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Saturday, July 13, 2013

Religious Leaders/Citizens Demand Nuclear Weapons Free World/ Janice Sevre-Duszynska Joins Jesuits, Franciscans in Witness


PeaceWorks, Kansas City

4509 Walnut, KC MO 64111, 816-561-1181

www.PeaceWorksKC.org; Facebook at PeaceWorksKC

 

For immediate release: July 5, 2013

Contacts: Henry Stoever, 913-375-0045; Ann Suellentrop, 913-271-7925

 

Civil resistance at KC nuclear-weapons-parts plant July 13:

Citizens demand, “Open the door to a nuclear-weapons-free world!”

 

On Saturday, July 13, members of local peace, health and environmental groups will call for “Opening the Door” to freedom from nuclear weapons at Kansas City’s new nuclear-weapons-parts plant, located across the highway from the former Richards-Gebaur Air Force Base. 

 

Coinciding with Nuclear Abolition Week July 6-13,1 activists will cross the new plant’s property line, resisting the 85 percent of non-nuclear parts for nuclear weapons that will be made or procured there. About a dozen protesters will step through a symbolic door “to a nuclear-weapons-free future” at the entrance to the new Kansas City Plant, called the Nuclear Security Campus.  Resisters include several Catholic priests—long-time Plowshares anti-nuclear activist Fr. Carl Kabat of St. Louis, his superior Fr. Bill Antone of Chicago, Fr. Bill Bichsel of Tacoma, WA, Fr. Jerry Zawada of Chicago, and woman priest Janice Sevre-Duzinska—along with Des Moines Catholic Workers, KC-area Catholic Workers and PeaceWorks-KC members.  The new plant, located at 14510 Botts Road, near Mo. Hwy. 150, will take over production next year from the old, highly contaminated KC Plant at Bannister Federal Complex at Bannister and Troost.

 

Participants in the events will begin Friday, July 12, at 3 pm with nonviolence training and a festival of hope until 8 pm2 at Linwood United Church, 3151 Olive, KC, MO.

 

Recent developments give encouragement to the activists:

--On March 4-5, representatives from 127 countries (not the U.S.) convened in Oslo, Norway, to consider the humanitarian impact of nuclear weapons. “This movement to abolish nuclear weapons, led by Norway and Switzerland, is growing and strengthening, even though countries with nuclear weapons are trying to kill it,” says Steve Leeper, former chair of the Hiroshima Peace Culture Foundation.

--In May, a new United Nations working group began meeting in Geneva to develop proposals to take forward multilateral nuclear disarmament negotiations for the achievement and maintenance of a world without nuclear weapons.  

--On June 19, President Obama in Berlin urged negotiations with Russia to reduce deployed, strategic nuclear weapons by up to one-third further than required in the New START treaty (Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty). 

--On June 24, the U.S. Conference of Mayors unanimously adopted a resolution calling for the U.S. to take the lead in global elimination of nuclear weapons and in redirection of military spending to domestic needs. 

 

The current KC Plant, operated by Honeywell Federal Manufacturing and Technologies (FM&T), produces and procures 85percent of non-nuclear components for U.S. nuclear warheads.  It is operated by the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), a semi-autonomous agency of the Department of Energy (DOE).  The KC Plant relies on Life Extension Program (LEP) work, a program touted to extend the “life” or time that a weapon can safely and reliably remain in the stockpile.3 However, LEPs are voracious spenders of federal funds.  So, on June 27, the Senate Energy and Water Development Appropriations Subcommittee reported that it cut funding for one of the most expensive LEPs, NNSA’s B61 nuclear bomb LEP.

 

“So-called ‘Life’ Extension Program costs are astronomical,”4 said Ann Suellentrop, a mother-baby nurse with Physicians for Social Responsibility-KC.  “Billions upon billions of our tax dollars are slated to be wasted on these outdated, unbelievably catastrophic weapons that we fervently hope are never, ever used.  What insanity!  We all have human rights, and the right to life is No. 1!  Just think what pressing human needs we could use these funds for: housing, education, health care, infrastructure and useful, sustainable jobs!”

 

Reflecting on the July 13 line-crossing, attorney Henry Stoever, chair of the PeaceWorks-KC Board, said, “Those crossing the line are saying our government has already far crossed the line. It continues to build weapons of mass destruction while the world is crying for reduction and disarmament of WMDs. We are complicit if we do not take strong action against this new plant and seek its conversion to life-giving, not life-threatening, products.”

 




4 Source: http://www.nnsa.energy.gov/ourmission/managingthestockpile/ssmp  See p. 189 (chapter 8, figures 8-1 and 8-2).

New Cincinnati Westside Inclusive Catholic Community Liturgy with newly ordained Roman Catholic Woman Priest Debra Meyers, ARCWP

Bridget Mary presents newly ordained priest, Debra Meyers to Assembly
New Cincinnati Westside Inclusive Catholic Community Liturgy

The first Wednesday every month from 7-8pm

Presider: Debra Meyers, ARCWP priest

Location: Our Lady of Peace, 119 Wocher Avenue off of River Road in Cincinnati


Accessibility: There are three steps with a railing to get into the church.

Additional Parking: Morton Salt Co. permits overflow parking in their lot located a block down the street.


For more information or if you would like to serve on the planning committee, please contact Debra Meyers at drmeyers@aol.com


Anyone interested in serving on planning committees for new communities on the eastside and in northern Kentucky that would meet during the third or fourth weeks of each month should contact Debra.

Thursday, July 11, 2013

Contraception, the Philippines, and Pope Francis' Passion for the Poor

By Jamie L. Manson
After 18 months of contentious debate, the controversy over access to contraception in the United States seems to be arriving at a peaceful resolution. On Tuesday, the Catholic Health Association (CHA) announced its approval of an accommodation in the Obama administration's mandate that all health care plans cover contraception services.
Read More Or paste this link into your browser: http://ncronline.org/node/55686/

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

"'Enquirer' Takes Questionable Approach to Covering Meyers' Ordination"

"Thirty-nine years ago, Enquirer editors agreed to cover a global story that still reverberates through some of Christianity’s oldest denominations: the acrimonious debate over whether women may be priests.
That 1974 event was the ordination of the first female priests in the Episcopal Church. They were rebels as were the three traditionally consecrated bishops who ordained them.
None of the women was from the Tristate. The event was in Philadelphia. It was a big deal and the Enquirer covered it, irrespective of the divisive local and national furor.
Those 11 women’s ordinations were valid but illicit. Valid because the bishops had the power to do so. Illicit because the women and bishops violated canon law.
I was the Enquirer’s religion reporter. My editors knew a story when they saw it and that valid-but-illicit flavor added zest to the event and coverage.
It was a great story, not least because of the joy of the women being ordained. Their ceremony effectively opened the Episcopal priesthood to women; the denomination removed gender as a disqualification two years later and regularized the Philadelphia 11’s illicit ordinations in 1977.
With renewed dissent, the first female Episcopal bishop was consecrated in 1989. Today’s presiding bishop is Katharine Jefferts Schori.
All of which raises disturbing questions about the Enquirer’s confused response to the invitation to cover the ordination of Debra Meyers by Bishop Bridget Mary Meehan of the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests.
It would have been the first known local ordination of a female Catholic priest.
 
The Enquirer refused to cover Meyers’ordination on May 25. Management’s reasoning was captured by Janice Sevre-Duszynska, an ordained American member of the association and a contributor to Article 25, our local human rights newspaper. In March, I wrote how Italian police interrupted Sevre-Duszynska’s standing protest against the Vatican practice of an all-male priesthood.
Home again in Kentucky, she invited coverage of Meyers’ ordination ceremony at St. John’s Unitarian Church in Clifton. In an email exchange with the Enquirer, an aide to editor Carolyn Washburn told Sevre-Duszynska that when the aide asked about coverage, “I was told no, as you admit in your email that your ordinations are considered illegal.”
Women’s ordination is no more “illegal” than abortion or artificial contraception under Catholic canon law but the Enquirerreports extensively about those and distinguishes between the demands of canon and civil law.
Granted, Sevre-Duszynska’s press release said, “Our ordinations are valid but considered illegal,”but she obviously meant illegal under Roman Catholic canon law.
So that’s where this gets disturbing. No answer makes sense if we’re talking about rational news judgment.
Is it possible that senior Enquirer editors couldn’t distinguish between canon law and civil law? Roman Catholic canon law allows only male priests. Civil law says nothing about what’s licit or illicit in Roman Catholic ordinations.
If editors failed to ask reporter Julie Irwin Zimmerman — who writes knowledgeably about religion and covered it for the Enquirer years ago — that was a serious oversight. She could have explained these distinctions and, possibly, affected the decision to ignore Meyers’ordination.
Scarier than an ignorant inability to distinguish canon from civil law is the possibility that the Enquirer knowingly subjects its news judgment to religious law, Catholic (canon), Jewish (halakhah) or Islamic (sharia).
It would have been better if Enquirer editors said they’d ignore NKU history professor Meyers’ ordination at St. John’s to avoid offending more traditional Catholic readers.
Then this affair goes from disturbing to weird. Although the Enquirer said it would not cover an “illegal” event, a reporter for related weekly Clermont County Community Press reported Meyers’ ordination and posted it days later on the Enquirer’s Cincinnati.com. Her story included a sympathetic interview with newly ordained Meyers. The headline was “Batavia woman fights to change Catholic Church.”
For context, Community Press reporter Roxanna Swift quoted Dan Andriacco, communications director for the Archdiocese of Cincinnati. “From our point of view as Roman Catholics, it (ordination) didn’t really take place,” Andriacco told her. Ordination can only be conferred by the proper authority, he said, and the proper authority would be a bishop. Because the Vatican does not recognize women as bishops, Meyers’ ordination is illegal and invalid, Andriacco said.
Youtube has video of Meyers’ ordination. Local coverage — beyond Clermont County Community Press — was scarce.Article 25 and WNKU reported Meyers’ ordination. CityBeatinterviewed Meyers before the ceremony. "

Women Should Serve As Priests

http://www.timesunion.com/opinion/article/Letter-Women-should-serve-as-priests-4655094.php

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Continue Dialogue on Women Priests in Times Union/Albany, New York

Medieval thinking stands in way of women priests
Letter to the Editor Albany Times Union by Bob Corliss June 22, 2013
Mary Theresa Streck left backrow, Marianne Smyth, Mary Collingwood, Barbara Duff, Bridget Mary Meehan, Joleane Presley
Three cheers for Mary Theresa Streck ("'Joyous passage' also seeks change," June 2). She has lived her Roman Catholic faith for decades and is now heeding her call to the priesthood, despite the institutional church's ban on women priests.
Continue dialogue on women priests
Elizabeth Friday, July 9, 2013
With regard to "'Joyous passage' also seeks change," June 2, on Mary Theresa Streck's position relating to women seeking priesthood in the Roman Catholic Church, I felt it was necessary to congratulate her on her courage to speak her opinion.
Letter: Calling woman a priest is inaccurate
Letter: Theology dictates no women priests

Monday, July 8, 2013

Sex Abuse Scandal Keeps Priests from Healthy Relationships with Young People"/ NCR

http://ncronline.org/news/faith-parish/i-am-angry-priest

"I was wearing walking shorts and a sports shirt, so when the hospice nurse arrived at the house, I had to introduce myself: "I'm Gerry Kleba, the family priest." I'm not much into clericalism, so I don't use the title "Father." Within minutes, the mother of the family slipped away peacefully, as her children and I prayed, cried, talked, even laughed. I'd known the family for 40 years. The older children -- in their teens then -- had typed the parish bulletin on stencils, mimeographed and folded them on Saturday mornings at the rectory.
I had barely left the house, started my Prius and driven to the corner when I started to feel not only very sad, but very, very angry..."
Bridget Mary's Response:
How tragic and what a high price good priests like Gerry Kleba are paying for the sexual abuse scandal that bishops have covered up for decades, perhaps, centuries. Bridget Mary Meehan, www.arcwp.org

"Bishop Morlino's Focus on Doctrine, Not on Jesus"/ Male RC Bishop Should Apologize to Girls in his Diocese and Follow Jesus' Example of Gospel Equality

http://host.madison.com/wsj/news/opinion/mailbag/bishop-morlino-s-focus-on-doctrine-not-jesus/article_cc40f27e-ac45-11de-a349-001cc4c03286.html
Regarding last Sunday's article, "Inspiring some, alienating others," it comes as no surprise to me that Bishop Robert Morlino has embraced the Society of Jesus Christ the Priest...
Now he cannot even accept the changes brought about by Vatican II, and wants to step further back in time. "Girls distract and intimidate boys" - what century are we in?
At this time in the history of the Catholic church, after the sex abuse scandals when it needs to show the good it can do, the love it can bring, Bishop Morlino manages only to show an ugly, controlling side in his leadership.
I disagree that people leaving the church because of Bishop Morlino need to do a gut check. Bishop Morlino is the one who needs a gut check by asking himself, "What would Jesus do?" I don't think Jesus turned his back on women, gays or those of a different race, and a leader in the Catholic church should not either.


Read more: http://host.madison.com/news/opinion/mailbag/bishop-morlino-s-focus-on-doctrine-not-jesus/article_cc40f27e-ac45-11de-a349-001cc4c03286.html#ixzz2YVLdLtZC

Bridget Mary's Response: I cannot believe Bishop Morlino expressed such blatant hostility toward girls. No wonder young women are fleeing the pews! This is embarassing even by institutional standards! Jesus had many female disciples and Mary of Magdala was the first witness to encounter the Risen Christ. Bishop Morlino and the Catholic hierarchy should follow Jesus' example of Gospel equality and repent of the sin of sexism. Bridget Mary Meehan, www.arcwp.org

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Dotty Shugrue, ARCWP, Presides at Baptism

My grand niece, Caelon and My grand nephew, charlie and their Mummy, Marijke who is my new godcaughter! What a great day!
Dotty Shugrue in red stole presides at baptism

Few Wisconsin Clergy Sexual Abuse Victims Get Big Settlements by M. L. Johnson

http://m.apnews.com/ap/db_268773/contentdetail.htm?contentguid=Ih9zUVaQ
An Associated Press analysis of documents released in July 2013 found most of the $30 million the archdiocese paid out through mid-2012 went to clergy sex abuse victim settlements and therapy, but the bulk of it went to just a few victims - while hundreds of others got no money at all. Most of the settlements made public were reached as part of a mediation program Dolan started in 2003.                  
MILWAUKEE (AP) - Clergy sex abuse victims have long accused the Archdiocese of Milwaukee of spending more money on lawyers to protect itself than to care for those who suffered at the hands of abusive priests. An Associated Press analysis of documents released this week found most of the $30 million the archdiocese paid out through mid-2012 went to victim settlements and therapy, but the bulk of it went to just a few victims - while hundreds of others got no money at all.
The archdiocese released the records as part of a deal with victims suing it for fraud in federal bankruptcy court. The documents cover 88 settlements worth at least $6.6 million and provide the first detailed look at which victims were paid, how much and when. Until this week, the archdiocese had only released annual totals.
The records support victims' longtime claim that Wisconsin for many years was among the more difficult states for them to get compensation. The main reason was a Wisconsin Supreme Court ruling in 1995 that made it nearly impossible to hold the church responsible for its priests' actions. The court said the church was protected from negligence lawsuits by the First Amendment. No longer afraid of litigation, the archdiocese established a no-settlement policy that lasted until the national clergy abuse scandal erupted in 2002.
"It was an appalling decision," said Peter Isely, a longtime activist who now serves as the Midwest director for the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. "Because (Milwaukee victims) were raped and sexually assaulted by a priest, unlike anywhere else in the country, they could not exercise their civil rights and file their case in court..."

Pope Francis Places Papal Hat on Girl's Head at Vatican

http://evangelizadorasdelosapostoles.wordpress.com/2013/07/06/feminismo-en-estado-salvaje-gesto-profetico-cual-sera-el-mensaje-subliminal/


One gesture is worth a thousand words!
Bridget Mary Meehan

Hindus Urge Church of England to Approve Women Bishops

Hindu statesman Rajan Zed has urged General Synod of Church of England to endorse introduction of women bishops in its debate and vote on the issue on Monday in University of York (United Kingdom).

It would be a “step in the right direction”, Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, stressed in a statement in Nevada (USA) today.

Rajan Zed suggested the Church to empower the women bishops with exactly equal roles as men bishops and without any limits or conditions. As women were equal partners in the society, they should be equal partners in Church also. Women could disseminate God’s message as skillfully as men and deserved equal and full participation and access in religion, Zed added.

Quoting Hindu scriptures, Zed says: Where women are honored, there the gods are pleased.

Women now reportedly make up about a third of the Church's priests. Monday’s Synod agenda includes “Women in the episcopate – new legislative proposals”.

The General Synod, currently meeting July 5-9 in York, is the national assembly of the Church of England (headquartered in London whose tagline is "A Christian presence in every community"), which is recognized by law as the official church of England. About 1.7 million people take part in a Church of England service each month, about 12 million people visit its cathedrals annually and it has over 19,500 licensed ministers. Her Majesty the Queen is the Supreme Governor of the Church of England, while Most Reverend Justin Welby is the Archbishop of Canterbury.

Hinduism, oldest and third largest religion of the world, has about one billion adherents and moksh (liberation) is its ultimate goal.

"The Church's Errant Shepherds"/New York Times/ by Frank Bruni

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/07/opinion/sunday/bruni-the-churchs-errant-shepherds.html?hpw&_r=1&
"BOSTON, Philadelphia, Los Angeles. The archdioceses change but the overarching story line doesn’t, and last week Milwaukee had a turn in the spotlight, with the release of roughly 6,000 pages of records detailing decades of child sexual abuse by Roman Catholic priests there, a sweeping, searing encyclopedia of crime and insufficient punishment.
But the words I keep marveling at aren’t from that wretched trove. They’re from an open letter that Jerome Listecki, the archbishop of Milwaukee, wrote to Catholics just before the documents came out.
“Prepare to be shocked,” he said.
What a quaint warning, and what a clueless one.
Quaint because at this grim point in 2013, a quarter-century since child sexual abuse in the Catholic Church first captured serious public attention, few if any Catholics are still surprised by a priest’s predations.
Clueless because Listecki was referring to the rapes and molestations themselves, not to what has ultimately eroded many Catholics’ faith and what continues to be even more galling than the evil that a man — any man, including one in a cassock or collar — can do. I mean the evil that an entire institution can do, though it supposedly dedicates itself to good.
I mean the way that a religious organization can behave almost precisely as a corporation does, with fudged words, twisted logic and a transcendent instinct for self-protection that frequently trump the principled handling of a specific grievance or a particular victim.
The Milwaukee documents underscore this, especially in the person of Cardinal Timothy Dolan, now the archbishop of New York, previously the archbishop of Milwaukee from 2002 to 2009 and thus one of the characters in the story that the documents tell. Last week’s headlines rightly focused on his part, because he typifies the slippery ways of too many Catholic leaders.
The documents show that in 2007, as the Milwaukee archdiocese grappled with sex-abuse lawsuits and seemingly pondered bankruptcy, Dolan sought and got permission from the Vatican to transfer $57 million into a trust for Catholic cemetery maintenance, where it might be better protected, as he wrote, “from any legal claim and liability.” ...
      
.

Friday, July 5, 2013

"What will it take?"/Sexual Abuse, Archbishop Dolan, Milwaukee and the Vatican/ Shocking Revelations

http://questionsfromaewe.blogspot.com/2013/07/what-will-it-take.html

"Milwaukee’s Archbishop Listecki warned people last week, “Prepare to be shocked”, with regards to reading sexual abuse case-related church documents which were released July 1st. I read several of the documents and the following things did strike me with intensity so I appreciate the warning: The Vatican stated in one of its letters to Tim Dolan, Milwaukee’s archbishop at the time, “…the Dicastery would call to your Excellency’s attention the priorities for the use of ecclesial goods as established in c.1254.2, noting that the support of clergy ranks second in importance only to divine worship.” I think many people sense church hierarchy prioritizes protecting ritual and clergy above all else but it was startling to see it in writing. There’s no mention of the flock, victims or anything else as having a priority other than ritual and clergy, by the way. .." 
 
Bridget Mary's Response:
How many times must we encounter the same tragic response from the hierarchy and Vatican to the sexual abuse in the Catholic Church?

"Star Spangled Virgin, Blessed or Blasphemous" by David Gibson

http://davidgibson.religionnews.com/2013/07/03/star-spangled-virgin-blessed-or-blasphemous/
Bridget Mary's reflection
In my view, Mary, mother of Jesus, would not wrap herself in any flag as she is the mother of all.

"Excommunicated from the Catholic Church, Local Nurse Providing Another Model of Priesthood"

http://chestnuthilllocal.com/blog/2013/07/05/excommunicated-from-catholic-church-local-nurse-providing-another-model-of-priesthood/

"The war between the Liberation Theology movement and Rome is over "

Gianni Valentevatican city
“The Latin American ecclesial and theological movement known as “Liberation Theology”, which spread to other parts of the world after the Second Vatican Council, should in my opinion be included among the most important currents in 20th century Catholic theology.” This authoritative and glorifying historical evaluation of Liberation Theology did not just come from some ancient South American theologian who is out of touch wit the times. The above statement was made by Archbishop Gerhard Ludwig Müller, Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith which Ratzinger headed in the 1980’s, after John Paul I appointed him to the post. The Prefect gave two instructions, warning against pastoral and doctrinal deviations from Latin American theological currents of thought.

This decisive comment about the Liberation Theology movement is not just some witty remark that happened to escape the mouth of the current custodian of Catholic orthodoxy. The same balanced opinion pervades the densely written pages of “On the Side of the Poor. The Theology of Liberation”, a collection of essays co-written with liberation theologian Gustavo Gutiérrez and published in Germany in 2004. Gutiérrez invented the formula for defining the Liberation Theology movement, whose actions were – for a long time – closely scrutinised by the Ratzinger-led Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. The movement was not criticised once during this time.

Today the book seems to wave goodbye in a way to the theological wars of the past and the hostility that flash up now and again, to cause alarm on purpose.

The book put an official seal on a common path the two had followed for many years. Müller never hid his closeness to Gustavo Gutiérrez, whom he met in Lima in 1988, during a study seminar. During the ceremony for the honorary degree which the Pontifical Catholic University of Peru granted to Müller in 2008, the then bishop of Regensburg defined the theological thought of his master and Peruvian friend as fully orthodox. In the months before Müller’s nomination as head of the dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, some claimed his closeness to Gutiérrez proved he was not suited to the role previously held by Cardinal Ratzinger (24 long years).

In the book’s essays, the two authors/friends back each other up. Müller says the merits of Liberation Theology go beyond the Latin American Catholic. The Prefect stressed that in recent decades, Latin America’s Liberation Theology movement has been oriented towards the image of Jesus Christ the Redeemer and liberator, an image all genuinely Christian theological currents are oriented towards. This stems from an evangelical inclination towards the poor. Müller affirmed that “poverty in Latin America oppresses children, the elderly and the sick,” to such an extent that many are driven to “contemplate death as the only way out.” Right from the outset, the Liberation Theology movement “forced” theological movements founded elsewhere, not to consider the real living conditions of people and individuals as something abstract. He saw “the body of Christ” in the poor, as Pope Francis does.

The arrival of the Catholic Church’s first Latin American Pope made it possible to look at those years and experience without being conditioned by the controversies that raged at the time. Without the ritualism of the false mea culpas and superficial changes, it is easier today to see that the hostility shown by certain sections of the Church towards the Liberation Theology movement was politically motivated and did not really stem from a desire to preserve and spread the faith of the apostles. Those who paid the price were the theologians and pastors who were completely immersed in the evangelical faith of their people. They either ended up in the mince or faded into the shadows. For a long time, the hostility shown towards the Liberation Theology movement was invaluable factor in helping some climb the ecclesiastical career ladder.

In one of his speeches, Müller (who in an interview on 27 December 2012 suggested it was likely a Latin American would substitute Ratzinger as Pope) did not hesitate to describe the political and geopolitical factors that had influenced certain “crusades” against the Liberation Theology movement: “the satisfaction of depriving the Liberation Theology movement of all meaning was intensified by capitalism’s sense of triumph, which was probably considered to have gained absolute victory. It was seen as an easy target that could be fitted into the same category as revolutionary violence and Marxist terrorism,” Müller said. He referred to a secret document prepared for President Reagan by the Committee of Santa Fé in 1980 (so 4 years before the Vatican’s first Instruction on the Liberation Theology movement), requesting that the U.S. government take aggressive action against the movement, which was accused of transforming the Catholic Church into “a political weapon against private property and productive capitalism by infiltrating the religious community with ideas that are less Christian than communist.'' Müller said: “The impertinence shown by the document’s authors, who are themselves guilty of brutal military dictatorships and powerful oligarchies, is disturbing. Their interest in private property and the capitalist production system has replaced Christianity as a criterion.”

After decades of fierce conflicts and opposition, the friendship between the two theologians – the Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and the man who was once investigated by the Congregation – has helped create a clear distinction between the ephemeral ideological frameworks of the past and the genuine evangelical spirit that inspired so many of the paths taken by Latin American Catholicism after the Second Vatican Council. In Müller’s eyes, 85 year old Gutiérrez - who is due to visit Italy, including Rome, this coming September - did not wear out his theological reflections in conferences or university meetings but found inspiration in the liturgies priests celebrated for the poor, in Lima’s run down suburbs. Essentially he was inspired by the basic experience which derived from the idea that “being Christian means following Jesus,” as Gutiérrez himself said in simple and biblical terms. It is the Lord himself who tells us we should “commit to working directly with the poor. The truth brings us closer to the poor,” Müller said, quoting his Peruvian friend..."



Pope Francis' Encyclical "Light of Faith"

http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/francesco/encyclicals/documents/papa-francesco_20130629_enciclica-lumen-fidei_en.html

..."Transformed by this love, we gain fresh vision, new eyes to see; we realize that it contains a great promise of fulfilment, and that a vision of the future opens up before us. Faith, received from God as a supernatural gift, becomes a light for our way, guiding our journey through time. On the one hand, it is a light coming from the past, the light of the foundational memory of the life of Jesus which revealed his perfectly trustworthy love, a love capable of triumphing over death. Yet since Christ has risen and draws us beyond death, faith is also a light coming from the future and opening before us vast horizons which guide us beyond our isolated selves towards the breadth of communion. We come to see that faith does not dwell in shadow and gloom; it is a light for our darkness. Dante, in the Divine Comedy, after professing his faith to Saint Peter, describes that light as a "spark, which then becomes a burning flame and like a heavenly star within me glimmers...."

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

"Tuesday's Child Has Far To Go- The Tuesday Ministry" by Judy Lee, ARCWP

http://judyabl.wordpress.com/2013/07/03/tuesdays-child-has-far-to-go-the-tuesday-ministry/

They came. They came to our Tuesday Ministry, July 2,2013, in the flash flood,thunder and lightening type of summer rain we are having here in Fort Myers, Florida. They came by foot, by bike and by bus. Only Roger has a car and he brought two others. Almost everyone was dripping wet. We gave out shirts and towels. Lauretta opened her heavy backpack and gave out mangos from her tree to everyone. The mangos were exquisite and she was applauded. Chris settled her 3 month old baby and two year old in. Little Carl was given a big new truck and he moved it around the circle. Kathleen, 70, wiped her face and silver hair with a towel and sat by her favorite person, Mr. Gary who welcomed her warmly.

Some came because they were hungry and Ellen McNally the local Call to Action President and her husband Jack,85, brought a tantalizing homemade Lasagna with garlic bread that cooked in the oven awaiting presentation with a delicious green salad and deserts. Call To Action is a progressive Catholic group with chapters throughout the United States and they support women priests. On our Ministry Tuesdays they make this a literal form of support by bringing and serving the food prepared by themselves and other CTA members. They are an important part of our Good Shepherd Ministries, served by two Roman Catholic women priests, myself, Judy Lee, and co-pastor Judy Beaumont. Ellen and Jack are a part of the family that gathers on Tuesdays. They were with us in 2007 when we joined a ministry of the Lamb of God Lutheran Episcopal church in feeding the hungry and homeless on Saturday nights in a local park. They were with us in 2008 when we drew up to a hundred and fifty people on our Friday night Church in the Park. They were with us in late 2009 when we purchased the house that we turned into a church and a transitional shelter for homeless people. And they remain with us now as we continue the feeding traditions on Tuesdays and Sunday after church. No one needs come to church to be fed, the hot food is served after the church service and all are welcome to any part of the afternoon. They also can get food from our food pantry at those times. They are among the over 70 homeless people we have now gotten into affordable housing and assisted in getting incomes. And they are the newly homeless or unemployed or living on low fixed incomes who seek our support. They come to minister to each other. Those with homes bring those without homes and resources to be helped.

They come because we are family to those who have no families and friends to those who have no friends. They come because they are hungry for affiliation and acceptance and love and a place to have fellowship and thank God together as much as for food and a host of social and spiritual services. Most love coming to the worship and discussion of the day’s Scriptures that takes place before the meal.Our group meeting is lively and animated. People were were shunned and scorned by others now lead the group.

Today’s Scriptures were the story of Joseph forgiving his brothers in Genesis 49 and of Jesus telling his followers not to be afraid and to trust God’s love as God knows when a tiny bird falls and how many hairs you have on your head. Joking about his shaved head, Mr. G. led the discussion of forgiveness sharing that for the first time he was able to ask a family member for forgiveness. He said it was easier for him to forgive than to ask for forgiveness. But a weight was lifted off of his chest. This resonated with many as they shared stories of forgiving and being forgiven. Lauretta tied the two Scriptures together as she said “I know the love God has for me because of this church. When I came to the church when it was in the park, I was out of my head. I needed forgiveness from so many for the things I did. I disrupted everything. No one wanted to come near me. I was thrown out of every other church and was so hungry. This church welcomed me as I was and cared for me as if I was a little sparrow with broken wings. The pastors and all of you who were there loved me back to health. I could not accept my mental illness and would not take my medicine. But through your love today I am happy to take my meds, I have a lovely home and am reunited with my family,and most of all you are my family. That’s why I bring you fruits and honey and things all the time.” Everyone applauded her and the meeting went on.

After the meeting I spoke with Chris who is newly housed with her two babies. We agreed to help her pay her electricity deposit or she would lose this precious housing. This is not something we do often as the line then goes around the block.But we could not see her lose this precious housing. She was also delighted at the gifts of clothing for her children and herself and her developmentally slow older brother. As I held the tiny baby who already wheezed with asthma I thought of those sparrows and prayed.

Judy Lee,ARCWP

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

"Francis Plans Dramatic Pro-Immigrant Outing"/National Catholic Reporter

http://ncronline.org/blogs/ncr-today/francis-plans-dramatic-pro-immigrant-outing
"For Europeans, especially Italians, the southern Mediterranean island of Lampedusa has become what the deserts along the Mexican/U.S. border have long been for Americans -- the scene of appalling humanitarian tragedies as desperate migrants try to reach a better life as well as a metaphor for political and cultural tensions over immigration policy.
The fact that Pope Francis has chosen Lampedusa for his first visit outside Rome on Monday, therefore, is anything but casual.
To get a sense of its impact, imagine a newly elected president of the United States announcing that his first trip outside D.C. would be to the border to see for himself where people have died and to embrace detainees in an ICE facility. It would be taken as a bold way of proclaiming that compassion will be a hallmark of the new administration. That's exactly how Italians, and Europeans generally, are reacting to Francis' planned outing.
Traveling without the usual pomp, Francis is scheduled to arrive Monday morning to embrace migrants who've made it to Lampedusa, mostly from Africa and the Middle East, and to mourn those who died along the way. The Vatican announced the trip just a week in advance, suggesting it's a highly personal decision.
The trip has an interreligious dimension, given that a large share of those who wash up on the island are Muslims. It also has clear political subtext, including in the United States where Catholic bishops are leading the charge for immigration reform..."

 

Milwuakee Archbishop Warned Vatican of Sex Abuse Scandal/Transferred Millions to Cemetary Fund

http://host.madison.com/news/local/crime_and_courts/records-milwaukee-archbishop-warned-vatican-of-sex-abuse-scandal/article_7c3a196a-b909-56ba-9802-0bfef6548aed.html
Bridget Mary's Response:
What would Jesus do?
 It is my hope that women priests will be part of the healing process. May we reach out to those who have lost hope and to  Catholics who have walked away with hearts broken.  To begin this process, I believe we need to realize that God is love and is in love with each of us. So healing begins in the divine embrace and within a loving, praying, compassionate faith community. This is what it means to be "church" to one another.
Bridget Mary Meehan, arcwp.org,

Monday, July 1, 2013

Celebrating Sacraments at Good Shepherd Church, Ft. Myers, Florida by Judy Lee, ARCWP

What a beautiful day this was at the Good Shepherd Church in Fort Myers, Florida!
The mothers, Linda and Toni Ann moved us greatly by beginning the celebration of the baptisms with prayers for the children.


When Jakein read his prayer of thanksgiving before his First Holy Communion, I thought my heart would burst. These prayers are in the tradition of the Black Catholic church and have so much meaning that they should be used everywhere.


While the pictures of the day are imperfect, and many of the most important moments were missed, it was a perfect joy for our community to share in the baptisms of Jakein John, 11 and Courtney Symone, just 7 months old. Jakein was both serious and joyful. His understanding of what happened to him today is way beyond his years.

He summed it up saying: "When I was baptized I felt so different and after it was over I felt better,I felt so good.I feel new and I am new!" The baby was amazing too, she never cried or fussed, but seemed to be taking it all in with her mother, Grandmother and little Aunt,Joelle whom we baptized three yeas ago now. Our proud God-parents are Dr. Joseph and Mrs. Pearl Cudjoe who made the day for these children and families in the way they stood up for them-and this will be for always.

Jakein's Grandmother and mother were there as well along with 14 members of his family,all of whom we baptized except one. He is 21 and will be baptized this Fall.

To us, this is what it is all about-opening the saacraments and sharing them with everyone!
Oh yes, oh Happy Day!

Pastors JudyLee and JudyBeamont, arcwp

www.arcwp.org
 

Sunday, June 30, 2013

Jimmy Carter: Women's Plight Perpetuated by World Religions


Activists Arrested Decrying Killer Drones at CIA in Langley, VA. on June 29, 2013


Janice Sevre-Duszynska, ARCWP,  (holding yellow sign), walks with fellow activists in peaceful protest against drones at CIA

LANGLEY, VA – Fifty people protested killer drones at the main gate of

the CIA today, and six individuals were arrested. The action was

organized by the National Campaign for Nonviolent Resistance [NCNR], a

group that has been active in challenging U.S. invasions of

Afghanistan, Iraq and other countries, abolishing torture, closing

Guantanamo, and bringing an end to drone warfare.

 


Janice Sevre-Duszynska, ARCWP, ministers at "die in " at symbolic mourning rite for innocent victims of drone attacks


Those arrested were Joy First, Mt. Horeb, WI; Malachy Kilbride,

Arlington, VA; Max Obuszewski, Baltimore, MD; Phil Runkel, Milwaukee,

WI (Catholic Worker Archivist <Phil.Runkel@marquette.edu>); Cindy

Sheehan, Vacaville, CA; and Janice Sevre_Duszynska, Lexington, KY.


Members of NCNR previously sent a letter to CIA Director John Brennan

requesting a meeting to discuss ending the drone program, and have

received no response. Because the group is concerned about continuing

deaths from drone strikes, they decided they must act, and they must

personally go to the CIA and ask for a meeting. They were joined by

Cindy Sheehan, Brian Terrell, and other activists from Code Pink,

World Can’t Wait, Veterans for Peace, Answer, and many individuals

affiliated with other groups to protest the illegal and immoral CIA

killer drone program. Sheehan is the mother of Casey who was killed

in 2004 in Iraq. Terrell was recently released from federal prison

after serving a 6-month term for a peaceful protest against drones at

Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri.

 

The group walked up to the gates of the CIA with a copy of the letter

they had sent to Brennan. When they were denied a meeting, six

individuals crossed onto the base. After announcing a mock drone

strike, five people lay down on the ground and were covered with

pictures of drone victims. The sixth person keened and wailed over

the bodies. After 20 minutes, the group rose up and began to walk

further onto the base carrying pictures of drone victims. They were

arrested, and cited and released on site.



Somewhere around 3500-4500 people have been killed by drones in

Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia, Iraq, and other places around

the globe with no due process. According to a study from Stanford

and NYU only 2% of those killed are high-level targets. Over 200

children have been killed in Pakistan alone. According to Malachy

Kilbride, NCNR, “These illegal drone strikes are not making people in

the U.S. any safer and will only perpetuate the cycle of violence.”

 

NCNR citizen activists believe they have the right and a Nuremberg

responsibility to highlight perceived illegal government operations.

Moreover, the Nuremberg trials pointed out that citizens must act to

prevent their government from further illegal activities. Ellen

Barfield, Vets for Peace, commented on the arrests stating, “Because

our government seems incapable of restricting drone weapons, these

brave citizens are practicing their Nuremberg responsibilities.”



Contacts:

Max Obuszewski 410-366-1637 <mobuszewski@verizon.net>

Joy First 608-239-4327 <joyfirst5@gmail.com>