Daily Archives: May 26, 2012

Welland, ON: Patronal feast day

SOURCE: Welland Tribune

WELLAND — Parishioners of St. John the Baptist Hungarian Greek
Catholic Church
, 111 Second St., will celebrate their patronal feast day
on June 10.

Divine liturgy will take place at 10:30 a.m. followed by lunch at 12:30 in the church hall.
Parishioners from far and near are invited to attend.

For tickets call 905-735-7055.

See original article here: 

Welland, ON: Patronal feast day

Russian Church raises EUR 500,000 for Greek homeless – Русская Церковь собрала в помощь неимущим Греции…

25 May 2012 | 17:31 |

FOCUS News Agency

Home / Southeast Europe and Balkans

Athens.

The Orthodox Church of Russia has donated half
a million euros to go toward helping the growing ranks of Greece’s
homeless, it emerged on Friday,

eKathimerini

reported.

According to the Russian church’s official website, www.diaconia.ru, a
total of 19 million Roubles, or around 500,000 euros, had been collected
by May 22, following appeals for cash from churches and monasteries
across the country but also from individuals. The campaign started in
February following a public appeal by Russian Patriarch Kyrill for
support for the Greek homeless.

According to a Russian Church official, most of the donations from
Russian citizens ranged from 100 to 400 Roubles (or 2.5 to 10 euros)
with many Diaspora Russians contributing. «People see the problem in
Greece as their own,» the official said.
По благословению Святейшего Патриарха Кирилла в храмах и
монастырях на территории России продолжается сбор средств в помощь
нуждающимся в Греции. Пожертвования приходят со всей страны – как от
епархий, приходов и монастырей, так и от частных лиц.
К
22 мая на счет Отдела по благотворительности и социальному служению,
координирующего сбор, поступило 17 миллионов 962 тысячи 822 рубля 99
копеек.

Провести сбор пожертвований в помощь неимущим в братской православной
стране, переживающей тяжелый экономический кризис, в январе

благословилСвятейший Патриарх Московский и всея Руси Кирилл

.
Епархиальным архиереям, наместникам ставропигиальных монастырей,
настоятелям московских храмов и Патриарших подворий были направлены
письма, в которых предлагалось в один из воскресных дней организовать
тарелочный сбор в помощь нуждающимся. Сбор начался 19 февраля. Его
координацию осуществляет Отдел по церковной благотворительности и
социальному служению.

Средства поступают со всей России и из-за рубежа. Величина
пожертвований варьируется от 100 рублей до 400 тысяч. Помощь грекам
направляют не только приходы и монастыри, но и миряне. «Люди
воспринимают беду далекой страны как свою собственную. В этом
убеждаешься, когда видишь частные пожертвования с Камчатки или с
Сахалина – от людей разных национальностей», – отмечает глава финансовой
службы Отдела по благотворительности Константин Басилов.

Предполагается, что собранные средства пойдут на организацию
бесплатного питания для неимущих в благотворительных столовых
организации «Апостоли» («Миссия»), осуществляющей социальное служение
Афинской архиепископии.

Как сообщил Diaconia.ru
глава «Апостоли» Константинос Димцас, Церковь и муниципальные службы
ежедневно кормят около 250 тысяч человек. В Афинах 13 тысяч человек
каждый день получают порцию супа и другую горячую еду от «Апостоли» в
рамках программы «Церковь на улице». Ежедневная потребность в горячем
питании на начало февраля оценивалась в 300 тысяч порций по стране и 50
тысяч порций в Афинах при уровне безработицы в 19-20%. Сегодня в помощи
обездоленным участвуют все епархии Элладской Православной Церкви, каждая
по мере своих возможностей. В Афинах в помощи задействованы 89
приходов. Также «Миссия» осуществляет программу адресной доставки
неимущим продуктов «Церковь дома». Ее сотрудники ежемесячно передают
бедным семьям 2,5 тысячи наборов макарон, консервов и других
непортящихся продуктов.

Организация горячего питания для бездомных и безработных сегодня
стала основным, но не единственным социальным проектом Элладской
Православной Церкви. Более 100 богаделен в Греции принадлежат Церкви. В
Афинах действуют два социальных магазина. В одном можно бесплатно
получить одежду и продукты питания, в другом – только одежду. Подобные
магазины открываются и в других городах Греции. Продукты и вещи для
открытия первого подобного магазина передавали сами жители греческой
столицы. Церковью была организована трехдневная акция в афинских
гипермаркетах, в результате которой было собрано 35 тонн еды.
Напомним, что экономическое положение Греции продолжает ухудшаться.
Исследование национального статистического агентства ELSTAT
свидетельствует, что почти треть греков в настоящее время живет за
чертой бедности, которая составляет 1256 евро в месяц на семью с двумя
детьми. «Минимальный месячный доход, который позволяет семье сводить
концы с концами, составляет 2464 евро», – говорится в отчете агентства.
Цены на основные продукты питания и промышленные товары в Греции в
среднем на 20-30% выше среднеевропейских. В среднем на оплату жилья
уходит около 400 евро. Опубликованный в апреле отчет ЮНИСЕФ сообщает,
что за чертой бедности живет 439 тысяч детей (23% детей).

По данным ELSTAT, в стране более 1,1 миллиона безработных (21,7%
трудоспособного населения). Каждый день их число увеличивается на 900
человек. Согласно прогнозу Всеобщей конфедерации труда Греции, к декабрю
2012 года без работы останется каждый четвертый житель страны.
Большинство из уволенных на другую работу устроиться не смогут:
повсеместно закрываются как частные, так и государственные предприятия.

Как отмечают греческие профсоюзы, волна увольнений в значительной
степени коснется работников старшего возраста. В Греции пенсионный
возраст и для мужчин и для женщин составляет 65 лет. Если же под
сокращение попадет работник, предположим, 60 лет, то он не получит
пенсию, а шансы устроиться на новую работу у него будут минимальны.
Среди бедняков 37,9% не могут своевременно оплачивать электричество,
газ, воду и другие коммунальные услуги и рискуют потерять жилье за
неуплату, также отмечает ELSTAT.
Сокращение зарплат и безработица при высоком уровне расходов приводит
к тому, что те, кто ранее считал себя частью среднего класса,
оказываются без средств к существованию, а порой и на улице.

Source article:

Russian Church raises EUR 500,000 for Greek homeless – Русская Церковь собрала в помощь неимущим Греции…

Because I honour the military

And because I don’t ‘forward’ chain emails, not even the ones that ask for prayer. And because I have no use for the scumbag ACLU. I did not compose the text below, but cut and pasted it from the email I received. May God protect our soldiers and bring them safely home.

ACLU has filed a suit to end prayer from the military completely. They’re making great progress. The Navy Chaplains can no longer mention Jesus’ name in prayer thanks to the ACLU and others.


‘Lord, hold our troops in your loving hands. Protect them as they protect us. Bless them and their families for the selfless acts they perform for us in our time of need. In Jesus’ name, Amen.


Prayer Request: When you receive this, please stop for a moment and say a prayer for our troops around the world.

Of all the gifts you could give a Marine, a Soldier, a Sailor, an Airman, & others deployed in harms way, prayer is the very best one ever.

GOD BLESS YOU FOR PASSING IT !!
PLEASE PASS IT ON !

I know these are not Amerian troops, but I am also pro Israel




Link to original:  

Because I honour the military

Uzbek Orthodox Church introduces tests for would-be godparents

The Orthodox churches of Uzbekistan have introduced a new procedure for
the rite of baptism which provides for attending 12 Sunday lectures and
passing exams.

“I have visited Tashkent’s St. Uspenskiy cathedral church to find out
how to baptise my son and learnt that this is a whole problem,” a
28-year old resident of the Uzbek capital, Olga, has said.

Who will agree to become a godfather?

According to Olga, would-be godparents will now have to attend Sunday
catechetical lectures which will explain the essence of Christianity and
the main point and meaning of baptism.

After attending a total of 12 catechetical lectures, would-be godparents
and those who want to be baptised, if they are already 15, will have to
pass exams.

The matter is not about simple formality. “Skiving”, like at school,
will be impossible because the attendance of catechetical lectures will
be registered as visitors “have to sign in some book”.

“Where will I find godparents for my son under such conditions?” Olga wonders.

According to her, all her friends who had earlier been willing to become
a godmother or a godfather have now refused politely to do so after
learning that they will have to visit the church on Sundays for three
months.

Godfather should help godchild!

Other church members approve the church innovation.

“It is a right thing that catechetical lectures and exams were
introduced, otherwise people have been becoming godparents for no
particular reason but just to drink during christening parties without
having any idea about their new obligations,” a 50-year old member of
Tashkent’s Saint-Uspenskiy church, Marina, has said.

She said that godparents would have to help their godchildren in the
future in both practical circumstances and “in their kind and Christian
education”.

“As for adults willing to be baptised, God ordered them to attend 12
catechetical lectures, otherwise many get baptised because it is just in
fashion and they do not even know the basics of Orthodox Christianity,”
a friend of hers, pensioner Mariya, added.

Metropolitan Vikentiy revives traditions

Many link the innovations at the Tashkent and Uzbekistan eparchy of the
Russian Orthodox church’s Central Asian metropolitan area with the new
leader of the church, Metropolitan Vikentiy, who came late in August
2011.

“Metropolitan Vikentiy has decided to revive old traditions and
strengthen his confidence in orthodox believers,” members of the church
have spoken of him respectfully.

The decision to hold 12 compulsory catechetical lectures before the rite
of baptism was adopted at the 4 October 2011 eparchy clergy meeting at
Tashkent’s eparchy directorate.

Since that day, catechetical lectures have been mandatory for all priests of the Tashkent and Uzbekistan eparchy.

The practice of baptism without catechetical lectures is only allowed for a person if he is seriously ill or about to die.

The meeting also decided that “it will be mandatory for both for
children and adults to undergo the sacrament of baptism through full
immersion” in a big baptismal bowl instead of previously practiced
aspersion with holy water.

There is always a way out

“Not everyone likes the church innovation but there is a way out from
any situation,” a 35-year old would-be godfather, Maksim, has said.

According to Maksim, the Tashkent eparchy understands that the
innovation was a little bit too much and they are ready for compromise
to prevent the alienation of less committed believers form the church.

“When I have announced at the Saint Uspenskiy cathedral church that
because of certain circumstances I am not able to come to the church
every Sunday, I was offered to buy a disc of catechetical lectures for
8,000 sums [about 2.5 dollars] and to listen to them at any time
comfortable for me and then pass the exams,” says Lyudmila, who is going
to become a godmother of her niece.

“It is quite obvious that catechetical lectures for future godparents
were introduced in order to make people more religious and to attract
new members to orthodox churches at the same time, but this is not fair
at all,” a 30-year old Tashkent resident, Elena, has said.

In her opinion, mandatory catechetical lectures should be given only to
adult people who want to receive baptism: “if they want to get baptised,
let them learn more about orthodox Christianity.”

“And for those who have decided to become godparents it is enough for
them to listen to a lecture about the rights and duties of godparents
and to get a two-page booklet,” Elena suggested.

She thinks that this will also help people to learn more about religion
and preserve a democratic atmosphere in Uzbekistan’s orthodox churches
that is so necessary “at present difficult realities of life”.

Original source - 

Uzbek Orthodox Church introduces tests for would-be godparents

Liturgical Pluralism and the TLM

The following paper was especially written for Rorate Caeli.

Liturgical Pluralism and the Traditional Latin Mass
John Lamont

The international federation Una Voce has recently released its sixth position paper, ‘Liturgical Pluralism and the Extraordinary Form‘. The paper makes assertions and raises issues that call for further discussion.

Several commenters, including myself, have been hard on this paper, so it should be acknowledged at the outset that it provides a conclusive answer to one objection that has indeed been commonly made against the practice of the traditional Roman rite (abbreviated henceforth as TLM). This objection is that unity among Catholics demands that they share the same form of worship, and hence that it is wrong to allow use of two forms of worship, the TLM as well as the Novus Ordo. The idea that it is the TLM rather than the NO that should be abandoned is taken for granted by this argument, which concludes that only the Novus Ordo should be permitted. The paper shows that the existence of legitimate liturgical pluralism within the Catholic Church means that the first premise of this objection is false – it is not the case that Catholics must all have the same form of worship – and hence it shows that this objection has no value.

The trouble with the paper is that it does not limit itself to the useful service of providing a purely negative, dialectical refutation of this objection. It goes further; it attempts to argue for a positive thesis, which is that the use of the TLM in the Church can be justified as an instance of legitimate liturgical pluralism.

It asks: ‘the question to be addressed by this paper is whether the existence in the Latin Rite of an extra, ‘extraordinary’, ‘Form’ of the Roman Rite is problematic, and therefore something to be overcome if possible, in the short or long term, perhaps by the creation of a single, amalgamated, Form of the Roman Rite.’ It gives an affirmative answer to this question on the basis of an appeal to ‘the value of pluralism’.

One can discern a good intention behind this positive answer. It is to fend off the possibility of an attempt at creating a hybrid between the TLM and the NO, which would be presented as the real fruit of the liturgical ‘reform’ called for by the Second Vatican Council, and then used to replace the 1962 missal currently in use by traditionalists. (The word ‘reform’ is in scare quotes here because the Latin word actually used by the Council is not ‘reformare’, but ‘instaurare’, which means to restore rather than to reform; the English word ‘reform’ is an interpolation of the English translators of the conciliar text.) The plan of imposing such a hybrid as the sole liturgy of the Latin church is unrealistic, but the plan of replacing the 1962 missal with a hybrid (perhaps closely modelled on the 1965 missal), while leaving the Novus Ordo in place, is a real one that is promoted in some liturgical circles.

Such a hybrid would be a disaster, so the intention of fending it off is indeed a good one. But I want to argue that the appeal to liturgical pluralism is not the way to go about it.

The first step in this argument is to clarify the nature of the liturgical pluralism that is to be discussed. One understanding of liturgical pluralism is an abstract one, that simply claims that the number of legitimate forms of Catholic rite is more than one, without identifying any particular forms as being legitimate ones. This abstract sense is the only sense needed to rebut the objection that only one form of Catholic worship should exist. It is legitimate to use in in the negative, dialectical argument mentioned above.

The other understanding of liturgical pluralism as applied to the Roman rite is a particular one, that claims that both the TLM and the Novus Ordo, while different, are legitimate forms of the Roman rite. It is this particular understanding that is used by the paper to argue for its positive claim. The trouble with this understanding of liturgical pluralism is that if both the TLM and the Novus Ordo are legitimate forms of the Roman rite, it follows that the Novus Ordo on its own is a legitimate form of the Roman rite, and that both the TLM and the Novus Ordo are a ‘response of faith to different conditions’, and represent ‘a treasury of theological and spiritual insights which complement each other’.

This position is untenable. As I remarked in an earlier comment on the paper, the Novus Ordo was devised on purpose to replace the TLM, because the theological content and general structure of the old mass were judged to be wrong and in need of abolition. Robert Mickens points this out:

‘The old Mass mirrored a vertical hierarchy of truths, a strict discipline, legalism, conformism, and marked separation of clerics from the laity; the New Mass highlighted a dialogical dimension between priest and people, the active participation of the laity, and the possibility of adaptation (although this was often exaggerated early on). The argument was that the Tridentine Rite was not just a different way of celebrating the Mass, but that it was undergirded with a theology and understanding of the Church that was inconsistent with the Second Vatican Council. This was one of the reasons why the vast majority of members and consulters at the Congregation of Divine Worship, of which Archbishop Bugnini was secretary, believed any concession to traditionalists on the old Mass would be harmful to the liturgical reform and the pastoral efforts of the bishops to apply it.’ (1)

Whether or not Mickens is right about the TLM being incompatible with the Second Vatican Council, he is certainly right about its being incompatible with the ecclesiology that undergirds the Novus Ordo, and is right about the designers of the Novus Ordo having introduced this incompatibility on purpose, because they disagreed with the ecclesiology behind the TLM. This is only one way in which the Novus Ordo is at odds with the TLM; the importance of the notion of sacrifice in the TLM, and its deliberate and virtually complete exclusion from the Novus Ordo, is another. The liturgist Fr. Joseph Grayland explains the fundamental reason for the differences between the two:

In the Christian tradition, liturgical rites express the church’s understanding of the ‘how’ of salvation as this is mediated through the ministry, mission and worship of the church. As ecclesial rites, the 1962 missal and the 1970 missal show the believer who can and cannot be saved and it is at this fundamental point that they part company, to such an extent that their difference becomes irreconcilable. These two missals ritualise totally diverse understandings of salvation, damnation and the Church’s role as mediator of salvation. (2)

He points out the implications of accepting both the TLM and the Novus Ordo as legitimate rites:

In responding to this development, Summorum Pontificum opens up real vistas of possibility in most seminaries, where any request by seminarians to be instructed in the sacramental rituals of the 1962 missal (as well as the 1970 missal) will have to be considered legitimate. The future direction of seminarians’ formation must include a serious debate over the use of two liturgical calendars, two forms of the liturgy of the hours and two forms of confession/ reconciliation-penance. In order to effectively minister as priests of ‘a twofold use of the same Roman rite’ seminarians will require formation in two theologies of church, priesthood, (lay) ministry and salvation.

… To view the reinstatement of the 1962 missal as just a liturgical change, offering another equally valid option for ‘saying Mass’ indicates, at least to me, a fundamental misunderstanding of the nature and role of liturgical worship in the life of the Christian Church. Those who will have no problem with this development will do so, because their understanding of worship is essentially ritualistic, not ecclesiological, and not liturgical. What is rejected and reinstated here are not two forms of religious ritual but two entirely distinct, and in my opinion, two irreconcilable theologies of how the Church mediates salvation sacramentally and pastorally. This development cannot be reduced to a crass competition between liturgical traditions or equally valid ritual gestures, as if the significant issue lay at that level. What is at stake here is the Church’s self-understanding of her role in the work of God’s salvation and how that role is mediated theologically through the Church’s liturgical worship.

As a Church, we are left with the reality that Catholics may now view the divergent theologies of salvation and sacramental-liturgical mediation as simply additional choices available to them as ritual-consumers. As long as they suspend their understanding of liturgy as being more than just ritual then worshipping according to one rite or the other will not constitute a choice by the worshipper for one understanding of salvation and sacramental-liturgical mediation over the other. This would then be, as Mark Francis observes, to ‘have succumbed to…relativism’ and to have created the ultimate expression of ‘the ‘Catholic cafeteria’’ (Mark Francis, ‘Beyond Language’, The Tablet, London 14 July 2007, p. 6). (3)

Fr. Grayland thinks that the theology of the Novus Ordo is correct and the theology of the TLM is wrong, but his analysis of how and why the two are incompatible is entirely correct. The incompatibility of the two rituals is well known to both traditionalists and non-traditionalists, and beyond reasoned dispute. And clearly the existence of two liturgies that have not only different but incompatible presuppositions and approaches, presuppositions and approaches that are incompatible on purpose because one liturgy was judged to be wrongheaded by the designers of the other liturgy, cannot be an example of legitimate liturgical pluralism. At least one of them must be wrong.

The paper might be defended on this count by its being pointed out that nowhere does it explicitly state that legitimate liturgical pluralism includes the Novus Ordo; it only claims that such pluralism applies to the TLM. But unless this legitimate pluralism is understood to include the Novus Ordo, at whom is the paper aimed? A response to this objection that appeals to legitimate pluralism must have in mind more than one legitimate form of the Latin rite. If there is not more than one, there is no pluralism to appeal to. But the different forms of the Latin rite that are in question here cannot be the traditional forms that existed alongside the Roman liturgy. No-one is objecting to the traditional Roman rite being accepted as a legitimate form of worship among other traditional forms of the Latin rite, such as the Mozarabic or Ambrosian rites; such an objection would be totally absurd to everyone. So the legitimate liturgical pluralism that is being defended can only be understood as the existence of both the TLM and the Novus Ordo as legitimate forms of the Latin rite. And that is untenable for the reasons given.

Of course a defence of the TLM that involves rejecting the Novus Ordo will attract great hostility from ecclesiastical authority and make life difficult for traditionalists. But Una Voce has encountered such difficulties before and survived. Michael Davies, the most important English-speaking critic of the Novus Ordo, served as the president of Una Voce for years without disaster ensuing. Leo Darroch’s obituary of Michael Davies in Mass of Ages states; ‘Perhaps [Davies'] most telling intervention [as president of the International Federation Una Voce] was in 2000 when he informed the [Ecclesia Dei] commission that moves to adapt the Missal of 1962 to include changes introduced in the 1960s would be rejected in their entirety by the traditional movement worldwide. The proposed moves were dropped.’ (4)

Davies’ example indicates that firmness is the right course to take with respect to attempts to hybridise the 1962 missal. But this firmness needs to be backed up by arguments, as it was by Davies, and the most important argument is precisely based on rejection of the Novus Ordo. Traditionalists have to argue that the Novus Ordo is based on bad principles, and hence that any moves to make the TLM more like the Novus Ordo are themselves bad and must be rejected. If this argument is not made, and the Novus Ordo is accepted as an example of legitimate liturgical pluralism, then there cannot be anything wrong with the Novus Ordo in itself, and there thus cannot be anything intrinsically objectionable about changes to the TLM that bring it closer to the Novus Ordo. The paper’s positive argument from liturgical pluralism thus completely undermines its purpose of resisting such hybridisation. It could be objected that such changes would diminish the extent of legitimate liturgical pluralism, but as long as the hybrid was noticeably different from the Novus Ordo – which seems to be the intent of proposed hybrids – this argument would be extremely weak. The differences between the hybrid and the Novus Ordo would mean that liturgical pluralism had been preserved in the Latin rite. On this question the International Federation Una Voce needs to return to the correct stance of Michael Davies.

NOTES:

(1) The Tablet, 18 June 2005.

(2) Fr. Joseph Grayland, ‘The Tridentine Mass again: Can the Church celebrate in two rites?’, Compass: A Review of Topical Theology 41/3 (Spring 2007).

(3) Grayland (2007).

(4) http://www.ifuv.org/docs/michaeldavies_01.html.

Visit link - 

Liturgical Pluralism and the TLM

You gotta love this girl!

Newman’s essential classic (above) distinguishing organic doctrinal developments, like the Trinity, from flagrant doctrinal innovations, like sola scriptura

The best resource on Islam in print! (above)

Want to see through the political fog surrounding Muslim terrorism? Read this book!

Pope Benedict XVI’s definitive statement on truth and tolerance

Best all-around intro to Christianity (by Pope Benedict XVI)

Pope Benedict’s classic on fundamental principles of theology

Pope Benedict XVI on the liturgy

(This anthology contains Pope Benedict’s sympathetic position statement on the Tridentine Mass)

(The above volume offers Pope Benedict’s reflections on the meaning of the Eucharist)

(Above: best popular-level intro to common sense “natural law” basis of morality you’ll ever find)

Ronald Knox’s classic work (above)

Howard’s eloquent meditation as a new convert (above)

Bouyer’s classic (above) on how the positive elements of Protestantism can be sustained only if rooted in the Catholic Church (by a former Lutheran pastor in France)

Cobbett’s incensed expose (above) of the actual origins of his Anglican tradition–”Engendered in
beastly lust, brought forth in hypocrisy and perfidy, and cherished and fed by plunder, devastation, and by rivers of
English and Irish blood.”

A Hilaire Belloc classic (above)

Belloc’s profoundly insightful analysis (above) of personal character in individuals ranging from Henry VIII to Oliver Cromwell

Waugh’s moving biographies (above) of Ronald Knox and the Jesuit martyr Edmund Campion

Duffy’s definitive refutation (above) of the Protestant textbook tradition of the English Reformation as a “grassroots” movement

A brilliant expose (above) of why Catholic hymnody since Vatican II represents the triumph of bad taste over a rich tradition of beauty and dignity

Original link: 

You gotta love this girl!

Pope sends congratulations to Catholicos-Patriarch of the Assyrian Church of the East

Messagge of the Holy Father to His Holiness Mar Dinkha IV, Catholicos-Patriarch of the Assyrian Church of the East, on the occasion of his 50th anniversary of episcopal consecration.


Message of the Holy Father

The Golden Jubilee of the episcopal consecration of Your Holiness, which has
culminated in your distinguished ministry as Catholicos Patriarch of the
Assyrian Church of the East, offers me the opportunity to extend my
congratulations and prayerful good wishes to you.

I thank the Lord for the many blessings he has bestowed on the Assyrian
Church of the East through your ministry, and I am grateful for your commitment
to promoting constructive dialogue, fruitful cooperation and growing friendship
between our Churches. I recall your presence at the funeral of John Paul II and,
previously, your 1994 visit to Rome to sign a Common Declaration on Christology.
The subsequent Joint Commission for Theological Dialogue between the Catholic
Church and the Assyrian Church of the East has borne many fruits. I renew the
hope which I expressed during your visit to Rome in June 2007, that “the
fruitful labour which the Commission has accomplished over the years can
continue, while never losing sight of the ultimate goal of our common journey
towards the re-establishment of full communion”.

I wish also to reiterate my solidarity with the Christian communities in Iraq
and throughout the Middle East, praying that effective forms of common witness
to the Gospel and pastoral collaboration in the service of peace, reconciliation
and unity may be deepened between the Catholic and Assyrian faithful.

Your Holiness, on this significant anniversary, I pray that the love of God
the Father may enfold you, the wisdom of the Son enlighten you and the fire of
the Holy Spirit continue to inspire you.

With sentiments of respect, I extend to Your Holiness a fraternal embrace in
Jesus Christ our Saviour.

BENEDICTUS PP. XVI

[00734-02.01] [Original text: English]

[B0310-XX.01]

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Pope sends congratulations to Catholicos-Patriarch of the Assyrian Church of the East

Regina Coeli: Jesus sends His Spirit to the Church

2012-05-27 Vatican Radio

In his Regina Coeli address, Pope Benedict XVI spoke about today’s feast of Pentecost, “which completes the Easter season.”

“This feast reminds us and experience the outpouring of the Holy Spirit upon the Apostles and other disciples gathered in prayer to the Virgin Mary in the Upper Room,” the Pope said. “Jesus, risen and ascended into heaven, sends His Spirit to the Church, so that all Christians can share in His divine life and become His effective witness in the world.”

Noting that the Holy Spirit “continues to inspire women and men who engage in the pursuit of truth” Pope Benedict announced that on October 7, at the beginning of the Ordinary Assembly of the Synod of Bishops, he would proclaim St. John of Avila and St. Hildegard of Bingen as Doctors of the Church. “These two great witnesses of the faith lived in very different historical periods and came from different cultural backgrounds,” he said. “But the sanctity of life and depth of teaching makes them perpetually present: the grace of the Holy Spirit, in fact, projected them into that experience of penetrating understanding of divine revelation and intelligent dialogue with the world that constitutes the horizon of permanent life and action of the Church.”

“Especially in light of the project of the New Evangelization, to which the Assembly of the Synod of Bishops will be dedicated, and on the vigil of the Year of Faith, these two figures of saints and doctors are of considerable importance and relevance.”

Pope Benedict then invited the tens of thousands of pilgrims present in St. Peter’s Square to join him in saying the Regina Coeli, praying that, through the intercession of the Virgin Mary, the Church might “be powerfully animated by the Holy Spirit to witness Christ’s Gospel with boldness and ever more open to the fullness of truth.”

After the Regina Coeli, the Holy Father addressed the pilgrims in various languages. In his remarks in English, he said “I offer a warm welcome to the English-speaking pilgrims and visitors present at this Regina Caeli on the Solemnity of Pentecost. Next Friday, I will go to Milan to be with families from all over the world celebrating the Seventh World Meeting of Families. I ask you to join me in praying for the success of this important event, and that families may be filled with the Holy Spirit, rediscover the joy of their vocation in the Church and the world, and bear loving witness to the faith. Upon all of you, I invoke God’s abundant blessings!”

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Regina Coeli: Jesus sends His Spirit to the Church

Pope: Pentecost is a feast of unity, understanding and sharing

2012-05-27 Vatican Radio

Pope Benedict XVI on Sunday morning celebrated Pentecost Sunday Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica.
Here is Vatican Radio’s translation of the Pope’s homily for the occasion.

Dear brothers and sisters

I am happy to celebrate this Holy Mass with you – a Mass animated by the Choir of the Academy of Santa Cecilia and by the Youth Orchestra, which I thank – on this Feast of Pentecost. This mystery constitutes the baptism of the Church, it is an event that gave the Church the initial shape and thrust of its mission, so to speak. This shape and thrust are always valid, always timely, and they are renewed through the actions of the liturgy, especially.
This morning I want to reflect on an essential aspect of the mystery of Pentecost, which maintains all its importance in our own day as well. Pentecost is the feast of human unity, understanding and sharing.We can all see how in our world, despite us being closer to one another through developments in communications, with geographical distances seeming to disappear – understanding and sharing among people is often superfical and difficult. There are imbalances that frequently lead to conflicts; dialogue between generations is hard and differences sometimes prevail; we witness daily events where people appear to be growing more aggressive and belligerent; understanding one another takes too much effort and people prefer to remain inside their own sphere, cultivating their own interests. In this situation, can we really discover and experience the unity we so need?

The account of Pentecost in the Acts of the Apostles, which we heard in the first reading, is set against a background that contains one of the last great frescoes of the Old Testament: the ancient story of the construction of the Tower of Babel. But what is Babel? It is the description of a kingdom in which people have concentrated so much power they think they no longer need depend on a God who is far away. They believe they are so powerful they can build their own way to heaven in order to open the gates and put themselves in God’s place. But it’s precisely at this moment that something strange and unusual happens. While they are working to build the tower, they suddenly realise they are working against one another. While trying to be like God, they run the risk of not even being human – because they’ve lost an essential element of being human: the ability to agree, to understand one another and to work together.

This biblical story contains an eternal truth: we see this truth throughout history and in our own time as well. Progress and science have given us the power to dominate the forces of nature, to manipulate the elements, to reproduce living things, almost to the point of manufacturing humans themselves. In this situation, praying to God appears outmoded, pointless, because we can build and create whatever we want. We don’t realise we are reliving the same experience as Babel. It’s true, we have multiplied the possibilities of communicating, of possessing information, of transmitting news – but can we say our ability to understand each other has increased? Or, paradoxically, do we understand each other even less? Doesn’t it seem like feelings of mistrust, suspicion and mutual fear have insinuated themselves into human relationships to the point where one person can even pose a threat to another? Let’s go back to the initial question: can unity and harmony really exist? How?

The answer lies in Sacred Scripture: unity can only exist as a gift of God’s Spirit, which will give us a new heart and a new tongue, a new ability to communicate. This is what happened at Pentecost. On that morning, fifty days after Easter, a powerful wind blew over Jerusalem and the flame of the Holy Spirit descended on the gathered disciples. It came to rest upon the head of each of them and ignited in them a divine fire, a fire of love, capable of transforming things. Their fear disappeared, their hearts were filled with new strength, their tongues were loosened and they began to speak freely, in such a way that everyone could understand the news that Jesus Christ had died and was risen. On Pentecost, where there was division and incomprehension, unity and understanding were born.

But let’s look at today’s Gospel in which Jesus affirms: “When he comes, the Spirit of truth, He will guide you to the whole truth”. Speaking about the Holy Spirit, Jesus is explaining to us what the Church is and how she must live in order to be herself, to be the place of unity and comunion in Truth; he tells us that acting like Christians means not being closed inside our own spheres, but opening ourselves towards others; it means welcoming the whole Church within ourselves or, better still, allowing the Church to welcome us. So, when I speak, think and act like a Christian, I don’t stay closed off within myself – but I do so in everything and starting from everything: thus the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of unity and truth, can continue to resonate in people’s hearts and minds, encouraging them to meet and welcome one another. Precisely because it acts in this way, the Spirit introduces us to the whole truth, who is Jesus, and guides us to examine and understand it. We do not grow in understanding by closing ourselves off inside ourselves, but only by becoming capable of listening and sharing, in the “ourselves” of the Church, with an attitude of deep personal humility. Now it’s clearer why Babel is Babel and Pentecost is Pentecost. Where people want to become God, they succeed only in pitting themselves against each other. Where they place themselves within the Lord’s truth, on the other hand, they open themselves to the action of his Spirit which supports and unites them.

The contrast between Babel and Pentecost returns in the second reading, where the Apostle Paul says: “Walk according to the Spirit and you will not be brought to satisfy the desires of the flesh”. St Paul tells us that our personal life is marked by interior conflict and division, between impulses that come from the flesh and those that come from the Spirit: and we cannot follow all of them. We cannot be both selfish and generous, we cannot follow the tendency to dominate others and experience the joy of disinterested service. We have to choose which impulse to follow and we can do so authentically only with the help of the Spirit of Christ. St Paul lists the works of the flesh: they are the sins of selfishness and violence, like hostility, discord, jealousy, dissent. These are thoughts and actions that do not allow us to live in a truly human and Christian way, in love. This direction leads to us losing our life. The Holy Spirit, though, guides us towards the heights of God, so that, on this earth, we can already experience the seed of divine life that is within us.
St Paul confirms: “The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace”. We note how the Apostle uses the plural to describe the works of the flesh that provoke the loss of our humanity – while he uses the singular to define the action of the Spirit, speaking of “the fruit”, in the same way as the dispersion of Babel contrasts with the unity of Pentecost.

Dear friends, we must live according to the Spirit of unity and truth, and this is why we must pray for the Spirit to enlighten and guide us to overcome the temptation to follow our own truths, and to welcome the truth of Christ transmitted in the Church. Luke’s account of Pentecost tells us that, before rising to heaven, Jesus asked the Apostles to stay together and to prepare themselves to receive the Holy Spirit. And they gathered together in prayer with Mary in the Upper Room and awaited the promised event.

Like when it was born, today the Church still gathers with Mary and prays: “Veni Sancte Spiritus! – Come Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of your faithful and kindle in them the fire of your love!”. Amen.

Excerpt from:  

Pope: Pentecost is a feast of unity, understanding and sharing

Benedict Snubs Pro-Gay “Marriage” Politician

Scottish First Minister, Alex Salmond, has been banned from meeting the Pope because of proposals to redefine marriage. Mr Salmond had hoped to put himself on the world stage by meeting the Pope at the Vatican ahead of a Scottish referendum on independence. But Roman Catholic leaders blocked the move because the meeting would have sent out the “wrong message”, given Mr Salmond’s position on gay marriage…(Source)

The proverbial gloves are coming off.  Long live this Pope.  The Gospel, it appears, is more important than diplomacy, thanks be to God.  I have forseen this coming for a long time.  Be prepared, folks, because the next Pope will not be able to travel to many Western countries in the future.

Dark days are ahead.  But they are, paradoxically, days of hope too.  The old glad-handling, back-slapping institutional structures within the Church which have smothered the Gospel of Jesus Christ are being swept away and destroyed. Purification is the order of the day, and it can’t come soon enough.

The Catholic Church is becoming Catholic again!

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Benedict Snubs Pro-Gay “Marriage” Politician

Down Syndrome Abortion Stats

It is commonly stated by pro-life advocates, that 90-92% of babies diagnosed with Down Syndrome are aborted. From the blog of Bristol Palin, comes a reasoned correction to that figure.

I just read Bristol’s post about babies who are born with DS being one of the 8%. I love the poem she includes, and I think her point is an important one. Still, I’ve learned recently that it’s an inaccurate number. It’s widely cited by many people, but it’s based on a single study from a single hospital in the 1980′s. Overall, it seems that about 70% of babies prenatally diagnosed with DS are aborted, and that the abortion rates vary greatly from region to region across the US. Moreover, lots of women don’t seek prenatal diagnosis, whether out of ignorance or because they don’t want to risk an amnio or because they don’t think the information is necessary. So out of all babies conceived with DS, 50% are actually born. Still a terrible reality that 50% are aborted, but a much better situation than the 8% number implies.

I think it’s important to get the accurate numbers out there so that women who are facing decisions about prenatal testing and abortion recognize that they are not alone if they decide to forgo the testing and/or keep the baby with DS. There are thousands of other women making the same decision who want to support them and love their babies.

Read more at

Bristol Palin’s blog

Hmmm, another blog I am going to have to read.

See the article here: 

Down Syndrome Abortion Stats

Routine gizmo maintenance and reminders

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Routine gizmo maintenance and reminders

Routine gizmo maintenance and a reminders

Image 20120526-170341.jpg

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Routine gizmo maintenance and a reminders

Whitsunday

Sant%20Spirito%20Torino-Milano.jpg

A Pentecost Meditation

Alleluia!
Today the Spirit of the Lord has invaded the cosmos and filled it!
Life spills out of the Cenacle
and, like a torrent of wine,
courses through the streets of Jerusalem.
God arises and His enemies are scattered;
those that hate Him flee before his face,
and those that love Him sing: Alleluia!

Today He who came down to see Babel’s tower
and confused the speech of the proud
visits the Upper Room.
He unties the tongues of the humble
and unites into one holy people those long divided by sin.
Amazed at what she sees and hears,
the Church intones her birthday song: Alleluia!

Today He who on Sinai descended in fire,
causing rocks to quake and peaks to pale,
descends upon Jerusalem;
tongues of fire dance over the heads of those
who, cloistered in the Cenacle, waited to meet their God
and at His coming, they cry out: Alleluia.

Today the valley of dry bones
begins to stir, to rattle, and to reverberate.
Behold, I will cause the Spirit to enter you,
and you shall live:
and they lived and stood upon their feet,
an exceeding great host
singing: Alleluia!

Today the Cenacle sealed like tomb
opens, a joyful Mother’s fruitful womb.
None was ever born of the Spirit
who did not take his birth from her,
and each, claiming from her the springs of his life,
calls her forever glorious, repeating: Alleluia!

Today the Spirit is poured out in superabundance;
today sons and daughters prophesy;
today old men dream dreams and young men see visions;
today menservants and maidservants
join the choir to chant with one many-tongued voice: Alleluia!

Today the Virgin whom the Spirit covered with His shadow
is wrapped in Love and crowned in flame.
Today the Woman who interceded at Cana
tastes New Wine, for the Hour has come.
Today the Mother who stood watching by the Tree
remembers the stream of water and of blood
and filled with sweetness, cries: Alleluia!
Today the Spirit helps us in our weakness
and we who do not know to pray as we ought,
pray in a way that is wonderful and new;
for now the Spirit Himself intercedes for us
with sighs too deep for words.
In the valley of the shadow of death
there rises the canticle of life: Alleluia!

Today, for the poor there is a Father,
for the destitute a Treasury,
for hearts grown dark an inblazing of brightness.
Today, for those who weep there comes the Best of Comforters,
for the lonely, there arrives a gentle Guest,
for the worn and weary there is a refreshment so sweet
that even they begin to sing: Alleluia!

Today, for workers there is repose,
for those scorched in the heat of discord, refreshment,
for those brought low by too great a weight of sorrow, solace,
and for those with tears to shed,
a chalice ready to receive them.
Today there is no one who cannot say: Alleluia!

Today, even where there is nothing good
Goodness elects to dwell;
and where there is nothing holy
Holiness makes a tabernacle,
so that the broken, the sad, and the powerless
find their voices to sing: Alleluia!

Today, there is a balm for every wound,
a dew sprinkled over every dryness;
a cleansing water for every stain.
Today, the stubborn heart learns to bend
and the stiff spine learns to bow.
In the twinkling of an eye the frozen are thawed
and icy hearts warmed through and through,
making them declare as never before: Alleluia!

Today there are Seven Gifts
lavishly given for each according to his need:
Wisdom for the foolish,
Understanding for the dull,
Counsel for the hesitant,
Fortitude for the weak,
Piety for the feckless,
and Fear of the Lord for those who have forgotten to adore,
saying humbly: Alleluia

Today for sinners there is forgiveness,
for the stranger a home,
for the hungry a Holy Table,
for the thirsty a river of living water,
and for every mouth the long-awaited Kiss.
Today heaven is poured over the face of the earth,
while the children of men in amazement sing: Alleluia! Alleluia! Alleluia!

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Whitsunday

“Yes, Lord: You know that I love you`.` Reflection on a Gospel from a Novus Ordo Mass for Friday, Seventh Week of Easter Cycle 1/Year 1 at Lunchtime

Hello Everyone.

It’s kind of exciting that I’m getting 20-50 page-views per day now. Gives me a little hope now as things aren’t exactly peachy keen in my personal life.

Any ways, I decided to go on my lunch break Friday to a parish that is a 5-minute walk from my workplace. The best part is that because it is a parish whose priestly order has a charism that focuses on redemption and the offering of sacraments that was contrary to the challenges in the Church at the time of its foundation. So They offer confession before almost all their major masses and every one on Sunday (Thank the Lord! Here’s an order and a parish that knows about the worthy redemption of the Sacrament of the Eucharist!!!!!).

So obviously I went for confession, but also I stayed for Mass because I wanted to offer prayers and my spiritual work of being there to the Lord concerning an intention in a minor, but personal important spiritual conflict I am having, and feel that I know what the outcome will be based on a key statement.

The homily was given by the chaplain from my workplace. The Gospel reading for Friday, May 25 in the Novus Ordo from the CCCB lectionary for Canada, was from John 21:15-19. Nutshell version: Jesus wants Peter to be a leader and step up and spread the mission of His Church but also he hints that he will die not by his own hands or naturally (that is he will undergo the Passion, Death and Resurrection). He does a well-known reversal of when Peter denies Christ 3 times in the Passion: Christ asks him 3 times “Do you love me?” and of course Peter says yes, but Christ replies “Feed my lambs.”

The chaplain decided to focus on this famous reversal, speaking about the theme of Love. His ending on the topic was a little weak, and personally I felt that the priest could have gone a bit more into explaining about the virtue of Charity (which is also called Love) or explaining more about the highest level of Love which the trinity expressed perfectly: Divine Love, or Caritas. You can read Pope Benedict’s Encyclical on that Caritas in Veritate (Love in Truth) with regard to that.

However, what struck me from that day’s homily, was that he likely used a recent tragedy as a literary device in order to emphasize a point about the Love of Christ. The summation is that a young man, who fell in love with a woman, was rejected. He then proceeded with a firearm to her, threatens her or someone else, and in the end he shot himself. I thought I heard “students” or “student” in the homily so after an internet search, this is the story that matched the most times in links. The news item is from India and it is fairly recent, having happened last week involving young university students:

http://www.ndtv.com/article/cities/man-shoots-self-in-girls-hostel-after-being-rejected-by-woman-211348

After relating the story, the priest said that yes, the man “loved” the woman, but is this really love? That question, got me thinking a bit, and I can conclude that, no it’s not. Love should not end in a person shooting one’s self, and further love cannot be present in forcing another person to do one’s bidding or express emotions not there. Instead, all that is present is submission to a more dominant person, fear, and unhappiness. The main point that I remember the priest speaking from this, is that the love of the Trinity has to be present at the core of us as Catholics (I think he used the Holy Spirit. It would make sense as some priests and a doctoral student I know has said that the Holy Spirit is Love.). If our actions are devoid of true, Christian love, well …. I cannot remember what the priest said about that, but I can say that obviously if faith without works is dead, the reverse can also be (and in Catholicism must be,) true. If part of our faith is that our Trinity expresses the most perfect form of love, Caritas, and we ourselves are vessels for the Holy Spirit from Baptism and must carry out God/Christ’s Love as part of our Catholic life, then yes, Love/the Theological Virtue of Charity/Caritas must be at the very core of what we do as Catholics (how we do it, though, and how this teaching has been misapplied, is another kettle of fish).

It was a nice little piece of mind that day, concerning that conflict I had and still do on my mind. I pray and hope in that conflict that the Theological virtue of Love will be present. It was definitely my verbal spiritual nourishment, in addition to the ULTIMATE spiritual nourishment found in the Eucharist of our Blessed Lord as his Glorified body present on Earth.

Hoped you enjoyed what I have shared, Pax. YCRCM.

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“Yes, Lord: You know that I love you`.` Reflection on a Gospel from a Novus Ordo Mass for Friday, Seventh Week of Easter Cycle 1/Year 1 at Lunchtime

Adventures in Social Media

Well, with the permission of my lawful ecclesiastical superior, I’ve decided to try out Twitter. It is, definitely, an experiment. If it turns out to be pointless or time-consuming I will drop it – the blog is getting good traffic as it is.

The Madonna House community is slowly learning about social media and feeling out its apostolic possibilities. I am one of our digital pioneers, tracking the e-regon Trail in my covered cyber-wagon, herding my stray thoughts along down the trail (get along, little dogies! Yah!).

Anyhow, my Twitter name is Fr.Denis Lemieux, if you want to ‘follow’ me. Now, I know nothing – nothing whatsover – about Twitter (hence the experiment). If anyone reading this knows anything that might help me, and wants to give this poor techno-Luddite a helping hand, feel free to comment below.

Source:  

Adventures in Social Media

Yawner: McGuinty lied to bishops on GSAs

The Catholic Register reports:

The Liberal government of Dalton McGuinty has pulled a dramatic about-face by breaking a pledge not to force Catholic schools to use the term gay-straight alliance for anti-bullying clubs.

Instead, Education Minister Laurel Broten has announced an amendment to Bill 13 to make it mandatory that Catholic students be allowed to name their clubs gay-straight alliances if that is their wish. (Source)

This is really a dog-bites-man story. McGuinty lied? Seriously? As if that hasn’t happened a zillion times before. I don’t reproach the Catholic Register for reporting it. Quite the contrary. But no serious Catholic or pro-lifer is really surprised by this, are we? We all knew that McGuinty wasn’t to be trusted, just like we all knew that Obama wasn’t to be trusted.

It seems that the bishops of Canada and the U.S. aren’t very politically savvy. Worse, they don’t listen to those people among the laity who have been granted the gift of discernment on these matters and who try to warn them in advance. They’d rather trust pro-gay, pro-abort politicians than their own spiritual children.

I’m not sure how big a deal this about-face really is. Did the bishops think it would be morally acceptable to have gay-straight alliances as long as they called them by another name? This is almost childish.

Socon or Bust has learned from friends in the Ottawa Catholic school board that GSAs are already alive and well in our Catholic schools. They simply can’t be called GSAs and staff are asked to be discreet about it. After all, we wouldn’t want the dirty little secret to get out, would we?

Both laity and clergy are part of the body of Christ and have a vital role to play. That was an important lesson from Vatican II. As long as bishops continue to trust corrupt politicians instead of employing the gifts and talents of their flock, the Church in North America will continue on the road to hell. United, we can stand. But divided we’re screwed.

Link: 

Yawner: McGuinty lied to bishops on GSAs

Stargazing

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Stargazing

A heads up about a few upcoming events. Readers can add.

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A heads up about a few upcoming events. Readers can add.

QUESTION TO READERS: Expanded Pentecost liturgy in the Ordinary Form

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QUESTION TO READERS: Expanded Pentecost liturgy in the Ordinary Form