We do indeed need to show joy as Catholics.

 We do indeed need to show joy as Catholics.   My motto — “Be happily and uncomplicatedly Catholic.”

Michael J. Sheehan, Archbishop ofSanta Fe

 

-         The Joyful Catholic has been added to the select list of Catholic Blogs.

-         The British government is planning to end the current ban on religious ceremonies for same-sex marriages, but churches would not be required to perform such ceremonies.

-         Regarding where your charity dollars go, Catholic Charities and Salvation Army have the smallest administrative expenses. Those who eat up most of your charitable dollars before they reach recipients are: UNICEF ($1,200,000 for CEO Careel Stern); American Red Cross ($652,000 salary for President Marsha Evans), The United Way ($375,000 for President Brian Gallagher).

-         The World Bank reported that surging food prices have pushed 44million people worldwide into extreme poverty. This increases the number of undernourished people to 1 billion.

-         In his Easter message, Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury, endorsed (though not specifically) us Joyful Catholics when he said, “We are officially told it is good to be happy. Politicians have started talking about happiness rather than prosperity and there is even a research programme on the subject… Let a thousand street parties blossom!”

 

                                                      Today’s Martyrs

Qamar David, a Catholic businessman inPakistan, who was imprisoned for life for blasphemy against the Koran, was tortured and murdered in jail on March 15.

                                 

My favorite priest, layperson, breathing saint or organization

 Tom Crowe recommends Father Michael Scanlan at the Franciscan University of Steubenville. “In 1974 when he took charge of the failing college, Father Scanlon re-invigorated it with the person of Jesus Christ, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, trying in every way to make the person of Christ the center of College activities. In getting to know the students, to solve the major problem of loneliness he launched the faith household system in which, today, 60 % of the student body participate. Under his guidance, the school grew from a few hundred students to over 2,400.

          “He initiated summer youth conferences which last year had 35,000 teens participating in 18 locations across the U. S.and Canada. On the local level, he was a champion of civil rights and personally integrated the local public swimming pool.

          “Father Mike, though his devotion to the Holy Spirit and his dedication to education has done as much as any single person in this country over the past 50 years to rebuild this Church. He is moving on to the next phase of his life. We are all better, much better, for his work at the tiny college in this post-industrial rust belt town, because from it emanates a spirit, an energy that can set the world on fire.

(Now, tell me about your favorite Catholic priest, layperson or organization that is making a difference.)

aljagoe@comcast.net

 Interesting sayings

 As I sit here, the beating of my heart, the ebb and flow of my breathing, the movements of my mind are all signs of God’s ongoing creation of me. I pause for a moment and become aware of the presence of God within me.

Sacred Space: The Prayer Book 2009

 

Ilia Delio on the cover of America, the Catholic

If the secular, scientific culture behaves like a rabbit, leaping across vast areas of discovery and invention, the Catholic Church too often behaves like a turtle, crawling up from behind, hesitant to accept new scientific discoveries.

Ilia Delio, O.S.F.

 

In Eugene O’Neill’s play, Lazarus Laughed, a witness standing by the tomb, half dead with fright, tells how Jesus and Lazarus looked at each other for a long time. Then Jesus smiles and Lazarus begins to laugh and cries out, “There is no death! There’s only life!”

Patricia Livingston

 

                                   Communiqués 

-         I congratulate your for your blog which fecundates our Catholicism.

Roger Wentworth,Cambridge,MA 

-         Your continuing to report on today’s Christians martyrs puts a dampener on the concept of respect for other religions.

Rezar Johnson, New York, NY 

-         How can I suggest a topic for one of your future blogs?

Helen Ellis, Miami, FL

(Please be my guest and send your suggestions to me at aljagoe@comcast.net)

 

Chuckle time

The bishop went into the church office and handed several pieces of paper to a young volunteer standing next to the shredder, “Please help me,” he said. “I don’t know how to work these different machines.”

          After the volunteer inserted the papers and pressed the button, the bishop said, “This is tomorrow’s homily I have been working on for two weeks. I only want one copy.”

 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 aljagoe@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, Isola Todd, Jill Todd, David Abbey, Linwood “Skip” Williams, Roseanne Somlock, Nicholas Gallagher, Tom Lewis, Donald Whitcomb, Violeta Zepeda, John Aylor, Rev. Joseph Marini, Enrique Portillo,

 Sharon McPike, Tom Ryan, Joseph Normile, Jim Quimby, Russell Edwards,  

Rev. Stephen Huffstetter, Hugh Cannon, Eric Moore, Joan Barrett,

8-year-old Michael Fotta and his parents, Lolita Alvarez,

Camilus Musselman, Ed Block, Isobel Milligan, Peter Bartkiewiez and his family, Joe Toles, Camilus Musselman,   Ed Cole, Bishop Thomas Olmsted,

Jay Parker, William Stephenson, Roger Stoven, Bob Abbott, Denny Kline, Lois Pinkin, Larry Mannino, Cheryl DeSantis, Lenore Sommers

Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, Laura Marsh, Marie Lyons, John Vaughey,

Christian martyrs in the Middle East, those in refugee camps throughout the world, the Japanese victims of their recent calamity.

I Envy The Muslims

We do indeed need to show joy as Catholics.   My motto — “Be happily and uncomplicatedly Catholic.”

Michael J. Sheehan, Archbishop of Santa Fe

 

I Envy the Muslims

…for three reasons.  First, I admire their commitment to pray five times a day — to take time out from whatever they are doing to recognize God, and to give thanks.  I have seen this demonstrated by Muslims of all ranks, from day laborers to corporate executives.  Often I have witnessed it is in a vacant spot at a busy airport where the religious fellow is kneeling in prayer, not giving a damn what others think.  I don’t have the guts to do that. (What about you? Would you do it?)

          As a Catholic it would be easy for me to pray five times a day, using the five decades of each mystery of the Rosary. Often, I make the morning commitment to do it. By bedtime, I seldom have remembered to accomplish this spiritual goal.

          Secondly, their devotion to Muhammad, as God’s Messenger who died in 632, is astounding. Their reverence for this person is so great that a critical cartoon in a Dutch newspaper caused a fury throughout the Islamic world with a death warrant declared for the cartoonist, which has put his life in jeopardy.

Their belief is that God has not appeared on earth in human form or any other form.  We believe that Jesus was God manifested, and yet we don’t treat him with the extreme love, devotion and protective desire that the Muslins demonstrate towards Muhammad, who was merely a receiver of messages from God.  I would like to think constantly of Jesus as the most important factor in my life, superior in importance to those I most love, to my possessions and to life itself. But in this, I fail.

Saint Padre Pio of Pietrelcina wrote, “I also suffer greatly, Father, when I see how people ignore Jesus, and what is worse, how they even insult him, especially by those dreadful blasphemies. I should like to die, or at least become deaf rather than hear so many insults offered to God by men.”

Pope Benedict XVI stated that “We must learn to know intimately Jesus Christ, the God with the human face, and really come into contact with him.”

My third envy is their devotion to the Qur’an, their holy book which was dictated by Muhammad as he heard these words from the Most High.  Reverence for the Qur’an (their “Word of Allah”) requires that almost all Muslims commit sizeable portions to memory. One may not touch the original Arabic text without being ritually clean. It may not be carried below waist level and to throw it or tear any of its pages is sacrilege.

Recently, riots broke out when Bishop Bishoy in Egypt’s Coptic Orthodox Church said that passages in the Qur’an denying the divinity of Jesus might have been inserted after the death of Muhammad. To quiet massive protests, the bishop had to apologize.  Can you imagine the Christian community rising up in arms every time a non-believer is critical of our Bible?

When the kook Minister Jones in Florida threatened to burn a Qur’an, revolts broke out in Muslim territories with massive demonstrations, and Jones and President Obama were burned in efface, etc.

I wish I had the same devotion to our Bible that the Muslims have towards their Qur’an. Why don’t I make the commitment to start daily reading and studying our “Word of God”?  Perhaps I’ll start tomorrow.

(And what are your thoughts about this? aljagoe@comcast.net 

Recommended Readings

-         From the Ralph McInerney’s article, “The Eucharist and Culture”, in the October 30 issue of Inside Catholic:

How easily we lose the sense of wonder of the miraculous…One reads that large numbers of Catholics do not understand or accept the teaching of the real presence of Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament…It may well be that liturgical changes have drained the Mass of awe and reverence.  Romper room music and bushels of bonhomie don’t prepare one to receive Jesus in the sacrament. (Comment: Amen!!!)

     -   “Junkets for Jesus” in the November-December Mother Jones.

 

Quiz

Last week, the winner of the autographed copy of Light Reading for Good and Wayward Catholic is Dorothy Wilcox in Birmingham, AL. Here are the answers:

1.     The two pairs of Apostles who had the same names were the two James’ and the two Judas’.

2.     The new president of Catholic University is John H. Garvey.

3.     Elijah rode into heaven in a fiery chariot.

Be happily and uncomplicatedly Catholic.

We do indeed need to show joy as Catholics.   My motto — “Be happily and uncomplicatedly Catholic.”

Michael J. Sheehan, Archbishop of Santa Fe

 

The Age of Apathy and Ignorance 

Realizing that we are the last of the Catholics in our family, last week my wife and I donated our massive family Bible to our church library.  Our splendid four children, two sons-in-laws and two daughter-in-laws have no interest in Catholicism, and our ten remarkable grandkids have little (if any) knowledge of Christianity.

          Several years ago, our adorable six-year-old granddaughter was visiting us. At breakfast one morning when I mentioned I had trouble understanding the Buddhist religion, she told me all about when Buddha was under a tree he had this revelation that he taught to his followers, etc., etc. I then asked her what she knew about the 5,000 year history of the Jews and about Jesus Christ. With the truth of youth, she said, “I haven’t the foggiest.”

        Our two generations following us are all admirable individuals—intelligent, well-educated, loving one another and their neighbors, thoughtful, sensitive, good and popular citizens in their communities and enjoyable company.  They have made themselves healthy and financially successful.  They are all good kids, of whom I am busting with pride.  Yet I am concerned about their satisfied two-dimensional lives, devoid of religion.

          St. Augustine compared religion as a bridge to a higher location.  To me, I relate it to an experience I had years ago when I would take early morning swims in the clear sea at the Costa Brava.  I enjoyed it as a refreshing way of starting the day. Then one morning I had my initial experience with a snorkeling mask.  I was stunned to see clearly the beauty of the under-water world. Before, I had been content with skimming along the surface, ignorant of the sea treasures below me. Now, thanks to my mask, like magic an entire new world opened for me.

          I feel that way about my Faith.  There are boundless spiritual treasures that Catholicism makes available for me every minute of the day.  It gives me the opportunity to view all with new and fresh sight—though the eyes of others, of Christ, of Blessed Mary, and of thousands of saints. This gives meaning, purpose and enjoyment to the hum-drum of life.  As the theologian Ewert Cousins wrote, “Theology is concerned with the ultimate level of religious mystery which is even less accessible than the mystery of the physical universe.”

 I have the uncomfortable feeling of being a frustrated billionaire who hasn’t figured out how to share his wealth.  Without intent, I am a hoarder of spiritual blessings I want to share.  My failure to pass my appreciation of religion on to my children is a puzzlement, and I don’t know the answer.  As one who has experienced this feeling, Kenda Creasy Dean, professor at Princeton Theological Seminary, said she has spend the most depressing summers of her life, interviewing teens about their faith.

As an interesting tid-bit, I read this in the North American Almanac 1929: “He who fights religion and its institutions kicks at the stars. He who incurs religion’s enmity must be a brave fighter for he may have 1,000 hands of logic, yet cannot lay low the one hand of religious prejudice.”

You readers, give me your thoughts and advice.  I welcome it!

thejoyfulcatholic@comcast.net.

Recommended readings

-         “Twelve instant ways of beautifying the Novus Ordo” by Monica Miller. PhD., in the August/September issue of Homiletic & Pastoral Review.

-         “What’s Extraordinary?” by Gerald Coleman, S.S., in America, August 30 – September 6.

-         “The Traditional Sources of Thomas Merton’s Environmental Spirituality” by Patrick O’Connell PhD in Spiritual Life, fall 2010.

-         “A Tree Full of Monkeys – Why The Soul  Needs Silence” by John Garvey, in Commonweal, July 16

My favorite priest, layperson, breathing saint or organization

We do indeed need to show joy as Catholics.   My motto — “Be happily and uncomplicatedly Catholic.”

Michael J Sheehan

Archbishop of Santa Fe

 

My favorite priest, layperson, breathing saint or organization

Rev. Mario Dorsonville works in the Spanish Catholic Center in Washington, DC. He has been very successful reaching out to the Hispanic Community to increase awareness of the health needs of that group. As well, he continues to promote volunteerism for doctors and laypersons to work for SCC. I know he prays for my family, so I like that.

          Submitted by Dennis DuFour

 

Interesting sayings

 Surrender, then, all things to God and in him you shall find all things more abundantly. God created us only to fulfill his own purpose. The noble words Jesus Christ has addressed to various saintly souls are relevant here: “Think of me and I will think of you: make my glory your concern and leave me to make your welfare and eternal happiness my concern.”

Father Jean Pierre Caussade, S.J.

A French Jesuit who dies in 1751

 

Ring out your joy to God our strength,

Shout in triumph to the God of Jacob.

                                       Psalm 81

 

It is a matter of placing ourselves again before a Presence, of losing ourselves in a dialogue while we are fulfilling ourselves and to feel always in greater depth that the life of God is handed over into our hands.  That is the great and supreme purity

                             Father Maurice Zunder

                             Swiss mystic, poet and philosopher who died in 1975

 

 

Attitude is more important that the past, than education, than money, than circumstances, than what people do or say. It is more important that appearance, giftedness or skill.                             W. C. Fields

Communiqués

I encourage you to keep a smile in the midst of all this turmoil in the Church. “The truth is great and it will prevail.”

                   Most Reverend Richard J. Skilba

                   Auxiliary Bishop of Milwaukee

Many thanks for the new format for The Joyful Catholic. I like it!

                             Cynthia Collins, San Francisco, CA

I enjoyed your article about Canon Wilson in London. He seems to know what we parishioners crave.  I wish many of our American priests would learn from him.

                             Abraham Jennings, Topeka, KS

 Count me in as one of your new “10 WOW’s” participants!

                               Roger Wilcox, New Orleans, LA

Chuckle time

Mother: Father O’Brien, I want my son Joey to become a priest. How long will it take?

Father O’Brien: To become a dioceses priest will take maybe four years after college.  If he wants to be a Franciscan, it could require as many as six, and to be a Jesuit, it will take a total of 16 years.

Mother: Then, since Joey is a slow-learner and not too bright, we better make him a Jesuit.

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, Isola Todd, David Abbey, Amie Ellis,

Linwood “Skip” Williams, Gerry Paradiso, Tom Medved, Eileen Grotsky, Roseanne Somlock, Nicholas Gallagher, Tom Lewis, Donald Whitcomb, Violeta Zepeda, John Aylor, Rev. Joseph Marini, Enrique Portillo,

 Sharon McPike, Tom Ryan, Joseph Normile, Jim Quimby, Russell Edwards,

Gertrude Goldstein, Rev. Stephen Huffstetter, Hugh Cannon, Eric Moore, Joan Barrett, 8-year-old Michael Fotta and his parents, Lolita Alvarez, Camilus Musselman, Jack Conner, Ed Block,

Peter Bartkiewiez and his family, Joe Toles.

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