Journeys of a Catholic Poster Girl

“Our faith needs to be the North Star of our lives. Our behavior needs to match our words.” –Archbishop Charles Chaput

Au revoir, limbo…. (and learn more about it than you ever wanted to)

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin at 5:02 pm on Saturday, December 31, 2005

Looks like limbo is on it’s way out (finally)… From the Chicago Trib : (long, yes, but full of good insight and such…)

It may seem half a shame to get rid of a church tradition, however cruel and antiquated, if it can inspire poetry like “The Inferno” or spooky lines like these from Seamus Heaney: “Fishermen at Ballyshannon/Netted an infant last night/Along with the salmon.”

But limbo, that netherworld of unbaptized babies and worthy pagans, is very much on the way out–another lesson that while belief in God may not change, the things people believe about him most certainly do.

This month, 30 top theologians from around the world met at the Vatican to discuss, among other quandaries, the problem of what happens to babies who die without baptism. What they were really doing, as theological advisers to Pope Benedict XVI, was finally disposing of limbo–a concept that was never official church doctrine but has been an enduring medieval theory of a blissful state among the departed, somehow different from both heaven and hell.

Unlike purgatory, a sort of waiting room to heaven for those with some venial faults, the theory of limbo consigned children outside of heaven on account of original sin alone. As a concept, limbo has long been out of favor anyway as theologically questionable and unnecessarily harsh. It is hard to imagine depriving innocents of heaven. These days it prompts more snickers than anything, as evidenced by the titter of headlines here along the lines of “Limbo Consigned to Hell.”

But it remains an interesting relic, strangely relevant to what the Roman Catholic Church has been and what it wants to be. The theory of limbo bumps up against one of the most contentious issues for the church: abortion. If fetuses are human beings, what happens to their souls if they are aborted? It raises questions of how broadly the church–and its new leader–views the idea of salvation.

And it has some real-life consequences. The church is growing most in poor places like Africa and Asia where infant mortality remains high. While the concerns of the experts reconsidering limbo are more theological, it does not hurt the church’s future if an African mother who has lost a baby can receive more hopeful news from her priest in 2005 than, say, an Italian mother did 100 years ago.

“You look at the proper theology, but if there is more consolation, all the better,” said Rev. Luis Ladaria, the Spanish Jesuit who is secretary general of the International Theological Commission, the official body working on limbo. Unlike many issues–the recent emotional debate over homosexuality in the priesthood, for example–limbo seems to garner unanimity that it should exit the church’s stage, even if, at the moment, the exact doctrine that would replace it is unclear.

“Limbo has never been a definitive truth of the faith,” Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, who became Pope Benedict XVI earlier this year, said in an interview in 1984, during his long term as Pope John Paul II’s doctrinal watchdog. “Personally, I would let it drop, since it has always been only a theological hypothesis.”

Debate began with Augustine

As pope, Benedict has said nothing on the subject, though many experts–but not all, it should be noted–say the controversy over limbo began with one of Benedict’s spiritual heroes: St. Augustine.

The theology is complicated, but the bottom line is that Augustine, believing in humankind’s original sin, persuaded a church council in 418 to reject any notion of an “intermediary place” between heaven and hell. He held that baptism was necessary for salvation, and that unbaptized babies would actually go to hell, though in his later writings he conceded that it would entail the mildest of conditions.

It was “a pretty grim doctrine,” said Rev. Gerald O’Collins, an Australian Jesuit and co-author of “A Concise Dictionary of Theology.” “You’re either in hell or you’re not.”

In the Middle Ages, theologians, notably St. Thomas Aquinas, postulated a slightly cheerier idea: limbo, from the Latin “limbus,” meaning a hem or a boundary. Here innocents would live forever in what Thomas called “natural happiness,” if not in heaven.

This was the Limbo of the Babies. There was also a temporary Limbo of the Fathers, where Dante located, among others, Virgil, his guide through hell; Moses; Socrates; Plato; even the gentlemanly Muslim warrior Saladin.

Not doctrine but tradition

Though limbo had no firm scriptural basis and was thus never official church doctrine, it remained a major part of church tradition–as well as one defining image of Catholicism–as either a neat theological compromise or as a bit mean, depending on whom one asked.

It remained strong in 1905, when Pope Pius X stated plainly, “Children who die without baptism go into limbo, where they do not enjoy God, but they do not suffer either.”

But ideas began to change with the reforms of the Second Vatican Council in the early 1960s, in which the church held that everyone–baptized Christians or not–could be eligible for salvation through the mystery of Christ’s redemptive power. Pope John Paul II continued the decline of limbo, omitting the term from the most recent catechism and last year, not long before his death, asking the theological commission to officially consider the question of unbaptized babies.

Pope John Paul, who brought the issue of abortion to the fore of the church’s concerns, appeared interested for a special reason: the fate of aborted fetuses. In his 1995 encyclical, he wrote to women who had abortions, “You will also be able to ask forgiveness of your child, who is now living in the Lord.” He did not say if they were in heaven or limbo.

The mystery of God, and people’s ignorance before it, is, Ladaria said, the starting point for his panel’s work. To some observers of the church, which holds the pope’s judgment infallible on certain matters, the questioning of limbo is a rare, welcome admission of error.

A sign of inclusivity?

This will attract attention “as something that does look like an ability to pull back,” said Rev. James O’Donnell, provost of Georgetown University and a professor of classics. It is, he said, essentially saying, “Let’s progress back to ignorance rather than remain mired in assertion that brings with it perhaps more complication and more trouble than it is worth.”

O’Donnell, author of “Augustine: A New Biography,” said it might also be interesting to see limbo killed off under the rule of Benedict.

Benedict, he noted, is also an Augustine scholar, and the issue of unbaptized babies aside, Augustine generally argued for a broader view of who should be allowed in the church.

Over the years before he became pope, Ratzinger propounded several doctrines that had the “appearance, and sometimes more than the appearance, of exclusivity and separatism” of Catholics over other faiths, he said. Getting rid of limbo, he said, could be read as a sign of Benedict’s endorsing a greater inclusivity into God’s plan.

“Even though Augustine himself would not be particularly tolerant of a doctrine that is kinder to unbaptized children, you could still say that a move in that direction would have an Augustinian quality to it,” he said.

Ladaria said the final report on limbo might be finished in no less than a year.

You know, the part above where it says purgatory is like a “waiting room” for Heaven is what I always thought of as a kid. I thought that purgatory was one big doctor’s waiting room with an abundance of Golden Books that you read (and didn’t run out of new ones–joy!) until the Big Angel in the Sky called your name and you got to see God then. I will say I like my picture better than Dante’s idea of climbing up the mountain. But I digress. :)

Experimental lay movement gets a talking-to

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin at 4:56 pm on Saturday, December 31, 2005

Via Yahoo!

A letter reported by specialist Catholic media from Nigerian Cardinal Francis Arinze, head of the Congregation for Divine Worship, demands that the Neocatechumenal Way movement, which claims thousands of followers, change its practices.

The Neocatechumenal Way, launched in the Madrid slums in 1964 by Kiko Arguello and Carmen Hernandez, celebrates mass on Saturdays instead of Sundays, and communion is administered to the faithful seated around a table.

In addition, lay members of the congregation are allowed to preach during the service, while the priest plays a relatively minor role.

The Vatican’s letter says members of the Neocatechumenate should celebrate mass on Sunday during the normal parish liturgy at least once a month, that all the prescribed prayers should be followed, that a priest or deacon deliver the homily, and that communion be administered while standing or genuflecting.

The Vatican has given the Neocatechumenate two years to bring its practice on communion in line with the norms, while allowing lay people to continue to deliver reflections at the mass, as long as they are brief and not confused with the homily…the new pope is less keen on lay movements, and particularly those that seek to introduce innovations into Church practices. The Neocatechumenal Way, which has its own seminaries, has faced criticism that it resembles a separate sect.

On its own website the movement claims to have communities in 105 countries, mainly in Europe and the Americas, more than 700 ordained priests and hundreds more undergoing training.

Hey, you know, I’m not too keen on “new” movements myself. Call me old-fashioned, but I think Mass should be on Sunday, we should not be “reclining” around the altar, and I don’t want to hear my fellow parishioners preaching. And, um, the priest’s role shouldn’t be “minor”. Why do people constantly feel the need to reinvent the wheel? If it was good enough for Augustine, St. Thomas More, St. Teresa of Avila, St. Francis, and all the other great saints, and the popes, then I’ll take it. Thank you.

A Dubious Distinction?

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin at 4:48 pm on Saturday, December 31, 2005

In the year-end accolades that are coming out, Pope Benedict has been named the “Ant-Gay Person of the Year” by the Washington Blade . Here’s some choice bits courtesy of Yahoo!

…writer Dyana Bagby writes “Presiding over what some describe as the ’strongest bully pulpit in the world,’ Pope Benedict XVI, just eight months into his tenure, has unilaterally targeted gays as moral threats to society.”

From banning gay priests to publicly lobbying against legal recognition for gay couples in Spain and Italy, the Washington Blade reports Pope Benedict XVI has aggressively lobbied against gay rights across the globe.

“His rhetoric is obscene. He wants gays clearly taken care of — it’s almost like the Final Solution,” said Kara Speltz, a Catholic lesbian activist for Soulforce, an organization dedicated to ending anti-gay discrimination within all religions.

ooooookay. So whose rhetoric is obscene here? Just because the Pope doesn’t happen to believe that homosexual “rights” such as marriage are part of God’s order, that doesn’t mean he’s ordering their extermination. Good heavens. Let’s get a grip on our figures of speech, please. When we start sending gays to the gulag, then we’ll talk. But guess what? That’s not going to happen. So let’s get real, please.

B XVI may visit Auschwitz in May

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin at 4:46 pm on Saturday, December 31, 2005

From USA Today :

Poland’s Roman Catholic Church has invited Pope Benedict XVI to visit the former Nazi death camp of Auschwitz during his expected visit to Poland in May, a church spokesman said Thursday.
Stanislaw Dziwisz, the Archbishop of Krakow who was the late Pope John Paul II’s longtime aide, invited Benedict to visit Auschwitz and two cities associated with John Paul’s life, his spokesman said.

“The archbishop of Krakow said he has invited the pope to visit Krakow, Wadowice and Auschwitz and a separate invitation has come from the sanctuary of Kalwaria Zebrzydowska,” spokesman Rev. Robert Necek told The Associated Press.

Necek reiterated that the German-born pope is expected to visit Poland in the second half of May, but hasn’t given an exact date.

tribute to JPII — he was a “regular man”

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin at 4:40 am on Saturday, December 31, 2005

Probably the first of a few JP the Great tributes I’ll be posting in their entirety—yes, they’re long, but nice, so if you have a mind to read them, go ahead…

Lean forward and kiss his ring?
He’d prefer that you give him a bear hug instead.
When Pope John Paul II died on April 2, 2005, it was the humane details the local folks who met him were remembering.
“He was a very unassuming, down-to-earth guy,” said Dave Cole, recalling the day he and his wife Henny entertained Cardinal Karol Wotyla, the future pope.
“He didn’t want anyone to kiss his ring, nothing formal like that. He wanted to hug us. You know how some people come into your house for five minutes and they feel like they’re part of the family? That’s how he was,” she said.
The circumstances that brought the Cardinal from Poland to the Coles’ house in Trooper that day in July 1976 were the result of a happy “accident,” Cole told this reporter last April.
It all began with Henny Cole’s aunt, Sister Bernice, who was a Felician nun working at the Vatican at the time.
“When she knew of people in Rome who were coming over here for some reason, she would tell them if they needed a place to stay that they could use our house,” he noted.
Both Wotyla and his assistant, Father Ambroziak, had traveled from Poland to attend the Catholic Eucharistic Congress, which coincided with the U.S. Bicentennial celebration.
“I arrive at St. Charles Seminary to pick up the priest, and it turns out the Cardinal had no driver to take him around,” Cole recalled.
Even priests are not immune to scoring a few points with the boss, he suggested. Sympathetic to the cardinal’s dilemma, Ambroziak volunteered Cole’s services, and both men rode to Trooper with Cole behind the wheel.
“When he got in my car the first thing I thought of is, ‘What do you say to a cardinal?’,” Cole laughed.
“My wife didn’t even know he was coming with us, but we spent the whole day with him. We took him to a Polish shrine in Doylestown, where he said Mass, and then he came back to the house. We invited all the neighbors over, and their kids.”
As they neared the house, Wotyla asked if it was the family’s summer home.
“I said, ‘Yeah … also winter, fall and spring,’” she said.
The cardinal had a good chuckle over that, noted Cole.
What Cole remembers most about the unexpected visitor was the way he came across like a “lovable grandfather.”
“He was very robust then, very strong. He picked up my daughter Alison, who was two years old then. He was very warm. You just wanted to be around the guy. Over the years so many people have asked me what he was like. And that’s exactly how he was.”
Wotyla had tickets to a Polish composers concert at the Academy of Music in Philadelphia that evening. As a way of thanking the Coles for their hospitality, he insisted they attend the concert with him.
“My wife was planning on having a big dinner at the house, but we were running late.”
Not a problem with this preeminent guest, who was happy to grab a bite to eat anywhere the Coles suggested.
“He was not fussy at all,” Cole said. “He told us this was the only time he had spent with an American family.”
Not surprisingly, the talk eventually turned to the subject of religion.
“Father Ambroziak had said the cardinal was one of the great philosophers of the Catholic Church, and he really was an interesting guy to talk to,” Cole said. “He said ‘You Americans don’t know what freedoms you have. Until the government takes away your religious freedom, you’ll never see your churches full. That’s the way it was in Poland. The government was so anti-religion that it bonded the people together and made the church stronger than ever.’”
“He said, ‘Over here in the United States it doesn’t matter if you go to church or not, that’s your right, your freedom. You just don’t appreciate it until someone takes it away.’”
When the Coles and the cardinal parted ways late that night, Wotyla extended an invitation to the couple to stop by the Vatican if they were ever in Europe.
During a vacation to Rome many years later, they took him up on his offer.
By then, of course, Wotyla had become Pope John Paul II.
“When he got elected in ‘78 it really blew our minds to think it was the guy who spent the day at our house,” Cole said. “When we visited him at the Vatican, he actually remembered us.”
In 1982, Cole had written to the pope, asking him to pray for his father, who was dying of cancer.
“About two weeks later we received a letter from the Apostolic Delegate in Washington, D.C. that the pope had gotten my letter and that he was forwarding to me a handwritten blessing and rosaries for my father. We never really expected that, but it shows you how caring and thoughtful this man was.”
Cole admitted he never had an inkling that the man he opened his home to would one day be made head of the Catholic Church.
But Ambroziak’s parting words to him following the ride back to St. Charles Seminary that night were eerily prophetic:
“He told me, ‘You may have hosted the next pope.’”
Father Patrick McManus of Visitation B.V.M. Catholic Church was only eight years old when Pope John Paul II visited Philadelphia in October 1979, a year after assuming the papacy.
“When he came here, I remember sitting in front of the television, watching it the entire time,” McManus recalled.
“I didn’t really know the significance of it until later on, when I became a priest, but I look back on it fondly now.”
Twenty years after being glued inexplicably to the screen that day, the newly ordained McManus was celebrating Mass with the pope in Rome.
Cardinal Anthony Cardinal Bevilacqua, then Archbishop of Philadelphia, had written a letter to the Vatican on McManus’ behalf.
“It’s not especially unusual for a newly ordained priest to celebrate Mass with the pope, but you do need somebody to sponsor you,” McManus said. “A friend and I went over to Rome and we didn’t know it would happen until the day before when we got a phone call in our hotel room. They said the Holy Father would like me to come in the morning and celebrate Mass with him.”
When he first saw Pope John Paul II, McManus remembers being struck by his “prayerful” bearing.
“You knew there was something different about him. As soon as you walked into the chapel and saw him kneeling down praying you knew you were in the presence of a holy man, almost like a saint, right in your midst.”

–from the Times-Herald of Philadelphia

I’m baaack!

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin at 2:29 am on Saturday, December 31, 2005

Hey everyone–
Hope you all had a marvelous and enjoyable Christmas!! I am back from my “holiday” break and will begin posting a slew of things tomorrow. Among them–holiday pope stories, the female pope (again!), movie review, and all sorts of other goodies. Check back tomorrow for more!

Some Christmas pics (for those interested)

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin at 7:02 pm on Sunday, December 25, 2005

Merry Christmas, everybody!! The news today is a bit light, so I thought I’d post the first round of Christmas pics, with explanations…..hope you are all having a blessed and joyous day!

L-R: Tom, me, and Branden at the Christmas fete Richelle and I threw at Bon Vie bistro up at Easton. Great party, good food, good times….very enjoyable.

More friends at Bon Vie…L-R: Doug and Becca, Richelle and Brian, Brian and Leah Yoder


Evening at Karen’s place in German Village (very cool): the puppies (!) and me and Karen

The family at Christmas: Mel, me, and Bryan




Photos from Branden’s Christmas Party: 1) me and Troy in the basement pool room (with Alex in the back); 2) Tiff and I in the living room in front of the ‘blue tree’–one of many!; 3) Sean, Tony and Tom before playing Mario Tennis (again…); 4) Andrea and Lindsay enjoy my Snickerdoodle cake (recipe appearing here soon!) with Doc Froggy!!

Merry Christmas y’all!

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin at 9:49 pm on Friday, December 23, 2005

Posting will be sporadic the next few days, what with the holiday and all, but I’ve just put up a bunch of stuff to make you happy. :) Tomorrow I’ll post a few other things (I think), but if I don’t, have a MERRY CHRISTMAS :) ! I’ll see you next week.

B XVI: Fashion Icon?

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin at 9:46 pm on Friday, December 23, 2005

From Yahoo!

Whether it’s Prada and Gucci, or just fancy ecclesiastical tailoring, Pope Benedict XVI is his own man when it comes to dressing.

Just days before Christmas, Benedict showed up at his weekly public audience in St. Peter’s Square wearing a fur-trimmed stocking cap that could easily have passed for a Santa Claus hat.

Earlier this month, Benedict made another fashion statement – donning a deep red velvet cape trimmed in ermine for the trad-itional visit to the statue of the Madonna that marks the beginning of Rome’s Christmas season.

Coming on the heels of gossip about Gucci shades and bright red Prada loafers, the vintage styles have turned Benedict into something of a fashion celebrity.

“Those red shoes have made quite an impression,” said Vatican historian Alberto Melloni.

But those who know the 78-year-old Joseph Ratzinger from his years as head of the Vatican’s doctrinal office before he became pope in April dismiss any notion of vanity in his dressing habits.

“He wouldn’t know Gucci from Smoochi,” said Marjorie Weeke, a former official at the Vatican. – AP

B XV: Election was a surprise

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin at 9:46 pm on Friday, December 23, 2005

From www.voanews.com:

….”[r]ecalling his own election on April 19, the pope said he was faced with a task that was completely beyond anything that he would ever have imagined as his vocation. He recalled, as he put it, the “fright” with which he had received the news.
He added that he accepted the job only because of his great faith in God. He asked for the prayers of the faithful to sustain him in his mission.”

As they say in The Princess Diaries : “courage is not the absence of fear, but the realization that something is more important.”

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