PERTH, WA: April 11, 1991
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Catholic schools need more teachers
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Bishop Healy blesses the cross presented by Kalgoorlie Catholic School head girl Fleur McIntyre and head boy (obscured) Graeme Barter.
. . . says bishop in Kalgoorlie
Vocations for teaching in C atholic schools are needed, Bishop Healy said at Kalgoorlie last Sunday.
Speaking after he had blessed school extensions Bishop Healy said the major contributors to the school's present spirit "If you love Kalgoorlie are the many lay teachers Catholic School," he said who have come from all to the students' "and I parts of the state and all know you do — the best parts of Australia. thing you could do for the school is to think of He praised the teachers' being a teacher in this or devotion and commitsome other Catholic ment and the contribuschool." tion they had made to the
development of the school and computer education. (See also Page 2.)
Bishop Healy also praised the Josephite Sisters for their 50 years of service to the school and to education in the outback. He singled out the St John of God Sisters who pioneered the school in
1897 next to their hospi-
tal block and who on their departure gave their convent and chapel to the school.
"But the sisters gave more than buildings. They gave the school their rich tradition of compassion and care for others which is central to their ethos as a nursing order."
Bishop Healy urged the parents to support the school. "It is essential for this to happen in every parish but especially in Kalgoorlie that has a population which stays a while and then moves elsewhere. "You have before you the example of those who have gone before you including the pioneers
who were also on the move but who achieved wonderful things like building St Mary's Church and school within 10 years of finding gold here." The extensions were opened by the Deputy Premier Mr Ian Taylor who listed the many efforts of the Church in the Goldfields in the
fields of education, health, social welfare and work for Aborigines by the Little Sisters of the Poor and the parish. Bishop Healy asked Mr Taylor to convey thanks to the government for the low interest loan of $85,340 which along with a school provision of $10,000, made the project possible.
Devil at work CARDINALS BLAME POVERTY, TOO, FOR THE GROWTH IN SECTS
VATICAN CITY (CNS): Catholicism's cardinals meeting is the Vatican cited everything from poverty to the devil for the dramatic worldwide rise of religious sects and the inroads the sects have made into traditionally Catholic societies. The success of the sects, Christian and other, is fuelled by spiritual famine, weaknesses within Catholicism, anxiety caused by rapid social change and alienation, said many of 110 cardinals at a special meeting. "Not to be excluded is the action of the devil, even if this action is unknown to the people involved," said Cardinal Francis Arinze, president of the Vatican Council for Interreligious Dialogue. The College of Cardinals assessed ways to stem the success sects are having in converting Catholics. The cardinals also examined ways to combat
abortion and other threats to human life. Confusion about the faith sown by dissident theologians and institutional structures which do not provide enough personal attention were also blamed. Cardinal jozef Tomko, head of the Vatican Congregation for the Evangelisation of Peoples, spoke of Catholic theologians in India who "have developed unacceptable and destructive doctrines" in an exaggerated effort at interreligious dialogue. Under these doctrines evangelisation "would consist solely in dialogue, inculturation and liberation," he said. The result is an impression that all religions are equal and "the universal mystery of salvation is accomplished through all religious," he added. This doctrinal confusion "opens the way to the multiplication of sects," he said.
Cardinal Arinze said that sects should be regarded as a challenge rather than a threat to the Church. Their rise "indicates that there are spiritual needs which have not been identified or which the Church and other religious institutions have not perceived or have not known how to meet," he said. Cardinal Arinze divided sects into four groups: • Bible-based Christian offshoots. • Those derived from other traditional religions such as Hinduism and Buddhism. • Those which distort religion and advocate a return to paganism, sometimes including magic and satanic rites. • Those that believe in God. • See page 2.
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