bishop peter cullinane – NZ Catholic Newspaper https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz The New Zealand National Catholic Newspaper Thu, 15 Feb 2018 20:30:15 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.8.5 The spiritual dimension of suicide prevention https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2017/12/02/spiritual-dimension-suicide-prevention/ https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2017/12/02/spiritual-dimension-suicide-prevention/#respond Fri, 01 Dec 2017 22:30:14 +0000 https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/?p=16460 A recent UNICEF report showed that New Zealand has the highest rate of adolescent suicide of any country. What a record to have! If we are living in the real world, we are going to want to know why. Much commentary on suicide rates and suicide prevention recites statistics and demographics, trying to identify the

The post The spiritual dimension of suicide prevention appeared first on NZ Catholic Newspaper.

]]>
A recent UNICEF report showed that New Zealand has the highest rate of adolescent suicide of any country. What a record to have! If we are living in the real world, we are going to want to know why.echo $variable;

The post The spiritual dimension of suicide prevention appeared first on NZ Catholic Newspaper.

]]>
https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2017/12/02/spiritual-dimension-suicide-prevention/feed/ 0
Hundreds wish Bishop Denis well as three milestones marked at Mass https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2017/10/18/hundreds-wish-bishop-denis-well-three-milestones-marked-mass/ https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2017/10/18/hundreds-wish-bishop-denis-well-three-milestones-marked-mass/#respond Tue, 17 Oct 2017 20:30:05 +0000 https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/?p=16176 by JOHN FONG The many years of service as a priest and as a bishop by Hamilton Bishop Emeritus Denis Browne were fittingly recognised at a packed Cathedral of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Hamilton on September 8. A Mass of Thanksgiving was celebrated on the feast of the Nativity of Mary to acknowledge and

The post Hundreds wish Bishop Denis well as three milestones marked at Mass appeared first on NZ Catholic Newspaper.

]]>
by JOHN FONG
The many years of service as a priest and as a bishop by Hamilton Bishop Emeritus Denis Browne were fittingly recognised at a packed Cathedral of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Hamilton on September 8.echo $variable;

The post Hundreds wish Bishop Denis well as three milestones marked at Mass appeared first on NZ Catholic Newspaper.

]]>
https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2017/10/18/hundreds-wish-bishop-denis-well-three-milestones-marked-mass/feed/ 0
Studies part of ‘tradition’ https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2017/05/02/studies-part-of-tradition/ https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2017/05/02/studies-part-of-tradition/#respond Mon, 01 May 2017 23:28:48 +0000 https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/?p=14913 Bishop Peter Cullinane has told students and staff at Good Shepherd College in Ponsonby that their academic year is part of what the Church calls “tradition”. In his homily at the opening Mass for the college’s academic year, on February 24, Bishop Cullinane quoted from the Second Vatican Council’s Dei Verbum [8] on tradition. The

The post Studies part of ‘tradition’ appeared first on NZ Catholic Newspaper.

]]>
Bishop Peter Cullinane has told students and staff at Good Shepherd College in Ponsonby that their academic year is part of what the Church calls “tradition”.echo $variable;

The post Studies part of ‘tradition’ appeared first on NZ Catholic Newspaper.

]]>
https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2017/05/02/studies-part-of-tradition/feed/ 0
Wars and rumours of war and peacemaking II https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2016/09/22/wars-rumours-war-peacemaking-ii-2/ https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2016/09/22/wars-rumours-war-peacemaking-ii-2/#respond Thu, 22 Sep 2016 02:00:29 +0000 https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/?p=13705 This is the second part of a two-part article written by Bishop Peter Cullinane titled: Wars and rumours of war and peacemaking. We cannot exclude from the title of “peace-makers” those who risk their own lives to defend others against lethal attack. Citizens have a right to be defended, and governments a corresponding duty to defend them, by force if

The post Wars and rumours of war and peacemaking II appeared first on NZ Catholic Newspaper.

]]>
This is the second part of a two-part article written by Bishop Peter Cullinane titled: Wars and rumours of war and peacemaking.

We cannot exclude from the title of “peace-makers” those who risk their own lives to defend others against lethal attack. Citizens have a right to be defended, and governments a corresponding duty to defend them, by force if necessary, as well as a right to call on other governments for help, if needed. This is not different in principle from what we expect of our police forces, which sometimes have to use force, and call for back-up.

To leave others exposed and defenseless when we are in a position to help cannot be justified by invoking “non-violence”. Members of peace movements rightly remind us of Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount and his teaching on turning the other cheek. His teaching is to be taken seriously, but not superficially; it is not intended to encourage new acts of violence. Nor does it excuse us from restraining perpetrators of violence if we can. We are not being anti-war by allowing others to wage war. Pope Paul VI, even as he warned against revolutionary uprising, admitted that this cannot be absolutely excluded if there is no other way of liberating people from long-standing tyranny and ongoing, deep injustice.

Nor does “non-violence” in the sense adopted by Ghandi, Te Whiti and Tohu, Martin Luther King and others fulfil our obligations in all situations. This is a noble philosophy and mechanism for promoting social and political change, but even where it makes use of passive resistance and civil disobedience, it simply does not apply, for example, when terrorists are attacking buses and trains in London, cafes and restaurants in Paris and Sydney, school children in Nigeria, holiday-makers in Libya, partygoers in a gay nightclub in Orlando, religious and ethnic minorities on a hill top surrounded by ISIS, etc.

The rights and duties relating to self-defence and defence of others are the basis for what has been unhelpfully nicknamed the “just war theory”. It seems strangely necessary to say that this “theory” is not intended to argue the case for war; it is intended to limit the circumstances in which force may be used even for legitimate defense! And it is not just a “theory”; when the Church identifies circumstances in which it would be morally wrong to use force, its teaching is to be taken seriously. It is sloppy thinking to say “modern wars have made the just war theory obsolete”. On the contrary, it is that “theory” — or “the strict conditions for legitimate defense by military force” as the Catechism of the Catholic Church more correctly calls it — that outlaws modern warfare in many circumstances.

Comparison was made above with policing. I would argue that the concept of war needs to be replaced by the concept of policing, which seems to offer a more
civilised way of thinking about enforcement. I think this is also implied in the teaching of the Second Vatican Council when it said that a nation’s right to use force in self-defence exists only so long as there is “no competent and sufficiently powerful authority at international level” to defend them (Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World 79). They too are peacemakers who work for a world order in which we can move beyond war to policing; beyond what is possible
now to what might become possible yet. The temptation is to feel overwhelmed by the size of the task. But every small step in the right direction gradually shifts
horizons, and in this way opens up new possibilities. It starts with where we put ourselves. Pope Paul VI was right to say: “There can be no new world unless there
are first of all new persons”.

Archbishop Tutu was also right to link it with forgiveness:

“When I talk of forgiveness I mean the belief that you can come out the other side a better person; a better person than the one being consumed by anger and hatred. Remaining in that state locks you in a state of victimhood making you almost dependent on the perpetrator. If you can find it in yourself to forgive then you
are no longer chained to the perpetrator. You can move on, and you can even help the perpetrator to become a better person too.”

Whatever makes for better persons makes for peace.

Does respect for gradualness risk being used as an excuse for doing too little, and acquiescing in how things are, instead of how they should be? The trouble
is — asking too much too soon can produce the same result. This is the tension being played out in differences between Pope Francis and his critics. His critics insist
on repeating and emphasising the full ideal; they fear that not to do so is to compromise doctrine and moral standards.

They have little to say to those who don’t reach the full ideal, other than that they are guilty. Pope Francis starts instead from human experience, which is the
experience of weakness, struggle, failure and limited success; it’s about a journey in which every step in the right direction is good, and getting there gradually is
better than feeling overwhelmed and not getting there at all.

Peacemaking is like that; doing what you can, where you can, when you can, and believing that it all counts.

Bishop Peter Cullinane is Bishop emeritus of Palmerston North.

 

echo $variable;

The post Wars and rumours of war and peacemaking II appeared first on NZ Catholic Newspaper.

]]>
https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2016/09/22/wars-rumours-war-peacemaking-ii-2/feed/ 0
Catholics and Methodists keep on talking https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2015/05/14/catholics-and-methodists-keep-on-talking/ https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2015/05/14/catholics-and-methodists-keep-on-talking/#respond Wed, 13 May 2015 21:07:45 +0000 http://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/?p=10743 by PAT LYTHE The Methodist-Catholic dialogue continued in Auckland last month. Eight people from the Catholic and Methodist Churches talked with a view to increasing Church unity. The dialogue has grown out of the formation of the World Council of Churches in the early part of the 20th century. Following that, Protestant churches began to

The post Catholics and Methodists keep on talking appeared first on NZ Catholic Newspaper.

]]>
by PAT LYTHE
The Methodist-Catholic dialogue continued in Auckland last month. Eight people from the
Catholic and Methodist Churches talked with a view to increasing Church unity.echo $variable;

The post Catholics and Methodists keep on talking appeared first on NZ Catholic Newspaper.

]]>
https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2015/05/14/catholics-and-methodists-keep-on-talking/feed/ 0
Deacon ordained for Palm. North https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2014/07/08/deacon-ordained-for-palm-north/ https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2014/07/08/deacon-ordained-for-palm-north/#respond Tue, 08 Jul 2014 02:00:46 +0000 http://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/?p=7503 by NZ CATHOLIC staff PALMERSTON NORTH — Danny Karatea-Goddard of Palmerston North was ordained to the diaconate on June 7 by the Bishop of Palmerston North, Bishop Charles Drennan. About 600 people attended the ordination at the Cathedral of the Holy Spirit, most of them from the Maori community. Mr Karatea-Goddard has been the Mäori

The post Deacon ordained for Palm. North appeared first on NZ Catholic Newspaper.

]]>
by NZ CATHOLIC staff
PALMERSTON NORTH — Danny Karatea-Goddard of Palmerston North was ordained to the diaconate on June 7 by the Bishop of Palmerston North, Bishop Charles Drennan.echo $variable;

The post Deacon ordained for Palm. North appeared first on NZ Catholic Newspaper.

]]>
https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2014/07/08/deacon-ordained-for-palm-north/feed/ 0
Moot response: Many issues due to ‘disconnects’, says bishop https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2013/06/26/moot-response-many-issues-due-to-disconnects-says-bishop/ https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2013/06/26/moot-response-many-issues-due-to-disconnects-says-bishop/#comments Wed, 26 Jun 2013 05:08:40 +0000 http://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/?p=5477 by MICHAEL OTTO ROTORUA — Responding to concerns expressed at a Moot in Rotorua about the role of women and youth in the Church, as well as the relationship between clergy and laity, Bishop Peter Cullinane said that underlying the headings and discussions at the event, was a sense of “disconnect”. This “disconnect” is between

The post Moot response: Many issues due to ‘disconnects’, says bishop appeared first on NZ Catholic Newspaper.

]]>
by MICHAEL OTTO
ROTORUA — Responding to concerns expressed at a Moot in Rotorua about the role of women and youth in the Church, as well as the relationship between clergy and laity, Bishopecho $variable;

The post Moot response: Many issues due to ‘disconnects’, says bishop appeared first on NZ Catholic Newspaper.

]]>
https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2013/06/26/moot-response-many-issues-due-to-disconnects-says-bishop/feed/ 1
Two bishops dedicate Feildings new church https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2009/09/16/two-bishops-dedicate-feildings-new-church/ https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2009/09/16/two-bishops-dedicate-feildings-new-church/#respond Tue, 15 Sep 2009 12:00:00 +0000 http://nzcatholic.iconmedia.co.nz/?p=2848 FEILDING Hundreds of people gathered in Feilding on a beautiful winter morning as Bishop Peter Cullinance opened and dedicated the new St Brigids Church. Following the karanga, or call to welcome, parishioners Mary Sanson and her granddaughter Gabrielle Cribb-Burrow were the first to pass through the doorway, symbolising the birth of the new church. Bishop

The post Two bishops dedicate Feildings new church appeared first on NZ Catholic Newspaper.

]]>
FEILDING Hundreds of people gathered in Feilding on a beautiful winter morning as Bishop Peter Cullinance opened and dedicated the new St Brigids Church. echo $variable;

The post Two bishops dedicate Feildings new church appeared first on NZ Catholic Newspaper.

]]>
https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2009/09/16/two-bishops-dedicate-feildings-new-church/feed/ 0
Bishops make plans to find their episcopal successors https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2009/07/11/bishops-make-plans-to-find-their-episcopal-successors/ https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2009/07/11/bishops-make-plans-to-find-their-episcopal-successors/#respond Fri, 10 Jul 2009 12:00:00 +0000 http://nzcatholic.iconmedia.co.nz/?p=2276 PALMERSTON NORTH The first moves towards the appointment of a coadjutor bishop for Palmerston North diocese have taken place. Bishop Peter Cullinane told NZ Catholic that, at his request, the Holy See granted leave in May last year that initial steps be taken. The bishop wrote to inform priests and people in his diocese about

The post Bishops make plans to find their episcopal successors appeared first on NZ Catholic Newspaper.

]]>
PALMERSTON NORTH The first moves towards the appointment of a coadjutor bishop for Palmerston North diocese have taken place. echo $variable;

The post Bishops make plans to find their episcopal successors appeared first on NZ Catholic Newspaper.

]]>
https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2009/07/11/bishops-make-plans-to-find-their-episcopal-successors/feed/ 0
Letters protest end to Rite III https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2009/06/26/letters-protest-end-to-rite-iii/ https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2009/06/26/letters-protest-end-to-rite-iii/#respond Thu, 25 Jun 2009 12:00:00 +0000 http://nzcatholic.iconmedia.co.nz/?p=2532 NEW PLYMOUTH Bishop Peter Cullinane of Palmerston North has received letters from north Taranaki Catholics protesting the end of Rite III Reconciliation with general absolution in their district. This form of the sacrament of Penance had taken place in St Josephs, New Plymouth, each Advent and Lent since 1997. As NZ Catholic reported on April

The post Letters protest end to Rite III appeared first on NZ Catholic Newspaper.

]]>
NEW PLYMOUTH Bishop Peter Cullinane of Palmerston North has received letters from north Taranaki Catholics protesting the end of Rite III Reconciliation with general absolution in their district. echo $variable;

The post Letters protest end to Rite III appeared first on NZ Catholic Newspaper.

]]>
https://www.nzcatholic.org.nz/2009/06/26/letters-protest-end-to-rite-iii/feed/ 0