Tuesday, December 21, 2021

" PAST " MEANWHILE 1,000 KMS TO THE NORTH ORDINARY ON TAPE

  

 

 

Archbishop John Bathersby of Brisbane.........

 

 WITH US ON TAPE

Brisbane’s soon to retire (July, 2011) Archbishop John Bathersby is not seen as often in his Cathedral as most Archbishops are seen in their Cathedrals. But this practice is taken to weird lengths on the occasion of the delivery of most of his Pastoral Letters.

This was again the case on Sunday 6th March when the Archbishop’s Lenten Pastoral Letter – after a suitable Guitar lead-in and an announcer’s introduction, came once again over the Cathedral’s PA system read by His Grace. The effect is quite odd .The Ambo is empty, the Cathedra is vacant (perilously located under the impressive organ Pipes and casing which dominate the Sanctuary). Only the disembodied voice wafts through the Cathedral, leaving the congregation no related focus for their attention. Another Guitar passage and it is all over – almost as if it had never been.

There is a better way, but one would have to be there!

Pastoral Letters have not been the greatest strength of Queensland Bishops.There was the 2006 Advent Pastoral of Bishop Morris of Toowoomba - about which, the less said the better- and the later unfortunate effort of Bishop Michael Putney of Townsville which referred to The Blessed Sacrament as a "symbol"(! see our earlier post.) Even the Metropolitan, the above Archbishop Bathersby ( due to retire in July 2011) had an attack of "the Queensland Pastoral Syndrome" in Advent , 2006 which seemed to have been obscured by the brilliance of Bishop Morris' flames of self-destruction.

Born in Stanthorpe in South East Queensland ( the centre of a vast apple, stone fruit and wine making region), Archbishop John Bathersby of Brisbane will be 75 in July , 2011, when he must submit his resignation to the Holy Father. Ordained Priest in 1961 for Toowoomba Diocese, he became Bishop of Cairns in 1986 and Archbishop of Brisbane on 3 December, 1991.

In his 2006 Pastoral Letter for Advent he committed to published print some of his ideas we had heard in previous sermons or had been relayed to us third- hand.Here is the passage and beneath it , what the Church believes and teaches:

Archbishop Bathersby :
"Yet the title that includes all the others is the deceptively simple title 'Prophet of the Kingdom'. This title places Jesus in a long line of Jewish prophets who addressed the chosen people in the name of God,and often died because of their message. However, Jesus as a prophet was different from the others because he was unique.
 

He was the prophet par excellence, the Messiah, the long awaited messenger of God who announced the arrival of the Kingdom in Himself.

This conviction of Jesus must have developed during his comparatively short life of 33 years, when through prayer, study and action he came to realise, in a mysterious process we will never be able to understand, that, rather than being merely one of the Prophets he himself was the Messiah, the anointed one of God.

He must have realised that in himself God was not merely calling the chosen people into an ever deeper relationship as God had done with the prophets and patriarchs, but that in relating to Himself people were relating to God.

He must also have realised that relationship with Himself would save the world and change it forever.

No longer would sinfulness prevail as it had done earlier, but rather the love of God would reach out through Him not just to a few privileged people but to all people who would experience in Himself God's love and forgiveness.

It was a reckless, extravagant claim that ultimately cost Jesus his life, nevertheless this extraordinary claim was ultimately vindicated by resurrection."

"MYSTICI CORPORIS"  POPE PIUS XII :

"75. Now the only begotten Son of God embraced us in His infinite knowledge and undying love even before the world began. And that He might give a visible and exceedingly beautiful expression to  this love, He assumed our nature in hypostatic union : hence - as Maximus of Turin with a certain unaffected simplicity remarks - "in Christ our own flesh loves us "(156)) But the knowledge and love of Our Divine Redeemer, of which we were the object from the first moment of His Incarnation, exceed all that the human intellect can hope to grasp. For hardly was He conceived in the womb of the Mother of God, when He began to enjoy the Beatific Vision, and in that vision all the members of His Mystical Body were continually and unceasingly present to Him, and He embraced them with His redeeming love. O marvellous condescension of Divine Love for us! O inestimable dispensation of boundless charity! In the crib, on the Cross, in the unending glory of the Father, Christ has all the members of the Church present before Him and united to Him in a much clearer and more loving manner than that of a mother who clasps her child to her breast, or than that with which a man knows and loves himself." (Emphasis added.)

If we followed Archbishop Bathersby ( and his Anglican guru Bishop Tom Wright of Durham, England, who he refers to and has brought to Brisbane to teach Catholics about Christ) we would hold that at some time Jesus developed His thinking along these lines :

" Gosh,I think I'm the Messiah!' (whom the Jews of that time expected to be a military and political leader.) Then, " Hey, I reckon all the Jews should come to God through me". Then, " well, golly, I believe I am God."

This marvellous bit of self discovery would logically involve either :
 

(a) Jesus having become God somewhere in the process, or
(b) having been God incarnate from the instant of His Conception, but not knowing it - God, but He didn't know it!

Since we know that the Church has always taught that Jesus was God Incarnate from the moment of His Conception ( " and the Word became flesh" ) His Grace was advancing the latter absurd proposition. He should not be surprised that we prefer to stay with Pope Pius XII and the Catholic Church.

                     Archbishop Bathersby of Brisbane due to retire in July,2011

" PAST " RARE COMBINATION OF GENIAL GOOD HUMOUR AND POWERFUL CORRECTION OF ERROR

Cardinal Pell in 2009 Preaching in Cork,Ireland
  

He is a no nonsense sort of Prelate - I have heard him say :"All I do, is do what the Catholic Church does, and teach what the Catholic Church teaches, and let the chips fall where they may." He is of course Cardinal George Pell, Archbishop of Sydney.

Last Sunday, in typical good form and with even more of his genial good humour than usual, he delivered this powerful Homily, which is a classic - starting with gentle humour and steadily winding up with forceful teaching, before delivering a knockout blow at some post- Conciliar nonsense.:

"9th Sunday in Ordinary Time


St. Mary's Cathedral, Sydney

Deut 11:18, 26-28, 32; Mt 7:21-27

By + Cardinal George Pell

Archbishop of Sydney

6 March 2011

This year it seems that the Feast of Easter is celebrated as late in the year as is possible. We know that the date of Easter is still controverted with Western and Eastern Churches celebrating on different days.

Our situation is not as bad as it was in 387 when St. Augustine observed that Easter was celebrated in Gaul on March 21st, in Italy on April 18th and at Alexandria on April 25th. The earliest dispute was between those who followed the Jewish method of dating the Passover, celebrating the Paschal (or full) moon, on a fixed day of the lunar month and those who believed the celebration should be on the following Sunday. The ancient Church opted for a Sunday.

The two major schools of Christian theology in ancient times were at Antioch and Alexandria and they moved in different directions after this initial clarification. Antioch accepted the Jewish reckoning, while Alexandria developed their own system always placing Easter after the vernal equinox i.e. the spring date when night and day all over the earth are of equal length. Rome came to follow Alexandria.

There was trouble when the Roman missionaries came to England in the 590s, where the established Celtic Churches followed a different dating practice. As late as 651 Queen Eanfleda of Northumbria, following the Roman rule, celebrated Palm Sunday on the day her husband King Oswy was celebrating Easter! In the fourth and fifth centuries the Church of Rome would have forbade us to celebrate Easter on April 24th, as we do this year, because for them April 21st was the cut-off date!

I am not sure that this is of any particular use for your spiritual or moral development, but it helps explain why I could not find any evidence that I had preached on this gospel text on any earlier occasion.

Today's passage is almost at the end of a long section of particular instructions, which Our Lord gave to his inner circle of disciples rather than to the general public, often known as the Great Instruction. It runs through chapters five to seven and concludes with Matthew noting that the crowds were deeply impressed, because Jesus taught authoritatively, not like their scribes.

One characteristic of much of the Great Instruction is the prominence Jesus gives to reward and punishment. Some high minded commentators, well formed in the Christian tradition and perhaps influenced, even unknowingly, by the eighteenth century German philosopher Immanuel Kant, teach that virtue should be its own reward and that acting for a reward makes an act less good or moral.

Our Lord did not follow that line at all, promising men and women the salvation that comes from God alone (which is offered to those who enter the Kingdom, purchased by Jesus' blood). This is an immense blessing which requires an appropriate response from us; a turning to God or a conversion.

No one is claiming that we merit the prize of heaven, although our good works do merit some reward, because the happiness of heaven is far beyond anything we might attain through our own efforts.

I like this gospel passage, because Our Lord is saying that doers rather than talkers will enter the kingdom of heaven. As someone who has to do a lot of talking, the message is not entirely reassuring, but I am happy to endorse the priority of deeds over words. As a child I was told that talk can be cheap and that personal integrity is needed, a congruence between what we are and what we say.

Popular wisdom takes up this theme too. "You can talk the talk, but can you walk the walk?" it asks. An Irish friend claimed that the next saying was Chinese, but it sounds Irish to me: "There's a lot of noise on the stairs, but no one coming down"! By a coincidence this passage about the doers rather than the sayers entering the Kingdom has some relevance for a discussion which took place at a recent clergy meeting.

You all know that later this year the entire English-speaking world will adopt a single new translation of the third edition of the Roman Missal.

The peoples' parts are not much changed, but the priests' parts have more important changes. One controversial point is the translation of the words of consecration where Jesus' blood is described as being poured out "for you and for all for the forgiveness of sins".

The Latin words are "pro vobis et pro multis" which we now translate as "for you and for all". Often language groups translate this, following the Latin more closely, as "for many". What should the new translation say?

The presidents of bishops' conferences were consulted, opinion was divided, but eventually the decision was that in future the priest will say "for you and for many".

One priest was upset by this (and he is not alone) and has asked who were excluded and why they were excluded. It is not a bad question and the answer is in today's gospel.

Jesus died for everyone in the sense that salvation is offered to all, but Our Lord was also very clear that some refuse that offer. In fact he also seems to suggest that only a few enter and that most miss the cut. Let us hope this is not the case. The people who are excluded are excluded by their own refusal to enter the narrow gate, by being merely talkers rather than doers and refusing to build their lives on the sure foundations of faith and good works. Solid foundations will ensure that our houses will not fall over in the floods and storms. Jesus did not promise salvation to everyone.

In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.  "


Lucky the Archdiocese that has such a Bishop!

Sunday, December 19, 2021

" PAST " SOME THINGS IN COMMON A BEGINNING

MUTUAL UNDERSTANDING A TALE OF TWO COUNTRIES 

AUSTRALIA POLITICAL AND TOPOGRAPICAL


Landmass :7,682,300 Sq. miles 7th Largest in World

Population :22,751,014 July 2015 Est.56th Largest in World



Thursday, December 16, 2021

 

Technical problems with Google indexing have made it desirable to re-post all of our material. I hope you will find interest in reflecting with me, on the history of the Church over the centuries and during the life of the Blog which began on 14th December 2009. This post first appeared on 9th March 2011. 

               CARDINAL MAHONY FORMER ARCHBISHOP OF LOS ANGELES AND LITURGICAL ABUSE

Cardinal Mahony Archbishop of Los Angeles reaches 75Years of Age and Holy Father accepts his resignation.


He Appoints Co-Adjutor as Successor.
 

To the great relief of very many people, the leading”false “spirit of the Council” Archbishop of Los Angeles, Cardinal Mahony has been replaced. His Successor is the highly regarded, devout and personable Archbishop Jose H.Gomez a member of Opus Dei, who has been for some months the Co-Adjutor to the Cardinal.


Cardinal Mahony and his brazen liturgical abuse (see picture -top) is an example of a style of American prelate that is passing – very big on glad-handing the wealthy whose support for the Archdiocese has been substantial, light on the reforms of Venerable Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI. His eyes were firmly fixed on “the signs of the times” but not as they evolve, rather for him”the times“appear to have been what the song called “the sick, sick sixties”.


Cardinal Mahony became notorious for the extraordinary legal manoeuvres he authorized to obstruct authorities investigating sexual abuse cases in Los Angeles and to avoid giving personal testimony about his administration of these matters. He has also for years sponsored an annual Catholic Education seminar which had as its hallmark bizarre” liturgical” events featuring liturgical dancers whirling and twirling about, both male and female, one even holding the Book of the Gospels as he did so. 

Many were convinced that Hollywood was affecting the local church rather than vice versa. 

Cardinal Mahony’s approach gained physical expression when the Archdiocese abandoned St. Vibiana’s Cathedral and built a new structure which resembles a second-rate municipal Concert Hall. The building is totally devoid of any sense of the sacred.

Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels



As his Successor’s name suggests, he will be keenly alert to the needs of the Archdiocese’s burgeoning Latino community whose numbers and particular problems are truly “signs of the times.”

ARCHBISHOP JOSE H.GOMEZ
We pray that Archbishop Gomez will have great success in his appointment for the glory of God and the spiritual good of his people.

" PAST " CARDINAL PELL HITS THE NAIL ON THE HEAD

 

Technical problems with Google indexing have made it desirable to re-post all of our material. I hope you will find interest in reflecting with me, on the history of the Church over the centuries and during the life of the Blog which began on 14th December 2009. This post first appeared on 9th March 2011. 
 Cardinal Pell preaching in Sydney's magnificent Saint Mary's Basilica

 

In his Homily the Sunday before last Cardinal George Pell got to speaking about commitment in the context of the dearth of vocations in the recent past and the growth of young unmarried couples living together, read what His Eminence said:

"It is fascinating to ponder whether the increasing level of prosperity in Australia over the last fifty years is connected with the decline in the number of seminarians and young religious and with the increasing number of young people who live together and are reluctant to commit to each other permanently and exclusively in the institution of marriage. Is our example, our easier life style (at least physically) encouraging a materialism and selfishness, which make it harder for young people to make commitments which involve explicit sacrifices? We have something to ponder and pray about here."

As so often, and in his characteristically laconic style, he hits the nail on the head.

Happily, in more recent years, and under His Eminence's leadership, the Archdiocese of Sydney has enjoyed a continuing growth in the number of Seminarians, so that it now has a total of 45 at its two seminaries and studying in Rome. It takes inspiring leadership and the Grace of the Holy Spirit to get young men to commit their lives to Christ, especially in this self-centred, materialistic society.

The "preserving of one's options"was much spoken of in military circles and political circles during Lyndon Johnson's Presidency, mired in the Vietnam war, where the concept had some validity. Unhappily it spilled over into the fields of everyday discourse where it became poisonous. In an era of abandonment of principles and ideals its effect was greatly destructive.

The return to ideals and commitment, and foregoing self-indulgence on that account , is essential to re-building the ranks of the clergy and re-establishing a flourishing Christian society.

Beautiful St. Marys Cathedral, flanked by statues of earlier Archbishops - Cardinal Moran (left) and Archbishop Kelly (right).

 

 

 I had the privilege of assisting at the Solemn Mass at 10.30 am on that Sunday in St. Mary’s Cathedral Sydney. It is always an impressive and deeply affecting experience. On this occasion it was even more so, for the assembled Parish Vocations Co-Ordinators were to be commissioned, and the Archdiocesan Vocations Director the inspiring Father Michael De Stoop, the Rector of the Good Shepherd Seminary Father Tony Percy and a number of other Seminary Professorial Staff concelebrated with His Eminence Cardinal George Pell


The entrance procession was long, being augmented by the Seminarians among the Altar Servers, and proceeded with due deliberation, from the Sacristy along the side aisle, turned and approached the Altar down the centre aisle, preceded by two thurifers and the great Processional Cross and followed by a majestic banner. The choir sang “Lord of All Hopefulness”to the Traditional Irish melody “Slane” and the fine Canadian organ over the College Street entrance complemented them perfectly. When this was completed the Choir sang the Introit “Factus est Dominus protector meus…’All were vested perfectly with hands properly joined palm to palm in front of them (no anxious old lady clutching of fingers) and lastly came His Eminence .No irregularity to distract, just precise order and obvious devotion on the part of those processing along, drew together and inspired the congregation, one could not have better created the atmosphere for a devout celebration of Holy Mass.

And that was exactly what we assisted at – everything just as it should be. Cardinal Pell’s homily was characteristically succinct and to the point, as we have seen above. The Vocations Co-ordinators were commissioned without any undue distraction – it was the Mass that mattered. I have seen it appear to be otherwise on some occasions in another place. But, the reader might say, “That’s OK in the biggest Cathedral in the Southern Hemisphere with scads of Priests and Seminarians and a huge choir….what is your point for the rest of us?”Just this – whether it is in St. Patrick’s in Melbourne or in St.Peter Chanel’s in Berala(Sydney) or St. Ignatius’ in Toowong (Brisbane)) – wherever, large or small , or on the bonnet of a Jeep in a far distant battlefield, it is always possible to do our very best: Bishop, Priest, Acolytes, people to produce the atmosphere of devotion.
I have seen the good Jesuit Father Greg Jordan at a temporary Altar in a School Hall with a small but devout group celebrate Holy Mass in such a way that the memory of it is with me years later and particularly the recitation of the Sequence for the Feast of Corpus Christi with its wonderful and noble evocation of the mystery of our redemption.

This very issue of the character of our celebrations of the Sacred Liturgy is very much at the heart of the life and teachings of the Holy Father and that fact becomes ever more clear. The great mistake of the false “spirit of the Council” folk now shuffling out of the sanctuaries, was to think that it was all about “us”. Whereas it is, and always has been in truth, all about HIM. Please pray for a true inspiration of devotion in all who prepare and celebrate the Sacred Liturgy, and that they may use the coming of the corrected texts for the Order of Mass as an opportunity to reform and enhance their celebration remembering just that – “its not about us , it’s about HIM”


Pope Benedict XVI concelebrates Holy Mass with Cardinal Pell and others after consecrating the new High Altar of St, Marys Cathedral Sydney in 2008.

Tuesday, December 7, 2021

" PAST " JESUS AND JUDAS

   

 


                       " You call Me Master and Lord; and you say well, for so I am. "(John 13:13)

On that night  of the Last Supper, having so clearly set out His Divine Authority, Jesus showed forth His astounding Humility by proceeding to wash the feet of the disciples in that scene we know so well especially for its presentation of Saint Peter's characteristic demonstration of extreme volatility, But Jesus was about to demonstrate His astounding Mercy even more thoroughly though less obviously and over a number of hours.

In every scene of Sacred Scripture, Jesus is shown as truly the Master of every situation,He knows everything,"past, present and to come", and, as Sacred Scripture says of God : "omnia quaecumque voluit fecit "that is," whatever He wishes, He does".

Jesus has freely willed to accept Death on the Cross as the means to achieve our Salvation . But His Mercy is infinite and He will not allow Judas to commit the hideous crime of betraying the Son of Man - as he has contracted to do - without allowing him every grace and choice to avoid the great sin. So, in the first place, He lets Judas know that He knows what Judas has done and plans to do.

"Amen,Amen, I say to you, one of you shall betray Me." 

Note that Our Lord is careful to allow Judas every time the chance to reform with no-one else knowing what he had intended. So now Judas knows that Jesus knows his guilty secret. All of the others , sure of their present innocence but not so sure of their courage under pressure, begin their "Is it I Lord?"cries. Until with characteristic impatience to find the traitor out, Saint Peter signals to St.John to ask Him who it is.This was easy to do, because Saint John's head, in the reclining arrangements of the disciples at table, is near Our Lord's breast.Our Lord softly tells John that it is the one to whom He shall give the morsel of bread dipped in the bowl. Saint John tells us that after Judas consumed the morsel, Satan entered into him. Jesus knew it of course and knew that it was not possible without Judas' agreement - therefore Jesus said to the committed traitor : "That which thou dost, do quickly."  Judas went out immediately "And it was night" Saint John tells us - night the time for hidden , shameful deeds, for all manner of evil. The others automatically assumed that Judas - the keeper of the purse- had some duty to perform.

"Judas, Dost thou betray the Son of Man with a kiss?"

 

The events of this sublime evening moved on inexorably.The Saviour of the World, anticipating the bloody Sacrifice of the morrow on Calvary had given Himself -Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity, as food to His Disciples and had made them the first Bishops of His Church, instituting the Sacred Ministerial Priesthood. Now, after His Agony in the Garden of Gethsemane in the course of which He had accepted the burden of the guilt of every sin of mankind,past, present and to come and the Father's Will that He should be sacrificed on the Cross to redeem the sinners  who wished to  be saved. All these crushing burdens were present to Him as both God and Man, and yet...and yet..He still took care to give Judas a way out. For, as the party of Soldiers and Temple Authorities accompanied by Judas emerged from the darkness,Jesus it was Who went forward to meet them. By so doing He ensured that the disciples did not identify Judas - even now, Jesus gave him the chance to break and run.

Jesus  asks them Who they seek "Jesus of Nazareth"comes the reply." I AM HE "Our Lord firmly responds. Then showing the force of His Divine Authority all of the would be captors stagger backwards and collapse to the ground. It is enough - He has shown that if He is to be taken, it will only be because He permits it.

Now, Judas has been given every opportunity to abandon his hideously sinful intention. But he wills to proceed. Throwing Jesus' Mercy back in His Face literally, he comes forward and as the great Archbishop Fulton Sheen said : "Blistered His lips with a kiss" - How sickening a betrayal - Innocence Himself delivered into the hands of His enemies through the abuse of the great symbol of love - a kiss!
Now the disciples also knew the traitor for what he was.And indeed, Judas himself in horror realised the appalling depth of the evil he had done.The words of Jesus came crashing and crushing into his heart of darkness: "...woe to that man"by whom the Son of Man shall be betrayed: it were better for him, if that man had not been born."( Matt.26:24)

The Gospel narratives of Holy Thursday are wonderfully rich , but we have concentrated on one aspect alone,the merciful concern of Our Lord for the Salvation of the sinner planning to betray Him.Amid all the vast riches of that evening this reality is easy to pass by. But , it is and should be, a great lesson and consolation for each of us sinners to realise what a merciful God we adore.

CHRIST THE PANTOKRATOR _Palermo

" PAST " HE HAD BECOME A MAN, NOT AN ANGEL

JESUS CONFOUNDS SATAN'S ATTEMPT AT TEMPTATION
 

 

 "For the moment, Satan had been worsted, but perhaps he had learnt all he had cared to know. Whoever this Jesus was it was clear that He was a Power with whom he would have to reckon. He left Him, but in no confusion; he left Him, but, as the Evangelist carefully tells us, only "for a time". He had other weapons at his disposal and he would use them, even till the last night when would come

                        " Your hour
And the power of darkness."  Luke xxii: 53

Meanwhile, Jesus Himself was at peace. He could ask His Father, and His Father would give Him legions of angels to help Him in His work, but that would not be His way. He had not become an angel, He had become Man, and man should be His helper. Still, because of His humiliation, He should not be deserted; He Who had submitted to this buffeting by the spirit of evil should be visited by the spirits of good. As at the beginning in Bethlehem, as at the end in the Garden, so now in His first desolation,

                          "Behold angels came
                       And ministered to Him.""

-
Extract from Archbishop Alban Goodier S.J.'s masterful " The Public Life of Our Lord Jesus Christ".