Tuesday, November 23, 2010

No Mom, she's just my roommate, housing assigned her to me.

In case there had been any remaining doubt, I guess that I am officially a neanderthal. Hearing that Georgetown University, a Jesuit school, is considering "gender blind housing" for incoming students, I have apparently been caught simply napping at the station as the cultural express blazed through town.
One Georgetown student opined that such a change would be beneficial to the community as, "It would be helpful to the many people on campus who have friends of the opposite sex and who have different sexual orientations." I don't think I would have had the courage to try to sell that one to my parents.

Monday, November 15, 2010

Not quite "Man bites dog" -- but it is unusual

I am somewhat surprised to hear that a bishop actually exercised his authority and demanded an apology from a priest who had determined that he and not the pope, bishops, or magisterium should determine what is appropriate.
Fr. Larry McNally, pastor of Ascension Parish in Oak Park apparently was held to account for his pandering to secular news agencies and a segment of his parish in issuing a call for the ordination of women in the Catholic Church in spite of two-thousand years of practice and consistent teachings on the subject throughout the years. Bishop John Manz apparently demanded a public apology which has been made. I may doubt the sincerity of the apology, but I am thankful to Bishop Manz for asking for it. (story here)

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Quote for today...

From Msgr. Charles Pope in the Archdiocese of Washington, D.C. speaking on the need for the laity to assume greater responsibility for spreading the faith:
It is simple to say the priests should do something, but it is also a fact that shepherds don't have sheep; sheep have sheep.
h/t to Greg Kandra

Monday, November 8, 2010

Under persecution -- stay or go?


A curious disconnect between the first reading for the 32nd Sunday in Ordinary time for year C which was proclaimed at Mass yesterday and the report of a Syrian Orthodox Archbishop in London encouraging Iraqi Christians to abandon their homes (story here) in the face of the "ethnic cleansing" being perpetrated on the community.
The Reading taken from 2 Maccabees 7 is the one in which a mother encourages her seven sons her sons to remain faithful to the Lord to the point of death under torture. It is tough to imagine a mother able to take such a stance, yet lest we consign the possibility of such sacrifice to the pages of history perhaps we should take into account the example of the parishioners of Baghdad's Our Lady of Salvation church who gathered together for Mass just one week after Islamic militants attacked that congregation and left 58 people dead. This suffering community gathered again yesterday and offered prayers for their persecutors as well as for the victims. (story here). Iraq's top Catholic prelate, Chaldean Cardinal Emmanuel III Delly, has encouraged the country's remaining 1.5million Christians to stay.
The Syrian Archbishop demonstrates a loving concern for Christians in Iraq and offers sage counsel. The Cardinal and the Catholic community of Our Lady of Salvation church are inspiring in their reliance upon God for protection. I can only prayerfully consider what choice I might be led to make under similar circumstances and ponder if there is a point at which courage and faith become foolhardiness.
Meanwhile in the United States perhaps 25% of those who describe themselves as Catholic managed to find time to worship God this weekend. As Americans we tend to value things according to their relative cost and too readily fail to recognize the treasures we have.

Monday, November 1, 2010

More names added to the list of All Saints...


As I prepared to leave the house this morning to head toward church for Mass in observance of All Saints Day, I was saddened to hear of the death (martyrdom) of Catholics in Baghdad. (story here) The Church is being assailed by a secular culture here in the United States, but at least to date we are being spared the level of persecution that is rampant in places such as Iraq, Sudan and many other nations in which Christians and particularly Catholics live with a target on their backs.
We are called to be saints. Indeed, scripture tells us that we are to be conformed to the image of Christ. The crucifix serves as a reminder of that calling. A head crowned not with glory but with thorns in a mockery of kingship. The hands that set the stars in the heavens pinned to the tree in impotence, arms spread wide in love and in the emptying of self. A heart pierced and pouring out blood marking the very earth in the same manner that the blood of lambs marked the homes of those to be saved in Egypt.
I doubt that many of the 52 slain in Baghdad anticipated how close they would come to the cross as they gathered to worship. May those who paid with their lives for the faith we often take for granted inherit the promise of the kingdom and serve as an example for us as we remember all the saints this day.