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The Curt Jester

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

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No sour grapes

by Jeffrey Miller April 16, 2011April 16, 2011
written by Jeffrey Miller

Looking over the list of bloggers invited to the Vatican-Bloggers conference I guess that I will have to get over the fact that the Papal Helicopter will not be landing in my yard to take my wife and I on an all expense paid trip to this conference. My one critique of this event is that is was announced with such a short lead time seemingly assuming any bloggers wanting to attend would already be there for the Beautification of John Paul II the day before. Oh well – I guess it can’t always be about me – wah!

Looking over the list I was unfamiliar with most of the blogs invited. Yet it is a good reminder that St. Blogs extends far beyond just the English-speaking Catholic blogosphere – the Church is truly universal.

Some of the names I did recognize at first glance were:

Thomas Peters at The American Papist
Fr. Roderick Vonhögen at SQPN
Elizabeth Scalia at The Anchoress (Patheos)
Katrina Ebersole at The Crescat
Susan Windley-Daoust at The Ironic Catholic
Taylor Marshall at Canterbury Tales
Lisa Hendey CatholicMom.com
Rocco Palmer Whispers in the Logia
Joan Lewis of EWTN
Anna Arco of The Catholic Herald,

Certainly an excellent choice of representatives for English speaking Catholic blogs and I wish them all a fruitful trip. Thomas Peters speech at the last Catholic Media Celebration shows he has thought deeply on the subject and can provide good input. Fr. Roderick is of course the perfect choice being so involved in Catholic media and evangelization. Lisa Hendey has done great work and I got to meet her when she asked questions of Mark Shea, Amy Welborn, and myself at the first Catholic Media Celebration. The Crescat being there just makes a heart smile! So I will be very interested to follow the coverage by these capable bloggers.

April 16, 2011April 16, 2011 3 comments
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Book Review

Kevinapalooza

by Jeffrey Miller April 16, 2011April 16, 2011
written by Jeffrey Miller

Recently I have been reviewing some of the works of Kevin O’Brien. Previously I have reviewed three books he narrated for Ignatius Press where I both enjoyed the books read and his voice talent. This time I am reviewing an audiobook, his own book, and a DVD from his show Theater of the Word.

As a Chesterton fan Manalive is one of my all time favorite novels of his and really one of my all time favorite novels. This story Innocent Smith seems to me to often be the story of G.K. Chesterton. Chesterton was a man deeply thankful for all things and would go beyond stopping and smelling the roses, but stopping and noticing he had two legs. This novel also reminds me of some aspects of his The Napoleon of Notting Hill in the court that occurs in the house. His idea of neighborhoods becoming sovereign translates in to the same for homes.

This is my second read of the novel and even though I was quite aware of how the plot would resolve itself, it was still great fun chocked full of Chesterton’s wisdom and his view of life. Innocent Smith is such an interesting character who shows that he is not the oddball and the one crazy, but ourselves as we settle down to life not seeing things afresh.

I listened to the just released Audiobook version of Manalive as put out by Ignatius Press. Chestertonian and actor Kevin O’Brien is wonderful as usual as once again he acts as a whole cast of players and gives us a version of Manalive I think Chesterton would have liked. Available here

“The Church of the Kevin” is a short book which uses material from his newsletter for his comedy murder mysteries he performed across the country along with some essays from his blog. Like most humor directed pieces it is hit and miss, but mostly hit. There is a lot of funny stuff contained. I especially liked his re-imagining of “It’s a wonderful life” where Clarence is a materialistic determinist with a major in moral relativism. Another funny bit was his take off on the million monkey-infinite time-Shakespeare meme that takes it in an interesting direction considering how inane the original meme is.

I really liked the essays in the section of the book “Trying to be serious” which combined both humor and critical content, a combination I especially enjoy and one in which Kevin O’Brien pulls off quite well. The Guide to Bad Homilies would have been especially funny if it wasn’t especially true – though we often laugh because something is true. His spending of a Christmas with relatives and the conversations that ensued considering that their points of view did not match Kevin’s in the realm of the Church and morality showed an issue we often come against ourselves along with some commentary on Seinfield and The Office. “How to make bad art” was an essay on the subject close to my heart considering just how much bad Christian/Catholic art there is out there from statues and paintings to film. What Christians are willing to accept as the height of art is quite depressing to me.

The last section included some poems. Now I generally have a poetic tin ear, but I enjoyed Kevin’s poems. Though that might not exactly be a ringing endorsement for him. Here is a sample of one that I really liked.

A Triolet for Pagan-Christians
Oh, come, oh come, enneagram
And save us from His precious love
We pimp ourselves for Fraud and Sham
Oh, come, oh come, enneagram
Who needs the Father, Son, and Dove?
Oh, come, oh come, enneagram
And save us from His precious love

The Church of the Kevin

“In 2007 Fr. Joseph Fessio of Ignatius Press and Archbishop Raymond Burke, then archbishop of St. Louis, teamed with actor and playwright Kevin O’Brien to launch a production company to spread the Gospel message through stage, film, television, audio recordings and the internet. Inspired by the clandestine theater company run by Karol Wojtyla in Nazi occupied Poland, also called the Theater of the Word, this traveling company seeks to evangelize through drama.”

As part of the Theater of the Word one of the shows they created is “The Honor of Israel Gow” which is one of the Father Brown mysteries from G.K. Chesterton. Kevin’s portray of Father Brown was quite inspired even if physically he doesn’t quite match the Father Brown I envisioned from the descriptions in the book. He does portray that spark and intensity of Father Brown quite well. Again as a critic of much of Catholic media I was happy to see that this show was well produced and the location shooting added to the story. Frank C. Turner who played Israel Gow was really perfect for the part. There is even an appearance from the great promoter of Chesterton – Dale Alquist. There was something missing though from the performance of the actor who played Flambeau though. Overall this was a solid performance of a Father Brown story. This can be obtained via EWTN Catalog.

April 16, 2011April 16, 2011 0 comment
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Book Review

Thoughts for the Journey Home

by Jeffrey Miller April 16, 2011April 19, 2011
written by Jeffrey Miller

I admit to being a bit of a Marcus Grodi fanboy. I’ve watched the Journey Home on EWTN since the very first episode in I believe 1997 which coincided with my increased investigation of the Catholic Church. I’ve even read his book of fiction “How firm a foundation.” So I was quite happy to receive a review copy of “Thoughts for the Journey Home.”

One of the things I have enjoyed about his show is that while the majority of guests are Protestant converts they appreciate what they learned as Protestants while at the same time rejoicing in receiving the fullness of the faith in the Catholic Church. The shows are never angered snipes at Protestantism, but more a reasoned awareness of the flaws inherent in Protestantism and also a acknowledgment that more unites us than divides us. Though this is also pretty much true of all Protestant coverts and not just the ones that were on the Journey Home.

Marcus Grodi as a convert himself is an excellent example of this attitude and this new book presents a thoughtful look at the Journey Home. It is only part autobiographical as Marcus thinks about a range of topics concerning conversion and the problems for mainly Protestant converts and of course the problems Protestant clergy have in adapting from what might have been a fairly well paid job to a very uncertain future. I have come to greatly admire those who have stepped out in the deep believing the truth of the Catholic Church while having other difficulties ranging from friends and family not happy with such a conversion.

Marcus has had years to think about this subject and of course took action with his Coming Home Network International to help converts and so has much experience in this area. Thus his thoughts on the subject are well worth reading even at a general level. While the book certainly has apologetic potentials it goes on to look at many human factors in conversions and various difficulties. Marcus Grodi is also skilled at making worthwhile parallels to make a subject understood that reminded me to some extent of Jesus’ parables that took the common subjects such as farming to make a point. Marcus Grodi does the same thing here and currently living on a farm takes some similar approaches. I really like one chapter comparing the Church to a football team that kind of takes off from the Body of Christ and at the same time shows that it is rather silly to blame the quarterback when the rest of the team is underperforming. We often seem to think of bishops/priests in this way forgetting we are also on the team and have our important roles to play also.

A part of this book is also addresses the struggles of the Christian life and growth in holiness that affects us all as his book of short essays covers a range of topics written in his engaging manner. The last section addresses the history of the Coming Home Network International along with a short history of EWTN.

This review was written as part of the Catholic book reviewer program from The Catholic Company. Visit The Catholic Company to find more information on Thoughts for the Journey Home. They are also a great source for serenity prayer and baptism gifts.

April 16, 2011April 19, 2011 2 comments
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Saints

Did you know?

by Jeffrey Miller April 16, 2011
written by Jeffrey Miller

Zac Brakefield has once again turned out a very professional example of Catholic media. this time in commemoration of st. Bernadette.

April 16, 2011 1 comment
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Punditry

Father Pfleger willing to leave Church rather than resign pastorate

by Jeffrey Miller April 13, 2011
written by Jeffrey Miller

The embattled pastor of St. Sabina Roman Catholic Church told radio show hosts Tavis Smiley and Cornel West this weekend that he would look outside the Catholic Church if offered no other choice but to work at a Catholic high school.

The Rev. Michael Pfleger also said on the “Smiley & West” public radio program that he had been banned from speaking at events in the archdiocese and blamed pressure from conservative Catholics and the National Rifle Association for his most recent clash with Chicago’s Cardinal Francis George.

“I want to try to stay in the Catholic Church,” Pfleger said. “If they say ‘You either take this principalship of [Leo High School] or pastorship there or leave,’ then I’ll have to look outside the church. I believe my calling is to be a pastor. I believe my calling is to be a voice for justice. I believe my calling is to preach the Gospel. In or out of the church, I’m going to continue to do that.”

In an interview with the Tribune, Pfleger clarified that he feels called to preach and push for social justice in a Catholic context. He said he loves the Catholic Church and prefers to stay there. But going to Leo full-time would not happen, Pfleger said.

“I’ve always said I could not do something that I don’t feel called or equipped to do,” he told the Tribune. “A full-time position at Leo is not something I’m equipped to do. I think Leo has made it clear they don’t see any need for me to come there. For both sides this would be a lose-lose. [source]

Well I would agree with half of that lose-lose.

I seem to be under some misunderstanding. I thought bishops directed where their priest went. Diocesan priests don’t make vows, they make promises to their bishop and one of those promises is obedience. Obedient priests don’t go on television questioning where there bishop is going to send them and they especially don’t talk about going outside the Church if they don’t get their way. Fr. Pfleger had developed a cult of personality over at St Sabina and his past antics have not served that congregation well.

In diocese with a bishop of a more liberal-bent they have no problem with priests faithful to the magisterium. They can ship them off to small country parishes knowing they will not complain in the least and I can think of circumstances where this has happened. Priests like Fr. Pfleger though seem to think it is all about them and there abilities and obedience only comes into play if they agree with what the bishop wants.

Earlier when I had read of Chicago’s Cardinal Francis George considering a new job assignment for Fr. Pfleger I thought this rather odd. Sending up seeming trial-ballons is out-of-place. The Cardinal should simply have made the assignment and while I can understand his pastoral approach with Fr. Pfleger considering his record, he must also consider the damage this priest does.

April 13, 2011 21 comments
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Punditry

Faithful Dissidents

by Jeffrey Miller April 12, 2011
written by Jeffrey Miller

(CNSNews.com) – A Catholic priest who works with a group that advocates “full equality” of homosexuals would not say whether he agrees with the Catholic Church’s teaching on homosexuality.

Equally Blessed, which describes itself as “a coalition of faithful Catholics who support full equality for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people both in the church and in civil society,” held a Mar. 30 briefing on Capitol Hill.

An oxymoronic description in the way they mean it. Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people already have full equality in the Church and are called to holiness and chastity just as every single other person in the Church. What this group wants is not equality, but Animal Farm equality where some are more equal in that the sin of homosexual acts is to be accepted while everybody else’s sins are to be repented of.

…CNSNews.com asked Rev. Massingale, “Section 2357 of the Catechism of the Catholic Church says that ‘homosexual acts are contrary to the natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved.’ That’s a quote. So, from your presence here today, is it safe to say that both of you disagree with this portion of Catholic law?”

Rev. Massingale said, “First, we have to become clear about, that it’s not Catholic law, it’s a Catholic teaching. It’s a distinction and a difference there. So let’s phrase your question more precisely –” at which point CNSNews.com asked, “Do you disagree with Catholic teaching on that?”

A distinction and a a difference and total nonsense.

Ah yes as an associate professor of moral theology at Marquette University getting that exactly backwards is to be expected there. A law is an ordinance and while Catholic teaching has various levels of assent it is always more than just a law. Canon law for examples follows Catholic teachings and corresponds with it. A dogma is not a law but a formally revealed truth concerning doctrine.

He then follows this with a bunch of mumbo jumbo that he would call nuance. I have more respect for dissidents who say they support homosexual acts than those who crouch their dissent in the language of equality. Exactly why on they campaigning on Capitol Hill? Exactly what law condones unjust discrimination on those with same-sex attraction? Exactly what rights are they being denied? This of course is all about same-sex marriage and not the phony pretenses that Rev. Massingale, STD dances around.

Oh and what “faithful” groups started “Equally Blessed”?

Well Call To Action, DignityUSA, Fortunate Families, and New Ways Ministry combined to create this advocacy group.

[Source]

April 12, 2011 2 comments
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News

Was Sitting Bull a Catholic?

by Jeffrey Miller April 11, 2011
written by Jeffrey Miller

On Friday Taylor Marshall posted this pitcher of Sitting Bull.

People usually don’t see this picture of Sitting Bull wearing a crucifix since the photo is often cropped.

Now I had heard before that Sitting Bull was Catholic convert, but an article I saw today casts doubt on that. Mark Armstrong writing for Catholic Lane notes that this is not known for sure and while Father Pierre De Smet and Bishop Martin Marty were people Sitting Bull trusted and were also men who had baptized Indians in the thousands we have no baptismal records to verify.

His conversion into possibly becoming a Catholic makes a small headline in the New York Times from a story on September 27, 1883, “An unforeseen obstacle to his (Sitting Bull’s) reception has been met in the shape of two wives, neither of whom Sitting Bull can make up his mind to part with.” The article concludes, “Until the red man brings himself to put aside one or the other of his marital companions he will be debarred entrance.”

Thus, he still wasn’t a Catholic in late 1883 according to the NY Times article, which references Bishop Marty’s efforts to convert him as well: “[T]he famous warrior’s reception into the church, will be delayed for a time, it ever takes place. Sitting Bull is at Fort Yates where he has been under the instruction of Bishop Marty for a long time.

The whole article has some in depth historical background and also addresses the deathbed conversion of Buffalo Bill Cody to the Catholic Church. The problem with Sitting Bull’s two wives was apparently never resolved and so it is unlikely he was ever officially received into the Catholic Church, though he might have been baptized.

April 11, 2011 2 comments
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Book Review

Happy Catholic

by Jeffrey Miller April 9, 2011
written by Jeffrey Miller

What do you get when you have a book of eclectic quotes from books of fiction, TV, movies, blogs, and scripture and then add short pithy reflections after each quote or set of quotes? Why you get the new book Happy Catholic: Glimpses of God in Everyday Life
by Julie Davis from the blog Happy Catholic.

The book starts with a short version of her conversion story from non-belief from a family of non-believers and the initial event that started moving her to accept grace and then a realization that struck her after a period of trying to test God. Her conversion story itself is quite interesting and not quite what I expected. She as a lifelong book lover only turned to theology and books on the spiritual life after becoming a Catholic.

Her quote journal has been put to good effect on her blog and this fruit is what drives this book. The quotes in an of themselves our interesting and they really span a variety of sources and the quotes are often not spiritual in nature – at least at first blush. What Julie has done though is adding short reflections on these quotes and how they struck her. As she demonstrates these passages of thought can hit you in different ways as we live our lives. A quote or a plot point that might have struck us one way when we were not living our faiths can take on a deeper or more significant meaning when we come into faith. I really liked her short pithy reflections since they made their points simply and did not try to hammer them home over and over in added verbiage. Some can write long reflections that are quite worthy of the time and some have the gifts to writer shorter ones that also can jog your mind into seeing something.

Now Julie is a self-confessed book skimmer in that she often will skim through a book and then come back later and re-read it. I am not as much of a book skimmer and certainly did not skim through this book for fear of overlooking a good nugget. It also did not hurt that Julie pulled her quotes from areas and sources I also love. To have a book quoting Alice Cooper (now an Evangelical), Futurama, Firefly, SF Movies, and a vast swath of culture not in the SF realm is certainly to my taste, but her reflections should benefit all.

I simply loved this book. I’m not just saying that because she even pulled a paragraph from my blog for inclusion in her book. It is rather cool to find something you wrote quoted. I loved her book even if she pulled from sources such as my blog. I am of the Groucho Marx camp in that I would not join a club that would have me as a member.

One quote of hers I really loved in this book is this “It is my blessing and my curse, I suppose. While I’m laughing, I’m always thinking.” Wow, this is something I can certainly relate to. Though readers of this book will also find themselves laughing and thinking in that she has the gift of making serious points with humor.

You can even get an autographed copy here.

April 9, 2011 1 comment
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Punditry

Fr. Bourgeois and his reasons for supporting women’s ordination

by Jeffrey Miller April 8, 2011
written by Jeffrey Miller

Well I guess it was too much to hope for that Fr. Bourgeois would repent of his support of women’s ordination. Though really it was something to pray and hope for.

He has written a letter to his superior affirming his support for women’s ordination.

As you would expect it didn’t take him long to bring up the priestly abuse scandal as if this justifies his support of women’s ordination. Over 75 percent of teachers are women yet teacher sexual abuse is an epidemic. For example 2,570 teachers were punished for sexual misconduct from 2001 to 2005 alone, for actions that ranged from fondling to viewing child pornography to rape.

He advances arguments that are rather lame and shows he has no idea what the actual reasons for the Church’s teaching.

1. Implying that an all mail priesthood makes a statement that women are inferior is like saying men not being able to be mothers make them inferior. Hasn’t he ever read St. Paul and how the Body of Christ has different organs while still remaining part of the Body of Christ? Are men inferior to women because the only human person to be born without original sin and to remain sinless is Mary?

2. “How can we, as men, say: “Our call from God is authentic, but your call, as women, is not”? ” Simply because it was Jesus’ will. He asks “Who are we to reject God’s call of women to the priesthood?” I would ask who are we to say that God is calling women to the priesthood? Does Fr. Bourgeois have an authentic call detector. If so he would be useful to screen out seminarians.

3. He gets around to answering why Jesus didn’t select women as apostles. Fr. Bourgeois actually says “As we know, Jesus did not ordain anyone.” What!!! Did he receive his clerical collar in a box of Crackerjacks? It doesn’t take much thinking to point to the Last Supper and the establishment of the Eucharist. The Eucharist is an act of sacrifice and requires a priest. The instructions Jesus gave instituted the priesthood and the center of the priesthood the Eucharist. This understanding has always been present with the Church and to make such a casual statement such as “As we know” is to either show extreme ignorance or deception.

Council of Trent said: “If anyone says that by the words ‘Do this in remembrance of me’ (Lk 22:19; 1 Cor 11: 24) Christ did not establish the apostles as priests or that He did not order (ordinasse) that they and other priests should offer His body and blood, let him be anathema”.

He goes on to talk about how St. Mary Magdalene was the first witness to the resurrection. So exactly how does that relate to the ministerial priesthood? He then writes “Mary Magdalene became known as “the apostle to the apostles.” A phrase that first appeared in the tenth century and not from early Christian writers as many have said. Hippolytus (170-236) did refer to Mary Magdalene as a female apostle, but not individually but as part of a whole group of women sent by Jesus. The word Apostle now refers to the men Jesus ordained, but the word itself generally means “commissioned by another” so would not automatically refer to priesthood. It is obvious Hippolytus uses it in strict sense with his writing of the details on the the martyrdom or death of the Twelve Apostles He uses it in a another sense in his list of seventy apostles which are all bishops. If Hippolytus thought “female apostles” were ordained it would be rather strange that of seventy apostles he lists no women.

4. He then pulls out the chestnut  that “A 1976 report by the Pontifical Biblical Commission, the Vatican’s top Scripture scholars, concluded that there is no valid case to be made against the ordination of women from the Scriptures.”  Well that is not exactly correct.  What the Pontifical Biblical Commision did say was:

“It does not seem that the New Testament by itself alone will permit us to settle in a clear way and once and for all the problem of the possible accession of women to the presbyterate,”

Plus it is a silly argument for a Catholic to take a Sola Scriptura approach and not mention Sacred Tradition and a no time from the early Church on was women’s ordination anything other than condemned.

Another argument of his is “Lutheran, United Church of Christ, Presbyterian and other Christian churches, God’s call of women to the priesthood is affirmed and women are ordained. Why not in the Catholic church?” Well in those same churches we also have acceptance of contraception, abortion, homosexuality. Why not the Catholic Church? Because the Catholic Church is the one true Church protected from error and those other churches aren’t.

5. The final lame argument is “in Galatians 3:28, “There is neither male nor female. In Christ Jesus you are one.”.” And does it prove that women can be ordained? No, we are all one in Christ. We are all loved by him, graced by him, given everything we actually need from him. Is the fact that as a man that I am not a priest mean that I can not be one in Christ? What his argument would mean if taken seriously is we are not one unless everyone of us is ordained. His final argument is “Furthermore, the Second Vatican Council’s Pastoral Constitution on The Church in the Modern World states: “Every type of discrimination … based on sex. .. is to be overcome and eradicated as contrary to God’s intent.”” But the document goes on to say “rightful differences exist between men” and of course Pope John Paul II wrote in Ordination Sacerdotalis

“Furthermore, the fact that the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of God and Mother of the Church, received neither the mission proper to the Apostles nor the ministerial priesthood clearly shows that the non-admission of women to priestly ordination cannot mean that women are of lesser dignity, nor can it be construed as discrimination against them. Rather, it is to be seen as the faithful observance of a plan to be ascribed to the wisdom of the Lord of the universe.”

Plus if Fr. Bourgeois is going to quote Vatican II how about Lumen Gentium and the fact that as a minimum the ordinary papal magisterium requires “Religious submission of intellect and will” and really this teaching requires the assent of faith being part of the ordinary and universal teaching of the Church.

Later, as you would expect, he brings up the primacy of conscience which is not in conformance with the Catechism and Vatican II’s Lumen Gentium says “That discernment in matters of faith is aroused and sustained by the Spirit of truth. It is exercised under the guidance of the sacred teaching authority, in faithful and respectful obedience to which the people of God accepts that which is not just the word of men but truly the word of God.(112) Through it, the people of God adheres unwaveringly to the faith given once and for all to the saints,(113) penetrates it more deeply with right thinking, and applies it more fully in its life.” A well-formed conscience has a voice that tells us how to conform our will to God’s will. A conscience that rejects the magisterium is not a well-formed conscience.

Well at least Fr. Bourgeois did not say the reason only Jesus choose male Apostles was because of societal pressure. I do wish that for once that supporters of female ordination would actually address the arguments made by those faithful to the Church. Instead they talk as if bringing up equality should be enough to win the argument.

No doubt soon we will see the response by the Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers which has little choice but his expulsion. Though I must admit being surprised to see them actually remove somebody for heterodoxy since so many in the order are infected with dissent. Maybe their hand is forced in this case or even better obedience to the Church.

April 8, 2011 6 comments
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News

Vatican seeks meeting with bloggers.

by Jeffrey Miller April 8, 2011
written by Jeffrey Miller

The Vatican is inviting Internet bloggers to Rome next month for an unprecedented meeting to foster “informal exchange and contact.”

The May 2 event aims to take advantage of the influx of international bloggers coming to Rome for the beatification of Pope John Paul II a day earlier.

While all are invited to apply, only a limited number of blogging attendees will receive a formal invitation. The objective of the Vatican departments organizing the event is to fill the 150-seat St. Pius X auditorium with a group representing the diversity of the “blogosphere.”
Participants will be selected with reference to the timeliness of request, blog subject and the language and geographical location of the blogger. Attention will also be given to the nature of blogs as institutional or private, multi-voice or personal.

The encounter marks a first for the Church, which has put emphasis on opening up channels with new media platforms through a series initiatives in recent years.

The Vatican has only gradually entered social networks, setting up YouTube and Facebook accounts for the Pope and even promoting John Paul II’s May 1 beatification through Twitter.

The Holy See’s relationship with blogs, however, has been a little more prickly. During a press conference to present Pope Benedict XVI’s message for World Social Communication’s Day last January, Archbishop Claudio Maria Celli decried “aggressive blog sites that excommunicate and don’t have a Christian style of presence.”

While it was not clear to which Church-themed blogs he referred, he said that Internet users needed to approach blogs with an eye on “to what point they are truly Catholic.”

But the May 2 event aims give bloggers and Church representatives a chance to move beyond the relatively impersonal medium of the Internet and establish a more personal connection.

According to an April 7 statement from the two Vatican departments in charge, the objective is “to allow for a dialogue between bloggers and Church representatives, to listen to the experiences of those who are actively involved in this arena, and to achieve a greater understanding of the needs of that community.”

Cool, though I was disappointed to find there was a signup list. I was hoping for a Golden Ticket and an all expense paid trip. Really though my first thought was to look in my email spam folder for an invite from the Vatican. Or maybe a fancy envelop in the mail. Don’t they know who I am? Or maybe they do and thus no invite.

Seriously though I wish I could go to Rome for such a meeting, a Catholic bloggers dream.

April 8, 2011 2 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.

Conversion story

  • Catholic Answers Magazine
  • Coming Home Network

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Blogging since July 2002

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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.
My conversion story
  • The Curt Jester: Disturbingly Funny --Mark Shea
  • EX-cellent blog --Jimmy Akin
  • One wag has even posted a list of the Top Ten signs that someone is in the grip of "motu-mania," -- John Allen Jr.
  • Brilliance abounds --Victor Lams
  • The Curt Jester is a blog of wise-ass musings on the media, politics, and things "Papist." The Revealer

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•SQPN - Tons of great Catholic podcasts Subscribe to Podcast RSS
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Archives

Catholic Sites

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Ministerial Bloghood

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  • Father Joe
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  • Orthometer
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Bloghood of the Faithful

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  • Always Catholic
  • American Chesterton Society
  • American Papist
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  • And Sometimes Tea
  • Ask Sister Mary Martha
  • auntie joanna writes
  • Bad Catholic
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  • Charlotte was Both
  • Christus Vincit
  • Confessions of a Hot Carmel Sundae
  • Cor ad cor loquitur
  • Courageous Priest
  • Creative Minority Report
  • CVSTOS FIDEI
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  • Defend us in Battle
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  • Dyspectic Mutterings
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  • InForum Blog
  • Jeff Cavins
  • Jimmy Akin
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  • Open wide the doors to Christ!
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  • The B-Movie Catechism
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