- Nov 2, 2016
- 4,815
- 1,638
- 67
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Catholic
- Marital Status
- Married
I'm at a loss to know what to do.
I almost walked out of mass the other day at the homily because I despair of being fed a diet of left socialism. Later in the post, I identify what it was specifically that made me almost walk out. But a little background first.
I get the fact that the priest (lovely bloke he is in every other way) only ever comes into contact with public sector workers., so he only ever hears one side of a story.
So we are forcefed a diet of what ever the guardian newspaper feeds him. He has no concept of economics, or that someone must earn the money his public sector spends. The businesses that pay for the public sector, did not get 100% of salary paid to stay at home like much of the public sector did. At best they got a portion of wages paid. Many businesses lost a fortune. Including many in energy sector!
So We are now paying the cost of shutting down the economy for COVID and an expensive war in russia causing massive energy price spikes that manifest as inflation.. The costs of an ageing population and too much green focus do not helo . Also in the UK the monumental costs of public sector pension inflation proofing that noone else cam have but them . And if everyone gets an inflation proof rise, nobody wins. Since inflation repeats itself.
The strikers as always are those who can hold the economy to ransom. They demand an inflation proof rise.
Which is why most of them are already way over average wage for average jobs.
But Whatever your thoughts on the above..
This is what almost made me walk out..
I drew the line when we were asked to pray for strikers!!! (no mention at all of their victims, or others affected, the ones who will die from striking healthcare workers, and the businesses wrecked by covid, those bankrupted and who wil lose their jobs now deprived of income by striking rail workers, none of whom lost anything in covid.
Does that one sided view bother anyone else ?
Yet (such as ) the hospitality sector are already wrecked by COVID and now excess energy bills.
Their workers are the ones who need prayers! Many will find them selves unemployed and unemployable in the recession to come.So to have their best time at christimas destroyed by union greed is a disgrace. The rail sector was offered 9% (nobody else got) at the start of the strike. They turned it down.
For sure SOME politics has a place in the pulpit. Take the one apprehended by police on suspicion of "silent prayer" near an abortion clinic.
But priests have no idea how the economy in general functions and should stay out of partisan politics. A priest commands a certain authority so should be very careful with intervention.
What is the catholic church view on partisan politics from the pulpit?
What would others do?
Speak to the priest? Write to the priest? Write to the diocese?
For peace of mind I am now going to another parish. But it is not a good solution.
I almost walked out of mass the other day at the homily because I despair of being fed a diet of left socialism. Later in the post, I identify what it was specifically that made me almost walk out. But a little background first.
I get the fact that the priest (lovely bloke he is in every other way) only ever comes into contact with public sector workers., so he only ever hears one side of a story.
So we are forcefed a diet of what ever the guardian newspaper feeds him. He has no concept of economics, or that someone must earn the money his public sector spends. The businesses that pay for the public sector, did not get 100% of salary paid to stay at home like much of the public sector did. At best they got a portion of wages paid. Many businesses lost a fortune. Including many in energy sector!
So We are now paying the cost of shutting down the economy for COVID and an expensive war in russia causing massive energy price spikes that manifest as inflation.. The costs of an ageing population and too much green focus do not helo . Also in the UK the monumental costs of public sector pension inflation proofing that noone else cam have but them . And if everyone gets an inflation proof rise, nobody wins. Since inflation repeats itself.
The strikers as always are those who can hold the economy to ransom. They demand an inflation proof rise.
Which is why most of them are already way over average wage for average jobs.
But Whatever your thoughts on the above..
This is what almost made me walk out..
I drew the line when we were asked to pray for strikers!!! (no mention at all of their victims, or others affected, the ones who will die from striking healthcare workers, and the businesses wrecked by covid, those bankrupted and who wil lose their jobs now deprived of income by striking rail workers, none of whom lost anything in covid.
Does that one sided view bother anyone else ?
Yet (such as ) the hospitality sector are already wrecked by COVID and now excess energy bills.
Their workers are the ones who need prayers! Many will find them selves unemployed and unemployable in the recession to come.So to have their best time at christimas destroyed by union greed is a disgrace. The rail sector was offered 9% (nobody else got) at the start of the strike. They turned it down.
For sure SOME politics has a place in the pulpit. Take the one apprehended by police on suspicion of "silent prayer" near an abortion clinic.
But priests have no idea how the economy in general functions and should stay out of partisan politics. A priest commands a certain authority so should be very careful with intervention.
What is the catholic church view on partisan politics from the pulpit?
What would others do?
Speak to the priest? Write to the priest? Write to the diocese?
For peace of mind I am now going to another parish. But it is not a good solution.
Last edited: