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Monday, August 4, 2014

Blessing, Homily and Liturgy for Joe Herbert’s Funeral by Jim Marsh

Joe McVeigh
December 26, 1968 - July 12, 2014

      Joe,
      Go forth in peace,
      for you have followed the good road.

      Go forth without fear,
      for God who created you has made you holy,
      has always protected you,
      and loves you as a mother.

      Blessed be you, my God,
      for having created him.
                             -Saint Clare of Assisi

 Homily:
We find ourselves so soon again at McVeigh’s funeral home to ritualize our “good-byes”  and to make sense of all that has been, and how your lives will be different from this point without Joe’s physical presence.

Many of us in this room (if not all) believe in the existence of God.  We may call God by many names, (Divine Presence, Creator, Great Spirit, the Holy One, Yahweh, Allah, Adonai, Shekinah) none of which are entirely adequate or sufficient.  God is beyond our images and descriptions.

There are many, many creation stories.  Perhaps we are most familiar with the Hebrew story found in Genesis.  While it is certainly not an accurate account, I believe it does bear some truths; namely, that darkness covered the abyss and a mighty wind (literally the spirit of God) was hovering over the chaos, and that after all was created we hear God say “IT IS GOOD, IT IS VERY GOOD.”  In essence, it is a story of original blessing.

[Let’s try a little exercise – repeat the words Yah-weh and Allah several times.]
What did you experience? …………. Are you conscious that your very articulation of these names is an act of breathing.  Is it any coincidence that many forms of meditation concentrate on breathing. 

We live in very exciting times  --- scientific exploration and discovery, the Hubbell telescope, etc. ---- there is a “new creation” story.  Superclusters contain thousands of galaxies, and each galaxy contains hundreds of billions of stars.  Our galaxy is only one of several, and it’s billions of years old.  Human kind, as we know, is at least a hundred thousand years old if not older.  And guess what, our bodies are made of stardust, yes that’s right, the very same stuff of stars!  And new stars are continually being born every 15 seconds, while others are dying.  So creation is not static, it’s not over, it continues to evolve and we know this ourselves in the changing seasons that we use as time-markers. 

We also know from science that energy is never destroyed, but is always transformed into other forms, a continual cycle.  And so it is with all of creation – birth, death and new life again.

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Creation is the ultimate sacrament, the primary revelation of God!  We find God not only in creation, but also in ourselves since we too are part of creation.  In this sense, each of us is an expression of the divine masculine and sacred feminine – we are the unique face of God. 

Joe was a unique expression of the Divine presence.  Rabbi Abraham Heschel said it this way: “Just to be is a blessing.  Just to live is holy.”

At Joe’s baptism, his parents and god-parents and the community of believers gave him a name, signed him with the cross, and declared him to be a “child of God,” a brother of Jesus, the Cosmic Christ.  “You are the beloved of God!”

Scripture reminds us of this:
Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you; before you came to birth I consecrated you.  -Jeremiah 1:4,5,10

From the very beginning God loved us.  We are God’s work of art.
-Ephesians 2:10

The promises made that day have now been fulfilled: “Come, you who are blessed, you who are beloved…”  I do not believe his death is the final end of anything, nor is it the start of a journey to somewhere else (heaven), but a transformation / continuation of the ebb and flow of existence in ways we do not fully understand.  Joe continues to live on in God and in the lives of those he touched.

Joe was also nourished by the Eucharist.  I dare say that he was also nourished and fed at so many other tables during his life – indeed these too were Eucharistic encounters that nurtured his spirit.

You see my friends, each breath we take is a piece of the sky, a part of creation, a “piece of spirit.”  Naturalist Diane Ackerman says “with every breath, we inhale millions of molecules of sky, heat them briefly, and then exhale them back into the world…………” 

In the same way all energy is derived from the sun’s energy.  And we know that plants “eat” the sun through photosynthesis and obtain rich

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minerals from mother earth.  Food is also part of the same mysterious cycle of life, death, and rebirth.  Our food was once alive, whether plant or animal, and it allows us to live; thus we should always be grateful for food.  Actually this is why saying “grace” before meals is so ancient and yet a universal practice.  Every meal is sacred, a sacrament or sign of the relationship and relatedness with all that is, and all that is behind all that is. . 
So the cosmos is not merely a philosophical abstraction, but the very “placenta” for our earthly existence.  It represents the divine energy, the divine presence, Father Sky and Mother Earth, the Divine Masculine and
Sacred Feminine.  Julian of Norwich, the sainted mystic, declared “God is both Father and Mother.” 

I chose the Scripture passage from the Epistle (Letter) of John because it emphasizes Jesus’ message that “I have come that you might have life, and have it in abundance.”  

It is not usually a passage that is used at funerals, however.  If God is love, then we encounter God in all that we love and cherish (friends, lovers, children, sunsets, animals, music, poetry, sunshine, landscapes and beaches) ---- they become epiphanies or windows to the divine presence and energy.

To say that God is love also rules out an image of God as the “old man in the sky” who is out to judge us; a peeping tom on our actions, or the God of empires or the powerful, or even the avenging God who destroys.  I dare say these are idols, certainly not images of a God who is Love.

Another reason is the passage says “God is love”.  It does not say ‘God is heterosexual love.’  All love is a taste of the Divine and so Brian, I wanted to affirm your 27 year relationship with my cousin Joe.  Certainly, like all relationships it had joys, sorrows, hopes and disappointments; but I’m sure you would say it has been a blessing to you both.

Another great mystic, Meister Eckhart declared “If the only prayer you ever say in your whole life is ‘thank you,’ that would suffice."    
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Death causes us to take stock of our own lives too.  Remember the dash between the dates of birth and death on a headstone.  Perhaps it is key – what do we want others to remember about us when “sister death” claims our mortal bodies?

Ann Bryan Smollin is a Sister of St. Joseph here in Albany.  She is a therapist by training and has written “Jiggle Your Heart and Tickle Your Soul” (The uses of joy and laughter in attaining health & happiness).
She is a very joyful person and has some wisdom to share with us today, namely:

1)  Decide to live today to the fullest – i.e., don’t die without ever living!

2)  Use your energy and enjoy the NOW; yesterday is gone and tomorrow
     isn’t here yet

3)  Differentiate between wants and needs

4)  Ask for what you need – none of us can do it alone!  To let others help
      you is a gift to them and a gift to yourself.

5)  Give something away every day -  like a smile, a kind word, a helping
      hand, a card, note or phone call.  [my mentor St Francis – “preach the
      gospel always; use words, if necessary]

6)  Don’t take yourself so seriously; we are human and do make mistakes.

7)  Learn to laugh at yourself

8)  Spend some quiet time – it might help our focus and lessen anxiety (not
      to mention blood pressure).  Psalm 45 reminds us “Be still and know
      that I am God.”

9)  Don’t waste your life with worry – deal with what is real.  We can’t
      control every situation (if you are a worry wart, then plan your time)


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10) Be patient with yourself – give yourself some breathing space, time to
       limp or walk slowly through our wounds and brokenness until we can
       run again with full vigor. 

11) Focus on your surroundings – notice the beauty, “feast on the divine”

12) Choose to be a happy person; smile more, laugh more, see humor as
       gift. So today, we speak and ponder the seamlessness of life, death,
       and new life.  Not only do all living beings (plants and animals) live,
       die and resurrect in some form but so do galaxies, stars and
       supernovas.

We can thank the pioneers like Ernest Becker and Elisabeth Kubler-Ross for addressing the denial of death and emphasizing the spiritual side of death.  Death is our consciousness moving on to another plane of existence.

All the religious traditions teach and speak about death and the afterlife.  In the goddess era many, many centuries ago it was called “regeneration,” the East now calls it “reincarnation” and the Western traditions speak of “resurrection.” 

The mystic Meister Eckhart said that at death “life dies but being goes on.” 

The Sufi mystic Hafiz declares “God has written a thousand promises all over your heart that say Life, life, life is far too sacred to ever end.”

Each of us has experienced many deaths in our lives.  Life is an eternal act of letting go.  The letting go we do at death is just one more, though very unique from all “former deaths with a small d.”

Because life is brief, it is valuable!

Because life is brief, it is all the more precious!


Let us not waste our lives!

Funeral Liturgy for Joe McVeigh
Funeral Liturgy for Joseph S. Herbert

Greeting:
Welcome -  Let us truly celebrate Joe’s life!

We know that Jesus is always present when we gather in prayer; may we experience God’s consolation and peace as we “pray our goodbyes.”   

May our prayer today be a profound thank you,
[THANKS Be to GOD!] for the life of Joe Herbert.

Our brother Joe has gone to his rest in the peace of Christ.  With faith and hope, let us assist him with our prayers. 

Let us pause in silence to be united with him.

God of Abraham and Sarah,
Moses and Miriam,
Lord of the living and the dead,
Hear our prayer this day as we remember Joe.

Gracious God, Most Holy One,
We pray for Aunt Carol, who mourns the death of yet another child;

We pray for Brian, who grieves the loss of his beloved companion and soulmate;

We pray for his siblings Ed, Carolynn, Diana (Ana), Charlotte, Mary, Darlene and their children, who will miss their dear brother and uncle;   

Embrace them all in your love.
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May each of us who are Aunt, Uncle, cousin, friend, neighbor keep the flame of remembrance alive in our hearts.

We make this prayer in the name of Jesus, our brother, who accompanies us all on our life’s journey.  R: AMEN

Word of God:  St. John’s First Letter (1 John 4:7-9, 11-13, 16-17, 19)

Dear friends!  Let us love one another, for love comes from God. 

Whoever loves is a child of God and knows God. 

Whoever does not love, does not know God, because God is love. 

This is how God showed love for us: God sent Jesus into the world that we might have life.

Dear friends, since God so loved us, we also ought to love one another. 

No one has ever seen God; but if we love one another, God lives in us and God’s love is made complete in us.

God is love.  Whoever lives in love, lives in God, and God in them. 

We love because God first loved us.






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Sharing our Story(ies)

My friends, we believe that all the ties of affection, family and friendship which we experience in our lives DO NOT unravel with death. And so I ask you, what will you remember and cherish about Joe (in one or two words)? [allow time for community to respond]

Eulogy by Joe’s niece Gina

Few Thoughts/Homily by JTM (separate doc)

Our Father and Closing Prayer:

When his friends asked how to pray, Jesus responded:
O Cosmic Birther of all radiance and vibration!
Soften the ground of our being and carve out a space within us where your
          presence can abide.
Fill us with your creativity so that we may be empowered to bear the fruit of
          your mission.
Let each of our actions bear fruit in accordance with your desire.
Endow us with the wisdom to produce and share what each being needs to
          grow and flourish.
          Untie the tangled threads of destiny that bind us,
as we release others from the entanglement of past mistakes.
Do not let us be seduced by that which would divert us from our true purpose,
but illuminate the opportunities of the present moment.

For you are the ground and fruitful vision,
the birth, power and fulfillment,
as all is gathered and made whole once again.
-Based on the original Aramaic by Neil Douglas Klotz

And so let us stand, hold hands and pray the Jesus prayer as we have been taught ………………..



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We rejoice because the name of Joseph Scott Herbert has been written for all ages in the palm of your divine hand.

May our funeral gathering today remind us of what we know in faith and what we await with hope ----- that nothing dies, but rather that life is only transformed into new life.

We know that Joe is now reunited with his dad, Ed (whom we buried last week); his brothers David and Donald; his maternal grandparents George & Grace; his maternal aunts, Josephine, Eileen and Lois; his maternal uncles George and Bob; and his cousins Keith, John and Darren

We give you thanks for the blessings you bestowed on him in this life and we thank you for the gift he was to each of us.

We pray also for all the health professionals who cared for Joe competently, skillfully and compassionately throughout the course of his disease and illness over many years.


Song of Farewell:   The Hand of God Shall Hold You –Marty Haugen

The hand of God shall hold you,
The peace of God enfold you,
The love that dreamed and formed you still surrounds you here today;
The light of God beside you, above, beneath, inside you,
The light that shines to guide you home to the loving hand of God.
                                                              [in the presence of our God.]
                                                              [to the loving arms of God.]     




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Sprinkling and blessing of casket:
Although we will leave this place in sorrow, we are confident and full of faith that we shall see Joe again in the peace and joy of the Divine presence for eternity.

Until that day Joe,
may perpetual light shine upon you.  R. AMEN

May your soul and the souls of all the faithful departed, rest in peace.  R. AMEN

[Invite the family to come forward and bless the casket with water while all present stand, extend hands and pray this blessing prayer]
Joe,
      Go forth in peace,
      for you have followed the good road.

      Go forth without fear,
      for God who created you has made you holy,
      has always protected you,
      and loves you as a mother.

      Blessed be you, my God,
      for having created him.
                        -Saint Clare of Assisi

Blessing and Dismissal
May God’s love, the peace of Jesus, the Christ, and the consolation of the Spirit gently wipe every tear from our eyes;
and continue to bless us, and all we love in the name of God, the Creator; Jesus the liberator; and the Holy Spirit who inspires our every breath.  R. AMEN

Go in the peace of the Cosmic Christ.  R. THANKS BE TO GOD.
Thanks to Jim Marsh for sharing this inspirational funeral liturgy and homily with us.
Bridget Mary Meehan, ARCWP, www.arcwp.org

Pope Reinstates Pro-Sadinista Priest

http://news.yahoo.com/pope-reinstates-suspended-pro-sandinista-priest-152838619.html

The God of Turbulence Co Partners with us in Community of the Cosmos--Elizabeth Johnson's book, Ask the Beasts


In her provocative new book, Ask the Beasts,  Elizabeth Johnson states that the world is the Body of God and the infinite creativity of God is always moving within us and opening us up to fresh possibilities."The indwelling Creator Spirit grounds not only life's regularities, but also the novel occurrences that open up the status quo igniting what is unexpected, interruptive, genuinely uncontrolled and unimaginably possible...Divine Creativity is much more allied to the outbreak of novelty than our older order-oriented theology ever imagined. In the emergent evolutionary universe, we should not be surprised to find the Creator Spirit hovering very close to turbulence."  (p.173 )
Elizabeth Johnson's book takes our evolutionary consciousness to a new level that integrates a deep theological  understanding with a mystical awareness which leads  to the realization  that our neighbor is the entire universe. Therefore, our ecological vocation challenges us to take responsibility for the community of creation. If you want a book to stretch your imagination and feed your soul, I  highly recommend this visionary book. Bridget Mary Meehan, ARCWP, www.arcwp.org

"Encounter"; A Poem by Michele Birch-Conery, ARCWP/Photo of Community Liturgy in Windsor, Canada

  Encounter: Windsor, Ontario Faith Community Liturgy 03 Aug 2014
Encounter
Tears came. I could have wept
a year, a hundred years,
centuries even.

All our loss, grief
of every kind,
Then, now

and yet to come.

Tears come. She in her softness,
tenderness, infinite love. She
who is firm, strong

who lasts.

Within our tears
her sacred dance
quickens into jazz—

joyous jazzy steps.

We raise our arms,
We open our hands
In praise, in wonder

We are in miracles now.
We are in
miraculous

Presence.

Tears come, a great
outpouring. We gather
our mothers’ grief.

The outpouring

of their tears
fills the universe.
Their tears flow

as streams and rivers

flow. Their tears
fill our oceans.
The salt of their tears

Lingers along our coastlines.

We fill our vessels with their tears
Together, we lift them on high
Our chalice in the sky.

Wisdom Divine,
She brings us
back to ourselves.

She pushes us
Through her great birth passage
sending us everywhere.

We come forth
 from her head, her heart,
her hands, her feet.

She has borne
us, again and again,
from her whole self.

We have become her.
She was already us.
 Presence.
Michele Birch-Conery, ARCWP Priest
September 2013.
Revision July 12, 2014.











































Saturday, August 2, 2014

Homily for 18th Sunday of Ordinary Time: “Called to be the Heart of Compassion” by Bridget Mary Meehan, ARCWP and Terry Binder, Co-Presider

Did you ever say to yourself  ‘I’ve got too much on my plate! I need some peace and quiet.
I have no idea how it is all going to get done with my meager resources!’
In this Gospel, Jesus was dealing with the murder of John the Baptist his dearly loved mentor. He needed to retreat to a quiet place to grieve his friend’s loss.  But the crowds kept coming, and the disciples, tired and frustrated, were a cranky lot. It must have been one of those ‘Jesus, you have got to be kidding moments’ when Jesus told them to feed the people with five loaves and a couple of fish.  Say what! We don’t know how the multiplication of the loaves and fishes happened, we just know everyone was fed and there were left overs.
I had one of those kinds of moments on our Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests Retreat in Cincinnati two weeks ago.
I was so looking forward to a time of peace and quiet and sharing with my Sisters. However, on day one there was a crisis. Debra Meyers, one of our women priests, who was invited to pray at an opening ceremony at Lydia’s House, a Catholic Worker Home for homeless and abused women informed us that the Archdiocese of Cincinnati withdrew funds that had been previously been promised for a washer and dryer at the shelter.  Immediately we opened our purses and we came up with $1000! J anice Sevre-Duszynska and I who work on ARCWP media started work on the press release to spread the news. As a result NBC news covered and National Catholic Reporter published a story.  So much for peace and quiet on the retreat!  
However, as you know,   Lydia House was abundantly blessed with an outpouring of money ( $7000) They shared their excess with some to other ministry groups to benefit those in need. So once again, I can declare the hierarchy is the gift that keeps on giving and giving! It is a modern day multiplication of the loaves and fishes story!
We are the Body of Christ. Everyday, we are called to be  blessed, broken and shared. We are called to be the Heart of Compassion loving in our world!
Today, approximately one-third of Catholics have left the institutional church. Many are alienated or feel spiritually homeless. When they die, their relatives will have problems procuring a Catholic service or funeral. Sometimes, as one of our community recently learned, one has to go through a 20 questions drill; Did you go to Mass each Sunday? Did you receive Communion? Did you go to Confession? Etc.
I believe that inclusive Catholic communities are called to be the Heart of Compassion in our world. We are the bread blessed, broken and shared. As we give of ourselves, God will pour out abundance, making what we do more than enough to meet the needs of those who are grieving and in need of spiritual comfort.
 As an inclusive community, MOJO could provide a Memorial or Funeral Service to Catholics who are denied such a service by the Institutional Church. . I know that our married priests couples have presided at funerals, and last year that our MMOJ community celebrated a Memorial Service for a woman who died without resources.
Michele Birch-Conery and Barbara Billey, two of our Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests in Canada have designed a Heart of Compassion Memorial Ministry. I’d like to invite your comments on my proposal to offer this ministry in our local area.
Heart of Compassion Memorial Ministry

We are members of Mary Mother of Jesus Inclusive Catholic Community
who serve persons who have died in
financial hardship and social isolation
as well as Roman Catholics who have not been
connected to the Church yet seek a
funeral rite within this tradition.

Often family members
or friends of the deceased
request a modified, affordable memorial
service tailored to their religious tradition
or a memorial ritual  that helps the family honor their loved one.

We consult with them
to fashion an inclusive liturgy or ritual
sensitive to their needs and preferences.
When there are no family or friends
we offer a memorial service
that brings dignity to and makes sacred
a person’s life and death, as a reflection of God’s presence in our world.

Open discussion with the community




Deacon Annie Watson, ARCWP Attends Conference Given By Bishop John Shelby Spong

Deacon Annie Watson and Bishop  John Shelby Spong
Jimmy & I attended a two day conference at Community Christian Church in Springfield, Missouri. Dr. Roger Ray a progressive speaker and author is the Pastor of the church (Roger is a good friend of ours). Bishop John Shelby Spong presented  several lectures from his book "The Fourth Gospel" tales of a Jewish Mystic. He was captivating as always. He talked about how to read the gospel of John from a Jewish perspective. Spong has read every major commentary on the gospel of John and has gained many great insights. I look forward to sharing more after I go through my notes. The day ended with a small dinner party at a church members house. I had the pleasure of sitting next to him and talking about the ARCWP! He is very supportive and called me a "troublemaker". Jimmy reacquainted with old friends, we made several new ones. I witness about our movement with a couple from Indy!
I feel blessed to be given such a wonderful new nickname by Bishop Spong. 

Come,Without Paying or Cost: Rev Judy’s Homily for the 18th Sunday in OT 8/3/14

http://judyabl.wordpress.com/2014/08/02/comewithout-paying-or-cost-rev-judys-homily-for-the-18th-sunday-in-ot-8314/
IMG_0022
The Scriptures for this week assure us that God loves us and will meet our needs on all levels of being.  Wow!
These are some of the most beautiful and meaningful messages in all of the Scriptures. We can take these Scriptures on two levels: with literal meaning, that is, God will indeed provide food and sustenance for the poor and hungry, and on the metaphoric level. God’s word is the living water and the bread of life. The teachings of Christ are the food that fills us with what we need to want no more.  God’s words from the prophet Isaiah(55:1-3) to the Psalmists refrain( Psalm 145) “The hand of our God feeds us; God answers all our needs”;  to the Epistle (Romans 8:35-39) and the Gospel (Matt 14:13-21) fill us with knowledge of a God who is mindful of our every human need, and responds accordingly whether our needs are for basic survival or for connection to God and peace in our spirits. Yet it is Jesus’ words in the Gospel (Matthew 14:16b) that teach us that God meets our human needs through the care we have for one another: “You give them something to eat!”.
It is of no use to those who are poor and in need of assistance to eat, and have clothing and shelter to say “God bless you” or “enjoy God’s word” and do nothing. Our Good Shepherd ministry in Fort Myers, Florida, like most of the Ecclesia Street Ministries throughout the USA and elsewhere and many churches who care for the poor and low income, is a literal feeding ministry. Every time we have church and break open the word, we also break open our storehouses and cook and serve nutritious meals, wholesome drinks and food to take away if it is needed.  We take literally the words of Isaiah 55:1-3 “You who have no money, come, buy and eat; Come… without paying and without cost….”Our faith-filled volunteers make this meal possible. And these include those with considerable means and those are those who were poor and homeless and now have the means to help others.
Roger was the first man we helped as we reached out to the homeless in 2007. When he comes to church now he brings an envelope upon which he has printed “Roger’s Foundation” and in it is ten -twenty dollars to share with someone else as we see fit. He also chooses people in his residential community to share with on a regular basis. He gets the meaning of today’s Scriptures. Lauretta lugs a heavy back pack full of produce from neighboring trees and farms on the bus to share with others. She gets it. Lauretta, Linda and others reach out and bring people to our church. Because Lauretta brought Diane, Diane, who was homeless in the park, now has a home.
This is Diane in her home with Pastor Judy Beaumont. She is telling us how she takes her shopping cart on the bus to go and buy food. 100_4020
Linda brings her own kids, her sister’s kids and a young Haitian teen who is sometimes ridiculed by other kids simply because he is Haitian. She sets the example, she goes and gets him and he is welcomed by all. He is one of our happiest teenagers now. Linda gets it.
Jerry with our Teen Class100_4038
After the meal we open our pantries and offer food to take home and also clothing and personal items at no cost.  After the meal we say “the store is open” and people go to the room where they shop for no money. People also see us for counseling and referral and prayer during that time. They also love sitting in the living room and socializing. So that which is not tangible is also given away freely. Our worship and study of the Scriptures is enthusiastically attended so the teachings that fill the inner spirit and soul are also available to those who want them. We say that in our church we have many preachers. I do a shorter version of the sermon matched to their needs on Sundays. Then I stop and ask for “their word upon the word”. Two or three may expound on the Scriptures and share their own experiences of God.  The meal becomes a feast.
This is Elder Gary who preaches by word and deed with Joelle, his God Child and Keke IMG_0102
Were the disciples guarding the purse strings when they tried to send the people away “to buy their own food”? Or were they just short of faith, feeling that they truly did not have enough to give? Did Jesus literally multiply their little food or did the people sit down and open up their own supplies and share with one another? I can accept it either way or both ways.  Either way it was a miracle. The Aramaic culture that Jesus came from may sometimes teach by metaphor and exaggeration. So was it really 5,000 families-or 500- or 50? It doesn’t matter because it means a LOT of families were fed and ALL present ate their fill. And, it was Jesus, the Christ, making that happenwith the help of the disciples.  
Let us remember that this whole section of Scripture is prefaced by Jesus withdrawing in grief over the loss of his cousin, John the Baptist and yet, not able to get away, he was still loving the crowd, with his heart being being moved by them to heal them and now to feed them (Matt 14:13-14). So  does it mean that they ate a good lunch and were full, or they ate of the bread of life, the word of God, the teachings of Christ, the love of Christ, and were full? I think it is clear that it means both-we are to “feed them” ourselves, we are to feed one another. When food is needed we provide food. When material help is needed we provide it-no strings attached. When we have two coats, we share one. When Christ’s teachings are needed, we teach them.  They are always needed and we can only teach them when we live them. Live what? Live love even when we are tired and want or need to get away.  And live justice and celebrate the love God has for ALL of God’s creatures.   
And finally, Romans 8: 35 asks: “What will separate us from the love of Christ” and verse 39 concludes NOTHING “will be able to separate us from the love of God that comes to us in Christ Jesus”.  For us as women priests that the Roman Church hierarchy thinks it can cut off from Christ, or for the divorced, those civilly married, the LGBTQ community and all who may be deemed or may therefore feel less than worthy,  these Scriptures provide the healing balm of Christ. Nothing and no one can cut us off from the love of God in Christ. And, my dear friends, no one can cut you off either so let us eat and be full of the love of God. Thanks be to God!
Rev. Dr. Judy Lee, RCWP
Good Shepherd Inclusive Catholic Community of Fort Myers, Florida
This is Rvda. Marina Teresa Sanchez, RCWP, feeding the children the Bread of Life in Cali, Colombia Dando la Eucaristía a los niños de Colegio Educativo Navarro

My Precious Memories of the First U.S. Ordination of Roman Catholic Women Priests at Pittsburgh Bridget Mary Meehan, ARCWP

Happy 8th Anniversary!
I will always remember this historic day when I was ordained a Roman Catholic Woman Priest. The dream of a lifetime came true for me. 

 During the laying on of hands, my dear Dad, Jack, placed his hands on my shoulders connecting me to our entire Irish family ancestral line.
I felt such gratitude and  joy that he had lived to see this day and I knew my wonderful, devout Mother , Bridie, who had died 8 years before, was holding me too.  My brother Patrick and  some close friends from VA, MD, New York,  Kansas City and Colorado accompanied me on this momentous journey. Sister Regina Madonna Oliver and Peg Bowen, who had shared 15 years of pastoral ministry with me, played key roles in the Rite by presenting me for ordination and laying out the prostration cloth. Several Sisters for Christian Community were present to offer prayerful support and affirmation.  

  I sensed the Spirit moving within me and all around us, and felt like  I could almost float away. With my faith eyes, I could see the communion of saints cheering us on as the  beautiful Litany of the Saints was sung  Earth and heaven rejoiced on that great day. 

Bishops Patrica Fresen,, Gisela Forster and Ida Raming laid hands on us in silence in the solemn moment of ordination. Then, the entire assembly was invited to lay hands on the ordinands. The people stood in a long line that wound around the boat, waiting to place their hands on our heads. While soft liturgical music played in the background, some people quietly wept  as they prayed over us.  

We twelve women were  modern day gutsy disciples , disobeying an unjust man-made law so that justice and equality could  become a reality for women in our beloved Church. My  life has never been the same since  that day when  we sailed down the Three Rivers  on the beautiful riverboat Majestic.

The good news is that our Women Priests Movement continues to grow and to renew the church into a more open, inclusive, egalitarian community of believers in seven countries.  Indeed the Spirit is a'moving in this holy shakeup of the Catholic Church. Bridget Mary Meehan, www.arcwp.org 

On July 31, 2006, Eileen McCafferty DiFranco,  Olivia Doko, Joan Clark Houk, Kathleen Kunster, Bridget Mary Meehan, Roberta Meehan, Dana Reynolds, Kathy Sullivan Vandenberg were ordained as Roman Catholic priests.  Four deacons were also ordained at the ordination.  The ordination took place on a riverboat in Pittsburgh, PA.  

On the day of the ordination, Joan Houk said she hoped that as priest she would be able to  “Connect with people who are Catholic who have walked away or are not participating…”  Today there are approximately 180 RCWP members worldwide; more than 150 of these women are located in the United States.  Roman Catholic Womenpriests are ministering in house and parish communities, perform weddings, baptisms and funerals; are chaplains and offer sacraments to the sick and elderly, serve the homeless and provide spiritual direction and retreats.    

The movement within the Church began in Germany with the ordination of seven women on the Danube River in 2002, by male Roman Catholic Bishops and in 2003 two of the “Danube 7” were ordained Bishops. 

RCWP rejects Canon law that does not allow women to be ordained priest today.  Many historians and theologians can provide evidence that women were ordained Deacons, Priests, and Bishops in the early church.  In addition, in 1970, because of the Soviet Bloc, a Czech Bishop ordained women to serve in the women’s prisons where men could not go.

You can help us continue to prepare and ordain women by making a donation to RCWP-USA and to www.arcwp.org today. 



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Read More about the Historic Day:

Pittsburgh Post Gazette: Group Ordains 8 women as Priests.