The ten best looking rock singers of all time...
1 Billy Fury
MISSION STATEMENT ... To celebrate where it's deserved! ... To take the Michael out of institutions and individuals where it's deserved! ... Recently I had occasion to prepare my gravestone epitaph: GENE... Educator, Novelist, Humanitarian and Humorist - TO KNOW HIM WAS TO LOVE HIM - Rest in Peace ....... But while I am still walking the earth do not hesitate to contact me at: bobbyslingshot8@gmail.com
Does Detterling suffer from false memory syndrome?
While I was in hospital recently I had quite a bit of time to think. This thought occurred to me: Does Detterling suffer from false memory syndrome?
Detterling seems to continually imagine events which have just not happened - or blocked out events which really have happened. Let us have a superficial look at some of the evidence. Firstly let us consider the legendary Duke of York showdown which took place on 25th November 2006. Detterling's account varied significantly from every other account given. Did he imagine events that just did not happen?
If faith, as the nuns said, was the substance of things hoped for,
then lace was the outline—the suggestion—of things not seen.
—Iris Anthony, The Ruins of Lace (2012)
From time to time it seems as though Pope Francis can’t resist the urge to tell priests off in his speeches; he’s not afraid to employ mockery and sarcasm, either. That he has never been a simple parish priest frequently seems to come across in the content of his reproofs; so many of them tend to be anticlerical, as if this somehow profits the flock. It doesn’t necessarily make life easier for those of us at the coal face.
The Holy Father has commanded priests to “smell of the sheep,” as if the parish clergy of today are like the absentee-incumbents of centuries past who drew the revenues of parishes they never visited. He has also told us not to make the confessional, that source of healing grace, “a torture chamber”. Perhaps his experience in Argentina differed, but any torture on that front usually comes from the penitent’s own conscience.
The latest swipe was aimed at the clergy of Sicily, about whom he admits he knows little.
I don’t know, because I don’t go to Mass in Sicily and I don’t know how the Sicilian priests preach, whether they preach as was suggested in Evangelii gaudium or whether they preach in such a way that people go out for a cigarette and then come back.
Next came this pointed aside.
Yes, sometimes bringing some of grandma’s lace is appropriate, sometimes. It’s to pay homage to grandma, right? It’s good to honour grandma, but it’s better to celebrate the mother, Holy Mother Church, and how Mother Church wants to be celebrated. So that insularity does not prevent the true liturgical reform that the Council sent out.
So the pope does not like priests wearing cottas or albs ornamented with lace. Fine, but personal taste has never been within the remit of papal infallibility, nor even a lower level of the magisterium. With a captive audience of Sicilian bishops—not the priests themselves, but their superiors—the Holy Father seemed to want to bolster a type of episcopal camaraderie by having a dig at their clergy.
In any case, in Mediterranean countries and other hot climes the purpose of lace is not necessarily to advance decoration, but to reduce perspiration; it is practical, not ideological. Lace was a sensible development of the body-length alb in lands where hot days are the norm, at least in summer. Of course Sicilian priests wear lace, and of course many a pious Catholic lady—even a nonna or a mamma—delights in making such vestments in service of the Church she loves.
By caricaturing Sicilian priests as mummy’s boys Pope Francis risks alienating these ladies, the most loyal part of the flock, but maybe the Sicilian clergy were stand-ins for another target: the lace-wearing clergy of the North and the West. The issue of Lacegate is not the lace per se. The Holy Father himself points to the larger issue: the liturgical reforms that followed Vatican II, and in particular those who are regarded as out of step with it—the traditionally-minded clergy.
Providence may be at work in this, of course. The Petrine office was never more exalted than after Vatican I, which decreed the infallibility of the pope but was prevented from teaching more broadly on the roles of the episcopacy, clergy, and laity. Nevertheless, the arguable incompleteness of Vatican I allowed the Church a strong central voice and a united identity in the face of the turbulence of the last century, and not least the blight of communism.
Given Pope Francis’s failure to condemn unequivocally the naked aggression of President Putin, or to offer concrete succour to the people of Ukraine, then it may be time to revisit this approach. Many people, even his supporters, seem to think that the pope is now animated by an awareness that his time is running out. Simultaneously, the majority of young people who still persevere in the Church are voting with their feet and embracing more traditional liturgy in steadily increasing numbers. Time is on their side.
It is sad that the Holy Father so often seems to express a dislike of the ordinary clergy; he so rarely encourages us that sometimes it’s as though he thinks we are part of the problem, and not the solution. We’re not perfect, of course, but the deficiencies—real and imagined—of the modern presbyterate are not the cause of the Church’s woes. Rather, they are symptoms of a deeper malaise: a decades-long turn to the world, rather than to God, which has decimated the numbers of practising Catholics in the West.
The focus for any cure to this lies beyond both the parish clergy and liturgical tastes. Never mind lace; if we wish to heal the Church’s ailments then surely the first question needs to be this: “If the sheep have gone astray, then what have their shepherds been doing?”
Dom Hugh Somerville-Knapman is a monk of Douai Abbey, and parish priest of Scarisbrick in Lancashire
Drama at Chez Vincent...
Woke up last Tuesday morning in excruciating pain. Gall stones. Was rushed to Hillingdon Hospital and had an emergency procedure.
Fine now and looking forward to updating my blog. There has been a development since I've been away. Detterling has departed. His final words to me: 'I have done with you, you vicious little sod.'
Charming! My response? I can think of no better response but to encore the cry that went up so often over the years on the TES Opinion Forum: 'Another Victory for Gene'
Detterling is still planning to go ahead with his threat of blackmail. Bad move Detters. Didn't Dante consign blackmailers to the lower regions of hell?
Modern theology is discourse about God in the context of modernity and the cultural ethos brought about by the Enlightenment. After Enlightenment thinkers denigrated special revelation in favor of natural theology, post-Enlightenment intellectual giants tried in various ways to move beyond their assertions. Kant focused on morality as the focal point of Christianity. Hegel homed in on the intellectual realm as Christianity’s center. Schleiermacher elevated the experience and intuition of the community.
Judging those responses to be aberrations from historic Christian teaching, the theologians on the following list attempted to carve out a more faithful path for post-Enlightenment Christianity. Thoughtful non-theologians will benefit from patient exposure to these scholars. Inclusion does not imply endorsement. The list encourages readers not to be denominational or chronological snobs, but instead to read the most important theologians slowly, patiently, and receptively.
Karl Barth (1886–1968)
Reformed theologian Karl Barth's work signaled the end of liberalism’s theological reign. He recovered classic Christian doctrines and showed their significance for the modern world. “Barth’s . . . influence,” Lutheran theologian Eberhard Jüngel writes, “profoundly changed the shape of Christian theology across confessional boundaries, significantly altered the direction of the Protestant church, and also left an unmistakable imprint on the politics and cultural life of the twentieth century.” The significance of his work in the theological sphere is comparable to that of Freud, Marx, or Wittgenstein in theirs, in that he indisputably reorganized an entire academic discipline.
For young theologians who want to read something readily comprehensible, one option is Dogmatics in Outline, which shows Barth’s early and unseasoned thought. Evangelical Theology demonstrates his more mature thought, though it is, unfortunately, not a dogmatics text. The final option, Church Dogmatics, is the best of the three. It is wickedly difficult to read, largely because Barth unfolds his arguments slowly and circuitously, rather than in a straightforward and linear fashion. His sentences sometimes last half a page. While not an easy read for the uninitiated (the first time I read a volume of it, back in 1996, I felt like a ferret swimming in a bucket of Thorazine), Dogmatics is nonetheless rewarding.
Carl F. H. Henry (1913–2003)
Without a doubt, the most prominent evangelical theologian of the second half of the twentieth century was Baptist thinker Carl Henry. A theological journalist, teacher, editor, cultural commentator, and world spokesperson for evangelical Christianity, Henry never wrote a systematic theology, but he did write several powerful theological treatises.
Henry offers the most notable evangelical critique of both liberal theology and the Barthian response. God, Revelation, and Authority is a multi-volume treatise on, well, God, revelation, and authority. But the best entrée for a non-theologian is The Uneasy Conscience of Modern Fundamentalism. In it, Henry calls for a new kind of robust evangelical scholarship that engages with the larger world and culture in all of its complexity, rejects cultural separatism, and proposes a type of theological “triage” through which evangelicals can unify and cooperate despite disagreement on secondary and tertiary issues.
Alexander Schmemann (1921–1983)
Alexander Schmemann’s writings are an impeccably good entrée into contemporary Orthodox thought. The Orthodox theologian’s books influenced myriad ecclesiastical leaders, seminary professors, and laypeople. He was one of the primary catalysts of Orthodox liturgical and pastoral renewal in the late twentieth century.
To understand Schmemann, I recommend starting with For the Life of the World, a slim volume that articulates an Orthodox view of Christian faith as reflected in Christian liturgy. For him, the church—rather than the academy—is the locus of theological life: “The meaning, the essence and the end of all vocation is the mystery of Christ and the Church. It is through the Church that each one of us finds that the vocation of all vocations is to follow Christ in the fullness of His priesthood: in His love for man and the world, His love for their ultimate fulfillment in the abundant life of the Kingdom.” When addressing secularism, Schmemann retains the high ground for Christianity, understanding it from the perspective of the historic church and her liturgy.
Richard McBrien (1936–2015)
Richard McBrien’s constructive theology is decidedly unremarkable, given that he was a liberal-revisionist theologian excited by the many radicalisms of past decades. Conservative Catholics don’t prefer him. But he does a fine job with historical theology. I recommend McBrien’s Catholicism, a massive tome tracing the rise and development of Catholic doctrine and ethics, including its maintenance of Nicene Orthodoxy vis-Ã -vis Enlightenment and post-Enlightenment trends. At nearly 1,300 pages, this book is best read while sitting upright. In other words, do not attempt to read it in bed; I fear that you would doze off mid-sentence (a reasonable fear, I assure you) and be crushed to death.
N. T. Wright (1945–)
Anglican New Testament theologian N. T. Wright has challenged post-Enlightenment liberal-revisionist trends. In academic treatises such as The Resurrection and the Son of God and popular books such as Surprised by Hope, he has defended literal belief in the Resurrection and Second Coming as central to Christianity. Further, in What Saint Paul Really Said, Paul: in Fresh Perspective, and numerous other publications, he has sought to retrieve the “original Paul” and his teaching on justification from the clutches of modernist Christianity. In recent years especially, he has evaluated and criticized the syncretism of modern Christianity—its complicity with Enlightenment and post-Enlightenment currents of thought.
Non-theologians may wish to start with one of his trade books, such as Surprised by Hope or How God Became King; these books offer a lay-level glimpse into Wright’s theological method and his views on the kingdom of God. More ambitious readers may wish to tackle The Resurrection and the Son of God, which centers on Jesus’s bodily Resurrection and explores the early origins of Christianity.
Craig Bartholomew (1961–)
Anglican Old Testament theologian and polymath Craig Bartholomew is perhaps unsurpassed among contemporary theologians in his multi-disciplinary subversion of the Enlightenment and post-Enlightenment agendas. His scholarly publications in various disciplines—Old Testament, hermeneutics, systematic theology, philosophy, spirituality, and public theology—center on Scripture as God’s living and active word for all of life. For him, a faithfully Christian approach to the disciplines will not only drive a scholar more deeply into Scripture (rather than drawing him away), but will also drive him more broadly into public life (rather than relegating his Christianity to merely personal spirituality or ecclesiastical involvement).
Non-theologians may wish to start with The Drama of Scripture, an introductory volume demonstrating the narrative coherence of Christian Scripture. More ambitious readers may wish to read The God Who Acts in History (the first volume of a five-part Old Testament theology series), Introducing Biblical Hermeneutics (a majestic treatment of biblical interpretation), Doctrine of Creation (an exploration of the Bible’s teaching about creation and its application to personal ethics and public life), or Beyond the Modern Age (a theological analysis of contemporary culture).
Bruce Riley Ashford is a fellow in public theology at the Kirby Laing Institute for Christian Ethics and author, most recently, of The Doctrine of Creation: A Constructive Kuyperian Approach.
First Things depends on its subscribers and supporters. Join the conversation and make a contribution today.
Click here to make a donation.
ROME (AP) — Pope Francis added fuel to rumors about the future of his pontificate by announcing he would visit the central Italian city of L’Aquila in August for a feast initiated by Pope Celestine V, one of the few pontiffs who resigned before Pope Benedict XVI stepped down in 2013.
Italian and Catholic media have been rife with unsourced speculation that the 85-year-old Francis might be planning to follow in Benedict’s footsteps, given his increased mobility problems that have forced him to use a wheelchair for the last month.
Those rumors gained steam last week when Francis announced a consistory to create 21 new cardinals scheduled for Aug. 27. Sixteen of those cardinals are under age 80 and eligible to vote in a conclave to elect Francis’ successor.
Once they are added to the ranks of princes of the church, Francis will have stacked the College of Cardinals with 83 of the 132 voting-age cardinals. While there is no guarantee how the cardinals might vote, the chances that they will tap a successor who shares Francis’ pastoral priorities become ever greater.
In announcing the Aug. 27 consistory, Francis also announced he would host two days of talks the following week to brief the cardinals about his recent apostolic constitution reforming the Vatican bureaucracy. That document, which goes into effect Sunday, allows women to head Vatican offices, imposes term limits on priestly Vatican employees and positions the Holy See as an institution at the service of local churches, rather than vice versa.
Francis was elected pope in 2013 on a mandate to reform the Roman Curia. Now that the nine-year project has been rolled out and at least partially implemented, Francis’ main task as pope has in some ways been accomplished.
All of which made Saturday’s otherwise routine announcement of a pastoral visit to L’Aquila carry more speculative weight than it might otherwise have.
Notable was the timing: The Vatican and the rest of Italy are usually on holiday in August to mid-September, with all but essential business closed. Calling a major consistory in late August to create new cardinals, gathering churchmen for two days of talks on implementing his reform and making a symbolically significant pastoral visit suggests Francis might have out-of-the-ordinary business in mind.
“With today’s news that @Pontifex will go to L’Aquila in the very middle of the August consistory, it all got even more intriguing,” tweeted Vatican commentator Robert Mickens, linking to an essay he had published in La Croix International about the rumors swirling around the future of the pontificate.
The basilica in L’Aquila hosts the tomb of Celestine V, a hermit pope who resigned after five months in 1294, overwhelmed by the job. In 2009, Benedict visited L’Aquila, which had been devastated by a recent earthquake and prayed at Celestine’s tomb, leaving his pallium stole on it.
No one at the time appreciated the significance of the gesture. But four years later, the 85-year-old Benedict would follow in Celestine’s footsteps and resign, saying he no longer had the strength of body and mind to carry on the rigors of the papacy.
The Vatican announced Saturday Francis would visit L’Aquila to celebrate Mass on Aug. 28 and open the “Holy Door” at the basilica hosting Celestine’s tomb. The timing coincides with the L’Aquila church’s celebration of the Feast of Forgiveness, which was created by Celestine in a papal bull.
No pope has travelled to L’Aquila since to close out the annual feast, which celebrates the sacrament of forgiveness so dear to Francis, noted the current archbishop of L’Aquila, Cardinal Giuseppe Petrocchi.
“We hope that all people, especially those harmed by conflicts and internal divisions, might (come) and find the path of solidarity and peace,” he said in a statement announcing the visit.
Francis has praised Benedict’s decision to retire as “opening the door” for future popes to do the same, and he had originally predicted a short papacy for himself of two to five years.
Nine years later, Francis has shown no signs he wants to step down, and he has major projects still on the horizon.
In addition to upcoming trips this year to Congo, South Sudan, Canada and Kazakhstan, in 2023 he has scheduled a major meeting of the world’s bishops to debate the increasing decentralization of the Catholic Church, as well as the continued implementation of his reforms.
But Francis has been hobbled by the strained ligaments in his right knee that have made walking painful and difficult. He has told friends he doesn’t want to undergo surgery, reportedly because of his reaction to anesthesia last July when he had 33 centimeters (13 inches) of his large intestine removed.
This week, one of his closest advisers and friends, Honduran Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga, said talk of a papal resignation or the end of Francis’ pontificate was unfounded.
“I think these are optical illusions, cerebral illusions,” Maradiaga told Religion Digital, a Spanish-language Catholic site.
Christopher Bellitto, a church historian at Kean University in Union, New Jersey, noted that most Vatican watchers expect Francis will eventually resign, but not before Benedict dies. The 95-year-old retired pope is physically frail but still alert and receiving occasional visitors in his home in the Vatican gardens.
“He’s not going to have two former popes floating around,” Bellitto said in an email. Referring to Francis’ planned visit to L’Aquila, he suggested not reading too much into it, noting that Benedict’s gesture in 2009 was missed by most everyone.
“I don’t recall a lot of stories at the time saying that Benedict’s visit in 2009 made us think he was going to resign,” he said, suggesting that Francis’ pastoral visit to l’Aquila might be just that: a pastoral visit.