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Monthly Archives: July 2015

No Prayers, Please.

21 Tuesday Jul 2015

Posted by jimmyk1967 in Religious

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paedophile prayers

What’s difficult to explain to young people ? Not much, thanks to the internet.
What’s difficult to explain to young people who want nothing to do with the priesthood , even if they don’t want an excuse to join in the lifestyle of their non-Catholic peers?
Above all, surely, there is the horrifically blood-curdling and nauseating assurance from failed priests that they can be assured of their prayers.
Go to a First Communion service, and watch all those lovely wee persons go to accept the Body and Blood of Christ, their love and trust shining in their faces. Imagine how they must feel years later as they discover that the priest who gave them the Host is revealed as a mere paedophile, the one type of criminal considered beneath all others in prison, by even the worst of prisoners. Then to have their idealism flung in their faces by the assurance that they are “remembered in their prayers” by these deviants.
Why do the deviant clergymen do this? Is it simply cynical derision ? Or is it the bitterness and despair of a failed, aberrant existence ,and by poisoning the concept of prayer, a final rejection of Christ ?
Who knows? To be charitable, are not these “prayers” an inevitable symptom of a defective vision of the priesthood, an enduring , invincible vision of the priesthood as a special mark , not to be removed even by the sordid details of paedophily, apparently a mere blip in the passage of a Tridentine priest through life ?
This is the real problem, and in its way even more terrifying than the sordid betrayal of the idealism of our young people by individual priests.
The Tridentine priesthood in particular has built an ethos about itself as part of the very fibre of the Church over the last thousand years .
How can we bring it home to our Tridentine bishops and to our Tridentine priests that their time has come – and has gone. The celibate priest can obviously find a home in the religious orders, on whom the Church must depend yet again.
It is time for them all to realise that valid ordination must be extended beyond the celibate clergyman supported by a parish to the parishioners themselves if the Flock all over the world are to be energised and invigorated by a new method of bringing the Body and Blood of Christ to them as He asked.
We ask, as we continue to do – what is the problem in doing this ?
Why are people having to live without the Eucharist ?

Mission Unnecessary

12 Sunday Jul 2015

Posted by jimmyk1967 in Religious

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Bishop Nolan, Bishop Robson, National Catholic Reporter, Robert Mickens, Scottish Bishops, vocations

Scottish bishops are once more in the news internationally. No, it’s not a paedophile/homosexual thing, since it’s outside the Glasgow-Edinburgh Axis . This time it’s Bishop William Nolan of Galloway and Bishop Stephen Robson of Dunkeld on Scotland being a mission country..
They appear in an article on vocations in the US ‘National Catholic Reporter’, in an article by Robert Mickens on vocations. He makes the very perceptive observation that ‘For every new novena or eucharistic adoration scheme launched to stimulate vocations, two or 10 more parishes are being closed or merged.’ To the average reader who still believes that we should be allowed to receive the Eucharist , that would be worth reading the article for alone, or getting the NCR every Friday on line or otherwise.
But he goes on to point out that the Episcopal Dynamic Duo from Scotland have invited the Heralds of Good News, a society of apostolic life from Southern India , to take over parishes in their diocese. Both stated that Scotland is now a mission country. Bishop Robson felt that “The people who are coming here are the ones whose faith and devotion will sustain us.”
As Robert Mickens says,” What he really meant- and what bishops from all over the world mean, too- is that these ‘missionaries’ will sustain the bishops who embrace the status quo concerning ministries in the church’.
Well said, Robert Mickens.
Why go to Southern India, when you can ask your fellow Scottish bishops to accept Pope Francis’s invitation to extend ordination , and as a result help to begin a movement which will ultimately bring the Eucharist and the Sacraments to so many who are dying – as we read and type this-without their consolation ?
We ask again- what is the problem in the valid extension of ordination to parishioners ? At the –well, risk- of moving back into the dynamic argot of preachers from our youth like the Redemptorists and the Passionists, it’s time our bishops said ‘Why don’t we..’ before all they have the breath to say is ‘Why didn’t we.. ?’

Aye, aye,Sir? No, No,Sir !

05 Sunday Jul 2015

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Archbishop Tartaglia, Glasgow, lifeboats, Pope Francis

Stirring times in Glasgow last week! In the Archdiocesan newspaper, ‘Flourish’, Archbishop Tartaglia shared with us “my thoughts on where I think we are” in planning future parish provision. Essentially, there were “Where are the people ? “ and “How many priest and deacons will there be ? ”
He also mentioned that a new auxiliary Bishop would be appointed.
The newspaper was probably printed too early for him to mention the plea of guilty to three sexual assaults on young people accepted by one of the finest preachers in the Archdiocese.
Now there are less appealing bishops than Archbishop Tartaglia , and unlike other Archbishops in Scotland he’s prepared to at least acknowledge a letter. But what an unfortunate series of events.
We do try to avoid cliché, but the rearrangement of deckchairs on the ‘Titanic’ can hardly be avoided now, can it?
Very few people have ever been killed or injured in fights at the back of our churches here in Glasgow to get the latest edition of ‘Flourish’ . So it’s fair to assume he’s talking to churchgoers.
Imagine if you will, the captain of the ‘Titanic’ talking in a not yet invented tannoy to those in the lifeboats. In the article, Archbishop Tartaglia is speaking in geographical terms of the city when he asks ‘Where are the people?’. Those of us in the lifeboats know from our own families , and at least two generations within them, where the people are. They are no longer in church. They are drifting silently away from the Church into the darkness, like the lifejacketed victims in the famous ‘Titanic’ film to a very different life without the Sacraments from the one they were baptised into. Unlike the original, there are many lifeboats- or parishes, if you are still with me- without seamen to control them, who could save those still aboard. The Captain- still Archbishop Tartaglia- says he hopes to find , and I quote, ’suitable priests from wherever’, the missing seamen .
My Jesuit former English teacher used to suggest that we run the other way if we saw an extended metaphor approaching, but bear with us. In 2015, to ignore Pope Francis’s offer to extend ordination, as he has done with the Eastern Rite, is for the captain of the ‘Titanic’ to tell all sorts of rescue ships not to bother, we’ll be fine. Why can’t the bishops accept his offer to extend ordination and give us the duly Ordained Ministers , from our parishes, who would provide the Eucharist to the Flock ? And in particular why can’t British bishops? The Scottish ones certainly owe us. Do we really need to hope , however improbably unlikely this is, for the miraculous provision of ‘suitable priests from wherever’?
This extended metaphor thing is quite addictive. We now see what Fr John Tracy, SJ meant. But bear with us one last time, for two last points , as he would have said.
How would those in the lifeboats have responded to this tannoy announcement, as the ship descended into the depths, to the news that the ship had a new First Lieutenant, other than by detaching removable parts from the lifeboats and trying to throw them at the Captain ? We feel that the announcement of a new auxiliary Bishop for Glasgow is equally irrelevant.
Finally, but far more significantly than the Church in Scotland seems to feel is relevant, what if the Captain had had to mention that one of his most trusted seamen had played an active part in trying to scuttle the ship , as regrettably one of the finest preachers in the Archdiocese has done ?
We have now abandoned the Titanic metaphor, you may be pleased to note.
We simply ask- why don’t our bishops abandon the notion that the Tridentine priest is , in general, the only method of providing the Eucharist for the Flock , and extend ordination as Pope Francis has asked them to consider ?

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