Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Bulletin for Sunday, August 21, 2011

21st Sunday in Ordinary Time

Friends,

This Sunday we will welcome newly ordained Rev Patti La Rosa, who will preach and preside at the 11 am Mass. Hooray! The world gained four great new priests on June 4, when she, Caryl Johnson, Ann Penick and Marellen Mayers were ordained in Baltimore. More and more women are answering God's call. It was great to be with so many of them, including Ann and Marellen, in Chicago earlier this month.

Seems to me that with all these new priests around – over a hundred of us women priests world-wide in the past ten years or so – seems to me we need to be thinking hard about the role of a priest. The question I carried with me all through Divinity School was, “what is the role of a priest in a community of equals?” I believe this so strongly – that the church must be a place where we recognize the worth and dignity of each person, not only with our words, but with our structures. The church must be a place where each person can begin to see the possibilities in themselves and to recognize them in others, as well.

When I first encountered the Roman Catholic Womenpriests in 2007, I was overjoyed to discover an entire movement of women asking the same question! One of the ways we have wrestled with that question is in determining the role of our bishops. We decided that bishops have a liturgical role (in ordinations, particularly) and are “pastors to the pastors” - but they do not have a decision-making role. There's no council of bishops making decisions for everyone else.

One of the measures of any organization is if it lives up to its own standards, if it “walks the walk, not just talks the talk.” Something I have noticed, at the retreat this month and at other retreats, is that although the women present are priests, deacons, bishops and women discerning their call, if you were to sit in a circle with us I don't think you would know who was who. Everybody's voice counts. Everyone is valued. We are clearly not a movement about personalities.

There's a lot more to say on all this, probably a book or so's worth of things to say. But for now I just wanted to share that with you – how happy I am with this group of women who really are walking their talk.

Come worship with us on Sunday, if you will – and pray for Patti, that her priesthood may be a blessing to many.

What a wonderful age we are living in.

Blessings and love to all,
Chava

All summer long, there is a car wash in the St Joe's parking lot on Saturdays and Sundays from 9-5 as part of the St Joe's Employment Training Program. Come get your car washed! Recommended donations are $5-10 for outside cleanings, $20 for inside and out. Give your car some TLC, and help our guys earn some cash and learn some job skills!


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Oscar Romero Church
An Inclusive Church in the Catholic Tradition
Mass: Sundays, 11 am
St Joseph's House of Hospitality, 402 South Ave, Rochester NY 14620

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Bulletin for Sunday, August 14, 2011

20th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Friends,

What a week this has been for women priests. Thirty-five women from around the country gathered in Chicago for an RCWP-USA national retreat. Then we came home to find that Fr. Roy Bourgeois is at the point of being ousted from the Maryknoll order and from his priesthood for supporting us. (He’s already been excommunicated for it, and this next step has been looming for a while). Roy has been such a strong and prophetic voice for justice, founding the SOA-watch and keeping us aware of what our country is doing in Central and South America. He’s an exemplary priest! How can such a thing be?

We who lived through the crisis at Corpus Christi in 1998 know this --- when you stand with the people who have been excluded, you end up excluded, yourself. Thank you, Roy, for standing with us, your sister priests.

When I was in Chicago I heard this story from Alta Jacko, a priest from the mid-West region. We were talking about Howard Thurman, the great African-American prophet and mystic who was a big influence on Martin Luther King, Jr. Once Rev. Thurman was traveling in the South with his family during the time of the Jim Crow laws there. His two little girls had never encountered legalized discrimination like that before, and didn’t understand why they weren’t allowed to play on a certain playground. He explained it to them this way: “It takes the whole police force, the mayor, the national guard and the entire legislature of this state to keep you from playing on this playground. That’s how powerful you are!!”

Something powerful is happening in the church right now, so powerful that the powers-that-be are trying to keep people from even speaking of it! And as is so typical of the way God works in the world, it is a small, fragile, hidden power --- like mustard seeds. Like yeast. Like dandelions. The powers that be can’t keep it down, no matter how hard they try. Look at the people God has used in history to change the world. Stuttering Moses. Little David, the shepherd boy. An unwed teenage mother. And here we are, a bunch of middle-aged women with our little communities meeting in living rooms and other people’s churches, or in an old bank like Mary Magdalene church or the dining room of a soup kitchen, like us at St Romero’s. A bunch of women all saying YES to God and following where the Spirit leads. And God is going to use us to turn the church upside down, just like in 1998 when the Spirit blew into Corpus Christi – and look what came of that. LIFE. I am so grateful for all these yes-giving, life-giving women. What a great adventure we get to be part of!

If you would like to speak up on behalf of Fr Roy, you could write a letter to Fr. Ed Dougherty, the Superior General of Maryknoll, and ask him not to expel Fr. Roy Bourgeois for advocating for women priests.  Here is the address:

Fr. Edward Dougherty
Maryknoll Fathers
PO Box 303
Maryknoll, NY 10545-0303
Email: mklcouncil@maryknoll.org

If you write to him, Fr Roy’s attorney is requesting copies of letters sent to Maryknoll:
Bill Quigley, Attorney for Fr. Roy Bourgeois,
7214 St. Charles Avenue, Campus Box 902,
New Orleans, LA 70118
Quigley@loyno.edu


Another way to support Fr Roy is to sign an on-line petition from the Women’s Ordination Conference: http://www.womensordination.org/component/option,com_chronocontact/chronoformname,form/

And finally, here is an article from the National Catholic Reporter if you’d like to know more: http://ncronline.org/blogs/ncr-today/bourgeois-facing-expulsion-maryknoll


On Thursday some friends from the Presbytery of Genesee Valley will be joining us as we travel west of the city for our Migrant Mass. You are welcome to join us, too! We leave at 7 pm from the St Joe’s parking lot.

On Sunday, August 21, we will welcome newly-ordained Rev. Patti LaRosa, who will preach and preside at the 11 am Mass at St Romero’s. Come celebrate Patti! Yay!

I hope you are enjoying these beautiful summer days. As I write by the open window I can hear the crickets chirping all over my neighborhood. What a peaceful and happy sound that is!

Blessings and love to all,
Chava


"The culture of bullying within the Catholic Church cannot be tolerated any longer," said, Erin Hanna, Executive Director of the Women's Ordination Conference. "It is contrary to the gospel itself to bully and dismiss faithful priests who dare to break the silence in support of women's rightful role in the Church." --- WOC statement in support of Fr Roy



________________________________________________________
Oscar Romero Church
An Inclusive Church in the Catholic Tradition
Mass: Sundays, 11 am
St Joseph's House of Hospitality, 402 South Ave, Rochester NY 14620