Eucharistic Miracle in Minnesota?

Deacon Greg has a post up on the possibility:

The mystery centers on a consecrated host that the Rev. John Echert of St. Augustine Church said fell to the floor last month during Holy Communion and turned “blood red” after being placed in a cup filled with water. It has yet to fully dissolve, he said.

“It was notable enough that, clearly, it was some phenomenon and not the ordinary way in which a host would dissolve…that we’re familiar with,” Echert said. Continue reading….

While I believe in miracles, I tend to be a skeptic. The Eponymus Flower has more information including a possible scientific explanation.

 

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In the News: Ireland Will not Excempt Confessions From Abuse Reporting

I have not been following the sex abuse scandal in the Irish Church as I just don’t have the  stomach for it.  My favorite deacon, however, has and he gave me a heads up on this rather shocking development. It looks like faithful Priests could be jailed for not violating the sacramental seal of the confessional.

The Irish Independent reports:

Children’s Minister Frances Fitzgerald has vehemently ruled out exempting the Catholic sacrament of confession from long-awaited rules on mandatory reporting of child abuse.

Amid the fallout from the Cloyne report’s exposure of former bishop John Magee for failing to unmask abusive priests, the minister reiterated warnings that there will be no exceptions to hardline rules on withholding information.

Ms Fitzgerald dismissed out of hand suggestions that information given to a priest in the confessional about crimes against a child can remain confidential.

The Catholic Church’s watchdog on clerical abuse, Ian Elliot, has claimed there should be room to allow clerics to keep secret details passed on when someone seeks forgiveness. But Ms Fitzgerald on Friday backed Taoiseach Enda Kenny’s stark warning that one rule will apply to everyone in Ireland.

“The point is, if there is a law in the land, it has to be followed by everybody. There are no exceptions, there are no exemptions,” the minister said. “I’m not concerned, neither is the Government, about the internal laws, the rules governing any body.

“This is about the law of the land. It’s about child protection. Are we saying … if a child is at risk of child sexual abuse that should not be reported? We cannot say that. The law of the land is clear and unambiguous.”

Under new laws planned to be in place by the autumn, anyone found to have withheld information on a crime against a child will face up to five years in jail. Continue reading here…

The abuse scandals which have rocked the Church for years are deplorable and they have inflicted great damage on the body of Christ.  The priests who committed such atrocities, and the bishops who provided cover, will have a lot to answer for when they meet our Lord face to face.  Sinful, unfaithful clergy have been a problem since Judas.  St. John Chrysostom said that the road to hell is paved with the skulls of bishops.

While I understand the outrage and the resolve to end the abuse, it is not an excuse to extend the long arms of the law to the confessional. Priests can not, for any reason, betray a penitent.

I predict that if the Irish government enacts this law, without religious exemptions, that journalists will use the sacrament to entrap priests. If I am right, we will see priests being jailed.  But it won’t be the abusive priests who deserve to never see the light of day; it will be faithful innocent priests who will suffer.

The sacramental seal has been recognized by state governments, at least in the free world, for centuries.  This is an unprecedented intrusion by the Irish government into the sacramental life of the Church.

The world is becoming an increasingly hostile place for Christians–at least orthodox ones. And in this case the Catholic Church shares part of the blame.

Above Photo, Inside Confessional, courtesy of two stout monks.

Posted in Catholic Church Scandals, Religion News | Tagged , | 3 Comments

Our Choices Shape Our Eternity

Posting has been infrequent around here lately.  While I do have a lot of projects on the table right now, that isn’t  the whole story. Truth be told if wasting time was an Olympic event, I would be, the not so proud, record holder.

Archbishop Chaput tells us why choosing to waste time has deadly consequences.  H/T New Advent

In Muslim countries like Pakistan, many of the young men begin studying the Koran as soon as they can read. In fact, many of them learn to read using the Koran. They read and discuss the Koran every day, for hours each day, every day of the week until they know it by heart. Many of them can recite whole sections of the Koran without thinking. Little by little, like water dripping on a stone, it shapes their whole view of the world—what’s right and what’s wrong; what’s important and what’s not.

Here in America, we have a similar kind of training. It’s called television.  The typical American spends between three and seven hours a day watching TV and sees well over 2 million commercials in the course of a lifetime.

That’s a form of education. And most of what we see on TV teaches us that buying a lot of products makes us happy; that young is good and old is bad; that we should eat whatever we want but that we also need to be thin; that suffering doesn’t have any meaning; that relationships never last; that most families are dysfunctional; that authority is dangerous; and that religious people are hypocritical.

None of us lives forever. Or rather, all of us live forever, but only for a very short time in this world.  If we lose our money, we can often earn it back.  But if we misuse our time, we can never get it back.  Where we put our time shows the world what we really value and believe. What we really believe shapes our choices.  And our choices shape our eternity.

Muslims didn’t develop their admirable piety in a vacuum.  They borrowed their reverence from Jews and early Christians, who had a profound love for the written Word of God in the Old and New Testaments.  The lesson for us today is simple.  American Catholics have the one true Word of God in the Bible.  If we took just one hour of the time we waste on television every day and used it to study and pray over the Gospels, we’d be fundamentally different people, and our country and our world would be transformed.  Continue reading….

The article was a real wake up call for me. God always has a way of getting my attention.

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Polar Bears are from Ireland

My favorite deacon, who hails from Ireland, claims that almost everything originates from Ireland. Including Adam and Eve. I hate to encourage him, but in the case of polar bears, it appears that genetics are on his side.

Excerpt:

Researchers have now been able to do that with polar bears, and the results are surprising. The female ancestor of all polar bears isn’t a polar bear at all, but instead a brown bear, a species that includes Grizzlies and Kodiaks. This ancestor lived 20,000 to 50,000 years ago during one of the last major Ice Ages. It probably was located on the glaciers right around what is now Ireland and Britain. Read the article here.

H/T First Thoughts

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Dublin Pro Life Rally Draws 8,000 Protestors

Dublin, Ireland, Jul 7, 2011 / 06:22 am (CNA).- Thousands of people attended a large pro-life rally in Dublin to oppose attempts to force abortion on Ireland by changing its laws.

Organizers said the July 2 “All Ireland Rally for Life” was “hugely successful” and serves as a warning to the political party Fine Gael that the Labour Party’s plans to legalize abortion in Ireland are “unacceptable to the majority of Irish people.”

Speakers called on Irish prime minister Enda Kenny to keep his promise that his party would be opposed to the legalization of abortion, according to rally co-sponsor Youth Defence.

The European Court of Human Rights in December ruled that Ireland’s abortion ban breached the rights of a woman who had to leave the country in order to procure an abortion. Fine Gael has set up an expert group to examine the judgment.

The “rush” by Ireland’s Labour Party to call for abortion legislation after the ruling hurt their  performance in the 2011 elections, Niamh Uí Bhriain of the Life Institute told the crowd.

She said that pro-lifers will not accept a review committee that is “stacked against the unborn child” or ignores “the evidence that clearly shows that abortion is never medically necessary.”

Carolyn Johnston of Youth Defence said Irish pro-lifers demand that the government “listen to the pro-life majority who say ‘Yes to Life’ and ‘No to abortion.’”

“Enda Kenny needs to tell the European Court not to interfere in the right of the sovereign people to decide Ireland’s pro-life laws,” Johnston said.  Continue reading…

I really do think that we are winning the war on abortion. We have,however, miles to go before we win the other culture war battles.

The Church is losing the battle to define marriage between one man and one woman. But all things are possible in Christ. And since the right to life is foundational, we have reason for our hope.

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The Fr. Corapi Saga Ends Badly

Sorry about not blogging in a while. My favorite deacon and I drove to Denver to visit my parents. It was great to spend time with Mom and Dad, but I really hate the drive.

I spent all of my time in real world instead of  the virtual one. So I was saddened, when I went on line today, to learn that there have been further developments in the Fr. Corapi case.  His community has issued a press release. They have determined that the allegations are true.

We need to pray for Fr. Corapi, his followers, and his community. 

Deacon Greg has links to bloggers who have commented.

It is a lesson that all of us who take our mission to spread the Gospel in words and deeds seriously. We all sin. We all are prone to pride. Humility is a grace that we can only receive from God.

But most important of all, we need to always keep in mind that we are not the messenger. As Mother Teresa said, we are but pencils in the hand of God.

Jennifer Fulwiler, whose conversion was influenced by Corapi’s talks and sermons, got it just right when she wrote several weeks ago (excerpt):

And so it is with Fr. Corapi. No matter what happens, I will always respect his talent for capturing the truth, and will eternally owe him a debt of gratitude for highlighting its beauty so well. I will think back fondly of those days when his voice guided me during those drives to my doctor appointments, when his televised image was a natural part of our family living room. My love of the doctrines of the Faith will remain unscathed, even if the one who originally conveyed them to me does not. And I pray that Fr. Corapi feels similarly liberated to take whatever time he needs to pray, pause, and seek the still, small voice of God, knowing that it is not his burden alone to pass on the Faith. God has given us the truth through a system that is outside of and above any one man. And because of that, we are all free.

Posted in Catholic Church, Clergy | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Same Sex Marriage: Have We Lost the War or Just a Few Key Battles?

Since New York passed the same sex marriage bill, the wild, wild, web has been awash with commentary.  Proponents are elated. Opponents are depressed.  It seems that proponents are on the right side of history. Opponents are bigots stuck in the dark ages.

But why are proponents to the same sex agenda gaining momentum against the reasoned arguments of the Church?

Well the New York Times thinks that the Catholic Church was missing in action

Excerpt:

It was befuddling to gay-rights advocates: The Catholic Church, arguably the only institution with the authority and reach to derail same-sex marriage, seemed to shrink from the fight.

Rod Dreher agrees:

Excerpt:

Dolan told reporters that he was feeling down after the legislative loss. Please. Any pity for him is unearned, given that he and his team have had years to prepare for this struggle, and to educate lay Catholics and the wider public about what was at stake in this issue. And yet they fought with a half-heartedness that is simply stunning given the vivid, calamitous language the archbishop used to describe the threat. comparing America under gay marriage to life in authoritarian China and totalitarian North Korea.

No man who really believes those things would have confronted the challenge with such bizarre maladroitness, skittering off to a bishops’ meeting in Seattle when crunch time came in Albany. It’s as if Churchill, having delivered his famous “finest hour” address in the Commons after France’s surrender, caught a train to the shore for a Tory Party conference. If gay rights champions are befuddled by the contrast between Dolan’s red-meat rhetoric and his milquetoast leadership, what must conservative Catholics think?

I am all for the bishops calling all the members of the Church Militant to arms. The Grey Lady and Rod Dreher have a point.

But I also have sympathy for Bishop Dolan.  It is easy to become battle weary. The growing acceptance of homosexual acts and same sex marriage seems to have sprung up from the garden of earthly delights overnight.

Of course it is decades in the making. It is rooted in the erosion of marriage that began when the baby boomers came of age.

First we had sexual liberation.  Men and women are freed at last from the prudish moral conventions of society.  Even many Christians and Christian churches bought the lie. It is no longer sin and the passions which enslave us.  Confining sex to marriage enslaves us.

Second, the acceptance of contraception divorced sex from procreation.  Sex is now only for pleasure, and only sometimes for procreation.

Love is no longer a gift that requires commitment and sacrifice. Love today, at least in the main stream culture, is really just lust.

Third, no fault divorce made ending a marriage easy. Now a spouse can up and leave just because they are bored. The disintegration of the family quickly followed.

All of this happened without much noise from our Catholic leaders.  It is, for example, a rare Catholic engaged couple who are not “living in sin”.  But we don’t really tackle this thorny issue.

If we are losing the war, it is because we entered into the war on marriage too late.  The Church and all opponents of same sex marriage have lost credibility.

It is also hard to convince the proponents of same sex marriage using Natural Law arguments. There was a time when even atheists understood that there are universal laws that withstand time, place or culture.

Now Natural Law is considered a strictly religious belief.

This begs the question, how do we develop convincing arguments?  The Bishops, including Dolan, have made rational arguments. Yet they are dismissed out of hand. There is no debate from those who celebrate same sex unions.  Just an appeal to those lovin’ feelings wooooooh.

It  is just seen as a given that those who oppose same sex marriage are bigots who want to deny civil rights to people with same sex attractions.

It is enough to make even a tough and orthodox bishop want to retreat to a hermitage on a desert island.  I can relate.

But we can’t retreat. Sure go to the hermitage. Pray. Fast. Retreat.  Retrench. Then come back to the culture war and come out swinging.

Jesus didn’t promise us a rose garden. He promised us a crown of thorns in this life.

Posted in Catholic Moral Teaching, Church and the Public Square, Marriage | Tagged , , | 4 Comments

Vatican Discovers 6th Century Fresco of St. Paul

H/T New Advent

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Homily of Pope Benedict on the Feast of Saints Peter and Paul

It is also the 60th anniversary of his ordination to the Priesthood.  Ad Multos Annos Benedictus XVI.

Homily of Pope Benedict XVI on the Feast of Saints Peter and Paul

Saint Peter’s Basilica, 29 June 2011

Dear Brothers and Sisters,
“I no longer call you servants, but friends” (cf. Jn 15:15). Sixty years on from the day of my priestly ordination, I hear once again deep within me these words of Jesus that were addressed to us new priests at the end of the ordination ceremony by the Archbishop, Cardinal Faulhaber, in his slightly frail yet firm voice. According to the liturgical practice of that time, these words conferred on the newly-ordained priests the authority to forgive sins. “No longer servants, but friends”: at that moment I knew deep down that these words were no mere formality, nor were they simply a quotation from Scripture. I knew that, at that moment, the Lord himself was speaking to me in a very personal way. In baptism and confirmation he had already drawn us close to him, he had already received us into God’s family. But what was taking place now was something greater still. He calls me his friend. He welcomes me into the circle of those he had spoken to in the Upper Room, into the circle of those whom he knows in a very special way, and who thereby come to know him in a very special way. He grants me the almost frightening faculty to do what only he, the Son of God, can legitimately say and do: I forgive you your sins. He wants me – with his authority – to be able to speak, in his name (“I” forgive), words that are not merely words, but an action, changing something at the deepest level of being. I know that behind these words lies his suffering for us and on account of us. I know that forgiveness comes at a price: in his Passion he went deep down into the sordid darkness of our sins. He went down into the night of our guilt, for only thus can it be transformed. And by giving me authority to forgive sins, he lets me look down into the abyss of man, into the immensity of his suffering for us men, and this enables me to sense the immensity of his love. He confides in me: “No longer servants, but friends”. He entrusts to me the words of consecration in the Eucharist. He trusts me to proclaim his word, to explain it aright and to bring it to the people of today. He entrusts himself to me. “You are no longer servants, but friends”: these words bring great inner joy, but at the same time, they are so awe-inspiring that one can feel daunted as the decades go by amid so many experiences of one’s own frailty and his inexhaustible goodness.  Continue reading here.

The Vatican has just launched a news service, and Pope Benedict tweeted on an iPad!

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A Deacon’s Wife Interviewed for Our Sunday Visitor

I was interviewed, via email, by Scott Alessi for Our Sunday Visitor.  He has a very

My Favorite Deacon and Me

informative article, Permanent diaconate: A ministry of service.  BTW the picture is of me and my favorite deacon at his ordination.

In addition, blush, he included my reflection in his second article, Deacons share their stories.

Susan Kehoe believes in the old adage that behind every great man, there is a great woman. But in her case, the saying may be modified to “behind every great deacon is a supportive deacon’s wife.” 

Since her husband of nearly 38 years, Deacon Larry Kehoe, was ordained in 2006, Kehoe has humbly taken on the responsibility of standing behind him in his ministry at Christ the King Parish in their hometown of Des Moines, Iowa. 

At first, Kehoe admitted, the thought of having her husband ordained a deacon was intimidating, but she knew she could not stand in the way of his calling. 

“I just wanted to make sure I did not get between God and my husband,” she told Our Sunday Visitor. “I was a bit scared, but I was pretty sure that God was calling him.” 

While the couple has shared responsibility in some ministries, such as jointly leading their parish’s Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults, Kehoe said she understands that there is a dividing line between her work as a member of the laity and her husband’s role as an ordained minister.  You can read more here (mine is near the end).

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