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Monthly Archives: July 2016

Archbishop Martin and the Glass Ceiling

31 Sunday Jul 2016

Posted by jimmyk1967 in Religious

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Archbishop Martin, Cardinal Burke, Cardinal Marx, Extended Ordination, Pope Benedict

Archbishop Diarmuid Martin of Dublin can talk good sense, as in his use of the phrase ‘credibility deficit’ when speaking of Irish Catholics and the Church, on paedophily, when suggesting that the Vatican deal a little quicker with things and on other occasions. But he is still trapped under the glass ceiling.
Cardinal Burke is not a favourite on this blog, but we have to object to Archbishop Martin commenting on the Cardinal’s recent book, in particular its view that Islam seeks to rule the world and that the only solution is to return to its Christian roots. He was unfortunate enough to remark ‘I don’t think that helps at all ’ ,considering that he also thought that interreligious tensions are caused by inequalities and the Israeli-Palestinian crisis. To be fair, he did add perceptively that long-term solutions would come from education.
Cardinal Marx said he felt the intention of the act of terror in the French church (the murder of the parish priest) was to stir up hatred between religions.
Now is it the long years of training away from the world which they see themselves as the only possible means of changing, or too much brooding about the early Fathers of the Church , but how do churchmen get this way ? Where are all those cynical, world-weary but worldly, sophisticated old clerics like Cardinal Richelieu when you need them?
The two Moslems- and may they rest in peace- who entered the French church, cut the throat of the old parish priest and took hostages , armed only with knives , in a country where every policeman carries a gun and special security units are on high alert, knew what they were doing. They were not interested in inequalities, or the Israeli-Palestinian crisis, or in their lack of education. They were committing suicide in slow motion by security squad , so that each could meet his 72 virgins. They knew that they would not get out of that church alive. And they didn’t care. And what can be done about that ?
And yet, Archbishop Martin , quizzed on TV, did say that the only way to combat evil is ‘by bringing a similar force of goodness into our society’, without expanding on this, adding that ’goodness will always win in a combat with evil’ . Left at that, his statement that ‘I don’t think that helps at all’ is ironic. Especially when he must know that there is a way of ‘bringing a similar force of goodness into our society’ and yet , as a bishop under Pope Francis, he shows little interest like his fellow bishops in bringing it,i.e. ordaining parishioners to provide the Eucharist.
We wonder more and more if the six years of theological education undergone by the Tridentine priesthood is in fact simply a form of celibacy training. They must pick up some other stuff, surely.
Pope Benedict points out :’We cannot approach the Eucharistic table without being drawn into the mission which, beginning in the very heart of God, is meant to reach all people. Missionary outreach is thus an essential part of the Eucharistic form of the Christian life.’
Or as St John says,’..you are in Me, and I am in you’ .
50,000 parishes are without clergy, ie a Tridentine priest, theologically educated, celibate and parish supported, and therefore unable to receive the Eucharist.
And yet Archbishop Diarmuid Martin of Dublin and his fellow bishops are unwilling to accept Pope Francis’s invitation to discuss extending ordination to parishioners, and therefore providing the Eucharist to all, and therefore ‘bringing a force of goodness into our society’ and to the world.
We ask, as we have done so often on this blog, why in Heaven’s name, not ? Why can’t the Tridentine priesthood let go ?

St Maeve’s and The Sacrament of Matrimony

24 Sunday Jul 2016

Posted by jimmyk1967 in Religious

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nostalgia, St Maeve's and matrimony, the Catholic press

We have been prevailed upon, once again, to permit a little carefully controlled nostalgia into the blog, despite our fears as to the popularity of life in St Maeve’s among our presumably elderly readers. Our caveat is as always- those were the days and they’re not coming back ! They can’t !
The Sacrament of Matrimony is far from dead. Weddings have in fact been canonised, or the equivalent in a secular society, by being given what might be called a culture slot on television. Actually up there with sharks, Stephen Fry, Hitler, Egyptian mummies and the dissection of bizarrely murdered corpses, on programmes like CSI
In St Maeve’s, in the Forties and Fifties, a marriage was a marriage, but a wedding was also a wedding . A choice of time other than ten o’clock Mass was considered to be Bohemian. Nuptial Mass, with Papal Blessing, preordered from the Vatican in a cardboard cylinder, with exotic postage stamps from the Vatican City itself, was statutory.
It was the custom as a new baby was going to its christening to give a “christening piece”, a bread and butter sandwich with a coin , as a gift to the first child met on the way to the Church. As dead nowadays is the custom of scattering money to children as the bridal car left the Church , both gone thanks to potential litigation on the grounds of food poisoning on the one hand, and possible injury under the wheels of the car on the other.
Wedding photographs are now taken at the reception, and in a world full of conspiracy theories which are not always just theories , it is possible to believe that the amount of time it takes to produce the wedding photographs is the result of an arrangement between the photographer and the bar staff . The impact of this delay on guests who have been unwise enough to approach the wedding Mass on an empty stomach can be considerable, even if it is an effective anaesthetic for some of the speeches.
The thousands of cabinet photographs still in existence also show that white weddings are comparatively modern. Good suits and “costumes” were the order of the day for bridegroom and bride, and for most people. The photographs were limited in scope to the bride and groom, and probably also the best man and best maid, sometimes in a photographer’s studio, and that at the double. Little attention was paid to the possibility that low-grade members of the groom or bride’s party might be offended by the omission of their poses, however artistically arranged in these photos, or to the rather improbable possibility of the photos being reprinted in “Vogue”.
Next stop was the wedding breakfast, in Glasgow in places like the Ca’doro, for the well fixed, or Miss Buick’s, or for most others the many branches of the City Bakeries. At that time, it was still possible for the Best Man to make the statutory thanks to the Best Maid without embarrassing the entire company and the catering staff. A problem still to be solved after the meal itself , for the Best Man, and one which still exists, was what was to be done with the wedding telegrams. What does one do with wedding telegrams? It is easy to read out “Best wishes from Bert and Maisie- and remember yon day in Palma?”. It is difficult , as a Best Man, to bring the emotional impact of this telegram home to a company, when it is painfully obvious to everyone that neither the bride nor bridegroom can remember who Bert and Maisie were, or what happened yon day in Palma, and exactly how they are supposed to respond to this. . Once the painful ritual of telegrams is over, nowadays, the dancing begins. But before weddings were held in functions suites, the guests simply went to the cinema, family parties to follow.
Earlier wedding breakfasts,before and at the turn of the 20th century, were held at home, the guests appearing after a twelve hour day at work whenever they could. This meant that weddings could last for several days. It is a family tradition that on one occasion, a four day wedding celebration disintegrated only after the groom, who had been present obviously throughout the celebrations, and whose perceptions had become increasingly blurred took exception to the best man being described as such, and what are euphemistically described as ructions ensued. The lengthy wedding breakfast survived until the Fifties, and especially among the Italian community, and I recall my father and mother appearing several times, on several days, at the same Italian wedding .
Wartime shortages affected our lives , sometimes permanently, and without our realising how much , the impact being forgotten as time goes on. One of these was the paper shortage, which restricted the size of all newspapers. The local “Scottish Catholic Observer” suffered from this, and from it went the rather pleasant prewar way in which it described weddings. For instance, :
” A wedding of great interest took place in St
Patrick’s Anderston on Thursday morning when Joseph, eldest
son of Mr and Mrs James Kelly, of 17 McIntyre Street,
Anderston, was joined in holy matrimony to Alice Moira,
eldest daughter of Mr and Mrs John McKerrell, 39
McIntyre Street. The ceremony was performed with
Nuptial Mass by Rev. Father Lynch.
The bride, who was a well-known member of
the choir, looked charming in a pretty dress of duck egg
blue georgette, embroidered with powder blue silk, with
flounced skirts and puffed sleeves, with straw hat to
match. In place of the usual bouquet, the bride carried a
missal. The bridesmaid, Miss Annie McKerrell,M.A.,sister
of the bride, wore a beautiful dress of floral ninon, having
a coatee with puffed sleeves and a silver lace bodice and a
large picture hat of blue. She also carried a missal.”

As well as this, there followed the entire guest list, and therefore a wonderful souvenir of the occasion. In an era in which the Sacrament of Matrimony is under attack from some remarkably bizarre angles, perhaps the Catholic press might consider reviving this treatment of one of the Church’s most important Sacraments.

Teilhard de Chardin and Cardinal Sarah

17 Sunday Jul 2016

Posted by jimmyk1967 in Religious

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Cardinal Robert Sarah, catholic conservative blogs, Teilhard de Chardin, the end of the Tridentine priesthood

Teilhard de Chardin conceived the idea of Omega Point, a maximum level of complexity and consciousness to which he believed the universe was evolving. Well, if you’ve still to finish decorating the back bedroom or cleaning out the car- relax. Judging by some churchmen, this may not be for a week or two.
We’re doing this blog without having looked at the response to last week’s, but we are geared up to cope with any number of congratulations on how well we sussed out Cardinal Robert Sarah , as the comment from the Vatican showed. The expression ‘slapped down’ has been freely used. As a priest pointed out in the Tablet;’When we stopped muttering Latin over infants and over couples on their wedding day, and over corpses, we did more than make the prayers intelligible. We said we belong to the same world as the rest of you.’ He adds ’We need to ask if our notion of God is inspired by looking outside of our world and mediated by the priest who stands between God and us. That was certainly an important part of the Tridentine theology of worship, expressed by the spatial arrangement the cardinal is promoting, ‘ This point, you must agree, is most beautifully made. We borrow it with acknowledgments to the Tablet.
Spielberg’s otherwise superb ’A Bridge of Spies’ contained several scenes which we found unspielberglike. We checked on Wikipedia, to find that he was – inexplicably- assisted by the famous Coen Brothers, there apparently to pick out the humourous aspect of nuclear annihilation in 1961. Having been there at the time, we found this a demanding concept to grasp. Anyway, although the Church is functioning and no more ,due to the shortage of people permitted to provide the Eucharist, there is also a humourous- if unintentional- aspect to this. Practically the next day , a blog , that of a Catholic clergyman, leapt into action to defend the good cardinal. Apparently under the assumption that those of its readers who were not Tridentine priests needed help, it provided two drawings, in sets of two. One was a priest facing the congregation with a crucifix at his back. One was a priest with his back to the congregation facing the crucifix. We have to sympathise here with Catholic apologists who have spent years of their lives assuring non-Catholics that we don’t worship statues- even crucifixes. For particularly dense lay readers of the blog, the other pair was of a bus. In one, the driver was driving the bus and looking ahead. But in the other, he was driving the bus with his back to the road. Talk about putting your cards on the table !
The same blog if we understand it correctly- tears of laughter can so interfere with accurate comprehension- suggests that young Catholics find this attitude to Cardinal Sarah’s suggestion as ‘reactionary’. We’ll leave that with you at the moment. We simply repeat the mantra of this blog, excluding as ever the religious orders.:
Only Tridentine priests can provide the Eucharist. At the moment.
There are now practically no Tridentine priests coming up to do this.
Therefore the Flock cannot receive the Eucharist as Christ commanded.
We have no artists in the group, so we can’t provide a drawing.
But you get it, don’t you?

East, West-it’s the Mass that’s best

10 Sunday Jul 2016

Posted by jimmyk1967 in Religious

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Cardinal Sarah, orientation of churches, que sera sera, the Tridentine priesthood

Blog Sarah
While we were away- and we’re not saying the two are necessarily connected- Cardinal Sarah has been in the headlines of the ecclesiastical press. Cardinal Sarah wishes his name to be pronounced with stress on the second syllable, and he was made a cardinal by Pope Benedict. Anyway, he would like priests to begin celebrating Mass ad orientem, ‘that is facing east rather than the congregation’, the Catholic Herald tells us.
He said we should have confidence that ‘this is something good for the Church, good for our people.’ Having heard once that God doesn’t like families who celebrate the First Communion of a child with a bouncy castle, if we understood correctly, we are a little bit cautious about accepting sweeping statements like that of Cardinal Sarah too quickly. But we have decided that we cannot any longer resist the temptation to say ‘Well, que sarah, sarah’.
But we will point out that the good cardinal’s wish , of course, is going to present many Glasgow parishes with problems. In St Andrew’s Cathedral it means we’ll see the priest’s right profile, and in Our Lady of Perpetual Succour his left. It seems at first sight like business as usual in St Aloysius or St Patrick’s, although how this can be done without facing the congregation is tricky. The priest could do it if he stands at the back of the church, right enough.
‘How shall the world be served ?’ as one of Chaucer’s characters remarks.
This praying to the east is a very old idea, although the great Christian intellectual Origen commented that ‘the reasons for this, I think, are not easily discovered by anyone’ , and this in the fourth century.
St Charles Borromeo – he was like that- said if you’re going to build churches designed for this east thing, then get a compass and do it exactly right. He also said he didn’t care if it had to be done north and south. Even more interestingly, he also said the altar could be at the west end where- and this is the interesting bit- ‘in accordance with the rite of the Church it is customary for Mass to be celebrated at the main altar by a priest facing the people’ . No wonder Wikipedia says that today the custom is ‘little observed’
Cardinal Sarah also remarked that it is essential that priest and faithful look together towards the East, again without saying why. We , on this blog, can hardly let the whole thing go without pointing out that it is also a symbolic representation of the Tridentine priest as leader of the congregation.
That, it has to be accepted even by Cardinal Sarah, was then. This is now.

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