Tag Archives: Priests

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Georgia: clashes on International Day Against Homophobia

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In Georgia, a rally for International Day Against Homophobia has been dramatically bombarded by priests and thousands of anti-gay protesters. Wearing religious and national dress, they marched into a square in central Tbilisi chanting nationalistic slogans.

Their motivation came from recent comments from the Patriarch of the Georgian Orthodox Church, who called the Gay Rights rally an “insult” to tradition.

Zaza Davitaia, who took part in the anti-gay demonstration said: “We are against the rally which comes in contradiction to Georgian morals and traditions.”

A Georgian Orthodox priest, Archimandrite Ioanne, explained why he was against the gay rights rally: “It is unacceptable in any way, especially today. It’s their plan to try our patience.”

Police escorted the gay rights supporters onto buses and drove them away to avoid violence.

Organisers had hoped for a peaceful demonstration outside the old parliament building, with no more than 50 Georgians rallying in support of gay rights.

However, its thought at least 17 people, including journalists, were injured in the clashes.

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Pope Francis breaks with tradition, includes women in foot washing ritual

As part of a Holy Thursday ritual, Pope Francis washed the feet of a dozen inmates at a juvenile detention center in Rome, including two young women. Some in the Catholic Church see the pontiff’s decision to wash women’s feet as symbolic break with male-dominated tradition, as current liturgical rules that restrict the ritual to men. Previous popes had only washed the feet of priests meant to represent Jesus’ male disciples.As the Associated Press reports:Francis told the detainees that Jesus washed the feet of his disciples on the eve of his crucifixion in a gesture of love and service. “This is a symbol, it is a sign – washing your feet means I am at your service,” Francis told the youngsters. “Help one another. This is what Jesus teaches us. This is what I do. And I do it with my heart. I do this with my heart because it is my duty, as a priest and bishop I must be at your service.”Rev. James Martin, a Jesuit priest, calls the act “hugely significant,” explaining that “including women in this part of the Holy Thursday Mass has been frowned on — and even banned — in some dioceses.”Continue Reading… Read More

Vatican rejects Argentina junta ‘Dirty War’ claims against Pope Francis

The Vatican on Friday rejected claims that Pope Francis failed to do enough to protect two priests kidnapped and tortured by Argentina’s military junta and said he had in fact helped save lives. Jorge Mario Bergoglio, the first pope to hail from Latin America, has been criticised by leftist…

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Journalist Who Exposed Pope Francis’ Argentine Junta Ties: the Contentious Story of Abducted Priests

http://www.youtube.com/v/asvMhBEZiq8?version=3&f=videos&app=youtube_gdata Originally posted here -  Journalist Who Exposed Pope Francis’ Argentine Junta Ties: the Contentious Story of Abducted Priests

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Catherine Sevcenko on Academic Freedom

Marjorie Heins’ ;Priests of Our
Democracy ;chronicles New York City’s efforts to root out
Communist Party members and sympathizers from the public schools in
the 1940s and ’50s. As Heins notes in her book—and as Catherine
Sevcenko ;stresses in her review—restrictions on academic
freedom are still with us today. By delving into the damage this
censorship causes, Heins reminds us why freedom of expression,
especially on campuses, is so vitally important. View this article.
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Is the priesthood a failed tradition?

It takes a long time to write and publish a book, so Garry Wills certainly could not have predicted that his newest, “Why Priests?: A Failed Tradition,” would arrive at precisely the moment in history in which many thoughtful Catholics must be asking the same question.If you’re expecting a polemic, you might get a quiet one, but you won’t get much in the way of bombast or grandstanding. Wills is a scholar, and his opposition is rooted in a position firmly inside the church. The book is dedicated to the memory of a priest, Henri de Lubac, S.J., and it begins with a long appreciation of the priests Wills has known and loved in a professional lifetime of reading and writing about religion which itself began in a Jesuit seminary, where Wills studied for five years in hopes of becoming a priest.This brief memoiristic opening quickly gives way to a historical account of the rise to prominence and power of the priestly class in the Roman Catholic tradition, which begins with the first generation of a priestless movement that hadn’t yet begun to call itself Christianity, and it is here that the reviewer of the audiobook edition begins to experience a special pleasure. So often the better audiobooks get their traction and build their momentum through their narrative qualities — the urgency of scene-making, the building tension of information that the listener is gaining alongside the speaker, the carefully modulated rising and falling of carefully shaped juxtapositions of events.Continue Reading… Read More

British cardinal: Next pope should review marriage ban since ‘Jesus didn’t say that’

Cardinal Keith O’Brien, Britain’s most senior Catholic figure, points to ecclesiastical celibacy as having no ‘divine origin’ Britain’s most senior Catholic has suggested Catholic priests should be able to marry and have children, saying the demand for celibacy was not…

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