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PAGE 6 GEORGIA BULLETIN THURSDAY APRIL 18, 1963
MODERN APPLICA TION
Importance Of Scriptures
In Student Formation
CHICAGO-NC— The instruct
ion and consolation of Sacred
Scripture art essential for the
proper spiritual development of
Christian students, a professor
of Old Te stament studies said
here.
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"The Scriptures provide in
struction by; interpreting for us
the meaning of life in Christ,”
said Father F.A.F. MacKenzie,
S.J., of Regis College, Toronto,
at the convention (April 15-16)
of the Society of Catholic College
Teachers of Sacred Doctrine.
THE JESUIT priest, citing the
distinctive attributes of certain
sections of the Bible, said (April
16) that "the whole sweep of
Old Testament history shows us
the loving Providence of God
over the human race,”
He told some 200 theology
professors from the U. S. and
Canada at the meeting that "the
Psalms offer a virile, objective,
utterly genuine expression of our
relationship to God.”
Pope Sends
Condolence
On Thresher
VATICAN CITY (RNS) --
Pope John XXIII extended con
dolences to President Kennedy,
the American people and the
families of the 129 men lost
in the sinking of the nuclear
submarine Thresher.
In a cablegram to Archbishop
Egidio Vagnozzi, Apostolic De
legate in Washington, D.C. the
Pope instructed him to express
to the President his "deepest
condolences."
Pope John also requested the
Apostolic Delegate to convey
to the families of the crew mem
bers and civilian technicians
aboard the ill - fated craft
his sympathy, blessing and the
assurance of his prayers for
those who had died.
AND HELL
The Book of Ecclesiasticus,
he continued, "has something
for everybody. It contains even
humor (sometimes intentional,
occasionally not), profound psy
chological insights, and beauti
ful passages on justice and
charity in family, social and
political life."
ST. PAUL'S First Letter to the
Corinthians, Father MacKenzie
said, is attuned to people of this
century.
"In Corinth at least,” he said,
"St. Paul was a sort of ‘water-
front priest', and in that harbor
city of ill fame he created a
Christian community out of the
materials that came to hand.
"In the Corinthian Christian,
with their beatnik habits and
their unconventional standards,
...their lack of balance but also
their childlike repentance and
love, we have a New Testament
community with whom our stu
dents, at least, ought to feel a
certain kinship."
A Belgian priest told the con
vention (April 15) that the Church
must not hesitate to join with
well-intentioned movements for
unity outside of it.
Father Augustin P. Leonard,
O.P,, visiting professor of theo
logy at Notre Dame University,
said there is need today for a
"passage beyond modernity, a
new synthesis between a world
which has become adult and a
Church which appears too much
linked to obsolete traditions of
the past."
"If the world Is striving to
ward unity," tho Dominican
priest said, "the Church must
strive towards more catholicity
or universality to be an answer
to the needs of the world."
"She must appear like a Church
without walls and without limits,"
he concluded.
Padre Pio, the 75-year-old Capuchin stigmatic who has
carried the marks of Christ’s Passion for more than 40
years, is still the main attraction at San Giovanni monas
tery, near Mt. Gargano on the Adriatic coast of Italy.
Thousands of pilgrims and curiosity-seekers flock daily to
the small monastery town to see the Capuchin monk offer
Mass or make their confession to him. At left, the famed
monk offers the Sacred Host during morning Mass. In
photo at upper right, he blesses the congregation during his
Mass which is a slow and deeply fervent ritual. Because of
the monk’s reknown, a multi-million dollar addition to the
hospital at San Giovanni is being built with funds donated
from all over the world. In photo at lower right, both the
old (right) and the new portions of the "House for the Re
lief of Suffering*’ can be seen. The new addition will have
600 beds, ten operating rooms, facilities for 100 student
nurses, and a medical convention and study center capable
of handling international meetings.
PACEM !N TERRIS
Fourteenth Peace Encyclical
Issued In Twentieth Century
Pacem in Terris is the 14th
encyclical of the 20th century
based on peace.
was grieved at continued
will among nations.
ill must be joined to prayer.
Court Rejects Suit
To i Locate 9 Heaven
SAN FRANCISCO (RNS)— A
Superior Court judge here has
thrown out a suit in which an
attorney sought to have the
Roman Catholic Church prove
the "physical location" of Hea
ven, Hell and Purgatory.
The case centered around an
attempt by attorney Vincent
Hallinan to break the will of
the Late David F. Supple, a
Catholic layman who left his
$175,000 estate to a number of
Catholic Institutions.
MR. HALLINAN claimed that
Mr. Supple made his will under
inducement by the Church "to
prepare his way to Heaven."
He charged that because "there
is no Heaven," the will was
made under false promises.
In handing down his ruling,
Judge Byron Arnold declared
that "a civil court does not
have the power to enter into
any inquiry for the purpose of
determining the right or justi
fication of any person to believe
the religious teaching of any
church or religious faith."
J Mr. Hallinan had attempted to
get the court to require Cat
holic Archbishop Joseph T. Me
Gucken of San Francisco to test
ify as to the exact location of
Heaven, Hell and Purgatory, but
his request was refused earl
ier by Judge Arnold.
THE attorney, who said he
would appeal the judge’s dis
missal, brought the suit on be
half of his 23-year-old son
Terrence who is claming the
estate as a grand nephew of
Mr. Supple.
Pope Benedict XV wrote
three. Pope Pius XI wrote one.
Pope Pius XII wrote nine. It is
the first for His Holiness Pope
John XXIII,
Pope Benedict XV's first en
cyclical (November 1, 1914) Ad
Beatissiml: (Appeal for Peace)
explained that world unrest was
due to lack of love, contempt
for authority, injustice and
greed.
IN QUOD lam Diu (On the
Future Peace Conference) is
sued on December 1, 1918,
shortly after the end of World
War I, the same Pope called on
Catholics to thank God that the
war was over and urged them
to pray for divine guidance for
the members of the Versailles
peace conference.
Two years later, Pope
Benedict wrote in Pacem, Dei
Munus Pulcherrimum (On
Peace and Christian Reconcil
iation) (May 23, 1920) that genu
ine forgiveness is a necessary
prelude to peace and that he
Pope Pius XI also appealed
for peace In his first encycli
cal (Dec. 23, 1922) Ubi Arcano
(On the Peace and Christ in
the Kingdom of Christ.) He
reviewed the conditions which
followed World War I—hatred
between nations, fear of the
future, class warfare, break
down of family life and spirit
ual disruption—and urged that
men restore God to public and
private life as the only source
of peace.
POPE Pius XII issued his
first peace encyclical on April
15, 1945. In Communium In-
terpretes Dolorum (To the Bis
hops of the world: appeal for
prayers for peace during May)
he said that conduct will change
if men have a change of heart
and that peace depends on just
ice and charity.
• In Optatissima Pax (Dec
ember 18, 194 7( (Prescribing
public prayers for social and
world peace) he said that in the
world crisis all must put com
mon welfare before private ad
vantage and that generous works
How to Put Sand on The Gears of Progress
...Without Really Trying
Here are twenty-five of the best ways to preserve the status quo. Whether applied
to the question of minority rights, papal encyclicals, the lay apostolate, overseas work
or creative thinking, a judicious combination of these bromides is sure to dampen
enthusiasm and isolate the virlis of involvement.
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The Dialectical
Oo ahead, but don't spend any
money.
Go ahead, but I warned you.
Do whatever you want but don't get
caught.
Sounds good but it won't work.
The Prudential
We don't want to hurt anybody'
feelings.
It might be controversial.
We don't want to shock people.
Don't make a wave.
The “Hand-Wringer”
I have my own reputation to think
of.
People have to take me the way
I am.
It hurts me more than it does you.
Don't get personal.
The Philosop 1 teal
It's all a question of somantics.
There are two sides to every story.
It depends on tho way you look ot It.
Don't confuse me with facts.
The Traditional
We can't do these things overnight.
If we leave It alone, It'll go away.
We don't want to set a precedent.
It's never been done before.
Sometimes these problems solve
themselves.
The Authoritarian
You don't appreciate It now, but
someday you'll thunk me.
You're not old enough to
understand.
When I was your ago ...
SHUT UP and GIT OUT I
(REPRINTED FROM WORLD CAMPUS)
-
• In Auspicia Quaedam
(Public prayers during May for
world peace and solution of the
Palestine problem) (May 1,
1948) he said that peace was not
reigning although war had stop
ped in most lands.
• Pope Pius XII spoke out on
the Palestine question again
(October 24, 1948) in In Multi-
plicibus Curls (Prayers for
peace in Palestine) when he said
that peace must guarantee indi
vidual rights, ancestral cust
oms and fulfilment of reciprocal
duties.
• He called for public prayers
for peace again (July 19, 1950)
IN Summi Maeroris (Public
prayers for peace) and said that
people want peace but do not
use the right means: prayer,
penance, expiation and obser
vance of the Commandments.
Lions Duel
First Win
On Mound
BY MIKE MOORE
Bruce MacDowell pitched the
Lions to their first win of the
season, a 6-2 region baseball
victory over Chamblee. Mac
Dowell was backed up by a 10
hit attack and two lightning-
fast double plays.
Pitching himself out of a
jam in the first innin, Mac
Dowell yielded but two runs
and was never headed. The
Bulldogs loaded the bases in
the first with only one out.
MacDowell, however, got the
next hitter on a line drive
and threw to third for the double
play.
TOM Medland's single in the
second inning drove in Robert
Amass and David Sibert with
the first two Lion tallies. Amass
and Sibert had singled and dou
bled respectively.
Denny Bishop came home with
the tie-breaking run in the third
on Amass’4 sacrifice. The
Lions added insurance .runs in
the fifth and sixth innings to
clinch the victory. Their re-
c rd now stands at 1-2, while
cDowell’s personal chart is
>w 1-1.
Chamblee . . . 002 000 0-2 4 2
St. Plus .... 020 121 x-6 10 1
Edwards and F ream an; Mac
Dowell and Mangan.
• In Mlrabile Illud (Crusade
of prayer for peace) (Decem
ber 6, 1950) Pope Pius XII
called for a scared crusade
to oppose unrestrained struggle
among peoples.
O After the abortive Hungar
ian revolution of October 1956,
Pius XII Issued Luctuosisslmi
Eventus. (Urging prayers for a
peace based on justice for the
people of Eastern Europe,
particularly the Hungarians)
(October 28, 1956), in which
he condemned the shockingvio-
lation of civil rights and per
sonal liberty.
O In Laetamur Admodum
(Renewing prayers for peace
especially for the Middle East)
(November 1, 1956), he asked
for prayers for solution of the
Egypt-Israeli crisis.
# In Datis Nuperrime (La
menting the sorrowful events
in Hungary and condemning the
ruthless use of force) (Nove
mber 5, 1956), he condemned
the brutal attack on freedom
and urged the world to make
efforts toward a just peace.
Diocese
Sets Rule
CLEVELAND, Ohio (RNS) —
Auxiliary Bishop Clarence E.
Elwell, superintendent of sc
hools in the Roman Catholic
Cleveland diocese, issued rules
here for proms and "after grad
uation" parties of students in
diocesan high schools.
He pointed out that the major
responsibility of keeping the
rules rests with the students
themselves, but that parents and
the school shared some res
ponsibility. He said:
"IF THE moral level of this
country Is to be raised, it is
about time our Catholic youth
realize they must accept the
greatest part of the responsi
bility for raising it."
Here are the rules for the
Cleveland diocese:
Proms should end In time for
the building to be cleared by
midnight.
Unless specific permission
has been granted to stop in an
approved restaurant, students
must return directly to their
homes. To gain permission for
such a stop, parents must ask
the consent of principals . If
the school Is parish-mintain-
ed, permission must be re
ceived from the pastor.
WITH or without eating pri
vileges, girls must be in their
homes no later than 1 a.m.
and boys no later than 2 a.m.
"Home parties" should be
planned for students and their
friends on an evening other than
prom night.
If permission is granted for
students to stop at a restaurant,
parents are urged to see that
the students do not visit any
place serving liquor or featur
ing a floor show.
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