The Forge - Catholic Commentary

T.J. Haines

Audio Monologues, Article Voiceovers, News Briefs, and Short-Form update podcasts. TheForge.fm - Catholic Commentary that HITS! www.theforge.fm

Episodios

  1. Moment of Truth: 'Dangerous' is Scandalous?

    1 ABR

    Moment of Truth: 'Dangerous' is Scandalous?

    The Transcript Recently, the message “Catholics are dangerous” has stirred controversy in various corners of the internet. Some comments and direct messages have accused me of being proud… even boastful. One person went so far as to insist that it isn’t the faithful who are dangerous — it’s the world that is dangerous. But what’s behind that response? It reflects a spirit of defeatism and fear — a victim mentality that has become characteristic of our age, and one that has even made its way into the Catholic community. We are living in a time when people are so culturally separated from Jesus Christ that they have also become separated from the reality of the victory He has already won for us by His Cross. Being dangerous does not mean being hostile. It means opposing the world, the flesh, and the devil in the name of Jesus Christ. God is a winner. Jesus Christ is the Father’s champion. And those who align themselves with Him in faith and in truth not only have nothing to fear in this world — the fallen world has reason to fear the witness of faithful Catholics. Why do you think churches are vandalized? Why do you think some countries attempt to restrict the expression of religion? Do you think those efforts are directed equally at every religion? Do you really think vague spirituality provokes this kind of resistance? No. Again and again, social and legal pressure eventually focuses itself most directly on the Catholic Church — because Catholicism, when lived seriously, refuses to conform itself to the spirit of the age. Catholics are dangerous to a fallen world precisely because we belong to Jesus Christ. Our Lord came into the world as light in the darkness, and He was rejected because many prefer darkness. As Saint Paul says in Philippians, we are meant to live in the midst of a crooked generation, shining like stars in the dark sky. That is not the description of a timid people. It is time to get over this victim mentality. It is holding too many Catholics back from courage, and it is holding too many Catholics back from excellence in holiness. If we are with Christ, who can be against us? To take Christianity seriously is to accept that we will sometimes stand in opposition to a fallen world. Jesus Christ Himself was dangerous — dangerous enough that people insisted He should die. If Christ was dangerous to darkness, and if we are called to become like Him, then we should not be surprised that faithful Catholics will also be considered dangerous. Not violent. Not hateful. But so clearly aligned with truth, and reflecting the light of Christ so distinctly, that we stand in visible opposition to a fallen world that still chooses Barabbas, and still chooses to do the work of its father the devil. Stay dangerous, Catholics. God wills it. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.theforge.fm/subscribe

    4 min
  2. 15 MAR

    Distrust of the Church and the Malady of Suspicion

    (originally published to Stoking the Embers) Recently, I’ve been in a a few casual conversations and exchanges with Catholics who express a growing distrust of the Church. It isn’t isolated. This is something real in the Catholic culture. It manifests as suspicion, doubt, or an absence of trust in the Church’s guidance, teaching, or leadership. Often, it’s all three rolled into one. But that attitude is dangerous. It disables Catholic identity, stunts growth in holiness, disfigures good Catholic attitudes (submission, docility, holiness), and ultimately amounts to an assault on the Church—whether well-intentioned or subversive—that becomes an obstacle to her missionary pilgrimage on Earth. What’s really behind this distrust? Where did it come from—reputation, experience, something else? I think it’s rooted more in the human element than in the Church herself, and more in fiction than in fact, and often more in defiance than reasoned suspicion. The Headlines Every time the Church shows up in the headlines, the same reaction ripples out: See? This is why I don’t trust them. It doesn’t matter whether the story is a scandal, a policy decision, a papal remark, or a diocesan controversy (real or imagined). We’re conditioned to react rather than to receive and consider what’s happening or what’s being said NOTE: I wrote a piece addressing the moral and spiritual risk of being “Hooked on Headlines” Check it out some time The most significant event thought to have caused a great deal of distrust in the Church was the clergy sex crisis that erupted in the media in 2002. Investigative reporting revealed not only cases of sexual abuse by priests, but patterns of reassignment and concealment by some bishops. Many Catholics cite this as the reason they’ve stopped attending Mass or practicing the faith in general. Then COVID became another confirmation point. When lockdowns were imposed, the Church’s response was, in many places, limited, measured, or non-existent. There were scattered efforts at ministry in certain parishes and dioceses—sometimes even in secret. But broadly speaking, the Church accepted the restrictions, even when churches remained closed longer than other public spaces. For many Catholics—my family among them—that felt like a letdown and abandonment during one of the most vulnerable periods in living memory. But distrust of the Church didn’t start with COVID or even the revelation of the clergy sex crisis in the early 2000s. From my perspective, it was already festering in the culture long before any of that. Long Before the Headlines Suspicion toward the Church was already established in the culture. You could hear it in everyday conversations, see it in movies, read it in commentary on popular history—little remarks people repeated without ever really checking them. The Church was described as absurdly wealthy, politically manipulative, historically violent, and morally suspect. Fallacious claims about the Inquisition, caricatures of the Crusades, and conspiracy theories passed around as if they were settled fact were a common part of religious discourse pertaining to the Catholic Church or the practice of the faith. “Everybody knows the Catholic Church executed a billion Jews during the Spanish Inquisition. What’s wrong with you?!” (Fear the “everybody-knows-isms” my friends. When “Everybody knows…” it means the people telling it to you don’t know what they’re talking about. Moving on.) Most of the rumors and rhetoric weren’t carefully examined, and because “everybody knows…” nobody questioned or challenged them. They didn’t need to be challenged. They confirmed what many people already wanted to believe: the crazy Catholic Church just can’t be trusted or taken seriously. Even as a young teenager just getting into apologetics, I spent more time saying, “I’m sorry” for the Spanish Inquisition than, “Hold on, back up a minute!…” In many cases, distrust of the Church didn’t begin with evidence. Evidence was gathered—or invented—to fit the preconfigured conclusion of the Church’s untrustworthiness and lack of competence as a moral voice and guide. This evidence gathering was essentially cherry-picking historical distortions, granting uncritical credibility to personal horror stories that were sometimes exaggerated in the retelling, and taking isolated failures and turning them into proof that the whole Church is corrupt. A Necessary Clarification At the risk of breaking cadence for a moment, let me pause and say something plainly. Some horror stories are true. Abuse, cruelty, negligence—these are real, and they matter. Most of us know at least one “bad priest” or religious. Some of us have our own stories. But the question isn’t whether those stories exist or whether they’re valid or important. The question is what they actually prove about the Church. Individual failures—even serious ones—do not automatically define the nature, mission, or truth-claims of the Church herself. That distinction is important to point out if we’re going to think clearly instead of reactively. From Suspicion to Agenda Barring the aforementioned isolated incidents, distrust in the Catholic Church didn’t start with facts. It mostly started with an agenda. As the culture became progressively morally liberalized and Catholics became more secularized, it served an agenda of defiance of Church teaching, or of basic Catholic responsibilities, to disqualify the origin of that teaching—the Catholic Church. But then real scandals broke into public view, and everything shifted. Now, being seen as an institution of perverts and enablers, the perception of the Church as lacking credibility or moral authority was confirmed. Now people had fact-based reasons to distrust the Church, even if the facts were usually distorted in the media. The clergy scandal, paired with what many experienced as institutional impotence during COVID, confirmed what had been settled in the cultural mind for decades: that the Church is weak, incompetent, corrupt, and unworthy of both our fidelity and our trust. The Unsettling Twist But here’s the unsettling twist: what had been, for decades, an attitude of distrust of the Church in the secular culture (which included some Catholics) is now a malady in the culture of the Church. Catholics, even very devoted ones, are affected by what has long become a culturally acceptable distrust or suspicion toward the Church. We grade, or try to out-Church, the Magisterium. We rate the Holy Father. We bring secular political mindsets into the Catholic experience. We hold the Church to our subjective standards the way we might hold Congress’s feet to the fire. Much of this is prompted and conditioned by some in independent Catholic media who have something to gain by posturing as the Truth-bearers and saviors of the Church. And many tend to trust those outlets more than the Church. Take it from me, brethren. Some of those outlets—and even a few high-profile clerics—are knowingly misleading you. Your trust in them is ill-placed. Just because they’re saying what you want to hear doesn’t mean they’re trustworthy. It means they’re accomplices in advancing distrust of the Church as she stands today, measured against an idealized vision of her past. Here is what Catholics need to take from this. “The Church is a mess” would be a true statement no matter where or when it’s uttered across its 2,000-year history. There’s imperfection in her clergy, in her offices, in her people. But what needs to be focused on is this: is the Church competent in her mission? Is the Church trustworthy where it counts—in the salvation of souls, the formation of saints? Most definitely! And if reading that makes you doubt it, this malady may have affected you, too. The Church isn’t perfect. There are things you and I might change if we could. But the Lord didn’t put that in front of us. What He puts in front of us is the mission to live in God’s law, to love in accord with the Gospel, to forgive with the attitude of Jesus, and to follow with trust, as the Hebrews were commanded in the days of Moses. That isn’t blind trust; it’s true faith Follow me on X | Instagram | TikTok | FB | YouTube RELATED LINK This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.theforge.fm/subscribe

    10 min
  3. Who Should Form Future Priests?

    5 MAR

    Who Should Form Future Priests?

    A recent Vatican report connected to the Synod on Synodality recommends giving “due weight” to women’s views and assessments in the formation of future priests. It doesn’t propose changing Holy Orders or ordaining women, but it does suggest a structural shift in how seminarians might be evaluated and accompanied during their formation. In this monologue, I break down what the report actually proposes and explain why it caught my attention. The idea is framed as part of a broader push for “synodality” — a vision of the Church where more voices from the wider community, including women, participate in processes that have traditionally been handled within clerical structures. But that raises a deeper question. The priesthood is a masculine vocation, and priestly formation has historically been rooted in men forming men. Introducing women into the evaluative side of seminary formation may sound harmless or even “inclusive,” but does it actually strengthen priestly formation — or does it reflect a broader instinct to reshape the Church according to secular expectations about participation and gender roles? In this episode, I explain why I think the proposal misunderstands the nature of male formation, why seminarians should not feel as though they are being assessed by “their mothers,” and why this conversation risks focusing on the wrong problem altogether. The real crisis in the Church today isn’t primarily how priests are formed — it’s the collapse of priestly vocations in the first place. So rather than theorizing new structures for seminary evaluation, perhaps the more urgent question is much simpler: How do we raise and call forth more men willing to become priests? This short monologue unpacks the story, the reasoning behind the proposal, and why I believe the discussion reveals something deeper about the direction of Catholic leadership today. Follow me on X | Instagram | TikTok | FB | YouTube Thanks for reading The Forge ! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.theforge.fm/subscribe

    3 min
  4. The Forge Episode 2

    23 FEB

    The Forge Episode 2

    Here’s what’s been happening at The Forge: Some new articles, a few new podcasts, and some new features to make this a more immersive experience for readers and listeners. LINKS TO THE CONTENT REFERENCED IN THIS EPISODE Distrust of the Church and the Malady of Suspicion The origins, causes, of Catholics’ distrust of the Church; and the real story behind it READ NOW AT STOKING THE EMBERS The Media Is Buzzing About Aliens. Christians Shouldn’t Buy It. The headlines lately sound like a trailer for a sci-fi reboot. Here’s the reality, as I see itREAD NOW Hooked on Headlines - The Devil’s Bid For Your Attention Attention wins markets. The Devil knows that too. Here’s why Catholics must resist the lie that information is power, and awareness is a virtue READ NOW Why Catholics Distrust the Church - The Real Story! Why are so many people losing trust in the Catholic Church, and what is the TRUE origin of this crisis of trust and faith? WATCH/LISTEN NOW Do Aliens Exist? The Catholic Response Exploring UFOs, angels and demons, scripture and theology to find out where faith and reason guide us in answer to this intriguing question of the ages. (Chat about it!) LISTEN NOW Do Aliens Exist? Conversation with Patrick Abbot Do aliens exist? Does the subject shape or inform religion? We discuss it through a Catholic prism. WATCH/LISTEN NOW This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.theforge.fm/subscribe

    16 min
  5. Welcome to The Forge - Episode 1

    18 FEB

    Welcome to The Forge - Episode 1

    This is not the usual podcast you might expect from me. The Forge podcast is short, simple, casual and personal. The episodes will be reviews and additional thoughts about recent articles Ive published, sometimes supplements to articles, and sometimes audio read-throughs of articles. Here are the hits I’m covering int his episode A headline goes viral claiming the Pope approved beatification for a scandalous bishop—but in this piece, I show how the outrage was engineered before readers ever saw the facts. Because the man isn’t beatified at all, and the reporting blurred crucial distinctions to make it look that way. This article walks through what was left out, how the framing worked, and why learning to spot media manipulation is now a basic survival skill for Catholics who want truth instead of outrage. A viral homily from Ireland is stirring serious debate after a priest claimed Mass isn’t about worship but about sharing a meal. In this piece, I break down why that claim isn’t just sloppy theology—it strikes at the very meaning of the Eucharist itself. Because the Catholic Mass isn’t a dinner gathering that happens to include prayer; it’s the sacrifice of Christ made present, and the meal flows from that sacrifice—not the other way around. If we lose that order, we don’t just misunderstand the Mass… we misunderstand worship. In this piece, I argue that the devil’s most effective tactic isn’t always temptation to sin—it’s distraction. Because if he can’t make you fall, he can keep you busy, agitated, and scattered enough that you never go deep spiritually. Drawing from Scripture, St. Augustine, and Ignatian spirituality, I show how our obsession with headlines, outrage cycles, and constant updates can thin the soul and choke holiness before we even notice it Thanks for reading The Forge ! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.theforge.fm/subscribe

    16 min
  6. 15 FEB

    Hooked on Headlines - The Devil's Bid For Your Attention

    The Devil doesn’t just tempt you to sin. He tempts you to be distracted. And that’s far more dangerous. I’v been trying for years to convince Catholics (and other Christians) that they’re fixated and focused on all the wrong things. Catholic news, politics, social unrest—sometimes a thousand miles away where it could never be meaningful to their lives or spirituality. “What’s the pope doing? What’d he say? What are the cardinals talking about, thousands of miles away? What’d that bishop say/do in a diocese I don’t even live and worship in? Oh my goodness, oh my goodness!!” Can I be blunt with you? It’s time to get over it, folks. Stop playing the devil’s game. Yes, the devil has a hand in it! Hey, you don’t have to take my word for it. This is catechesis from many saints and spirituality masters. Listen to them if you won’t listen to me. What Saints Have Said The Setup Most Christians think temptation is about being drawn toward obvious evil. Lust. Pride. Anger. Something dramatic, and something that prompts an act of the will. But that assumption is too small. Some temptations are temptations to a disposition—or temptations to inaction. The enemy doesn’t always ensnare us through temptation to sin; he often gets us by drawing us out, thinning us out, and wearing us out. He fragments your focus, keeping you busy, agitated, and stimulated enough that you never go deep. He draws you (your attention) away from your interior castle where you are strong and fortified, drawing you way out into the intellectual wild where you’re all alone and vulnerable. Augustine Augustine viewed an excessive obsession with current events or worldly happenings as a form of curiosity—a vice that distracts from the pursuit of wisdom and holiness. "You were within me, but I was outside, and it was there that I searched for you... You called, you shouted, and you broke through my deafness." God speaks to the soul through an illumination of the intellect. He rarely speaks through signs outside of ourselves, because signs are meant to be read. If a soul is not conditioned and disposed to seeing, “reading” and correctly interpreting those signs, then the signs are useless. God doesn’t work that way. So it’s bad discipline, and a fruitless venture to direct and guide our will by the prompting of unprofitable things that have our attention “In addition to the lust of the flesh and the lust of the eyes… which belong to the old life, and not to the new, there is in the soul through the same eyes a certain vain and curious desire, veiled under the name of knowledge and science… This is that curiosity which is the lust of the eyes.”— Both quotes from St. Augustine, Confessions This “lust of the eyes” is a lack of discipline over your attention, and over your intellect. It prompts us to an inordinate and unrealistic drive to be hyper-aware of everything that doesn’t matter, leading us to anxiety (where Peace cannot reign in the heart) and even rage. How is any of that leading anybody to holiness? Spiritual Warfare In The Spiritual Combat, Lorenzo Scupoli makes it clear that the enemy studies the soul carefully and adapts his tactics. When he can’t drag a person into obvious sin, he occupies him with lesser things so that greater duties are quietly neglected. “The devil doesn’t have to turn a Catholic into a heretic or an apostate to disable them. He only has to disorient them. They can be as religious as they like, but if they are disoriented and can’t discern Truth, he has them where he wants them—impotent and unthreatening”-TJ Haines Not everything that distracts you is evil. That is precisely why the tactic works. Because we are conditioned to be alert when we’re faced with temptations to evil, but we aren’t so conditioned to be alert and vigilant in the face of temptations to distractions. We believe knowledge is power; but that is not true. Knowledge sometimes is the threat! Ignatius Similarly, in the Spiritual Exercises, Ignatius of Loyola describes how the enemy operates through agitation and disturbance (Are you listening, social media?). He clouds judgment and stirs restlessness. He creates interior noise. The goal is not always to make you “bad”, it’s to make you unstable and disoriented. A distracted soul is easier to steer than a defiant one. From Rule 4, on spiritual desolation: “I call desolation…darkness of soul, disturbance in it, movement to things low and earthly, the unquiet of different agitations and temptations, moving to want of confidence, without hope, without love, when one finds oneself all lazy, tepid, sad, and as if separated from his Creator and Lord.” And from Rule 2: how the enemy operates in those who are advancing in holiness, going from good to better): “In persons who are going on intensely purifying their sins and rising from good to better in the service of God our Lord, it is proper to the bad spirit to bite, sadden, and put obstacles, disquieting with false reasons, that one may not go on; and it is proper to the good spirit to give courage and strength, consolations, tears, inspirations, and quiet [this happens interiorly, but not when there is noise], easing and putting away all obstacles [distractions], that one may go on in well doing.” Scripture Scripture confirms the pattern. “Be sober and alert. Your enemy, the devil, prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour” (1 Peter 5:8). The first command is sobriety. Clear-minded. Alert. Collected. You can’t be alert and vigilant if your attention is constantly hijacked. And when Christ explains the seed choked by thorns, He very clearly identifies the thorns as “the cares and riches and pleasures of life” (Luke 8:14). Not necessarily mortal sin. Cares. Pleasures. Preoccupations. Enough to choke growth without sounding alarms or even blipping on your radar. It’s strategic suffocation, by our own cooperation. Now consider the age we live in. There are endless feeds, “drama pimps”, controversy brokers, and engineered outrage. We’re swimming in distraction. If the enemy can keep you even mildly reactive and perpetually distracted, he doesn’t need to push us into sin—he can just settle for something almost as effective—spiritual thinness. Grace through masses, rosaries, and devotions won’t save you from that if you are willfully allowing your mind to be distracted (“lust of the eyes”) by things that don’t matter. Grace has to be cooperated with. Grace illuminates the mind and God speaks to the interior of the soul. God doesn’t compete with noise, and grace doesn’t ask for a little elbow room. A sign on the door of your heart and mind that says “Occupied” won’t prompt a knock on the door—it’ll prompt a “Call me when you’re free”. So cut yourself loose of distractions, my friends. It’s a lie that knowledge is empowering. Wisdom is empowering. And wisdom requires right knowledge, prudent knowledge, and the Truth (information) that leads us to it. Pay attention to the things that matter—the scriptures, prayer life, love of family and neighbor and so on. You’re on a mission to become saints. What the hell are you doing focusing on everything else that won’t get you there? Nothing going on in the Church, or in the world, can stop you from growing in holiness. Nothing! The only thing that can stop that is you—by choosing to focus on things that don’t truly matter. Stand watch. God be with you all Follow me on X | Instagram | TikTok | FB |cYouTube | Discord Thanks for reading The Forge ! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.theforge.fm/subscribe

    13 min

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Audio Monologues, Article Voiceovers, News Briefs, and Short-Form update podcasts. TheForge.fm - Catholic Commentary that HITS! www.theforge.fm