Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Deathly Hallows vs. Living Hallows

Symbol of the Deathly Hallows
 (Providence) This week, the Harry Potter series released another installment of their movie. This movie is titled "Deathly Hallows." A major element of the movie included the Tale of the Three Brothers. The three brothers escaped death by the use of their intellects to cross a treacherous river. Death, in an attempt to destroy the brothers, offers them each an object which they believe will ultimately allude death. For two out of the three brothers, death comes as a result of the powers. For the last brother, he gives up his life freely in old age, realizing that death is not the enemy of life, but a stage of life. The inspiration from the tale is based on Geoffrey Chaucer's The Pardoner's Tale.

The three objects from the tale are represented within this symbol of Deathly Hallows. The triangle represents an escape from death, the circle inside the triangle symbolizes the earthly return to life from the dead, and the vertical line represents power.

Symbol of Old Catholicism in Germany
The Old Catholic symbol, an older symbol, appears similar in nature. There is a triangle which represents the Trinity. The God who created the world, sanctifies it, and redeems it. Within the triangle lies the cross, our only hope. Through the cross, Jesus redeemed all people and ensured for the created world, a part in the beatific vision. Through the resurrection, there is not an avoidance of death or a temporary coming back to earthly life like what happened at the raising of Lazarus, but instead, the resurrection is a glorification into eternity with God and neighbor.

For more information about the Old Catholic Church of Germany
For more information about the Tale of the Three Brothers

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Anglicans and Old Catholic hold an International Council

Communiqué
Beuggen (Germany)

The Anglican-Old Catholic International Co-ordinating Council (AOCICC) met in Schloss Beuggen, Germany from 8 to 12 November 2010. The Council welcomed Canon Dr Alyson Barnett-Cowan, Director for Unity Faith and Order at the Anglican Communion Office, as Anglican Co-Secretary.

In its most important piece of work, the Council finalized the text of a common statement on ecclesiology and mission ‘Belonging Together in Europe’. This version of the text will be the major focus of the International Old Catholic and Anglican Theological Conference to be held in Neustadt/W. (Germany) from August 29 to September 2, 2011.

The members received reports of developments in the Anglican Communion and in the Old Catholic churches of the Union of Utrecht, and reviewed present ecumenical dialogues in which our churches are engaged. A paper by Bishop Pierre Whalon of the Convocation of Episcopal Churches in Europe, entitled “Should The Episcopal Church Create a Missionary Diocese in Europe?” sparked discussion by members of the Council of their churches’ mission perspectives.

The Council participated in daily prayer with the community in Schloss Beuggen and celebrated the Eucharist together. Bible study was led each morning by members of the Council. The Council attended Vespers presided at by Fr Peter Grüter at St Martin’s Old Catholic church in Rheinfelden, Switzerland, and enjoyed a dinner hosted by Bishop Harald Rein and the church council of the Old Catholic Church of Switzerland.

The next meeting of the Council will take place November 4-8, 2011 in York, England, and will include the annual celebration of the Feast of St Willibrord with the Society of St Willibrord.

For further information, please contact the Revd Professor Dr Angela Berlis, tel +41 (0)31 631 4193, email aocicc@alt-katholisch.de, or Canon Dr Alyson Barnett-Cowan at the Anglican Communion Office, tel +44 (0)20 7313 3930, email alyson.barnett-cowan@anglicancommunion.org. Websites: www.utrechterunion.org and http://www.anglicancommunion.org

Present at this meeting were:
Anglicans: The Rt Revd Jonathan Gledhill, Co-chair, Canon Dr Alyson Barnett-Cowan, Co-secretary, The Rt Revd David Hamid, Mrs Maryon Jägers, The Revd Carola von Wrangel, Consultant, Mr Neil Vigers, Anglican Communion Office

Old Catholics: The Rt Revd Joachim Vobbe, Co-chair, The Revd Professor Dr Angela Berlis, Co-secretary, The Revd Henriette Crüwell, The Revd Professor Dr David R Holeton, The Rt Revd Dr Dick Schoon, The Revd Lars Simpson, Administrative Support and Interpreter

Bishop David Hamid's Blog

Monday, November 22, 2010

Synod: Strong Foundations in the Netherlands

(Amersfoort) "We stand together." This is how the Old Catholic Archbishop Joris Vercammen is feeling after the synod which was held last Saturday. 'Growth' and financial resources were the key of the church meeting.

This keyword, growth has been playing an important role for some time in the Old Catholic Church in the Netherlands (OKKN). The small denomination is struggling with a poor financial situation and is asking for action. The past year was the starting point of a new policy and produced results. "We've learned the last few years," says Vercammen, "that growth is associated with an inner conviction and that growth does not come by itself, it must be worked at."

The financial situation of the church is becoming increasingly better and in more than half the parishes during these recent years, having seen its membership grow.

Friday, November 19, 2010

The Utrecht Cathedral grows as former Old Catholic center declines

(Netherlands) Church News Netherlands Reports: St. Agnes in Egmond,  has the largest concentration of Old Catholics, but it has the lowest Mass attendance out of all Old Catholic parishes in the Netherlands. Utrecht is a more ancient Catholic Mecca than Egmond, evidenced by statistics from the Old Catholic Church (OKKN).

Egmond is a historic center of the OKKN. Nearly one in five people in the North Sea coastal towns of Egmond and Alkmaar are Old Catholics. In 2009, the parish in Egmond had 981 Old Catholics, yet,  only 7% attend weekly Mass, which is the lowest number of all twenty nine Old Catholic parishes in the Netherlands. Nationally, 18% percent of all Old Catholic attend church on a weekly basis.


The loss of members in Egmond is also dramatically high: over the last five years the parish lost 9% of its members. Nationally, Old Catholic parishes lost only 5% of its members. In the last five years, half of the Old Catholic parishes have encountered substantial growth while some smaller parishes are struggling to stay open. 

Egmond is perhaps not the Old Catholic stronghold as of old. Therefore we may look to Utrecht, where the seat of Archbishop Joris Vercammen is located. The parish has 350 members there, but on Sunday there are over one hundred parishioners in the cathedral of St. Gertrude. In no other parish are people so faithful to the church. Parishioners donate on average 262 euros per year to the church. That's a big difference from the situation in Egmond, although some parishes receive even more generous donations.

 
There are 5,500 Old Catholics in the Netherlands. The Synod of the Church is gathering tomorrow, Saturday, November 20  in Hilversum. Let us pray for the success of the Synod.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Annual Festival of Willibrord Society & The Charter for Compassion

(London) Thursday, 18 November, starts this year's annual festival of Willibrord Society in London. The festival begins with a solemn Eucharistic celebration in the Church of St Peter's (Eaton Square).The first Willibrord Society was founded in England in 1908. Its initial aim was to work for closer links between the Church of England and the Old Catholic churches. St Willibrord came from England in the 7th century. He was a missionary to the Frisians, and in 695, he became the first Archbishop of Utrecht. He thus witnesses to the long-standing relationship between the Church of England and the Union of Utrecht, and has been adopted as patron of the relationship between Anglicans and Old Catholics.The Anglican and Old Catholic churches have always been close theologically, and have always enjoyed a good relationship. The Bonn Agreement of 1931 established full intercommunion between the two.The Willibrord Society and its national associations are working for a practical realization of this agreement in the lives of their respective churches.

Old Catholic Bishop Dr. Matthais Ring holds lecture at this year's St. Willibrord Festival in London on the role of the German Old Catholic Church in the Third Reich. I am sure more information about the Bishop's speech will follow. 

On a separate note, across the world people celebrate the one year anniversary of the Charter for Compassion. The Charter for Compassion (2009) is a document which urges the peoples and religions of the world to embrace the core value of compassion. The charter is currently available in thirty languages, and is being translated into more.





Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Belgian Catholics Embrace Alternative Catholicism

 Today, the New York Times released a story about Catholics in Belgium creating Catholic Christian prayer communities. Although they are not Old Catholics in the traditional sense, it is clear that there is an ever growing trend towards alternative forms of Catholicism. 


(Belgium) Willy Delsaert is a retired railroad employee with dyslexia who practiced intensively before facing the suburban Don Bosco Catholic parish to perform the Sunday Mass rituals he grew up with.
“Who takes this bread and eats,” he murmured, cracking a communion wafer with his wife at his side, “declares a desire for a new world.”

With those words, Mr. Delsaert, 60, and his fellow parishioners are discreetly pioneering a grass-roots movement that defies centuries of ancient Roman Catholic Church doctrine by worshiping and sharing communion without benefit of a priest.

Don Bosco is one of about a dozen alternative Catholic churches that have sprouted and grown in the last two years in Dutch-speaking regions of Belgium and the Netherlands. They are an uneasy reaction to a combination of forces: a shortage of priests, the closing of churches, dissatisfaction with Vatican appointments of conservative bishops and, most recently, dismay over cover-ups of priestly sexual abuse.

The churches are called ecclesias, the word derived from the Greek verb for calling together. Five were started last year in the Netherlands by Catholics who broke away from their existing parishes and more are being planned, according to Franck Ploum, who helped start an ecclesia in January in Breda, the Netherlands, and is organizing a network conference for the groups in the two countries.

At this sturdy brick church in a suburb southwest of Brussels, men and women are trained as “conductors.” They preside over Masses and the landmarks of life: weddings and baptisms, funerals and last rites. Church members took charge more than a year ago when their pastor retired without a successor. In Belgium, about two-thirds of clergymen are over 55, and one-third older then 65.

“We are resisting a little bit like Gandhi,” said Johan Veys, a married former priest who performs baptisms and recruits newcomers for other tasks at Don Bosco. “Our intention is not to criticize, but to live correctly. We press onward quietly without a lot of noise. It’s important to have a community where people feel at home and can find peace and inspiration.”

Yet they appear to be on a collision course with the Vatican and the Catholic Church in Belgium. The Belgian church has been staggering from a sexual abuse scandal with 475 victims, and the resignation of the bishop of Bruges, Roger Vangheluwe, who last April admitted to years of molesting a boy who turned out to be his nephew.

In the view of Rome, only ordained priests can celebrate Mass or preside over most sacraments like baptisms and marriage. “If there are persons or groups that do not observe these norms, the competent bishops — who know what really happens — have to see how to intervene and explain what is in order and out of order if someone belongs to the Catholic Church,” the Rev. Federico Lombardi, director of the Vatican press office, said.

The primate of Belgium, Archbishop André-Joseph Léonard of Mechelen-Brussels, has already raised objections to the alternative services, calling them “unacceptable practices.” But he declined to respond to questions, maintaining a pledge to keep silent until December. He was engulfed in controversy this month after he criticized prosecution of elderly priests for pedophile acts as “vengeance” and described AIDS as a “sort of inherent justice” for promiscuous homosexual acts.

For some Catholics in the ecclesia movement and academics at the Catholic University of Louvain, Archbishop Léonard is emblematic of a remote church disconnected from a flock that yearns for more relevant rituals and active participation.

“Something is beginning to crack,” said the Rev. Gabriel Ringlet, a priest and former vice rector at the Catholic University of Louvain, which is considering dropping the “Catholic” from its name. “I think the Belgian Catholic Church is starting to feel something exceptional for the first time in 40 years. A lot of Catholics are waking up and speaking out.”

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Feast of St. Gertrude, November 16th

(1256-1301) Born in Eisleben, Germany, Saint Gertrude was received into the Cistercian convent. She studied literature and philosophy and devoted herself as well to prayer and contemplation. In cooperation with her close friend and fellow mystic Saint Mechtildis, St. Gertrude wrote a compilation of prayers that became very popular. She introduced the devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus which, centuries later, would spread throughout the Church.

St Gertrude's Cathedral is the seat of the Archbishop of the Old Catholic Church. That Church originated in the 18th century after a conflict with the Church of Rome. Now the Old Catholic Church is associated with churches in other countries, e.g. with the Church of England. The present Cathedral was built between 1912 and 1914. The Neo-Romanesque style was chosen, because the former Collegiate Church of St Mary's, which stood close by, was the most beautiful Romanesque church in Utrecht.
The Chapel of St Gertrude's preceded the Cathedral. This recently renovated chapel is the finest example of a 17th-century clandestine church in Holland. Its restoration was rewarded the Europa Nostra Award for Restoration and Conservation in 1993. In this hidden church was the ordination of Bishop Arnold Harris Matthews who sent missionaries to the United States.

Photos of the Cathedral and Chapel