The Portal October 2017 | Page 24

THE P RTAL October 2017 Page 24 Are practising Catholics welcome in public life? Geoffrey Kirk watched that Jacob Rees-Mogg interview on breakfast TV M ost members of the Ordinariate – and not especially the clergy – will at some time or other have been accused of being a misogynist. What the accuser will have meant, of course, is not that we habitually beat our wives, and have consigned our elderly mothers to a lunatic asylum, but simply that we disagreed with them, on theological grounds, about the ordination of women. Because we refused to countenance an innovation which had no warranty in Scriptures or the Tradition, we were taken to be bigots, fired by an irrational hatred of the entire sex. If you have been there – had that experience – then spare a thought for Jacob Rees-Mogg, who bravely (on breakfast television!) defended the Church’s teaching on marriage and abortion. And consider the implications of the outrage that followed. Not only was Mogg accused of being a ‘bigot’, but said to be, as a result of those opinions, ineligible for a role in public life. Now Jacob is the very model of a modest English gentleman, cool, rational, articulate and gently humorous. Piers Morgan (a catholic in wolf ’s clothing) pressed him relentlessly toward an extreme position. Mogg – you can watch it again on U-Tube - went no further than saying that he unequivocally accepted the teaching of the Catholic Church. He condemned no one and denounced nothing. And as he did so he was accused of ‘hiding behind’ the Church’s teaching. The implications of that claim are monstrous. They are that, far from upholding the catholic teaching out of loyalty to scripture and fidelity to the tradition, he was covertly an ardent queer basher, who as soon as soon as he had any semblance of power, would condemn every girl who had an abortion to a stiff sentence in prison. You will ask yourself why an interviewer like Morgan behaves in this outrageous and unacceptable manner. The answer must surely be that the members of Protestant hatred of the Church have never died away, and that a new political correctness has fanned them into flame once more. Morgan’s intent was no doubt to end Rees-Mogg’s political career as decisively as a similar interviewer had ended that of poor Tim Farron. But this time the gentleman won.