06.18.93

Page 1

VOL. 37, NO. 24

FALL RIVER, MASS.

Friday, June 18, 1993

Southeastern Massachusetts' Largest Weekly

$]11 Per Year

Priests rate standing 0; bishop has a cameo By MaricE: Hickey The summer blockbuster season is here! But alas, where can you find that rarity in entertainment which offers substance over rampagingdinosaur special effects; less wanton obliteration than the latest Terminator outing; and high ideals over c1iffhanging !;tunts? Which offers, say, a catchy blend of music, nostalgia and humoreven an extra-ordinary appearance by the diocesan ordinary?

Fear not-family entertainment is not extinct. It was spotted recently in Mashpee at the latest vehicle of Priests for Life (Part Trois). That melodious sound emanating from Cape Cod last Sunday was the doing of 10 musicallyinclined clerics-seven diocesan priests and three seminarianswhose talents at times also leaned precariously toward the comedic. Turn to Page Eight

VAT1CAN CITY (CNS) - In the new"Catechismofthe C 0 olic Chur()h" we learn that . tq.rTI;initYl;;i~ifelUini· hierarchy. .· , i ; t : Is this a revolution in Catholic teachjfigs? No. grammar rules of French, agender-obviQl.l~langua The ori&inal tl~Xt9{!he cate9~!~,~,app '. PY.~ Hlast year as the b~!lis for d'eyelopingelig materials, is in French. A distinguishing feature of that tonglJ~, shared R omance I~nguages.i~ that,~ ver····· or feminine, This isttueeveniutl concept, such as an ideology. ,;.,. Is gender-obvious Janguage~,P1acho over the a $ e s ? ' . .., .Thisis'highI:y qQJ~Qtfl.lI;;;;;.: masculine.. Is thereany pOlitical cortect to life? Probably,Mt,C authoritatianisrri. m Anyone thinking wQrnen war, violence and .'. re, macho thi9,g. .. , Whatalil>tit t~e'C inate against men Of e The situation is confusing the.devil•..•.'f{••~men ; Christi~';;ri1ale, are female:Priestsltt¢"'men, bU feminine.I'Joweyer;)rYou talJ!; masculi" , ,)/ 'Arey Here's ehel . belongs to ,men.. What t the ,;.•.•.. Wo. e1,ea .. and get thing ce sional, however, isrnale. Do rnen~ome ou('{I.head· They .ty;~ ill the fo' ps,bf the sin isrnale. chalk scandal, incest, lies and suici cence (IU!lt~!.~!l~ '.c •F~.p.ti , Also CQ61plyin . 'Fre thy name is·woman.",. Is there a wayget)der-obvl0dS langu people us~~ to glen9~tlJeutr~I' ., s?, Let's trybytn~nsl~t~J\gas¢ ofth putting the gender inparenthe$l;s;' "The (female) morality of human acts de~ends .. - The (male} object chOse " - The (fernal.e) egderlV! ".••.•..•. " - The (female) circumsta '.' . the/ Ie) Maybe we should try translatl'ng a siml'll:: senten "The (female) end does not jq§~ify the . . 'Ie) rne What does this alliPfoye?>t ' It probably explains why ih~~1

COLD FEET were not a problem for Priests for Life, performing last Sunday in Christ the King parish center, Mashpee, where their sandals and rendition of St. Francis' Prayer for Peace paid tribute to sandaled Franciscan Bishop Sean O'Malley.

.'

Men

It's the Mass that matters,

s~ys

pope

Charity, justice linked 1to Eucharist SEVILLE, Spain (CNS) - Pope John Paul II, in Spain for a sixday visit, said the country's increasingly secular society needs to rediscover traditional religious values - starting with love for the Eucharist. Leading ceremonies in Seville June 12-13 to close the 45th International Eucharistic Congress, the pope said the church's social work is inseparably linked to celebration of the Mass. Love for the Eucharist inevitably leads to acts of charity and justice, he said. "One cannot receive the body of Christ and feel distant from the hungry and the thirsty, from the exploited, the outsiders, the imprisoned or the sick," he told some 300,000 people at a Mass June 13. To illustrate his point, the pope later traveled to Dos Hermanas outside Seville to bless a new church-run home for the aged, where he hugged elderly residents and chatted with them briefly. The center, built on the grounds of a Jesuit rectory, houses 48 poor people who had nowhere else to go. "These people are so happy. They never dreamed the pope would come to see them," said a nun who works at the residence. The pope stressed that the social projects connected with the Eucharistic Congress - including a drug rehabilitation program and centers for the sick - were not merely symbolic add-ons. "These works of charity are not something superfluous and incidental, but represent the very demand of the sacrament," he said. The Eucharist is an "action"

sacrament that orients Catholics toward love, he said, and leads to a recognition that modern society must better respond to the needy in its midst. The pope cited in particular Spain's growing unemployment, estimated at 22 percent of the work force. The lack of jobs "is placing many families in situations of anguish" and raises basic ethical questions about the economic system, he said. It was the pope's fourth trip to Spain, and he was greeted warmly - first by King Juan Carlos I and Queen Sofia, then by large crowds that turned out in the southern Spanish city to cheer the papal motorcade. The pope kept the focus on the Eucharist, and his first major event was adoration of the Blessed Sacrament in Seville's Gothic cathedral, the fourth largest in the world. He watched as 10 boys wearing plumed sombreros and striped cost limes performed the "Seises," a traditional dance of the Andalusian region, in front of the Eucharist. The dance combines courtly movements and music, accompanied by castanets. At a Mass the safT\e day, the pope ordained 37 priests and said

Graduation 1993/ See pages 14 and 15

the whole church was "filled with joy" at their vocations. Among them was a disabled Spaniard who managed to get in and out of his wheelchair to join the new priests in prostrating themselves before ,the pope. The pope's sermon outlined the elements of a "good pastor": promoting the Eucharist as the center of church life, a willingness to spend much time hearing confessions, preaching inspired by solid church teaching and respect for the promise of priestly celibacy. He said the pries~ must be merciful and "teach people that God loves them infinitely and is always waiting for them." The pope also announced that the next International Eucharistic Congress will be held in 1997 in Wroclaw, Poland. He said he was happy that a former communist country of Eastern Europe will be able to host such a meeting. The Seville congress brought together 12.000 people from more than 70 countries. Official delegates, appointed by their national hierarchies, numbered 7,000. The rest registered as individual participants. Participants were continually challenged to see the Eucharist as the key to a vigorous evangelization that includes concern for solving social problems. The Eucharist is the "summons and stimulus" to defeat apartheid, ethnic cleansing, the "ages-old oppression of women" and child exploitation, said Cardinal Jaime Sin of Manila, Philippines. Child exploitation includes "young girls sold into sexual slavTurn to Page II


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