NewGathering
Tuesday, April 29, 2025
MSW on the Conclave
Friday, April 25, 2025
How are the first 100 days going where you live?
There are many articles out there summing up the first 100 days of Trump 2.0. Different areas of the country will be impacted in different sectors. Red states are more dependent on Federal funds than blue states. I read this morning that 50% of government operations in West Virginia are supported by federal grants (WVA went for trump by 70%), some of which have already been canceled, blowing a huge hole in the state budget. I suspect that WVA is not alone in this situation.
Monday, April 21, 2025
POPE FRANCIS DIED THIS MORNING
NATIONAL CATHOLIC REPORTER; POPE FRANCIS IS DEAD AT 88
FROM WASHINGTON POST
Pope Francis died at the age of 88 at 7:35 a.m. local time Monday, the Vatican said, ending a historic chapter for the world’s largest Christian faith. The first Latin American pontiff burst open the doors of the Catholic Church to “everyone, everyone, everyone.” Francis shifted the focus of the church away from debates about topics such as divorce and contraception and engaged with modern questions about climate change, immigration and artificial intelligence. He also sought, and sometimes struggled, to impose accountability for clerical sexual abuse. He made his final public appearance on Easter Sunday, when he released a message decrying the “logic of fear.” The coming days will involve a public viewing, a funeral, a period of mourning and, eventually, a conclave to select a new pope and determine the direction of the church.
NEW YORK TIMES
Pope Francis, who rose from modest means in Argentina to become the first Jesuit and Latin American pontiff, who clashed bitterly with traditionalists in his push for a more inclusive Roman Catholic Church, and who spoke out tirelessly for migrants, the marginalized and the health of the planet, died on Monday at the Vatican’s Casa Santa Marta. He was 88.
The pope’s death was announced by the Vatican in a statement on X, a day after Francis appeared in his wheelchair to bless the faithful in St. Peter’s Square on Easter Sunday.
Throughout his 12-year papacy, Francis was a change agent, having inherited a Vatican in disarray in 2013 after the stunning resignation of his predecessor, Benedict XVI, a standard-bearer of Roman Catholic conservatism.
Francis steadily steered the church in another direction, restocking its leadership with a diverse array of bishops who shared his pastoral, welcoming approach as he sought to open up the church. Many rank-and-file Catholics approved, believing that the church had become inward-looking and distant from ordinary people.
Francis reached out to migrants, the poor and the destitute, to victims of sexual abuse by Catholic clergy members, and to alienated gay Catholics. He traveled to often-forgotten and far-flung countries and sought to improve relations with an antagonistic Chinese government, Muslim clerics and leaders from across the fragmented Christian world.
After some early stumbles, he took strong steps to address a clerical sex abuse crisis that had become an existential threat to the church. He adopted new rules to hold top religious leaders, including bishops, accountable if they committed sexual abuse or covered it up, though he did not impose the level of transparency or civil reporting obligations that many advocates demanded.
In his final years, slowed by a bad knee, intestinal surgery and respiratory ailments that sapped his breath and voice, Francis used a cane and then a wheelchair, seemingly a diminished figure. But that was a misleading impression. He continued to travel widely, focusing on exploited and war-torn parts of Africa, where he excoriated modern-day colonizers and sought peace in South Sudan.
Sunday, April 20, 2025
Rejoice!
This is my homily for today, Easter Sunday, Cycle C. I gave the same homily (slightly modified) last night at the Easter Vigil. I used the same Gospel account of the discovery of the empty tomb, Luke 24:1-12, for both masses. That was the appointed reading for the Vigil this year, and while not the primary choice for Easter Sunday morning (that would be John's account), it's permitted.
I've been very busy the last few days with church-related activities. I sang with the choir at the Holy Thursday evening liturgy. On Friday I was the deacon and had to chant the first half of each of the 10 solemn intercessions. Then I accompanied the cross up the center aisle, singing "Behold, behold the wood of the cross, on which is hung our salvation" at three intervals. Then, at Easter Vigil, I was the Deacon of the Word (our other deacon was the Deacon of the Eucharist). I chanted the Exsultet and also preached. And I had to lug the Easter candle up or down the aisle (and up and down sanctuary steps) a few times. It's really heavy! And the fact that it's lit the whole time, ups the diciness quotient a few clicks. All this may not sound like much, but all of it took a lot of thought, preparation and practice in the spirit of trying to do it well.
Happy Easter, everyone! Now that I'm done with church duties, my wife and I are working on pulling together an Easter dinner for the family. Taking a break while the sweet potato casserole is in the oven to post the homily - it's below the break.
Wednesday, April 16, 2025
If they do these things in the green wood...
An enigmatic verse in the Gospel of Luke (read recently on Palm Sunday) which has always stuck in my mind is Luke 23:31, "If they do these things in the green wood, what will they do in the dry?" I've never been sure exactly what was meant, but from the text, and biblical commentaries, I would interpret it as Jesus himself being the green wood, or the green tree; the innocent and life-giving tree. And the dry wood being the branches which have separated themselves from the green tree, the source of their life. subjecting themselves to being thrown away or burned. And a prophecy of the siege of Jerusalem in 70 AD. Not a comfortable meditation,
Today is Wednesday of Holy Week, often called "Spy Wednesday". There are plenty of dry wood things to think about lately, from betrayal of allies, to unjust imprisonment, and mistreatment of the strangers within our gates.
Sunday, April 13, 2025
Satire by Tom Reese
Trump Imposes Tariffs on the Vatican
“Why should we import indulgences from the Vatican when we have domestic producers like Paula White who offer products that are much better,” said a White House spokesperson.
Paula White, head of the new White House Faith Office and a proponent of the prosperity Gospel, last month promised seven supernatural blessings for the Easter season to her followers if they sent her $1,000 or more. (While the rest of this column is satire, this particular offer from White is real.)
White’s “seven blessings” was no doubt an effort to cut into the indulgence market that the Holy See has dominated for centuries.
“Our blessings are seven times better than indulgences, which only get you out of Purgatory,” explained Trump, in introducing the Vatican tariffs. “It’s a bigger bang for the buck.”
Saturday, April 12, 2025
"Dire Wolves", the Endangered Species List, and Hotel California
Secretary of the Interior, Doug Burgum, posts on X that now that Colossal Biosciences brought back the dire wolf, we don't have to worry about endangered species anymore. We can just bring them back if we drive them to extinction.
Okay, it's settled then!
Well, not quite. Read on, from this article: people.com/trump-administration-says-u-s-endangered-species-list-should-go-extinct-11713720
And continue at the bottom for some thoughts from me.