Wednesday, October 29, 2008

A scheme has been launched...

...for a national monument to honour the airmen of the Royal Air Force Bomber Command who died in World War 11 (reports in today's press).

There is a fine Royal Air Force Memorial, on the rising crest of the hill overlooking the Thames at Runnymede. My uncle, John Campbell, is among those who served and died with Bomber Command honoured there. The names are engraved in panels in cloisters of simplicity and beauty, and above them are the words of the Scriptures "If I take the wings of the morning, and dwell in the innermost parts of the sea... even there shall Thy right hand lead me..."

Rather than another monument, it would be a fine thing if the planned £2 million were to be spent on a Trust which would fund projects to pass on to the next generation a knowledge of the things for which these men gave their lives: our country's history, culture, traditions, and Christian faith, a love of true human freedom and the worth of each individual.

These thoughts are prompted by the viewing, yesterday evening of a classic wartime film, Mrs Miniver. It was created partly to emphasise to an American audience the sort of spirit and community life which an (idealised) England represented, and to show why British people felt it was something worth fighting for. It's a moving and tender story, and watching it now is rather heart-breaking.

Catholic students and Humanae Vitae...

...a conference is to be held at the Catholic chaplaincy at Manchester University, to honour the 40th anniversary of Humanae Vitae. November 14th-16th, with some excellent speakers including Luke Gormally of the Linacre Centre and Edmund Adamus from the Westminster diocese. More details from: info@rc-chaplaincy-um.org.uk It's aimed at young people, but ALL are welcome. This is something well worth supporting. Be there!

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Latest nasty idea...

...from an official Govt source is that little children of five years old should be given "sex education". Who produces these vile policies? The horrible schemes of sex-ed that have been used in many secondary schools over the past two decades have made their own contribution to the inexorably rising rates of sexually transmitted diseases among teenagers...I suppose the people who relish that sort of thing are now keen to involve little ones, too.

How horrible it all is, and how miserable. And I'm so sickened by the fatuous arguments that are used to prop up the claim that children "need" this sex-ed. This isn't the 1950s. The notion that Britain's young people are growing up with no information about sexual matters, to arrive at the altar for matrimony ignorant of what it all involves, is just ridiculous, and to claiming such tosh to justify talking about sex to five-year olds is disgraceful.

Children today get so much material about sex on the television, especially in the soap-operas ..school should be one place which is free from this pressure, a safe place, where children can be happy, and allowed to use their minds to think along large lines, to discover the great things of the world.

Today in golden Autumn sunshine a cheerful team from the local Council arrived to collect garden rubbbish. Joy!! I hurried out with armfuls of branches, and they were helpful and kind, with laughter and talk as the greenery got stacked away. In the afternoon a neighbour knocked on our door with a small box of sweets "It's Divali, and these are for you" and to say that his little baby daughter was celebrating her first birthday... They are a very nice family. Later his wife brought some delicious rice and chicken and a slice of birthday cake for us. The baby is sweet and beams back agreeably when you smile at her. Just think: in four years' time she'll be ready for school and her first sex-education lessons...

Monday, October 27, 2008

Oriel College Oxford...


...looked absolutely glorious in the Autumn evening light as we arrived yesterday for Evensong, to be followed by dinner at High Table. We were guests of Dr Peter Nockles who is an old friend and a fellow-member of the Catholic Writers' Guild, of which his father was a distinguished Master. Evensong was beautiful, with some lovely singing by the College choir, a really interesting sermon about the (15th cent) Bishop Carpenter who founded the College... and we sang "He who would valiant be" and concluded with "Jerusalem", both among my most favourite hymns...dinner, candelit in the splendid Hall, with Latin grace and the chatter of dozens and dozens and dozens of gown-glad undergraduates, was delicious and hugely enjoyable. Earlier, we had visited John Henry Newman's rooms, including the tiny one that he used as an oratory, and which now has a stained-glass window commemorating him, and his motto Cor ad cor loquitor, engraved on the wall. A wonderful evening.

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Saturday...

...was spent partly in a general tidying-up at Bogle Towers. Rushed to charity shop with some clothes. Noticed a vast bulging orange bag outside. Team at the shop - whom I know well, having offloaded many books etc there - v. friendly as always. "What do I do with all these old wire coat-hangers?" Sigh "Add them to the hundreds of others in that orange sack..." WHY isn't there a recycling-system for all this metal? You can't take the wretched things back to the dry-cleaners. Why not? I just bet there's some "Elf-n-saeftee" reason. The way to tackle our disgusting problems of junk and litter is to offer commercial incentives to the public for getting rid of the stuff: a modest (5p?) for each coathanger returned to a dry-cleaner, ditto (but, say, 30p or 50p) any glass bottle returned to a supermarket, would be a start...

Friday, October 24, 2008

Westminster Cathedral...

...doesn't look like this at the moment, the front entrance currently muddled with by fencing, workmen's huts, and stacks and stacks of equipment...and inside the whole is dominated by the MOST ENORMOUS ARRAY OF SCAFFOLDING YOU CAN POSSIBLY IMAGINE, up and up and up to the roof itself... all neccessary because of massive repairs and renewal of the whole electric lighting system. It's urgently necessary because the lighting system was set up in 1902, and hasn't really had any renovation since...

We gathered, holding flickering candles, for prayer at the tomb of St John Southworth, hero priest of the Plague era. The sung evening Mass had just finished, and the air was still scented with incense. The Scripture reading reminded us about not being afraid "to give an account of the hope that is in us". The skeletal scaffolding and layer upon layer of planking leading up to the great darkness above made the cathedral seem especially awesome. Out into the rainy night and round to the cheerful hall, where people settled for a talk given by Auntie about St John Southworth and our other London martyrs. Attendance was good, we netted a comfortable sum for the Friends of Westminster Cathedral, there was lots of lively talk over wine afterwards.

It was a most wonderful experience to be speaking at an event connected to this great cathedral which, for me as for so many other Catholic Londoners, holds so many memories. Long ago - oh, long ago - I stood in that great aisle, holding a flag at a Girl Guide parade, and looked up at that vast dark ceiling and then down to the great glowing sanctuary, from where Benediction was given, and across to the packed cathedral, hundreds and hundreds of people at prayer. Unforgettable. Times without number, throughout my adult life, I've dropped into the Cathedral for a weekday Mass, for confession, to say a quick Rosary, to meet a friend...day after day people go in and out - there are queues for confession, people lighting candles, packed Sunday Masses, a Blessed Sacrament chapel where there are always people kneeling...

The cathedral is a great reminder of the presence of God and an absolutely crucial place for the Faith in our country. The repairs are costing a terribly worrying amount of money - and at the moment the funds just aren't there. Please, please help.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

A fascinating conference...

...at the Institute for Economic Affairs in London, exploring the links between taxation, welfare, and families. An impressive speaker was Philip Booth - look out for his forthcoming feature in the Catholic Times newspaper. There is a growing recognition that Catholic social teaching is not about making more and more demands for Government action and expenditure on welfare schemes. The centrality of the family unit, based on marriage, the negative effect of current taxation policies, which favour the break-up of families as benefits go to single-parents, the increasingly uncomfortable pressure being placed on Catholic projects which receive public funds, all got due discussion and analysis. Naturally the current difficulties faced by the Catholic adoption agencies was at the forefront of people's minds. Other issues tackled included those connected with the natural environment, use of resources, the debate over climate...Discussion was lively, interesting, challenging. A useful day.

I'm following...

...the progress of the Live Chastely campaign. Go on, sign up. The witness of married couples who are glad to affirm their commitment to their vows of lifelong faithfulness would be especially valuable. Just scroll down to my previous blog of a couple of days ago, click on and join in! We need 1,000 signatures and are on the way but NEED MORE NAMES!!

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

The plight of Christians...

...in parts of India at present is rather bleak. Worth getting more information on this from the website of Aid to the Church in Need. Spent today at a meeting of the UK Board of this charity. It is doing good work, and held an excellent conference in London recently. Speakers go to parishes around Britain to talk about the work - if you'd like such a speaker in our parish, I'm sure the office would be glad to hear from you...

We spent some time...

...at the weekend trying to get rid of domestic rubbish. It's not so easy. For some reason, the local dump requires you to produce evidence that you are a local resident before taking rubbish there. Why? Surely it should be made as easy as possible to put rubbish in the correct place? As it happens, it was no problem for us - J. had his driving licence with our address on it, and we conscientiously placed the paper rubbish in one place, the old suitcase in another, the big old tray in another...but suppose we had been without the relevant papers, and were, for example, helping out some other family who were about to move in to a new home and wanted to clear domestic junk from its surroundings first? I just don't understand why the local authorities are so keen to encourage people to dump their rubbish out in the countryside or on the roadside, by making them carry documentation before using the correct place. What possible sanity can there be in this Soviet-style emphasis on bureaucracy?

Monday, October 20, 2008

And please...

...do click on this link to add your name to the brilliant Live Chastely campaign. It's a terrific call, and it needs lots and lots of support. The blog link is a good read, too - enjoy.

Going the rounds...

...of Catholic blogs is the ghastly, revolting, but of course extremely funny suggestion for a "youth liturgy" produced by some twerp and being officially promoted by the Bishops' Conference. Who honestly imagines that anyone will take this sort of rubbish seriously? Click on the link for a good laugh.

Like most of us, I've been to some fairly unattractive Masses in which young people have used loud, well-intentioned, but very poor music (see below). But they DON'T WANT idiotic bogus "liturgies" written by middle-aged sillies who think that worshipping God is less important than walking around with banners with fashionable meaningless slogans on them. Young Catholics want to to to church to worship God. It is they who are leading the crusade for more adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, it is they who have brought Confession back into the forefront of Catholic retreats and events, it is they who go to Walsingham with Youth 2000 and fill the halls and chapels at events run by the FAITH Movement, in huge numbers. They are not - repeat NOT - interested in having some inane rubbish instead of the timeless reality of the Mass as offered by the Church.

In the diocese...

...of Arundel and Brighton, yesterday was celebrated in a special way because it was the feast of St Philip Howard, the diocesan patron. Want to know more about him? Mary's Dowry Productions has a good DVD which you would enjoy. It is a moving story, and it all happened in London and Sussex...

We live just where Greater London begins to look out towards Surrey - this Sunday a family tea party took us right out into the countryside, well over the diocesan border into A-and-B. A packed Mass in a large church crammed with young people, which is great but...oh dear....much crooning into a microphone and lots of electronic strumming and bashing of drums, and then a round of applause at the end of Mass... is it crucial for the young singers to stand with their backs to the altar and assume the poses of performers? I don't see why the enthusiasm need be any less if they were further down the church, with the sound thus coming up from behind us, which in any case would make congregational participation easier.

Saturday, October 18, 2008

By Westminster Abbey...

...we gathered this afternoon, holding white crosses. We knelt on the ground and prayed. It was embarrassing, necessary, and important to be there. We were asking for God's mercy and forgiveness for the deliberate killing of unborn babies through abortion in Britain. The Human Embryology and Fertilisation Bill goes to Parliament shortly. If passed into law it will mean yet more destruction of human life in our country.

Friday, October 17, 2008

How am I getting on...

...with my Maryvale course? I'm loving it. Lots to learn: had to 'phone Jamie from the Tube the other day to ask what "epistemology" was (yes, yes, I've got it now...) but otherwise I'm getting along swimmingly.

The Church of...

....the Holy Ghost at Balham is a delight to visit - dropping in on an Autumn evening, I was not alone as various other people also came in to pray, candles glowed in front of statues, the marble altar gleamed with its silver candlesticks, the Crucifix above was illuminated, the Tabernable light indicated the Presence which gives the church its welcome...

I had been given the use of the parish room at Visitation House, adjoining the church, to lead an informal Media Presentation, with ideas and practical work for those interested in getting involved with TV and radio etc. We had Greg Clovis from Family Life International with TV cameras, and did some interviews and debates - a chance for people to learn some practical skills, discuss techniques - and also looked at the Internet, letters to the press, use of Catholic materials and publications...it is a joy to work with young people who are enthusiastic and the evening sparkled with good humour and a sense of zest.

The evening went well and we'll do more. Interested? Send a Comment to this blog with your full name and email address and I'll keep you informed...

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

I've been re-reading...

...the prison notes of Cardinal Stefan Wyszinski, published some years ago by Aid to the Church in Need under the title A Freedom Within. When I first read the book, some years ago, it all felt somehow securely centred in an Eastern Europe dominated by Stalinist Communism, all terribly dreadful but far away. Now the notion of a Bishop being arrested by a Government set on an ideological path which seems to be carrying all if history before it doesn't seem so far away at all...more timeless and ever-possible. It has happened in other places since Poland in the 1950s, and the possibilities in the Middle East, Africa and so on seem worryingly possible...

A delightful...

...visit to young relatives in Surrey. Glorious Autumn colours as we sped along the railway line from Epsom. An enchanting small great-nephew with an appropriate interest in toy trains and some very jolly teddy bears. A small great-niece with a gurgling grin.

Also delightful: a very jolly book of jokes and anecdotes on sale via a local church. I laughed aloud while browsing through a copy before giving it as a present: I'm now ordering two more. Funds raised from its sales go towards necessary maintenance work at the Sacred Heart Church in Wimbledon, one of the finest of London's 19th century churches and well worth cherishing. You can get a copy by post, £5, from: Sacred Heart Bookshop, Edge Hill, Wimbledon, London SW19 4LU.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Life in modern Britain (2)

The newspapers often have reports of people being fined large sums of money for putting all their rubbish in a rubbish-bin to be collected, instead of putting some of it in different open containers so that it can be blown around the street. Aware of this, I have been carefully using the complicated system of open green boxes and purple boxes that we have been told to use in our district. Cardboard, carefully torn up, in one box, newspapers in another, tins in one, plastic bottles in another. Working at my desk, I can then watch the chaps coming to empty the boxes - which they do by cheerfully putting the contents of both purple and green boxes into one big bin and wheeling it away...

Wine bottles, however, are a different matter. They are meant to go in to the purple box. But sometimes people who put them carefully there recognise them again, dumped at the end of the street. Some believe (but this may be "urban myth" ) that if the staff on duty belong to a religion that denounces alcohol, they don't like them into the big bin because that would mean they would be wheeling away bottles that had once contained alcohol. So the wine bottles are left...to join the rotting sofas and the other clutter...

Life in modern Britain (1)...

...today the garden needed some work, so, glad to be out of doors and away from the computer, I pruned the apple-tree, tackled the mess of the gooseberry/rosemary bush/brambles and generally tidied things up. It was a cool Autumn day and I enjoyed chatting to a neighbour who is one of a group of us at this end of the street who enjoys gardening - and whose garden, along with that of another neighbour opposite, is lovely in all seasons, a joy to see.

What to do with my resulting pile of wood and greenery? No bonfires now allowed. Oh, it's quite simple. You find out the right telephone number, telephone the local authority, get their automated answering service, hang on for a long while while various recorded announcements are made, and then find none of them are helpful. You do this a number of times and then find some one from the wrong department who will finally put you on to another department which isn't the right one either, but where you can leave a message, and then you put in a request for a Green Bag. When this is delivered to you some while later, you fill it with your garden rubbish, and then telephone for them to collect it. Apparently it only takes a week or so...

There is a lot of ghastly rubbish around at the corner where our street joins the main road - there are some sofas, armchairs, and other items all starting to rot there where the fence has long since been destroyed and the owners do not care to mend it, or indeed to do anything except use the area, and the surrounding roadside, as a place to put old furniture. Apparently it's OK to do that, but not to stack wood and leaves and then have a bonfire in November.

I have been doing...

...some interviews for EWTN, the Catholic TV network. They feature various Catholic personalities in Britain, under the title "Catholic Lives". Want to view them? They are all being broadcast during November. You can get the information here.

Where will you be...

....on Saturday? I'm planning to be with others at the prayer vigil/protest over the horrible plans to destroy and tamper with human life. JOIN US!

Auntie on her bike...

...this week: to Chelsea tonight to give a talk at St Mary's Cadogan Street, as part of a series for young engaged couples. To young relations on Wednesday, with Mother, to enjoy an afternoon with great-niece and great-nephew. To Balham on Thursday evening, for a Media Training Evening, ideas on how to get involved with writing for the press, using the Internet, TV and radio (interested? Send a Comment to this Blog WITH YOUR FULL NAME AND YOUR EMAIL ADDRESS SO I CAN CONTACT YOU). To a Coffee Morning on Friday which will raise funds for the St Patrick's Evangelisation School based in Soho...

Interested in London's Catholic martyrs?

...then get yourself a ticket to a talk to be given by Auntie on Thursday October 23rd. It's organised by the Friends of Westminster Cathedral and that link will tell you how to get tickets: £10 each and all funds will go to the Cathedral for its restoration work. Been there recently? Then you will know how urgently they need funds - it's all swathed in scaffolding, and lots of work going on.

Monday, October 13, 2008

...and while on the subject...

...of Brompton Oratory, there is be be an event there, in St Wilfrid's Hall, in support of Christians in Iraq this week: Tuesday, Oct 13th, 6.45 pm. A talk about the plight of the Church there, plus ligsht refreshments etc....suggested donation £10. WELL WORTH SUPPORTING. The speaker is one of this year's Catholic Women of the Year...

Sunday, October 12, 2008

I spent virtually the whole of Sunday...

...at Brompton Oratory! The Fathers v. kindly allowed me to give out leaflets about the Festival of Catholic Culture (Nov 8th, Westmin. Cathedral Hall - be there!) at all Masses. It was a wonderful place to spend Sunday morning. I arrived as the 9am Mass was about halfway through...it is well attended, the 10 am Mass more so - with many young families, and singing from the excellent Children's Choir - and then of course there is the famous 11 am Mass with the most glorious music from the most magnificent choir and the church absolutely full, again several families with children. Then there is a 12.30 Mass, where I just arrived for the end...yes, extremely well attended again.

After the 11 am Mass, at which I met many friends, it was fun talking in the Autumn sunshine while children frolicked about. In the afternoon I whizzed back to the suburbs and Mother and I went out for a lovely walk, and Tea at our favourite shop. A friend was taking care of the 4.30pm Mass for me. Off to the Oratory again for the 7pm Mass. Did you know there was a 7pm Mass at Brompton Oratory? V. handy to know - and yes, it's full, this time lots of young people, the girls all denim jeans and swinging hair...made me feel v. middle-aged.

The London trees...

...are turning golden and russet-brown and we are in St Luke's "little summer" with a sudden glow of warm weather as we approach his Feast Day. Yesterday, the annual Rosary Crusade took place in London. More than a thousand people processing from Westminster Cathedral to Brompton Oratory...it's perhaps not as large as it was when we used to go to Hyde Park back in the early 1980s, but it is still a grand day, and the Oratory was packed for the final prayers and a magnificent Benediction. I was among several who were kneeling on the floor, and the side-chapels were full as well. Many of us stayed on for evening Mass, at which there was glorious music provided by the Chamber Choir of the London Oratory School. This is one of several choirs at the school, and it was an impressive sight to see the pupils in their smart uniforms making their way up to the choir-loft with confidence.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

A charming...

...new book for children about St Paul, published for this Year of St Paul. Hardback, with delightful illustrations, shows him being converted on the road to Damascus, being shipwrecked, being bitten by a snake on Malta, and everything. This will make him come alive, and is ideal for any child who sits through the Epistles Sunday and after Sunday and needs to know - and enjoy - the life of the man who wrote these things and did so much to pass the Faith on to us.If you have a child who fidgets in church, try this. £4.99 from St Paul's UK ISBN 978-0-854-748-8.

The Catholic Women of the Year Luncheon...

...was held yesterday in London and was very enjoyable indeed. Each year, this event brings together a large crowd of people, to honour Catholic women who have served the Church and the community in various ways. My task was to do the vote of thanks and it couldn't have been easier or more enjoyable. There was a letter from the dear Holy Father with a beautiful message for his "beloved daughters". The Papal Nuncio attended, and said Grace before lunch, and our special guest speaker was Fr Aidan Nichols who was simply superb, inspiring and amusing, with a message that was interesting, intellectually stimulating and at the same time cheering and challenging. The theme of this year's Luncheon was "Communicating the Faith in our times", and Fr Aidan linked this with the martyrs of times past - "any problems we face today are pinpricks, compared to the dungeon, fire and sword they faced" and to our hopes for the future. He was followed,in a way that matched perfectly, by the speaker from the charity we had chosen to support this year - Youth 2000. Charlie Connor, young, energetic, and enthusiastic, gave a rousing account of this movement's excellent work among young people (1,000 at their Walsingham rally this summer) and it was a perfect celebration of our 40th anniversary.

Season of mists...

...and there is lots of mellow fruitfulness in England this year, as the rain has conspired to make the apple crop simply extraordinary.

Today I picked the most important apples of all. Some years ago, at the shrine of Ladyewell at Fernyhalgh, we bought a tiny cutting of an apple-tree, less than a foot high. You know the legend of Fernyhalgh? Well, part of it involves a man looking for a place where grow "apples without any core..." We planted our sprig, and it grew and grew, and this year produced apples...high up, hard to reach, all in a tiny bunch...and today I scrambled up to reach them, via the fire-escape, and grabbed the branches.

Well, the apples do have cores. But we munched with great delight, and thought of Fernyhalgh and Catholic Lancashire and it is a golden Autumn day with slanting sunlight and all is good.

Thursday, October 09, 2008

Glowing pink...

...our main room looks beautifully warm on this chill evening. We needed new lampshades for this and for the tiny adjoining room where I work. The old ones were in a shocking state - I can't think why we didn't replace them years ago, they must have been at least 25 years old, and hanging there ever since we moved in....so I went to buy new ones. Practically no one in the big DIY shop which is usually packed with busy people. Is this a sign of things to come? Lampshades reduced to one-third of the original price. Anyway, they are a lovely pink colour, make the whole room look enchanting.

The Crusades...

....were the topic of an absolutely brilliant lecture yesterday at The Keys, the Catholic Writers' Guild, at St Mary Moorfields

Professor Jonathan Riley-Smith, who has written a number of books on the Crusades, gave us a real insight into the current Islamic mindset about the Crusades, and how it was formed. All sorts of things went into this talk - Sir Walter Scott's Ivanhoe, and Kaiser Wilhelm, and Saladin (did you know he was a Kurd? No, nor did I) and much more.

BTW, all Catholic writers/journalists/broadcasters are eligible to join the Guild. Current Master of the The Keys, which is the London branch, is journalist Melanie McDonagh. There are also branches in the North-West (meeting in Manchester at the University chaplaincy) and in the North East. If you are interested, send a Comment to this blog, WITH YOUR EMAIL ADDRESS INCLUDED OR I CANNOT REPLY TO YOU and I'll send you further information.

Scripture, liturgy, and Scott Hahn...

...if you are interested in all of those, then here's an event for you. Oxford, Saturday Nov 1st. There's a conference, organised by the excellent Centre for Faith and Culture, exploring "Scripture and Liturgy in the Theology of Benedict VI

I am told there are still a few places left. It will be a terrific day: speakers include Fr Aidan Nicholls the Dominican scholar and Scott Hahn the American evangelist and speaker. Click on to the link I have given and book yourself in.

While studying...

...happily away yesterday in a coffee-shop, with two glorious hours to spare between meetings, and my Maryvale coursework and Bible and a pen and some coffee, I was completely blissful and absorbed. When the time came to leave, I had just finished the work I needed to do, and everything felt deeply satisfying. Then a thought: where is my mobile phone? Missing. Gone. I hurried out into Victoria Street - and immediately ran into various friends, who happened to be gathering for a Mass at Westminster Cathedral. "Hey - Joanna! How are you?" "Panicking" I answered "I've lost my mobile phone - must have left it somewhere - I'm about to start retracing my steps to all the places I've been - ". Quick prayer. Calmly, Sally G. had the thought of ringing my mobile's number. The voice that answered was that of the manager of the Internet cafe, where I'd been checking my emails earlier in the day...he was very pleased to be able to return it to me safely, big satisfaction all round... as I poured out my gratitude, other customers joined in the general celebrations...

I hadn't planned to go to the Westmin. Cath. Mass (which was commemorating the 80th anniversary of the founding of Opus Dei - cathedral packed, lots of families, sermon by Cardinal Cormac) but I dropped in anyway, to say a heartfelt "thank you"...

Tuesday, October 07, 2008

The Martyrs' Walk...

...in June began at Tower Hill where Saints John Fisher and Thomas More were beheaded, and went through London to Tyburn, honouring the English Martyrs who died for the Catholic Faith in the years of persecution in the reigns of Henry VIII, Elizabeth I and beyond.

A DVD, based on the walk, and opening up the whole history, telling the heroic stories of some of the martyrs, explaining the background, etc, has now been made. Do get a copy! It could work well for a Confirmation class, or a prayer group or similar gathering. Contact the producers: mail@marysdowryproductions.org or follow this link.

Monday, October 06, 2008

Today...

...was a day of odds and ends...a man came to mend and paint the ceiling of the bathroom and bedroom(leak from the flat upstairs) . This entailed much transporting of books from the bedroom shelves to the floor of the small den where I work. Books, books...Jane Austen and Walter Scott, jostling with Palgrave's Golden Treasury, G.M. Trevelyan's history, Newman's Arians of the Fourth century, (which I will need for my Divinity course and was v. glad to find), and E. Nesbit's Treasure Seekers, and other childhood books including the enchanting Lord of the Rushie River...then a great deal of cleaning and reorganising, and the transporting of books back again...everything clean and pleasing, and two suitcases of general clutter and papers to be taken gloriously away...

THANK GOD...

...for Bishop Patrick O'Donohue.

READ THIS


Thank God for a Bishop with courage and integrity. Let him know he has your prayers and full support.

Sunday, October 05, 2008

An Autumn day...

...in Kent, on a family visit, a warm welcome, delightful young nieces, a delicious lunch, a happy day. We walked through Autumn fields, with fabulous views, gathering chestnuts to take home and bake. We stopped at the hop-pickers huts, once used every year by the teams of people who came out from London for the hop season - all empty and derelict now, but the tradition is remembered with an annual end-of-summer gathering and barbeque...

This has been a family weekend: on Saturday a visit from another dear niece, and an agreeable dinner with friends visiting from America. To get a flavour of the conversation over dinner, pick up the Catholic Times each week and read the delightful and amusing Stateside letter from America by Alenka Lawrence.

Saturday, October 04, 2008

In the Catholic press...

...there are reports of a set of "Ten Commandments" for bloggers, produced by a Christian group...with some good things that needed to be said.

Surely the most important thing for Catholic bloggers is to emphasise things that are true and large-minded and wise and cheering and beautiful. Of course we should not fail to denounce ideas that are wrong and unjust and dangerous to the common good - especially when they are being imposed on us all with the force of law. But each and every time we do this, we should ensure that this is part of a much wider piece of work which exalts what is good and lifts everyone up to what is great.

Easily one of the best books...

...I have read for ages is ENGLISH CATHOLIC HEROES, edited by John Jolliffe. Do get it. Your Christmas present problems solved! It's a terrific read. They are all here: Edmund Campion and Robert Southwell, Fisher and More, Richard Challoner, and Manning and John Henry Newman and Leonard Cheshire and more...contributors include A.N.Wilson, Dom Aidan Bellenger, Lucy Beckett and Clare Asquith. The book was launched at a very enjoyable party held at St Wilfrid's Hall, Brompton Oratory, last week, but I have been waiting to write about until I had read the book from cover to cover. Do get it. Enjoy. Available from Gracewing Books

Friday, October 03, 2008

Christians in IRAQ..

...are having a very tough time of it, and Aid to the Church in Need sponsored a visit to Britain last week by Bishop Jean Sleiman, leader of the Catholic community there. In London he met Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O'Connor, and senior Government officials, and addressed a packed conference at Westminster Cathedral Hall....read about it here...

And don't just read...let's keep this community in our prayers...I went to an evening gathering to meet the Bishop, and it was moving to hear him talk about how people are being forced out of their homes, leaving behind everything, and a whole way of life is vanishing.

I've been sent..

..a Parish Study Guide called WITNESS, which is aimed at preparing people for Confirmation. It would be particularly useful for adult candidates, or people going through the Rite of Christian Initiation for Adults. No woffle about getting people into a circle and talking about feelings, or "each of us sharing our faith story". This is an information-packed scheme, full colour with pics, going systematically through the Catholic Faith, with answers to questions that people really ask, not ones that some campaigners think they ought to ask!

Thus it goes through the Creed, with detailed material on God the Father, the Trinity, the Virgin Birth, the Last Judgement, the Communion of saints, and more...and there are pages on the Church's seasons, on liturgical vestments, and sacred vessels, and symbols, and everything from incense to cassocks, from initials like AMDG to how St Boniface gave us the Christmas tree. It's published by Heart and Voice Publications

Thursday, October 02, 2008

I am hugely enjoying...

...the Maryvale Divinity course. For those who have asked me about it: last weekend we had lectures on "What is theology?", on the Catechism of the Catholic Church, and on Church history, including the Arians of the 4th century (yes, Newman's book etc) and on the Crusades. The latter v. topical at present, and indeed Jonathan Riley-Smith is coming to speak to The Keys, the Catholic Writers' Guild, on the subject shortly.

I'm currently working on my first essay, which is about God, theology, and the human person....

Enjoying this blog?

...then you might enjoy this too...

Wednesday, October 01, 2008

A group...

...of young people, involved in theatre, writing, or the arts in general, gather for Mass together regularly at the Church of Our Lady and St Gregory in Warwick Street , just off Piccadilly Circus. It's the only surviving church in London that has a direct link going back to the old Embassy Chapels - it was originally the Portugese, later the Bavarian, embassy chapel. In the days when the practice of the Catholic faith was outlawed in England, and Catholics in London could go to Mass there in safety as such churches were technically foreign soil so the penal laws did not apply.On a cold wet evening, it was rather exciting to dive into the basement - for this small group, Mass was being said there rather than in the church above - and find an altar and glowing candles, and everything set for the sacred mysteries.