Wszechmogący wieczny Boże, przebacz nam lękliwość, chwiejność i niewypełnianie przepisów kościoła katolickiego, a za przyczyną błg. Jana Sarkandra umocnij nas w wierze, którą chcemy odtąd wyznawać nie tylko słowem ale i uczynkiem. Amen.
Jesus said
—Let the children come to me
for it is to such as these
that the kingdom of God belongs.—
So we adults have decided to act like children.
We break out the shalalie and the shamrocks
and get drunk as fools,
engorged on green beer
and a side of corned beef.
In the weeks to come
we will paint eggs
and engorge ourselves on
ham, eggs, and chocolate
while giving our children the notion
that the Easter bunny brings it all.
What we forgot
was that children have the innocence
to see Christ clearly.
We sold our innocence for stupidity
and lost God in the transaction.
Pray that our Lord, through the intercession of St. Patrick, turns our hearts toward Him and protects us from the evil of the day.
As you may know, I have been following the events at St. Stanislaus Parish in St. Louis for some time. Because of my personal history with church closings and my membership in the PNCC the issues raised there resonate with me.
I came across this posting over at Catholic World News. They were posting on Fr. Marek Bozek’s appearance at the installation of a pastor in a St. Louis area church which styles itself as the —Ecumenical Catholic Church—
I cried. Sts. Clare and Francis, it appears, belongs to something called the Ecumenical Catholic Communion, which received its warrant of apostolic succession from the Old Catholics of Utrecht, along with an accredited degree in refrigerator repair at the same low price. SCF’s pastor, unsurprisingly, is a partnered gay man who used to be a Catholic priest, and who’s done a great job of coaching his flock that it is they who sit in judgment of the Gospel, and not vice-versa. Parishioner Jessica Rowley gushes:
Now just to clear things up for the sake of accuracy:
The —Ecumenical Catholic Church (ECC)— is not a member of the Old Catholic Churches in the Utrecht Union. Their membership directory makes no mention of the ECC. As a matter of fact, the only North American Church that was a member of Utrecht was the PNCC. Thankfully, once Utrecht went all innovative with gay marriages and women priests the PNCC said goodbye.
As of today, there is one North American parish, a former PNCC parish, in Toronto Canada, that is a parish under the jurisdiction of the International Bishop’s Conference of Utrecht.
Generally, these American churches are churches that style themselves as Old Catholic, Liberal Catholic, etc. and trace their way back to Episcopal vagantes like Joseph Rene Vilatte, Arnold Hans Mathew, Carmel Henry Carfora, William Francis Brothers, etal.
In my opinion, Fr. Bozek is reaching. I was willing to give him the benefit of the doubt, but he is so far outside the mainstream by cavorting with people who are heretics and self obsessed that I could not see myself as being supportive of that.
I began to get suspicious when I heard he was creating more —Special Ministers of Holy Communion— at his parish (nooooooooo!). That action, coupled with his statements about the ECC show him to be just another N.O. created ‘do whatever feels right’ cleric.
I would hope that the Board at St. Stans sets him back on the road to traditional Catholicism, be it Roman Catholic, PNCC, Orthodox, or SSPX. The faithfulness of the St. Stan’s parishioners will be harmed a second time by yet another clergyman who cannot see the beyond his own ego.
And, when did our catechesis begin turning out non-Catholics?
The following are excerpts from an article at the Times Newspapers Online about the ECC pastor’s installation, the history of this church, and Fr. Bozek’s appearance:
Sts. Clare & Francis
Ecumenical Catholics establish Parish in Webster Groves
by Fran ManninoSts. Clare and Francis Parish was welcomed into the fold of the Ecumenical Catholic Communion on Saturday, Feb. 25, during a celebratory Mass at its borrowed home, Evangelical United Church of Christ in Webster Groves.
“Inclusivity” is a word that resonates with the ECC, and is what distinguishes it from the more traditional Roman Catholic Church.
The clergy of the ECC are a prime example of these beliefs in action. The newly-elected pastor of Sts. Clare and Francis, Rev. Francis Krebs, is an openly gay former Roman Catholic priest. ECC presiding bishop Peter Hickman is the married father of five.
Sts. Clare and Francis parish currently has two women pursuing the deaconate and priesthood, Jessica Rowley and Lisa von Stamwitz.In The Beginning
The ECC is a group of independent Catholic faith communities with roots in the Old Catholic Church. The Old Catholic Church separated itself from the Roman Catholic Church in 1870, in rejection of the First Vatican Council’s decree of Papal Infallibility, and other church dogma.
“Most of the clergy who are part of the ECC are former Roman Catholic clergy,” said Hickman. “I was raised in the American Baptist Church, and ordained a baptist minister in 1979.”
Three years later Hickman converted to Catholicism through the Old Catholic Church. He founded St. Matthew Church in Orange, Calif., in 1985, and became a bishop in 1996.
“I began to have contact with other independent Catholic faith communities and Roman Catholic clergy who wanted to look at another way of being Catholic,” he said. “That’s how the ECC came into being. We’re about 21 communities at this time across the nation, and continuing to grow.”
Sts. Clare and Francis
“Sts. Clare and Francis has been around in a formative stage for slightly more than a year,” said Rev. Krebs. “Our first eucharist together was on the 23rd of October, 2004.”
Inclusion is evident even in the name parishioners chose for their parish – that of St. Francis of Assisi, a man, and St. Clare of Assisi, a woman. The two were contemporaries in the 13th century, and are important figures in Catholic history.
In his former calling as a Roman Catholic priest, Krebs served as pastor of St. Peter and Paul Catholic Church in Soulard for 13 years. Although he left the priesthood in 1990, he missed the ministry.
“I’m a gay man, and have been in a committed relationship for the past seven-and-a-half years,” he said. “That’s a primary feature in my life, and I didn’t want to leave that. I thought, ‘How can I be a priest and still live as a gay man?'”
Krebs began searching for options. He looked to the Episcopal church, a community he admired, but soon found what he calls a “more cultural fit” within the Ecumenical Catholic Communion.
Krebs, along with another ECC priest, Bob Blattner, began forming a faith community that eventually became the parish of Sts. Clare and Francis. The congregation now has approximately 50 registered members, with about one-third of them coming from the Webster-Kirkwood area.
“We would love to be able to have our own space, and when we grow I presume we will,” said Krebs. “At the moment, we are very grateful to the Evangelical United Church of Christ.”
Sts. Clare and Francis draws parishioners from all over the St. Louis area. Acting president of the parish council, George von Stamwitz, lives in the Lafayette Square neighborhood of St. Louis.
“We’re trying to grow, develop ministries, and be a lively, functioning church,” he said. “Within the next couple of years, we hope to certainly have another ordained person, and also hope to have space of our own.”
…
“The Catholic Perestroika”
Bishop Hickman spends part of his time traveling the country, speaking to lay Catholics and Catholic reform organizations about the ECC.
While in St. Louis he spoke with local and visiting clergy, including Rev. Marek Bozek, pastor of St. Stanislaus Kostka Church.
Bozek was recently excommunicated from the Roman Catholic Church for his efforts to minister to the parishioners of St. Stanislaus, which is battling with the Archdiocese of St. Louis over control of the church.
“I wish Sts. Clare and Francis all the best, and congratulate the new pastor and the new candidates for ordination,” said Bozek. “I wish there was a way that Sts. Clare and Francis could be part of the Roman Catholic Church, because I believe that what they are doing is very Catholic.”
Bozek received a standing ovation from celebrants at the installation Mass for Sts. Clare and Francis, but said he was not there looking for options for either himself or St. Stanislaus.
“I hope and I pray that there will be a day when there will be room in the Roman Catholic Church for diverse communities such as Sts. Clare and Francis,” he said. “The purpose of theology is to bring God’s word to a new generation of people. The message does not change; how we proclaim this message and the means we use has to change.”
“It’s an issue of justice,” said Hickman. “The church needs to be a voice of hope for the future, rather than looking like an antiquated institution dragging us back to the past. If the church is the people of God, let the people have a voice.
“The Catholic faith tradition is much larger than the Roman Catholic hierarchy, or the Roman Catholic Church,” he added. “We need to put our emphasis on the Gospel of Jesus, rather than canon law. We’re the Catholic Perestroika.”
…
As you may know I attended the funeral of my aunt this past Wednesday. The pastor of the R.C. parish was very generous in allowing me to lead the prayers for my aunt at the funeral home. He was also a really gentle and nice person.
Because he was kind I find it hard to find fault with the funeral mass he conducted. So I will put my observations out here as a question.
In the R.C. Church is there a form of the Eucharistic Prayer that allows for only the epiclesis and consecration of the bread and wine? It was very basic and bare bones and not any of the first four prayers that I grew up with in my N.O. parish.
On the subject of the liturgical question, —what was that,— Bernard Brandt at A (little) Light from the East points to a video of a processional monstrosity in his posting Processional. He also does a great spoof on Willy Wonka.
—The Denim Revolution—
SUPPORT FREEDOM IN BELARUS!
March 16, 2006
Between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.
At Embassy of Belarus, 18th & New Hampshire, Washington, DC
Why Your Help is Required:
- Europe’s —last dictatorship— is facing presidential elections on March 19
- Results of election likely to be falsified, as has happened previously
- Ignorance to what is happening strengthens the dictator and harms the world
For the Last 12 Years in Belarus:
- Politicians seeking democracy and freedom have been kidnapped and killed
- The list of permanent political prisoners grows each day
- Dictator calls his opponents —bastards— on TV, while arresting youth activists for plotting a —coup— against the government
- Opposition candidate beaten and arrested, his cameraman shot at
Demonstration Location:
Across from the Belarusian Embassy
1619 New Hampshire Ave NW, (Near 18th & New Hampshire), Washington, DC 20009
Metro: Dupont Circle, Red Line, Q St. Exit
You are invited to attend a demonstration of solidarity with the democratic movement in Belarus to show the Belarusian dictator that the world is not indifferent to the destruction of life and liberty.
We welcome all diversity of backgrounds, colors, religions, opinions, and ideassome of the very things that Belarus and its people have been deprived of during the 12 years of Alexander Lukashenko’s rule.
What is Belarus?
Belarus is a former republic of the Soviet Union, located north of Ukraine and to the west of Russia. It has been ruled by Alexander Lukashenko since 1994, who is currently seeking an illegal third term in office with plans to stay in power indefinitely.
What is the Occasion?
Belarus will have its next presidential “elections” on March 19th, 2006. March 16th was chosen as a —Day of Solidarity with Belarus— to remember all those who are oppressed in Belarus on the behalf of democracy and freedom and it is vital that this event continue ahead of the elections.
Why Should I Come?
Significant amounts of people demonstrating in Washington, DC, will show the Belarusian people that the world supports to their right to choose another president on election day, and that freedom and democracy are the right of all peoples, not dictatorship and fear. Like the people of Ukraine, Belarusians will come out onto the streets to peacefully show their disagreement with rigged results and you can join with them in support.
Who Will Win the Presidential Elections?
The “elections” are expected to be officially won by Mr. Lukashenko by over 70%, and he has already stated his victory. This situation has happened many times before, including during the last presidential “elections” in 2001, parliamentary elections, referendums, and other votes which have all been in his favor. Alyaksandar Milinkevich is a united opposition candidate, and has been campaigning despite the numerous obstacles forced upon him. Another independent candidate, Alyaksandr Kazulin, is also running.
Will the Presidential Elections be Fair in Belarus?
No. During the current campaign, one of the opposition candidates was beaten up and detained for 8 hours. Police are arresting campaign volunteers and do not allow peaceful gatherings. Belarus has no independent media and students are threatened and expelled for expressing disagreement with the current government, for attending gatherings, or for supporting the opposition campaigns. It is already expected that Alexander Lukashenko will be announced the —winner— having gathered at least 70% of the vote.
You can make a real difference by showing solidarity – by showing up!
What to bring: You can bring a cowbell (Belarus’ dictator was once the head of a collective farm), or any other fun musical instruments. To pass the time, a few skits will be performed.
More information on Belarus and the upcoming elections can be found at: Charter 97
Wszechmogący Boże, któryś Irlandczykom dał gorliwego apostoła św. Patryka, wzbudź i w narodzie naszym licznych i gorliwych kapłanów, którzyby nas zasad wiary św. pouczali i prowadzili do zbawienia. Amen.
Daj nam o Panie tę łaskę, za przyczyna św. Klemensa Marji, abyśmy zwyciężyli wszelakie przeszkody stojące nam na drodze do zbawienia, a żyjąc według przepisów wiary, odnieśli tryumf nad światem, czartem i ciałem. Przez Chrystusa Pana naszego. Amen.
Św. Matyldo, któraś ubóstwo i prześladowanie ochotnie znosiła poddając się pokornie woli bożej, a nieprzyjaciołom z serca przebaczała, uproś nam u Boga tę łaskę, abyśmy przykrości wszelakie cierpliwie znosili i nie żywili w sercu urazy dla przeciwników. Przez Chrystusa Pana naszego. Amen.
A very dear aunt passed away late last week. The wake and funeral will be Tuesday and Wednesday. I will not be blogging for the next two days, although I will try to get the saints of the day posted before I leave.
Please remember her and her children, family, and friends in your prayers.
The pastor of the R.C. church where the funeral mass is being held is allowing me to sit in choir for the funeral. I appreciate his generosity and kindness.
Generally pastors do this sort of thing, and based on other recent experience, would like PNCC clergy to participate more fully. It presents an uncomfortable situation in that we have to explain why we cannot. Usually something like —Due to our unfortunate divisions etc. etc…—
From the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Actually, Americans are fed up with Roe vs. Wade’s impact
By Barbara L. LyonsAre Americans fed up with Roe vs. Wade? Recent actions in South Dakota and other state legislative bodies to prohibit abortion indicate they are.
For well over 100 years, states had the ability to decide when or if abortions were legal. But in 1973, in an act of raw judicial power, seven of nine U.S. Supreme Court justices shattered the abortion laws of all 50 states and forced their own regime on the nation.
Abortion is legal in every state for any reason essentially for the full nine months of pregnancy.
That’s right. While the public has been lead to believe for over 30 years that abortion is legal only in the first three months of pregnancy, abortions can be performed even as a method of birth control essentially up until the moment of birth. The people, through their elected state legislative bodies, have been shackled in their desire to protect unborn children from a cruel abortion death.
Why are Americans fed up with Roe? Because it has gone too far for too long.
…
Abortion proponents claim that reversal of Roe will send abortion to the back alleys. I maintain that we already exist in a heinous back alley, where 47 million unborn children have lost their lives to abortion under Roe.
Everyone loves a hero, and here are mine:
- The pregnant woman who resists pressure to take the supposedly “easy” solution of abortion by digging deep inside herself and deciding to give life to her precious baby.
- The woman who learns she is pregnant and has breast cancer on the same day and chooses treatment that preserves her baby’s life.
- The man who forsakes career opportunities to stand by the child he has fathered.
- The parents who fight disappointment to support a pregnant daughter.
- The family that welcomes a child with a disability with open arms.
To love and nurture a child is heroism at its best. It gives validity to the American dream that everyone deserves a chance – the America where our most fundamental right is the right to life.
Read the stuff in the middle. The article is powerful stuff —“ and very true.