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Music
director fired
Ordinarily,
that’s not newsworthy. A new pastor arrives and people are let go; that’s
nothing unusual. In this case, Joe Nadeau of St. Agnes Church in
Roeland Park, Kan., found himself out of a job and at the center of controversy
over homosexuality this past spring. Under a previous pastor, he had mentioned
his main job was directing the Heartland Men’s Chorus, an organization
that attracts many homosexual men. He offered to withdraw his employment
application but was instead given the position of overseeing five weekend
Masses and three choirs. Eight years later, a new pastor responded to unhappy
parishioners whose previous petition to have Nadeau removed had been rebuffed.
After a two-hour reception line at his farewell, Nadeau was released from
service for noncompliance with three directives: quit his primary job,
publicly concede homosexuality as a disorder, and promise to live as a
celibate.
Within
a week, another area church hired Nadeau, but the Catholic Church doesn’t
come off too well in the aftermath. First, note that a parish job involving
a full set of Sunday Masses and multiple choirs pays less than running
a single choir for a half-dozen annual performances. Second, you have to
wonder who’s really in charge of a parish that makes personnel decisions
by petition drives. And third, no bishop would dare make such public requests
of its clergy. No wonder Catholics are weighed down by low morale.
Music
to Katrina- battered churches
In
the aftermath of last fall’s hurricane, food, money, and clothing poured
into hard-hit Gulf States. While considering a possible trip to the recycle
bin, one Iowa woman religious thought of something more useful. Sister
Nancy Wooldridge wrote to a friend of another sister, Phil Beining,
music
ministry director at the cathedral in Biloxi, Miss. Would he be interested
in sheet music, music lesson books, and a host of other materials now taking
up space in the convent storage? Definitely so, came the reply.
Sister
Nancy organized collections from various Davenport, Iowa, parishes, sending
old hymnals, sheet music, tapes, CDs, DVDs, and religious education materials
south. Beining promised that he would distribute the shipment to other
Biloxi parishes, most of which were harder hit than the cathedral.
“It’s
a big process for her to go through 60 to 70 years of choral music and
piano methodology music,” said Beining. “It’s a delight that she wants
to help.”
Warning:
Fake organist abroad
St.
Peter’s Basilica issued a public warning about various agents who are attempting
to pass off other musicians as the “official organist of Pope Benedict.”
There is only one official organist at St. Peter’s, James E. Goettsche,
an
American, who has held the post since 1989. “I have been advised to take
legal action,” said Goettsche, “but for now I am looking more for clarification
and correction.” So far he has received at least one apology from one promoter
who posted made- up details about an Italian organist available for concert
tours in Germany, the United States, and New Zealand.
World
Cup prayers
The
world went soccer-mad for a month this past summer, but some of the festivities
included prayer. Munich’s Catholic Cathedral of Our Lady hosted a nationally
televised ecumenical service on the eve of the World Cup opener. Children
clad in soccer jerseys of the 32 participating teams joined religious leaders
in procession. Songs were sung in many languages, and prayers were offered
for a celebration of sport that would bring understanding and cooperation
to the nations of the world. One of the Scripture readings was St. Paul’s
athletic advice from 1 Corinthians 9:24–25: “Do you not know that the runners
in the stadium all run in the race, but only one wins the prize? Run so
as to win. Every athlete exercises discipline in every way. They do it
to win a perishable crown, but we an imperishable one.”
Sadly,
no players were present.
Reclaiming
Holy Hill
Milwaukee
Archbishop
Timothy Dolan celebrated a Mass of Reparation to reclaim a 150-year-old
shrine from satanic desecration suffered on 6-6-06. “Satan had his moment,”
Dolan preached. “But Satan is crushed now because the entire community
has expressed its outrage.”
The
vandals (along with others who obsessed over that date) might want to reconsider
their math, especially since the real date, 6-6-6, actually happened 2,000
years ago, before the Christian numbering of years. At least since Y2K,
most places recognize that we’re in the year “2006,” not “06” or even “6.”
Father
Cyril Guise, director of the National Shrine of Mary, Help of Christians,
told the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel that cleanup efforts will purge
the shrine of any lasting damage from the desecration. Thanks to the archbishop,
the emotional healing was quick to begin.
God
already knows …
A parish
priest in Milano, Italy, put up a sign on his parish church that read:
Dio
conosce gia’ il tuo ombelic. Translation: “God already knows about
your navel.” I guess he probably wasn’t talking about oranges, as Milano
is considered one of Europe’s centers of high fashion. ML
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