2010 News Central, Items of Interest

Change Page: 123456789 > | Showing page 1 of 9, messages 1 to 40 of 326
Author Message
Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 02/01/2010 11:39:20

Nativity by He Qi, China

Dear friends,

On behalf of the Team at www.womenpriests.org, I wish you the very best of love, peace, happiness and health in this new year.  We journey together...manifesting Christ's presence as we make our way.

with love and blessings,

~Sophie~



Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 02/01/2010 11:42:24
Dear friends,

Welcome to www.womenpriests.org! We take pride in the work of nurturing the largest international website about women and sacred ministry!

My name is Sophie.  I serve as Moderator and traffic navigator in our Circles dialogue community.  The forums hold space for sharing, learning, expressing concerns, challenging ideas, and offering support to one another as we gather in the spirit of Christian dialogue. 

If you have questions at any time, please do not hesitate to ask. I routinely check in on the boards every day or two.  If you post your questions in the threads where they arise, I will respond. 

This particular thread serves as our news central.  Check here for daily news updates and other items of interest. From time to time, I will provide an overview post in this thread sharing information as to where there are current 'hot spots' in the various dialogue threads.

In News Central, you will also find historical, scriptural, theological, traditional, and political items of interest.  In advancing the case for women priests, it is important that we become as informed as possible.  We work to equip ourselves to become leaders in the dialogue necessary to bring about the transformation we seek.  Where possible, I will provide links to relevant documents from our internet library.  In my posts, links will appear in blue.

If you are new to Circles, a secret that will help with navigation in the different streams of dialogue is as follows.  The main forum page (www.womenpriests.org/circles/) houses the lists of dialogue threads appearing in the different discussion forums. At the top and bottom of each dialogue thread page, you will see a list of page numbers. (You will also see these numbers in the title bars of the dialogue threads of each forum.) When you click on the last number in sequence, you will connect with the most recent page in the thread.

Once again ~Welcome~  If you have any questions at any time, please let me know!

with love and blessings,

~Sophie~  

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 03/01/2010 12:20:25
Gathering/Quieting Song
Prayer for Peace 

Peace before us, peace behind us, peace under our feet
Peace within us, peace over us, let all around us be peace.

Love before us, love behind us, love under our feet.
Love within us, love over us, let all around us be love.

Light before us, light behind us, light under our feet.
Light within us, light over us, let all around us be light.

Christ before us, Christ behind us, Christ under our feet.
Christ within us, Christ over us, let all around us be Christ.

Alleluia, alleluia

Peace before us, peace behind us, peace under our feet
Peace within us, peace over us, let all around us be peace.


(Based on a Navaho Indian Prayer. Words by David Haas. “Best of David Haas,” Vol. I, GIA Publications, 1995.)

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 03/01/2010 12:27:03
Women's Ordination Worldwide Prayer

O Holy One, You who are Creator of all,
who made humanity in Your image
Saviour of all, who called women and men
to witness Your ministry, death and resurrection,
Inspirer of all who seek and serve,
We thank You for the women You have blessed with Your call
to celebrate the Eucharist,
to minister alongside their brothers in a renewed Roman Catholic Church.

We pray that the Church will soon welcome and nourish to the full
the gifts of women as priests, prophets and leaders,
knowing, as Mary of Nazareth knew,
that with You all things are possible.

-Amen

http://www.womensordinationworldwide.org/

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 03/01/2010 12:35:19
Dear friends,

On this year's World Day of Peace, I was inspired by Pope Benedict's moving message exhorting all, 'If you want to cultivate peace, protect creation.'   A copy of the text is here: http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/benedict_xvi/messages/peace/documents/hf_ben-xvi_mes_20091208_xliii-world-day-peace_en.html

The message brought to mind his 2007 World Day of Peace message when he warned that peace becomes a mirage when the dignity of woman is not fully respected. The Holy Father aptly pointed out how "insufficient consideration of the feminine condition also causes factors of instability in the social order.... [In particular] the exploitation of women treated as objects and in so many ways of lack of respect to their dignity."



Most notable was his point blank assertion that persistent conceptions in some cultures "which still assign to woman a role of great submission to the discretion of the man, with consequences offensive to her dignity of person and [the] exercise of the fundamental liberties." "One must not fall into the illusion that peace is assured while these forms of discrimination are not also are not also overcome," he said. Such forms "lacerate the personal dignity inscribed by the Creator in every human being."

It seems strange that while he makes clarion calls for both the feminine and the environment to be respected, he and his administration cannot make the leap into addressing the pressing questions about the role and treatment of women in the Church.

As I quiet myself for prayer today, I join my British friend, Sue Williamson who prays, 'Let us pray that in the coming year the scales will fall off the patriarchal eyes of some of our spiritual leaders.'

In hope and love,

~Sophie~

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 03/01/2010 05:06:02


Synod, saints, shroud all on papal calendar for 2010

By John Thavis
Catholic News Service
December 29, 2009

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- As Pope Benedict XVI says goodbye to 2009, his 2010 calendar is already being filled.

On the horizon for the next 12 months are four papal trips; a Middle East Synod of Bishops; the expected publication of a document on the Bible and the second volume of "Jesus of Nazareth;" a major gathering of the world's priests; a pilgrimage to the Shroud of Turin; a probable consistory and several likely canonizations and beatifications -- including that of Pope John Paul II.

. . .

For complete story, click here: http://www.womenpriests.org/circles/fb.asp?m=34683

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 03/01/2010 05:09:38
Towards a humble Church
Dublin Diocese and child abuse

by Timothy Radcliffe

The Tablet
January 3, 2010

Last week we published the first part of a talk given by the former Master of the Dominicans to priests of the Diocese of Dublin, in which he highlighted the fear and anger caused by the revelations of child abuse. Here, he asks how the Church can rid itself of the clericalism besetting it.

Friendship with Jesus – intimacy –means learning to be gentle and lowly of heart. Then we shall find rest for our souls. But if one thinks of the Catholic Church, the first word that springs to mind might not be “humble”.

I have given retreats for dioceses in 15 countries since I finished my term as Master of the Dominican Order in 2001. The vast majority of priests and bishops whom I have met are simple and unpretentious people who just wish to serve the people of God. But this personal humility has to be sustained in the teeth of a clerical culture, common to all Christian denominations, which stresses rank and power.


Father Timothy Radcliffe, OP

This terrible crisis of sexual abuse is deeply linked to the way that power can corrupt human relationships, which is why it touches all the Churches, even if the Catholic Church happens to have been more in the spotlight recently. Celibacy is not, I believe, the source of the crisis, otherwise it would be the case that Catholic priests have a higher rate of offence, which, it seems, we do not. We shall only really address this crisis if we learn from Jesus who is “gentle and lowly of heart”, and find ways of embodying authority which honour the equal dignity of all the baptised, and cherish the weak and vulnerable.

. . .

For complete article, see here:  http://www.womenpriests.org/circles/fb.asp?m=34685

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 03/01/2010 05:16:08
Dear friends,

For those among us who are new to CIRCLES dialogues, this note of introduction explains the spirit of one of our new conversation threads, 2010 Heroic Agents of Transformation .

From a practical point of view, work for women's ordination includes labouring for cultural transformation. There is strong resistance to acknowledging the fact that God calls women to be Catholic priests.  Facing community resistance is not an easy part of the journey of an agent for change. Despite the fact that work for justice is a noble endeavor, shunning, condemnation, abusive rhetoric and hostility are realities sometimes encountered by those who forge ahead.



Though many are the tests of determination and committment, sources of inspiration are plentiful, too. We are not alone. Many brothers and sisters have travelled parallel journeys before us. When we look to them for role models, we can learn from and be inspired by them.



An agent of change who often comes to mind when I come to work on this thread is Benazir Bhutto. Controversial though she was to some, when she spoke about her work for democracy, she explained how she understood herself to be a 'Daughter of Destiny.' She was made for the time. When talking about challenges in her life,  she Benazir was known to share memories of her childhood when her father encouraged her to nourish herself with inspiration by reading the life stories of women like Joan of Arc and Indira Gandhi. Benazir frequently remarked that besides her faith life, the stories of heroes served as sources of empowerment for her.


Benazir Bhutto

In that same vein, we gather here to read the stories of the world's inspiring and heroic agents of change and transformation. Though not necessarily connected to our Catholic faith community in name, through their works for truth and justice, they share a journey with us. They continue to serve by inspiring us when perseverence is tough.

Please enjoy. The thread is here: http://www.womenpriests.org/circles/fb.asp?m=34688 .  If you have any questions, as always let me know.

~Sophie~

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 03/01/2010 05:36:24
Short Take
Unlikely Prophets
HOW A MOTLEY CREW OF FRENCH CATHOLICS INSPIRED VATICAN II
by Jerry Ryan
Commonweal
December 18, 2009

The years just before and after World War II saw breakthroughs in theology that had major impact on Vatican II. For centuries the church had been waging a defensive battle against the abuses of the Enlightenment, the challenges of the Reform, and the rise of the secular nation-state. Theology had been reduced to defending the status quo or nurturing a form of popular piety that would set Catholicism apart from rival versions of Christianity.

The “new theology,” which developed above all in France, upset the calm and stagnant waters of scholasticism. It sought both to respond to the challenges of the modern world and to return to the sources of Christian faith. A vital reevaluation took place in these years, and since then nothing has been the same.

With the distance and comfort of hindsight, this theological transition can appear straightforward, even inevitable. But Vatican II did not just “happen.” It was the fruit of many related but rarely coordinated initiatives undertaken by flawed people who often bickered with one another. Each had his own intuitions, each his own ego and quirks. Yet many of them recognized that they were all traveling on the same road, and they sharpened their own thinking by confronting their fellow travelers.

In France much of the movement for renewal began with laypeople. A generation of lay mystics, artists, poets, and philosophers gradually created the spiritual and intellectual climate that would allow the “new theology” to flourish. Renewal came from the bottom—and seemed stuck there for a long time—before it was finally recognized as a gift of the Spirit to the church.

. . .

For complete article, see here: http://www.womenpriests.org/circles/fb.asp?m=34691

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 03/01/2010 01:28:27








On this day January 3 in 1521 – Pope Leo X issued the papal bull Decet Romanum Pontificem, excommunicating Martin Luther from the Roman Catholic Church after Luther refused to retract 41 of his 95 theses.

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 03/01/2010 02:29:03
On January 3, 1874, Harper's Weekly featured a cartoon about women's rights.

Image and text provided by HarpWeek.


"This is the Most Magnificent Movement of All" "The New England Woman's Tea Party, believing that 'Taxation without Representation is Tyranny,' and that our Forefathers were justified in resisting Despotic Power by throwing the Tea into Boston Harbor," hereby do the Same. Artist: Thomas Nast

In this 1874 Harper's Weekly cartoon, artist Thomas Nast employs a parody of the Boston Tea Party to satirize the women's suffrage movement and its claim to the same rights for which the American revolutionaries fought a century before.

Lucy Stone, a leading nineteenth-century women's rights advocate, organized a centennial observance of the Boston Tea Party, on December 15, 1873, in order to promote the issue of women's voting rights. As the celebration's site, she chose Boston's Faneuil Hall, which was nicknamed "the cradle of liberty" for its role as a favored meeting house of America's revolutionary leaders. Thomas Wentworth Higginson, a well-known essayist, historian, and Unitarian minister, presided at the event.

Despite the laudatory caption of this cartoon, the artist's sentiments toward the suffragists is sarcastic. He pictures two people pouring tea into Boston Harbor. The figure on the right, who resembles Susan B. Anthony, is stern-faced, and wears a muffler to protect herself from the cold. She dispenses the liquid from a dainty teapot, as if she were hosting a tea party in her home.

The background figure on the left is probably a man dressed as a woman; note the combination of a mustache and sideburns with a hair net and bonnet.

The rowboat's name, Mayflower , associates the cartoon's crew with the early English settlers of Massachusetts, yet reinforces the feminine nature of their undertaking. The caricature presents an effete mimicry of the original event, during which male revolutionaries donned Native American costumes to hoist weighty crates of tea into the bay.

In the February 7 issue of Harper's Weekly , editor George William Curtis, a vocal supporter of women's rights, took a different view. As Lucy Stone had done, Curtis linked the plight of American women of the 1870's with the situation of American revolutionaries of the 1770's. Both instances, Curtis argued, involve the tyranny of taxation without representation, a phrase Nast includes in his lighthearted look at women's rights

Harper's Weekly also reported in January 1874 that Boston voters elected four women to positions on the city's public school board. The other (male) board members, however, announced they would wait for the Massachusetts Supreme Court to decide the legality of the women's election before seating them. In February, the court ruled that state law did allow women to fill any local office of an administrative character. On the other hand, a bill in the state senate to allow women to vote in school board elections was defeated that spring. Thus, the women could sit on Boston's school board, but no woman could vote for them.

In 1875, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the right of states to deny women the right to vote. Gradually, a few states or territories, particularly in the West, granted women's suffrage, but it was not until ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution in August 1920 that the right of all American women to vote was recognized.

Rob Kennedy

http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/harp/0103.html


Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 03/01/2010 02:42:14
Born this day January 3 in 1892 - J. R. R. Tolkien English novelist, scholar, author of the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy, was born in Bloemfontein, South Africa


Shared by a guest:

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

JRR Tolkien in a letter to his son Christopher:

'I sometimes feel appalled at the thought of the sum total of human misery all over the world at the present moment: the millions parted, fretting, wasting in unprofitable days -- quite apart from torture, pain, death, bereavement, injustice. If anguish were visible, almost the whole of this benighted planet would be enveloped in a dnse dark vapour, shrouded from the amazed vision of the heavens! And the products of it all will be mainly evil -- historically considered. But the historical version is of course not the only one. All things and deeds have a value in themselves, apart from their 'causes' and 'effects.' No man can estimate what is really happening at the present sub specie aeternitatis. All we do know, and that to a large extent by direct experience, is that evil labours with vast power and perpetual success -- in vain: preparing always only the soil for unexpected good to sprout in.'

Hmmm...pausing to reflect on many things. Is this part of what the Paschal mystery is about?

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 03/01/2010 03:27:03
Dear friends,

At some point in the year -- anticipated to be autumn -- Pope Benedict is planning to canonise Mary MacKillop (1842-1909).  This will make her Australia’s first saint.



Her life story is an interesting one -- it even includes being excommunicated for a brief time! Observers note the parallels between her  struggles and the ones experienced by people today working for transformation in the Church so as to make way for a greater role for women's ministry.

I'll share news about Mary in our 2010 thread Holy Women Through The Ages.

with love and blessings,

~Sophie~


Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 03/01/2010 07:28:26








For our coverage about Blessed Mary MacKillop, see here:
http://www.womenpriests.org/circles/fb.asp?m=34711

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 03/01/2010 08:54:38






Dear friends,

I am in the midst of recategorising some of our discussion threads.  Thanks for your patience. 

with love and blessings,

~Sophie~

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 04/01/2010 04:13:09
Feminist theologian Mary Daly dies
2010 January 3
by m
catholicanarchy.org

Another theologian in Catholic circles passes away this week, this time the controversial feminist theologian Mary Daly who taught at Boston College for 33 years. I received the following message from Daly’s colleague Mary Hunt via a bulletin from Feminist Studies in Religion:

'With a heavy heart, yet grateful beyond words for her life and work, I report that Mary Daly died this morning, January 3, 2010 in Massachusetts. She had been in poor health for the last two years.

Her contributions to feminist theology, philosophy, and theory were many, unique, and if I may say so, world-changing. She created intellectual space; she set the bar high. Even those who disagreed with her are in her debt for the challenges she offered.

When I return from vacation at week’s end I will post more. But I want WATER colleagues, of which she was a stalwart one, to know this now. She always advised women to throw our lives as far as they would go. I can say without fear of exaggeration that she lived that way herself.

May her spirit soar and her ideas endure.

Mary E. Hunt
Hoechenschwand, Germany'


http://catholicanarchy.org/?p=1381

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 04/01/2010 04:16:30


Mary Daly  (October 16, 1928 - January 3, 2010)


Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 04/01/2010 03:48:53
Reflections from 25 Years of Experience At the Start of the New Year
by Thomas Doyle, J.C.D.  

It is the beginning of 2010. Back many years ago when a new year would dawn, I remember when I would predict that this would be the last year of the Catholic sex abuse scandal.  This year the Church will change.  This year the bishops will shift gears and focus on the thousands of victims.  This year the lawsuits will end because they will no longer be necessary.


Thomas Doyle, JCD


Some would call that wishful thinking.  Others may believe it to be delusion.  In either case it was obviously magical thinking based on unreality.

None of my past hopes have come true and I doubt they ever will.  The contrast between the reality of what has happened and continues to happen to victims at the direction of bishops, and what the bishops themselves claim they have accomplished is a chasm the depth of which defies the imagination.

. . .

For complete article, see here: http://www.womenpriests.org/circles/fb.asp?m=34732

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 05/01/2010 01:21:06
Mary Daly, radical feminist theologian, dead at 81
She helped reshape Christian thought through decades

By Thomas C. Fox
The National Catholic Reporter
January 4, 2010

Mary Daly, radical feminist theologian and a mother of modern feminist theology, died Jan. 3 at the age of 81. She was one of the most influential voices of the radical feminist movement through the later 20th century.

Daly taught courses in theology, feminist ethics and patriarchy at Boston College for 33 years. Her first book, "The Church and the Second Sex," published in 1968, got her fired, briefly, from her teaching position there, but as a result of support from the (then all-male) student body and the general public, she was ultimately granted tenure.


Mary Daly

. . .

Read complete article, click here:  http://www.womenpriests.org/circles/fb.asp?m=34737

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 05/01/2010 01:27:07
Women priests will no longer be contained
by Janice Sevre-Duszynska
Other Voices
Cincinnati.com
January 4, 2010


Several months ago, former Cincinnati Archbishop Daniel Pilarczyk barred Sister Louise Akers from teaching in archdiocesean schools because she supported the ordination of women. Recently, when a reporter asked him why he did this, the archbishop said: "The formal teaching of the church is women cannot be ordained to the priesthood. I am bound by that ... She was representing the church. You can't represent the church and teach things that the church doesn't teach. I believe I was forced to take some action." (The Enquirer, Dec 21, 2009)  


Janice Sevre-Duszyszka

There are numerous publications by theologians which attest to the history and tradition of women's leadership in early Christianity and up until the 12th century - as deacons, priests and bishops. See, for example, the calendars of archaeologist/theologian Dorothy Irvin and books by scholars Gary Macy, Karen Jo Torjesen, John Wijngaards, Lavinia Byrne, Ida Raming, Ute Eisen, Joan Morris, Kevin Madigan and Carolyn Osiek.

Catholics must search for the above information by themselves because male priests do not mention the words "women's ordination" from the pulpit at Sunday Masses. Those who follow their conscience and have spoken out for women's justice within our church and world community have been severely reprimanded by the Vatican. One such person is Father Roy Bourgeois, Maryknoll priest of 38 years and founder of the School of the Americas Watch. He and SOAWatch have been nominated for the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize.


Theologian Dorothy Irvin, who has a pontifical doctorate in Catholic studies from the University of Tübingen, Germany, with specialization in Bible, ancient Near-Eastern studies and archaeology, has found archaeological evidence that women were priests.

I traveled with her to Rome, Naples and North Africa. We visited catacombs and churches. We studied frescoes, mosaics and tombstones. I have seen firsthand frescoes of a woman at the altar celebrating Mass and women celebrating Eucharist. I have seen the Roman mosaic of four women ministers, including a woman bishop, which attests to a continuous succession in church office from Mary through Praxedis and Pudentiana to Theodora.


Above her head is her title, "Episcopa," with the feminine ending, meaning a bishop who is a woman.


Jesus treated women and men as equals and partners in ministry. Among his disciples were many women. Mary Magdalene, the first to encounter the risen Christ, was commissioned by Christ to be the "Apostle to the Apostles." St. Paul called Junia "an outstanding apostle." In 1976, the Pontifical Biblical Commission concluded that there is no biblical reason to prohibit women's ordination.


This past July former President Jimmy Carter severed his ties with the Southern Baptist Convention because he believes that "we are all equal in the eyes of God - as confirmed in the Holy Scriptures."


His July 12, 2009, statement entitled "The Words of God Do Not Justify Cruelty to Women" was published in the Sunday Observer in the United Kingdom. (See CommonDreams.org) In this powerful essay, he challenges male religious authorities saying that "discrimination and abuse wrongly backed by doctrine are damaging society. This discrimination, unjustifiably attributed to a Higher Authority, has provided a reason or excuse for the deprivation of women's equal rights across the world for centuries."


In polls conducted by the National Catholic Reporter, the sensus fidelium - the voices of the faithful - believe that women are called to the servant priesthood.

Many Catholics have left the Church because they consider it unbalanced without women on the altar to interpret the Gospels from their feminine living and dying.

The Holy Spirit moves in grace and truth among the grassroots and cannot be deterred - even by the Vatican. In recent years, women have reclaimed their ancient heritage within the Church.

Today there are about 100 women ordained as Roman Catholic Womenpriests.
Your farewell article on Archbishop Pilarczyk contained a chart indicating that there are 482 Roman Catholic priests in the Archdiocese of Cincinnati. That is an error you may want to correct for the incoming archbishop, Dennis Schnurr. As an ordained Roman Catholic Womanpriest, I make the total 483.

http://news.cincinnati.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=20101040323


Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 05/01/2010 05:41:34
Religious life as prophetic life form
'The pernicious appeal for blind obedience'

By Sr. Sandra Schneiders
The National Catholic Reporter
January 4, 2010


Sr. Sandra Schneiders

This is the first part of a five-part essay by Immaculate Heart of Mary Sr. Sandra Schneiders on the meaning of religious life today. In this part Schneiders, professor of New Testament Studies and Christian Spirituality at the Jesuit School of Theology at Berkeley, sets the context for “Religious Life as Prophetic Life Form.”

These essays run from Jan. 4 through Jan. 8.


Introduction

When the Vatican investigation of U.S. women religious was announced some months ago without any preparation, consultation, or even the courtesy of a notification to congregational leaders that it was about to happen, many people, religious and laity alike, were stunned at what seemed like a surprise attack aimed at a most unlikely target, given the massive and unaddressed problems besetting the clergy and hierarchy at the moment. Persistent efforts to learn the charges and the accusers hit a stone wall since virtually no one believed that a decline in numbers of entrants constituted a “crime” calling for such a massive response or that a judicial proceeding of such magnitude was instituted to ascertain (much less foster!) the “quality of life” of religious.

. . .

For complete article, click here: http://www.womenpriests.org/circles/fb.asp?m=34742

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 05/01/2010 05:46:32
Investigation story about men, not women
An NCR editorial
National Catholic Reporter
December 9, 2009

When considering the story of the investigation of U.S. women religious and their recent acts of noncompliance in the face of a Vatican questionnaire seeking information on life in their communities, it is easy to think the story is about women.

The presumption that the episode is primarily about the women is easy to make, because women are the target of the twin investigations by the Vatican, with the not-so-subtle implications that they are not living out their vows as faithful Catholics. Keep in mind we are talking about not a handful of women, but tens of thousands who have given their entire lives to our church over many decades.

In opening the investigations, one into “the quality of life” within the communities of U.S. women religious, the other into the “doctrine” allegedly not being upheld by the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, which represents more than 90 percent of the U.S. women religious communities, Rome is saying something has gone wrong with our women religious.

. . .

For complete story, see here: http://www.womenpriests.org/circles/fb.asp?m=34745

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 05/01/2010 06:11:18

Felix Manz

On this day January 5 in 1527Felix Manz, co-founder of the original Swiss Brethren Anabaptist congregation in Zürich, was executed by drowning, becoming one of the first martyrs of the Radical Reformation.

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 05/01/2010 06:18:06








On this day January 5 in 1968Alexander Dubček comes to power: "Prague Spring" begins in Czechoslovakia.

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 11/01/2010 06:24:49
Religion and Women
By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF
The New York Times
Published: January 9, 2010

Religions derive their power and popularity in part from the ethical compass they offer. So why do so many faiths help perpetuate something that most of us regard as profoundly unethical: the oppression of women?


Nicholas D. Kristof

It is not that warlor...ds in Congo cite Scripture to justify their mass rapes (although the last warlord I met there called himself a pastor and wore a button reading “rebels for Christ”). It’s not that brides are burned in India as part of a Hindu ritual. And there’s no verse in the Koran that instructs Afghan thugs to throw acid in the faces of girls who dare to go to school.

Yet these kinds of abuses — along with more banal injustices, like slapping a girlfriend or paying women less for their work — arise out of a social context in which women are, often, second-class citizens. That’s a context that religions have helped shape, and not pushed hard to change.

“Women are prevented from playing a full and equal role in many faiths, creating an environment in which violations against women are justified,” former President Jimmy Carter noted in a speech last month to the Parliament of the World’s Religions in Australia.

“The belief that women are inferior human beings in the eyes of God,” Mr. Carter continued, “gives excuses to the brutal husband who beats his wife, the soldier who rapes a woman, the employer who has a lower pay scale for women employees, or parents who decide to abort a female embryo.”

Mr. Carter, who sees religion as one of the “basic causes of the violation of women’s rights,” is a member of The Elders, a small council of retired leaders brought together by Nelson Mandela. The Elders are focusing on the role of religion in oppressing women, and they have issued a joint statement calling on religious leaders to “change all discriminatory practices within their own religions and traditions.”

The Elders are neither irreligious nor rabble-rousers. They include Archbishop Desmond Tutu, and they begin their meetings with a moment for silent prayer.

“The Elders are not attacking religion as such,” noted Mary Robinson, the former president of Ireland and United Nations high commissioner for human rights. But she added, “We all recognized that if there’s one overarching issue for women it’s the way that religion can be manipulated to subjugate women.”

There is of course plenty of fodder, in both the Koran and the Bible, for those who seek a theology of discrimination.

The New Testament quotes St. Paul (I Timothy 2) as saying that women “must be silent.” Deuteronomy declares that if a woman does not bleed on her wedding night, “the men of her town shall stone her to death.” An Orthodox Jewish prayer thanks God, “who hast not made me a woman.” The Koran stipulates that a woman shall inherit less than a man, and that a woman’s testimony counts for half a man’s.

In fairness, many scholars believe that Paul did not in fact write the passages calling on women to be silent. And Islam started out as socially progressive for women — banning female infanticide and limiting polygamy — but did not continue to advance.

But religious leaders sanctified existing social structures, instead of pushing for justice. In Africa, it would help enormously if religious figures spoke up for widows disenfranchised by unjust inheritance traditions — or for rape victims, or for schoolgirls facing sexual demands from their teachers. Instead, in Uganda, the influence of conservative Christians is found in a grotesque push to execute gays.

Yet paradoxically, the churches in Africa that have done the most to empower women have been conservative ones led by evangelicals and especially Pentecostals. In particular, Pentecostals encourage women to take leadership roles, and for many women this is the first time they have been trusted with authority and found their opinions respected. In rural Africa, Pentecostal churches are becoming a significant force to emancipate women.

That’s a glimmer of hope that reminds us that while religion is part of the problem, it can also be part of the solution. The Dalai Lama has taken that step and calls himself a feminist.

Another excellent precedent is slavery. Each of the Abrahamic faiths accepted slavery. Muhammad owned slaves, and St. Paul seems to have condoned slavery. Yet the pioneers of the abolitionist movement were Quakers and evangelicals like William Wilberforce. People of faith ultimately worked ferociously to overthrow an oppressive institution that churches had previously condoned.

Today, when religious institutions exclude women from their hierarchies and rituals, the inevitable implication is that females are inferior. The Elders are right that religious groups should stand up for a simple ethical principle: any person’s human rights should be sacred, and not depend on something as earthly as their genitals.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/10/opinion/10kristof.html

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 13/01/2010 02:11:45
Indian Religious head seeks nun empowerment
UCA News
January 13, 2010

Lack of empowerment among Catholic nuns remains a major concern for the Church in India, Conference of Religious in India president, Brother K.M. Joseph has said.



Although there has been much work generating awareness in the Church about women’s rights, “we have a long way to go in realizing” systemic changes, Montfort Brother K.M. Joseph told UCA News.

Old beliefs and a perception that convent life is meant only for spiritual pursuits were partially to blame.

Many nuns do not receive the necessary skills or academic training to cope with the demands of missionary work, he said on Jan. 12. As a consequence, many languish as domestic workers in their congregations and male Religious institutions.

“Dynamics of change in this sector are slow and difficult,” he added.

The brother was airing his concerns in an address to the general assembly of the Catholic Council of India, the Church’s top representative body in the country.

Some 250 people representing bishops, priests, Religious and laity from India’s 160 dioceses attended the Jan. 9-12 meeting in Nagpur, Maharashtra state.

Brother Joseph said CRI has been working for a “gender empowered Church” and has organized a series of training programs.

“We were happy that this became a national agenda” and the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of India took up the issue of empowerment of women in its last plenary meeting, he noted.

He urged Church leaders to act to break the current mindset.

Areas that need focus include respecting the dignity of women, appreciating their consecration as Religious, acknowledging their missionary service, and giving them decent remuneration.

There are around 100,000 nuns in India, “more than 80 percent” of the Religious in the country, said Brother Joseph.

SOURCE UCA news

http://www.cathnewsasia.com/2010/01/13/indian-religious-head-seeks-empowerment-for-nuns/

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 13/01/2010 02:13:23
INDIA Religious head urges greater empowerment for nuns
UCA News
January 12, 2010

NEW DELHI (UCAN) -- Lack of empowerment among Catholic nuns remains a major concern for the Church in India, the head of Religious in the country says.

A lack of empowerment among nuns remains a concern for the Indian Church, according to Brother K.M. Joseph.

Although there has been much work generating awareness in the Church about women's rights, "we have a long way to go in realizing" systemic changes, Montfort Brother K.M. Joseph, president of the Conference of Religious India (CRI), said.



Old beliefs and a perception that convent life is meant only for spiritual pursuits were partially to blame.

Many nuns do not receive the necessary skills or academic training to cope with the demands of missionary work, he said on Jan. 12. As a consequence, many languish as domestic workers in their congregations and male Religious institutions.

"Dynamics of change in this sector are slow and difficult," he added.

The brother was airing his concerns in an address to the general assembly of the Catholic Council of India, the Church's top representative body in the country.

Some 250 people representing bishops, priests, Religious and laity from India's 160 dioceses attended the Jan. 9-12 meeting in Nagpur, Maharashtra state.

Brother Joseph said CRI has been working for a "gender empowered Church" and has organized a series of training programs.

"We were happy that this became a national agenda" and the Catholic Bishops' Conference of India took up the issue of empowerment of women in its last plenary meeting, he noted.

He urged Church leaders to act to break the current mindset.

Areas that need focus include respecting the dignity of women, appreciating their consecration as Religious, acknowledging their missionary service, and giving them decent remuneration.

There are around 100,000 nuns in India, "more than 80 percent" of the Religious in the country, said Brother Joseph.

http://www.ucanews.com/2010/01/12/religious-head-urges-greater-empowerment-for-nuns/

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 13/01/2010 02:59:41
Reform Rabbis Support Women at the Wall
Religion News Service
January 5, 2010

Reform rabbis have resolved to protest attacks on religious freedom in 2010 by supporting women who seek to worship equally with men in Jerusalem and Muslims who want to build minarets in Switzerland.

The Central Conference of American Rabbis, representing about 1,800 Reform Jewish clergy in North America, issued a statement Dec. 30 against the treatment of Israeli feminist Nofrat Frankel, who was arrested in November after violating a law against women wearing traditional male prayer shawls and reading the Torah at the Western Wall.


Nofrat Frankel, on the right

Frankel, a medical student, and other "Women of the Wall" activists argue the holy site should not be operated like an Orthodox synagogue -- with strict gender segregation and restrictions on how women may pray -- because it belongs to all Jews.

On Jan. 10, Women of the Wall supporters plan to hold a 10 a.m. service in San Francisco's Union Square and other cities. Female worshippers may wear male vestments to demonstrate how some modern women prefer to pray. A similar day of solidarity was organized last month by the Women's Rabbinic Network, a partner of the Central Conference of American Rabbis.

In its parallel condemnation of the recent Swiss vote to ban new minarets, the rabbis noted that European Jews once endured similar discrimination during the Holocaust.

"We have been shocked by attacks on religious liberty in both Switzerland and our own Jewish State of Israel," the group's statement reads. "As we approach the secular new year, we hope that 2010 will see no further erosions of religious freedom but will be a year of liberty for men and women of all religions everywhere."

http://ncronline.org/news/women/reform-rabbis-support-women-wall

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 13/01/2010 03:22:45

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 13/01/2010 03:44:51
This from the website Catholics Come Home (catholicscomehome.org):

'Why can’t women be priests?

Church teaching on the ordination of only men to the priesthood finds its origins in the teaching and practices established by Christ. While He was on earth, Jesus chose men to be His apostles and He passed on authority to these men to carry out His work of preaching the good news (Luke 9:1-2) and forgiving sins (John 20:23).

The Catechism of the Catholic Church explains, “The Church recognizes herself to be bound by this choice made by the Lord himself. For this reason the ordination of women is not possible” (CCC 1577). Furthermore, the Catechism informs us that “No one has a right to receive the sacrament of Holy Orders. Indeed no one claims this office for himself; he is called to it by God” (CCC 1578).

Jesus came to us on earth in the form of a man. It makes sense, then, that He chose His successors—his “representatives” on earth—to be men.

Finally, though we cannot always know exactly why Christ made some of the choices He made, we do know that He did not view women as inferior to men. Christ simply made clear that this particular vocation—the priesthood—would be reserved for men. In obedience to the will of God, the Catholic Church has and will continue to follow this practice of ordaining only men to the priesthood.'

http://www.catholicscomehome.org/answers-priesthood.php

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 13/01/2010 06:23:08
Short Take
Preaching to Bishops
AN UNDERTAKER’S VIEW

by Thomas Lynch
Commonweal
January 15, 2010

“Preaching to bishops,” a long-dead churchman told me years ago, “is like farting at skunks. You’ll win some battles, but lose the war.” All the more so, no doubt, the higher you go. His Holiness, Their Eminences and Excellencies—“Don’t cross ’em,” the curate cautioned; “those boyos aren’t to be tampered with.”

Among the blessings of my work as a funeral director is that it has put me in earshot of the reverend clergy trying to make sense of senseless things: the man who kills his wife, their poodle, and then himself; a mother who drowns her baby then does her nails; the teenager with the broken heart and loaded pistol; the tumors and emboli, flus and tsunamis, deadly contagions and misadventures—the endless renditions of the Book of Job. When someone shows up—priest or pastor, rabbi or imam, venerable master or fellow traveler—to stand with the living and the dead and speak into the gaping maw of the unspeakable, I know I am witnessing uncommon courage and my perennially shaken faith is emboldened by theirs.

“Behold, I show you a mystery,” they always say. They are balm and anointing, these men and women of God, frontline infantry and holy corpsmen in the wars long waged between faith and fear.

Which is why the recent ecclesiastical mischief by rear- and upper-echelon sorts seems cartoonish, unseemly, so lacking in gravitas by comparison. The papal poaching of “traditionalist” Anglicans (to wit: those put off by female clerics and homosexuals) is but one sup of thin gruel boiled up lately by the hierarchies. Another is the carping of Archbishop Raymond Burke (late of St. Louis, latterly installed in the Vatican) at Cardinal Sean O’Malley’s generous opening of the church’s arms to the corpse and people of the late Edward Kennedy—an epic senator and sinner, self-confessed. Then there is its decidedly downsized version (for mid-careerists): the Right Rev. Thomas Tobin’s harangue on the sacramental options open to the late senator’s son, Patrick, who votes with his caucus on matters of civil law. “Erratic” is the word His Excellency used to describe the congressman’s conduct—twisting the prick of insinuation, as we Irish-American Catholics so deftly do.

In Ireland, the shoes of the fishermen are on the other foot. Coincident with the worst flooding in memory, budget woes and recession, and nationwide public-sector strikes, the report of Judge Yvonne Murphy on priestly abuses in the Dublin archdiocese is not so much a reiteration of old news about pedophiles as it is a stark indictment of the up-line of hierarchs who colluded with civil authorities to provide cover and protection for such criminals. Some bishops, it turns out, behaved like “company guys,” obstructing inquiry, hushing complaints, covering the tracks of abusers, protecting the interests of the world’s oldest merger-and-acquisition firm from any whiff of scandal. Their calculated malfeasance has done permanent damage to the faithful and to faithful priests who will spend the rest of their lives trying to repair trusts they never had a hand in breaking. The Murphy Report and the stonewalling from Rome have occasioned calls for the removal of the papal nuncio, for the immediate sacking of bishops (four subsequently resigned), for the removal of public schools from diocesan sponsorship, and for the church to be once and forever disentangled from the civic life of holy Ireland.

While back at home, the Vatican’s investigation of American women religious makes many of us who were well schooled in faith and morals by nuns even more devoutly lapsed than we’ve been for years. Trying to retain the imitation of Christ our faith calls us to while removing ourselves from the endless contretemps and imbroglios of the church’s princely caste is becoming more the mug’s game than ever.

The church is already served by a “priesthood” of women, gay bishops, and good Catholics who have long ignored the preachments of the old boys on sexual matters. To be blind to what is while proclaiming what isn’t is not faith. It is denial. The church’s people have moved along, even if the prelates won’t.

Bringing the dead and their families into church is something I’ve been doing all my life, first with my father, then with my brothers and sisters, now with my sons and nieces and nephews. It is our family’s thing: what we’ve been “called” to do. Not by voices from on high or burning bushes, but by human voices, in the middle of the night, the middle of dinner, the middle of otherwise uneventful days. They call for help when there is trouble. And I know when the clergy who meet us in the journey—whether male or female, gay or straight, celibate or sexually active, whether robed in talliths or white chasubles, Brooks Brothers suits or business casual, reciting from Bible or Torah, Qur’an or Zen koan, with incense, icon, or ancient liturgy—I know they bring a brave and sacred narrative to bear on the existential questions: Is that all there is? Can it happen to me? Are we all alone? What comes next?

In earshot of such powerful medicines, the high-churchy intrigues and inquisitions, the connivance of bishops seems a waste of God’s precious gifts of grace and time.


http://commonwealmagazine.org/preaching-bishops

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 14/01/2010 10:59:25
Dear friends,

Pausing to reflect:

News reports and images are pouring in about the devastating earthquake that struck Haiti outside the capital city of Port-au-Prince. Most of the capital has been flattened. Tens of thousands are feared dead. People are struggling to comprehend the extent of the tragedy.

Often referred to as the most impoverished country in the Western Hemisphere, Haiti has a proud history as a nation that challenged slavery as early as 1791 and remained a stubborn burr on the side of powerful slave owning nations, including both the United States and France... an inspiring legacy to those of us who work for change.

In more recent times, Haiti has faced tremendous socio-political and economic challenges. 80% of the population lives below the poverty line. Besides extreme poverty, violence and unrest have plagued the nation for many decades. Challenges -- including a grotesque abuse of power by a tiny elite -- have been compounded by a series of devastating natural disasters, including four successive hurricanes in 2008.



News reports say that what makes the apocalyptic earthquake especially cruel is that it struck at a rare moment of optimism for the country. After decades of natural and political catastrophes, a U.N. peacekeeping force and an international development campaign had recently begun to calm and rebuild Haiti. NGOs, grassroots organisations including women’s groups have been working relentlessly to ensure that the poorest of the poor have access to basic resources and can mobilize to protect human rights and improve ordinary citizens’ access to education, health, sanitation, and economic opportunity. "We were hearing more positive things from Haiti for once," says Danielle Romer, an American social worker with family in Haiti. "Things were coming around."

In a moment of hope, Haiti has been plunged into despair.

Time News records Haiti development experts who say that if there's one silver lining to the disaster it's precisely that it occurred at an unusually optimistic time. Before the quake, one development expert notes, Haitians were experiencing an unusual sense of common purpose and material upgrade — traffic lights were even working 24/7 for a change — and the international community "was stepping up for Haiti in ways it hadn't before," giving the world a glimpse of a Haiti that might be redeemable after all. It is believed that this very optimism is what "could accelerate recovery" -- a welcome outlook at this dismal time. As desperate as Haiti has been, it has never felt this hopeless. (http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1953379_1953494_1953515,00.html)

Our heartfelt prayers are with the people of Haiti.

~Sophie~
<message edited by Sophie on 14/01/2010 12:37:21>

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 14/01/2010 03:41:25
Trading Places
A Once-Catholic Episcopalian Looks at Benedict's Offer

by Jack Miles
Commonweal
January 15, 2010

These are interesting times for Anglican-Catholic relations in the United Kingdom. Four and a half centuries after the historic Act of Supremacy, by which Henry VIII effectively made himself pope of England, Britain has more active Roman Catholics than active Anglicans, and the Church of England seems to be threatened with step-by-step disestablishment within England itself.

There is talk that in a reorganized House of Lords, the “Lords Spiritual”—the Anglican bishops—might lose their automatic seats. Former Prime Minister Tony Blair has quietly converted to Roman Catholicism. One hears rumors that Queen Elizabeth might lift the ancient ban on royals marrying Catholics. In this context, one would think that a small gesture or two from the Vatican side, offered in a conciliatory spirit—perhaps a concession that British Catholics wedded to Anglicans at Anglican ceremonies would not be regarded as having impaired their membership in the Roman Catholic Church—might carry the process to virtual completion, helping the United Kingdom finally separate its church from its state.

. . .

Read complete article, see here: http://www.womenpriests.org/circles/fb.asp?m=34830

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 14/01/2010 08:05:11






Dear friends,

www.womenpriests.org has joined the social networking community and is now on Facebook! If you are a member, join us there at: http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=228802543420&ref=nf

with love and blessings,

~Sophie~

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 19/01/2010 11:56:50


January 18: Martin Luther King Jr.'s Birthday Observed in United States.

Learn more about this heroic agent of transformation, see here: http://www.womenpriests.org/circles/fb.asp?m=34860

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 19/01/2010 12:19:08
Book Review:
DUBLIN’S SHAME IS FINALLY EXPOSED
Author: PETER DE ROSA



Catholic Ireland continues to boil over
The Editor
New Catholic Times
January 18, 2010

The key finding of the report on priest paedophiles in Dublin is nastier than the foulest minded anti-Catholic could have imagined.

For decades, the Archdiocese was run by moral morons dressed in purple. Bishops allowed self-confessed priest-paedophiles to continue ministering to children. They sacrificed children as if their god was Moloch.

They seem to have believed that once a child is born it has no rights.

. . .

Read full review, see here: http://www.womenpriests.org/circles/fb.asp?m=34865

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 19/01/2010 12:42:57


Dear friends,

I am pleased to announce a new feature that has been added to our website -- a cartoon competition!

We will carry a new 'captionless' cartoon every week. Contribute your ideas for a caption. Three weeks after the launch of the cartoon, we'll announce the winner of the best caption for that week.

Anyone can see the cartoons but to contribute an idea for a caption you will need to LOG IN.

You can access the cartoon page from the Drop Down Menu on our homepage (see the Action Tab) or you can link with it directly from here: http://www.womenpriests.org/compete/

I look forward to enjoying your contributions!

with love and blessings,

~Sophie~

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 21/01/2010 12:23:32
Pope calls all Irish bishops to meeting about child abuse
Vatican conference to discuss response to clerical sexual abuse in Ireland

by Henry McDonald
The Guardian
January 20, 2010

The pope has summoned Irish clergy to a conference on 15 and 16 February. Photograph: Alessandro Di Meo/EPA

Ireland's bishops have all been summoned to the Vatican for discussions on the clerical child sex abuse scandal that has rocked the Irish Catholic church.

Senior Catholic sources said today the pope had summoned them to a meeting in Rome on 15 and 16 February.

Senior Catholic church sources confirmed a story in the Irish Catholic newspaper about a meeting to debate the Ryan and Murphy reports into widespread clerical child abuse across the republic.

Irish bishops said they received the Vatican's invitations yesterday.

A prelate, who wished to remain anonymous, said Pope Benedict would speak to the bishops on the opening day of the meeting and they would be able to tell him what they thought about the scandal.They would also meet senior Vatican officials responsible for areas such as doctrine.

At least one bishop expects consultations about the pope's pastoral letter to Ireland's Catholics, in which he promised a response to the Murphy report.

The Irish Catholic Bishops' Conference has announced that it will convene an extraordinary general meeting on Friday in Maynooth, the seat of training for Catholic priests in Ireland, to discuss preparations for the pope's letter, which will be read out in churches on Ash Wednesday.

The Catholic church has been accused of repeatedly covering up the abuse of children by priests in the Dublin diocese.

The Murphy report, published in November, said the archdiocese had an "obsessive concern with secrecy and the avoidance of scandal" and "little or no concern for the welfare of the abused child".

A few months earlier, the Ryan report into the abuse of children in Catholic-run industrial schools and orphanages in Ireland over 50 years concluded that there was a culture of covering up allegations of abuse.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jan/20/pope-irish-bishops-meeting-abuse

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 21/01/2010 12:28:00
Whispers of another Synod for America
by Carol Glatz
Catholic News Service
January 20, 2010

VATICAN CITY — During a Vatican press conference yesterday presenting the outline of the Synod of Bishops for the Middle East, Archbishop Nikola Eterovic told reporters there was talk of having another special assembly for America.


Archbishop Nikola Eterovic speaks at a Jan. 19 Vatican press conference.

The last synod for America was held in 1997. It included bishops, priests, religious and lay representatives from the northern reaches of North America all the way down to the southern tip of South America.

The decision to hold a special assembly, he said, “depends on the pastoral situation (of the region) and also on the bishops requesting it.”

There has been “talk of a special assembly for America. However, it is an idea that needs fleshing out,” he added.

He said if the bishops and Pope Benedict XVI decide it would be useful for the local churches and for the continent to organize a regional synod, then the Synod of Bishops, which is “at the service of the bishops,” will follow up on it.

One source told me that Latin American bishops have been talking about the need for a special assembly so that they can get input and assistance from Northern America and the Vatican.

There are two issues of special concern: better communication and increasingly authoritarian governments taking hold in Latin America.

With communication, it seems the bishops would like help in finding ways to get information to flow more easily and quickly among the churches – some kind of set up (as the phrase goes) so the right hand knows what the left hand is doing.

Concerning the political situation in Latin America, it appears that some church leaders want to make sure their role in public debate is not misconstrued as being an advocate for a particular political party, but  as a supporter of specific principles and democratic ideals.

http://cnsblog.wordpress.com/2010/01/20/whispers-of-another-synod-for-america/

Sophie
  • Total Posts : 15488
  • Reward points : 0
  • Joined: 18/01/2007
RE: 2010 News Central, Items of Interest - 21/01/2010 12:34:15


Anna Zizi drinks water after members of a Mexican search-and-rescue team freed her from the rubble of a house in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Jan. 19. She was rescued from the collapsed residence of a parish priest at the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Assumption. (CNS/Paul Jeffrey)

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

We continue to offer our prayers for the people of Haiti.

Change Page: 123456789 > | Showing page 1 of 9, messages 1 to 40 of 326