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The Curt Jester

"It is the test of a good religion whether you can joke about it." GKC

The Weekly Francis

The Weekly Francis – Volume 26 – 8 September 2013

by Jeffrey Miller September 8, 2013September 8, 2013
written by Jeffrey Miller

pope-francis2-300x187This version of The Weekly Francis covers material released in the last week from 24 July to 7 September 2013.

The Weekly Francis is a compilation of the Holy Father’s writings, speeches, etc which I also post at Jimmy Akin’s The Weekly Francis. Jimmy Akin came up with this idea when he started “The Weekly Benedict” and I have taken over curation of it.

Homilies

  • 7 September 2013 – Remarks during the Celebration of the Vigil of Prayer for Peace

Letters

  • 4 September – Letter – To Vladimir Putin on the occasion of the G20 St. Petersburg summit

Speeches

  • 24 July 2013 – Greeting to young Italians at the conclusion of his Visit to Saint Francis’ Hospital, WYD 2013
  • 28 August 2013 – Greeting to the young people from the Diocese of Piacenza-Bobbio, located in northern Italy
  • 5 September 2013 – To His Holiness Baselios Marthoma Paulose II, Catholicos of the Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church

Daily Homilies (fervorinos)

  • 3 September 2013 – Jesus has no need of armies to overcome evil
  • 5 September 2013 – Jesus has a promise and a mission for every Christian.
  • 6 September 2013 – Daily Mass for Friday
  • 7 September 2013 – Overcome temptation to be “Christians without Jesus”

Papal Tweets

  • “By his coming among us, Jesus transforms our lives. In him, we see that God is love, he is fidelity he is life who gives himself.” @pontifex, 3 September 2013
  • “We want in our society, torn apart by divisions and conflict, that peace break out!” @pontifex, 3 September 2013
  • “With utmost firmness I condemn the use of chemical weapons.” @pontifex, 3 September 2013
  • “Let the cry for peace ring out in all the world!#prayforpeace” @pontifex, 3 September 2013
  • “With all my strength, I ask each party in the conflict not to close themselves in solely on their own interests. #prayforpeace” @pontifex, 4 September 2013
  • “There is no such thing as low-cost Christianity. Following Jesus means swimming against the tide, renouncing evil and selfishness” @pontifex, 5 September 2013
  • “Peace is a good which overcomes every barrier, because it belongs all of humanity #prayforpeace” @pontifex, 5 September 2013
  • “Dear young people, pray with me for peace in the world #prayforpeace” @pontifex, 6 September 2013
  • “All men and women of good will are bound by the task of pursuing peace. #prayforpeace” @pontifex, 6 September 2013
  • “Pray for Peace!
    https://www.facebook.com/news.va.en
    #prayforpeace” @pontifex, 7 September 2013

Note: Due to problems with using copyrighted material from the Vatican the eBook version of The Weekly Francis has been suspended. For users of the previous ebook volume I have some suggestions for alternatives on how to best read these documents especially on mobile platforms.

September 8, 2013September 8, 2013 0 comment
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Book Review

Sisters in Crisis Revisited: From Unraveling to Reform and Renewal

by Jeffrey Miller September 4, 2013
written by Jeffrey Miller

Having admired the reporting and coverage provided by Ann Carey regarding women in religious life in the United States I had been interested in reading her book “Sisters in Crisis.” Considering this book was first published in 1997 I had wished for an updated version especially considering recent history. So I was delighted to see Sisters in Crisis Revisited: From Unraveling to Reform and Renewal which exactly fulfilled my desire.

There was a lot of information I wanted to see regarding the history of women religious in the United States from mostly the sixties forward. Exactly how did we come to the current situation and exactly who were the people that had a fundamental influence on this is something I am very interested in. As a convert I am always seeking to fill in my lack of knowledge regarding the Church in the United States.

A book of this type can become easily polemical and just come down to “religious habits good”, “pant suits bad” along with various stereotypes.

Finally, I am uncomfortable with using the terms liberal and conservative for religious orders because of the political connotations of the terms and also because they carry negatie images for many people. Therefore, I follow the example of sociologist Helen Rose Fuchs Ebaugh by using the term change-oriented to describe sisters of religious institutes inclined to seek a new definition of religious life by expanding the boundaries usually associated with the religious state. I use the term traditional to describe sisters or institues that adhere to the traditional understanding of religious life as contained in Vatican II documents and other Church teachings. Neither term should be construed as inherently negative.

I thinks this was a good decision as I have also dropped using terms like liberal, conservative, progressive etc when describing Catholics as much as possible. Even if I might quibble with the term change-oriented, I find it useful here.

In 2009 when the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith announced a formal doctrinal Assessment of the LCWR and then later the Doctrinal Assessment itself I remember the news being reported as if this was something totally out of left-field and such a surprise. This books shows that if anything it was decades later then it could have been. Still the CDF acts slowly and deliberately and there are many good reasons for this.

This is quite a comprehensive history detailing both all of the personalities involved and the sequences of events. Over and over again I was impressed just how much research was involved. Even more I was impressed by the writing style that lays out all the information without becoming just a dry regurgitation of facts. Mostly the author just lets the facts of the actual history tell the story with minimal editorial content. Ann Carey’s own comments and opinions are short and to the point and nicely punctuate the history. Basically they are snark-free, although you can note the authors astonishment at times regarding the history she is putting forth.

There was just so much I learned from this book that really helped me fill in the gaps. As much as I enjoyed it the book does not exactly make for joyful reading. The author describes how much of this came about as a “perfect storm” that took place among the cultural storm of the sixties and the false narrative of how Vatican II was going to change everything. The fact that religious life really needed a renewal is something easy to forget. There were many aspects of religious life that needed updating or a second look at. The education of women in religious life had been deficient and was only just starting to be addressed. The high numbers of those in religious life in the early sixties partly hid the fact that the healthiness of these religious orders was not all that it should have been.

Really it seems that not only did the baby get thrown out with the bathwater, but that the bath was thrown out also. The term change-oriented is accurate in that it seems change-for-change sake was the order of the day. The Vatican’s call for updating and experimentation was mostly met with a giddy-excitement of the possibilities for new ways of living religious life. What later became knows as “The spirit of Vatican II” seems to be quite evident in this early thinking. Unfortunately it seems the majority of women religious did not actually get to see the documents of Vatican II or were treated with some early translations that were not as accurate as they could have been. Word at the time that Canon Law was also going to be rewritten caused even more turmoil and the false expectation of the changes to be made and the false assumption regarding the applicability of the current Canon Law and other Church documents.

There were so many parts of this history that were very frustrating to read. It was not that tens of thousands of those in religious life decided that everything was now in flux and acceptable. Mostly it seems to me that there were a dedicated core of women who came to believe in a totally different view regarding how religious life is to be lived that often had much more of a political identity and a push towards some specific social justice issues. Over and over you see the names of many of these individuals repeated as part of different groups and efforts. Ann Carey describe how some of this happened as a coup and that seems rather accurate. The transition of the US Conference of Major Superiors of Women’s Institutes (CMSR) to the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR) is rather an amazing story.

What surprised me was just how much dissent, equivocations, and disdain for the so-called institutional Church there was at the start of these events. Documents and guidance from the Church were often met by a very negative response. Any intervention from bishops and the Vatican was sometimes described as violence. If they were not consulted they considered it violent even as they took actions without consulting others in their orders. Some of the behavior I have noticed from the LCWR is quite evident in its history. For example dialogue meaning we are willing to enter into dialogue with you as a delay tactic or until you just give in. How the LCWR came about and its very name is an example of this. This book provides tons of documentary evidence regarding the adversarial relationship these leaders showed to the Church and the tactics used that seemed more akin to dirty politics than to religious life. One piece of information I found in the book I thought to be an excellent example of what went wrong. A building was constructed for retired and infirmed nuns that included a beauty shop but no chapel.

Again it should be emphasized that so often those who became leaders in this change-oriented movement were not necessarily representative of those they were suppose to represent. This is also evident by the fact that the Vatican approved the CMSWR (Council of Major Superiors of Women Religious) a group of traditional-minded women in religious life that broke away from the LCWR. At the time the Vatican had never approved two different organizations representing women religious in the same country.

I really could go on and on with this review since there was just so much information that fascinates me and so many episodes of this history that grabbed my attention. Again I was impressed with how Ann Carey wrote on this topic steering clear of demonizing people and being quite balanced in the telling of this history.

While this book totally satisfied me in regards to a specific history of women religious associated with the LCWR, women’s ordination movements, and other associated groups there are other aspects I would like to learn more about. For example I would love this author or another one to chronicle a history for example of women religious associated with the CMSWR. Mother Angelica’s story has been told already in book form, but I bet there are tons of other interesting stories involving other women’s religious institutes and the paths they took that took a divergent path from the LCWR. Mother Dolores Hart in her book [The Ear of the Heart][heart] also chronicles to some extent adaptations after Vatican II at Regina Laudis which were much more aligned with the intent of what Vatican II called for.

There are references to men in religious life along with priests, especially those who inspired or were sympathetic with the change-oriented orders. There is probably a closely paralleled history regarding them along with some major differences. Plus the other context I would like to see are the currents worldwide in religious life in how they compared and diverged from what happened here.

September 4, 2013 6 comments
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Punditry

No blood for Presidential credibility

by Jeffrey Miller September 3, 2013
written by Jeffrey Miller

Via Frank Weathers.

 

972712_10200502153464992_472847449_n

Although my opposing war in Syria surely means I must be racist.

September 3, 2013 1 comment
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News

Aliens have grown tired of crop circles

by Jeffrey Miller September 3, 2013September 3, 2013
written by Jeffrey Miller

You just never know when the pope might “crop” up.

popecircles

 

The headline at the Telegraph left much to the imagination Giant pope face ploughed into field.

Italian artist, Dario Gambarin, uses a tractor to create the 328 foot picture, entitled Love Liberates, in a field in Castagnaro near the northern Italian city of Verona.

The portrait took six hours to complete and is the latest piece of land-art by the artist who says he uses his plough as a painter would a brush, on farmland belonging to his parents.

September 3, 2013September 3, 2013 2 comments
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Prayer

Ember Alert

by Jeffrey Miller September 3, 2013
written by Jeffrey Miller

From the Angelus on 2 September:

… All men and women of good will are bound by the task of pursuing peace. I make a forceful and urgent call to the entire Catholic Church, and also to every Christian of other confessions, as well as to followers of every religion and to those brothers and sisters who do not believe: peace is a good which overcomes every barrier, because it belongs all of humanity!

I repeat forcefully: it is neither a culture of confrontation nor a culture of conflict which builds harmony within and between peoples, but rather a culture of encounter and a culture of dialogue; this is the only way to peace.

May the plea for peace rise up and touch the heart of everyone so that they may lay down their weapons and be let themselves be led by the desire for peace.

To this end, brothers and sisters, I have decided to proclaim for the whole Church on 7 September next, the vigil of the birth of Mary, Queen of Peace, a day of fasting and prayer for peace in Syria, the Middle East, and throughout the world, and I also invite each person, including our fellow Christians, followers of other religions and all men of good will, to participate, in whatever way they can, in this initiative.

On 7 September, in Saint Peter’s Square, here, from 19:00 until 24:00, we will gather in prayer and in a spirit of penance, invoking God’s great gift of peace upon the beloved nation of Syria and upon each situation of conflict and violence around the world. Humanity needs to see these gestures of peace and to hear words of hope and peace! I ask all the local churches, in addition to fasting, that they gather to pray for this intention.

Let us ask Mary to help us to respond to violence, to conflict and to war, with the power of dialogue, reconciliation and love. She is our mother: may she help us to find peace; all of us are her children! Help us, Mary, to overcome this most difficult moment and to dedicate ourselves each day to building in every situation an authentic culture of encounter and peace. Mat, Queen of Peace, pray for us!

Considering the short lead time between the Pope’s announcement and the 7th of September I wonder how many Catholics will even hear about it? Father Z brings up this topic and wonders about possible remedies.

Certainly the media isn’t going to get the word out for the most part since there are three times as many stories about the Pope’s alleged “selfie” compared to his call for a day of fasting and prayer for peace in Syria.

As far as I can tell most diocese and parishes really have no way to quickly get the word out in a situation like this where the parishes bulletin or an announcement ahead of time is not really possible.

Although there is an excellent solution that should be much better known. The service flocknote started by Matthew Warner is really the perfect solution for both regular communication and special cases like this. I wish my diocese had this.

During the last papal election the service popealarm.com provided a white smoke alert and supposedly they are continuing with sending information to those who signed up regarding something “particularly noteworthy.” I would say the Pope’s call for this day of prayer an fasting should be something they notified people about.

Really we need a kind of amber alert for prayer, or should I say Ember alert.

Canonist Ed Peters posts on “A fast on Sept 7 is not canonically required, but…”

Granting that popes are not held to the same canonical standards as are diocesan bishops in regard to their manner of establishing obligatory days of penance (1983 CIC 331, 1244), I do not think that Pope Francis “proclamation” of September 7 as a day of fast and prayer for peace in Syria is canonically binding on the faithful. The manner of the proclamation used (an Angelus talk) and not used (e.g., publication in the AAS), and of the vocabulary used (e.g., invitation) and not used (e.g., decree, direct) suggests the urgent-but-still-exhortative character of the pope’s plea, not its binding character. Besides, in cases of “doubt of law”, potential obligations are not binding (1983 CIC 14, 18).

In short, a Catholic who does not observe a fast on Sept 7 does not violate canon law. What such disregard for the pope’s unusual request might indicate about one’s desire to act with the Successor of Peter is another question. + + +

Be there or be square.

September 3, 2013 2 comments
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The Weekly Francis

The Weekly Francis – Volume 25 – 2 September 2013

by Jeffrey Miller September 2, 2013
written by Jeffrey Miller

pope-francis2-300x187This version of The Weekly Francis covers material released in the last week from 21 August to 2 September 2013.

The Weekly Francis is a compilation of the Holy Father’s writings, speeches, etc which I also post at Jimmy Akin’s The Weekly Francis. Jimmy Akin came up with this idea when he started “The Weekly Benedict” and I have taken over curation of it.

Angelus

  • 25 August 2013
  • 1 September 2013

Daily Homilies (fervorinos)

  • 2 September 2013 – The threat of gossip

Speeches

  • 21 August 2013 – Pope Francis meets a group of students and teachers from the Seibu Gakuen Bunri Junior High School of Saitama, Japan

Papal Tweets

  • “Jesus is the gate opening up to salvation, a gate open to everyone.” @pontifex, 27 September 2013
  • “Let us allow Jesus into our lives, and leave behind our selfishness, indifference and closed attitudes to others.” @pontifex, 27 September 2013
  • “The love of God is not something vague or generic; the love of God has a name and a face: Jesus Christ.” @pontifex, 29 September 2013
  • “Faith is not something decorative or for show. To have faith means to put Christ truly at the centre of our lives.” @pontifex, 30 September 2013
  • “Let us ask Mary to help us fix our eyes intently on Jesus, to follow him always, even when this is demanding.” @pontifex, 31 September 2013
  • “Let us pray for peace: peace in the world and in each of our hearts.” @pontifex, 1 September 2013
  • “War never again! Never again war!” @pontifex, 2 September 2013
  • “We want a peaceful world, we want to be men and women of peace.” @pontifex, 2 September 2013
  • “How much suffering, how much devastation, how much pain has the use of arms carried in its wake.” @pontifex, 2 September 2013

Note: Due to problems with using copyrighted material from the Vatican the eBook version of The Weekly Francis has been suspended. For users of the previous ebook volume I have some suggestions for alternatives on how to best read these documents especially on mobile platforms.

September 2, 2013 1 comment
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Punditry

More of a groupie than a selfie

by Jeffrey Miller August 29, 2013
written by Jeffrey Miller

pope-groupie

 

I just don’t get why the media and some Catholics are calling this a “selfie.”

Oxford Dictionaries Online’s quarterly update defined selfie as “a photograph that one has taken of oneself, typically one taken with a smartphone or webcam and uploaded to a social media website.”

This is more of a “groupie.”

It is bad enough that we have terms like this and then don’t even use them correctly.

The media though always like pictures that they think are somewhat ironic when it comes to the Pope, bishops, priests, and those in religious life. Show them doing something “normal” and somehow it is news.

Still I like the picture itself which no doubt is much better than the one taken on that cell phone at arms length.

 

 

August 29, 2013 10 comments
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Humor

Priestbots

by Jeffrey Miller August 28, 2013August 28, 2013
written by Jeffrey Miller

Eye of the Tiber hilarious as usual:

Prototype clergydroid Fr. SRT4–11392 celebrating its first wedding ceremony.

Vatican––The Vatican has confirmed reports today that an agreement has been reached with the International Federation of Robotics (IFR) to begin development of what they are calling “Clergydroids.” The news comes as relief to many seminary directors around the world that have seen their numbers plummet in the past few decades. “With so little priests and so many Catholics, this is going to help assure that every parish not only has a pastor of their own, but also an associate pastor,” Father Tobi Riland told the press earlier this morning. “I  have had the pleasure of having a prototype absolve me of my sins. I’ll tell you one thing…he didn’t…excuse me, it didn’t forget the words of absolution!” One Vatican official, Monsignor Phillip Rudolph, who spearheaded the negotiations, told EOTT that “when you see those big, blue glowing eyes peering through the confessional grill at you, it feels as though they’re burning right through you. Seriously though…they freaking burn. Look at this burn mark on my throat. It’s a malfunction in the prototype that the IFR promise to resolve before their final launch next May.” Another issue with of the clergydroid prototype Fr. SRT4–11392 includes a recent frying of some of its mechanisms and kinematics after an altar boy attempted to pour water on the clergydroid’s titanium fingers. Witnesses say that Fr. SRT4–11392′s final words before catching fire were, “Lord, wash away my iniqui…iniqui…iniqui…iniqui. Oh, no…just when I was learning to love.”

Source

futurama_robot_priest
Stories involving robots that have obtained intelligence have been SF staples over the years. As pure conjecture what would happen if an artificial creature was actually sentient? Then such a creature could come to know God. This could cause problems though (besides Baptism and having to be soaked in rice afterwards to avoid system failure.). I can easily imagine a Robot Ordination Conference upset that the Catholic Church will not ordain them. The horror of inequality and making robots second class citizens in the Church. Robots citing St. Paul There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor female: for you are all one in Christ Jesus.” while perhaps wearing pant suits. No doubt we would have all the sympathetic story from the media about robots desiring ordination and the injustice of it all. Especially after the Episcopalian Priestbots.

While we are conjecturing about such Priestbots, how about programming them with the three laws ala Asimov.

The first law would obviously have to be “Say the black, do the red.”

Hey maybe just one law would be enough.

In reality though I am extremely skeptical of an artificial intelligence leading to actual sentience. Instead of AI I much prefer SF writer Mike Flynn’s term Artificial Stupidity (AS) as much more accurate term regarding programming of machines.

August 28, 2013August 28, 2013 4 comments
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Punditry

Trends in YA literature

by Jeffrey Miller August 28, 2013
written by Jeffrey Miller

A couple of years ago Steven D. Greydanus wrote an excellent essay A House Divided: Broken Homes, Flying Houses, Divorce, and Death in Family Fantasy Films. I thought that what he had to say was dead on. Some of the movies he discussed were based on children’s books.

During the summer the site Sync offers YA literature in audiobook formats. Each week during this time they usually have a fairly recent YA fiction audiobook and one of more classic literature. What I have noticed of the YA fiction are some similarities to what Mr. Greydanus wrote. In the last couple of years I can’t think of one book I read or listened to in this genre that actually had an intact family. If the children were not orphans than it was usually the case that they only had a mother or rarer only a father.

Such a contrast between classics such as the ones written by Madeleine L’Engle. I had been reading through the Kairos first-generation books and looking at the other YA books I have read in the last couple of years there is quite a contrast. Now many Fantasy novels have had the trope of the orphan who becomes the hero partly out of revenge. Now though it just seems that there must be a broken family regardless of the setting of the novel.

The other thing I have noticed is just how much deception and lying is part of these plots. Children lie and deceive either their one parent, whoever is taking care of them, or some authority figure. There is almost never a lesson learned in this and some resulting character development. The children/young adults “know better” and just have to do this for some apparent good. Moral relativism is the status quo even for the heroic figure. While I enjoyed the Harry Potter novels, the amount of lying that Harry does throughout and with no apparent consequences is an aspect that annoyed me.

Another common thread in many of these YA novels is just how dark they are or how often it involves the death of young adults. The situations contrived call for this to happen and becomes a major part of the plot as for example “The Hunger Games” trilogy. Dystopian futures seem to dominate.

Now I can understand various plot tensions and how conflict is a necessary part of a story. Yet this was done before without a dominance of broken families and gloomy futures. Maybe I am just getting older and instead of saying “Get off my lawn” I am saying “get off my bookshelf.”

While I am unable to eloquently write about these trends I see, I do wonder if others have noticed the same?

August 28, 2013 5 comments
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HumorPunditry

When narrative meets satire

by Jeffrey Miller August 26, 2013
written by Jeffrey Miller

What happens when your narrative meets satire?

Yesterday morning, the the Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason and Science (Official) Facebook page posted the following bombshell:

According to the new laws, revealing or receiving confidential Vatican information is now punishable by up to two years in prison, while newly defined sex crimes against children carry a sentence of up to twelve years. Because all sex crimes are kept confidential, there is no longer a legal way for Vatican officials to report sex crimes.

The only problem is that this article came from a parody web site (similar to the Onion) called Newslo. (source)

This happens from time to time when over-the-top satire intersects with a negative narrative. It is just funnier when the self-identified “brights” who live by “pure reason” fall for a satiric story.

Still it is a good reminder for all of us to check the source of an article before committing mouse-click to post. I know over the years I came close to stumbling regarding this before realizing something was satire. I use to run a parody blog with a progressive nun persona called “Thoroughly Modern Mary” and their were a number of comments responding that fell for the satire. Even my “Moloch Now!” parody blog got comments from people who didn’t catch on.

August 26, 2013 4 comments
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About Me

Jeff Miller is a former atheist who after spending forty years in the wilderness finds himself with both astonishment and joy a member of the Catholic Church. This award-winning blog presents my hopefully humorous and sometimes serious take on things religious, political, and whatever else crosses my mind.

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Jeff Miller is a former atheist who after spending forty years in the wilderness finds himself with both astonishment and joy a member of the Catholic Church. This award winning blog presents my hopefully humorous and sometimes serious take on things religious, political, and whatever else crosses my mind.
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