AMERICA Magazine
A balanced Catholic weekly magazine published by the jesuits of the United States for an intelligent Catholic readership. Go online to subscribe.
Liturgy
This link will keep 'parishioners-at-large' in touch with current creative liturgy sources and resources that respect a variety of 'traditions' within the Church.
Voice of the Faithful
A 'movement' of lay Catholics 'inspired' by the abuse scandal calling for greater accountability of bishops to 'Catholics in the Pew.'
Survivos' Network for those Abused by Priests or Religious
A National Network of self-help support groups for people abused by clergy or religious.
Bishop Accountability
Vital information about the disclosure of sexual abuse and related issues affecting Catholics in the pew and the manner in which Bishops continue to exempt themselves from accountability
National Catholic Reporter
A national Catholic lay newspaper covering events not usually covered or presented with a clerical bias in the local diocesan press or but of concern and interest to Catholics.
COMMONWEAL Magazine
A 'lay' Catholic weekly publication with an accent on an intelligent analysis and commentary on curent issues, trends and concerns of interest to Catholics.
+ 7th Week of Easter
We are to be consecrated in truth.
Readings: Acts 20:28-38 Psalm 88:29-30, 33-36 John 17:11b-19
Consecrate them in the truth. Your word is truth. As you sent me into the world, so I sent them into the world. And I consecrate myself for them, so that they may also be consecrated in truth. [John 17:18-19]
Read the Gospel very slowly and if possible, out loud and if necessary, three times! Although John’s literary style is quite complex, the farewell prayer of Jesus is as powerful as is Paul’s farewell message in Acts.
It is not likely that these passages are the actual words of Paul and Jesus. They are compositions that Luke and John or whoever wrote in their name and are based on the oral tradition of the sayings of Jesus and the preaching of Paul. They were written in the style of farewell addresses of prominent leaders of their times in order to win the attention of early believers to whom the message of truth was entrusted.
The ‘truth’ that is being proclaimed is not from a catechism nor is it a defined doctrine or dogma. It is the core truth about the God who spoke through the prophets and then through Jesus about the universality of God’s love.
During this time of immediate preparation for Pentecost, we are invited to think about our own responsibility to pass on the ‘truth’ of God’s goodness entrusted to us in Christ and how we are to live that truth in our daily lives, each in our own unique way. No one of us can do this alone and so we much join hands literally and figuratively within the community of believers everywhere.
To live the ‘truth’ is to live in the Spirit of Jesus Christ the fruits of which are charity, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, generosity, gentleness, moderation, self-control, reverence, etc. I’m sure you memorized these ‘fruits of the Holy Spirit.’
These are the true ‘marks’ of our authenticity as believers.
Daily Scripture Archive»Free to Be Faithful
Ever felt trapped? Perhaps it was because you WERE trapped; in an elevator between floors, on the top of a Ferris Wheel or in a subway between stations. However, these “adventures” are nothing compared to the experience of being snared in a life and death situation as a fire, a sinking ship or a life-threatening illness.
But there is another kind of imprisonment that can trap the soul in a life threatening situation of confusion, anger, guilt, depression, self-hatred and a sense of alienation from self, family and friends. It may be rooted in unhealed wounds such as physical or emotional abuse or it may arise from the raw memory of wounds we have inflicted on others.
Some people turn to alcohol; others to self-help books and seminars designed to build self-esteem but which often do little more than damage control.
Psychotherapy can be very helpful and indeed is essential in many instances in order to expose deep wounds that must be quarterized in a safe environment.
But there is even more to healing than the care of the psyche. It requires what Richard Rohr calls, “soul work” and I would add, “soul food.”
Twentieth century psychologist, Carl Jung believed that most psychological and emotional derailments are rooted in a spiritual disconnect or fragmentation at the level of the unconscious or as Jung calls it, in the shadow of our being. It is where many of our demons reside. It is where we bury our hurts, those inflicted on us as well as those we have inflicted on others. But this is also the place where we can confront those demons of fear, shame, self-hatred or pride. Ironically, it is where we also encounter God in the midst of the mess. It is where the healing of the soul begins, leading to a restoration of shattered dreams and the reintegration of broken relationships.
As a people in exile, the Israelites experienced both physical and spiritual alienation when Isaiah addressed these words to them: “Be strong, fear not! Your God is coming to save you!” God will be your strength.
In poetic and metaphorical language, Isaiah emphasized further that the signs of God’s intervention would be miraculous. “The eyes of the blind will be opened, and the ears of the deaf unstopped; the lame shall leap like a deer, and the tongue of the speechless sing for joy.”
We in the Christian tradition view the exodus and the liberation of the Jews from Babylon as the foreshadowing of God’s ultimate intervention through Jesus, an intervention that was not just directed to one people or to one nation but to all people of every nation.
John the Baptist was the last prophet of the old order and the first prophet of the new order who, as Isaiah, alerted the people to a higher order that would prevail with the imminent arrival of the Messiah. It is puzzling, nevertheless, that John who baptized Jesus in the Jordan, identifying him as the “Lamb of God,” was unsure of the identity of Jesus as Messiah. Otherwise, why did he send his own disciples to ask Jesus if he were indeed the Messiah?
Take note of Jesus’ response: “Go and tell John what you hear and see: the blind receive their sight, the lame walk, the dead are raised and the poor have good news brought to them.” It is stated as fact, not as promise. His words were both literal and metaphorical. These are the signs of the God’s incarnate intervention in the person of Jesus, the “Anointed of God,” the Christ, the promised Messiah. Not a king with a gold crown or a warrior with spear and shield but a shepherd with a staff as symbol of service.
We who live in the new order as the ‘people or assembly of God,’ the ‘Body of Christ’ have been liberated individually and collectively, untrapped, as it were, freed from the exile of spiritual dysfunction and the paralysis of pride—thinking that we are the center of the universe; or of self-hatred—thinking that we are unworthy of the love of God. We believe this happened definitively at our Baptism but the effects of God’s intervention continue as long as we as individuals and as a community of faith continue to struggle with our demons of self-hatred or pride.
I think that we as Catholics are not always appreciative of the gift of faith and not serious about religion as we are about politics and economics. We practice our religion but we don’t always live our faith. Religious practice can become mechanical all too easily. Living the faith is more than adherence to rules and rituals. In the words of St. Paul, it is putting on the mind and heart of Christ, doing what Jesus did in our own time and place.
In recent years we Americans have become vulnerable as a nation and more recently as a church. For a variety of reasons, many Catholics have left the pews
We don’t solve our problems by walking away from them but by reinvesting in what we believe as Church and reshaping it according to the mind and heart of Christ whether our leaders like it or not. What we believe is more than dogma, doctrine, or discipline. Our theological tradition is broader than rigid definitions and our spirituality deeper than liturgical rules and rituals can express.
James tells us to be patient and not to lose heart and not to grumble against one another but listen to the prophets, ancient and contemporary, and pay special attention to the voice of Christ who is the mark of integrity and truth.
We need to be a listening Church rather than a Church of edicts and sanctions. Our leaders need to listen. We need to listen to one another. More and more parents tell me that their grown children no longer go to church. I tell them to listen to their children, not just to the words they speak but to the beat of their heart. We need to listen carefully before we speak, pursing wisdom and understanding under all circumstances. Together we can find a new truth that can free our church from sin and bring genuine healing.
The decisions we make at every level of life as individuals and as a church have ripple effects in the world community. If we claim to be disciples of Jesus, the Body of Christ, then the proof of our liberation and of God’s presence will be clearly visible and it will be said of us as it was said of Jesus: The blind see what they never saw before; the deaf will hear what they never heard before; the lame walk, and the poor have the good news brought to them, all in the present tense!
But we must be free to be faithful!
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