Liberation Theology in the Larger
Church
A vast
network of Roman Catholic and Protestant church organizations devoted to the
spread of Marxism-Leninism under the guise of Liberation Theology has been
developed in the past 25 years.
At the
highest level of Catholic Church organization are Marxist sympathizers Bryan
Heir and Thomas Quigley. Father Heir was given the Letelier Award by the
radical leftist Institute for Policy Studies. (Orlando Letelier was a known
Chilean communist, openly admired by Heir.) Quigley is active in a number of
pro-communist organizations, including the Council for Hemispheric Affairs, the
Washington Office for Latin America, and the Religious Task Force on Central
America.
The main
instrument for the communist use of the Church is the network of Justice and
Peace Commissions. These organizations exist at all levels of the Catholic
Church. Local commissions are formed by individual parishioners, whose
activities typically include letter writing in support of leftist causes and
support for boycotts.
This
official set of church organizations is supplemented by many other groups,
including the Maryknoll and Jesuit orders and Pax Christi.
Pax
Christi is a frankly political group that involves bishops, priests, and lay
people. Bishop Thomas Gumbleton, head of the U.S. chapter of Pax Christi, for
example, was known to be a Sandinista sympathizer and a personal supporter of
Maryknoll priest Miguel D’Escoto, an avowed communist.
At the
local level, the organizations are too many to list. Worthy of special note,
however, is the Mexican American Cultural Center (MACC) in the diocese of San
Antonio, Texas, which maintains an active liberationist program.
Active
throughout the hemisphere, but especially in Texas, the MACC has its fingers in
a number of progressive pies. They advocate opening U.S. borders to
uncontrolled immigration, harbor illegal aliens, organize farm labor strikes,
and establish Basic Christian Communities to promote Liberation Theology among
Hispanics.
In the
Washington, DC area, many groups are active in promoting Liberation Theology,
including: The Center of Concern, a Jesuit front; The Quixote Center; Network,
the official lobbying group of leftist nuns; The Christic Institute; and The
Jesuit Mission Center.
The
National Council of Churches (NCC) and a number of its member organizations
also promote Liberation Theology. Consider these:
Church
World Service actively contributes funds to leftist governments with which the
NCC sympathizes.
Domestic
Hunger Network spends more money supporting leftwing political activism than
feeding the needy.
Agricultural
Missions Program supports local indigenous movements that tend toward total
liberation of rural people - spiritual, economic, and political.
Cluster
on Unity and Relationships fosters ecumenical merging of church groups with
differing doctrines, all in the context of Liberation Theology.
Cluster
on Church Life and Witness (Divison on Church and Society) is an outreach to
increase the acceptance of Liberation Theology propaganda in public discussion,
media communications, and educational curriculum.
Cluster
on Church and Society promotes a broad, leftist agenda on issues including
poverty, racism, sexism, civil liberties, ecology, and welfare.
Cluster
on International Ministries works with overseas religious groups to promote
socialist policies there and undermine anti-communist governments combatting
terrorism.
The
Clergy and Laity Concerned, formed by the NCC in 1965, are closely allied to
the communist World Peace Council and were active in the assault on South
Africa.
Another
group, the American Friends Service Committee, formed by 14 socialist Quakers
in 1917, has been infiltrated and used by communists to promote their domestic
and foreign policy objectives - including the promotion of liberationist
activities worldwide.
The
Riverside Church Disarmament Program (RCDP), run by activists in the leadership
of the Marxist Institute for Policy Studies, is a propaganda organization
active in the spread of liberationism. RCDP also is closely allied to the
communist World Peace Council.
Additional
promotion of Liberation Theology is conducted by major Protestant
denominations, most notably Methodist, Episcopal, and Presbyterian, as well as
by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.
----Father
Enrique Rueda and Bill McIlhany
http://www.celticorthodoxy.com/bkceltic-orthodox-church