Catholic in Yanchep

Go out into the deep.


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30th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year A | Love of God and love of neighbour

Mother Teresa

Mother Teresa

Hello again!  Please click here to download the newsletter for this weekend.

Word format: Year A 30th Sunday

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Paralysed man walks again

Did you know the Catholic Church had a role in the revolutionary operation which allowed a paralysed man to walk again?  The paralysed man, Darek Fidyka from Poland, had had his spinal cord completely severed in a stabbing injury.  In 2012, Alan Mackay Sim, director of the Adult Stem Cell Research Centre at Griffith University extracted olfactory ensheathing cells, thought to be derived from stem cells, from a [different] patient’s nose and injected them into his spinal cord, establishing the safety of the procedure.

From The Australian:

Brisbane ear, nose and throat specialist Chris Perry, who extracted the stem cells in the trial, said Professor Mackay-Sim’s work with adult stem cells had been a vital element in the international collaboration. He said the Catholic Church, under George Pell, had donated $50,000 to the research to encourage alternatives to embryonic stem cells.  “Unlike embryonic stem cells, which can trigger tumours in some cases, adult stem cells grow in a controlled fashion after they are injected,” Dr Perry said.

As you know, embryonic stem cell research involves the destruction of tiny humans (known as blastocysts at this stage of life, but don’t be fooled – they’re still unique human individuals).  The Catholic Church has long spoken out against this exploitation of the helpless and sought to encourage research in adult stem cells instead.  Numerous advances have been made in the field of adult stem cell technologies, including the regrowing of a woman’s trachea and the growth of a retina for potential transplant.

In fact, the Church regularly offers $100,000 grants for adult stem cell research – Parkinson’s disease (2003), regeneration of skin after severe burns (2005), treatment of stroke victims (2007), regeneration of normal blood function for cancer sufferers (2009) and improving the success of tissue transplantation (2011).

Australian Christian Lobby Conference

Please pray for the Australian Christian Lobby which this week holds its annual conference in Canberra.  It has come under renewed attack over recent weeks.  When I read Lyle’s article, I was somewhat bemused that some individuals think the Church is full of hate!

Prayer:  Almighty God, we pray that through the work of the ACL, the truth about the beauty of genuine marriage – faithful and fruitful – will be upheld in Australia.  We pray that all politicians present will be able to see that

  • there is no biological complementarity in same-sex relationships
  • children have a right to live with their biological mother and father and not be treated as commodities for other people’s self-centred fulfilment

We pray, however, that all statements will be issued with due respect for people of differing views and uphold these statements from the Catechism:

  • The union of man and woman in marriage is a way of imitating in the flesh the Creator’s generosity and fecundity: “Therefore a man leaves his father and his mother and cleaves to his wife, and they become one flesh.”121 All human generations proceed from this union. (2335)
  • [Homosexual persons] must be accepted with respect, compassion, and sensitivity. Every sign of unjust discrimination in their regard should be avoided. These persons are called to fulfill God’s will in their lives and, if they are Christians, to unite to the sacrifice of the Lord’s Cross the difficulties they may encounter from their condition. (2358)
  • Homosexual persons are called to chastity. By the virtues of self-mastery that teach them inner freedom, at times by the support of disinterested friendship, by prayer and sacramental grace, they can and should gradually and resolutely approach Christian perfection. (2359)

 


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29th Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year A | On the right relationship between religion and politics

How are we to understand the right relationship between religion and politics?  This Sunday’s readings address that question.

Why are you testing me, you hypocrites?

Why are you testing me, you hypocrites?  Downloaded from http://www.lds.org 

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Listen to Fr Robert Barron’s explanation here: Click-here-to-listen

And go here for a Scripture Study on today’s readings by John Kincaid, Professor of Theology at John Paul the Great Catholic University.

Good democracies rely on understanding this relationship correctly.  As an example, look at the logical inconsistencies in Barack Obama’s views on abortion, compared to, say, his views on slavery:

 

 

 

 


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28th Sunday, Ordinary Time, Year A | God invites us to the Wedding Banquet: do we ignore, refuse or accept?

The Wedding Feast at Cana, Paolo Veronese (1563), Oil on Canvas, Louvre, Paris.

The Wedding Feast at Cana, Paolo Veronese (1563), Oil on Canvas, Louvre, Paris.

Friends, here are the readings/newsletter for this weekend.

Word format: Year A 28th Sunday

Pdf format: Year A 28th Sunday

We’re asked the question, “How do we respond to God’s invitation to join him?”  Do we trash the invitation (after all, we might mistake it for another bit of spam) or realise what it is and respond with joy?  Click on the image to listen to Fr Barron explain …Click-here-to-listen

For a full treatment of this week’s Scripture passages, read Dr John Bergsma’s exegesis.

And congratulations to Geoff and Juliet Witts on the birth of their first granddaughter, Ava!

Lots of food for thought.  Have a great weekend!