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Tag Archives: vocations

Lemons and Lizards

22 Sunday Nov 2015

Posted by jimmyk1967 in Religious

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priesthood in the Gospels, vocations

In Glasgow’s Vocations drive, Archbishop Tartaglia (Tablet October 30) refers to his sense of surprise and delight from working as a priest. His Vocations Director, Fr Ross Campbell, refers to ‘the joy and privilege’ of the priesthood, and elsewhere says ‘the Eucharist animates our ministry as priests and sustains us in our pastoral service’.
We mentioned these pious aspirations last week, and could not disagree. Especially since they were delivered by Scottish churchmen. And believe us, that’s important !
We do have a problem with them however, which a letter to the ‘Tablet’ threw into relief. This is a code expression for running round the room throwing movable objects at the walls. We are unable to find the thing as we write , in the Tablet Letters Extra section, which is found only on the internet, and where it was. This has done nothing at all for the walls.
Its burden or gist ( and so much for Roget ) is that it’s great to see a celibate priest getting on with the priesthood . It makes you appreciate the thing as a kind of triumph of the human spirit.
Correct us if we are wrong, but we do not see the Tridentine priesthood as a corporate identity becoming an entry into the Guinness Book of Triumph of the Human Spirit Records. The priesthood is not about priests. It is there to provide the Eucharist. And that’s it. As the Orangeman on a train to the Field once remarked to a quizzing foreigner unable to understand the theological complexities of an Orange Walk, ‘read your Bible !’
The computer- and how the original compilers could have used one- provides us with many free examples of concordances to the Bible. Idly looking at references to the ‘chief priests’ in one of these, and their hostility to Christ and his Message, a thought occurred to us. If for instance , at random, surreal though it may be, it were imagined that ‘lemons’ or even ’lizards’ had played any kind of part in His Death and Crucifixion, is it likely that a single lemon tree would have survived on the surface of the earth , or a lizard beneath it ? Tragically, anti-semitism proves the point.
But we still have ‘chief priests’. And we did say it was surreal. But it’s worth thinking about.
Why can’t the world get 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.. ?’

Vocations Sunday? Oh, come on !

26 Sunday Apr 2015

Posted by jimmyk1967 in Religious

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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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