Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Obama called Dolan to congratulate

Round 1:
President Barack Obama called New York's new Roman Catholic archbishop Monday to offer his prayers and congratulations, Archbishop Timothy M. Dolan said as he visited a suburban seminary.

The former archbishop of Milwaukee described the call as "extraordinarily gracious" and said he invited Obama to his installation on April 15. He said the president had told him, "I assure you of my prayers."

There was no official word from the White House on the conversation.

The new archbishop and Obama spoke briefly about the country's financial problems, Dolan said. Dolan even managed to inject some humor into their exchange, suggesting the church hold additional collections, he said.

He said that when he received the call, he initially thought it was his brother playing a joke.
It's a tie.

Bishop tells outspoken CA priest to "cool it" on Obama sermons

"San Diego Bishop Robert Brom has asked an outspoken Escondido priest to tone down his fierce criticism of the Obama Administration, prompting supporters of the priest to launch a letter-writing campaign to the bishop on his behalf.

On Feb. 11, California Catholic Daily reprinted an article – “100 Days or End of Days?” -- from the parish bulletin of St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Escondido written by Pastor Richard Perozich. In the article, Fr. Perozich warned that “evil has acceded to power” in the Obama Administration. (To see the article behind the controversy, Click Here.)

Sources at St. Mary’s told California Catholic Daily that a family from the parish-administered St. Mary’s School had complained to the chancery about the article. An intermediary, acting on behalf of Bishop Brom, then contacted Fr. Perozich by telephone, sources said, and told him to “cool it.” Aside from that single complaint, sources said, “the overwhelming opinion of parishioners has been favorable.” (California Catholic Daily)

I have some experience of Fr. Perozich. While I don't agree with everything he said in his letter (I only had time to skim it), I think what is at issue is not so much what he said, but that he said it - people are not used to hearing their priests vocally "naming names" in this manner. Also, an important note: this is what Fr. Perozich said in a homily - he published it in his parish bulletin.
Still, the problem with impassioned rhetorical language about these issues is that such statements tend to come across as unrational, thus doing a disservice to the principled versions of these sentiments.

Quote of the Day

From Archbishop Charles Chaput:

"We can’t talk piously about programs to reduce the abortion body count without also working vigorously to change the laws that make the killing possible. If we’re Catholic, then we believe in the sanctity of developing human life. And if we don’t really believe in the humanity of the unborn child from the moment life begins, then we should stop lying to ourselves and others, and even to God, by claiming we’re something we’re not."

Hearing "Christian-based music groups" is an "unapproved religious activity"?

I wonder if driving by a church building also constitutes "exposing children to unapproved religious activities"? From The Christan Post, this insane story:

A veteran youth counselor is suing a California children's home after she was suspended without pay because teenagers under her supervision overheard Christian music.

In a suit filed on Feb. 13, Maureen Loya charged Orangewood Children's Home with religious discrimination for slapping her with a six-week suspension for "exposing children to unapproved religious activities."

In July 2006, the counselor took four teenage girls from the Orangewood Children's Home on an approved field trip to the Anaheim 5K run and then to the beach.

When the group went to Huntington Beach pier, they encountered the Surfrider Foundation's Celebrity Surf Jam, which featured a surfing competition and concert as part an effort to raise awareness and support for our nation's beach and coastal environments. The event's entertainment included Christian-based music groups Incubus and Switchfoot. According to the suit, the group overheard ten minutes of Christian music as they were eating. The girls also visited booths at the pier, some of which were selling Christian items.

I can see the concern if the music was by, say, early Whiteheart, Sandi Patti, Mortification, Horde, or something by these folks. But Switchfoot? That's just wrong.

Pope 'could visit Britain next year'

PJP2-gatwick 'The first ever state visit by a Pope to Britain could take place as soon as next year, The Times has learned.

John Paul II's ground-breaking visit in 1982 was a pastoral visit. Benedict XVI's looks likely to be the full monty, including an address to Lords and MPs in Westminster Hall where Thomas More was tried and condemned.

'The logistics of a visit to Britain by Pope Benedict XVI are being discussed after Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who advises the Queen on state visits, raised the possibility at a meeting with the pontiff at the Vatican.' Read it all here.

There was much confusion in Rome last week after the apparently inept response from the Pope's press office to Gordon Brown's invitation to the Pope to visit Britain. It looked as though the idea was being dismissed summarily, but I've learned this was not the case.

Both Gordon Brown and the Archbishop of Westminster have in the last three years raised the possibility of a visit before. Previously there has been an unequivocal 'no' because of two main reasons, diary commitments and sensitivities over Northern Ireland. The latter is no longer a problem, and the former is at the moment looking good for next year.

Further, there was no suitable 'peg' two years ago. Next year, assuming the Vatican theologians meeting soon to discuss the Cause give the go ahead, there could be. The Pope is just one of the many Catholics and non-Catholics worldwide who hope to see Cardinal John Henry Newman beatified. The ceremony could take place in Rome and then the Pope's visit here come soon after, to mark the momentous event.

The Pope wants to come. He would even like to speak at Oxford, having done so once previously at Cambridge. Health problems as yet unknown might still prevent it, as might the intrusion of other urgent diary commitments. But all these and other things being well, it might actually happen.

Imagine the symbolism of Pope Benedict delivering a speech in Westminster Hall, where Thomas More was indicted and tried for refusing to accept King Henry VIII as head of the nascent Church of England, where the instigators of the gunpowder plot were also tried and condemned.

Oh how I pray it happens. What a story to cover!

Monday, February 23, 2009

Archbishop Timothy Dolan:
"You're asking, maybe, if there's any difference between Archbishop Weakland and me? And there is a big one, about 50 pounds right off the bat." -- at an introductory press conference in 2002. {source.}

Archbishop Dolan: The Reaction

{see my complete coverage of Abp. Dolan's appointment here.}

Episcopal appointments never occur in a political or ecclesiastical-political vacuum:

Making his highest-profile U.S. appointment since his 2005 election, Pope Benedict XVI chose a conservative who is likely to stress the church's stand on social issues like abortion. - Dan Gilgoff

Dolan, a St. Louis native, is virtually guaranteed to rise to the rank of Cardinal in the next consistory — a formal meeting of the College of Cardinals — at the Vatican. - TIME

The new head of the New York Archdiocese served for seven years as rector of the Pontifical North American College, the U.S. national seminary in Rome, and was a student there himself in the 1970s. In addition, he was assigned for two years to the staff of the apostolic nunciature, or Vatican embassy, in Washington. - CNS

Archbishop Dolan's move to the New York Archdiocese will more than triple the number of Catholics under his pastoral care -- from about 700,000 in Milwaukee to 2.5 million in New York. - CNS

In Milwaukee, he proved a prodigious fund-raiser, staving off the bankruptcy that seemed to beckon as the priest sexual abuse scandal, and earlier efforts at a cover-up, led to lawsuits. He closed a $3 million budget deficit last year, and started a fund-raising campaign that he says is more than halfway to its goal, with $57.5 million in pledges. He has combined shrinking parishes and reached out to young people over beers, and recruited new seminarians — the Milwaukee archdiocese expects to ordain six men this year, as opposed to a single ordination a few years ago. - NYT

The appointment marks the first time in the 200-year history of the archdiocese that power will be transferred from a living prelate to his successor in a post that Pope John Paul II once called “archbishop of the capital of the world.” - Laurie Goodstein

While Pope Benedict XVI’s appointment of Archbishop Timothy Dolan to New York hardly marks a dramatic break with key picks under recent popes, it may confirm an intriguing pattern-within-a-pattern under Benedict when it comes to the most important jobs in the United States.
In a sound-bite, one might call it a choice for “the center-right with a human face.”
In essence, that means leaders who are basically conservative in both their politics and their theology, but also upbeat, pastoral figures given to dialogue. It’s a pattern with across-the-board consequences for both the substance and the style of American Catholicism, and one that could carry particularly interesting implications for relations between church and state in the Age of Obama. - John Allen

Photo: The many sides of Abp. Dolan

Archbishop Timothy Dolan leads a procession following a mass at the Missionaries of Charity home in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. With support from Catholic Relief Services, the home serves more than 1,000 children and adults who are orphaned or ill. Photo by Jim Stipe/CRS.

Observers of Abp. Dolan will often focus on his boisterous presence, easy-going character and boundless energy.

But there is another side to this able pastor which comes out in his efforts on behalf of Catholic Relief Services - where he has served as their Chairmen of the Board since November 2007.

The President of CRS said in a statement this morning:

"...Although he leads a busy Archdiocese in Milwaukee, Archbishop Dolan devoted considerable attention to his work with CRS. In just the last year he traveled to the field twice. In May he went to Ethiopia, where he met with people suffering from the twin blows of the global food crisis and devastating drought. And last month, he traveled to India to see CRS programs and to witness our longstanding collaboration with the Missionaries of Charity...

"... I’m confident Archbishop Dolan will bring to New York what he has brought to CRS as our Chairman: dedication to the Church, tremendous energy, a warm sense of humor, and deep compassion for the poor and vulnerable."

Amen.

Photo: the NYT's odd choice of a Dolan photo

I'm not sure why the New York Times chose a photo of a "napping" Abp. Tim Dolan for their homepage:

"What - long plane ride, Timmy?"

(I mean - can you imagine Obama getting a front-page photo like that?!)

And then, on Facebook...

You can already become a facebook fan of Archbishop Dolan, or join the group Supporters of Archbishop Timothy J. Dolan, Archbishop of New York. I suggest this as a fan photo someone should include:


Note the Archbishop's right hand....

Abp. Dolan - First Take

The most notable bits of Dolan coverage I've read so far ... from my feeds to your screen:


His first words to New York:
In a statement, Archbishop Dolan addressed New Yorkers, saying, "My brother bishops, priests, religious women and men, seminarians, committed Catholics of this wonderful Church, I pledge to you my love, my life, my heart, and I can tell you already that I love you, I need so much your prayers and support, I am so honored, humbled, and happy to serve as your pastor."
His reputation:
"Best known for his contagious, energetic enthusiasm, love for priesthood -- and, of course, media-savvy -- Dolan will be installed as head of the nation's second-largest local church on Easter Wednesday, 15 April, in the nation's best-known house of worship."
Revealing story:
“I was at the vespers when he was installed as [arch]bishop. And there’s a part where the bishop knocks on the door. Most do it timidly. Tap, tap. Not him — ‘Bang! Bang!’ It echoed through the cathedral and let everyone know that Timothy Dolan was there.”
Dolan was informed of the appointment "9, 10 days ago", reports Rocco:
"As opposed to his appointments as an auxiliary of St Louis and archbishop of Milwaukee when he was told that the Pope "would like [him] to" take the post, he added that Archbishop Pietro Sambi "was quite factual" in that the nuncio to Washington told him that "the Pope had appointed me" to New York -- in other words, that he had little choice but to accept."
update: Archbishop Dolan is strongly pro-life:
For the pro-life movement, Dolan has been a strong friend and ally and has been called a "hero" by leading pro-life advocates.
"It bothers me if any politician, Catholic or not, is for abortion," Dolan has said. "Because in my mind, we're talking about a civil right, we're not talking about a matter of Catholic Church discipline. We can't allow the noble pro-life cause to be reduced to a denominational issue."
Last year, Dolan took House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Vice-President Joe Biden to task for misrepresenting Catholic pro-life teachings.
update 2: Fr. James has posted excerpts of an interview he conducted with Abp. Dolan.


Photopost: Abp. Dolan

Abp. Dolan has a larger-than-life personality, as a couple pictures quickly show:



I'm looking for more....

Official: Timothy Dolan to become next NYC Archbishop!

iiiiiiiiiiitttttttttssssssss DOLAN!

The official announcement, we are told by the Associated Press, will be made at 6AM EST, when the Vatican publishes its daily news bulletin.

Whispers sources say Dolan will make his first public NYC appearance at 8AM Mass in St. Patrick's Cathedral, with an 11AM press conference.

I wrote a post last week about these rumors, and refer you back to it for all the interesting Dolan tidbits I've assembled. Good catch-up reading.

I'll make two additions now: I'm currently holding a letter from Archbishop Dolan, and one of my brothers was baptized by him. ;)

Lent Begins


Lent should suggest to us these basic questions: Am I advancing in my faithfulness to Christ, in my desire for holiness, in a generous apostolate in my daily life, in my ordinary work among my colleagues?
Christ is Passing by, 58

We are at the beginning of Lent: a time of penance, purification and conversion. It is not an easy program, but then Christianity is not an easy way of life. It is not enough just to be in the Church, letting the years roll by. In our life, in the life of Christians, our first conversion — that unique moment which each of us remembers, when we clearly understood everything the Lord was asking of us — is certainly very significant. But the later conversions are even more important, and they are increasingly demanding. To facilitate the work of grace in these conversions, we need to keep our soul young; we have to call upon our Lord, know how to listen to him and, having found out what has gone wrong, know how to ask his pardon…
What better way to begin Lent? Let’s renew our faith, hope and love. The spirit of penance and the desire for purification come from these virtues. Lent is not only an opportunity for increasing our external practices of self denial. If we thought it were only that, we would miss the deep meaning it has in Christian living, for these external practices are — as I have said — the result of faith, hope and charity. Christ is Passing By, 57

Let’s remind ourselves, this Lent, that the Christian cannot be superficial. While being fully involved in his everyday work, among other men, his equals; busy, under stress, the Christian has to be at the same time totally involved with God, for he is a child of God.
Divine filiation is a joyful truth, a consoling mystery. It fills all our spiritual life, it shows us how to speak to God, to know and to love our Father in heaven. And it makes our interior struggle overflow with hope and gives us the trusting simplicity of little children. More than that: precisely because we are children of God, we can contemplate in love and wonder everything as coming from the hands of our Father, God the Creator. And so we become contemplatives in the middle of the world, loving the world.
In Lent, the liturgy recalls the effect of Adam’s sin in the life of man. Adam did not want to be a good son of God; he rebelled. But we also hear the echoing chant of that felix culpa: “O happy fault,” which the whole Church will joyfully intone at the Easter vigil.
God the Father, in the fullness of time, sent to the world his only-begotten Son, to re-establish peace; so that by his redeeming men from sin, “we might become sons of God,” freed from the yoke of sin, capable of sharing in the divine intimacy of the Trinity. And so it has become possible for this new man, this new grafting of the children of God, to free all creation from disorder, restoring all things in Christ, who has reconciled them to God.
It is, then, a time of penance, but, as we have seen, this is not something negative. Lent should be lived in the spirit of filiation, which Christ has communicated to us and which is alive in our soul. Our Lord calls us to come nearer to him, to be like him: “Be imitators of God, as his dearly beloved children,” (Eph. 5:1) cooperating humbly but fervently in the divine purpose of mending what is broken, of saving what is lost, of bringing back to order what sinful man has put out of order, of leading to its goal what has gone astray, of re-establishing the divine balance of all creation.
Christ is Passing By, 65

The Chair of Peter

February 22nd, 2009 by Vatican Information Service Print This Article Print This Article ·ShareThis

Today is the Feast of the “Cathedra” or Chair of St. Peter, a recurrence dating back to the fourth century that honors and celebrates the primacy and authority of St. Peter.

The word “cathedra” means seat or throne and is the root of the word cathedral, the church where a bishop has his throne and from whence he preaches. Another word for “cathedra” is “sede” (seat or see): the “see” is the place from which a bishop governs his diocese. Thus, for example, the Holy See is the see of the bishop of Rome, the Pope.

In 2004, on this day, in reflections made during the Angelus, Pope John Paul II remarked that “the liturgical feast of the Chair of Peter underscores the singular mystery, entrusted by the Lord to the leader of the Apostles, of confirming and guiding the Church in the unity of faith. This is what the ‘ministerium petrinum’ is, that particular service that the Bishop of Rome is called to render to all Christians. An indispensable mission that is not based on human prerogatives but on Christ Himself as the cornerstone of the ecclesial community. Let us pray that the Church, in the variety of cultures, languages and traditions, will be unanimous in believing and professing the truth of faith and morals transmitted by the Apostles.”

The Chair of St. Peter is actually a throne that Charles the Bald, the grandson of the Emperor Charlemagne, gave to Pope John VIII at the former’s coronation as emperor on Christmas Day 875. For many years the chair was used at liturgical events by Pope John and his successors: it was ensconced in Bernini’s Altar of the Chair in 1666.

A mixture of tradition, legend and belief held for many years that this was actually a double chair, parts of which dated back to the early days of Christianity and to St. Peter himself. This chair or cathedra has been studied over the centuries; the last time it was removed from its niche in the Bernini altar was a six-year period from 1968 to 1974 during which studies pointed to a single chair whose oldest parts date to the sixth century. What appeared to be an outer or second chair was a covering which served both to protect the throne and to carry it in procession.

Every year on this feast, the monumental altar housing the Chair of Peter is illuminated by scores of candles throughout the entire day. Numerous Masses are celebrated at this altar, from early morning to early evening, concluding with the Mass of the Canons of St. Peter.

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Help me accomplish the ministry of Peter, says Pope

In the day in which the Church celebrates the Feast of the Chair of Saint Peter (22 February), Benedict XVI spoke to the pilgrims who had gathered in St Peter’s Square for the Angelus, asking them to “accompany me with your prayers so that I may faithfully accomplish the high task Divine Providence has placed upon me as Successor to the Apostle Peter.”

“The Chair of Peter,” the Pontiff explained, “symbolises the authority of the Bishop of Rome, [who is] called to fulfil a special service for the People of God as a whole. Right after the martyrdom of Saints Peter and Paul the Church of Rome was acknowledged a primatial role in the whole Catholic community, a role attested as early as the 2nd century by Saint Ignatius of Antioch (Ad. Rom, praef. Funk, I, 252) and Saint Irenaeus of Lyons (Against Heresies III, 3, 2-3).”

This unique and specific ministry of the Bishop of Rome was reiterated in the Second Vatican Council.

“[W]ithin the Church,” says the Dogmatic Constitution of the Church, “particular Churches hold a rightful place; these Churches retain their own traditions, without in any way opposing the primacy of the Chair of Peter, which presides over the whole assembly of charity (cf S. Ignatius M., Ad Rom., Praef.: Ed. Funk, I, p. 252),) and protects legitimate differences, while at the same time assuring that such differences do not hinder unity but rather contribute toward it” (Lumen gentium, 13).

Speaking earlier to the tens of thousands of people present in the square, he Holy Father gave a brief commentary on this Sunday’s Gospel, which refers to the episode of the paralytic whom Jesus forgave and healed (Mk, 2:1-12). “When Jesus was preaching, among the sick brought to him, there was a paralytic on a litter. ‘Child, your sins are forgiven’ (Mk, 2:5), said the Lord upon seeing him. Because some of those present were scandalised by these words, he added: ‘But that you may know that the Son of Man has authority to forgive sins on earth’—he said to the paralytic—, ‘I say to you, rise, pick up your mat, and go home’ (Mk, 2:10-11). And the paralytic got up, left, healed. This Gospel story shows that not only did Jesus have the power to heal a sick body, but that he also had the power to forgive sins. Indeed physical healing is a sign of the spiritual healing his forgiveness produces. In effect, sin is a sort of paralysis of the spirit from which only the power of God’s merciful love can free us, allowing us to get up and restart our journey on the path of goodness.”

Before the Marian prayer and his multilingual greetings, Benedict XVI said a prayer to Our Lady so that she may help us “begin in the right state of mind Lent, which starts next Wednesday with its suggestive Ash ritual.”

The Pope will receive the ashes during the afternoon ceremony that will be held in Basilica of Saint Sabina.

Pope decries discrimination based on genetics

Pope Benedict XVI said Saturday that any type of discrimination based on genetic factors, such as a risk for cancer or other ailments, is an attack against all of humanity.

Benedict praised the scientific progress that has enabled researchers to diagnose genetic illnesses and develop therapies to treat them.

But he warned that alongside this progress were "worrisome displays" of discrimination that privileged "efficiency, perfection and physical beauty at the expense of other forms of existence that are deemed unworthy."

Benedict made the comments during an audience with participants in a Vatican conference on the "New Frontiers of Genetics and the Risk of Eugenics."

Eugenics is the effort to improve the quality of the human race by controlling heredity.

The comments were an apparent reference to pre-implantation genetic diagnosis for embryos. In the screening, known by its abbreviation PGD, a single cell from an embryo created for in-vitro fertilization is tested before being implanted in the womb to screen for genetic conditions and diseases such as Down Syndrome, sickle-cell anemia or cystic fibrosis.

The Vatican opposes the screening because it often results in the destruction of embryos, and the Vatican holds that life begins at conception.

But Benedict also voiced opposition to the type of technology because "it means that medical biotechnology has given way to being the judge of the strongest."

Proponents of the process say it can spare parents the tragedy of passing on hereditary diseases to their children. But many countries ban it or restrict it to prevention of serious inherited diseases, in part to prevent it from being used to screen on the basis of gender or eye color alone.

Benedict told the members of the Pontifical Academy for Life that any discrimination of individuals, people or ethnic groups on the base of real or presumed genetic factors "is an attack against all of humanity."

He acknowledged that the term eugenics harks back to the past, when most famously the Nazis used eugenic theories to justify forced sterilization and other practices in their quest to establish a master race.

Benedict said such ideologies are not returning. But he said a type of eugenics mentality had emerged with medical advances to justify different considerations of who deserves to live.

"What we must repeat with force is the equal dignity of every human being, for the sole fact of having been brought to life," he said.

"One's biological, psychological and cultural development and health can never become an element for discrimination."

Late Cardinal Kim as Saint?

Catholic leaders are expressing caution over public calls for the Archbishop of Seoul to propose to the Vatican that the late Cardinal Stephen Kim Sou-hwan be declared a saint.

Proponents of the move, led by some devout Catholics, say the nation's first Roman Catholic cardinal Kim, who passed away last Monday, deserves such an honor.

They demanded Korean Catholic leaders to take procedures to elevate his status as such.

However, Korean Catholic circles say it's too early to discuss the matter.

Roman Catholicism has a ``Sacred Congregation for the Causes of Saints'' that oversees the entire canonization process. Once the deceased is proposed by particular churches for beatification or canonization, the congregation of the Roman Curia assesses them and the Pope makes the final decision.

``There are no talks going on inside the Archbishopric of Seoul as of yet. We might talk over whether to seek canonization only after some time, when stronger emotions have subsided,'' an official said.

Catholic sainthood requires that a miracle attributed to the candidate's intercession be confirmed for beatification, after which a second miracle is needed for sainthood. The process for the recognition of the miracle follows new rules laid down in 1983 by the apostolic constitution Divinus Perfectionis Magister.

Mother Teresa was beatified by Pope John Paul II and given the title Blessed Teresa of Calcutta in 2003, six years after her death. Andrew Kim Tae-gon, a Korean Catholic priest who was martyred in 1846, was canonized by Pope John Paul II, along with 103 other Korean Martyrs, in 1984.

In the meantime, the Korean ambassador to the Vatican said the prayer and support of the Korean Catholic community will help bring a new cardinal to South Korea following the nation's first ― Cardinal Kim ― and the second cardinal, Nicholas Cheong Jin-suk.

In an interview with local radio broadcaster PBC, Ambassador Kim Ji-young said that according to Vatican custom, there is no successor to a retired cardinal. But Kim said Pope Benedict XVI could appoint a new cardinal at a proper time if cardinal numbers decrease.

He said there is no fixed quota rule of appointing two cardinals for Korea but if the Catholic circle continues to appeal to the Holy See and if the pope approves it, another Korean could be appointed.

Pauline Year (29th June 2008/09) Prayer


Glorious Saint Paul,
Apostle full of zeal,
Martyr by Christ's love,
obtain for us a profound faith,
a firm hope,
a burning love for the Lord
so that we can say with you:
"It is no longer I but the Christ who lives in me."

Help us to become apostles
who serve the Church with a pure conscience,
witnesses of its greatness and its beauty
amid the darkness of our time.

With you we praise God our Father,
"To Him be the glory in the Church and in Christ
from age to age forever."

Amen.

Words of Wisdom from St. Thomas Aquinas before Lent

If you were guilty of imbibing a bit too much vino this weekend (it is, after all, the last weekend before Lent begins), just take to heart the words of St. Thomas Aquinas:

"Si quis scienter in tantum a vino abstineret ut naturam multum gravaret, a culpa immunis non esset." (ST II-II 150.1 ad 1)

"If one knowingly abstained from wine to the point of pressing nature seriously, he would not be free of guilt."
[Sent in by AmP reader Isaac.]