We do indeed need to show joy as Catholics.  

My motto  “Be happily and uncomplicatedly
Catholic.”

Michael J. Sheehan, Archbishop of Santa Fe  _____________________________________________

Why Do They Hate Us?

On September 4, in Kottenkulangara within the southwestern Indian state of Kerala, twenty masked Hindu extremists destroyed the altar, confessionals and vestments in Our Lady of Vailankanni parish church. This was two days after Christians in another part of India welcomed a court decision, mandating that the National Human Rights Commission compensate victims of anti-Christian violence. (Three years ago 300 villages were attacked with 70 people killed. Later that year, because of violence, 25,000 Christians fled for their lives.)
Recently, in the Nigerian city of Jos, Muslim militants launched a series of attacks on Christians and killed 14 people.
 Beijing is tackled the country’s embattled Catholics. In China, there are an estimated eight million Catholics who have to worship secretly because they refuse to join the state controlled Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association. The US-based Cardinal Kung Foundation stated there are 25 Chinese bishops either in jail or under house arrest.
The Pew Research Center Forum lists these eight countries as having very high hostilities towards Christians: Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Egypt, India, Indonesia, Iraq Israel, Nigeria, Pakistan and Somalia. Thirty other countries are listed as having high hostility.
Italian sociologist Massimo Introvigne, representative of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe on Combating Intolerance and Discrimination against Christians, reported that over 100,000 Christians are killed annually. “Every five minutes,” he said, ‘a Christian is killed for his faith.”
This is puzzlement for me. We Christians don’t have suicide bombers and extremists who attack people of other faiths and destroy their places of worship. Throughout history, Christians universally have been the selfless providers of healthcare, education, food, housing and welfare for all people. We still are today.
I can’t say we weren’t forewarned because St. Luke records Christ as saying, “Blessed are you when people hate you, and when they exclude and insult you and denounce your name as evil on account of the Son of Man.” And in the year 210, Tertullian said, “The blood of martyrs is the seed of the Church.” Four hundred years later, St. Gregory the Great added an optimistic note when he wrote “Change the wicked and they will be no more. The wicked who have been changed will be no more, not because they will altogether cease to exist in their essential being; they will cease to exist in their state of ungodliness.”
Are we hated merely because we are different? Is there jealousy because of our enjoyment and devotion of our Faith? Do they resent us because they are beneficiaries of our goodness? I don’t know. Send me your thoughts to share with other readers. (aljagoe@comcast.net)

Other recommended Catholic blogs

- Shower of Roses

- Wildflowers and Marbles

- American Papist

Recommended readings


-“Make-Up Orthodoxy” in August-September The Catholic World Report.
- “Rights of Conscience” in August 1-8 America.
- Liberal education and the priesthood” in August-September Homiletic & Pastoral Review.

– Andrew Bacevich on the Information Age” in August 12 Commonweal.

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)
Fr. John M.Bauer (MN)
Rev. Edward Gorman, O.P. (DE)
Fr. Andrew Gries (DC)
Msgr. Edward Filardi (MD)
Fr. Raymond Kemp (DC)
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)
Msg. Paul L. Rohling (AL)
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)

Michael J. Sheehan Archbishop of Santa Fe

Why they’re leaving the Church

(part 2 of 4)

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

  Recently I learned that my beautiful 24-year-old god-daughter has left the Church to take part in another religion. With open frankness, she told me that she no longer felt ‘at home’ in the Catholic Church. “Each Sunday, I entered the church a stranger,” she said, “and walked out a stranger.” She wanted the feeling of being a loving and loved  member of a spiritual family.

By contrast, in the Presbyterian Church she now attends, she feels like a welcomed and cared-about member of a happy community. Unfortunately, in my many decades of attending Mass, I have  found this Catholic hermit behavior to be true. The usual attitude of a parishioners is to acknowledge only those they know, and after Mass to get to the car as fast as possible with the impression of “Thanks God, that’s done.”
As Russell Moore in Touchstone magazine said, the difference between the Catholics and the Evangelicals isless theological than cultural.

In the first chapter of Light Reading for Good and Wayward Catholics I tell of visiting in Fayetteville, NC, and being delighted with the reception at Mass.
The ushers and church members greeted me like rich relative. When I sat down and picked up the prayer book, I realized I was in an Episcopal church. I  hurried and left to get to the Catholic Church, a block away, to be scolded by the usher for being late and treated like a suspicious stranger by others. I felt at home.

In 1940, Servant of God Madeleine Delbrel, the
French laywoman, writer and mystic, wrote, “The Kingdom
of God is the encounter between God and humanity composed of one person, plus another, plus another. It does not emerge form an anonymous mass.” In his London (UK) parish, Canon Stuart Wilson occasionally cuts his homily to five minutes to allow time for each parishioner to meet a stranger. “Tell them about you,” he instructs, “and find out something about them.” Instantly, the church becomes alive with happy talking and an invisible cloud of communal love encompasses the church. There, if you are in a hurry to leave after Mass, you have to wiggle through many  parishioners who are visiting in the vestibule and out on the sidewalk. I double-dog-dare you priests to have the back-bone to do this. Don’t be chicken.
Give it a try and let me know the results. aljagoe@comcast.net.

Sr. Melannie Svbobodo, S.N.D

As Sr. Melannie Svbobodo, S.N.D., said, “Our church has to be more than a loving community of fellow believers. It must be a loving community whose love extends beyond its own members.” And what can we Joyful Catholics do to help solve this problem of lacking spirit of  community within our Church? As an example, how about committing to meeting a  stranger at each Mass? I have done this with mixed results, mostly positive.  Some sorrowful souls want to be left as hermits. Give me your thoughts.  aljagoe@comcast.net

             Other recommended Catholic blogs

Happy Catholic

The Crescat

Domine,da mihi hanc aquam!

 

Recommended readings

Check out the pamphlet, Discover the Catholic Church,  published by Liturgy Trainings Publications.  It is an excellent piece, especially for those why might be interested in
knowing about our Faith.

“The buck stops where?” in August U. S. Catholic.

“Liberal education and the priesthood” by Fr. James V. Schall, S.J. in the August-September Homiletic & Pastoral  Review.

                         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)

Fr. Raymond Kemp (DC)

Bishop Dennis Madden (MD)

Fr. Joseph Marini (CA)

Fr. John Mericantante (FL)

Msgr. Thomas Modugno (NYC)

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)

 

Invite Jesus to the Pub

We do indeed need to show joy as Catholics.   My motto
— “Be happily and uncomplicatedly
Catholic.”  
Michael J. Sheehan, Archbishop of Santa Fe

Invite Jesus to the Pub

I am a pub man. When I’m in the U.K., at 6 PM that’s where you’ll find me.  I walked in a pub a stranger—but not for long. The friendly fellow behind the bar asked,

 “What’ll it be, Yank?” – “What ale do you recommend?”

“Bombardier is the best.”  “Good, since I was a bombardier in WWII, I’ll take it.”           “Coming up, Mate.”

It’s strange that in America we can’t accept pub culture. If I have a friend who goes to a bar after work each day, I have reason to worry about him. In the U.K., if a friend doesn’t make frequent pub visits, he probably has problems.

There is something about the friendly, casual and at-ease atmosphere of a pub that makes one open up and want to share and listen. When I meet someone whom I sense I would enjoy as a friend, I invite him or her to join me at a pub. There, in a short time, we get to know one another in a solid way. It can often be the beginning of a lifetime friendship. That’s why I think it often a good idea (mentally) to
invite Jesus to meet me at a pub. There are things I would like to know about
him.  Also, I would appreciate his advice and opinion about things I am doing.
But to do this, I have to set aside a quiet time. And in preparation, I should
think about what we’ll talk about. He’s a great listener, and I have to
remember to shut up long enough to hear his advice. My imaginary pub is a
delight. Give it a try.

(And how does this idea grab you? aljagoe@comcast.net

 

Quiz

 (See answer at bottom)

1. After she joined a religious order, what was Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu’s name?

2. Who was the first male American to be canonized?

3. Which of these is not in all four gospels?

          – the loaves and the fishes,

          – bread and wine at the Last Supper,

          – the clearing out of the temple

          – the burial of Jesus

Other recommended Catholic blogs

-       Catholic and Enjoying It!

-       Ignatius Insight Scoop

-       By Sun and Candlelight

Recommended readings

-        “The Disease of Irreverence” in June New Oxford  Review

-        “The God Who Sees Me” and “Reflections  on Aging Spiritually”  in summer Spiritual Life. 

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)
  • Bishop Dennis Madden (MD)
  • Fr. Joseph Marini (CA)
  • Fr. John Mericantante (FL)
  • Msgr. Thomas Modugno (NYC)
  • 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)

Answer to Quiz

1-    Mother Teresa ofCalcutta

2-    John Neumann

3-    Bread and wine at the Last Supper