Daily Archives: May 5, 2012

The Pious Imperative

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Like many parishes this first Eastertide Sunday in May, the choirs at my parish will be singing several versions of the

Regina Caeli.

I wonder how many folks have stopped to consider the paradox of this text. We, with our limited vision and holiness, are exhorting Our Lady, with all her privileges of knowledge and love, to rejoice. Mary, whose mere voice sounding in her cousin’s ears made John the Baptist leap for joy in the womb, already rejoices exceedingly. And yet we, the Church militant, as yet on the path to redemption, exhort her, who is full of grace, to rejoice. And then we explain to her the reason why she should do so.

I take this verbal construction to be a kind of literary license, not to be taken at face value. Somehow, by saying to Mary “rejoice,” we are not helping her but helping ourselves. We are not cheering her on, like fans in the stadium during the race, but entering into her exultation, like fans during the victory lap. Or rather, we are the runners, and are cheering on ourselves, by praising the Lord for her victory, her salvation, and her joy.
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The Pious Imperative

Can we ship some feminists to Afghanistan?

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Can we ship some feminists to Afghanistan?

Toys not needed

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If there is one thing I have learnt with parenthood, it’s that real things are *always* more exciting than than toy things…..as evidenced by the arrival of our new oven earlier this week, which provided us with more than an afternoon of fun!


The dials were carefully studied, the symbols identified in the manual and ooh! look! It has a light! and a timer which goes ding!

Thankfully we can turn it off at the mains so that *ahem* Little Leo Hands dont accidentally turn it on unbeknownst to me for hours!!

And look! It makes a good toy for big boys too…..as evidenced here by daddy patiently watching the Chelsea Buns baking….

(nb: I wanted to bake Chelsea Buns even

before

I knew about Chelsea’s football victory over Liverpool, Chris’s favourite team….sorry Chris, hope the yummy stickyness of the buns was consoling at least!)

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Toys not needed

Regina Coeli: Christ is the vine, we are the branches

2012-05-06 Vatican Radio

In his message for the Regina Coeli, Pope Benedict XVI spoke about the Gospel for today, the Fifth Sunday of Easter. He recalled the words of Christ, who said, “I am the true vine, and My Father is the vine-grower.”

“On the day of our Baptism,” the Pope said, “The Church grafts us as branches into the Paschal Mystery of Christ, into His own Person.” He called upon the faithful to bear in mind that “every one of us is like a vine, which lives only if it is growing every day in prayer, participation in the Sacraments, in charity, in its union with the Lord. And he who loves Jesus, the true vine, produces fruits of faith for an abundant spiritual harvest. Let us beseech the Mother of God that we might remain firmly grafted in Jesus and that all our actions may have their beginning, and their fulfillment, in Him.”

After the Regina Coeli prayer, the Holy Father greeted pilgrims and visitors from around the world. He reminded the faithful of the VII World Meeting of Families, taking place at the beginning of next month. The Meeting is being sponsored by the Pontifical Council of the Family, headed by Cardinal Ennio Antonelli. The Holy Father thanked the Ambrosian Diocese and other dioceses in Lombardy who are cooperating in the preparation of this ecclesial event, and noted that, “I, too, God willing, will have the joy of participating” in the Meeting.

Pope Benedict then greeted pilgrims from around the world. In his remarks to the English-speaking pilgrims and visitors, the Holy Father said:
“I extend warm greetings to the English-speaking visitors present for today’s Regina Coeli, and especially to the large group of pilgrims from Indonesia. In today’s Gospel Jesus speaks of himself as the true vine and He calls us to be fruit-bearing branches. I pray that God’s children all over the world will grow in unity and love, sustained and nourished by the divine life that he has planted deep within us. May God bless all of you!”

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Regina Coeli: Christ is the vine, we are the branches

Location of the Sodality of the Good Shepherd in Oshawa

By clicking on the link at the right, the location of the Sodality of the Good Shepherd can be found (at the southwest corner of Court Street and Barrie). You can also get driving directions to the church building from your home address using the Mapquest link.

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Location of the Sodality of the Good Shepherd in Oshawa

Viva La Sedia Gestatoria

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Viva La Sedia Gestatoria

How to Pose for a Portrait

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How to Pose for a Portrait

Ven Pius XII Post Mortem

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Ven Pius XII Post Mortem

An Example for Sketching St. Peter’s

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An Example for Sketching St. Peter’s

Spring Flowers at Church

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Spring Flowers at Church

Paul’s Tiara

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Paul’s Tiara

What is a Catholic, anyway?

Those of us considering the Ordinariate (a structure for Anglicans coming into full communion with the Holy See) ponder what we believe, what we have been and what we are becoming in terms of our membership in the Body of Christ. We must also consider what a Catholic Christian affirms as distinct from those of other faiths or of no faith.

Catholics are not . . .

First of all it may be helpful to consider what being or becoming a Catholic is not, despite what popular opinion and prejudice may say.

1.

Entering or being received into the full communion of the Catholic Church does not mean being “re-baptized”. If one is already baptized by water in the Name of the Holy Trinity, one is already a member of Christ’s One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church.


Here is a helpful thought from Fr. Sam Edwards, an Anglican priest who is entering the Ordinariate:

“Like Tennyson’s Ulysses, “I am a part of all that I have met,” and it is a part of me. I was baptized into the Great Belonging of Christ’s body in the Methodist Church, but that act did not make me a Methodist, but a catholic Christian. This is true in the case of all baptisms administered with water “in the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.” (Methodism claims nothing less; the Catholic Church entirely agrees, for while she teaches that the Church of Jesus Christ “subsists” visibly and most fully in that body whose bishops are in full communion with one another and with the Bishop of Rome, she does not thereby deny the reality of the Christian identity and commitment of those who are outside those limits, but instead invites them inside . . .)

2.

Being a Catholic does not only mean you must be a member of the Western Roman Catholic Church. Catholics may equally be members of Eastern churches – in fact Christianity, like Judaism is originally an oriental religion. Some Eastern churches are in full communion with Rome e.g. Ukrainian, Melkite (Arab) and Maronite (Syrian/ Lebanese) Catholics along with many other Eastern churches in a variety of countries using a variety of liturgies and languages.


3.

All those who are not in full communion with Rome are not considered heretics. There are degrees of communion since all the baptized are part, by definition, of the one universal Catholic Church of Christ on the most basic level. A number of Eastern churches, apart from those mentioned above, are not yet in full communion with Rome but have bishops, priests and deacons who are recognized by the Pope as legitimately ordained sacred ministers. These clergy hold the Orthodox Christian faith and celebrate what Rome considers valid sacraments but are not yet in full communion with the Holy See e.g. the Greek, Russian, Romanian, Bulgarian Orthodox, the Orthodox Church of America and other Orthodox churches as well as the Assyrian Church of the East, amongst others. These people and their churches along with others in the West would affirm that they are Catholic but for a variety of reasons are not yet in full communion with Rome.

4. These churches professing Catholic faith but not in full communion with Rome are not excommunicated. As noted, they participate in a degree of unity or communion and may, in certain circumstances, share in or even administer the sacraments to Roman Catholics. Canon 671 of the 1991 Code of Canons of the Eastern Churches, states:

“If necessity requires it or genuine spiritual advantage suggests it and provided that the danger of error or indifferentism is avoided, it is permitted for Catholic Christian faithful, for whom it is physically or morally impossible to approach a Catholic minister, to receive the sacraments of penance, the Eucharist and anointing of the sick from non-Catholic ministers, in whose Churches these sacraments are valid. Likewise Catholic ministers licitly administer the Sacraments of Penance, the Eucharist and Anointing of the Sick to Christian faithful of Eastern Churches, who do not have full communion with the Catholic Church, if they ask for them on their own and are properly disposed.”


5.

Being a Catholic does not mean practising every tradition or custom found in the various churches which are part of Catholic Church. There is a difference between doctrine as set forth in

The Catechism of the Catholic Church

and the devotions or practices of various groups in the Catholic Church. For example, nothing requires a Catholic to say the rosary, go on a pilgrimage, venerate relics, kiss icons or light candles at shrines to saints. Blessed John Henry Newman, a famous Anglican who was received by Rome, did not like some of the practices, attitudes or some of the art of continental European Catholicism. On the other hand, every Catholic is required to attend Mass on Sundays and holy days of obligation unless hindered by sickness or another legitimate reason and to prepare for and receive Holy Communion at least once a year at Easter.


So there are customs and spiritual practices that vary from place to place as well as doctrinal rules that apply to all Catholics. The former are a matter of taste and preference and are not obligatory, the latter are the basic rules of membership in the Body of Christ and so are for all. Many outside the church confuse popular piety and the sometimes mistaken emphasis given by some Catholics to certain practices with the actual teaching of the Church.

So, what does a Catholic believe?

Catholics like other Christians are followers of Jesus Christ believing that Jesus is fully God and fully man, the Son of God and their Lord and Saviour.
Catholics believe that Jesus Christ commissioned the leadership of his Church, which it is, in a mystical way, his body. Jesus insisted upon the unity of the Church based upon the rock of Peter. (Matthew chapter 16 verse 18). Those who hold the Catholic faith are called to unity with each other in that body with all Christians and indeed with all humanity through the power of the Holy Spirit.
Christian unity reflects the unity of the one God, perfectly united in Trinity: Father, Son and Holy Spirit and so it is the vocation of every Christian to pray for, seek and serve unity in the Church.
Catholic unity requires both allegiance and sacrifice. There are levels of unity between people and with God. The Catholic faith requires that we join our Lord in his prayer ut unum sint – that they all may be one. We join in his sacrifice, his self-giving for the life of the world by seeking to nurture the unity for which he gives his life through the Church and the ministry of all baptized people for the life of the world (John 6:51).
If one holds the Catholic Faith it is imperative, then, to find ways to grow in unity with the leadership of the one Church commissioned by Jesus and to bring others into that unity. The principle ministry of the Bishop of Rome, the Pope or Holy Father, is to nurture this unity. It is central to the Catholic faith that all bishops also seek and nurture unity and that bishops be in communion with the Bishop of Rome, the centre of unity and successor of St. Peter of whom our Lord said, “And I say also unto thee, That thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.” (Matthew 16:18)


This is a contentious issue for some because they profess Catholic faith but have difficulty with the history of the papacy or with the history of the Catholic Church as they understand it or have been misinformed about it. These are understandable concerns as there is much of fallen human nature that has wounded humanity and the witness of the Church. Yet the principle of unity is essential since there is one God, one Christ and one Church and Jesus commands it.
How do we square the fallen nature of humanity, the fallenness and corruption of some people in the Church, indeed at times of some at the highest levels of the Church, with the holiness of the Church as proclaimed in the Catholic creeds. How is this possible when we have the promise of Jesus to Peter and to us, his followers that the gates of hell shall not prevail against his Church? (Matthew 16:18)
This question is pertinent to what it means to be a Catholic Christian and requires a fuller treatment elsewhere. We need say here, however, that the Church, the centre of unity for humanity, is the Body of Christ but the body has been and continues to be wounded by the sinful actions of human beings – “All have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God” (Romans 3:23; cf. Romans 1:18-3:20; 11:32; Gal 3:22).
Since all have sinned, this includes all those in the Church and those leading the Church. Jesus did not say that Satan would not be able to influence some in the Church, but that evil would not prevail against the mission of Christ and his Church. The struggle goes on.
This struggle and the occasional defeat does not and will not stop Christ’s reconciling love and his giving himself for us and others in and through the Church – the Bride of Christ. Christ continues to give us his very life – his body and blood in the Eucharist bringing healing and unity through the proclamation of the Word and Sacraments in and through the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church despite the fallen nature of those who serve the Church.
Forgiveness is always available and always necessary for members of the Church especially as they prepare to receive and offer Christ in the sacraments. The sacraments are the outward and visible signs of his love for us and are the assured means of his grace for those who will receive and, in turn, minister his love to others. This constant need for forgiveness does not affect the Church’s call to holiness or the ideal of perfection which she holds out to all those who seek the City of God. In a family no member is perfect but all are called to serve the good and the unity of the family by seeking forgiveness from God and from one another so that the family may continue to pursue its ideals and help others.
So, being a Catholic means recognizing the holiness and vocation of the Church (which is God’s doing and grace) to bring others to reconciliation with God and with one another as a witness to the world that God so loves (John 3:16).
As stated recently in an article here on Confession, “The Seal of the Confessional”, unity in the vocation to holiness requires that the Sacrament of Penance i.e. the ministry of justice, forgiveness and healing be participated in by every member of the Church including the Pope and those leading the Church. This sacrament of reconciliation is a witness to the world, a sign of unity and a call to the rest of humanity to seek the same unity that Christ wills for all. This is entirely the work and power of God conveyed through ‘earthen vessels’ (2 Corinthians 4:7), by frail human beings whom God has chosen to be his partners in the ministry of his justice and love.
To be a Catholic means, then, to be a penitent receiving God’s forgiveness and then forgiving others by the power of the Holy Spirit, a power which is communicated in the assurance of the healing sacraments: Baptism, Penance, Eucharist, Unction (anointing of for healing) and in various other acts of love and mercy.
This recognition of the fallen nature of humanity is widely rejected in the West today, but remains true and all the more necessary because it is so widely denied. Ironically, those who stand outside of the Church to judge her do so based upon the very principles of the Christian faith, which they have absorbed but failed to attribute to Christ and his Catholic Church. The standards of justice and mercy in the West are directly attributable to Christianity (see Rene Girard: Things Hidden from the Foundation of the World, Stanford University Press; and The Scapegoat, CBC Ideas:)


What about Protestant Objections?
This issue of God’s justifying us through faith and our continuing participation in the life of Christ or sanctification and growth in love and service goes to the root of the thorny problem of justification and sanctification that has been an obstacle for Protestants since the Reformation.
The justification/ sanctification issue is a very large topic to be dealt in another article but is one that has been discussed extensively in recent years and has been discerned not to be an insuperable barrier to further unity in Christ. In recent Lutheran-RC dialogues and in the discussions that the Catholic Church continues to have with other Christian ecclesial communities these matters bring forth agreements leading to a deepening of Christian unity.
A Catholic Christian believes that by God’s forgiving and justifying grace we are open to the goodness of God’s creation and sanctifying grace. Though imperfect as human beings, we are forgiven for our sins and empowered by the Holy Spirit to seek God and the good of others by means of faith, hope and love. We accept grace by faith in Christ. This faith is freely bestowed as a gift by which we are empowered to co-operate and so bring forth the fruit of God’s love in works of mercy for the good of all.
Grace abounds and as members of the Body of Christ, the universal Catholic Church, we participate as free human beings growing in grace now and beyond the grave as we are purified by God’s burning love along with the prayers of all the faithful here (the Church Militant), those in the Church Expectant (those who have gone before us in faith) and those in the Church Triumphant (the saints in heaven).
One recent example of the reconciling negotiations on this and other matters is The Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification, a document created by and agreed to by the Catholic Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity and the Lutheran World Federation in 1999. It affirms that the Lutherans, Catholics and others now share “a common understanding of our justification by God’s grace through faith in Christ.” This agreement resolves the conflict over the nature of justification that was at the root of the Protestant Reformation and removes another barrier to unity in Christ.


The excommunications relating to the doctrine of justification by the Council of Trent no longer apply to the teachings of the Lutheran churches and others who affirm the agreement. In 2006 the World Methodist Council, meeting in South Korea, voted unanimously to adopt this document. Anglicans who did not share the same level of doctrinal concern on this issue generally accept the text as well.
This kind of agreement is important because it removes another barrier to unity and contributes to acceptance of the Petrine ministry, the ministry of unity exercised by the Pope and the Catholic Church for all Christians. Discussions continue about various aspects of universal Catholic Christian faith and how it may be more widely accepted by all those bodies separated from full communion with the Holy See.


Finally
A Catholic affirms all efforts to bring about co-operation and increase communion with people of faith and good will who affirm life, seek healing for themselves and others and are open to dialogue and co-operation with the Holy See. Being in communion with the Catholic Church links us to the largest and most universal community of all time and one which seeks the good of every human being from conception to natural death, affirming that everything good in human nature and the world comes from and returns to God who loves and holds the universe in being.

Excerpt from:

What is a Catholic, anyway?

LMS One-Day Conference 9 June 2012

On Saturday 9th June 2012, the Latin Mass Society is holding a one-day conference at Regent Hall, Oxford Street, London.

It’s the first time the LMS has organised a one-day conference, and they have invited some excellent speakers. The conference is aimed principally at ordinary LMS members, although non-members are very welcome to join them.

For those who would like to attend Mass, there will be a Low Mass at St. James’ Church, Spanish Place (which is very close to the conference venue.)

Doors open for registration and browsing of stalls at 10am, and the first talk, by Dr. John Rao (Director of the Roman Forum) starts at 11am. Stuart McCullough (Good Counsel Network) is the second speaker. After lunch, Fr. John Zuhlsdorf (WDTPRS), Fr. Tim Finigan (Hermeneutic of Continuity) and John Hunwicke are due to speak.

Admission is by ticket only, but these can be obtained by phoning the LMS office, sending a cheque or booking online. Further details can be found on the LMS website.

It is an impressive line-up, and I am really looking forward to it (though I wish it could have been at the beginning of half term rather than the end!)

Credit: 

LMS One-Day Conference 9 June 2012

A flash mob! How I wish I could have been on this train!!!

About Fr. Tim

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A Roman Catholic Evangelical Priest of the Diocese of Pembroke, Canada. Shown in my profile photo with my canine companion, Mateo.






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A flash mob! How I wish I could have been on this train!!!

Abortion push escalates in Botswana

There has been a mass escalation by international NGOs pushing to legalise abortion in answer to the country’s many woes.

GABORONE, Botswana, May 5, 2012 (LifeSiteNews.com) – An editorial in the Botswana Gazette this week, notes that there has been a mass escalation by international NGOs pushing to legalise abortion in answer to the country’s many woes. The call has been taken up by the media and some members of government, including Assistant Minister of Local Government Botlhogile Tshireletso who has called on the government to consider complete legalisation.

The Penal Code makes abortion a crime except in cases of pregnancy under 16 weeks gestation, where the pregnancy is the result of rape, “defilement” or incest; the pregnancy “puts the life of the mother at risk or may cause harm to her physical or mental health” or in cases where the “unborn child would suffer or later develop physical or mental abnormality. Abortions for rape, incest or “foetal impairment” must be approved in writing by two doctors and all abortions must be carried out in government-approved hospitals or specialty “clinics”. Officially, only abortions for “social and economic reasons” or abortions “on request” are disallowed under the law.

Despite these sweeping exceptions, including the notorious “mental health” exception that has opened the door to virtual abortion on demand in many western countries, international organisations and some local politicians are agitating for the removal of all restrictions.

The May 2nd Gazette editorial said, “The law has made it highly difficult for women to terminate pregnancy. This has meant that women have to resort to street abortion to assert their reproductive rights and make a deliberate decision whether or not to keep the pregnancy.

“The restrictive criteria for legal abortions and the continued criminalisation of abortion pushes women into unsafe abortions and early deaths,” the editorial said. As long as abortion remains in the penal code, the editor complains, it will not be recognised as “a right”.

In February this year, Minister Tshireletso, responding to the budget speech, called upon government to legalise abortion, saying, “Just recently, we read about six heads of infants which were found in a bucket. In another incident we heard about how dogs dug out the head of a dumped fetus.

“These things are worrisome. They are the works of backyard abortions. I therefore call on government to make abortion legal so that desperate pregnant women can have access to safer, legal and decent abortions.”

In 2011, Minister Tshireletso also supported a call from a former president of Botswana to legalise prostitution, that she called “sex work,” saying that sex workers “are not only those we call ‘ladies of the night.”

“I have male friends who tell me where they buy. So let’s decriminalise sex work to protect these people who get cheated because they do not have anywhere to go for help.”

Botswana is still a majority Christian country, with over 70 per cent of its population belonging to the various denominations, and its Christian leadership has spoken out against this latest call for legalisation. Pastor Biggie Butale, head of the Evangelical Fellowship of Botswana, said “abortion is absolute murder,” and that the churches will never accept it.

“Such an act is morally inadmissible, because it is murder; the right to life underlies all other rights and we can never support murder of innocent unborn babies that cannot retaliate,” Butale said. “As the church we unite in the defense of life, repudiating any attempts to legalize abortion in our country.

Butale warned of dire consequences if Botswana legalises abortion, saying it dehumanises.

Botswana is a country beset with problems related to health, infant and maternal mortality, and uncontrolled extramarital sexual activity, and as such is a special target of international population control groups. The State Department of the US note that HIV is mainly spread through heterosexual contact, and that the number of young girls who are infected far outstrips the number of young men.

Although average life expectancy is rising, it still lags far behind developed countries, with 2012 statistics showing 56.93 years for men, and 54.51 years for women – an improvement on the 48 years recorded for women in 1995-2000.

All observers agree that the most significant factor in the statistics is the rate of AIDS/HIV infection which is believed to be the second highest in the world in Botswana, with 24.8 per cent of the adult population being infected. The US State Department estimated in 2009 that there were 93,000 orphans due to AIDS in Botswana.

The population is young, with a median age of about 22 years for men and women, and only a tiny percentage (3.9) of the population surviving past age 65. In addition to AIDS, the rates of death from other infectious diseases is high, including bacterial diarrhea, hepatitis A, typhoid fever and malaria.

Paradoxically, these woes come at a time when Botswana’s economy is growing, despite the global economic crisis. In the last ten years, the country has moved from being one of the poorest in the world to being a middle-income country, though it still relies heavily on its single-export trade of diamonds. Despite recent growth, Botswana has an unofficial unemployment rate of nearly 40 per cent, with the spectre of depopulation from AIDS a constant threat to future economic prospects.

In the 1974 document issued by the US National Security Council, National Security Study Memorandum 200, Botswana was listed among the Sub-Saharan African “least developed countries” whose population growth was considered problematic. The Memorandum held that population growth in these countries is a risk to U.S. concerns abroad. The Memorandum was adopted as official policy in 1975, and led to the pairing of overseas aid to developing countries with the mandating of population control measures, including the promotion of artificial contraception.

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Abortion push escalates in Botswana

British aid buying coercive population control in India

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The Wall Street Journal reports on

What Britain’s Foreign Aid Buys

in India

The UK Department for International Development confirms that our £162.2 million of our money has been spent on India’s national “Reproductive and Child Health Programme” in order to reduce “disparities in access and use of essential reproductive and child health services.” What this actually adds up to in practice is forcible sterilisation of both women and men.

The WSJ is naively benevolent in its assessment of British intentions and protestations of opposition to coercive population control.

The above photo casting doubt on the blessing of pregnancy and quoting Malthus, was judged Best Advertisement on “Population Control” in a contest organised by a leading advertising portal in New Delhi in July 2007.

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British aid buying coercive population control in India

A Plea from the CMAA

Last year I attended the Colloquium in Pittsburgh. I really enjoyed myself and was able to bring both the music and the semiology back to the choir in my home parish. Upon returning, I taught a class in semiology to our adult choir and dabbled in the Ward method with our two children’s choirs. Things continue apace, and we hope to do the Parson’s Ave Maria this fall. But this year, money is definitely an issue. By splitting a room and car-pooling with a friend, I can afford travel, room, and board but, I have little to nothing left for tuition. I am a religious and just don’t have means to pull the whole amount together. I’m wondering if someone might possibly be willing to donate that cost or part of the cost. I really have used the knowledge and repertoire from last year in both adult and children’s choirs AND in two different parishes, OF and EF. I would be so grateful if there would be some way that I could attend again.

There have been many requests just like this one for scholarship aid this year. The CMAA has been able to amass a large enough scholarship fund to assist twelve people in coming to the

Sacred Music Colloquium

this year in Salt Lake City. There are many more people who would like to come, but do not have the funds. And not all are bold enough to ask for help.

The registration deadline is in two weeks. If there is some way you can make a donation to the cause, be it $10 or $500, your generosity will be much rewarded: with renewed hope, beautiful liturgy, and a more promising future for sacred music.

Write to us if you can help, or make a donation online. No gift is too small. All donations are tax deductible.


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A Plea from the CMAA

‘Healing Sexual Wounds’: Dawn Eden interview about new book

World renowned chastity speaker and pro-life convert Dawn Eden has just released a new book about how to find healing for sexual wounds with the help of Catholic saints.

WASHINGTON, D.C., May 4, 2012 (LifeSiteNews.com) -­ World renowned chastity speaker and pro-life convert Dawn Eden has just released a new book about how to find healing for sexual wounds with the help of Catholic saints. LifeSiteNews caught Dawn at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, D.C. on the weekend as she promoted My Peace I Give You: Healing Sexual Wounds with the Help of the Saints (Ave Maria Press, 2012).

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