Thursday, October 7, 2021

Real talk is underway!

Just a few thoughts

From the Plenary Council

T  The need for new wineskins – a sense of urgency for the need for change.

T  Lots of enthusiasm and strong level of commitment

T  “Women’s participation is THE ISSUE. It must be up front, but isn’t yet”

T  Post Royal Commission - The Catholic community is living a collective trauma.

T  Explicit action is required from the hierarchy - atonement for church abuse.

T  “Everything is on the table!” – Archbishop Coleridge

Comment from John Warhurst – Sense Or Urgency Rising

Comments from Francis Sullivan:- The Journey

Interview by Geraldine Doogue - The Council in Session

The Signs Of The Times

Ø Will Catholics get what they want from the Plenary Council?

Ø Contemplating woundedness, the marginalised

Ø One year on: Reflecting on Fratelli Tutti

Musical Reflection

¯ Gather Us, O God

¯ Lord, We Come To Your Table

¯ Take The Word Of God With You

Wednesday, October 6, 2021

Lord let your mercy be upon us, as we place our trust in you.

Just a few thoughts

From the Plenary Council

T  On Monday afternoon a number of delegates spoke of their concern about the official Agenda. It was felt that the Agenda did not contain sufficient emphasis on the many issues mentioned by Catholics in the 17,500 submissions received. However, Council president, Archbishop Timothy Costelloe, made it clear that delegates must accept that discussions stay within the bounds of the statutes of Canon Law. So that really dampens the scope of allowable discussions.

T  It is also interesting to note that this is the first Australian Plenary Council that has people other than bishops and priests as the delegates. There are 278 delegates. 89 (32%) are women and 91 (33%) are lay people

Comment from John Warhurst

T  “…..one thread was strong, though not unanimous:- thoughtful and passionate advocacy for women preaching.”

T  “….Francis Sullivan, whose brave initial Intervention yesterday morning on the issue of women’s participation in governance and ordained ministries made me so proud.”

T  Topics were varied, including marriage, secular society and young people, and some not easily pigeon-holed. An increased role for women in the church was taken up by various speakers, lay and religious, and pointed references made to the minority representation of women (89) and laity (91).

Comments from Francis Sullivan:-

T  “….what struck me most starkly were the voices that have been effectively silenced in the Plenary’s Agenda.”

T  “Some Catholics…. resist any practical measures that would seem to ‘change Church teachings’.”

T  “It is simply not enough to say that everyone is loved by God and then draw a line in the sand over the full participation in the faith community of our ‘rainbow’ sisters and brothers, daughters and sons, grandchildren and friends.”

Lay Women At The Council – Interview by Geraldine Doogue – Audio about 25minutes

The Signs Of The Times

Ø Catholic Plenary awakens hope despite women’s fading trust in the hierarchy

Ø Council members begin work of Communal Discernment

Ø Faith leaders urge nations to care for creation

Musical Reflection

¯ Gather Your People

¯ Taste and See

¯ Go Now You Are Sent Forth

Tuesday, October 5, 2021

Preach the Gospel at all times. Use words if necessary.

Just a few thoughts

·        From the Plenary Council:

T  Listening is more than just hearing  --  Pope Francis

T  To listen deeply is to connect!  --  Miriam-Rose Ungunmerr-Baumann

T  The 1st session of the Plenary Council was a very formal procedural affair. I thought the introductory aboriginal presentation was great.

T  Official Agenda was presented, but no discussion about it was live-streamed.

·        Plenary Matters: Fr Frank Brennan interviewed by Geraldine Doogue about Sunday’s Opening Mass. – Very interesting audio-about 25minutes

·        Comment on the Monday session from Francis Sullivan – “For me, they are genuine voices that cry out to be heard. They are the groans of a people wanting to cultivate a place of nurture and spiritual and moral direction. A place that is inclusive and respectful of differences. A place that actually makes real our belief that God is love, and we are here to explore how love works.”

·        Comment on the Agenda from John Warhurst – “My intention was to take the opportunity to draw a line in the sand by recording for posterity that there was a serious disconnect between the voices of the faithful, voiced with enormous passion and effort, and the final ‘distilled’ version. In doing so I was expressing a widely held view among council members.”

The Signs Of The Times

Ø Yesterday was Feastday of St Francis of Assisi and World habitat Day

Ø Key initiatives to follow Adelaide Diocesan Assembly

Ø Sharing the faith

Musical Reflection

¯ The House That Love Is Building

¯ Eat This Bread

¯ Prayer Of St Francis

Monday, October 4, 2021

Plenary Council 1st Session


Just a few thoughts

·        Thank you Stephanie and Alan for your reflections about the Adelaide Diocesan Council Assembly.
This is the first occasion that in our parish I have heard anything at all about the Plenary Council at Sunday Mass.

·        It is true that since Vatican II Council many of its significant resolutions have not been realised. Any change that we as lay Catholics may seek will not happen unless the hierarchy of the Church agrees.
Let us pray that these men will be courageous and acknowledge that all of us are the Body of Christ.
Let us also seek to encourage young people to make their mark in the future growth of the Church.

·        Speak boldly, speak with passion and listen with an open and humble heart  --  Pope Francis 2018

·        “What we need is a listening and inclusive Church — a Plenary Council at which the clergy and the laity have a proper place at the table, at which the voices of the ‘rusted-on’ and the ‘cheesed-off’ Catholics are heard and at which the bishops are respectfully listening as much as speaking,”  --  Fr Frank Brennan

·        The opening session of the Plenary Council starts at 10:30am today. It may be interesting to see if the Agenda that was planned will actually be endorsed.

Plenary Reflections

¯ Adelaide Diocesan Assembly Closing Session  --  This video lasts 2 hours, but many parts I found very useful and informative. Here are some summarising screenshots:

¯ All Are Welcome






¯ Open My Eyes

Each of these topics has been elaborated in the video and I recommend that you watch the video for those details.

¯ Go Make A Difference

Sunday, October 3, 2021

Commitment

Just a few thoughts

·        Today the Plenary Council opens!
I must admit that I feel scared!
The Catholic Church can’t afford to fail in this exercise. But will it have the courage to truly adopt Vatican II and catch up with ‘the times’?

Opening Mass Booklet

Opening Mass livestreamed starting at 1:30pm

·        Fr Frank Brennan’s encouraging words – Audio  --  Text

·        That future depends on the values of self-government, our sense of duty, loyalty, self-confidence and regard for the common good. We are a diverse country, and getting more diverse. And these virtues are what keep this great country together.  --  Jeff Miller

·        There is an important message that all political leaders should be taking from the response to coronavirus, and that is that people are prepared to make hard choices for the common good.  --  Caroline Lucas

Plenary Reflections

Ø Plenary Council 2021: Mary MacKillop Inspires Us To Be A Heart-Centred Church

Ø A Gift Of God – The 5th Plenary Council of Australia

Ø Pope chooses ‘Listen’ as Communications Day theme  -- 

Ø Sunday Reflection  --  Accepting Disappointment in Love

Musical Reflection

¯ Spirit Of God

¯ A Blessing Hymn For Australia

¯ Set Your Heart on the Higher Gifts

¯ I Have Loved You

Saturday, October 2, 2021

‘God listens to those who are in need.’

Just a few thoughts

·        There is no higher religion than human service. To work for the common good is the greatest creed.  --  Woodrow Wilson

·        People cannot be free unless they are willing to sacrifice some of their interests to guarantee the freedom of others. The price of democracy is the ongoing pursuit of the common good by all of the people.  --  Saul Alinsky

Plenary Reflections

Ø Cracking open the Plenary Council: Helpers wanted for Mark Coleridge and the Holy Spirit.

Ø Three Catholic Archbishops: A viral infection

Ø The Plenary Council agenda is not fit for purpose

Musical Reflection

¯ One Quiet Man

¯ Veni Sancte Spiritus (Taizé)

¯ Take And Eat

Bits & Pieces

v 1869: - Birth of Mahatma Gandhi
“Gandhi constantly highlighted the gap between what we do, and what we are capable of doing. On this International Day, I urge each and every one of us to do everything in our power to bridge this divide as we strive to build a better future for all.”  -- UN Secretary-General António Guterres

Friday, October 1, 2021

There is never any room for complacency in our Christian life.

Just a few thoughts

·        The Plenary Matters podcast, hosted by Australian broadcaster Geraldine Doogue, will follow the Plenary Council.  Join Geraldine in this daily podcast as she talks to other Catholics who hope - as she does so fervently - that the Church will 'resurrect' itself.

·        It's a little embarrassing that after 45 years of research and study, the best advice I can give people is to be a little kinder to each other.  --  Aldous Huxley

Plenary Reflections

Ø 5th Plenary Council: what hope for success?
Just days away the 5th Plenary Council of Australia will open on Sunday 3 October 2021 with a Solemn Mass and mixed expectations. For over it hangs a critical question: can it deliver the much-needed renewal of a drifting and wounded Church gone off mission? – Catholics For Renewal

Ø There is never any room for complacency in our Christian life. Because we have been given so much so much more is expected of us.

Ø How the Plenary might resolve the unresolvable

Ø Free speech doesn’t mean you can say whatever you want, wherever.

Musical Reflection

¯ Alleluia! Raise the Gospel

¯ By Our Love

¯ For the beauty of the Earth