Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, AUGUST 29, 1963 GEORGIA BULLETIN PAGE 5
GEORGIA PINES
Saints in Black and White CARDINAL SPELLMAN
Poultry To PT Boats
ST. THOMAS BECKART
BY REV. R. DONALD KIERNAN
In a small town the coffee shop provides a
scene in which business men of the commu
nity gather in tn informal way to discuss every
thing from locat politics to what "the preacher"
talked about on list Sunday.
Now in every town there are coffee-clubs
which meet at various hours. One group gathers
about 7 in the miming and this is followed by
another group anc so on until near the dinner
hour. Hardly any group would sit past a half-
hour lest they incur the wrath of the next crowd
coming in.
THIS SEEMS to be an inte
gral part of community life in
the small town. It affords men
of different walks in life and
various social standings to get
together Beside promoting good
fellowship it aids in promoting
community and civic projects
and leads to a general under
standing of each others prob
lems. Possibly some of these
would never meet socially, but in a coffe.
all are equal.
men
club
I belong to such a club and it meets every
morning at 8 a.m. in the Dixie-Hunt Hotel here
in Gainesville. There are no officers, no dues,
no records- just good fellowhsip.
IN OUR club we have the president of one of
the local banks, a former director of the highway-
patrol, a lawyer, a city commissioner, a poultry
plant owner, the local army recruiter and my
self.
It is interesting to hear the commissioner
tlak about the city's problems and their possible
solution; the poultry plant owner has just returned
from a state department trip to Russia; the law
yer gives us hints on current legal battles now
going on; and the former highway director, now
in the roofing business, gives us his woes every
time it rains.
ONE OF the more interesting conversations,
though, come from a man who just "stopped
by" to have coffee one morning with us. He is
the personnel director at one of the local fac
tories. He had been in the PT boat next to Lt.
Kennedy that night when the future president
got hit. As a matter of fact, this man was the
one who reported Lt. Kennedy as missing in
action.
The story goes that eight PT boats left the base
that night for a raid on some Japanese shipping
barges. All did not go well with the raid and when
their position was discovered they were met
with a barrage of shells. The radio on his boat
and Lt. Kennedy’s boat was disabled and they were
unable to hear a recall order. Talking by mega
phone to each other, this man and Lt. Kennedy
decided to do a little more patrolling before
returning to the base some 80 miles away.
AFTER ABOUT two hours on patrol, Lt. Kennedy
pulled along side and, again talking through a
megaphone, said that he would take the lead
position for a while. This is just when the Japa
nese destroyer appeared "almost out of nowhere".
Our visitor said that the last he saw of Lt.
Kennedy's boat was as it was going down in
what appeared to be a sea of flames. Returning
home, he reported the ship as lost.
THE STORY is now famous of how the natives
appeared with a message written on the side of
a cocoanut and the subsequent rescue of the man
who was later to become our president.
Of course the story triggered many questions.
(The coffee club met longer than usual that morn
ing) Was he Aell liked? What did his men think
of him? Dozens of questions followed.
Finally at the end of the meeting, our visitor
turned to me and said, "Father, I'm a Republi
can, but make no bones about it. . .the guy is a
real hero".
QUESTION BOX
Prejudice-Ideas?
BY MONSIGNOR J. D. CONWAY
Q. THANKS AGAIN FOR COMING TO SPEAK
TO US ON RACIAL JUSTICE. A LOT OF COM
MENTS, SUCH AS; "I KNOW HE IS RIGHT BUT
HE HASN'T CHANGED MY MIND ONE BIT." A
GOOD CATHOLIC SAID, "EXCELLENT, GUESS
WE ALL HAD BETTER TAKE A LOOK AT OUR
OWN ATTITUDES." ANOTHER COMMENT WAS,
"I GOT MADDER BY THE MINUTE AS I HAVE
MY OWN IDEAS OF THE COLORED RACE IN
HOUSE RENTALS."
A. No roof is more impermeable to rain than
prejudice is to ideas.
***
Q. IT IS MY UNDERSTANDING THAT THE
CATHOLIC FAITH IS, IN EFFECT, AN EXTEN
SION OF JUDAISM. IF THIS IS TRUE, WOUL0
T BE WRONG FOR A JEWISH CONVERT TO
CONTINUE TO ATTACH SPECIAL SIGNIFICA-
CE TO THE JEWISH HIGH HOLIDAYS AS LONG
* HE OBSERVES THE PRACTICES AND TEA
CHINGS OF THE CATHOLIC FAITHS
aa- « _ A. It would probably be more
exact to say that the Catholic
jk faith is the successor to Juda
ism. The ancient convenantwas
made between God and the Jew-
7 H is h people as a preparation for
the coming of the Redeemer. It
.was a true and valid covenant as
long as it remained in effect. But
I in due time its purpose was ful
filled: the Redeemer came, and
througl Him God made a new covenant with his
people, -eplacing the old.
Certaiiy a Jewish convert to Catholicism
should Cutinue to hold in reverence the sac
red days traditional importance to his people;
and he my well enter into customs and cere
monies wi(ch commemorate these days in the
home or $ the civic and social life of the
community. He should not take active part In
official relig 0 us celebrations of these holydays-
in the Synag,gue, for instance. This would imp
ly that he h continuing unity with the Jewish
faith - a unit which he broke when he became
a Catholic.
»**
Q. HOW CAB I EXPLAIN TOA NON-CATH-
OLIC THE CHlRCH'S VIEW' ON CREMATION?
A. The ChurcPs prohibition of cremation is
based mainly on a constant Judaeo-Christian
tradition which dites back to the time of
Abraham, at least. Jews and Christians have
generally found cremation as less than reverent
treatment of the luman body. And Catholics
emphasize the dignity of the body which was
joined to the soul as an integral part of man,
which will rise again to resume that unity,
which was the temple o the Holy Spirit, sanc
tified by the sacraments, and offered frequently
to God in union with tte Body 0 f Christ in the
Mass.
Cremation is not contrary to any doctrine of
Catholic faith. Resurrection is no more difficult
after cremation than after the decay which
follows burial. The burning of human body is not
Wrong in itself, and would be tolerated by the
Church in times of war, ep.demics, etc.
The Church s traditional opposition to cre
ation became more forceful in the middle ages,
and again in the 19th century, when those who ad-
v °cated it often showed a spirit hostile to reli
gion. She became adamant on the subject in the
face of opposition.
For centuries the Church’s ceremonies; the
funeral Mass, the absolution and the committal
services have been keyed to burial. Some new sort
of ritual would have to be developed if crema
tion were accepted.
Q. IF A FORMER CATHOLIC, NOW A LUTH
ERAN, DIES, SHOULD WE GO TO THE SERVICES
IN THE LUTHERAN CHURCH? SOME OF US SAY,
"YES, HE NEEDS OUR PRAYERS NOW MORE
THAN EVER." OTHERS SAY, "THIS DOES NOT
INCLUDE ACTUAL ATTENDANCE AT THE SER
VICES, REGARDLESS OF WHETHER HE IS A RE
LATIVE OR NOT."
A. Much depends on the circumstances. If
this man became a Lutheran in good faith, then
there should be no scandal involved in your
attending the funeral. And many good reasons
may urge your attendance, especially if he was
a relative or a close friend.
If this man’s defection from the Catholic
Church was a recent and notorious thing, then
the answer would probably be different; since
many people might think you were giving formal
approval to what he had done.
We must keep in mind that people are extre
mely sensitive when a loved one dies or
is buried. If we slight the family on such occ
asion we may cause deep hurt, which may turn
into resentment against the Church. Charity should
inspired us and prudence guide us on such
occasions; and it is hard to lay down firm rules
for either virtue.
Q. WHERE ARE SOULS BEFORE CONCEP
TION? ARE THEY CREATED ATTHE SAME TIME
AS THE BODY? MY HUSBAND WAS VEXED
BECAUSE I TOLD OUR VERY YOUND CHILDREN
THEY HAD BEEN WITH THE ANGELS WAITING
TO COME TO US. PERHAPS THAT WAS GOING
TOO FAR . . .
A. Since the time of St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic
thought about the soul has been generally uni
fied: Each soul is created individually by God
at the moment a human embryo is able to receive
it.
The first great Christian writer to speculate
deeply about die soul was of the same nature
as an angel; and that each soul had lived for
ages in heaven before it was imprisoned in a
human body. The spiritual soul was not happy
in its prison of flesh, but eagerly awaited death
which would liberate it.
Now we consider the soul as much a part of
man as his body: they are made for each other.
When they are separated in death the soul will be
incomplete, waiting eventual reunion with the risen
body.
Q. RECENTLY I RECEIVED A CHAIN LETTER
FROM A FRIEND ASKING ME TO SEND A POST
CARD TO THE FIRST ADDRESS ON A GIVEN
LIST OF FIVE PEOPLE. MY PAYMENT WILL BE
250 POSTCARDS IN LESS THAN TWO WEEKS.
MY MOTHER FORBADE MY TAKING PART IN
THE CHAIN,SAYINGTHATITWASAGAINSTOUR
RELIGION. I THEN INVESTIGATED A PARISH
PRIEST GAVE SOME HELP, SAYING THAT A
CHAIN LETTER CONTAINING A THREAT OR A
PRAYER CHAIN SHOULD NOT BE ANSWERED.
MY MOTHER WAS NOT SATISFIED. I AM WILL
ING TO ACCEPT YOUR ANSWER WHETHER IN
MY FAVOR OR NOT.
A. The parish priest has given you the answer:
chain prayers are bad - superstitious-especially
when there is threat of dire consequences if the
chain is broken. They should be torn up and drop
ped into the waste basket.
However, your postcard deal is only a harmless
fad - harmless if you can stand receiving 250
postcards all at once.
Urges Holy Name To Lead
Social Justice Struggle
ACROSS
65. Branch of Learning
26. He Was Killed By A
1. Crone
67. Hands on Hips
71. Blonde
28. Cycle
4. Half
74. Of Good Birth
29. Bar
8. Whim
77. Small Brook
31. Atmospheric; abbr.
32. "Anthony and Cleo-
patra”character
11. Cheat; Slang
78. Confess
14. Ever
79. Biscuit
15. Minced Oath
81. Vow
34. Saurel
16. Follower
84. Accomplish
35. Palpitate
17. Bullfight Cry
18. “Blue Eagle”
85. Vase
37. Holy
86. Armed Service
38. Deserves
19. Arrive
Organization
39. Scoff
20. Untried
89. A Medley
40. Steep Slope
21. Ear
88. Saint; female
41. Avid
22. Revolt
89. Railroads
42. Excuse
24. East
90. implore
44. All
26. Ken
91. Den
47. Din
27. Previous to to-day
-92. Decade
49. Site
30. Has Killed
33. Beach
DOWN
52. And Others; abbr. (Lat.)
54. Yemen. Arabia Capital
36. Bars
1. He Served As Chancel
57. World War II Area
40. Main
lor Under King ....
59. Southern Organization
43. Recess
2. Eagle Nest
62. New Year Drink
45. Wizard
3. Lawn ■„
64. Knight
46. Comb, form meaning
4. His Feast Day Is In
66. Pronoun
Like Calcium
68. Middle
48. Grub
5. The Whole Man
69. Goosefoot Herb
50. Prop
6. Mother
70. Ancient
51. Spry
6. Mother
71. He Was Forty-....
When He Became
53. People who Get Things
7. Date; Roman
Done
8. Year End Examinations
Bishop
55. Melody
9. Consumed
72. Amiss
56. Deduction
10; Moisture
73. Taverns
58. Fracture
11. He and the King Were
75. Meridian
60. Soviet Socialist
.... Companions
76. Myth
Republic
12. Viola
79. Little Fellow
61. He Became .... of
13. Cat Sound
80. Exercise
England
23. And So On-, abbr.
82. It Is
63. Jerks
25. Equal
83. Peppery
ANSWER TO LAST WEEK'S PUZZLE ON PAGE 7
BUFFALO, N.Y., (N.C.)—
Francis Cardinal Spellman
urged thousands of Holy Name
men meeting here to take on the
challenges of the times in the
spirit of optimism and courage
sparked by the ecumenical
council.
The Archbishop of New York
told them they have a respon
sibility in the work of Christian
unity and exhorted them to be
in the vanguard of the battle for
social and interracial justice.
THE CARDINAL addressed
more than 10,000 persons at a
Holy Hour and candlelight cere
mony held in War Memorial
Stadium (Aug. 23) as part of the
Holy Name Society convention.
He said "the Second Vatican
Council has already proved to be
an event of momentous conse
quence for the Church and for
the world" and "has caught
the imagination of men every
where."
"THE ULTIMATE goal of this
council is the reunion of all
Christians." he continued.
"Admittedly a reunited Christ
endom is to be realized not now
and all at once but gradually,
and fully only at some future
time. But the vision and the
dream has been reawakened
and desire and longing for un
ion is in the hearts of all."
Declaring that Christian unity
ARNOLD VIEWING
55 Days At Peking
BY JAMES W. ARNOLD
L'Osservatore Romano's favorite producer,
Samuel Bronston, works out of a $2 million
studio in Madrid where since 1959 he has
manufactured such big budget epics as "John
Paul Jones," King of Kings" and "El Cid."
Bronston’s films are not bad, but they are never
quite as good as they might be.
The curse holds for "55 Days at Peking,"
an original screen-play about the Boxer Rebel
lion, a bloody uprising against foreigners and
Christians in China in 1900. The locale did not
stop Bronston, who has brought about $30 million
into Spain in a kind of one-man Marshall Plan.
He duplicated the old walled
city on a giant 250-acre set,
imported 600 Chinese extras
from London and Marseilles,
and proceeded with a cast and
crew that likely had never been
closer to Peking than Catalina.
The result, ig 150 minutes
of wide-screen color action and
mayhem bears only some re
semblance to history and esta
blishes a new movie category, the Far Eastern
Western. But within these limits it is reason
ably interesting, comparable to robust adventure
films of the 1930’s like "Bengal Lancer" and
"Gunga Din."
THE STORY concerns the small group of for
eign soldiers, civilians and Chinese Christians
besieged in Peking's international compound for
55 days while an 11-nation military force bat
tled overland to their rescue. The obvious moral:
persons of many backgrounds and nationalities
hanging together to avoid annihilation. Everyone
is heroic but the Chinese (not much box-office
in Red China). Deeper causes, with vast po
tential for dramatic conflict, are handled casually.
At the end the troops march in smartly, bands
playing and flags waving; no mention is made
of the fact that they then looted the city and re-
taliatedsavagely on die Chinese.
THE VATICAN newspaper admires Bronstonfor
his self-proclaimed effort to produce "family"
pictures; he differs from Disney chiefly in his
yen for the historical spectacular, that is, for
burning down sets rather than warming hearts.
In describing Bronston as die producer whose
intentions and principles were "nearest our
point of view," the L’Osservatore writer must
have swallowed hard his memory of "King of
Kings'* a diaster which only true faith could
survive. Catholics may also have reason to
.quibble with "Peking":
1 - Despite the importance assigned to one
priest-character, the script (by Phillip Yordan
of "King of Kings") largely ignores crucial re
ligious overtones of the incident and the center-
stage role of the Church. The Chinese nation
alist attack was as much anti-Christian as anti-
foreign, and Peking's Catholic cathedral was a
center of the resistance.
2 - Although the priest is sympathetic and
well-acted (by Harry Andrews, the impressive
Peter of "King of Kings"), he spends most of
his time devising makeshift artillery weapons and
launching firebombs at the enemy. He is identi
fiable only by name and cassock, and by his
employment in the vicinity of the Catholic or
phanage.
3 - While there is little explicit sadism (one
sees no beheadings, but hears only the swoosh
ing blade and the thunk), life in the battle area
is cheap on both sides. The Chinese extras
seem more willing and expire five times more
frequently; in one sequence, shells blast them off
the walls in bunches and U.S. Marines eagerly
pour down flaming debris on fleeing stragglers.
4 - Actress Ava Gardner guarantees the film’s
sexual innocence with some of the finest non
acting since Zas Zsa Gabor was a starlet. She
plays a Russian baroness who has induced the
suicide of her husband by carrying on with a
Chinese general (only Britisher Leo Genn, who
doesn’t get within 20 feet of her on-camera).
The baroness is rehabilitated by tending a wound
ed soldier, and has a splendid death scene.
Doctor: Don’t you want to live? Baroness (with
an ironic smile): I have lived...
DESPITE the lack of ^exiand decolletage, "Pek
ing" does a more frightful disservice to love
by pretending it exists between the baroness and
the leather-tough Marine major (Charlton Heston).
It’s an electric thing that starts with a pickup
in a bar and ends with her in-nurse's-attire
kissing him farewell as he sets off on one of
several impossible missions. Silly, perhaps, but
hard to explain, when discussing the reality of
love with teenagers at CCD meetings.
In its favor, "Peking" observes that the Chinese
dowager empress (played in high classic tragedy
style by Flora Robson) is defended by an army
of eunuchs without pushing the point ( as Man-
kiewicz did in "Cleopatra"). A Chinese waif,
Lynne Sue Moon, is affecting as the orphan of
a Marine casualty, but one feels that director
Nicholas Ray ("King of Kings") wants tears and
throat-lumps so badly he is willing to grab the
audience by the collar and shake.
MOST satisfactory are the action scenes, in
which the shrieking armies charge in, through
and over Bronston’s massive sets, under the
baton of Ray and Andrew Marten ("The Longest
Day"). Superior editing and photography make it
dreadfully real, and several fantastic night ex
plosions and conflagrations are literally stunning.
But "Peking" is too profuselyHollywooded(or
Madrided). Heston’s heroics become so routine
that on the last mission he is forced to lug along
a dying man just to even the odds against the
Chinese army. One must believe that David Niven,
as a key British diplomat, helps lead a volunteer
mission through the sewers to blow up an ammuni
tion dump. Robert Helpmann (the great British
ballet star) is a traditional Fu Manchu villain -
haughty, tight smile, shifty eyes, choppy, high-
pitched voice.
As they say at the local amateur playhouse,
it may not be good, but by George, it's thea
trical.
CURRENT RECOMMENDED FILMS:
For everyone: The Miracle Worker, To Kill
a Mockingbird, Lawrence of Arabia, The Four
Days of Naples.
For connoisseurs: Sundays and Cybele, The L-
Shaped Room.
Better than most: The Longest Day, Mutiny on the
Bounty, Days of Wine and Roses, A Child Is
Waiting.
Kids may like; PT-109, List of Adrian Messenger,
The Lion.
is the work of the Church, he
added: "It is not for the Pope
alone to accomplish it, nor for
the Fathers of the council, nor
for the priests and nuns and
Brothers. It is for all the mem
bers of Christ's Church."
"IT IS in fact no exaggera
tion to say that ours is pree
minently the age of the layman
in the Church," he asserted.
"So much so that during the
council it was decided that we
must emphasize more clearly
the role of the layman. . .Let
no mistake linger in your minds,
ours is a time of renewal, a
time of rebirth. The last two
pontiffs have declared it and
those who have eyes to see
must see it all around them."
"Many in the world await the
message of Christ our Savi
our," Cardinal Spellman told
the laymen, "and you are char
ged to be His messengers.
Sanctify yourselves as Catholic
men and proclaim to die world
the holiness and thehappiness of
a Christian life, a Christian
Approves Charter
WASHINGTON (NC) — The
Senate has passed by voice vote
a bill to grant a Federal char
ter to the Catholic War Veterans
of the United States. The bill
goes to the House.
family life,"
URGING THE men to devote
themselves "enthusiasticallyto
the causes which are the chal
lenges of our times," the Car
dinal continued: "Do not be af
raid to enter the very frontlines
of the battle, whether the strug
gle is to save our sciety from
the clutches of communism, or
to obtain justice for the working
man, or to help our Negro bro
thers to achieve full citizenship
in our free society.*'
"These are the areas," the
Cardinal stressed, "Which be
long in a very special way
to our laymen, whose lives are
lived in the marketplaces of
the modern world and who, far
better thanpriest or Religious,
can carry on the struggle for
freedom and justice for all
men."
HE THEN urged the laymen
"to be imbued with a spirit
of courage and enthusiasm and
opimism, that spirit which
shone forth so nobly in the
last two supreme pontiffs and
which marks the beginning of the
reign of our new Holy Father.”
"Problems by the score con
front us," Cardinal Spellman
concluded, "but in the spirit of
the ecumenical council let us
at last confront our problems,
as men courageous and strong
with the strength which comes
from God."
God Love You
BY MOST REVEREND FULTON J. SHEEN
Sixteen of twenty-one civilizations which have
perished in the pages of history did not succumb
to attacks from without; they decayed from
within. Material prosperity may ravage both body
and soul by making the body grow quickly old
through excessive ease and comfort, and by making
the soul serve two masters.
Applying this to the Church in the United
States, do we not have too much while others
have too little? As Catholics
we are members of the Mysti
cal Body everywhere in die
world; the hunger of India is
our hunger; the infra-human de
gradation of the slums of Latin
America is our deadened spirit.
The sad fact is that wherever
there is economic prosperity
the rich get richer and wher
ever there are vast populations,
our soul-explosions, there is
growing poverty.
Catholics have a duty to aid the poor of the
world. To keep the Church spiritually healthy
we might well consider the merits of these sug
gestions:
1. When you make contributions to institutions
already having millions — to a hospital, a school,
a university, a parish hall, or for the construct
ion of an excessively expensive Church—-ask that
a share of that contribution be given to the Holy
Father and his Society for the Propagation of the
Faith. This may help to alleviate the hunger
which, in Asia, is more dangerous than the atomic
bomb.
2. When you buy a new car, new furniture, clothes
or records, or pay taxes to help build a hundred
million dollar Polaris submarine, should you not
think of giving to those in whom Christ relives His
poverty?
Regardless of how much we are giving, it is
still below what the Lord expects of us. It must
worry us to know that about one-fourth of Santi
ago's people live in hovels and tumble-down
shacks; in one slum there is no water, sewage
or electricity. We must begin retrenching, cutting
back, cutting down, diminishing our wants to be
worthy of the Lord who took upon Himself the
hunger, the thirst and the suffering of human
hearts.
Two-thirds of the world does not want to go
to heaven on an empty stomach, nor can we go
there on a full one day after day. Only a wounded
Christ won the world and only a wounded Church
can save it. May the Spirit inspire you to walk
worthy of the Faith to which you have been
called!
GOD LOVE YOU to A. P. for $200 "This is
in Thanksgiving for recovery from a coronary."
. . .to M. K. O. for $20 "I have been saving
my winnings from a Friday night card club."
. . .to R. L. Q. for $4 "The Good Lord gave
me this money to use for something worthwhile”
. . . to E. B. for $10 "I promised this to the
Missions for a favor received."
DARE TO DISCOVER YOURSELF! Learn if you
are a member of "The Church of the Poor"
or "The Poor Church" by reading our special
September-October issue of MISSION. If you
wish to be put on our mailing list for this bi
monthly magazine, Just ask us via: The Society
for the ^Propagation of the Faith, 366 Fifth Avenue,
NFEW York I, New York.
SHEEN COLUMN: Cut out this column, pin your
sacrifice to it and mail it to Most Rev. Fulton J.
Sheen, National Director of The Society for the
Propagation of the Faith 366 Fifth Avenue, New
York 1, N. Y. or your Diocesan Director.