Tag Archives: Activism

Post Christmas catchup #Catholic

After a Christmas blizzard that prevented our son and his girlfriend from travelling to our house, then pooped out, after an NFL weekend that identified the six NFC teams that will be playoff bound with seeding yet to be determined and an AFC with five 8-7 teams contending for two wildcard spots, after Christmas eve Senate passage of health care reform, after a failed attempt at terrorism over the Detroit skies, it’s Monday morning and time to return to the routine.

My novel publisher is busy designing a robust website to promote the novel, due for release in February, but I have to write the text that will appear on the various web pages.  That has been my task for the past several weeks, but I should finish today or tomorrow.  Yesterday, at a Christmas gathering of my siblings, 86 year old Dad, and numerous nieces and nephews, I received lots of kudos about the early novel reviews—tinged with hues of surprise.

I follow lots of blogs through my RSS reader, and this morning I sifted through the headlines of over 250 posts that had accumulated over the weekend.  It will take a few days and a few blogposts to sort it all out, but let me start the week by noting the passing of a great Catholic reformer.

Schillebeeckx in younger days I mentioned Edward Schillebeeckx in a recent blogpost about a Vatican II reformer whose path I had crossed, Godfrey Diekmann.  Here is a link to the press release from the Schillebeeckx foundation announcing the death of the 96 year old Catholic reformer; another to a Vox Nova blog post, which has an interesting string of comments, pro and con, that speak to the current retrenchment of Roman Catholicism to pre-Vatican II conservatism; and to the National Catholic Reporter, which contains a lengthy and well spoken obituary that concludes:

[T]hough he was keenly aware of the hierarchical church today and had no misapprehensions about the direction in which it seemed to be heading. This is what he said in 1990:

“My concern is that the further we move away in history from Vatican II, the more some people begin to interpret unity as uniformity. They seem to want to go back to the monolithic church which must form a bulwark on the one hand against communism and on the other hand against the Western liberal consumer society. I think that above all in the West, with its pluralist society such an ideal of a monolith church is out of date and runs into a blind alley. And there is the danger that in that case, people with that ideal before their eyes will begin to force the church in the direction of a ghetto church, a church of the little flock, the holy remnant. But though the church is not of this world, it is of men and women. Men and women who are believing subjects of the church.”

America, the National Catholic Weekly, also contains an excellent article that speaks of the “Dominican priest who advised the Dutch bishops at Vatican II and became a major figure in the Church’s efforts to implement the reforms of that Council in the decades that followed.”

In a related note, blogger Terence Weldon of the UK notes a movement in his country to “stand up for Vatican II”.  Indeed, that is precisely what US based Catholic reform movements such as Call to Action, Voice of the Faithful, and a host of others seek as well.  The next 5-10 years will be fascinating to follow progressive Catholics in opposition to an increasingly conservative, patriarchal, and hierarchal institutional church.

Call to Action Progressive #Catholic Conference wraps up

The three day annual Conference of Call to Action (CTA) in Milwaukee is over.  I was unable to attend as I had planned, but Thomas C Fox, editor of National Catholic Reporter, offered several sympathetic blog posts over the weekend, and I pass on his insights here.

Call to Action seeks to reclaim the spirit of Vatican II in the face of a church that has tilted strongly toward the right since those heady reform minded days of the early 60’s.  Fox’s first post speaks to the need of these progressives to come together to rekindle their energy but especially to be healed:

The folks who come here have been hurt, really hurt, in many ways by their church, a church that has turned on them as they have tried to live out its call faithfully, a clergy who have virtually banished them for their care and compassion. Some CTA types have literally been driven out of parishes, others forced out of ministries and careers. Hurt, really hurt. And they come here, recognizing it or not, in need of healing. And the CTA weekend provides this healing. CTA as healer. I like it. Think of it.

Call to Action has a new executive director, Jim Fitzgerald, and he offered his inaugural address, which Fox reprinted in toto.  Here is a portion:

“I don’t think I would be Catholic if it weren’t for Call To Action.” It is a comment I have heard so many times in my 12 years with CTA. While I was a college student at The College of Saint Rose in Albany, NY, I voiced my doubts about remaining Catholic to Sister Nancy Langhart, a Franciscan sister who was my campus minister. I told Nancy that I feel Catholic in my spirit, but I have such difficulty staying in the Church when the Vatican says other religions are deficient, that lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people are intrinsically disordered, and that the priestly women in my life are not suitable to be ordained or serve in official leadership because of their gender. Regardless of what the Vatican said, I knew in my heart and soul that it is not one’s sexual identity or gender that is disordered; it’s homophobia and sexism in the name of Jesus that’s disordered!

Nancy smiled compassionately as if she knew exactly what I was feeling, leaned over and asked, “Have you ever heard of Call To Action?” In 1997, Nancy drove me to Detroit and introduced me to the Call To Action conference experience and I was home! Tonight, I’m thrilled to say Nancy is here and once again we get to share together this wonderful gathering. Thank you Nancy for bringing me home.

The role of women in the church, including women’s ordination, is of prime importance to Call to Action.  Speakers and presenters at the Milwaukee conference included many Catholic feminists.  Fox blogged about a couple of them.

Akers (photo by David Hawlic)Sister of Charity Louise Akers filled in for scheduled keynoter Roy Bourgeois Friday evening because Bourgeois’ father took ill.  Fox reports that “Akers last August was told by Cincinnati Archbishop Daniel E. Pilarczyk to publicly disassociate herself from the issue of women’s ordination or lose her ability to continue making any presentations or teaching for credit in any archdiocesan-related institution.”

Akers remained defiant, and her address claimed that it was she, not Pilarczyk, who was following church teaching.

Fox also blogged about the Biblical reflections of Sister Dianne Bergant on Saturday.  Using the Biblical story of Ruth and Naomi, Bergant suggested we find the the ways God will bless us through the immigrant.

Finally, Fox blogged about Bob and Margaret McClory, founders and mainstays of Call to Action, and their recent visit with reform theologian Fr. Edward Schillebeeckx of Holland who is nearing his 95th birthday.

As the conference came to a close on Sunday, over 2,000 attendees unanimously approved a resolution of support for American nuns who are under pressure from the Vatican.  The resolution is reprinted below (from CTA’s press release):

Since January of 2009, the Vatican has investigated and sought to silence Catholic sisters in the United States. They have set a deadline of November 20th for the women religious’ communities to respond to its probing questionnaire. Now more than ever we must speak out against the few bishops who continue to wield the sword of division, rather than extend the hand of unity.

To our fellow Catholics in the United States and around the globe, women religious have taught us how to live the gospel and open our arms until they embraced all of God’s people. It is now our responsibility to put into action the lessons we have learned and ensure that our sisters in faith are not ripped from the church’s embrace,

To our courageous sisters, you who have been the bedrock of our church and country, know that the people you have faithfully served stand beside you as you have stood with us.

To those who are doing the investigation, your actions do not reflect the welcoming and embracing love that Jesus demonstrated in the gospels. We invite you to have a conversion of heart and join us in standing with the women religious.

In every generation God raises up prophets to point the way towards the gospel vision of inclusion. Women religious are these prophets. Today we stand not with those who cling to the gates of exclusion but with the prophets who open the gates and call us to live as one.

Call to Action Progressive #Catholic Conference opens today

Over 2,000 progressive Catholics are expected to gather today in Milwaukee for the opening of the annual Call to Action (CTA) conference.  The CTA slogan is “Catholics working together for Justice and Equality,”, and the conference theme is “Everyone at the Table: Rejoicing as People of God!” 

The day will be filled with arrivals, registrations, miscellaneous workshops and seminars, a hall full of exhibitors, and an opening liturgy this evening.  Today’s keynote address will be offered by Maryknoll priest Roy Bourgeois who has been ordered by the Vatican to recant for his unrelenting support of women’s ordination, but he has refused.  His address will be entitled, “A New Model of Being Church”.

The exclusion of women from the priesthood in the Catholic Church is a grave injustice against women and a grave injustice against the God who calls women to be priests. In his keynote address, Bourgeois will explore the roots of sexism in the Church’s history and how an all-male clergy has led to a crisis in our present-day Church. Since justice is an integral part of our faith, Bourgeois will reflect upon what each of us can do to reform our Church and create a new model of being Church.

Here are links to blogs that reference Call to Action:

YoungAdultCatholics – a blog of NextGen at Call To Action

Catholicism in the 21st Century

Local Catholic Reporter (St Louis)

Bridget Mary’s Blog

Bowed but not broken: the quest for marriage equality continues

I am not a gay person, but I am what is referred to as a “straight ally”.  Thus, while I can sympathize with and support LGBT causes, I cannot empathize.  I cannot feel the brutalizing affront to my essential human dignity that is all too often the gay experience.  Thus, I defer to the voices of others to name the feelings following election night victories and losses.  Popular blogger Andrew Sullivan offers his succinct response to the narrow defeat in Maine and the narrow victory in Washington:

But I do want to point out that, from the perspective of just a decade ago, to have an even split on this question in a voter referendum is a huge shift in the culture. In Maine, where the Catholic church did all it could to prevent gays from having civil rights in a very Catholic and rural state, gays do have equality but may now merely be denied the name. The process itself has helped educate and enlighten and deepen the debate about gay people in ways that never happened before the marriage issue came up.

I am heart-broken tonight by Maine, and I’d be lying if I said otherwise.

Somehow losing by this tiny margin is brutalizing. And because this is a vote on my dignity as a human being, it is hard not to take it personally or emotionally. But I also know that the history of civil rights movements has many steps backward as forward, and some of those reversals actually catalyze the convictions that lead to victories. A decade ago, the marriage issue was toxic. Now it divides evenly. Soon, it will win everywhere.

I know for many younger gays and lesbians, this process can seem bewildering and hurtful. But I’m old enough now to be able to look back and see the hill we have climbed in such a short amount of time, and the minds and hearts we have changed. Including our own.

Know hope.

The Johannine account of Jesus’ call to follow me haunts me this morning.  Why should we follow?  Come and see, Jesus says.  Come and see, repeat his followers, one to the next.  But I wonder what the world sees when the Mormons in California and the Catholics in Maine work so stridently against human rights. 

Vox Clamantis in Deserto.  A voice crying in the wilderness.  Against the shrillness of the powerful Vatican and much of American evangelicalism, the voice of progressive Christianity sometimes seem so still and so small.  Yet, You will see greater things than these, promises Jesus.  Forward we go.  Forward we must.

Election Day 2009: spotlight on Maine

In this off year, there are not a lot of elections of import across the country.  There are hotly contested governorships in New Jersey and Virginia, and an interesting Congressional race in upstate New York, but many eyes will be on the state of Maine as the latest battleground regarding marriage equality. 

Here’s the background according to the Associated Press:

Maine MoosePORTLAND, Maine — Bolstered by out-of-state money and volunteers, both sides jockeyed Monday to boost turnout for a Maine referendum that could give gay-rights activists in the U.S. their first victory at the ballot box on the deeply divisive issue of same-sex marriage.

The state’s voters will decide Tuesday whether to repeal a law that would allow gay marriage. The law was passed by the Legislature and signed by Democratic Gov. John Baldacci last May but has never taken effect.

The contest is considered too close to call, and both campaigns worked vigorously — with rallies, phone calls, e-mails and ads — to be sure their supporters cast votes in the off-year election.

If voters uphold the law, it will be the first time the electorate in any state has endorsed marital rights for same-sex couples, energizing activists nationwide and deflating a long-standing conservative argument that gay marriage lacks popular support.

Conversely, a repeal — in New England, the corner of the country most receptive to same-sex marriage — would be a jolting setback for the gay-rights movement and mark the first time voters overturned a gay-marriage law enacted by a legislature. When Californians voters rejected gay marriage a year ago, it was in response to a court ruling, not legislation.

Religious activists are on both sides of the issue.  Roman Catholic Bishop Richard J Malone of the Portland Diocese (which includes the entire state) has been particularly active according to the National Catholic Reporter and quoted in Talk to Action blog:

Besides spearheading a parish-based petition signature drive, assisted by local and national socially conservative groups, Malone also padded church bulletins with anti-gay marriage messages — on six consecutive Sundays. He required that pastors throughout the diocese preach on traditional marriage.

Malone has produced a DVD, in which he stars, explaining why marriage matters, and directed that it be shown in all parishes. (See Marriage: What the church teaches.)
Last month, Malone called for a second collection to be taken up during Sunday Masses, with proceeds going to Stand for Marriage, the organization leading the repeal effort.

The second collection netted $86,000. In total, the Portland diocese has given $550,000 to the effort to repeal the same-sex marriage legislation.

But many Catholics resist their bishop, including Governor John E. Baldacci who signed the legislation.  The Bangor Daily News reports that many Catholics joined four recent statewide  rallies sponsored by the Religious Coalition for the Freedom to Marry in Maine.

After Mass on Sunday morning, Ed Oechslie left St. John Catholic Church and walked alone to Hammond Street Congregational Church.

The Brewer man wore a sign made on his computer and pinned to the back of his jacket. It showed a cross in the foreground with a rainbow rising behind its base, arcing across the background. Above the cross were the words, “Maine Catholics for Marriage Equality.”

“I think it’s important for Catholics to speak up,” Oechslie said before the Bangor service began. “The bishop has taken a stance that, in my view, has nothing to do with the teachings of Jesus.”

The Talk to Action blog post quotes other progressive Catholics who oppose their Bishop’s overt politicking.  William H. Slavick of Portland, a retired college professor and long-time coordinator of the Pax Christi Maine chapter,

favors keeping the civil marriage law, saying that the church is wrong to try to impose a Catholic view of marriage on society.

Catholic attorney, Anne Underwood, in public testimony before the legislature, stated:

As a practicing Roman Catholic and attorney, I thank each of you for your daily work on behalf of our democratic form of government. A government based not on Halachah (Jewish), Shari’ a (Islamic), or Canon Law (Roman Catholic), but on Civil Law.

The Religious Coalition for the Freedom to marry includes a diverse group of religious leaders including Rabbi Darah Lerner of Congregational Beth El, Bangor’s Reform synagogue, who said her religion required her to speak out at the rally.

“I am participating because my tradition calls me to pursue equality and justice for all people,” she said. “Full equality under the law for gay men and lesbians requires the legal recognition of monogamous domestic gay and lesbian relationships. All loving couples should be included in the civil right and the responsibility of marriage.”

Pam’s House Blend blog has voting instructions and an open thread for comments throughout the day.

Voice of the Faithful: Progressive #Catholic Conference a success

This past weekend, the progressive Catholic group called Voice of the Faithful (VOTF) held its annual convention on Long Island.  Their slogan is “Keep the Faith, Change the Church.”  I reprint their press release below:

NEW ENERGY AT VOICE OF THE FAITHFUL CONFERENCE

October 31, 2009

Sr. Joan Chittister and Fr. Tom Reese inspire VOTF members at LI conference

Melville, NY – Over 500 members of Voice of the Faithful were encouraged to see the good within in the institution of the Catholic Church. It was the message given by Father Tom Reese, one of the distinguished speakers at this year’s event held at the Huntington Hilton on Long Island. He also asked members to avail themselves of the social justice opportunities within Church, to be mindful of the importance of prayer and scripture reading, and recognize the importance of being welcoming community within their own parish.

The day began with Sr. Joan Chittister offering a new insight into the nature of leadership within the Church. She emphasized that power and leadership are not synonyms and that people should lead they way the wish to follow. Sr. Chittister said, “real reform brings people together, does not pit one group against one another,” a message taken to heart by the VOTF members in attendance.

Priest of Integrity Awards were given to Fr. Joseph Fowler of Louisville, a tireless advocate for victims rights in Kentucky, and Fr. Donald Cozzens, a noted author and a long-time advisor to Voice of the Faithful. Both priests were greeted with a hearty reception.

Jason Berry, an author and investigative journalist, received the St. Catherine of Siena Distinguished Lay Person award for his work in bringing the sexual abuse scandal to light and his persistent quest for justice for survivors.

VOTF members were also asked by Margaret Smith of John Jay College, a dedicated researcher on the “Causes and Context Study,” for their help in solving the mystery around the abuse crisis: how could such a moral lapse not have been recognized at the time? Ms. Smith also reported that the dimming number of clergy abuse reports were a positive sign of change.

President Dan Bartley said to the members, “I am encouraged by your support. We have so much work to do, especially with new Voices in Action campaign. Your presence here is a testament to your hard work and dedication.”

VOTF is restructuring and expanding.  FY 2009 budget of $450,000 will be increased to $600,000 for 2010 and $700,000 for 2011.  It hopes to expand its membership by 30% to 45,000.  The organization plans to become more collegial, collaborative, and grass roots, emphasizing lay involvement, an expanded role for women, and actualization of the spirit of Vatican II.  Here is a web based slide show with voice that outlines their plans and goals of their “Voices in Action Campaign”.  If you don’t care to watch and listen to this fifteen minute presentation, the highlights include a five pronged plan that includes:

Meanwhile, another progressive Catholic group named Call to Action will hold its annual convention in Milwaukee next weekend.  Over 2,000 persons are expected to attend, and I plan to be one of them with live blogs from the convention floor.

Voice of the Faithful: Progressive Catholic Convention

I have blogged several times about the upcoming Call to Action (CTA) Conference in Milwaukee  beginning November 6 (click here to follow the thread).  However, I have been remiss in reporting the annual conference of Voice of the Faithful (VOTF) that will convene this weekend in Melville, New York.  Both CTA and VOTF are progressive Catholic organizations, but I am not sure how they differ or how they are alike.

Here is the agenda for the VOTF convention:

Schedule of Events

Friday evening, October 30th

7 pm-8:45 pm          Registration & cocktail hour

7:00 pm-8:45 pm    Presentations on Strategic Platform and the American Catholic Council 
(Come find out where you fit into the action plan that VOTF is unfolding by learning more about the five platforms: Local/Diocesan Action, Protect Children/Support Survivors, Universal Church Reform, Networking and Partnerships, and Spiritual and Communal Growth.  Get an overview of the proposals, ask questions, and sign up for involvement!  This new strategy has a place for every VOTF member to participate in meaningful activities that will help us “make our voices heard.”)

8:00 pm-8:30 pm &
8:45 pm-9:15 pm       Presentations on Vigil Strategies with LI-VOTF and SNAP

Saturday October 31st

8 am  Registration and Continental Breakfast

9 am  Opening Prayer 
Welcome to Long Island – Joan Hopkins- co-chair LIVOTF

9:15 am-9:45 am
President Dan Bartley’s  Report  On the State of VOTF”
“Ask the President” Q & A

9:45 am Introduction of distinguished guests and acknowledgments – Phil Megna

10 am  BREAK

10:15 am-11:15 am Sister Joan Chittister

11:15 am-12:15 pm  Discussions, Remarks, Solutions & questions for speaker
(Attendees will have time for discussion and reflection on Sister Joan’s remarks in light of VOTF’s Strategic Plan and the opportunities available for action based on her presentation.)

12:15 pm-12:30 pm President’s Special Awards for Contributions at the Local and Affiliate Levels  – Dan Bartley

12:30 pm-1:30 pm LUNCH

1:30 pm-2:00 pm Presentation of National VOTF awards-Priest of Integrity and St. Catherine of Siena awards

2:00 pm-2:30pm BREAK (browse & check out the books & merchandise at the tables)

2:30 pm-3:30 pm Rev. Thomas Reese

3:45 pm-4:30 pm Discussions, Remarks, Solutions & questions for speaker
(Attendees will have time for discussion and reflection on Father’s remarks in light of VOTF’s Strategic Plan and the opportunities available for action based on his presentation.)

Break- Preparation for Mass

5:00 pm Mass celebrated by Father Tom Reese (including singing and prayers)

#Catholic

Call to Action Convention: Day Three Agenda

Call to Action (CTA) is a well established organization of progressive Catholics that seeks to uphold and further the liberalizing spirit of Vatican II.  Their slogan is “Catholics Working Together for Justice and Equality.”  The organization holds annual conventions in Milwaukee, and the upcoming gathering begins on November 6, 2009.  Here is the link to the Day One Agenda, and here is the link to the Day Two Agenda.  Sunday, November 8th marks the conclusion of the three day event, and here is the Day Three Agenda.

Plenary Session in Ballroom: 8:45 AM

2009 Call To Action Leadership Award: SNAP Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

The board of Call To Action is honored to recognize Barbara Blaine, David Clohessy and SNAP with the 2009 Call To Action Leadership Award for giving voice to the survivors of clergy sexual abuse. SNAP’s work to demand accountability in church structures and among church personnel has helped nurture a culture where Catholics are better able to question Church leaders about the closed, patriarchal structures that put children at risk. SNAP has also opened a dialogue among parishioners to help them understand their own role in Blaine / Clohessyperpetuating destructive church structures. Beyond their work as public advocates for accountability, Barbara and David share a generosity of spirit that allows them to gently minister to survivors of abuse. Their determined pursuit of justice for survivors, their families, and the entire Church, has been a powerful model for every Catholic.

Barbara Blaine is founder and president of SNAP. Since 1988, Blaine has reached out to help survivors and expose wrongdoers. Previously, Blaine worked in Jamaica with the Sisters of Mercy, was co-chair of Call To Action’s Catholics for Peace, worked with homeless families at a Catholic Worker house, and then represented abused and neglected children in juvenile court. Blaine holds graduate degrees in Law and Social Work as well as a Masters of Divinity. David Clohessy has been national director of SNAP since 1991, setting up dozens of support groups and doing thousands of interviews (including Oprah, Sixty Minutes, the Phil Donahue Show, Good Morning America). He’s been a community organizer in poor neighborhoods, and done political and public relations consulting. He’s married and has two sons.

Keynote – DR. Clarissa Pinkola Estés “The Thunderous Gifts of the Holy Spirit and the Gentle Ones: Did You Think Creator was Kidding?”

The Old Believers are a wild lot, wild as in natural, following cycles of sowing and harvest down by the river, even in the strongest cross-winds of our times. When did we last protect and sow the wild seeds of the Holy Ghost? And when did we last carry in the harvest by boldly ‘living out loud’ the legacy we were granted at Christening and at Confirmation? Did we think Creator was not serious when we were given the profound gifts of the Holy Spirit then? Have we forgotten? Or been misled? Or become too shy? Or told that’s only for saints? We all were given the charisms of hands-on healing, given an unquenchable taste for Espirito Santo, welded so that we might stand bravely right in the center of the flame of the Inspiratus, blowing past the rote, and instead, speaking in ways that cleanse and re-root the weary mind back into the ever-glowing rhizome — the Igneus Christi. For us, the Holy Ghost is friendly, but never tame.

Dr. Clarissa Pinkola Estés, activist poet, psychoanalyst, cantadora (keeper of the old Pinkola Estesstories), Dr. Estés has practiced clinically as a post-trauma specialist since 1970. She served teachers and children after the massacre at Columbine High School and survivor families of the 9/11 tragedy. She is an Associate with the Sisters of Charity, Leavenworth, Kansas. Her teaching “spirit in healing” to young doctors at a Catholic hospital coincides with her board appointment at Maya Angelou Minority Health Foundation, Wake Forest University Medical School. A former welfare mother, she testifies before state and federal legislatures on issues of mercy. Of Mestizo-Mexican heritage, adopted by immigrant Hungarians as an older child, Dr. Estés is a visiting diversity lecturer at universities and a Founder of La Sociedad de Guadalupe for adult literacy. As a grandmother from the Rocky Mountains and a disciple of nature, Dr. Estés holds that the largest endangered species on earth is the human soul.

Closing Liturgy: 10:45 AM – 12:15 PM

Call to Action Convention: Day Two Agenda

The progressive Catholic group named Call to Action (CTA) will hold its 2009 Convention in Milwaukee beginning Friday, November 6.  Last week, I offered a blog post with the agenda for Day one.  Today, I highlight the agenda for Saturday the 7th of November, Day two.  If you are a liberal Catholic, this is the place to be.

Prayer Sessions: 7:45 AM – 8:30 AM

Debra Nell Brittenum Racism to Reconciliation: Praying the Peaceable Kindom to Now and Here

Debra Nell Brittenum of Memphis, TN, guides morning prayer rooted in the principles of Servant BrittenumLeadership. It includes silence, Scripture, memory and our own reflections. Brittenum and 40 Memphians of many faith traditions and racial/ethnic backgrounds have done a three-year study of racism in the context of the South and the Black Liberation Struggle that began there. For 20 years Debra practiced public interest law. She belongs to the Call To Action/USA board and the mission group of the School of Servant Leadership in Memphis. Her Biblical model for reconciliation is grounded in prayer, memory, study, community, social justice action and servant leadership principles. She facilitates retreats and preaches. She was Call To Action Conference homilist in 2005.

 
Carolyn Gantner Yoga for an Open Heart & Mind

Carolyn Gantner invites us to experience the transformative possibilities of yoga to more fully open our hearts and minds. This year’s CTA Conference calls upon us Gantnerto deeply explore the transformations needed in order to understand and embrace our differences. Yoga helps us do that. Through gentle poses in union with breath work, we create more space within ourselves to be more open to the world. No yoga experience is necessary, just an open heart. We may participate sitting in a chair or on the floor. Wear loose, comfortable clothing. Carolyn is a certified Kripalu yoga instructor and teaches in Madison, WI. She is also involved with teaching mindfulness and meditation in the prisons through a local Engaged Buddhism social justice initiative. And since 1994 Carolyn has been involved with solidarity projects in El Salvador where she has had the privilege of spending time in Madison’s sister city of Arcatao.

Johanna Hatch Women Mystics for Today

While we are separated by centuries and circumstance from medieval women mystics, the Hatchevents of their lives echo the struggles of women today. Angela of Foligno was a wife & mother, Margaret of Cortura struggled with anorexia, & Catherine of Geneva with depression. Yet all had ecstatic experiences of God’s love. Johanna Hatch is a graduate of the College of Saint Benedict and has studied spirituality at the graduate level at the Washington Theological Union. Her interests include women’s spirituality and hagiography. Johanna is active in Call to Action’s NextGen community and her local Faith Sharing Communion in Madison, WI.

 
Meshar / WojtanRoxanne Meshar and Katharine Wojtan Praying in Solidarity with Women in the Americas

 

Take this time to hear and reflect on the culture and circumstances of our sisters across the Americas. Hear readings related to their lives; reflect as a group on the values, culture and circumstances of women. Dialogue about the meaning it holds in our lives. What is our reaction? What is our action? Roxanne is an Adjunct Theology Professor at University of St. Thomas in St. Paul Minnesota, and board chair for Mary’s Pence, a nonprofit working with women of the Americas on economic sustainability and increasing their voice in their worlds. Join her and Katherine Wojtan, Executive Director of Mary’s Pence.

 

 

Ramerman / CallanSpiritus Christi Liturgy

Spiritus Christi Church members, including Rev. Mary Ramerman and Fr. Jim Callan, host a Eucharistic liturgy. Spiritus Christi Church, in Rochester, New York is an inclusive Catholic Parish known for its outreach to the poor, prison ministry, a mental health center, a recovery house and projects in Haiti and Chiapas, Mexico. The parish has taken a stand on ordaining women, gay unions, and welcoming everyone to the Eucharist. Rev. Mary Ramerman, a Catholic priest ordained in 2001, is the pastor of Spiritus Christi Church. Before priesthood, Ramerman spent 25 years in ministry and was called to the priesthood by her community. Rev. Jim Callan is the associate pastor of Spiritus Christi Church and has been a priest for 30 years. He has been a constant advocate for the poor. In 1998, Callan was suspended for including women in the liturgy, celebrating gay and lesbian unions, and welcoming everyone to communion. He is a well-known social justice speaker and the author of four books.

 
Lena Woltering Living Our Dream Without Forfeiting Our Catholic Identity

The Lay Synod Movement is designed to create an experience of Church where we live out and share our moral convictions for the betterment of humankind. WolteringIdeally, religion is supposed to provide a nurturing environment for that work to be done, but sometimes it becomes an oppressive stumbling block. When Jesus saw that Judaism was no longer an environment that nurtured love, he felt obliged to reform it by reforming its members. Folks who have become involved in local lay synods are recognizing their responsibility to re-vision their roles as Catholics. They are people who have been grounded in Catholic Social teachings and gospel values and recognize that Catholicism is far more than a membership in an organization; it is an identity that no one (not even the Pope) can revoke or strip away. Lena Woltering has been active in Church Reform and Social Justice work for many years. She served on the National Board of CTA for 11 years and was Coordinator of Fellowship of Southern Illinois Laity (FOSIL) from 1993-2003. Lena served on the State Board of the Illinois Death Penalty Moratorium Project, has worked in prison ministry and served on the board of Seeds of Hope – a ministry advocating for people with disabilities. She currently does local chapter organizing for CTA and travels the country helping folks organize local lay synods.

Morning Workshops: 9 AM – 10:30 AM

Imam Mohamed Abdul-Azeez The life of a Muslim in America: A Bittersweet Narrative

The presentation will cover information about Muslims in America, history, culture, tradition, political pains and advancements and contribution to American Abdul-Azeezsociety. Contrary to common belief, Muslims have been in America since the inception of the union and have had a tremendous impact on American culture. The presentation will cover issues such as Islamic practices in America, post 9-11 American Muslim community and the role of American Muslims in a global world. Imam Mohamed Abdul-Azeez is the religious leader of the SALAM Islamic Center in Sacramento CA. He was educated in Medicine, political science, sociology, Islamic history and Islamic theology and holds an MD from Ain Shams University, a BA from Ohio State University, and an MA from University of Chicago. Imam Azeez has been involved in Islamic activism and education for the past 10 years and is a passionate advocate of interfaith work. He dedicates much of his time educating the community about the true peaceful essence of the religion of Islam. In his capacity as the Imam of SALAM, he is a member of the Sacramento Interfaith Service Bureau, and participates in most inter-religious dialogue in the area.

Stephen Boehrer The Purple Culture And Completing a Revolution

Traces the historical development of the Episcopal culture as it exists today. Reveals the components of that culture and “why” the culture explains BoehrerEpiscopal behavior . . . not only in the clerical abuse scandal, but in the suppression of lay wisdom in the entire moral arena. Understanding this culture provides both the key to reform and the way to achieve it. Stephen Boehrer, STD, is a married priest, former college instructor, chancellor, businessman and author of four novels. His novel, “The Purple Culture,” is acclaimed by such recognized experts as Thomas Doyle, Richard Sipe, and Jason Berry for its skilled analysis of the “why” of the sexual abuse crisis and other episcopal behaviors.

Rachel Bundang Feminist Visionary Ethics for the Rest of Us

BundangRachel Bundang discusses what makes a good person and society, what we imagine for a new world and church, and how we get there. Bundang writes on feminist ethics and theology, Catholic moral theology, and Asian Pacific American religion and teaches at the College of St. Catherine in St. Paul, Minnesota. She also consults on race and religion, religious pluralism, and liturgy.

 

 

 Diana Hayes God’s Welcome Table: Coming Together As One Family

The Eucharist, once symbol of unity, has become a sign of God’s fractured Body today, a weapon to divide not unite. This presentation discusses our need to Hayescome together as family, offering the mass freely and frequently and with renewed meaning to all whom are Catholic. This means continuing to overcome the many “isms” that persist in our Church and communities, reaffirming our true and historical diversity. Diana L. Hayes is Professor of Systematic Theology at Georgetown University. She holds the Juris Doctor (Law), PhD (Religious Studies) and Doctor of Sacred Theology (STD) degrees and is the first African American woman to earn a Pontifical Doctorate in Theology. Hayes is the author/editor of 6 books, most recently Many Faces of the Church (with P. Phan) and over 70 articles and book chapters. She has received numerous awards including three honorary doctorates.

 

Orville H. Huntington Understanding Climate Change and Tribal Perspectives

In this presentation we will discuss four interrelated issues: the context and knowledge within stories—what academics call Traditional Ecological Knowledge; Huntingtonthe differences between tribes who share their knowledge; the difference between traditional knowledge and prophesy, and the kinds of products from research that are useful to tribes and academics; and lastly, we will examine how all of these issues present intellectual challenges of being a Native American and an academic. Orville Huntington was born in Huslia, Alaska and received a B.S. in Wildlife Biology from University of Alaska, Fairbanks. His primary work continues to be the preservation of Native American subsistence hunting, fishing, gathering and trapping rights, and subsistence opportunities, and the significant cultural events that surround those traditional beliefs. Mr. Huntington is committed to protecting the aboriginal rights of Native people to continue to live a subsistence way of life and preserve the cultural beliefs associated with that way of life. Mr. Huntington has participated on many professional panels and testified at several State House and Senate Hearings. He currently sits as Chair of the Interior Athabascan Tribal College Board of Trustees and on the Alaska Native Science Commission Board of Commissioners, and was selected for the Alaska Governors’ Subcabinet on Climate Change Working Groups.

 

Robert McClory A Theologian For THIS Season

Thirty years ago the Dominican Edward Schillebeeckx used history and theology to create a firm Vatican II foundation regarding eucharist, priesthood, McClorychurch and hierarchy that was so far advanced the Vatican blanched. Now his ideas don’t seem so radical. and many are blooming in the church. After time in Holland and a visit with Schillebeeckx, McClory wants to share the wisdom of this far-seeing giant. Robert McClory, a former board member of Call To Action, is a longtime writer for the National Catholic Reporter and author of four books dealing with Catholic history: “Turning Point, “Power and the Papacy,” “Faithful Dissenters” and “As It Was in the Beginning: The Coming Democratization of the Catholic Church.” He is a professor emeritus at the Medill School of Journalism, Northwestern University.

 

Pace e Bene Team Everyone at the Table: Creating the Vision

Butigan / Preston-PileThrough a dynamic, interactive process, this workshop will offer an opportunity for participants to visualize and clarify their hopes for a JustChurch. Part two of a four-part series. For Pace e Bene, nonviolence is more than a principle for effective protest – it is a way of life. For two decades Pace e Bene’s unique approach has been transforming lives and reaching people around the globe. Since its founding in 1989, over 25,000 people have taken 600 Pace e Bene workshops to gain tools for more healthy relationships and to create a new society. Pace e Bene has offices and associates in Oakland, Chicago, Las Vegas, New England, Washington, DC (Metro Area), Montreal, Australia, and Nigeria, and a growing number of partners and trainers in the US and around the world. Together they work with individuals, organizations, and movements to strengthen their efforts to end war, protect human rights, challenge injustice, and to meet today’s profound spiritual task: to build a more just and peaceful world.

 

 

 

Miriam Therese Winter Turning the Tables: Welcome to Quantum Reality

As our world becomes more and more chaotic and unpredictable, the quantum spirit of the Winterliving God invites us into a new and ever evolving understanding of continuity and community, revealing to us that we too have to change with the changing times. A quantum reality is already defining our lives. Miriam Therese Winter, a Medical Mission Sister, is professor of liturgy, worship, spirituality, and feminist studies at Hartford Seminary in Connecticut. She has produced 16 recordings of original songs and hymns and has published a number of books on biblical women, ritual, and spirituality, most recently, Paradoxology: Spirituality in a Quantum Universe (2009).

Keynote – Dianne Bergant: 11 AM – 12 PM
The Outsider Becomes an Insider: The New Center is on the Margin

Dianne Bergant, CSA is Professor of Biblical Studies at Catholic Theological Union in Chicago. She was President of the Catholic Biblical Association of America and Berganthas been an active member of the Chicago Catholic/Jewish Scholars Dialogue for the past twenty years. She is the Old Testament book reviewer of The Bible Today, having been a member of the editorial board for 25 years. She is now on the editorial board of Biblical Theology Bulletin, and Chicago Studies. She wrote the weekly column The Word for America magazine from 2002–2005. She is currently working in the areas of biblical interpretation and biblical theology, particularly issues of peace, ecology and feminism. There is a fundamental tension between the Bible’s ethnocentricity and its call for inclusivity. What does the Bible say about people on the margins? How might its religious message help us to address various forms of marginality? These are the kinds of questions Bergant will address in this plenary.

Lunch, Caucuses, Networking, Exhibits: 12 PM – 2 PM

Focus Sessions: 2 PM – 3 PM

Childs-Graham & ValeriKate Childs-Graham & Marissa Valeri Vatican’s Ban on Contraception: What Happened Then and How It Affects Us Now

Kate Childs Graham and Marissa Valeri explore the Vatican’s 40 year ban on contraception and the devastation it has left in its wake in this interactive workshop. In 1968, Humanae Vitae slammed the door on modern contraceptives and sexual health. Now, with the pope’s recent criticism of condom use as a means to prevent HIV/AIDS, the situation has grown dire. Marissa, Senior Associate for Domestic Programs at Catholics for Choice (CFC), coordinates CFC’s Condoms4Life campaign which encourages all people of faith to use condoms. Kate, Communications Associate, works on CFC’s publications, which includes the recent report on the Vatican ban on contraception, Truth & Consequence. Kate is also a member of CTA’s NextGeneration Leadership Team.

 

 

 

Tom Draney The House Church Meal / Liturgy: An Emmaus Experience

House Church – an exploration of the growing movement of Christians gathering in homes regularly for a lay-led liturgy based on the sharing of a Draneymeal modeled on the Last Supper. How this enhances the spirituality of individuals and of the parish community, plus minimizes the mentality of clericalism. Also, the reality of the priesthood of the faithful, and how Christ is present in this liturgy. Brother Thomas Draney, CFC is an “Irish Christian Brother,” he has been a teacher, administrator, co-founder and lobbyist for Catholic School Administrators in NY, regional rep for the Catholic League, founder and director of Christ House, a residence for political asylum cases in the South Bronx.. Most recently business manager for Los Hermanos in Fl., he now in retirement promotes house church and religious education in Naples.

FaithSharing Communities Young Adults: Living the Gospel

Do you want to meet other progressive young adult Catholics in your community? Want to deepen your faith and take action on church justice issues? Catholics in their 20s and 30s are invited to attend this workshop on how to begin and facilitate local FaithSharing Communions (FSC). FSCs are a collaborative program co-sponsored by Call To Action, FutureChurch and the Women’s Ordination Conference.

Fredal / BrownMarian Fredal & Myra Brown Exploring Racism Inside and Out

As Catholics, we know that we are all made in God’s image. Yet, racism affects us profoundly, no matter who we are. The presenters will examine how racism impacts us physically, intellectually, emotionally, and spiritually. They will offer possible next steps in the quest for racial justice. Marian Fredal has been active as a White anti-racist activist for 15 years. She has led support groups and taught classes for white people working to eliminate racism. She recently completed a PhD on the work to end racism in the Catholic Church, and is on the CTA Anti-Racism Team. Myra is a Parish Minister of Spiritus Christi Church in Rochester N.Y. For 17 years she has been leading work for racial justice within and outside the church. She founded SPARC, a Spiritus Christi group working for racial justice via advocacy, activism and training, and is on CTA’s Anti Racism Team.

 

 

 

J. Patrick Mahon The Nonviolence of Thomas Merton

Merton sought God and found solitude at Gethsemani Abbey. On a street corner in Louisville, Merton realized that he was not separate. He was one with Mahonall people. Embracing contemplative nonviolence, Merton became the conscience of the peace movement. His stances against war, racism, and nuclear weapons inform Christian witness today. J. Patrick Mahon, STB, PhD, served as a high school principal for 23 years before retiring. Now retired, he and his wife, Joan, are working for peace and justice. They have visited Ireland, Northern Ireland, and Israel /Palestine in recent years. Thomas Merton is Pat’s Anam Cara on contemplative nonviolence.

Fredrikka Joy Maxwell Triple Whammy: Surviving Being Black,Trans & Catholic 

Have you ever met a trans Catholic? Most people haven’t and those who have Maxwellmay not always know it. Curious? Then come listen to a woman of trans experience share the agony and the ecstasy and the journey of faith in surviving the triple whammy of being black, transgender, and Catholic. A lifelong Catholic, Ms. Maxwell attended her first CTA at Chicago in 2001. She has presented seminars from a black trans perspective in diverse venues as Atlanta’s Soouthern Comfort Conference, DignityUSA’s convention at Austin, Philadelphia’s IFGE and the United Methodist RMN Convo. A graduate of the University of Tennessee, she lives in Nashville.

Richard Renshaw Recent Trends in Liberation Theology

Biblical interpretations have shaped Western attitudes toward Nature and the Earth. That thinking has played an important role in the contemporary Renshawdevastation of the planet. Liberation theologians in Latin American have begun addressing these issues, as well as taking up the question of inter-religious dialogue with indigenous and Afro-American traditions. Richard Renshaw spent 11 years in Peru; published Dealing with Diversity (2009); translated Along the Many Paths of God (2008); served at the Canadian Religious Conference and at Development and Peace (the Canadian international development agency). He is a member of the Holy Cross International Justice and Peace Office.

Sharon Shepela Raising Compassionate Children in the 21st Century

It is possible to raise compassionate and courageous children in a world filled with violence Shepelaand selfishness. Learn how to help children develop empathic reactions, internalize parental and community standards of right and wrong, and acquire habits of courage, skill, and experience in this interactive workshop filled with hope and takeaway materials. Sharon Toffey Shepela, PhD is a social psychologist, an award-winning teacher who leads retreats and workshops described by CTA attendees as “Extraordinary!” “Animated, practical presentation…”She is coauthor of Courageous Resistance: The Power of Ordinary People which NCR called “a slim, potent book.” See her website www.couragematters.info

Helen Thompson Let Your Spirituality Evolve

Helen Thompson maps the evolution of our worldviews. This mega-lens shapes one’s spirituality. As our consciousness shifts in this time of radical change, so Thompsonmust our images of the world, ourselves, God, Jesus, the Spirit and the church. Conventional thinking which believes the universe is static and dualistic universe is no longer convincing. An evolving interconnected universe requires us to transform old religious imagery and beliefs urging us to contribute creatively to the Great Work – the evolution of the Cosmos and of the Cosmic Christ. Helen Thompson, BVM, PhD combines insights from her graduate work at the University of Chicago and the GTU in Berkeley with her 18 years teaching at the Berkeley School of Applied Theology to explore how human consciousness creates worldviews and how they shift in an individual life story and in human history in The West. A native of San Francisco, she currently lives in Berkeley, CA.


Dinner: 5 PM – 7 PM
Advance reservations required, available when registering.

Evening Sessions: 7:30 PM – 8:30 PM

All Saints Gospel Choir The Milwaukee Choir Joins Us Again

All Saints ChoirAll Saints Catholic Church Gospel Choir is a multi-age, multicultural, and multitalented group of Christians who love to praise Jesus in song. We are rooted in prayer, worship, and love. We believe that when praises go up, the blessings come down.

 

 

Film: As We Forgive Discussion led by Rose Elizondo

Could you forgive a person who murdered your family? This is the question faced by the subjects of As We Forgive, a documentary about Rosaria and As We ForgiveChantal—two Rwandan women coming face-to-face with the men who slaughtered their families during the 1994 genocide. The subjects of As We Forgive speak for a nation still wracked by the grief of a genocide that killed one in eight Rwandans in 1994. Overwhelmed by an enormous backlog of court cases, the government has returned over 50,000 thousand genocide perpetrators back to the very communities they helped to dest. Without the hope of full justice, Rwanda has turned to a new solution: Reconciliation. But can it be done? Can survivors truly forgive the killers who destroyed their families? Can the government expect this from its people? And can the church, which failed at moral leadership during the genocide, fit into the process of reconciliation today? In As We Forgive, director Laura Waters Hinson and narrator Mia Farrow explore these topics through the lives of four neighbors once caught in opposite tides of a genocidal bloodbath, and their extraordinary journey from death to life through forgiveness. The film will be introduced by Rose Elizondo. Afterwards, she will lead a discussion. Rose is a member of the San Quentin Prison Restorative Justice Roundtable who believes forgiveness has the power to transform society.

Music: Emma’s Revolution

Dancing on the edge of folk and pop, there’s a revolution: emma’s revolution. Emma's Revolution“Bold, profound, moving, hilarious and transformative.” The sound of passion in “deftly-turned phrases,” songs imbued with hope, warmth and the “power and drive” to turn tears into laughter, cynicism into action. A motivating force in intimate concerts and mass demonstrations, infused with inspiration from the legacy of music for social change, Pat Humphries and Sandy O’s dynamic harmonies are multiplied by hundreds of thousands. Emma Goldman stood for everybody’s right to beautiful, radiant things. Join the revolution!

Film: Women of Faith

Women of FaithWomen of Faith examines the choice to lead a profoundly religious life. Through interviews with active and contemplative nuns, a former nun, and a woman who was ordained in the face of possible excommunication, a wide range of views on everything from women’s ordination to homosexuality to the very nature of faith are included. It features an honest, challenging discussion of what it means to be a Catholic, even if you disagree with the Church.

 

Gloria Ulterino & Women of the Well “Mama’s Mansion:” A Liturgical Parable in Story and Song

The reign of God is like a family reunion where everyone is welcomed home. Mama's MansionCome and meet Mama (the Wisdom Woman), Sarah, and the Woman with the Lost Coin. As they prepare for the family reunion, they welcome Eve, Mary of Magdala, the Madres of the Plaza de Mayo in Argentina, and Gabrielle Bossis… 20th century French actress and mystic. So, in the words of the title song, “Come on in… things are’bout to begin… we’ve been expecting you!” In January 1998, Gloria Ulterino first called together a group of women to tell the stories of women in Scripture and Tradition through liturgical drama, story, and song. They now have developed eight programs, bringing them to Western New York… Maryknoll, NY… Hartford, CT… Ottawa, Canada… and now Milwaukee.

Call to Action: a movement of progressive Catholics

Early in November, Call to Action (Catholics working together for Justice and Equality) will hold its National Conference in Milwaukee with three intensive days of seminars, speeches, workshops, music, children and teen programs, prayer, and networking amongst progressive Catholics.  This blog will provide regular posts prior to, during, and in followup to the Convention.

Call To Action is a Catholic movement working for equality and justice in the Church and society. An independent national organization of over 25,000 people and 53 local chapters, Call To Action believes that the Spirit of God is at work in the whole Church, not just in its appointed leaders. The entire Catholic Church has the obligation of responding to the needs of the world and taking initiative in programs of peace and justice. Call To Action promotes its vision of a progressive, engaged Catholicism through its acclaimed annual conferences, award-winning publications, extensive network of regional groups and joint programs with other Catholic renewal organizations.

The theme of the 2009 National Convention is “Everyone at the Table: Rejoicing as People of God.”  Signup and registration info is here.  Here is the agenda for day one, Friday November 6th:

Pre-Conference Seminars: 9 AM – 3 PM

Frank DeBernardo and the Next Generation Leadership Team
Just Love: A Workshop/Retreat on Right Relationship

DeBernardoWhether you are lesbian, heterosexual, gay, bisexual, the question of what defines a life-giving and holy sexual relationship between yourself and a significant other can be a difficult one to explore. This program, designed for couples and singles, provides an overview of contemporary insights from theology and participants’ personal experiences. All ages are welcome. CTA’s NextGeneration Leadership Team guides and supports the activities of the NextGen community, an inclusive group of reform-minded Catholics in their 20’s and 30’s. Francis DeBernardo is Executive Director of New Ways Ministry, a national Catholic ministry of justice and education for lesbian/gay Catholics and the wider church. For the past 15 years, he has presented programs on sexuality, theology, personal development and spirituality, and pastoral care in scores of Catholic dioceses.

Edwina Gateley: In God’s Womb

GateleyIn a world of noise, activity and pressure we will spend this day sinking into the silence and grace of God. Through contemplative prayer, poetry and music we will spend time alone with God as we seek to enter into our inner consciousness. Silence is requested. Edwina Gateley is a poet, speaker, author of thirteen books and a mom. She founded the international volunteer missionary Movement (VMM) and Genesis House – a program for women in recovery from prostitution. Edwina has worked as a lay woman in the church for over 40 years and is still hanging in there.

 

David Saavedra, Ann Cass & Jorge Mújica Murias
Immigration: The Need for Just & Comprehensive Legislative Reform

SaavedraSaavedra, Cass, and Mújica Murias will explore the myths of undocumented immigration in the US and the need for just and comprehensive immigration reform legislation. The panel will respond to the intensified enforcement and militarization of border communities, and will lead discussion on detention and deportation abuses and workplace raids and their effects on communities throughout the country, while offering recommendations for alternative policies and practices. Ann Williams Cass is Executive Director of Proyecto Azteca in San Juan, Texas, a self-help housing program for migrant workers and people who reside in colonias, She has been actively involved in immigration issues in South Texas since 1981 and is a member of the US-Mexico Border and ImmigrationTask Force. David Saavedra is a licensed clinical social worker and a marriage and family therapist. He is clinical director for Hope Family Health Center, a nonprofit that provides primary medical and mental health services to the poor in McAllen, Tx. The agency provides services to a high number of immigrants. Mr. Saavedra is also on the national board of CTA. Born and raised in Mexico, Mújica has lived in the United States since 1987. An awarded journalist, he currently publishes an opinion column printed in over 30 newspapers in Mexico and the United States. Since 2006, Mújica has been the most visible face in the movement to achieve comprehensive immigration reform and legalization for some 12 million undocumented immigrants in the country.

 

Chris Schenk, Barbara Guerin & Dianne Bergant
Women and the Word: Bridging the Gap

Schenk / Guerin / BergantThis pre-conference day is designed to ‘bridge the gap’ between the reality of women’s biblical leadership and the experience of most church goers today. Participants will engage in a process designed to identify issues contributing to the invisibility of women’s biblical leadership in preaching and proclamation. Together we will explore creative strategies for overcoming obstacles to gender-balanced proclamation of the Word in your parish or small faith community. Sr. Dianne Bergant, CSA will provide her outstanding expertise and creativity in discussing biblical women leaders, how it came to be that we don’t hear about them in Church, and what preachers can do about it. She is Professor of Old Testament Studies at Chicago’s Catholic Theological Union and the author of Preaching the New Lectionary: Cycles A, B, and C and People of the Covenant. Sr. Chris Schenk CSJ will explore practical ways of overcoming obstacles to gender balanced proclamation of the Word both at home and in Rome. Schenk has a Master’s degrees in midwifery and theology and is the Executive Director of FutureChurch. In 2007 and 2008 Schenk coordinated an international effort to “put women back in the biblical picture” at the Vatican’s Synod on the Word. Ms. Barbara Guerin will share learnings from her many years of experience as Chair of the Women’s Ministry committee at her parish in Irvine CA. Barbara is an Executive Consultant for the IBM Company, a mother, grandmother and an MA candidate in Religious Studies at Mount St. Mary’s College in Los Angeles.

 

 

Pace e Bene Team
Everyone at the Table: Awakening Soul Force for a JustChurch

Butigan / Preston-PileKen Preston Pile, Ken Butigan, and the Pace e Bene team will use the tools of spiritually-grounded nonviolent change to invite participants to create a vision, challenge the obstacles, and create a road map to a JustChurch. The process will be creative and interactive and use a variety of learning styles. Part one of a four-part series. For Pace e Bene, nonviolence is more than a principle for effective protest – it is a way of life. For two decades Pace e Bene’s unique approach has been transforming lives and reaching people around the globe. Since its founding in 1989, over 25,000 people have taken 600 Pace e Bene workshops to gain tools for more healthy relationships and to create a new society. Pace e Bene has offices and associates in Oakland, Chicago, Las Vegas, New England, Washington, DC (Metro Area), Montreal, Australia, and Nigeria, and a growing number of partners and trainers in the US and around the world. Together they work with individuals, organizations, and movements to strengthen their efforts to end war, protect human rights, challenge injustice, and to meet today’s profound spiritual task: to build a more just and peaceful world.

 
Lena Woltering
Living Our Dream Without Forfeiting Our Catholic Identity

WolteringThe Lay Synod Movement is designed to create an experience of Church where we live out and share our moral convictions for the betterment of humankind. Ideally, religion is supposed to provide a nurturing environment for that work to be done, but sometimes it becomes an oppressive stumbling block. When Jesus saw that Judaism was no longer an environment that nurtured love, he felt obliged to reform it by reforming its members. Folks who have become involved in local lay synods are recognizing their responsibility to re-vision their roles as Catholics. They are people who have been grounded in Catholic Social teachings and gospel values and recognize that Catholicism is far more than a membership in an organization; it is an identity that no one (not even the Pope) can revoke or strip away. Lena Woltering has been active in Church Reform and Social Justice work for many years. She served on the National Board of CTA for 11 years and was Coordinator of Fellowship of Southern Illinois Laity (FOSIL) from 1993-2003. Lena served on the State Board of the Illinois Death Penalty Moratorium Project, has worked in prison ministry and served on the board of Seeds of Hope – a ministry advocating for people with disabilities. She currently does local chapter organizing for CTA and travels the country helping folks organize local lay synods.

Exhibits, Networking, Caucuses: 3 PM – 7 PM
Repairers of the Breach choir performs in the Exhibit Hall at 3:30 PM.
Regional caucuses in Plenary Hall.

Dinner: 5 PM – 7 PM

Opening Liturgy & Welcome Address: 7 PM
Co-Presidents Patty Hawk and Paul Scarbrough welcome attendees to Call To Action’s 2009 National Conference.

Keynote – Roy Bourgeois: 7:30 PM
A New Model of Being Church

BourgeoisThe exclusion of women from the priesthood in the Catholic Church is a grave injustice against women and a grave injustice against the God who calls women to be priests. In his keynote address, Bourgeois will explore the roots of sexism in the Church’s history and how an all-male clergy has led to a crisis in our present-day Church. Since justice is an integral part of our faith, Bourgeois will reflect upon what each of us can do to reform our Church and create a new model of being Church. A graduate of the University of Louisiana, Roy Bourgeois received a Purple Heart in Vietnam, entered the Maryknoll Order and was ordained in 1972, and went on to work with the poor of Bolivia. Bourgeois became an outspoken critic of US foreign policy in Latin America and has spent four years in prison for his nonviolent protests against the School of the Americas. In 2008, the Vatican ordered Bourgeois to recant his support of the ordination of women or face excommunication. He responded to the Vatican saying that, in conscience, he cannot recant.