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Friday, January 8, 2016

The Catholic Story: Conservative vs. Progressive by Tom Reese/ Sexism in the Catholic Church is One of the Many Reasons for the Decline of Young Catholics in the Pew

http://ncronline.org/blogs/faith-and-justice/catholic-story-conservative-vs-progressive
Bridget Mary Meehan and Alicia Bartol Thomas  co-preside
at liturgy with Mary Mother of Jesus Inclusive Catholic Community
in Sarasota, Florida,
www.marymotherofjesus.org


Bridget Mary's Response:
I agree with Tom Reese's  basic analysis. Read full article, click on link above. 
The Roman Catholic Church treats women as second class citizens.Young women and men will not put up with a sexist church that excludes women from priesthood and from decision-making in teachings that affect their lives. Our international Roman Catholic Women Priests Movement is changing the church one  inclusive, egalitarian, renewed grassroots community at a time. We are in 35 states in the U.S. and in North America, South America, Europe, Africa and Asia. The full equality of women in the church is the voice of God in our time. Bridget Mary Meehan, ARCWP www.arcwp.org



"...Many American conservative Catholics downplayed Catholic social teaching because it went contrary to their political and economic views or because they felt it would distract attention from the culture wars. They ignored or spun what John Paul and Benedict had to say about war and peace and economic justice. 
I agree with Douthat that the conservative narrative is undercut by the sexual abuse crisis and the continued exodus of people (especially young people) from the church under John Paul and Benedict. I also agree that the progressive narrative is undercut by the rise of the Evangelicals and the decline of the mainline churches. While half those who leave the church become unchurched or "nones," about a third become Evangelical. Few in comparison join mainline churches.
Neither the conservative nor the progressive narrative has a good explanation for the Catholic exodus. My personal belief is that it has little to do with theology and more to do with a desire for emotionally charged worship services and a sense of community, which are absent from most Catholic parishes. 
Narratives are important for explaining the world to ourselves and others. These competing conservative and progressive narratives help define the church of today. Can we have a conversation about them without name calling and stone throwing? I hope so."
Next week, my column, "Welcome to the cafeteria, Ross," will also be on Douthat's piece.
[Jesuit Fr. Thomas Reese is a senior analyst for NCR and author of Inside the Vatican: The Politics and Organization of the Catholic Church. His email address is treesesj@ncronline.org.] 

Thursday, January 7, 2016

New Book from Sibyl Dana Reynolds, Enjoy, a Spiritual and Creative Accompaniment and guidebook for Ink and Honey

I'm happy to share the news of the birth of my new book, The Way of Belle Coeur: A Woman's Vade Mecum, a spiritual and creative accompaniment and guidebook for Ink and Honey
 


Visit my website where you will find a FAQ page with answers for your Belle Coeur questions. At the website you will also meet our Belle Coeur Sisters. They have generously shared their wisdom and stories in the pages of The Way of Belle Coeur: A Woman's Vade Mecum



To fully experience the spiritual  practices, journal prompts, and creative experiences described in The Way of Belle Coeur, I suggest that you read my novel, Ink and Honey. The two books combined create a sacred feminine cosmology that includes the template for Belle Coeur spirituality. 


 


Copyright © *2016* *Sibyl Dana Reynolds*, All rights reserved.

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Homily at Holy Spirit Catholic Community, Baptism of Jesus, C , January 10, 2016 by Beverly Bingle, RCWP

Jesus was a Jew.
His Jewishness was integral to his entire being,
and his first followers had no problem with it.
Starting with Constantine, though,
Christians began to hide that fact.
The change begins to show up in art
as Jesus' family get blond hair and blue eyes.
The crucifixion images begin to show Jesus
wearing a loincloth to hide the uncomfortable fact
that he had been circumcised,
as all Jewish boys were—and still are—on the eighth day.
The apostles morph into handsome western Europeans,
except for Judas who takes on caricatured Jewish features
and the yellow clothes that Jews were made to wear.
_____________________________________
The current issue of Smithsonian
describes the discovery of an ancient synagogue in Magdala,
the fishing village that was probably
the home of Mary of Magdala.
The many discoveries brought to light
by the excavation of this synagogue and the surrounding area,
“solidified the portrait of Jesus
as a Jew preaching to other Jews.”
Excavations in the nearby villages of Nazareth and Bethsaida,
along with the history of the area,
give us new insights about the times Jesus lived in
and the cultures that surrounded him.
_____________________________________
Who was this person, this Jesus from Nazareth?
He was, first of all, a faithful Jew.
He was a Jew living in the midst of turmoil and oppression.
He grew in wisdom, age, and grace
to be a good man,
a prayerful mystic who took God seriously.
And, following the teachings of his Jewish faith,
he grew to have the courage to say out loud
what was obvious to the ordinary people in the countryside: God is
not like the Roman emperor,
who declares himself a god over us.
God is not like the Temple officials,
who set down burdensome rules for us.
God is love.
_____________________________________
Today we celebrate Jesus' baptism,
and we find that it's an epiphany story—
another example of the manifestation of God among us—
and it reveals a truth about all of us,
the truth that spirituality has to be lived to make it real.
Jesus didn't suddenly become a different person
on the day he was baptized.
He answered the call that had been growing in him.
He committed himself unconditionally
to living his life in keeping with what Judaism taught:
he saw himself as made in the image and likeness of God,
literally a son of God, beloved by God and called to live in love.
_____________________________________
Jesus was compelled by his experience of oneness with God
to speak the truth he had come to understand.
The people who heard him were inspired
by his teaching that everyone, here and now, is beloved;
each of us is a child of God.
Each of us is filled with the Holy Spirit.
Each of us is commissioned to show God
in our selves and our world.
_____________________________________
When Jesus committed himself to serve God above all else,
it was not a commitment to suffer and die.

It was a commitment
to follow God's command to love unconditionally,
and that meant doing justice.
Jesus' commitment threatened people with power and authority
in both the religion and the government.
_____________________________________
The choice to live in love and do justice
continues to threaten people who hold power and authority.
Pope Francis' push for the care of creation is opposed
by those who have misused their power and authority
to use people and abuse the environment.
This week President Obama's executive orders
aimed at reducing gun deaths
brought vicious statements
from the National Rifle Association members
who profit from guns
and from members of Congress
who depend on NRA contributions for their political campaigns.
There's a very long list of people
who gave their lives trying to do justice,
some of them well-known like Oscar Romero, Maura Clarke,
Ita Ford, Dorothy Kazel, and Jean Donovan,
others known only to their families
who grieve their “disappearance.”
Still, the way of Jesus of Nazareth prevails.
It lives on in every whistleblower
who puts the common good before personal gain.
It lives on in every person, Christian or not,
who does justice in the world.
As Luke writes in today's passage from the Acts of the Apostles,
“any person of any nationality
who fears God and does what is right
is acceptable to God.”
Any person!
Jews and Muslims,
Sikhs and Buddhists and Baha’i,
agnostics and atheists.
Any person!
Even Christians!
You and me!
_____________________________________
Here we are at the beginning of the new year,
and our path is clear.
Isaiah gives us the outline
of what Jesus understood and acted on.
Endowed with the Spirit,
like him we are called to bring justice to the nations,
to serve the cause of right;
to open the eyes of the blind;
to free captives from prison;
to bring light to the world.
_____________________________________
It's a tall order.
Some of you will fill it by tending to the sick and the dying.
Some will plant trees.
Or tend children and grandchildren,
your own or your neighbors
or those of people you have never met.
Or give to soup kitchens and food pantries
and efforts to settle Syrian refugees
or get trafficked women and children off the streets
and into a safe place.
Some of you will donate blood, or tutor, or register voters.
Whatever piece of justice each of you decides to do this year
may bring opposition from those who profit by oppression.
But, thanks be to you and to God, you'll do it anyway.

--
Holy Spirit Catholic Community
Saturdays at 4:30 p.m.
Sundays at 5:30 p.m.
at 3925 West Central Avenue (Washington Church)

www.holyspirittoledo.org

Rev. Dr. Bev Bingle, Pastor
Mailing address: 3156 Doyle Street, Toledo, OH 43608-2006

Help Stop Raids on Central American Families/ A Human Rights Issue/You Can Help

Pres. Obama: Stop the raids on Central American families.
As people of faith and moral conscience, we are outraged by the Obama administration's violation of human rights by raiding and deporting immigrants and refugees seeking asylum. We pledge to resist these acts of violence and persecution by offering up our voices, actions and bodies to stand with our immigrant and refugee brothers and sisters. 
http://cl.s7.exct.net/?qs=9eb627a9d6c2bd3f1a4203aa8866ee197244d0255f49f4cbb1361105fc7ceed7de2f134cb20a4e70
Yesterday, I called the White House and Senate and asked that our government stop the raids on Central American families. As an immigrant from Ireland who came to the U.S. in 1956, I feel compassion and solidarity with the families being torn apart by imprisonment and deportation. 
I asked myself, what would Jesus do? In Matthew 25 the answer is clear:"Whatsoever you do for the least of my brothers and sisters that you do unto me."  
Join me  in advocating for these desperate families who live in fear of  persecution and imprisonment in the United States because they are seeking asylum in response to violence in their homeland  in Latin America. Together we can create a more just and compassionate world. Reach out in love. Make the call today. 
Bridget Mary Meehan, ARCWP, www.arcwp.org

Right now - young mothers and children are being rounded up by immigration officials in cities across the country.
ICE officers show up at their doors unannounced, deceiving them to gain entry, waking up sleeping children, and taking away their families to detention centers where mothers and their children are jailed until they are deported back to the rape, murder, and domestic violence they are fleeing.
Tell President Obama this is a violation of human rights. 
At Southside Presbyterian Church here in Tucson, Arizona - we feel as if we are once again living through a nightmare that is all too familiar to us.
Back in the 1980s when Central Americans were fleeing the horrific violence of civil war, they came to our country seeking asylum but were met with deportation orders and were sent back to the death squads they sought to escape.
And so communities of faith did the only thing we could: We formed an underground railroad and declared sanctuary for Central American refugees.
When human life was on the line, we knew that the only ethical act was resistance.
Will you join our powerful act of resistance and solidarity by adding your voice to our moral call?
Our faith traditions are very clear that our very salvation is dependent on what we do in this moment. And in this moment - as people are running for their lives from horrific violence - the gift that we as religious leaders and faith communities have to offer is the gift of sanctuary.
Since May of 2014, Southside has become immersed once again in the work of sanctuary when we welcomed a local undocumented father facing deportation into sanctuary - after about a month we were able to get him a stay of deportation and he was able to safely leave sanctuary.
But another amazing thing happened when he entered sanctuary - other communities of faith started to discern whether they could do the same, and the movement began to grow.
With your voice and your actions, you can keep this movement growing and show the Obama administration you will not stand by while they terrorize thousands of immigrant and refugee families.
Every day we are talking to a new congregation and every day we are hearing of a new family devastated - but we have been here before and as we keep mobilizing and organizing churches and start moving people into sanctuary, it is our prayer and our hope that the Obama Administration will soon realize that they have been through this with us before.
Even though they tried to do everything they could to stop the Sanctuary Movement over the past 30 years, they could not stop people of faith and conscience who knew that their faith compelled them to resist through the work of sanctuary - and thousands of lives were saved.
Your support in this moment is critical - sign the pledge to stand with our immigrant and refugee brothers and sisters.
As politicians and presidential hopefuls play games with people's lives, as the Obama administration uses raids as a tactic of fear - preachers in pulpits across the nation are preaching a very difficult gospel: A gospel of hospitality, of welcome, of love for our neighbor - an ethic of resistance.
And pew by pew, congregation by congregation, the movement is growing and we are getting ready to open our doors to prevent deportations. The movement won't stop until there is not one more family living in fear of deportation.
When they ask you what you did in this moment, what will you say? Join the movement of resistance.
In solidarity,
Rev. Alison Harrington
Groundswell 

El Salvador to Arrest Soldiers Accused of 1989 Murder of Priests, Reuters

http://nypost.com/2016/01/06/el-salvador-to-arrest-soldiers-accused-in-1989-murder-of-priests/

Salvadoran people mark the 26-year anniversary of the massacre 
of six Jesuit priests and two women on Nov. 14, 2015. Photo EPA, 
Photo: EPA
SAN SALVADOR — El Salvador said on Wednesday it would cooperate in the arrest of 17 former soldiers accused of killing six Jesuit priests in one of the most notorious atrocities of the country’s bloody civil war.
The government made the announcement after a Spanish judge sent a new petition to international police agency Interpol on Monday, ordering the soldiers’ capture for the 1989 murders of the priests, their housekeeper and her daughter. Five of the priests were Spanish and one was Salvadoran.
Salvadoran presidential spokesman Eugenio Chicas said once legal requirements were met, the government of the Central American nation could make the arrests.
“The only path for our security forces to take is to proceed with the arrests, that is, there’s nothing to do but follow the law,” Chicas said in a statement to the media.
Among the officials wanted are Colonel Inocente Montano, a former deputy defense minister, who was arrested in the United States in 2011 for immigration fraud. US authorities said last April they would seek to extradite him to Spain.
Prosecutors say Salvadoran soldiers shot the priests at their home at a university to silence their criticism of rights abuses committed by the U.S.-backed army during the 1980-1992 civil war that claimed an estimated 75,000 lives.
But Chicas said the extradition of the former soldiers to Spain would depend on El Salvador’s Supreme Court.
Spain’s High Court ruled in 2011 that the ex-soldiers should be tried for the murders and ordered them arrested. Interpol also said the men were wanted for extradition.
But El Salvador’s Supreme Court ruled then that Interpol had required the soldiers be located but not arrested or extradited.
“This is a new opportunity for the justice system in this country to put things right,” said Omar Serrano, a vice-rector at the university where the priests were killed.

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

Article in National Catholic Reporter by Elizabeth A. Elliott on Internal Forum ---Is this the Pastoral Approach that Will Help Catholic Remarried Couples to Return to Sacraments?

http://ncronline.org/news/faith-parish/us-church-eyes-potential-internal-forum

At the close of the Synod of Bishops on the family Oct. 24NCR reported that the synod's final document "recommended softening the church's practice toward those who have divorced and remarried."
The three paragraphs in the final document that dealt with this issue "seems to significantly move decision-making for how [divorced and remarried Catholics] can participate in the church to private conversations in dioceses around the world," NCR reported.
The document itself said, "The conversation with the priest, in internal forum, contributes to the formation of a correct decision on what is blocking the possibility of a fuller participation in the life of the church and on steps that might foster it and make it grow."
Using the "internal forum," the document says, priests can help remarried Catholics "in becoming conscious of their situation before God" and then deciding how to move forward.
NCR's reporting, however, also pointed out that ambiguity in the text would mean that different interpretations would likely arise.

That is what NCR found in interviews with U.S. priests and church personnel who work with married, divorced and remarried Catholics.
Depending on whom you ask:
  • Internal forum may not be necessary if the annulment process is streamlined;
  • Others are waiting for the pope to issue his final document;
  • Some refer the questions directly to the pastors;
  • Education will be needed if implementation of internal forum goes through.
Fr. James Coriden, a retired professor of canon law from Washington Theological Union, describes the internal forum as "a moral decision-making process rather than a canonical or judicial process for people who have experienced the tragedy of divorce and have come to a sense of repentance and desire for the sacraments despite the fact that they are in a second marriage and who cannot or will not avail themselves of the annulment process."
Fr. Robert Ruhnke, director of Marriage Preparation Resources, an online resource, believes internal forum is a useful tool. He shared a case with NCR of what an internal forum case might look like.
"Carl and Elizabeth were a couple in their 80s and wanted to get their marriage validated because they were previously married. There were no witnesses alive to testify in an annulment and [Carl and Elizabeth] were able to receive assurance that everything would be fine. We got them a Catholic marriage certificate and they continued on with life."
Another example he uses is that of Frank and Sue, who divorced and remarried other people. They didn't get an annulment. Frank and his second wife became involved in the church and wanted to receive Communion.
They talked to the priest about the situation. "He and his new wife are receiving Communion and no one is asking questions," said Ruhnke. "Frank called wondering if getting a new pastor would cause a mess and I told him that all the new priest knows is he is very involved in the parish."
Some say that if the annulment process is streamlined, the use of internal forum may not be relevant.
"It seems like one of the things they are going to do is make the annulment process more efficient," said Ruhnke.
Peg Hensler, associate director of the Department of Youth, Marriage and Family Life for the diocese of Trenton, N.J., said she hopes the annulment process is improved. She told NCR, "Anything that will assist couples through this painful and difficult process we believe in the end will be much better for the person."
Kevin Eckery, spokesman for the diocese of Sacramento, Calif., said that most dioceses are formulating guidelines based on the Vatican documents when it comes to annulments, rather than considering internal forum at this time.
Fr. Michael Ryan, pastor of St. James Cathedral in Seattle for 27 years, has dealt with couples using the internal forum. "I've always tried to make the very best use of the church's law, which can be helpful, can be merciful and even be freeing for people to go through the external process of annulments. But for some cases, it's simply a punishing process and it sometimes ends nowhere."
Youngstown, Ohio, Bishop George Murry, who participated at the synod on the family, told NCR he has "encouraged people in irregular marriages to utilize the expedited annulment process inaugurated by Pope Francis."
Some dioceses NCR contacted are waiting until the pope's final document on the matter. Lisa Arriazola, assistant to the tribunal director in the San Antonio archdiocese, said that Msgr. Terry Nolan, judicial vicar, had not received calls about internal forum.
"We expect that we will receive calls," she said. "However, until the Holy Father releases his statements, we will not be providing any information without the certainty of changes."
The same is true in the diocese of Brownsville, Texas, where Fr. Oliver Angel, director of the Judicial and Diocesan Tribunal Office, said they are also waiting for final guidelines from the Vatican.
In Helena, Mont., Fr. John Robertson, judicial vicar, said he had not received any calls, but if he did, "we would refer them to their pastor."
No matter what new guidelines come from Rome, it will take some time to train priests and pastoral ministers. The topic has been taught in seminaries in the past, though Ruhnke suspects it is not taught as much now.
"When I was in the seminary, we learned a lot about internal forum," he said. "It was more important a long time ago when there weren't options for annulments back in those days."
He said that in the late 1960s and 1970s, annulments were beginning to happen and the bishop in Beaumont, Texas, released a letter encouraging the priests to look up people in this situation and help them get reconciled with the church through internal forum.
"At a national family life directors conference two or three years ago, a canon lawyer said there was no need for internal forum," said Ruhnke. "At the same time, tribunals have gotten easier to work with."
Coriden said internal forum was taught in some seminaries and not others, as it was "one of those disputed moral processes," like if someone confesses to using contraception. "The teachings on things like that vary from place to place."
Ryan said that those ordained within the last 30 years have a different mindset and might not be as willing to embrace internal forum. "If the church is going to embrace it, then the church ought to be providing them with steps to understand this and open their minds to it," he said.
"If this is truly something that has a place in the life of the church, and the bishops seem to be saying that it does, then we ought to help awaken people to this," he said.
Fr. Thomas McCarthy, a priest at Blessed Sacrament Parish in Warren, Ohio, told NCR that local bishops can prepare pastors to use internal forum, recognizing that it has been part of practice for years, and talk about it in clergy conferences or clergy support groups.
"What a clergyman is encouraged to do is to help a couple explain their situation to them and it's the couple that has to make the decision," he said. "It's an individual choice and the person has to conscientiously look at their state and their situation and what they choose to do and think is right before God."
Ryan said that when he was a young priest, he wasn't educated about internal forum. "It was always under the radar," he said. "It was often from canon lawyers from a pastoral bent who realized the limitations of the system."
Ryan said he thinks priests of his generation who were formed in the Second Vatican Council "already have the pastoral insights for the whole thing coming out of the synod. It fits into our way of thinking. It is consonant with what we thought was the right thing all along."
He said it's not that they're loose with the law, but "it's more that we try to engage with people and realize there is something about the primacy of conscience when all is said and done."
Hensler told NCR she did some work in the area when working on her master's thesis and learned from a priest in her diocese who told her that "everything has to be done in the external forum. There is no such thing as an internal forum solution recognized in the diocese. That was a few years ago and nothing new with the synod would change that at this point."
Hensler said her goal as a person responsible for marriage ministries is "that everyone would be able to experience the profound joy of sacramental marriage and the grace that we get from sacramental marriage."
"I don't want anyone to not be able to be sacramentally married. My goal is to help parishes identify couples in irregular situations and invite them into conversation and see what's going on and is there any way that we can assist them through this process."

[Elizabeth A. Elliott is an NCR Bertelsen intern. Her email address is eelliott@ncronline.org.]

Monday, January 4, 2016

"A Personal Creed" by Mary Theresa Streck, ARCWP, Reflection on "The Banquet of the Creed" from Abounding in Kindness, by Elizabeth Johnson


Mary Theresa Streck, ARCWP
This morning I reflected on "The Banquet of the Creed" (p. 3-18, Abounding in Kindness) in light of my ministry in service to God's people in the 21st century. This is a personal creed that come to me from reading this section:

A Personal Creed

I believe in you, O Holy One, Source of all, the incomprehensible mystery of love beyond imagining.
I believe that I am in you and that you are in me.
I believe that our relationship is transforming my life.
I believe that you surround me with forgiving, abounding kindness in the midst of darkness, injustice, sin, and death.

I believe in Jesus, anointed by Your Spirit, who embodies your ways in his ministry.
I believe that Jesus did not come to die but to live and help others live in abundance on this beautiful earth.
I believe that Your Spirit anoints me to share in the same ministry by living justly, loving tenderly and walking with integrity.
I believe that you nourish and sustain me through prayer.
I believe that you summon my conscience to action on behalf of justice that will change oppressive structures.

I believe that Your Spirit is at work in all of creation.
I believe that you call me to be a co-creator with you and to join with companions on the journey as you beckon us to birth with you a new creation. 

Amen.

Mary Theresa Streck, ARCWP Book Club,  "The Banquet of the Creed", Abounding in Kindness: Contemporary Theology for the People of God, by Elizabeth Johnson. 

"Beware" by John Chuchman

Beware!
Beware!
Religion will swallow us whole!
It's easy to be swallowed whole and drowned by religion.
It is a kind of a narcotic.

Let’s grow Spiritually
even though being Spiritual is oft counter-religious.

In many ways,
religion gives us the message,
Don't rock the boat.
Don't challenge the system.
That message,
 promoted by the vast majority of Religion’s powerful
 is continually transmitted
through a myriad of ways
to numb us into submission.

Religion encourages us to accept its teachings,
doctrines, dogmas, rites, and rituals
to be quiet,
to leave things the way they are.

But if we are genuine followers
of the Prince of Peace,
the God of life,
we cannot be quiet,
cannot leave evil the way it is.
We must cry out against
 religious abuse, intolerance, and discrimination
because by our silence,
we consent to it.

Filled with a fresh Christmas rebirth of Jesus
within our hearts,
let’s take his loving, peaceful and joyful presence
out into our hurting world this New Year,
and courageously challenge
the entrenched hierarchy.

 
Let us imagine during 2016 a better world
where ALL God's people,
and ALL of God's creation,
(not just the worthy, the acquiescent, the believers)

are respected, protected and cherished.

Sunday, January 3, 2016

Epiphany January 3, 2015 Following the Star by Donna Rougeux ARCWP

Isaiah 60:1-6
Matthew 2:1-12


 Twelve days after Christmas is a special day called Epiphany.  This Sunday is close to that day (January 6) and many churches celebrate Epiphany. An epiphany is an experience of a sudden striking realization of something that changes us. You have heard people say, “I have seen the light.” When someone says that they usually mean that they have experienced something that has given them a new perspective, which has helped them come to a deeper understanding of themselves and of God.

In the gospel story today we hear about the epiphany that inspires this celebration in churches. The first reading from Isaiah is a response of exiled people who experienced an epiphany of God’s presence as they were led back to their homeland. Both of these scripture passages use the images of light to describe experiences of coming to a deeper realization of God-with-us.

 In the gospel story the wise men that live far away from the birthplace of Jesus literally see a light, a star in the sky. For some reason, they think this star is important and indicates the birth of a new king. So they prepare for a trip to find this new king. The story says that this trip even involved getting lost because the wise men stopped to get directions from Herod. When they got back on the right track and saw the star again bringing them to their destination the story says they were overwhelmed with joy.

The sight of the star in the sky somehow convinced the wise men to go on a journey to find Jesus. They did not give up on their trip when they got lost. They lost sight of the star but they knew it was still there so they kept on going and stopped to ask for directions. When they got back on track and were in the presence of the baby they dropped to their knees to show respect, honor and reverence for this life changing experience of following the light to meet Jesus.

This gospel story and the imagery in Isaiah of seeing light, letting light shine and experiencing radiance can help us reflect on the epiphanies of our own lives.  As you look back on your life can you see times when you gained clearer understandings of yourself and of God?

We like the wise men are on a journey and can loose sight of the light. We can fall into dark places when things happen that we do not expect or would not choose. When the light of love breaks through the darkness we like the wise men are filled with hope and can continue the journey even if we have to stop and ask for directions.

Light that shines in the darkness is like a breath of fresh air. It can resuscitate us and take us to the next place. We each have light inside of us that must be nurtured so it can grow and so it can help other people. Light takes the form of peace, love and joy and it is much more powerful than the darkness of fear, hate and sadness.

By what light do you see God? Have you had any epiphanies lately? What peace, love or joy has taken you to a new understanding of yourself and of God? I shared with you last week about a recent epiphany I experienced when the children arrived just in time to help us do our Christmas program. That experience of love from the parents, the children and the Spirit, filled me with a deeper reverence, respect and honor of God. I felt like the wise men who were overwhelmed with joy and who dropped to their knees when they found the baby Jesus. In the midst of a very busy week of preparing Christmas celebrations I experienced God-with-us in and deep and powerful way.


How about you? Where are you on the journey? Are you in a dark place? Do you see a light? Have you experienced any epiphanies? Do you need to stop for directions? I pray that we can learn from the story of the wise men that the light leads us out of the darkness and that we must continue the journey even when we loose sight of the star. May we continue to be a light for each other like the children and their parents were for me. And may we continue to grow into a deeper understanding of ourselves and of God who is always with us.
Donna  Rougeux, ARCWP

Mary Mother of Jesus Inclusive Catholic Community Celebration of Epiphany with Co-Presiders Roman and Theresa Rodriquez, Janet Blakeley, Music Minister

3 Wise Women
It is joked that if the three wise men had been women, they would have asked directions and thus arrived in time to help with the birth, cleaned the stable, and brought practical gifts. 
Left to right: Theresa and Roman Rodriguez


THE RE-GIFT

EVERYONE KNOWS WHAT A RE-GIFT IS. IT IS BEAUTIFUL. IT GIVES YOU SOME PLEASURE THINKING ABOUT THE PERSON THAT GAVE IT TO YOU.

BUT THEN YOU PASS IT ON. YOU WANT TO SHARE THE GIFT WITH OTHERS, TO LET THEM SEE ITS BEAUTY.

WHEN THE THREE WISE MEN FOLLOWED A STAR TO THE STABLE IN BETHLEHEM, THEY WERE ALSO SHARING GIFTS, HOPING TO PLEASE THE NEW BORN KING.

LITTLE DID THEY KNOW THAT THE BABE IN THE STABLE WAS THE GIFT. HE IS THE GIFT THAT CAME INTO THE WORLD TO US: THE GIFT OF FAITH, THE GIFT OF SCRIPTURE, THE GIFT OF THE EUCHARIST. BUT WE MUST NOT KEEP IT TO OURSELVES. WE HAVE A RESPONSIBILITY FOR THIS GIFT. JESUS IS THE RE-GIFT.

IT’S OUR TURN TO PASS ON THE GIFT TO OTHERS, SO THAT OTHERS MAY KNOW THE JOY OF GOD’S GIFT TO US.

SO GO SHARE THE GIFT.
Roman Rodriguez gave homily starter

THE THREE KINGS  IN SPAIN

"The best-loved Spanish Christmas tradition among children is Los Tres Reyes Magos (the Three Wise Men).  Santa Claus is quite well-known as he delivers toys and presnts, but the real stars in Spain are los Reyes.  These Three Kings are the ones who followed a star to meet the new King of Kings (Baby Jesus) and offered him three presents: gold, frankincense and myrrh to the newborn child in Belén (Bethlehem).
When December comes, all the boys and girls in Spain and Latin America start to write their letters to The Three Kings or to their favorite King: Melchor, Gaspar or Baltasar.  They write about the things they’d like to receive on the morning of the 6th of January, (which is the day the presents get delivered) and also about their behavior during the year.  If they’ve been good, they get presents; if they’ve been bad, they get a piece of coal.
Their Majesties travel by camel and due to the fact that they come from the East, they take a long time to arrive to Spain.  Once there, they visit all the cities and villages, and listen to the children’s requests.  This is followed by a  spectacular parade.  On the night of the 5th, the children put their shoes by the door before going to bed so that the Kings will know how many children live there.  They also put out something to eat and drink for Melchor, Gaspar, and Baltasar, and also water and grass for the camels. (true, they can last a month or more without drinking water, but that night they have a lot of work to do, so they need extra water and food).
On the morning of the 6th, children find their presents inside and outside the shoes (it’s very unusual for their Majesties to bring carbones (coal) because no child really behaves so badly, and many people say it’s not true that naughty girls and boys get only coal and not toys).  The food and drink placed in the plates and glasses are now gone .  The children excitedlystart playing with their toys, and wait for the next 5th of January to come around."

C 1996 – 2016 don Quijote Salamanca S.L. All rights reserved.
Pat McMillan, Lector




Celebration of Katy Zatsick's birthday after Liturgy 
Left to right: Bridget Mary and Katy Zatsick
left to right, Bob, Mary, Jenai
Left to right: Marie, Mary Al, Bob, Mary