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PAGE 3—'The Georgia Bulletin, June 19,1980
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Pope Ordains
U.S. Deacons
To Ireland And Back
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VATICAN CITY (NC)
-- Pope John Paul II
prayed for more vocations
June 15 as he ordained 45
deacons, including two
from the United States, to
the priesthood in St.
Peter’s Basilica.
The ceremony was
attended by eight
cardinals, nearly 100
bishops and 10,000 lay
people.
“Your ordination is
accompanied by my
prayer, together with that
of the whole church, for
priestly vocations,” the
pope told the group of
new priests, which
included Father Robert
Dempsey of the Chicago
Archdiocese and Father
William Millea of
Bridgeport, Conn.
The two former
students of the North
American College in Rome
were ordained along with
15 Spaniards, nine Italians,
five Latin Americans, six
Africans and eight men
from other countries.
Pope John Paul
centered his homily on
words from Christ’s prayer
for the disciples (John 18,
18-19), ‘‘As you have sent
me into the world, so I
have sent them into the
world; I consecrate myself
for their sakes now, that
they may be consecrated
in truth.”
“Hear these words well
and engrave them deeply
in your hearts, because
they must constitute the
basis of your priestly
identity for all your life,”
the pope advised the new
priests.
Several hours earlier, in
his noon Angelas talk,
Pope John Paul had told a
crowd of about 10,000 in
St. Peter’s Square of his
hopes for an increase in
vocations to the
priesthood.
“The priestly vocation
is nothing but the
discovery of that eternal
love which draws and calls,
which can fill the heart of
the chosen one with
inexhaustible joy,
simultaneously opening it
to all those brothers and
sisters whom providence
will place on the road of
his pastoral ministry,” he
said.
“May they ever increase
in number those to whom
the eternal love is revealed
in their hearts as the
greatest love, those who
feel the call to priestly
service and follow it
without turning back,” the
pope added.
The ordinations came
in the middle of a busy
three days for Pope John
Paul, who had 17 private
audiences and two group
meetings June 14-16.
On June 14, he
addressed Italian Catholic
intellectuals about the
importance of a Christian
orientation in work
involving culture and
people.
Culture must help
people realize their
transcendence over things
and prevent destruction
“by a science and
technology serving the
greed and violence of
tyrannical powers, enemies
of man,” the pope said.
He was addressing
about 300 participants in
the Italian National
Assembly of the Ecclesial
Movement of Cultural
Commitment.
“May your movement
be one of the instruments
of presence and Christian
animation in the world of
culture and of
evangelization of those
with whom you work, for
their eternal salvation,”
Pope John Paul said.
Among the pope’s
many private visitors
during the three-day
period were Archbishop
Philip M. Hannan of New
Orleans, Cardinal Maurice
Roy of Quebec, Cardinal
Joseph-Marie Trinh Van
Can of Hanoi, Vietnam,
and five other Vietnamese
bishops.
On June 16, in an
address to 1,200 members
of the Italian Union of
Hairdressers for the
Worship of St. Martin de
Porres, Pope John Paul
emphasized that every
profession is a service to a
neighbor and witness to
the love of Christ.
BY THEA JARVIS
Father Dave
McGuinness was only the
fill-in at Saint Michael’s
Church in Gainesville last
summer. Father Ed
O’Connor, the pastor,
had taken off for New
Orleans to study some
theology, and Father
Dave, flying in from his
home parish in County
Waterford, Ireland,
graciously consented to
help out.
During his visit,
however, Father Dave
conceived the idea of an
exchange program
between the young
people of Saint Michael’s
and those at his own
Irish church.
With Father Ed’s
approval, things started
to move. Young people
on both sides of the
Atlantic corresponded
through the winter and
began making plans.
They worked hard to
raise money for the trip,
the Americans selling
Christmas fruitcakes, the
Irishers pushing a bed
from Waterford to
Dublin, collecting pre-set
donations for each mile
covered.
Father Dave’s
brainchild became a
reality this month when
ten students from Saint
Michael’s school of
religion boarded the
British Caledonian
inaugural flight on June
1st bound for Waterford,
Ireland.
For three weeks, the
young travelers have
stayed with families in
Father Dave’s parish,
seeing as much of the
Irish countryside as time
would allow.
They are due in this
week, and their Irish
friends will follow
shortly after, led by
Father Dave.
While in Gainesville,
the young folk from
County Waterford will
visit Six Flags, Lake
Lanier, Helen,
Dahlonega, Stone
Mountain, and more. A
parish fellowship is
planned at Saint
Michael’s to welcome
one and all.
According to Mrs. Jo
Ann Phillips, mother of
two Gainesville travelers
and one of the organizers
of the trip, “It’s going to
be an exciting time for
everyone in our parish
community!”
Broniec To Lead
Frank D. Broniec, a
member of ST. THOMAS
MORE PARISH in
DECATUR, was elected to
the position of
President-Elect of the
CHRISTIAN COUNCIL
OF METROPOLITAN
ATLANTA for the
1980-81 program year.
The Christian Council is
the largest ecumenical
group in the Atlanta metro
area. Also, it is one of the
oldest ecumenical groups
in the country dating back
to 1879.
Frank is a long-time
ecumenist and has been a
member of the Christian
Council since 1968. He
and his wife, Shirley, have
been activists in the
Christian Family
Movement and have served
on the National Board of
CFM. They reside in
Decatur with their four
children.
Frank is the owner of
Frank D. Broniec and
Associates, a business
consulting firm.
Frank D. Broniec
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SOME OF THE SAINT
Michael’s parishioners who have
spent the past three weeks in
Ireland include; back row, 1. to r.:
Megan Phillips, Lisa Carroll; front
row, 1. to r.: Kathleen Braff,
Jennifer Phillips, Michael Ginder,
and Theresa Gambon.
on arrival at Lisieux Basilica for the
final open-air Mass of his visit to
France.
GEORGIA BULLETIN
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SPECIAL BLESSING ~ Pope
John Paul II blesses a handicapped
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CARDINAL HUME
Encourages Ecumenism
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ST. LOUIS (NC) -
“You cannot really be
Roman Catholic today
without being
ecumenical,” Cardinal
Basil Hume of
Westminster, England, told
an interfaith gathering at
the St. Louis Priory' June
2. He said Pope John Paul
II is “very ecumenical.”
Since the Second
Vatican Council’s decree
on ecumenism, working
for reunion has become an
essential part of Roman
Catholic life, the English
Benedictine Cardinal said,
pointing out that the
positions adopted less than
20 years ago made
Catholics “latecomers” on
the ecumenical scene.
Cardinal Hume, a
member of the Vatican’s
Secretariat for Promoting
Christian Unity, has also
been appointed to the
Vatican’s new commission
to work toward reuniting
the Orthodox and Roman
Catholic churches.
The pope’s own
experience is primarily
with the Orthodox, the
cardinal said, and he is
controversial issues,” he
said. “I believe very firmly
that we shouldn’t just go
on pussyfooting around
until such time as we face
up to the big issues that
divide.” He said such
issues include the primacy
of Peter, Anglican holy
orders and intercommun
ion.
He subsequently said
that in the ecumenical
point of view, the
Anglican ordination of
women is “a distraction.”
The fact it has occurred at
this stage of ecumenical
dialogue is “a thousand
pities, and that’s whether
you agree with the
concept of ordaining
women or don’t agree.”
The church’s only
Benedictine cardinal,
Cardinal Hume was visiting
St. Louis on the second
stop of a month-long visit
to the United States to
participate in observances
marking the 1,500th
anniversary of the birth of
St. Benedict, founder of
Christian monasticism.
“very determined to get
our relationship with the
Orthodox right.” Cardinal
Hume Suggested the pope
will take “very definite
steps” to do so.
The British prelate said
he had no inside
information but that he
believes Pope John Paul II
is similarly inclined to
pursue unification with
the Church of England. “I
know quite definitely that
he is beginning to push,”
the cardinal said.
He predicted that with
publication sometime in
1981 of the joint works of
an 11- year-old
organization of Anglican
and Roman Catholic
bishops, the pope and the
Anglican archbishop of
Canterbury will form a
new commission which
may take steps tow'ard
reunification.
IIr> nr>! rl Ik In r. 1^4 _P
iic oaiu nitric iS a iui ui
truth to the complaint
that the ecumenical
movement is stagnating.
Initially, “there was a
tendency to push aside
slightly those things which
could be called
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SISTER KATHLEEN PURSER, principal of
the Immaculate Heart of Mary School,
congratulates Greg Lee and Dan Garrison. Greg
and Dan placed 2nd and 3rd respectively in the
Georgia State Science Fair.
GEORGIA BULLETIN
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