The Record Newspaper 07 December 1995

Page 1

Record PERTH, WA: December 7, 1995

PRINT POST APPROVED P P602669/00303

Number 2974

POST ADDRESS: PO Box 75, LEEDERVILLE, 6902, WA LOCATION: 587 Newcastle Street, Cnr Douglas St (near Loftus St)

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What's Inside . . . Archbishop Hickey reflects on the significance of the Second Vatican Council on the occasion of the 30th anniversary of its closing; Mgr Keating tells of being a student at the Council - Pages 8-9 Recipes to fire up Christmas cheer - Page 11 Explanation of women's ordination ruling - Page 6 Marian Movement gives hope to priests in today's turbulent Church - Page 2

Mazenod a model of Advent: Pone By Cindy Wooden VATICAN CITY (CNS) Pope John Paul said the Catholic Church's newest saint, Bishop Eugene de Mazenod, was an exemplary model of what the Advent season is about: preaching salvation to all people while preparing for Christ's second coming. The Pope canonised the bishop, who was the French founder of the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate, who serve in schools and parishes in Perth, during Mass last Sunday in Rome with Oblates, their supporters and friends from around the world. Pilgrims present included Oblate and Fremantle parish priest. Father John Hannah. Mrs Olga Yaksich, the rector of Mazenod College. Lesmurdie, Fr Peter Daly, and Peter Leiba. Another West Australian connection is that Kalgoorlie native. Fr James FitzPatrick, is the promoter for cause of the sainthood of Eugene de Mazenod. "Eugene de Mazenod felt, in a very profound way, the universality of the mission of the Church. He knew that Christ wanted to unite himself to all of humankind," the Pope said in his homily. "His canonisation today, the first Sunday of Advent, helps us to understand better the meaning of the season of the liturgical

St Eugene de MAMININII

year. which begins today." he said. During Advent. Christians prepare to recall Christ's birth and the beginnings of salvation open to all people while taking Individual and collective steps to prepare for his coming again in glory and judgment, the Pope said. By founding the Oblates in the early 1800s. the Pope said. St Eugene showed how seriously he took the words of the Bible that ask how anyone can believe unless they have heard the Gospel. Appointed bishop of Marseille, France, in 1837 St Eugene was a model of something clearly explained by the Second Vatican Council 100 years after his death: "The mission of every bishop, in union with the See of Peter, has a universal character," the Pope said. "De Mazenod was aware that

the mandate of every bishop and of every local church is in itself missionary," he said. "We thank God for the great transformations which occurred through the work of this bishop," Pope John Paul said. "His influence was not limited to the age in which he lived, but continues to work in our limes as well." The Pope also met last Sunday with the bishops, Oblates and pilgrims who had come to Rome for the canonisation. Among the French pilgrims were relatives of the saint. The canonisation of a family member, the Pope said, must make clearer than ever the truth that people are prepared for holiness and living the Christian life within their families. Also during the audience. the Pope told today's Oblate priests and bmthers that their mission was as great as it was when St. Eugene founded his order. "An immense field for the apostolate still lies open before you; this is both exhilarating and demanding," he said. -Evangelising the poor,- which is the motto of the congregation, "remains the primary missionary concern of the Church." "The holiness of your lives makes you zealous missionaries for the evangelization of Christians and non-Christians," the Pope told them. "By your community life, by faithfulness to your founder, you will not cease to bear fruit, as the presence of many bishops from your congregation clearly attests."

Date for beatification of Edmund Rice set Edmund Rice, founder of the Irish Christian Brothers and the Presentation Brothers, will be beatified by Pope John Paul in St Peter's Square in Rome on October 6 next year. Rice, who lived from 1762 to 1844, was a wealthy businessman living in County Waterford in Ireland. After the death of his young wife, he searched for "something that was yet wanting for him," and was touched by the sight of poor teenagers on the streets of Waterford. Aware of the work of the Presentation Sisters, founded by Irishwoman Nano Nagle for poor girls, he formed a group of men to look after poverty-stricken boys and modelled the community on the Presentation pattern of life. The embryonic congregation based its approach on community living, prayer and service of others. Edmund Rice's work flourished to the point where the Christian Brothers spread throughout the world and became one of the

Edmund Ignatius Rice

most successful and well-known Religious congregations of its kind. Often linked with education, the Brothers came to Australia in 1868 and arrived in Perth in 1894. Today their educational enterprises include one of Perth's premier boy's schools, Aquinas College in Attadale, and the agricultural College teaching teenage boys farm management skills at Tarclun near Geraldton.

Aranmore are winners

Diaconate 'no part-time job' VATICAN CITY (CNS) - Even if a permanent deacon holds a job outside the Church to support his family, he is not a part-time church worker, Pope John Paul II has said. "The deacon is not a part-time employee or ecclesial functionary, but a minister of the Church," the pope said late last month during an audience with members of and consultants to the Congregation for Clergy At its plenary meeting last week, the congregation was drafting a set of guidelines for the selection, training, ministry

and life of permanent deacons. There are 20,000 permanent deacons in the world, with a number in Australia. Pope John Paul told the congregation the guidelines would offer "a providential practical orientation" for the life and ministry of deacons, addressing questions or problems which have arisen since the permanent diaconate was re-established in the Latin-rite Church by Pope Paul VI in 1967 Two of the areas highlighted by the Pope were: the identity of deacons as distinct both from

the laity and from priests and bishops, and; the family life and obligations of married deacons, including the ban on remarriage in case of the death of the wife of a deacon. "The vocation of the permanent deacon is a great gift of God to the Church and constitutes an important source of enrichment for its mission," the Pope said. The theological, liturgical and canonical identity of the permanent deacon arose from the sacrament of ordination and must be respected, he said. Continued on Page 2

Aranmore Catholic College in Leederville claims to be one of the most multicultural campuses in the Catholic school system and this, and the work of 17 students has enabled them to win a state-wide competition by The West Australian newspaper to create an English-language newspaper. The editors of the Aranmore Times, Cassandra Janeczko (I) and Marie Botsis, pose with the winning certificates. The competition was judged on a variety of factors including the quality of the journalism, the spread of stories, editorial and advertising content as well as photography and layout qualities.


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The Record Newspaper 07 December 1995 by The Record - Issuu