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Tag Archives: Glasgow

Aye, aye,Sir? No, No,Sir !

05 Sunday Jul 2015

Posted by jimmyk1967 in Religious

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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 ?

Death- and St Maeve’s

01 Sunday Mar 2015

Posted by jimmyk1967 in Religious

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Glasgow, Glasgow Irish

Our elderly parishioner of St Maeve’s sends the following:
On a school trip, I had been thrilled by all the sights and sounds of Paris, which , like any visitor there, I have never forgotten. And it was not all visiting churches, although there is one I do remember, Ste Odile’s, I think. It had the parish hall underneath it, the part under the altar being kept for corpses lying overnight for a funeral service next day. I didn’t know if Apache dancers really existed in Paris, but remembering how easily even eightsome reels at parish ceilidhs could degenerate into aerobatics, it could have been that resting in peace in this parish might exclude being struck by a flying brunette. Wakes in Glasgow were handled much better.
When I was about ten, my grandmother McKerrell’s best pal, Mrs Fox, died. All I remember of Mrs Fox, alive, was an always warm and welcoming smile for her pal’s first grandson. Many may feel nowadays- if they’ve never watched some children’s TV cartoons, that is- that I was too young to be exposed to the fact of death. But it happened then, and my grandmother obviously chose that wake with some care. I don’t know now what Mrs Fox died of, but as I came into the room where she lay in her coffin, still with the same smile which I knew so well from afternoon visits and cups of tea, I got the message. Mrs Fox had died; her soul was in heaven; but her body was still here for a while; and she didn’t look at all as if the whole thing had been any kind of a problem.
This was possible, of course, only because her body looked quite unaffected by death. I have since been at wakes where my grandmother would never have let me see the body. My father suffered all his life from what we would now call insecurity. In old age, he was inclined to attribute this not just to seeing such a corpse as a child, but being held over the coffin to kiss it.
The wake was one of the very few Irish customs which survived emigration, although in a much tamer form. Death, given the working and living conditions in nineteenth century Glasgow, was very familiar indeed to the Glasgow Irish. The modern euphemism for a funeral service is to call it “a celebration of the life of…”.An earlier generation with an Irish background may have misunderstood exactly what “celebration” means here, but were perfectly happy with their own version. Because there was a celebratory element, shall we say.
The Irish and the Highlanders were not going to let a twelve hour working day in Glasgow inhibit their sociability. Weddings were important. My great-grandfather was self-employed as a blacksmith, and his lasted for three days, until a misunderstanding about the expression “best man”, the guests simply appearing as they got off work. Funerals were just as important, and could also last , given our climate, for three days. Inevitably there were refreshments, sometimes card schools and , less often than in Irish and Irish-American wakes, a little horseplay.
Enter the Man Who Was Barred From Wakes, who operated mostly in the north of the city, as meek looking a wee man as you would ask for at a funeral. He would move respectfully to the open coffin, break down in a paroxysm of grief over the deceased, and attach a loop of linen thread to a finger. He would then unobtrusively pay out the thread, and sit at the side of the room until late in the evening or early in the morning, pull the cord and shout “Look!” There was a tendency to make for the exits. At one wake, two country cousins, unaccustomed to tenement life, chose to do this by the window, which was unfortunately two stories up.
Death as a social phenomenon made itself known to the Glasgow Irish household in the simplest possible but most irrelevant terms: the trestles appeared. Polished wooden triangular structures, in their very functionalism they indicated an impersonal and therefore terrifying attitude to death, by their irrelevance to everyday life. I mean who needs trestles in a room and kitchen? Morning-coated acolytes would close the room door for a short time-their very intrusion into the family home indicating in itself the presence of another world- and then the coffin was open to inspection.
Until quite recently in Glasgow, before it became the custom to have the body remain in the undertaker’s parlour, the old, traditional wake was statutory. A running buffet, at morning rolls on corned beef, cheese, tomato and scrambled egg sandwiches level was kept going for a day or two, and an extensive range of alcoholic refreshments, none of this doing any harm at all, and ,if nothing else, keeping the relatives of the dead person distracted from their grief.
The evening rosary was the watershed of the evening, but eventually it would be time for the “screwing down”. When the final rosary had finished, there was the first movement of the coffin, which was to the church, where it normally lies overnight. In a few Glasgow parishes, where there was a church with a bell-tower, there was a knell, and a procession behind the hearse. At any rate, there would be the moment when the coffin would be hoisted on the shoulders of the chief mourners, its edges remarkably sharp on the shoulders, the close contact with it sometimes bringing a quite powerful whiff of corruption, then the slow movement up the aisle to where the coffin would lie before the altar.
This could involve a movement up external steps in the older churches, always a crisis point for the undertaker’s helpers. I don’t know of any occasions where the mourners actually dropped the coffin, but there is one case where the professional integrity of the undertaker was found wanting in the most spectacular way: the bottom vertical panel fell out, and the shrouded corpse slid out, like some latter day Lazarus, to bump its way down the stairs, for a last unexpected visit to the main road, through a crowd of instantly and spectacularly prayerful mourners.

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