Always Say Sorry Again, Again

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We saw a TV commercial this morning for the new film ‘Spotlight’, which deals with the ’Boston Globe’s exposure of clerical child abuse in Boston. It is apparently very good , and considered Oscar material. We mention this for two reasons.
A local parish in Mass asked a fortnight ago for prayers for a recently dead past curate. He was a convicted child abuser , the abuse partly during his time at that parish. . We don’t think anyone would deny him prayers , having been warned about casting stones. Moreover, he was an absolutely brilliant preacher , whose bon mots still survive. A local broadsheet pointed out, however, that he was sent to this church having offended previously in a junior seminary. We don’t how many readers of the broadsheet were present at the Mass, but no one seemed to object to an obvious omission. The death announcement was as brief as it could be. Rightly, although bizarrely, the Archdiocese has offered its apologies to his ‘victims’ . At no point has it ever offered an apology to the parishioners , to our knowledge. The slogan of the film is ’They knew- and they let it happen’.
To have made sure the family went to Mass, then find out that the celebrant has been a paedophile all the time, then face them, is humiliating. Were such humiliation to be contained within the family circle it would be bad enough.
But the West of Scotland is a peculiar place, its spiritual life inextricably entwined with land appropriation in Ulster in the seventeenth century and Irish republicanism. These elements help, along with cheap Irish labour in Scotland two centuries ago, and the fun element of participating, to create an uncommon kind of anti-Catholic sectarianism certainly not found in the Honduras or Korea. To go to work , and to do so daily among non-Catholics , and to hear comments like ’So that’s another one, then?’ and undergo such small humiliations as yet another priest- or cardinal- is revealed as a sexual adventurer is something which priests or bishops can hardly imagine. But we are sure it happens. We doubt if the kind of fierce and extravagant loyalty which the occasional Papal appearance in Glasgow has produced is entirely due to a community expression of ‘We don’t care so there’, but surely it plays a part.
How about an occasional apology to the entire Catholic community in Scotland ?
The second point is that in 2016 everybody now knows about the deficiencies in the priesthood. ‘Spotlight’ will put a nice cherry on the cake, but the appearance of a Catholic priest on any of the immensely popular US tv crime series seen all over the world is almost always yet another paedophile event. Everybody knows , even the Papal Delegate, we imagine. ‘Sorry’ is one of the most meaningless words in the language, especially in Britain. It should be said in this circumstance above, however. Why not say it ? Everybody knows !
We quote the Rev Michael Kelly SJ : ‘clericalism, that culture of self-interest which promotes and sustain the presumption of superiority among clergy and their practice of protective secrecy. It is something that priests share with all would-be elites such as professional associations in law and medicine, bureaucrats and the military .’
Have they really learned nothing?

The Arithmetic of Decline

We have heard occasionally, we think, the click of some kind of counter as we receive the Sacrament of Reconciliation, which is perfectly sensible and practical . Moreover, it permits the introduction of a statistical element into the spiritual life of our parishes.
We have been accused, by the way, of being a single-issue blog , this being apparently A Bad Thing. But since our issue is that of highlighting the words of Christ at the Last Supper, we can live with that. And die with it. We don’t care. So there.
But back to business. Sorry, we may also be accused of being anecdotal. But since those pesky Gospels could also be accused of that, we don’t care either. So there -again.
Back to business this time. We have noticed , in our anecdotal single-issue way, that at Communion time almost the entire congregation goes to receive the Body and Blood of Christ . We have also noticed how few people go to receive the Sacrament of Reconciliation. We have also read that this may be particularly obvious in Britain, and we’re being definitely anecdotal here, but we also notice that at family functions, especially Baptisms and even First Communions, the presence of some unlikely to receive a prize for regular Mass going receive Communion , and many of them are young. We know it’s none of our business, but wonder why.
Do they find it difficult to confess to a considerably discredited group who may be found to be paedophiles later ?(We know the feeling here.)
Do they feel that these old men who so betrayed their parents and grandparents are just embarrassing nowadays, and can still be found , despite everything, still being so on the front pages of Scotland’s newspapers ?
Do they feel that these old men don’t seem to want to help carry out Christ’s Eucharistic imperative , as the Pope has suggested, in a world where Islam is rampant and China is suffering spiritual hunger and that they are now really irrelevant ?
Are the young baffled as to why they cannot receive General AbsoIution , again knocked back by the Bishops of England and Wales some weeks ago ?
Ask the question: What about the image of the priesthood? We suggest two possible responses: LOL, as our young texters would say , and ‘who cares?’
And by the way, no member of Feed The Flock is under 80 years old.

Our bishops and extended ordination

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We were asked recently if we were ‘still battering the bishops’, obviously by someone who completely misunderstands this blog. Now for a start, if this odd expression were our purpose , there would be no doubt about it, we assure you. We simply try to help to make it clear what our bishops are saying at the end of 2015.
At the plenary meeting of the English and Welsh bishops in November, a motion put forward by Bishop Seamus Cunningham of Hexham and Newcastle on behalf of the Council of Priests in his diocese to ordain married men as priests was rejected. Bishop Cunningham agreed that this would allow the faithful ‘not to be starved of the Sacraments , especially the Eucharist’, but pointed out that many of the bishops felt that the priesthood and celibacy were a symbol of an interior dedication to Christ and were intimately linked. He added that ‘any separation of them as a norm of the Church would change the nature of how we see the priesthood.’
To summarise that objectively for the busy reader, without , we hope giving offence, or ‘bishop battering’, the bishops of England and Wales are more interested in their image than in providing the Eucharist.
We hope that this will clear us of charges of ‘bishop battering’. Such a site would have said, ’The bishops of England and Wales aren’t too worried about what was said at the Last Supper, or what this Pope says either.’ We hope this will clear up any misunderstanding. We would be interested , however, in googling a ‘bishop battering’ site . If you know one, please get in touch.

Nuncios- What are they? Why Are They ?

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What is it with Archbishop Leo Cushley ? Printed in this week’s ‘Tablet’ is his absolutely brilliant Episcopal Christmas message, in which he compares Advent to the film ‘Ice Cold In Alex’ with a flair and insight which Gerard Manley Hopkins himself would have applauded. But he featured last week in a Glasgow newspaper, sitting, as one does, on a large map of his archdiocese with eight children, two of them in the middle of the Forth. He was about to undertake a tour of the archdiocese to tell the people how he was going to remove their churches. He emphasised the necessity of creating ‘vibrant Christian communities centred on Jesus Christ in the Holy Eucharist’.
Now we always believed that words were important in the world of diplomacy, even presumably in the world of ‘Vatican diplomacy’, a concept about as difficult to grasp and as sensible as ‘naval landscape gardening’. Archbishop Cushley was a Vatican diplomat.
Firstly, do you create communities by closing their churches?
Secondly, he speaks , as he has done recently in a similar context, of the importance of the Eucharist. But at the moment the Eucharist is largely provided by the Tridentine priesthood. The entire world knows that the Tridentine priesthood is no longer able to do this effectively. The Pope, echoed by possibly as many as 9 British bishops and umpteen lay organisations worldwide have advocated extending ordination. Only one Scottish bishop reads Scotland’s only Catholic magazine , and who knows how many cross the street when they pass a shop selling ‘The Tablet’, the national Catholic magazine ,in case they are infected, both of which have added their voices to this. But wait a minute, Archbishop Cushley is a former Vatican diplomat. Surely he –of all Scottish bishops- must know that the Pope allowed the ordination of married men in the Eastern Church in January this year ? This would permit ‘vibrant communities centred on Jesus Christ in the Holy Eucharist’. And yet he does nothing about asking the Pope , as the Pope has suggested, to allow this in Scotland . Why not ?
But, of course, is even Archbishop Cushley anything more than a mere puppet ? Although the leading figure in our regional episcopacy, and even nominated as one of the hundred most important people in this neck of the woods, Canon Law – of 1917, we remind you, and not AD 37- says that the boss is Archbishop Mennini, Nuncio to Great Britain. He and all the other bishops in Britain jump when the Nuncio cracks the whip. Actually when one thinks about it –why? What can a mere Nuncio do against the tide of world opinion ? Really do? Confiscate their palliums? Ceremonially snap their crosiers ? Bash in their mitres?
Archbishop Mennini ‘s ‘family has strong links with the Holy See’ (Wikipedia). He was ordained by a cardinal, and consecrated by another. His father was managing director of the Vatican Bank at a bad time. Yes, that time. After a degree (theology) he entered the diplomatic service of the Holy See in 1981. It will soon be the fifth anniversary of his appointment as Nuncio to Great Britain, and the second of his being sent a letter with registered delivery many months ago by ‘ To Feed The Flock’, to which he has still not replied.
The Nuncio is obviously Curia to the bone. He and his associates must surely see , even if Archbishop Cushley is apparently unable to do so, that we cannot follow Christ’s Eucharistic imperative if its provision is only by the Tridentine priest, and that the Eastern Church has shown us the way to go ?
Why can’t we have ‘vibrant communities centred on Jesus Christ and the Holy Eucharist’ not just in Edinburgh but all over the world ?

Daddy, What Was A Priest ?

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There was some recent and familiar foreboding when an episode of the superlative New York police series ‘Blue Bloods’ began with the arrest of a police chaplain. But- surprise, surprise- it was not for paedophily, and of course it’s not set in Glasgow anyway. He was arrested for drunk driving. The drinking was because he felt he had let down a friend who committed suicide. More interestingly, he felt that his New York police flock no longer seemed to need his ministrations. Perhaps this will be a new media theme for the Catholic priest character, and like all media dramatic themes it must be one which is easily recognised , and therefore part of the zeitgeist. Which makes you think.
We are not to be intimidated by being called ‘anecdotal’- after all this mode is the basis of the Gospels. But we do notice that since the dramatic decline in auricular confession, almost the entire congregation receives the Eucharist. This is, in any case, apparently very common in the UK. Auricular confession is never comfortable, but its decline is considerably easier to understand when one can apparently be confessing to a serial paedophile priest, thanks to the ‘transfer them somewhere else’ policy. This also makes you think.
We repeat again that, when current events give us the chance, this blog is about the dragon in the room, how China will inevitably affect the lives of our grandchildren, or even children, in the next thirty years or so. Last week’s ‘Tablet’ pointed out that there are only 3 students for the priesthood in Beijing. We appreciate that Glasgow has 2 seminarians, but there are 25 million people in Beijing. But we must look to our bishops . With what we feel is the unattractive frenzy of the drowning man, Bishop Yang, rector of the official National Catholic Seminary in Beijing would have us believe that this is for family reasons, and China’s policy of the one child family. Every language has its ironic and dismissive put-down. In Glasgow we say ’Uch, away ! ‘ : how we wish that we knew the Mandarin equivalent. So the celibacy nonsense and the paedophile reputation of the Tridentine priesthood hasn’t really happened , in this age of the internet?
The ultimate vindication of an extension of ordination to the laity and its parishes must surely be the future of the church in China , and consequently the world. China is not going to go away.
Who knows when the title of this blog may be an everyday event? Who cannot hope that it is soon ?

Lemons and Lizards

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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?

Why should we panic ? It is the Titanic !

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’. In vocations mode, the Archbishop of Tuam (Tablet, October 30) states that ‘celibacy allows the priest to give himself to Christ with an undivided heart’ We must, of course, acclaim such spiritual aspirations, but what inevitably emerges , one has to say, are their personal and restricted nature.
What is needed in the world in 2015 is a quite unrestricted and universal method of providing the Eucharist. The Glasgow Vocations Drive uses a documentary called ‘Do This in Memory of Me ‘. To attempt to revive the Tridentine priesthood , although the Archdiocese does not specify if that is all it is aiming at , is to try to recreate what today is obviously a failed method of providing the Eucharist, although vocations to the religious orders are more important than ever.
Bishops all over the world seem unwilling to look at other possibilities for providing the Eucharist, the reasons for which we propose to analyse quite soon with the greatest respect, of course. Where possible, of course.
We are only one of the many websites which do our best to keep suggesting the obvious alternative. We –To Feed The Flock- have been described as being ‘ ahead of our time ‘, like our fellow bloggers.
A local idiom, positively plangent with irony, is ‘That will be right ‘.which indicates the opposite in terms sometimes in less sophisticated circles as a direct preface to physical violence . As a sophisticated circle, we reply with thanks to the magnificent George Gershwin : ‘They all laughed at Christopher Columbus, when he said the world was round.’ So there.

Nor are we afraid of a ‘Titanic’ cliché. Not the ‘rearranging the deckchairs ’ one, brilliant though it is. We would simply add our own to those who attempt to meet the spiritual hunger of the world , in particular the present and future spiritual hunger of China, the world’s greatest power , by reviving the Tridentine priesthood . You are washing and scrubbing the decks of the ‘Titanic’ as the iceberg crunches through its vitals, and the last lifeboats are being lowered.

And as for the Archbishop of Tuam…..oh come on, Your Grace !

Confessionals? Remember Them ?

“ We are bishops of the Church, shepherds appointed by God to feed His flock. ”
Pope Francis’s Speech to the Bishops of the United States of America, St Matthew’s Cathedral , Washington DC, September 23rd 2015 .
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Some seem to believe that Canon Law was dashed off by the apostles waiting in the Upper Room with one ear open for the clump of the Sanhedrim secret police coming up the stairs instead of by Cardinal Gasparri & co in 1917.
Firstly it should be pointed out that this is 2015. In 1917, apart from the Prisoner in the Vatican stuff after Garibaldi, there was the general worry about Bolshevism. Canon Law was built like a suit of armour against any possible sabotage of the Church as it was then. Like a really good suit of armour, it was almost impossible to move in, you could hardly see where you were going and one could have only a fairly vague notion of what was going on round about And if you still buy a newspaper, a look at the front page will suggest some of the differences between 1917 and this afternoon.
It’s been very useful for churchmen too lethargic or even insecure to make tricky decisions- ‘but Canon Law says…’ – you know the routine. But even very early on there was as much criticism as was healthy about it lumping the Sacraments along with times of service, financial considerations and other very practical considerations under the heading of ‘rebus’ or ‘things’ . This highlights much more clearly today where a change in Canon Law (heavens !) is now necessary. We refer, of course to General Absolution.
This, of course, is to be resorted to only in times of crisis. Well, anybody who looks round at shrinking Mass attendance , lack of priests and closing parishes would think we were in a time of crisis. Those left to die without any kind of absolution would, we feel, also agree . If there are no priests, there will be no Eucharist or the Sacrament of Reconciliation. It is as simple as that.
An interesting Irish expression to indicate shock or surprise is ‘he was taking side-leps’. There are several websites which deal pretty summarily with those who ask if General Absolution is possible. Some of them take side-peps practically over the horizon at the very thought. E.g. ‘Also to be avoided is the scheduling of General Absolution which is as wrong wrong wrong as wrong can be !’ (There were at least four ‘wrongs’) And all because of replacing the Holy Spirit with Canon Law.
And even if it is accepted that there are hardly any priests left, a time of crisis, most would say, and general absolution were adopted where necessary, sins would have to be confessed again ! Why, you may well ask. Or even to whom ?
A quick look at the history of the Sacrament of Reconciliation will show that from time to time the emphasis has moved between Auricular Confession and General Absolution.
Nowadays, auricular confession is mostly the prerogative of the Tridentine priest. But there are not enough Tridentine priests to do this . So it’s time to change the emphasis again. And for the benefit of some of Pope Francis’s less loyal clergy, we can’t see that this constitutes a change in doctrine. As they retire baffled from the Synod, can we ask them to look again at Canon Law ?
It must be changed without the usual years of pointless mindless delay which seem to distinguish movement in the Church. We are far from being fans of Milton, and he was talking about Anglicans at the time, but he did make a good point which we can’t make often enough: ‘The hungry sheep look up, and are not fed.’
And they are not going to be fed in the very foreseeable future

Sacraments? Who Needs Them When You’ve Got Us ?

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“ We are bishops of the Church, shepherds appointed by God to feed His flock. ”
Pope Francis’s Speech to the Bishops of the United States of America, St Matthew’s Cathedral , Washington DC, September 23rd 2015 .
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As we write, it was announced on the internet page of two Scottish newspapers that a piece of cloth dipped in the blood of St Pope John Paul II had been obtained for his parish in Lanarkshire by its Polish priest . It will be interesting to see how far civilised comment on this will be exceeded by local trolls at this insult to the zeitgeist.
Fair minded as we are, we would make two points. Given the zeitgeist, we would add to relevance to time in general, that of place, with all due respects to Lanarkshire and its many problems , a minor one of which is how that area’s Catholics will explain this to their workmates tomorrow. It will at least be a change from CurryPowderGate. Our second point may be helpful. In 1996, somebody bought Yul Brynner’s black hat worn in ‘The Magnificent Seven’ for £9000.Then there’s Clyde Barrow- Clyde of ‘Bonnie and Clyde’. His shirt- the one full of tommy-gun holes-went for £53000 in 1997.Somebody even bought an alleged hat of Hitler’s in the eighties for £15000. For exactly how much does anyone think that a paper tissue used by John Lennon for almost any purpose would go for at auction, given the necessary provenance? The zeitgeist thing always needs a careful look.
The US ‘ National Catholic Register ‘ very kindly sends out a daily email on the Synod. From it we pluck this gem. What is described as a French-speaking bishop is quoted there as saying : ‘We mustn’t cling too much to the sacraments as if they were the only tools for grace .’ Well there you are now!
Our conviction that any cleansing of the Curia should start not with the humble monsignori of Vatican City but with the appointment of Papal Delegates is justified once again. Who appointed this person a bishop? We mustn’t cling too much to the sacraments ? Then to what, may we ask ? To one of this Episcopal clown’s pastoral letters ? To a parish visit from him? To a vocations drive to produce more people as thoroughly educated in theology as him ? Where do we get them from? Oh, sorry. We get them from Papal Delegates .
(We think ‘French-speaking’ is code, by the way. Work it out.)
Anyway, now that Pope Francis has not betrayed doctrine at the Synod- and who ever thought he would except one or two cardinals using this as an excuse to stress him out and precipitate a coronary- let’s get back to basics.
The Flock all over the world can’t get the Eucharist because this is provided mostly by the Tridentine priesthood. This concept is defunct. Extend ordination to parishioners.
For the umpteenth time, would somebody tell us why not ?

The Hungry Sheep Look Up-And Scottish Bishops are Silent

“ We are bishops of the Church, shepherds appointed by God to feed His flock. ”
Pope Francis’s Speech to the Bishops of the United States of America, St Matthew’s Cathedral , Washington DC, September 23rd 2015 .
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Here we go again, with yet another dirty old man in the headlines, a Father Paul Moore, already dismissed for paedophily . He’s accused of paying hush money of £10,000 , but denies it, and there’s suggestions of a third case involving him and an altar boy appearing. Another priest has accused him of abuse as a young seminarian. And of course he quotes the Bible . It’s as if they were compelled to remind us of their religious background.
A local newspaper adds ‘The Scottish Catholic Church did not comment ‘. Now, there’s a surprise !
All of our Tridentine clergy are highly educated in theology. Now we can’t comment, if only because we don’t know, on how professionally this is done, in terms of standards, independent external marking,, pass marks etc. And in terms of educational transfer we can’t comment either. But bizarrely, when you think about it, there appears to be nil transfer in terms of public relations. Living in the bubble of ecclesiastical life from age 13 , as we spoke of recently, certainly can’t help. But come on!
Little did we ever think we would thank God for the Scottish press, but what would we know without them?
Looming over any discussion of the Tridentine priesthood is celibacy. The abandonment of marriage and family life and the personal sacrifices involved are things we have to make allowances for , and we are certainly told about this , although we all know it was all about safeguarding legal rights in the twelfth century to what are possibly now just heaps of mouldering ruins all over Europe, or empty churches.
If this means giving up sex, some of the Scottish clergy , and not just them, don’t let this be a problem. In Scotland we don’t just have paedophily, but occasionally homosexual fun and games in seminaries as well. The expression ‘optional celibacy’ has now been given new layers of meaning in Scotland and elsewhere.
We would like the Scottish bishops to realise that we, humble laymen as we are, whose regimental motto is ‘ Pay, Pray and Obey’, know a great deal about it , thanks to the Scottish press, whatever its motives , and who cares. Why can’t the Scottish bishops accept this? Everybody knows, or has a pretty good idea. Why not eliminate unhealthy speculation if everybody’s not got it quite right, and clear up the matter?
How refreshing it would be if the Scottish bishops laid out clearly and honestly the entire mess the Scottish Church is in . Think of the relief to us all, not least to the ordinary clergy not at all involved, to see the whole disaster clearly . Who would suffer ? Prelates dead and gone ? The image of the Church in Scotland is in tatters. Why not try to improve it a little for the ordinary parishioners who have to live with it with their associates at work, and more importantly with their families ?
Why not, you may say? What prevents them? Surely not concern about what an already moribund Vatican bureaucracy might say about this ?

Surely not ?