Deacon Bob’s Homily for the Second Sunday of Advent – Cycle C

Here is my homily for the 2nd Sunday of Advent. May God bless you all.

Audio: 2nd Sunday of Advent – Cycle C

Text:

2nd Sunday of Advent – Cycle C

 December 8/9, 2012

 Baruch 5: 1-9; Phil 1:4, 8-11; Lk 3: 1-6 

God comes to us. Will we go to him?

 Imagine two scenarios and two different voices. First, I’d like you to think of the voice of the oddest member in your family, maybe your uncle or cousin. Imagine that family member being gone for a few years and then all of a sudden returning looking pretty ragged and out-of-sorts, speaking directly to you and going on and on about God coming soon and how we all have to repent and get ready.

Now, imagine another scenario and another kind of voice,. You are walking through a mountain range. Big tall mountains that seem to speak to you with their size and beauty, and the deep valleys that repeat back to you every word you speak. This voice seems to pull you farther and farther into the mountains, mesmerizing you by their grandeur and beauty, only to find that you are lost and can’t find your way back home because the mountains block your exit and the valleys are too deep to escape.

Now, my question is to which of these two voices will you listen to in your life? Is it the call of the mountains of resistance and the echoes of the deep valleys of temptation? Or, will you listen to the words of John the Baptist in the Gospel? The word of God came to John the son of Zechariah in the wilderness; and he went into the region around the Jordan, preaching a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. Make ready the way of the Lord! Clear him a straight path! Let every valley be filled, every mountain made low! Let all mankind see the salvation of our God, for he comes! Smooth out the rough patches John said, and straighten the crookedness of your life. Fill in what is missing!

God wants to make our lives smooth. He wants to remove the mountains of distress in our lives and he wants to fill our valleys of despair with his presence, with his peace, with his justice, with his glory. Yes God comes to us! He comes so that we might not be held captive by sin and death. He comes so that we might be free from all that would tear us away from him. God comes to seeking us out.

God comes to level our mountains of resistance. He comes to fill the trenches of temptation. God comes to strengthen our hands and make firm our knees, so that we might stand tall upon the heights and declare before all the people, “The Lord has done great things for us! We are glad indeed!”

Yes, return to the Lord with all your heart. Go to him. Ready yourself, for Jesus is coming! He will complete in us the good work, the good news, which he began so long ago.

Ask yourselves, “What are the valleys of temptation in my life? Where are the mountains of resistance that impede my progress? What has led me away from my God?”

My friends, John the Baptist outlines three steps we must take to find our way out of those mountains and the valleys of life.

Step one:  we must go into the wilderness, into the desert, into those mountains and valleys. We must find time to be with God. We must find time to pray. In the wilderness we must struggle to admit our sinfulness and our need of forgiveness.  We must admit we are lost and in need of guidance and direction.

Step two, we must let the God come to us and lead us out. God comes to us when we pray. God comes to us when we read Scripture and hear it read. Yes, God wants us to seek him out by going into the desert, but he also wants to lead us out of that wilderness; he wants to free us from whatever holds us captive. He wants to give us his Spirit who guides us out of the mountains and valleys that surround us. He comes to give us the hope of rebirth! On his own initiative, God comes searching our souls, searching our hearts that have been held captive by the addiction of sin and the temptations of the world around us.

Yes, God comes to forgive us. When does that forgiveness come to us in a very personal way? When we go to confession and receive absolution. We all need to confess our sins, admit our guilt and receive the Lord’s forgiveness. We must go frequently, on a monthly basis, to the sacrament of Penance. It is our way of being prepared for his coming. It is our way to ready ourselves for the coming of Jesus.

Step three, we must go out and proclaim the faith. He sends us out to announce to the whole world that God is good and that he has done great things for us. He sends us out in joy and peace so we might give witness to his presence and his love, so that we might lead others to him. He sends us out so that others may learn the faith, and know God. He sends us out to proclaim the truth that God is found in the Catholic Church, in her teachings, in her living Tradition and Apostolic ministry.

In a nutshell, Advent is a time to go into the wilderness in order to listen and hear God’s voice, to be open to his coming into our lives, to seek his forgiveness, and then to become witnesses of his coming into our world.

God will lead us. He will level the mountains of sin and fills the trenches of temptation. He will bring to completion the work he has begun. He will grace us with his presence. Look for him! He is coming soon! Go to him! As the Scriptures say, “Let all mankind will see the salvation of God!” God comes to you. Will you go to him?

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A “Catholic” Newspaper Gets It Wrong

Some of you may already be on top of this story. On December 3rd, the National Catholic Reporter published an editorial endorsing the ordination of women to the priesthood. If you must, you can log on to: http://ncronline.org/node/40306 to read what they had to say. I would summarize the editorial in this way:

The Editorial Staff at the National Catholic Reporter (NCR) uses the recent excommunication and laicization of Roy Bourgeois (a former Maryknoll priest) as point of departure in their argument that denial of the ministerial priesthood to women is an injustice. They report that Bourgeois said that  no one can say who God can and cannot call to the priesthood, and that gender does not limit God’s ability to call a woman to the priesthood, and that the majority of the faithful believe this.

They conclude their argument by saying that the sensus fidelium, that is the sense of the faithful througout the world is that the exclusion of women from the priesthood has no strong basis in Scripture or any other compelling rationale, therefore women should be ordained.

The NCR has got it wrong.

Unless you abandon what has been the consistent understanding in the Catholic Church regarding the nature of Divine Revelation, you cannot argue the NCR position reasonably. We Catholics are not sola scriptura. In other words, we know Divine Truth is revealed not soley in Scripture. Scripture, along with the living Tradition (the faith as handed on to us by the Apostles in oral form, and which continues to be handed on by their successors, the bishops in union with the Pope) and the Magisterium are source of Revelation, for they attest to Jesus Christ and his self-revelation of the Father. Jesus is the final authority on truth; he has willed for us his Church. Together with the Holy Spirit in unity with the Father, the will of Jesus is lived out in the Catholic Church. It is clear in Scripture, Tradition, and the Magesterium that the Bishop of Rome, the pope, is the Vicar of Christ on earth, and that the bishops throughout the world share in an infallibility assured us by Jesus himself when together as a college and individually as pope they teach in matters of faith and morals.

The NCR seems to have lost a Catholic understanding of Revelation and Truth. I could understand (although I would disagree) if they were to argue the ordination question differently, taking into account Scripture, Tradition and Magesterium. But to do so would be fruitless, and I suspect they know it, because all three have been exhaustively studied and prayed over by bishops, theologians and the laity, and a definitive conclusion has been drawn which Pope John Paul II bravely articulated: the Church has no power to confer priestly ordination on women for Jesus himself willed that priests share his gender.

By the way, why is it so difficult to accept that not everyone who believes to have a calling will be accepted? Many believe they are called, but only a few ordained. That is why we have the lengthy discernment process, why we screen men extensively, and why we exclude men who have certain conditions or qualities.

Pope John Paul II, speaking for all the bishops in communion with him, and exercising his authority as the one who strengthens and confirms his brother bishops declared on May 22, 1994 in his Apostolic LetterOrdinatio Sacerdotalis:

Although the teaching that priestly ordination is to be reserved to men alone has been preserved by the constant and universal Tradition of the Church and firmly taught by the Magisterium in its more recent documents, at the present time in some places it is nonetheless considered still open to debate, or the Church’s judgment that women are not to be admitted to ordination is considered to have a merely disciplinary force.

Wherefore, in order that all doubt may be removed regarding a matter of great importance, a matter which pertains to the Church’s divine constitution itself, in virtue of my ministry of confirming the brethren (cf. Lk 22:32) I declare that the Church has no authority whatsoever to confer priestly ordination on women and that this judgment is to be definitively held by all the Church’s faithful.

The matter has been settled, and it is incumbent on all the faithful to grant it our full assent.

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Catholic Social Doctrine: The Value of Marriage

The Catholic Church’s social doctrine includes its teaching on marriage. Marriage is foundational for family, and is predicated on the free choice of the spouses to unite themselves as persons. This unity is of mind and body. The meaning and value of marriage is not dependent on human construction, but rather on God himself. It is not the result of human convention or of legislative prescriptions but has stability from divine disposition. It is a definitive commitment expressed by mutual, irrevocable and public consent. It is marked by a sense of justice and respect for certain rights and duties.

The characteristic traits of marriage are: totality, unity, indissolubility, fidelity, and fruitfulness. In its “objective” truth, marriage is ordered to the procreation and education of children, yet marriage was not instituted solely for procreation. Because of this, marriage remains even when children did not arrive and complete conjugal life, even though they were greatly desired.

For a more detailed discussion of this topic, refer to the Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church, nos . 215-218

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Maranatha! The Holy Father’s Words at the Beginning of Advent

Advent is upon us once again and we with expectant hope look for the coming of Jesus into our hearts and our world. He comes, most assuredly just as he came to us in the flesh  over two thousand years ago.

The Holy Father said the following at his Angelus address to the pilgrims in Rome (Vatican Radio’s translation of the Italian original):

Today the Church begins a new liturgical year, a path that is further enriched by the Year of Faith, 50 years since the opening of the Second Vatican Council. The first Time of this journey is Advent, composed, in the Roman Rite, of the four weeks that precede the Birth of the Lord, that is, the mystery of the Incarnation. The word “Advent” means “coming” or “presence.” In the ancient world, it signified the coming of the king or the emperor into one of the provinces; in the language of Christians, it referred to the coming of God, to His presence in the world; a mystery that involves the whole of the cosmos and of history, but that recognises two culminating moments: the first and the second coming of Jesus Christ. The first is the Incarnation itself; the second is the glorious return at the end of time. These two moments, chronologically distant – and it is not given to us to know how far apart they are – touch us deeply, because by His death and resurrection Jesus has already accomplished that transformation of humanity and of the cosmos that is the final goal of creation. But before that end, it is necessary that the Gospel be proclaimed to all nations, as Jesus says in the Gospel of Saint Mark. The coming of Christ is continuous; the world must be infused by His presence. This permanent coming of the Lord in the proclamation of the Gospel requires our continual collaboration; and the Church, which is like the Betrothed, the promised Bride of the crucified and risen Lamb of God (cfr. Rev. 21,9), in communion with her Lord collaborates in this coming of the Lord, in which His glorious return is already begun.

It is to this that the Word of God recalls us today, tracing out a line of conduct to pursue in order to be ready for the coming of the Lord. In the Gospel of Luke, Jesus says to the disciples: “Beware that your hearts do not become drowsy from carousing and drunkenness and the anxieties of daily life . . . Be vigilant at all times and pray.” So: simplicity and prayer. And the apostle Paul adds the invitation to “increase and abound in love” among ourselves and towards everyone, to strengthen our hearts and to be blameless in holiness (cfr. 1 Thess 3, 12-13). In the midst of the turmoil of the world, or the desert of indifference and materialism, Christians accept the salvation of God and witness to it by a different way of life, as a city set on a hill. “In those days,” the prophet Jeremiah proclaims, “Jerusalem shall dwell safely; this is the name they shall call her: ‘The Lord our justice’” (Jer 33,16). The community of believers is a sign of the love of God, of His justice that is already present and working in history, but not yet fully realised, and that therefore should always be awaited, invoked, and sought after with patience and courage.

The Virgin Mary perfectly embodies the spirit of Advent, which consists of listening to God, a profound desire to do His will, and joyful service to others. Let us be guided by her, so that God who is coming may not find us closed or distracted, but might extend to each of us a small part of His kingdom of love, of justice, and of peace.

May we all prepare well this Advent. Maranatha! Come, Lord Jesus!

 

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Quote for the Day

“… peace is much more than the simple absence of war; it represents the fullness of life.” — Catechism of the Catholic Church #489

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Mary’s Greatness Lay in Her Fidelity to God’s Word

I will deliver this homily to the diaconal community in the Winona diocese as we gathered for an Advent Day of Reflection. The Mass will be a votive Mass in honor of our Blessed Mother.

Homily for Advent Day of Reflection

December 1, 2012

Albert Lea, MN

Humble and bold. Two words we don’t often associate in our minds. Humble and bold… we find them both in the person of Mary.

The humble virgin Mary, docile to God’s will, God’s word, yet the most bold of all the witnesses of the Word made Flesh, of her Son and Lord, Jesus.

No, it was not Peter. No, it was not James or John or Paul who was the boldest yet most humble of all the witnesses of the Life, Death, and Resurrection of Jesus….. No, it was Mary, for from her heart came these words:

My soul proclaims the greatness of the Lord

My spirit rejoices in God, my Savior

For He has looked with favor on his lowly servant

From this day all generations shall call me blessed!

It was Mary who bore the most humble but bold witness to her Son. It was Mary who bore the Word of God in her heart and then conceived Word in her womb.

Only because of her faith in that Word that came to her, who she nurtured in her Immaculate Heart, was she then able to conceive and bear the Son of God, her creator and Savior, Jesus.

Mary kept close to her heart the Word made Flesh. She said, “Yes.” She said, “Fiat.” She said, “Let it be done to me.” St. Augustine would later write that Mary was more blessed for hearing God’s word and keeping custody of it in her heart than because of the flesh she gave to her divine Son. Since this was true, Mary was able to stand by her Son as he died on the cross, stand by Him without staining her Immaculate Heart. She knew it was by virtue of her faith in God’s Word that she had been able to conceive that Word in her womb, and it was by faith in that Word that she was able to give bold witness to her Son when he gave up his life on the Cross.

Mary, who surpasses all of us in her sanctity and her fidelity, remains like us, a member of the Church, and a member of the Body of Christ her Son, a witness to her Son’s death and resurrection.

You too are members of the Body of Christ.  You also carry God’s Word in your hearts for you are heralds of that Word.

My brother deacons, we are more blessed and find greater dignity in the Word we nourish in our hearts and profess with our lips than in the office we bear. We are first, and most importantly, members of the Body of Christ, from which we must never separate ourselves. We are called in a special way to preach the Gospel and become Icons of Jesus the Servant.

We cannot become that Icon, we cannot become the Image of Jesus the Servant unless first we have welcomed the Word in our hearts, treasured it, nurtured it, obeyed it, followed it, trusted it. Mary would not have become the Mother of God had she not first accepted and kept the Word of God in her Immaculate Heart. We cannot become the Icon of Jesus the Servant if we do not first hold in purity of heart the Word entrusted to us. Mary could not have endured the passion and death of her Son without cradling in her heart the Word that had come to her. We cannot endure the trials and difficulties of ministry without knowing and nurturing and loving the Word entrusted to us as deacons of the Church.

Yes, our diaconal ministry can be modeled after Mary. We too are to give humble yet bold witness to the Gospel. Ours is a vocation of humble service, not arrogant rule, but ours is also a vocation of boldly proclaiming the Gospel. There is no place for the timid there. We must teach and preach boldly, with conviction and faith arising from a pure conscience.

My brothers, thank you for your ministries in our diocese. To all you wives here present, I thank you for the sacrificial love you live out on a daily basis in the support you give us. Without you, we could do very little.

May God bless us all!

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Quote for the Day

“There is no more authoritative book to teach us how to grow in God’s love than the book of Jesus crucified.” — St. Maximillian Kolbe, OFM Conv.

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Quote for the Day

“God, and only God, is infinite, most wise, most holy, a most loving Lord, our father and creator, our beginning and end, our wisdom, power and love — God is our all.” – St. Maximillian Kolbe, OFM Conv.

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Four Myths of Papa Luciani “Debunked”

John Allen, a correspondent from the National Catholic Reporter on November 2, 2012, wrote the following for that newspaper. Here are excerpts from the article.

Oct. 17 marked the 100th anniversary of the birth of Albino Luciani, the man who would become John Paul I, the “Smiling Pope” of just 33 days, from Aug. 26 to Sept. 28, 1978. On the day of the anniversary, an official positio, or “position paper,” was filed in the Vatican to support his sainthood cause………John Paul I’s 33-day papacy was the 10th shortest of all time, and the briefest since Leo XI’s in the early 17th century. Yet the ferment shows he only needed a month to leave a deep mark on the Catholic imagination.In part, that’s because he seemed exactly what most Catholics pray their leaders will be: warm, compassionate, genuinely happy to be with ordinary people, a man of obvious faith who didn’t wear his piety on his sleeve or take himself too seriously. He pioneered the simplification of the papacy by dropping the royal “we,” declining coronation with the papal tiara and discontinuing use of the sedia gestatoria, or portable throne……….. the remembrances we’ve heard during the last month seem to debunk four persistent myths:

  • The “smiling pope” was good-hearted but weak, out of his depth in the Machiavellian environment of the Vatican.

  • John Paul I was a closet radical who would have taken the church in a dramatically different direction than the two popes who followed him.

  • John Paul I did not die of natural causes, but rather fell victim to a complex assassination plot.

  • Although a breath of fresh air after the dour final years of Pope Paul VI, John Paul I’s reign was too short to have anything substantive to offer the church of the 21st century, especially with regard to its top internal priority, new evangelization.

No weakling

In his interview, Lorenzi dismissed perceptions that John Paul I was a wide-eyed naïf, a country pastor crushed by the magnitude of the papacy and the Byzantine intricacies of the Vatican.

Instead, Lorenzi said the day after his election, Luciani studied the Annuario, the Vatican’s yearbook, to familiarize himself with the organizational chart, then set about taking things in hand. He met regularly with the Secretary of State, Lorenzi said, and also had meetings with all the cardinals who headed Vatican departments.

“He was not overwhelmed,” Lorenzi insisted, saying John Paul I took up his new role with the same “perspicacity and intelligence” he displayed over a decade as the patriarch of Venice.

At the New York conference, writer Mo Guernon argued that Luciani’s humility had nothing to do with fecklessness, and that he could summon some steel when the situation called for it.

For instance, Guernon told a story of when Luciani was a bishop and one of his parishes chose a new pastor without consulting him. He responded by boldly entering the church and removing the Eucharist, refusing to return it until the situation was resolved.

In a similar vein, when some priests in Venice openly backed the liberalization of divorce in defiance of church teaching, Luciani disbanded the group and suspended the priests. As Guernon put it, that was “rather tough stuff from such a meek man.”…….

Lorenzi also shot down the notion that Luciani’s election was a bolt from the blue, a sort of rabbit-out-of-the-hat solution to a deadlock.

For one thing, he said, Luciani knew going into the conclave of August 1978 that there was considerable talk about him. Indeed, Lorenzi said Luciani told him personally that if elected, he would decline, and that he had said the same thing to then-Fr. Prospero Grech, who’s now a cardinal, noting that Paul VI’s constitution allowed whoever’s elected the right to refuse. In the end, however, Lorenzi said Luciani felt compelled to offer the same “yes” as when he had been named patriarch of Venice.

Lorenzi said Luciani was familiar to the other cardinals from his contributions to the 1974 Synod of Bishops on evangelization in the modern world.

“They knew him well,” Lorenzi said, saying his work at the synod had been “respected and appreciated.”…….

One hallmark of a John Paul I papacy may have been a desire for greater financial transparency, and Guernon suggested he had the spine to back it up.

He told the story of a scandal in which two of Luciani’s priests were caught embezzling church funds. Luciani suspended the priests and wrote an open letter to the diocese explaining the situation, frankly acknowledging that “two of my priests have done wrong.” While voicing compassion, he let a criminal investigation and prosecution run its course. He also sold off property owned by the diocese and also requested additional help from parishioners in order to balance the books.

No radical

Overall, the image of John Paul I that emerges is of a pastorally minded figure who tried to hold a divided church together. At the New York event, his niece, Pia Luciani, recounted a time shortly after the Second Vatican Council (1962-65) when he was still the bishop of Vittorio Veneto, when he said to her the diocese actually contained people “of three councils”:

  • Those stuck at Vatican I, if not actually at the Council of Trent.

  • Those “who gladly accept the aggiornamento of Vatican II, seeing it as a grace to improve the relationship between the church and the world.”

  • “A little group who make the council say things that in reality it does not say, planning a radical rush toward another council that still does not exist, a Vatican III.”

Her uncle, she implied, was in that second camp, but didn’t want to just write off either the first or the third.

Lorenzi said during his Sat2000 interview that Benedict XVI actually reminds him of Luciani, both in terms of “physical stature,” he said, and in terms of their core concern with the theological virtues of faith, hope and charity. Just as those were the subjects of Benedict’s first encyclicals, Lorenzi said, they were also the topic of John Paul I’s first homily as pope……

Cementing the impression of sympathy between John Paul I and Benedict XVI, freelance writer Lori Pieper, a Secular Franciscan who organized the New York conference, quoted from a homily given by Luciani in 1977, after Paul VI announced that then-Fr. Joseph Ratzinger would become the archbishop of Munich and a cardinal:

A few days ago, I offered my congratulations to Cardinal Ratzinger, the new Archbishop of Munich. In a Catholic Germany that he himself deplores as suffering, in part, from an anti-Roman and anti-papal complex, he has had the courage to proclaim loudly that ‘the Lord should be sought where Peter is.’ … Ratzinger appears to me to be the right kind of prophet. Not all those who write and speak today have the same courage. In order to want to go where others are going, for fear of not seeming modern, some of them accept only with cuts and restrictions the creed pronounced by Paul VI in 1968 at the closing of the Year of Faith; they criticize the papal documents; they talk constantly about ecclesial communion, but never about the pope as a necessary reference point for those who want to be in true communion with the church.

Other examples surfaced at the New York event.

British researcher Paul Spackman reported that when a bitter national debate erupted in Italy in the 1970s over divorce, Luciani’s views lined up solidly with orthodox teaching. The difference, he said, is Luciani had a keener sense than some others of how to expound that teaching in the context of the times.

In 1974, Spackman said, Luciani was opposed to efforts by right-wing Christian Democrats to stage a national referendum seeking to overturn the liberalization of divorce, fearing it would divide the church and underscore its declining influence. (In the end, the referendum was soundly defeated.)

Overall, Spackman describes John Paul I as a man of “doctrinal rigor leavened by pastoral and social open-mindednes,” and said he left behind a “legacy of gentle and compassionate bridge-building.”

Pieper unpacked two famous sound bites from John Paul I that have fueled a good deal of speculation:

  • A comment before the conclave of August 1978 congratulating the parents of the world’s first test-tube baby, which has led some to believe he would have overturned the church’s ban on in-vitro fertilization

  • A comment during his Sept. 10, 1978, Angelus address that God is “more mother than father,” prompting some to wonder if he shared the objection of many feminists to the church’s “patriarchal” bias and might have reversed the ban on female priests

On IVF, Pieper wrote Luciani upheld the teaching of Pope Pius XII against mechanical intervention in the marital act. Further, she said, people always quote his congratulations to the parents of Louise Brown in that pre-conclave interview, but not the lines that followed it:

Even if the possibility of having children in vitro does not bring about disaster, it at least poses some enormous risks. For example: If the natural ability to conceive sometimes produces malformed children, won’t the ability to conceive artificially produce even more? If so, won’t the scientist faced with new problems be acting like the “sorcerer’s apprentice,” who unleashes powerful forces without being able to contain and dominate them? Another example: Given the hunger for money and the lack of moral scruples today, won’t there be the danger that a new industry will arise, that of “baby‑manufacturing,” perhaps for those who cannot or will not contract a valid marriage? If this were to happen, wouldn’t it be a great setback instead of progress for the family and for society?

Needless to say, that doesn’t exactly sound like an IVF enthusiast.

On the celebrated “more mother than father” quote, Pieper argued that John Paul I meant to underline God’s tenderness, not to dislodge traditional imagery about God as a father or to suggest that God is more female than male in an absolute sense. It’s a trope, she notes, that was developed by John Paul II, including his 1980 encyclical Dives in Misericordia.

On women priests, Spackman quoted a 1975 talk Luciani gave to a group of sisters expressing support for the all-male priesthood:

You will ask: what about … the priesthood itself? I can say to you: Christ bestowed the pastoral ministry on men alone, on his apostles. Did he mean this to be valid only for a short time, almost as though he made allowances for the prejudice about the inferiority of women prevalent in his time? Or did he intend it to be valid always? Let it be very clear: Christ never accepted the prejudice about the inferiority of women: they are always admirable figures in the Gospels, more so than the apostles themselves. The priesthood, however, is a service given by means of spiritual powers and not a form of superiority. Through the will of Christ, women — in my judgment — carry out a different, complementary, and precious service in the church, but they are not “possible priests” … That does not do wrong to women…..

No conspiracy

As he has done on many other occasions, in his comments on Italian TV, Lorenzi rejected conspiracy theories suggesting John Paul I was the victim of foul play. Instead, he said he believes the pope died of a heart attack, a conviction based partly on the fact that, according to Lorenzi, he had complained of chest pains at dinner the night before.

They didn’t summon the doctor, Lorenzi said, because at the time, the pope said the pains were passing.

Lorenzi added that the initial Vatican statement announcing the death of the pope probably could have short-circuited much of the speculation by including those details, but said everyone involved felt under tremendous pressure to get it finished.

Pia Luciani said in New York that “the whole family, beginning with my father, his brother Edoardo, has never attributed the sudden death of my uncle to anything but natural causes.”

“All the castles of the most disparate theories that have been heard or read in books and newspapers fall,” she said.

She added that perhaps the Vatican’s effort to fudge the circumstances of the death — not wanting to admit that John Paul I was discovered by a nun who worked in the papal apartment, and trying to suggest he was holding The Imitation of Christ rather than papers from the office — “gave rise to other problems and suspicions.”

Luciani said her uncle may have suffered a thrombosis, meaning a clot that obstructs the flow of blood, since he had already experiences one such episode during a 1975 trip to Brazil that affected the retina in one eye.

Interestingly, she rejected the idea floated by Lorenzi of a heart attack, insisting that had her uncle really complained of chest pains, the nuns in his household who accompanied him to the Vatican from Venice would have called a doctor whether he wanted it or not. The actual cause of death will likely never be ascertained with certainty because no autopsy was performed, in keeping with Vatican protocol.

Bishop Enrico Dal Covolo, rector of the Lateran University in Rome and the postulator for John Paul I’s sainthood cause, recently said medical records collected as part of the process also support the conclusion that the pope died of natural causes.

The new evangelization

Although John Paul I apparently didn’t use the phrase new evangelization, Pieper argued that he not only “anticipated” the idea, but “preached it and lived it.” If the aim is primarily to reach out to lapsed Catholics in the West, Luciani was certainly early to the party; Pieper quoted from a 1968 essay in which he argued that Italy was, by then, every bit as much “mission territory” as Africa.

In a speech to the College of Cardinals the morning after his election, John Paul I said it clearly: “We want to recall to the entire church that her first duty is still evangelization.”

The important point, however, is not that John Paul I wanted to relight the church’s missionary fires, because plenty of people share that desire, but rather the model he offered of how to go about it…….

Pieper quoted an English priest who recently told her of John Paul I, “If there was ever a prophet of the new evangelization, it’s him.”

One final footnote: John Paul I is usually remembered as an extremely “pastoral” figure, someone close to ordinary people who understood their struggles and their dreams, and who knew how to make church teaching accessible and relevant……

Strikingly, however, Pia Luciani reminded the New York conference that despite his pastoral reputation, her uncle never actually served as a parish priest. During his career, he was a seminary professor, rector and vicar general, then a bishop, patriarch and pope.

John Paul I thus illustrates a key Catholic insight: being “pastoral” is far more about outlook and personality, not so much one’s résumé. Somebody can be pastoral from behind a desk, just as they can be clericalist in a cornfield.

[John L. Allen Jr. is NCR senior correspondent. His email address is jallen@ncronline.org.]

Here is the link to the article: www.ncronline.org/blogs/all-things-catholic/debunking-four-myths-about-john–paul-i-smiling-pope

I would like to add that when it comes to the New Evangelization, I truly believe that it started with Pope John Paul I for on the day he died he called for that evangelization when he gave an address to the Filipino bishops who had come for their ad limina visit. I would also add my agreement with the observation that John Paul I and Benedict XVI have much in common in that both Luciani and Ratzinger have focused on the three theological virtues of faith, hope and charity, Luciani in his weekly addresses and Ratzinger in his first encyclicals.

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The Discipleship of Mary, Mother of God

I have been stuck thinking about what St. Augustine said a few days ago in the second reading in the Office of Readings on the memorial of the Presentation of Mary. If you recall, he said that Mary saw her discipleship to her Son as conferring a greater degree of dignity than her having physical maternity of Jesus. He pointed out that Mary, though surpassing us in sanctity and unique in her path as a disciple, remains a member of the Church, a member of the Body of Christ, just as do we.

This thought continues to stew in my mind. Mary having given human flesh to our Lord, i.e., having been the mother of Jesus and thus Mother of God, held in greater esteem her discipleship. That she accepted and kept perfect custody in her Immaculate Heart the Word of God that came to her, and she perfectly followed that Word in the totality of her life. That her life as a disciple, as a member of the Mystical Body of Christ was what she held as a higher dignity.

It does leave me reflecting on how this can be applied to the diaconal life. We deacons are ordained to be heralds of the Gospel, bearers of the Word, custodians of the Word of God. We are to embody every human and Christian virtue. We are to become Icons of Jesus the Servant. In other words, we are to be sacramentally disciples of the Lord. It is the Word we accept and bear in our souls that is of primary importance and that gives us our true dignity for it is to that Word that we are to orient our lives, that we are to be disciples. It is in bearing that Word within us that we give flesh to Jesus the Servant, we become the visible presence of He who is servant of all.

In that way, our discipleship, our following of God’s word in our lives, is what underlies any dignity that may be ours because of our office. In the end, it is our discipleship that will bring us into eternal life. Ours is of course a diaconal discipleship, it is a sacramental sign of God’s living and effective Word in our world today.

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Diaconal Spirituality and Marriage

I wrote a post many months ago on the spirituality of the diaconate and marriage. My point was that there was a dynamic tension between the ontologic change that occurs in the deacon by virtue of his ordination and the precendential graces of marriage. I pointed out that this tension is something to be acknowledged and lived, not something to be denied or made into something other than what it is. To deny its existence leads only to trouble, both for ministry and for marriage. Here it is reproduced for you:

Diaconal spirituality is one of dynamic tension between irrevocable change of Holy Orders and the graces of marriage.

Theologically, we speak of the indelible mark that cannot be erased on the very being of a man who receives Holy Orders. We deacons are so marked. There is no doubt that this is not just a theological construct; it is a very real and lived out each day. Because our wives do not share in this ontological change, this change of being, it places us in a sort of dynamic tension with them. This tension can be fruitful or not, depending on how well one’s marital spirituality undergirds one’s diaconal spirituality.

There seems to be a real possibility that deacons and their wives avoid the tension, or redefine it as something other than it is. This is a big mistake. Denial of its existence in this way, I believe, only leads to problems.

For example, there are some married deacons whose wives are envious of the deacon’s function and his reception of Holy Orders, wishing they too were ordained and both deacon and wife live as if she was a deacon also. There are also those situations where the deacon’s wife wants nothing whatsoever to do with her husband’s diaconal ministry and thus withdraws from him. She sees nothing in it for her.

In both of these situations, both the diaconal spirit and the marital life erode and wither.

Diaconal spirituality lies in living out the tension. It is never an either-or scenario. It is always a both-and.

A deacon’s spirituality arises from the ontological change of ordination. It grows in maturity in the context of the precedential graces of marriage. The unifying thread is the self-giving in service, giving so others may have life and have it fully. For the deacon himself there is no end to diaconal and maritial spirituality understood in this way. One never stops and the other begins. For the deacon’s wife, her spirituality is altered for he whom she now loves is now claimed by God and the Church in an irrevocable way, and her love for her husband now includes in a more profound way Jesus Christ the Servant.

Deacons, when people look at us, do they see Jesus the Servant? Do they also see the face of our wives reflected in who we are and what we do? Yes, do they see the face of our wives reflected in us….. we spiritually bring our wives into all we do as deacons; we carry them everywhere for that is what our promise of love and fidelity to them is about.

I passed this post on to my brother deacons in the diocese of Winona, asking for feedback. I received an interesting take on it from Deacon Eduardo Fortini. Here is what he said (my translation of his Italian original):

The diaconate establishes a spousal relationship toward the Church that is irrevocable and eternal. In this sense, his love for his wife is enriched in as much as we no longer love our wives only as a spouse united to us by the Sacrament of Marriage but also with the spousal love that Christ has for her as a member of his Mystical Body. The same spiritual love that we must have for those souls that God has entrusted to us in our concrete diaconal ministry. Wives, then, while not having the diaconal onotologic character that we have received at ordination, do have – through the communion realized by the Sacrament of Matrimony – a particular participation with diaconal grace that flows from us. This grace, if accepted in a spirit of cooperation, gives to our wives the capacity to exercise a deeper level of spiritual maternity with the souls entrusted to us by the Lord. This realization on the part of our wives should contribute to resolve the tension that arises between the spousal relationship of the deacon with his wife and that spiritua/spousal relationship with the Church.

I think Deacon Fortini says it well, and gives us something upon which we can meditate. Her certainly is pointing out that our spousal love for our wives becomes more rooted in our love for the Church, a marital love that arises anew from our diaconal ordination. His  theology of how the graces of the diaconate flows in some sense to our wives is intriguing.  Finally, his conception of the spiritual maternity of our wives that becomes more profound by virtue of our ordination is interesting. I left him with a question to which I hope he responds, “How does the spiritual maternity of our wives, which deepens by their cooperation with her husband’s diaconal ministry, affect the intimacy of the deacon and his wife? How does it affect their sexuality?”

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Quote for the Day

“‘He breathed on them,’ and in that breathing the Spirit of God brought back to life forever the heart of the whole Church.” — Eric Doyle, OFM

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Faith as Liberation Mediated by Communion with Christ

Pope Benedict has written eloquently about the virtue of faith, and fittingly so in the Year of Faith. He has reminded us that faith is a supremely personal act, by which he means it is an act of the whole person that frees us from ourselves by bringing us into communion with God through Jesus Christ.

In common parlance, the word personal has taken on the connotation of individual preference or taste. This is not what is meant by the word in Christian anthropology, philosophy or theology. Personal is indicative of an entire being who acts. Human persons mind/body beings, i.e., incarnate spirits. Because of this, a personal act is an act of the individual’s senses, intellect, will and passions.

That is why the pope has described faith as not merely an act of the will, or an act of intellect or mere emotional activity. It is, rather all of these together. It is an act of the whole self in a concentrated unity. Biblically, this is described as an act of the “heart” (Rom 10:9).

Because faith is an act of the person, it transcends the person. It becomes a relational act which brings the individual out of himself and beyond himself and into the transcendent “Other” who is God.

Benedict has furthermore beautifully and astonishingly said that because we are created beings, faith is never just action but also passion. Passion is that which invigorates and enlivens the decision, the fundamental option, for God in Christ. Yes, faith is a fundamental option for God and it requires all our energies to maintain it. While this fundamental option is radical, it is tenuous in light of the attractions of the world.

The take home message is this: Faith is an act of the entire person, not just an intellectual  acknowledgment and assent (although that is part of it). It is a rational choice, rising out of hearing the Gospel proclaimed and seeing the witness of many, reinforced by a passionate embrace of the person of Jesus Christ, through whom we have freedom and life.

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From Here, Where?

There are many people who seem to be disoriented in the past month. Disoriented because of either:

1. Disbelief. They are dumbfounded with the results of the elections and the in-your-face, undeniable force of the tyranny of moral relativism born from an unsupportable epistemology. These individuals seem uncertain how to move forward to secure the foundational elements of truth, reason, and the common good. These individuals risk losing their vision by turning to the political system as a theology or an ideology luring them into a form of idolatry.

2. Gittyness. These people see the recent turn of events in politics as heaven sent, a confirmation of human rights and a vindication of the middle class and justified blow to the powerful and wealthy, the out-of-touch and bigoted. These individuals seem blinded to the tyranny which oppresses them by the unrootedness of their moral, philosophical and political bases.

Neither disbelief or gittyness is warranted.

The question before us is, “From here, where do we go now?”

Those of us who are trying to articulate the objective nature of truth – truths to which we all are subject by human nature if not also by religious conviction – we must fall back to that which we claim to adhere. I am referring to the unshakeable belief in the love of God, his providence and his unwavering benevolence. I am also referring to the knowledge that God is just in all he does and his justice and his love are one.

We must go on retreat, you might say, and spend some time alone with God to renew and refresh us. We need a conversation with God. A long conversation, I would add. We need to remember that God is God, and “we ain’t He.”

Unless the Lord builds the house, in vain does the laborer labor. Let us step back and ask God what he wants for us, and how to proceed.

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Quote for the Day

“As in heaven thy will is punctually performed, so may it be done on earth by all creatures, particularly in me.” — St. Elizabeth of Hungary, SFO

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