Month: April 2006

Current Events, Media

Dan Simmons – fiction approaching reality

Here’s a must read.

First check out the science fiction/horror story written by Dan Simmons in Dan Simmons April 2006 Message. Then read the dialog at his website forum (general dialog) and the response posted over at A (little) Light from the East.

Mr. Simmons is a one time educator (and one time Buffalonian 🙂 ) and since 1987 has been a full time author. His work spans the genres of fantasy, science fiction, horror, suspense, historical fiction, noir crime fiction, and mainstream literary fiction . His books are published in 27 foreign counties as well as the U.S. and Canada.

Current Events, Perspective, ,

Heterodox to Retire?

The following are portions of an article from the Albany Times Union. They discuss the upcoming retirement of the Rev. Leo O’Brien, pastor of St. Vincent de Paul R.C. Church in Albany and the Albany Diocese’s vicar general. My commentary is interspersed.

Faith’s steady flame

For more than three decades, the Rev. Leo O’Brien has drawn people to his church

The man enters unobtrusively, walking slowly through the open double doors next to the altar. He steadies himself with the cane in his right hand.

It’s Sunday morning at St. Vincent de Paul church in Albany, shortly before 11 o’clock Mass. The man is dressed casually in dark slacks, a sports shirt and L.L. Bean jacket. He steps near the altar and sits down.

We’ve set the tone. He’s a very casual guy.

As he watches parishioners trickle in, two Filipino children play at the feet of their mother in the front row. Then the man stands up, walks down the four steps at the front of the altar and approaches an unfamiliar face.

“What’s your name?” he asks, extending a hand. “Does your mother know you come to places like this?”

More tone setting. He likes to use obtuse humor and a deprecating style.

This is the Rev. Leo O’Brien, pastor at St. Vincent. He has led this church on Madison Avenue for 34 years — and kept the people coming.

The silver-haired priest has welcomed all worshipers, creating a congregation of 700 families from 43 ZIP codes. Gay couples pray next to retirees; a mixed-race couple with one child slips into chairs next to a white couple with three.

And look, he’s so accepting. Come one, come all, it doesn’t really matter how you live, who you are, or even what you believe, as long as you come.

O’Brien addresses social issues without lecturing or politicizing. He “plants seeds,” as he puts it, smiling.

After announcing at a recent Mass that there would be a second collection for the poor, he said: “We wouldn’t have to do this if we weren’t spending all that money in Iraq.”

Not a bad point. It’s good to speak truth to power and to energize the faithful. I’m just wondering if he’s that honest about calling people to repentance and to living as the Lord and Church command them to live. Hmmm?

Now O’Brien is retiring as full-time priest, and parishioners worry about the church’s future. He turns 75 in six days, and church law says that priests must retire in their 75th year.

O’Brien has chosen July 30 for his retirement, although he’ll remain at St. Vincent part time, celebrating Mass on Saturdays, conducting marriages and presiding at funerals. Today he celebrates his last Easter Mass as resident priest.

“Physically, I’m ready to retire,” he says. “Certainly, I will miss being here full-time. I’ll miss being with the people, sharing their joys and sometimes their sorrows. I’ll miss supporting and helping them.”

I’m waiting for the ‘I’ll miss teaching them the truths of the faith, how to live lives in accord with their professed faith and allegiance to the Church.’

Winding down: O’Brien suffered a heart attack two years ago. He struggles getting around because of neuropathy, which causes numbness in his feet. In January he showed up at Mass wearing dark glasses. He had fallen and cut his eyebrow. The injury required stitches and produced a black eye.

Because of a lack of incoming priests, St. Vincent won’t receive a full-time replacement for O’Brien. Sister Joan Byrne, who has been at St. Vincent for 33 years, one fewer than O’Brien, will run the parish. And the Rev. Richard Vosko, who lives in Clifton Park, will celebrate Mass on Sundays.

“Without Father O’Brien’s strong leadership, I wonder how things will go,” says Bob Sipos, an active parishioner. “We’re going to miss him; that’s for sure.”

But Sipos and others say that O’Brien has motivated so many parishioners to serve on councils and committees that the parish will continue to flourish. O’Brien says St. Vincent has 400 to 500 volunteers.

He’s always recruiting, mingling with parishioners before and after Mass, making newcomers feel welcome and introducing worshipers to one another. His amiable manner seems casual, but it’s often calculated to get people involved.

“We have a motto,” O’Brien says, “Jesus didn’t hang a sign-up sheet in the synagogue. He went out and picked people.”

Being inspired: Sipos and his wife, Jane, both 82, responded to O’Brien’s cajoling shortly after discovering St. Vincent three years ago. Sipos is one of 53 parishioners who read the Scripture at Mass, and he and his wife visit the sick in the hospital.

“He can be very strong without being pushy,” Sipos says of O’Brien. “He’s a motivator. He makes his appeals seem so logical. You think, ‘Yes, I can do that.’

Sipos and his wife moved to Latham from Little Silver, N.J., to be near their son and his family, who live in Albany. They attended five different Catholic churches but found the parishioners indifferent, the services dry and the homilies uninspiring. Then they attended St. Vincent.

“After just one visit,” Sipos says, “we knew we’d found a home.”

Sorry the other Churches weren’t as entertaining as you’d have liked. Perhaps if they used smiley faced cookies instead of communion wafers?

You know that the only good churches are those that entertain you. This is the trap of self worship. Church is about me and how I feel, what I want, not about the worship of God. I wonder if they truly think that if they are not entertained God is not entertained?

They liked the music. Next to the altar in a front corner of the church, an ensemble plays guitars, flute, saxophone and trumpet. A pianist accompanies a choir of nearly 30, all ages. The hymns are upbeat and, O’Brien says, designed to get the parishioners involved in the service.

That’s right, the music must be upbeat, in the traditional happy-slappy Jesus style. No more sin, repent, sacrifice stuff. That’s just too heavy mannnnn…

The Siposes liked the homily, or sermon. They found that O’Brien’s homilies could be whittled down to a single, simple, doable message: Be kind to strangers, strengthen the bonds of your family, reach out to a friend.

And they liked the camaraderie — from other parishioners’ friendliness to O’Brien’s openness, accessibility and willingness to listen and address concerns. People don’t dart for the door after Mass; they hang around. As Sipos notes, the parking lot is slow to empty.

Melting pot: Noreen Thomas, 60, who lives in Delmar and has known O’Brien for 35 years, says he has created “the people’s parish.” She says “it’s not about what you wear or what you do for a living. We all come here as equals; talk about a melting pot.

“You don’t think, do I have to go to church today? You get up and go, because you want to. It’s like going to your grandmother’s for Sunday dinner.”

O’Brien says he’s most proud of helping the parish “become the community that it is, the people who come, the people we serve.”

He oversaw creation of a food pantry that gives away food three days a week to about 500 people a month. Parishioners donate blankets, clothes and other items for homeless shelters. The church sells coffee, tea and chocolate from developing countries to support those countries’ farmers. It encourages parishioners to write letters to politicians urging support of such things as health care for the poor, justice for immigrants and abolition of the death penalty.

For three decades, O’Brien has encouraged women to join men as readers at Mass; the Vatican in the 1960s urged pastors to involve more worshipers. About 10 years ago, he encouraged girls to join the boys as altar servers, carrying the cross, lighting candles, assisting the priest; that happened after a parishioner asked why they couldn’t have girl servers, and O’Brien replied: “We can.”

All of the above are good things. A sense of community, clear homilies that motivate people to do, the universality of the Church, no one is put out because of race or economic class, a priest who is open and accessible to his people, and ministries that actually put Christian ideals into practice.

After baptizing baby girls in front of the congregation several years ago, O’Brien said: “Maybe someday they’ll have the opportunity to be a priest.”

Priest problems: Only unmarried men can become Roman Catholic priests. O’Brien says he doesn’t see why married men and women can’t become priests, too. Because of a lack of priests, he says, 30 of the 190 parishes in the 14-county Albany Diocese do not have full-time pastors.

“It’s a great concern,” he says. “Men are not entering the seminary to replace us as we age and retire. There’s no bench strength. We must do something different.”

Now the downside all in a nutshell. I don’t know what to do, so let’s do something different.

Oh, and it is far more important to use events like the baptism of an infant to proclaim personal politics that contravene the Church’s teaching. It’s really important that father teach what father believes rather than what the Church believes. That way people can learn that the teachings of the Church are optional. Bad enough coming from a parish priest, but the vicar general?

I wonder how many young men or even those on their second or third careers have been challenged by the good father to be a priest? He’s been open, inclusive, hasn’t said a negative thing to anyone —“ yet no vocations?

A native of Raymertown in Rensselaer County, O’Brien was ordained in 1956 after attending Catholic Central High School in Troy, St. Charles College in Baltimore, St. Bernard Seminary in Rochester and Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C. He was pastor at St. Paul the Apostle in Schenectady for eight years and worked full-time in the bishop’s office for eight years, serving as vice chancellor, chancellor and vicar general. He remains vicar general, meaning he’s the diocese’s second-in-command, behind the bishop.

Much has changed in the Catholic Church during O’Brien’s career. Priests quit celebrating Mass in Latin, and altars were placed so priests would be facing the congregation. Nuns shed their habits for everyday clothing.

O’Brien embraced the changes, saying that they gave the church life. But nothing jolted the church as severely as the scandal of priests’ sexually abusing boys.

“Since the terrible scandal of clergy abuse,” O’Brien says, “I’ve had to be very careful in the presence of children. I’m never with a child alone, just to be sure I don’t give signs of anything possibly improper.”

St. Vincent at a recent Sunday Mass abounds with children. They play with toys and color on the floor at the rear and sides of the church. Their chatter, laughs and cries provide a constant background noise.

O’Brien calls a woman forward who is converting to Catholicism. As she stands in front of the altar, wearing faded jeans and a long-sleeve white shirt, untucked, O’Brien says: “Do you want to belong to this parish? We’re strange here.”

Here’s a great teaching moment.

It is different to be Catholic. It is to be among the strange —“ at least as the world determines us to be strange. It is because you are called to live a life of faith. A life that calls you to believe in and profess all that the Church teaches, even if you can’t understand it, even if it is uncomfortable or goes against what ‘society’ wants. You are taking yourself out of the world and will be buried with Christ in baptism. Buried so that you may come to new life.

The people laugh. But many revel in their belief that this parish is different. As O’Brien approaches retirement, he tells them not to worry. His motto, he says, is if you want your church to keep going, keep coming.

We all know that it is great to be in a church that is full, especially one alive with the joy of children, a church where the people are motivated and work really hard. Some of us only experience moments like that during holidays, when the churches come alive with people and their praise of God.

While this is great, it is not an end in and of itself. Washing out orthodox faith for the sake of full pews is no better than Judas selling out Jesus for thirty pieces of silver. The people are there, but what will you say to them? If you proclaim the truth of the Church’s teaching, some will walk away like the rich young man. Some will hear but will not be able to bear it. Heterodoxy is no solution.

As clergy, I know that if I fail to stand up for the teaching of the Church I am simply greasing the skids for those I should be witnessing to. I have a responsibility and am accountable, not just to my Bishop, but to God.

I wish Father O’Brian well. I simply hope that he will reflect upon his ministry and be strengthened in calling the world to repentance and orthodox faith.

Current Events, Saints and Martyrs, ,

Pray for the repose of her soul, and for her work…

Sister Karen Klimczak was a tireless worker for non-violence, the rehabilitation of convicts, and for all those in need. She was killed during Holy Week. The Buffalo News has three articles about her and her work. Please pray for the repose of her soul and that her work be carried on.

Missing nun dead; man charged

Police say suspect attacked sister during a burglary

Just as 600 people prayed for a miracle that a missing nun who devoted her life to nonviolence would be found alive, authorities made the devastating announcement Monday evening that her body had been recovered and that an ex-convict she tried to help was arrested in her murder.

Sister Karen was careful, but determined to help

She worked tirelessly for ex-convicts, peace

Sister Karen Klimczak devoted her life and ministry to peace and to stemming the type of violence that claimed her as a victim.

Sister Karen Klimczak figured that good could thrive in a place once marred by evil, just as she believed that ex-convicts deserved a second chance.

The tireless Catholic nun reclaimed a Grider Street rectory from the memory of a horrible crime and encouraged former prisoners toward productive futures.

Bishop Edward U. Kmiec also called for the work that Sister Karen did to be continued.

“It is people like Sister Karen who devote their lives, often at great peril, to assist those in society who so desperately need help, compassion and understanding,” Kmiec said in a written statement. “She was at the forefront of the non-violence movement in Buffalo and it is my sincere hope that as a community, we can address the issues that have resulted in a serious escalation of violent crime. Let this be a call for the entire community to come up with workable solutions to end this senseless violence.”

She took a stand for others

Personal recollection: Remembering Sister Karen Klimczak

Early on Holy Saturday, on my annual trip to the Broadway Market, we drove past Hope House, and it reminded me, once again, of Sister Karen Klimczak. I didn’t know, at the time, that she was missing.

In 1989, I interviewed her for a Sunday magazine piece on grass-roots efforts in the Catholic Church, those street-level ministries that spring from the goodness, the ideals, the ideas of one or two people. Included were Little Portion Friary, a Main Street shelter for homeless men and women; the Franciscan Center, a home for adolescent males; Benedict House, a haven for people with AIDS.

And Hope House, where Sister Karen welcomed and guided men coming out of prison.

I haven’t seen her in years, but I remember her well.

Saints and Martyrs

April 18 – Bl. Nankier (Błg. Nankier)

Litościwy Boże, wzmacniaj nas łaską swoją, abyśmy w każdem położeniu wiernymi byli zasadom naszej świętej religji, mężnym umysłem znosili rozmaite prześladowania i utrapienia, i osiągnęli chwalebną koronę, którą nam w niebie w nadgrodę przygotowałeś. Amen.

Current Events, Media

The Diocese of Toledo Heats-up

The decades old murder case against the Rev. Gerald Robinson, a 68-year-old Roman Catholic priest is finally going to be tried. The Rev. Robinson and other Toledo priests were alleged to be part of a satanic cult that sexually abused young girls as part of satanic worship rituals. The killer(s) who performed the ritualistic murder of Sister Margaret Ann Pahl (she was strangled, stabbed in the torso in the form of a cross, and covered with altar linens) may finally be brought to justice.

Here’s an excerpt from the story at Spero News.

The Pahl case was cold, even though Robinson had always been a prime suspect, until Vercellotti passed the victim’s letter on to the Attorney General’s office in September 2003 after having concluded that Catholic officials had been too slow to respond. Robinson has not faced any sexual abuse charges, however.

Police subsequently requested the diocese to release all documents in Robinson’s file and received three pages in return. It was only after a warrant was issued that the diocese released over 100 documents relating to the priest. According to reports, the local police came to believe that the diocese was less than forthcoming with its cooperation. A local priest and critic of the diocese, Rev. Stephen Stanberry, said that Bishop Leonard Blair had assured fellow priests in 2004 that his diocese had fully cooperated with investigators, however.

Police and diocesan officials deny any complicity in stalling the outcome of investigation into this and other cases of alleged sexual abuse and rape on the part of clerics. A gag order issued by a Lucas County judge is cited by County prosecutors and Robinson’s defense for refusing to comment further. Some observers cite the Roman Catholic Church’s influence in the Toledo region, where one in four residents is Catholic, as a reason why investigations into alleged sexual abuse might have been placed on the back burner by police.

You can read more at the Cleveland Plain Dealer.

Oh, by-the-way, the Toledo Diocese, headed by Bishop Leonard Blair, is the very same that has been closing churches and condemning people for founding a PNCC Parish.

It also appears that the Rev. Robinson paid attention to the Poles of Toledo. The Ely Times and County reports that:

Robinson was the Roman Catholic chaplain at Mercy Hospital and a popular priest in this blue-collar city of about 300,000, where a quarter of the residents are Catholic. He was especially well-liked in Polish neighborhoods because he delivered some sermons and heard confessions in Polish.

Jack Sparagowski, a parishioner at an inner-city church where Robinson used to celebrate Mass on Easter weekend, set up a legal defense fund that raised $12,000. Some family members and supporters put their houses up to post a $400,000 bond.

“For someone to commit murder, you have to have a violent streak,” Sparagowski said. “I’ve never heard Father raise his voice or show any expression of anger. The whole thing seems so bizarre.”

It’s sad that these people, having been given so little attention over the years, and having their parishes consistently closed, form attachments to priests like this. This is one of the most common pitfalls among some ethnics. Someone shows up and says a few nice words in their language, appears to actually care about their traditions, thoughts, and feelings, and they fall for it.

One of the greatest problems is priests like that who develop cults of personality. They prey upon the weakest and most disaffected, using psychological tactics to take advantage of people, families, and children. It appears Mr. Sparagowski (point of clarification: one of the people working to form a PNCC parish in Toledo), and some of his friends, have fallen for the ploy.

Then again, isn’t that what satanism is all about —“ working to destroy the faith of believers. Build up a grand faí§ade and then take hope and love away all at once.

May our Lord and His blessed mother protect these people!

Homilies

Resurrection Sunday

For they did not yet understand the Scripture
that he had to rise from the dead.

Nor had their faith been strengthened and activated by the Holy Spirit.

In fifty short days the Holy Spirit will come, and we will hear Peter confronting a Jerusalem full of pilgrims with the message from today’s first reading. We will hear Peter take the people through an exposition of the scriptures and their fulfillment in Jesus Christ.

The people will hear Peter speak in every known language. Thousands will come to conversion.

A few years later Paul will venture out. The people of Colossae in the Lycus Valley in Asia Minor, not far from Ephesus, will read:

For you have died, and your life is hidden with Christ in God.
When Christ your life appears,
then you too will appear with him in glory.

The congregation at Colossae died with Christ in baptism. They were immersed in the waters of baptism, and thus buried with Jesus. They are told to remember this fact, and await the coming of the Lord.

It sounds like an ideal time, a time of great hope and new revelation.

Of course we forget that Stephen and then James will die in Jerusalem, that bandits prey upon travelers, that the congregation at Colossae will get so caught up in minutia that they will place Christ on the back burner, that society is ruled by the iron fist of Rome, and that Rome is immersed in a culture of violence, war, self-serving pleasure, and a faith in stone idols that offer no hope beyond the do-it-if-it-feels-good present.

It comes down to faith.

Faith!

The people who heard Peter were not eyewitnesses. Paul himself only saw and heard Jesus in a spectacularly blinding light on the road to Damascus.

Yet, the work and the Word is being passed on. Generation by generation, the Word is handed on. In a hundred years from the Resurrection there were no eyewitnesses left. But the message continues to this very day.

Jesus Christ came to earth, the Son of God, true God and true man. He came to save sinners and to redeem humanity. He came with the sole intention of doing the Father’s will. He came knowing that he would voluntarily place himself in the hands of the Chief priests and the Sanhedrin, and into the hands of Pilate. He knew that He would have to allow the soldiers to mock Him, whip and beat Him, and place a crown of thorns on His head. He knew that He would have to allow them to drive Him up the road to Calvary, nail Him to the cross, mock Him again, and that He would cry out in abandonment. He knew that He would have to allow himself to die for sinners, for you and me. No one did it to Him, not the Jews and not the Romans.

Jesus allowed it and accepted it. He did it all for us, for generation upon generation of people who know only the testimony of those original eyewitnesses, the testimony of Mary, Simon Peter, John, the Apostles, the disciples on the road to Emmaus, the five-hundred.

All you and I know, we know by faith.

I have been blessed to be called Christian. I have been especially blessed to live long enough to have tasted the flesh of Christ and to have drunk His blood, and to do so in true faith and allegiance to Jesus Christ and His Holy Church.

We come here by faith.

Faith!

When we greet each other today we will say to you, ‘Jesus Christ is risen from the dead, alleluia.’ And you will respond, ‘He has risen indeed, alleluia.’

If this is said as a pleasantry or as a tradition, it is better left unsaid.

I tell you, in the proclamation of the Holy Gospel, that it is true: Jesus Christ is risen from the dead, alleluia! He is risen indeed alleluia!

The cross and death have lead to this. A dead man on a cross, later buried in a tomb is just a sad and horrific death. The God-man Jesus Christ, dead on the cross, buried in the tomb, and risen forevermore is our hope.

Proclaim it with faith. He is risen indeed alleluia!

Christian Witness, Perspective

On the Holy Mass

It follows that individuals, whether they be priests or lay faithful, are not free to add or subtract any details in the approved rites of the celebration of the Holy Eucharist (cf Sacrosanctum Concilium, 22). A do-it-yourself mentality, an attitude of nobody-will-tell-me-what-to-do, or a defiant sting of if-you-do-not-like-my-Mass-you-can-go-to-another-parish, is not only against sound theology and ecclesiology, but also offends against common sense. Unfortunately, sometimes common sense is not very common, when we see a priest ignoring liturgical rules and installing creativity – in his case personal idiosyncrasy – as the guide to the celebration of Holy Mass. Our faith guides us and our love of Jesus and of his Church safeguards us from taking such unwholesome liberties. Aware that we are only ministers, not masters of the mysteries of Christ (cf I Cor 4:1), we follow the approved liturgical books so that the people of God are respected and their faith nourished, and so that God is honoured and the Church is gradually being built up.

An excerpt from Cardinal Francis Arinze, Prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship and Discipline of the Sacraments, in a keynote talk at Westminster Cathedral, London, England on Saturday, April 3, 2006, as part of a special afternoon event ‘Hearts and Minds’, devoted to thinking about and celebrating the Liturgy of the Church.

See the full text at: Independent Catholic News.