Wednesday, August 15, 2018

Priest after priest and 1,000 children

There are no words to describe this.

To read the report click on the relevant link.

Priest after priest. It's not a few 'bad apples'. It's much worse than that.

From The New York Times:
Catholic Priests Abused 1,000 Children in Pennsylvania, Report Says
The grand jury report is the government’s broadest look yet in the United States at child sexual abuse in the church.

For years there were allegations about John Smyth

On Monday British media reported the death of John Smyth, who died in South Africa.

Smyth worked at a Christian camp for young people, where it is alleged he abused young boys.

One of his victims, Andy Moore, has spoken how Smyth physically abused him by beating him on the bottom in a sadistic and cruel manner.

Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby was at the camp when Smyth was there but has denied any knowledge of Smyth's behaviour.

Smyth, a well-known barrister, had been under investigation before he fled to Zimbabwe and South Africa.

Last year Channel 4 tracked him down in South Africa but he refused to give an interview.

There had been rumours about him and his behaviour over a long period of time.

He had the demeanour of a 'respectable' and 'learned' person.

The familiar story.

At least in his death his misdeeds are made public.

What about those whose misdeeds die with them?

Tuesday, August 14, 2018

James Comey's views on Trump

This week's Independent News & Media Irish regional newspapers' column.

Michael Commane
Columnist Mary Kenny writes in The Irish Catholic of August 2: ‘But, as some commentators have pointed out, Trump is not wrong about everything. And even where he is right, he is seldom given much credit – which isn’t fair either. It was announced last week (by the reliable Atlanta Fed) that the American economy is due to grow by 4.6% or 4.8% this year. Never in recent history, have so many Americans been employed…..’

I wonder has Ms Kenny read James Comey’s ‘A Higher Loyalty’?

In his epilogue Comey writes: ‘I see so many so-called conservative commentators, including some faith leaders, focusing on favourable policy initiatives or court appointments to justify their acceptance of this damage, while deemphasing the impact of this president on basic norms and ethics. That strikes me as both hypocritical and morally wrong.’

Before I came across Mary Kenny’s piece on Trump I had read Comey’s book.
James Comey was the former director of the FBI, who was sacked by President Donald Trump.

He was appointed director by President Barack Obama in 2013 and was in the job until he was sacked by President Donald Trump. He was deputy attorney general in the administration of President George W Bush and he also served as US attorney for the Southern District of New York. The man was a top US public servant.

Like all reality, the book has it failings. Parts of it are somewhat tedious and maybe in places a little self-indulgent. But reading through the book one gets the clear impression that James Comey is an honourable person. His track record speaks for itself.

In his opening chapter he quotes from the German philosopher Reinhold Niebuhr: ‘Man’s capacity for justice makes democracy possible, but man’s inclination to injustice makes democracy necessary’.

In that same chapter Comey explains that he decided to study law because he thought it might be the best way to make a difference.

He traces his childhood, which involved a burglar breaking into their home when he and his siblings were children, right through his young days as a lawyer and then on to his time at the FBI and the Clinton emails. The final chapters deal with his relationship with Donald Trump.

When he is appointed director of the FBI Barack Obama clearly points out to him that there has to be a clear division between the FBI and the president. ‘I don’t want help from the FBI on policy. I need competence and independence,’ Obama said to Comey. He also told him that once he was director of the FBI no longer would he and Comey be able to talk to one another in any sort of casual way. The FBI and its director cannot be close with the president.

The moment Trump moves into the White House Comey’s relationship with the president changes dramatically. Trump is constantly phoning him and then the infamous meal where Trump demands loyalty from Comey.

James Comey compares Trump to a Mafia boss.

I strongly recommend Mary Kenny reads James Comey’s A Higher Loyalty

 Comey sees the wisdom in Thomas Jefferson’s words: ‘Our liberty depends on the freedom of the press, and that cannot be limited without being lost.’

He stresses that if the shared values of George Washington are pushed aside then only a fool would be consoled by a tax cut or a different immigration policy.

What’s happening in the US is not normal. It’s not fake news. ‘It is not okay.’

I recommend A Higher Loyalty.





 

Monday, August 13, 2018

Fifty seven years ago Berliners awoke to a horrible surprise

On this day, August 13, 1961 the government of the German Democratic Republic began building the infamous Berlin Wall.

Large numbers of East Germans were leaving the German Democratic Republic and moving to West Germany, to give it its official name, the Federal Republic of Germany.

Rumours had been about that something was to happen, probably a wall but the GDR government vehemently denied plans to build any sort of barrier or fortification. And then overnight the Volksarmee plied their trade with barbwire, cement and metal barriers.

From then until 1989 every possible technique was used to strengthen the fortifications between East and West Germany.

The Catholic Church may have been the only organisation in Berlin which retained its HQ in East Berlin and worked across all Berlin. The bishop of Berlin resided in Bebel Platz beside the cathedral.

Due to an error made by a spokesman of the GDR government Berliners in large numbers arrived at the crossing at Bornholmer Strasse on November 30' 1989. The rest is history.

The West German authorities had a system in place whereby any GDR citizens arriving in the west would be given 50 DM from the government.

On the night of November 30, 1989 and in the following days the West German government kept its promise and paid out a lot of money.

And these days across Europe and in the US there's talk of building new walls and barriers.

The hope of then and the despair of now.

The piece below is from Wikipedia.

The Berlin Wall (GermanBerliner Mauerpronounced [bɛʁˈliːnɐ ˈmaʊ̯ɐ] (About this sound listen)) was a guarded concrete barrier that physically and ideologically divided Berlin from 1961 to 1989.[1] Constructed by the German Democratic Republic (GDR, East Germany), starting on 13 August 1961, the Wall cut off (by land) West Berlin from virtually all of surrounding East Germany and East Berlin until government officials opened it in November 1989.[2] Its demolition officially began on 13 June 1990 and finished in 1992.[1][3] 

The barrier included guard towers placed along large concrete walls,[4] accompanied by a wide area (later known as the "death strip") that contained anti-vehicle trenches, "fakir beds" and other defenses. The Eastern Bloc portrayed the Wall as protecting its population from fascist elements conspiring to prevent the "will of the people" in building a socialist state in East Germany.

Sunday, August 12, 2018

Donald Trump's version of patriotism

US President Donald Trump talks a lot about country, always upper casing the 'c', patriotism and patriots and the military.

Where was Donald Trump when the US was waging war in Vietnam and over 50,000 US soldiers were killed in battle? 

And it seems that his no-show in Vietnam is airbrushed out of his background.

Why did he not serve in Vietnam?  

Was he a conscientious objector? Was his medical condition not good enough for the job? Was he a coward?

If he was a conscientious objector then he has had a major change in his thinking. His doctors have passed him a fit man in his 70s. A coward?

A year since Charlottesville

Today is the first anniversary of the white supremacist rally in Charlottesville.

Saturday, August 11, 2018

Wise words from a Jesuit

A quote from Damian Howard, provincial of the British Jesuit province.

No life worth living is without its trials and I can’t pretend that my Jesuit journey has been an altogether smooth ride; I could only have avoided the discomfort of growing by not growing up! 
But there is something about making the journey with one’s fellow Jesuits and our many friends and co-workers, people who are honest, grounded in a relationship with God, generous and eager to serve others, interesting and, not infrequently fun, that makes me insanely grateful to God for choosing me in the way He has.

And today I find myself serving as provincial for all the Jesuits in Britain. This is definitely not something I envisaged happening when I joined! It’s a huge responsibility and it comes at a time when leadership in the Church and, indeed, the world, is in crisis. 
But I find more and more that if I just keep coming back to Christ every day, in the Mass and in my prayer, in some deep sense it doesn’t matter what job I have been assigned to. He is always there and with the prayers of so many good people I never feel alone.

Friday, August 10, 2018

RTE's 'new initiative'

In an item on the upcoming fleadh cheoil in Drogheda on RTE's Morning Ireland at 08.49 today the presenter spoke about a 'new initiative' taking place at the fleadh.

It's an expression much heard these days. But are not all initiatives new?

Caught in a trap of dishonesty


This article is from The Tablet of August 4.
There is a blurb at the bottom on the author. He was also for a number of years a Dominican.
Would it shock you to know that the leading force behind the term “gender ideology”, and the campaign against it, was a gay cardinal? Or that a gay priest wrote the official 2005 explanation as to why gay men could not be priests?
I learned of the (now dead) Latin American cardinal’s reputation for violence towards the rent boys he frequented from a social worker in his home town, and later discovered that this and other outrages were open secrets in both his homeland and Rome. Paris-based Mgr Tony Anatrella was a Vatican expert on homosexuality, one of very few authors the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith recommended on the subject, alongside Drs Joseph Nicolosi, Gerard van den Aardweg and Aquilino Polaino, gay-cure proponents all. 
Anatrella had long been reported to have engaged in inappropriate touching with seminarians and others who came to him for help in dealing with their so-called “same-sex attraction”. As recently as this June, and after many years of shameful ecclesiastical obfuscation in France and Italy, those reports have been found to be credible, and Anatrella has been suspended from public ministry. If it does shock you that such paragons of homophobia-dressed-as-Christianity might have been “protesting too much”, prepare yourself for a rough ride over the next few years.
I start with the as yet unnamed Latin American prelate and Anatrella, both from outside the English-speaking world, because the accounts of (now former) Cardinal Theodore McCarrick’s wrongdoings, added to those of the late Cardinal Keith O’Brien, might have fooled you into thinking that this is an anglophone thing. It isn’t. Similar tales abound across the four language groups with which I am directly familiar. And now that the dominoes are starting to fall, both the name and the deeds of the Latin American will surely come into the record soon.
The McCarrick shock was not what he was a getting up to with seminarians and other adults. 
This was widely known about. It was that in addition to a standardly furtive, albeit egregiously creepy, clerical gay life, this generally kind and well-liked man had also abused at least two minors. 
Such does not seem to have been the case with O’Brien, Anatrella or the Latin American. And in general, despite what those who try to conflate “gay” with “paedophile” would have you believe, a knowing clerical gay milieu is shocked and baffled when minors are involved.
In all these cases, in as far as the behaviour was adult-related, plenty of people in authority sort-of-knew what was going on, and had known throughout the clerics’ respective careers. 
However, the informal rule in the Catholic Church – the last remaining outpost of enforced homosociality in the Western world – is strictly “don’t ask, don’t tell”. Typically, blind eyes are turned to the active sex lives of those clerics who have them, only two things being beyond the pale: whistle-blowing on the sex lives of others, or public suggestions that the Church’s teaching in this area is wrong. These lead to marginalisation.
Given all this, it seems to me entirely reasonable that people should now be asking:  “How deep does this go?” If such careers were the result of blind eyes being turned, legal settlements made, and these clerics themselves were in positions of influence and authority, how much more are we going to learn about those who promoted and protected them? Or about those whom they promoted?
So it is that voices such as Rod Dreher – keenly followed blogger at The American Conservative – are resuscitating talk of the “Lavender Mafia”, and the demand, which became popular in conservative circles from 2002 onwards, that the priesthood be purged of gay men. 
Investigative journalists are being encouraged to lay bare the informal gay networks of friendship, patronage, and potential for blackmail that structure clerical life (or are being excoriated for their politically correct cowardice in failing to do so).
The aim is to weed out the gays, especially the treasonous bishops who have perpetuated the system. Ross Douthat – the New York Times columnist – has called for a papally mandated investigation into the American Church (I guess along the lines of Archbishop Charles Scicluna’s in Chile) to restore the moral authority of the Church.
Others, such as Robert Mickens, The Tablet’s Rome correspondent for many years, are equally aware of the “elephant in the sacristy”, which is the massively disproportionate number of gay men in the clergy, but highlight the refusal of the Roman authorities to engage in any kind of publicly accountable, adult discussion about this fact. This reinforces collective dishonesty and perpetuates the psychosexual immaturity of all gay clergy, whether celibate, partnered or practitioners of so-called “serial celibacy”.
How to approach this issue in a healthy way? As a gay priest myself I am obviously more in agreement with Mickens than with Dreher or Douthat. However, I would like to record my complete sympathy with the passion of the latter two as well as with their rage at a collective clerical dishonesty that renders farcical the claim to be teachers of anything at all, let alone divine truth. 
Jesus becomes credible through witnesses, not corrupt party-line pontificators. Having said that, I suspect that particular interventions, whether by civil authority or papal mandate, are always going to run aground on the fact that they can only deal with, and bring to light, specific bad acts, usually ones that are criminal.
I cannot imagine a one-off legal intervention in this sphere that would be able to make appropriate distinctions where there are so many fine lines: between innocent friendship, sexually charged admiration, abusive sexual suggestion, emotional blackmail, financial blackmail, recognition of genuine talent, genuine love lived platonically, genuine love lived with sexual intimacy, sexual favours granted with genuine freedom, sexual favours granted out of fear or in exchange for promotion, covering peccadillos for a friend, covering graver matters for a rival in exchange for some benefit, not wanting to know too much about other people’s lives, or obsessively wanting to know too much about them. Let alone the usual rancours of break-ups, career disappointments, petty jealousies, bitterness, revenge and so on. All of these tend to shade into or out of each other over time, making effective outside assessment, even if it were desirable, impossible.
I don’t think there is a healthy way to address this without opening up understanding of some of the dimensions of the systemic structural trap that is the clerical closet. In a second article I will set out what I hope is a merciful picture of how this trap has arisen, and how it can be, and indeed is beginning to be, undone. This with a view to diminishing our scandal and helping all of us adjust to a new ecclesial reality. However, let me here describe some elements of the structure that will become more and more visible as time goes by. These will not offer a pretty picture. Our Lord told us that what was whispered in private would be shouted from the rooftops. So it is: what seemed randomly anecdotal is becoming sociologically evident.
For shorthand I use the word “gay” here to refer to an adult male’s stable same-sex orientation, irrespective of how that is accepted or lived out. Also please notice that, for the purpose of these two articles, the issue of a gay cleric’s personal relationship status – single, partnered, widower, serially available – while important for each one personally, is functionally irrelevant for understanding the systemic nature of the clerical closet. 
A stably partnered and emotionally balanced priest can no more be publicly honest than a deeply tortured one with many partners. And it is very rare that a genuinely celibate gay cleric is allowed to bear witness to their gift in the first person. Not least because if they are genuine livers-out of celibacy as a gift, they are likely to have discovered that it is as a self-accepting gay man that they are so. This public self-acceptance puts them further into opposition with official teaching than any sexual indiscretion, which can of course be forgiven.
An anecdotal illustration: a few years ago, I found myself leading a retreat for Italian gay priests in Rome. Of the nearly 50 participants some were single, some partnered, for others it was the first time they could to talk honestly with other priests outside the confessional. Among them there were seven or eight mid-level Vatican officials. I asked one from the Congregation for the Clergy what he made of those attending with their partners. He smiled and said, “Of course, we know that the partnered ones are the healthy ones.” Let that sink in. In the clerical closet, dishonesty is functional, honesty is dysfunctional, and the absence or presence of circumspect sexual practice between adult males is irrelevant.
And so to some systemic dimensions of “the elephant in the sacristy”. The first is its size. A far, far greater proportion of the clergy, particularly the senior clergy, is gay than anyone has been allowed to understand, even the bishops and cardinals themselves. Harvard Professor Mark Jordan’s phrase “a honeycomb of closets”, in which each enclosed participant has very little access to the overall picture, is exactly right. But the proportion is going to become more and more self-evident thanks to social media and the generalised expectations of gay honesty and visibility in the civil sphere. This despite many years of bishops resisting accurate sociological clergy surveys.
During the last papal election in 2013 we did have hints that the Vatican and the cardinal electors were shocked at discovering from reports commissioned by Benedict how many of them were gay. Part of their shock has to have been their fear at how the faithful would be scandalised if they had any idea. They were right to be afraid, and the faithful are going to have an idea as the implosion of the closet accelerates. How scandalised – or accepting – the faithful will be is going to depend on how well we learn to talk about all this.
A second dimension is grasped when you understand the general rule that the heterosexuality of a cleric is inversely proportional to the stridency of his homophobia. This is one of the reasons why I am sceptical of all attempts to “weed out the gays”. The principal clerical crusaders in this area turn out to be gay themselves – in some cases, so deeply in denial that they don’t know it. And in some cases knowingly so. 
My own experience, which has since been confirmed by hundreds of echoes worldwide, is that there are proportionately few straight men in the clergy (leaving aside rural dioceses in some countries, where heterosexual concubinage is the customary norm) and they do not, as a rule, persecute gay men. 
It is closeted men who are the worst persecutors. Some are very sadly disturbed souls who cannot but try to clean outwardly what they cannot admit to being inwardly. These can’t be helped since Church teaching reinforces their hell. For others the lure of upward mobility leads them to strategic displays of enthusiasm for the enforcement of the house rules.
A third dimension is that banning gay men from the seminary never works. In practice, the ban means that those “tempted” by honesty will be weeded out, or will weed themselves out, uncomfortable with the inducements to a double life. Those unconcerned by honesty, and happy to swim in the wake of the double lives of those doing the weeding, will learn how to look the part.
The only seminaries that might avoid this are those that differentiate on the basis not of sexual orientation, but of honesty, which is a primary requisite for any form of psycho-sexual maturity. 
There are some that do, presumably with the permission of wise bishops, but in quiet contravention of the official line. These of course are instantly vulnerable to accusations of being “liberal”, of “promoting homosexuality” or whatever, when in practical terms the reverse is true. 
For honesty is effectively forbidden by a Church teaching that tells you that you are an intrinsically heterosexual person who is inexplicably suffering from a grave objective disorder called “same-sex attraction”. And so we get seminaries in which there are no gay seminarians, but whose rectors nevertheless push programmes like those of “Courage” on their oh-so-non-gay-but-transitorily-same-sex-attracted charges.
A fourth dimension: no attempt to view this issue through culture war lenses will be helpful. The clerical closet is not the result of some 1960s liberal conspiracy. It is a systemic structure in which, absent scandal, all its members are functional. In the previous round of the blame-the-gays game, from 2002 on, much was made of the supposed culpability of liberal Vatican II bishops such as Rembert Weakland. 
The idea was that the new breed of John Paul II hardliners would sort it out. Men such as John Nienstedt and John Myers. Oh wait … really? Then again, does anyone seriously think the four cardinals of the “dubia” – two of whom have since died – to be proportionately more heterosexual than the rest of the hierarchy?
This is not a matter of left or right, traditional or progressive, good or bad, chaste or practising; nor even a matter of 25 years of Karol Wojtyla’s notoriously poor judgement of character, though all these feed into it. It is a systemic structural trap, and if we are to get out of it, it must be described in such a way as to recognise that unknowing innocence as much as knowing guilt, well-meaning error as well as malice, has been, and is, involved in both its constitution and its maintenance. To that I will turn next week.
James Alison is a priest, theologian, lecturer, retreat giver and itinerant preacher. When not on the road, he lives in Madrid, Spain.

Thursday, August 9, 2018

Boris Johnson and the Munich beerhall

An excerpt from an article in today's Guardian by Martin Kettle.
For many years it struck me as amusing rather than ominous that the place where I first spent any time with Boris Johnson was a Munich beerhall. 
We were journalists covering a defence summit in the 1990s. We’d both filed our pieces – he to the Telegraph, me to the Guardian – and we were bored. So, along with the man from the Times, we took a taxi into the city centre and spent the rest of the afternoon drinking beer and chatting. Johnson made a lot of good jokes, and one or two rather loud and tasteless ones about Hitler and Munich beerhalls.


I didn’t then, and still don’t, know Johnson well, but I have never much altered the views I formed of him over those beers in Bavaria long ago. He is very entertaining company, if you like that sort of thing. 
But he is neither an intellectually thoughtful nor a morally serious person. He ridicules not just foreigners but most people other than himself. He is very bright but not very wise. He possesses both bottomless self-regard and incontinent ambition. And among the many things I would never trust him with is my country.

Germany's Ryanair pilots express their anger

Friday's Ryanair pilots' strike was the first item on Germany's ARD main evening news last evening.

It reported that over 200 flights to and from Germany will be cancelled on Friday.

A spokesperson for Cockpit, the pilots' union, expressed in clear and forthright terms how angry his members are with Ryanair management.

The news item lasted more than four minutes

Ryanair pilots in other European countries including Ireland are due to strike this coming Friday.

Wednesday, August 8, 2018

Poverty in Ireland

There are 780,000 people living below the poverty line in Ireland.

Five hundrd and twenty thousand adults have poor literacy skills.

Last year the Saint Vincent de Paul Society received 130,000 calls for assistance.

Today, the feast of St Dominic, it would be intersting to know how the Spanish saint would react to such deprivation in a land of plenty.

Monday, August 6, 2018

Patriot Radio now sees Michael Cohen as a 'rat'

This week's Independent News & Media Irish regional newspapers' column.

Michael Commane
Is there  anyone who does not have a radio in their house? It's doubtful. Every car is fitted with one. Radios are ubiquitous. It has been a great invention. Unlike television, listening to radio allows one multitask.


With the arrival of the internet we can listen to radio stations from anywhere in the world. You can either download the appropriate app or buy an internet radio.


The advantage of an internet radio over an app on your computer or tablet is that there is the facility to pre-tune stations. Perfect if you are in bed and are turning on or off the radio in the dark.


It must be two or three years since I tuned in to Patriot Radio. It is a station based in Phoenix Arizona but it seems it has affiliates right across the United States. Many of the programmes are syndicated. Millions of Americans listen to Patriot Radio.


Regularly I make a promise not to tune in anymore but curiosity gets the better of me and I'm back listening to it.


No words can accurately describe how right-wing it is. It is wall-to-wall vitriolic bile against everything and everyone who espouses views that are not ultra right-wing. Donald Trump is their darling.


Last week I heard a presenter say that left wing people cannot be good or happy. Presenters have called the sacked director of he FBI James Comey, among other things, a liar. 


They have fired incredible insults at the former CIA boss John Brennan and have no trouble calling him a traitor. Now that Michael Cohen is spilling the beans on Donald Trump he has gone from being the wisest and most loyal of lawyers to being a rat.


The anger is palpable, scary too.


It constantly repeats that conservatives are genuinely and intrinsically good while liberals and those with left-wing views are nasty and evil. It pays homage to Donald Trump and despises Barack Obama. These presenters are educated people, lawyers, some have been advisers to former US presidents.


The world seems to be in the strangest of places.


Last week it was reported that after the murder of the UK Labour MP Jo Cox it was agreed between the leavers and the remainers in the Brexit vote that there would be a pause in campaigning to honour Jo Cox. The leavers did not keep to the agreement.


We all seem to be shouting at the other side and most of the nastiness appears to be coming from the right-wing. But am I saying that because I consider myself to have views and opinions that frequently  concur with a left-wing or liberal view?


Are all vestiges of politeness and decorum vanishing off the face of the earth? What's happening?


It seems we refuse to listen to those with different opinions and ideas, instead we are sneering at them and dismissing their thinking.


We are seeing how angry and dysfunctional the world of politics has become. It's been raising its ugly head right across society, on all continents. It is also evident in  the churches. Church right-wingers make an art of being secret and sly.


Jesuit priest Richard Leonard  has written a piece in the English Catholic weekly 'The Tablet' that idoelogy is the enemy of discernment. These days too many seem to be ideologues or culture warriors and self-righteously convinced right is only on one side.


Tune in to Patriot and hear for yourself but please, don't leave the dial stuck there. It appeals to the nastiest side of our humanity.


The world urgently needs empathy, kindness too.

The fangs of automation

According to the IMI 45 per cent of all jobs will be threatened by automation by 2025.

Sunday, August 5, 2018

Embarrassing advertisement

This ad appears on the front page of a national newspaper yesterday.

And it seems there is more than one error. Two, three, four?

Good luck to the team today.


Saturday, August 4, 2018

Child protection in Norway

BBC 2's Newsnight aired last evening a disturbing report on child protection in Norway.

While on the one hand, children from what seems normal/ordinary families were removed into State care, on the other, one of the principal members of the child protection agency was found guilty of viewing child pornography.

And nobody saying a word about it.

Friday, August 3, 2018

Being honourable

If honour were profitable, everybody would be honourable.

- Thomas More

Thursday, August 2, 2018

Spotlight on clerical child sex abuse

Last evening RTE screened 'Spotlight'.

It tells the story of clerical child sex abuse in the diocese of Boston, including the church cover-up and the behaviour of the late Cardinal Law.

At one stage in the film a victim of one of the priests visited the offices of the Boston Globe newspaper.

The team kept repeating questions he asked. He was surprised with their behaviour. They explained they were simply trying to clarify what he was saying.

He said:

"Maybe you should have clarified this stuff when I sent it to you five years ago."

Wednesday, August 1, 2018

RTE get it wrong again.

Again RTE get it wrong.

Yesterday Ray D'Arcy said: How many of you have rang.....

It sounds wrong, it is wrong.

It was during a discussion on the closing down of the speaking clock.

Not good enough, especially when top earners at RTE are paid such high salaries.

Tuesday, July 31, 2018

'Irish church not listening to Pope Francis'

This week's Independent News and Media Irish regional newspapers' column
Michael Commane
The Association of Catholic Priests (ACP) organised four regional meetings ahead of Pope Francis’ visit to Ireland.

The theme of the meetings was: ‘What do we need to say to Pope Francis about the Irish church?’
I attended the eastern meeting, which was held on Wednesday, July 18 in the DCU St Patrick’s Campus.

Brendan Hoban, a priest of the Killala diocese and a founding member of the ACP gave a 10-minute talk at the Dublin meeting before opening it to the floor and inviting people to verbalise what they would say to Pope Francis about the Irish church if they met him on the street.

People were encouraged to speak openly and honestly.

A summary of each meeting is being prepared and a press release will be issued with the main topics highlighted.

A synopsis of what was said at the four meetings will be forwarded to Pope Francis.

In his introductory remarks Fr Hoban asked why the Irish church was not listening to Pope Francis.
He pointed out that the Irish church was in a crisis and at such a time it was opportune for people to share their hopes and dreams, indeed, they had a duty of loyalty to the Gospel.

Fr Hoban said that the current leadership in the Irish Catholic Church does not encourage people to speak and that sometimes their voices are resented.

He stressed how we are living in changing times. He finds it interesting that Pope Francis and the people want the same kind of church.

Brendan referred to a recent survey carried out in the Killala diocese, in which 69 per cent of respondents are in favour of women priests, 81 per cent would like to see married priests and men who had resigned from priesthood should be invited to return to ministry should they so wish.

He told the meeting there are between 15 and 20 men studying in Maynooth for priesthood and that the archdiocese of Dublin, with over one million Catholics in name, has three men studying for priesthood.

He believes that in the midst of these huge problems there are reasons for hope.

The questions people had for Pope Francis from the floor were as varied and as disparate as imaginable. Some interesting, some wise, and there were one or two people who wanted to make statements.

It did strike me that the church is a wide panoply of people. But it was evident from the meeting that many people are angry and in pain and that there is no real platform to deal with that pain and anger.
The old world is disintegrating in front of our eyes, something that has positive and negative aspects, but is there an Irish church leader, who is seriously addressing the current crisis?

Brendan Hoban on the ACP website cogently writes:

‘Part of the problem we have in the Irish Catholic Church is that little respect was given to the critical voices that time and again warned against the icebergs stalking our voyage. A lack of vision, a failure in leadership and an inability to cope with the complexities of a changing world meant that the uncritical voices, especially those that echoed official thinking, were given an inordinate influence in the last few decades. And anyone who didn’t subscribe to the old conservatism was taken out in some shape or form. As it was in the beginning . . . was the way it would always be.’

Wise words. I hope Pope Francis hears them.

Monday, July 30, 2018

Fifty eight words in one sentence to be read in public

The Opening Prayer at yesterday's Mass was made up of one sentence with 58 words.

It is close to impossible to read in public one sentence with 58 words.

How many sub clauses, what was the main verb.

Is this really the best they can do?

It is awful.

Then again, it's no longer the Opening Prayer, rather the Collect.

Maybe that explains it.

Also, is God not the protector of all?

This behaviour reminds one of how the government of the former GDR introduced new words into the German spoken east of the Elbe.

One is reminded of the words of Jesuit priest and author Richard Leonard: Ideology is the enemy of true discernment. 

Sunday, July 29, 2018

Spotting sings of hope

From this week's Sunday Message at the church of The Three Patrons, Rathgar.

Michael Commane
Two Sundays ago there was no music at the 18.15 Mass. It is only when there is not music at Mass one realises how it plays such an uplifting role in the celebration of the Eucharist.

On that particular Sunday only one of the musicians was available and we decided there would be no music. May I take this opportunity to compliment the women who give of their music talents every week at the Sunday evening Mass. Indeed, all our musicians, who add to our Sunday liturgy, deserve high commendation for what they do.

Even I, who has not a note in my head, greatly appreciate the value of having music at Mass. I remember when I first went to Germany discovering that the Germans sing at every Mass, even at a 06.30 weekday Mass. 

Back to two weeks ago when we had no musicians at Mass. Before the final blessing I suggested/asked/coaxed the congregation if we would all try to sing the hymn on the Sunday leaflet as our final parting. 

Not being a singer myself I could not lead. It turned out that there was a powerful response and I got the impression everyone in the church was singing. 

It makes such a difference when people join in during the celebration of the Eucharist. With the slightest of invitations or promptings, people are only too willing to join in and become part of the ceremony.

And that does not just apply to music. It goes right across the spectrum with everything to do with all church celebrations.

Whether it is Eucharistic ministers, readers of the Word, people bringing gifts to the altar, whatever the task is, the more people, who actively participate in our Sunday and weekday liturgies, the more meaningful and prayerful it is for all of us.

More and more people appear to be joining in in the prayers we say at Mass. It makes such a difference when the prayer responses are acclaimed aloud. So too, with the Gloria and the Creed, it makes far more sense when we all join in in a public manner in praying these prayers.

Nobody at Mass is an anonymous spectator. The Mass is the community coming together to pray the greatest of prayers. It is communion at its best.

Every day I come to this church I am noticing shoots of great hope.

What do you think?

Saturday, July 28, 2018

The art of listening

"Until I met my wife, I didn't know what listening really was.

"My marriage has taught me that what I thought of as listening really isn't listening. Like a lot of people, I thought that listening involved sitting silently as someone else talked, and then perceiving what they say.

"I was wrong. True listening is actually that period of silence and allowing someone's words to reach your conscious brain, but it also includes something else that's a little weird: with your posture, your face, and your sounds, you signal to someone, 'I want what you have, I need to know what you know, and I want you to keep telling me.'"

James  Comey in A Higher Reality, page 146, 147.

Friday, July 27, 2018

'Priestly dress is an identity strengthening factor'

From the current issue of The Tablet.
A senior theologian who teaches on the permanent diaconate programmes of Birmingham and Clifton dioceses has lamented the growth of “an increasingly ritualistic priesthood” which he has warned is “unhealthy”.
Dr David McLoughlin has trained young priests for the priesthood for 25 years and taught theology at Oscott College and at Newman University. He has also been a consulter to the Vatican and the Bishops Conference of England and Wales.
Speaking to The Tablet after he gave an address to the National Justice and Peace Network conference in Derbyshire, he said many of today’s seminarians “are caught up in the rituals of the sacramental process in a way that I would regard as unhealthy” because its sense of holiness was focused in a very limited way.
“I don’t know where we have gone wrong. They are all lovely guys ...  But when you see a young man on Sunday in a big Roman collar with a cassock with 33 buttons and a cummerbund and he is telling people off for taking the host in their hand – what on earth is going on?
“I think for some of them, the formal elements in religion and the formal elements of priestly dress, is a sort of bolstering and an identity strengthening factor.”
Referring to the Vatican II document on priesthood, "Presbyterorum Ordinis", he said the use of the two words – presbyter and sacerdos – had resulted in two models and that the tension between the two remained unresolved.
“Some priests have settled for a much more ritualistic sacerdotal model. I think a number of our younger priests have gone in that direction because it seems to be purer and more holy.” 
According to Dr McLoughlin the most important thing is that the church continues the reconciling work of Christ in the world and reconciling men and women to each other and to God.
“If there is anything gets in the way of that, we should go beyond it. So, if we have a lack of ordained ministers because we settled for celibate priests from the second millennia on, which is only true of the western half of the church not the eastern orthodox, why shouldn’t we change it? There is no profound theological reason why priests have to be celibate, it is just custom.”
He described CDF chief, Cardinal Luis Ladaria’s recent comments on the commission on women deacons as “a damage limitation job” and suggested that the Jesuit was “trying to manage expectations” and manage the conservatives. “A lot of them are in the States and they provide the central church with a lot of money,” he said.

Thursday, July 26, 2018

Hugh Fenning OP, RIP

Dominican priest Hugh Fenning died early on Wednesday morning in Kiltipper nursing home, Tallaght. 

He was born in 1935, joined the Dominicans in 1953, made his first profession the following year and was ordained a priest in 1960.

Hugh was an accomplished historian, spent many years living in Rome as a member of the historical  institute of the Dominican Order.

During his time as a member of the historical institute he lived at the Dominican HQ at Santa Sabina. When it was decided to move the institute out of Santa Sabina, Hugh was not pleased having to leave and had no difficulty airing his views. He spent a number of years living at the Irish Dominican priory at San Clemente in Rome. People still recall some of his Roman one-liners.

He was for a long period of time the archivist of the Irish province of the Order and wrote many books and pamphlets on the historical background to Dominican priories in Ireland.

In 2012 he suffered a stroke, which left him greatly incapacitated. It meant he was semi-paralysed and yet he never once complained about his illness and situation. And that from a man who was sharp and quick with his tongue. He was confident that his faith had been a great support to him in his illness.

He had a wonderful capacity with words, words which could be most incisive and direct. He could enliven any conversation with a quiet, clever throw-away comment, but would it be sharp and indeed, cutting when required.

Hugh once said of me that I would never say anything about a person behind their back, instead I would say it straight to their face.

Like his father before him he had a special interest in rare books.

He was an ornithologist and had a large collection of books on birds. Hugh could give you detailed information on every bird he saw. How he enjoyed observing birds while in the priory garden in Tallaght or in the garden of the Black Abbey in Kilkenny. On his regular field trips he always went armed with his binoculars.

He attended CBS Synge Street. Another Synge Street student, Andrew John Kane joined the Dominicans the same day as Hugh. Hugh told many funny stories about how their academic abilities did a turn-around when they joined the Order. The stories always at his own expense.

He joined the Dominicans in a world of seeming certainty, a certainty in which he felt at home and enjoyed its environs. It meant he could be cleverly critical of 'new-fangled ways' for which he would always have the perfect comment.

Hugh Fenning was a large personality in the Irish Dominicans. He told it as he saw it and sometimes that could hurt.

He was a kind man, loyal to his friends.

Hugh Fenning was a towering character in the Irish Dominican province.


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