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Thursday, August 18, 2016

Rigoberta Menchu: Human Rights and Indigenous Peoples,Rigoberta Menchú is a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, indigenous woman and survivor of genocide in Guatemala. She seeks the observance of a code of ethics for an era of peace, as her contribution to humanity.



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Irvq1CHPAvo&feature=youtu.be


Rigoberta Menchu: Human Rights and Indigenous Peoples

As We Love Ourselves and Others...We Are God-Filled


Wedding of Rick Sapp and Nancy Fitzgerald June 2015
Both Rick and Nancy were "God-filled" and are now in God's eternal embrace. 

"As we love ourselves, we move toward our own bliss, by which Joseph Campbell meant our highest enthusiasm. The word ‘entheos’ means ‘god-filled.’ Moving towards that which fills us with the godhood, that place where time is not, is all we need to do to change the world around us. Then we, naturally and without effort, love others and allow them to move beyond their self-imposed limitations, and in their own ways"

"Diarmuid Martin’s Maynooth Manoeuvre " by John Cooney, The Phoenix, August 14, 2016.

Diarmuid Martin has been isolated from his 25 episcopal colleagues in alleging the existence of a gay culture in Maynooth, but he has the backing of the most powerful leader in Christendom – none other than the Bishop of Rome, Pope Francis.
In very publicly withdrawing his three students at St Patrick’s College and sending  them instead to the Pontifical Irish College in Rome, the Archbishop of Dublin has affirmed solidarity with the Pope.  Francis has been attempting  to promote open discussion among world bishops about  contentious issues  of sexual morality, a debate  closed down by his predecessors, John Paul II and Benedict XVI.  
The frenzied running of this summer’s silly season story in the Irish media has seen conservative commentators such as David Quinn of the Iona Institute and the even more reactionary Anthony Murphy of the Irish Voice  applauding  Ironically, this saw them applauding Diarmuid of Dublin and urging him to clean out Maynooth of unorthodox theology teaching.
Undoubtedly, Maynooth’s problems are many and lie for the greater part in the ineptitude of the good Bishops, the products of a narrow background which has left them out of their depth in matters theological and pastoral, Yet as trustees they wield absolute power over the seminary, a power they are ill equipped to use.
Sadly the vast majority of students simply don't have the cultural depth to attempt a course in contemporary  theology . Down the years this has included several  ill educated zealots, few of whom would be accepted by any of the major religious orders. Indeed, one  order in a recent year rejected a whole tranche of would be postulants!
However, in the new fangled “social media”, bishops can’t stop basic  human curiosity from igniting among  this generation of millenials. Young fellows at Maynooth have a mobile phone and that means they are all tempted by social media - especially if an "app" culture is already up and running when they arrive at the seminary. So, in the quiet hours they hop onto these sites and connect with the real world. where sins are waiting to be committed!
However, sending off young fellas to Rome is not necessarily the way of salvation. Rather, it might tempt them even more to do as the Romans do. Scusi, padre. How do you say "Tinder" or "Grindre" in Italian? Indeed, in his attempts to implement Vatican Two Pope Francis has come up against the opposition of a gay and very conservative cabal embedded in the Vatican bureaucracy.
As a former experienced Vatican diplomat, Diarmuid knows that he has a common cause with the reformist Francis, and that he needs to drag the Irish church into the 21st century before the August 2018 visit to Ireland of Pope Francis .More to the point, he needs to make a splash about the issue in Ireland., thus drawing the public aattention to his alignment with the new ,liberal outlook that Francis is trying to introduce.  If handled adroitly, this current crisis could be Martin’s pathway  to the coveted Red Hat.

So Diarmuid has two years to get the other 25 bishops into line behind his real game plan of working out a new community style training programme based on an amalgamation of Maynooth, Milltown Park and the Loyola Institute at Trinity College. 
*John Cooney is a Irish journalist

Wednesday, August 17, 2016

"Stop shaming women for seeking equal power in the church" by Jamie Manson, National Catholic Reporter, Agree Equal Power,+ Equal Rites, =Loving Service

https://www.ncronline.org/blogs/grace-margins/stop-shaming-women-seeking-equal-power-church


Bridget Mary's Response: I agree with Jamie Manson's analysis. The real issue is equal power: equal rights include equal rites. Equal power is empowering, and fosters healthy relationships. This indeed is one of the major issues. 
Inclusive Catholic Community: Upper Room, Albany, New York

In our inclusive Catholic communities, we promote a companionship of empowered disciples where the gifts of all are affirmed in ministry. As a prophetic movement , we are challenging the church from within to live compassion and justice by embracing the marginalized, including the divorced and remarried, gays, lesbians, transgender, women and all who are modern day outcastes in our contemporary church. We invite everyone into the circle of God's boundless love to celebrate sacraments.

Equal Power and Equal Rites is a reality in Inclusive, Empowered, Catholic Communities

In my community, Mary Mother of Jesus Inclusive Catholic Community, in Sarasota, Florida, we celebrate inclusive liturgies where all invited to receive Communion, participate in dialogue homilies, pray the Eucharistic Prayer, and make decisions. www.marymotherofjesus.org

If the Commission on Women Deacons recommends and Pope Francis adopts the early church model of women deacons as leaders in service with their communities, then, I believe women deacons could be a step forward. If Francis goes with the contemporary model of the permanent deacon today , then I agree with Jamie Manson, women deacons will not advance equal rights in the Catholic Church. 

While women deacons will join their brothers in the clerical ranks, both will remain second class as they fill a major pastoral need in service to God's people! However, I also believe that many Catholics will be blessed by their ministry of loving presence, wisdom and compassion.
Bridget Mary Meehan, ARCWP, www.arcwp.org













In late June, on a flight back from Armenia, Pope Francis told a team of reporters that he was angry.
What made Francis angry wasn't the continued deaths of countless refugees, or the latest instance of environmental degradation or some grim statistics about rates of human trafficking. No, what angered him was the suggestion, by some in the media, that he had "opened the door to deaconesses," after his May 12 dialogue with the International Union of Superiors General (UISG).
"Really?" Francis said incredulously to the reporters aboard the plane, "I was a bit angry with the media because this is not saying the truth of the thing to the people." He explained that, after the UISG meeting, he asked the prefect for the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (Gerhard Müller) to compile a list of possible members of a commission to study the role of women deacons in the early church.
"When you want something not to be resolved, make a commission," Francis joked to the journalists,quoting line from a former president of Argentina.
And, yet, on August 2, just weeks after this press conference, the pope appointed six men and six women to the "Study Commission on the Women's Diaconate."
But the pope's anger over the notion that admitting women to some form of the diaconate was already a fait accompli suggests the depth of angst conjured by even the suggestion of offering women a semblance of authority in the church.
We don't know what, if anything, will be resolved by this commission. We do not know how long they will meet, we do not know what they will recommend, and we do not know how Pope Francis will respond to their recommendations.
We do know that this commission will not resolve the neuralgic issue of the ordination of women to the priesthood. The reasons have been laid out. First, there is clear historical precedent for women deacons, where there isn't clear precedent for women priests. Second, women deacons are a matter of ecclesiastical law that can be changed, whereas women priests have been banned by church doctrine.
But the deeper reason that women will be denied the priesthood lies in the Catholic church's radical opposition to allowing women and men equal power in the realms of ecclesiastical and sacramental authority.
According to the pope and the hierarchy, women cannot have equal power in the church because it would go against nature. That's because they believe that God created men to be leaders, authorities and decision-makers, while women were made to be servants, helpers and nurturers.
This is why the pope has repeatedly said that women are entitled to equal dignity, but he has not said that they are entitled to equal power. He wants women's voices to be heard in discussions, but he doesn't necessarily want to entrust them to make decisions.
It's a safe bet, therefore, that the only form of the diaconate for women that can gain approval from the pope is one that honors the model of male-female complementarity that Francis regularly extols when discussing any issue related to gender and sexuality.
I can appreciate those who see the creation of this commission as a small, important step towards integrating women into the decision-making positions in the church. But as we celebrate this incremental step, I think it is wise to bear in mind a sobering reality. We are dealing with a hierarchy that has an enshrined belief that God has ordered the cosmos and human relations in a way that de facto denies women power in the church that is equal to men.
The struggle for women's equal participation in the church will, therefore, continue to arouse a variety of emotions -- and Pope Francis is not the only one whose anger will get piqued by the topic.
But we shouldn't concern ourselves too much with the anger or outrage of the church leaders or conservative Catholics. Much more alarming is the discomfort that is being stirred among Catholics who claim that they want equality for women in the church.
For example, more than once in the conversation about women deacons, I have heard the argument that women who want to be deacons "do not want power," they simply want to serve, or to be servant leaders.
I realize that such rhetoric is intended to avoid scaring off the men who will ultimately decide if women will be deacons. But playing down women's right to ecclesial power and playing up women's desire to serve could result in the creation of a diminished form of the diaconate for women -- one that is different from the male diaconate and one in which female deacons would get trapped in rut of service, loaded down with lots of new responsibilities, but endowed with very little actual authority.
The hierarchy already believe that women were born to play the role of the servant, and have convinced themselves that it is service alone that women find uniquely fulfilling.
So a new form of the diaconate that is heavy on support of the priest and light on sacramental faculties could in fact set the struggle for women's equality in the church back by years, if not centuries, rather than creating an incremental step towards progress.
But an even darker threat looms over the struggle for women's equality in the church, and I hear it in some of the criticisms leveled against those who campaign for women in the priesthood. Some progressive Catholics have expressed resentment towards the women's ordination movement for impeding or derailing any possibility of progress for women in the church, as if expecting to be recognized as equal is asking too much.
I've also heard more than one person suggest (taking a cue from Pope Francis' own warning that women will be "clericalized" by ordination) that women who want the priesthood are power-hungry careerists who seek honors, and titles and status.
I find this argument particularly troubling, since we rarely hear anyone accuse a young man seeking the priesthood of such nefarious motivations. We tend to give male seminarians the benefit of the doubt, but it seems such good intentions aren't assumed of Catholic women who feel qualified to seek the priesthood.
There is a demonization, sometimes subtle, sometimes not so subtle, of women who want the same power afforded to men in the institutional church. That sort of shaming and blaming must stop. The only purpose it serves is to divide and conquer Catholics who want to see women treated with genuine justice and equality in the church.
We must insist that there is no shame in a woman's desire for equal power in her church. According to the Oxford Dictionary, "power" means "the ability or capacity to do something or act in a particular way," or "the capacity or ability to direct or influence the behavior of others or the course of events." Where is the sin in a woman's wanting to function in this way within her church?
Those who have had the blessing of encountering good priests and good bishops, and those who exalt Pope Francis for using his ecclesial power to do good, have seen that not all church power is corrupting. Why, then, can't women be trusted to do the same good in any and all clerical roles? Why is it that when a woman wants sacramental or decision-making power, her image gets sullied as controlling, domineering, or ambitious?
As we move forward in our discussion about women deacons, we must stop disparaging and devaluing women who want equal rites in our church. There is no more shame in a woman's wanting to use sacramental or spiritual power than there is shame in Pope Francis' own use of it. Like the beloved pope, women are simply trying to claim the power that God has already given them.
[Jamie L. Manson is NCR books editor. She received her Master of Divinity degree from Yale Divinity School, where she studied Catholic theology and sexual ethics. Her email address is jmanson@ncronline.org.]
Editor's note: We can send you an email alert every time Jamie Manson's column, "Grace on the Margins," is posted to NCRonline.org. Go to this page and follow directions: Email alert sign-up.

"The Beauty of the Dancer" by Sara Thomsen, Inspirational Music Videos

https://youtu.be/Lax7fxdOnVU









Tuesday, August 16, 2016

"Toward an Inclusive Church" by Janice Sevre Duszynska ARCWP, Via Pacis

Janice Sevre Duszynska ARCWP and Christina Moriera ARCWP in  Rome



See p. 3 and 4 for Article: "Toward an Inclusive church."

"Role of Prophet" by Sister Joan Chittister, Roman Catholic Women Priests Movement: Prophets of Gospel Equality

 Bridget Mary's Response: 

Roman Catholic Women Priests and all who practice Gospel inclusiveness are contemporary prophets.
We live as a discipleship of equals in grassroots, inclusive communities, changing the church one community at a time. 

We are walking in the footsteps of Saints Catherine of Siena, Joan of Arc, Dorothy Day and many more!

Bridget Mary Meehan, ARCWP, www.arcwp.org
Bridget Mary Meehan, MA, D Min, is a Bishop with the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests, and a Sister for Christian Community. She is a founding member of the Mary Mother of Jesus Inclusive Catholic Community in Sarasota, Florida. As a woman priest and bishop, Bridget Mary ordains, presides at liturgies, officiates at weddings and offers sacramental ministry. Bridget Mary is the author of twenty books and is currently the Dean of the Doctor of Ministry Program for Global Ministries University. Her work in communications media includes programs about women priests on Google and YouTube. Bridget Mary was ordained a priest in the first USA ordination in Pittsburgh on July 31, 2006 and was ordained a bishop in Santa Barbara, California on April 19, 2009. Email: sofiabmm@aol.com Blog http://bridgetmarys.blogspot.com/

St. Catherine of Siena


"Role of the prophet"

There is a major difference between a critic and a prophet. Critics stand outside a system and mock it. Prophets remain clear-eyed and conscientious, inside a sinful system, and love it anyway. It is easy to condemn the country, for instance. It is possible to criticize the church. But it is prophetic to love both church and country enough to want them to be everything they claim to be—just, honest, free, equal—and then to stay with them in their faltering attempts to do so, even if it is you yourself against whom both church and state turn in their attempts to evade the prophetic truth of the time.

The French papacy of Avignon did not want to hear the call of Catherine of Siena but, in the end, she prevailed and they returned the Holy See to Rome. The powers that be did not want to hear Joan of Arc and killed her to silence her, but in the end, her prophetic word outlasted them all. Neither church nor state wanted to hear Dorothy Day and Thomas Merton in their pleas for the poor and their prophetic cries for peace, but in the need it is their messages that expose the secularization of the church, that haunt it at the turn of every gospel page, that challenge it to this day and that have marked its best presence in these times.

The function of the prophet is not to destroy. The function of the prophet is to expose whatever cancers fester beneath the surface so that what is loved can be saved while there is yet time.

To claim, then, that to criticize the government is treason, to insist that to criticize the church is disunity, may be the greatest perfidy and the deepest infidelity of them all. It is a prophet’s lot to risk the two so that what is worth loving can be lovable again.



       —from The Cry of the Prophet by Joan Chittister

'Iron Nun' Proves Youth Is Unlimited In Nike Ad : Sister Madeline is a Sister for Christian Community, My Community and an Inspiration to All!

With a nickname like the “Iron Nun,” Sister Madonna Buder isn’t the kind of lady you’d want to underestimate. ...


"Sr. Megan Rice: People are miseducated about nuclear weapons" by Janice Sevre Duszynska ARCWP Max Obuszewski , National Catholic Reporter



https://www.ncronline.org/blogs/ncr-today/sr-megan-rice-people-are-miseducated-about-nuclear-weapons



  |  


On July 28, 2012, Society of the Holy Child Jesus Sr. Megan Rice, 86, along with two other activists in the Transform Now Plowshares movement, broke into the government's premier nuclear storage facility in Oak Ridge, Tenn. The three were convicted in May 2013 for damaging federal property and obstructing the national defense of the U.S. Rice was sentenced to 35 months and was released May 16, 2015.
Janice Sevre-Duszynska, along with Max Obuszewski of the Baltimore Nonviolence Center, interviewed Rice July 10 at the Jonah House in Baltimore, less than a month before the 71st anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
Sevre-Duszynska: Why is it important to talk about nuclear weapons, especially as we commemorate the 71st anniversary of Hiroshima-Nagasaki?
Rice: Mainly, I think it's important to wake people up. They've gone to sleep for 70 years by the intent of the government from the beginning. People weren't consulted in the building or use of these horrific weapons. It was all very secret and very contained. Even during the production of nuclear weapons, one worker didn't know what the other was doing.
… What happened at Hiroshima and Nagasaki is not in the textbooks. It was unspeakable to have any discussion of the suffering and death of hundreds of thousands of Japanese in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Moreover, the decision-makers were in denial. There were scientists who worked on the Manhattan Project who did try to warn government officials about using these awful weapons. After the Trinity Test at Los Alamos, N.M., in 1945, Robert Oppenheimer, director of the Manhattan Project, recognized the destructive nature of the atom bomb and (possibly) began to have reservations about its use. The test proved that the bomb worked and that it would cause tremendous devastation. There was never a weapon like it in history.
… After Germany was defeated, a number of scientists did not want the bomb to be used. One alternative would have been to explode it over a deserted island with the hope that Japan would recognize its destructive nature and surrender. … Unfortunately, the development of nuclear weapons continues. One or two of today's atomic bombs could destroy the planet.
Do we keep Hiroshima-Nagasaki out of our mindset?
Many people do not have a personal connection unless they are Japanese or are humanitarians who have visited Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Some of the U.S. soldiers who were part of the occupation forces in Japan suffered from PTSD after seeing the destruction caused by the A-bombs.
There were people who did speak out to condemn the use of nuclear weapons. Some veterans were affected physically and emotionally because they were part of the post-war occupation. In 1988 under President Reagan, The Atomic Veterans Compensation Act was passed despite significant opposition. Very few veterans were adequately compensated. The law was passed more than 40 years after the war, and many of the atomic veterans were dead. Their wives should be compensated.
So when you look back at your action at Oak Ridge, what are your thoughts?
I feel gratitude as we were able to do what we planned to do or hoped to do: To enter a base and inform the workers (as well as the rest of the country) of the illegality of nuclear weapons is a success. It was very difficult to get into the place, so we had to go where you wouldn't be seen.
It's a crime scene: Crimes against humanity. Crimes against international laws and treaties. That shouldn't even have to be said. The powers that be wouldn't allow us to say this in our defense. The government, including Congress, is engaged in a cover-up, which results in the limiting of media coverage, and thus the criminality is not allowed to be exposed in a court of law.
There are moral laws, ethics, and values obviously. And so, therefore, any laws that protect the production or use of nuclear weapons are invalid because a law has to be enacted to protect the common good. The Rev. Martin Luther King said a law that is not a just law is not to be obeyed. Otherwise, you're promoting the crime.
What about people in church communities?
People in various religious faith traditions recognize that it is a crime to possess nuclear weapons. Unfortunately, many ministers, bishops or others involved in religious communities are not addressing this issue. They are failing to educate their people. They will not oppose the ongoing production or the storage and possession of nuclear weapons.
… It's not taught. I've asked people if they were told in elementary school or high school as to what the bomb did. Sometimes it's taught in high school, but it's rare. It's not in the curriculum.
What do you say to people? What action do you suggest they take?
Let people take some time and look into this at each stage of their lives. Universities should be researching it and having courses about it. People need to know. It needs to be taught as historical fact and let people make their own conclusions about it: When they look what happened to people whose lives were exterminated in less than a minute and hundreds of thousands were damaged the rest of their lives. Look what's neglected in their lives and their children's lives and the $10 trillion spent.


Were you pleased with Dan Zak's bookAlmighty: Courage, Resistance, and Existential Peril in the Nuclear Age?
I regret occupying so much space ... not necessary stuff. All of us were happy that he addressed the issue of nuclear weapons, the main purpose of the book. He exposed the madness of nuclear weapons. Dan has done that very conscientiously. Certain details he could have left out -- not just about myself. ... I give huge praise for the breadth of information that he gives in a very readable way ... and I'm thinking of it as a textbook of the 2015 nuclear weapons complex. ... Maybe others would be inclined to write a history book, a textbook.
There are two times he calls our actions "crimes" and he doesn't qualify these words. He doesn't say this is our shared responsibility whenever we know our government is involved in criminal activity to expose and oppose all that the government is doing against the common good.
Obuszewski: At Concepcion Picciotto's funeral, [her attorney] Mark Goldstone pointed out many thought she was crazy for protesting nuclear weapons for more than 30 years, mostly living outside the White House. Some of us, however, think that anyone contemplating the use of nuclear weapons is certifiably insane.

It shows how people were misled. We are compassionate with them because they were denied the truth in their upbringing. They are unable to recognize the immorality or even the thought of a nuclear bomb. ... Unable because of their miseducation.
This book of Dan Zak's exposes the truth very courageously and accurately. Other journalists who have exposed the truth have lost their jobs. ... A New York Times reporter, Raymond Bonner, lost his job for exposing U.S. involvement in death squad activities in Latin America.
I don't feel I've been into it that long, for 72 years. From my uncle who was at Nagasaki, that's where I got all my zest. We had to do this action. He was there for five months, nothing to do but drive around and see the absence of life. He met the bishop of Nagasaki whose cathedral had been destroyed and where his mother and sister were exterminated when the bomb was dropped. Paul Yamaguchi, they became lifelong friends. My uncle was in the Marines, and became a non-commissioned officer. In a way he also became a victim.
[Janice Sevre-Duszynska is a priest in the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests, peace and justice activist, and a retired teacher. Max Obuszewski works with the Baltimore Nonviolence Center. ]

A LITANY By Rita Lucey ARCWP In gratitude for who I am


DEARLY BELOVEDS:    Rhea, Artemis, Ops, Ge, Mata, Urania, Urunome, Ida, and Maia in Crete; Venus, Vesta, and Anna in Italy; and Hubbel in Arabia, Isis, in Egypt and Gaia, our ancestors long before our time.
---
 We STAND ON YOUR SHOULDERS


TO LILLITH, FIRST WIFE OF ADAM,
WHO REFUSED TO BE SUBSERVIENT(from ancient Jewish myth)

Refrain:

ANCIENT MOTHER I HEAR  YOU CALL ME*

TO EVE, WHO TOOK THE TREE OF KNOWLEDGE
WITH HER WHEN SHE LEFT EDEN (non biblical myth)

ANCIENT MOTHER I HEAR YOU CALL ME*

TO SARAH AND HAGAR, WHO  EACH BIRTHED A SON OF ABRAHAM (Genesis 16)

ANCIENT MOTHER I HEAR YOU CALL ME

TO KETURAH, WHO BIRTHED TWELVE SONS TO ABRAHAM (Genesis 25)

ANCIENT MOTHER I HEAR YOU CALL ME.


TO BATHSHEBA,  THE WIFE OF DAVID, AND MOTHER OF SOLOMON (Chronicles, II Samuel, Kings 4:15)

ANCIENT MOTHER I HEAR YOU CALL ME


TO SHIPHRAH AND PUAH, VALIANT  MIDWIVES, WHO DEFY THE PHAROH’S COMMAND TO
KILL FIRST BORN MALES(Exodus 1: 15-22

ANCIENT MOTHER I HEAR YOU CALL ME

TO SHEERAH, WOMAN OF VISION, BUILDER OF CITIES (1Chron 7:24)

ANCIENT MOTHER I HEAR YOU CALL ME

TO MIRIAM, A PROPHET, SISTER OF MOSES AND AARON,  WHO LEADS HER PEOPLE IN A LITURGY OF THANKSGIVING AFTER THE CROSSING OF THE SEA (Exodus)

ANCIENT MOTHER I HEAR YOU CALL ME


TO JOCHEBED WHO BIRTHED MOSES, MIRIAM AND AARON, LEADERS IN THEIR WORLD (Ex 1:2)

ANCIENT MOTHER I HEAR YOU CALL ME

TO HANNAH, PROPHETESS AND CITIZEN OF JERUSALEM, MOTHER OF SAMUEL (1 Samuel)

ANCIENT MOTHER I HEAR YOU CALL ME*


TO ESTHER, QUEEN OF THE PERSIAN EMPIRE WHO SAVES HER PEOPLE AS SHE APPEALS TO GOD FOR STRENGTH (Esther)

ANCIENT MOTHER I HEAR YOU CALL ME

TO DEBORAH, PROPHET AND JUDGE OF ISRAEL,
WHO LED HER PEOPLE TO VICTORIOUS BATTLE (Judges 4-5)

ANCIENT MOTHER I HEAR YOU CALL ME


TO RUTH, WHO SHOWS DEVOTION TO HER MOTHER IN LAW NAOMI(Ruth 1-4)

ANCIENT MOTHER I HEAR YOU CALL ME

TO HULDAH, THE PROPHET, CONSULTED BY KING JOSIAH, WHO RECOGNIZES HER
INTELLECT AND KNOWLEDGE(2Kings 22:14-20

ANCIENT MOTHER I HEAR YOU CALL ME

TO JUDITH, WHO JEOPARDIZES HER LIFE FOR HER PEOPLE (Judith)

ANCIENT MOTHER I HEAR YOU CALL ME


TO THE MOTHER OF THE MACCABEE BROTHERS,WHO ENCOURAGED THEIR BRAVERY(Maccabes)

ANCIENT MOTHER I HEAR YOU CALL ME

TO PHOEBE, A DEACONESS, OF THE CHURCH OF Cenchrae (Romans, 16:1-2)

STRENGTHEN ME IN  SOPHIA JESUS

TO PRISCA AND AQUILA, PAUL’S CO-WORKERS IN PROCLAIMING THE GOSPEL (Romans 16: 3-4)

STRENGTHEN ME IN SOPHIA JESUS

TO EUNICE THE MOTHER, AND LOIS THE GRANDMOTHER OF TIMOTHY (Romans 16:1-12)

STRENGTHEN ME IN  SOPHIA JESUS

TO THE SISTERS TRYPHAENA AND TRYPHOSA WHO WORK HARD
FOR OUR GOD (Romans 16:12)

STRENGTHEN ME IN  SOPHIA JESUS

TO THE MOTHERS OF JOHN THE BAPTIST, AND JESUS OF NAZARETH
WHO DID NOT UNDERSTAND THEIR SONS UNTIL THEIR DEATHS(synoptic gospels)

STRENGTHEN ME IN  SOPHIA JESUS

TO THE UNAMED WOMAN, A DAUGHTER OF ABRAHAM,  HEALED AFTER EIGHTEEN YEARS (Luke 13:10-17)

STRENGTHEN ME IN  SOPHIA JESUS

TO MARY MAGDALEN, BELOVED OF JESUS, AND FIRST AMONG THE APOSTLES
(John 20:10-18)

GUIDE ME IN YOUR FOOTSTEPS

TO ANNA, THE MOTHER OF MARY, (LUKE2:22-40)

GUIDE ME IN YOUR FOOTSTEPS


TO TABITHA, LYDIA, AND PRISCILLA, WOMEN LEADERS IN THE FIRST CHRISTIAN COMMUNITY (Acts 4)

GUIDE ME IN YOUR FOOTSTEPS


TO THE UNAMED WOMAN WITH THE HEMORRHAGE, WHO AGAINST THE CULTURE, DARES TO TOUCH JESUS (Mark5:21-43)

GUIDE ME IN YOUR FOOTSTEPS SOPHIA JESUS

TO THE UNNAMED WOMAN WHO ANNOINTS JESUS’ HEAD AT THE BEGINNING OF HIS PASSION (Matthew 26:6-13)

GUIDE ME IN YOUR FOOTSTEPS  SOPHIA JESUS

TO THE WOMEN WHO STOOD BENEATH THE CROSS WHEN ALL OTHERS HAD DESERTED THE DYING JESUS.  (Matthew 26)

GUIDE ME IN YOUR FOOTSTEPS SOPHIA JESUS

TO MARY OF BETHANY WHO ANOINTS JESUS AT THE BANQUEST SERVED BY HER SISTER MARTHA. (John 12:1-8)

GUIDE ME IN YOUR FOOTSTEPS SOPHIA JESUS

TO THE SINFUL AND PENITENT WOMAN WHO WASHES JESUS FEET WITH HER TEARS, (Luke7:36-50)

GUIDE ME IN YOUR FOOTSTEPS SOPHIA JESUS

TO JOANNA AND SUSANNA, WOMEN DISCIPLES, AND OTHERS WHO GO UNNAMED (Luke 8:2-4)

GUIDE ME IN YOUR FOOTSTEPS SOPHIA JESUS

Prayer:

For we, as women, are full  “partners in God’s great triumphant parade” (2 Corinthians 2:14.)  We are all part of the Kin-Dom,  brothers and sisters on the journey of a lifetime - a communion of saints.

“Both the weakness and the glory of your ancestors are within you.  You carry the lived and unlived lives of your parents, grandparents and great-grandparents as far back as DNA and genomes can trace  ---which is pretty far back. We are the first generation to know that this is literally and biologically true.  Living in the communion of saints, or in what some now call “deep time,” means we can take ourselves very seriously (as part of the whole communion) and not too seriously at all (precisely because we are just a part!) at the very same time.”  Richard Rohr (OFM) daily meditations.

November 2013- a litany engendered by the words of Fr. Richard Rohr.

The term Sophia Jesus calls upon the Shekinah, the Divine Wisdom that dwells within.
( Ex25:8,29:45-46)

It means that the powerful feminine presence is among us.. (She Who is, Johnson, 85)