(not to mention the pope's historic rally at the U,S,-Mexico border to shame America into taking more illegals ...)
In the next week
or so, the Council of the European Union will
meet to discuss how well its ongoing commitment to provide for the millions
of Middle Eastern, Asian and African adult males and other migrants fleeing the
likes of Syria has
been going.
But let’s just cut
to the chase. The bureaucrats in charge are going to conclude A) the European
Union needs to do more and B) the United States needs to do more. What’s not
going to be determined, however, is the need for any sort of first-person
attachment to those conclusions.
Germany’s Angela
Merkel may double down on her national embrace of the migrants, rapists
and all. But Germany’s Angela Merkel is never going to open her massively
spacious Bundeskanzleramt-based
apartment to taking in a few of these refugees herself.
Nope. That Price
is Right “come on down” attitude has a boundary – and it weaves nicely along
the border of Not In My Yard.
Politicians being
politicians, nobody’s really surprised at their hypocrisy. Where it really
nags, however, is in the religious realm. And where it’s really personified is in
this continuing migrant crisis is in the pope, his church, and Vatican City.
Migrants are our
brothers and sisters, in search of better lives, Pope Francis told the world,
during a January address on Vatican
Radio.
“Do unto others as
you would have them do unto you,” he told
the United States, during a September 2015 address on Capitol Hill.
“Behind these
statistics are people, each of them with a name, a face, a story, an inalienable
dignity which is theirs as a child of God,” he said in
a November 2015 speech from Vatican City marking the 35th
anniversary of the Jesuit Refugee Service, just days after a series of terror
attacks rocked Paris and threatened to slow the flow of migrants into the area.
Noticeably absent
during these speeches? Faces and photographs of the dozens of refugee families
welcomed into Vatican
City, the headquarters of the Roman Catholic Church and the home of the
pope. The sovereign
city-state sits on a 100-acre parcel of well-guarded, partly walled land by
the Tiber River, and is home to some of the world’s most notable treasures,
from art work to gold, as well as to the highly secretive – and highly
profitable – Vatican
Bank with untold amounts of assets
and investments. Plenty of money to spend on provisions for these children
of God, it would seem.
The world saw a
glimmer of goodwill from the cloistered city when the pontiff, in a widely
reported September 2015 address, called on every parish, monastery and
religious community in Europe to take in a refugee family or two – and backed
that call by
vowing to house two such families in the Vatican. But weeks later, and the
segregated city had only
found one family worthy of welcome – and curiously enough, given the high
Muslim population of the refugees, a Christian
family belonging to the Melkite Catholic Church, at that. Within months,
many of the Catholic Churches called by Pope Francis to do their moral duty and
open doors to refugees abandoned
the idea in seemingly similar fashion.
One can imagine
the cry of the migrant standing outside one of the five armed-guarded doors
that keep Vatican City secure: “Father, got a spare coin?”
It’s bad enough
listening to politicians prattle on from tax-paid venues about the need to
provide for the world’s suffering, before being escorted by armed officers to
their chauffeured vehicles and dropped within the gates of their high-security
homes. But having a religious leader wag moral fingers at the rest of us, from
behind gilded screens and amid some of the world’s most precious of metals and
treasures – from behind walls that protect this wealth from the riffraff of
society – is just too much. It’s unChristian, and it’s everything people hate
about organized religion. But Jesus said it
best, speaking to the money-lovers of the time: “Woe to you, teachers of
the law and Pharisees, you hypocrites!”
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