Wednesday, 30 September 2009

Journey to ordination - Formation Update 02




Last Sunday saw us get down to work with a proper study day following the gentle introduction at the Induction Day a few weeks ago. The structure for the Formation Days will now be Morning Prayer from the Liturgy of the Hours, Lecture, Discussion, Mass, Diocesan Hour, Lecture, Discussion, Solemn Vespers. We sing most of the liturgy, which I really like. And we get a couple of tea breaks and a nice lunch! During Mass we were formally welcomed into the Formation Community, which comprises of men across the three years, as well as priests and permanent deacons who make up the formation team. We promised to study to the best of our ability, to be active members of the Formation Community and pray the Liturgy of the Hours every day. We all seem to be bonding quite well and there are a few guys with a wicked sense of humour which suits me quite well! We had two lectures from Fr Ashley Beck, the Dean of Studies. His first lecture was on Creation and Proofs for the existence of God. How do we know that God exists? Heavy stuff! The second lecture was on Revelation, that is, how God has communicated with humanity, especially through Jesus his Son. When the day was over it was a mad dash to the car park as most of the men have a very long journey home of several hours. It’s o.k. for me as I’m only 40 minutes up the A3! My next three updates will explain in a bit more detail the importance of the three different aspects of a deacon’s ministry, that is Ministry of the Word, Ministry of the Altar and most importantly the Ministry of Charity. Permanent Deacons are servants, following the example of Jesus, and the Ministry of Charity is the most important aspect of their ordained ministry.

Wednesday, 23 September 2009

Pope to visit Britain in Jan 2010

Pope to visit Britain in Jan 2010 - from the BBC News website

Pope Benedict XVI is to visit the UK in January 2010, the BBC has learned.

It will be the first papal visit to Britain since 1982, when Pope John Paul II's six-day tour drew huge crowds.

Masses were held in cities including Cardiff, London, Liverpool, Manchester and Edinburgh and he also met the Queen and Archbishop of Canterbury.

The news of Pope Benedict's visit comes two years after the Roman Catholic Church in England and Wales sent him a formal invitation

Friday, 18 September 2009

Journey to ordination - Formation Update 01

My wife and I attended the Induction Day for the permanent diaconate formation programme, at St John’s Seminary, last Sunday. Candidates had come from the nine dioceses across the south of England, including Cardiff. The day began with prayer from the Liturgy of the Hours, also known as the Divine Office. Priests and deacons are obliged to say this prayer every day. It was made very clear that we should not wait until we are ordained, but start praying the Office now. Many lay people pray the Liturgy_of_the_Hours, which is a way of sanctifying particular times during the day, with the official prayer of the Church. We also attended Mass during the day and Vespers (Evening Prayer) at the end of the day. The wives of the candidates will sometimes have separate meetings from the men, to discuss amongst themselves the implications of having a husband who is destined to become an ordained minister of the Catholic Church, and support each other. The day was essentially an opportunity for the men to get to meet each other, meet men in the third year who are due for ordination in the summer of 2010, and meet deacons recently ordained as well as the formation team.
It was good to make a start on the programme after an application process that has taken about five months! I have had to fill in so many forms, undergo an enhanced criminal background check, a medical, attend a selection conference, lots of interviews, see Archbishop Vincent, and participate in a two and a half day residential psychological assessment – phew! I’m off to the next Formation Day at the end of this month and this will be a ‘get down to work’ event as it will involve lectures and assignments, that is, an essay! I’ll be letting you know what the title is so that if you have any ideas you can help me out!

Below is the text from the introductory lecture by Fr Ashley Beck, the Dean of Studies.

STUDYING FOR THE DIACONATE An Introduction to the Course of Studies
Fr Ashley Beck September 2009

The value of what you are doing

You have been accepted for formation for the diaconate by your bishop: this demonstrates the Church’s confidence in you. Therefore have confidence in yourself. Share what this means with your family and fellow parishioners. You are responding to a call from the Church to an increasingly important and valued form of public ministry in the life of the Roman Catholic community in this country, the rest of Europe, and all over the world. Others should not disparage or patronise you. Following this course of formation and your future ministry will demand some sacrifices from you and your families, but that is a sign of the worth of what you have freely chosen to do. As candidates you are called either to the vocation of marriage or the vocation to celibacy: develop your confidence in this as well. You are also now part of what is probably one of the largest clergy formation programmes in western Europe.

The Diaconate

People in the Church and elsewhere will tend to ask you ‘what does a deacon do?’ However, the authorities of the Church, in the guidance they give for the formation of deacons, give more stress to what a deacon is, to his sacramental character. The Basic Norms (7) say:

‘Insofar as it is a grade of holy orders, the diaconate imprints a character and communicates a specific sacramental grace. The diaconal character is the configurative and distinguishing sign indelibly impressed in the soul, which configures the one ordained to Christ, who made himself the deacon and servant of all.’

You will receive a permanent consecration through the sacrament of Holy Order; the emphasis is on how this draws you more closely to the person of Jesus Christ. Your ministry of service will be modelled on that of Our Lord:

‘The model “par excellence” is Christ the servant, who lived totally at the service of God, for the good of human beings. He recognised himself as the one announced in the servant of the first song of the Book of Isaiah (cf Lk 4: 18-19), he explicitly qualified his action as diakonia (cf Mt 20:28; Lk 22:27; Jn 13:1-17; Phil 2:2-7 1 Pet 2: 21-25) and he entrusted his disciples to do the same (cf Jn 13:34-35; Lk 12:37)’ (Basic Norms 11)

This diakonia is characterised by the deacon’s threefold ministry of the Word, the Eucharist and Charity. The three annual Study weekends in May on our course are focussed on these three themes.

The different elements of formation

The Church sees your formation in terms of four headings: spiritual, human, pastoral and doctrinal. You are joining this programme at an exciting time because we are in the process of implementing an expansion of what we are doing to ensure fuller coverage of all these headings. We are doing this by means of an extra residential weekend each year, in November, and by greater co-ordination of what will be done in your dioceses and, hopefully, your parishes. I won’t go into the first three areas in too much detail today as moist of this talk is about the fourth area, doctrinal formation, but I will say one or two things:

Spiritual formation

During your time of formation you have to develop a life of prayer based on a personal relationship with Christ: a deacon has to be a man of prayer. Some of this is focussed on the Divine Office about which there will be a talk this afternoon; there are also some notes available from me. You should have a spiritual director in place in the next few weeks and this is of the utmost importance; please discuss this with your director who will need to approve your choice or find you someone if you have not got anyone in mind. We will be doing further work on spiritual direction.

In our residential weekends we try to deepen our spiritual lives centred on the Eucharist by special periods of prayer. We also have an annual retreat in January, and there is a talk on Spiritual Theology and different prayer types. Remember that it is the mind of the Church that you should be developing a spiritual life proper to a deacon, focussed on Christ the Servant – this has a bearing on different traditions in the life of the Church and particular spiritual writers.

The community of formation is at heart a worshipping community and meeting together for the Sunday Mass and for Morning and Evening Prayer is central to what we do on formation days and residential weekends. We now join the students for the priesthood for Mass and Evening Prayer when they are here. This attempt to help you grow also needs to be rooted in your diocesan and parish communities.

Human formation

You will grow and change during your formation. Your bishops and directors at your selection have tried to look at your maturity as human beings, and this is also an element in the rigorous psychological assessments which you have undergone – your directors may decide to refer to the findings of these assessments confidentially with your during your formation (dioceses have differing policies). If you are married all these changes will have a bearing on your wives and children – how you are growing needs to be constantly reviewed with your directors.

If you are married you need to be aware of the effect your formation will have on your families. You need to be aware of the requirement that you undertake not to marry again after ordination should your wife die, and the implications of this. If you are celibate you need to reflect on the nature of this commitment. Work on these aspects of personal growth will be included in the new November weekends.

One way in which we grow as human beings is by becoming more aware of our strengths and weaknesses. There are good professional tools available for doing this and from this term we are providing, through the Gallup organisation, psychometric ‘Strengthfinder’ appraisals, involving individual sessions with analysts. First year students will be covered in the spring.

Pastoral formation

During your formation you need to build up skills to enable you to respond effectively to people’s pastoral needs in line with the Church’s vision for the permanent diaconate. The primary focus of our pastoral formation is on the development of your ability to preach – at Sunday Mass on a regular basis, and at other acts of worship which you will be leading (baptisms, weddings, funerals, etc.) There are workshops at the May weekends each year. It is true to say that permanent deacons, perhaps unfairly, are in some cases evaluated by people more exclusively in terms of their preaching ability than priests.
Residential weekends also include work on developing listening skills and discussion of how you can enable the Church to respond effectively to people with particular needs, such as those who are disabled and refugees and asylum seekers in your communities. The issue of child protection is a big fact of life in the Catholic Church in this country and we also do some work on this.

Much of what the programme tries to cover has to be mirrored in your dioceses and parishes. We encourage dioceses to establish for each of you pastoral support groups in your parishes – people to meet you regularly during your formation and give you support. This will be particularly important as you try to develop preaching skills, but we hope it will be use in other areas as well – these groups will be distinct from your personal tutor and your spiritual director. Dioceses should also arrange regular meetings with your parish priests.

Doctrinal formation

We are required by the Church to give you a basic introduction to Christian theology to enable you to teach the faith and preach the Word of God, and lectures to this end take place on the monthly formation days. There are two lectures, and on the basis of one of them you are required to write an essay to be handed in the following month. There are group discussions after each lecture.

The academic lectures are all intended to be ‘tailor-made’ to diaconal formation which is why we don’t normally allow exemptions if you have studied a topic elsewhere – many of us who lecture are working in parishes rather than academic institutions.

You come from varying educational backgrounds and some of you will find it easier than others to return to study; but you have been accepted for formation because others have judged that you have the aptitude to follow the course. There is a limit to what can be covered in the time available, and in many ways what we do is merely to introduce you to what is a lifelong task for all of us in ordained ministry to maintain our theological formation. It is my practice to recommend to bishops that very able students, when they are ordained, are encouraged to pursuer further studies.

Bear in mind that you should have confidence in the value and importance of theological study. In some places there is a poisonous anti-intellectualism and people are often suspicious of people who study theology: this is very un-Catholic and you need to be assertive about what you are doing. I am afraid you will even find this among clergy! As you are aware the doctrinal and some pastoral elements in the course now form for the first two years a Foundation degree in Pastoral Ministry awarded by St Mary’s University College, Twickenham, and when we meet there on 3 October I will go through the topics and modules in detail. In your third year on the programme we envisage that you will be able to use the modules studied then to convert this into a full BA honours degree.

The Ways in which the course is taught

Formation Days and lectures

There are two lectures on each Formation Day. After lunch on each day there is space for you to meet your diocesan directors and this should take precedence over other activities. There is also time for prayer and consulting the library. Most lecturers will give out notes at each lecture. Many wives come to Formation days and make a very important contribution: discussing what you have learnt can help in essay preparation. As I pointed out in my letter formation days take precedence over everything in your lives, including parish events and wedding anniversaries; if you are ill or likely to be prevented by a grave cause, you must seek permission from your director (not from me) who will decide whether you can be excused. This is a tightly organised course and you miss a lot if you cannot get here.

Study Weekends

These are usually in November and February of each year (unfortunately wives are not able to come) and one each year focusses on the themes of the Word, the Eucharist and Charity, corresponding to the tasks of teaching, sanctifying and ruling characteristic of all the ordained, referred to in the Basic Norms (9).

Coursework

At most formation days an essay will be set, on a topic covered that day. There will be notes about this circulated to you for forwarding to them; at least in your first few months, you should see your personal tutor twice (thereafter once or twice, as the two of you decide) to discuss the material you will have from the lecture and also (initially) a draft of your essay. If you do not know yet who your personal tutor is you must ask your director without delay to tell you who he is. If there is a problem, let me know. Tutors now receive a small annual honorarium.
The essay must be handed in at the next formation day. Lateness or failure to complete work will be noted as this has in the past proved to be an indicator of other underlying problems. A complete list of all the essays for the year set by me will be available at the September formation day. We try to return essays to you by the following formation day. Markers make comments on the essays and your marks, graded in detail according to the system in use at St Mary’s, are communicated to you. In addition for each module some assessment is made of powerpoint presentation exercises, and logbooks/portfolios.
In addition to material from the formation days here I sometimes also circulate other material which I hope will be of use to you..

The Diaconate nationally and worldwide

This programme is well represented in the national Conference of Diaconate Directors and Deacon Delegates, which is the official representative body for deacons and those with responsibility for deacons in relation to the Bishops Conference (I am presently the Chair). This meets once a year in Leeds. During your formation, hopefully in 2011, we will be having a special Diaconate Assembly and students are urged to come if they can. Members of the Formation team are also involved in international diaconate bodies, such as International Diaconate Study Centre. The North European circle of this now publishes twice yearly the only academic journal in English in the world on the diaconate, the New Diaconal Review, of which I am co-editor, and we expect you to subscribe to this (again, you can try and claim the sum back from your diocese). I am also a member of the Catholic Theological Association.

Keeping up to date

A characteristic of your engagement with this course of formation should be some effort to keep abreast of what is going on in the life of the Catholic Church throughout the world and in this country.
While this programme is demanding and makes sacrifices of you, most students also find it rewarding and enjoyable.

Wednesday, 9 September 2009

Deacons are a living sacramental sign of Christ the servant, today

Great article here by Joe Michalak who has served as a director of diaconate formation since 2000 in the US, and for the past five years has been on the board of directors for the National Association of Diaconate Directors in the US.


Whenever I tell people I work in the Office of Diaconate, the most common response is “The office of what? Can you spell that?”


And whenever I speak with Serra Clubs or at parishes about the vocation and role of the deacon, the most common question is: “What does a deacon do that a priest or lay person can’t do?”

The response is: That’s the wrong question — at least to begin with. As with any vocation (marriage, religious life, priesthood), we first need to answer “who we are” before we can describe “what we do.”

Christ the servant

In the words of Pope John Paul II and the church documents that govern diaconate formation, the deacon is ordained to “sacramentalize service” and to be an “icon of Christ the servant.” In other words, the deacon is a unique living sacramental sign in our midst of Christ the servant, the one who knows suffering and who pours himself out for the good of others.

Therefore, the deacon is ordained — he is no longer a layman — into Jesus’ own apostolic ministry. In theological terms, the deacon, like priest, stands “in persona Christi capitas” (in the person of Christ the head). But the deacon does so not as victim and priest, but as servant.

As one theologian has put it, a priest presides at the Liturgy of the Eucharist that gives rise to charity; the deacon, however, presides at the “liturgy of charity” that culminates in the mystery of the Eucharist.

(This, by the way, is why the church envisions a normal Mass to be one with a deacon, and it is why you will see after the consecration both deacon and priest holding up the host and the chalice. Here is a more robust sign, so to speak, of the dimensions of Jesus the head of the body, victim-priest and servant laying down his life in love.)

At the end of Mass, it is the deacon’s role to intone “The Mass is ended; go in peace,” and he then is ordained to do precisely that: to lead in extending the sacramental charity of the Eucharist — the apostolic ministry of Christ himself — into the world. The deacon often then goes forth as “icon” of Christ where a priest is unable to go, and the deacon is meant to do so as an “animator of the laity.”

Thus, like laity, the deacon by virtue of baptism shares in the three-fold office of Jesus (prophet, priest, and king). In addition, like bishop and priest, the deacon is ordained into a more specified three-fold participation in the ministry of Christ for the church and the world: ministry of the Word (the foundation), ministry of the Eucharist and liturgy (the heart) and ministry of charity and justice (the expression and fruit). What a deacon does flows from this three-fold ministry.

As a servant of God’s Word, the deacon daily contemplates that Word, especially in Scripture. The deacon always proclaims the Gospel at Mass (even if the pope presides); he evangelizes, teaches, instructs, preaches and leads others into “lectio divina.”

As servant of the Eucharist and the sacramental and liturgical life of the church, the deacon presides at baptisms, assists in the mystery of the Eucharist, is the normal bearer of the Eucharist to the sick and suffering, can witness marriages, bury the dead and preside at benediction.

The deacon commits himself to praying morning and evening prayer on behalf of the church and intercedes as Christ for all. As servant of charity and justice, embodying the eucharistic self-gift, the deacon takes the sacramental presence of the church into the most far-reaching corners of suffering: to the poor, the sick, the imprisoned, the elderly and dying, to immigrants, to the mentally ill, to the estranged — to wherever there is need and suffering.

What does a deacon do? The list is too long to describe fully. But whatever he does, he does as sacramentally ordained into the ministry of Christ the servant; he is icon of that servant, the living bearer of the Word and doer of the Father’s will. That is why the day after Christmas we celebrate the feast of Deacon Stephen, Proto-martyr, who was so perfectly conformed to the Incarnate Word that he died with Jesus’ own words on his lips. And he died as a good servant would: pointing toward and gazing upon his master, Jesus.

Archbishop’s man

Because he is ordained to be a sacrament of service, the deacon is an extension of the bishop’s apostolic ministry; at ordination, only the bishop lays hands on the new deacon, and the deacon promises obedience to the bishop. In the words of an early church father, the deacon is the “eyes, ears, hands” of the bishop, ordained first to serve the diocese and only then a specific parish.

This is why today deacons usually receive a dual assignment, one to assist in a parish setting and one to serve at the archdiocesan level or in some specific ministry such as in a prison, hospital or nursing home, with the police force, with the homeless, at the university or wherever he may be needed.

Often, a deacon can be more aware of specific needs than a priest can be, and the deacon can then bring those to the attention of the archbishop.
With the recent economic downturn, for instance, we have deacons who assist people in dealing with both the material and spiritual effects of foreclosures on their homes.

Although deacons usually serve under the supervision of a priest-pastor, the deacon is not a “mini-priest” — he is both “alongside” the priest as well as “under” the priest, and he often is active in secular settings where a priest is unable to go.


Bridge-builder

Here is an especially unique feature of the deacon: he is ordained clergy, but he lives a lay lifestyle. He then is supremely suited to be, and to bring, the sacramental presence of Christ and the church to the world. The majority of deacons (but not all) still work full time in secular employment; the majority of deacons (but not all) are married and have families.

They, therefore, are clergy who know and live with the same kinds of challenges as lay folks. But they are ordained and sent by the bishop to do so even as they live a life of contemplation and prayer and charity and sacramental presence. They then are especially able to activate and assist laity in carrying out their specific apostolic role in professional and poli?tical and civic life.

It is noteworthy that the roots of the modern diaconate began during World War II in the Dachau concentration camp as priest-prisoners began praying and thinking about what would be needed for the restoration of culture and civilization in Europe after the war.

Is it indeed possible that the Holy Spirit has ideally suited the deacon (and his wife and family and work) to help rebuild the culture of life and marriage and family that is so under attack today? Many deacons will tell you that some of their most significant ministry takes place at home or at work when not “on duty” but when those around them come to them for prayer or counsel or a listening ear, precisely because they know and see that this is a man of the church.

We recently had a deacon candidate leading others in praying the Liturgy of the Hours at his work simply because others — and not all Catholic — saw him praying and wanted to join in. When we look at the five strategic priorities for the church identified by the U.S. bishops this past year, we see the deacon ideally ready for the New Evangelization.

Pursuit of holiness

Finally, because the deacon usually lives as a lay person would, he can be a singular model of the holiness — the self-gift — to which we are all called. He comes from our midst. As he stands at the altar and raises the chalice of suffering, he is offering not only his own self to the Father, but he carries with him the suffering and needs of all those with whom he comes in contact. He knows the injustice; he bears the challenges. He makes the sacrifice of his life for the sake of all.

Who does this — and why?

We are grateful for the more than 200 men from all walks of life who have been ordained a deacon in this archdiocese since 1975. About 140 are still active in official ministry; all are servants in prayer and witness.

For those who are married, their wives and children (and even grandchildren) likewise make an offering of their lives — and certainly of their husbands and fathers.

Many of the wives generously serve in their own right.

And considering that diaconate discernment and formation is at least four years long, at 15 to 20 hours per week, and a deacon then does “official” ministry about 10 hours per week (and the majority often do much more) for no pay and, too often, for little thanks, the question naturally arises: Why do this?

The answer, all will tell you, is simple: love.

Why be a mother or father? Why be a priest? Love. Why be a disciple of Christ? Love — the generous “giving of self,” the dying to self for the good of the other.


Source here:

http://thecatholicspirit.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2453&Itemid=27

Saturday, 5 September 2009

They'll let anybody in.....

I have been accepted by His Grace, the Archbishop of Westminster, Vincent Nichols, for formation and eventual ordination in 2012, as a Permanent Deacon in the Archdiocese of Westminster. A permanent what!? Well, Permanent Deacons in the Catholic Church are, along with priests and bishops, members of the clergy. The Church considers service to be so essential to its mission, that it ordains some of its members to visibly represent service on behalf of the bishop. Permanent Deacons can proclaim the Gospel at mass; preach; assist the priest during mass; baptise; witness and bless marriages; instruct people in the faith, provide spiritual direction and counsel, officiate at funerals and burial services, and bless people and religious objects. They also do lots of other things – but it’s what their role points to, which is the most significant element. They wear vestments at services that look similar to the priest’s vestments and are formally referred to as ‘Deacon’ or ‘The Reverend’ as appropriate. Though if I make it to ordination, I’ll be quite happy with the usual, ‘oi, you!’ I keep my day job as this is an office in the Church – with no pay! A good starting point for a servant ;-)
I'll post occasional updates.
Brian

Hello!

Here it (I) is, another blog to congest the cyberspace! I'm not to sure what to write about, but I'm sure that someone will make me sufficiently irate sooner or later! Anyway, I trust you like my sufficiently pretentious blog name? I'll post when inspired.

It will also contain periodic updates on my formation for ordination as a Permanent Deacon.

Check me out again soon. This is still a work in progress so some bits may look a bit squiffy at the moment.

Two million hits, here I come ;-)

Brian