Day: December 26, 2005

Everything Else

Truth vs. Blackmail and What is Evidence – via the St. Louis Dispatch

An interesting story today, recapping the Christmas Eve story from St. Stanislaus Kostka church in St. Louis and Fr. Bozek’s homily for Christmas Day.

Fr. Bozek’s Christmas morning homily was a revelation as to his character. It is the speaking of truth in the face of those who resort to blackmail to get what they want. Blackmail cannot stand if the accused has no fear. Those who have no fear or do not let themselves be ruled by fear are those that have the Lord as their shield.

It would appear that the lavender mafia of the American Roman Catholic church is at work again.

For those not familiar with the lavender mafia, there are tons of internet resources about it. Just do a Google Search or check out The Gay Question by Rod Dreher from the National Review Online. To wit:

THE LAVENDER MAFIA

The raw numbers are less important, though, if homosexual priests occupy positions of influence in the vast Catholic bureaucracy; and there seems little doubt that this is the case in the American Church. Lest this be dismissed as right-wing paranoia, it bears noting that psychotherapist Sipe is no conservative —” indeed, he is disliked by many on the Catholic Right for his vigorous dissent from Church teaching on sexual morality —” yet he is convinced that the sexual abuse of minors is facilitated by a secret, powerful network of gay priests. Sipe has a great deal of clinical and research experience in this field; he has reviewed thousands of case histories of sexually active priests and abuse victims. He is convinced of the existence of what the Rev. Andrew Greeley, the left-wing clerical gadfly, has called a “lavender Mafia.”

“This is a system. This is a whole community. You have many good people covering it up,” Sipe says. “There is a network of power. A lot of seminary rectors and teachers are part of it, and they move to chancery-office positions, and on to bishoprics. It’s part of the ladder of success. It breaks your heart to see the people who suffer because of this.”

In his new book, Goodbye! Good Men, Michael S. Rose documents in shocking detail how pervasive militant homosexuality is in many seminaries, how much gay sex is taking place among seminarians and priest-professors, and how gay power cliques exclude and punish heterosexuals who oppose them. “It’s not just a few guys in a few seminaries that have an ax to grind. It is a pattern,” says Rose. “The protective network [of homosexual priests] begins in the seminaries.”

The stories related in Rose’s book will strike many as incredible, but they track closely with the stories that priests have told me about open gay sex and gay politicking in seminaries. The current scandal is opening Catholic eyes: As one ex-seminarian says, “People thought I was crazy when I told them what it was like there, so I finally quit talking about it. They’re starting to see now that I wasn’t.”

Goodbye! Good Men links homosexuality among priests with theological dissent, a connection commonly made by conservative Catholics who wonder why their parish priests have practically abandoned teaching and explaining Catholic sexual morality. But one veteran vocations-team member for a conservative diocese cautions that Catholics should not assume that theological orthodoxy guarantees heterosexuality or chastity. “You find [active homosexuality] among some pretty conservative orders, and in places you’d not expect it,” he says. “That’s what makes this so depressing. You don’t know where to turn.”

So it would seem that those who do not like Fr. Bozek’s decision have decided to attack his call by labeling him (excerpts from the St. Louis Dispatch):

It wasn’t until Christmas morning, in a different homily, that Bozek told his new parishioners about a prior episode in his life that helped prepare him for this latest challenge to authority. “God tries us with fire to make our faith stronger,” he told them.

Five years ago, Bozek and Catholic church leaders in Poland were at odds about something more personal than the St. Stanislaus dispute. It was an accusation that forced him to flee his homeland, landing in Missouri, and, finally, in the pulpit at St. Stanislaus parish.

The next morning, Bozek returned to the pulpit, this time with a different homily. “It seems so many things happen by accident, that paths cross by accident,” he said. “But that is the mystery of our faith – nothing happens without a reason.”

With a startling revelation, he signaled to his parishioners on Christmas morning that he had been through controversy with church authority before. And he believed it had made him stronger.

Bozek told his new parishioners the story of his struggle five years ago at a seminary in Poland with an accusation made against him – “a witch hunt” he called it. “Some people accused me of being a promiscuous homosexual,” he said. He told the rector of the seminary to provide proof, and said the rector couldn’t, but persisted in the
accusations.

Bozek said he went to his Warmia Archbishop Edmund Michal Piszcz, and told him to call off the rector. He threatened to sue the archdiocese. “They have no proof,” he told Piszcz. Bozek said Piszcz agreed. Nevertheless the priest left the seminary and Poland, landing in Springfield, Mo.

“What would have happened had I not been accused?” he asked the congregation. “I probably would still be in Poland living happily near my parents. I probably never would have heard of St. Stanislaus Kostka church.”

Jan Guzowski, the rector at the Hosianum seminary in Olsztyn when Bozek was there, said in a telephone interview from Poland that Bozek had been told to leave because of suspected homosexuality.

“We thought he was homosexual. We had several problems with him. He said he wasn’t homosexual, but we had certain proof that this wasn’t true.” Asked what proof, Guzowski said that other seminarians told him so.

Oh yes, —we thought—, how convenient. We thought therefore it must be so. The rector and some students wishing to paint seminarian Bozek as a ‘promiscuous homosexual’. Perhaps they had only wished it to be true? See I can draw innuendo as well as the next person. Being in the profession I am in during my regular 9 —“ 5 I should know what having evidence is all about. Dr. Guzowski has the luxury of making ‘evidence’ be anything he wishes it to be. Read on…

Guzowski, who left the seminary two years ago, is now professor of moral theology at a state-run university in Olsztyn.

Do I even have to point out the irony?

In an interview after his second Christmas Mass on Sunday, Bozek denied Guzowski’s charges. “Of course the rector is going to say I was kicked out; that’s his side of the story,” Bozek said. “But I have a recommendation from Archbishop Piszcz which says I left by my own request.”

Bozek said he then decided to be “a missionary” resulting in his acceptance to study as a priest for the diocese of Springfield-Cape Girardeau, his arrival there in 2000, his studies at St. Meinrad School of Theology in Indiana, and his eventual ordination three years ago.

Bozek said he brought up his flight from Hosianum in his Christmas homily because he had received phone calls threatening to leak the accusations to the press. “I wanted to tell this to my new parishioners in my own words,” he said.

So what will the new priest say when his parishioners ask him the inevitable question: Are you a homosexual? “When people ask me that, I just say, I am a celibate and chaste priest, so it doesn’t matter,” Bozek said.

Fr. Bozek makes an important note here that the press often misses. Celibacy and chastity are not the same thing. Now celibacy by rights would presume chastity. You cannot be married and as such you should not be having sexual relations with anyone. Chastity is the key. Fr. Bozek is neither married (therefore celibate) and is not engaging in sexual relations (therefore chaste).

Everything Else,

The Trans-Siberian Orchestra

My family and I, along with several other families from our church, went to see the Trans-Siberian Orchestra today.

It was a wonderful experience on many levels and I would like to just note a few here:

Our Parish supports its children and young people:

The fact is, children pay for nothing in our parish. The Parent-Teacher organization provides for all the religious education needs for our School of Christian Living. There are no book fees, material fees, teaching fees, or any other kind of fees. Rich or poor, nothing hinders our children or their parents from approaching the Lord.

The PTO paid for the tickets for all the children today. It was a great Christmas gift for them. I am grateful for the PTO’s support. The PTO also assists with the annual youth retreat and the youth Valentine’s Day Holy Mass and party.

The men’s organization, the Young Men’s Society of the Resurrection (YMS of R), along with our fraternal organization, the Polish National Union of America (Spójnia) provides for an annual after Christmas bowling party. The YMS of R also covers the full freight for our children’s Church summer camp (KURS) attendance and for attendance at the biennial PNCC Youth Convocation.

God bless these dedicated men and women for their support.

The children’s reaction:

It was wonderful to see the children’s reaction to the TSO’s stage show, lighting, pyrotechnics, and music. My 4 year old daughter was a little scared at the beginning, but once the initial razzzle-dazzle was done, she settled right in. My 6 year old son just though everything was great. He be-bopped right along.

My children love the arts. It was great to see their wide-eyed reaction to everything.

TSO:

What can I say? I was surprised! My wife researched the group in advance, I did not. I was expecting a secular Christmas experience. Instead I got theology —“ and pretty good at that.

The group told the —Christmas Eve & Other Stories— tale. What I found in this story was an affirmation of God’s abiding presence with us. Christ is real and present. God is not a disinterested, distant observer, but actively engages man where he is. Christ’s action continues to inspire man to act.

The other amazing thing is that they did not slip into secular humanism or equating all religions on an equal plane. This was, in a sense, a rediscovery of Christianity and the Arts working together to better humanity.

Once when asked what Trans-Siberian Orchestra was about, Paul O’Neill replied, “It’s about creating great art. When asked to define what great art was, Paul said, “The purpose of art is to create an emotional response in the person that is exposed to that art. And there are three categories of art; bad art, good art and great art. Bad art will elicit no emotional response in the person that is exposed to it, i.e.; a song you hear in an elevator and it does nothing to you, a picture on a wall that gives you the same emotional response as if the wall had been blank, a movie that chews up time. Good art will make you feel an emotion that you have felt before; you see a picture of a forest and you remember the last time you went fishing with your dad, you hear a song about love and you remember the last time you were in love. Great art will make you feel an emotion you have never felt before; seeing the pieta, the world famous sculpture by Michelangelo, can cause someone to feel the pain of losing a child even if they’ve never had one. And when you’re trying for these emotions the easiest one to trigger is anger. Anyone can do it. Go into the street, throw a rock at someone, you will make them angry. The emotions of love, empathy and laughter are much harder to trigger, but since they operate on a deeper level, they bring a much greater reward.

Having read this I recall the great patrimony held in our churches, the very same ones our ancestors built with love and which, it would seem, we are so bent of closing and selling. These buildings are not only property and assets; rather they are about lifting our eyes and hearts to God and the magnificence of His love for us. Our ancestors, in their poverty, recognized the need to glorify and magnify the Lord. If only we, blessed by riches, would support these churches. At the same time, wouldn’t it be great if the new churches being built would reflect God rather than the mall.

Saints and Martyrs

Feast of Stephen, Deacon and Protomartyr

StStephen.jpg 

As a deacon in the Church, St. Stephen is both my patron and role model. Along with St. Anthony of Padua, for whom my mother had great devotion, they have both inspired me for as long as I can remember and right through to today.

Their common theme is strong preaching. Both were the best examples of proclaiming the Lord in the face of difficulty and with St. Stephen, martyrdom.

St. Stephen, Protomartyr, pray for us.

Yesterday we celebrated the birth in time of our eternal King. Today we celebrate the triumphant suffering of his soldier. Yesterday our king, clothed in his robe of flesh, left his place in the virgin’s womb and graciously visited the world. Today his soldier leaves the tabernacle of his body and goes triumphantly to heaven.

Our king, despite his exalted majesty, came in humility for our sake; yet he did not come empty-handed. He gave of his bounty, yet without any loss to himself. In a marvelous way he changed into wealth the poverty of his faithful followers while remaining in full possession of his own inexhaustible riches. And so the love that brought Christ from heaven to earth raised Stephen from earth to heaven; shown first in the king, it later shone forth in his soldier. His love of God kept him from yielding to the ferocious mob; his love for his neighbor made him pray for those who were stoning him. Love inspired him to reprove those who erred, to make them amend; love led him to pray for those who stoned him, to save them from punishment.

Love, indeed, is the source of all good things; it is an impregnable defense, and the way that leads to heaven. He who walks in love can neither go astray nor be afraid: love guides him, protects him, and brings him to his journey’s end.

My brothers, Christ made love the stairway that would enable all Christians to climb to heaven. Hold fast to it, therefore, in all sincerity, give one another practical proof of it, and by your progress in it, make your ascent together.

— from a sermon by Saint Fulgentius of Ruspe

O, First Martyr and Apostle of Christ, you fought the good fight. You exposed the perversion of the persecutors, for when you were killed by stoning of the hands of the wicked men, you received a crown from the Right Hand on high.

— Troparion of St. Stephen