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US priests' association wants to focus on formation
National Catholic Reporter ^ | June 28, 2017 | Jeannine Gramick

Posted on 06/28/2017 2:38:59 PM PDT by ebb tide

US priests' association wants to focus on formation

  • Fr. Bryan Massingale, left, and Bishop Gregory Hartmayer, right, addressed the Association of U.S. Catholic Priests in Atlanta, June 19-22. (Paul Leingang)
  • A liturgical dancer is seen at the Mass presided over by Atlanta Archbishop Wilton Gregory. (Paul Leingang)
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Atlanta

"All means all — no exceptions, no small print. God loves all of us, whatever our differences," Fr. Bryan Massingale said as he recalled the anniversary of the Orlando massacre of LGBT people in the Pulse nightclub a year ago.

Amid sustained applause from 170 members of the Association of U.S. Catholic Priests, the Fordham University theology professor challenged the sixth annual assembly gathered in Atlanta, June 19-22, to retrieve a crucial insight of Martin Luther King Jr. — the need to "redeem the soul."

According to Massingale, "We are in a struggle for the soul of America." To heal a fractured society is not just a quest to overturn racial or other discriminatory laws. There is a far deeper reality to redeem — the soul. The soul is a set of meanings and values that informs a way of life.

"What does President [Donald] Trump's election reveal about us as a nation?" Massingale asked. The ministerial challenge we face is "us." Trump has found a way to tap into people's fear of the stranger. Deep-seated emotions like racism, anti-immigrant sentiment, or homophobia, for example, cannot be combated politically because they are rooted in soul sickness, a profound warping of the human spirit.

Removing Trump is not the answer, he maintained. Sooner or later another will arise as long as we have soul-sickness. Massingale called for a reclaiming of King's vision to counter soul-sickness by visualizing a great world house in which all people live together and learn to live in peace.

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"We are also in a struggle for the soul of U.S. Catholicism," said the recipient of the association's St. John XXIII Award. "We talk more about religious liberty than about Jesus Christ. We talk more about the Fortnight for Freedom than the reign of God. We need less talk about the catechism and the code of canon law and talk more about the joyful witness of passionate charity found in Pope Benedict XVI's first encyclical, Deus Caritas Est," continued Massingale, again amid persistent applause.

The St. John XXIII Award is an honor given annually by the Association of U.S. Catholic Priests to those who exemplify the principles, ideals, and spirit of love set forth by St. John XXIII and embodied in the documents of the Second Vatican Council. The award was given to Massingale "for his generous response to God's call to priesthood, the pastoral wisdom he has exemplified by his courageous choice of focus in his studies, the clarity of his teaching and writing, and his application of Catholic Social Teaching, as envisioned by the Second Vatican Council."

In the last month, the U.S. church saw this soul struggle played out when Bishop Thomas Paprocki of Springfield, Illinois, issued a diocesan policy that people in same-sex marriages cannot take Communion, get baptized, or even have a Catholic funeral, and that violations of the policy would be punished according to canon law. Meanwhile, Cardinal Joseph Tobin welcomed a pilgrimage of LGBT Catholics to the Newark archdiocese's Cathedral of the Sacred Heart.

The soul struggles among the U.S. bishops are mirrored in the U.S. presbyterate, according to Fr. Bob Bonnot, chair of the 1,200-member organization's leadership team. More recently ordained priests have been trained in a clerical culture not in sync with Pope Francis' vision of the church as a "field hospital," where bishops and priests are encouraged to "smell like the sheep."

To influence the training of future priests, the association's assembly passed a goal to "establish a working group to contribute to the [U.S. bishops' conference] USCCB's current project of reviewing the Program of Priestly Formation." The goal states that the Association of U.S. Catholic Priests will share their experiences of pastoral work, which cannot be rigid, "not black or white, but grey." The group is well positioned to give input through Archbishop John Wester of Sante Fe, its episcopal moderator. Wester, who attended the meeting, is a member of the bishops' Committee on Clergy, Consecrated Life and Vocations, which oversees seminary formation.

Redeeming the soul of the U.S. church in parishes was a theme developed by Jack Jezreel, an assembly speaker and founder of JustFaith Ministries. He contrasted Vatican I parishes, where clergy were seen as the ministers, with Vatican II parishes, where all the baptized are ministers

"Most U.S. parishes are Vatican one-and-a-half parishes, but we need to make them a beehive" where all the baptized are buzzing with justice and faith, Jezreel concluded.

And faith was evident throughout the assembly. After each major address and before each vote, the chair called for a few moments of silent prayer. In addition, more than half of the participants came early to participate in a one-day retreat facilitated by Gregory Hartmayer, a Conventual Franciscan, who served mainly as a principal and pastor before becoming bishop of Savannah.

At the retreat, Hartmayer told the story of a priest who blessed his chalice on his ordination day, but put a scratch on the inside of the chalice.

"I didn't like that," he said, "but now I understand. I need to embrace my own vulnerability because the flaw is the place that allows the Spirit to come in and give life."

Speaking of the need to find private "Sabbath spaces for grace," in addition to the public prayer of the church, the Franciscan maintained, "Without prayer, our lives will lack meaning." The Sabbath spaces are sometimes painful because "we see our dents and scratches." Because of all the attention, accolades and privileges of the clerical state, a priest needs to keep in mind that "he is to be a servant who washes feet or a shepherd who takes care of others. Be a pastor, not an employer," Hartmayer urged.

Faith was also evident in a visit to the Martin Luther King Jr. National Historic Site and in the celebration of a spirited Eucharist planned by the National Black Catholic Clergy Caucus. Amid lots of hand clapping and rhythms of a robust choir, Atlanta Archbishop Wilton Gregory presided at Mass as liturgical dancers in elegant black and white dresses flowed up and down the aisles.

The group will meet next year in Albuquerque, New Mexico.*

[Jeannine Gramick is a Sister of Loretto who has been involved in a pastoral ministry for lesbian and gay Catholics since 1971. She co-founded New Ways Ministry and has been an executive coordinator of the National Coalition of American Nuns since 2003.]


TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; Moral Issues; Religion & Politics
KEYWORDS: francischurch; gramick; homos; trumpderangement
The soul struggles among the U.S. bishops are mirrored in the U.S. presbyterate, according to Fr. Bob Bonnot, chair of the 1,200-member organization's leadership team. More recently ordained priests have been trained in a clerical culture not in sync with Pope Francis' vision of the church as a "field hospital," where bishops and priests are encouraged to "smell like the sheep."
1 posted on 06/28/2017 2:38:59 PM PDT by ebb tide
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To: ebb tide

I thought the title was at first, fortification.


2 posted on 06/28/2017 2:49:43 PM PDT by alternatives? (Why have an army if there are no borders?)
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To: ebb tide

Gotta love those Novus Ordo “liturgical dances.”

That’ll bring them back to mass.


3 posted on 06/28/2017 2:52:05 PM PDT by Catmom (We're all gonna get the punishment only some of us deserve.)
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To: ebb tide

It all continues to point back to Vatican II.....


4 posted on 06/28/2017 2:52:28 PM PDT by piusv (Pray for a return to the pre-Vatican II (Catholic) Faith)
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To: ebb tide

My Church is in trouble.


5 posted on 06/28/2017 2:57:01 PM PDT by Mercat (Everytime an old man farts, a butterfly dies.)
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To: Mercat

+1


6 posted on 06/28/2017 3:00:12 PM PDT by Ouchthatonehurt (Sehnsucht)
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To: ebb tide
“We need less talk about the catechism and the code of canon law and talk more about the joyful witness of passionate charity found in Pope Benedict XVI’s first encyclical, Deus Caritas Est,” continued Massingale,”

Why can we not talk about both?

It seems like the US priests’ association wants to speak to “feelings” rather to God's actual word and traditional Church doctrine.

“Removing Trump is not the answer, he maintained. Sooner or later another will arise as long as we have soul-sickness. Massingale called for a reclaiming of King's vision to counter soul-sickness by visualizing a great world house in which all people live together and learn to live in peace.”

Communist politics as viewed by a leftist, plain and simple.

Question to Father Massingale- how did this “soul sickness arise? Could it possibly be refusing ALL of God's word and just cherry picking the things you like?

7 posted on 06/28/2017 3:19:46 PM PDT by themidnightskulker (And then the thread dies... peacefully, in it's sleep....)
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To: ebb tide

I think it was Hilary White who said: “The Church could not survive another ‘conservative’ Pope.”

Every one of these gay, pro-abortion whack-a-doodles was fully known to JPII and Benedict, who did nothing about them.

With one of their own as Pope, they are coming out of the closet fast and furious. The next Pope will have NO excuse for leaving them in place.


8 posted on 06/28/2017 3:23:35 PM PDT by Arthur McGowan (https://youtu.be/IYUYya6bPGw)
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