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Category Archives: Religious

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 ?

St Maeve’s and the Pulpit

23 Tuesday Jun 2015

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There were two speakers at Gettysburg, on the day of the famous Address. You can find with difficulty that the other, apart from Abraham Lincoln, was Edward Everett, who wrote to Lincoln to say that in two minutes Lincoln had said more than he did in two hours.
In St Maeve’s, sermons were nothing like as long as in Presbyterian churches, I gather, but long enough. Apparently 25-30 minutes was quite possible. The lengthy sermon nowadays, in my experience, comes from visiting priests from other parts of the Universal Church, an often tenuous grasp of English and its pronunciation providing some compensation.
Over the past year or two, it has been interesting to trace the path of the expression “It does what it says on the tin” from a TV commercial for Ronseal , a wood preservative, to its apotheosis as a universally accepted English idiom. It is one of many expressions which have become part of the very fibre of our being through a 30 second sound-bite. The advertising industry certainly knows what it is about when it comes to passing on a message. One wonders if an organisation with a Message to pass on of somewhat greater significance for the present and future of the human race than the efficacy of a wood preservative can learn from this.
Fortunately, the Archdiocese of Glasgow has had and still has preachers who are on the ball with sermons. I still remember, from twenty years ago, a two sentence sermon, and the first sentence was “Silence is golden”. I am prepared however to accept that there is a happy medium, and that a line could well be drawn. I was present some years ago when a famous member of the staff of St Aloysius Church, Glasgow once read the Gospel, said “I can’t possibly follow that”, and got on with the Mass. Who were we to argue?
But sermons were part of the Church’s after-sales service, which was rather good. It often took the shape of a Mission, a visit from two or three shock-troops, usually from the Redemptorists or Passionists . Spectacular figures though they were in their exotic flowing habits, they were even more spectacular when they started to preach. An Irish writer points out that these two orders were preferred to the Jesuits and the Franciscans in his native parish . The former preached common sense, and the latter charity, qualities which the Irish found rather boring.
It is easy to forget nowadays, when all churches are fitted with a sound-system which often works as well as most sound systems in Glasgow, a city still not privy to any of the technology which allowed Cape Canaveral to talk to the astronaut Collins, behind the moon, forty years ago, that sermons were delivered straight. This may be the historic explanation of why the back of a church still tends to be packed to suffocation while the front is empty. God knows how they trained, but they came to emphasise home truths, which they did with the kind of bellow which could have the Stations of the Cross rocking on the walls, and the holy water slopping over the sides of the stoup.
And these were lads who liked the smell of hell fire in the morning. There was a recent assurance by a Pope that Hell is not a place, but I don’t think this would have fazed them for long. They may well have mentioned the metaphorical nature of eternal flames and the worm which dieth not, but this would probably have disappointed the congregation. Because the surprising thing is that parishes loved missions, and the threat of hell-fire. There was a week for the women, and a week for the men, the church crowded to capacity every night, the missioners during the day and in the early evening visiting as many homes as they could. Naturally, being in the district only for a fortnight, they could afford to be a little more outspoken than the ordinary curates. The congregation might shudder- but they loved it.
What they loved most of all was the final evening, and the renewal of baptismal vows. The church was darkened. Each person held a lit candle, careless handling producing a painful spillage of hot wax , while black ribbons of smoke drifted up to the dark brown heights of the nave. The first response to “Do you renounce the Devil ?” was traditionally found to be unsatisfactory, and repudiated. “Do you renounce the Devil? Louder!”
A mission was a spiritual sauna, which never failed to leave the parish refreshed and invigorated. All we need now, of course, are the congregations and a modern dynamic method of advertising spirituality. These two circumstances may well be connected.

Bishop Leo O’Reilly, June 11th 2015

15 Monday Jun 2015

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Bishop Leo O’Reilly, Pope Francis

The Bishop of Kilmore, Bishop Leo O’Reilly, it is reported in the ‘Catholic Herald ‘ of 11th June 2015, has urged his colleagues to establish a commission to discuss the possibility of ordain9ing married men. It is hoped that the proposal will be discussed at the next meeting of the bishops’ conference in October.

Bishop O’Reilly said :
‘Pope Francis has encouraged individual bishops and bishops’ conferences to be creative in looking at ways to do ministry in the future, so I think we have to consider all options.’

Corpus Christi 2O15

07 Sunday Jun 2015

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General Absolution, priest shortage, the bishops, the Eucharist

We have seen men dance in the dust of the Moon.
We can look into the sub-atomic world, and see particles , some there and absent at the same time, which can communicate with each other instantly over thousands of miles.
We can transplant our hearts, lungs, livers and kidneys, and even replace faces.
We live in the post-Incarnation world, in which Christ has given us His blood to drink, and His Flesh to eat.
And yet we cannot to find a way of providing Them for the Flock in the fifty thousand parishes without priests.
We should remember this week-end all those who are contrite, but who cannot receive absolution or the Eucharist, but who could if valid ordination were extended.
Let us also remember the bishops in our prayers.

Luke: 5:32

31 Sunday May 2015

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Code of Canon law 1917, confession, General Absolution

It doesn’t seem like a year since we visualised on this blog Easter Duties confessions being dispensed via General Absolution to thousands by an elderly priest, supported by two passkeepers, on one of the hills surrounding Glasgow. And of course it might come to that yet, if the megaparish is established as in the U.S. As we’ve already mentioned, the ban on General Absolution unless in certain circumstances is nothing but one of the interesting contributions made to the Church and therefore the provision of the Eucharist by the Canon Law Code of 1917. Try to Google a reason why it’s wrong, and the answer is usually because Canon Law says so. Oh well then, you would be foolish to say. And as we also pointed out earlier, via Fr Ladislas Orsy,SJ, why the insistence on confessing sins auricularly later? If it’s forgiven, it’s forgiven.
Some elderly- who else is there –Catholics will say.”There’s nothing like making a confession to a priest”
To which we will say, firstly, haven’t you been lucky or did you just choose your confessor carefully ? Secondly, since we’re not all saints, and for various human reasons some may find auricular confession uncomfortable. In fact, undoubtedly some would rather not go than do this. You’ll notice we didn’t say we were all sensible. Thirdly, it’s not meant to be a comfortable emotional experience , like a family birthday or a New Year’s Night party. It’s asking for forgiveness for our sins.
We live in a world in which that fairly recent invention, the confessional box, is now used to store the Hoover. People don’t go. (a statistic mentioned recently was 2% of Catholics in the US, but this may require more research) . What can be done to help the rest ask for forgiveness and therefore bring them to the Eucharist ? If General Absolution will do it , does it matter what the Code of Canon Law of 1917 says ? Can anyone say that General Absolution is “not as good” as auricular confession ? We are reminded again of the local headmaster who is reputed to have once said “As Our Lord says, and I must say I think He was right…”
Life goes on, and the world changes exponentially and almost daily in 2015.Not all change is bad. The difference between a contemporary change in the provision of the Eucharist and that found in the early training of our bishops and (some)priests, one which no longer functions , is something which they do not seem to be able to grasp. If this is intellectual, they disappoint us. If this is because of an archaic and self-centred vision of their importance in providing the Eucharist, we are far from being simply disappointed. A wide variety of intellectual and even emotional responses presents itself to us.
People may be being denied the Body and Blood of Christ . Even our respect for the Code of Canon Law (1917), yes, even that, must surely pale into insignificance.

Father O’Flynn- where are you now ?

17 Sunday May 2015

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Father O'Flynn, ordained celebrants, the Eucharist

When the history of the Tridentine secular priest is written decades from now, hopefully by somebody like Bernadette Wong (whom you will remember from past posts) at the New Vatican University in Perth, Australia, to find its place in the Catholic University of Shanghai Library, there will be more than a footnote about Father O’Flynn – the one from the Irish song.
If my readers are unfamiliar with it, the words are on the internet. Father O’Flynn was the ultimate archetypical Irish Catholic priest , an idealisation of the secular priest to the millions of the Irish diaspora all over the world, and to millions more on the “ foreign Missions “.
Younger readers – the word “younger” here is fairly elastic- will remember how quickly Hollywood seized on the meme. Spencer Tracy was perhaps its ultimate archetype, along with Pat O’Brien and even Bing Crosby . I recommend “Hollywood Priests” on Google. We must not forget Ingrid Bergman and Deborah Kerr as Hollywood nuns. Karl Malden as Father Barry, SJ, in “ On The Waterfront” , of course, moved the image forward into social action, and occasionally a tougher kind of priest appeared , like the immortal Charles Bickford as Canon Peyramale in “The Song of Bernadette”.
But even then Ward Bond, as the parish priest in “The Quiet Man”, capable of “ reading out names in the Mass” (and I quote) also appeared. According to any police procedural TV series ever made, there was also a type of nun, immortalised even locally in Glasgow, as a “Sister Mary Carnaptious”, whose quick-draw with a ruler over the knuckles helped to form many a good policeman.
Ironically, as many local journalists would say, even when they actually mean ironically, we have to remember again the song. It said, “Father O’Flynn, had a wonderful way with him /All the younger children were running to play with him”. As a certain type of twitterer might say, now they are running away from him. All Catholics except unfortunately possibly some Catholic priests, are aware of what a permanent stain the paedophile priests have left on the Tridentine priesthood.
But apart even from that, there was another kind of Hollywood Catholic priest. There was the Farley Granger and Henry Fonda kind of Catholic priest, admittedly tortured and disturbed by confessional and persecution problems , but probably not a bundle of fun in any case.
Our point is this. There are still Tridentine priests whose wonderful dynamic personalities can dynamically invigorate their parishioners. Some will say that if ordination is extended to parish congregations, we may lose something. But how many of them are there ? Was the accident of an outgoing and extrovert personality at any point mentioned during the Last Supper? How many of us every Sunday had a very different kind of parish priest from Spencer Tracy or Bing Crosby ? Fill in the spaces to suit yourselves. Yes, old Canon Whatsit, and his like, although he means well, etc, etc.
But does it matter ?
What matters is the provision of the Eucharist for the Flock, and the transformation of the world which would ensue . That its provision would benefit from that by the personality of a used car salesman manqué is interesting, but irrelevant . Perhaps indeed a used car salesman might be more effective, in some ways, in terms of persuasion techniques, people being what we are.
The point is that the world needs the Eucharist. It is not being provided at the moment by the Tridentine priest .
Why can’t the Flock be allowed to receive the Eucharist, even if it means the provision of duly Ordained
Celebrants from every Catholic parish , even if they are car mechanics, or shopkeepers, or bricklayers ?
Why can’t we receive the Body and Blood of Christ ?

a

The Scottish Bishops Is it Deja Vu once more ?

10 Sunday May 2015

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Pope Francis, Scottish Bishops, Scottish Reformation, the next Pope

We noted recently that Pope Francis said he wasn’t feeling too good. Well, we all know the feeling
The “Letter from Rome “ in this week’s “Tablet “,quotes a member of the Italian bishops’ conference , which we take the liberty of quoting in turn. “There is a kind of clerical magma, lying passively underground, waiting to see in which direction the wind will blow.” The author adds “To put it brutally, these are willing time to pass quickly, and looking forward to seeing who will be next to occupy the Chair of Peter”. Next day we came across the details of yet another dreadful Scottish clerical scandal from 2012, thanks, of course, only to the files of a local newspaper, which we had unaccountably missed.
Next time the Chair is vacant , we can visualise three possibilities. First, a “pope of transition”, hopefully however with the guts of Emeritus Pope Benedict. Secondly, another John Paul II . We’ll leave it at that, but definitely a champagne party for the bishops. Thirdly, an even more dynamic Pope than Pope Francis, who could easily , if he felt like it, and overnight at that by email, order all bishops over 45 to resign immediately to ensure that ordination would be extended and the Eucharist provided for thousands.
Some would cry “schism !” It wouldn’t be, of course. The only schism would be if the bishops refused to go, as the Catholic Catechism tells us .
One speculates as to how this would affect the Church in Scotland . Would anyone really be distressed except possibly a few of the rapidly shrinking oldest generation of Catholics ? The other two generations might well see such a change as a very badly needed transfusion of new blood . That is, if they have not been turned off completely by now.
The care taken to ensure that children and grandchildren receive the first four Sacraments suggests that these battered and bruised generations are doggedly determined to ensure that Catholicism in Scotland continues.
A nightmare scenario for apparently all but the Scottish bishops , however, would be if they have been turned off completely. In police argot, Scottish bishops have form in their persistent refusal to pay attention to the needs and concerns of their flocks. We draw the attention of the Scottish episcopate to the historical notes in the annual handbook “The Western Catholic Calendar : “ There were few countries in the 16th century religious reformation in which the eclipse of the Catholic Church seemed so quickly accomplished and so totally effective as in Scotland”.
Well, it makes you think. Catholics in Scotland in 2015, are like Catholics everywhere else hanging on despite enormous pressure from secularism and changing values, but unlike Catholics everywhere operating in a grand guignol scenario in which the only response from their bishops is silence, and a refusal to listen to the Pope’s offers to extend ordination .
It makes you think. Will it make Scottish bishops think before, possibly, it is too late?

Well there now !

04 Monday May 2015

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celibate parish supported clergy, the Eucharist

In his pastoral letter promoting vocations, Archbishop Cushley of St Andrew’s and Edinburgh, has pointed out that without priests there would be no Eucharist, and without the Eucharist there would be no Church.

That’s good ! We’re getting somewhere !

As the poet Julia Abigail Fletcher Carney(1823-1908) once pointed out :
“Little drops of water, little grains of sand,
Make a mighty ocean, and a beauteous land ”

Could it be that it is gradually getting through that a method of providing the Eucharist for the Flock is absolutely vital? Eventually ! At last !

Maybe in the near future- who knows- could there be somewhere, somehow, just possibly, some realisation that the secular clergy, celibate,parish supported, is not the only method of providing the Eucharist ?

Vocations Sunday? Oh, come on !

26 Sunday Apr 2015

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Pope Francis, the bishops, vocations

We’ve lost touch with how precisely Vocations Sundays pastoral letters, etc, target candidates, largely due to trying to keep a straight face, it must be said. The Archdiocese of Glasgow has 2 students in Rome, and two mothballed seminaries. Pope Francis, like all really clever Jesuits, can say what he wants to without actually saying it. As readers of this blog may just be aware, he has offered on several occasions to reassess the status of the secular priest, as well as having actually changed it for the Eastern Church in January. We think it fair to say therefore that To Feed The Flock and Pope Francis are united in not expecting prayers for vocations to result in hundreds suddenly queuing up anywhere to join secular priest seminaries in August 2015. Without attempting to sound Apocalyptic, we assure you, given the statutory five or six year clerical education , the spiritual apathy of Europe and its response to the march of aggressive Islam, it is too late for that.
Instead Pope Francis pointed us last week to vocation as “an attitude of conversion and transformation, an incessant moving forward, a passage from death to life like that celebrated in every liturgy, an experience of Passover”. The journey, he points out is God’s work as “He leads us beyond our initial situation, frees us from every enslavement, breaks down our habits and our indifference and brings us to the joy of communion with Him and with our brothers and sisters.”
Does he possibly suggest here that the “conversion and transformation” of vocation could be extended beyond ordination to the episcopacy, to accepting the necessity of change ?
When will the Church’s bishops accept that it is no longer possible, or right, or ultimately Christian to deny the Eucharist to so many hundreds of thousands of the faithful unless through the medium of a celibate and parish supported priesthood ?

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