WI Marriage Amendment Stands!

From Dad29
Seven to zip, the UW professor is wrong. (Surprise!)

A legal challenge to the state's constitutional ban on gay marriage was rejected Wednesday by the Wisconsin Supreme Court.

In a 7-0 ruling, the court ruled the 2006 constitutional amendment was properly put to voters in a statewide referendum

Bill McConkey, a University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh political science instructor from Door County, in 2007 sued the state in Dane County Circuit Court arguing that the ban should be struck down.

The Supremes were not persuaded by McConkey's convoluted blather.
Background: In November 2006, voters were asked whether the state should ban same-sex marriage and whether it should ban "identical or substantially similar arrangements," such as civil unions. Wisconsin voters adopted the amendment with 59% of the vote.

This will be one of many legal challenges to this amendment.

If legally we could, a ban on abortion in Wisconsin would pass by an even larger margin...  Except that according to Wisconsin law, abortion is illegal in the state.  Only by the federal Roe v Wade decision did judicialslators take the rights of the state away to govern its own people.

Satanists partner with SNAP

I suppose you are waiting for the punchline...

A blog by the name "Christan Child Abuse" byline - "Religious fanatics are among the most vicioius(sic) child abusers in the world" which claims "In fact, you could go so far as to say that child abuse IS a Judeo-Christian-Islamic tradition!" is blogging about SNAP press releases.  The blog is run by professed Satanists.  Apparently the are hoping to discredit the Church as True because of the sins of Her members.  Recently they posted on a Fr. Willenborg
Leaders of a Chicago-based support group are writing to [Bishop] Paprocki [of Springfield], prodding him to
-- aggressively reach out to anyone with information about a predator priest, Fr. Henry V. Willenborg, who was ousted last fall, and
-- post all the names of central Illinois child molesting clerics on his diocesan website.

At sidewalk news conferences in St. Louis and Quincy, the group is also begging anyone who saw, suspected or suffered clergy sex crimes (especially Willenborg) to call police, get help, expose wrongdoers, protect others and start healing.

Last October, Willenborg was suspended from active ministry because of allegations that he molested a Quincy teenager years ago. At the time of his ouster, Willenborg was working at Our Lady of the Lake church in Ashland, Wisconsin (in the Superior Diocese). The move was prompted, in part, by a long, page one New York Times story which disclosed that Willenborg seduced a young devout Illinois Catholic woman, impregnated her twice, urged her to have an abortion once, then for more than two decades essentially ignored the boy he fathered. In the same article, another woman said that Willenborg had sexually abused her when she was in high school in Quincy. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/16/us/16priest.html
Fr. Willenborg is a sad tale, may St. Michael defend him from the snares of Satan, and may his victim find The Divine Healer.  Also an interesting case since the victim was an adult women where most cases have been adolescent boys

And I think here's the point of the article from the C of S perspective:
SNAP notes that the actual number of Springfield area pedophile priests is likely much higher because BishopAccountability.org lists only those clerics against whom allegations have been lodge in the public domain – in civil lawsuits, criminal prosecution or news accounts.
So now they hope to project all priests as guilty criminals(to say the least).  Interesting bedfellow SNAP finds herself with. 

Pro-Life Sunday Stations & Summer Supper - Madison

All pro-lifers welcome Sunday, July 18, 2010 @ 5:00 p.m. Orin Road Planned Parenthood, Madison,

Wisconsin Pro-Life Stations of the Cross Led by Fr. Rick Heilman, Founder and Spiritual Leader of the Knights of Divine Mercy

Accompanied by The Missionary Image of Our Lady of Guadalupe
Pro-Life Family picnic to follow across the street at Our Lady of Victory newly acquired property with Peggy Hamill, State Director of Pro-Life Wisconsin Dish to pass if possible, not required
Table settings and beverages provided
Bring lawn chairs

Call Jeanne at cell #608.516.8632 with questions.
Headcount helpful, not necessary

Some Listecki Pallium photos

Milwaukee Examiner has some posted

 

Green Bay priest Blair sent to South Dakota

Very interesting to say the least.  From the outside looking in, it sounds like Fr. Blair had a lot of people hero worshiping him.  I did not realize he was not a diocesan priest, but a member of the Priest of the Sacred Heart. That makes it even more odd that folks wanted the bishop to do something about it even though he's not the bishop's priest.
The Rev. Guy Blair, a high-profile advocate for homeless and hearing-impaired people in Green Bay, has been called to serve a parish in South Dakota, the Catholic Diocese of Green Bay announced this morning.

Blair is the pastor of St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church in downtown Green Bay, but will leave on Sept. 14 for St. James Parish in Chamberlain, S.D.

He was called to his new assignment by his order, the Priests of the Sacred Heart. He was to have transferred within the Green Bay diocese to St. Paul Catholic Church in Combined Locks.

The Hales Corners-based order also runs St. Joseph Indian School, an elementary school for Native American children, in Chamberlain.

Green Bay Bishop David Ricken received a letter from the Provincial Superior of Blair's order alerting him of the move, the diocese said.

Blair, a Connecticut native, came to Green Bay from San Antonio, Texas, in September 2005.

Ricken previously said it was a difficult decision to transfer Blair to Combined Locks. The bishop said a shortage of priests prompted the move, which was unpopular with St. John parishioners, the hearing-impaired community and advocates for the homeless.

Blair's weekly Mass for the deaf is the only one of its kind in the Green Bay diocese, which covers 16 counties: Brown, Calumet, Door, Florence, Forest, Kewaunee, Langlade, Manitowoc, Marinette, Menominee, Oconto, Outagamie, Shawano, Waupaca, Waushara and Winnebago.

The seasonal homeless shelter at St. John's will continue operating without Blair.

The Rev. John Girotti will still become pastor of St. John’s the Evangelist on Sept. 15, while continuing as pastor of St. Francis Xavier Cathedral Parish, also in downtown Green Bay. Girotti doesn't know sign language, he said, but he'll do his best to reach out to hearing-impaired parishioners at St. John.

The Rev. James Lucas, the pastor of St. Paul Parish in Combined Locks, will leave for a new assignment on Sept. 15. The Priest Personnel Board will meet this week to discuss his successor.
Background 1 and 2

Ongoings at the Shrine with Archbishop Burke

Archbishop Raymond L. Burke, former bishop of La Crosse and founder of the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe, will return to La Crosse this summer for conferences at the shrine. Burke now serves as prefect of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura at the Vatican.
  • JUNE 26: Monsignor Eduardo Chavez Sanchez, postulator for the Cause of Juan Diego, and Burke will speak during an all-day conference. Cost is $40, $15 for children younger than 12, and includes a luncheon. For more information, call (608) 782-5440 or go online at www.guadalupeshrine.org
  • JULY 30-31: Burke will be the keynote speaker at the Queen of the Americas Guild’s two-day conference “Our Lady of Guadalupe: Bringing Us to Her Son Through an Understanding of Church Law.” Others presenters include Bishop Joseph J. Madera, retired auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese for the Military Services; Benedict Nguyen, chancellor for the Diocese of La Crosse; the Rev. Christopher Kubat, executive director of Catholic Social Services for the Diocese of Lincoln, Neb., and Grammy-nominated Catholic singer/songwriter Marty Rotella. For more information, go online at www.queenoftheamericasguild.org.
  • AUG. 3-4: Burke also will be one of four presenters at a two-day Canon Law Conference for canonists and civil attorneys.
La Crosse Tribune

Some photos from this past weekends event


Also recently Archbishop George Antonysamy (left), Apostolic Nuncio in Liberia, Sierra Leone and the Gambia visited The Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe on Thursday, June 24. With him is Father Arul Joseph, temporarily serving in the Diocese of La Crosse. Both priests are natives of India and knew each other while attending seminary.

Green Bay priest has apologetics book published posthumously

One of the Rev. Mike O'Rourke's greatest strengths was making sense of the most complex of issues and putting them into simple terms even a child could understand.

"Come Follow Me: Catholic Answers for Bible Objections to the Church" is the book O'Rourke, in conjunction with the Diocese of Green Bay, was in the process of publishing when he died. The book, which is about myths and answers to those myths regarding the Catholic faith, was an ongoing project of O'Rourke's for more than 10 years.

When Joe Bound was president of ACES Xavier in Appleton, he commented at a meeting of pastors about wanting to see Catholic apologetics introduced in the high school. Apologetics is a branch of theology that is concerned with defending or proving the truth of Christian doctrines.

"After we got all done with the meeting, (O'Rourke) came over to me and said, 'Joe, I've got an interest in this Catholic apologetics, and I've been tinkering with something for a while. Would you mind looking at it?'" said Bound, who since 2006 has been director of education for the Diocese of Green Bay. The Bible-based manuscript was what Bound sought.

O'Rourke tried several times to get the manuscript published, however, when those efforts failed, "he decided to form a partnership with the Diocese of Green Bay so at least the book could get into the Catholic school system," said St. Mary's business administrator Brian Dresang.

O'Rourke had shared unpublished copies of his book with teachers and diocesan officials, and everyone felt it would serve as a great learning tool. In December, Dresang said, the diocese agreed to do a limited publishing to get it into the hands of high school juniors and seniors as part of their religion studies.

"That was in place before he passed away," Dresang said. "Now we have an agreement with the diocese that we can maybe piggyback on that to make it available. A lot of parishioners have heard about it, but they've never seen a draft copy, and are interested in getting their hands on it. So we are going to try and make that happen."

With copyright pending, Bound said, the diocese will go ahead with a limited printing of the book based on pre-orders.

"He was a personal friend," Bound said of O'Rourke. "And I am deeply saddened by his passing. But this will be a great tribute to him."
PostCrecent

Milwaukee priest photoed in NCRegister Clerical Cups article


CLERICUS CUP. Pontifical North American College seminarian John Gibson of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee competes in the Clericus Cup against the Pontifical College of St. Paul in Rome Feb. 27. The U.S. team won the soccer match 2-0.

Read the article at National Catholic Register

A new look

Well I thought that would go well except is screwed up all my modules over on the right of the screen.  I used a program called Artisteer which isn't perfect but I would still highly recommend.  Blogger is only one of the many applications it can be used to design templates for. A little too green which I couldn't seem to straighten out, especially with a wife with the flu at home.

I'm not quite sure if I like it yet.  

MN "journalist" John Townsend outs gay pastor because of his religious beliefs

Lavender Magazine, in one of its rare moments of political investigative reporting, outed the Rev.Tom Brock, a Lutheran with a penchant for slamming gays and lesbians. It turns out, Brock had been attending Courage, a Catholic support group for gays and lesbians who want to be straight. But critics say Lavender violated the group’s confidentiality in writing the article, prompting some to call the ethics employed by the magazine and its reporter, John Townsend, “suspect.”

MinnPost’s David Brauer spoke with Stephen Rocheford, president of Lavender who admitted sending Townsend into the confidential Courage meeting undercover. The magazine also admitted that it knew the meeting was confidential, but published statements from the meeting anyway. 

Rocheford defended his article.

“I personally, and Lavender Magazine as a matter of policy, do not believe in outing anyone.[hmm, seems to me there must be some exception] People are allowed to be crazy and dysfunctional in their lives. There’s one exception: a public figure who says one thing and does another. This is not the first homosexual minister who denounces homosexuality in public and engages in it in private.” 
Read the whole article at The Colu.MN

So who decides who gets outed and who doesn't, the Lavender Magazine Magisterium? Maybe setup some groups and hunt them down like witches. That will make the world a better place; out everybody you hate.  A pastor finds that acting out on his homosexual desires leaves him empty and broken. Tragically, if he is not lying to people by supporting that lifestyle politically and spiritually, those who make themselves his enemies will seek and destroy. 

HT StellaBorealis

Young Wisconsin Catholics Cheer Bishop Morlino for Welcoming Orthodox Priests

Old liberals in shock.  Youth and Orthodoxy walk hand in hand!

From LifeSiteNews
Catholics in the diocese of Madison, WI are hitting back at negative media coverage of their bishop after he welcomed priests with the Society of Jesus Christ the Priest, a group renowned for their traditionalist liturgy and fidelity to orthodox Catholic teaching. Supporters note that, contrary to the picture painted by dissenting voices in the media, Morlino's focus on orthodoxy is increasingly popular with Catholic youth - even in the liberal stronghold of the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Madison Bishop Robert Morlino, one of the most outspoken advocates for the unborn among the U.S. Catholic hierarchy, has defended the priests against criticism that the move represented a "step backward" and that the priests' approach is, in the words of one parishioner, “quite different than we have become accustomed to." Morlino heard parishioners from St. Mary's Parish in Platteville at an occasionally-heated meeting on Monday. [Maybe there is more to this than Big Media wants you to know]

"Pro-life Wisconsin knows him to have a deep respect for the sacredness of human life which he expects his priests to reflect," said Hamill. "Bishop Morlino's selection of new priests for the diocese of Madison is simply consistent with his fostering appreciation for the sacred."

PLW board member Greg Wagner agreed that "there's lots of positive" in the diocese's reaction to Morlino, despite the consistently negative news coverage.

Morlino has been subject to scathing criticism for his adherence to orthodox Catholicism in the past: he met with a strident outcry from liberal Catholics after sacking a pastoral associate who refused to recant her thesis questioning the masculinity of God as well as the authority of male Church hierarchy.

"There's quite a bit of support here in the Madison diocese, it certainly isn't all negative," said Wagner.

In addition, Wagner pointed to the "just phenomenal" Catholic spiritual life at the University of Wisconsin Madison's St. Paul University Catholic Center, saying that the "youth are getting behind Bishop Morlino." [That would be the other Badger Catholics]

"St. Paul has probably become the epitome of what a good Catholic parish would now look like," he said, with hundreds of students attending daily Mass, and maintaining Eucharistic adoration, Bible studies, and regular attendance at the sacrament of reconciliation - all on what is considered one of the most heavily liberal public research universities in the country.

Scott Hackl, director of development at the St. Paul Catholic Student Center at the University of Wisconsin Madison, expressed support for Bishop Morlino and confirmed that local Catholic youth have increasingly come to support the bishop and his views.

"There's no doubt that this order of priests is helping to [give] a strong image of what the priesthood is supposed to resemble," Hackl, 29, told LSN. "Personally, I commend the bishop very much in bringing priests to our diocese."

Hackl said there was "no question" that Morlino's zeal for orthodoxy was catching on with Catholic youth in the diocese. In addition, he said, Morlino's concerted effort to connect with young people in his flock has met with a positive reception.

"What we've found is students respond very well to the teachings of the Magisterium. And whether they personally agree with them or not, they still respond very strongly to that versus having more watered-down type of approach that just fuels an atmosphere of ... apathy," he said.  [Liberals answer, well then stop teaching them the Truth!]

Pro-life Catholic politician? Yes we can!

Sean P. Duffy is a Republican politician in Wisconsin, currently serving as the district attorney of Ashland County, Wisconsin.  He is also a frequent ESPN commentator, and former reality television show cast member on The Real World: Boston.

Duffy was born in Hayward, Wisconsin on October 3, 1971, one of 11 children. He started log rolling at age 5 and speed climbing (sprinting up 60 and 90 foot poles) at 13. He holds two speed-climbing titles.  As a teen, Duffy competed in the National Lumberjack Championships and is a three-time world champion in the 90-foot speed climb and has several other titles. He still competes in local and national competitions. Duffy also has been an ESPN color commentator for televised competitions and in 2003 appeared as both a competitor and commentator on ESPN's Great Outdoor Games.  He was named Badger State Games Honorary Athlete of the 2004 Winter Games.  He has a marketing degree from St. Mary's University[Winona, MN], and a law degree from William Mitchell College of Law[St Paul, MN].

Duffy, a Republican, was appointed to the district attorney's post in 2002 by then Gov. Scott McCallum, and was elected unopposed in 2002, 2004, 2006 and 2008. He has a greater than 90% trial success rate as district attorney.  He also was on the Republican slate of the 10 Wisconsin electors for the 2008 Presidential Election. He served as the chair for the Republican Party of Wisconsin's seventh congressional district, and is succeeded by Michael Munson.

He announced on July 8, 2009, that he is running for Congress in Wisconsin's seventh congressional district whose retiring incumbent congressman is Democratic Representative Dave Obey.  On May 5, 2010, Rep. Obey announced his retirement.  [A growing trend for establishment Democrats who know they are going to lose]

Duffy is married to Rachel Campos-Duffy of The Real World: San Francisco and The Wedding Video. The two met while on the spinoff show Road Rules: All Stars.  They have six children, Evita, Jack, Lucia-Belen, John-Paul, Paloma, and MariaVictoria.

So is this guy conservative?  I don't often quote Austin Powers but, Yeah Baby, YEAH!

Pro-life: I believe in the value and the potential of every human life. I will vigorously defend the right to life of the unborn and our elderly, and I will actively support policies that offer women non-violent choices and opportunities when faced with a crisis pregnancy. As the father of six, I understand first hand the responsibilities and joys of parenthood and the gift that every child is to our world.

Pro-Second Amendment: Hunting and gun ownership is part of the Wisconsin way of life. I will always protect and defend our Constitutional right to bear arms.

Pro-Traditional Marriage: I believe in the definition of marriage as a union between one man and one woman. I voted for the 2006 Wisconsin amendment defining marriage between a man and woman and I do not favor any government-sanctioned union/arrangement that looks like traditional marriage. However, I am not opposed to people entering into contracts for the purposes of inheritance, medical decisions, etc. All Americans, regardless of sexual orientation, have a right to make legal contracts and arrangements with each other and deserve the respect and dignity afforded to all citizens.


Judicial Philosophy: I believe in the U.S. Constitution and I am a strict constructionist. Our Constitution is not a “living, breathing document” to be interpreted to meet the political goals of any particular jurist. Judicial activism undermines representative democracy and I will only support jurists who strictly interpret the Constitution.

Like what you see?  You can donate to his campaign here.

HT verso l'alto

Diocese of Green Bay blesses first consecrated virgin

A first in the history of Green Bay Diocese will take place on Saturday, June 26.

Shirley Farrell, a member of Our Lady of Lourdes Parish in De Pere, will be consecrated as "a virgin living in the world" by Bishop David L. Ricken at a 9 a.m. Mass at St. Francis Xavier Cathedral. All are welcome to attend the Mass.

Farrell is the daughter of the late Terrence and Viola Farrell and the sister of Fr. Tom Farrell, pastor at St. Pius X Parish in Appleton. She also has two sisters. The ceremony will be attended by consecrated virgins from other parts of the state and Minnesota. Concelebrants will include Fr. Farrell, Norbertine Fr. Tim Shillcox (Farrell's pastor), Msgr. John Schuh and Fr. John Girotti.
TheCompass

There are several in the La Crosse diocese, I do not know which other dioceses in Wisconsin.

Provisions in Canon Law

Alverno (ustabe Catholic) College

From Dad29, Alverno (ustabe Catholic) College is located in Milwaukee
That Alverno College is a LeftOWackie "Catholic" college is no surprise.

But someone actually protesting that? That IS news.

...TFP (Tradition, Family, Property) Student Action launched the peaceful protest after discovering links to extreme pro-abortion groups including the National Organization for Women, the Center for Reproductive Rights, EMILY's List, and the Feminist Majority Foundation, on the resource page of the Alverno College Research Center for Women and Girls.The page also hosts links to Lambda Legal and the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network (GLSEN), two top homosexualist groups, among other homosexualist advocacy groups.
Good luck with that. Alverno has about 40 years of left-leaning and left-sliding history.
Dad29: Shock! Alverno College Links to AbortoSupporters
HT: Wiggy

FSPA "Spirituality" Center celebrates 25 years of Buddhism

From Sunday's La Crosse Tribune
Inside these brick walls a businessman found life was about more than his career. A mother found balance amid a race to meet the demands of her kids, workplace and home. People for 25 years have found peace.

"From the minute you walk in the door there is a sense of calmness and a sense of people being present to what is happening at the moment - it seems like your blood pressure drops several points immediately," said Brad Sturm, president of Coulee Bank and chairman of the spirituality center board.

The Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration[who publicly supported taxpayer funded abortion] founded the Franciscan Spirituality Center [which has nothing to do with Franciscan spirituality] 25 years ago[that would put this at 1985..] in part of St. Rose Convent. Since then 246,000 people[almost 200 per week] have come through the doors, whether for retreats, relaxation, spiritual guidance, training to become spiritual directors or other programs hosted at the center. The center welcomed nearly 15,000 people last year - the most guests in a single year.

"They started it and said the Holy Spirit will guide us - and that's what happened," said Vince Hatt, director of the center. [Apparently He wasn't good enough.  They are now guided by their Reiki "spirit guide"]

The start

The Franciscan Sisters had a history of responding to needs in the community. In the late 1800s, they saw needs for health care and education and founded a hospital, which became Franciscan Skemp, and a school, which became Viterbo University. In the years leading up to 1985, they saw a need for spiritual formation, or the development of the whole person by tapping into one's spiritual needs. They needed a retreat center where they could train spiritual directors to guide people on a path to wholeness.  [History has shown the FSPA has done an incredible amount of good for this city and diocese.  The Spirituality Center could have filled a great need, but indeed is far from it]

People tend to think they are done with spirituality at confirmation, Hatt said. But as we grow older, we become more aware of our incompleteness and search for answers.[True]

"There is something incomplete about the human condition," Hatt said. "We believe that one is not complete until they have a relationship with a higher power[read Reiki] or the holy." [....right, so this must be a direct quote from St Francis while receiving the sacred stigmata]

The spiritual journey

The spirituality center helped Stephanie Swartz, mother and senior nursing consultant at Gundersen Lutheran, move out of the "fast lane" at a time when that style of living became a health crisis, she said.

Swartz said her life was tipping heavily out of balance. She drove her kids to activities, worked, cleaned the house and mowed the lawn, but never took a moment to slow down and be present.

"I come from a long line of women that take care of everyone and not themselves," she said.

She was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2002. It was a wake-up call and Swartz decided her journey to health would not only be medical, but spiritual. The center allowed her to take that journey with a community of like-minded people, she said. [Another great example of a person seeking the True Spirituality,  which the Franciscan Spirituality Center denied her]

The spirituality center is a place she can be "more of a human being rather than a human doing," she said.

"The spirituality center has been the beacon in the fog," she said. [too bad nobody turned the light on]

Now Swartz sets aside time for meditation and contemplation every day.  She is cancer free and is a resource to other women going through similar health challenges.

"I look at my life as a keel of a boat. If you are centered[centering prayer], so are the people you work with and your family," she said. "That is what transitions into being a good parent, wife, employee and leader."

Serving all

The spirituality center is dedicated to helping anyone find wholeness. Its broad vision has helped the center respond to the needs of the community as they arise, said Mary Kathryn Fogarty, FSPA, a former center director of 12 years.

"We are not sitting in an ivory tower thinking up something by ourselves," she said. "What is out there is inviting us to respond."

For example, the center has coordinated programs for people who are unemployed, experiencing depression and/or searching for their purpose in life. It has offered programs parishes typically don't, like classes on meditation[this is not Lexio Divina], yoga and weekend retreats. [St. Rose of Viterbo was well versed in yoga before her death at age 17]

"We had yoga[what this is all about] almost from the beginning and other things that some people are disturbed about and question today[we are called Christians, thank you very much], but they are programs we've found helpful," said Kathleen Kenkel, FSPA, the center's first director. "The focus is not only on Catholics or deeply religious people, but anyone that wants growth with a spiritual direction." [...Doesn't matter if that spiritual growth is positive or negative I guess]

[The kingdom of heaven is like unto a treasure hidden in a field. Which a man having found, hid it, and for joy thereof goeth, and selleth all that he hath, and buyeth that field. Again the kingdom of heaven is like to a merchant seeking good pearls. Who when he had found one pearl of great price, went his way, and sold all that he had, and bought it. -Matt 13 44-46 

Beth Erickson, a center board member, was initially attracted to the La Crosse women's writer's group at the center.

"This is a group of women who get together every two weeks and check their egos at the door," she said. "The atmosphere is transformational."

The writers' group has evolved to one that held its own conference, featuring author Kathleen Norris in March 2009. The conference, aimed at getting people to write for personal healing, drew more than 300 people from across the country, said Theresa Washburn, director of communications for the spirituality center.

"It's a place where we've grown, not just in writing skills, but in who we are and our confidence as women, writers and people," Erickson said.

Reaching out

The spirituality center today continues to be a mission of the FSPA[Hello Apostolic Visitation]. But it has evolved to include a broad cross section of the community extending well outside the convent walls. The board, originally all Franciscan Sisters, is now made up of 12 laypeople and three FSPA. [perhaps the FSPA is having some vocational troubles]

The center's spiritual direction preparation program - which initially trained a class of primarily Franciscan Sisters - now has 27 participants from all religious denominations and none are Franciscan Sisters, Hatt said. It's an in increasingly diverse, interfaith community of participants, he said.  [Ecumenicism at its best!]

"It is very much interfaith, which I love," Swartz said. "Although I grew up Catholic, I've learned a lot about spirituality in a global sense." [LOL, thee most telling statement in the article]

The center has reached out to more people. In the late 1990s, the center started a certificate in servant leadership to bring community leaders spiritual and psychological grounding. In 2008 the center, in collaboration with a local coalition of congregations working on justice issues, AMOS Inc., started a program to provide more supportive relationships for people recently released from jail.  [That is the same AMOS that partners with pro-abortion Center for Community Change and Gamaliel]

So, what will the center look like 10 years from now? "We don't know," Hatt said.  [Maybe add some Wicca spirituality? ]

"That's the beauty when you are open to possibilities," Fogarty said. "We can carry on the history of the Franciscan Sisters.[Hardly] We can respond to what we see as the needs of this time." [Responded to a real need, but a glass of sand will not quench anyones thirst, Buddist or Catholic]

-end of article

The USCCB findings after studying Reiki is crystal clear.  (Obviously the FSPA has already shown it does not acknowledge the authority of any bishop over their order)
Since Reiki therapy is not compatible with either Christian teaching or scientific evidence, it would be inappropriate for Catholic institutions, such as Catholic health care facilities and retreat centers, or persons representing the Church, such as Catholic chaplains, to promote or to provide support for Reiki therapy.
-USCCB Guidelines on Reiki (pdf)

Matthew Alderman Studios

I just took a look around the net this morning for the first time in a day or two and saw that Matthew Alderman Studios has gone live.

Matthew is one of America's fastest rising stars in ecclesiastical art and architecture yet somehow has lost none of the sense of humor that first gained him wide attention at The Shrine of the Holy Whapping.

If you're looking for anything from a bookplate to a Baroque abbey, Matthew should be your first stop or you may simply send a seven to eight figure check to the Cistercian Abbey of Our Lady of Spring Bank and we'll be happy to see that some of it finds its way back to Matthew. 

Right: Design Sketch for a Lady Altar Incorporating an18th c.
Spanish-American Portable Shrine, Matthew Alderman
From Br. Stephen at SubTuum

Alderman is based out of the Milwaukee area.

Fr Z - Bp. Morlino - WI State Journal - Tradition

The following is Fr Z's post I'd try to cover it myself, but I am the student, he is the master.

For your brick by brick file…

I have written about Madison’s bishop, Most Rev. Robert Morlino before (for example here and here).

Pro-abortion activists, aging-hippie liturgy types, and proponents of wymynprysts really dislike this guy. 

All the more reason to support him in prayer and with notes of encouragement.

Bp. Morlino is taking fire in the press for his decision to staff more parishes with priests from a traditional institute of men called the Society of Jesus Christ the Priest (based in Spain and not to be confused with the Institute of Christ the King).

This group roused the ire of some liberals in one parish when they properly phased out service at the altar by altar girls and by recuperating the use of – wait for it – LATIN in our Latin Rite worship.

They are accused of [CLICHE WARNING] trying to turn back the clock.

There is an article on Bp. Morlino’s latest efforts to staff parishes … would the alternative be to close them? ... with members of the Society of Jesus Christ the Priest in the Wisconsin State Journal:

Bishop Morlino criticized over plan to bring in conservative priests

DOUG ERICKSON
Posted: Monday, June 21, 2010

The effort by Madison Bishop Robert Morlino to staff several Catholic churches in the diocese with priests from a conservative Spanish society has met resistance in another community.

About 200 members of St. Mary’s Parish in Platteville met with Morlino at the church Monday night to question his decision to bring in three priests from the Society of Jesus Christ the Priest to lead the church. [I would like to know the mean age of the people who came.]

A diocesan official and parishioners who attended the 90-minute meeting described it as largely civil but occasionally heated, with Morlino apologizing toward the end for having raised his voice earlier in the meeting.

“It was a tough evening for everyone,” said diocesan spokesman Brent King.

The society, based in Murcia, Spain, is known for a staunch, traditional approach to Catholic practice. There are now eight society priests at seven parishes in the diocese.

At other churches where they serve, the priests have prohibited girls from being altar servers, dispensed with the common Catholic practice of using trained lay people to assist with Communion and added Masses celebrated only in Latin[To be clear: male service is the norm, Extraordinary Ministers of Communion should not be used unless there is real need, and Latin is the language of the Church’s worship.]

Morlino invited members of the society to begin serving in the diocese in 2006, primarily in the Sauk City area. Some parishioners praise the priests for deepening their faith and bringing discipline to wayward Catholics; others have left the church, saying the priests’ approach is regressive and too rigid. [bzzzz]

“To me, it seems like a step backward,” said Fay Stone, a St. Mary’s member. The priests’ approach is “quite different than we have become accustomed to,” she said.  [When the earthquake hit the Church in the ‘60’s and ‘70’s people weren’t used to the changes then either.  But no one cared about the people who didn’t like the changes back then.]

The parish has about 700 families.

Monsignor James Bartylla, the diocese’s second in command, [probably means Vicar General] said in an interview Monday the priests are a good fit for Platteville because their gifts align with aspects of the parish.

Priests from the society are known as good school administrators, Bartylla said, and St. Mary’s has a K-8 parochial school. The society has a special mission to encourage young men to enter the seminary, and the priests will lead St. Augustine University Parish, the campus ministry at UW-Platteville, in addition to St. Mary’s.

It’s a great blessing in this time of a priest shortage to have these priests here,” Bartylla said. [Or… the diocese could just start closing places.  Would the people want that too?  Or do they simply want a Church which conforms to them?]

[...]

Some parishioners say the timing is bad. The congregation is in the midst of a capital campaign to buy the building it currently rents for its parochial school. The school also is in the process of hiring a new principal.

“With the more conservative priests arriving and a change in the principal, there’s just some unease with the amount of change at one time,” member Lee Eggers said.

Some parishioners also are miffed that the new principal may end up being the father of a society priest. [That’s interesting.] A parish search committee wasn’t aware of that possibility and had verbally offered the position to someone else.

[Read more about that issue on the linked website… let’s stick to the liturgical issues here.]

[...]

Member Barb LeGrand said she went into the meeting very worried that trained lay people such as herself would no longer be allowed to offer Communion to the homebound, a ministry the church has offered for 20 years[It is not a right.]

After the meeting, LeGrand said she was feeling slightly upbeat because Pascual had agreed to meet with her and others about the ministry’s future. “He seems like a very nice man,” she said of Pascual, whom she met for the first time Monday.

King said he does not anticipate the bishop will change his mind on the new priest appointments. The message from the bishop to parishioners was to get to know the priests and give them a chance to explain why they make the decisions they do, King said.

“It’s our hope that, given the opportunity, the parishioners will grow to love the priests and the priests will love the congregation,” King said.
I am sure things will work out, given time, good will and common sense.

More kudos for Bp. Morlino!

Biden pushes abortion, Bishop seeks "canonical reprimand"

Bishop Rene Henry Gracida, Bishop Emeritus of the Catholic Diocese of Corpus Christi, has called for a canonical reprimand against U.S. Vice President Joe Biden. Biden, a Catholic, recently traveled to Kenya to lobby for the country's proposed constitution, which has been strenuously opposed by pro-life groups due to its pro-abortion language.

Biden told a crowd earlier this month that the Kenya government should adopt the new constitution in order "to allow money to flow" to Kenya from other countries.

When asked about the lobbying of U.S. pro-life groups against the document, Biden told religious leaders that the Obama administration did not share the position of such groups, and said that their activites are "one of the drawbacks of democracy."

Bishop Gracida wrote on his blog Saturday that Biden "has crossed the line as a Catholic" by supporting the document.

"Now he has taken a stand on Kenya’s proposed new constitution, a stand which is probably a violation of US law and a stand that is certainly immoral," wrote the retired bishop. "Perhaps God, who knows whether or not Biden’s brain was permanently damaged by his brain surgery, will not judge him too harshly, but the Church, which does not have that kind of knowledge should certainly speak out and reprimand him."

Then-senator Biden underwent two operations in 1988 to correct intracranial aneurysms.

Last month, three U.S. congressmen with legal oversight jurisdiction over foreign funds launched a probe to determine whether the Obama administration has violated federal law by using taxpayer money to promote the pro-abortion constitution. 
LifeSiteNews

So..... doesn't he have anything better to do?  We do have a gulf full of oil and 10+% unemployment, not to mention an ongoing war.  And he's out there as a figure piece for Planned Parenthood International. 

Oh, and canonical penalty?  The USCCB hasn't shown it's willing to do anything concrete in the past, so it would be a first to do something with Biden.  It would sure be a good start.  This is eugenics 101.  Why not legalize heroin too while he's at it?  I mean it is a woman's choice, right? 

HT Dad29

My Jesuit story

When I was discerning some years ago I felt called to the Society of Jesus.  I knew the diocesan priesthood was not for me.  But reading the stories of all the Jesuit saints and stories of American Jesuit priest drinking stout beer during Lent to help subsist in their fasting made me realize if there was an order for me, this was it. I called the provincial vocations office.  I remember this exchange (paraphrased) from the conversation.

Vocations director: So what drew you to the Society of Jesus? (since I have never even met a Jesuit)
Me: Well, I think of the Jesuits as the Marines of the Catholic Church.
Vocations director: (somewhat taken aback) ... well, what do you mean?
Me: Well when the Church has needed something really important done, She sends in the Jesuits.
Vocations director: ...Well we don't really talk like that anymore(I assume he was thinking "Church Militant")
Me:  .... oh.

I was young and honestly had no idea what the modern Church(not to mention the modern Jesuits) looked like.  I had ideas that becoming a Jesuit priest meant rigorous study, learning several languages, wearing a cassock, teaching in a university, comradery with other men, ...praying in Latin, performing exorcisms, and striving for heroic virtue.  That's not to say that some of these are not qualities of the modern Jesuit.  Take the story for what it's worth.  After further consideration I did not pursue the Jesuits.  The Society has done alot of good.  I just pray the modern Jesuit does not work for the common good, or for social justice, but for the only cause worth fighting for; Ad majorem Dei gloriam.

Milwaukee Vice Chancellor and Liberal Jesuit Accuse Two Outstanding Bishops of Derelection of Duty

I strongly suspect there are other motives for this self-righteous Open Letter of Father James O’Connell, issued while his bishop is away on retreat. Might these motives have something to do with the fact that Archbishop Burke and Bishop Listecki are two of the most uncompromising US bishops in publicly defending Church teaching, opposing pro-abortion politicians receiving the Eucharist, and insisting on a Catholic university’s obligation to enforce its Catholic identity if it advertises itself as “Catholic” ?

Catholic Culture reports: Father James O’Connell, vice chancellor of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee and a member of the archdiocesan review board for sexual abuse cases, issued an open letter on June 17 in which he blasted the Diocese of La Crosse’s abuse policy. Father O’Connell asserts that the diocese has an inordinately high burden of proof for removing an accused priest from ministry. Read more here with a need-to- read link.
From Catholicism.org

Here Fr. O'Connell, SJ's op ed

Mil Journal Sentinel coverage

Blurb in the La Crosse Tribune

Within the Diocese of La Crosse, allegations of child sexual abuse by priests and deacons are investigated by a six-member Child Sexual Abuse Review Board that determines whether cases should be sent to the Catholic church's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in Rome.

Appointed by the bishop, the board includes a former public defender, a clinical psychologist and a retired police detective who investigated sexual assault cases.

"This is not a push-over board," said James Birnbaum[a liberal himself], the diocese's attorney. "Our board is a very experienced, very savvy board."

All reports are confidential, and no record is made of the board's proceedings.

From the Diocese of La Crosse (couldn't find on Diocese website)
The Diocese of La Crosse has just learned that a priest of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee, with no knowledge of the Diocese of La Crosse, has issued a public statement criticizing the Diocese of La Crosse for not timely addressing his personal highly technical opinion of church law.

The Diocese took immediate steps to address his technical church law question and both reviewed with and retained independent canonical counsel to address that question. (See attached correspondence to the USCCB from the Diocesan Administrator Msgr. Richard Gilles dated April 29, 2010 and May 11, 2010.) As explained in the policy, the standard applied by the Diocese of La Crosse Child Sexual Abuse Review Board is “sufficiently confirmed”, a lower standard of proof than “beyond a reasonable doubt”.

In addition, an immediate review of all cases before the Board occurred to determine if, in any case, a finding of insufficiency was based upon any canonical technicality. The Diocese of La Crosse Child Sexual Abuse Review Board includes its Chair, a practicing attorney who previously was a state public defender; a retired police detective sergeant who investigated child sexual abuse cases; and a clinical psychologist who drafted La Crosse County’s Child Sexual Abuse Review protocols, all members well qualified to make such judgments. No such cases exist. The Board is confident that no child in the Diocese of La Crosse is at risk from any clergy.

The Diocese of La Crosse complies with both the letter and the spirit of the law by reporting and cooperating with authorities regarding all complaints of child sexual abuse. The best evidence of the effectiveness of the Diocese of La Crosse Safe Environment Program is that there have been no current confirmed cases of child sexual abuse in the Diocese of La Crosse by clergy since the very public prosecution and conviction in Marathon County in 2001 of Timothy Svea, a member of a Religious Institute. In that case, the Diocese both immediately reported the accusation and assisted the civil authorities in that conviction.

Despite any conjecture to the contrary, the Diocese of La Crosse is confident that all aspects of the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People are being applied and enforced and that its children are safe.
Although we've seen SNAP (particularly in Wisconsin) going after the Church(instead of working with them), I think this might have more to do with Marquette.  O'Connell pouting because of Listecki's influence over the O'Brien incident?  Listecki stated he already discussed the issue with O'Connell; so why make things public?  How many liberal Jesuits (that's not redundant anymore) in Milwaukee are happy right now?  More than anything else, this priest I think is hoping to sling mud at anyone and everyone "conservative".  I think it makes the new pick for Marquette president all the more interesting.  Turn up the heat and hope Arch Listecki will zip-it over the new president. 

H/T Dad29

...and I dont care if I never get back...

I have perhaps just realized I really am a traditionalist. 

From the Lion and the Cardinal



A short list of immediate changes in policy that, were I the owner of a baseball team, I would make to improve the experience of watching the game. Bear in mind, of course, that doomed contrarian anachronism accounts for a healthy nine-tenths of my opinions on all subjects.

1) Tear out all the JumboTrons and electronic scoreboards. These more than anything poison the experience of watching live sports. If a man wants to watch TV, he can stay home.

2) Forbid all canned rock music. The ballpark organ exists for a reason. Make the organist earn his living.

3) Impose a dress code. Sport jackets and straw hats for men, ankle length sun dresses for women. Just like it was back in the good old days when the world was sane.

4) Accept as much advertising as necessary, but mandate that it all be designed in graphic styles established before 1940.

5) Sing all the verses to Take Me out to the Ball Game, not just the chorus. And by the way: the word is never: nnnnnnnever. There is a consonant at the beginning of that word. Nobody is allowed to act smart and claim that there is a double negative in the song. The words are being sung in the voice of Katie Casey, who is pleading her gentleman-caller to take her to the ball game. She is not currently at the ball game. When she says that she does not care if she nnnnnnnever gets back, she means that she would be perfectly content to remain at the ball game forever. This may be hyperbolic, but it is clearly what the songwriter intended.

After those were implemented, I would begin gathering funds for a Gothic Revival ballpark. It would include a copper roof with numerous turrets (sort of a cross between the old South End Grounds and Craigievar Castle); tympana over the entrances surrounded by niches for statues of fondly remembered players; functional gargoyles caricaturing opposing teams' mascots and players; a tower hung with change-ringing bells to be pealed upon victory; a triptychal manual scoreboard; and an astronomical clock with automata to reënact great plays from team history on the o'clocks and half-pasts. And possibly a bear pit out among the center field foliage, like they have in Old Bern.

HT FatherZ

Abortion vending machines used in IA and WI coming soon to MN

For a little background.
Now that we know what we're looking for, and particularly given PP of Greater IA's Spring 2009 newsletter stating, "The telemedicine technology has expanded access to women from Iowa and bordering states," a 2009 report rementioned on PP of MN, ND, and SD's blog on June 9 is ominous. It's 2009 Rural Women's Health Report is chock full of telemed buzz phrases. Following is a snippet. On guard, MN pro-lifers:
The obstacles faced by health care providers and patients in rural areas are vastly different from those in urban areas. Economic factors... and the isolation of living in remote areas all impact rural residents' ability to lead a healthy life.
JillStanek

Aahhh, our tax dollars hard at work!

Archbishop Listecki to recieve pallium June 29th

Pope Benedict XVI's last big Mass before a summer's rest revolves around a symbol of how his ministry as shepherd is shared with archbishops scattered across the globe.

The pallium -- a round woolen band with two black-tipped strips -- is worn around the shoulders over liturgical vestments to evoke the image of the Good Shepherd carrying a sheep back to the fold.

Pope Benedict wears one and, each June 29, the feast of Sts. Peter and Paul, he places a pallium around the shoulders of prelates who in the past year have been named to head archdioceses.

The liturgical vestment, made from the wool of lambs blessed by the pope each year on the feast of St. Agnes, is a strictly pastoral symbol for those with a flock. Archbishops who serve as secretaries of Vatican congregations or as Vatican ambassadors around the globe do not receive one.

The office in charge of organizing papal liturgies said June 17 that at least 35 archbishops would receive a pallium in 2010; the timing of an archbishop's nomination and installation as well as travel arrangements mean that the list is not finalized until very close to the date of the Mass.

U.S. and Canadian archbishops on the list will include Archbishops Jerome E. Listecki of Milwaukee; Dennis M. Schnurr of Cincinnati; Thomas G. Wenski of Miami; and Albert LeGatt of Saint-Boniface, Manitoba.

CNS

Marquette Settles with Jilted Lesbian Prof


Marquette University has reached an out-of-court settlement with Dr. Jodi O'Brien regarding Marquette President Fr. Robert Wild's decision to rescind a job offer to the openly lesbian O'Brien as dean of Marquette's College of Arts and Sciences.

The terms of the settlement were not disclosed.

"We have apologized to Dr. O’Brien for the way in which this was handled," Fr. Wild said in an email to the University's faculty, "and for the upset and unwanted attention that we have caused to this outstanding teacher and scholar."

As a Marquette University statement has explained, O'Brien's job offer was rescinded because her writings "relating to Catholic mission and identity should have been more fully explored early in the process [of finding a new dean]."

O'Brien's curriculum vitae contains works with titles such as "Phone Sex, Fantasies and Disembodiment," "Heterosexism and Homophobia," and "'Do it on the Web': Emerging Discourses on Internet Sexuality." In one essay detailing "gender fluidity" in online sexual encounters, a nude male torso in an online sex advertisement causes O'Brien to fantasize: "I imagine pressing my palm into the smooth curve where torso slides into hip. I need some action!" (Click here to read. Warning: graphic content.)

Many had accused Fr. Wild of rescinding the offer because of O'Brien's homosexuality. A group of faculty members at Marquette had demanded in a full-page ad in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel that the job be re-offered and an apology issued to O'Brien.

In his recent email, Fr. Wild again confirmed that it was O'Brien's academic works and not her private life that caused the University's action.

"Throughout my administration, and with my active support, openly gay faculty and staff have been hired and received promotions and tenure based on academic merit and accomplishments," he pointed out.

Others said that, because Fr. Wild spoke with Milwaukee Archbishop Jerome E. Listecki about the issue before rescinding the offer, academic freedom and independence had been compromised by an outside influence. Fr. Wild stated that the input he received from Archbishop Listecki was similar to that he would have received from anyone else.

"My conversation with Archbishop Listecki," said Wild, "was like the others: he gave me his thoughts, and at no point did he attempt to tell me what to do."

"The decision, as it should be, was ultimately mine alone."

O'Brien also issued a statement, in which she said that she had "received hundreds of messages, including many from local Catholics, expressing dismay at the university's decision to suddenly cancel my hire."

Such dismay was not universal. Christopher Wolfe, professor emeritus at Marquette University, had said that "the question that should be asked is not why Marquette President Father Robert A. Wild backed off the hiring, but how in heaven did the hiring ever occur in the first place?"

The “trendy post-modernism" of O'Brien's writings, Wolfe continued, made her unfit for the position of dean simply because of Marquette's commitment to reason--even leaving aside its commitment to Catholicism.

He concluded that it was not merely "the Jesuits who built up Marquette over decades, to foster the pursuit of truth in light of the Catholic faith, who are turning in their graves.” "Anyone who cares about the serious pursuit of truth at all should be shaking their heads."


LifeSiteNews

Good take on Archbishop Weakland

I found Weakland to be a sad character in that all he ever wanted in his life was to live out his days in the peace and tranquility of his Benedictine order, where he could study, read, pray, and play his piano. (He is an exceptionally talented musician.) Weakland is basically a quiet academic type, bookish and introverted through and through.

How and why this man became a prominent bishop is beyond me, and quite honestly, if I didn't know better, I almost suspect that he was used like a puppet by Pope Paul VI, who he was close to. In saying this, I know I'm feeding into TRAD-ish territory in believing that Pope Paul VI is almost single-handedly responsible for much of the post-Vatican II rot and ruin in the Church, but I say it nonetheless. Otherwise, there seems no compelling reason why Weakland would be considered bishop material.
Check out the whole article:
Cheeky Pink Girl: Forgot To Mention

Abortion vending machines are paid for by Wisconsin taxpayers

A little background

Planned Parenthood of Iowa has been providing abortions remotely.  Women are teleconferenced with an abortionist and then told to take RU-486 which induces severe cramping and bleeding to kill the child.  There is a dispenser in the room that issues the toxins in pill form.  No doctor is available if the bleeding does not stop or other complications arise. 

Now today on Jill Stanek it turns out that this has been going on for some time in Wisconsin and it is TAXPAYER FUNDED....and yes, it is going on right now as you read this, and yes, you did pay for it.  I am posting the article in its entirety below. 

The New York Times reported on June 8:

So far only Planned Parenthood clinics in IA use this [RU-486 telemed abortion] method, but around the country, abortion providers have begun asking how they might replicate the concept.
I don't necessarily believe it's true that RU-486 telemed abortions are confined to IA at this point. Adding fuel to my fire is the article below that Pro-Life WI has dug up, posted by The Business Journal of Milwaukee on July 10, 2009....

Takeaways: The telemedicine system has been in place at WI Planned Parenthoods and paid for with tax dollars for 2 years, the same length of time PP of the Heartland has been committing telemed abortions.

Wide scale PP collusion on telemed abortions for quite awhile is not only possible but probable. I expect many more PPs around the country have been girding for them with government grants, funding telemed systems under the guise of needing them to dispense birth control pills.

Furthermore, Teri Huyck, the new CEO of PP of WI, is definitely one not to be trusted if she says WI PPs haven't started committing telemed abortions. Huyck was instrumental in the Aurora PP cover-up.

Here are key excerpts from that BJM story:
Since there aren't enough primary care physicians or nurse practitioners to get to all of the patients, Planned Parenthood of WI is bringing the patients to them.
The organization, which provides health care to about 70k men and women a year at 28 clinics across the state, has begun investing in telemedicine, a high-tech way for the patient and clinician to communicate via video phone....
PP clinics, particularly those in rural areas, are often staffed by people who do not have a medical license. Those employees are not allowed to do patient assessments so patients are turned away if there isn't a licensed clinician working that particular day.
Delaying a visit could result in a patient's condition getting worse or a delay in getting birth control, which could result in an unintended pregnancy, Burnett said.
The video phones, which are the size of a laptop computer, are at 10 PP locations - Racine, Delavan, Waukesha, Fond du Lac, West Bend, Portage, 2 clinics in Madison and clinics in Milwaukee on Mitchell Street and WI Avenue....
The 10 locations were chosen because they are the organization's Title 10 clinics, which means they receive funding from the federal government. PP's other centers are either state-funded or self-sustaining.
A federal grant paid for the video phones, which cost $15,000 each, including the infrastructure needed to operate the phone.
The video phones are used by clinicians to do consultations with patients and to order medication. If a patient needs immediate medical attention and a clinician cannot get to them, they are referred to the emergency room, Burnett said....
PP of WI piloted the telemedicine program in March 2008 at 3 clinics..... The equipment for the pilot project was paid for with a grant from the Public Service Commission of WI.
PP is looking for additional grants to pay for phones in the remaining 18 clinics, since the clinician shortage is expected to worsen, Burnett said....
While there are no specific regulations with telemedicine,...
Pro-Life WI has confirmed there are no WI statutes in place that would prohibit the WI abortion industry from committing telemed abortions. Pro-Life WI is currently working with the Alliance Defense Fund to learn whether WI PPs are and have been committing telemed RU-486 abortions.

Silent No More Minnesota unveils new billboard


Today Silent No More Minnesota, whose mission is to reach out to those wounded by abortion, unveiled a new billboard, scheduled for launch July 1 for 3 months on I94 in Albertville, MN....

Timing and location were chosen to take advantage of heavy summer Interstate traffic at a site near MN's largest outlet shopping mall, which is in Albertville.

The billboard, which reads, "Abortion Hurts, There is Hope and Healing," will be the 1st of its kind in MN.

SNM MN president Ann Marie Cosgrove stated in a press release that the billboard has multiple purposes: to bring awareness to those hurting from abortion, especially the unchurched, who may not ever hear a message of hope and healing; to educate the public that abortion causes pain, which also gives the abortion vulnerable pause to reconsider; and to soften hearts of those who think poorly of post-abortive mothers.

Ann Marie would love to keep the billboard up an additional 3 months for those who find their summer flings produced more than fond memories and for college students trekking to and from school. It only takes money. Donate online or by snail mail to Silent No More MN, P. O. Box 68125 Minneapolis, MN 55418.
JillStanek

World Cup: Germany vs Greece



This is hilarious! Did you hear who the German's manager was? This is a classic. My wife doesn't like Monte Python... *sigh*.

Wisconsin Catholic Bloggers

I thought I'd put together a list.  I simply went to Catholic Blog Directory and pulled off all the entries with Wisconsin in the description.  Listed in alphabetical order, which coincidentally puts yours truly at numero uno. 

The Badger Catholic - Matt K., Wisconsin
The Bridge - Fr. Frank Majka, SJ, Wisconsin
A Broken Fortress - Allison, Wisconsin
Catholic Wintertime in Milwaukee - Faithful Catholic, Wisconsin
Cheeky Pink Girl - Charlotte, Wisconsin
Crusader Knight - James Pawlak, Wisconsin
Dad29 - Dad29, Wisconsin
Digital Catholic - Philip, Wisconsin (formerly Inflated Tires)
Dogpatch, Ergo Sum - Jerry DePyper, Wisconsin (formerly Dogpatch of the North)
A Fruitful Vine - Krissy A., Wisconsin 
Heart of the Home with Six Kids - Mom of Six, Wisconsin
Holy Cross Family of Green Bay, Wisconsin - Holy Cross Staff, Wisconsin
HuMAMAe Vitae - Katie, Wisconsin
Imprisoned in My Bones - Anne, Wisconsin
Marquette Warrior - John McAdams, Wisconsin
Mary's Anawim - Fr. Rick Heilman, Wisconsin
Meet Joe Convert - Sean Herriott, Wisconsin
Modern Commentaries - Amy Pawlak, Wisconsin
The New Apologist - Aaron Olson, Wisconsin
Offer It Up - Fr. James Kubicki, SJ, Wisconsin
Our Orthodox Catholic Family - Pam Folbrecht, Wisconsin
Polonia Pearl - Eddie, Wisconsin
Pro-Life Strike / Abortion Boycott - Gerald DePyper, Wisconsin
The Provincial Emails - Terrence Berres, Wisconsin
The Reluctant Traditionalist - David Palm, Wisconsin
Sacra Domus Nazarena - Nazareth Priest, Wisconsin
Saint Anne Catholic Church - Group, Wisconsin
Scriptura et Ecclesia - Fr. Brian Dulli, Wisconsin
Stand in the Trenches - M.E., Wisconsin
Studeo - Love2Learn Mom, Wisconsin
Sub Tuum - Br. Stephen, O.Cist., Wisconsin
WI Catholic Musings - WICatholic, Wisconsin
Yes, I'm Catholic - Janet Meyer, Wisconsin

Bp Callahan tours Cathedral

No way to embed the video but here is the external link to it.

Bishop Callahan tours Cathedral - WXOW

Only two minutes, worth the watch.

By the way the organ is in the middle of being replaced so that is why you see stuff everywhere. That means there's no organ for the installation Mass August 11th either, but with the quality of the choir that won't be that much of an issue. 

If you want to check out my coverage, I have tagged Bishop Callahan articles on Badger Catholic.

Also the diocese put the entire press conference on YouTube

Bishop Callahan Youtube video for Year of the Priest

Thanks to the commenter who tipped me to these.  The first video is the Introduction of a four part series done by the Archdiocese of Milwaukee which features none other than Bishop Callahan.

New Guadalupe Shrine director Leif Arvidson - Press Release

The Most Reverend Raymond L. Burke, President of the Board of Directors of the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe at La Crosse, announced today that the Board of Directors has appointed Mr. Leif E. Arvidson of Reedsburg, Wisconsin, to the position of Executive Director of the Shrine. Mr. Arvidson succeeds Sister Christa Marie Halligan, F.S.G.M., who was transferred to Saint James Academy in Lenexa, Kansas, effective May 31st. Mr. Arvidson will begin his service at the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe on June 21st[next Monday].

Mr. Arvidson is a third-generation Alaskan fisherman who completed his undergraduate degree in history[Like], with a minor in theology, at Franciscan University of Steubenville in Ohio, including a year of studies abroad at Franciscan University’s campus in Gaming, Austria. He obtained his law degree from Notre Dame Law School. He has also undertaken intense personal study of the Sacred Scriptures, the official teaching of the Catholic Church, and Church history, including the lives and writings of the Saints.

From the beginning of their marriage, which has been blessed with six children, Mr. Arvidson and his wife, Karen, have been dedicated to the mission of the Catholic Church. Shortly after their marriage, they served for nearly two years as Catholic lay missionaries in Japan. In recent years, they have been active in both their parish and in the Diocese of Madison, in which they presently reside. They have been involved in pro-life activities, the local food pantry, Eucharistic adoration, the preparation of adults for the reception of the Sacraments of Christian Initiation, and the preparation of couples for the celebration of the Sacrament of Marriage. Mr. Arvidson has served on the Parish Pastoral Council at Sacred Heart Church in Reedsburg.

In announcing the appointment of Mr. Arvidson to the position of Executive Director of the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe, Archbishop Burke observed: “Our Lord and His Mother, Our Lady of Guadalupe, who have watched over and guided the work of the Shrine, since its inception, have provided in Mr. Arvidson a worthy and well-prepared Executive Director. With the other members of the Board of Directors, I look forward to working with Mr. Arvidson in carrying forward the important spiritual mission of the Shrine.”

He sounds in line with the mission of the Shrine.  The next step is to build a Catechetical Center for the Marian Catechists and move beyond the construction phase of the Shrine and to its true mission which is catechesis and evangelization.

On an aside.... it would be nice if someone took on the task of building a functional website for the Shrine, it is terrible as is.  The press release was put on the website as a Microsoft Word 2000 document.  The Vatican has publicly stated 
Cyberspace ought to be a resource of comprehensive information and services available without charge to all
Microsoft Office is $150, not everyone can spend that kind of money to open a press release.  It takes only a few seconds to convert it to a pdf.   Am I a nit picker or what!?  It is very difficult to spread the word about their events without a web savey person in place.