Wednesday 25 May 2011

"human rights violations"

I've been reading tonight a report into human rights abuses in China: particularly practitioners of falun gong, which I had never heard of until tonight. I don't understand what falun gong (or falun dafa) actually is but here is a report upon its early days in the 1990's by Ian Johnson.

The 2010 United Nations report on the horrifying medieval methods the Chinese authorities are now apparently using to stamp out falun gong needs to be known more widely. (It includes the modern equivalent of the rack and frequently ends in the death of the victim.)

When people mention" human rights violations" in China do we ever really know what that actually means? I've never heard it being discussed or debated or even qualified. The trouble is that the words have such a wide range that they have become almost trivial to us in the west. "A violation of my human rights" can mean anything from not being able to walk into a shop upwards. In China it can mean being tortured to death. The words have become inadequate.

Sunday 15 May 2011

. . . . which is just as well.

Monday 9 May 2011

even the blankest dreariest, shoddiest prayer bears fruit. . . . .
David Stancliffe in a sermon at easter (Durham Cathedral website)
"So we are invited into the bleeding wounds of Christ; we are invited to lose our private and sterile immunity and risk ourselves in him.  We are invited to step into a countercultural solidarity with the poor, the dis-eased, the broken in order to find an immunity that is not of our own private making, but of his giving.  This is his gift to you this day, and whenever you are taken out of yourself and drawn into his wounded side to share his divine nature."

Sunday 8 May 2011

woodbine willy again:
"Broken, bleeding, but unconquered, very God of God to me.
All that showy pomp of splendour, all that sheen of angel wings,
Was but borrowed from the baubles that surround our earthly kings."
Brother Paul Quenon has been a monk at Gethsemane Abbey since 1959 - where he went aged 17 directly inspired by the writings of Thomas Merton.
On this video he says (Douglas at the group quoted it in full)
"Well, I think the purpose of the monastic life in the modern world is to show that we don't need a purpose. The purpose of life is life, and you are to be just to be. Everybody measures their importance by how useful they are, so you need to shatter that. You know, somebody has to come along now and then just say listen, you know, that's not it. That's not what life is."

Saturday 7 May 2011

today I renewed my renewal.

blankest prayer, but I did recognise the fruit.

the psalms though overflow with meaning.
there, your voice is unmistakeable:
strong, clear and joyful

Monday 2 May 2011

hans kung

I am arguing with the man who has again censored my post to the group at yahoo. (IFSB) I will probably have to leave although I really dont want to.
On a strongly related issue:
Coming up again against reactionary American Catholic bloggers, I did a little more research on Hans Kung, whom they hate - most recently because he is against the beatification of JP2 (as am I). I then came across a letter he wrote to the Irish Times last year. I will quote it in full because it made me think that perhaps I am not vociferous enough. Although my blog is an irrelevance this in itself doesnt give me leave to stay silent. I will highlight bits that seem relevant.

He puts forward 6 points (addressing, I think, Irish bishops??)
1. Do not keep silent: By keeping silent in the face of so many serious grievances, you taint yourselves with guilt. When you feel that certain laws, directives and measures are counterproductive, you should say this in public. Send Rome not professions of your devotion, but rather calls for reform!
2. Set about reform: Too many in the church and in the episcopate complain about Rome, but do nothing themselves. When people no longer attend church in a diocese, when the ministry bears little fruit, when the public is kept in ignorance about the needs of the world, when ecumenical co-operation is reduced to a minimum, then the blame cannot simply be shoved off on Rome. Whether bishop, priest, layman or laywoman – everyone can do something for the renewal of the church within his own sphere of influence, be it large or small. Many of the great achievements that have occurred in the individual parishes and in the church at large owe their origin to the initiative of an individual or a small group. As bishops, you should support such initiatives and, especially given the present situation, you should respond to the just complaints of the faithful.
3. Act in a collegial way: After heated debate and against the persistent opposition of the Curia, the Second Vatican Council decreed the collegiality of the pope and the bishops. It did so in the sense of the Acts of the Apostles, in which Peter did not act alone without the college of the apostles. In the post-conciliar era, however, the pope and the Curia have ignored this decree. Just two years after the council, Pope Paul VI issued his encyclical defending the controversial celibacy law without the slightest consultation of the bishops. Since then, papal politics and the papal magisterium have continued to act in the old, uncollegial fashion. Even in liturgical matters, the pope rules as an autocrat over and against the bishops. He is happy to surround himself with them as long as they are nothing more than stage extras with neither voices nor voting rights. This is why, venerable bishops, you should not act for yourselves alone, but rather in the community of the other bishops, of the priests and of the men and women who make up the church.
4. Unconditional obedience is owed to God alone: Although at your episcopal consecration you had to take an oath of unconditional obedience to the pope, you know that unconditional obedience can never be paid to any human authority; it is due to God alone. For this reason, you should not feel impeded by your oath to speak the truth about the current crisis facing the church, your diocese and your country. Your model should be the apostle Paul, who dared to oppose Peter “to his face since he was manifestly in the wrong”! ( Galatians 2:11 ). Pressuring the Roman authorities in the spirit of Christian fraternity can be permissible and even necessary when they fail to live up to the spirit of the Gospel and its mission. The use of the vernacular in the liturgy, the changes in the regulations governing mixed marriages, the affirmation of tolerance, democracy and human rights, the opening up of an ecumenical approach, and the many other reforms of Vatican II were only achieved because of tenacious pressure from below.
5. Work for regional solutions: The Vatican has frequently turned a deaf ear to the well-founded demands of the episcopate, the priests and the laity. This is all the more reason for seeking wise regional solutions. As you are well aware, the rule of celibacy, which was inherited from the Middle Ages, represents a particularly delicate problem. In the context of today’s clerical abuse scandal, the practice has been increasingly called into question. Against the expressed will of Rome, a change would appear hardly possible; yet this is no reason for passive resignation. When a priest, after mature consideration, wishes to marry, there is no reason why he must automatically resign his office when his bishop and his parish choose to stand behind him. Individual episcopal conferences could take the lead with regional solutions. It would be better, however, to seek a solution for the whole church, therefore:
6. Call for a council: Just as the achievement of liturgical reform, religious freedom, ecumenism and inter-religious dialogue required an ecumenical council, so now a council is needed to solve the dramatically escalating problems calling for reform. In the century before the Reformation, the Council of Constance decreed that councils should be held every five years. Yet the Roman Curia successfully managed to circumvent this ruling. There is no question that the Curia, fearing a limitation of its power, would do everything in its power to prevent a council coming together in the present situation. Thus it is up to you to push through the calling of a council or at least a representative assembly of bishops.
With the church in deep crisis, this is my appeal to you, venerable bishops: Put to use the episcopal authority that was reaffirmed by the Second Vatican Council. In this urgent situation, the eyes of the world turn to you. Innumerable people have lost their trust in the Catholic Church. Only by openly and honestly reckoning with these problems and resolutely carrying out needed reforms can their trust be regained. With all due respect, I beg you to do your part – together with your fellow bishops as far as possible, but also alone if necessary – in apostolic “fearlessness” ( Acts 4:29, 31 ). Give your faithful signs of hope and encouragement and give our church a perspective for the future.
Osama Bin Laden was killed today at a compound in Pakistan. 
Will this weaken the terrorists or strengthen their cause?

The rejoicing: dismaying.

Sunday 1 May 2011

having floundered so seriously this week, there was a more concerted renewal today.

remember: constant conversion through reading and prayer.
not repetition for its own sake but because there are so many enemies to see off.
(who could have thought so many!)