Newspaper Page Text
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1963 GEORGIA BULLETIN PAGE 5
GEORGIA PINES
Weekend Pilgrimage
by REV. R. DONALD KIERNAN
GAINESVILLE—’It was a beautiful weekend in
this northeast Georgia town as the sun brought
the temperatures up to a soaring 85 degrees
and there was hardly, a cloud in the sky all week
end City people made the best of the weekend
by driving up to see the pretty foliage and
the breathtaking scenery of north Georgia’s moun
tains. The Elks were holding a convention here,
and the towns of Cleveland and Dahlonega were
engaged in tourist-attracting festivals. All in all
it was a weekend which defies description.
Or.e thing which I have seldom
done is to take a ride on Sun
day afternoon. Usually meet
ings, Baptisms or just plain
parlor-calls have prohibited
this since the first Sunday af
ter I was ordained. However,
last Sunday was the exception,
and I took my first Sunday af
ternoon pleasure drive.
I GUESS ONE thing which pro-
npted this was when I observed the out-of-
lunty cars in front of Saint Michael’s Church
c Sunday morning. I actually felt like a "visit-
11 priest” when I began to give the sermon and
ha dly recognized anyone in my own church. They
we s mostly Atlanta and Decatur people who de-
c 1C ^ 10 8 et an early start, and they came here
for *r',y Mass.
Ihe^cJe from here to Toccoa was enjoyable.
It couFfiave been better if there had not been
so mucxtraffic. Ihe Verona Fathers in Toccoa
have an jtdoor shrine in honor of the Blessed
Mother lcated on their property. Nestled among.
Georgia no trees the white marble statue is
set upon concrete block stand with a wall to
set off th shrine area. It is a most inspirat
ional sight. Incidentlly, this church in Toccoa
was built with money collected over the years
on Mother's Day.
CLAYTON, WITH its unusual design, has an
attraction all of its own. The windows of the
church, whkh are placed at the top of the wall
near the veiling, affords a view of the tree
tops. At this time of the year with such an array
of colors one can really see the handiwork of
the Creator. A parish in Philadelphia’s archdio
cese with an eye to the missions donated this
chapel to the diocese of Atlanta. The church has
a tremendous summer crowd in attendance. Pre
vious to its erection, people* had to drive all
the way to Gainesville *or . Toccoa in order to
hear Sunday Mass: distance of about forty miles
each way.
In Dahlonega one can see the effects of what
Georgia Mission Sunday has done for the arch
diocese. Here with funds collected for this pur
pose, the GlenMary Fathers purchased a church
and completely renovated the edifice. Mass is said
facing the poeple in this beautiful chapel. The
construction of a rectory is now in progress.
At Dahlonega I saw Father Gus showing people
from Marietta around the new rectory. The man
explained that he just wanted to see first hand
what the funds erf Georgia Mission Sunday were
being spent on. He was most pleased.
THEN BACK TO GAINESVILLE where Saint
Michael’s Church constructed of stone and covered
with ivy appealed to me the most. Naturally.
The ivy is now in the process of changing col
or, and without a doubt the church is the most
attractive building in Gainesville today.
If next Sunday promises to be as nice as last
Sunday, I recommend a ride U p through these
north Georgia hills. It is most relaxing and will
give you a wonderful start on the new week.
QUESTION BOX
Wiat About Penance?
BY Ms’SIGNOR J.D. CONWAY
Q. WOULD Yj PLEASE GIVE YOUR OPINION
ON A PROBLE and SEVERAL ACQUAINTA
NCES? THIS WHh HaS been BOTHERING ME
INVOLVES A FRANCE THAT A CONFESSOR
IMPOSES AFTEI^oNFESSION. QUITE OFTEN
THE PENANCE (»NSISTS OF SAYING A FAM
ILIAR PRAYER Fur or FIVE TIMES, FOR EX
AMPLE, FIVE HAimarys. NOW IF ISAYTHE
FIRST HAIL MAI W ITH SINCERITY AND
HEART-FELT DEqtiON, THERE DOESN'T
SEEM TO BE MUQ REASON FOR REPEAT-
fr C THF P FlRST R TlJ 8M ° RETft,ES ’ IMEANT
iJ\™ E ‘ 1K 1 ™:. MORE REPETITIONS
SEEM TO BE A CAr 0F THE FORMALISM
AND HYPER-JURIDK; M THAT VATICAN II
was called to all^jate.
penance; but Ido think he should ask his confessor
for a penance which will offer him opportunity
for more fervent prayer.
Another ideal Why not say one penitential Hail
Mary a day for five days? There is little danger
of formalism or of distracting repetition in that.
Q. RECENTLY IN ANSWERING A QUESTION
YOU CLAIMED THERE HAD BEEN NO NEGRO
POPES. REVEREND WINFRID HERBST, S. D.S.,
A NOTED WRITER, STATES THAT THERE HAVE
BEEN THREE NEGRO POPES; ST. VICTOR I
(189-* 199), ST. MELCHIADES (311-314) AND ST.
GEL'ASIUS (492-496). WILL YOU PLEASE CLEAR
THfe POINT WITH YOUR READERS MYSELF
INCLUDED?
,^ LD IT BE PERMsiBLE FOR A WEI
INSTRUCTED PENITENT jq PRAY A MC
MEANINGFUL PENANCLjjsj PLACE OF T
REPETITIOUS ONE?
A. In the answer to which you refer I stated
that at least three early Popes were from Africa.
I had in mind the same three named by Father
Herbst. But then I added, "there is no indicat
ion that any of them was colored.”
A. Your question present^ challenge to medi
tation and self-examination As a confessor I
know that the easiest penance,, g iV eisone which
requires no original thought or lypartandis sure
to be known by the penitent^,- Fathers and
Hail Marys are made to order.
It is a bit disturbing, howev. __ un l eS s long-
habit has dulled our sensitivity^. t0 read t h e
words of our Savior: "But in pra^g do not mul
tiply words, as the Gentiles do; 6r they think
that by saying a great deal, they wi^g heard. So
do not be like them for your Fathe knows what
you need before you ask Him."
It is highly probable that our rou ne dishing
out of five Our Fathers and ten Hail \ rys gives
encouragement to formalistic, n. c h a nistic
prayer. There is nothing essentially v ong with
the repetition of a prayer which we re.] v mean
as long as we do - it with interior dev t ’i 0n> so
that it is genuine conversation with Go jf'we
can repeat prayers without attention rea llv
focused on God, and with faith, love ar 5 i n _
ce rity in our hearts, then there is no form i li;m
or hint of supersitition in our repentition.
However, we all know that it is very diff. ult
to maintain close attention and devotion whenpr v _
ers art “ multiplied as a matter of form oi 0 f
legalistic conformity. Such prayer is defectiv
il not entirely devoid of value, and it may leq
us to attitudes which approach supersitition. i
our distractions are intentional we strip our re
peated prayers of all value and make them an
offense to God.
The Catholic Encyclopedia devotes well over a
page to Pope St. Victor I without a hint as to
his race, though it quotes the "Liber Pantifi-
calis" — Book of the Popes— a biographical
history of die Popes from St. Peter to the I5th
Century, which makes him a native of .Africa
and gives his father the name of Felix. St.
Victor is best known for his part in the Easter
controversy.
St. Melchiades gets nearly a page in the same
Encyclopedia, under an alternate spelling of his
name: Miltiades. It was while he was Pope that
the persecutions came to official end in the wes
tern part of the Empire. Still no mention of race.
St. Gelasius gets a page. There is some quest
ion whether he was African or Roman. Possibly
he was born at Rome of African parentage. He
is known in history for his strong stand against
Acacius, an ambitiodf Patriarch of Constan
tinople, author of the Acacian Schism.
In my earlier answer I gave reasons for believ
ing that most of the people designated as Af
ricans in those days were of the so-called white
race.
Q. THESE TWO PEOPLE WERE MARRIED,
BUT NOT BY A CATHOLIC PRIEST. THEY WERE
DIVORCED. COULD THIS WOMAN BE BAP
TIZED, THEN JOIN THE CATHOLIC-CHURCH-
AND - MARRY- A CATHOLIC? FOR SINS COM
MITTED BEFORE BAPTISM ARE ALL FORGOT
TEN.
I do not believe it is permissible for a penitent,
even a well instructed one, to commute his own
A. But husbands acquired before baptism are
no so easily forgotten—or brushed aside. Bet
ter talk it over with your parish priest.
J.ITURGICU, WEEK
Kingship Over All
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 4
TERDay. And the Second Lesson, the Gospel,
links our whole hope of God’s mercy and His
grace with that fraternal, social, cosmic dimen
sion we have d**cussed. "U is thus that my heaven-
H Father will deal with you, if brother does not
forgive brother with all his heart” (Gospel).
Every time \*e gather around the altar, it is
evident. Every time we read the Bible or hear
it proclaimed in common worship, it is evident.
But we grasp the message very slowly: that sal-
vation is a kingdom, a social order, a frater
nal order, indivisible from our relations with one
another.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31 MASS AS ON
TUESDAY. The "alien race" of the Aleluia is
no longer the Egyptians. It is those who, not
recon|iz:ng Christ's kingship, do not recognize
their neighbors, their brothers, those whose des
tinies are bound with their own in a social and
familial relationship to God.
4 \
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1 ALLSAINTS. The Beat
itudes we hear in today’s Gospel are the char
ter of Christ's kingdom and, therefore, the c harter
of true participation in the Mass.
The kingdom is a social order, the social
order, toward which all present social order is
moving. So its symbol in man’s present stage,
its sacrament, is the Mass—an ordering of hu
man society in faith and love through a sacrifi
cial meal.
Saints in Black and White
ST. JOAN OF ARC «2 i
ACROSS
1. Capture
4. Known as the
" of Oilcans"
8. Club
11. Wonder
14. Arabian sleeveless
cloak
15. Italian river
16. Woman’s name
17. Energy unit
18. Spigot
19. Gregory .....
20. Hot
21. Russian plane
22. New Zealand island
24. Musical instrument
26. American war
correspondent
27. Sea nymph
30. Indian leader
33. Scene of actual
fighting
36. Entrance
10. Well-known airline
43. Prophet
45. Scold
46. South African guns
48. The cream of the crop
50. Greek letter
51. Squatic animal
53. Escape
55. Expensive
56. Indian scholar
58. Invidious
60. Seniors
61. Charm
63. Dutch villages
65. Rainy day playroom
67.
71.
74.
77.
78.
79.
81.
84.
85.
86.
87.
88.
89.
She crowned the
Dauphin at
Dark horse
Sour substance
Sir Anthonv
Japanese admiral
Friend
She is called the
soldier
Period of time
Negative
Where the sun rises
in Paris
Brazilian weight
of the Co venant 42
90.
91.
92.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
23.
One who keeps
records
Also
Peruse
Cutting tool
DOWN
Rouge
Subside
One who yawns
Chart
Exist
Unit of measurement
African tribe
Manner of her death
Prefix meaning upward 7 3.
Abe Lincoln's son
She led the French
Lament
Margin
Army unit in
World War II
25. Doctor’s helper
26. Made a low
vibrating sound
28. Wrath
29. Alms
31. Stick used as a targe
32. Roe-filled
34. Famous river
35. Appendages
37. Ridges in cloth
38 of roses
39. Age
40. Figure of speech
41. Norse god
Sicilian volcano
Dazes
Indian
Redact
Brawl
Biblical tower
Exclamation
Anglo-Saxon letter
Venetian market place
Comprehend
Cubic centimeters
Beliefs
Christmas
Reptile
Metallic chemical
element
On top of
Small quantity
75 Stravinsky
76. Eat
79. Caress
80. Japanese National
Park
82. Radio corporalior
83. Boy
44.
47.
49.
52.
54.
57.
59.
62.
64.
66.
68.
69.
70.
71.
72.
ANSWER TO LAST WEEK’S PUZZLE ON PAGE 7
HEAVY SCHEDULE
Council May Need Further
Sessions To Complete Work
ROME (NC)—Some Fathers
of Vatican Council II would like
to see the 17 major documents
of the council reduced to just
four.
In their view, the existing
draft proposals, or schemata,
should be telescoped to these:
on the liturgy, which is vir
tually completed; ecumenism;
the presence of the Church in
the modern world; and on the
nature of the Church. The sche
ma on the nature of the Church
-—”De Ecclesia”—is the major
topic thus far discussed during
the council's second session.
REDUCTION TO a total of
four schemata would be a dras
tic revision of the agenda con
fronting the council Fathers
prior to the opening of the coun
cil a year ago. The 10 prepa
ratory commissions and two
preparatory secretariats had
sent to the bishops of the world
119 booklets detailing 67 sepa
rate projects.
die current session, which ends
on December 4.
However, since other draft
proposals, notably the Mario-
logical one, may be incorporat
ed into the schema on the Church
—and remaining chapters al
ready deal with the lay aposto-
late and the status of religious
orders—the adoption of the
whole ”De Ecclesia” schema
may be delayed until the next
session.
IT IS NOW thought here that
the next session will take place
in the spring of 1964.
If present plans materialize,
the draft proposal on ecume
nism, which is of great impor
tance for the Church’s rela
tions with other faiths, will be
next on the council’s agenda. It
will be taken up during the
present session only if suffi-
RACIAL RIGHTS
cient time remains after the
debate on the nature of the
Church.
IT APPEARS likely that the
controversial schema on Reve
lation will not come up again for
consideration, since it is felt
that the issues at stake under
this heading require further in
vestigation by theologians,
whose studies the council would
not want to restrict premature
ly.
There would then remain one
draft proposal only to be con
sidered after those on the
Church and on ecumenism,
namely the present 17th sche
ma, which is entitled "On the
Presence and Activity of the
Church in the Modern World.”
A committee under the chair
manship of Leo Cardinal Sue-
nens, Archbishop of Malines-
Brusseis, Belgium, is now stu
dying the topics.
Catholics Hit Bid
To Water Down Law
Whether or not the present
17 projects are reduced to four,
at least one if not two addi
tional sessions of the council
can now be viewed as a cer
tainty, according to competent
sources here.
THE DELAY IN adoption of
the second chapter of the lit
urgy schema has proved right
those who had warned of the
possibility of surprises. This
also applies to the draft pro
ject on the nature of the Church.
Its discussion, according to
these sources, will no doubt
take up at least the balance of
CHICAGO (RNS)—Adminis
tration requests for deletion
of some provisions from pend
ing civil rights legislation were
sharply criticized in a telegram
sent to President Kennedy by
Raymond M. H. Hilliard, chair
man of the National Catholic
Conference for Interracial Jus
tice.
The Attorney General had
requested trimming of some
additions made in subcommittee
which substantially strengthened
the original proposal. Chiefly at
issue was Title III, giving the
Justice Department the right to
sue to prote*. t Constitutional
rights.
ARNOLD VIEWING
V.I.P. Is Too Slick
BY JAMES W. ARNOLD
”The V. L P’s is too slick, and often comp
letely incredible, but it is a writer’s picture,
and one of the better ones since '"All About
Eve.” Its varied virtues and vices can be laid
to scenarist Terence Rattigan ("Separate Tab
les," "The Browning Version”), who here plays
clever and even profound variations on the com
plex relationships between love and money.
There is a central irony: the modern passion
for prestige that causes a large airline (BOAC)
to bestow special love-favors
on Very Important Persons
whose only qualifying attribute
is money. The practice is not
peculiar to BOAC, even among
airlines; in our society it is,
like anxiety, a universal trait.
DURING the movie the pos
session or pursuit of wealth
also (1) corrupts the 13-year-
old marriage of an industrial
magnate; (2) allows a dotty duchess to hang
onto her ancestral castle; (3) forces an abusurd
marriage between a film producer and a brain
less actress, and (4) encourages the blossoming
of love between a harrassed businessman and
his devoted Girl Friday.
The plots are more than slightly fake, and the
setting - a fogged-in London airport where the
characters, in varying degrees of desperation,
await a flight to New Yorks - reminds one of
the hundreds of similar movie dramas aboard
plane, ship, train or stagecoach. Transportation,
or the threat of it, brings out the soap in every
writer’s blood.
If so much high drama on a given day in one
V. L P. lounge strains belief, consider that in
three of the four situations, there are crucial
time deadlines. The magnate’s wife hoped to
elope before her spouse finds the "Dear John”
note; the film producer has to leave the country
by midnight or lose a million dollars to tax-
collectors; the businessman must reach New York
to cover a check already on its way to the bank.
The fog, of course, keeps everybody grounded.
WRITER Rattigan also furnishes an old-fashion
ed jealous husband, equipped with wild eyes,
loaded pistol and suicide note. In one scene,
the magnate donates the better part of a million
to a pleading girl he has never seen before;
in another, the producer and duchess just happen
to meet under a poster-portrait of the old girl's
castle. Net effect; the movieman rents the place
for a new film, thus unwittingly lifts the mort
gage from the homestead.
But the movie is rescued from its squeaking
mechanisms by superb characterizations, mostly
in the writing and often in the acting; a half-
dozen exciting and ingenious eyeball-to-eyeball
character confrontations, and loads of fresh,
mature dialog. If the whole is mediocre, the
parts are smashing.
A major obstacle for Rattigan and veteran
director Anthony Asquith (who has filmed nearly
all Rattigan's scripts) was the casting of Eliz
abeth Taylor and Richard Burton as the part
ners in the collapsing marriage. Although the
famous pair may be the key to box-o(fice glory,
their off-camera reputations are no help to their
believability here as a man and wife deeply shaken
by what material success has done to their mutual
need and love. As characters they must hold
intensely values that they have, according to en
thusiastic press documentation, disregarded.
LIZ’ ROLE demands chiefly beauty, in which
she is helped by color and a lush Givenchy
wardrobe. Burton has the onus of an unattrac
tive part which requires him to glower, snarl
and sulk with a wooden detachment that may con
ceal a secret longing for the dear dignified days
at the Old Vic. But others in the cast offer such
pleasantries as:
SUPRISE: Provided by veteran glamor boy Louis
Jourdan, who finds so many likeable subtleties
in the trite role of an aging gigolo that he may
well be embarrassed with an Oscar nomina
tion. Viewers will find themselves, astonishing
ly, not only liking him but rooting for him.
Ironically, as the paid lover for whom love has
come to mean all and money nothing, Jourdan is
the only character who ends up both loveless and
broke.
DELIGHT: As the duchess, longtime film-
stealer Margaret Rutherford, looking mo"> than
ever like a befuddled stork, conducts a visual
comedy circus of her own. Her hilarious por
trait include first-plane-trip nervousness, baggy
disarranged overcoat, ill-fitting hat which squats
on her head like an overturned soap tureen,
and a magnificently anonymous handbag. The
film’s best scene: Miss Rutheriord struggling
into her narrow plane seat, badgering the ste
wardess and coping ineffectually with a seat
belt.
FRESHNESS: Rod Taylor and Maggie Smith
bring a youthful glow to their troubless with the
rubber check that offsets the weary sophisti
cation of the stars. Australian Taylor is both
rugged and pitiable as a onetime laborer over-
his-head in the cruel world of high finance, and
has some of Rattigan’s best ironic lines, e.g.;
"A hundred years ago people were Important be
cause they were born that way. . .perhaps 25
years from now, they will be important because
they deserve to be."
Movie barons are clobbered satirically in the
comic dilemma of the producer and his prote
gee (Orson Welles and Elsa Martinelli). Welles
tells reporters he’s interested in art not pro
fit ("I use the camera as a surgeon uses his
scalpel"), then spends most of the movie in a
cold sweat to get his loot safely to Switzerland.
RATTIGAN’S point seems to be that wealth
is only good or bad depending on its use and its
personal cost, in terms of spirit. The film, re
freshingly, tries to deal with persons rather
than mere types. As actor Burton puts it: "A
man like me? There is no man like me - only
me. . . myself. . .this body. . .this mind. . .
this spirit."
CURRENT RECOMMENDED FILMS:
For everyone: Lawrence of Arabia, The Four
Days of Naples, The Great Escape.
For connoisseurs: 8 1/2, The L-Shaped Room.
Better than most: The Longest Day, Mutiny on
the Bounty, The Haunting, The V. L P.’s.
Kids may like; PT-109, List of Adrian Messen
ger.
Referring to Attorney Gene
ral Robert F. Kennedy’s pro
posals to the House Judiciary
Committee, Mr. Hilliard told
the President it is "incredible
that a member of your adminis
tration should do anything to we
aken prospective civil rights
legislation."
THE CHICAGO NCCIJ chair
man said the Attorney General’s
"request for weak legislation is
intolerable at this stage in our
American democracy. Americ
ans have a right to expect the
federal administration to take
the ultimate stand on protection
of the rights of all our citiz
ens over 100 years after the Gr
eat Emancipator freed our
country from slavery."
ATTORNEY GENERAL Ken
nedy said this provision would
give the government and him
self too much power and would
involve stich. jiopracial matters
as censorship and Church-State
relations.
In his telegram, Mr. Hilliard
declared that civil rights leg
islation, "including a strong
FEP (fair employment pract
ices provision), and across
-the-board public accom
modations title and broad in
junctive powers for the Attor
ney General, is essential if it-
is to have any real meaning to
the Negroes of the United St
ates, and if it is to be effec
tive at all in protecting our ri
ghts.”
God Love You
BY MOST REVEREND FULTON 1. SHttEN
ROME. . .A Bishop wears his purple on the outside for the Dene-
fit of the people. He can always wear a hair shirt on the inside for
the benefit of himself. As one sits in Council with 2,500 bishops
one has the feeling that many of them would be more comfortable
if they had on a hair shirt.
This morning, one was telling me of his
great anxiety when he sent three nuns into a
desert to care for 200,000 starving people.
One day they were journeying by Volkswa
gen to aid the sick in a distant place. At one
point they began to ford a river bed with
only a few inches of water in it. But a sud
den torrential ran produced a flood, and the
little car carrying the three of them was
swept down the river in the torrent. Pro
videntially, they were stopped by a tree which was growing in the
river bed. They climbed into the upper branches only to see the
auto disappear. Imagine the surprise of the natives the next morn
ing as they heard the cries of the good Sisters. And tms is tne way
the Gospel was first ^reached to these people. The bishop wanted
to know if we could get him another Volkswagen for the Sisters.
Another missionary bishop introduced to me one of his priests
whom he said was living in the "greenhell of the Amazon.” He had
only 10,000 people in an area of 35,000 square miles - and no
transportation. Most of his parishioners were Japanese. (Little
do we realize that thei-e are more Catholic Japanese in Brazil than
in Japan.) Five other bishoDs came in a body to our desk to beg
Mass stipends for their priests, whom they said had no other means
of livelihood.
And where do you suppose the Lord has put me for this second
session of the Council? In the front row, where 1 am so accessible
to our beloved poor missionaries. These good apostles have
something worse than a hair shirt; they have povertyl Please
help me help them. The Church is so blessed in such men I
GOD LOVE YOU to J. H. for $50 "Asking your prayers." ...
to L. A. L. for $1 "I can’t forget a sentence in the September
issue of MISSION: ‘To turn the pages of MISSION and make no sac
rifice for the Missions is to take your cup of water and turn your
back on Christ thirsting on the Cross.’ ” ...to Mrs. J. K. for >5
"In honor of St. Theresa for many prayers answered.*’
You carry the Blessed Mother’s image in your heart, but why not
show it by wearing her GOD LOVE YOU medal? The ten letters of
GOD LOVE YOU form a decade of the rosary as they encircle this
medal originated by Bishop Sheen to honor the Madonna of the
World. W'ith your request and a corresponding offering you may
order a GOD LOVE YOU medal in any one of the following styles;
$ 2 small sterling silver
$ 3 small 10k gold filled r
$ 5 large sterling silver
$10 large 10k gold filled
SHEE^i 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, N. Y. 10001, or your Diocesan Director.