Tag: Vocations

Perspective, PNCC,

Lead us not…

From the BBC: French villagers back priest with partner

A Catholic priest in south-west France has been forced out of the clergy after admitting to the Church authorities that he was having a sexual relationship with one of his parishioners. The BBC’s Emma Jane Kirby says this has set off a fresh debate about celibacy in the Church.

There is a wonderful sense of stillness in the mountains overlooking the little village of Asson – a few swallows surf gently on the upwind currents and a shepherd sits quietly watching his flock of fat, thickly pelted sheep graze on the velvet grass.

It is a bit like one of those bucolic woodcut scenes you find in ancient bibles. But, in this religious landscape, those who break the rules are quickly cast asunder.

To a passer by, Fr Leon and his partner Marga probably look like any other middle-aged couple taking an evening stroll together.

He is twinkly eyed and looks a little like Dustin Hoffman. She seems warm and open and is still a very attractive woman. But in the eyes of the Roman Catholic Church, Leon and Marga are sinners.

‘Closer to God’

For the past 22 years, the couple have been in a sexual relationship, which is forbidden to a Catholic priest who has vowed to remain celibate. Fr Leon admits he has broken his promise but claims that being in love has brought him closer to God and his congregation.

“I haven’t been strictly faithful to all my vows,” he says.

“And I worried that by breaking some of those vows I had hurt Our Lord. But I think God can see that my relationship with Marga has brought real fruits to the Church – far from being a handicap to my mission as a priest, she’s been a great support. I just wish the Church could see that.”

There is no doubt that Fr Leon has been an excellent parish priest…

Let’s do some parsing out of the good Father’s problem.

Now certainly living with and having a sexual relationship with Marga is sinful and improper. Father and Marga are committing adultery – and Father, who is in a position of some authority (including social stature and economic resources) is committing a sin against her by not engendering his love for her in the state of matrimony.

There’s that nagging question though, are Father and Marga completely at fault for their actions? Let’s see if the Catechism of the Roman Catholic Church can shed some light on that question.

II. RESPECT FOR THE DIGNITY OF PERSONS

Respect for the souls of others: scandal

2284 Scandal is an attitude or behavior which leads another to do evil. The person who gives scandal becomes his neighbor’s tempter. He damages virtue and integrity; he may even draw his brother into spiritual death. Scandal is a grave offense if by deed or omission another is deliberately led into a grave offense.

2285 Scandal takes on a particular gravity by reason of the authority of those who cause it or the weakness of those who are scandalized. It prompted our Lord to utter this curse: “Whoever causes one of these little ones who believe in me to sin, it would be better for him to have a great millstone fastened round his neck and to be drowned in the depth of the sea.” (Mt 18:6; cf. I Cor 8:10-13.) Scandal is grave when given by those who by nature or office are obliged to teach and educate others. Jesus reproaches the scribes and Pharisees on this account: he likens them to wolves in sheep’s clothing. (Cf. Mt 7:15.)

2286 Scandal can be provoked by laws or institutions, by fashion or opinion.

Therefore, they are guilty of scandal who establish laws or social structures leading to the decline of morals and the corruption of religious practice, or to “social conditions that, intentionally or not, make Christian conduct and obedience to the Commandments difficult and practically impossible.” (Pius XII, Discourse, June 1,1941.) This is also true of business leaders who make rules encouraging fraud, teachers who provoke their children to anger, (Cf. Eph 6:4; Col 3:21.) or manipulators of public opinion who turn it away from moral values.

2287 Anyone who uses the power at his disposal in such a way that it leads others to do wrong becomes guilty of scandal and responsible for the evil that he has directly or indirectly encouraged. “Temptations to sin are sure to come; but woe to him by whom they come!” (Lk 17:1.)

We’re getting there.

As I have often said, demanding gifts from the Holy Spirit doesn’t work. The Holy Spirit is not going to give the gift or grace of celibate living to every priest. In addition, I recall no calling down of that gift from the Holy Spirit in the Roman Church’s Rite of Ordination to the Diaconate or Priesthood. There is a promise made in the Ordination Rite to the Order of Deacon, but, that is a human promise, subject to the maturation of the person making that promise.

Priests in the Roman Church are put in a lonely and difficult position. Is the grace given to some, to fulfill their calling as part of a celibatecelibacy means no marriage, as opposed to chastity, which we are all called to practice (i.e., Thou shalt not commit adultery) life actually necessary for all? My Church certainly doesn’t think so, nor do most Catholic bodies in the world.

I fully support clergy members who are given the grace of celibacy. I think we all pray for them and support them in their ministry. However, it is not necessary onto salvation.

In part, the good Father’s sins are his own making. In part, they are not, but caused by a man made system that applied absolutely, damages more than it helps.

Pray for Fr. Leon and Marga.

Father Leon, if you ever come across this article, write to us. Our Church would be happy to welcome you and Marga.

Christian Witness, , ,

The good sisters

I’ve always had an admiration for nuns (yes, I know the difference between nuns and sisters, but for this post I’ll use them interchangeably).

I had an aunt who was a Felician sister.

As a child my family and I visited sister nearly every week. I found the sisters joyful, spiritual, and committed to their ministry. A ministry centered on Christ. When I was in seminary I got to see the Felician’s spirituality and personalities even more closely because one of my spiritual director’s was a priest assigned to minister to them.

I was also taught by the Felician’s throughout grade school (K-8). The sisters were certainly tough and demanding, but they were also loving and dedicated. There were probably two who I could have done without, but I think I could say the same about more than two of the lay teachers I’ve had.

A fantastic ministry is that of the Felician Sisters at the R.C. Basilica of St. Adalbert in Buffalo, NY. They run the Response to Love Center. Check out the link to learn more and support this program which serves the poorest of the poor in Buffalo.

I also came across this article, posted to the Polish American Forum newsgroup. From the Cleveland Plain Dealer: Service with love: the sisters of Slavic Village

On a street of pit bulls and boarded-up houses, a Polish accent met an Arkansas twang and nothing got lost in the translation.

“Good morning, Margaret,” Sister Marianna Danko greeted the frail woman who gripped her front door for support. “Give me a hug.”

On another street, in a tidy brick house near the area of southeast Cleveland known as Slavic Village, Maria Kozlowski, 76, knelt next to her stroke-disabled husband as both took Communion from Sister Anna Kaszuba in the language of their mutual homeland.

“I am sick. My husband is sick. Who’s to help?” Kozlowski later asked, then answered herself. “The sisters help.”

For the past 31 years, the Sisters Servants of Mary Immaculate, a Polish order founded in 1878, have ministered to the ethnic elderly of Cleveland – the shut-ins, the abandoned, the ailing and lonely.

Each weekday, five sisters of the group make their rounds to meet the spiritual, emotional, psychological and sometimes basic survival needs of more than 200 people.

The group was originally invited here by former Bishop James Hickey to serve the Eastern European immigrants of Slavic Village.

The sisters also are on call during weekends for their mostly Polish-speaking or Eastern European clients, though neither a person’s religion nor ethnicity is a requisite for aid.

Some clients have outlived the days when they could rely on a close-knit community of merchants and professionals who shared their language and customs but moved out of the neighborhood over the years, according to Kaszuba, program director of the sisters’ Special Ministry to the Aged based at the Immaculate Heart of Mary Church.

So the sisters fill the gaps, helping these people shop, obtain needed medical and social services, arrange legal affairs, translate or transport.

And sometimes they are just there for companionship and comfort.

“It’s unbelievable work and a very needed service that the sisters are performing,” said Gene Bak, executive director of the Polish American Cultural Center in Slavic Village.

“The community is getting older and a lot of the younger people have moved to the suburbs,” he added.

“But the older people still stay in the area because the churches and halls are here, and the sisters serve a very important function by helping them do that.”

Kaszuba noted that the number of clients has stayed fairly steady over the years, as the children of earlier immigrants got older, in need of the sisters’ services but still adhering to such ethnic traditions as a fierce independence and reluctance to seek help.

The program stresses aid for independent living, and Kaszuba said the toughest part can be getting the social services for their clients, who may not be aware of the help or have a language barrier. She said the sisters also are working with a limited budget. They receive help from Catholic Charities, an endowment fund and an annual fund-raising dinner.

But the payoff goes both ways, beyond the home-grown vegetables that clients like the Kozlowskis give the sisters in gratitude.

Kaszuba said when considering the ordeal that some of her clients went through in just getting to this country, “your own problems disappear. They teach us perseverance and deep faith.”

And doing this kind of work teaches and requires “patience, patience, patience, and a lot of love,” said Sister Danko before visiting one of her clients, Margaret Cooley. “It comes from the
heart.”

As Danko settled in for a chat, she reached over to grasp Cooley’s hands, which twisted a handkerchief over and over into knots of frustration as she talked.

Cooley, who was raised a Catholic but became a Methodist after getting married, knows what it’s like to be a caretaker. She moved here 15 years ago from Arkansas after her husband’s death to tend to her sister-in-law and then her brother until they died.

She remembered when the infirmities of age didn’t keep her from cooking, arranging flowers and painting. She remembered when her knees didn’t throb like jolts of electricity were shooting through them. She remembered what life was like before two men broke into her house and robbed her.

The handkerchief twisted and knotted, twisted and knotted.

“When you get old, it’s bad, you have to depend on people,” Cooley said. “I don’t know too many people. I can’t go anywhere, anymore. I don’t know what I’d do without her [Danko]. I believe I’d just die.”

But she wouldn’t die alone. Nobody does when the sisters are there.

Three years ago, Sister Ce Ann Sambor found Ben Kula living in a neighborhood of abandoned buildings, in a house on the verge of being condemned with steps so steeply canted that even Kula joked that they seemed just right for him in his former drinking days.

Sambor said it took time for Kula to accept her help. First, she would just drive him to the coin-operated laundry. Then grocery shopping. Then the big move to a new home in a senior housing complex.

The nuns remind him of his own sister, Kula said. Somebody to depend on, like family. “They’re great. Just beautiful. They make me feel better,” he said.

The sisters have taken him to the hospital for treating numerous broken bones, plus cancer of the prostate and colon.

“I’m doing great! Better than Muhammad Ali,” Kulas proclaimed, the epitome of spry, who will be 91 this year. “If I make it,” he said.

But during her visit, Sambor and Kula matter-of-factly talked about the inevitable. He wants to be buried with the ashes of his wife.

He will, because the sisters are there to the end. They will help with independent living or referral to a nursing home, through illness and hospitalization, with hospice and funerals. As Sambor said, “We follow them until God takes them home.”

She added, “The rewarding part, for us, is just to be part of their lives. Sometimes, we are their family.”

She paused before leaving Kula and asked, “Ben, did you eat yet?”

He sheepishly shrugged.

“Go eat,” she said, and closed the door.

Additonal information about the Sisters Servants of Mary Immaculate can be obtained by calling 216-441-5402

The sisters go bravely into the neighborhood the chanceries have forgotten. The places where churches close almost weekly. They are all too often the last bastion of the R.C. Church’s living ministry in these places. May God bless them, their ministry, and grant them many vocations.

Christian Witness, Current Events, Perspective

They’re out in the cold…

Our Lady of Ostrabrama and Our Lady of Czestochowa

The old people who used to come here every day to play cards and cook now have nowhere to go. There’s no where to celebrate the liturgy. They’re outside in the cold. That’s not right. This is a place where people come to be in the presence of God.

The Rev. Eugene Sawicki, retired New York City firefighter, lawyer, doctor of nursing, judge of the New York Inter-Diocesan Appellate court, and pastor of the suddenly shuttered Our Lady of Vilnius Roman Catholic Church, as quoted in the NY post article Street preach.

That article along with the Post’s Cardinal Sin are a must read. I could reprint excerpts here, each line an indictment befitting the corporate moguls of ENRON, but here applied to the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York, but to what end? The sheep are out in the cold, their shepherd, the Rev. Sawicki summarily called to the Chancery while the locks on his parish — and his residence — were being changed (only they messed up the lock change on his residence, so he still has a bed to sleep in, for now).

The Our Lady of Vilnius Blog covers it well. My thoughts and prayers are with the people of Our Lady of Vilnius. My admiration is with Father Sawicki, who is a true father to his people.

This Sunday we celebrate the 110th Anniversary of the Institution of the PNCC. All are welcome. If you would like contacts in the NYC area, who I am sure would welcome you, please feel free to contact me at deaconjim [at] bvmc [dot] org.

For those who like interesting historical parallels, Cardinal Egan scheduled a meeting with Lithuanian Consul General Mindaugas Butkus who was to hand-deliver Lithuanian President Valdas Adamkus’ letter to the Cardinal. The Lithuanian President told the cardinal that “we value [the church] very much . . . it has historical value and cultural value.”

Knowing that the meeting was scheduled and the purpose of the meeting, the Cardinal proceeded to forcibly lock the doors of the church prior to the meeting, yet still went on with the show of the meeting, leaving the Consul General in the dark about the closing.

It reminds me of the Japanese ambassador serving a declaration of war on the United States hours after the bombing of Pearl Harbor began.

So the Cardinal shows up hours after the closing for diplomatic niceties. A real Prince of the Church.

PNCC, Poland - Polish - Polonia, ,

Here’s news… not

From EarthTimes – Report: Majority of Catholic priests in Poland want right to marry

Warsaw (dpa) – Sixty per cent of Roman Catholic priests in overwhelmingly Catholic Poland want the right the marry and have families of their own, according to a survey published by Poland’s respected Tygodnik Powszechny (TP) weekly.

As times change and the social status of and respect for the priesthood declines, more and more priests who feel lonely, isolated and misunderstood are considering leaving the priesthood, according to the weekly, which caters for Poland’s Catholic intelligentsia.

“Not everyone can cope with the fact that at the beginning of the 21st century priests are no longer regarded as the priest they knew in their youth,” Jesuit Father and psychologist Jacek Prusak told TP.

But according to an as yet unpublished study, so far only one third of young priests who quit the priesthood do so for the sake of a woman.

“The main reason (for quitting the priesthood ) are existential problems and ideals,” according to the study’s author Professor Jozef Baniak of Poznan’s Adam Mickiewicz university. “A woman, if she appears, is in the background.”

“First there is an crisis of the priest’s identity and then he looks for someone in whom he can confide his problem,” says Baniak.

Vatican statistics quoted by TP also show more and more Polish priest are deciding to quit. Whereas in 1998, some 32 priests left, in 2004 the figure shot up to 57…

Not news because many Polish R.C. priests are ‘married,’ just not in the legal sense. They have women and children, often provided for out of the coffers of the local parish, or in extreme cases, out of the diocese. Scandal erupts only when a priest leaves to do the right thing – that is he legally marries his wife and supports his wife and children. He stands by her as husband and father.

Unfortunately, far too many choose the easy road. Oh, honey, I can’t marry you. Look at my great job, the cars, the money, the clothes, the vacations, the status. But it’s ok, we’ll be together on certain evenings and every other weekend. Tell the kids I do care.

It’s a total fallacy. It’s playing to a man’s base instincts, have fun, don’t commit.

Choosing to leave the R.C. priesthood in Poland puts one at a severe disadvantage. Start with the family pressure, the social pressures in the local community, and the hint of scandal… The women (those who actually hold these men to a higher standard) are poorly regarded in comparison to those who take it and shut-up. In addition, the financial losses alone are huge – another base instinct that must be fought against if the man wishes to do right.

And, by-the-way, it is not the woman’s fault.

The 57 who left are the honest ones, the ones who take their faith seriously. The others who remain, seeking the right to marry, are simply seeking a normalization of what already exists.

These men are having problems with their identity, as Prof. Baniak points out, not because of an inherent disorder, but because the identity they live in is disordered to their natural calling – marriage, a spouse, and children.

As I’ve said before, celibacy is a gift given to some, not a gift that can be demanded of the Holy Spirit. Once the R.C. Church gets beyond demanding that its men ‘receive’ this gift, perhaps the gift will be given more freely.

Faith you know.

PNCC, , , ,

Music Scholarship Sunday

God ascends amid shouts of joy,
Yahweh at the sound of the horn.

Praise God, praise him with psalms!
Praise our king, praise him with psalms!

For God is the ruler of all the earth;
praise him to the utmost of your ability.

— Psalm 47:5-7

The PNCC observes Music Scholarship Sunday on the last Sunday in January.

Polish National Catholics are encouraged to support the scholarship program and are asked to encourage youth in their pursuit of music education, to pray for our organists, choir directors, and choir members, and to take part in the ministry of song – raising their voices unto the Lord. We are also asked to pray for all those who have gone before us and who have worked for the glory of God through music ministry.

Persons wishing to apply to the National United Choirs scholarship program may obtain an application from their pastor or choir director or by writing to:

Music Scholarship Committee
National United Choirs
280 Valley View Dr
Westfield, MA 01085.

Applications are available between January 1st and March 20th. Applications must be received no later than April 1st.

There is also a Junior Incentive Award. Applications may only be obtained through your pastor, assistant pastor, administrator, deacon, choir member, director or organist, or Parish Committee member.

Everything Else, ,

I’m a Melancholic

Several of the blogs I read had pointers to Fish eaters quiz on the Four Temperaments (Medieval self analysis).

I took the quiz and it turns out that I am Melancholic. My personality is said to consist of being:

  • Sensitive
  • Intuitive
  • Self-conscious
  • Easily embarrassed
  • Easily hurt
  • Introspective
  • Sentimental
  • Moody
  • Likes to be alone
  • Empathetic
  • Often artistic
  • Often fussy and perfectionist
  • Deep
  • Prone to depression, avarice, and gluttony

It appears that I am in the best of company:

Famous Melancholics include St. John of the Cross, St. John the Divine, St. Francis, and St. Catherine of Siena.

…and that my ‘if I had my druthers’ way of life might include a career as a contemplative religious, theologian, artist, or writer.

I would say that they pegged me pretty well.

Check out the temperament test if you care to see where you fall.