Broten said the amendment was made so that every student could feel
safe and accepted at school. She had used much the same language when
introducing Bill 13 late last year. At that time, Bill 13 proposed that
students be allowed to deal with sexual orientation and gender issues by
forming organizations "with the name gay-straight alliance or another
name."
By now potentially forcing Catholic schools to use the
term gay-straight alliance, Broten has put the government on a collision
course with the Church.
Catholic schools are entirely
supportive of initiatives to reduce bullying and, until yesterday, had
been assured by the government that they would be allowed to do so in
ways that respected Church teaching on homosexuality. In January, the
Ontario Catholic Schools Trustees' Association released a document
called Respecting Difference that outlined how Catholic schools would
address anti-bullying for all students. That document was drafted after
consultations with the government and all indications were that the
government was onside with the Catholic approach to this difficult
issue.
So yesterday's announcement by Broten will be widely regarded as a betrayal and a breach of trust.
Earlier
in the week, the Assembly of Catholic Bishops of Ontario had made a
submission to a government standing committee that was formed to meld
the Liberal Bill 13 with the Conservative Bill 14. Both deal with
anti-bullying but the Conservative bill does not give special emphasis
to students bullied by what the Liberal bill calls homophobia. Instead,
it addresses the issue of bullying uniformly.
In their
submission, the bishops supported strong measures to reduce student
bullying but called on the government to remove the special emphasis on
"homophobia" and instead address bullying in a way that does not
highlight one cause of bullying.
The bishops emphasized that
Catholic schools "have their own highly developed ways of attaining the
goal of creating a welcoming school" that are based on the principles of
the Gospel. They said it is wrong to insist Catholic schools combat
bullying with one "particular methodology that comes from a different
perspective."
By adopting the Respecting Difference guidelines,
Catholic schools would achieve the government anti-bullying objectives
in ways that adhered to Catholic principles, said the bishops. The
bishops also called on the government to respect that education is
primarily the responsibility of the parents "and the government is to
assist them."
See also Teachers Union OECTA comes out in favour of GSAs
Thursday, May 31, 2012
VIDEO: Українська православна церква — Київський патріархат
Viktor Yuschenko's inspiring remarks from a recent speech combined with
footage of Patriarch Filaret, head of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church -
Kyiv Patriarchate, visiting St. Volodymyr Ukrainian Cultural Centre,
Oakville, Canada, 21 April 2012 (Святійший Патріарх Київський і всієї
Руси-України ФІЛАРЕТ, Українська православна церква — Київський
патріархат, Культурний центр Св. Володимира, Оквілл, Канада, 21 квітня
2012.)
Українська православна церква — Київський патріархат (Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Kyivan Patriarchate) http://www.cerkva.info
Українська Православна Церква в Канаді (Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Canada)
http://www.uocc.ca
Українська православна церква — Київський патріархат (Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Kyivan Patriarchate) http://www.cerkva.info
Українська Православна Церква в Канаді (Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Canada)
http://www.uocc.ca
Knights of Columbus defend Montana Jesus statue against lawsuit
Kalispell, Mont., May 31, 2012 / 02:15 am (SOURCE: CNA).- The Knights of Columbus and several individual knights have asked to intervene in a federal legal case challenging the presence of a decades-old World War II memorial in Montana because it contains a statue of Jesus.
“It is sad that some in America have become so intolerant of religion that they are willing to remove longstanding memorials to America’s war heroes to enforce their narrow view on the rest of us,” Supreme Knight Carl Anderson said May 30.
“The idea that a war memorial containing a religious symbol on a remote piece of public land somehow establishes religion in this country is at odds with the historical record, the vision of our Founding Fathers enshrined in the First Amendment and the extensive jurisprudence in this area,” Anderson stated.
The case concerns a memorial erected near Whitefish, Montana on land now within a commercial ski resort. Veterans of the U.S. Army's 10th Mountain Division asked Montana members of the Knights of Columbus to create a memorial like the hilltop shrines they encountered in Europe during World War II.
The Knights of Columbus’ Kalispell Council 1328 leased from the U.S. Forest Service the 25-foot by 25-foot plot of land on Big Mountain to erect the memorial. It finished the shrine in 1954 and has maintained it since.
The permit had been renewed regularly every 10 years until 2010. That year, the Wisconsin-based Freedom from Religion Foundation told the Forest Service that the memorial violated the U.S. Constitution.
The Forest Service initially denied the permit but renewed it after public outcry and media attention.
In February 2012 the Freedom from Religion Foundation sued to have the memorial permanently removed.
Its lawsuit said the continued presence of the Jesus statue is “intended as a religious shrine” and “gives the unmistakable appearance of governmental endorsement of religion.”
The suit also argued that the Forest Service’s approval of the permit for the shrine land diminishes “the civil and political standing of non-religious and non-Christian Americans” and “constitutes governmental preference for religion and Christianity.”
On May 29 the Knights of Columbus and several Montana members asked the U.S. District Court in Missoula, Montana to allow it to intervene as a defendant in order to protect First Amendment Rights.
Retired Air Force Lt. Col. Dr. Raymond Leopold, a Knights of Columbus member who helps maintain the memorial, explained why he wants the statue to stay.
“I have tried to teach my children sincere love and respect for this country and those who defend it,” he said. “I know that members of our community have similar feelings about the statue and are proud to have it as one aspect of our community’s history and culture.”
The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty’s litigation director Erich Rassbach is representing the Knights of Columbus and the individual knights in the case.
“From their perch in Madison, Wisconsin, these professional bullies go around the country threatening government agencies and cities with lawsuits and financial ruin. The Becket Fund will not let them get away with it here,” Rassbach said May 30.
“The Freedom from Religion Foundation has not identified any of its members who have actually seen or complained about the statue. These soldiers died fighting for our freedom—it is unfortunate that the Freedom From Religion Foundation wants to annihilate their sacrifices from public memory.”
Dan Graves, president of Whitefish Mountain Resort, said the statue “honors men who gave their lives in World War II in defense of freedom from tyranny.”
“It’s a historical monument unique to Big Mountain. Trying to erase that history, just because you have a different belief system, is wrong,” he said.
![]() |
| Dr. Raymond Leopold stands next to the 10th Mountain Division war memorial known as the Montana Jesus Statue. |
“The idea that a war memorial containing a religious symbol on a remote piece of public land somehow establishes religion in this country is at odds with the historical record, the vision of our Founding Fathers enshrined in the First Amendment and the extensive jurisprudence in this area,” Anderson stated.
The case concerns a memorial erected near Whitefish, Montana on land now within a commercial ski resort. Veterans of the U.S. Army's 10th Mountain Division asked Montana members of the Knights of Columbus to create a memorial like the hilltop shrines they encountered in Europe during World War II.
The Knights of Columbus’ Kalispell Council 1328 leased from the U.S. Forest Service the 25-foot by 25-foot plot of land on Big Mountain to erect the memorial. It finished the shrine in 1954 and has maintained it since.
The permit had been renewed regularly every 10 years until 2010. That year, the Wisconsin-based Freedom from Religion Foundation told the Forest Service that the memorial violated the U.S. Constitution.
The Forest Service initially denied the permit but renewed it after public outcry and media attention.
In February 2012 the Freedom from Religion Foundation sued to have the memorial permanently removed.
Its lawsuit said the continued presence of the Jesus statue is “intended as a religious shrine” and “gives the unmistakable appearance of governmental endorsement of religion.”
The suit also argued that the Forest Service’s approval of the permit for the shrine land diminishes “the civil and political standing of non-religious and non-Christian Americans” and “constitutes governmental preference for religion and Christianity.”
On May 29 the Knights of Columbus and several Montana members asked the U.S. District Court in Missoula, Montana to allow it to intervene as a defendant in order to protect First Amendment Rights.
Retired Air Force Lt. Col. Dr. Raymond Leopold, a Knights of Columbus member who helps maintain the memorial, explained why he wants the statue to stay.
“I have tried to teach my children sincere love and respect for this country and those who defend it,” he said. “I know that members of our community have similar feelings about the statue and are proud to have it as one aspect of our community’s history and culture.”
The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty’s litigation director Erich Rassbach is representing the Knights of Columbus and the individual knights in the case.
“From their perch in Madison, Wisconsin, these professional bullies go around the country threatening government agencies and cities with lawsuits and financial ruin. The Becket Fund will not let them get away with it here,” Rassbach said May 30.
“The Freedom from Religion Foundation has not identified any of its members who have actually seen or complained about the statue. These soldiers died fighting for our freedom—it is unfortunate that the Freedom From Religion Foundation wants to annihilate their sacrifices from public memory.”
Dan Graves, president of Whitefish Mountain Resort, said the statue “honors men who gave their lives in World War II in defense of freedom from tyranny.”
“It’s a historical monument unique to Big Mountain. Trying to erase that history, just because you have a different belief system, is wrong,” he said.
Wednesday, May 30, 2012
Day of Jesus' Crucifixion Believed Determined
It's been debated for years, but researchers say they now have a definitive date of the crucifixion.
By Jennifer Viegas , SOURCE: Discovery NewsTHE GIST
- Researchers believe that Jesus, as described in the New Testament, was crucified on Friday April 3, 33 A.D.
- Textual and geological clues, along with astronomical data, support the date.
- Scientists acknowledge that natural events described in the Bible could be allegorical.
The latest investigation, reported in the journal International Geology Review, focused on earthquake activity at the Dead Sea, located 13 miles from Jerusalem. The Gospel of Matthew, Chapter 27, mentions that an earthquake coincided with the crucifixion:
“And when Jesus had cried out again in a loud voice, he gave up his spirit. At that moment the curtain of the temple was torn in two from top to bottom. The earth shook, the rocks split and the tombs broke open.”
To analyze earthquake activity in the region, geologist Jefferson Williams of Supersonic Geophysical and colleagues Markus Schwab and Achim Brauer of the German Research Center for Geosciences studied three cores from the beach of the Ein Gedi Spa adjacent to the Dead Sea.
Varves, which are annual layers of deposition in the sediments, reveal that at least two major earthquakes affected the core: a widespread earthquake in 31 B.C. and an early first century seismic event that happened sometime between 26 A.D. and 36 A.D.
The latter period occurred during “the years when Pontius Pilate was procurator of Judea and when the earthquake of the Gospel of Matthew is historically constrained,” Williams said.
"The day and date of the crucifixion (Good Friday) are known with a fair degree of precision," he said. But the year has been in question.
In terms of textual clues to the date of the crucifixion, Williams quoted a Nature paper authored by Colin Humphreys and Graeme Waddington. Williams summarized their work as follows:
- All four gospels and Tacitus in Annals (XV,44) agree that the crucifixion occurred when Pontius Pilate was procurator of Judea from 26-36 AD.
- All four gospels say the crucifixion occurred on a Friday.
- All four gospels agree that Jesus died a few hours before the beginning of the Jewish Sabbath (nightfall on a Friday).
- The synoptic gospels (Matthew, Mark, and Luke) indicate that Jesus died before nightfall on the 15th day of Nisan; right before the start of the Passover meal.
- John’s gospel differs from the synoptics; apparently indicating that Jesus died before nightfall on the 14th day of Nisan.
In terms of the earthquake data alone, Williams and his team acknowledge that the seismic activity associated with the crucifixion could refer to “an earthquake that occurred sometime before or after the crucifixion and was in effect ‘borrowed’ by the author of the Gospel of Matthew, and a local earthquake between 26 and 36 A.D. that was sufficiently energetic to deform the sediments of Ein Gedi but not energetic enough to produce a still extant and extra-biblical historical record.”
“If the last possibility is true, this would mean that the report of an earthquake in the Gospel of Matthew is a type of allegory,” they write.
Williams is studying yet another possible natural happening associated with the crucifixion - darkness.
Three of the four canonical gospels report darkness from noon to 3 PM after the crucifixion. Such darkness could have been caused by a dust storm, he believes.
Williams is investigating if there are dust storm deposits in the sediments coincident with the early first century Jerusalem region earthquake.
Patriarch Sviatoslav Greets Metropolitan Volodymyr on 20th Anniversary of Primate's Service
SOURCE: RISU
Patriarch Sviatoslav (Shevchuk) of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church sent a greeting letter to Metropolitan Volodymyr of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church-Moscow Patriarchate on occasion of the 20th anniversary of his ministry in the Kyiv cathedra.
“I would like to greet You on the 20th anniversary of the service as the Head of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in the Kyiv Cathedra. I thank God for the gift of restoration of Your health which allowed You to return to the full-fledged service as the Head of the Church. On the eve of the Lord’s great holy day of Descent of the Holy Spirit, I will pray to the One God in the Holy Trinity asking Him to fill You with all the necessary gifts for further service for the good and salvation of the flock entrusted to You,” reads the letter.
On 10 March, 2012, Patriarch Sviatoslav visited the Head of UOC-MP in the hospital on the patriarch’s initiative. During the visit he assured Metropolitan Volodymyr of his constant prayer for the metropolitan’s recovery. So reported the Information Department of UGCC.
Патріарх УГКЦ Святослав (Шевчук) надіслав лист-привітання Митрополиту УПЦ (МП) Володимирові (Сабодану) з нагоди 20-ліття його служіння на київській кафедрі.
«Хочу привітати Вас із 20-літтям предстоятельства Главою Української Православної Церкви на Київській кафедрі. Дякую Господу Богу за дар віднови Вашого здоров‘я, що дало можливість повернутися Вам до повноцінного служіння як Предстоятеля Церкви. У переддень великого Господнього свята – Зіслання Святого Духа – буду молити у Святій Тройці Єдиного Бога, щоб сповнював Вас усіма необхідними дарами для подальшого служіння на добро та спасіння дорученої Вам пастви», — йдеться у листі.
Як нагадує Департамент інформації УГКЦ, 10 березня 2012 року Патріарх Святослав (Шевчук) відвідав у лікарні Предстоятеля УПЦ (МП). Зустріч відбулася з ініціативи Глави УГКЦ.
Під час візиту Патріарх Святослав запевнив Митрополита Володимира у постійній молитві за його швидке одужання. Він також з приємністю ствердив, що самопочуття Митрополита поступово покращується, а «це означає, що молитва всіх християн та людей доброї волі приносить свої плоди».
Колаж РІСУ
Patriarch Sviatoslav (Shevchuk) of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church sent a greeting letter to Metropolitan Volodymyr of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church-Moscow Patriarchate on occasion of the 20th anniversary of his ministry in the Kyiv cathedra.
“I would like to greet You on the 20th anniversary of the service as the Head of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in the Kyiv Cathedra. I thank God for the gift of restoration of Your health which allowed You to return to the full-fledged service as the Head of the Church. On the eve of the Lord’s great holy day of Descent of the Holy Spirit, I will pray to the One God in the Holy Trinity asking Him to fill You with all the necessary gifts for further service for the good and salvation of the flock entrusted to You,” reads the letter.
On 10 March, 2012, Patriarch Sviatoslav visited the Head of UOC-MP in the hospital on the patriarch’s initiative. During the visit he assured Metropolitan Volodymyr of his constant prayer for the metropolitan’s recovery. So reported the Information Department of UGCC.
Патріарх УГКЦ Святослав (Шевчук) надіслав лист-привітання Митрополиту УПЦ (МП) Володимирові (Сабодану) з нагоди 20-ліття його служіння на київській кафедрі.
«Хочу привітати Вас із 20-літтям предстоятельства Главою Української Православної Церкви на Київській кафедрі. Дякую Господу Богу за дар віднови Вашого здоров‘я, що дало можливість повернутися Вам до повноцінного служіння як Предстоятеля Церкви. У переддень великого Господнього свята – Зіслання Святого Духа – буду молити у Святій Тройці Єдиного Бога, щоб сповнював Вас усіма необхідними дарами для подальшого служіння на добро та спасіння дорученої Вам пастви», — йдеться у листі.
Як нагадує Департамент інформації УГКЦ, 10 березня 2012 року Патріарх Святослав (Шевчук) відвідав у лікарні Предстоятеля УПЦ (МП). Зустріч відбулася з ініціативи Глави УГКЦ.
Під час візиту Патріарх Святослав запевнив Митрополита Володимира у постійній молитві за його швидке одужання. Він також з приємністю ствердив, що самопочуття Митрополита поступово покращується, а «це означає, що молитва всіх християн та людей доброї волі приносить свої плоди».
Колаж РІСУ
Pope Celebrates Jubilee of Catholicos Patriarch of the Assyrian Church of the East
SOURCE: Assyrian International NewsAgency
Pope Benedict XVI has sent a message celebrating the Golden Jubilee of Mar Dinkha IV, Catholicos Patriarch of the Assyrian Church of the East. The Assyrian Church's historical homeland is in Iraq and other areas of the Middle East, but in recent years has spread across the world due to emigration. In his message, Pope Benedict recalled several ecumenical highlights between the two Churches, including the 1994 Common Declaration on Christology and the establishment of a Joint Commission for Theological Dialogue between the Catholic Church and the Assyrian Church of the East.
Pope Benedict took the occasion to also express his "solidarity with the Christian communities in Iraq and throughout the Middle East, praying that effective forms of common witness to the Gospel and pastoral collaboration in the service of peace, reconciliation and unity may be deepened between the Catholic and Assyrian faithful."
Message of the Holy Father To His Holiness Mar Dinkha IV, Catholicos Patriarch of the Assyrian Church of the East
The Golden Jubilee of the episcopal consecration of Your Holiness, which has culminated in your distinguished ministry as Catholicos Patriarch of the Assyrian Church of the East, offers me the opportunity to extend my congratulations and prayerful good wishes to you.
I thank the Lord for the many blessings he has bestowed on the Assyrian Church of the East through your ministry, and I am grateful for your commitment to promoting constructive dialogue, fruitful cooperation and growing friendship between our Churches. I recall your presence at the funeral of John Paul II and, previously, your 1994 visit to Rome to sign a Common Declaration on Christology. The subsequent Joint Commission for Theological Dialogue between the Catholic Church and the Assyrian Church of the East has borne many fruits. I renew the hope which I expressed during your visit to Rome in June 2007, that "the fruitful labour which the Commission has accomplished over the years can continue, while never losing sight of the ultimate goal of our common journey towards the re-establishment of full communion".I wish also to reiterate my solidarity with the Christian communities in Iraq and throughout the Middle East, praying that effective forms of common witness to the Gospel and pastoral collaboration in the service of peace, reconciliation and unity may be deepened between the Catholic and Assyrian faithful.
Your Holiness, on this significant anniversary, I pray that the love of God the Father may enfold you, the wisdom of the Son enlighten you and the fire of the Holy Spirit continue to inspire you.With sentiments of respect, I extend to Your Holiness a fraternal embrace in Jesus Christ our Saviour.
Benedictus PP. XVI
Pope Benedict XVI has sent a message celebrating the Golden Jubilee of Mar Dinkha IV, Catholicos Patriarch of the Assyrian Church of the East. The Assyrian Church's historical homeland is in Iraq and other areas of the Middle East, but in recent years has spread across the world due to emigration. In his message, Pope Benedict recalled several ecumenical highlights between the two Churches, including the 1994 Common Declaration on Christology and the establishment of a Joint Commission for Theological Dialogue between the Catholic Church and the Assyrian Church of the East.
![]() |
| His Holiness Mar Dinkha IV KhananiaCatholicos-Patriarch of the Holy Apostolic Catholic Church of the East (New Calendarists) together with H. H. Pope Benedict XVI on 21st of June 2007 at the Vatican |
Message of the Holy Father To His Holiness Mar Dinkha IV, Catholicos Patriarch of the Assyrian Church of the East
The Golden Jubilee of the episcopal consecration of Your Holiness, which has culminated in your distinguished ministry as Catholicos Patriarch of the Assyrian Church of the East, offers me the opportunity to extend my congratulations and prayerful good wishes to you.
I thank the Lord for the many blessings he has bestowed on the Assyrian Church of the East through your ministry, and I am grateful for your commitment to promoting constructive dialogue, fruitful cooperation and growing friendship between our Churches. I recall your presence at the funeral of John Paul II and, previously, your 1994 visit to Rome to sign a Common Declaration on Christology. The subsequent Joint Commission for Theological Dialogue between the Catholic Church and the Assyrian Church of the East has borne many fruits. I renew the hope which I expressed during your visit to Rome in June 2007, that "the fruitful labour which the Commission has accomplished over the years can continue, while never losing sight of the ultimate goal of our common journey towards the re-establishment of full communion".I wish also to reiterate my solidarity with the Christian communities in Iraq and throughout the Middle East, praying that effective forms of common witness to the Gospel and pastoral collaboration in the service of peace, reconciliation and unity may be deepened between the Catholic and Assyrian faithful.
Your Holiness, on this significant anniversary, I pray that the love of God the Father may enfold you, the wisdom of the Son enlighten you and the fire of the Holy Spirit continue to inspire you.With sentiments of respect, I extend to Your Holiness a fraternal embrace in Jesus Christ our Saviour.
Benedictus PP. XVI
Church rejects Ontario’s gay-straight club decision, accuses government of ‘micromanagement’
The Ontario Liberals are engaging in unnecessary government “micromanagement” and disregarding the Catholic Church’s own ability to tackle bullying, Cardinal Thomas Collins, head of the Ontario Assembly of Catholic Bishops, said Monday.
“If the point is that there is something unacceptable about those Catholic principles, then I find that troubling and wonder whether caricatures of the Catholic faith are in play,” he said.
“With the principle established that the legitimate local authority is nullified in this case, then is any student free to introduce any program, any club, or advocacy group relating to any issue?”
The province on Friday said it would amend its anti-bullying Bill 13 to give students the right to name their clubs “gay-straight alliances” over the objection of school authorities. The original bill called for “organizations with the name gay-straight alliance or another name.”
The option of “another name” is now off the table. Other ambiguities remain, however.
Related
Laurel Broten, the Minister of Education, made it clear in an interview Monday that all school clubs would have teacher supervision. That raises the question of what a GSA would look like in a Catholic school setting, something that still remains unclear even after two press conferences held by two Catholic leaders.
Cardinal Collins, also the head of the Archdiocese of Toronto, said organizations’ names have specific meaning, and so what a group is named may determine the group’s activity.
“If someone asks you to join the Liberal, Conservative or New Democratic Party, you rightly expect something different from each. So the key issue is not just the name itself, but the content connected with the name, with the ‘brand.’”
Cardinal Collins said the Church was taken aback by Friday’s decision because it believed it was on the way to negotiating a compromise. He said he is puzzled as to “why a piece of provincial legislation is being used to micromanage the naming of student clubs” and “why Catholics are not free to design their own methods to fight bullying?”
Cardinal Collins said he would not speculate as to the government’s motives, and was unclear about the role teachers might play in steering a club, regardless of its name, in keeping the club’s agenda in line with Catholic teaching.
The Catechism of the Catholic Church says homosexual behaviour is “intrinsically disordered” and “under no circumstance can it be approved.” However, the Catechism also teaches that homosexuals “must be accepted with respect, compassion, and sensitivity. Every sign of unjust discrimination in their regard should be avoided.”
Earlier Monday, Marino Gazzola, president of the Ontario Catholic School Trustees’ Association, struggled to express what the practical difference would be between a GSA or a “respecting difference” club, something his group has proposed.
“GSAs are externally developed and they don’t reflect the unique values our Catholic schools are based on,” he said. ‘‘Our concern is on focusing on Catholic values and the safety of all students and ensure they are protected. In our view the word [gay] is distraction. We want to focus on the safety of the students.”
Both the Liberals and NDP support the amended bill, so in all likelihood the bill will be passed before the legislature rises for the summer on June 7.
In an interview, Ms. Broten said the government has focused on gay students because they are the group most at risk. She noted a survey from EGALE Canada, the country’s leading gay rights groups, which showed that 64% of gays students have been subjected to some form of bullying.
However, the in 2006 the Toronto District School Board conducted a study to determine causes of bullying. The most cited reason was “body image” (38% in Grades 7 to 8; 27% in Grades 9 to 12), followed by grades or marks (17% and 12% respectively), and 7% in all grades noted language as a cause.
The next three categories at 5% or lower were gender, religion and income. The issue of gay bullying did not register in the study.
National Post
PHOTO of the Day - UCU Chapel
Ukrainian Catholic University chapel, icons written by Bohdan Turetsky (photo: Fr. Michael Winn)
NB: The iconography at St. Elias Church in Brampton, ON is also the work of Mr. Turetsky. We hope to have him back in Canada so that he can complete the wonderful work started many years ago. See video series Icons and Architecture at St. Elias (on YouTube) to learn more.
NB: The iconography at St. Elias Church in Brampton, ON is also the work of Mr. Turetsky. We hope to have him back in Canada so that he can complete the wonderful work started many years ago. See video series Icons and Architecture at St. Elias (on YouTube) to learn more.
Anti-Abortion Protests to Take Place in Front of the United Nations in New York and Russian Embassies in Washington, DC, and Montreal, QC
SOURCE: Christian News Wire
Contact: Gregg Cunningham, Center for Bioethical Reform, 714-240-6976
NEW YORK, May 30, 2012 /Christian Newswire/ -- On June 1st, the international anti-abortion movement "Warriors of Life" will conduct a public campaign aimed at prohibition of abortions in Russia, Ukraine, USA, Poland, Canada. Campaign will include picketing of the United Nations Headquarters in New York City.
New York, NY: At 11am on June 1st, June New Yorkers will bear witness to picketing of the United Nations Headquarters (45th Street and 1st Avenue) with a call to protect the most defenseless members of the society -- the unborn children. Protests will be led by Orthodox Christians group "The Awakening."
Washington, DC: At 11am on June 1st, a picket in front of the Russian Embassy (2650 Wisconsin Avenue Northwest Washington) will be organized by the Center for Bioethical Reform (CBR), based in Lake Forest, California and take place in support of the "Warriors of Life" open letter written to Vladimir Putin requesting an Institutional Court investigation into the legality of abortion-permitting clauses. According to the legal analysis done by "Warriors of Life," these clauses are unconstitutional.
Montreal, Canada: At 1pm on June 2nd, Conservative organizations will gather in front of Russian Consulate General (Montreal, 3685, Avenue de Musee), supporting the "Warriors of Life" campaign to put an end to abortions.
Russia: "Warriors of Life" will protest in front of Ukrainian Embassy in Moscow and Ukrainian General Consulate in Saint-Petersburg. At this time, Ukrainian Legislature (Verkhovnaya Rada) is considering the law aimed at curbing discretionary abortion. During the diplomatic mission protests "Warriors of Life" will call on Ukrainian elected representatives to pass this law and continue legislative process even further (since the law under consideration still allows some abortions).
The protest campaign will continue on for several days in Moscow, St. Petersburg, including sea-boat protests within the boundaries of the city, other cities in Russia, Warsaw (Poland), and Kiev (Ukraine).
Current anti-abortion campaign is dedicated to the memory of the Saint Constantine, a Roman Emperor called by the Orthodox Church equal-to-the-apostles. The memory of Saint Constantine is celebrated on June 3rd on Gregorian (contemporary) calendar. Emperor Constantine put an end to many pagan atrocities in the Eastern Roman Empire. "Warriors of Life" are intent on putting an end to a new paganism- 'lawful' killing of the unborn children.
June 1, 2012. 11:00am Washington, DC In front of Russian Embassy (2650 Wisconsin Avenue Northwest Washington). Center for Bioethical Reform (CBR), based in Lake Forest, California abortionno.org Kurt Linnemann, tel:410-913-3931 Email: cbrmaryland@cbrinfo.org
June 1, 2012. 11:00am St. Petersburg, Russia In front of Ukrainian Consulate General (Tulskaya street, 8) International Pro-Life Movement "Warriors of Life" +7-911-940-12-02, +7-951-675-91-17.
June 1, 2012. 10:00am Moscow, Russia In front of Ukrainian Embassy (Leontievsky Pereulok, 18) International Pro-Life Movement "Warriors of Life" +7-985-287-1835
June 1, 2012. 08:00am Kiev, Ukraine In front of Russian Embassy (Vozduhoflotsky Prospekt, 27) International Pro-Life Movement "Warriors of Life" +380-63-766-5279, +380-95-439-3976
June 1, 2012. 02:00pm Warsaw, Poland Belwederska St., 49 Foundation "The right to life" (Poland) E-mail: kontakt@stopaborcji.pl, tel/fax: (022) 828-70-82, Tel. kom. 608 594 158
June 2, 2012. 1:00pm Montreal, Canada In front of Ukrainian Consulate General (Tulskaya street, 8) Various initiative groups +1-514-521-9289
June 2, 2012. 12:00pm St. Petersburg, Russia Sennoy Bridge through Griboyedov Channel (subway Spasskaya, Sennaya, Sadovaya) International Pro-Life Movement "Warriors of Life" +7-911-940-12-02, +7-951-675-91-17.
June 3, 2012. 02:00pm Moscow, Russia Novokuznetskaya Square (subway Novokuznetskaya) International Pro-Life Movement "Warriors of Life" +7-985-287-1835
June 4, 2012. 02:00pm Moscow, Russia In front of Russian State Duma (Ohotny Ryad, 1. Subway Ohotny Ryad) International Pro-Life Movement "Warriors of Life" +7-985-287-1835
June 4, 2012. 08:00am Kiev, Ukraine In front of Verhovnaya Rada (Grushevskogo St, 5) International Pro-Life Movement "Warriors of Life" +380-63-766-5279, +380-95-439-3976
Contact: Gregg Cunningham, Center for Bioethical Reform, 714-240-6976
NEW YORK, May 30, 2012 /Christian Newswire/ -- On June 1st, the international anti-abortion movement "Warriors of Life" will conduct a public campaign aimed at prohibition of abortions in Russia, Ukraine, USA, Poland, Canada. Campaign will include picketing of the United Nations Headquarters in New York City.
New York, NY: At 11am on June 1st, June New Yorkers will bear witness to picketing of the United Nations Headquarters (45th Street and 1st Avenue) with a call to protect the most defenseless members of the society -- the unborn children. Protests will be led by Orthodox Christians group "The Awakening."
Washington, DC: At 11am on June 1st, a picket in front of the Russian Embassy (2650 Wisconsin Avenue Northwest Washington) will be organized by the Center for Bioethical Reform (CBR), based in Lake Forest, California and take place in support of the "Warriors of Life" open letter written to Vladimir Putin requesting an Institutional Court investigation into the legality of abortion-permitting clauses. According to the legal analysis done by "Warriors of Life," these clauses are unconstitutional.
Montreal, Canada: At 1pm on June 2nd, Conservative organizations will gather in front of Russian Consulate General (Montreal, 3685, Avenue de Musee), supporting the "Warriors of Life" campaign to put an end to abortions.
Russia: "Warriors of Life" will protest in front of Ukrainian Embassy in Moscow and Ukrainian General Consulate in Saint-Petersburg. At this time, Ukrainian Legislature (Verkhovnaya Rada) is considering the law aimed at curbing discretionary abortion. During the diplomatic mission protests "Warriors of Life" will call on Ukrainian elected representatives to pass this law and continue legislative process even further (since the law under consideration still allows some abortions).
The protest campaign will continue on for several days in Moscow, St. Petersburg, including sea-boat protests within the boundaries of the city, other cities in Russia, Warsaw (Poland), and Kiev (Ukraine).
Current anti-abortion campaign is dedicated to the memory of the Saint Constantine, a Roman Emperor called by the Orthodox Church equal-to-the-apostles. The memory of Saint Constantine is celebrated on June 3rd on Gregorian (contemporary) calendar. Emperor Constantine put an end to many pagan atrocities in the Eastern Roman Empire. "Warriors of Life" are intent on putting an end to a new paganism- 'lawful' killing of the unborn children.
TO JOIN PROTESTS IN YOUR LOCATION:
June 1, 2012. 11:00am New York, NY In front of the United Nations (45th Street and 1st Avenue Radio Awakening” www.radio-awakening.com +1-917-600-9679June 1, 2012. 11:00am Washington, DC In front of Russian Embassy (2650 Wisconsin Avenue Northwest Washington). Center for Bioethical Reform (CBR), based in Lake Forest, California abortionno.org Kurt Linnemann, tel:410-913-3931 Email: cbrmaryland@cbrinfo.org
June 1, 2012. 11:00am St. Petersburg, Russia In front of Ukrainian Consulate General (Tulskaya street, 8) International Pro-Life Movement "Warriors of Life" +7-911-940-12-02, +7-951-675-91-17.
June 1, 2012. 10:00am Moscow, Russia In front of Ukrainian Embassy (Leontievsky Pereulok, 18) International Pro-Life Movement "Warriors of Life" +7-985-287-1835
June 1, 2012. 08:00am Kiev, Ukraine In front of Russian Embassy (Vozduhoflotsky Prospekt, 27) International Pro-Life Movement "Warriors of Life" +380-63-766-5279, +380-95-439-3976
June 1, 2012. 02:00pm Warsaw, Poland Belwederska St., 49 Foundation "The right to life" (Poland) E-mail: kontakt@stopaborcji.pl, tel/fax: (022) 828-70-82, Tel. kom. 608 594 158
June 2, 2012. 1:00pm Montreal, Canada In front of Ukrainian Consulate General (Tulskaya street, 8) Various initiative groups +1-514-521-9289
June 2, 2012. 12:00pm St. Petersburg, Russia Sennoy Bridge through Griboyedov Channel (subway Spasskaya, Sennaya, Sadovaya) International Pro-Life Movement "Warriors of Life" +7-911-940-12-02, +7-951-675-91-17.
June 3, 2012. 02:00pm Moscow, Russia Novokuznetskaya Square (subway Novokuznetskaya) International Pro-Life Movement "Warriors of Life" +7-985-287-1835
June 4, 2012. 02:00pm Moscow, Russia In front of Russian State Duma (Ohotny Ryad, 1. Subway Ohotny Ryad) International Pro-Life Movement "Warriors of Life" +7-985-287-1835
June 4, 2012. 08:00am Kiev, Ukraine In front of Verhovnaya Rada (Grushevskogo St, 5) International Pro-Life Movement "Warriors of Life" +380-63-766-5279, +380-95-439-3976
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
VIDEO: Mgr Keith Newton on The Future of Ecumenism
Monsignor Keith Newton from the Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham speaks about The Future of Ecumenism,
This talk was recorded for at St Mary Magdalen's Brighton on Thursday 24th May as part of the 150th Anniversary Talks.
Monsignor Newton (born 10 April 1952) is an English priest of the Roman Catholic Church and the first Ordinary of the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham. Newton was formerly a bishop of the Church of England and served as the Bishop of Richborough in the Province of Canterbury from 2002 to 2010. (Wikipedia)
Monsignor Newton (born 10 April 1952) is an English priest of the Roman Catholic Church and the first Ordinary of the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham. Newton was formerly a bishop of the Church of England and served as the Bishop of Richborough in the Province of Canterbury from 2002 to 2010. (Wikipedia)
Многая літа, Владико! God grant you many years!
Most Reverend Bishop Stephen, Eparch of Toronto and Eastern Canada,
to celebrate the 40th anniversary of his ordination to the Holy Priesthood
Ordained June 11, 1972
Let us help him celebrate the occasion!
Clergy Conference
June 12, 2012
10:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
Sts. Peter and Paul Church, 1490 Markham Road Toronto, ON
1:00 p.m. Lunch and celebration
All clergy are asked to be present at the conference
and to honour Bishop Stephen on this special day.
UOC-MP Events in Transcarpathian Region of Ukraine
UOC-MP Clergy in Transcarpathian Region Pray for Symon Petliura
Source: RISU
On 25 May, the Orthodox clergy in the Church of St. Cyril and Methodius of the Uzhhorod Ukrainian Theological academy of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church-Moscow Patriarchate (UOC-MP) served a memorial litia for the repose of the Chief Otaman of the Army of the Ukrainian People’s Republic and Head of the Directory, Symon Petliura on occasion of the 133rd anniversary of his birth.
The service was led by the Rector of the Uzhhorod Ukrainian Theological Academy and President of Avhustyn Voloshyn Carpathian Univeresity, Commissioner of UOC-MP on Matters of Higher Education and Science, Professor, Archimandrite Viktor (Bed’) in concelebration with Protopriest, Ihor Kovalchuk and Senior Priest of the Church of St. Cyril and Methodius, Protopriest Yevhenii Shevelii. So reported the press-service of the Uzhhorod Ukrainian Theological Academy.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++
UOC-MP Clergy in Transcarpathian Region Pray for Yevhen Konovalets
SOURCE: RISU
On 23 May, the Orthodox clergy in the Church of St. Cyril and Methodius of the Uzhhorod Ukrainian Theological academy of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church-Moscow Patriarchate (UOC-MP) served a memorial litia for the repose of the leader of the Ukrainian national liberation movement of 1930-s, Yevhen Konovalets who was executed by the Soviet Communist regime.
The service was led by the Rector of the Uzhhorod Ukrainian Theological Academy and President of Avhustyn Voloshyn Carpathian Univeresity, Commissioner of UOC-MP on Matters of Higher Education and Science, Professor, Archimandrite Viktor (Bed’) in concelebration with the head of the academy’s press service, Protopriest Ihor Kovalchuk and Hieromonach Ihor (Bohdan). So reported the press-service of the Academy.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++
New Monastery of UOC-MP Established in Transcarpathian Region
SOURCE: RISU
A men’s Monastery of the Holy Trinity has been established in the village of Bukivtsiovo of Velykobereznianskyi District of the Transcarpathian Region with the blessing of Archbishop Feodor (Mamasuiev) of Mukachiv and Uzhhorod of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church-Moscow Patriarchate.
On 26 May, Archbishop Feodor consecrated the foundation of the first wooden Church in the new monastery.
According to Orthodoxy in Ukraine, Hieromonach Rafail was appointed hegumen of the monastery.
It is the 19th monastery of the Mukachiv Eparchy of UOC-MP.
Source: RISU
On 25 May, the Orthodox clergy in the Church of St. Cyril and Methodius of the Uzhhorod Ukrainian Theological academy of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church-Moscow Patriarchate (UOC-MP) served a memorial litia for the repose of the Chief Otaman of the Army of the Ukrainian People’s Republic and Head of the Directory, Symon Petliura on occasion of the 133rd anniversary of his birth.
The service was led by the Rector of the Uzhhorod Ukrainian Theological Academy and President of Avhustyn Voloshyn Carpathian Univeresity, Commissioner of UOC-MP on Matters of Higher Education and Science, Professor, Archimandrite Viktor (Bed’) in concelebration with Protopriest, Ihor Kovalchuk and Senior Priest of the Church of St. Cyril and Methodius, Protopriest Yevhenii Shevelii. So reported the press-service of the Uzhhorod Ukrainian Theological Academy.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++
UOC-MP Clergy in Transcarpathian Region Pray for Yevhen Konovalets
SOURCE: RISU
On 23 May, the Orthodox clergy in the Church of St. Cyril and Methodius of the Uzhhorod Ukrainian Theological academy of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church-Moscow Patriarchate (UOC-MP) served a memorial litia for the repose of the leader of the Ukrainian national liberation movement of 1930-s, Yevhen Konovalets who was executed by the Soviet Communist regime.
The service was led by the Rector of the Uzhhorod Ukrainian Theological Academy and President of Avhustyn Voloshyn Carpathian Univeresity, Commissioner of UOC-MP on Matters of Higher Education and Science, Professor, Archimandrite Viktor (Bed’) in concelebration with the head of the academy’s press service, Protopriest Ihor Kovalchuk and Hieromonach Ihor (Bohdan). So reported the press-service of the Academy.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++
New Monastery of UOC-MP Established in Transcarpathian Region
SOURCE: RISU
A men’s Monastery of the Holy Trinity has been established in the village of Bukivtsiovo of Velykobereznianskyi District of the Transcarpathian Region with the blessing of Archbishop Feodor (Mamasuiev) of Mukachiv and Uzhhorod of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church-Moscow Patriarchate.
On 26 May, Archbishop Feodor consecrated the foundation of the first wooden Church in the new monastery.
According to Orthodoxy in Ukraine, Hieromonach Rafail was appointed hegumen of the monastery.
It is the 19th monastery of the Mukachiv Eparchy of UOC-MP.
МУКАЧЕВО. У єпархії з’явився новий чоловічий монастир
SOURCE: Orthodoxy in Ukraine
28 Май 2012 13:13
28 Май 2012 13:13
З благословення архієпископа
Мукачівського та Ужгородського Феодора в селі Великоберезнянського
району засновано Свято-Троїцький православний чоловічий монастир.
26 травня 2012 р. владика Феодор здійснив освячення фундаменту під перший дерев'яний храм в новій святій обителі.
У чудовому мальовничому місці, звідки
видніються вершини гір Березнянщини, серед чудової Богом створеної
природи розпочалося монаше життя, що заключає в собі сердечну молитву за
весь світ.
Ігуменом молодої обителі був призначений ієромонах Рафаїл, який разом із братією одним із перших поселився у цій місцевості.
Новостворений Свято-Троїцький чоловічий монастир став уже 19-м у Мукачівській єпархії.
Братія монастиря з великою любов'ю зустріла перших паломників, які
стали свідками історичної події – заснування першої монастирської
церкви.
Після освячення владика Феодор розкрив у
проповіді зміст сердечної молитви та монашого подвигу, а також побажав
ігумену обителі отцю Рафаїлу Божої допомоги в «будівництві» храмів душі у
ввіреній йому братії.
Patriarch Kirill to visit Kyiv (again...) on July 26-28
Yesterday at 18:43 | Interfax-Ukraine
The head of the Russian Orthodox Church, Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia Kirill, will visit Kyiv on July 26-28 this year.
"Patriarch Kirill's visit on the memorial day of St. (Prince) Volodymyr is already traditional. This year, the traditional visit, dedicated to this day, also foresees his participation in marking the 20th anniversary of Metropolitan Volodymyr's stay in Kyiv's cathedra as chairman of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate)," the spokesperson for the head of the UOC (MP), Archpriest Heorhiy Kovalenko, said at a briefing in Kyiv on Monday.
He said that the main events of this visit would be worshiping at St. Volodymyr’s Hill and the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra monastery.
"With regard to other activities, then there is no final program, but it is being agreed," he added.
The head of the Russian Orthodox Church, Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia Kirill, will visit Kyiv on July 26-28 this year.
"Patriarch Kirill's visit on the memorial day of St. (Prince) Volodymyr is already traditional. This year, the traditional visit, dedicated to this day, also foresees his participation in marking the 20th anniversary of Metropolitan Volodymyr's stay in Kyiv's cathedra as chairman of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate)," the spokesperson for the head of the UOC (MP), Archpriest Heorhiy Kovalenko, said at a briefing in Kyiv on Monday.
He said that the main events of this visit would be worshiping at St. Volodymyr’s Hill and the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra monastery.
"With regard to other activities, then there is no final program, but it is being agreed," he added.
Catholic spokesman in Greece: Orthodox leader intolerant, fanatical
SOURCE: The Catholic Register
Written by Jonathan Luxmoore, Catholic News Service Monday, 28 May 2012 09:58
OXFORD, England - Greece's Catholic Church accused a leader of the Orthodox Church of "intolerance and fanaticism" after he sued a Catholic archbishop for illegal proselytism.
"I hope the court rejects his petition, which has no legal or juridical basis," said Nikolaos Gasparakis, spokesman for the Greek bishops' conference. "It's a pity he doesn't say more about the plight of citizens during our grave economic crisis, rather than just attacking Catholics."
In April, Orthodox Metropolitan Seraphim of Piraeus filed suit against Athens Archbishop Nikolaos Foskolos, for allegedly violating the Greek constitution by running a Catholic school in Piraeus. The metropolitan cited Article 13 of Greece's constitution, which prohibits proselytism.
In a May 24 interview with Catholic News Service, Gasparakis said Metropolitan Seraphim's actions "infringed canonical rules" and "contradicted the Gospel," but added that he was concerned other Orthodox leaders had not reacted to his actions.
"In the 11 years since Pope John Paul II visited our country, Greek society has become more tolerant and less hostile toward Catholics," Gasparakis said. However, he said, that was not true of the Orthodox leaders.
In March, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I -- considered first among equals of the Orthodox patriarchs -- wrote the Orthodox archbishop of Athens about an "unjustified and dangerous" sermon by Metropolitan Seraphim. In that early March sermon, the metropolitan invoked an anathema against Pope Benedict XVI as well as against Protestants, Jews, Muslims and ecumenists.
The 200,000-member Catholic Church has often complained of discrimination in Greece, a European Union and NATO member-state whose constitution declares Orthodoxy the "prevailing religion" and prohibits Bible translations without Orthodox consent.
On May 7, the bishops' conference said it would take action in the European Court of Human Rights against Greece's failure to provide equal rights and legal status for the Catholic Church.
The statement, published a day after inconclusive May 6 elections worsened Greece's economic crisis, said the church would also protest the "unacceptable and offensive aggression" by Orthodox leaders.
Written by Jonathan Luxmoore, Catholic News Service Monday, 28 May 2012 09:58
OXFORD, England - Greece's Catholic Church accused a leader of the Orthodox Church of "intolerance and fanaticism" after he sued a Catholic archbishop for illegal proselytism.
"I hope the court rejects his petition, which has no legal or juridical basis," said Nikolaos Gasparakis, spokesman for the Greek bishops' conference. "It's a pity he doesn't say more about the plight of citizens during our grave economic crisis, rather than just attacking Catholics."
![]() |
| Metropolitan Seraphim of Piraeus |
In a May 24 interview with Catholic News Service, Gasparakis said Metropolitan Seraphim's actions "infringed canonical rules" and "contradicted the Gospel," but added that he was concerned other Orthodox leaders had not reacted to his actions.
"In the 11 years since Pope John Paul II visited our country, Greek society has become more tolerant and less hostile toward Catholics," Gasparakis said. However, he said, that was not true of the Orthodox leaders.
In March, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I -- considered first among equals of the Orthodox patriarchs -- wrote the Orthodox archbishop of Athens about an "unjustified and dangerous" sermon by Metropolitan Seraphim. In that early March sermon, the metropolitan invoked an anathema against Pope Benedict XVI as well as against Protestants, Jews, Muslims and ecumenists.
The 200,000-member Catholic Church has often complained of discrimination in Greece, a European Union and NATO member-state whose constitution declares Orthodoxy the "prevailing religion" and prohibits Bible translations without Orthodox consent.
On May 7, the bishops' conference said it would take action in the European Court of Human Rights against Greece's failure to provide equal rights and legal status for the Catholic Church.
The statement, published a day after inconclusive May 6 elections worsened Greece's economic crisis, said the church would also protest the "unacceptable and offensive aggression" by Orthodox leaders.
Monday, May 28, 2012
Christian villages attempt to revive ancient Biblical language
SOURCE: Haaretz
In both the Galilee and the West Bank, Christian communities are putting a new focus on Aramaic, with a little help from a Swedish television channel.
Two villages in the Holy Land's tiny Christian community are teaching Aramaic in an ambitious effort to revive the language that Jesus spoke, centuries after it all but disappeared from the Middle East.
The new focus on the region's dominant language 2,000 years ago comes with a little help from modern technology: an Aramaic-speaking television channel from Sweden, of all places, where a vibrant immigrant community has kept the ancient tongue alive.
In the Palestinian village of Beit Jala, an older generation of Aramaic speakers is trying to share the language with their grandchildren. Beit Jala lies next to Bethlehem, where the New Testament says Jesus was born.
And in the Arab-Israeli village of Jish, nestled in the Galilean hills where Jesus lived and preached, elementary school children are now being instructed in Aramaic. The children belong mostly to the Maronite Christian community. Maronites still chant their liturgy in Aramaic but few understand the prayers.
"We want to speak the language that Jesus spoke," said Carla Hadd, a 10-year-old Jish girl who frequently waved her arms to answer questions in Aramaic from school teacher Mona Issa during a recent lesson.
"We used to speak it a long time ago," she added, referring to her ancestors.
During the lesson, a dozen children lisped out a Christian prayer in Aramaic. They learned the words for "elephant," "how are you?" and "mountain." Some children carefully drew sharp-angled Aramaic letters. Others fiddled with their pencil cases, which sported images of popular soccer teams.
The dialect taught in Jish and Beit Jala is "Syriac," which was spoken by their Christian forefathers and resembles the Galilean dialect that Jesus would have used, according to Steven Fassberg, an Aramaic expert at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
"They probably would have understood each other," Fassberg said.
In Jish, about 80 children in grades one through five study Aramaic as a voluntary subject for two hours a week. Israel's education ministry provided funds to add classes until the eighth grade, said principal Reem Khatieb-Zuabi.
Several Jish residents lobbied for Aramaic studies several years ago, said Khatieb-Zuabi, but the idea faced resistance: Jish's Muslims worried it was a covert attempt to entice their children to Christianity. Some Christians objected, saying the emphasis on their ancestral language was being used to strip them of their Arab identity. The issue is sensitive to many Arab Muslims and Christians in Israel, who prefer to be identified by their ethnicity, not their faith.
Ultimately, Khatieb-Zuabi, a secular Muslim from an outside village, overruled them.
"This is our collective heritage and culture. We should celebrate and study it," the principal said. And so the Jish Elementary School become the only Israeli public school teaching Aramaic, according to the education ministry.
Their efforts are mirrored in Beit Jala's Mar Afram school run by the Syrian Orthodox church and located just a few miles (kilometers) from Bethlehem's Manger Square.
There, priests have taught the language to their 320 students for the past five years.
Some 360 families in the area descend from Aramaic-speaking refugees who in the 1920s fled the Tur Abdin region of what is now Turkey.
Priest Butros Nimeh said elders still speak the language but that it vanished among younger generations. Nimeh said they hoped teaching the language would help the children appreciate their roots.
Although both the Syrian Orthodox and Maronite church worship in Aramaic, they are distinctly different sects.
The Maronites are the dominant Christian church in neighboring Lebanon but make up only a few thousand of the Holy Land's 210,000 Christians. Likewise, Syrian Orthodox Christians number no more than 2,000 in the Holy Land, said Nimeh.
Overall, some 150,000 Christians live in Israel and another 60,000 live in the West Bank.
Both schools found inspiration and assistance in an unlikely place: Sweden. There, Aramaic-speaking communities who descended from the Middle East have sought to keep their language alive.
They publish a newspaper, "Bahro Suryoyo," pamphlets and children's books, including "The Little Prince," and maintain a satellite television station, "Soryoyosat," said Arzu Alan, chairwoman of the Syriac Aramaic Federation of Sweden.
There's also an Aramaic soccer team, "Syrianska FC" in the Swedish top division from the town of Sodertalje. Officials estimate the Aramaic-speaking population at anywhere from 30,000 to 80,000 people.
For many Maronites and Syrian Orthodox Christians in the Holy Land, the television station, in particular, was the first time they heard the language outside church in decades. Hearing it in a modern context inspired them to try revive the language among their communities.
"When you hear (the language), you can speak it," said Issa, the teacher.
Aramaic dialects were the region's vernacular from 2,500 years ago until the sixth century, when Arabic, the language of conquering Muslims from the Arabian Peninsula, became dominant, according to Fassberg.
Linguistic islands survived: Maronites clung to Aramaic liturgy and so did the Syrian Orthodox church. Kurdish Jews on the river island of Zakho spoke an Aramaic dialect called "Targum" until fleeing to Israel in the 1950s. Three Christian villages in Syria still speak an Aramaic dialect, Fassberg said.
With few opportunities to practice the ancient tongue, teachers in Jish have tempered expectations. They hope they can at least revive an understanding of the language.
The steep challenges are seen in the Jish school, where the fourth-grade Aramaic class has just a dozen students. The number used to be twice that until they introduced an art class during the same time slot … and lost half their students.
In both the Galilee and the West Bank, Christian communities are putting a new focus on Aramaic, with a little help from a Swedish television channel.
Two villages in the Holy Land's tiny Christian community are teaching Aramaic in an ambitious effort to revive the language that Jesus spoke, centuries after it all but disappeared from the Middle East.
The new focus on the region's dominant language 2,000 years ago comes with a little help from modern technology: an Aramaic-speaking television channel from Sweden, of all places, where a vibrant immigrant community has kept the ancient tongue alive.
In the Palestinian village of Beit Jala, an older generation of Aramaic speakers is trying to share the language with their grandchildren. Beit Jala lies next to Bethlehem, where the New Testament says Jesus was born.
And in the Arab-Israeli village of Jish, nestled in the Galilean hills where Jesus lived and preached, elementary school children are now being instructed in Aramaic. The children belong mostly to the Maronite Christian community. Maronites still chant their liturgy in Aramaic but few understand the prayers.
"We want to speak the language that Jesus spoke," said Carla Hadd, a 10-year-old Jish girl who frequently waved her arms to answer questions in Aramaic from school teacher Mona Issa during a recent lesson.
"We used to speak it a long time ago," she added, referring to her ancestors.
During the lesson, a dozen children lisped out a Christian prayer in Aramaic. They learned the words for "elephant," "how are you?" and "mountain." Some children carefully drew sharp-angled Aramaic letters. Others fiddled with their pencil cases, which sported images of popular soccer teams.
The dialect taught in Jish and Beit Jala is "Syriac," which was spoken by their Christian forefathers and resembles the Galilean dialect that Jesus would have used, according to Steven Fassberg, an Aramaic expert at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
"They probably would have understood each other," Fassberg said.
In Jish, about 80 children in grades one through five study Aramaic as a voluntary subject for two hours a week. Israel's education ministry provided funds to add classes until the eighth grade, said principal Reem Khatieb-Zuabi.
Several Jish residents lobbied for Aramaic studies several years ago, said Khatieb-Zuabi, but the idea faced resistance: Jish's Muslims worried it was a covert attempt to entice their children to Christianity. Some Christians objected, saying the emphasis on their ancestral language was being used to strip them of their Arab identity. The issue is sensitive to many Arab Muslims and Christians in Israel, who prefer to be identified by their ethnicity, not their faith.
Ultimately, Khatieb-Zuabi, a secular Muslim from an outside village, overruled them.
"This is our collective heritage and culture. We should celebrate and study it," the principal said. And so the Jish Elementary School become the only Israeli public school teaching Aramaic, according to the education ministry.
Their efforts are mirrored in Beit Jala's Mar Afram school run by the Syrian Orthodox church and located just a few miles (kilometers) from Bethlehem's Manger Square.
There, priests have taught the language to their 320 students for the past five years.
Some 360 families in the area descend from Aramaic-speaking refugees who in the 1920s fled the Tur Abdin region of what is now Turkey.
Priest Butros Nimeh said elders still speak the language but that it vanished among younger generations. Nimeh said they hoped teaching the language would help the children appreciate their roots.
Although both the Syrian Orthodox and Maronite church worship in Aramaic, they are distinctly different sects.
The Maronites are the dominant Christian church in neighboring Lebanon but make up only a few thousand of the Holy Land's 210,000 Christians. Likewise, Syrian Orthodox Christians number no more than 2,000 in the Holy Land, said Nimeh.
Overall, some 150,000 Christians live in Israel and another 60,000 live in the West Bank.
Both schools found inspiration and assistance in an unlikely place: Sweden. There, Aramaic-speaking communities who descended from the Middle East have sought to keep their language alive.
They publish a newspaper, "Bahro Suryoyo," pamphlets and children's books, including "The Little Prince," and maintain a satellite television station, "Soryoyosat," said Arzu Alan, chairwoman of the Syriac Aramaic Federation of Sweden.
There's also an Aramaic soccer team, "Syrianska FC" in the Swedish top division from the town of Sodertalje. Officials estimate the Aramaic-speaking population at anywhere from 30,000 to 80,000 people.
For many Maronites and Syrian Orthodox Christians in the Holy Land, the television station, in particular, was the first time they heard the language outside church in decades. Hearing it in a modern context inspired them to try revive the language among their communities.
"When you hear (the language), you can speak it," said Issa, the teacher.
Aramaic dialects were the region's vernacular from 2,500 years ago until the sixth century, when Arabic, the language of conquering Muslims from the Arabian Peninsula, became dominant, according to Fassberg.
Linguistic islands survived: Maronites clung to Aramaic liturgy and so did the Syrian Orthodox church. Kurdish Jews on the river island of Zakho spoke an Aramaic dialect called "Targum" until fleeing to Israel in the 1950s. Three Christian villages in Syria still speak an Aramaic dialect, Fassberg said.
With few opportunities to practice the ancient tongue, teachers in Jish have tempered expectations. They hope they can at least revive an understanding of the language.
The steep challenges are seen in the Jish school, where the fourth-grade Aramaic class has just a dozen students. The number used to be twice that until they introduced an art class during the same time slot … and lost half their students.
GSA reversal puts church and government on collision course
Friday, 25 May 2012 15:59
The Liberal government of Dalton McGuinty has pulled a dramatic about-face by breaking a pledge not to force Catholic schools to use the term gay-straight alliance for anti-bullying clubs.
Instead, Education Minister Laurel Broten has announced an amendment to Bill 13 to make it mandatory that Catholic students be allowed to name their clubs gay-straight alliances if that is their wish.
"Under our amendments (to Bill 13), no school board or principal can refuse to allow students to use the name "gay-straight alliance" to describe their clubs," Broten said in a letter released to Liberal supporters on May 25.
The Liberal government of Dalton McGuinty has pulled a dramatic about-face by breaking a pledge not to force Catholic schools to use the term gay-straight alliance for anti-bullying clubs.
Instead, Education Minister Laurel Broten has announced an amendment to Bill 13 to make it mandatory that Catholic students be allowed to name their clubs gay-straight alliances if that is their wish.
"Under our amendments (to Bill 13), no school board or principal can refuse to allow students to use the name "gay-straight alliance" to describe their clubs," Broten said in a letter released to Liberal supporters on May 25.
Why give the Sacraments to those who don’t believe?
SOURCE: Catholic Herald UK
By Francis Phillips on Monday, 28 May 2012
A conversation with my parish priest reminds me of the difficulties the Church faces with baptisms, weddings and Holy Communion
During Mass the other morning our parish priest asked the congregation to pray for a “Day for Priests” that will be held in our diocese in July. He told us that several areas of concern would be discussed at this meeting, such as: when should the sacrament of Confirmation be administered? When should Holy Communion first be given? What should be said to cohabiting couples wanting a church wedding?
After Mass I cornered him and asked him to expand. He told me that in the early Church Confirmation was given at baptism, as the seal of faith; it seems this is still the case in the Eastern churches. Now the question arises whether it should be given to children when their faith is still immature or whether to wait until it has matured.
The pp told me that in his experience modern children were simply not ready to make their First Holy Communion at the age of seven. I mentioned St Pius X who had first ruled that children were ready by the age of seven to do so. “Ah yes” said our priest, “but in Pius X’s day the atmosphere in homes was much more pious than is generally the case today. Today children might be extremely knowledgeable in certain areas by the age of seven, such as knowing how to operate any number of technological gadgets and watching all sorts of programme on TV, but they are woefully immature when it comes to their faith. He added with emphasis, “They simply don’t have the spiritual maturity today to receive Christ with proper devotion at that age.”
He told me that once, as a school chaplain, he had been informed later that eight Hosts had been found discarded in the school hall when Mass was over. “I have called children back when I see them walking away with the Host in their hand” he added. Personally, he believes that First Holy Communion should be delayed until the Sacrament of Confirmation.
On the question of marriage, the pp told me occasionally he sees couples who, although nominally Catholic, never practise their Faith, yet tell him they want a “proper church wedding”. After a conversation with him, in which he points out what a Catholic wedding means and the responsibility of raising any children as Catholic, they usually walk away.
Over the question of baptism, he says he would have a “pleasant but frank conversation to elicit the couple’s intentions and to discover if there is a spark of faith left”. If they have no faith, he says, they also “usually go away”. For those who are cohabiting, he reminds them that if they want to receive Holy Communion they must do so in a state of grace – so need to go to Confession before the wedding.
Our pp feels embattled. He is in his late-50s and tells me that as a young man he could never have imagined the secularism he sees everywhere today. He remarks to me he thinks that “God is purifying our faith. He is telling us that we must either re-Christianise the surrounding culture or live a more spiritual Christianity ourselves.” In his view, in the past many people were cultural Catholics rather than truly pious: “This didn’t matter so much when the surrounding culture was a Christian one – but when this changed the faith of many people was weak so it collapsed likewise.” He adds, “When people tell me that everything was so much better before Vatican II, I point out to them that if this was the case, why did the faith fall away so quickly?”
Our conversation reminds me to pray harder for priests. They have an uphill battle in our society today. Yet there are also fewer of them and we need them more than ever. In this connection it was good to read Bishop Mark Davies of Shrewsbury’s address to seminarians and staff at Oscott for the Ascension, in which he said that “Celibate chastity is a Christina sign for our times… The challenge today is to offer priests all the support they need to sustain this generous response to the call of Christ. Celibacy is not just a discipline or a practical requirement. Evangelical celibacy is a vocation.”
By Francis Phillips on Monday, 28 May 2012
A conversation with my parish priest reminds me of the difficulties the Church faces with baptisms, weddings and Holy Communion
During Mass the other morning our parish priest asked the congregation to pray for a “Day for Priests” that will be held in our diocese in July. He told us that several areas of concern would be discussed at this meeting, such as: when should the sacrament of Confirmation be administered? When should Holy Communion first be given? What should be said to cohabiting couples wanting a church wedding?
After Mass I cornered him and asked him to expand. He told me that in the early Church Confirmation was given at baptism, as the seal of faith; it seems this is still the case in the Eastern churches. Now the question arises whether it should be given to children when their faith is still immature or whether to wait until it has matured.
The pp told me that in his experience modern children were simply not ready to make their First Holy Communion at the age of seven. I mentioned St Pius X who had first ruled that children were ready by the age of seven to do so. “Ah yes” said our priest, “but in Pius X’s day the atmosphere in homes was much more pious than is generally the case today. Today children might be extremely knowledgeable in certain areas by the age of seven, such as knowing how to operate any number of technological gadgets and watching all sorts of programme on TV, but they are woefully immature when it comes to their faith. He added with emphasis, “They simply don’t have the spiritual maturity today to receive Christ with proper devotion at that age.”
He told me that once, as a school chaplain, he had been informed later that eight Hosts had been found discarded in the school hall when Mass was over. “I have called children back when I see them walking away with the Host in their hand” he added. Personally, he believes that First Holy Communion should be delayed until the Sacrament of Confirmation.
On the question of marriage, the pp told me occasionally he sees couples who, although nominally Catholic, never practise their Faith, yet tell him they want a “proper church wedding”. After a conversation with him, in which he points out what a Catholic wedding means and the responsibility of raising any children as Catholic, they usually walk away.
Over the question of baptism, he says he would have a “pleasant but frank conversation to elicit the couple’s intentions and to discover if there is a spark of faith left”. If they have no faith, he says, they also “usually go away”. For those who are cohabiting, he reminds them that if they want to receive Holy Communion they must do so in a state of grace – so need to go to Confession before the wedding.
Our pp feels embattled. He is in his late-50s and tells me that as a young man he could never have imagined the secularism he sees everywhere today. He remarks to me he thinks that “God is purifying our faith. He is telling us that we must either re-Christianise the surrounding culture or live a more spiritual Christianity ourselves.” In his view, in the past many people were cultural Catholics rather than truly pious: “This didn’t matter so much when the surrounding culture was a Christian one – but when this changed the faith of many people was weak so it collapsed likewise.” He adds, “When people tell me that everything was so much better before Vatican II, I point out to them that if this was the case, why did the faith fall away so quickly?”
Our conversation reminds me to pray harder for priests. They have an uphill battle in our society today. Yet there are also fewer of them and we need them more than ever. In this connection it was good to read Bishop Mark Davies of Shrewsbury’s address to seminarians and staff at Oscott for the Ascension, in which he said that “Celibate chastity is a Christina sign for our times… The challenge today is to offer priests all the support they need to sustain this generous response to the call of Christ. Celibacy is not just a discipline or a practical requirement. Evangelical celibacy is a vocation.”
PHOTOS of the Day: Patriarch Filaret
Source: Патріарше богослужіння на свято Вознесіння Господнього
Photos from Divine Liturgy celebrated at last week's Feast of the Ascension of Our Lord - St. Volodymyr's cathedral, Kyiv.
Photos from Divine Liturgy celebrated at last week's Feast of the Ascension of Our Lord - St. Volodymyr's cathedral, Kyiv.
Rising birth rate in former Soviet nation credited to Georgian Patriarch
SOURCE: LifeSiteNews.com
by Thaddeus Baklinski
Wed May 23, 2012 15:37 EST
TBILISI, Georgia, May 23, 2012 (LifeSiteNews.com) - The patriarch of the Georgian Orthodox Church has been credited with helping raise the birth rate in the former Soviet nation of Georgia.
Patriarch Ilia II came up with an astonishingly successful incentive to counteract the country’s plummeting birth rate by promising to become the godfather of all babies born into Orthodox Christian families who already have two or more children. Since he began fulfilling his promise with the mass baptisms in 2008, he has gained nearly 11,000 godchildren.
Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili publicly stated that the patriarch deserves much of the credit for the rising birth rate, which was 25 percent higher in 2010 than in 2005, and which Saakashvili said is helping the government achieve its five year plan of increasing the aging nation’s population from 4.5 million to 5 million by 2015.
While Georgia was under the domination of the former Soviet Union, the Orthodox religion was all but suppressed in the country. But now, according to the (http://patriarch.ge/eng) Patriarch Foundation, a movement set up to promote the interests of the Church, the Orthodox Church and clergy play a very influential role in Georgian society, with many seeing the patriarch as the most authoritative figure in their lives.
“Faith is getting stronger,” said spokesman Irakli Kadagishvili. “The patriarch is seen not only as a religious figure, but also as a national authority. When he saw the need to increase the birth rate he only had to provide an incentive. It was the only stimulus most parents needed if they were already thinking about having more children.”
Lamara Georgadze, whose fourth child was recently baptized by Patriarch Ilia II, said she and her husband answered the patriarch’s call to have more children.
“The Holy Father reminded us all of the importance of increasing the birth rate,” she said in an AP report that described the 400 baptisms presided over by Patriarch Ilia II in a Tbilisi cathedral on May 6. “There are too few of us Georgians and therefore this is very important.”
“This is a wonderful day for my family,” said Tamar Kapanadze, a 33-year-old father of four. “Our fourth son, Lashko, was baptized by the patriarch himself, and before this he baptized our daughter Liziko. This is why we decided to have a fourth child.”
The Georgian government announced earlier this year that parents would be given a one-time payment of 1000 Georgian Lari (about $600) for a third child and double that amount for a fourth child.
“This will help raise the birth rate,” Saakashvili said. “The patriarch has already taken steps in this direction. We should be thankful to him for continually reminding the Georgian people that we should multiply.”
Government statistics indicate that the number of abortions has also declined by nearly 50 percent between 2005 and 2010.
See also Georgia's patriarch baptizes 400 babies
by Thaddeus Baklinski
Wed May 23, 2012 15:37 EST
TBILISI, Georgia, May 23, 2012 (LifeSiteNews.com) - The patriarch of the Georgian Orthodox Church has been credited with helping raise the birth rate in the former Soviet nation of Georgia.
Patriarch Ilia II came up with an astonishingly successful incentive to counteract the country’s plummeting birth rate by promising to become the godfather of all babies born into Orthodox Christian families who already have two or more children. Since he began fulfilling his promise with the mass baptisms in 2008, he has gained nearly 11,000 godchildren.
Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili publicly stated that the patriarch deserves much of the credit for the rising birth rate, which was 25 percent higher in 2010 than in 2005, and which Saakashvili said is helping the government achieve its five year plan of increasing the aging nation’s population from 4.5 million to 5 million by 2015.
While Georgia was under the domination of the former Soviet Union, the Orthodox religion was all but suppressed in the country. But now, according to the (http://patriarch.ge/eng) Patriarch Foundation, a movement set up to promote the interests of the Church, the Orthodox Church and clergy play a very influential role in Georgian society, with many seeing the patriarch as the most authoritative figure in their lives.
“Faith is getting stronger,” said spokesman Irakli Kadagishvili. “The patriarch is seen not only as a religious figure, but also as a national authority. When he saw the need to increase the birth rate he only had to provide an incentive. It was the only stimulus most parents needed if they were already thinking about having more children.”
Lamara Georgadze, whose fourth child was recently baptized by Patriarch Ilia II, said she and her husband answered the patriarch’s call to have more children.
“The Holy Father reminded us all of the importance of increasing the birth rate,” she said in an AP report that described the 400 baptisms presided over by Patriarch Ilia II in a Tbilisi cathedral on May 6. “There are too few of us Georgians and therefore this is very important.”
“This is a wonderful day for my family,” said Tamar Kapanadze, a 33-year-old father of four. “Our fourth son, Lashko, was baptized by the patriarch himself, and before this he baptized our daughter Liziko. This is why we decided to have a fourth child.”
The Georgian government announced earlier this year that parents would be given a one-time payment of 1000 Georgian Lari (about $600) for a third child and double that amount for a fourth child.
“This will help raise the birth rate,” Saakashvili said. “The patriarch has already taken steps in this direction. We should be thankful to him for continually reminding the Georgian people that we should multiply.”
Government statistics indicate that the number of abortions has also declined by nearly 50 percent between 2005 and 2010.
See also Georgia's patriarch baptizes 400 babies
More on the Meetings of Permanent Synod of Bishops held in Wroclaw, Poland
Meetings of the Permanent Synod of Bishops of the UGCC are being held in Wroclaw, Poland. In addition to Patriarch Sviatoslav, the head of the UGCC, bishops from Ukraine and from abroad are taking part.
The first day of the Permanent Synod, May 24, was devoted to the preparation for the 2012 Synod of Bishops, which will be held September 9-16 in Winnipeg, Canada. In particular, much attention was paid to the methodology of presenting the main theme of this year's Synod – the role of laity in the life and mission of the Church. In accordance with the decisions of the Permanent Synod, the position of the Catholic Church on the role of the laity in general should be taken into consideration, experience of UGCC lay movements over the centuries should be presented, and the current state of the believing laity of the UGCC in Ukraine and the diaspora should be analyzed.
In addition, members of the Permanent Synod heard a report on the implementation of the Strategy for Development of the UGCC for the period until 2020, adopted the first reading the Charter of the Patriarchal Commission for Monastics, and considered part of the canons of the Particular Law to be submitted for approval of the Synod of Bishops in 2012.
As the meeting of the Permanent Synod was held in Wroclaw for the first time, the city government invited the bishops together with Patriarch Sviatoslav and Bishop Volodymyr Juszczak of Wroclaw-Gdansk to visit the City Council.
The head of the Church and members of the Synod of Bishops also had the opportunity to meet with representatives of academic circles of the city. Jerzy Langer, professor at Wroclaw and Warsaw Universities, presented to the bishops the city administration’s vision of the importance of university education. The speaker noted that the lack of knowledge among the people inevitably allows uneducated people who do not care about the welfare of the people to usurp power over the people. Universities, according to Professor Langer, should become a place of deep reflection on human nature and a place to plan the future of states and peoples. The professor, remembering his visit to the Ukrainian Catholic University, noted the critical role of the university in "relations of Ukrainian land."
The head of the UGCC on behalf of the bishops sincerely thanked the city authorities for their hospitality and for the opportunity to jointly reflect on the past, present and future of Europe.
On May 25, a meeting between His Beatitude Sviatoslav and the Archbishop of Wroclaw of the Polish Roman Catholic Church Marian Golebiewski and Cardinal Henryk Gulbinowicz is planned. At the end of the day head of the UGCC will meet with representatives of the media.
On Saturday, May 26, in one of the largest Greek Catholic parishes in Poland, in Legnica, Patriarch Sviatoslav will speak with the clergy and lead the Divine Liturgy.
The last day of the Permanent Synod of Bishops, on Sunday, the head of the UGCC will lead the Divine Liturgy at the Cathedral of Wroclaw. Sunday evening Patriarch Sviatoslav with the bishops will visit Mayor of Wroclaw Rafał Dutkiewicz.
Doctor ordered to pay child support for baby who survived abortion
Madrid, Spain, May 25, 2012 / 04:02 pm (SOURCE: CNA/EWTN News).- A judge in the Spanish city of Palma has ordered a doctor and his clinic to provide financial support for a baby who survived a botched abortion until the child's 25th birthday.
According to local media, the mother of the child attempted to procure an abortion on April 20, 2010. Two weeks later, the doctor – identified as E.R.K. – said X-rays showed the baby had been extracted from the womb.
Three months later, however, the woman discovered she was still pregnant. She returned to the clinic to undergo another abortion, but because she was in her twenty-second week, the clinic refused to perform the procedure.
In the ruling, the judge said the mother did not want the child and had done everything legally possible to prevent his birth. For this reason, he argued, she could not be compelled to support the baby, who is now 18 months old.
The doctor was also ordered to pay the woman $530,000 in damages.
Reacting to the news, the president of the local Baleares Medical College, Antoni Bennassar, criticized the ruling and asked, “Were the damages from the baby being born or not being born?”
Bennassar said the judge's order was surprising to him not only as a doctor but also as “a normal person.” People are punished for crimes and assaults, not for births, he noted.
According to local media, the mother of the child attempted to procure an abortion on April 20, 2010. Two weeks later, the doctor – identified as E.R.K. – said X-rays showed the baby had been extracted from the womb.
Three months later, however, the woman discovered she was still pregnant. She returned to the clinic to undergo another abortion, but because she was in her twenty-second week, the clinic refused to perform the procedure.
In the ruling, the judge said the mother did not want the child and had done everything legally possible to prevent his birth. For this reason, he argued, she could not be compelled to support the baby, who is now 18 months old.
The doctor was also ordered to pay the woman $530,000 in damages.
Reacting to the news, the president of the local Baleares Medical College, Antoni Bennassar, criticized the ruling and asked, “Were the damages from the baby being born or not being born?”
Bennassar said the judge's order was surprising to him not only as a doctor but also as “a normal person.” People are punished for crimes and assaults, not for births, he noted.
Czech PM says gov't will go ahead with church restitution
SOURCE: Czech News Agency (ČTK)
28 May 2012
Vatican, May 25 (CTK) - Czech Prime Minister Petr Necas believes it would not be reasonable to postpone the planned property settlement between the Czech state and churches due to the economic crisis, he told journalists after meeting the Vatican Secretary of State Tarcisio Bertone Friday.
The bill returns the real estate, confiscated by the communist regime, to 17 churches operating in the Czech Republic, and terminates the state financing of the clergy's pay. It is now being discussed by the Czech Chamber of Deputies.
Necas said the bill, if passed and implemented, would be more advantageous [than the status quo] for Czech public budgets in both the medium- and long-term outlook.
"I think it would not be a good path to follow," Necas said, commenting on some proposals for a postponement of the paying out of financial compensation to churches for the property that cannot be returned.
"The bill really settles relations between the state and all churches, not only the Catholic Church. In fact it means the separation of the state from churches, it does away with the absurd situation where priests are paid like state officials," Necas said.
Under the bill settling the church-state property relations, churches should get back more than a half of the property worth about 75 billion crowns that was confiscated from them under the Czechoslovak communist regime. Fifty-nine billion crowns are to be paid to them in compensation for the rest over a period of 30 years starting next year. Inflation could raise the sum to 78.9 up to 96.24 billion crowns.
Simultaneously, the state will gradually cease to finance churches. The transitional period is to last 17 years.
Necas also discussed in the Vatican bilateral relations that, diplomats say, are excellent.
This is true even though the long discussed treaty defining the position of the Roman Catholic and Greek Catholic churches has not yet been signed and that the number of people claiming a faith largely dropped according to the latest census in 2011.
A draft Czech-Vatican treaty was negotiated years ago, but the Chamber of Deputies did not pass it. The discussion on its changed wording could be resumed after the return of property to churches is passed.
Experts say the Czech Republic is the sole European country with a predominantly Catholic tradition not having the treaty as yet. Even some more or less Muslim countries, such as Kazakhstan, have signed a treaty with the Vatican.
($1=20.221 crowns)
28 May 2012
![]() |
| Czech PM Petr Necas |
The bill returns the real estate, confiscated by the communist regime, to 17 churches operating in the Czech Republic, and terminates the state financing of the clergy's pay. It is now being discussed by the Czech Chamber of Deputies.
Necas said the bill, if passed and implemented, would be more advantageous [than the status quo] for Czech public budgets in both the medium- and long-term outlook.
"I think it would not be a good path to follow," Necas said, commenting on some proposals for a postponement of the paying out of financial compensation to churches for the property that cannot be returned.
"The bill really settles relations between the state and all churches, not only the Catholic Church. In fact it means the separation of the state from churches, it does away with the absurd situation where priests are paid like state officials," Necas said.
Under the bill settling the church-state property relations, churches should get back more than a half of the property worth about 75 billion crowns that was confiscated from them under the Czechoslovak communist regime. Fifty-nine billion crowns are to be paid to them in compensation for the rest over a period of 30 years starting next year. Inflation could raise the sum to 78.9 up to 96.24 billion crowns.
Simultaneously, the state will gradually cease to finance churches. The transitional period is to last 17 years.
Necas also discussed in the Vatican bilateral relations that, diplomats say, are excellent.
This is true even though the long discussed treaty defining the position of the Roman Catholic and Greek Catholic churches has not yet been signed and that the number of people claiming a faith largely dropped according to the latest census in 2011.
A draft Czech-Vatican treaty was negotiated years ago, but the Chamber of Deputies did not pass it. The discussion on its changed wording could be resumed after the return of property to churches is passed.
Experts say the Czech Republic is the sole European country with a predominantly Catholic tradition not having the treaty as yet. Even some more or less Muslim countries, such as Kazakhstan, have signed a treaty with the Vatican.
($1=20.221 crowns)
Sunday, May 27, 2012
Thousands pray for Hagia Sophia to become mosque
SOURCE: Reuters UK
By Ayla Jean Yackley , Sat, May 26 2012
ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Thousands of devout Muslims prayed outside Turkey's historic Hagia Sophia museum on Saturday to protest a 1934 law that bars religious services at the former church and mosque.
Worshippers shouted, "Break the chains, let Hagia Sophia Mosque open," and "God is great" before kneeling in prayer as tourists looked on.
Turkey's secular laws prevent Muslims and Christians from formal worship within the 6th-century monument, the world's greatest cathedral for almost a millennium before invading Ottomans converted it into a mosque in the 15th century.
"Keeping Hagia Sophia Mosque closed is an insult to our mostly Muslim population of 75 million. It symbolises our ill-treatment by the West," Salih Turhan, head of the Anatolian Youth Association, which organised the event, told the crowd, whose male and female worshippers prayed separately according to Islamic custom.
The government has rejected requests from both Christians and Muslims to hold formal prayers at the site, historically and spiritually significant to adherents of both religions.
The rally's size and location signals more tolerance for religious expression under Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, whose party traces its roots to a banned Islamist movement.
His government has also allowed Christian worship at sites that were off-limits for decades, as it seeks to bring human rights in line with the European Union, which it aims to join.
Turhan told Reuters his group staged the prayers ahead of celebrations next week marking the 559th anniversary of the Ottoman Sultan Mehmet's conquest of Byzantine Constantinople.
"As the grandchildren of Mehmet the Conqueror, seeking the re-opening Hagia Sophia as a mosque is our legitimate right," Turhan said in an interview.
Worshippers refrained from entering the museum, one of Turkey's most-visited tourist destinations and whose famous dome is considered a triumph of Byzantine architecture.
Most Turks appear satisfied with it remaining a museum as a kind of compromise between its conflicting historic roles.
OTTOMAN PAST
However, some devout Turks believe that barring worship at Hagia Sophia is an affront against Sultan Mehmet, who designated it as a mosque and who, like other Ottoman leaders, served as caliph to the Islamic world.
Under Erdogan, many Turks have come to embrace their imperial Ottoman past and question the more austere, Western-oriented reforms that followed the last sultan's overthrow in 1923.
The shift coincides with a stalled EU bid and declining expectations Turkey will ever join the mostly Christian bloc.
The government's active diplomatic engagement in the Middle East with lands that once belonged to the Ottoman empire has also prompted Turks to re-examine the NATO member's Western tilt.
Meanwhile, some Orthodox argue Hagia Sophia should be returned to its original state as a Christian basilica.
In 2010, 200 or so Greek American Orthodox aborted plans to pray at Hagia Sophia after the Turkish government threatened to block their entry into the country on security grounds.
The Ecumenical Patriarchate, spiritual leader of the world's 250 million Orthodox, does not support efforts to revert its former dominion into a church.
"We want it to remain a museum in line with the Republic of Turkey's principles," said Father Dositheos Anagnostopulos, the patriarch's spokesman.
"If it were to become a mosque, Christians wouldn't be able to pray there, and if it became a church it would be chaos."
Only a few thousand Greek Orthodox faithful are left in Turkey, but the patriarch's seat remains in Istanbul, a vestige of the Byzantine Empire.
By Ayla Jean Yackley , Sat, May 26 2012
ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Thousands of devout Muslims prayed outside Turkey's historic Hagia Sophia museum on Saturday to protest a 1934 law that bars religious services at the former church and mosque.
Worshippers shouted, "Break the chains, let Hagia Sophia Mosque open," and "God is great" before kneeling in prayer as tourists looked on.
Turkey's secular laws prevent Muslims and Christians from formal worship within the 6th-century monument, the world's greatest cathedral for almost a millennium before invading Ottomans converted it into a mosque in the 15th century.
"Keeping Hagia Sophia Mosque closed is an insult to our mostly Muslim population of 75 million. It symbolises our ill-treatment by the West," Salih Turhan, head of the Anatolian Youth Association, which organised the event, told the crowd, whose male and female worshippers prayed separately according to Islamic custom.
The government has rejected requests from both Christians and Muslims to hold formal prayers at the site, historically and spiritually significant to adherents of both religions.
The rally's size and location signals more tolerance for religious expression under Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, whose party traces its roots to a banned Islamist movement.
His government has also allowed Christian worship at sites that were off-limits for decades, as it seeks to bring human rights in line with the European Union, which it aims to join.
Turhan told Reuters his group staged the prayers ahead of celebrations next week marking the 559th anniversary of the Ottoman Sultan Mehmet's conquest of Byzantine Constantinople.
"As the grandchildren of Mehmet the Conqueror, seeking the re-opening Hagia Sophia as a mosque is our legitimate right," Turhan said in an interview.
Worshippers refrained from entering the museum, one of Turkey's most-visited tourist destinations and whose famous dome is considered a triumph of Byzantine architecture.
Most Turks appear satisfied with it remaining a museum as a kind of compromise between its conflicting historic roles.
OTTOMAN PAST
However, some devout Turks believe that barring worship at Hagia Sophia is an affront against Sultan Mehmet, who designated it as a mosque and who, like other Ottoman leaders, served as caliph to the Islamic world.
Under Erdogan, many Turks have come to embrace their imperial Ottoman past and question the more austere, Western-oriented reforms that followed the last sultan's overthrow in 1923.
The shift coincides with a stalled EU bid and declining expectations Turkey will ever join the mostly Christian bloc.
The government's active diplomatic engagement in the Middle East with lands that once belonged to the Ottoman empire has also prompted Turks to re-examine the NATO member's Western tilt.
Meanwhile, some Orthodox argue Hagia Sophia should be returned to its original state as a Christian basilica.
In 2010, 200 or so Greek American Orthodox aborted plans to pray at Hagia Sophia after the Turkish government threatened to block their entry into the country on security grounds.
The Ecumenical Patriarchate, spiritual leader of the world's 250 million Orthodox, does not support efforts to revert its former dominion into a church.
"We want it to remain a museum in line with the Republic of Turkey's principles," said Father Dositheos Anagnostopulos, the patriarch's spokesman.
"If it were to become a mosque, Christians wouldn't be able to pray there, and if it became a church it would be chaos."
Only a few thousand Greek Orthodox faithful are left in Turkey, but the patriarch's seat remains in Istanbul, a vestige of the Byzantine Empire.
Orthodox bishops remember Metropolitan Constantine
By Ann Rodgers / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Tiny St. Vladimir Ukrainian Orthodox Church on the South Side seemed to swell with love and grief as bishops, priests and laity sang ancient chants of final blessing for Metropolitan Constantine, primate of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in the USA, who died Monday at age 75.
"His soul was on fire with faith," said Bishop Antony of the Eastern United States, who wept as he spoke of the man who ordained him.
The metropolitan constantly sought the guidance of the Holy Spirit, he said. Those who approached him for casual conversation "parted from him on a spiritual high."
The former Theodore Buggan became the first American-born Ukrainian Orthodox bishop in 1972. His church was then independent and its canonical status problematic, as all of its bishops in Ukraine were executed 50 years earlier. After Ukraine was freed from Soviet rule in 1990, Metropolitan Constantine was instrumental in rebuilding the church there.
In 1993, he became primate of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in the USA. He then brought it under the jurisdiction of the ecumenical patriarch of Constantinople, regularizing its standing in worldwide Orthodoxy. He oversaw reunification of two Ukrainian Orthodox bodies in America, and sought to heal the historically troubled relationship between the Ukrainian Orthodox and Ukrainian Catholic churches. Ukrainian Catholic Metropolitan Stefan Soroka of Philadelphia joined many Orthodox bishops at his funeral.
Metropolitan Constantine lay in repose beneath a purple pall, his ivory vestments trimmed with the orange rushnyk embroidery of Ukraine. A matching cloth covered his face beneath the gold crown of his office.
In order to fit more people into the church Saturday, pews were pushed to the side walls and most worshipers stood, as is traditional in Orthodoxy. He had a cathedral in Parma, Ohio, but chose to live in the house where he grew up across from St. Vladimir, and to be buried from it. Police barricaded the block to accommodate the funeral and its many religious dignitaries.
Archbishop Ihor of the Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church in Poltava, Ukraine, said that prayers were being offered for Metropolitan Constantine in many churches in his country.
Metropolitan Constantine's abiding passion was to lead others to God, and he sought to pave the way with love and humility, Bishop Antony said.
Rather than expound on dogma, he liked to sit in a circle with people "asking simple questions to test their knowledge," he said. "He never heard a wrong answer" but could deftly turn their words into a revelation about the gospel.
He would similarly engage other bishops, said Archbishop Demetrios of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America, who represented Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew.
"There was no guile in him. He was so innocent, so simple, so clear, so natural," he said. But that could disguise his great intelligence and spiritual wisdom.
"He had a sharp mind ... raising serious existential, ecclesiastical, human and social questions," he said. "He was simple and sophisticated, ecclesiastically wise and an outstanding person to cooperate with."
Although it is often said that no one is irreplaceable "there are degrees of irreplaceability," Archbishop Demetrios said. "You cannot have a copy of Metropolitan Constantine."
Ann Rodgers: arodgers@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1416.
First Published May 27, 2012 12:00 am
Tiny St. Vladimir Ukrainian Orthodox Church on the South Side seemed to swell with love and grief as bishops, priests and laity sang ancient chants of final blessing for Metropolitan Constantine, primate of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in the USA, who died Monday at age 75.
"His soul was on fire with faith," said Bishop Antony of the Eastern United States, who wept as he spoke of the man who ordained him.
The metropolitan constantly sought the guidance of the Holy Spirit, he said. Those who approached him for casual conversation "parted from him on a spiritual high."
The former Theodore Buggan became the first American-born Ukrainian Orthodox bishop in 1972. His church was then independent and its canonical status problematic, as all of its bishops in Ukraine were executed 50 years earlier. After Ukraine was freed from Soviet rule in 1990, Metropolitan Constantine was instrumental in rebuilding the church there.
In 1993, he became primate of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in the USA. He then brought it under the jurisdiction of the ecumenical patriarch of Constantinople, regularizing its standing in worldwide Orthodoxy. He oversaw reunification of two Ukrainian Orthodox bodies in America, and sought to heal the historically troubled relationship between the Ukrainian Orthodox and Ukrainian Catholic churches. Ukrainian Catholic Metropolitan Stefan Soroka of Philadelphia joined many Orthodox bishops at his funeral.
Metropolitan Constantine lay in repose beneath a purple pall, his ivory vestments trimmed with the orange rushnyk embroidery of Ukraine. A matching cloth covered his face beneath the gold crown of his office.
In order to fit more people into the church Saturday, pews were pushed to the side walls and most worshipers stood, as is traditional in Orthodoxy. He had a cathedral in Parma, Ohio, but chose to live in the house where he grew up across from St. Vladimir, and to be buried from it. Police barricaded the block to accommodate the funeral and its many religious dignitaries.
Archbishop Ihor of the Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church in Poltava, Ukraine, said that prayers were being offered for Metropolitan Constantine in many churches in his country.
Metropolitan Constantine's abiding passion was to lead others to God, and he sought to pave the way with love and humility, Bishop Antony said.
Rather than expound on dogma, he liked to sit in a circle with people "asking simple questions to test their knowledge," he said. "He never heard a wrong answer" but could deftly turn their words into a revelation about the gospel.
He would similarly engage other bishops, said Archbishop Demetrios of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America, who represented Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew.
"There was no guile in him. He was so innocent, so simple, so clear, so natural," he said. But that could disguise his great intelligence and spiritual wisdom.
"He had a sharp mind ... raising serious existential, ecclesiastical, human and social questions," he said. "He was simple and sophisticated, ecclesiastically wise and an outstanding person to cooperate with."
Although it is often said that no one is irreplaceable "there are degrees of irreplaceability," Archbishop Demetrios said. "You cannot have a copy of Metropolitan Constantine."
Ann Rodgers: arodgers@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1416.
First Published May 27, 2012 12:00 am
Winnipeg, MB: Doors Open event at Cathedral
SOURCE: Winnipeg Free Press
Winnipeggers got a peek into the secret parts of dozens of Winnipeg landmarks Saturday. It's the ninth year Heritage Winnipeg has organized its Doors Open event, which gives people tours through churches, government buildings, historic homes and office towers. The annual event continues today.
Ukrainian Catholic Metropolitan Cathedral of Saints Vladimir and Olga
Where: At 111 McGregor St. in the heart of the historic Ukrainian North End.
Date built: In 1950, but it has a Romanesque feel.
What it was: Now the central cathedral for all Ukrainian Catholics in Canada, it was built on the site of the oldest Ukrainian Catholic church in Winnipeg, a humble wooden structure.
What it is now: Still a vibrant church, the only one in Winnipeg where the entire service is in Ukrainian. Pope John Paul visited in 1984 and Queen Elizabeth II has also stopped by.
What's cool about it: The colourful, exuberant paintings of icons and saints, especially on the traditional screen, called an iconostasis, that separates the nave from the sanctuary. The stained glass windows by Leo Mol depicting the history of Christianity in Ukraine are showstoppers.
Don't miss: The small, quiet but colourful chapel to the right of the sanctuary. That's the Right Rev. Monsignor Michael Buyachok's favourite place in the cathedral and is about to include four new stained glass windows honouring the blessed Nykyta Budka, the first bishop of the Ukrainian Catholic Church in Canada. The chapel will be named for Budka.
Winnipeggers got a peek into the secret parts of dozens of Winnipeg landmarks Saturday. It's the ninth year Heritage Winnipeg has organized its Doors Open event, which gives people tours through churches, government buildings, historic homes and office towers. The annual event continues today.
Ukrainian Catholic Metropolitan Cathedral of Saints Vladimir and Olga
Where: At 111 McGregor St. in the heart of the historic Ukrainian North End.
Date built: In 1950, but it has a Romanesque feel.
What it was: Now the central cathedral for all Ukrainian Catholics in Canada, it was built on the site of the oldest Ukrainian Catholic church in Winnipeg, a humble wooden structure.
What it is now: Still a vibrant church, the only one in Winnipeg where the entire service is in Ukrainian. Pope John Paul visited in 1984 and Queen Elizabeth II has also stopped by.
What's cool about it: The colourful, exuberant paintings of icons and saints, especially on the traditional screen, called an iconostasis, that separates the nave from the sanctuary. The stained glass windows by Leo Mol depicting the history of Christianity in Ukraine are showstoppers.
Don't miss: The small, quiet but colourful chapel to the right of the sanctuary. That's the Right Rev. Monsignor Michael Buyachok's favourite place in the cathedral and is about to include four new stained glass windows honouring the blessed Nykyta Budka, the first bishop of the Ukrainian Catholic Church in Canada. The chapel will be named for Budka.
Fr. Jacobse: Christianity and Same-Sex Attraction
SOURCE: OrthodoxNet.com Blog
by Fr. Johannes Jacobse -
This past Sunday (May 20, 2012), Ancient Faith Todayinterviewed Dr. Philip Mamalakis and Andrew Williams who specialize in counseling people with same-sex attraction. It was hands down one of the most illuminating and informed presentations I have heard on this complex and often contentious topic in quite a while.
Without going into particulars (you can listen to the interview below), their grounding in Orthodox anthropology enabled them to avoid the common misconception that the object of a person’s sexual desire forms what I call a “foundational characteristic of personhood.” In practical terms this means that we error when we see a person first and foremost as either “straight” or “gay” believing that “sexual orientation” sums up much of who and what he is.
This way of understanding the human person is taken at face value in the larger culture, but in Orthodox self-understanding it misses the mark completely. We are not to conform our understanding of the human person to whether he prefers men or women because we don’t define a person in terms of his sexual desire. Desires are malleable, they require self-discipline and self-mastery (this is what fasting is about for example). And the knowledge that directs this path of mastery can only be uncovered if there is a deeper understanding of the purpose, meaning, and destiny of the human person.
This deeper understanding has been lost in the larger culture — including in some quarters of the Church — although not by the two presenters in Sunday’s program. They framed same-sex desire in the larger context of the inherent value of the human person and his created destiny to become a son of God (male and female alike). As such we heard no condemnatory language that you might hear from moral rigorists who correctly see homosexual behavior as sin but lack the insight about how the struggle with same-sex desire might actually be a means of transformation, or the moral relativism of those who believe that if something feels good it must be right.
The idea that desire defines personhood also gives rise to the notion that ‘orientation’ is a fixed and objective category of human ontology. In English this means that the thinking — the orientation or outlook that results by acting on desire — is itself the source of the desire. The orientation is understood to be something fixed and unchangeable, similar to say, hair color or race.
Yet, all passions (desires) affect an orientation, especially the inordinate ones. A person addicted to food will have an inner orientation geared toward the acquisition and consumption of more food, the alcoholic to alcohol, a person motivated by anger to anger, and so forth. In sexual terms this is true of the heterosexual as well. A man who fails to master lust will have an inner orientation towards, say, fornication and so forth. His self-understanding is no different from the homosexual activist.
Sexual relationships are properly expressed only in the context of marriage between one man and one woman in order to create a family and continue the human race. The sexual revolution that began in the 1960s overthrew this common wisdom. It created the condom/contraception culture that divorced sexual activity from procreation. The idea that the two parent family was crucial for interpersonal and thus cultural stability was undermined, and sexual activity outside of marriage was seen as a natural and positive good.
Homosexual activism then is a predictable outcome of heterosexual irresponsibility. Anytime sexual activity is divorced from procreation, any notion that the family — the union of one male and one female — is the proper social context for sexual relations erodes along with it. And where sexual desire is elevated as a primary constituent of self-identity, then marriage becomes little more than a legal framework in which sexual desire is actualized. ‘Gay marriage’ seems like a reasonable arrangement under these conditions.
Further, it is not true that the heterosexual model is an ‘orientation’ even though heterosexual desire can be misused. Heterosexual relationships, when properly understood and expressed as one man and one woman joining to create a family, lie within the order of creation, within nature. Put another way, same-sex unions are naturally sterile (not the same thing as infertile). They are biologically closed to the creation of new life. Nature itself rejects the premise that same-sex unions correspond in any meaningful way to the heterosexual family.
These ideas are self-evidently true even though many people have an increasingly difficult time seeing it. The cultural shift in the West is anthropological first, and only political second. Unfortunately this is also true in the Church where some activists work to bring this impoverished view of the human person into Orthodox thinking and praxis. They are not enemies necessarily but they are deeply confused, and their confusion should not be allowed to stand under the rubric of fairness, compassion, or any other appeal calculated to create moral parity.
The person authentically struggling with same-sex desire will learn to bring that struggle to Christ in ways that allow for a deeper transformation into Christ. If the ideas about homosexual orientation prevalent in the larger culture are imported in the Church however, then that struggle will either be truncated or abandoned altogether because of the false anthropology that it posits.
We are more than our desires. The activist seeking to create a moral parity between homosexuality and heterosexuality seeks the dominance of homosexual behavior in the end, and either has a poor understanding of the human person or deliberately set out to change the core anthropological teachings of the Church. Aberration replaces truth when this occurs, and the image of Him into Whom we are to be transformed is distorted.
by Fr. Johannes Jacobse -
This past Sunday (May 20, 2012), Ancient Faith Todayinterviewed Dr. Philip Mamalakis and Andrew Williams who specialize in counseling people with same-sex attraction. It was hands down one of the most illuminating and informed presentations I have heard on this complex and often contentious topic in quite a while.
Without going into particulars (you can listen to the interview below), their grounding in Orthodox anthropology enabled them to avoid the common misconception that the object of a person’s sexual desire forms what I call a “foundational characteristic of personhood.” In practical terms this means that we error when we see a person first and foremost as either “straight” or “gay” believing that “sexual orientation” sums up much of who and what he is.
This way of understanding the human person is taken at face value in the larger culture, but in Orthodox self-understanding it misses the mark completely. We are not to conform our understanding of the human person to whether he prefers men or women because we don’t define a person in terms of his sexual desire. Desires are malleable, they require self-discipline and self-mastery (this is what fasting is about for example). And the knowledge that directs this path of mastery can only be uncovered if there is a deeper understanding of the purpose, meaning, and destiny of the human person.
This deeper understanding has been lost in the larger culture — including in some quarters of the Church — although not by the two presenters in Sunday’s program. They framed same-sex desire in the larger context of the inherent value of the human person and his created destiny to become a son of God (male and female alike). As such we heard no condemnatory language that you might hear from moral rigorists who correctly see homosexual behavior as sin but lack the insight about how the struggle with same-sex desire might actually be a means of transformation, or the moral relativism of those who believe that if something feels good it must be right.
The idea that desire defines personhood also gives rise to the notion that ‘orientation’ is a fixed and objective category of human ontology. In English this means that the thinking — the orientation or outlook that results by acting on desire — is itself the source of the desire. The orientation is understood to be something fixed and unchangeable, similar to say, hair color or race.
Yet, all passions (desires) affect an orientation, especially the inordinate ones. A person addicted to food will have an inner orientation geared toward the acquisition and consumption of more food, the alcoholic to alcohol, a person motivated by anger to anger, and so forth. In sexual terms this is true of the heterosexual as well. A man who fails to master lust will have an inner orientation towards, say, fornication and so forth. His self-understanding is no different from the homosexual activist.
Sexual relationships are properly expressed only in the context of marriage between one man and one woman in order to create a family and continue the human race. The sexual revolution that began in the 1960s overthrew this common wisdom. It created the condom/contraception culture that divorced sexual activity from procreation. The idea that the two parent family was crucial for interpersonal and thus cultural stability was undermined, and sexual activity outside of marriage was seen as a natural and positive good.
Homosexual activism then is a predictable outcome of heterosexual irresponsibility. Anytime sexual activity is divorced from procreation, any notion that the family — the union of one male and one female — is the proper social context for sexual relations erodes along with it. And where sexual desire is elevated as a primary constituent of self-identity, then marriage becomes little more than a legal framework in which sexual desire is actualized. ‘Gay marriage’ seems like a reasonable arrangement under these conditions.
Further, it is not true that the heterosexual model is an ‘orientation’ even though heterosexual desire can be misused. Heterosexual relationships, when properly understood and expressed as one man and one woman joining to create a family, lie within the order of creation, within nature. Put another way, same-sex unions are naturally sterile (not the same thing as infertile). They are biologically closed to the creation of new life. Nature itself rejects the premise that same-sex unions correspond in any meaningful way to the heterosexual family.
These ideas are self-evidently true even though many people have an increasingly difficult time seeing it. The cultural shift in the West is anthropological first, and only political second. Unfortunately this is also true in the Church where some activists work to bring this impoverished view of the human person into Orthodox thinking and praxis. They are not enemies necessarily but they are deeply confused, and their confusion should not be allowed to stand under the rubric of fairness, compassion, or any other appeal calculated to create moral parity.
The person authentically struggling with same-sex desire will learn to bring that struggle to Christ in ways that allow for a deeper transformation into Christ. If the ideas about homosexual orientation prevalent in the larger culture are imported in the Church however, then that struggle will either be truncated or abandoned altogether because of the false anthropology that it posits.
We are more than our desires. The activist seeking to create a moral parity between homosexuality and heterosexuality seeks the dominance of homosexual behavior in the end, and either has a poor understanding of the human person or deliberately set out to change the core anthropological teachings of the Church. Aberration replaces truth when this occurs, and the image of Him into Whom we are to be transformed is distorted.
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