Hurrah for Dr. Susan!

I logged on to Dr. Susan Windley-Daoust’s blog, The Ironic Catholic today. Dr. Susan is a professor of theology at St. Mary’s University of Minnesota in Winona, Minnesota. SMU is my alma mater, and Dr. Susan a couple of years ago was kind enough to review a paper I had written about Hans Kung’s book, Christ Sein.

On May 30 she posted, Theological Rant #10: It Ain’t “the culture of bothersome unpleasantness” and Satan isn’t a “gentleman caller”. It is a great read, and in my opinion, right on the money, as my father would have said.

I refer you to the link highlighted above to read this post and many other good ones. If you choose to not click the mouse, here is a portion of her comment:

“…. I used that phrase: culture of death. I am flummoxed by people who dismiss this idea, that we are afloat in a culture of death. Of course good things happen, and there are good people out there, but that isn’t culture! Culture is the way human beings come together to make sense of the world through concrete policies, practices, and values. And this culture does not consistently value human life. Period.

Let me put it this way: I live a pretty charmed existence, (lower) middle class in the sedate Upper MIdwest, with a lovely family and work I love. But I am also surrounded by people interested in slashing human dignity at every turn: hospitals that ask me with every pregnancy (for over two hours at the mandatory genetic questioning intake) are you sure you don’t want to kill your child, part of a Church where a majority of practitioners support torture, a country that increasingly encourages assisted suicide over being human and holding that person’s hand, a nation at war for reasons I *still* cannot understand, a neighborhood where a mother of a child with Down Syndrome had an acquaintance tell her (IN FRONT OF THE CHILD) ‘why didn’t you just abort him?’, a town where there are homeless families facing the ‘slow kill’ of living on the street, and more. If this isn’t the culture of death, well, what the ^%(&%)# is?

Really, where is the denial coming from? …. I think people with a dismissive attitude about spiritual warfare tend to pooh-pooh the culture of death diagnosis. I don’t know anyone (who’s Catholic, anyway) who denies the existence of Satan. But I do think most people think of him as a kind of generalized way to talk about evil.

Here’s the thing: Satan is no generalized concept. Satan is a hyena.… People!! This is Satan we are talking about, not the opposing football team! Satan is the father of lies and a thief from the beginning!….. And that “making sure everyone else gets the ‘support’ to choose to end life’ is called the culture of death.

Name it for what is is people. And maybe a little missiology is exactly what American Catholics need right now. That, and the courage to say God has overcome the Evil One, and the revealed venue of the grace to cling to God is most fully held in the Catholic Church.

Live reality, people….

Magnificently said, Susan!

Posted in Human Development and Life, Politics | 1 Comment

Church of the Week

 

 

Sacred Heart Catholic Church

Waseca, Minnesota

Posted in Churches of the United States | Comments Off on Church of the Week

The Centrality of the Christian Family

The Holy Father is on his visit to Croatia and he has had some splendid things to say during his travels there. I read this morning of his comments about the Christian family. Here they are, in part:

Dear parents, commit yourselves always to teach your children to pray, and pray with them; draw them close to the Sacraments, especially the Eucharist…. introduce them to the life of the Church; in the intimacy of the home do not be afraid to read the Scriptures, illuminating family life with the light of faith and praising God as Father. Be like a little Upper Room, like that of Mary and the disciples, in which to live unity, communion and prayer!

By the grace of God, many Christian families today are acquiring an ever deeper awareness of their missionary vocation, and are devoting themselves seriously to bearing witness to Christ the Lord. Blessed John Paul II once said: “An authentic family, founded on marriage, is in itself ‘good news’ for the world.” And he added: “In our time the families that collaborate actively in evangelization are ever more numerous […] the hour of the family has arrived in the Church, which is also the hour of the missionary family” (Angelus, 21 October 2001). In today’s society the presence of exemplary Christian families is more necessary and urgent than ever. Unfortunately, we are forced to acknowledge the spread of secularization which leads to the exclusion of God from life and the increasing disintegration of the family, especially in Europe. Freedom without commitment to the truth is made into an absolute, and individual well-being through the consumption of material goods and transient experiences is cultivated as an ideal, obscuring the quality of interpersonal relations and deeper human values; love is reduced to sentimental emotion and to the gratification of instinctive impulses, without a commitment to build lasting bonds of reciprocal belonging and without openess to life. We are called to oppose such a mentality! Alongside what the Church says, the testimony and commitment of the Christian family — your concrete testimony — is very important, especially when you affirm the inviolability of human life from conception to natural death, the singular and irreplaceable value of the family founded upon matrimony and the need for legislation which supports families in the task of giving birth to children and educating them. Dear families, be courageous! Do not give in to that seculalized mentality … Show by the witness of your lives that it is possible, like Christ, to love without reserve, and do not be afraid to make a commitment to another person!… Rejoice in fatherhood and motherhood! Openness to life is a sign of openness to the future, confidence in the future, just as respect for the natural moral law frees people, rather than demeaning them!

Read his entire comment at:   The Vatican.

 

Posted in Marriage and Family | Comments Off on The Centrality of the Christian Family

Is Europe Doomed?

I read with a bit of interest the Holy Father’s comments on the first day of his visit to Croatia. He spoke of conscience, and Europe’s future.

Here is what he said, as reported by The Catholic News Agency.

“If, in keeping with the prevailing modern idea, conscience is reduced to the subjective field to which religion and morality have been banished, then the crisis of the West has no remedy and Europe is destined to collapse in on itself… If on the other hand, conscience is rediscovered as the place in which to listen to truth and good, the place of responsibility before God and before fellow human beings — in other words, the bulwark against all forms of tyranny — then there is hope for the future.”

There are so many who think today that the tyranny lies in the camp of those of us who know there to be a truth to which we aspire, a truth besides ourselves, a truth that has objective validity and reality. These people are misled to believe that freedom can only be found in an absence of outer restrictions and obligations and the ability to “do what I desire to do.” What they mistake for freedom is in all reality a true slavery and an invitation to diminishment, even annihilation of the human person.

Freedom comes from knowing the truth, and being able to pursue and accomplish what we ought. Inner freedom arises from moving beyond ourselves and toward an embrace of the other who is truth.

Conscience is that God-given gift which directs us out of ourselves and to that which we come to know as the true, good and beautiful.

As goes Europe, so goes, eventually, the Americas. That is why the pope’s warning is so pointed.

Posted in Ethics and Morality, Fundamental Theology, Popes | Comments Off on Is Europe Doomed?

“That Which Saves is Unity”

In today’s Office of Readings we are given a selection on the Canticle of Canticles written by St. Gregory of Nyssa, one of the Fathers of the Eastern Church. It is a wonderful reflection on the gift of unity that is to be ours in the Spirit.

Here is my translation of the Italian text I use.

“If it is true that love eliminates fear and transforms it into love, then one will discover that it is unity which saves. Salvation, in fact, dwells in knowing ourselves united in the one and true love found in the perfection seen in the dove of which the Canticle of Canticles speaks: One is my dove, my perfect one, one of my mother, my preferred one of her mother. (Canticle of Canticles 6:9)

Our Lord clearly demonstrates this in the Gospel.

Jesus blesses his disciples, giving them every power and conferring to them every good thing. Among these are included the holy expressions that he directed to his Father. But of all the works he spoke and graces he conferred there is one that is the greatest of all and contains all; it is that which Christ admonished his disciples to find themselves always united in answering questions and evaluating things regarding what is good to do; to find themselves of one heart and soul and to esteem this unity as the one good; to bind themselves in the unity of the Spirit with the bond of peace;to be of one body and one spirit; to living according to the one vocation animated by one hope.

Greater than these thoughts are the actual words of the Gospel: That they may be one, as you, Father, are one in me and I in you, that they may also be one so that the world may believe that you have sent me. (John 17: 21)

The bond of this unity is authentic glory. No one can deny that the Holy Spirit may be called Glory. The Lord in fact says, The glory that you have given to me I have given to them. (John 17:22) He possessed this glory always even before this world existed. Yet in time he received it when he assumed human nature. When this nature was glorified by the Holy Spirit, all that was connected to this glory shared in that Holy Spirit.

He said: The glory you have given to me, I have given to them that they may be one. I in them, and you in me so that they may be perfectly united. (John 17: 22-23) Thus, he who from his infancy has grown into the full maturity of Christ will come to find himself in that special state, that only intelligence illuminated by faith will be able to perceive. He becomes the glory of the Spirit through a life far from vices and marked by holiness. He is, therefore, that perfect dove, who looks upon his Spouse when he says, She is my only dove, my perfect one.

Let us all work for unity and peace in all the many spheres of our lives. Our unity will come from acknowledging the truth and adhering to it, which is acknowledging God – Father, Son and Spirit – and living a life consonant with He who is the Truth.

That which saves is unity — unity with our Lord.

Posted in Dogmatic Theology, Ecclesiology | Comments Off on “That Which Saves is Unity”

The Death of Dr. Death

Jack Kervorkian, a retired pathologist who became known as “Dr. Death” for his role in assisted suicide, died today at age 83. He was the face of the so-called “right to die” movement in our country.

I was always puzzled by the phrase “right to die.” Whenever we believe we have a “right” to something, we try to lay claim to that right. Seems to me that we do not have a claim on death; it has a claim on us because of sin.

Life is always preferable to death. Death is an unavoidable evil. Life is an inexplicable gift and goodness. Why, then, choose death?

Let us all pray for the soul of Jack Kervorkian. We dare not judge him, only pray for him.

Posted in General Interest | Comments Off on The Death of Dr. Death

1000th Weblog Post

Catholic Faith and Reflections has been up and running now since October 28, 2008 and has had over 414,000 page views in the course of that time.

This is the 1000th posting.

For some reason, that seems like a lot….

It is a pleasant undertaking in many ways.

My purpose remains what it always has been: a place where one can speak about the Catholic faith, learn some about what our Church teaches, and hopefully ellict a bit of dialogue, all the while keeping updated on currrent events in the Church.

I hope to advance in whatever way I am able the “new evangelization.”

A deacon’s vocation is to spread the Gospel and to bring the Church to places where our bishops cannot always go. A deacon without the Gospel in his hands and in his heart betrays the character imprinted on his soul at his ordination.  As Pope John Paul II remined us, we are always and everywhere a deacon, a minister of the Gospel in service to others. It is my hope that this weblog expresses in some manner my diaconal character.

I thank all of you who silently log on and read what is posted, and especially those of you who take the time to comment. Almost without exception, the comments have been excellent and well-received.

God bless each and every one of you.

Deacon Bob

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on 1000th Weblog Post

Attention Deacons! A Brother is Appointed!!

If you haven’t heard yet, Deacon Bernard Nojadera of the diocese of San Jose, California, has been named head of the U.S. bishops’ Secretariat for Child and Youth Protection.

He will begin his position August 15.

Deacon Bernard has headed the San Jose diocesan child protection office since 2002. He has served as an officer in the US Naval Reserves and has served in the US Marine Corps and the Army National Guard. He holds a Master of Social Work degree from San Jose State University and a master of theology degree from St. Patrick’s Seminary and University in Menlo Park. He has held positions in several community organizations focused on child protection.

For the USCCB’s news release, log on to:  www.usccb.org/comm/archives/2011/11-116.shtml

Congratulations, Deacon Bernard.

Posted in Church News, Deacons | Comments Off on Attention Deacons! A Brother is Appointed!!

The Gospel’s Social Relevance

Here is something worth reading:  The Gospel’s Social Relevance

It is a copy of an address that Fr. Raniero Cantalamessa delivered to the general assembly of Caritas International on May 27.

Cantalamessa is the preacher of the Pontifical Household, and a Capuchin priest.

It is entitled, “Not all who love their neighbor love Christ, but all who love Christ love their neighbor.” You will find a multi-layered discussion of  the social relevance of the Gospel, including a good analysis of “liberal theology”, “dialectical theology” and the Magisterium in the area of Catholic social teaching. It also contains some memorable lines, which I will let you discover for yourselves.

Gift always comes before duty, as Fr. Cantalamessa says, and God is never stingy with his gifts to us so as to well equip us  to do what we ought in service to others. Christianity is a religion of grace, grace freely poured out so that we may work what we must in today’s world to better establish justice through changing the structural barriers in society suppressing the poor and needy and through responding to the needs of the particular situation that demands our immediate response.

We do all because God has first loved us, and we now love him in return, especially in the lives and faces of the poor.

You can read a very similar homily that he gave during Lent at: www.cantalamessa.org/en/predicheView.php?id=417

Posted in General Interest, homilies, Human Development and Life | Comments Off on The Gospel’s Social Relevance

First African Pope

For over 400 years, until Pope John Paul II, we had only Italian popes. Did you know though, that we have had lots of non-Italian popes throughout the centuries?

Of course, St. Peter, the first pope, was Jewish and a Galilean by birth.

The first African pope was Pope St. Victor I. A north African by birth, he was elected to the see of Peter in 189 and died in 198. He was noted for settling a difference between the Western and Eastern Churches on the date for Easter. The West always celebrated it on a Sunday, whereas the East was celebrating it on the 14th of Nissan. It was established during his pontificate that Easter would be on a Sunday throughout the Church.

I recall during the time of the conclave that elected John Paul II that there was a good deal of speculation that there would be an African pope. I still expect that we may see the day in the not to distant future when this will occur, given the growth of the Church on that continent.

Posted in Church History, Popes | Comments Off on First African Pope

Quote for the Day

“Not only ‘see in his hands the print of the nails,’ with the apostle Thomas, not only put your finger into the place of the nails, not only put your hand into his side, but enter with your whole being through the door of his side into Jesus’ heart itself.” — St. Bonaventure, OFM

Posted in Saints and Prophets, Spirituality | Comments Off on Quote for the Day

“The Crisis of Indifference”

The Holy Father in his remarks to the Pontifical Council for Promoting New Evangelization yesterday, spoke of the “crisis of indifference” that carries with it an apathy to the message of the Gospel.

He said, in part:

The crisis we are living through carries with it signs of the exclusion of God from people’s lives, a general indifference to the Christian faith, and even the intention of marginalizing it from public life….proclaiming Jesus Christ, the sole Savior of the world, is more complex today than in the past, but our task continues to be the same as at the beginning of our history. The mission hasn’t changed, just the enthusiasm and courage that motivated the apostles and first disciples should not change…. It is important of make them understand that being a Christian is not a type of outfit that one wears in private or on special occasions, but something living and totalizing, capable of taking all that is good in modernity…. [the] lifestyle of believers needs real credibility, as much more convincing as the more dramatic is the condition of the persons to whom it is addressed.

I love that phrase, “… something living and totalizing.” I have never seen that word used before to describe the demands of Christian life.

Totalizing…..

Let us not be indifferent, for indifference leads, ultimately, to anxiety and loneliness and darkness.

Totalization, as understood in the Pope’s remarks, leads to peace and indescribable joy.

As John Paul II said, Totus Tuus , Completely Yours.

Read the Pope’s remarks in the Italian original at: The Vatican or a synopsis in English at: The Catholic News Agency.

Posted in Popes, Spirituality | Comments Off on “The Crisis of Indifference”

Quote for the Day

“When a stranger shows up, we should think, ‘That’s our boss. What does the boss need?'” — William Short, OFM

Posted in Spirituality | Comments Off on Quote for the Day

Papa Luciani on Hope

Pope John Paul I, on September 20, 1978 in his weekly general audience, spoke of hope and cheerfulness. I’d like to share an excerpt for you today, as we live in a world in need of hope and a smile.

Not everyone shares this sympathy of mine for hope. Nietzsche, for example, calls it the “virtue of the weak”. According to him, it makes the Christian a useless, separated, resigned person, extraneous to the progress of the world. Others speak of “alienation”, which, they say, turns the Christian away from the struggle for human advancement. But “the Christian message”, the Council said, “far from deterring men from the task of building up the world… binds them, rather, to all this by a still more stringent obligation.” (GS, 34 and Message to the World of the Council Fathers, 20 October 1962.

In the course of the centuries there have also appeared from time to time affirmations and tendencies of Christians that were too pessimistic with regard to man. But these affirmations were disapproved by the Church and were forgotten, thanks to a host of joyful and hardworking saints, to Christian humanism, to ascetic teachers, whom Saint-Beuve called “les doux”, and to a comprehensive theology. St. Thomas Aquinas, for example, puts among the virtues jucunditas or the capacity of changing things heard and seen into a cheerful smile — to the extent and in the way appropriate (cf. 2.2ae, q. 168, a.2)….. When St. Thomas declared that joking and making people smile was a virtue, he was in agreement with the “glad tidings” preached by Christ, and with the hilaritas recommended by St. Augustine. He overcame pessimism, clothed Christian life in joy and invited us to keep up our courage also with the healthy, pure joys, which we meet on our way.

Read his address in its entirety at: Papa Luciani on Hope.

Take home point: God has redeemed the world, and that includes you and me. God has created us for happiness and put within us, in our very nature, the capacity for cheerfulness and hope. It is the gift of his Spirit. So let us spend this day in hopeful confidence that God indeed is at work in a beautiful way, and he binds together faith and love with the virtue of hope.

Posted in Papa Luciani (Pope John Paul I), Virtues | Comments Off on Papa Luciani on Hope

A Miraculous Healing?

The editor of the Vatican newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano, said he was cured of a serious case of diphtheria in 1954 when he was two years old. Giovanni Maria Vian reports that on the eve of the canonization of Pope St. Pius X, a Spanish priest said Mass in his intention “on the pope’s tomb” in St. Peter’s Basilica, after which Vian was cured. This information comes from an interview Vian gave with  Il Consulente Re, an online Italian Catholic magazine.

If you read Italian, log on to: Il Consulente Re.

 

Posted in Saints and Prophets | Comments Off on A Miraculous Healing?