Monday, 30 November 2020

CHURCHES CLOSED, COMMUNION DENIED IN THE LAND OF MORDOR

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Seems like Satan has the Body of Christ in a stranglehold.

In New Zealand the dismantling of the Catholic Church is proceeding apace: in the Wairarapa, from PÅ«kaha Mount Bruce to the Remutaka Pass, only two churches now remain open.

Now defunct and up for sale are St Mary's, Carterton (an embarrassment for years, so gloomy is its aspect), St Anthony of Padua's, Martinborough (where historic secular buildings are cherished and still in use) and Sacred Heart Greytown (which will suffer a fate similar to Napier's 'The Mission' and 'The Old Church' (aaargh!).

And how has this horrendous fait accompli come to pass, you ask? The immediate answer - according to Cardinal John Dew, chief architect of this sad misfortune - is  "complexities faced by the parish, with its multiple communities and the “difficulties in the consultation process within the parish”. So he's decided to close the churches. This is what he calls a "pastoral approach". 

Tell that to 95 year-old Yvonne Riddiford, whose family has worshipped at St Anthony of Padua, Martinborough for generations. What does she put it down to?

"Total defeatism." 

Mrs Riddiford (I should think she's a 'Mrs' but in their story Stuff doesn't accord her the courtesy of an honorific) is of a generation that doesn't easily admit defeat. 



Martinborough parishioner 95 year-old Yvonne Riddiford is "desperately sad"


But Cardinal Dew will be gratified to know that Mr Kieran McAnulty, MP for Wairarapa ('himself a Catholic', says Stuff) agrees with him - as McAnulty would agree, with a Prince of the Church. McAnulty reckons several people have contacted him to lobby to keep the churches open. How desperate those Catholics must have been, to bring themselves to ask McAnulty a favour ...

But Stuff reports him as saying there are 'realities that the church authorities had to tackle'.

“At a sentimental level," says McAnulty, "I totally agree it is a shame that the church that I was baptised and had my first holy communion and confirmed in, in Carterton is no longer going to remain operational."

Sentimentality is about all we can expect in this context, from an MP who voted for abortion up to birth, euthanasia and recreational cannabis and who describes himself as a Catholic, but presents himself for Communion at Mass. Feelings are obviously much more important to Mr McAnulty than the truth.

If I may allow myself a short but significant digression: a 'good Catholic' of the Palmerston North Diocese earnestly assured me last week that he is 'a Eucharistic Minister'. He's not. The only Eucharistic Minister is the priest. But as 'a Eucharistic Minister', this chap knows beyond the shadow of a doubt that "you can NEVER refuse Communion to anyone. Only God can judge. You can't." 

Oh dear. He's been told this by a priest, so he totally believes itO me miserum. How often does one have to repeat the difference between judging a person and judging his/her acts? 

Serious sin against God or against neighbor makes one unworthy to receive Holy Communion, until the sin has been confessed and forgiveness received through the Sacrament of Penance.

If the lack of right disposition is serious and public, and the person, nevertheless, approaches to receive the Sacrament, then he is to be admonished and denied Holy Communion. In other words, the Church cannot remain silent and indifferent to a public offense against the Body and Blood of Christ: Cardinal Raymond Burke.

https://www.ewtn.com/catholicism/library/discipline-regarding-the-denial-of-holy-communion-to-those-obstinately-persevering-in-manifest-grave-sin-1230

“At the same time," Mr McAnulty opines, "we have to face up to the fact that a lot of these buildings are earthquake-prone ... it’s very much a case of use it or lose it.

“The church (sic) is faced with significant costs to keep up buildings that a relatively small number of people are attending, they can’t keep these buildings going for large congregations twice a year at Christmas and Easter.”https://www.stuff.co.nz/national/123513298/parishioners-devastated-as-last-rites-given-to-rural-churches

Well there you are. Straight from the horse's mouth. It's true that an horrific percentage of 'Catholics' rarely attend Mass, with families that have shrunk away to just over replacement rate since the advent of the pill, and when they do get to Mass, for the majority it's in a perfunctory fashion and as if they're there to be entertained. But they are poorly catechised, ignorant and spiritually starving, unconfessed and unrepentant - of sins unknown to them.

For he that eateth and drinketh unworthily, eateth and drinketh judgment to himself, not discerning the body of the Lord. 30Therefore are there many infirm and weak among you, and many sleep (I Cor 11:29).

That is the problem which must be addressed, and not by the defeatist 'solution' of closing churches, which only serves to aggravate the loss of souls for eternity which it causes. 


St  Anthony of Padua, Martinborough, a perfect gem inside and out



St Mary's Carterton which just needs TLC



Sacred Heart Greytown whose interior probably matches its exterior: noble simplicity

The (Wairarapa) parish pastoral council at the time was opposed to the closure of any of the five churches in the parish area.

According to a recent article in the Wairarapa Times Age, the parish council had acknowledged their financial situation was bad, but said that “with transparency, restoration of trust and certainty, regular giving would increase.”

According to the CathNews NZ website, at least four parish council members have resigned, as well as two parish council chairpersons.

https://nzcatholic.org.nz/2020/11/23/decision-made-to-sell-three-wairarapa-churches-vatican/

At the time of the proposed closures, the Wairarapa Parish Pastoral Council response to a reduction in parishes was “no”.

It lobbied to retain all five churches with a call for leadership on how to achieve this. https://cathnews.co.nz/2020/09/10/3-wairarapa-churches-sale/

We are at a loss to know, your Eminence, how selling three churches can be "a pastoral approach". A pastoral approach would surely exclude the support for the revolutionary, violent Black Lives Matter movement implied by the Archdiocese in removing a sign innocently proclaiming "All Lives Matter" from Masterton's St Patrick's - which is now, with St Teresa's in Featherston, one of only two churches remaining in the whole of the Wairarapa.

In a statement Dew said, "as Archbishop for the diocese, I do not support the placement of that sign. It should not have been put there.

"A church should not be politicised this way. A church should be a safe space for everyone, a place where everyone feels welcome without being confronted with politicised material that some could find unwelcoming or offensive."  

https://www.newshub.co.nz/home/new-zealand/2020/06/archbishop-of-wellington-condemns-all-lives-matter-message-at-church.html

Well there you go. That attitude, aglow with the thoroughly discredited 'Spirit of Vatican II' is at base the reason why these three churches have gone up for sale, and why the Church in New Zealand is disintegrating.. 

Ordering the removal of a sign erected by parishioners possessed of a lively conscience defending unborn babies - who were abandoned by the NZ Bishops' Conference's dereliction of duty in failing to oppose the evil socialist agenda of Jacinda Ardern - betrays the very 'clericalism' that +Dew himself and his liberal confreres in bishops' conferences around the world would deplore.

Did Jesus Christ Himself regard His church, the temple in Jerusalem, as a 'safe space for everyone, a place where everyone feels welcome' when he drove out the money changers with a whip?

And when he had seen afar off a fig tree having leaves, he came if perhaps he might find any thing on it. And when he was come to it, he found nothing but leaves. For it was not the time for figs. And answering he said to it: May no man hereafter eat fruit of thee any more for ever. And his disciples heard it.  

And they came to Jerusalem. And when he was entered into the temple, he began to cast out them that sold and bought in the temple, and overthrew the tables of the moneychangers, and the chairs of them that sold doves.

And he suffered not that any man should carry a vessel through the temple;  And he taught, saying to them: Is it not written, My house shall be called the house of prayer to all nations? But you have made it a den of thieves. Which when the chief priests and the scribes had heard, they sought how they might destroy him. For they feared him, because the whole multitude was in admiration at his doctrine.  

And when evening was come, he went forth out of the city. And when they passed by in the morning they saw the fig tree dried up from the roots.

 And Peter remembering, said to him: Rabbi, behold the fig tree, which thou didst curse, is withered away. And Jesus answering, saith to them: Have the faith of God. (Mk 11, 13-22).

How do you square that Reading, your Eminence, with a church being 'a safe space'? 

It would seem that 'a safe space for everyone' is a 'safe space' for a senior prelate to get away with his declared intention of saying Mass 'as quickly as possible' - a prelate who says he 'can't wait for women priests' and who expedites that agenda by illicitly promoting women to the pulpit to deliver 'Advent Reflections' at the cathedral's Sunday Masses. 

While this is the parlous state of affairs in the PN Diocese, odds are that in the Wellington Archdiocese - the Land of Mordor, spiritually speaking - they are worse.

In preaching and teaching doctrine contrary to Christ's and to the Magisterium, priests and prelates themselves are the ones who have made His Church into a den of thieves, stealing from the whole multitude of the faithful the doctrine which they once so admired. No wonder that multitude has departed. No wonder their empty churches are closed and up for sale.

Has it not occurred to you, your Eminence, that Jesus might have cursed your Archdiocese as He cursed the fig tree because it had no fruit for Him to eat? We the faithful - no longer a multitude, but still a remnant - rely on the Tree of Life for our spiritual food, the word of God, and we go to the Tree every Sunday, and behold there is no fruit of doctrine on It. And so the Tree, the Church, has withered away. 

Jesus tells us, "Have the faith of God." In calling for "transparency, restoration of trust and certainty" with confidence that "regular giving would increase", the Wairarapa Parish Pastoral Council would seem to possess more of the faith of God than their Chief Shepherd, the cardinal.

Above all, your Eminence, the Jesus Who exhibited His anger in the Temple and at the fruitless fig tree, might well have cursed the Tree of Life of the Wellington Archdiocese for having no food on it for the remnant of the multitude who humbly ask for their right to Holy Communion on the tongue, a centuries-old tradition which expresses and signifies the reverent respect of the faithful towards the Holy Eucharist and avoids the danger of profaning the Eucharistic species. 

It is up to you, your Eminence, to reconsider your outrageous and unjust ban on Holy Communion on the tongue, rooted as that ban is in 'the Spirit of Vatican II', a council which like the Synod of Pistoia (1786) would best be forgotten. 

I quote Pope Gregory VII, reformer and crusader Pope, whose words may be applied to the silence of our bishops in the face of the evil of this Labour Government as well as to their compliance with that Government's edicts re Communion on the tongue:

For us it is better to face, if necessary, our due death of the flesh at the hand of tyrants, rather than consent by our silence, whether out of fear or convenience, to the ruin of the Christian law. We know in fact that our holy Fathers said: He who, in consideration of his office, does not oppose evil men; it is as if he agrees with them: and whoever does not eliminate the evils which should be repressed; it is as if he committed them" (Registrum,  IV, I).

Pope St Gregory VII


And it is up to us, the faithful, to pray for our priests, bishops, cardinal and Pope, asking God's forgiveness for their theft of sacred doctrine and Christ's Body and Blood in the Eucharist, and for our apathy and negligence in tolerating that theft, so that the Tree of Life, the Catholic Church in New Zealand, will bear fruit once again. 



Christ Driving out the Money-changers
El Greco


14 comments:

  1. Jeanette Hancock says:
    So what's the deal? Is this a case of the impact of dwindling attendance and donation? Financial mismanagement? Surly clergy? Or lack of clergy?
    Years ago I read an open letter written by a priest principal of a Catholic school that had to shut down, a lot of parents were complaining as a reslult. The priest was blunt, how can Catholics expect our schools to continue to stay open when so many are contracepting and aborting like the seculars? That instead of a generous family of 7, couples are intentionally choosing to have 1, maybe 2 kids? It's just not viable to run a school with so few children, kids who probably don't even get taken to Mass, by parents who don't bother to donate, despite being able to afford it.
    The people have to take ownership over our closing churches, it's not all the fault of the leadership.

    Krauss Miles says:
    I am NOT RC, but it does have standards with which I agree. Having children costs money a fact that is beyond many who then live off benefits.

    Daniel Tither says:
    Many modern (non-Catholic) churches and the buildings they use are uninspiring too.
    Events centres, conference halls, and other buildings without any character or sense of even being suitable for church activity.
    They seem to have no sense of history, nor any sense of trying to reach for anything beyond mundane-ness, day-to-day-ness and same-ness to any other community or commercial thing that groups of people do.

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  2. Jeanette Hancock says:
    To be fair, a lot of buildings in NZL fit this description. We're too young a country, and building in the style of say Ye Ole Gothic is too expensive for a lot of parish communities.
    Granted, that's no excuse for the bland, modernist garbage we're seeing in so many faith traditions. A boring building can still hold fantastic art and windows.

    Paul Young says:
    Great to witness the demise of such a dishonest and evil organisation ... a haven for cruel nuns and paedophilic priest at all levels ... the world be be a far better place when the last church closes ... how anyone can support such a horrible organisation beats me ...

    Jeanette Hancock
    Paul Young sorry bud, it's not going anywhere. What's simply happening is the demographics of the Church is changing. It's exploding in growth in non-Western countries. They're starting to come to evanglise the secular white heathens in the West.
    Granted, we do need to purge the filth, but the foundation is solid.
    The fact that such a Church and the Truth She teaches can prevail, despite the filth that infests a few nooks and crannies, the dishonestly and corruption, the paedos et al, is testament to God having given his protection. He will hold those abusers to account for the damage such repugnant crimes can do to Her reputation, and justice for the many souls that have been chased away because of the evil committed by corrupted men.

    I say:
    Paul, "It is a blessing for you when they insult you for bearing the name of Christ, because it means you have the Spirit of glory, the Spirit of God resting on you" (1Pet 4:14).
    Thank you and God bless you.

    David Truman says:
    Satan certainly has the current Pope in stranglehold.
    I say:
    Which means we must pray and sacrifice for him.

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  3. Paul Young says:
    It's so clear what's happening ... yes religion is growing in third world areas which in general equate to areas of low education and poverty ... religion feeds on the desperate and unenlightened ... when people get educated and learn to understand the wider universe, science and life in general, religion become unnecessary and irrelevant ... it's untruths are exposed and it dies ...

    I say:
    Only it doesn't die. And never will.

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  4. Monica Devine says:
    Bishop Jones when he was Bishop of Christchurch prepared a beautiful document to guide the building of inspiring churches: https://chchcatholic.nz/.../church-architecture-resources/
    Church Architecture Resources - Catholic Diocese of Christchurch
    CHCHCATHOLIC.NZ

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    Replies
    1. Daniel Tither says:
      Monica, that looks interesting!

      Delete
  5. Monica Devine says:
    Jeanette, the leadership have not been promoting generosity and openness to life for many many years. Also it is a well known fact that the majority of priestly vocations have come from larger than average families where generosity and service have been modelled. But yes the laity need to bear some of the responsibility.

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  6. I say:
    As I think I imply or state in my post.

    Jeanette Hancock says:
    Monica, I think it's just a nasty catch 22. The clergy don't want to promote openness to life because it's off putting to many, and they perhaps worry it'll chase people away, and too many of the people don't want to hear it because they've embraced secular values and will complain to the leadership if they do hear a homily about contraception or something too confronting to their lives outside of 1 hour on Sunday.
    I've had quite a number of priests tell me there's a real fear they'll chase people away with such talk, so they keep it inoffensive to at least keep the people in the pews - but that doesn't seem to be working cos people are drifting away anyway.
    How to fix it at this stage is probably going to be a painful and complicated journey, acknowledging some major issues in our Parishes, our schools and our homes. Conversations I don't think many are willing to have yet.
    I mean, you're right, of course, the leadership have failed in their side of the bargain, I'm almost 40. Go to Mass pretty much every Sunday and holy day of obligation, and I've never heard a homily about being open to life. Fully Catholic schooled, and never had a class that addressed Catholic teaching on the issue. Have heard more than one homily on our Christian duty to use energy efficient light bulbs though.

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    Replies
    1. Bob Gill says:
      Re “I've had quite a number of priests tell me there's a real fear they'll chase people away with such talk” is something priests should do some homework on, not just make assumptions. We are blessed at St Joseph’s Dannevirke at daily Mass these days with the temporary assignment of Father Michael McVerry, stuck here through the Covid issue not allowing him to get back to his overseas base. It will be a sad day indeed when he finally leaves us.
      Father’s daily homily is something we all look forward to because he always tells it how it is – no pussy-footing about. His homily is always straight to the point and leaves us with food for thought. No worry at all at his Mass too if you wish to have Communion on the tongue. I will always be grateful to God for blessing us with this holy priest’s presence during this time.

      I say:
      Jeanette, I think the parishioners of St Anthony's SSPX Whanganui will tell you they love their priests' straight from the shoulder preaching of the Gospel. The evidence is to be seen in the pews: big families; lots of babies, teenagers and yes even nuns - 30 nuns now I think; with a thriving school next door teaching Catholic doctrine to Years 1-13, and even a Catholic bookshop. Rosaries are recited, Adoration of the Eucharist, Benediction, in their beautiful, simple church adorned with many statues and fresh flowers: have a look at their website.
      People are longing to hear the truth and to live by it.

      Sharon Crooks says:
      Julia,and the fact they have vocations is testament to the Holy Spirit being 'free' to work in hearts and souls. Perhaps the same will be the case with the FSSP in time too. It was a blessing to meet Fr Roger Gilbride recently - so young and energetic! Few could argue that the one place where Catholicism has been most stripped of its beauty, and now the country of its Catholicity, is Ireland and vocations reflect this. In 2020 it appears that there will be two priests ordained Bishops and one seminarian ordained a priest. One can only imagine the same fate with churches there. Instead of turning back to Tradition, it is even more disappointing than ever to see Cardinal Dew promoting once again 'Launch Out' - a lay led ministry. It's a proven spiritual dead-end.

      Bob Gillsays:
      My wife and I were fortunate to be able to visit England, where I hail from, some months before the Covid issue arose here. Judith is non-Catholic but was impressed with the Novus Ordo Mass as it was said in my home town (the church remains generally the same as when I was a boy and the current Mass is celebrated with holiness, even though it was Novus Ordo when we visited). I make the point that all Novus Ordo Masses are not celebrated in the willy-nilly manner we sometimes experience in NZ.
      The SSPX Mass in Wanganui is celebrated as I recall it as a boy - with holiness. Time to make another visit, I'm thinking. I do wish, though, SSPX would spread its wings a bit more throughout NZ to make for easier access.

      Delete
    2. I say:
      Bob, I hope you know (I've mentioned it in yesterday's blog post) that the SSPX celebrate Mass in Tawa, Wellington, too.

      Bob Gill says:
      I am aware of that, Julia.

      Bob Gill adds:
      Sharon: Re “It’s a proven spiritual dead-end.” One important thing I learnt in my working life was to try not to re-invent the wheel. If something has been proven to work somewhere, then don’t waste time trying something else that hasn’t been proven – just stick to something that works.
      We know, for example, that the Catholic Diocese of Phoenix, Arizona had 40 would-be-priests in their seminary last year; at the same time we know that SSPX vocations are thriving. These two Catholic resources are not the only ones showing success. Shouldn’t we be asking our bishops why if other Catholic dioceses are successful we can’t just copy their success?

      Monica Devine says:
      Bob, problem is we have a habit here in NZ of following and copying failed dioceses where 'novel' ideas get promoted instead of tried and true such as Lay Pastoral Leaders (why amI giving them capital letters?).

      Delete
  7. Noels Famularo says:
    Why is the lady smiling?

    I say:
    Good question, when she's "desperately sad". You might infer though, from the post, that 95 year-old Yvonne Riddiford is of a gracious generation who smiled their way through misfortune greater than any that's come New Zealand's way since.
    I think we all need to practise smiling ...

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  8. Di Barrow says:
    Paul, the church teaches against the evils you mention. So it's senseless to judge the church on the people who don't follow its teachings.

    Paul Young says:
    It's actions fail to support it's words ... just look at the vast wealth of the Vatican and the starving around the world ... hipocracy (sic) ...

    Janferie Kelekolio says:
    Paul, and still people kill innocent babies, and still people rape and murder, and still there is wars going on and still there are world wide pedo rings OUTSIDE the church and you choose to only finger point to the church .... do not judge a whole group due to a tiny margin of people who are corrupt in that group.

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  9. Karen Moore says:
    I always thought, if you wanna be close to "God" then go sit under a tree.
    Buildings represent power and control - a pissing contest so to speak.
    The winner is the one with the most money which is why Catholic churches seem so grand.....
    I call it hypocrisy but that's just me.

    Daniel Tither says:
    Karen, the Western European middle ages — which were 100% Catholic — invented the township, and towns and cities surrounded central churches or cathedrals.
    Protestants, agnostics, atheists and people of other religions can make value judgements about that, but it's a bit like making a value judgement about capitalism. To focus only on the negatives, and while participating in the process too, is a bit lopsided and contradictory.
    Christianity wasn't just a faith, it was civilization itself. Those who believe Christianity can just be a faith remind me of the kids of the 60s who became hippies yet were mostly middle class, had been provided for well by their parents, and lived in a developed western country. In other words, it was possible to become a hippie, but only because other conditions were already in place (conditions that they apparently rejected, yet still relied on, as hippies).
    In Europe, the church shaped cultural reality for more than 1200 years almost exclusively (arguably 1500 years if you start from the first century), and Catholics and non-Catholics alike still use much of what the church introduced. For example, I just finished a degree, and it was at a university where I'm sure many people are anti-Catholic. Yet the European University system was created by the Catholic church about 1000 years ago, and it was an outgrowth of the Catholic Monastic system. Another example is the calendar the world runs on: it's the Roman Catholic Gregorian Calendar. Hippies didn't introduce the calendar to the world. The Roman Empire introduced it first, and the Catholic Middle Ages carried it forward (and even refined it). You need organisation (even if that organisation was oppressive in many ways — again, like capitalism, it's about taking the good and the bad into account).
    Some cathedrals themselves were even used for astronomy (blowing the argument out of the water that Catholicism was anti-science - on the contrary, it set the conditions for science, and fostered science). Some Cathedrals operated partly as solar observatories: https://longreads.com/.../catholic-churches-built-secret.../
    When I hear Christians say that it is wrong for a church to have good architecture, I think about how even the tin-pot independent churches have a church building of some sort to use, a committee, an accountant, pastors, and some form of organisation. And the larger the church gets, the more it relies on these things (in other words the more successful it gets, the more it relies on these things).
    The anti-organisational / anti-person-centred argument of many Born Again Christians is hypocritical, because as soon as their church has any level of success, they start to become organisational. Not only that, a lot of them use a lot of slick (and in my view, tacky) marketing with their sound and light shows held in convention centres (e.g. ARISE in the Michael Fowler Centre here in Wellington). Give me the tradition and history of the Catholic church over that stuff.

    Karen Moore says:
    Daniel, I have absolutely no problem with the "organization" or advancement or even the science/knowledge involved and evolved.
    But religion was and still is, used to control.
    However, there were civilized times and movements which were advanced such as Egyptian and Greek civilizations which had nothing to do with being "Catholic".
    If anything, the Romans were responsible for de-establishing other advancements by their hunger for power over knowledge which makes one wonder what could have been......

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  10. Karen Moore adds:
    Daniel, I would also like to point out that the most advanced cities in the world don't belong to European countries nor are they the ones embracing science and technology.
    In Europe they still don't have electrical cables in an underground network.
    One could presume that perhaps they're clinging too much to tradition.
    You need to travel the world more to appreciate the different cultures and what each one contributes to human advancement.
    Catholics seem similar in attitudes to Americans....

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  11. Linda Clarke says:
    WOW! It is hard to believe what is going on. They hardly seem Catholic, and don't seem to appreciate history and beautiful, sacred buildings. Why are these churches not full to the max? Would Liberality, Modernity and the spirit of V II be anything to do with it... Everything watered down, rationalism taking over etc etc. NZ is not looking too good with more churches closed.....how will we fare at the Warning!!!!

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