Oct 29, 2010

Canadian Nuncio Speaks at Plenary

On December 10th, 2009, Pope Benedict XVI appointed Archbishop Pedro Lopez Quintana as Apolostolic Nuncio to Canada. As nuncio, Archbishop Quintana is the Papal Ambassador to Canada, and was formally the apolostolic delegate to India and Nepal. As the Canadian Assembly of Catholic Bishops closes today it would be interesting to read some of his reflections to the assembly this week when he contrasted catholicism in India with our own lived witness here in Canada:


Archbishop Lopez Quintana
"The North American context is, in many ways, profoundly similar to that of Europe, characterized by pluralism, consumerism and in some sectors religious indifferentism. This last aspect seems typical; whereas in India religion permeates almost every facet of daily life, in the Western world, society tends to relegate it to the purely private realm. Yet Christianity has indelibly marked our culture. In India, the Catholic population is around 18 million people, which is numerically higher than in Canada. Proportionately, however, it represents only 1.8 percent of the entire Indian population. But while this may seem negligible, the vitality of the Church and its presence even in a country like India is in fact, an important component of Indian life. In my humble opinion, it seems that Canadian Catholics can continue contributing significantly to the building up of their country as they have, from the beginning."


They are words of invitation for us as we reflect on our own participation in the carrying of the Gospel from our heads to our hands. It is our shared responsibility to take what we have come to learn about justice and dignity and pass that on - not only in our own families but also within the community in which we live.
I find it rich to expand my understanding of church and culture and to visit my beliefs in the context of the gobal church.

 

Friday Prayer for Children

This weekend moves us closer to celebrating a day for children: Hallowe'en. In reflecting on this celebration, I have begun to see that it is a movement almost away from children and now it would seem more and more adults celebrate Hallowe'en. In my opinion it should be more a feast for our children in their innocence. 
Regardless of your point of view, the following prayerful reflection from Sister Joyce Rupp, a noted spiritual writer for our time is a worthwhile reminder for children everywhere.
___________________________________________________________
I remember the children of the world. As Jesus called to the children to come to him, so I gather in prayer the children of my world who are hurting. I embrace them with loving kindness and with a desire to mend the systems that bring such pain to their young lives. I remember the children:
... who will go hungry today,
... whose parents are on drugs,
... who have no one to teach them to read,
... who are handicapped and unattended,
... who do not know love,
... who live in filth and degradation,
... who have no friends,
... who are not listened to,
... who have never been sung to or read to or taken by the hand or experienced earth’s mystery and beauty,
... who do not have anyone to tuck them into bed at night,
... who are shunned or mistreated because of their color, their religion, or the place where they live,
... who have no awareness of their inner goodness,
... who have stopped believing in love,
... who are filled with anger and hate,
... who are receiving a poor education,
... who are ill or in pain,
... who are grieving the death of a loved one,
... who are suffering from AIDS or drug-related diseases,
... who feel lonely, desolate, and unloved,
... who are filled with fear for their lives,
... who hear only harsh words and hostile language,
... who have been bruised, beaten, and mutilated,
... who are victims of incest, rape, and pornography,
... who hide in fear from the sounds of war,
... who are ill and have no medical attention.

Yes, I pray for the children of my world today and I pray for each man and woman of this world, including myself, that we will do our part to create better living conditions for these children. Show us the way and prod us into action, God of justice and compassion!

Oct 28, 2010

A Moving Testimony

As vocation director for the archdiocese I often look at what is available for vocation promotion. A brother priest recommended this as a brilliantly produced vocation video. It has inspired me to share it with you. Do me a favor and pray for your priests (past, present and future) as you watch this beautiful tribute.

Oct 27, 2010

Future Priests to Embody Faith, Love, Gentleness: Pope's Letter

On October 18th (Feast of St. Luke), Pope Benedict XVI issued a letter to the Church's seminarians (future priests) worldwide. In it he readily challenges our future pastors to model their lives in the image of ministry given to us in St. Paul's letter to Timothy (6.11): "But as for you, Man of God...pursue righteousness, godliness, faith, love, endurance, gentleness."
 
This invitation was inspiring to me as just this very week I was interviewed by a local student as to the changes affecting the ministerial priesthood today. In a culture which the priesthood has become more administratively focused or task oriented, due in large part to the shortage of clergy, it becomes easy to forget the roots or foundations of the life we have chosen to live as priests.

Benedict's letter strikes to the core of the call to ministry as priest in the world and offers a firm foundation for the development of the sacramental character of the priest in the modern world. Of note is his insistence on prayer and study and to recognize the foundations of our Catholic faith as being founded both on Word (Sacred Scripture) and Sacrament. Pope Benedict asserts, "God is not simply Word. In the sacraments he gives himself to us in person, in physical realities."  This is the balance that all priests strive to embody for our people and one of the most difficult challenges facing the new generation of Catholic Christians.


The very life of the priest in years gone by spoke of the mystical bridge between heaven and earth. Today, priests are seen as being functional in nature, he is counselor, administrator, civil rights advocate, teacher in addition to his role as pastor. Yet the priesthood is far deeper and much more complex and, for myself in my opinion, much richer. 


The priesthood today is intended to be lived among people in the mundane encounters of everyday life. The priest is a "leaven" in the society reminding people that Christ is present among them. The priest fuses together the human and divine.


This is the life I fell in love with and I was inspired by Benedict's invitation to our future priests: we are not men who hold a job - we embody a life - a distinct character - a grace in the world. We bear Christ: living, loving and holy, into the lives of those tnrusted to our care.


Pope Benedict XVI's Letter to Seminarians can be found here.


 

Oct 26, 2010

Can Church Attendance Bounce Back?

Albertan sociologist, Reginald Bibby, has been studying trends in the churches of Canada for many decades. One of his latest books, Restless Gods: The Renaissance of the Church in Canada, was published by Novalis in 2004. This work asserted that although church attendance "had bottomed out," there were visible signs that Canadians were indeed "hungry" for an experience of God in their lives.

Bibby postulated that should churches begin to address current and relevent issues for people in their demographics a rebound effect could be experienced in the Canadian Church.

This has been something I have often felt in my own life. I see quite often how many people of my own age group struggle with finding a place in church today. For some it may be over ritualized, for others too formal, others still find the authority of the Church today a bit overwhelming and far from the humble beginnings that Christ had forseen. Whatever the experience is it strikes to my heart as a pastor.

This latest article by Joe McMorrow in the Western Catholic Reporter follows up where Bibby left off and is something to think about. You can view the article here.

Living for Others

"Love seeks one thing only: the good of the one loved. It leaves all the other secondary effects to take care of themselves. Love, therefore, is its own reward." - Thomas Merton

I find myself awash in a drizzly day in The Pas - Mother Nature is continuing to give us a dose of winter rain and snow. My thoughts have turned to something with which to warm my spirit and I found myself reading some of Thomas Merton's wisdom.

The above quote reminds me of the strength I can find in my life when I reach out beyond myself to love others. It takes the focus off me and places it square in the centre of the lives of those whom I am called to love.

I would often choose to place my needs before those of the ones I love. It is not intentional, and it is often times subtle. This happens when I take those I love for granted. Merton reminds me of the need to pray daily for the grace to set my heart and my mind on others  so that in serving them I am encouraging them to grow into the person God has lovingly called them to be.

Gentle Father,
Help me to use the gifts you have given me,
to love those you have blessed me with.
Together may we help in building your Kingdom
here on earth.  Amen.

Oct 25, 2010

CCCB Report: "Popular Piety Strong in Canada"

Eucharistic Adoration is found to be popular among Canadian Catholics
The Commission for Doctrine of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (CCCB) released today a document on the importance and role of popular piety in Canada. Entitled Popular Piety in Canada: Reflections on Some Popular Expressions of the Faith, its release was timed to celebrate the recent canonization of Saint Brother André, whose life and work illustrate the enduring importance of expressions of devotion in Canada.
 
Based on the results of a survey undertaken several years ago on popular expressions of the faith, the Commission examined the most significant aspects of the practice of popular piety within Canadian Catholic dioceses.

“This document offers a broad picture of popular devotion in Canada,” said Commission Chairman Archbishop J. Michael Miller, C.S.B. “It identifies some major considerations from the theological point of view and suggests some guidelines,” he added.
Central among the popular devotions noted in the document is Eucharistic adoration. This refers to the worship of the Blessed Sacrament outside of the celebration of Mass. The devotions include visits to the Blessed Sacrament, processions for the Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ (commonly known as “Corpus Christi”), exposition of the Blessed Sacrament, and the Forty Hours devotion.

Among the most popular expressions of faith in Canada are those involving the Blessed Virgin Mary and Saint Anne. The Commission noted that the popular piety of the faithful in Canada has a distinctive “feminine” quality. According to the Commission, the maternity and maternal qualities of both Our Lady and Saint Anne strike a chord in the hearts of Canadians, particularly among Indigenous peoples. This, the Commission said, is understandable, given the pioneering role of so many heroic women in the founding years of Canada as a young nation. The CCCB text goes on to note the remarkable contributions made over the years by so many religious women in establishing Catholic schools, hospitals, and charitable agencies, and these, it says, are deeply embedded in the collective memory and culture of Canadians. 

“The best criterion for evaluating the worth and the spiritual fruitfulness of a particular devotion is its capacity to draw people deeper into the liturgical life and ministry of the Church,” said Archbishop Miller. “Understanding the popular expressions of faith and devotion in Canada not only enables the Bishops to better understand the spiritual needs and gifts of the faithful, but also indicates how faith is brought into the everyday lives of Catholics,” he added. 

Canada’s five national shrines -- the Canadian Martyrs’ Shrine, the Saint Anne de BeauprĂ© Basilica, the Shrine of Notre-Dame-du-Cap, the Saint-Antoine Hermitage, and Saint Joseph’s Oratory -- receive 2.5 million pilgrims a year. In 2008, the International Eucharistic Congress in QuĂ©bec City drew 55,000 pilgrims to its closing Mass and 25,000 people joined in a procession through the streets of the city, which was watched by thousands of others. In addition to the national shrines and major events such as the Eucharistic Congress, there are many small, active local shrines, outdoor grottos and sanctuaries in every diocese across the country.

In his recent Letter to Seminarians (October 18, 2010), Pope Benedict XVI wrote that “Popular piety is … one of the Church’s great treasures. The faith has taken on flesh and blood. Certainly popular piety always needs to be purified and refocused, yet it is worthy of our love and it truly makes us into the ‘People of God’.”

Canadian Bishops Begin their Annual Assembly

Good Evening Church - its a quiet Monday evening in these parts after a well deserved day off and I am just catching up on the movement of the Spirit in our great country. Although a quiet day for your author, our local shepherd, Archbishop Sylvain Lavoie, OMI, is joining the rest of our country's bishops for the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishop's (CCCB) Plenary Assembly in Cornwall, ON.

This annual meeting is an opportunity for the bishops of Canada to gather and share among themselves the growing concerns and issues facing the Catholic Church in Canada. 

Bishop Pierre Morissette
Of interest is the annual address of the Conference President, currently Bishop Pierre Morissette, Bishop of St. Jerome, QC. This address highlights the focus of the year's past efforts and the work of the CCCB throughout the nation and the world. It also emphasizes the focus of the this current year which can be summed up in Bishop Morissette's address as "Evanglization." 


You can read Bishop Morissette's address here.

 

Oct 23, 2010

Kamloops Bishop Assaulted

Bishop David Monroe
Bishop David Monroe, Bishop of Kamloops, B.C., is in hospital recovering from severe head injuries after being attacked Friday evening in the rectory of Sacred Heart Cathedral.

Monsignor Jerry Desmond, Vicar General for the Diocese states that 69-year-old David Monroe was attacked after answering the door of the Sacred Hearts Cathedral on Nicola St. shortly before 10 p.m. 

A man forcefully entered the church, Desmond said, and began beating Monroe's head.
"He suffered a horrible beating," Desmond said. "I saw him last night and his head is very swollen." 

"He's stable, they say, but very little response to recognition of anybody at this time."
A priest, the only other person inside the church at the time of the assault, was rushing to help when he slipped and dislocated his shoulder.

He managed to leave the house and call for help, Desmond said. 

Witnesses reported seeing a person wandering the area earlier that evening looking for a priest. 

A suspect was arrested following a massive police search of the area. No information has been released, but police believe he may suffer from mental problems. 

No charges have been laid.

New Cardinals Appointed

On October 20th Pope Benedict appointed 24 new cardinals, including 20 who will be eligible to take part in the next papal conclave. 

Following the death of a pope, cardinals are called upon to find a successor. The candidate chosen is usually one of the cardinals.

Four of the new cardinals are currently more than 80 years old and therefore do not have the power to elect a new pope at the next conclave.

Pope Benedict has now named about 50 of the 120 cardinals who can choose his successor, raising the possibility that the next pontiff will be a conservative in his own image.

He told some 22,000 faithful assembled for his general audience in St Peter's Square that the list "reflects the universality of the church".

The list is dominated by European clergy but there will also be cardinals from Brazil, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ecuador, Egypt and Zambia.

The Cardinals will be created at a consistory to be held on November 20th, 2010, on the eve of the Solemnity of Christ the King.

First Snow

St. Ann's Parish Centre
Well, it happened. At some point this morning the annual arrival of snow in these northern parts has finally come to fruition. Thus begins a pilgrimage of white for the foreseeable future.

I happen to find myself in Flin Flon, MB for the weekend. For those new to these pages I am also the pastor of St. Ann's in Flin Flon for this pastoral year. It was a new appointment that I share with Fr. Bill Stang, OMI, who also helps out here from time to time.

It is a wonderful setting to embrace winter and as I sit in the rectory this afternoon I am reninded of how soothing a snowfall can be. The snow is falling gently around me and I am enriched by the warmth of God's spirit in my life. I feel part of a painting as a sit and write with Kismet (my dog) at my feet as the large picture windows in the rectory reveal the beginnings of the this season of winter. How blessed am I?
View from Baker's Narrows

This morning began with my two friends from Ontario leaving for Winnipeg and their flight East. I celebrated a Holy Hour with some folks from the parish which was followed by a beautiful breakfast. I returned to celebrate Eucharist with the children enrolled in Religious Education and let me say it was a moving mass with such youthful enthusiasm.

I will quietly reflect on a homily for the weekend this afternoon and get ready for the weekend's ministerial schedule with heartfelt anticipation. All in all a full day. I do hear rumblings that there is a "games night" planned in the parish hall this evening for some of our youth so I best rest up in order to remain competitive.

Know of my prayer for many and all and thank you for your patience in the last days as I was without an internet connection to be able to post. Blessings on your weekend.

Oct 19, 2010

Tuesday Evening Musings

Good Evening, Church

Spent the evening, following mass, with some parents for this year's Religious Education classes. It presented me with another opportunity to reflect on the role of the local parish in forming the lives of young christian people. By extension I could apply this to the formation of christian disciples of any age.

Once again I found myself speaking of the importance of catechizing children beyond the classes themselves. In other words, the insistence that parents are the first teachers of faith in the lives of their children. I encouraged those present to take this responsibility seriously and to engage their children actively in their relationship with Jesus Christ.

Sr. Mary Kastens, OP, our parish director for Religious Education said it best when she remarked that the ultimate goal of this program is to, "place what they have learned in their head and heart, into their hands." A Gospel that is touchable and visible in their lives.

I couldn't agree more. So often we have this sense that God is connected to our lives from a distance. The Gospel that we have been preparing to preach is really one that must have a strong root in our day to day lives if it is to ever grow.

I commend the parents who were present tonight and assure them of my prayer - our prayer - for the year ahead. May this truly be a season of new beginnings.

 

Irish Priests form Association

The inaugural meeting of a new association to represent the views of Irish priests drew six times more participants than organizers expected.

More than 300 priests were present at the first meeting of the Association of Catholic Priests in Port Laoise Sept. 15. Organizers had expected only 60 priests to attend, so the meeting was delayed while proceedings were transferred to a larger meeting hall.

One of the founders of the new association, Father Brendan Hoban, said the new association does not seek to represent all priests, only those who agree to its program, which was published in the September edition of the theological magazine The Furrow.

"The association hopes to speak to the members of the Vatican's apostolic visitation to Ireland to voice our opposition to the new English-language translation of the Mass," Father Hoban told Catholic News Service. "We believe the new translation, which is to come into effect next year, is over-complicated and over-Latinized. There has been very little consultation about it, but nobody seems to want it -- it's another example of the church trying to fix things that don't need to be fixed and not fixing the things that need fixing."
The association said it also would work for "full implementation of the vision and teaching of the Second Vatican Council, with special emphasis on: the primacy of the individual conscience, the status and active participation of all the baptized and the task of establishing a church where all believers will be treated as equal; a restructuring of the governing system of the church ... encouraging a culture of consultation and transparency, particularly in the appointment of church leaders; a re-evaluation of Catholic sexual teaching and practice that recognizes the profound mystery of human sexuality."

This is the third body to have been established to represent Irish priests since the 1960s. The Association of Irish Priests fell into disuse in the early 1970s and the Irish bishops instituted the National Conference of Priests of Ireland, with elected representatives, in 1975, but it ceased operations in 2007.

The Association of Catholic Priests hopes for greater success than the National Conference of Priests of Ireland, which was often ignored by the hierarchy. When one conference president tried contacting the papal nuncio to Ireland, he was informed that he was "a nobody leading nobodies."

Oct 16, 2010

Visitors from the East

The Pas welcomes two strangers from the east (Dundas, ON) for their annual pilgrimage to visit your author and friend. I'm happy to have my two very good friends, Gina Furlong and Nikki Sjoblom, here for a one week holiday.

This yearly visit is always a time of catching up, reliving memories and creating some fresh stories to bring back to my family and friends in the greater Hamilton area. Both of these young women are able to hold their ground quite well with this junior pastor and these visits always remind me of the need for some good clean everyday fun in the work day.

We will be keeping our other good friend, Father James Curtin, in the loop as to the latest escapades so he can pray for us from afar. Rest assured he will be thought of often during this week and we promise to keep him in prayer as well.

For now, off to the races for the beginning of a week that will celebrate friendship.

Oct 15, 2010

Beginning of the Dialogue

Good Morning Church, taking some time to open the dialogue on the changes coming from Rome regarding the new Liturgy. This new liturgy should be in place for Advent 2011. The Canadian Bishops should be issuing a statement on this sometime in the near future but the bishops of the United States have been working on this for some time.

I have taken the time to offer you some fruit for reflection from our brothers and sisters to the south. I will try and offer you some tid bits here and there as they arise as we all wait for word from our own bishops on the matter. The following is from Lynn Williams, a free lance journalist from Nashville, TN and a frequent contributor to the Catholic Press. Stay tuned folks.
 _________________________________________________________

The new English translation of the Roman Missal, the official manual for the Roman Catholic Mass, has been approved, and soon familiar prayers and responses said in churches around the English-speaking world will change. Priests will follow newly translated instructions. Prayers used throughout the Mass and some responses of the congregation will change. Sacred chants and music used in worship will also be updated.  
The full texts of the English translation received recognitio, or approval, from the Vatican in June and July of 2010. The new translation will be implemented in U.S. dioceses in Advent 2011. It will be the most significant change to the Mass in over 40 years.

An occasion like this raises the question: Why is the Roman Missal so important?

“The Roman Missal is a common treasure,” says Msgr. Anthony Sherman, executive director at USCCB Secretariat of Divine Worship. “It is the book that provides us with prayer text. It serves as a point of unity that keeps us all together, presenting the prayers that are used around the world, in many languages, during universal feasts or holy days.”

Latin is the core text of the Roman Missal, evolving from oral tradition to written words. During the 15th century, in the era of the first printing press, the earliest book called Missale Romanum appeared. After the Council of Trent in 1570, Pope Pius V issued the edition that set the premier standard of uniformity used by celebrants of the Catholic faith.

Eight former Popes issued new editions between the 1604 and 2002, and each maintained a consistent style of worship for prayer in the Roman rite. Over time, additional Masses, prayers and revised rubrics (instructions) used to celebrate the Mass were added. The need for vernacular translations of the Roman Missal arose after the Second Vatican Council, and the present English translation of the Mass, which dates back to the 1970s, follows the Vatican’s guidelines of that time, which favored translations that were easy to understand in the vernacular.

When Pope John Paul II issued the Third Edition of the Roman Missal in 2002, a new English translation was required. Since the new English translation is guided by the 2001 Vatican document Liturgiam Authenticam, it presents a more literal translation of Latin wording and sentence structure than is used in the current translation. 

“The current translations are centered more on the community than the divine,” says Father Paul Turner, a parish pastor in the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph, Missouri and author of Let Us Pray: A Guide to the Rubrics of Sunday Mass. “They were somewhat inattentive to inclusive language, and lacked some theological depth and musicality. The first translations condensed some of the content of the prayers. The new translation improves that,” he says.

“This is not a new Mass,” says Michael McMahon, president of the National Association of Pastoral Musicians, adding that with a new translation, “one of the opportunities we have is to look at the parts of the Mass that should be sung” in the dialogue between the priest and the people and integrate them. One of the challenges of introducing a newly translated missal is retraining priests to lead Mass. Downloadable recordings for priests who don’t read music are being produced and distributed free, online. Major publishers will release material on compact discs. 

The Roman Missal itself is the primary source of training and instruction for the new translation. It displays rubrics, sentences printed in red that instruct a priest on what to say and do, how and when to gesture, and when to sing the common prayers in The Order of Mass. It provides instructions that guide the celebrant in leading the liturgy and the people assembled in ritual response for each occasion of Mass. 

It also dictates the words used by a priest during the Mass, which with the new translation will reflect a more formal style than past translations.

“It will sound much more like Latin,” says Father Turner.

“The Roman Missal puts us into a tradition of prayer and creates an historical awareness in the roots of where we are now,” says
Msgr. Sherman. “When you study the background of these prayers, you become united” with the perpetual mission of the Church.

Oct 14, 2010

Quote of the Day

"There are actually 34 of us, because God has never left us down here."

 - 19-year-old Chilean miner Jimmy Sanchez, in a letter sent up from the mine Tuesday.

That says it all folks...

Listening to God's Will

When you do all the talking you only learn what you already know.
--Anonymous

I was grateful this morning to come to the end of St. Luke's discourse to the Pharisees and Scribes. It was a long week of "Woe to you" statements and I was relieved to see the end of the discourse. It did leave me wondering, this morning, what it truly means for us to be attentive to God's will. 

We are so conditioned to place our needs before God (and rightly so) that I sometimes wonder if we take the time needed to also listen to that will. Hence today's quote above. There is something to listening to God's voice and to be attentive to what His will is for us each day.

We place our needs before God each day and then we need to remind ourselves to listen for the response.

We will find that God is a sympathetic and compassionate listener who truly wants to see us succeed in life and become the wonderful gift that He has created us to be. The gift is in our 'becoming' and our being transformed by the experience of each day. To truly allow that to happen entails us to take time to listen to God's voice in the busyness of our lives. 

To be attentive to that voice and to allow it to change us.

Oct 13, 2010

The Reality of a Celibate Life - Henri Nouwen

Good Morning Church - a bit chaotic after a Thanksgiving Weekend but things are slowly quieting down and allowing more time to catch up on what is happening in the world.

Of interest first off today is an article by Richard Sipe who speaks of some reflections on the issue of celibacy for priests in the world today. Its worth a look and a thought. More to follow. Stay tuned.
 _____________________________________________________

Recently I was in the process of cleaning out some files and ran across a July 1991 letter from Henri Nouwen. He and I had spent a year together during the mid 1960s in Topeka, Kansas at the Menninger Foundation’s training programs for clergy counselors. We had kept in casual contact afterward. He moved on to professorships at Notre Dame, Yale, and Harvard and traveled the troubled world while I settled into clinical practice, married life, and part time work at a Catholic seminary, college, and medical school in Baltimore.
By the time Henri wrote this letter he had already become a huge spiritual resource through his writings, retreats, lectures, teaching, and personal contacts. Most of his 40 books had been published. In contrast I had just recently (in 1990) published my first book, A Secret World: Sexuality and the Search for Celibacy.

In February I had gone to Daybreak -- a L’Arche community near Toronto -- to spend retreat time with Henri. While I was there he was working on The Return of the Prodigal Son (in my mind the most personally integrated of all his books). We talked about his writing and he gave me a copy of the Rembrandt poster that meant so much to him.
This was no silent retreat either; I accompanied Henri on his daily round of duties to visit his beloved sisters and brothers -- the developmentally disabled in the L’Arche community houses. I remember well our daily exchanges. Henri was focused on the idea of Communion -- evidence of his creative process and fecundity.
It came up in evening conferences and lunch meetings with local pastors and in a formal lecture in Toronto. Experiencing all his ministries made it easy to decipher where his inner longings were at that time -- to hear the words “you are my Beloved, on you my favor rests.” His two books published in 1992, Life of the Beloved and the completed Return of the Prodigal Son confirmed the observation.

During our last days together Henri shared the spiritual-emotional crisis that descended upon him a year and a half before. The content -- or rather the empty abyss -- of his depression was clear: the loneliness of celibacy.
Rembrandt's 'The Prodigal Son'
After resigning his teaching appointments and making a commitment to Daybreak he had for the first time in his life opened himself to a human relationship and love he had never experienced. He was faced with himself as never before -- his sexuality and celibacy were naked and undefended. It was a heart wrenching emotional experience during which he kept a diary.
Rembrandt's 'The Prodigal Son'
He wanted to talk about two things. The first was whether he should publish the diary that recorded such a soul wrenching and intimate struggle. I said it would be helpful to many folks who suffer. He finally agreed with many friends who had the same thought and Inner Voice of Love (1996) was published four months after his death.
Henri was aware of my clinical work with priests and seminarians. He and I met in Baltimore while he was still teaching at Yale and I was teaching at St. Mary’s Pontifical Seminary.

We shared our current interests. Henri’s were meditation and spirituality. Mine were celibacy and sexuality. Henri was still the self-described “restless, nervous, intense” person who asked me for some encouragement about the talks on meditation he was going to present to the seminarians. He expressed surprise at my observations about the amount of sexual activity among the students and faculty.

In 1991 the second topic he wanted to talk about was celibacy and sexual orientation. Mainly his questions were about orientation. What really is it? Is it possible to alter it? What are the origins? What are its implications for celibacy? How does it affect spirituality? He was not quite at a point of personal resolution then.

But Henri was the genuine article. He was exactly what he appeared -- a priest struggling for integrity, exhausting himself in the service of others.

Henri’s depression -- which he named ‘a struggle through anguish to freedom’ -- reminded me of Thomas Merton’s account of his love affair with “M” after so many years in the monastery (found in Volume 6 of Learning to Love: Exploring Solitude and Freedom). Merton wrote feely about his loneliness, desolation, and celibate conflicts precipitated by his relationship with her.

Both priests (Merton and Henri) came to grips with the deepest levels of their sexuality through the attachment and loss of a love relationship. Those depths cannot be fathomed without squeezing the life out of loneliness and embracing it until it renders aloneness (genuine solitude) full of meaning. The lives of many saints show that depression is involved in that process.

After I returned home I sent Henri copies of two talks I had given: “Spirituality and Integrity” at Princeton Theological Seminary Dec. 4, 1990 and “The Celibate/Sexual Agenda” for The CORPUS National Meeting for a renewed priesthood June 22 in New York.

This communication prompted his letter to me.

He said that he enjoyed the Princeton talk and “got a lot out of it.” But he had reservations about the New York talk. After stating that he had many questions he would like to talk more about he wrote: “I also feel there is a dimension to the issue of celibacy that is absent from your presentation and, by its absence, gives your presentation an overly strong ‘political’ character. Somehow I think that we really need to think more deeply about the mystery of communion and start talking in a new way about sexuality from there. I am certainly not yet able to do so and I find myself quite wordless around this very sacred area. But I do feel that we have to move beyond pointing to the many weaknesses and failures in living a credible sexual ethic to a rediscovery of the deep meaning of the ‘vacare Deo.’ ["to be empty for God"]”

Henri was not the first to question my sense of mystery. Catherine de Hueck thought that my presentations during a retreat I gave at Madonna House – a Catholic lay community of men -- in 1961 were “overly psychological.” But my guide has always been grounded in Aquinas’ dictum that “grace builds on nature” and the patristic pronouncement: “The glory of God is man fully human.”

Henri and I never got a chance to have those conversations.

It takes nothing away from Henri’s insights when I say the church is suffering its present sexual/celibate crisis precisely because it has not tolerated enough talk about the mental-emotional-sexual dimensions of celibacy.
So many sexual abusers have words for the spiritual, the mysterious, and the mystagogic dimensions of celibacy. But they do not practice celibacy. They cannot tolerate the examination of the reality of their humanity, sexuality or behavior. Much of their talk about mystery sounds good and can be useful in the mental gyrations necessary for a man or woman to wrestle with -- as Fr. Robert Barron put it in 1999 -- the “unreasonable, unnatural, and excessive” expression of love that religious celibacy is meant to be.
Many churchmen deem it unseemly, ill mannered, even voyeuristic, to talk about the sexual practices of bishops and priests. Only when transparency and accountability become realities will we be able to move beyond talking about failures, as Henri wanted me to do.

In fact, facing the hard truth about his humanity and sexuality is exactly what Henri had to do in his depression. His psychological agony and struggle were proof of his celibate journey.

Henri died before he found his way with words around what he called “this very sacred area.” But he and Merton helped define the territory that needs to be excavated if celibacy is to be understood and practiced -- the emotions of loneliness, deprivation, and loss.

Celibacy is a process. If it is pretense it is hypocrisy -- the gravest religious sin.

Nathaniel Hawthorne was an astute observer of clerical vice -- and virtue and with authority could write that -- as written in the Custom House Introduction to The Scarlet Letter -- the person “who seemed the most righteous might prove the greatest sinner.”

The crisis of abuse of minors by bishops and priests is the key that is opening the door to the reality of celibate practice. This is where the true mystery will be revealed -- truth and facts.

Henri ended his letter to me with a kind endorsement: “I, personally, feel that you have a great vocation in this area, especially since you are so articulate and well-informed about the many facts and figures of the issues involved. You have important things to say and I have the feeling that rediscovering or reliving the mystical dimension of the sexual life may help you and me and all of us to grow to a reclaiming of live’s [sic] sacredness.

I approach the burning bush of religious celibacy with my sandals in hand and with a sense of vocation. I have a sense of the mystery of sexuality/celibacy, but I also know that we have to build on the solid ground of reality -- the mental, emotional, and sexual dimensions of celibate process and practice.

[Richard Sipe is a mental health counselor and author who earlier spent 18 years as a Benedictine monk and priest.]

Oct 7, 2010

Feast of Our Lady of the Rosary


Good Morning Church - something new and enlightening today in that we celebrate the Feast of Our Lady of the Rosary. It has been a feast in the Church for quite some time and surprise, surprise it's origin is noteworthy.

The feast of the Holy Rosary was established by Saint Pius V on the anniversary of the naval victory won by the Christian fleet at Lepanto, October 7, 1571. The victory was attributed to the help of the holy Mother of God whose aid was invoked through praying the Rosary.

It is interesting in that Marian Feasts in the Western calendar began to commemorate a particular event of the times. Who would have thought that our Blessed Mother would eventually be linked to an event such as a naval battle?

I often wonder what role Mary has in the lives of the young church today? Have we encouraged our young people to seek out Mary's guidance and intercession in their daily lives? Is Mary an unreachable and distant figure in church history or does she still foster a close and loving following in our people's search for a more intimate relationship with Jesus Christ?

Lord, fill our hearts with your love,
and as you revealed to us by an angel the coming of your Son as man,
so lead us through his suffering and death to the glory of his resurrection,
who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

Oct 5, 2010

Vanier Institute of the Family


Families in Canada -
A new report from the Vanier Institute for the Family gives us time to reflect on the role of families not only in Church but also in our country. I've been following the institute's reports for years and they always have something challenging to absorb and understand by way of family life.

This year's report asserts that there are now more single Canadian adults than married Canadian adults(47.9%). The number of couples without children also surpassed the number of adults with children for the first time.

It will certainly provide food for thought and reflection as we as Catholic Christians attempt to minister among this growing culture within the Church. The importance of seeing the marriage as a invaluable gift to the Church is a necessity as married couples enrich not only their local parish, but their community in which they live, through their love and fidelity.

One wonders what the long term effects of this trend will be. More reflection is sure to follow.

Oct 4, 2010

St. Francis of Assisi

Blessing of Pets

As autumn arrives, people in various places may notice something odd.

A procession of animals, everything from dogs and cats to hamsters and even horses, is led to churches for a special ceremony called the Blessing of Pets.

This custom is conducted in remembrance of St. Francis of Assisi’s love for all creatures.

Francis, whose feast day is October 4th, loved the larks flying about his hilltop town. He and his early brothers, staying in a small hovel, allowed themselves to be displaced by a donkey.

Francis wrote a Canticle of the Creatures, an ode to God’s living things. “All praise to you, Oh Lord, for all these brother and sister creatures.” And there was testimony in the cause for St. Clare of Assisi’s canonization that referred to her little cat!

That there are today over 62 million cats in the U.S. attests to the continuing affection we have for our furry, feathered or finned friends. We've even had a cat called Socks in the White House. Other popular presidential pets range from Abraham Lincoln’s Fido to Lyndon Johnson’s beagles, named Him and Her.

For single householders, a pet can be a true companion. Many people arrive home from work to find a furry friend overjoyed at their return. Many a senior has a lap filled with a purring fellow creature.

The bond between person and pet is like no other relationship, because the communication between fellow creatures is at its most basic. Eye-to-eye, a man and his dog, or a woman and her cat, are two creatures of love.

No wonder people enjoy the opportunity to take their animal companions to church for a special blessing. Church is the place where the bond of creation is celebrated.

At Franciscan churches, a friar with brown robe and white cord often welcomes each animal with a special prayer. The Blessing of Pets usually goes like this:

“Blessed are you, Lord God, maker of all living creatures. You called forth fish in the sea, birds in the air and animals on the land. You inspired St. Francis to call all of them his brothers and sisters. We ask you to bless this pet. By the power of your love, enable it to live according to your plan. May we always praise you for all your beauty in creation. Blessed are you, Lord our God, in all your creatures! Amen.”

As the prayer is offered, the pet is gently sprinkled with holy water. Believe it or not, most pets receive this sacramental spritz with dignity, though I must admit I have seen some cats flatten their ears a bit as the drops of water lightly pelt them.

But the owner is happy, and who knows what spiritual benefits may result?

Usually the Blessing of Pets is held outdoors. But I remember it rained one year, and all were invited inside St. Stephen’s Church in Manhattan. It was quite a sight to see pairs of creatures—one human, one animal—sitting in the pews. The pastor joined right in with his beagle. Noah’s Ark was never like this!

Some people criticize the amount and cost of care given to pets. People are more important, they say. Care for poor people instead of poodles. And certainly our needy fellow humans should not be neglected.

However, I believe every creature is important. The love we give to a pet, and receive from a pet, can draw us more deeply into the larger circle of life, into the wonder of our common relationship to our Creator.



Kevin E. Mackin, O.F.M., is a Franciscan of the Holy Name Province.

Oct 3, 2010

Sunday Evening


Good Evening Church -
A quiet evening after a day of ministry and I am left nursing my wounds after the Eskimo's defeat of my Tiger Cats. If it is any consolation it is that it was a close game at least.

We celebrated the 27th Sunday in Ordinary Time with a few visitors to the parish, most notably Fr. Gaspar - a new priest from India who will be with us for a few days before heading into Pukatawagan, MB.

It was also the annual parish Fall Supper! A record number of people were treated to a delicious meal of roast beef and all the fixings. We served a whopping 273 people with the help of some 25 volunteers and we still had some food leftover. This was a real tribute to the community spirit that is fostered by the hard working and dedicated faithful of the parish.

Tomorrow is a beloved Monday - the usual pastor's day off and this one is certainly looking forward to it. Have a blessed night all and thank you to all who made this day and evening a great celebration of Our Lord's Bounty.