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Daily Archives: June 10, 2012

Healing & Hope: Eucharistic Congress Begins in Dublin

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Four years after thousands made their way to Quebec City and the Plains of Abraham for the 49th International Eucharistic Congress (IEC), a country looking for healing and renewal kicked off the 50th edition of what some refer to as “World Youth Day” for adults on Sunday, June 10 in Dublin, Ireland.

As past hosts, the Canadian delegation is the largest outside of Irish pilgrims, with 900 Canucks in attendance. The Archdiocese of Toronto has 90 delegates attending this year’s IEC. All arrived safely after night-time flights Friday and we are also blessed to have Cardinal Thomas Collins, Toronto Auxiliary Bishop John Boissonneau and about a dozen priests attending this special gathering with us.

Most activities are taking place at the RDS (Royal Dublin Society) Congress Centre, a 15 minute train ride from the centre of the city. Cheerful volunteers are present throughout the city, at the airport and in full force at the RDS.

Today’s opening ceremonies were the culmination of four years of efforts to prep for the IEC. Bear in mind, this has been a tough last number of years for Irish Catholics, dealing with the revelations of widespread clerical abuse, devastating the largely Catholic country and prompting an official Apostolic Visitation to begin the pastoral healing of a church looking for answers, renewal and the courage to carry on.

It was clear from the opening moments of the Congress that the abuse story would not be ignored. A prayer of healing (written by survivors of abuse) was read before the start of Mass and is marked on a large granite “Healing Stone”, featured prominently just beside the main altar/stage that will be used throughout the week’s events.

Father Kevin Doran, Secretary General of IEC2012, said: “Stone speaks of permanence. To say something is ‘carved in stone’ is to say that it is here to stay rather than just a passing thought. The stone represents the firm determination to work for healing and renewal”.

The pilgrim symbol for this year’s IEC is the Eucharistic bell, traveling throughout the country to more than 1,000 churches over the last year. Like the World Youth Day Cross, pilgrims have taken the bell to prisons, hospitals, churches and other celebrations where evangelization is needed. The bell is even set up throughout the Congress where pilgrims can have their photo taken with it, pray before it and ring the bell – you hear constant single bell rings throughout the day, a soothing reminder of each pilgrim’s call to proclaim the Good News.

The Opening Ceremonies featured representatives from every diocese in the country, led by their local bishop, joining in a procession, populating the assembly with a crowd that was reported as 12,500 strong.

The traditional Irish rain held off Sunday with the opening taking place in an outdoor arena more accustomed to equestrian and rugby events, this week providing a centerpiece for Catholics from countries around the world to gather, pray, share and reflect.

The IEC is also competing for attention and space in the local media with the Euro 2012 Football (Soccer) Championships with Ireland losing their first match Sunday evening, dampening local spirits along with those congress “band-wagon” fans who can’t seem to travel anywhere without being immersed in a sea of green and orange.

The week will unfold with literally hundreds of events, workshops and speakers. Each day will include a plenary talk, witness reflection and Eucharistic Celebration.

Today’s Mass was celebrated by the Papal representative for the Congress, Canadian Cardinal Marc-Andre Ouellet, previous host of the 2008 IEC before his appointment to head the Congregation of Bishops at the Vatican.

So all in all, a very busy day, pilgrims still acclimatizing themselves to European time and the launch of a special celebration that promises to bear much fruit for the people of Ireland and all those in attendance.

The last Eucharistic Congress to come to the country was held in 1932 so it’s safe to say the Irish are due for this historic occasion once again. To all those involved in the planning, pilgrims participating and those engaged virtually throughout the world, we offer our prayers for a week of blessings and renewal for all.

On your mark, get set, let’s go…this pilgrimage is underway and Ireland has opened its arms to the world!

Location:Little Strand St,Dublin,Ireland

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Hunting "Il Corvo"…

Sunday, June 10, 2012

His Hermeneuticalness thought that, in order to

sort out those responsible

for the Vatileaks, we should bring along a couple of “the boys” to Rome. I thought that the Monsignori, being such good hunters, would have much more chance of success…

The nickname given to the person responsible for the leaks is “Il Corvo” – the crow. I forget why, exactly. The Monsignori are convinced that there is more than one crow…

IMG_20120610_174133

Monsignor Miaowrini’s biretta kept falling off. Monsignor Furretti was more inclined to pose for the camera…

IMG_20120610_210301

Oh, and by the way, no-one in Rome actually believes that the butler did it…

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Hunting "Il Corvo"…

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Ottawa to Dublin (via Toronto Pearson) – First Impressions

Sunday, June 10, 2012
Image DSC04995.JPG

YOW

Departure for most of us was from Ottawa International Airport (YOW) with a transfer in Toronto (YYZ) for the Air Canada flight to Dublin (DUB). At Pearson Airport we met a number of bishops also travelling to the International Eucharistic Congress (Archbishop Bohan of Regina and Bishop Bohen of Saskatoon) and others, including Father Thomas Rosica, CSB, of Salt and Light TV.

Whisked thtough Irish customs, we were met by representatives of the ICE. Our tour guide and bus driver took us on a tour of Dublin en route to our hotel (The Ballsbridge) which is a 15-minute walk from all the activities at the Royal Dublin Society (RDS) grounds.

Arrangements has been made for us to celebrate Mass in the downtown Blessed Sacrament Chapel, then we headed to Trinity College to take in the exhibition on the Book of Kells, a medieval manuscript of the four gospels. After checking into our hotel, we walked over to the RDS to pick up our registration kits (all handled very efficiently and with the traditional Irish warm welcome).

A photo medley of the start of our pilgrimage:

YYZ



Archbishop Albert LeGatt (Saint Boniface), Bishop Richard Gagnon (Victoria)








DUB









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Breathtaking Ireland

Sunday, June 10, 2012

We are in Ireland for the Eucharistic Congress which began today, Sunday June 10, 2012.

For the past eight days, though, we have toured Ireland and been thoroughly won over by her incredible beauty. I do not even know what word to use to describe it. If you have been here, you know. And if your heritage is Irish – which both Peggy and I share – then you have this enchanting sense that you have come home. Your suspicion is confirmed when you meet the locals and tell them your name and perhaps your mother’s name. In my case, Carney and Keogh. Right away they start telling you where you came from. County Wicklow, County Clare, County Cork. They know about the famine, for sure. And in New Ross there is a replica of the ships that took the starving emigrants to Canada. The mind starts seeing it happen. …… My own family on my mother’s side came over both before and during the potato famine (1840’s), as I understand it.

In County Clare and County Mayo you see the mountains. Rocky terrain with mile after mile of stone fences three or four feet high. Again – you see the work going on, in your mind’s eye. And you see the potato fields half way up the mountains. What? Yes that’s right. The land so poor, you see why potatoes were so important.

The other side of Ireland is its ancient history. 1800’s is recent history! You go back to Henry VIII and Oliver Cromwell. Monasteries burned, people slaughtered. Centuries of ‘troubles’ and hatred thereafter. You tour the monasteries with their stone-wall ruins. Many dating to centuries before Cromwell. We toured Glendalough, Jerpoint, Cashel, Clonmacnoise and others. How did those early monks find these places? In the middle of what would have been nowhere? I do not know, but there is a theme. High elevations and rivers or lakes. Almost always making for breath-taking views.
And speaking of breath-taking views, the Ring of Kerry and the Cliffs of Moher must hold best in show honours for the whole world.

So now we are back in Dublin. This week is the Eucharistic Congress, and today was opening day with people attending from around the world. Royal Dublin Society Stadium held a huge crowd for a powerful opening ceremony that included Mass presided by Cardinal Ouellet (Canada), said to be a candidate for the papacy. Don’t know about that but I must say two highlights did not involve him, and came right at the beginning, before Mass when Bishop Diarmuid Martin, Archbishop of Dublin went straight to the point about the illegal and immoral behaviour of members of the clergy in Ireland against those who should be protected and loved as Christ loved – children. A moving and sincere confession before all the world. Then some youth addressed the same topic, and I think these youth may have been victims. They laid it at the feet of the Church, and apparently they had composed a prayer meant to be said by a repentant Church. I intend to get a copy of that prayer, but I bet it is already in newspapers around the world.

Oh yes. Today was also the first day of the Euro soccer tournament for the Ireland team playing in Poland. Had dinner upstairs in a pub and watched Ireland go out of its mind. Bit like Canada-Russia hockey in 1972 in its intensity. Great to be part of it.
More to follow.

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Breathtaking Ireland

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Blackfen Visitation

Sunday, June 10, 2012

“Truly, it is the indescribable sweetness of contemplation which you give to those who love you. In this you have shown the tenderness of your charity, that when I had no being you made me; and when I strayed away from you, you brought me back again to serve you and commanded me to love you.” The Imitation of Christ

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The Five Arks of VBS

Sunday, June 10, 2012

 

http://www.biblestudyforkids.com/images/ark1.jpg

It’s almost summer now, but it’s also the winter of VBS discontent: the cost, the programs, the relevance, the Catholicity, etc. I don’t do Vacation Bible School so I’m not an authority; I just see VBS angst kick in on the Net each June.

At a VBS thread today someone suggested that VBS could be homemade instead of following a packaged program. (Although as Jerry Seinfeld might say, there’s nothing wrong with that.) So I thought for several seconds about what sort of homemade VBS I might like to do, and came up with this:

Assuming there are five days of VBS, they might be tied together by the idea of Ark:

1. Noah’s Ark
2. Baby Moses’ Ark
3. The Ark of the Covenant
4. Mary as the New Ark
5. The tabernacle in church as Ark.

There will be good stories to tell, read, and act out; things to draw, color, and craft. Any of the stories could be expanded per time available, e.g., Baby Moses’ Ark could be preceded by Joseph and the famine that brought his family to Egypt, and/or followed by the story of the first Passover. Then the kids could choose to make or draw: the pyramids; a sphinx; Joseph in his coat; Pharaoh; Moses in his Ark; the Burning Bush; one of the plagues; the Angel of Death passing over a house marked with lamb’s blood; parting the Red Sea, etc. Then they could assemble what they’d done in chronological order and as a group retell the whole story by referring to their artwork. Maybe each day’s artwork would append to the previous days’ such that on the last day they could tell the whole connected story to their parents or another class.

The Bible would be treated in an organized way, and the kids would see a meaningful thread of Catholicism run from the Old Testament through the New, and on into the kids’ very own church.

Ya can’t beat that.

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The International Eucharistic Congress for 2012 opens in Ireland

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Archbishop of Dublin, Martin Diarmuid

To help us celebrate the solemnity of Corpus Christi, here’s the opening address, from Vatican Radio, made by Archbishop
Diarmuid Martin for the 50th
International Eucharistic Congress. The event opens in
Ireland today and runs to June 17, 2012.


“Gaudet Mater Ecclesia: Our
Mother the Church rejoices. These were the first words of the homily preached
at the opening of the Second Vatican Council by Blessed Pope John XXIII, almost
fifty years ago. Today the Church in Ireland rejoices. It rejoices not in
triumphalism or external festivities. It rejoices in the gift of this
Eucharistic Congress which has been attentively prepared throughout the length
and breath of Ireland through prayerful reflection on the great Mystery of our
Faith: the sacrificial death and the life-giving resurrection of Jesus, present
in the Church wherever the Eucharist is celebrated and worshipped.

“The Church in Ireland
rejoices today in the presence of pilgrims from many parts of the world who
witness to the universality of our Catholic faith and who show their
faith-filled fellowship and solidarity with the Church in Ireland. Through
your presence, Cardinal Marc Ouellet, we experience our special bond in faith
with the See of Peter and we renew our affection for Pope Benedict XVI,
successor of Peter. The Catholic community in Ireland rejoices in the presence
of brothers and sisters of other Christian denominations who join with us in
prayer reflecting that real – if not yet complete – communion among us through
our common baptism.

“Above all the Church in
Ireland rejoices in the gift of the Eucharist itself, the presence among us of
Jesus Christ, our Saviour, given for us, poured out for us, in a sacrifice of
love. The Church in Ireland is a Church on the path to renewal. The fifty years
since the Second Vatican Council have brought many graces to the Church in
Ireland. The message and teaching of the Council still constitute the blueprint
for our renewal.
But those fifty years have also
been marked with a darker side, of sinful and criminal abuse and neglect of
those weakest in our society: children, who should have been the object of the
greatest care and support and Christ-like love. We recall all those who
suffered abuse and who still today bear the mark of that abuse and may well
carry it with them for the rest of their lives. In a spirit of repentance, let
us remember each of them in the silence of our hearts.

“The Church in Ireland is on
the path to renewal. It will be a lengthy journey. It requires renewed and
vigorous New Evangelization, a renewal in faith and in coherent and authentic
witness to that faith in the world and in the culture in which we live.
In these days of Eucharistic
devotion our aim is quietly yet confidently to rebuild and deepen that sense of
communion which is the mark of the followers of Jesus. We pray for Christian
parents. We pray for those who witness to their faith in shaping society in
education and in working for a truly caring society. We pray for all our
parishes and Christian communities.
“We pray for a renewal in
priestly life and in religious life, as we also give thanks to God for the
presence among us of great priests and religious men and women who love the
Church, who love their calling and who give generously of their lives following
Christ. We pray for all lay people who exercise ministry in the Church. We pray
that young Irish people will be led to know the happiness and fulfilment, the
joy and the hope, the call to love and commitment that comes from an encounter
with Jesus Christ.

“The Church in Ireland is on
the path to renewal. The Church is not ours to redesign; it is gift that we
receive from the Lord with the guidance throughout history of the Holy Spirit
and following the example of Mary and the saints. We look forward in hope. We
do not rely on our own talents. We are sure that in our efforts of renewal we
are never alone. The Eucharist is food for our journey, inviting us to
emulate the self-giving love of Jesus who gave himself for us. Gaudet
Mater Ecclesia. May the Church in Ireland rejoice, as Lord renews in all of us
the joy of our calling to Communion with Christ and communion with one
another.”


These are very encouraging universal words from our Mother Church, and they are so appropriate here in Ontario as parents fight for the freedom of Catholic education, raise their children in the faith, have a say in the public square and be part of the building of the Common Good. We pray for the success and the safety of the pilgrims attending this year’s Eucharistic Congress.

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Homily from June 10, 2012: The Pale Blue Dot (Corpus Christi Sunday)

Sunday, June 10, 2012

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Sunday Snippets – June 10

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Sunday Snippets – June 10

June 10, 2012 by Ellen Gable Hrkach


Please join me and other Catholic bloggers at RAnn’s Place for Sunday Snippets, where Catholic bloggers share posts from the previous week.

Here are my posts:


Teaching NFP Has Enriched Our Marriage

Tight Budget, Tiny Kitchen Book Review

7 Quick Takes Friday

Photo and text copyright 2012 Ellen Gable Hrkach

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Invasion

Sunday, June 10, 2012

School is being invaded by language students. Twice a year boys come here to learn English. It is a perfect environment as the boys are immersed in a complete ‘English’ experience.

However it means lots of new faces and names to learn. They will be fine.

The last time we had them was after Easter. One of the things we did was take them in boats on a river. In a boys’ school everything is competitive… so I’m pleased to say that my boat was best!

Oars… Rowe… get it?


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A little dancing for a Sunday

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Here’s another beautiful video for a Sunday… I seem to go on and on about music and song in my moodlings, but being a rather uncoordinated person these days, I find this movie about dance to be inspiring, too… another reason to get my balance back, somehow. It also reminds me of my L’Arche friends and their love of dance. Everything God gave us is for praise and celebration, our bodies included, so why not dance a little today? Let the Spirit move!

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A little dancing for a Sunday

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Hey, you can send one to me.

Sunday, June 10, 2012

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Hey, you can send one to me.

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The Feast of Corpus Christi – Panis Angelicus, sung by THE PRIESTS

Sunday, June 10, 2012

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The Feast of Corpus Christi - Panis Angelicus, sung by THE PRIESTS


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Spiritual Direction Book Club – How do I join in?

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Spiritual Direction Book Club – How do I join in?

Posted Sunday, June 10th, 2012 at 8:18 am under

Book Club
Tags:Book Club

Hundreds of you have read and responded with excitement about our new Catholic Spiritual Direction book club supported by our cast of amazing volunteers. A priest wrote in yesterday and asked an important question, “How do I participate?” Once you have registered, there are only three things to do, 1) Prepare, 2) Read, 3) Respond.

Here’s a bit more detail on how to get started:

  1. Read the first post announcing the club for more background on our book club leader and the program in general.
  2. If you have not already done so, subscribe to the Catholic Spiritual Direction site posts by entering your email in the “Subscribe Free Via Email” in the column to the right of this post (if you receive daily email updates from the site, you have already done this).
  3. IMPORTANT: Send a quick email to RCSpiritualDirection@gmail.com so we can send specific updates and resources for club members. Use “Book Club” in the subject line. In the body of the email, please indicate the city and state or country you live in. If you are a priest or religious, please indicate as such along with your parish or order/movement or prelature information as well.
  4. Acquire and read the selected book according to the schedule Vicki provides.
  5. Respond to book club posts and interact with the other readers as they dig deeper into their faith. This will all happen in the comment boxes of the posts. We may also provide some online interactive abilities in the future but you must complete step three above in order to get updates about these special events.

It really is just that simple!

Vicki will send you a post on Tuesday of this week which will outline the first reading and other important items.

We are looking forward to serve you in this new adventure!

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The Book of Common Prayer

Sunday, June 10, 2012


Coat of Arms of the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter







The Book of Common Prayer



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"English bells on English air"

Sunday, June 10, 2012

“Something quite different now bears the name of ‘Britain’”

Joanna Bogle at MercatorNet weighs in on British history and the Jubilee. Most sadly ironic quotation:

We look back down the centuries and wonder how anybody could possibly have imagined that watching a man being hanged or beheaded could constitute an afternoon’s enjoyment.

Um, not exaclty difficult to imagine, cuz the UK is filling up with just

such

people.

Here’s the part I enjoyed the most:

The pageant was magnificent – British seamanship, which many might think had disappeared as a skill along with most of our Navy, still seems to be thriving. There were superb oarsmen, beautiful crafts of different sorts and sizes, lots of energetic young people. The Royal Barge was splendid. All along the river, church bells pealed – that most glorious, most beautiful of sounds, English bells on English air, and this time mingling with the shouts and cheers of a great many happy people.

It makes cultural restoration worth working for.

.

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5 Questions Before You Leave the Catholic Church

Sunday, June 10, 2012

by Jennifer Fulwiler Wednesday, May 30, 2012


Author Anna Quindlen has been in the news lately, promoting a new book called Lots of Candles, Plenty of Cake. She recently spoke with NPR’s Terry Gross about a wide range of topics she covers in the book, including her recent decision to leave the Catholic Church. She summarized this decision by telling Gross:

The pedophilia scandals, the church’s reaction to them, and their constant obsession with gynecology — taken together at a certain point, it was probably two or three years ago, I said, ‘Enough.’ Every time I sit in the pew I ratify this behavior, and I’m not going to ratify it anymore.

I’m sure that Quindlen’s words resonated with many. She’s a gifted writer, and has undoubtedly put words to what others have thought when they make the decision to leave the Catholic Church. Like Quindlen, many people who abandon their Catholic faith still believe in God and still strive to be good, moral people; they choose to leave because they think that they will find these things they desire — God, freedom, equality — outside the walls of the Church. Such a move certainly fits in with popular cultural beliefs. Common wisdom states that the Catholic Church is a corrupt organization that places oppressive, unnecessary rules on its members. The way to find freedom, the thinking goes, is to ditch the institution and create a spirituality and moral code that works for you.

To modern ears, this all sounds right. But is it true?

As someone whose faith journey has gone in the opposite direction, I would encourage Quindlen, as well anyone else who has followed her path or is thinking of following it, to consider the following five questions before abandoning the Catholic faith:

1. Are you sure members of the Church hierarchy are worse than anyone else?

When people cite the pedophilia scandals as a key reason for abandoning the Church, I worry that they’re setting themselves up for deep disappointment. The fact that priests abused children is an idea so horrific that one can hardly bear to think about it, and the fact that some bishops didn’t take action to stop it is almost worse. But the chilling fact — perhaps so chilling that we don’t can’t accept it — is that this is not a problem with Catholic priests and bishops; it’s a problem with human nature. A priest is no more likely to abuse a child than a male schoolteacher, and a bishop is no more likely to cover it up than a school administrator.

The problems may have seemed worse within the Church because it is a single, worldwide organization, so it’s easy to link all the bad occurrences under one umbrella. But if, for example, all the nondenominational churches on the earth were part of a cohesive worldwide system, you would almost certainly see the same issues at the same rates. Instead of each instance being lost in the anonymity of disconnected communities, when they were all considered together it would seem epidemic.

Other organizations are no more safe for children than the Church — in fact, based on personal experience, I believe they are now less safe. Thanks to the pervasive stereotypes about Catholicism, people are lured into a false sense of security when dealing with other organizations, and end up adopting the dangerous mentality that “it couldn’t happen here.”

2. Are you sure your faith life would be better outside of the Church?

Keep in mind that leaving the Catholic Church means leaving the sacraments — sacraments with real power, which are not available outside of the Church that Jesus founded. If it brings you joy to commune with Jesus spiritually, how much better is it to commune with him physically as well? And how lucky are we to have the sacrament of confession, where you can unload all your burdens, hear the words “you are forgiven,” and receive special grace to help you to be the morally upright person you strive to be?

Now, those who are considering leaving the Church may struggle with believing in the supernatural power of the sacraments (in which case I’d recommend checking out these resources). But even if that’s the case, within the two-thousand-year-old Church is an unfathomable treasure chest of spiritual wisdom. We have the Rosary as well as all the other time-tested prayers of the Church. Then there are the lives of the saints, countless stories that offer an inexhaustible supply of information and inspiration about how to have a rich spiritual life. And of course we have a worldwide network of monasteries and convents, and all the great religious orders. I suppose it’s possible to utilize some of these spiritual resources without being a practicing Catholic, but if you believe that they’re good and helpful, why sever them from the source of their wisdom?

3. Are you sure the Church’s teachings are wrong?

There is a pervasive sense in modern culture that whatever spiritual tradition places the fewest moral restrictions on its adherents is most likely to be right. This idea might feel good since it appeals to our natural desire for autonomy, and certainly it is accepted as an immutable fact by modern society. And so if a person follows the path of least resistance carved out by our culture, it would be easy to drift away from all these “oppressive” teachings of the Church, without ever pausing to ask:

But are they true?

Let’s take just one example: The Church’s crazy-unpopular prohibition against contraception. The Church says that it’s neither good for individuals nor for society for couples to use artificial birth control. It’s understandable that someone’s first reaction upon hearing that would be to reject this wildly counter-cultural teaching. I know that when I first heard it, I thought it was one of the most backwards, bizarre ideas I’d ever heard. But when I took a closer look, I was shocked by the wisdom behind this thinking: I realized that contraception doesn’t solve the problems its proponents claim it will solve. I discovered that it makes women lose control over their bodies. I thought of the women I’ve known who have had abortions, and realized that almost every single one of them were using contraception when they conceived. They had been told that it would be just fine to engage in the act that creates babies, even if they were sure they couldn’t have a baby. Then, when they saw the two lines on the pregnancy tests, they felt trapped and scared, believing that they had no choices outside of the walls of the local abortion facility.

Living without artificial contraception has its challenges, but it’s the only system that gives women real freedom. As with so many other Catholic teachings that seemed crazy at first glance, once I took the time to understand the details of this view, I saw that there was a wealth of wisdom behind it beyond anything I could have imagined. It had seemed crazy simply because our culture has it so wrong, and the Church is the last institution left that’s willing to proclaim what’s right.

4. Are you sure the Church’s doctrines aren’t divinely inspired?

In my own conversion to Catholicism I faced serious challenges, including the fact that I was diagnosed with a Deep Vein Thrombosis (blood clot in a major vein) which was caused by a genetic clotting disorder that’s exacerbated by pregnancy. My doctors told me I absolutely had to use contraception. It threw me into a crisis where I had to discern how serious I was about this religion, and how much I was really willing to risk to follow it.

Thanks to some wise advice, I realized that the situation was really quite simple: Is this Church guided by God in its teachings or not? If it’s not, then there’s no reason to listen to anything it says; if it is, then to say that I knew better than the Church was to say that I knew better than God.

When I looked at the unfathomable body of wisdom contained in this organization, considered that it has stood strong while empire after empire has fallen away around it, and saw that it has been unwavering in its core doctrines despite the imperfections of its hierarchy, I simply didn’t think that humans could pull this off on their own. Then, when I began to transform my life according to these teachings, I was completely convinced. Following the “rules” of the Church brought an explosion of grace and peace and love into my life, and into my family’s lives as well. I became convinced that these teachings are not human-made, but come from Someone who knows us better than we know ourselves.

5. Are you sure we don’t need the Church?

At the end of the NPR interview, Quindlen says, “I’ve never really gotten past that quote from Anne Frank in her diary, where she says that people are really good at heart.” I too have always been touched by that quote, and I think it’s worth putting some serious thought into. Because if it’s true that people are ultimately good at heart…then that means that the staff who worked at Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen, lining up children in front of the gas chambers, overseeing Anne Frank and her family in slave labor, were good at heart too. How on earth, then, could normal, good people participate in something so evil?

The answer is chillingly simple: Through the power of human rationalization.

To look at the smiling faces of the employees in these pictures of an on-site staff retreat at Auschwitz is to understand that they had all rationalized their behavior. Nobody ever wakes up and says, “I’m going to do something evil today!”, not even the staffers at Auschwitz. The only way evil ever works through us is when we convince ourselves that what we’re doing is actually good. The most dangerous force in the world is the human capacity for rationalization.

I think that some folks reject the concept of the Church’s divinely-inspired moral code because they don’t see why it would even be necessary. Why would God even care to institute something like that? Why can’t each person just get in touch with the spiritual realm and find what’s good and true for him- or herself? The answer to that question can be found in the smiles on the Auschwitz’s employees faces.

Though the individual members of the Catholic Church have made plenty of mistakes, sometimes gravely serious ones, its doctrines have always been a bulwark that protects human life. To a healthy American adult this may seem like an insignificant concept, since the only life that is devalued in our time and place is that of the severely disabled, the unborn, and others who literally do not have a voice. But that could change. The zeitgeist could shift, just as it did in Europe in the 1930s, and new groups of people may suddenly be seen as inconvenient and expendable. And one day the life that the Catholic Church stands up for may be your own.

Read more: http://www.ncregister.com/blog/jennifer-fulwiler/5-questions-before-you-leave-the-catholic-church#ixzz1x6qCuLto

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5 Questions Before You Leave the Catholic Church

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Where the fault lies

Sunday, June 10, 2012

It has been very difficult to respond to the situation between the Catholic Church in Ontario and the Fascist Government at Queen’s Park headed by a Premier purporting to be a Roman Catholic. I go back and forth whether to post or not. Sometimes it is not charity that is needed, but clarity.

The fault lies squarely with the Bishops of Ontario and those who have been advising them. When I wrote to the Director of Communications for the Archdiocese of Toronto over a year ago on these matters, I was told that just because it appears that nothing was being done doesn’t mean that is the case. They were taking care of it and they told the priests of this Archdiocese the same thing.

Well, they took care of it all right!

Most letters and emails were not answered. None that I know of by the Ordinary or Auxiliary Bishops on this matter but deferred off to Communication experts; did they even read what we were saying?

They did not engage the Catholic laity even when pleaded with up to two years ago. They turned it over to so-called experts, chancery bureaucrats and communication experts who were under water in their understanding of who they were dealing with. They were dealing not only with a cynical manipulative government headed by a Premier who is a classic liar, but with a diabolical homosexualist movement that wants Catholic education eliminated and the Church marginalised.

The Priests of the Archdiocese of Toronto were even instructed not to preach on this matter.

Priests who wrote their concerns were answered by the Director of Communications, a layman, not their Ordinary or Auxiliary Bishop. Some were called in.

Yes, they were handling it, they had Dalton’s word.

d
Now, the homosexualist lobby has declared an open war. The enemy is empowered.

“But Ontario Gay-Straight Alliances Coalition lawyer Doug Elliott told the Gay and Lesbian news service Xtra! that if Catholics “driven by the position of the Vatican” think they have found a loophole in the legislation, then they will be hauled before the courts.”

“If the schools try to play games with kids…, the law is clear. We won’t put up with any of that crap come September,” said Elliott. “If you’re not complying with the law, then we’re going to take you to court. It’s that simple.”

The Premier of Ontario told our episcopal leadership that “there would be no changes” that we would have to worry about. They have admitted to certain Catholic lay leaders in this that the Premier lied to him.

What did they expect?

Continued: 

Where the fault lies

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Papal Wisdom

Sunday, June 10, 2012

When the Lord says, “Unless ye have eaten the flesh of the Son of Man, and drunk His blood, ye will not have life in you,” you ought so to be partakers at the Holy Table, as to have no doubt whatever concerning the reality of Christ’s Body and Blood.’

St. Leo I the Great, Sermon 91, A.D.461

‘Among the weapons against the prince of this world, the most potent is… a frequent partaking of the Lord’s Body.’
St. Gregory VII, Letter to Matilda of Uscany, Feb. 16, 1074

‘The effect of this sacrament [the Eucharist] which He operates in the soul for him who takes it worthily is the union of man with Christ.’
Eugenius IV, Exultate Deo, Nov. 22, 1439

‘In the most Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist the body and blood together with the soul and divinity of our Lord Jesus Christ are truly, really, and substantially present.’
Pius IV, Injunctum Nobis, Nov 13, 1564

‘There is a difference between the food of the body and that of the soul, that whereas the form is changed into our substance, the latter changes us into its own.’
Leo XIII, Mira Caritatis, May 28, 1902

‘By this Sacrament faith is fed, in it the mind finds its nourishment, the objections of the rationalists are brought to naught, and abundant light is thrown on the supernatural order.’
Leo XIII, Mira Caritatis, May 28, 1902

‘The faithful, being united to God by means of the Sacrament, may thence derive strength to resist their sensual passions, to cleanse themselves from the stains of daily faults, and to avoid those grave sins to which human frailty is liable.
St. Pius X, Sacra Tridentina Synodus, Dec. 20, 1905

‘In the profound vision which he had fo the Church as a society, Pope Pius X recognized that it was the Blessed Sacrament which had the power to nourish her initimate life substantially, and to elevate her high above all other human societies.’
Pius XIII, Quest’ ore di fulgente, May 29, 1954

See original:  

Papal Wisdom

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Corpus Christi Prayer

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Corpus Christi, nourish me

For your body is food indeed

Bread of life.

Corpus Christi, flood my soul

Cleanse me of all sin,

In streams of mercy and love

Engulf me.

Corpus Christi,

Direct my steps

For Your way leads to truth -

There is no other.

Corpus Christi, live in me,

Animate me

That I might live always in You.

Amen.

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Corpus Christi Prayer

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