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Tag Archives: Scottish Bishops

Why Can’t We All Get The Eucharist?

13 Sunday Aug 2017

Posted by jimmyk1967 in Religious

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celibacy, Scottish Bishops, Teenagers

We mentioned last week the problems which the ordinary Catholic can meet daily in the bizarre and mysterious hothouse religious atmosphere of 21st century Scotland. We have considerable respect for our fellow Christians , whether or not they would wish it of course. Given the propensity of many of our ministers of religion , it is only natural that ‘paedo ‘ is now apparently an accepted anti-Catholic insult. This at least makes a kind of sense, since it has superseded ‘Fenian’, a reference to an outdated Irish political movement, notable only really for its tendency to use pubs as strategic planning centres.
We repeat our view that anti-Catholicism still exists in 2017 only because of the psychological phenomenon known colloquially as ‘kick the cat’, explicable against a background of extensive immigration frequently with an alien and intense religious infrastructure ,adverse comment on which, should it exist, of course, is actually illegal. .
Last week we highlighted the problems of the ordinary Catholic at work and possibly on his way home from it. But that in a sense is only a detail. What about when he or she actually gets home, to a young or teenage family ?
Here we have once more to comment briefly on celibacy, that church regulation, with no doctrinal significance, which was founded to prevent the families of married clergymen a thousand years ago from selling off church buildings , the ruins of which in 2017 dot Europe. From the Pope downwards, excluding possibly St. Pope John Paul II’s relationship , however chaste, with another man’s wife which may have just given him an inkling , the average Catholic priest knows nothing about the family life of a married Catholic. This cannot be emphasised enough, although if we are given the strength, we will give our best to do so, we assure you.
No matter how saintly the Tridentine priest, he knows nothing about being the father of a family. To avoid the possibility of misunderstanding, we repeat that the word is ‘Nothing. ‘
The only thing that the average Catholic father of a teenage family can be sure of is the message of Christ. He has had twenty years or so of avoiding the gaze of his young family when a paedophile priest appears , as is practically universal in the middle of a TV drama. But he will have done his best, as the fathers of Catholic families do, to ensure that his family has been baptised , confirmed and received the Eucharist . These occasions will have been marked, always, by a church service, and continue to be so, although ridiculed as being ‘bouncy castle Catholicism’. Although why the reception of the Eucharist should not be welcomed and made a landmark in the life of the child even if a bouncy castle is involved is entirely a matter of conscience for those who object.
Christ in the Eucharist is still the centre of their lives, and they show this by making It the centre of their very difficult attempts to carry on their loyalty – and affection- to Him.
It is a simple matter of fact that at no time in the history of the entire world has it been more possible for any section of the community to be under more pressure than the Catholic teenager.
The Augustine legacy of sexuality as evil, although a natural biological impulse , is meaningless to the world of social media in which they live. And how can we expect them to make sense of this, , without any guidance from spiritual leadership enmeshed in the Augustine nonsense ?
Obviously, there is money in sex, and every possible method of making this is utilised in making it .
How the parent of a young Catholic family can make a distinction between this constant and attractive input of informative data and living a life as Christ wished us to is as near as impossible .
And yet they do their best , despite the apparent inability of their priests to join them.
A recent investigation into the WWI history of one of our grandparents, in the Royal Irish Rifles, revealed the regimental motto of ‘Quis Separabit ?’ a motto beloved of many Irish groups, misused often for political reasons.
Its validity is none the less unaffected. It means ‘Who Shall Divide Us From the Love of Christ ? ‘
Those who run To Feed The Flock, like those who run countless other blogs and websites throughout the world, have attended Holy Thursday services, accept that the purpose of the Incarnation was to provide the world with the ultimate gift, that of the Eucharist, which would transform our lives and the world itself with all its blazing implications.
Unfortunately providing the Eucharist has been for a thousand years or so largely in the hands of a section of the Church, celibate, over-stuffed with theology and supported by a parish, and bizarrely reluctant to extend providing the Eucharist to others, although nowadays largely defunct, and unwilling to do so. And worse still, thanks to paedophily and its cover ups, not being listened to at all. The question of ‘Quis Separabit ?’ is being answered daily.
Why cannot our bishops extend the provision of the Eucharist to parishioners all over the world ? Why cannot the bishops of Scotland accept the invitation of our Pope Francis to discuss this ?
Why, when the smoke clears away, do they condone our separation from the love of Christ?

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.. ?’

The Scottish Bishops Is it Deja Vu once more ?

10 Sunday May 2015

Posted by jimmyk1967 in Religious

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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?

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