We Do Indeed Need to Show Joy as Catholics.

My motto “Be happily and uncomplicatedly Catholic.”

Michael J. Sheehan Archbishop of Santa Fe

THANK YOU

(Submitted by Catherine Grant)

  • If you woke up this morning with more health than illness…you are more blessed than the million who will not survive the week.
  • If you have never experienced the danger of battle, the loneliness of imprisonment, the agony of torture, or the pangs of starvation—you are ahead of 500 million people in the world.
  • If you can attend a church meeting without fear of harassment, arrest, torture or death…you are more blessed than three billion people in the world. (In Afghanistan, there are no places for Christian worship.)
  • If you have food in the refrigerator, clothes on your back, a roof overhead and a place to sleep…you are richer than 75% of those in this world.
  • If you have money in the bank, in your wallet, and spare change in a dish somewhere…you are among the top 8% of the world’s wealthy.
  • If you parents are still alive and still married…you are very rare, even in the United States.

  • If you hold up your head with a smile and are truly thankful…you are blessed because the majority of us can, but most do not.
  • If you can hold someone’s hand, hug them or even touch them on the shoulder…you are blessed because you can offer healing touch.
  • If you can read this…you are more blessed than 171 million blind people in the world.  
  • (Send your comments for Catherine, aljagoe@comcast.net

Recommended readings 

-         “Religious Freedom” in March First Things.

-         “The Culture War & The Catholic Church” in April New Oxford Review

-         “A Year In the Promised Land” in May USCatholic

_______________________________________________________________________________

The Shooting Shepherds….All priests are from the Diocese of Fargo!

The media loves to publicize bad priests, and we should give recognition to our Joyful Catholic Priests. Send me your recommendation for ones you think merit membership in this splendid group. (aljagoe@comcast.net)

Fr. Robert Aufieri (New York, NY) 

Fr. John M. Bauer (Minneapolis, MN) 

Fr. Edmund Connors, Katonah, NY

Fr. Paul Duchsch(Fargo,ND) 

Fr. Edward Gorman, O.P. (Providence, RI) 

Fr. Andrew Gries (Washington, DC) 

Msgr. Edward Filardi (Bethesda, MD)

Fr. Raymond Kemp (Washington, DC)

Bishop Joseph N. Latino (Jackson, MS) 

Archbishop Jerome Listecki (Milwaukee, MN) 

Bishop Dennis Madden (Baltimore, MD)

Fr. Joseph Marini (San Mateo, CA) 

Msgr. Joseph Mayo (Salt Lake City, UT) 

Fr. John Mericantante (Pahokee, FL) 

Msgr. Thomas Modugno (New York,NY)

Fr. Kevin Nelson, (Lantana, FL) 

Fr. John O’Donoghue (San Antonio,TX)

Fr. Antony Pulikal (Lntana, FL) 

Fr. James R. Purfield (Denver,CO) 

Fr. Paul S. Quinter (Pittsburg, Pa) 

Msg. David Robichcaux, V.F. (New Orleans, LA)

Archbishop Thomas J. Rodi (Mobile, AL)

Msg. Paul L. Rohling (Birmingham, AL)

Fr. David Ross (Lima. OH) 

Fr. Matthew Ruhl, S.J. (Kansas City, KS) 

Fr. Michael Scanlon (Steubenville, OH) 

Fr. Walter J. Szezesny (Buffalo, NY) 

Fr. Richard Trout (Sanford, FL) 

Fr. Hayden Vaverek (New York, NY) 

Fr. Malcolm Sylvester Willoughby, O.P. (Washington, DC) 

Canon Stuart Wilson (London, UK)                         

Fr. Michael Radermache, (Vancouver, WA)

Fr. Paul D.Counce (BatonRouge, LA

Why They’re Leaving The Church

_______________________________________________

We do indeed need to show joy as Catholics.  

My motto…
“Be happily and uncomplicatedly
Catholic”

Michael J. Sheehan, Archbishop
of Santa Fe

____________________________________________________________

Why they’re leaving the Church- (Part 1 of 4)

(Let’s be aware of these problems and consider how we Joyful Catholics can help in the solution)

 This has been a rough time for me because some people who are special in my life have given up on Catholicism. A relative, who for her 40-plus years on this planet has been an active and happy Catholic, has now joined the Episcopal Church. Her comment was, “I suddenly realized how lonesome I was as a woman in the Catholic Church. Also, I wanted to quit a lifetime of playing a minor role – a second-rate citizen in a male dominated organization.”

I have empathy for her because I appreciate the splendid accomplishment and acceptance of women in the past seven decades. In the 1950s when I worked for the Hartford Insurance Company (then the largest USA insurer), it was company policy that women could only be typists and secretaries. The excuse for this  restriction was because “Our agents would not feel at ease talking with a  female underwriter.”  Twenty years later, I had a battle to get the bank board on which I was serving to add a woman director. They finally resented and the next year my woman board member was so popular they made her chairman of the important audit committee. Today, 15 of the Fortune 500 companies have women CEOs, and this number is increasing.

A Christian Brother friend, who counsels those who are shaky in their faith, told me that most women agree that at some point we should return to being a church of the
people, but few of them believe it will be anytime soon. They understand that  the aged bachelors who are calling the shots in the Vatican
move with a speed that would make a snail pace seem like an Olympic racer.

As a sign of the times, last month 300 Austrian priests have signed a “Call to Disobedience”, which calls for a parish to have an individual leader – whither man or woman, and for admission of women to the priesthood.

In her book There Is a Season, Joan Chittister, O.S.B., writes about the need for spiritual re-builders—those who take what other people only talk about and make it the next generation’s reality. She is right in that we should join together in our effort to make sense of relationships within our Church. We have made improvement in that the conservative priests who refused to let little girls serve on the altar are now in their dotage or have passed on to the next life. And although most of us can’t wait until 2111 when I predict the Vatican  will accept female deacons, we should now take positive steps to profess our admiration and appreciation for our woman church members. Mother Teresa said, “Holiness is not a luxury for the few; it is not for some people. It is meant for you and me, for all of us. It is a simple duty because if we learn to love, we learn to be holy.”

How do you think this can be done? (aljagoe@comcast.net)

 

 Other recommended Catholic blogs

Catholic Cuisine

The Shrine of the Holy Whapping

Testosterhome

 

Recommended
readings

“The Church and the Eucharist” in June/July Homiletic
& Pastoral Review

“It Doesn’t Sing” in July 13, Commonweal.

 “My Water, His Wine” in July-August Touchstone.

 

Roster
of Joyful Catholic Priests

The media loves to publicize bad priests, and we should give recognition to our Joyful Catholic Priests. Send me your recommendation for ones you think merit membership in this splendid group. (aljagoe@comcast.net)

Rev. Robert
Aufieri (NYC)

Rev. Edward
Gorman, O.P. (DE)

Fr. Andrew
Gries (DC)

Msgr. Edward
Filardi (MD)

Archbishop
Jerome Listecki, (MN)

Bishop Dennis
Madden (MD)

Fr. Joseph
Marini (CA)

Fr. John Mericantante (FL)

Msgr. Thomas
Modugno (NYC

Rev. John
O’Donoghue (TX)

Fr. Matthew
Ruhl, S.J. (KS)

Fr. Michael
Scanlon (OH)

Rev. Richard
Trout (FL)

Rev. Hayden
Vaverek (NYC)

Rev. Malcolm
Sylvester Willoughby, O.P. (DC)

Canon Stuart
Wilson (London, UK)
 

Form Your Own Prayer Group

Let us follow in his footsteps, driving out vice by virtue, pride by humility, impatience by patience, injustice by justice, impurity by perfect chastity and continence, ,vainglory by God’s honor and glory—so that whatever we do and accomplish may be for the gory, praise, honor and spread of our Jesus’ name.     Saint Catherine of Siena, 1375

Form Your Own Prayer Group 

 

In 1992, I when I heard of a men’s prayer group in Chicago which had been meeting weekly at 7:30 AM, I thought no-way would I do that. Then I realized four of us fellows were regularly meeting at 7:30 for our Friday tennis game.  As two in the group had serious health problems and the third was facing a career crisis, I suggested we form a prayer group to pray for one another.

         

 They agree to give it a try, and each was to check with his priest or minister to get ideas how to do this (two of us were Catholic, one Episcopalian and the other Methodist).  When we next met, as we had received no advice from the religious, we decided to fly by the seat of our pants.

 

 Our procedure was to start by holding hands and saying the Lord’s Prayer. Then we read Jesus’ statement that if two or more are gathered in his name, he is there also, followed by one of the brief spiritual messages we began accumulating. Next, we went over the list of people on our Special Intentions List for whom we were praying, and each member reported on the condition of the persons he was responsible for. We then held hands, closed our eyes and prayed for those on the list. After that, we read a chapter from the New Testament, beginning with Matthew. As each had different Bibles, this was interesting because if one was puzzled by a passage, the others would read their version and we would discuss. We would end by joining hands and praying again for everyone on our Special Intentions List.

 

 Now, eighteen years later, we are still meeting with the same format; however, now we meet monthly because one member has moved to the beach and has a three-hour drive to meet. We have five members, as two of the original group have died and three new ones added. Currently, we have 49 on our Special Intentions List and 814 on the Deo Gratias List (for whom we also still pray) of those who have experienced healing or have graduated to the Higher Life.

 

 The requirement for adding someone to the Special Intentions List is that this person receives a letter from the group, telling of being in our prayers and asking him or her to pray for the others listed.  We also have several friends, whom we call correspondents, who often give names of those we are to pray for.   

 

Now let me know how this grabs youWhy don’t you consider forming your own Prayer Group? Let me know if I can help.

joyfulcatholic@comcast.net

 

Interesting saying

 I’ve become very suspicious of certainty. First comes understanding the value of doubt. For me, that’s how we get through the world

                       William Kentridge, South African artist and film producer

 

 

 

 

 

God arranges the events that touch us, which are independent of our will, and which unfold themselves in time.  He acts also upon our will, because he is more intimate with us than we ourselves, and because is the author of our free will.

Raissa Maritain, who died in 1960 and was the Russian wife of philosopher Jacqus Maritain

 

 

 

 

And what are a few of your favorite sayings?  joyfulcatholic@comcast.net

 

News flashes

-        I found it ironic that in the January issue of The Catholic World Report the State of Israel has a full page encouraging Catholic to visit “where the miracles of Jesus happened!”  Then on page 10 is this account of Israel’s new restrictions on visiting priests: The government of Israel is restricting visas for Catholic priests, forcing clerics to renew their visas every year and refusing visas from African and Asian countries. The new restrictions on priests point toward the likelihood of greater tension between the Church and the Israeli government.

(My comment: Hey, Israel, you are pleading for our tourist dollars while you kick us in the ass.  What gives?)

 

-        In Lima, Peru, Cardinal Juan Luis Cipiani is attempting to restore a sense of reverence for the Eucharist by requiring one to kneel before receiving Communion. (My comment: We in North American do the opposite—we lessen a sense of reverence for the Eucharist by adding distractions, like Communion hymns, announcements, etc. Dear Lord, will we ever learn?!)

 

 

 

Joyful experiences

      -  Last night as my wife, Eva, and I were walking in the bitter cold toward a restaurant in Bethesda, MD, we saw on the sidewalk an attractive couple in their mid-twenties, selling cupcakes for the Clinton Haiti fund. When I gave a contribution, the young man assured me every penny would go to Haiti.

 

-  Tuesday was a special occasion when I took my blind friend, Paul Rice, for our usual monthly lunch. We hadn’t met since September because Paul, who is also partially deaf, a widower and scrapping through on his Social Security and small pension in a cheap retirement facility, has spent the past three months in hospitals, nursing homes and rehab centers. During the meal, Paul (a good Baptist) said, “2009 was one of the best years of my life. God was so good to me because he let me survive my quadruple heart operation, control my diabetes and curb my gout and intestinal problems.  I am so blessed!”

(And what joyful experience do you want to share?)

      joyfulcatholic@comcast.net)

 

 Examples from martyrs

On November 29, 1791, when the Jacobin judge told priest Blessed Jean Gallot that, to be faithful to the new French Republic, he must not profess any religion. He replied, “I shall always be a Catholic.”  Two months later, he was beheaded with thirteen fellow priests.

(Today, if someone asked you if you are a Joyful Catholic, how would you answer?)

 

 

Quiz

  The winner of a gift copy of Light Reading for Good and Wayward Catholics, who clocked in at 10:32AM on January 26, is Jose Gonzales in Albuquerque.

1. After the tax collector, Levi, son of Alphaeus, became a disciple, his name was Matthew

2.     In 313 Constantine, Emperor Rome legalized Christianity.   

3.     The Swiss Guards been serving the Popes for over 500 years

 

Communiqués received

 Regarding your last issue, if I work up thinking I died last night, I would be so depressed I would go back to sleep.

                                                          Edward Higgens, Alton, IL

 In regard to your article I died last night, I had rather think that each day is the first day in the rest of my life.

                                                          Irene Burnstein, Baton Rouge

                            

(My comment – You can’t win’em all. But still let me hear from you via joyfulcatholic@comcast.net)

 

Other recommended Catholic Blogs

        The Deacon’s Desk (article about a deacon’s rescue in Haiti)

        The Archdiocese of Denver(article by George Weigel, complaining

                   about the “Johnny-One-Note” pro-life Catholics)

 

Chuckle time

   Signs noticed:

   (outside the village of New Cuyana)

                   population             562

                   ft. above sea level 2150

                   established           1951

                   total                      4663

 

(in a hallway)

          If you need help

(1) press red button

(2) yell

 

My favorite religious priest, layperson or organization

The special honoree this week is 7-year-old Jonathan Slack of Orland Park, Ill.  Before the Christmas holidays he saw a destitute woman on a street in Chicago and was moved to tears. He wrote a letter to those in his neighborhood, requesting help for the homeless. Ten days later, he received four truckloads of good and toys which he delivered to the Su Casa Catholic Worker Homeless Center in Chicago.

And let me know about your favorite Catholic priest, layperson or organization that is making a difference.  Share this with our many Joyful Catholic members.

joyfulcatholic@comcast.net)

 

Special Intentions List

As you pray with a broad brush, please include these loved ones, who have been submitted by our readers. You, too, are invited to send me names of your special persons who are in need of prayer. My address is joyfulcatholic@comcast.net. They will be on the list for 60 days. At the end of that time, if prayers are still needed, you merely have to renew the name.

Juanita Caldwell, David Abbey, Amie Ellis, Linwood “Skip” Williams, Gerry Paradiso, Nick DeCarlo, Tom Medved, Bob Haines, Eileen Grotsky,

 Roseanne Somlock, Nicholas Gallagher, Tom Lewis, Donald Whitcomb,

Violeta Zepeda, Rev. Joseph Healy, John Aylor, Rev. Joseph Marini, Enrique Portillo, Sharon McPike, Joe Berger, Tom Ryan, Joseph Normile, Jim Quimby, Russell Edwards, Mary Darwish, Lizzy Balchin

As you note, because of miraculous healings, several names have been added to our Deo Gratias list.