Why The Flock Is Still Not Being Fed

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The leading theological controversy at the moment is, of course, the problem of the divorced , remarriage and the Eucharist. Let us hope their deliberations are focused clearly on the partner who is abandoned with a family but remarried, and compelled to bring up the family without the help of the Eucharist.
And the world goes on, still without any attempt by Tridentine bishops and clergy to take up the Pope’s invitation to discuss the ordination of parishioners to provide the Eucharist and the other Sacraments , thus depriving hundreds of thousands of it.
What possible explanations can they give , having dedicated their lives to providing It ?
1. Do they feel that not having five or six years of theological education is a disqualification despite any Gospel mention of this?
2. Do they assume that the sense of ‘vocation’ which would lead a parishioner to ‘stand for election’ is less acceptable than their own , especially given the spectacular failure of a clerical education to validate this, as the paedophily has so clearly demonstrated ?
3. Do they think that somehow the toxic damage done to the Tridentine priesthood , albeit by a small percentage of their number ,is ever going to go away?
4. Can they not deduce that the shortage of numbers tells us that no one wants to join them, and that the Eucharist is not being provided as a result?
5. Do they feel that they gave up a family life, and that ordained parishioners are getting away without doing this?
6. Do they still see themselves as an Alter Christus , and fail to understand that a validly ordained taxi-driver , a newsagent, or an IT technician could provide the Eucharist , as if the Apostolic Succession were in some way deficient in those cases?
To accept that a lifetime’s work –although gone into with a genuine love of Christ and the desire to do His work – is now in 2017 no longer needed or respected must, of course ,be devastating.
We must not forget in our prayers to remember them.

cardinal offence

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We have survived an ingenious attempt to murder us by an induced spike of very high blood pressure. Or, of course, it might just have been produced buy stupidity. Or the inability to read.
Anyway, it was said of us ‘Are they still trying to get married priests ?’ Yes, us.
As our readers know, we’d sooner found the Square Wheel Society of Great Britain, or the Chocolate Teapot Association.
We are for two things: the first is the extension of ordination beyond the present limits of celibacy, six years of theology and parish support, so that the Eucharist can be provided for the Flock.
The second is for China to become part of the Church, with the same result.
This leads us to Cardinal Zen, former archbishop of Hong Kong,. Now 85, he had to run for his life during the Mao era in China. He certainly knows what he is talking about when it comes to Communist persecution, and has been a fearless and outspoken critic of the regime throughout his life.
He now, unfortunately, reminds us of the old general in the film of ‘The Four Feathers’ for whom every meal was an opportunity to fight the battle of Balaclava yet again , thirty years later, with knives, spoons and the sugar bowl.
As ever, we have someone else who does not realise that this is 2017, and once again the Code of Canon Law of 1917 appears. In China, there is the underground church and the state controlled church. Both have validly ordained bishops. But Cardinal Zen believes that any attempt to allow the state controlled church to nominate bishops is for some reason a betrayal of the underground church , although such nomination was common practice in Europe for hundreds of years.
Against a background of the most delicate and Byzantinely complex nature of the negotiations going on at present with the Chinese government, his language is negative and essentially adversarial- ‘betrayal’; selling’,’capitulation’. It is interesting that we have not heard much from the underground church on how it feels about the rest of China being able to join the Church; they might not see it as a selling out but as a glorious passing on of belief , as the early Christians must have felt when they were allowed to leave the catacombs.
The Cardinal is on record , in November 2016, as saying he would rather have no bishops than fake bishops., Even Code of Canon Law (1917) fans must feel that we are now wildly over the top. Since the bishops of the state controlled church are validly ordained, if ‘illicitly’, i.e. without the permission of the Curia ,this is really not just an actual challenge Canon Law but denies the Apostolic Succession.
All we can do is remember him in our prayers, and hope that there are not too many like him in the Chinese Government.
The Church exists to provide the Eucharist for the Flock. Anything, positively or negatively which prevents it from doing so is denying Christ’s imperative at the Last Supper.

Frank Carson- Still Sorely Missed

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Archbishop Antonio Mennini, the Apostolic Nuncio to Great Britain, is returning to take up a post at the Vatican. Archbishop Mennini was ordained by Cardinal Poletti in 1974. His episcopal consecration was undertaken by Cardinal Ruini, and JeanLouis Tauran, ,SecretAry for Relations with State. He was born into a Roman family with strong links to the Roman See. His father was managing Director of the Vatican Bank; one of his brothers is a public prosecutor. He has served the Vatican in Uganda, Turkey, Bulgaria , Russia and Uzbekistan.
He was a St John Paul II appointee as Bishop. While we can, of course, be sure that neither his family connection nor his professional relationship with the Vatican will have affected his judgment in any way, in any given situation, he is certainly a Curia man /to the bone.
There will be idle speculation as to why his experiences in Uganda, Turkey, Bulgaria, Russia and Uzbekistan made him just the man for Great Britain, but this is irrelevant. After all, Bruno Heim picked Cardinal O’Brien as a bishop, after a lot of time in Egypt and Finland. Then Luigi Barbarito picked Bishop Roddy Wright, after a lot of experience in Senegal, Niger and Haiti. There was no speculation about the relevance of all this to choosing bishops for Scotland in the Catholic press , although to be fair, due to holidays we might have missed an edition or two of the ‘Scottish Catholic Observer’.
The omission of comment on what seems a bizarre method of choosing bishops for a country rather than leaving this to the country does suggest, possibly, a tolerance of Curia whim. We are reminded of ‘Cuckoo’, a game played by Czarist/Soviet army officers, when well-oiled in the mess. The lights were put out, and a revolver was fired into the darkness, to cries of ‘Cuckoo!’
On the other hand, this may all have been a prescient venture into the benefits of diversity, not all of which, it must be said, are as yet immediately apparent.
The concept of an ambitious prelate has been for those of us brought up on sermons about humility, a difficult one to grasp, not to mention the lack of transparency about financial matters and the secrecy about clerical sexual adventurism at all levels. It may not have been ambition which has prevented the bishops of Scotland at any point, as far as we know, to ask the Curia if it has even heard of Drumchapel and Drumnadrochit and their different pastoral needs, never mind why poor Archbishop Mennini was asked to transfer his experiences in Bulgaria and Uzbekistan to these very different areas. Who knows? We are sure he did his best.
Anyway, Archbishop Tartaglia has thanked him conventionally and no doubt genuinely. But one phrase he uses may well ring down through the ages. He thanks him for ‘his readiness to convey the specific reality of the Catholic Church to the Holy See’
If Archbishop Mennini does this, he will undoubtedly spoil the morning coffee that day for the Holy See, since we must assume they don’t know this already. Mustn’t we? We wish him more strength to his elbow. The results should be stimulating, and we certainly hope he managed to get a copy of Fr Despard’s silenced book on his Kindle before it was removed. Our only regret is his failure to answer our respectful letter to him in 2014 on the extension of ordination, despite our certificate of recorded delivery.

Curia ‘face’ or Chinese Faith?

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‘In China there are two Catholic Churches . One is the State controlled Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association with its big places of worship in the major cities. ,the other is the persecuted Catholic Church which exists in the backstreets and hidden places of the provinces. It’s obvious to me which one has Jesus present within it.’
I quote from a recent journalistic comment on the Church and China. While congratulating the writer on his personal confidence, it has to be said that there is a fundamental flaw in his observations. The flaw is that bishop members of the Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association , state controlled though they may be, are validly ordained bishops according to the Apostolic Succession . To deny them the powers of a bishop is to deny the Apostolic Succession., even if they have little influence in the’ backstreets and hidden places of the provinces’.
This year is the centenary of the code of rules and regulations for the governance of the Church, formulated by Cardinal Gasperri and Eugenio Pacelli , which is known as Canon Law. Among its many rules and regulations is that which insists that the choice of bishops has to be approved by the Pope.
As comparatively recently as 1829, the Pope appointed only 24 out of 646 bishops in the Latin Church .Any tinpot monarch , duke or margrave had the right to disapprove , but in 2017 possibly the most powerful country in the world must await the approval of a few Vatican civil servants in the smallest country in the world , while untold millions of Chinese hungry for the Eucharist , the other sacraments and a spiritual life , made available to them by Christ’s own imperative .
But of course that can’t compete with Canon Law.

The Pope and the Mouldy Maltesers

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A few years ago, the Lawrence Berkeley National Labs turned on their 27$ electron microscope. It can measure half the width of a hydrogen atom.
Even with its assistance, I doubt if I could find anything in the coverage of the Knights of Malta by an element of the Catholic Press in Britain of the slightest interest or significance And that even before we noticed the importance in this matter given to Cardinal Burke.
Like the good cardinal himself, this organisation is a medieval accretion , well past its sell-by and of debatable importance in the first place. We can see how he enjoys the company, mind you. The Knights tend to go into uniforms in a big way. One of them is in the news wearing a chestful of gear which would make an old-fashioned cinema commissionaire think twice, and which would fit beautifully into a Ruritanian operetta. But then, so, of course would, Cardinal Burke . Not just because of the cheap melodrama, but because of the famous 22 feet long cappa magna which you can see on Google at any time.
But who cares? Although one must ask why a section of the Catholic Press cares , and ask it loud and long.
Pope Francis has more to do. It was a bit worrying when it was reported that he was looking at letting married priests in Brazil back in, but there were reports of schism in that area not long ago, and he knows what he is doing .
There are two things he might care to consider, sooner rather than later.
One is clarifying at last the Church’s policy on family limitation, and reducing Pope Paul VI to the footnote in history where he belongs.
The other – and how obviously it follows on- is to remove from Canon Law the ridiculous necessity after General Absolution to find a priest and have sins forgiven twice. If you can find a priest of course.
The exercise of power, some have said, is the curse of the Tridentine priesthood. Just google ‘General Absolution’ some time, and note the frenzied hysteria with which the idea of losing the feeling-yes, the feeling- of giving absolution is greeted. That feeling-yes, the feeling- seems to be what really counts.
Anyway, it is now nearly a year since the BBC revealed in full detail- and sometimes you have to wonder if it really knows what good it does- that in St Pope John Paul II we had a pope who was madly in love with another man’s wife. And yet the Church still stands, and life goes on. Who knows what writers are working hard to draw parallels between STJPII’s more bizarre pronouncements and his complex emotional life ?
We have every intention of preempting them . Watch this space !

Should Auld Acquaintance Be Forgot ? In A Sense, Yes!

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Is it possible that the many blogs like ours are getting through ? Well yes, but just perceptibly , judging by two letters in this week’s ‘Tablet’.
One, from the Movement for Married Clergy, refers to ‘the diminishing diocesan clergy’. But it then advocates ‘admitting mature married men to the priesthood’, ‘mature’ here being coy code for ‘elderly’, we feel. Another letter on the same theme suggests adds ‘perhaps retired’ where ordination has been extended, but rightly wonders if ‘years of study and extended training’ are really necessary?
What is it with this confining the provision of the Eucharist to a few, this time the old ? We defy them to find any kind of restriction in Christ’s Eucharistic imperative. But above all- what age?
It must be remembered that the Church has lost two generations at least. So they should be talking to twenty-somethings. Twenty somethings, human experience tells us, are not normally particularly interested in old men. This probably applies particularly to Catholic twenty- somethings, with their burden of clerical dirty old men, selfish old men who covered up, and silent old men in episcopates who refuse to listen to Pope Francis’s invitation to consider extending ordination , and therefore prevent so many from receiving the Eucharist. We chose the word ’burden’ carefully, because the pederast priests will always be a cancer in their spiritual lives, a barrier to creating a sense of spirituality within their adolescent families, and a barrier, sometimes of bafflement and sometimes of spite, between them and neighbours and those in the workplace.
And ‘mature’ doesn’t make sense given the usual ‘Ah, but’ of those who try to use so-called ‘tradition’ as a weapon. Some look back- and ‘nostalgia’ doesn’t do it justice for intensity – to the good old days when umpteen priests were ordained every June . And they were all about 25 years old ! Were they all stored away like wine to mature? As we say in the West of Scotland, that will be right ! In many a parish, one could easily be crushed underfoot in the rush to receive the young priest’s blessing, accepted by many as primus inter pares.
(I halt to remind you that nobody in To Feed The Flock is under 80 years of age)
Why should those who provide the Eucharist have to be old, or celibate, or well-educated in theology, or have to be anything else ? Why should anyone deliberately, for any human reason, create a barrier of any kind between the blazing incandescent gift of the Eucharist through the Incarnation and the rest of the human race ? How do those that do sleep at night?
But it is Christmas, and we do try show that we have accepted its message, and are above all charitable. . To Feed The Flock humbly asks you to share our prayers that those who through whatever fault-line in human frailty , be it some pathetic distortion of the importance of professional solidarity, be it through some even more pathetic loyalty to an institution, be it a sense of personal insecurity in a rapidly changing world, be it incipient senility, or simply stupidity, may accept the validity of ordination through the Apostolic Succession and let parishioners provide the Eucharist for the Flock.

A Merry Christmas to all our readers.

What makes Bishops Tick?

The Oxford Dictionary has chosen ‘post-truth’ as the international word of the year. It refers to a situation in which objective facts are cast aside in favour of appeal to the emotions.
And here we have just the very word for the response for far too many of the world’s bishops to the needs of the Church , not to mention their response to Pope Francis.
Let’s ask the Bishops to look at their relationship with Pope Francis factually then in terms of emotion..
Fact: he is the Pope even if you don’t like him. Don’t ask us to choose- he hasn’t . Yet.
Emotions : Irritation at the way he seems to dance around various situations. Although you were irritated by him from the start , possibly although ridiculously because he came from a religious order. And it was the Society of Jesus. So don’t blame him now he’s got into his dancing stride , irritating though it may be.
Frustration, because he wasn’t Pope John come back to life to reward you again for the loyalty which you so clearly demonstrated to him before being appointed bishops .
Anger, because he may be a threat to the Code of Canon Law which has been such a comfort and support to bishops in 2016, even if it was put together in the very different world of 1917. Test this with newspapers. Find one dated 1917, and one of today’s.
Fear, because has allowed the Eastern Church to permit Extended Ordination to married laymen. The professional solidarity of the Tridentine priesthood is therefore revealed as just professional solidarity and quite irrelevant to Christ and the Incarnation itself .( And in any case,disturbingly similar to many other examples of professional solidarity) . He has made it clear, as Pope in the Apostolic Succession, that a taxi driver, a store manager or an IT technician of the Eastern Church can Feed The Flock just as well as any Tridentine priest.
Other emotions , and/or our interpretation of them might lead us to being uncharitable.
A simple answer to the post-truth episcopate versus the Pope –I know it’s boring, boring always banging on about them- can be found in the Gospels where Christ meets the Samaritan woman,.
Let’s take another post-truth Episcopal situation. There are now not enough Tridentine priests to continue the provision of the Eucharist for the Flock. There will not ever again be enough to do this. Neither should there be, objectively. The last two –or perhaps three- generations of Catholics and most tragically the youngest have repudiated the Tridentine priesthood, always now defined for them even more tragically in terms of pederasty first and foremost. But the post-truth mindset moves into emotional gear when ordained laymen are considered as the very obvious solution to the Flock being denied the Eucharist. What emotions are involved?
Nostalgia, surely, although it has been accurately defined as a form of intellectual cancer. Ah, those were the days when whatever drives the elderly episcopate was functioning freely. A world in which a look at the index of Canon Law could solve all their problems , if not those of the Flock , of course. Anger, at upset apple-carts ? And ,to be charitable, possibly even frustration at being here just before a time when the Church may change, and for the better .
It is here that Cardinal Burke’s Gang of Four may serve some useful purpose. Some may see them simply as old men who, after a lifetime of never being frustrated or contradicted, feel suddenly insecure. Others may see their activities merely as rancid and embittered politicking . Who knows? We have our view, but all Pope Francis has done , in an interview with the Italian Catholic newspaper ‘Avvenire’ is to speculate that rigidly legalistic thinking is driven by psychological needs, and is a way to ‘hide one’s sad dissatisfaction ‘.
He is, of course, well aware, of the intensity of feeling which any kind of change may lead to in the minds of an elderly Curia-based “opposition” , apart altogether from the Gang of Four, and may sense the possibility of a new schism, the last thing the Church needs at the moment. Try even moving the furniture a little- a very little- in an old person’s room, and you’ll see what we mean.
A real and valid emotion for the episcopate- possibly even world-wide-after the momentary exhilaration of Pope Francis’s death , must be fear. What will a new Pope, chosen by his cardinals, decide to get the Church back into touch with the Flock ? Many possibilities present themselves, very few of which, we venture to suggest, will not be welcomed by those of the Flock who are at present unable to receive the Eucharist.

Cheers, My Lords !

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The mother-in-law of one of us was wont to remark on occasion that ‘Catholics need a drink’. This, of course, has always been true, given the moral exertions so often demanded of us and ignored by so many others.
It is even more valid given how often and in how many ways the loyal Catholics of Scotland are let down by their priests and bishops. Our Cardinal’s sexual activities are self-confessed and known world wide. One of our bishops has run away with a divorced parishioner , although he did marry her, if in a registry office. In Lanarkshire, we have had the CurryPowderGate affair (see previous blogs), not to mention the disciplining of a priest by a church court for whistle-blowing, and his parishioners being forbidden to pray for him. Opus Dei- yes, Opus Dei !- can also be detected according to rumour in least one of the Scottish Episcopate.
There will be a short pause while some readers head to the cocktail cabinet.
If there are degrees of betrayal- let us not shrink from the word, even worse are some- a minority- among the parochial clergy, whose activities we know about through the agency of local media, thankfully meticulous in its presentation of these. These, of course, are the paedophile priests to whom our children looked up so trustfully as they were presented with the Eucharist on their First Communion, by those who were not reluctant to tell us they were acting as an Alter Christus, only to be betrayed by the very same priests and their sexually predatory appetites.
How many were there? ‘Aye, there’s the rub’
The McLellan Commission which looked into recent examples of paedophily among Catholic priests has complained publicly about the dilatory approach of the Scottish episcopate in carrying out the Commission’s recommendations. Also, if we are not mistaken, details of such cases since 1947 were to be provided.
One must ask why the Scottish episcopate has not been able to do this. .
Obvious explanations from our common human condition present themselves.
Is it pride ? Is it stupidity? Is it just, rather pathetically, corporate loyalty? Cynics will immediately suggest ambition, and that a full declaration of the failures of the parish priesthood might affect their promotion to good jobs in Rome. Oh, come on ! An episcopate led by the only Cardinal ever to have to refuse to take part in a Papal election?
Unfortunately, like many other bishops who were appointed by St. Pope John Paul II , they seem to live in the hope that they will outlive Pope Francis. Equally unfortunately, they seem unable to understand that a new Pope might be even more difficult to comprehend. Not to mention that even the most befriended member of the Curia is nowadays likely to move away from an ambitious Scottish cleric at speeds reminiscent of the Olympic 100 Metres .
Ironically- an expression sometimes used by journalists when they actually mean ‘ironically’- the only thing that really keeps the Catholic Church in Scotland going is anti-Catholicism in the bizarre social complex which is twenty first century Scottish life.
We know about the paedophile Catholic priests. Everybody knows about the paedophile Catholic priests. Catholic priests are defined in 21st century Scotland by paedophily, like it or not.
Smarten up, bishops. Get organised, then get everything out in the open air. Can it be any worse than we know, even if the names of beloved clerical figures turn up?
.While you can, give Catholics in Scotland a lead. And a good way to do so would be to give other equally dilatory bishops a lead by adopting the valid ordination of parishioners. The Apostolic Succession is based on valid ordination. Therefore, there is nothing which is done by a Tridentine priest that could not be done by a taxi-driver, newsagent or a/v technician
Catholics need a drink. If our bishops need a drink, let them take it , even to the point of alcoholic insensibility, if necessary. Order a special collection for its provision if necessary.

Chaput=Kaput for the Church

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The US ‘National Catholic Review’ is very interesting this week on bishops.
One writer points out that ‘Some of our bishops are determined to hunker down behind the battlements and dream of past illusory glories, praying for a holier church, even if that means we have to cast off a few members.’ He adds ‘I seem to remember a parable about a shepherd who leaves his flock of 99 to search for one lost sheep. How does that parable fit with the plans of those church leaders who want to bar the doors and draw the curtains ?’
Interestingly enough, his question is answered in the same edition by an Archbishop Chaput of Philadelphia on October 19th.
Now our readers know our views on the concept of the Tridentine priest as an ‘alter Christus’ , and whether we should laugh or just cry. But here, articulated beautifully, is its logical enough conclusion, the Tridentine bishop as ‘supra Christus’
Archbishop Chaput , naturally, enough, is a St Pope John Paul bishop, although the point of view he expresses has also been an Emeritus Pope Benedict one.
He says ‘But we should never be afraid of a smaller lighter church if her members are also more faithful, more zealous, more missionary and more committed to holiness ’. He objects to a secularising culture and a political agenda that’ ‘leaches out strong religious convictions in the name of liberal tolerance’….True enough, but he then accuses them of transferring ‘our real loyalties and convictions from the old church of our baptism to the new “church” of our ambitions and appetites’.
Notice the skilful use of ‘real loyalties and convictions’ , ‘the old church of our baptisms’ the inverted commas round ‘church’ Loaded terminology is a useful weapon, but the last three or four words are in the shoot to kill class :‘Our ambitions and appetites’. Extensive teaching of emotive language and connotation in our English classes nowadays means that this kind of kidology no longer really works and worse still for its proponents, is easily seen as kidology.
We compliment him on not mentioning Canon Law directly. But what does he mean by ‘appetites’, if anything other than just being offensive? Could it be that ‘they’ have ‘appetites’ ; he has spiritual aspirations ? And is therefore not as others?
There is so much to comment on in his remarks, but all we’ll say is that it strikes us as being a classic example of institution vs. The Christian message.
The first writer in that edition quotes a sister in religion: ‘Leadership fixated on preservation may actually be losing the future.’
On the other hand, Bishop Robert Lynch of St Petersburg ,Florida was quoted in the ‘Tablet’ of November 5th, that he was appalled by Archbishop Chaput’s proposal for a ‘smaller, purer’ church.
Archbishop Chaput is a member of the Prairie Band Potawatomi tribe, and the first Native American archbishop. His Potawatomi name is ; ‘the wind that rustles the leaves of the trees’
We will leave it at that

What We’re Here For

Blog bishops
The US ‘National Catholic Review’ is very interesting this week on bishops.
One writer points out that ‘Some of our bishops are determined to hunker down behind the battlements and dream of past illusory glories, praying for a holier church, even if that means we have to cast off a few members.’ He adds ‘I seem to remember a parable about a shepherd who leaves his flock of 99 to search for one lost sheep. How does that parable fit with the plans of those church leaders who want to bar the doors and draw the curtains ?’
Interestingly enough, his question is answered in the same edition by an Archbishop Chaput of Philadelphia on October 19th.
Now our readers know our views on the concept of the Tridentine priest as an ‘alter Christus’ , and whether we should laugh or just cry. But here, articulated beautifully, is its logical enough conclusion, the Tridentine bishop as ‘supra Christus’
Archbishop Chaput , naturally, enough, is a St Pope John Paul bishop, although the point of view he expresses has also been an Emeritus Pope Benedict one.
He says ‘But we should never be afraid of a smaller lighter church if her members are also more faithful, more zealous, more missionary and more committed to holiness ’. He objects to a secularising culture and a political agenda that’ ‘leaches out strong religious convictions in the name of liberal tolerance’….True enough, but he then accuses them of transferring ‘our real loyalties and convictions from the old church of our baptism to the new “church” of our ambitions and appetites’.
Notice the skilful use of ‘real loyalties and convictions’ , ‘the old church of our baptisms’ the inverted commas round ‘church’ Loaded terminology is a useful weapon, but the last three or four words are in the shoot to kill class :‘Our ambitions and appetites’. Extensive teaching of emotive language and connotation in our English classes nowadays means that this kind of kidology no longer really works and worse still for its proponents, is easily seen as kidology.
We compliment him on not mentioning Canon Law directly. But what does he mean by ‘appetites’, if anything other than just being offensive? Could it be that ‘they’ have ‘appetites’ ; he has spiritual aspirations ? And is therefore not as others?
There is so much to comment on in his remarks, but all we’ll say is that it strikes us as being a classic example of institution vs. The Christian message.
The first writer in that edition quotes a sister in religion: ‘Leadership fixated on preservation may actually be losing the future.’
On the other hand, Bishop Robert Lynch of St Petersburg ,Florida was quoted in the ‘Tablet’ of November 5th, that he was appalled by Archbishop Chaput’s proposal for a ‘smaller, purer’ church.
Archbishop Chaput is a member of the Prairie Band Potawatomi tribe, and the first Native American archbishop. His Potawatomi name is ; ‘the wind that rustles the leaves of the trees’
We will leave it at that