Other stuff


The First Supper PDF Print E-mail
Written by Church Mouse   
Saturday, 07 November 2009


One of the Church Mouse banner images - those at the top of the page that keep changing - that seems to attracts more attention than all the others is from a photograph of a framed image hanging in the back of the church.



It is a print of a work entitled "The First Supper" by Australian artist Susan Dorothea White, who says:

I was inspired to paint The First Supper after Leonardo da Vinci's Last Supper, by the narrative drama and magnificent composition of Leonardo's painting. I wanted to challenge the patriarchal concept of thirteen men on one side of a table that is accepted as a celebrated religious symbol. In place of the men, all with similar features, I painted an international group of women. (Read more at http://www.susandwhite.com.au/paintings/firstsupper.html )

While on the subject of challenging patriarchal concepts, the Mouse has received a couple of requests to help promote An Invitation to Catholic Men to apologise to the Women of the Church. It is an initiative from a small group of Australians concerned with the Church's attitude to women, which they see as a matter of justice, of basic human rights.

They suggest it is time to correct the glaring injustice of women being confined to secondary status in the Body of Christ, especially in their exclusion from leadership roles.

In simple terms, if there is no scriptural or theological reason to exclude women from leadership and priesthood, there is only tradition - and human traditions can harbour shocking injustices.

This is not just the offer of an apology, but also a change of heart and a commitment to think clearly and speak the truth, to become intolerant of kant, obfuscation and all forms of bullshit.

For more information, and an online petition, visit www.apologytowomen.com.


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Last Updated ( Saturday, 07 November 2009 )
 
Letter by Fr Terry Concerning St Mary's PDF Print E-mail
Written by Church Mouse   
Monday, 23 March 2009
The following "Letter by Fr Terry Concerning St Mary's", posted on the St Mary's Catholic Community South Brisbane website, so clearly sums up what is happening in the Catholic Church in general and in places like St Mary's and St Vincent's in particular that it would be remiss of the Church Mouse not to bring it to your attention.

There are many who believe the Catholic Community of St Mary’s in South Brisbane should have made compromises to sort out its difficulties with the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Brisbane.

To suggest that compromise is possible in this situation is to misunderstand the nature of paradigm shifts. The St Mary’s Community has undergone several such shifts – in theology (the nature of God), Christology (the nature of Christ), and ecclesiology (the nature of the Church). And these shifts have had consequences for how the Community lives out its commitment to Gospel values.

There’s no going back from a paradigm shift and there’s no compromise position. Once you’ve decided the earth is round and not flat, there’s no going back to believing the earth is flat and there’s no compromise position that encompasses both flat and round. Once you’ve decided the earth revolves around the sun and not the other way around, there’s no going back and there’s no compromise. So it is with the people of St Mary’s who have arrived at an understanding of God, Jesus and Church that is at odds with the paradigms of the hierarchical Church.

Paradigms are key to institutional religion, particularly Christianity where there has always been more emphasis on what people believe than on how they live their lives. Hence the hierarchical Church seems more affronted by someone saying “I don’t believe in the Virgin Birth” than by saying “I was molested by my parish priest when I was a child”.

The story of Christianity is the story of paradigm shifts. The primary challenge facing Jesus was bringing about a shift in how people understood and related to God and therefore each other. Shortly after Jesus’ death, Peter and Paul had stoushes about what it meant to be a follower of Jesus. And such stoushes have remained integral to the Christian story throughout its two thousand year history.

The Catholic Church has never led the pack in paradigm shifts. It’s always brought up the rear, agreeing to the shift only when to do otherwise would lead to annihilation. The status of women is an easy example. The hierarchical Church remains cemented in a role-based anthropology of gender that makes no sense to educated people of the twenty-first century. For St Mary’s, the equal status of women is fundamental to the life of the Community, recognised in many ways including inviting women to preach. But it’s safe to predict that the hierarchical Catholic Church will drag its feet to the very end on something as blindingly obvious as treating women as equals in ministry.

Religious paradigm shifts often originate silently in the pews, followed, sometimes centuries later, by what is often a shift-by-stealth in the hierarchical Church. The hierarchy is not known for its capacity to stand up and say “we got that one wrong”. What they are known for is harsh treatment of those who dissent from the prevailing paradigm. So the people sit quietly in the pews and hold onto their private views, many of which are irreconcilable with the official position. Or else they walk away. Many do.

What makes St Mary’s different is that the views in the pews matter, and out of those views, supported by priests who acknowledge the reality of paradigm shifts and are not afraid to embrace them, have come models of God, Christ and Church that make sense to people as they struggle to live their lives, faithful to the message of Jesus, in the twenty-first century.

St Mary’s is at the vanguard of a paradigm shift. Like all heralders of such shifts, the Community may well be extinguished as one would a spot fire. But the spot fires will continue to break out and grow in number and then eventually explode into a roaring inferno. And the hierarchical Catholic Church will once again be overtaken, thankfully, by the innate wisdom of the people of God.

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Christmas Eve - from Ann PDF Print E-mail
Written by Church Mouse   
Thursday, 25 December 2008
T
he Vigil Mass this evening was beautiful just because the church was filled with people with love in their hearts. It was warm and cheerful....
 
One could not stop smiling.....and...the...singing....WOW!!!!!!
 
Thank you everyone....
 
Have a lovely blessed Christmas.....
 
God Bless
 
Ann
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Catholica comes to tea PDF Print E-mail
Written by Church Mouse   
Monday, 01 December 2008
The St Vincent's community regularly sets aside the last Sunday of the month to enjoy a cup of tea and a leisurely chat after Mass. Guests are especially welcome, and the broad spectrum of "Redfernites" who visit the parish infrequently for many and varied reasons are heartily encouraged to mark their diaries accordingly.

Last Sunday, special guests singer-songwriter Amanda McKenna, and her husband Brian Coyne, editor of Catholica (formerly Catholica Australia) accepted an invitation to get together with the community.

They generously shared stories of their own journeys; Amanda sang a selection of her compositions and Brian spoke passionately on the theme "Reclaiming a Spirit of Trust". He also took the opportunity to say his personal “sorry” to the Aborigines.


Brian Coyne under Ted's watchful eye

Listening to these kindred spirits reinforced the community’s resolve to stand against the control freak hierarchy that is driving the Church into oblivion by alienating thinking, questioning Catholics everywhere.

You can read Brian’s comments on the day in the Catholica Forum thread What a thoroughly exquisite day!


Amanda McKenna performing one of her songs

and more about Amanda on her website and in a Catholic Weekly interview Conversation: Amanda McKenna, Catholic singer and songwriter - ‘God’s messenger’ on a journey of faith.
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 02 December 2008 )
 
Friends in Spain PDF Print E-mail
Written by Church Mouse   
Friday, 18 July 2008
Encomun is a Spanish collective of some 30 Christian communities from Madrid. Their blog is intended to serve as a virtual meting place for the communities. Intrepid translator, Joe C., has produced this English version of Part 2 of a recent article entitled WYD08 in Sydney and the parish of Redfern that the Mouse stumbled across during the week.

Many thanks for your support, members of Encomun.


It’s some time now, a couple of years, that I have been following the vicissitudes of a small Australian parish community, that of St Vincent’s in Redfern, a poor suburb of Sydney, whose population is mostly Aboriginal. Naturally, I do this via their web site, Church Mouse.

This community grew and matured under the guidance of two extraordinary people, the priest, Ted Kennedy and Mum Shirl, an activist who was herself Aboriginal. Fr. Ted Kennedy, called ‘the priest of the Aborigines’, achieved, through his respect, his personal poverty and the spirit of Vatican 2, a true inculturation of the traditions and customs of the Aborigines in the Gospel and in the liturgy.

The community of St Vincent’s, which Ted directed for almost 30 years, was characterised by its commitment to the Gospel, the warmth of its welcome, its strong community spirit, its openness to the most progressive things that came from Vatican II, its care for the poorest, its intense concern for social justice, and above all its activism for reconciliation between the two Australian communities, Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal.

Mum Shirl died in 1998, Ted in 2003. For their services to the Aboriginal community both received The Order of Australia.

However, already before the death of the priest, Cardinal Pell disapproved of the positions Ted Kennedy took up, regarding them as excessively radical. To deal with the problem, in 2003, when it was necessary to relieve Fr. Kennedy because of his health, he took the decision to put the parish in the hands of the Neocatechumenal Way.

This incomprehensible decision has produced an enormously tense situation at St Vincent’s, that gets worse with every day. As it seems they are accustomed to do, the NeoCatechumenals have come in without any respect for the particular characteristics of the community of St Vincent’s, with their own celebrations apart from the rest of the community, their own liturgical norms, the disrespectful treatment of Aboriginal customs and of the peculiarities of this parish and also the marginalisation of the poorest, the most simple and uneducated who make up a good part of it.

In spite of everything, the Community of St Vincent’s keeps going, working at its task of integration and of service, not only without the support, but even with express boycott, of its Neocatechumenal priests.

In all this effort to keep the original spirit of St Vincent’s alive, in the mobilisation of the efforts (so far fruitless) to get the Archbishop of Sydney to send it more suitable pastors, in its role in keeping alive, in spite of everything, the flame lit by Ted Kennedy and Mum Shirl, the web has played a decisive role. But it has been painful to follow the series of frustrations and disagreements involved, and in me myself it has produced , on more than one occasion, a profound anxiety, like an intense emotional identification, to see how our brothers in the Antipodes share the problems that we (whether communities or close groups) experience here.

However the community doesn’t lose hope and keeps struggling because they know they are not alone. In the web and in the old blog they can see many testimonies to the network of support and solidarity that has been established between other communities whose parishes have been handed over in the last few years by Cardinal Pell to conservative institutes or movements like the Neocatechumnenal Way or Opus Dei.

One of the latest items on the site is the news of a private celebration for Spanish Neocatechumenical pilgrims to World Youth Day with the priests of the parish which was held behind closed doors and with no access to members of the community.

Another example of disagreement is explained in detail in the entry No meal for the Pope. The community, in what it considers one of its principal services, organises twice a week a shared meal in the church itself (Sharing the Meal). It is open to anyone in need who wants to come, generally more than a hundred of the poorest people of the suburb – the photo on the web is of the special Christmas meal. The Neocatechumenal priests and the few ‘missionary’ families sent by Cardinal Pell, refuse to participate in any way with the rest of the community in this service. But it doesn’t end there. Because of the visit of the Pope and the presence of Neocatechumenal pilgrims to World Youth Day, the parish priest decided unilaterally to suspend the shared meal this week, arguing, to the shock and incomprehension of the community, that the church was needed for sessions of catechesis with the pilgrims. This very clearly demonstrates the difference of sensibilities.

In what can be seen as a sad counterpoint to the great Via Crucis that is going to be staged this week, the parishioners of Redfern wrote on the wall of the church some years ago, (and they have written it there again each time the Parish Priest has rubbed it out), this sentence:
Crucified on every city sidewalk, the Aboriginal Christ should be free in his own church among his own people in Redfern.
I will conclude with a final reflection taken from this recent entry (worth a full read, in English), which very much reflects the sentiments of this community and refers specifically to WYD08:
Where is Jesus in WYD08? Not at Randwick, not at St. Mary's Cathedral or the merchandise store across the road. You will find at Jesus' Sharing the Meal ', without the running water, but with plenty of love with those excluded and those who refuse to collude in the clerical abuse of power. Jesus will be with the least of his brothers and sisters.

I beg you to pray for a short while, not for WYD08 (Benedict XVI himself has asked that and you can do so if you wish), but for the community of St Vincent’s in Redfern Sydney, and for its efforts to bring about the Kingdom in spite of all.

PostScript

From a document found on the Encomun blog entitled The Church We Live In.

1. We love the Church; we work in the Church; we feel ourselves members of the Church; we value the Church; and we know that we have met Jesus thanks to it. We know many believing groups and individuals who have strengthened our faith.


2. The Church grieves us; it grieves us that its closed-mindedness to certain modern values keeps so many people away from the Gospel. We affirm that within the Church positions are held (in the areas of organisation, of relations with society or of sexual morality) that are a true scandal for our contemporaries.


3. At an official level, channels and attitudes for dialogue on burning issues are lacking. Often there is silence as if things were taboo, or there is recourse to authority to silence dissident positions.


4. We see renewal in the Church as essential if it is to continue its mission: proclaiming the Gospel of Jesus and collaborating in the establishment of the Kingdom of God.


5. Encomun is for many of our communities a place of reflection and dialogue about the renewal of the Church. Our communities’ own experiences are a sign of a Church renewed and refreshed. Therefore we desire that these reflections, which we wish to share with the people of God, can serve to continue this task.


While we wait for structural changes to happen in the Church, we will dedicate ourselves, through the modest means at our disposal, to curing wounds, feeding hope and joining our efforts at dialogue with those of all people who feel the way we do.




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Last Updated ( Thursday, 24 July 2008 )
 
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