Saturday 20 August 2011

Well perhaps things are finally getting through to the BBC...


Click on the link above: at least the reporter has recognised the sheer numbers of young Catholics in Madrid for World Youth Day this year. (In the year 2000 there were reckoned to be somewhere between 2 and 3 million youngsters in the field outside Rome to see Pope John Paul - the largest gathering in European history - yet it barely got a mention. Then there was Toronto, Cologne, Sydney.)
 

Church weddings are increasing in this area!


Congratulations to Justin and Fiona Williams married yesterday and to Steven and Anna Bowler married today.
There have been more marriages in the parish both this year and last year than we have had for 16 years.

Thursday 18 August 2011

World Youth Day - good news or bad?


Several people from Cornwall have joined the one and half million people who are with Pope Benedict in Spain this week. This includes the Dean of Cornwall and some of his parishioners.


The BBC gave its usual jaundiced coverage on the Today programme this morning - a few seconds on the 'thousands' who are protesting at the supposed cost to Spanish tax payers. This is despite the fact that the event is being paid for by the young pilgrims who have all had to raise several hundred pounds over the past year (they will also be spending their euros in Madrid). The journalist Andrew Brown was quick to note this however: 
The ability of mainstream Christianity to attract a crowd of 1.5 million young people seems to me a damn sight more newsworthy...
...Numbers don't prove truth, of course. But they are measures of commitment, and of political importance. Three hundred times as many people have travelled to Madrid to see the pope as have travelled to protests against him. Which group is more important to know about?

Given the recent events concerning the morally confused rioters in our country, the gathering of these young pilgrims from all over the world - motivated by the highest ideals -  provides a miraculous countersign. There is an element in BBC that just doesn't get religion and it seems to have excelled itself in being particularly perverse this time.

Tuesday 16 August 2011

Expedition to Westminster


Well the great day arrived - the Government interview for our proposal for Cornwall's first Catholic Secondary School (and the U.K.'s first Catholic 'free school').

After the overnight train to Paddington, we were able to celebrate Mass at the high altar in Westminster Cathedral and ask Our Lady's prayers in the fine Lady chapel.


Below- last minute preparations in Starbucks!




The meeting at the Department of Education headquarters in Great Smith Street began at 10am before a panel of four civil servants. We felt the six of us worked very well together, providing an articulate and confident response. We won't know what they decide yet until the end of September/beginning of October.


Here we are breathing a sigh of relief afterwards (our headteacher had already scooted off to catch the plane for World Youth Day in Madrid!)

But so many of you back here in Cornwall were praying that we could almost feel it.
                                     A very big thank you to you all!

Sunday 14 August 2011

Redruth Summer Lunch


Miracle of miracles: we had real sunshine. Well, there are no coincidences when it comes to the Sisters and fine weather.  The sky was Our Lady's colour.

The convent gardens were abuzz with people from as far afield as ...Camborne and Penponds.
Praise God for a fine day!

Our great feastday of hope.

Today we celebrate (one day early) the Assumption of Our Lady body and soul into heaven - the masterpiece of God's plan for Creation. Mary, the sinless one, has co-operated perfectly with the Word, her son. She is taken up to share the life of God in glory and she becomes our hope. We look to her assumption as we long for the first flower that bursts through the barren earth in Spring.

Everyone is feverishly analysing the riots in our major cities: lack of personal value-systems; no respect for authority; poor parenting etc. Certainly there are very  many young people who seem to have so little hope beyond aspiring to a few filched flat-screen TVs. This is surely a fruit of a secular, materialistic culture with no true grasp of what we are as human beings.

Two weeks ago, several hundred people in their teens and twenties travelled for the 5-day Summer Session at Woldingham (see below). They were filled with a whole-hearted love for their Catholic faith and want to live according to the highest values. They were brimming with hope. To witness them all singing the Salve Regina to Our Lady each evening would surely surprise the loudest New Atheist in the media.

St Maximilian Kolbe, the martyr-priest of Auschwitz whose feast-day is really today, made it his personal mission to make Mary known and loved throughout the world of the twentieth century. He saw the rise of dark forces -  hatred for the Church and Naziism. Through his extraordinary final act of love he had the last word on them all. He showed the power of Our Lady in our lives. She opens the door to hope, to her Son, in our lives.

The atheist way can be seen to have failed in so many ways. Human beings are made for more than flat-screen TVs. We are made, as Mary shows us most beautifully, for something far beyond this world. We are made for the life of God.

Saturday 13 August 2011

Kneeling for Communion


It is well-known that the Pope now only gives Holy Communion on the tongue to people who are kneeling.
Last month the head of the Congregation for Divine Worship, Cardinal Canizares Llovera, has explicitly seconded this. He recommends that all Catholics receive Communion on the tongue and also while kneeling:
"It is the sign of adoration that needs to be recovered. I think the entire Church needs to receive Communion while kneeling.
If we trivialize Communion, we trivialize everything, and we cannot lose a moment as important as that of receiving Communion, of recognizing the real presence of Christ there, of the God who is the love above all loves, as we sing in a hymn in Spanish.
It is to simply know that we are before God himself and that He came to us and that we are undeserving".
Certainly it is noticeable that more people in the parish here are rediscovering the practice of receiving on the tongue.
Last month the bishops of England and Wales also pointed out that all Catholics in this country have a right to receive kneeling. This would present a challenge at the moment, as the altar rails were removed in both churches decades ago.  It is going to require a little thinking about...

Thursday 11 August 2011

Explaining the revised translation


We had our last in the series of four talks in the parish hall this evening, with cakes!

The session focussed on the changes in the Eucharistic prayers and concluding rites.
It ended with the deeper emphasis on singing that the translation will usher in, as the Missal will now include more in the way of simple chants to accompany the prayers.

Following the diocesan music day last Saturday, we have decided to introduce the new 'Belmont Mass'; this setting is quite simple and dignified and draws on plainchant in a modern way. We will begin to learn it over the next few Sundays and copies of the music have been ordered for everyone. Here's hoping everyone will take to it!

Tuesday 9 August 2011

Mgr Conrad Meyer and Mgr Richard Rutt RIP

Today was the requiem Mass for Canon Richard Rutt (right) at St Mary's Falmouth.
He had died just 4 days after Canon Conrad Meyer, (left) whose funeral took place last Thursday at Holy Trinity Newquay.
Both were Anglican bishops - Fr Rutt had been suffragan in St Germans (later of Leicester) and Fr Meyer assistant in Truro. They were both received into the Catholic Church after the vote for women priests - and then ordained as priests on 8th June 1995. Both were gracious and humble gentlemen who brought their own inspiring witness of faith to their respective Catholic parishes.

It was fascinating to learn a little of Fr Rutt's life. He had been stationed at Bletchley Park during the war to help with code-breaking; he could speak 14 languages (and was known to compose limericks in Latin and Greek). He spent 20 years in Korea as an Anglican missionary; he learnt to speak fluent Korean.
He was also famous for his books on knitting: he once knitted himself a mitre!
His beloved wife Joan pre-deceased him by a few years.

May they both rest in peace.
(Please pray also for Fr Conrad's wife Mary).
                                          
Fr Rutt kindly donated these copes to our parish some years ago. They are made from fine Korean silk.

Sunday 7 August 2011

Faith Summer Session


Last week the Faith Summer Session for young Catholic adults (15-30 yrs) took place once again at Woldingham School in Surrey. Nearly 300 people attended, including a large contingent from Scotland and 15 seminarians. Around 30 priests were there too (4 newly ordained).
The theme was "Love as I have loved you" The Vocation to Love; there were 8 magnificent talks both by priests and lay people. It is uplifting and inspiring to meet so many bright young people who have a whole-hearted love for the Catholic Faith and are so keen to learn more.
There are some photos here and more here (thanks to Fr Tim Finigan and Mac Mclernon)

Here is the contingent from the 'South West' including Camborne, Redruth, Truro and Newquay.
Here are the seminarians (including Fr Chris's brother)

I'm not sure who this guy is, but what a t-shirt!