Saturday, January 31, 2015

Fwd: CNA: Archbishops Chaput, Gomez confirmed participants in Synod on the Family



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Saturday, January 31, 2015
Subject: CNA: Archbishops Chaput, Gomez confirmed participants in Synod on the Family
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Unknown:

Vatican City, Jan 31, 2015 / 11:32 am (CNA/EWTN News).- {The Vatican has confirmed the participation of 48 delegates chosen by bishops' conferences to take part in this year's Synod on the Family. 

Included on the list are all those elected by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB).

Archbishop Jose Gomez of Los Angeles, the US' largest archdiocese, and Archbishop Charles Chaput of Philadelphia, where the upcoming World Meeting of Families will be held, will be among those taking part in October's gathering, according to the Vatican document.}

Other US delegates included are Archbishop Joseph Kurtz of Louisville and Cardinal Daniel DiNardo of Galveston-Houston, USCCB president and secretary, respectively.

Released Jan. 31, this is the first of several documents listing the delegates elected by the various bishops' conferences around the world who have been approved by the Vatican. 

Delegates listed in the announcement included 7 from Africa; 3 from Asia; 3 from Oceana; 17 from Europe; and 10 from Central and South America.

Not every bishops' conference was represented in Saturday's list, as some still need to hold their general assemblies where they will select their candidates and substitutes before sending the names to the Vatican for approval. These subsequent ratifications will be announced at a later time.

Around 190 prelates worldwide participated in the 2014 Synod on the Family. 

The names of other participants, such as auditors, experts and papal nominees, will also released at a later date in the lead up to the Synod on the Family.

This year's Synod on the Family, to be held on Oct. 4-25, will be the second and larger of two such gatherings to take place in the course of a year. Like its 2014 precursor, the focus of the 2015 Synod of Bishops will be the family, this time with the theme: "The vocation and mission of the family in the church and the modern world."

The list also confirmed the participation of alternates, Archbishop Blase Cupich of Chicago, and Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone of San Francisco, head of the USCCB's defense and promotion of marriage subcommittee.

A preparatory document for the Synod on the Family, formally known as the Lineamenta, was sent to bishops' conference in Dec. 2014.

The full list of all 48 selected delegates can be found at: http://press.vatican.va/content/salastampa/it/bollettino/pubblico/2015/01/31/0080/00168.html

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Fwd: CNA: Humanity cannot exist without farmers, says Pope



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Saturday, January 31, 2015
Subject: CNA: Humanity cannot exist without farmers, says Pope
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Unknown:

Vatican City, Jan 31, 2015 / 12:00 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- {Pope Francis told farmers on Saturday that in a world marked by wastefulness and extreme climate change, they have the important vocation of caring for the earth and providing for all of humanity. 

"Care for the earth, making alliance with it, in order that it may continue to be, as God wants, the source of life for the entire human family," the Pope said.

The Holy Father's remarks were made in the Clementine Hall of the Papal Palace during a Jan. 31 audience with members of Italy's National Federation of Farmers, who celebrate their 70th anniversary of their foundation this year.}

The word cultivate, Pope Francis said in prepared remarks, "calls to mind the care which the farmer has for his land because it gives fruit, and this is shared." 

The Holy Father said that without farming, there is no humanity, and without good food, there is no life for "the men and women of every continent."

He went on to describe farming as a true vocation which merits deserves to be recognized and valued, and warned against measures which penalize this "valuable activity" and dissuade new generations from taking an interest in this profession. 

The Pope did note, however, that statistics indicate a growth in the number of students enrolling in agricultural studies. 

Pope Francis went on to speak of two "critical areas" of reflection with regard to the farming profession: first, that of poverty and hunger which is still of interest to "a vast part of humanity."

Noting how the Second Vatican Council "recalled the universal destination of the goods of the earth" (cfr Cost. past. Gaudium et spes, 69), Pope Francis said, "in reality the dominant economic system excludes much of their correct use."

"The absolutizing of market rules, a throwaway culture" and food wastefulness of "unacceptable proportions, together with other factors, cause misery and suffering for many families," he said.

In order to consider the second "critical area" of reflection on the farming profession, the Pope continued, it is important to remember "man's call, not only to till the earth, but also to care for it." (Gen. 2:15).

"Every farmer knows well how it becomes more difficult to till the land at a time of accelerated climate change". 

Pope Francis stressed the importance of acting swiftly to care for creation, calling on nations to collaborate with one another in this goal.

He then then invited those present in the audience to "rediscover love for the earth as 'mother' – as Saint Francis would say – from which we have taken and to which we are called to constantly return."

Before bestowing his blessing on the participants, Pope Francis concluded by asking those present to pray for him.

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Church vs. State: Six court cases to watch...



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Saturday, January 31, 2015
Subject: KATHY SCHIFFER: Church Vs. State: Six Court Cases To Watch
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Kathy SchifferSCHIFFER: The year 2015 has begun with some high-profile legal cases pitting the Church against the State.  The following six cases will impact Church/State relations, and should be of particular interest to concerned Catholics. Starting with Conestiga Woods: On Friday, January 23, the Obama Administration was required to pay $570,000 to cover attorney fees for Conestoga Wood [Read More...] #kk2mugshot

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Less is more, as seen in a cartoon...



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Friday, January 30, 2015
Subject: ARCHDIOCESE OF WASHINGTON: Less is More – As seen in a cartoon.
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Msgr. Charles PopePOPE: We have more than ever. Not just more things, more options, more capacity, more ability. Several hundred years ago a young peasant living is Europe seldom venture more than a few miles from they were born. And longer journeys were rare and for serious reasons. Most of their life was "decided" by the place and […] #kk3always

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Fwd: CRUX: ‘Return to Me' is a charming romantic comedy with Catholic themes



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Friday, January 30, 2015
Subject: CRUX: 'Return to Me': A charming rom-com with Catholic themes
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Steven D. GreydanusGREYDANUS: "Return to Me" is remarkably chaste for a rom-com made in the past 15 years, but a blend of traditionalism and irreverence runs through the film. {Let's face it, you don't often see large families in romantic comedies. After all, the leads in a romantic comedy are just getting acquainted, or at least just falling in love. If you already have half a dozen kids, it might be a comedy, and it could possibly even be romantic, but it wouldn't be a rom-com in the usual sense.} #kk3always

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A question about Limbo



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Saturday, January 31, 2015
Subject: MARK SHEA: Question about Limbo
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Mark SheaSHEA:

A reader writes:

I have a question about what happens to babies who die without baptism. I was always taught that limbo was a theological speculation, but never an official doctrine, and that God could give them the grace of baptism if he wanted. Basically, since God hasn't revealed what happens, we should just trust in His mercy.

But somebody in the Internet recently showed me some quotes that seems to say Limbo is infallibly taught by the Church. Supposedly Pope Pius VI said:

"Pope Pius VI, Auctorem fidei, Aug. 28, 1794: "26. The doctrine which rejects as a Pelagian fable, that place of the lower regions (which the faithful generally designate by the name of the limbo of the children) in which the souls of those departing with the sole guilt of original sin are punished with the punishment of the condemned, exclusive of the punishment of fire, just as if, by this very fact, that these who remove the punishment of fire introduced that middle place and state free of guilt and of punishment between the kingdom of God and eternal damnation, such as that about which the Pelagians idly talk" – Condemned as false, rash, injurious to Catholic schools"

So now I'm confused. I admit, I don't really understand what the quote by Pius is saying. It's worded really weird. But this person is convinced it means that limbo is official doctrine. So now I don't know what to believe. Did the Church change her teaching??? Why does it say now that limbo isn't doctrine?

Can you help me make sense of what Pius is saying here? This is really bothering me.

It sounds like Pius is saying that limbo can't be definitively denied, not that it must be definitively affirmed. That remains true. You can believe it if you like, but you don't have to. Be very leery of people grabbing obscure documents, written primarily about other issues, and pressing them into some modern agenda to attack the Church.

Thanks Mark. That makes sense and puts my mind at ease.

And yeah, after I wrote you I realized this guy was someone who thought the modern day Church lost her authority or something. He went on to say anyone not physically baptized in the Catholic Church was damned, and said the idea that people can be saved *through* the Church without necessarily being an actual member of the Church was a modernist invention. That's when I realized what this guy was doing.

Actually, the way he was going around using obscure papal texts as proof texts kind or reminded me of some Protestants use of the bible. He didn't care how the Church interpreted her own words, it was only how he interpreted it that mattered. I'm not sure if he realized the irony of that though.

Indeed, one of the ironies of the Greatest Catholics of All Time is the way in which they mirror Protestant Fundamentalism. Only their proof texts are encyclicals, or beloved mystics, or favorite passages from some saint or theologian. But the purpose is always the same: to insist on a flat contradiction between the pre- and post-Vatican II Church (typically on some matter where there is not really a contradiction, as here) and then to demand that we choose betwen the Real Church (i.e., the Church of the Reactionary's imagination) or the alleged heretical "modernist" Church (i.e. the actual Catholic Church).

Curiously, this is almost always driven by a burning rigorist *need* to believe that virtually the entire Church, as well as the entire world beyond the Church, is damned. Not a fear of their damnation, but an intense desire for it. Sure they may *say* they don't want people to go to hell. But the reality is that they deeply desire it and make very clear that if it doesn't happen, then "it was a *waste* to be a Catholic." It speaks of a relationship founded entirely on servile fear of God on the one hand and of a seriously loveless approach to neighbor on the other.

The healthy Catholic approach is that {The fear of the Lord is the beginning, not the end of wisdom. Love is the end and goal of wisdom. Our approach to our neighbor is to commend him into the hands of God, neither presuming his salvation nor, God forbid, hoping that he will be damned just to make our membership in Club Catholic feel validated. We are to hope–and to bear witness out of love. The approach to the sacraments as though they are reducing valves designed to keep out the riff raff is foreign to the mind of Christ.}

#kk3always

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Friday, January 30, 2015

How to tell when a robot has written you a letter

How to tell when a robot has written you a letter — The Message — Medium: A few weeks ago I got duped by a robot. In the mail.

I was sifting through my dead-tree postal mail and tossing junk in the recycling bin. Nearly everything that arrives in my mailbox is junk, so I was tossing, tossing, tossing … until suddenly, whoops: A hand-addressed letter. This looked legit, so I ripped it open — only to find it was an oily invitation to take out a second mortgage on my home. I’d been fooled.

Cardinal Baldisseri: Pope Francis approved controversial Synod documents personally

Top Official of Synod on the Family Counters Conservatives' Arguments - Aleteia: Last week, the debate about next October’s Synod on the Family came into view once again as the Secretary General of the Synod, Cardinal Lorenzo Baldisseri, opened a three-day (January 22 -25) international conference of lay and family movements in Rome.�

Cardinal Baldisseri called the 300 conference participants, representing 80 different organizations, to enter into the synod process by reflecting on the preparatory document, called the Lineamenta. The document contains the final report from last October’s preparatory assembly (the Extraordinary Synod of 2014), together with 46 questions intended to facilitate its reception and examine the themes treated in it.

The hidden-er, more traumatic-er secrets of Catholic womanhood

The Hidden-er, More Traumatic-er Secrets of Catholic Womanhood - FOCUS BlogMELISSAKEATING: So I heard the boys were throwing some shade. Daniel Paris decided to write a really adorable little piece in response my “Hidden Traumas of Catholic Womanhood” post. He actually tried to say that Catholic men have it harder than Catholic women.

Seriously. He said that. He wrote it in a blog AND said it to my face. Also, possibly behind my back at the FOCUS HQ water cooler. Rude…

And so, lovely ladies, here is our rebuttal. I would like you to know that I have actually edited it down, because apparently even a gif post can fall in the tl;dr category. Regardless, I apologize for the tears that may be induced by voicing following traumas.

It’s time to break the silence.

Fr. Joseph Illo explains altar boys-only policy at San Francisco parish

Fr. Joseph Illo Explains Altar Boys-Only Policy at San Francisco Parish | Catholic World Report - Global Church news and views: Star of the Sea Church in San Francisco made national news recently when its priests announced that female altar servers were being phased out and the parish was returning to the traditional practice of having only altar boys assisting the priest during the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. A CBS television news report (“Peeved Parishioners Leaving SF Catholic Church Over Ban on Girls as Altar Servers”) declared there was “outrage” among parishioners and featured a girl from the parish school saying she feels “insulted” because “it makes me feel like I’m not good enough because I’m a girl.” Other reports were also negative. “Because they are too good at fulfilling their duties,” the New York Daily News stated, “girls will no longer be trained as altar servers at a Catholic church in San Francisco.”

10 common thought distortions that cause us trouble

10 Common Thought Distortions That Cause Us Trouble - PsychedCatholicBREUNINGER: In my last post I offered a basic sketch of the cognitive-behavioral model of psychological distress.� By way of quick, pithy review: the way you THINK gives rise to the way you FEEL and BEHAVE.  So, understanding our thoughts is important if we want to understand our feelings and behaviors.


Now, we all operate from schemas—a fancy term for how we understand ourselves and the world around us. Based on our previous experiences (both positive and negative), this understanding of ourselves and the world can be inaccurate, unhelpful, and even harmful. �Our schemas heavily influence what we pay attention to in our environment, what we remember, and how we perceive our everyday occurrences—how we assess situations.

"I Will Follow": A new short film from Ascension Press on priestly vocations

New Advent: "I Will Follow": A new short film from Ascension Press on priestly vocations: This film follows Father Joshua and Father Mike through their conversions and their journey to the priesthood.

Why having a heart of gold is not what Christianity is about

New Advent: Why having a heart of gold is not what Christianity is aboutBARRON: Many atheists and agnostics today insistently argue that it is altogether possible for non-believers in God to be morally upright. They resent the implication that the denial of God will lead inevitably to complete ethical relativism or nihilism. And they are quick to point out examples of non-religious people who are models of kindness, compassion, justice, etc. In point of fact, a recent article has proposed that non-believers are actually, on average, more morally praiseworthy than religious people. In this context, I recall Christopher Hitchens remark that, all things considered, he would be more frightened of a group of people coming from a religious meeting than a group coming from a rock concert or home from a night on the town. God knows (pun intended) that during the last twenty years we’ve seen plenty of evidence from around the world of the godly behaving very badly indeed.

Fwd: CNA: Coming soon to the Vatican: haircuts for Rome's homeless


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Fri, Jan 30, 2015 at 12:48 AM
Subject: CNA: Coming soon to the Vatican: haircuts for Rome's homeless
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Unknown:

Vatican City, Jan 30, 2015 / 12:08 am (CNA/EWTN News).- {The Vatican's continued efforts to help the homeless of Rome have expanded beyond showers and bathrooms at St. Peter's Square, with a barber shop set to open soon.

"Our primary concern is to give people their dignity," Archbishop Konrad Krajewski, head of the Office of Papal Charities, told the Italian news agency ANSA.

In November, construction started on new showers and bathrooms for the homeless under the colonnades of St. Peter's Square. The archbishop, who oversaw the project, set aside space for a barber.

He noted the difficulty that the homeless face in washing themselves, which in turn helps cause others to reject them—or causes them to fear rejection.}

"A person needs to keep their hair and facial hair tidy, also in order to prevent diseases," the archbishop said. "This is another service that homeless people do not have easy access to. It is not easy for them to enter a normal shop because there may be a fear of customers catching something, like scabies for example."

The initiative will also help "the good of the city," since homeless people often take buses and the subway and come into contact with others.

The Poland-born Archbishop Krajewski is the papal almoner, who conducts acts of charity for the poor and raises money to fund the charitable work. When the archbishop was appointed, Pope Francis urged him not to stay at his desk but rather to be an active worker for the benefit of the poor.

Many barbers have volunteered with enthusiasm, including two barbers from the national Italian organization that transports the sick to Lourdes, France and other international shrines. Other volunteers are finishing their final year in barber school.

The barber service will be open on Mondays, when barber shops in Italy are traditionally closed. It is scheduled to open in several weeks.
 

#kk2churchnews

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How to save money at restaurants by buying gift cards

How to Save Money at Restaurants by Buying Gift Cards: Gift cards are a popular gift choice. You may have received some during the recent holiday season.

They’re convenient for the giver, since you don’t have to worry about getting the perfect gift, and they’re convenient for the receiver, because they get to shop at their leisure and pick out something out they really want.

It’s especially nice to receive a restaurant gift card because you can use it for a fun social night, or date night. These gifts cards are always a favorite, because who doesn’t like to take a night off from cooking for themselves?

Vatican to provide free haircuts for the homeless

Vatican to provide free haircuts for the homeless | World news | The Guardian: Homeless people in Rome will soon be able to head to the Vatican for a free shave and haircut.

The move, arranged by Pope Francis’s almoner, follows a plan unveiled last year to install toilets and showers for the homeless in a renovated area in the vicinity of St Peter’s Square.

The new service will be offered every Monday starting on 16 February and will be provided by volunteer barbers who usually have the day off on Mondays. The charity will rely heavily on donations, including for razors, scissors, mirrors and chairs, some of which have already been given to the Holy See.

"A new teaching with power": Background on this Sunday's readings...

The Sacred Page: "A New Teaching with Power": Readings for the Fourth Sunday in Ordinary TimeBARBER: Not long ago I got into a conversation with a fellow passenger on an airplane who explained to me how he had left Catholicism to find a "biblically based" church. In particular, he discussed his disdain for the Catholic tradition of the religious life, i.e., monks and nuns. Specifically, he claimed that such lifestyles were "unnatural" and contrary to the biblical vision for human sexuality.�

I asked him for his take on 1 Corinthians 7. After readily pulling out his Bible and reading through the passage, he confessed that he "must have missed that one".�

Paul's point in context, of course, is not that everyone is called to celibacy. Each should live the life the Lord has assigned for them. But the practice of celibacy is, as the Catechism of the Catholic Church says, an "eschatological sign". Those who live it out faithfully bear witness to the fact that the form of this world is passing away. The detachment they practice by renouncing earthly goods is a call for all of us to do the same in whatever way God has called us to do that.

How are your soul and body related? Not as milk to a milk bottle, but as the Mona Lisa to paint...

Burying the Dead: A Memorial and a Pledge of Future Salvation | Daily News | NCRegister.comSHEA: “The body,” I was taught growing up, “is just the shoebox for the soul. What matters are the shoes, not the box. So when it’s time to go to heaven, we throw the box away.”

Along with this good dose of gnostic thinking came a certain aesthetic that regarded the human person as a ghost in a machine. Of course, I didn’t live as though I was a ghost in a machine. Nobody does, except perhaps a victim of extreme mental illness.

Practically speaking, I lived as you do: in the instinctive awareness that I am a unity of body and soul. That’s why when Susie stuck out her tongue at me when I was 4, I knew that her soul was, in union with her body, expressing the thought that I was yucky. And when I cried as a result, it was not the tear ducts of my “bio-envelope” that were sad. It was me — the union of body and soul — that felt rejected.

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Many people seem to have a strange longing for aliens. But what if we are alone in the universe after all?

Afraid in the Cosmos — Our Strange Longing for Aliens - AleteiaMILLS: “Are we afraid?” asks a writer in the English newspaper The Guardian. Sue Blackmore, a writer and broadcaster, is trying to figure out why the discovery of Kepler 438b, a planet very much like earth, has gotten so much attention.

She admits to being scared herself. She’s not scared of aliens, but frightened because life may be ubiquitous in the universe but intelligent life “so dangerous that it cannot last,” because it creates technology that eventually kills it. She hopes we’re fascinated with aliens because we’re curious in the normal human way and mentions the pleasures of meeting aliens who might be doing better at facing problems than we are. She closes with an offhand question: “Or could we just be scared of being alone in the universe?”

The dangers of the occult and the New Age are all around us

In His Name I Cast Thee Out…TURLEY: So too is the solution to the woes they drag in their wake. Such were the sentiments of someone I had met some time ago, a woman who specialised in freeing souls from those shackles. Recently, I set out to find her again, and this time to question her more closely.

That search concluded as a train pulled into a lonely country station, somewhere in the British Isles.� Even at that early hour, the streets were deserted. I made my way through the cold wind to a non-descript avenue and to an equally ordinary house on it. As the door opened, I observed the woman stood before me and remembered the reason for my expedition, and its unusual nature. This was no social visit, but rather an interview with a demonologist.

A glimpse of Heaven in my personal Hell

A Glimpse of Heaven in My Personal HellMANN: We live in the human world, and in the natural world; and so we live, unavoidably, in the midst of beauty. But we are habitually blind and deaf to the beauty around us, hard-hearted and unappreciative toward it. This beauty runs far deeper than the mere appearance of things; but for that very reason, this blindness and deafness – our self-fortification against the “arrow of beauty that wounds man” (in Cardinal Ratzinger’s words) – extends even to those who are uncommonly sensitive to apparent, perceptible beauty. Only the saints, seeing with Christ’s own eyes, are exempt from the general law – while most of us remain determined, in our various ways, to defend ourselves against the mystery of beauty.

Interview: Armstrong Amendment’s author says D.C. will lose fight against religious educators...

Interview: Armstrong Amendment’s Author Says D.C. Will Lose Fight against Religious Educators: Former U.S. Senator William Armstrong, who authored the 1989 “Armstrong Amendment” to prevent the District of Columbia from forcing religious educators to sponsor homosexual clubs and events, told The Cardinal Newman Society that he expects D.C.’s repeal of the Amendment to be overturned by Congress or federal courts.

Armstrong, who now serves as president of Colorado Christian University, said that he sponsored the 1989 Nation’s Capital Religious Liberty and Academic Freedom Act, also known as the Armstrong Amendment, to ensure that the District “could not require a religious school to fund student groups that advocated a point of view different from the historic traditions of their faith.” Georgetown University had fought unsuccessfully in court to uphold its refusal to sponsor such a club.

Armstrong said that “the public policy purpose” was not clear in the D.C. Council’s decision to repeal the Amendment. He asked, “Why [is the Council] insisting on the right to trample on the religious freedom of these schools? Why would they want to deliberately require religious people to violate their strongly held convictions?”

St. John Bosco: Conquering souls for Christ

St. John Bosco: Conquering Souls for ChristFITZPATRICK: The boy entered the strange courtyard. He saw a knot of boys gathered by the far corner. As he approached, wondering where he was, he overheard them talking, laughing, and cursing. The boy became enraged at the foul language and rushed into their midst, striking them to silence their blasphemies. He froze suddenly under the gaze of a man with a face like the sun.

“John,” the man said, “come here.”

The boy lowered his fists, standing before the group he had been belaboring.

“Conquer the hearts of these, your friends, not with violence but with charity. Begin at once. Teach them the evil of vice and the excellence of virtue.”

12 amazing Christian sculptures made entirely out of Legos

12 Amazing Christian Sculptures Made Entirely Out of LEGOs | ChurchPOP: Take this, for example. Built by Amy Hughes, the whole project took about a year and a half, used more than 75,000 pieces, is 7 ft x 5.5 ft x 30 in, and seats 1,372 lego people. The Lego building has a balcony, a Narthex, stairs to the balcony, restrooms, coat rooms, several mosaics, a nave, a baptistery, an alter, a crucifix, a pulpit and an elaborate pipe organ.

Year in and year out, just a little bit at a time, NFL kickers get better. And better. And better.

Kickers Are Forever | FiveThirtyEight: In football, there are constant power struggles, both on and off the field: players battling players, offenses battling defenses, the passing game battling the running game, coaches battling coaches, and new ways of thinking battling old ways of thinking. And then there are kickers. Battling no one but themselves and the goalposts, they come on the field in moments most mundane and most decisive. They take all the blame when they fail, and little of the credit when they succeed.

It isn’t too late for America’s noble experiment to succeed

Eight Hundred Years of Prayer: Lawyers, Faith, and the Common Good | Public DiscourseCONLEY: The Catholic tradition of the Red Mass dates back to the year 1245, when the Bishop of Paris brought together the lawyers and law students working in his city to pray that the Holy Spirit would bless them with wisdom and good counsel. The Church has been praying for holy and virtuous lawyers for eight hundred years. Maybe another eight hundred years will finally do the trick!

As attorneys, your call is to serve the Lord in the life of the mind and in the forum of civil government and public life. Each of you has the privilege of formation in the fundamental contours of American public life and law. With that privilege comes the obligation, indeed the vocation, to be leaders in American public life and discourse.

"I call every seeking soul": Vermont's new bishop, free at last...


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Thu, Jan 29, 2015 at 1:12 PM
Subject: ROCCO PALMO: "I Call Every Seeking Soul" – Vermont's New Bishop, Free At Last
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Rocco PalmoPALMO: Even for all the tools now easily available, it remains a fact of ecclesial life that most Catholics don't hear from their bishops often, let alone every day.

For tens of thousands across the globe, however, the lacking state of things elsewhere makes it all the more significant that Chris Coyne has become a familiar, easily accessible daily shepherd... and perhaps most effectively of all for everybody else's sake, a prelate who can be reliably heard from without ever asking for money.

Through a host of platforms over his four years in episcopal ministry, the global church's first blogging priest-made-bishop has engaged his cyber-flock with a personality whose quirky sense of humor and devotion to Dunkin' Donuts, Florence Henderson, the Food Network and free hotel wi-fi have become prominent in their own right, each about as well known as his keen distaste for... come on, you already know it.

And yet, despite all that, a well-honed outreach done not out of calculation but simple fun and the sake of the Gospel has had one notable hitch: being second-fiddle in the diocese – and even if he's about to take the helm of the USCCB's communications arm – a certain reticence is expected of an auxiliary bishop.

Not that he's been "bitter" about it – in all truth, he hasn't. But today, with the 56 year-old's installation as tenth ordinary of Burlington and head of Vermont's 120,000-member statewide church, the days of reserve are over... and in his preach at the afternoon Mass, the prodigal New Englander marked his homecoming with a splash. (Indeed, all that remains now is the seeming inevitable: Tommy Tiernan's arrival as the diocesan spokesman.)

Granted, the rollout has already been ramping up – since his December appointment, Coyne's returned with a new fervor to his redesigned blog, as well as adding in yet another element: a series of "on the road" videos shot from his dashboard-mounted iPhone while driving around, all on top of a very concerted introduction in the local press that's served as a model for how it's done. (Given the attention Coyne's road videos have garnered, it bears noting that the concept was directly inspired by the first-ever blogging priest tapped to lead a diocese: Tyler's Bishop Joe Strickland – the long-suffering, wildly-beloved native son named to head his home-flock in 2012 – who fittingly began taping at the wheel on the Guadalupe feast.)

With polls routinely citing the Green Mountain State as the US jurisdiction whose residents are least attached to organized religion of any other, the Sant'Anselmo grad made a pointed and significant choice for his Opening Day liturgical texts, opting to use the little-known Mass for the New Evangelization, which the Holy See commissioned for the 2012 Year of Faith.


On a personal note, this scribe was supposed to be in Burlington for today's rites, both to be thoroughly entertained and, above all, to support a brother and friend who is one of our own more than almost anybody else. Alas, the non-blizzard that ended up skirting these parts earlier this week torpedoed the travel plans, a turn of events that – like deflated footballs, Philadelphia clericalism and Starbucks coffee – is simply of the devil. In that light, even more thanks to Fr Bob Reed and all our friends at CatholicTV for the gift of being able to see the moment in real-time and share it around.

All that said, as Mama Rita glowed in the front pew of St Joseph's Co-Cathedral, below is her middle boy's homecoming preach – a text that doesn't explicitly use the words "new evangelization," but whose call is written all over it.


* * * 
HOMILY OF
THE MOST REVEREND CHRISTOPHER JAMES COYNE, DD, SLD
TENTH BISHOP OF BURLINGTON
SOLEMN MASS OF INSTALLATION
SAINT JOSEPH'S CO-CATHEDRAL
29 JANUARY 2015

There is an inscription that was found on a bell that hung in the tower of a church in Northern Wisconsin that read:

"To the bath and the table,
To the prayers and the Word,
I call every seeking soul."

The ringing of church bells was once something with which Vermonters were very familiar. Whether it was in the small towns of the countryside or the competing calls of the churches of the cities, the Sunday morning call of the bells "to the bath and the table, to the prayers and the Word" were a constant reminder of the presence of God in our midst.

The bells still ring out. Not so numerous and not so often, but they still ring out, their meaning captured in the words of the poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, "for bells are the voice of the church; they have tones that touch and search, the hearts of young and old, one sound to all … [The Bells of St. Blas.] Yes, the bells still ring, the bells still search but not many are answering the call. "Come," the bells say, "Come and worship with us. Come and hear what God has to say. Come to the table and the bath, to the prayers and the Word." But not many seem to come anymore. Yes, most of churches are still places of worship and communion where folks still gather, but many of those gatherings grow smaller and grayer every year. Folks look out and say, "Where are the young people and the families? Where have our friends and neighbors gone? Why are there so few answering the call of the Church to the life of the Good News?" In response, one could respond with fatalism, with a shrug of defeat, and a kind of long-term communal hospice as door after door after door of our churches close and the Body is finally laid to rest.

And yet, I like many of you, do not stand here in this cathedral without hope, without the conviction that this need not be. Now more than ever, our community needs to hear the call of the "Good News" proclaimed to a culture that seems to hear so many other voices.

John Henry Newman, now Blessed, once spoke to the wreckage that was the Catholic Church in 19th c. England. After years of being legally banned from public life and worship in England, the Catholic faith was finally a legal religion once again. In the face of continuing anti-Catholic prejudice and in the midst of Church with little to build upon, Newman preached his famous sermon entitled, "A Second Spring." The very title itself invokes hope. He spoke:

"What! those few scattered worshippers, the Roman Catholics, to form a Church! Shall the past be rolled back? Shall the grave open? … Shall shepherds, watching their poor flocks by night, be visited by a multitude of the heavenly army, and hear how their Lord has been new-born in their own city? Yes; for grace can, where nature cannot. The world grows old, but the Church is ever young…. One thing alone I know — that according to our need, so will be our strength… We shall not be left orphans; we shall have within us the strength of the Paraclete, promised to the Church and to every member of it."
"We shall not be left orphans, we shall have within us the strength of the Paraclete." Jesus' promise of the gift of the Spirit to his disciples is our inheritance as well. In this power, we are not left orphans but are sons and daughters, brought into the communion of love that is the sublime essence of the Trinity. This is the Spirit that St. Paul writes in our reading from Colossians that allows us to put on "compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience … forgiving one another," binding it all with Christian love. If we fallible and broken humans can unite in such charity, is that not a sign of both hope and a witness that invites others to join us.

There is cause for much hope here in the gift of the Spirit and our communion with the Father. And yet … this is not something new. The gift of the Spirit and the sublime adoption are realities that we already possess and have possessed throughout the history of the Church. So … how does this answer the present challenge we face here in Vermont and elsewhere, that of declining membership and a cultural trend away from revealed religion to a personal spirituality at best or no belief at worst?

The gospel we just heard proclaimed points the way. Jesus stood in his home synagogue in the midst of his relatives and neighbors and proclaims himself the one about whom Isaiah prophesized to bring healing to the blind, liberty to prisoners and glad tidings to the poor. His voice rings out as both a challenge and an invitation when he says, "Today this Scripture passage is fulfilled in your hearing." It is a challenge that is immediately rejected by some as he is forced out of Nazareth by those irate at his words, but it is also an invitation that some hear and accept as they follow him on the way. Jesus does not stay in the synagogue but he goes out. His voice does not simply ring out from a place of worship like a bell stationary in a church steeple, calling people to come to him. He goes out to them. He goes out to spread the Good News of the Kingdom of God and the offer of eternal salvation.

Just before I left Indiana to come here to Vermont, I was having lunch at "A Nice Restaurant" in New Albany (that's the restaurant's real name, btw) and I was seated right next to a table occupied by two twenty-something young ladies. Now I'm not one to normally eavesdrop on others' conversations. I tend to read my book or newspaper while by myself, but my ears perked up when I heard one of them say, "Catholic Church." It turns out they were talking about how she had been looking for a faith community to join and had finally joined the mega-church down the street but only after first trying out a Catholic Church. It was what she said about her reason for not staying that really floored me: "It was like they mourn their religion." Wow ... You know the saddest part about that statement? I know what she is talking about ....

No one wants to join a church that lacks joy. When people who leave the Catholic Church to join other churches are asked why did you do so, the number one answer is "They made me feel welcome" followed by "I find the services joyful and uplifting." If we are going to call people to our churches and they do happen to come in , what are they going to find? People who have the joy of the "good news" in their hearts, people who are welcoming and encouraging, who celebrate the Church's liturgy with care and commitment or a people who "mourn their religion. Friends, both inside and outside we have to be about the "Good News."

Besides getting our own selves and our own houses in order, brothers and sisters, I challenge myself and you to follow the Lord's lead to "go out." We are no longer the Church of the establishment in which if we just open our doors and ring the bells people will come. That is not happening. In fact, we are opening our doors and people are not coming. They are leaving. We have to change the paradigm to that of a missionary Church, one that has to go out and engage the wider community in our ongoing acts of Christian mercy and in our words and conversation. Pope Francis calls us to move out to the peripheries. He tells us, his priests and bishops, that it is time to leave the sacristies and go out into the fields as good shepherds who take on the smell of the sheep. In his recent trip to the Philippines, Pope Francis' challenge to do so was echoed in the words of farewell to him spoken by Cardinal Tagle at the final Mass in front of an estimated 7 million people. The Cardinal said that the Filipinos want to follow Francis "to the peripheries — to the shanties, to prison cells, to hospitals, to the world of politics, finance, art, sciences, culture, education, and social communications." They want to follow Francis to those venues, he said, "to bring the light of Jesus."

Can we say the same?

Did you notice the other challenge in Cardinal Tagle's words, beyond just the call to go out to the peripheries. It was the one to bring the "light of Jesus." Now, there's a challenge. You know, we can only bring to someone else what we ourselves possess. Bringing the light of Christ. What a challenge.

One time when I was in Italy, one of my classmates invited me to come to his hometown in southeast Italy for a weekend. While we were there we climbed up into the bell tower of his church because he wanted to show me the view and the bells. The view was spectacular and the bells were big. We climbed down a few levels and he began to pull the rope to ring the bells (goodness knows what the neighbors were thinking). It was loud, but more than that, it was physical. Every time the largest, deepest bell sounded, you could feel the vibrations through your whole body. They say that bass notes travel farther than high notes. It's like that car with the sound system turned up loud and you hear the "thump, thump" of the bass notes long before you hear anything else as the car gets closer. The lower notes are foundational. The sound of the deep bell calling out is the sound with the deepest roots. The sound of the "light of Christ" within us must be that deep, that foundational. It permeates our very being so that our faith is not just a layer that we put on over lives but is instead, a way of life, a way of being in the world. Being a follower of Jesus Christ is not simply what I believe. It is who I am. It is the deepest bell of my soul. I cannot bring the light of Christ to others unless I first possess it myself, deeply.

My favorite poet is Robert Frost, the first poet laureate of the state of Vermont. He is buried down south in Bennington. Frost wrote many poems with which we are very familiar – "The road less travelled," "Stopping by the woods on a snowy evening," – but my favorite is his poem "Directive." In it he speaks of a walk in the woods that leads him to the ruins of a place that once was: "There is a house that is no more a house, upon a farm that is no more a farm and in a town that is no more a town." Not much is left - some stonewalls, a few chimneys and cellar holes with trees and vegetation now taking ownership of the ruins. His destination is the remains of a certain house and the brook that was once the source of water for the house. Next to it he has stashed a broken cup that he uses to slack his thirst. Here, though, Frost - gazing at the remains of the hope of small town and all that it once embodied and stood for - picks up the broken cup as "a broken drinking goblet like the grail" and proclaims, "Here are your waters and your watering place. Drink and be whole again beyond confusion."

Here is our water and our watering place. Here is the bath and the table, the prayer and the words where we are made whole in the love of Christ. Ours is not a place of ruin and lost hope. It is a place of forgiveness, nourishment, and instruction. It is a place of salvation. The bells still ring out from the steeple of this church, even though it is a bit broken and in need of repair. But when the bells ring out from our steeples they are the voice of Christ - He is the bass, midrange and treble that sounds and reverberates in the lives of all whether we know it or not. His bass notes rumble through life moving all to the works of mercy, His midrange voice calls us to be with Him and enjoy his company, His treble notes teach us about a life here as well as above with one He calls Father and teaches us to do the same. They are still bells of invitation to come to Him, yes, but now we hear them as well as an invitation to go out with Him in the power of the Holy Spirit, to spread the Good News of that His Kingdom is at hand at that He, Jesus Christ is Lord and Savior of the world. The "bells are the voice of the church" – the Mystical Body of Christ - "they have tones that touch and search, the hearts of young and old, one sound to all..." One sound to be brought to all.

-30-
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Fwd: CNA: Pope says palliums will be given to new archbishops at home – not Rome


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Thu, Jan 29, 2015 at 5:17 PM
Subject: CNA: Pope says palliums will be given to new archbishops at home – not Rome
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Unknown:

Vatican City, Jan 29, 2015 / 04:35 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- {As a sign of "synodality" with local churches, Pope Francis has decided that new metropolitan archbishops will officially be imposed with the pallium in their home diocese, rather than the Vatican.

"The meaning of this change is to put more emphasis on the relationship of the metropolitan archbishops – the newly nominated – with their local church," Mons. Guido Marini, Papal Master of Ceremonies, told Vatican Radio Jan. 29.

By having the official imposition ceremony in the archbishop's home diocese, more faithful and bishops in dioceses under the archbishop's jurisdiction will be able to attend the event, "which is so meaningful to them," he said.

The pallium is a white wool vestment, adorned with six black silk crosses. Dating back to at least the fifth century, the wearing of the pallium by the Pope and metropolitan archbishops symbolizes authority as well as unity with the Holy See.}

Traditionally the Pope bestows the stole to the new archbishops June 29 each year, which is the Solemnity of Saints Peter and Paul. The rite is a sign of communion with the See of Peter.

It also serves as a symbol of the metropolitan archbishop's jurisdiction in his own diocese as well as the other particular dioceses within his ecclesiastical province.

The title of "metropolitan bishop" refers to the diocesan bishop or archbishop of a metropolis, namely, the primary city of an ecclesiastical province or regional capital.

Mons. Marini said moving the official ceremony of imposition to the local level doesn't take anything away, but rather "keeps the whole meaning of the June 29 celebration, which underscores the relationship of communion and also of hierarchal communion between the Holy Father and the new archbishops."

At the same time, he noted, "this adds – with a significant gesture – this bond with the local church."

In a Jan. 12 letter to apostolic nuncios in countries where a new metropolitan archbishop is set to receive the traditional pallium this year, Mons. Marini said that the decision "will greatly favor the participation of the local Church in an important moment of its life and history."

He also said that Pope Francis believes this new custom will advance "that journey of synodality in the Catholic Church which, from the beginning of his pontificate, he has constantly emphasized as particularly urgent and precious at this time in the history of the Church."

Pope Francis made the decision regarding the change in custom "after a long reflection and upon receiving advice which he had requested," Marini noted in his letter.

The Pope, he explained, will bless the palliums during the June 29 Mass on the feast of Saints Peter and Paul in the Vatican as usual, but they will placed on the shoulders of new metropolitan archbishop "in his own diocese, by his representative, the Apostolic Nuncio."

Each of the new metropolitan archbishops are invited to concelebrate the June 29 Mass and blessing of the palliums in the Vatican, where they will then receive the stole "in a private manner, from the hands of the Holy Father."

Afterward, Mons. Marini said that it will be up to the nuncios to decide on a day and time to "publicly and officially" invest the archbishop with the pallium "by mandate of the Holy Father."

Other bishops under the jurisdiction of the new metropolitan archbishops are expected to attend the ceremony for their new shepherd.

The imposition ceremony is "enriched" by this new aspect of community at the local level, Mons. Marini told Vatican Radio, saying that the dynamic of communion generated by the change is "very beautiful."

There are 551 metropolitan archdioceses throughout the world. Among the archbishops appointed so far this year to serve these sees is Archbishop Blase Cupich of Chicago.

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How an Amish missionary caused 2014's massive measles outbreak

How an Amish missionary caused 2014's massive measles outbreak - Vox: Last year was terrible for measles in the United States: there were 644 cases — the highest annual caseload in two decades. Granola-crunching Californians, wealthy Oregonians, and Jenny McCarthy anti-vaccine acolytes have taken much of the blame for this spike. The Washington Post even pointed to Orange County — the location of the current Disneyland outbreak — as "Ground Zero in our current epidemic of anti-vaccine hysteria."

Vermont Catholics celebrate Installation Day for Burlington's Bishop Chris Coyne



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Wednesday, January 28, 2015
Subject: ROCCO PALMO: "I Am Not A Politician, I Am A Pastor" – Seeking "Peace" and "Justice," Burlington Begins
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Rocco PalmoPALMO: On the eve of his installation tomorrow as the tenth head of Vermont's statewide diocese, Bishop Chris Coyne delivered the following homily tonight at Vespers – which doubled as his reception by the Green Mountain State's civil, ecumenical and interfaith leadership – in Burlington's Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception.

Featuring some unscripted additions, fullvid likewise below.



My friends, I cannot begin to tell you how pleased I am to be here this evening with you as I take possession of this cathedral. I welcome the governmental and civic leaders who are here and thank them for their gracious presence. Please know of my continuing prayers for you and all our civic leaders as you seek to govern in the state of Vermont. I've been told that Vermonters can be somewhat free-spirited and free-thinking. I'm not sure if that's true... oh it is? Well good luck then.

I am especially glad to have joined in prayer with my brothers and sisters within the ecumenical and interfaith community. I am aware that this cathedral is only one of many places of worship within this city, places where prayer and worship are lifted up to God, places where charity is encouraged and enacted, places where the human person reaches for an encounter with the Divine. With the representatives of the Christian churches and communities I join this week in a time of prayer for unity among Christians, praying in the words of Jesus Himself "that all may be one." While there are things that divide us, there are also many things that unite us, most especially our love for the Lord Jesus Christ, our Savior. To my colleagues in the interfaith community, the shared belief we have in the Divine One and the common mission of care for the poor, sick, and needy in our midst unites us in charity and honors the One that we serve. I pledge myself to work with you on those things about which we agree and speak the Catholic Church's faith to those matters about which we disagree.

I am not a politician. I am a pastor. I am not a policy-maker. I am a preacher and teacher of the Catholic Faith. My desire is to teach what the Church teaches, to preach the Good News of Jesus Christ, and inform the consciences of my fellow Catholics about what we believe and why we believe. While I always seek to foster the common good of all, I recognize that I do so as one within a diverse and multi-faceted culture of which the Catholic Church is only one faith among many.

It seems to me that the reading that we just heard from the Letter of James is quite appropriate for this task. It was not a reading I chose but one that is prescribed for the Feast of Saint Thomas Aguinas, which we Catholics and a number of other Christian communities celebrate today. My hope is to be "wise" in the manner of which James writes: peaceable, rich in sympathy and the kindly deeds that are the fruits of wisdom. I can't make any guarantee about being docile though. It is just not in my nature.

I'm a student of history, having received my doctorate in Sacred Liturgy from the Pontifical Liturgical Institute in Rome. The P.I.L, as it is called, is famous for its use of the historical-critical method for the study of liturgy. One necessarily had to become versed in Church history in order to understand the development and meaning of the Church's liturgical practices. One thing I've learned is that in the encounter between human beings there is often not that much new under the sun. What I mean is when looking for wisdom on how to work together or get along or live in community or any number of interpersonal endeavors, the best place to look is often to the wisdom of the past. So in considering what I might offer for our consideration tonight, my thoughts turned to a writing that is close to our New England heritage. It is the sermon preached by the lay leader John Winthrop in 1630 as the Puritans were preparing to land in what is now Massachusetts. It is entitled "A Model of Christian Unity." I know, I know. This text has often been used, on the one hand, by politicians to support the idea of "American exceptionalism" – that we are a "city on a hill" for all to follow in the great experiment that is America – and on the other hand that Winthrop's intention in the new world was to establish a Puritan theocracy, but I think we can set those concerns aside and consider Winthrop's preaching on unity in love or fraternal charity as a binding force for the establishment of mutual cooperation.

Winthrop preached that the bond of charity among Christians was a necessary part of their community, "as the sinews and other ligaments of a natural body are to the being of that body" and that it was "a divine, spiritual nature" - free, active, strong, courageous and permanent. Winthrop believed that having this "bond of love" for one and other would unite a group of people that would be blessed by God and impact the world (as they knew it) in a positive manner. "Despite the diversity of people, living in mutual charity could unite people of completely different socioeconomic backgrounds to work together and better the world".

I would offer that we can move beyond Winthrop's particularly Christian leitmotif into the broader context of interfaith, even non-religious relationships. It begins, I believe with the golden rule - to do unto others as I would have them do unto me - but then moves beyond a kind of mutual exchange of personal value – "you do for me, I do for you" – to one of charity, meaning seeking the "good' for the other person, and seeking nothing in return. The hope is that the "other" will respond in kind, that my neighbor will seek what is good for me as I seek what is good for him or her.

Today's gospel text from the Common Lectionary gives us the parable of the sower:

"A sower went out to sow.
And as he sowed, some seed fell on the path,
and the birds came and ate it up.
Other seed fell on rocky ground where it had little soil.
It sprang up at once because the soil was not deep.
And when the sun rose, it was scorched and it withered for lack of roots.
Some seed fell among thorns, and the thorns grew up and choked it
and it produced no grain.
And some seed fell on rich soil and produced fruit.
It came up and grew and yielded thirty, sixty, and a hundredfold."

I have always considered one interpretation of this text to be an allegory for the works of charity and service. Each of us is the sower who sows good deeds. Some of our deeds are appreciated. Some are simply received by some as their "due." Some don't want or welcome our help at all. But then there are those persons who accept our good act as it is and then become people who also become sowers. But the point is that the sower does not seek anything in return. He or she just sows because it is the right thing to do, because it brings light instead of darkness, because it serves the common good.

All of this engages us in the broader question of what is best for the common good. The golden rule urges me to feed the hungry person because that is what I would want it if I were hungry. An act routed in communal charity and aimed at the common good urges me to look even further, to the roots of and possible solutions to poverty. It is best summed up in the familiar adage, "Give someone a fish and you feed them for a day. Teach them to fish and you feed them for a lifetime." My hope and prayer is that we can all work within a unity of charity that probes the deeper questions of how to further both the individual and the common good while seeking only that that good be returned in kind.

Finally, allow me to end my reflections this evening by referring to the last line of the reading from James: "The harvest of justice is sown in peace for those who cultivate peace." It is often difficult for us to agree about how we are to pray together. Different canons, creeds, and confessions can complicate things very quickly. When we try and worship as one, we most often end up with a compromise that leaves no one happy. Yet, I think there is one thing about which we can agree, not so much as to how we are to pray but for what we are to pray: peace – for an end to violence and hatred and bigotry and prejudice and war. If we do nothing else in our common gathering than to pray for peace and pray that we may each be peacemakers in our own way within our own faiths and our own beliefs, then we are doing something of the good, of the divine, of God. I commit myself, once again, to strive to be a "peacemaker," someone who prays for peace, advocates for peace, and seeks to live in peace with his brothers and sisters and I pray that my actions may bring forth a harvest of justice for all God's creatures. May God bless us all in that endeavor.

-30-
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Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Finding freedom in my prison cell: My journey from racial hatred to rational love

Finding Freedom in My Prison Cell: My Journey from Racial Hatred to Rational LovePEARCE: Many good and worthy people in the past have found the experience of imprisonment a crucial and definitive period on their road towards faith and religious conversion, or as a means of deepening an already existing faith. Saint John of the Cross springs to mind, as does Miguel Cervantes, and the great Nicolae Steinhardt, whose book on his time in prison is called The Happiness Diary. We could also add the French poet, Paul Verlaine, the Irish writer, Oscar Wilde, and the iconic Russian Nobel Prizewinner, Alexander Solzhenitsyn.

A look at the 1965 Missal, the "actual Mass" of Vatican II

A Look at the “Actual Mass” of Vatican II: the 1965 Missal � Archdiocese of WashingtonPOPE: While it is hard to argue that the new lectionary is problematic, I remain open to the criticism that the 1970 Missal introduced a “hermeneutic of discontinuity” and also flowed from that sort of rupture that the 1960s brought. We do well to see the 1965 Missal as a bridge back to the more modest notions of the council and as a template for the kind of cross-pollination that Pope Benedict wished for when he spoke of the two forms influencing each other.

This video provides a look back at 1967 in a crazy movie with Elvis. But it depicts a kind of estuary where there were still signs of Tradition but also of the radical changes under way in that era. The 1965 Missal barely saw the light of day before the liturgists were at it again, ending with all sorts of additional changes. They were wild and crazy times and I remember them well. Sadly, at the time, with radical changes everywhere, very few of us woke up to the damage that was being done until it was largely done.

Interesting perspective from an atheist: "Why Islam is more violent than Christianity"

Why Islam Is More Violent Than Christianity: The Charlie Hebdo massacre once again has politicians and the media dancing around the question of whether there might be something a little bit special about this one particular religion, Islam, that causes its adherents to go around killing people.

It is not considered acceptable in polite company to entertain this possibility. Instead, it is necessary to insist, as a New York Times article does, that “Islam is no more inherently violent than other religions.” This, mind you, was in an article on how Muslims in the Middle East are agonizing over the violent legacy of their religion.

Three of the best missals for small children

Living With Lady Philosophy: 3 Missals for Small ChildrenSPENCER: One of the things that is a constant struggle with little kids is helping them be quiet and if they are able be attentive at Mass. Something that has worked for us so far is to just keep things simple. Since M and I have a missal for Mass (for both the Ordinary Form and the Traditional Latin Extraordinary form), we decided that each of our children should have their own personal missals appropriate for their age. The key to encouraging children to use hand missals is to use them yourself.

100 babies: A women's center that helps every step of the way

100 babies: A women's center that helps every step of the way :: Catholic News Agency (CNA): Lynn Grandon kept a tally on her desk of how many babies she knew the Denver Lighthouse women’s center had helped bring into this world.

Last week, an e-mail from a nurse at the center confirmed that five more women had given birth – bringing the total to 100. Grandon, the director of Lighthouse, could barely contain her excitement.

“I called her back on the phone and I was screaming and I was going, ‘Do you realize what this means? We’ve hit 100!’” Grandon recalled.

25 mind-twisting optical illusion paintings by Rob Gonsalves

25 Mind-Twisting Optical Illusion Paintings By Rob Gonsalves | Bored Panda: The beautiful and mind-bending illusions in Canadian artist Robert Gonsalves’ paintings have a fun way of twisting your perception and causing you to question what in his paintings, if anything, is real.

The 12 most expensive winter storms in U.S. history

The Most Expensive Winter Storms in US History | WIRED: Forecasters say winter storm Juno will drop upwards of two feet of snow, crippling New York City, Boston, and the rest of the region. Nearly 7,000 flights have been cancelled as residents are hunkering down and bracing for power outages. That would make it one of the biggest storms in recorded American history.

Would it be possible for two teams in a tug-o-war to pull apart an iron rod?

Tug of War: As detailed in a riveting article in Priceonomics, recent games of tug-of-war have resulted in hundreds of serious injuries and numerous deaths—all caused, one way or another, by ropes snapping. In particular, this seems to happen when large groups of students try to set a world record for largest tug-of-war game. When a rope under many tons of tension suddenly snaps, the recoiling ends can—and do—cause a terrifying variety of injuries.

Amid storms and wars, the daily outrage that is Francis

Amid Storms and Wars, the Daily Outrage that is FrancisSCALIA: I’m getting burned out, not because I dislike him. I like Francis just fine, although Pope Benedict XVI will always be the pontiff of my heart, because his writings have penetrated it and poured the merciful balm of Christ Jesus into it as little else ever has. As some credit Francis with making them feel lovable, and deserving of mercy, I humbly credit Benedict with gifting me in a similar way.
Still, my problem is not with Francis — or not wholly with Francis; I do wish he would speak less brusquely, sometimes, and I truly wish he spoke English, so we are not always at the mercy of translations, and sometimes multiple translations. Once headlines take off, the clarifications that come four days later do little to change the established narrative. Some count on that, I think, but it’s not helpful for souls, particularly not when the headlines seem designed to build new flames of Francis-hating Outrage from the previous day’s nearly spent embers.

For St. Thomas Aquinas, the study of Theology was first and foremost the study of the Bible

Aquinas: The Biblical Approach of the Model Catholic Theologian | St. Paul Center For Biblical TheologyBARBER: Today is the Feast Day of St. Thomas Aquinas! In honor of that, I thought I’d cover some ground I’ve been over before, namely, Thomas’ role as a model of Catholic theology and his primary focus on Scripture. Perhaps most striking—at least to some—is Thomas’ insistence on the priority of the literal-historical sense of Scripture.

In short, for Thomas Theology is a Scriptural enterprise. Since he’s consistently held out as the model, Catholic theologians should be sure to, likewise, make “the study of the sacred page. . . the very soul of theology” (Vatican II, Dei Verbum, 24).

Cause for canonization of St. Thérèse of Lisieux’s sister is opened


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Wed, Jan 28, 2015 at 3:35 AM
Subject: CATHOLIC HERALD: Cause of St Thérèse of Lisieux's sister is opened
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Luke Coppen:

A French bishop has officially opened the beatification Cause of Léonie Martin, the sister of St Thérèse of Lisieux.

Bishop Jean-Claude Boulanger of Bayeux-Lisieux opened the diocesan stage of the Cause on Saturday at a Mass at the Monastery of the Visitation in Caen, north-west France, where Léonie lived from 1899 until her death in 1941, aged 78.

Léonie, who took the name Sister Françoise-Thérèse when she entered religious life, now has the title "Servant of God".

Léonie, the third of the five surviving children of the Martin family, had a difficult childhood. According to a website dedicated to her life, she was often ill, was physically abused by a maidservant, was expelled from school and was isolated within the family.

She attempted to enter religious life three times before she was accepted at the monastery in Caen.

She was known as the "forgotten sister" of St Thérèse. But her life story began to receive attention when Marie Baudouin-Croix published the book Léonie Martin: A Difficult Life in France in 1989.

A website highlighting the holiness of the five Martin sisters says that St Thérèse wrote her last letter to Léonie on July 17 1897, a few months before her death, encouraging her sister to become a saint.

She wrote: "If you want to become a saint, it will be easy, because in the depths of your heart the world means nothing to you … I mean that while you give yourself devotedly to external works, you have but one goal: to give pleasure to Jesus and to be united more intimately with Him."

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Liberals are beginning to realize that Pope Francis is not one of them...


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Wed, Jan 28, 2015 at 1:34 AM
Subject: MARK SHEA: Lefty Francis Hangover
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Mark SheaSHEA:

After bingeing on the hallucinatory drug that made them imagine the pope was just just about to make pot a sacrament, officiate at Michael Sam's wedding, sprinkle holy water on Rome's Planned Parenthood clinic, canonize Karl Marx, and call the Third Vatican Council to declare all religions/philosophies/lifestyle choices "cool", the Left is suddenly awakening to the fact that the only people who ever believed their banana oil were a) themselves and b) panic-stricken right wing Francis-haters.

So, with a mixture of bafflement and growing rage, pundits are rubbing their eyes and announcing "Pope Francis might not be as awesome as we thought he was".  That is, he turns out to be Catholic and not, as Bill Maher concluded with the keen insight of a mole in broad daylight, an atheist.  He thinks blasphemy is wrong, which has stunned Maher into surprised fury since, in Maher's mental world, the Manichaean choice is between blasphemy and murder.  He opposes abortion and contraception and gay "marriage".  He's not going to be ordaining women.  He's, y'know, the pope, and therefore Catholic.

Such a hangover was perfectly predictable.  It's something any disciple of Jesus should expect.  The gospel answers to deep longings in the human heart.  But it also makes hard demands.  Jesus' pattern was that people followed him when they saw signs like multiplication of loaves and fishes.  But when Jesus then said "It's not about free food forever, but about what that sign *means*" it left people with a choice: stick with him when he doesn't fulfill your hopes for a messiah who tells you how awesome you are or say, "This is a hard saying!  Who can hear it?" and ditch him for the next celebrity you choose to anoint.  He forces us to face the fact that he is the Messiah we need, not the Messiah we want.  And those who cannot face that fact typically become, either passively or actively, his enemies.  Let us pray for the grace to not take that road, because we all need it.

Francis is, above all, a disciple of Jesus.  If you don't get that, you don't get him.  He will never fit our political categories, left or right. I suspect he's going to wind up reviled for the name of Jesus by our fickle race.  And I suspect he is a saint of the Church.  God bless and protect him once the left joins with the right to attack him.

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'Sixty Minutes' leaves viewers with a cartoon pope and a cartoon Church

Nonsense on ‘Sixty Minutes’ - Denver CatholicWEIGEL: Constant harping on all this by the self-identified “progressive” wing of the Catholic Church strikes me as a tacit confession of intellectual impoverishment. Pope Francis is trying to put serious questions on the Church’s agenda: How does the Church more effectively proclaim the “yes” that underwrites the “no” Catholicism must say on occasion? How does the Church teach the truth about marriage and the family in a culture which imagines that everything in the human condition can be changed by human willfulness? How does the Church offer those wounded by the sexual revolution the medicine of the divine mercy, so that those healed by mercy can come to know the truth about love? How can the Church call the men and women of the developed world beyond a “throwaway culture” that disrespects and devalues vulnerable human life, whether that life is unborn, poor, unemployed, handicapped, elderly or otherwise “other”? How does Catholicism reclaim its essentially evangelical character, so that it’s once again a “Church in permanent mission,” as the pope often puts it?

Punching the Archbishop after he punches you

ASK FATHER: Punching the Archbishop after he punches you | Fr. Z's BlogZUHLSDORF: I will presume that the Archbishop in question is of the Latin Rite, and a Metropolitan.

As this punching took place in a non-liturgical setting, the ceremonies for returning the punch are much simplified . Imagine the manifold complexities of the liturgical punch at a Pontifical Mass coram Sanctissimo ... within the octave of St. Elphege’s Day!

If one is holding a cocktail (or beer) when one is punched by an archbishop, one hands one’s drink to the subdeacon (omitting the ceremonial kisses) with one’s right hand, makes a fist and, saying nothing, punches the prelate’s left arm, on – and this is important – the oversleeve of his simar, between the second and third buttons.*

In Mexico, devotion to St. Jude is pushing back against the cult of Santa Muerte...

St. Jude's Souls: Competing with the Skeleton Saint for Mexico's Faithful | Atlas Obscura: Practically unknown in Mexico before the 1980s, St. Jude Thaddeus has catapulted to the top position among Catholic saints in the country with the world's second largest Catholic population. No other canonized saint rivals the popularity of San Judas, the patron of lost causes. Only the Virgin of Guadalupe and folk saint Santa Muerte can compete with St. Jude for Mexican souls. And over the past decade, competition between the nation's number one Catholic saint and its top folk saint has become very intense, to the point that St. Jude in Mexico is now the only Catholic saint in the world who has a monthly feast day.

More and more, our public and private lives are on a collision course...


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Blogtrottr <busybee@blogtrottr.com>
Date: Tue, Jan 27, 2015 at 7:37 PM
Subject: FIRST THINGS (ON THE SQUARE): Public Chastity, Private Chaos
To: kcknight@gmail.com


AUTHOR=Mark Regnerus:

Americans' public and private lives are on a collision course. Our social system—the one we publicly engage daily—still unwittingly encourages and rewards chaste behavior (though perhaps not speech). Privately, our lives bespeak an emerging chaos, regardless of what we personally hold to be good or true or ideal. In other words, American life is becoming sexually bipolar.

{In many ways our social system still curbs its participants toward a very basic public chastity. Consider your time at the grocery store, your day at work or school, coffee at the café, the car or train ride back home. Sexually uneventful; you probably didn't even notice. Daily activity in the social world still manages to largely reinforce the basic sexual integrity of the person.

While publicly the verbal expression of sexual libertinism may be increasingly rewarded, libertine behavior sure isn't. Indeed, so much about the everyday social world works to reinforce monogamy and the reliable differences between men and women. From sexual violence laws, campus consent codes, all the way to workplace dating policies or norms—it's as if public life is an ode to the complementary, peaceable, and pivotal relationship between man and woman.}

A simple thought experiment ought to reveal how men could tolerate a much more sexualized social system (at least before unanticipated, unpleasant consequences emerge). Here's social psychologist Roy Baumeister:

A man in love may feel sexual desire for a specific, particular woman, but most men also have plenty of free-floating sexual interest in other women, all women, any woman, at least in the broad set of "reasonably attractive" ones (e.g., the top 90% of women in their twenties, etc.) . . . Having one partner for sex only slightly reduces the desire for every other possible one.

If Baumeister is correct, many men could be happy with a much less chaste social system. One reason we don't have such a system, Baumeister asserts, is because chaos is bad for a social system, putting it at risk of being undermined by more disciplined rival cultures. And sex can foster chaos:

Sex can disrupt families, set friends against each other, even produce violence and murder. Unregulated sex creates all sorts of social problems: children with no one to care for them, violence, and disease.

This gives us a profound incentive to retain public chastity even as private chaos is clearly emerging. As an example of this phenomenon, note the data on men's pornography use. It's soaring, and yet it remains largely hidden. The social system is not yet onboard with public manifestations of it. Indeed, it's been twenty years since an NC-17 rated film grossed over $10 million (and that only twice). While prostitution flourishes online, red-light districts in the US have receded. The chaos is private.

But will technology-fueled chaos eventually prevail upon the public sphere? A recent Forbes cover story about Tinder CEO Sean Rad claims the online male-female hook-up app

has logged 600% growth over the past 12 months, has been downloaded 40 million times since it launched in 2012. The 30 million people who have registered collectively check out 1.2 billion prospective partners daily—that's 14,000 per second. And they're not just kicking the tires: Tinder is now facilitating almost 14 million romantic matches every 24 hours.

It sounds unchaste, and rather public. But even here complementarity provides a self-limiting reality check: the vast majority of requited "swipes" (or matches) do not materialize in real life. That is, most of the mutually-attracted parties never actually meet in social reality. Moreover, such attempts to rapidly connect men and women "represent the wants and needs of only half of their target audience," complained one member of that half, Ann Friedman, in an article titled "Overwhelmed and Creeped Out."

In other words, even when technology presses us toward socio-sexual chaos, women are much less apt to comply. That's old but very good news. They're wired—dare I say—to foster sexual order over chaos when they interact with men in public life. Or so say monotheists and evolutionary psychologists. When unconstrained, men—the creators of most online dating apps and sites—tend to focus on their own wishes. Indeed, Grindr takes women out of the interaction altogether, offering a recipe for very efficient sexual contact. And with it, private chaos.

Hence a basic complementarity and chastity remains obvious to this observer of (public) social life. Doomsayers ought to recognize that it could be worse—much worse. This isn't blind optimism; it's measured reality. And for that I'm grateful. Dare I go so far as to suggest the arc of history bends toward complementarity and chastity, narrowly defined? Not anytime soon. But given a long-enough arc, I suspect it may.

Mark Regnerus is associate professor of sociology at the University of Texas at Austin.

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