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Saturday, July 7, 2018

"Dolores Leckey bridged the laity-hierarchy gap", by Dana Greene, National Catholic Reporter

https://www.ncronline.org/news/people/dolores-leckey-bridged-laity-hierarchy-gap

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Dolores Leckey in 1997 (Rick Reinhard)
The Second Vatican Council presented alternative roles for believers, those who make up more than 99 percent of all Catholics. In it, the "docile flock" was redefined as the people of God. Lumen Gentium stated unequivocally that the faithful shared in the "priestly, prophetic and kingly functions of Christ" and as such had a mission both in the world and the church.
Yet between the promulgation of these words and the reality there was a huge chasm that would be bridged over the next several decades. There were two issues of importance: how to persuade those with ecclesial authority to respond positively to lay empowerment, and how to educate laity about its mission.
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Standing in this gap between aspiration and reality was Dolores Conklin Leckey. 
Born the youngest of five into a devout Irish Catholic family in Queens, New York, Leckey learned early on to trust the church. She attended parochial schools and went off to St. John's University in New York to study literature and theology.
By age 21, both her parents had died and she learned to live independently. She began teaching high school and attended New York University at night, and in 1957 married Tom Leckey, with whom she moved to South Bend, Indiana, where he pursued doctoral work.
When they relocated to Arlington, Virginia, in 1958, she became ill with rheumatic fever and in her confinement read the mystics, who spurred in her a desire to learn how to pray.
In a period of five years, she gave birth to four children, subsequently going on to work at a variety of jobs, including as a producer for public television and teaching at the De Sales School of Theology. During this same time, she earned a master's degree in adult education at George Washington University and helped found the ecumenical Shalem Institute for Spiritual Formation. As residents of Arlington, she and her husband worked to help create affordable housing there.
It was not until the mid-1970s that the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops responded to the need to encourage an enlivened laity. A new secretariat was created, and Leckey, who did not even know where the bishops' headquarters was, was hired in October 1977 as the founding director of the Secretariat for the Laity.

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Book cover of "Interior Journey: A Spirituality for Contemporary Seekers" by Dolores Leckey (CNS)
The territory was uncharted and she was the lone woman to lead a secretariat. She worked at the U.S. bishops' office for 20 years, creating a unique and pioneering legacy.
This was followed by an appointment as senior fellow at the Woodstock Theological Center at Georgetown University, where for 14 years she continued to encourage lay participation in the church and the world.
Support for laity was a new idea with no precedent, hence Leckey believed that while some bishops were sympathetic, others were perplexed as to how to move forward. As she came to know these men personally, she gained their trust. A born connector of people, she worked to garner episcopal support and simultaneously to encourage lay efforts for spiritual deepening.
In 1980, under the leadership of Bishop Albert Ottenweller, a pastoral document, "Called and Gifted: The American Catholic Laity," was issued, urging the laity to lives of holiness, community and ministry. In some quarters, this last imperative to lay ministry caused consternation. Ordained clerics were ministers, how could those who were merely baptized claim that authority?
Gradually, there was greater openness to the need for lay ministers, particularly with the decline of ordained clergy. Leckey continued to advocate for laity, serving as an official adviser to the American bishops at both the 1980 Synod of Bishops on marriage and the family and the Synod of Bishops on the laity in 1987.
For more than 35 years, Leckey lectured and wrote on lay spirituality, mining the treasures of the Catholic tradition and revitalizing them for the contemporary world. She crafted her work to be accessible and drew on her own sources of encouragement — Scripture, literature, poetry, theology and personal experience. She was particularly indebted to women saints and mystics — Teresa of Avila, Thérèse of Lisieux, Catherine of Siena, Angela of Foligno, Catherine of Genoa, Evelyn Underhill and Dorothy Day.
"The one duty of the multitude [the laity] is to allow themselves to be led and, like a docile flock, to follow the Pastors."
— Pope Pius X
Leckey's 12 books focused on the laity and spirituality. In Laity Stirring the Church (1987), she addresses several issues that were causing suffering among the laity, but also offered the opportunity for hope and creative response. These included marriage, lay ministry, the role of women, and the laity's hunger for the experience of God. A later book, The Laity and Christian Education (2006), explores the history of how the laity was moved to "center stage" during Vatican II and the postconciliar period.
Cognizant of the need to encourage lay spirituality, she wrote The Ordinary Way: A Family Sprituality (1982), in which she focused on the family as the first place one encounters God. In order to strengthen this community, this "doorway to God," she examined the traditions of the monastic family and applied them to domestic life.
In other works, she explored prayer, the communion of saints, solitude, friendship and gratitude as resources for spirituality.
An advocate for women's empowerment, Leckey celebrated the creativity of women in her Madeleva Lecture, published as Women and Creativity (1991); Winter Music: A Life of Jessica Powers (1992), a biography of the Carmelite poet; a co-edited book, Monika K. Hellwig: The People's Theologian (2010); and Grieving With Grace: A Woman's Perspective (2008), reflections on the death of her husband, Tom.
In the gradual evolution of the understanding of laity from "docile flock" to "people of God" there have been changes. Leckey, now 85, reminisced: "I never have thought that ecclesial progress would happen at a fast clip. But it is happening. The bishops I worked with over the years really did care about the laity, even though it was hard to hold the center when stones come from the left and the right. They were men dedicated to the people of God."
Yet the challenges remain. On the one hand, Philadelphia Archbishop Charles Chaput, one of the most conservative of Catholic prelates, now serves as chair of the U.S. bishops' Committee on Laity, Marriage, Family Life and Youth. At the same time, Pope Francis has made the "historic" appointment of three lay women as consultors to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
The way forward has been and will be contingent on the bridge builders, "repairers of the gap" like Dolores Leckey, who has played an essential part in changing the American church and the self-understanding of the ordinary Catholic.
[Dana Greene's latest book is Elizabeth Jennings: The Inward War. She and Dolores Leckey met as a result of a shared interest in Evelyn Underhill.]

Friday, July 6, 2018

Jewish Scholar/Academic-Dr. Amy Levine- on Jesus, See Videos on Women's Stories from the Bible

Amy Jill-Levine

Amy Jill Levine and Great Courses

https://www.thegreatcourses.com/courses/old-testament.html


MIPodcast #28: The parables of Jesus, with Amy-Jill Levine

https://youtu.be/--SymIN-I7M


Amy-Jill Levine: Reassessing Jewish-Christian Relations

https://youtu.be/WGOobQiRAa8 

Jewish Jesus: Amy-Jill Levine Extended Interview

https://youtu.be/1PDyISl7TGc 


Dr. Amy-Jill Levine Talk

https://youtu.be/AFy_jjP2WzU


Amy-Jill Levine - Jesus in Text and Context - Westminster Town Hal

https://youtu.be/7dMylk0W3Sc


Amy-Jill Levine: Reassessing Jewish-Christian Relations


Prof. Amy-Jill Levine: Jesus and the New Testament


Amy Jill Levine Parables


Amy-Jill Levine - Who Did They Say He Was? Jesus in Text and Context - 03/31/15


Telling Stories About Women


Thursday, July 5, 2018

It took this mother 55 days to be reunited with her young daughter By Ray Sanchez and Linh Tran, CNN


It was a tearful reunion for this mother and her 8-year-old daughter who were separated for 55 days after crossing the US border. They were fleeing Guatemala, citing abuse and domestic violence at home. https://cnn.it/2zkNhmG

Catholic Women Called: Caryl Conroy Johnson RCWP, Newsletter from Women's Ordination Conference

If I did not use this opportunity to highlight the inequalities I see in the Church, then I would be turning a blind eye.  
I am not prepared to do that. 

This week the Taoiseach (Prime Minister) of Ireland, Leo Varadkar, backed the ordination of women as priests in the Catholic Church after news that one of his cabinet members, Josepha Madigan, carried on with a prayer service using pre-consecrated hosts when a Dublin priest failed to show up for Mass.
Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin criticized Josepha Madigan for "pushing an agenda" -- to which she replied: 

"The only agenda I am pushing is the one of equality. If the Church is to be truly reflective of its people it must ordain women." 

Meeting the needs of the people of God, like Josepha and the women who stepped up to lead, is something Caryl Conroy Johnson celebrates in this week's Catholic Women Called video. Caryl reminds us that through mutuality and creativity we can accompany one another in discovering God in all things. 



In the midsts of so much pain and inequality in our world, let's be the ones who step up, who work to meet the needs and ensure the rights of the people around us. Let's show up for equality. Let's show up for each other. 

With every blessing,



Kate McElwee
Executive Director 

Video Series on The Hebrew Bible with Christine Hayes, Yale University

Christine Hayes

Bible Lectures

1. Hebrew Bible Yale - Introduction

2. Hebrew Bible Yale - The Historical Setting and Polythiesm

3. Hebrew Bible Yale- Garden of Eden

01. The Parts of the Whole

Lecture 2. The Hebrew Bible in Its Ancient Near Eastern Setting: Biblical Religion in Context

Lecture 3. The Hebrew Bible in Its Ancient Near Eastern Setting: Genesis 1-4 in Context

Lecture 4. Doublets and Contradictions, Seams and Sources

Lecture 5. Critical Approaches to the Bible: Introduction to Genesis 12-50

Lecture 6. Biblical Narrative: The Stories of the Patriarchs (Genesis 12-36)

Lecture 7. Israel in Egypt: Moses and the Beginning of Yahwism (Genesis 37- Exodus 4)

Lecture 8. Exodus: From Egypt to Sinai (Exodus 5-24, 32; Numbers)

Lecture 9. The Priestly Legacy: Cult and Sacrifice, Purity and Holiness in Leviticus and Numbers

Lecture 10. Biblical Law: The Three Legal Corpora of JE (Exodus), P (Leviticus and Numbers) and D

Lecture 11. On the Steps of Moab: Deuteronomy

Lecture 12. The Deuteronomistic History: Life in the Land (Joshua and Judges)

Lecture 13. The Deuteronomistic History: Prophets and Kings (1 and 2 Samuel)

Lecture 14. The Deuteronomistic History: Response to Catastrophe (1 and 2 Kings)

Lecture 15. Hebrew Prophecy: The Non-Literary Prophets


Lecture 16. Literary Prophecy: Amos

https://youtu.be/YJd0Swp7d9Y

 

Lecture 17. Literary Prophecy: Hosea and Isaiah


Lecture 18. Literary Prophecy: Micah, Zephaniah, Nahum and Habbakuk


Lecture 19. Literary Prophecy: Perspectives on the Exile (Jeremiah, Ezekiel and 2nd Isaiah)

https://youtu.be/u85pHixyoOI

 

Lecture 20. Responses to Suffering and Evil: Lamentations and Wisdom Literature

https://youtu.be/RxENRH-v0Xk

 

Lecture 21. Biblical Poetry: Psalms and Song of Songs

https://youtu.be/WdjRz2b8BZo

 

Lecture 22. The Restoration: 1 and 2 Chronicles, Ezra and Nehemiah

https://youtu.be/zDYJwHW1lsM

 

Lecture 23. Visions of the End: Daniel and Apocalyptic Literature


Lecture 24. Alternative Visions: Esther, Ruth, and Jonah



Outstanding Videos on The Case for God and Religion by Scholar and Best- Selling Author Karen Armstrong

Karen Armstrong  - YouTubes


An Interview with Karen Armstrong - Part 1 of 3

https://youtu.be/BfMLfEhlL4c

 

An Interview with Karen Armstrong - Part 2 of 3

https://youtu.be/PUMqf5oZ5BQ

 

An Interview with Karen Armstrong - Part 3 of 3

https://youtu.be/YzkLFISUOGU

 

Big Think Interview With Karen Armstrong

https://youtu.be/nuRNmPpBAuI

 

Karen Armstrong - Ancient Iran, Its Links With Us

https://youtu.be/mKyoO5A8DLs

 

Karen Armstrong "Fields of Blood"


Karen Armstrong on How Kindness Can Change a Life | SuperSoul Sunday | Oprah Winfrey Network


Karen Armstrong - How Little We Know - Empathy and Compassion in Society 2013

https://youtu.be/3Fut24y48PU

 

Karen Armstrong on the clash between faith and modernity

https://youtu.be/g3SS7Oge1Gk

 

Karen Armstrong: I Was a Nun Who Couldn't Pray | SuperSoul Sunday | Oprah Winfrey Network

 

Karen Armstrong's Mystery Diagnosis | SuperSoul Sunday | Oprah Winfrey Network

 

Karen's TED Prize Talk


Karen Armstrong: "The Biblical God Is a Starter Kit" | SuperSoul Sunday | Oprah Winfrey Network

 

One on One - Karen Armstrong


The Case for God: Karen Armstrong at St Paul's Cathedral

The Core of our Religious Traditions | Karen Armstrong

https://youtu.be/-u3uPH9sr7c


Armstrong: What is Religion?

'It's embarrassing' - Mary McAleese hits out at the Pope over his 'disappointing' stance on women priests and 'evil' attitude to homosexuality" by Sarah MacDonald, Irish Independent

https://www.independent.ie/irish-news/its-embarrassing-mary-mcaleese-hits-out-at-the-pope-over-evil-attitude-to-homosexuality-37065713.html


My Response: I am grateful to Mary McAleese for her courageous challenge to 
Pope Francis to embrace a more open and affirming stance toward 
women priests and LGBTQI. 
It is time for Francis to have conversations with women priests and 
members of our inclusive communities as a first step forward. 
Bridget Mary Meehan ARCWP, #womenpriestsnow, https:arcwp.org

Former President Mary McAleese has appealed to Pope Francis to address his "disappointing" stance on women priests and the Church's "evil" attitude to homosexuality.
In an interview to mark 100 years since the foundation of the Missionary Society of St Columban, Dr McAleese told an audience of Columban priests, sisters and co-workers that the Argentinian pontiff, though loved by many, was "no different to any other pope on women".

She said the Church's arguments against women priests were "ultimately untenable" and that the "curial magisterial Church" was "so far behind the curve on women, it is embarrassing".
She recalled writing to Pope John Paul II in 1994 about his Apostolic Letter, Ordinatio Sacerdotalis, which ruled out women ever becoming priests, and in her letter she told him she could not, and would not, teach her children this teaching on women.
In Dalgan Park, home of the Columbans in Ireland, she described the Church's teaching on homosexuality as "evil", saying it gave rise to homophobia.
"Homophobia," she also said, was "evil" and "ruins peoples' lives" and "has ruined families' lives" because it "causes people to commit suicide" and "has caused people to live in dark shadows".

RCWP Canada Prepares to Ordain New Bishop this month in Calgary


Jane Kryzanowski will be the first Roman Catholic Woman Priest to be ordained bishop on Canadian soil.

REGINA, SK, July 2, 2018 — On July 21, 2018, the eve of the feast of St. Mary of Magdala, Jane Kryzanowki of Regina will be ordained bishop for RCWP Canada, replacing Marie Bouclin of Sudbury who is retiring as bishop after serving for seven years.

Jane Kryzanowski, Regina, SK, bishop-elect


According to the bishop-elect, "The Spirit of God appears to be moving among the people of God, calling women to be priests."  Marie and Jane are among women who have heard the call and responded. Small faith communities are coming together asking for the pastoral services of women. The merging of these two streams -- the call of the Spirit and the call of people -- is gaining momentum across Canada. Women priests are serving in British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchwan, Ontario, Quebec and New Brunswick. Jane Kryzanowski will be the first Roman Catholic Woman Priest to be ordained bishop on Canadian soil.

In conjuction with the episcopal ordination, the RCWP Canada community is inviting the public to a presentation by bishops from Canada and the United States on the growth and development of the women's ordination movement. It will be held Friday evening, July 20, 2018, 7-9 pm, the EEEL Building, 750 Campus Drive NW, University of Calgary. (Use Parking - Lot 21), Calgary, Alberta.



Marie Bouclin, Sudbury, ON, retiring bishop

The ordination itself is by invitation only, but anyone may obtain an invitation, which will give details of time, place and date, by writing to the invitation coordinator at rcwpcanada@outlook.com

RCWP Canada is a new model of ordained ministry in a renewed Roman Catholic Church
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--> If you would like more information about this topic, please call Felix Kryzanowski] at 306-737-2927, or email rcwpcanada@outlook.com or see our website at rcwpcanada.x10.mx