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  • Loving, Loved,Love- Our Triune God: Rev. Judy’s Homily for Trinity Sunday 2014

    As I think about the nature of God for Trinity Sunday I am reminded of listening to two of my young adult parishioners try to describe their parents. Each one harbored many complex feelings toward their parents and neither had the slightest notion that the parents had histories separate from themselves. They had no idea that that their parents had thoughts, feelings, problems, hopes,fears, dreams, strengths and weaknesses. Neither knew the parent at all- only how the parent had fallen short of their expectations. I remembered how woefully long it took me to really know my own mother and to love and value her as the priceless treasure she was.  I then thought is that what we do with God-simply make God a product of our projections without trying to find out who God really is?

    There are two things that enable me to speak but only with the greatest humility on this Sunday when the church offers an understanding of what God is like.  The first is the experience of God- in- relation in my own life and in the lives of those I serve; and the second is simply appreciation of the vastness of the nature of God, a vastness that I can nowhere near comprehend. I dare not speak at all except for seeing and knowing what God has done as revealed through human imperfections in the Scriptures and as revealed daily in  our lives.  I know this God-in-relation to me and to all of creation. I see and hear God in the lives of those who truly cast their cares upon God and trust God for everything, especially those who are poor in the goods of this world.

    Last Tuesday, In our worship group with homeless and formerly homeless men and women Nathaniel said “I know God is with me and that God loves me because there was a time that I was locked up inside myself and not able to find a way out to do something about being homeless and hungry and so I stayed that way for over five years. I stayed that way until I listened to and felt the message of love that the people of the Good Shepherd brought to the park. I felt loved and let God in. Soon after that I did what I had to do and got everything I needed.”  Several of those gathered echoed his story. Lauretta said dramatically, “listen, listen to our stories, how can anyone who listens not believe in God and in God’s Christ?”

                                                                                                                                                                                     Our Tuesday Worship Circle

    IMG_0079For those who depend on God for life, “believe in” is not an abstract exercise like believing in a dogma or doctrine, it is believing in a person who loves them and who will do anything for them- it is more like when a parent says to a child or one friend or lover says to another: “I believe in you”.  It is of the heart not the head. It inspires and motivates to emulate.  When I grew up poor I witnessed daily miracles of unmet needs being met by God and through people and I see it again now with our people. When I had to face cancer and major surgery in early 2013 an abstraction of God would not do, the love I experienced through those surrounding me with prayers and caring, and experiencing God being there with me especially at night got me through it.  What I needed to see most after eight days in a hospital room with no view outside was evidences of God’s creation. My gloom lifted as soon as I saw green grass and trees, birds and sky and my pets-for that is how I experience God-through others and through creation.  As I continue to face other scary health threats, it is God’s love and presence that gets me through it. I have a pretty good head, but it is my heart that knows.

    And so is the meaning of the Gospel of the day John 3:16-  to believe in(love and follow) Jesus brings life now and forever-it is a release from death in all its myriad forms, as Nathaniel said.  When I first moved to Florida 16 years ago my neighbor was a woman who lived alone and had an inoperable brain cancer. She told me that she loved the Buffalo Bills football games and saw a John 3:16 sign held up in the bleachers. She asked me what it meant. I shared God’s love with her because of that sign. We talked about her cancer and her fears, and that God is with her always. This brought her comfort and she realized that she was not alone anymore. Over time we also spoke of reaching out to her estranged children and relatives and she did.

    The words we use to explain God are inadequate. Our first reading from Exodus 34 says that God is a God of compassion and mercy-and we see what that looks like in the life of Jesus the Christ while we examine our own lives to see how far the acorn fell from the tree!  In 2 Corinthians 13:11-13 we are blessed with the grace of Christ Jesus, the love of God and the friendship of the Holy Spirit- and how blessed we truly are to experience this relational God. Yet we also learn that God is “immanent and transcendent”. What does that really mean?  Here is the explanation of one author J.I. Packer in Knowing God. 

    (Please note that I have changed the word “Him” in relation to God throughout this writing where I quote others for now it is accepted that women and men both reflect the image of God and God is our loving Mother as well as our loving Father. Also in the Scriptures the Spirit of God in original languages is clearly a feminine face of God.  As this language was translated and God was referred to only as “Him” we lost the balanced view of God with feminine and masculine qualities thus diminishing our understanding of God. See for example Elizabeth A. Johnson, Truly our Sister: A Theology of Mary in the Communion of Saints, Continuum, 2009.  So below I substitute God for Him and Father/Mother for Father.)

    Packer says:

    “God’s transcendent nature strives to keep God distant and remote from God’s creation both in space and time, yet on the other hand, God’s immanent nature works to draw God near to God’s creation and to sustain the universe. God’s love for God’s creation is so great that we see God’s immanence overshadowing God’s transcendence. This becomes clear in God’s incarnate Son, Jesus Christ, as Christ… draws all humanity back into a close, personal relationship. We see God not only choosing to draw near to God’s creation but to personally come into the hearts and minds of God’s people through the indwelling power God’s Holy Spirit. This is the miracle of God’s transcendence.”

    God is transcendent -“more” and “beyond”- beyond our greatest understanding yet not “above us” in the sense of removed from us.  ALL we can understand of the cosmos does not begin to touch who God is, and yet God is right next to and within us at the same time as close as breath.  This is part of the Mystery of God that we seek to name and know for ourselves. We cannot put God in a big God-box for we can not know the fullness of God’s being. I thank God for that Mystery that we know only in part.

    Fr. John Foley, scholar at  St.Louis University, sees knowing the triune God as a “Story of Love”.“What is the Holy Trinity and why do we dedicate a big Sunday to it?I know a story that might help.Once upon a time, in fact once upon many thousand times, God the (Father/Mother) invited the people of the earth to a lasting and loving relationship. Look at the Old Testament: “I want to be your God and I want you to be my people. My love for you is tender and precious. Won’t you love me in return?”

    In many ways people understood and entered into the agreement. Abraham, Isaac, Moses, Elisha, Elijah, just to begin the list.

    But we humans keep choosing things closer to hand, like money and honors and such—barns full of them. Our refusal of God’s love became widespread.

    How did God react to such rejections? With hurt and disappointment for sure.

    My people, what have I done to you? How have I offended you? Answer me. For your sake I scourged your captors and their first-born sons, but you brought your scourges down on me! My people, answer me (from “The Reproaches” on Good Friday)!

    No answer. So eventually the Father/Mother tried a new and quite brilliant way. “I will show them what true love looks like. Since I am all love and nothing but love, I will go out to them utterly, as love does. I will become one of them. I will live humanity to its depths, and they will see love in its full truth.”

    So a human called Jesus was born. He grew up. He told the people to love God above all things and their neighbors as themselves. He was the very heart of God, the heart made flesh. One with the Father but different as well. Two persons in one God.

    Human beings had been hurt and betrayed, of course, forced to live with their own mixed-up motives, selfishness and greed. Love gets lost in such a world. So Jesus-God plunged far into our ocean of cruelty and loss, dove all the way to down to death.

    His job was to carry all this back to the source of everything, the Father/Mother. The disciples knew about only two parts of God, Jesus and his Abba/Amma. So before he left, he said the following to them (I am paraphrasing):

    Philip and the rest of you, if you know me, you know the Father/Mother. And after I go back to the Father/Mother, I will remain within you. I will make a home in you by sending the Holy Spirit. This Comforter will be the very love that I and the Father/Mother have for each other!

    He was talking of course about the third person of the Trinity, the Holy Spirit—a real being that snuggles close within our souls if we let it. This Spirit of love is graceful and deep and comforting, like a blanket in winter cold.

    And that is the story. Alright, maybe it is less clear than we would like. Really it is just the story of our lives with God and each other.

    It is the Trinity! Let us celebrate!”

    John Foley S. J.

    YES, let us celebrate that through love and relationship and creation we have some understanding of God, but more, that we are loved by the God who created the Universe,the cosmos,  tends it like a Mother/Father and Creator, tends the created; and that we have a living example of what God is like in ways we can understand through knowing the love and self-emptying of Jesus the Christ who stood with the poorest and most outcast, the stranger and the sick, as for inclusion and justice; and that the Holy Spirit of our living God is with us, among us and in us now and forevermore.

    It is not original with me, but another preacher suggested that we can understand the Trinity-the three-in-one God as: Loving, Loved and Love.

    God’s active creating is loving; Christ’s example of love lets us know that we are loved; and the Holy Spirit is Love within us and motivating us.

    Loving, Loved, Love,

    AMEN!

    And a Blessed Father’s Day to all of our fathers, brothers, uncles, cousins and friends!

    Rev. Dr. Judy Lee, ARCWP

    Pastor The Good Shepherd Inclusive Catholic Community of Fort Myers, Florida

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Irish Priests call for Ordination of Women

    Irish priests calls for ordination of women and marriage in Church

    The Association of Catholic Priests (ACP), in Ireland, says the church must ordain women and allow priests to marry in order to survive.

    Pointing out that there are only two priests under the age of 40 in the Dublin archdiocese, Father Sean McDonagh says the Church is “facing an implosion in terms of vocations to the priesthood.”

    The group made a number of recommendations which will be discussed at the Irish Catholics Bishop Conference in Maynooth later this week.

    In 2012 a survey of Roman Catholics, on behalf of the ACP, showed that 87 percent believed priests should marry and 77 percent were in favor of women being priests. Another 22 percent believed matured married men should be ordained.

    McDonagh told TheJournal.ie that there is nothing “unusual” about appointing female deacons in the Catholic Church. “They were ordained in the past,” he said.

    “It’s fairly clear historically that women have served in the church, despite every effort to silence their voices since the 4th century.”

    He continued, “Women have to be a very major part of the future of ministry in the church. When you look around the church on a Sunday, who are doing most of the roles? Women.”

    The association is also calling on men who left the priesthood to marry to be called back to ministry.

    In 1984 there were 171 ordinations in Ireland. In 2006 there were 22. In 2013 just 70 were studying to become priests in Ireland.

    McDonagh said it is the obligation of the Irish bishops to raise these issues in Rome and added that it is not an issue unique to Ireland. He also noted that Pope Francis has indicated that he is open to such suggestions.

    McDonagh said that while praying for the numbers of vocations to increase is “fine” the Catholic Church needs a plan.

  • CALI: LA RV. MARINA TERESA SÁNCHEZ (ARCWP)IN Various Pastoral Activities in Her Community

    This is about our ARCWP Priest Marina Teresa Sanchez Mejia who is ministering to her community in Cali, Colombia. The pictures speak for themselves and do not need particular translation. They involve children and youth in a Boat Procession carrying Our Lady of Assumption and other community activities.  We send our blessings to Rvda. Marina Teresa and her Community and thank Rvda. Olga Lucia for her blog on this. Rev. Dr. Judy Lee ARCWP

    evangelizadorasdelosapostoles's avatarEvangelizadoras de los apóstoles

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    A orillas del rio Cauca. La Rv Maria Teresa  con las niñas de la Comunidad, en una actividad celebrativa. A orillas del rio Cauca. La Rv Maria Teresa con las niñas de la Comunidad, en una actividad celebrativa religiosa.

    Actividad pastoral en la Corporación con las Madres de Familia Actividad pastoral en la Corporación con las Madres de Familia

    Celebración Eucaristica en el Colegio Educativo Navarro Celebración Eucaristica en la Institución Educativa Navarro

    Dando la Eucaristía a los niños de Colegio Educativo Navarro Dando la Eucaristía a los niños de Institución  Educativa Navarro

    Alumnos, maestros y Padres de Familia de la Institución Educativa Navarro Alumnos, maestros y Padres de Familia de la Institución Educativa Navarro

    Con los lideres de la Comunidad en la Corporación "Playa Renaciente" Con los lideres de la Comunidad en la Corporación “Playa Renaciente”

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  • Breathe on us Breath of God-Happy Birthday Church! Homily for Pentecost 2014

    IMG_0047Breathe on us Breath of God-Happy Birthday Church!  Homily for PENTECOST SUNDAY    June 8, 2014

    For the last week, I have had some unpleasant bug. Once again I feel my human frailty physically and in my spirit.  I was supposed to be vacationing on the beach but I only got there for two nights as my breathing was heavy with coughing and new symptoms developed. I fully enjoyed being at the edge of the Gulf of Mexico and part of God’s beautiful creation including seeing parent dolphins teach their young how to eat about five feet away from us as we waded in the water.  Yet I needed to rest in bed as much as to be renewed by this. I’m  feeling better now but I am sure that I should not breathe my germs on anyone, and I pray for God to renew my body as well as my soul as I prepare to preach on Pentecost. But the beautiful thing is that it is not my breath but the Breath of God that will renew our people.

    Jesus said:

    “ ‘Peace be with you. As Abba God sent me, so I am sending you.’ After saying this, Jesus breathed on them and said, ‘Receive the Holy Spirit…’” John 20: 21-22

    Jesus left his disciples with the gift of the Holy Spirit.   He filled them with his Spirit so they could carry on his work of love, inclusion and justice.  Still they were frightened, they had not fully tried their wings to see if they could fly-could really carry on the work of the kin-dom.  On Pentecost, this gift came again in a dramatic way enlivening the followers, the men and women gathered together, with the abilities to reach out to peoples of all languages and cultures with the Good News of the living Christ. The Pentecost story in Acts 2 is such a wonderful accounting of how God provides the church the gifts that are needed to include everyone in the church. In the diverse group gathered in Jerusalem peoples of all then known languages and cultures had gathered. Suddenly, as if with the force of a hurricane, all could hear the Good News in his or her own languages, the disciples could preach to everyone! What a wonderful message of unity in diversity and in how Christ and the Church mandates, breathes,  diversity.

    In our church tomorrow the reading from Acts will be read simultaneously in  African languages and in Spanish and English and possibly Italian. How exciting it is to hear the first Pentecost enacted in this way and to know that our church like the Pentecost church is such a diverse group of followers.  Our youth leader, Efe Jane Cudjoe, is now home from her semester in Viet Nam, South Africa and Brazil and she will reflect with us on her experiences of the Spirit of God in those lands and diverse cultures.

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    Pentecost is one of the happiest feast days of the Church. We gather with excitement, we wear red and we welcome God’s Holy Spirit once again to breathe life into us so we may be the church that Jesus founded and intended. We are ever mindful of the need for renewing God’s spirit within us, not because it has left us, but because we are so often overwhelmed by life’s events and no longer hear or heed it. We need a fresh infusion, for God Transcendent as well as Immanent can indeed breathe new life into us!  An African-American Gospel Song goes: “Spirit of the Living God, Fall fresh on me, melt me, mold me, Fill me, use me, Spirit of the Living God, Fall fresh on me”.   That is our Pentecost prayer.

    Acts 1:12-14 and 2: 1-11

    The Spirit comes to the followers of Jesus, the men and women gathered in the upper room, in a dramatic and indisputable manner with what sounded like a “violent rushing wind, the noise filling the entire house.” – not a little breeze this time – something like the hurricane that we know well here in Florida. And how they must have been amazed and afraid!  Their spirits were ignited by the Holy Spirit and they burned with the Spirit.  Wind and fire, symbolizing the presence of God, filled them and they even began to speak in other languages.  Here God gives the church, the first Christians – the power to preach, teach and witness to Christ, Risen, Living and present, and to present the Good News to all people; no matter where they live or what language they speak.  And this power is given on the harvest feast of Pentecost (or the Feast of Weeks) celebrated by the Jews seven weeks/50 days after Passover.  As such Pentecost is the reminder of the covenant the Jewish people and Moses made with God on Mt. Sinai.  Luke is telling his followers that the Spirit brings us a new Covenant as God’s new people – that all people, “Gentiles” are now heirs to God’s promises of faithfulness and love.  And we are to preach the Good News everywhere – and especially to the poor, the disenfranchised and outcast of our world even as Jesus came to do that (echoing the purpose of the Prophet Isaiah) and fulfilling Isaiah’s prophetic vision: “The Spirit of God is upon me because the Most High has anointed me to bring Good News to those that are poor.”  (Is. 61; Luke 4:16-20).May the Spirit of God be upon us to do this as well!

    1 Cor. 12: 3-7,12-14 (TIB)

    Clearly the Spirit distributes gifts “as She will” – No one, no church, no government, absolutely no one can get in the Spirit’s way of distributing gifts.  So, my friends, clearly women – yes, women – and men – young and old of all classes, colors, cultures and languages may be filled and called by the Spirit.  I sit here today in deep thanksgiving for that – Amen?!

    Now here are the gifts Paul mentions in 1 Corinthians 12 – but these are just some of the gifts of the Spirit.

    •  Wisdom in discourse (i.e. teaching/ discussion/communication)
    • Knowledge, the word of knowledge
    • The gift of healing
    • Miraculous powers / also …… as mighty deeds
    • Prophecy
    • Speaking other languages
    • Interpreting other languages
    • The gifts to be apostles, prophets, teachers, administrators (and, yes, priests!)

    But, Paul reminds us, it is one and the same Spirit who produces all these gifts and many more and distributes them as She will – “as She will”!! (The words for Spirit in Greek and in Hebrew-Sophia and Ruah are indeed feminine).

    Let us now think about these gifts – and name in our hearts other gifts given to each of us by the Spirit.

    But gifts are not necessarily or even usually given in especially dramatic ways – just God’s Holy Spirit to the spirit within ourselves.  The breath of God, the breath of Jesus. One of our young people, Natasha is discerning her path to higher learning. Sometimes the answer seems easy and clear, sometimes not so easy or clear. We pray for her as she makes her choice of college.

    “We all drink of the one Spirit” (v. 13) – and here is the symbol of the living water and water as the giving of the spirit for we are baptized into one body – but it has many different and necessary parts – different gifts.  As we USE and DEVELOP these many gifts we can join Jesus the Christ in turning the world upside down!! Jesus breathed the Holy Spirit on a group of frightened people and they were no longer afraid – AND THE CHURCH WAS BORN!!

    The spirit of the living Christ that Jesus imparted to his disciples after the Resurrection en-couraged and em-powered them to go forth.  But the Pentecostal visitation of the Holy Spirit was different, it was dramatic and it was inclusive, for all gathered in Jerusalem.  The followers of Christ, now empowered, could reach the whole world through the many gifts that God gives to each one of us, the body of Christ.

    And the body of Christ is diverse and of infinite variety.  The first Pentecost came with loud sounds – wind and fire – the way that the Spirit spoke to the people of old.  Peoples who today are still struggling for peace- those from Israel, Iran and Iraq and Afghanistan and Pakistan and parts of Africa, Asia and Rome, Jewish converts and Arabs alike were united by the Holy Spirit.  Today the Spirit of God still speaks to the Church in many different ways – and it still says “Peace, Justice, Love and ALL are welcome.  Receive the Holy Spirit, be instruments of peace, be re-newed, forgive all, and live!

    May God empower us again to bring our many gifts to God’s world. Spirit of the Living God, fall Fresh on us!  Happy Birthday Church!  Amen.

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  • God Also Calls Women to Roman Catholic Priesthood: News-Press 6/7/2014

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    Re: “God speaks, but few answer,” May 25.

    Who can limit the call of God? God calls whomever God calls. The problem is that the church takes on the role of limiting God’s ability to call any but celibate men.

    It may be true, at least in the Diocese of Venice of Florida, that few men are answering God’s call, but this is not true for the women who are responding to God’s call to priesthood.

    There are nearly 200 women priests worldwide with the majority in the United States. We have not left the church, although we have “technically” been excommunicated.

    We have answered God’s call to lead the church to a new model where all are welcome — no one is excluded from the sacraments.

    Why not wait for the Vatican to accept women as priests? How can we wait when God has called? Jesus did not ordain anyone. He called men and women to follow him — and they did. They were married and unmarried and we do not know their sexual orientation.

    We have prepared — studied theology and been pastoral ministers in many settings: parishes, diocesan offices, hospitals, homeless shelters, schools and everywhere God asks us to be. Our ordinations, although breaking Canon 1024, that limits priesthood to males, are valid.

    Our ordaining bishops were ordained by women bishops who were ordained by a male bishop still in good standing with the Vatican whose name will be released upon his death. He said that he did this not for the women who are called but for the life of the church.

    We all answered the call to serve. We listened when God spoke no matter what it cost us.

    It is also a matter of justice for women in the church. Just think of what it would mean for women worldwide if the largest Christian denomination would accept women as fully equal to men in ordination. No longer would the Catholic Church be silent in its failure to recognize women as equal.

    President Jimmy Carter has made this point eloquently in his book when he said, “Religions that relegate women to second place have to bear responsibility for the pervasive violence against women.” He has been in communication with Pope Francis on this matter and we pray that the wisdom he brings will bear fruit.

    Our branch of the movement, the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests, has already ordained six priests this year. Locally, there are two women priests serving in Fort Myers, five located within the Diocese of Venice, with a total of nine priests and a deacon in Florida.

    In Fort Myers, we celebrate Mass every Sunday at 2 p.m. in a church located in a house dedicated to that purpose and to help homeless individuals make a transition to permanent housing: Good Shepherd Inclusive Catholic Community, 2621 Central Ave. A hot meal follows and faith formation for children and youth.

    On April 26, after much preparation, sixteen young people and adults were confirmed by ARCWP Bishop Bridget Mary Meehan in Sarasota.

    All are welcome to join with us in worship on Sundays. On the first Tuesday, we also serve persons experiencing homelessness, who gather at the church to pray, share a meal, and seek resources and counseling. Many days are spent following up with those who have shared their needs. We have a score of faithful volunteers who help us serve the homeless and low income of our community.

    The mission of Good Shepherd Ministries is to follow the mandate of Jesus in Matthew 25 by feeding, clothing and sheltering, ending homelessness one person at a time. To this end, we have collaborated with other agencies and have helped over 90 persons attain and maintain housing.

    God speaks, God calls, and we are answering with women everywhere. Who are any of us to limit the voice of God?

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    The Rev. Judith Lee, ARCWP and The Rev. Judith Beaumont, ARCWP are co-pastors, The Good Shepherd Inclusive Catholic Community, Fort Myers. arcwp.org

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  • Six Roman Catholic Women Ordained in Cleveland on May 24,2014

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    The Laying on of Hands on Marianne Therese Smyth  by Bishop Bridget Mary Meehan

    Pastor Judy Beaumont and I were happy to attend this wonderful ordination of four women priests and two women deacons in Cleveland on Saturday 5/24/14. The church was packed and joy,happiness and expectation filled the air.

    This was an especially happy occasion for me as my cousin Marianne Therese Smyth was one of the newly ordained priests. It was my joy to present her to the Bishop and the community along with our cousin, Jackie Weinmann Marion who also participated in the Procession and the ceremony, helping to vest Marianne and presenting her with a chalice and paten from the family.

    Marianne and Judy Lee

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    Jackie Weinmann Marion bringing up the Chalice and Paten

    Marianne,a mother of two and a grandmother of four, is theologically and experientially prepared for the priesthood. She was a third order Carmelite for five years, undertook much advanced study and spent her professional life teaching and counseling special education students and later was devoted to the care of her elderly and much beloved mother, Betty whose spirit was very much with us.  She is presently preparing herself for ministry with the dying and their families by taking an eleventh month course and practicum called “Companioning the Dying”. She feels blessed by this ministry  especially when called in to accompany someone at the eleventh hour. Marianne has conveyed that she is trying to live her life as a “conscious sacrament” and that she feels called to celebrate sacred connectedness and God’s boundless love for everyone. She will also be celebrating with the Living Waters Inclusive Catholic Community with RCWP Bishop Andrea Johnson and Priest Gloria Carpeneto and others in Catonsville, Maryland.

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    Left to right: Marianne T. Smyth, Irene C. Scaramazza and Mary Collingwood, Three Newly Ordained Priests

    Each one of the women ordained is a special and courageous woman. We are truly blessed to have them with us in the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests.

    Below Front: Mary Bergan Blanchard, Irene Scaramazza, Priests, Susan Guzik and Barbara Billey, Deacons,  Bishop Bridget Mary,and Mary Collingwood and Marianne Therese Smyth, Priests. Rear: Other ARCWP Priests Attending

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    Article from Bridgetmarys.blogspot

    Sunday, May 25, 2014

    Photos of ARCWP Cleveland Ordination by John Kuntz, Article by Tom Feran of The Plain Dealer

     

    Catholic Women Priests ordain six in emotional ceremony despite church’s stance (slideshow)BRECKSVILLE, Ohio — A message of inclusiveness as well as faith was delivered on Saturday when six women were ordained as priests or deacons in a ceremony sponsored by the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests.
    Presiding Bishop Bridget Mary Meehan, of Sarasota, Florida, said the ceremony was held at the Brecksville United Church of Christ because of the lack of institutional inclusiveness in the Catholic church, which says the ordination has no validity and incurred automatic excommunication.
    Meehan pointedly cited in her homily the story from the Gospel of John of the woman at the well. In it, Jesus crosses several social boundaries to ask for water from a Samaritan woman. The exchange becomes the longest individual conversation in scripture, and the first time Jesus reveals himself openly as the messiah.
    The church was filled for the emotional ceremony, nearly two hours long, which included ordinations of two Northeast Ohio women: Mary Collingwood, of Boston Heights, as a priest, and Susan Guzik, of Eastlake, as a deacon.
    Collingwood and Ann Klonowski, who was ordained last September, will say Mass weekly at 5 p.m. Saturdays starting June 7 at Brecksville United Church of Christ.

    TV Coverage: http://www.19actionnews.com/story/25605356/women-priests-ordained-at-brecksville-event

    Posted by Bridget Mary Meehan at 12:30 PM No comments:Links to this post

     

    ARCWP Ordination:Homily by Bishop Bridget Mary Meehan, May 24, 2014, Cleveland “Women Priests Sharing the Living Water of God’s Love of All”

     

    Today we rejoice that the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests will ordain 6 women:

    Deacon Barbara Billey who lives in Windsor, Ontario, Canada, has been married for 32 years. She is currently a counselor and art therapist. Barbara, a Doctor of Ministry candidate, has a particular interest in women’s spirituality and a passion for integrating sacred arts in liturgy.  

    Deacon Susan Marie Guzik from Eastlake, a suburb of Cleveland, is a widow, mother, grandmother. She received certification as a Lay Ecclesial Minister in the Diocese of Cleveland. Susan has volunteered in the Diocese as a pastoral minister and for the past seven years served as the Director/Advisor of the Stephen Ministry Program at St. Mary Magdalene Parish.

    The following women will be ordained PRIESTS:

    Mary Bergan Blanchard from Albuquerque, NM, is a former Sister of Mercy, a widow, mother, grandmother, teacher, writer and licensed counselor. After retiring in New Mexico, she served as a Mental Health Counselor in a Roman Catholic Church for twenty years. 

    Mary Eileen Collingwood, from the Cleveland area, is a wife, mother and grandmother who, with her advanced degree in theology, has served for 40 years in church ministry and taught theology on the high school and college levels.  In the parish she was Director of Religious Education, Coordinator for Marriage Preparation and Pastoral Minister.  

    has  advanced degrees in theology, pastoral counseling, and family therapy.  She is currently working as a hospice chaplain having completed her Provisional Board Chaplaincy Certification.

    Marianne Therese Smyth, from Silver Spring, MD; is a mother of two sons. She is a hospice volunteer with Montgomery Hospice and has worked for 25 years as a para-educator with special needs 
    students. She has a Masters of Education in counseling, a certificate in theological studies and serves the Living Water Inclusive Community in Catonsville, Maryland.

     These women, like the Samaritan woman have left their water jars behind. They come today to share the living water of their lives with God’s people.


    The story of the Samaritan woman at the well records the longest conversation between Jesus and anyone in the gospels. This sacred text reveals that Christ is the “wellspring of love” that will fill us forever. Eve­ryone is invited to drink the “living water” and belong to the community of faith. Jesus’ trademark is inclusiveness.  There are no outsiders. All that is required is that we worship in spirit and truth.

    In the encounter with the woman at the well, Jesus goes beyond the social and religious taboos of his times.  It is astonishing for us and shocking even for the apostles that Jesus confided his identity as Messiah to a woman who does not belong to the religious establishment and who is a foreigner and divorced.

     

    According to biblical experts, the woman understood Jesus’ mention that she had no “husband” not as a call to true repentance, but as a call to true worship. Other commentators believe that Jesus’ referral to the woman’s “husbands” pointed to the Samaritan practice of intermarriage outside the tribe, a custom that caused tension with the Jews because it destroyed Jewish ancestral lines. No matter what interpretation we accept, the Samaritan woman continues to live in couples today who reflect the face of God as they live as spiritual equals in committed, covenantal relationships.


    So too, today, Roman Catholic Women Priests are listening and responding to God’s Living Water flowing through us as we evangelize our church with the good news that all are invited to live Gospel equality now in inclusive communities where everyone is welcome. 

    Like the Samaritan woman, we too are daring and bold women, who are leaving our water jars behind, because we are being and encountering the Living Water of God’s love every day on the margins of our church.  Beyond our comfort zone and off the power grid we minister to the family of God who do not have a spiritual home – divorced and remarried Catholics, gays, lesbians, transgender, women who are excluded from liturgical leadership, youth and many others who are seeking a contemporary model of Church that is aligned with Gospel values.

     

    In his recent book, A Call to Action:  Women, Religion, Violence and Power, President Jimmy Carter, who supports women’s ordination and women’s equality in all religions, finds it “ironic” that women are welcomed into many professions “but are deprived of the right to serve Jesus Christ in positions of leadership” as they did in the early Christian churches. The former president said that the violence and abuse of women in society is directly connected to the spiritual inequality of women in religious practice. He said that he would become a Catholic when he is invited to do so by a female priest!  I assure you that we have issued an invitation!

    World-renown Spanish human rights activist, Sister Teresa Forcades, affirms the vision of Vatican 11 and suggests that Pope Francis might be an agent for change. In an article entitled: “Activist Nun -Change Comes from the Bottom” written by Janice Sevre-Duszynska and published by the National Catholic Reporter:

     “Sister Teresa said that it must be the people in the church who will promote the acceptance of contraception and an end to the church’s homophobia and who become voices in the struggle for justice for women.” ‘We now have women priests with the people from the bottom up,’ Forcades said with a smile. ‘The people are ready.’ ”

     

     

    Twenty years ago, on May 22, 1994, Pope John Paul II issued an apostolic letter, “Ordinatio Sacerdotalis” (“Priestly Ordination”) which reserved priesthood in the Catholic Church to men only.”This teaching that ‘women are not fully in the likeness of Jesus’ — qualifying, as it does, as a theological explanation — is utterly and demonstrably heretical,” said Augustinian theologian John Shea in  his 2nd letter to U.S. bishops.

    Despite two decades of blatant discrimination of women and  denial of women’s basic human rights as spiritual equals before God, justice is rising up for women in the church in grassroots, inclusive, Catholic communities. With almost 200 Roman Catholic Women Priests in the international movement, a renewed priestly ministry is flowering in 10 countries. Catholics worldwide are embracing a new model of church led by women and men.

    In imagining a dialogue with our beloved Pope Francis, I would invite him to consider faithful dissent in our church as healthy. I would ardently appeal for the end of discrimination, spiritual violence and bullying toward any member of the Body of Christ, including the Leadership Conference of Women Religious and for the cancellation of ecclesiastical punishments, including excommunication against women priests and our supporters. Let us pray that the Spirit will move our Pope to affirm all of us as beloved sisters and brothers in the family of God. 

     

     

    I believe that on a deep, mystical level women priests are beginning a healing process of centuries-old deep misogyny in which spiritual power was invested exclusively in men. With your prayers and commitment, we are recovering the dropped thread of our sister women in the early Church who embraced with dignity their full right to preach, to proclaim and to lead worship.

    Now we ordain you, our beloved Sisters, Mary, Marianne, Mary, Irene, Barbara and Susan.   In solidarity with Jesus and the Samaritan woman may you be God’s living waters bringing refreshment to the arid structures of our Church and beyond. May you help to liberate God’s people from oppression by  acts of justice, compassion and love.  May you  foster spiritual renewal in inclusive faith communities of equals.  

    Today, all of us rejoice that Christ Sophia, Wellspring of Wisdom, is in our midst!

    Bridget Mary Meehan, D.Min., a Sister for Christian Community, was ordained a Roman Catholic priest in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on July 31, 2006. She was ordained a bishop on April 19, 2009.  Dr. Meehan is currently Dean of the Doctor of Ministry Program for Global Ministries University, and is the author of 20 books

    THANKS BE TO GOD !

    Rev. Dr. Judy Lee, ARCWP

     

     

     

     

     

  • NCR Online Article on A New Day For Women Priests

    In this article woman priest and activist Janice Sevre-Dusynska talks about a new day for women priests and the ordination of three priests that will take place on Saturday 5/24/14 in Cleveland, Ohio. Two Deacons will also be ordained at that time. The NCR aritcle is introduced by two pictures from the Good Shepherd Inclusive Catholic Community in Fort Myers, Florida where Judy Beaumont and Judy Lee are Co-pastoring women priests. Here is both the article and the link: 

    ncronline.org/news/people/new-day-dawning-women-priests-20-years-after-ordinatio-sacerdotalis

    New day dawning for women priests 20 years after ‘Ordinatio Sacerdotalis’

    • Bishop Bridget Mary Meehan prays with 16 confirmands from Good Shepherd Inclusive Catholic Community in Fort Myers, Fla.
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    COMMENTARY

    Twenty years after Pope John Paul II issued the May 22, 1994, apostolic letter Ordinatio Sacerdotalisreserving priesthood for men only, the women priest movement in the Roman Catholic church is rising up. A new day is dawning.

    “Like Deacon Phoebe, Junia the Apostle, Mary Magdalene and the women of the Gospels, women priests today are following the call of Jesus by serving inclusive eucharistic Catholic communities where all are welcome to receive sacraments,” said Bishop Bridget Mary Meehan, who will ordain six women — four to the priesthood, two to the diaconate — on Saturday in Cleveland.

    The unswerving desire and sense of urgency from the Spirit’s calling continues. Despite 20 years of blatant discrimination of women and denial of women’s basic human rights as spiritual equals before God, women priests are serving in priestly ministry. With almost 200 Roman Catholic Womenpriests, a renewed priestly ministry is flowering in 10 countries. Catholics worldwide are ready for a new model of church led by women and men. In the United States, approximately 150 women priests are serving in 60 inclusive liturgical communities and providing sacraments.

    While some women priests are former nuns, others are single, married or divorced; converts to Catholicism; gay or straight. They have made their living as teachers, school administrators, professors, nurses, counselors, attorneys, chaplains, social workers, artists, authors and more. Some are Catholic Workers caring for immigrants and the homeless. One is an architect. Several have done resistance and spent time in prison and/or jail. Others have worked for the church in various capacities.

    Mary Collingwood of Boston Heights, Ohio, is one of the women who will be ordained as a priest Saturday in Cleveland. Collingwood is a wife, mother and grandmother who, with her advanced degree in theology, has served for 40 years in church ministry and taught theology at high school and college levels. In the parish, she was director of religious education, coordinator for marriage preparation, and a pastoral minister. On the diocesan level, she was an administrator and served on various boards and councils and as an activist for church reform.

    “Women are being called by the Holy Spirit to image the Divine Feminine through ordained priestly ministry thereby restoring the wholeness of God’s presence in our church,” Collingwood said. “Personally, this entails ordination and embracing circle leadership as an egalitarian model of decision-making within Roman Catholic communities.”

    Mary Bergan Blanchard, once a teaching Sister of Mercy in the Albany, N.Y., diocese, left the order in the late 1960s to teach the disadvantaged in Boston. She later married a widower with five children, and they eventually had a son of their own. She and her husband retired to Albuquerque, N.M., where she worked as a mental health counselor for 20 years at her parish church. Blanchard wrote a memoir, Eulogy, calling for changes in canon law. She complained that the “greatest sin of the Catholic Church is its failure to treat women as equals.”

    Upon hearing about the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests at age 82, she studied to become ordained. “If we are truly the Light of the World, it’s time to flick the switch,” she said.

    With advanced degrees in theology, pastoral counseling, and family therapy, Irene Scaramazza of Columbus, Ohio, is currently working as a hospice chaplain.

    She is being ordained a priest “because God continues to call me to deeper union lived out in service to others,” she said. “For me, ministry means immersing myself in the life of the people I serve and together discovering our living God.”

    For 35 years, Marianne Therese Smyth of Silver Spring, Md., has worked as a para-educator with special needs students. She has been serving with the Living Water Inclusive Community in Catonsville, Md., and has a Master of Education in counseling.

    “I am becoming a priest because God asked,” Smyth said. “God’s inclusive love cannot be expressed or shared from a strictly male point of view. That was not the message of Jesus. My love is hospice ministry, and I will be expanding into bereavement work and healing modalities such as Reiki.”

    As the women are ordained, communities rise up around them.

    During his 2013 Easter homily, not long after he was elected to the papacy, Pope Francis affirmed women as the first witnesses to the Resurrection. “This tells us that God does not choose according to human criteria,” he said. ” … The women are driven by love and know how to accept this proclamation with faith: they believe, and immediately transmit it, they do not keep it for themselves.”

    Women who have accepted the call from God to priesthood and who have become women priests want to share, as Francis said, “the joy of knowing that Jesus is alive, the hope that fills their heart.”

    [Janice Sevre-Duszynska is a Roman Catholic Womanpriest, peace and justice activist, and a retired teacher.]

  • Celebrating the Women of The Good Shepherd Inclusive Catholic Community

     

    In May flowers begin to bloom everywhere and even in Florida the season is festive as welcomed rain begins to fall and gentle breezes blow.

    It is a month of expectation and renewal and a time for celebrations of Mother’s Day and Graduations. This year we have had much

    to celebrate at our Good Shepherd Church.

     

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    This is Donnie and Lauretta celebrating each other for Mother’s Day

    The month of May has been packed with wonderful celebrations in our Good Shepherd Church.  We have had Mother’s Day,  Graduation Day and Birthday Celebrations.

    And we also had Rose and her much loved dog reunited as Rose moved into our Hospitality room at Joshua House on May 2nd.

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    Rose and Shinji on Move-in Day

    Mother’s Day was a very special event honoring all of the women in the church. Each woman was given a personalized gift and Pearl Cudjoe made a wonderful meal that Linda Maybin helped her to serve.

     

     

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    Pearl and Linda are serving Robert and Lili with Jakeriya in the background. 

    The congregation also presented Pastor Judy Beaumont and I with gifts for Mother’s Day.

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    Pearl Cudjoe and Marcella and Jakeriya present a gift to the surprise of the Pastors

    On May 6th members of the Board also met to plan summer activities and we celebrated Doreen Sookdeo’s Birthday as well

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    Hank Tessandori, Evelyn Efaw, Stella  Odie Ali and Doreen Sookdeo with Pastor Judy Beaumont

    On Sunday May 18th we celebrated the Birthday of our church Grandma, Mrs. Jolinda Harmon who has brought her daughter Linda and fourteen of her Grandchildren to attend Good Shepherd over the past five years.

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    Mrs. Jolinda Harmon in yellow with her Grand daughter Natasha Terrell whose Graduation on 5/17 we also celebrated.

    Grandsons Ty Powell in front and  Keion Lewis beats drum in rear.

    Pastor Judy Lee Blessing Grandma Harmon

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    Natasha Terrell graduated from Cypress Lake High School on Saturday 5/17/14.  She made all A’s in her Senior year. She has been accepted to three Colleges and , so far. plans to attend the University of South Florida,St. Pete Campus to study Nursing. She hopes to become a neonatal Nurse.  She was given gifts and a special blessing then a hearty round of applause.

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    We are so proud of Natasha!

    Here Grandma Harmon and Natasha share a cake.

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    And later Lili brought her dog Spike and her new bike to visit us. She was in an accident with a car.  She was not hurt but her other bike was beyond repair. She depends on her bike to get to work. She was distraught, but her son Gaspare, now completely recovered from his surgery, helped her to get a gently used bike. His recovery and his assistance made for a very happy Mother’s Day for her.She also had her rear basket filled with her Thrift Store Treasures,  videos for our Good Shepherd children.

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    We are so happy to celebrate all of our Good Shepherd women and their families and to see joy replace sadness and struggles

    as we become Church together!  May is a wonderful month for celebration! Thanks be to God!

    Rev. Dr. Judy Lee,Pastor

    Good Shepherd Inclusive Catholic Community

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Rev. Chava’s Beautiful Reflection and Prayer

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    Chava, We join you in prayer for Santiago to be able to stay and for all immigrants whose families are broken by the need for real immigration reform-like Jesus would do it-welcoming the stranger, having a room for everyone in his Dad and Mom’s house!  (And that is the Gospel of the day, room for everyone!   John 14:2 )

    bendiciones, Judy Lee

    Oscar Romero Inclusive Catholic Church 

    Bulletin for Sunday, May 18, 2014 
    Fifth Sunday of Easter

    Dear friends,

    It’s May! The lilacs are blooming, there are blossoms on the apple trees, and it’s time to start planting gardens. Folks in the migrant community have already been planting onions for weeks. Sometimes on a busy day when I have done many interesting things, I stop and realize that all day long, since before I got out of bed and long after my work day was done, people have been bent over, planting onions. I don’t think I could do for ten minutes what they do every day for 12 or 13 hours. Whether it’s cold, or hot and muggy, or even lightly raining, on they go. The only thing that stops work is heavy rain like we had this Friday.

    This month as I enjoy the beautiful flowers and rejoice in all the green [one day I couldn’t remember the word for green … verano? (summer) …verdura? (vegetable). Now when we pass a field lush with green winter wheat, Santiago says, “look, honey! The fields are vegetable!” Hahahahaha.] – in the midst of all that rejoicing, we are scared, because May 28 is growing ever closer.

    On that day, Santiago will go to court for the third time. It is hard to think past the 28th because we don’t know what will happen that day. Last year when he got that date to come back, I thought that surely there would be immigration reform by now.

    In recent weeks I have felt God reminding me to look at my story and remember. “Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for thou art with me. Thy rod and thy staff, they comfort me.” Thy rod and thy staff — that means, even though we can’t see the way, all we have to do is keep our eyes on the shepherd’s staff up ahead, because it doesn’t matter that we don’t know the way, the shepherd can see the road ahead even though we can’t and will guide our feet on safe paths. And I can’t think of that psalm without remembering the time that I was in the mountains in Utah and a storm came up, and I realized that I didn’t need to pray and ask God to keep us alive, because we were in the hands of God, and living or dying, nothing could separate us from the love of God. All was well.

    That memory does not stop me from shamelessly praying for a miracle! But deeper than that desperate prayer, I know that God has brought us safe thus far and God will lead us home.

    Monseñor Romero once said that those who walk with the poor will share the fate of the poor. In El Salvador in 1980 that meant sharing in being disappeared, beaten, tortured, and found dead, and I am grateful that in this moment and place it does not mean that. But all over the country there are people who are terrified that a loved one might be deported, and I am one of them. Pray for Santiago, please. And pray for all those facing separation and deportation and all the families that have been split apart by our terrible laws and broken immigration system. We need a better way.

    Love to all
    Chava

    Rev. Chava Redonnet

  • Becoming The Living Church: Homiletic Dialogue for the 5th Sunday of Easter by Women Priests Revs. Bev and Judy

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    Here we present two complementary homilies on texts for the Fifth Sunday of Easter. It is interesting and inspiring to see the Spirit working to teach through the meanings and illustrations of two women priests. First is  Ohio’s Rev. Dr. Beverly Bingle’s homily and then is my own.

    Let us pray: Our living God, raise us up with Christ so we may become the church You want us to be. Help us to remove all negative divisions from us, especially those we create ourselves. Help us, each one, to give our gifts and talents, our very selves so that we may welcome all to the many rooms in your house, so that we may become, with Christ, the ever growing and always welcoming living church. We ask this in the name of Jesus the Christ, who lives with You and the Holy Spirit, one God, forevermore, Amen!

    Rev. Bev’s Homily:

    In “Finnegan’s Wake,’ James Joyce wrote

    that Catholic means “Here comes everybody,”
    and he’s right.
    Jesus tells us:
    The kin-dom of God has many dwelling places.
    Many mansions.
    There is room for everybody.
    _____________________________________________
    It didn’t take long, though,
    for us Christians to stop acting Christ-like.
    Already, in the Acts of the Apostles,
    we read of the problem
    of some folks taking more than their fair share.
    The Greek widows are being shorted in the bread line.
    Disputes.
    Conflict.
    Distractions from prayer and scripture.
    So they worked out a way to include everybody,
    and their actions and their words
    attracted even more people to the faith.
    _____________________________________________
    We still have the conflicts,
    and we still have people working for peaceful resolutions.
    The Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR)
    continues, in response to the doctrinal investigation
    by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF),
    to show us what spirit-filled discernment
    and respectful dialogue look like.
    Frank Bruni in Wednesday‘s Blade wrote about
    the teacher contracts in the Archdiocese of Cincinnati,
    calling the hierarchy’s new requirements “archaic fixations”
    that show their “sad knack for driving people away.”
    On the other hand,
    he points to Pope Francis’ encouragement to priests
    to be real shepherds.
    This past Tuesday the pre-Vatican Tridentine Mass
    was prayed for Fr. Steve Majoros’ funeral–
    all in Latin, black vestments, priest with his back to the people.
    Contrast that with our weekend Masses at Holy Spirit, in English,
    everybody in a circle (well, more like a rectangle).
    Our church includes all of that here in Toledo,
    and even more variety in countries around the world.
    Ours is truly a catholic church, in the best sense of the word.
    ________________________________________________
    How do we survive?
    The first letter of Peter gives us a clue
    when it calls Jesus the cornerstone.
    That’s the first stone,
    the one that sets the level for a building.
    The other stones are positioned in relation to that stone,
    and the building is solid and straight.
    Those other stones–that’s us,
    the living stones that make up the church.
    As long as we work on being in right relationship
    with Jesus and each other, the faith holds.
    ________________________________________________
    So we keep working at it.
    Last week we thought about
    how to be good shepherds to the people in our lives.
    This week Jesus tells us he is the Way, the Truth, and the Life,
    and that no one can come to God except through him.
    We misunderstand if we think that he means
    that only Christians are going to some heaven
    up in the sky above the clouds.
    Jesus embodies the Way:
    he shows us how to live a life of integrity
    with love for the whole community of life.
    And he tells us that the Way requires Truth,
    so that pride, deception, fear, and selfishness have no place.
    And he tells us that following his Way brings Life:
    each of us fully and eternally alive,
    conscious expressions of the Divine Presence.
    If we don’t live that way,
    we will not have life;
    we die.
    _____________________________________________
    Ann Graham Brock, in her book on Mary of Magdala,
    analyzes the New Testament and other ancient writings,
    observing that the early church had two criteria
    for designating some Christians as apostles.
    First, apostles had a post-resurrection experience of Jesus,
    and second, they were sent to tell the good news to others.
    Every time we come to Mass,
    we tell each other that we are the Body of Christ.
    Christ is present, as Vatican II tells us,
    in the Word proclaimed,
    in the bread and wine shared,
    in the gathered assembly.
    So every one of us is an apostle:
    we have experienced the risen Jesus–in each other!
    Every one of us is commissioned–by our baptism–
    to tell the good news.
    As valuable as the early writings are–and they are foundational–
    God has not stopped talking to us.
    Revelation continues.
    We, individually and collectively, grow and develop;
    we discover new realities;
    we evolve.
    Our language changes;
    our understanding grows more complex.
    We have new insights into ourselves and God.
    _____________________________________________
    It’s not magic.
    It’s mystery
    because we are limited individuals–works in progress–
    on the Way.
    Our hearts need not be troubled–
    there’s a place for us.
    The kin-dom of God is at hand.

     
    Holy Spirit Catholic Community
    at 3535 Executive Parkway (Unity of Toledo)
    Saturdays at 4:30 p.m.
    Sundays at 9 a.m.
    Sundays at 5:30 p.m.
    www.holyspirittoledo.org

    Rev. Dr. Bev Bingle, Pastor

     

    Rev Judy’s Homily: 

    The Scriptural Readings for this week are wonderful guides to becoming church. The American psychologist,Gordon Allport developed a whole psychology of “Becoming” seeing people as unique works in progress and never finished products. In individual growth and development both being and becoming are essential components as one moves toward  socialization and individuality.  And so it was with the early church, and so it is with us. Indeed we can always plea: “Don’t be so hard on me, God is not finished with me yet!”. As church, as the body of Christ we are ever becoming Christ-like as we follow the Way, the teachings and actions, of Jesus but we are on shaky ground if we think we have already arrived. The Way is not easy and we are always in process as we learn and express it as individuals and as church.

    Acts 6:1-7 shows the new church growing and encountering problems- between the Greek speaking Jews and those who spoke Hebrew, the original followers of Christ. The Greek speaking widows were being neglected in the established food program. To solve this problem, divisions and dissension had to be put aside as new leaders were chosen with the specific job of feeding the widows.This also left the Apostles free to pray and preach.Here we see the praying and laying on of hands, or perhaps the ordination, of what may be the first deacons. With this division of labor the word spread, the material and spiritual needs of the new Christian community were met, and the number of disciples in Jerusalem “increased enormously”.  What a great example of becoming church-of learning how to do it in a particular community in the context of great growth!

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    The Psalm (33) is illuminating commentary on this process of a church becoming- “The Creator loves justice and right (and fills the earth with love)!” is the refrain (TIB). The context and content of practices that are just and right and loving( like feeding people in need with equanimity) are fixed characteristics of the becoming church. What is not just, right and loving, is not church and needs to be remedied for our effort at becoming Christ’s body-the church. As Pope Francis has recently noted any attempts at skewing the church toward inclusivity is not Christ’s vision for the church, or his. Yet, the leadership and the work it will take to make the church inclusive of the divorced,those on the LGBTQ spectrum and of women in the church who are called toward ordination as deacons and priests as well as married priests lies before us and is almost daunting. Without this work, the church is not “just, right and loving”. It is no longer becoming but quite stuck in muddy neck deep traditions that stultify and exclude, causing dimunition and not the growth of the church.

    I Peter 2:4-9 speaks of Christ as the living ,chosen and precious cornerstone of the church and of ourselves as living stones being built in around the cornerstone. We are further called “a chosen people, a royal priesthood…a people set apart” to become church whose ” good deeds will glorify God”(v.12). This is about the “priesthood of all believers”, the right and the responsibility of all believers to enact and build the becoming church. How then, can the traditions and canons of men (like Canon 1028 saying only men can be ordained) decide that only some are to be priests? How can total categories of people be left out by virtue of gender, orientation or marital status? The church is the priesthood of all believers. If it is not, it ceases to be and to become, it is dead and dying.

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    The Gospel (John 14:1-12) is about inclusion-“In God’s house there are many dwelling places” meaning that all people and nations are welcome in the living church with the living Christ as its head and all believers as the live building blocks of the living church. Welcome too are all cultures and all expressions of human efforts to know God, yet we are blessed to know God through knowing Christ.  It is also about seeing Jesus the Christ as the Way, that is Christ’s actions and teachings as the road map to becoming church and the people of God.  And it is about seeing the oneness of God and Christ for Christ is in God and God is in Christ. And we too  are in God and God is in us through Christ.  Hence we now have the power to build this church, to build it on justice ,right and love, to build this church that is ever becoming- to bring it finally into being. What an awesome opportunity and responsibility,made possible only by the grace of God!

    Rev. Dr. Judy Lee, Pastor

    The Good Shepherd Inclusive Catholic Community

    Fort Myers, Florida