06.22.67

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The ANCHOR Fall River, Mass. u Thursday, June 22" 1967

Yol. 11, No. 25

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961 The Anchor

,Mansfield Native Is Editor Of D~vine Word Messenger Rev. William J. Kelley; S.V.D., son of Mr. and :Mrs. J. lIpencer Kelley Sr. of 26 Bella Vista Avenue, Mansfield faas been appointed editor of the Divine Word Messenger and co-vooation director of D i vi neW 0 r d Missionaries, /Southern Province. The mag­ azine features the work of Divine Word mis'sionaries in the Southern United !!tates and has a circulation of

Cl'Ver 35,000.

The appointments were made

tty Vel'y Rev. John W, Bowman,

~.V.D., provincial superior, at

the seminary in Bay St. Louis"

Mississippi.

Or'dained Jan. 6, 1967, Father

OCelley was assigned to the

Southern Province by Very Rev. ,

<Jfohn Schuette, S.V.D., superior -,

~nel'al of the Divine Word Mis­

fi;ional'ies, Rome.

Father Kelley, a member of the

Catholic Press Association, wl'Ote

tor magazines as a semiriarian.

The second son oi Mr. and

Mrs. Kelley to be ordained a

lJ)riest, Father Kelley is on vaca­

tion in Mansfield and will be

l>Jl'esent for his pal'ents' 4mh

REV. WILLIAM Jr. KEILLEY 'ill'edding observance Sunday.

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Arrange New Ceremonies For 2'7 Cardinals-Elect VATICAN CITY (NC)-The final ceremony in the aeation of the Church's new cardinals will take place not only publicly-on the steps, of St. Peter's basilica oofore a great throng-but concurrently with the open­ fng of the Year of Faith Jltroclaimed by Pope Pallll VI. "FhiR open air consistory, \';)arring inclement weather, will be the first in Ii ving mem­ and perhaps in history. Only 24 of the 27 new cardi­ r:sals are scheduled to be present GJune 29) at the Mass in fcont m: the basilica. The three cardi­ I!lals who have been nuncios to Spain, Portugal and Italy win ooceive the regalia of their new @ffice from the heads of state ~ those countries. These are Archbishops Antonio Riberi, Maximilian de Furstenberg and G::arlo Grano. They will get their ~ardinal's rings from the Pope in a later ceremony. All 27, including the three not jplresent, will become cardinalll on the morning of June 26 when the Pope and college of cardinals ooeet in secret consistory in the ~onsistorial Hall to put the for­ mal seal of election upon new members. Within a qual'ter hour the 24 will be notified in the big <eoncert ,hall on the Via COllcilia­ 1JIi0ne where they will be waiting ~th their friends and we'U wish­ ~ll'S and the members of the dip­ llomatic corps accredited ttl» the :!BIoly See. Amleto Cardinal Cico­ lJnani, Papal Secretary oil Stlll(&e, will read the names. Turn to Pag0 Sbr ~y

Celibacyr Authority i Varied Posts i

I For Brothers i

Have Needed Roles = =

BALTIMORE (NC)- Lawrence Cardinal Shehan of Baltimore has upheld the tradition of priestly celibacy in the Church in a pastoral letter calling for a renewal of faith in the "supreme authority" of the Pope Noting a "certain weakenIng or con­ "much to the harm of those fusion of faith ... particular­ done who are wont to accept uncrit­ ly in the fundamental truth ically the printed word," he of the primacy," the,cardimil added. "Even more dangerous urged Catholics to give full as­ perhaps, has been the confusion resulting from erroneous impres­ sent to the teaching and govern­ ing authority of the Pope, par­ sions left by these discussions ticularly in regard to Holy concerning the relation' of opin­ Eucharist and Holy Orders. ion in the Church to the proper Speaking of the latter, he exercise of authority. "In any event," he continued, maintained that the Pope has "made clear that he is convinced "it is for the Pope as head of the the traditional law of celibacy universal Church to pronounce has values which far outweigh upon the conditions required for any objections which have been the reception of Holy Orders." raised against it and thel'e is no Discussing the Eucharist, Car­ well-founded hope' that'it will be dinal Shehan asserted that the Pope's ,primacy "extends not only abrogated." He decried the "loud and often to expounding the nature of this unseemly protest on the part of sacrament but also to its admin­ some against' the discipline ot' istration--the way iii which' the celibacy," stating' thilt 'it was' Eucharistic sacrifice is I~O be of­ , "contrary to £he deliberate judg­ fered; the conditions for partici­ pating in and partaking of it.'; ment of the Pope and the over­ whelming, majority of thebish­ The caxdinal called the Eucha­ ops of' (Vatican II) Council" 'and rist "the main sign of' the' unity has been the "occasion and'some­ of, God's people,''' and said 'that times the cause of no little harm ,"the introduction of unauthor": and confusion." '. ized changes only sel'v'es to cause The publicizing of opinion sur­ divisiOn and disunity ai'nong the vey results on the matter have faithful."

TO ROME: Brother Thom­

as Gallagher, C.S.C., pie­ tured above, for six years principal and superior at Coyle High School, Taunton" has been assigned to the fa­ culty of Notre Dame Inter­ national School, Rome. He will be succeeded at Colyle by Brother Richard Kiniry~ C.S.C.

Heart of Ecumenism Must Be Doctrine ST PETERSBURG (NC)-A Catholic archbishop as­ serted the "heart of the matter is doctl'ine," in a discus­ sion of the ecumenical movement before a Presbyterian convention here in Florida. Archbishop Joseph P. Hurley, bishop of St. Augustine, ac' knowledged the benefits in here, the archbishop said: "I StIch things as celerical and think I have noticed a backing lay associations, common ac- a'way 'from the problem of the tion .in civic fields, but added they "stop short of that veritable union which would be possible if we were to have a consensus of the all-important tl'llths committed to us by OUI' Lord Jesus Christ." Speaking to the United Presbyterian Church, Synod of Florida, at Presbyterian College'

faith among some of our Cath­ olic promoters of ecurnenism." The archbishop said much progress has been made in es­ tablishing closer Protestant­ Catholic ties in recent years, both 'among clergy and laity. He said they mainly have been centered around such problems Turn to Page Seventeen

Holy Name Parishioners Hear Proposals For Adapting Church to New Liturgy

COY L E GRADUATE: Brother Aubert Harriga~ C.S.C., a Coyle High School graduate, is newly appointe4 principal of Holy Cross Hilcl1 School, Flushing, N.Y. Pre. vious assignments have beell1l at Notre Dame High, West Haven, Conn..and St. Ed­ ward JIigh, Lakewood, O.

"A church should express something of the happiness of a wedding feast, when we are lifted on the wing's of lQve." Thus·Ade Bethune summarized her philosophy of. ec­ clesiastical design at a special parish council meeting at Holy Name Church, Fall RIver. The internationally known li17urgical artis t presented tentative proposals for adaptation of Holy Name's interior to the new liturgy of Vatican II. All parishioners were in­ vited to tl1e council meetin&"

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AIDE DE BETHUNE

and many accepted the oppor­ tunity. Also in attendance were guests from the council of neigh­ boring St. Joseph's parish, Miss Bethune was introduced by Dr. John C. Corrigan, parish council president, and brief re­ marks were also made by Msgr. Daniel F. Shalloo, pastor, At her right was Msgr, William H. Har­ rington, pastor emeritus of Holy Name. "For many years," said Miss Bethune, "we went to Mass as individuals; now we are to re­ gain the spirit of community so evident in the early church. The early basilicas were not so dif­ ferent from Holy Name Church," she added. She explained that the impor­ Turn to Page Fifteen

TAUNTON NAT!VE~ Brother Stephen Nunes, C. S.C., a Coyle High School graduate and Taunton na­ tive, will join the faculty of Colegio Dom' Amando, San­ tarem, Para, Brazil, in Au­ gust. He has been on the teaching staff of Mackin High School, Washington"


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06.22.67 by The Anchor - Issuu