Year: 2006

Current Events, Perspective, PNCC,

Another closing, but what of their souls?

From the Times-Union: Faith tinged with anger: Parishioners mourn as two churches in Watervliet celebrate their final Masses

Nationality defined Immaculate Conception, too. The church traces its roots to 1908, when Bishop Thomas Burke granted the Polish immigrant community permission to organize a parish and worship in their native language [not true – Latin was standard].

Much of that world no longer exists, as Razzano pointed out during a walk around his old neighborhood: The Polish-owned White Eagle Bakery; the Morelli Brothers Italian specialty shop across from Mount Carmel; the toothbrush factory. Every one — and much more — is gone.

True.

But the church remained a spoke that connected families to each other and to their shared past, a connection you could feel Sunday in the sobs of a 15-year-old girl.

Also true —“ the center of communal life —“ who’d of thought —“ a church?

Emily McFeeters, seated in an oak pew between her mother and grandmother, dabbed her eyes before the 9 a.m. Mass began.

“I was supposed to get married here,” she said. “My kids were supposed to be baptized in this church. I’m the last generation. I know it’s a little ridiculous to cry. But it means a lot to me.”

Emily had her eye on the future, a future that included the Church, centered on Christ. Will she ‘adapt’ or will she be lost? May God have mercy on her and her family —“ I feel for them because I’ve experienced it.

When decisions like this are made (read imposed) apart from the people (all the people – not just appointed yes men and women) there are real casualties. I image that if they asked Emily she could have developed a hundred strategies that would have allowed the parish to remain active and open. That’s what those without stilted thinking do, they imagine solutions outside the ‘norm.’

Sure, big ‘C’ Church is more than the local parish, but the local parish is where the rubber hits the road. The local parish is the place where the realities of life are lived, the continuum of communion is realized.

The folks in Toledo, who finally came over to the PNCC, made a pilgrimage through three R.C. parishes, each closed in succession, before they saw the reality.

The reality is that the top down ‘pontifical’ culture of the R.C. Church has separated the shepherds from the flock. The bishop does not know this girl, her life, or her hopes. Maybe the local pastor did, but the pastor in the new and improved mega-church (one parish, three locations, yada, yada, yada) won’t be all that connected.

The reality is that R.C. clerical culture is undemocratic and distant. The R.C. Church in the United States has a culture predominantly developed under the heresy of Americanism which ingrained itself in a hierarchical structure that ‘knows what’s best for you.’ (Note: the wiki article only covers the surface elements of the problem; see The Phantom Heresy? by Aaron J. Massey for a fuller exposition —“ and notice the seeds of today’s Am-Church problems).

In an extensive article on the American Catholic Church, The American Catholic Church, Assessing the Past, Discerning the Future, Anthony Padovano* states:

The second letter, Testem Benevolentiae (1899) took direct aim at American Catholic culture…

The encyclical condemns … “Americanism,” a general tendency to suppose that the “Church in America” can be “different from” the rest of the world.

Cardinal James Gibbons objects to the encyclical in a sharp letter to the Pope on March 17, 1899.

If one looks carefully at the encyclical letter Testem Benevolentiae, the five criticisms of Leo XIII go to the heart of American culture. He dislikes, as we have noted: change, free speech, conscience, pragmatism and initiative.

The submissiveness De Tocqueville observed and the Roman critique of America advanced even further because of the massive influx of immigrants. The immigrants were less adept with the American system. They did not, for the most part, have English as a native language; as Catholics, they cared less about an active voice in governing their Church than in surviving. A ready group of bishops moved in a sternly conservative direction, with Roman support.

The Roman Phase [1850-1960] stresses submissiveness, the papal critique of America and service to the immigrant community. In fairness, it must be noted that many conservative and even repressive bishops organized assistance for Catholic immigrants that was often healing and life-saving. A great deal of social justice work was expended on behalf of vulnerable and frightened immigrants. But these bishops, in turn, and many priests, insisted on absolute power and total obedience. They were brilliant organizers but also men of narrow theological vision. They tended to be belligerent, more impressive in conflict than in their capacity to reconcile.

John Hughes, Archbishop of New York, is typical. He dismantles the trustee system in St. Patrick’s Cathedral, boasting, “I made war on the whole system.” He added that “Catholics did their duty when they obeyed their bishop.” Even more ominously, he warns: “I will suffer no man in my diocese that I cannot control.”

Rome kept up the pressure. In Vehementer Nos, Pius X writes: “the one duty of the multitude is to allow themselves to be led and, like a docile flock, to follow their pastors”

The problem is that the ‘Roman Phase’ never ended. The window dressing, a result of Vatican II, has changed, but the underlying model of pray, pay, and obey remains.

In addition to the above, the American R.C. Church was built on the leadership of many clergy, shipped to the United States, because they had —problems— at home. While the true malcontents and problems stood out, the recent scandals point out that a lot remained hidden and suppressed.

In International Priests: New Ministers in the Catholic Church in the United States by Dean R. Hoge and Aniedi Okure, O.P. synopsized in International Priests in American History the authors’ state:

European bishops sometimes viewed America as a kind of Australia for wayward priests, a dumping ground for clergy of the lowest quality.

These two issues have combined into a clerical culture, which at its heart, is control based and influenced by the dysfunctional.

The bottom line is that people will do one of two things, they will simply stop going to church, or they will trot over to the next nearest R.C. parish, but remain apart from the community (at least for a couple years). This is the expected and time tested response, closing protests in Boston being the anomaly.

The disaffected in Watervliet (especially the Poles) will head over to St. Michael’s in Cohoes. There they will await the next closing under an immigrant pastor from Poland who was quickly installed and promoted after ordination in the Albany Diocese (that raises questions in my mind —“ aren’t there more senior priests awaiting parishes, why the special treatment).

Of course they could all attend the nearest PNCC parish in Latham or Schenectady —“ but it is a swim few will make.

Perhaps they would if they understood that they actually do get a voice and a vote in the management of the parish, that no one will close their parish without each person’s input (that’s why you never hear protests when PNCC parishes merge or move —“ the people decide for themselves).

Perhaps they are not used to a pastor who knows them individually? Perhaps their faith is dependent upon the pope? Perhaps, being treated as human beings, with thoughts, opinions, ideas, and the Constitutionally protected right to express such is too foreign? Perhaps the mentality of pray, pay, and obey is too deeply ingrained? Perhaps it is easier to stay home on Sunday?

For whatever reason, it is just sad, and I pray for these people, for all the Emily McFeeters who’s walk down the aisle will be something other than expected. We are here for you, follow Jesus’ direction to ‘come and see.’

*The conclusions of Mr. Padano’s article are suspect and carry a certain political agenda, but he raises valid historical points.

Homilies

The Thirty-third Sunday in Ordinary Time

—But the wise shall shine brightly
like the splendor of the firmament,
and those who lead the many to justice
shall be like the stars forever.”

In a few weeks we will be in the midst of anticipation, preparing with prayer and fasting for the Solemnity of our Lord’s birth.

Throughout the season of Advent we will sing O Come O Come Emanuel.

In that hymn we will sing:

O come, Thou Wisdom from on high,
Who orderest all things mightily;
To us the path of knowledge show,
And teach us in her ways to go.

We sing out a prayer, begging our Lord to teach us to walk in the path of knowledge —“ not book knowledge, but in wisdom; the knowledge that can only be given by the Wisdom from on high.

If we join ourselves to Christ and seek His wisdom we will be counted among the wise, and at the end we shall shine brightly. Along with the psalmist we will say:

You are my inheritance, O Lord!
You will show me the path to life,
fullness of joys in your presence,
the delights at your right hand forever.

The wise are those who attune their lives, every aspect of their lives, to Christ Jesus. The wise are those who pledge their lives to His Holy Church, who join together in the one true faith, working mightily to adhere to the Church’s teachings on faith, morals, and practice. Christ’s Holy Church is the path to eternal life —“ and apart from Her you cannot come to completeness of understanding.

The Letter to the Hebrews tells us that Jesus Christ

…offered one sacrifice for sins,
and took his seat forever at the right hand of God;
now he waits until his enemies are made his footstool.

But who are His enemies? I’m sure we could all come up with a quick list, and most certainly our list would be wrong.

That is because we think of enemies in human, physical terms. The writer speaks of the metaphysical enemy —“ sin and worldliness.

Joining ourselves to the Holy Church may seem at times to be an accident of history —“ a random chance. We could have been born Jewish, Hindu, or Mormon. But adjudging our place in the world as an accident, as mere randomness would be wrong. It is not true. We are here because we were chosen to do exactly what the writer to the Hebrews describes. We are to fold ourselves into the wisdom of God, and fight sin.

We are to cooperate with Jesus Christ in crushing sin, most especially our own, destroying it with His wisdom, with His grace.

We are here for that exact reason, and because of His graces we have been offered something that so many will miss —“ the chance to say yes to God, no to sin. We are offered the opportunity to consciously say yes and Amen, to be reborn and regenerated in water and the Holy Spirit. As Bishop Hodur said:

Rebirth comes from a spiritual transformation which changes man into a new being. It begins with an understanding of our true relationship with God and moving into closer union with Him.

Wisdom then is exactly that, the clarity of thought brought to us by grace, through which we come to understand our relationship to God and move ever closer to Him. It is the choice of the right path, the sinless path, the path of wisdom, becoming like unto God, what the Orthodox call Theosis.

If we choose to be wise and opt for He who is Wisdom then we shall shine brightly, like the splendor of the firmament.

I began by speaking of the weeks ahead. Today’s readings and Gospel remind us that tomorrow, while only a day away, may never come. They remind us that time is in God’s hands, and that we must ever be prepared and watchful, like the wise virgins who trimmed their lamps.

Wisdom tells us to draw closer and closer to God —“ not to forsake a minute.

Amen, I say to you,
this generation will not pass away
until all these things have taken place.
Heaven and earth will pass away,
but my words will not pass away.

Jesus, eternal Wisdom, will never pass away.

Therefore, be wise, be faithful, make your choice and set your course. Follow Jesus and crush the enemy —“ sin —“ under His feet. Start with your own sin and live a life of witness, making right choices based on God’s wisdom.

Once we begin we can, with clear conscience, hear the words of Jesus given to St. John through the angel:

“Yes, I am coming soon.”

And cry out with Saint John:

Amen! Come, Lord Jesus!

Saints and Martyrs

November 18 – Bl. Salomea of Poland (Błg. Salomea)

Święta patronko, która przy pomocy łaski bożej zwyciężyłaś pokusy, jakie ciało, świat i czart nasuwają człowiekowi, i zdobyłaś niebiańską koronę, wstaw się za nami do Boga, abyśmy unikali zepsucia światowego i z dniem każdym wiedli żywot coraz lepszy i doskonalszy dla chwały Boga i pożytku bliźnich. Przez Chrystusa Pana naszego. Amen.

Current Events, Perspective, Political

A fight over ribbons

The City of Poughkeepsie, NY had quite a battle going on over the past few days.

A sheriff’s deputy proposed placing yellow ribbons along Main Street to ‘honor’ servicemen and women from Poughkeepsie who were recently sent to Iraq. The City Council didn’t like the idea but reconsidered after the resulting firestorm of protest. Check out the tale of yellow ribbons over at the Poughkeepsie Journal in Council: Ribbons are OK.

They are really a meaningless symbol, evoking a hokey song. The real purpose is to evoke some kind of civic attachment to a cause, and to atone for the ‘guilt’ over our mistreatment of Vietnam era vets. A tour of the songs and sins of the Seventies.

The best thing we could possibly do is bring our troops home to protect our borders, and to provide a full range of lifelong services to all veterans. If we really cared we’d take care of these men and women out of our tax dollars. How’s that for a meaningful symbol.