Month: February 2007

Everything Else,

Stem Cell Research Symposium

National Pro-Life Action Center on Capitol Hill Presents a Stem Cell Research Symposium”

WASHINGTON, Feb. 19 /Christian Newswire/ — With the final vote on federal funding of embryonic stem cell research expected before the Senate next month, the National Pro-Life Action Center (NPLAC) has assembled a panel of experts to discuss the latest developments and debates in the science and ethics of stem cell research. This will be the third stem cell symposium that NPLAC has organized on Capitol Hill. Each symposium has featured different scientists and bioethicists addressing the most recent progress and pitfalls of this controversial new research.

This event is scheduled for Tuesday, February 20, 2007, from 9:30 – 10:30 a.m. and will be held in Dirkson Room (SD-G11). Speakers include: David Prentice, Ph.D., Rev. Lawrence A. Kutz, Ph.D. and Kimberly Zenarolla, M.T.S.

The symposium will address the latest advancements in the field, the various proposed bills, and the continuing ethical debate. There will be a Q&A session immediately following the discussion.

For additional information and media requests, please call 202-494-4410.

Everything Else

For Our Country

George Washington

We thank Thee, Lord, for America, our home. We bless Thee for the liberty, the opportunity, and the abundance we share. But above all we praise Thee for the traditions which have made our country great, and for patriots who have laid the foundations through faith, courage, and self-sacrifice. Teach us in our own day the meaning of citizenship, and help us to be faithful stewards of the responsibility which Thou entrusted to us. Through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

Homilies,

Quinquagesima Sunday

Cursed is the one who trusts in human beings,
who seeks his strength in flesh,
whose heart turns away from the LORD.

Blessed is the one who trusts in the LORD,
whose hope is the LORD.
He is like a tree planted beside the waters

This Sunday is a Sunday of contrasts. Throughout the readings, psalm, and Gospel the contrasts between those who walk with the Lord and those who walk apart are made very clear.

Blessed are you who are this. Woe to you who are that.

God knows what He’s doing. He created us and fully understands that we are faced with a life full of contrasts, contrasts that range from days of warmth, not too long ago, to blizzards. We are faced with a life of choices, choices in our marriages, our jobs, our families, our ministry, and our personal moments.

The prophets, speaking for God, and Jesus —“ God Himself —“ tell us that all the choices, all the contrasts lead either to a walk with God, or a walk alone.

While the choice to follow Jesus ultimately falls to us, we must also remember Jesus’ words:

You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit.

In other words, Jesus has called us and chosen us. For our part we are called to believe and believe in full. We must have faith in full, otherwise that faith, the very time we spend here is, as Paul says, in vain.

Our part in the choice is clear, and the Church is here to help us in our choosing. The Church is here, not for the purpose of condemnation, but for the purpose of light, light that will move us from the act of choosing and cooperating to the full realization of God’s kingdom.

Bishop Hodur, who we honor this week on the 54th anniversary of his entry onto eternal life, understood that we have to make those choices.

Bishop Hodur’s faith, learning, and experiences brought him to the realization that the Catholic Church must proclaim not only the choice, but the fact that choice for God is compelling. He wanted us to understand that that compelling choice leads to a life that is fuller, richer, and more joyful. Because of our choosing and cooperation our work is better, our athletic abilities are enhanced, our marriages are stronger, and our communities are improved. Every aspect of life is touched by our choosing.

Bishop Hodur desired that the Catholic Church be known as what it is, namely the Church of ultimate hope and joy; the Catholic Church which proclaims the fact that man is regenerated in Christ Jesus. He understood the Catholic Church as the one that proclaims God’s light, and the positive affect sharing in God’s life has in our world.

For us this means that the Church we follow does not preach hellfire, but rather our need to cooperate in our salvation. The Church we follow does not put an end to God’s grace at death, but proclaims that God’s love, grace, and mercy are eternal. The Church we follow tells us to come to communion from where we are, so that by God’s grace we may be changed.

Do not stand apart. Choose to join with us, and do what Jesus asked:

Rejoice and leap for joy on that day!
Behold, your reward will be great in heaven.

The Church we follow tells us that we must not be dismal and sad, looking like sin has won. We must come in joy, knowing that our choice for Jesus has won us eternal life. It has won us a likeness to Jesus of Whom Paul says:

Christ has been raised from the dead,
the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep.

For us it comes down to choices.

Will we be hungry or full, thirsty or quenched, poor or rich, sorrowful or joyful, persecuted and derided or spoken well of? Certainly! Will we be those things and sin because of them? Certainly! Will we try to be what Jesus asks, yet fall short of the mark Jesus set? Again, certainly! Will we be able to enumerate every sinful moment and choice in our marriages, our jobs, our families, and our personal moments? Yes!

And through it all, no matter the level of guilt, poor self-esteem, self-loathing, temptation, and sorrow —“ we must be joyful for the good news is that we will be blessed, on account of our choice for the Son of Man.

Current Events, Perspective

Do I qualify?

From All Africa: Catholic Church Publishes Guidelines On Defections

The Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts has published in English the clarified guidelines for baptized Catholics who formally separate from the Church.

Cardinal Julián Herranz, then president of the pontifical council, issued a statement on formal acts of defection from the Church last March.

The document was drawn up after many requests for clarifications of the so-called formal act of defection from the Church, mentioned in the Code of Canon Law.

Vatican dicasteries examined the issue to identify the theological and doctrinal components and then “the juridical formalities necessary so that such an action would constitute a true ‘formal act’ of defection,” Cardinal Herranz told Zenit.

“The formal act of defection,” the document states, “must have more than a juridical-administrative character (the removal of one’s name from a Church membership registry maintained by the government in order to produce certain civil consequences), but be configured as a true separation from the constitutive elements of the life of the Church: It supposes, therefore, an act of apostasy, heresy or schism.”

The document further lists the three steps necessary for the formal act of defection to be valid as; the internal decision to leave the Catholic Church, the realization and external manifestation of that decision; and the reception of that decision by the competent ecclesiastical authority.”

The document clarifies that the third step must be carried out “by a person who is canonically capable and in conformity with the canonical norms.”

The document has been transmitted by Benedict XVI to the presidents of all Episcopal conferences.

Cardinal Herranz, 76, retired on Thursday February 15, 2007 as president of the Pontifical council.

From my perspective the short answer as to whether or not I qualify is no.

The Roman Catholic Church is faced with many folks who wish to be acknowledged as non-Catholics in governmental registers, especially in European countries or in Africa. I can clearly see their point in saying that you are a Catholic regardless of whether or not you are listed in a governmental register.

I do have difficulty in seeing how they can extrapolate their criteria to me, because it confuses the key point.

I freely acknowledge that according to Roman Catholic Church juridical rules I am a schismatic. I also freely acknowledge the fact that I have externally manifested my separation from the Roman Church. I even sent them a letter to that affect, because they kept sending me contribution envelopes, even though I hadn’t been in one parish for three years and another in five years. I don’t know whether that means a ‘competent ecclesiastical authority’ has accepted my decision (I did stop receiving envelopes), but for the sake of argument, let’s say such authority has accepted my decision. I also think I am competent and ‘canonically capable.’

That takes care of most of the criteria.

Where this reasoning falls is on the criteria that I ‘[make an] internal decision to leave the Catholic Church. Ummm, no. The Roman Catholic Church yes, the Catholic Church no.

I admit that the Roman Church does think (kind of, sort of, begrudgingly) that it is the one and only Catholic Church. But, can I honestly say that I made an internal decision to leave the Catholic Church? Nope.

The problem with over legislating is that eventually all the legislation starts to bump up against other legislation, and beyond legislation, up against practice. Perhaps the Roman Church has gotten too big to legislate cleanly and centrally.

All I know is that as a member of the PNCC I am fully Catholic, maybe even more catholic than the Pope 😉

PNCC

The 54th Anniversary of the death of Prime Bishop Francis Hodur—”our Founder

His early life:

  • Born near Krakow, Poland, one of seven children in a poor family
  • Studied for the priesthood at the Jagiellonian University and noted as an exceptional student
  • Emigrated to the United States in 1893 and ordained to the priesthood that same year.
  • Called by the people and made pastor of St. Stanislaus, Bishop and Martyr Cathedral in Scranton, PA March 14, 1897
  • Consecrated Bishop on September 29, 1907

Among his many accomplishments:

  • Composed the Confession of Faith and the Eleven Great Principals of the PNCC
  • Published the first church newspaper, Straż, in 1897
  • Visited Poland 18 times to teach the beliefs of the PNCC
  • Organized the Polish National Union, a home for the aged, and a camp for children and youth
  • Ordained more than 200 priests, consecrated 9 bishops, baptized more than 4,000 children, performed over 1,700 marriages, spoke 6 languages, wrote 17 books, published 2 newspapers, composed three hymns, left no material wealth, but bequeathed a spiritual legacy that will never die.