Robert Blair Kaiser, whose award-winning coverage of the Second Vatican Council for Time magazine played a significant role in informing Americans about the council, died April 2 in hospice care in Phoenix. He was 84.
His funeral Mass was to be celebrated April 10 at St. Francis Xavier Church in Phoenix.
Kaiser spent 10 years as a Jesuit seminarian and scholastic, from 1949 to 1959, before leaving the order and turning to journalism.
He was one of those who broke the official secrecy during Vatican II, using his Jesuit ties to cultivate sources who regularly informed him about daily proceedings in the council.
For his coverage, he received the Overseas Press Club’s Ed Cunningham Award in 1963 for the “best magazine reporting from abroad.” His book “Pope, Council and World: The Story of Vatican II” was a No. 1 best-seller in London and Dublin.
Kaiser later covered religion for The New York Times and CBS-TV News; he covered the election of Pope Francis for Newsweek. He became an internationally recognized commentator and lecturer on the meaning of Vatican II.
An activist with regard to church politics, he pushed for reforms through several organizations, some of which he co-founded, including Catholic Church Reform International and a web community of U.S. Catholics called takebackourchurch.org. He was a board member of Accelerating Catholic Church Reform.
He was the editor of Just Good Company, an online journal of religion and culture. He wrote at least 15 books, several of which were about church reform.
He proposed that the American church “become an autochthonous church, modeled on the ancient churches of the Middle East. … Catholics united with Rome, with their own patriarchs, their own liturgies, and their own mostly married clergy.”
In a Catholic News Service review of his 2006 book, “A Church in Search of Itself: Benedict XVI and the Battle for the Future,” Rachelle Linner described Kaiser as “an engaging writer with an admirable ability to make complex situations and ideas understandable without facile simplification.” She called the book “a work of both journalism and activism.”
This book is about the institutional church, the Vatican and the 2005 conclave and, “at the same time, it is about ‘the people of God church’ that Kaiser discovered on his worldwide travels,” Linner wrote.
In the book, Kaiser discussed issues such as clericalism and priesthood, enculturation, liberation theology and the challenges of religious pluralism by providing profiles several cardinals, women religious, theologians and bishops.
“One does not have to agree with Kaiser’s call for a ‘people’s church’ to recognize the concern that motivated the long years of research and travel that resulted in this book,” said the reviewer.
One of his last books was “Inside the Jesuits: How Pope Francis is Changing the Church and the World,” published in 2014, and an obituary in the National Catholic Reporter said in his final months, Kaiser continued to write, with “a computer on his chest” while he was “hooked up to oxygen.”
NCR’s Thomas Fox said he was writing an epilogue for a book by Kaiser to be published in June: “Whistle: Tom Doyle’s Steadfast Witness for Victims of Clerical Sexual Abuse,” about a Dominican priest who for 40 years, Fox said, has been one of the church’s most outspoken critics of clergy sex abuse.
Kaiser is survived by a daughter, a son and grandchildren.
http://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpg00SOL Reformhttp://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpgSOL Reform2015-04-10 12:12:132015-04-10 12:12:13Catholic journalist known for Vatican II reporting, activism dies at 84, Catholic Sentinel
The Rev. Ronald Popivchak recently took Pope Francis up on his invitation last fall for clergy and laymen to submit their ideas on ways the Catholic Church can upgrade its profile.
And so the pastor of Ss. Peter and Paul Ukrainian Catholic Church in Bridgeport appointed himself administrator, overseer, leader – a metaphorical bishop for a day, as it were.
In his newly published book, “Bishop for a Day: Ideas to Heal and Renew the Catholic Church,” Popivchak — a gregarious man who is a self-avowed fishing buff and prefers being called Father Ron — covers a lot of ground in a quick and easy read of 91 pages filled with opinions and solutions surrounding such issues as parish closures, abortion, clergy sex abuse scandals, contraception, women in the church and youth.
“About a year and a half ago I decided to sit down and gather up all the facts I could and my ideas to try to help the church and the bishops and present them,” Popivchak noted. “I saw five or six priests in our town and neighboring towns charged with sex abuse and the church couldn’t get a handle on it. It bothered me, and also seeing the diocese going bankrupt. None of this is healthy for the church.”
In his introduction Popivchak writes, “For the first time in modern history, the Holy Father wants to know what we the priests and you the laity think about the thorny issues of family life! Divine Providence indeed! And if the Pope himself wants ideas, far be it from me to refuse this invitation. But I write not only out of obligation, but mainly out of love for the faithful and respect for the bishops. And I write as a Pastor with decades of experience with the sole purpose of helping the Church and her betroubled leaders in these difficult times.”
With streams of light radiating through a stained glass window onto a bishop’s miter, the striking cover sets the premise for the book, Popivchak said.
“The Holy Spirit is trying to enlighten the church, but the church isn’t reacting to it. If that hat were on my hat, what would I do? That’s the conceit I try to convey.”
Among the many things about the modern church he would attempt to rectify is the church’s long-held view on women’s secondary status, Popivchak allowed.
“If you remove half the population in decision making, what’s going to happen? It’s a shame how women have been (excluded),” he said.
Recalling how the dozen apostles were all male, Popivchak writes, “When the going got tough on that first Good Friday, only one man, the Beloved John, remained at His side. It is also true that Our Lord had many female followers and confidantes, such as sisters Martha and Mary, and the women at the cross. Matthew’s Gospel reads: ‘And many women were there, watching from a distance, the same women who had followed Jesus from Galilee and looked after Him. Among them were Mary Magdala, Mary the mother of James and Joseph, and the mother of Zebedee’s sons.’ Countless such modern-day Marys and Marthas are capable and willing to ‘look after’ Our Lord and His Holy Church today. It only remains for the Bishops to invite them into the Chancery door.”
Popivchak believes his bold foray into publication, a “semi-self-published” effort accomplished in collaboration with Infinity Publishing of West Conshohocken, is unprecedented in the area.
“I’ve been here 43 years and I think this is the first time a priest in the area has come out with a book,” said the man who grew up near Pittsburgh, earned a doctorate in Theology at The Catholic University and has published works in the Cambridge Dictionary of Christianity and The Mariner.
The book has been selling out via Amazon,BarnesandNoble.com and other literary outlets “because people want to read about ideas that will help the church,” Popivchak said. “The poor church is struggling and so many dioceses have declared bankruptcy in this country.”
When it comes to recruiting priests, Popivchak is adamant that the church needs to “hype” the job more aggressively.
“How can any organization seeking recruits — U.S. Army, U.S. Navy, anybody — find newcomers to the service without advertising? Go to Madison Avenue. Put a billboard on the Schuylkill Expressway. What’s it going to cost you? You spend $3 billion on the sex abuse scandal and you don’t have $10,000 to put up a billboard on I-95, going south or north, where the young people are driving every day? Ideas like that, which everybody else is using — and the church seems blind to them.”
Bishops need to come out of their “seclusion,” he added.
“Anybody who is a big time guy, when there’s a crisis, gets on television and tells the people what’s going on. Why can’t they pick a bishop who is photogenic, put him on television on Saturday night or Sunday morning and tell the American people what went on with this sex abuse scandal? They’re scared to do anything like that.”
For all his seemingly revolutionary pitches, Popivchak said he doesn’t consider his book controversial.
“It’s just ideas you can take or leave. Some of the ideas are very easy to enforce and implement,” he said.
The Catholic Church is reviewing how it dealt with the transfer of a priest who was found to have indecent videos of teenage boys.
Anthony McSweeney, 68, was last month jailed after he was found guilty of indecent assault between 1979 and 1981.
In 1998, he was found to have pornographic videos while at St Peter’s Catholic Church in Essex.
Bishop of East Anglia Alan Hopes is reviewing how McSweeney was allowed to move to St George’s, Norwich.
Southwark Crown Court heard how McSweeney and his friend John Stingemore, who died before the trial, assaulted a 15-year-old boy.
McSweeney was also found guilty of making indecent images of children.
The court had heard how a cleaner at St Peter’s Catholic Church found sex toys, truncheons and indecent videos in McSweeney’s possession.
He was threatened with being “banished” from the priesthood, the court heard, but moved to a new parish six months later.
Bishop Hopes said “questions have been raised” about how the Catholic Church dealt with McSweeney after the items were found.
“This incident was, at the time, referred to the police who decided not to investigate,” he said.
“It was, therefore, regarded by the Church as a matter of clergy discipline and dealt with accordingly.
“At that time no allegations of child abuse had been made against Father McSweeney, and no concerns had been raised in that regard.”
He said the matter was now being reviewed.
Full article: http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-norfolk-32204942
http://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpg00SOL Reformhttp://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpgSOL Reform2015-04-10 12:03:502015-04-10 12:03:50Church reviews sex abuse priest Anthony McSweeney's move to Norwich, BBC
http://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpg00SOL Reformhttp://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpgSOL Reform2015-04-10 12:00:352015-04-10 12:00:35David Hench, Newly disclosed letter rekindles sex abuse case against Maine priest, lawyer says, Portland Press Review
FRIENDS AND SUPPORTERS OF STATUTE OF LIMITATION REFORM IN PENNSYLVANIA
PLEASE JOIN US FOR OUR SUPER SOL REFORM LOBBY DAY
STATE CAPITOL – HARRISBURG, PA
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015
10:00 AM TO 3:30 PM
10:00 A.M. – 1:00 P.M.
MEETING LOCATION FOR VISITING SOL REFORM ADVOCATES: Room 101 East Wing
Send an e-mail to mrozzi@pahouse.net with April 15 Lobby Day in subject line with following information: Name, contact information, organization affiliation (if any), and names of your
state representative and state senator, if PA resident.
Sign-in and collect lobbying materials to leave behind in member offices. You will be provided key talking points to communicate. You will be assigned specific members to visit.
10:00 A.M. – 3:00 P.M.
EAST WING ROTUNDA (Outside of Cafeteria)
Tables will be available for Advocate exhibits and materials
1:15 P.M. – 2:30 P.M.
GATHER ON FRONT CAPITOL STEPS FOR PRESS CONFERENCE WITH SOL REFORM BILL SPONSORS
REP. LOUISE BISHOP, REP. TOM MURT AND REP. MARK ROZZI AND SPECIAL GUEST ADVOCATES
2:30 P.M. – 3:30 P.M.
DE-BRIEF MEETING OF ASSIGNED ADVOCATES: Room 101 East Wing
All other participants are asked to e-mail feedback of impressions and suggestions about the Lobby Day to mrozzi@pahouse.net with Lobby Day Feedback in subject line.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR CONTINUED SUPPORT OF OUR EFFORTS TO HELP
VICTIMS OF CHILDHOOD SEXUAL ABUSE AND TO PROTECT OUR CHILDREN.
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Scan0078
Catholic journalist known for Vatican II reporting, activism dies at 84, Catholic Sentinel
/in Uncategorized /by SOL ReformRobert Blair Kaiser, whose award-winning coverage of the Second Vatican Council for Time magazine played a significant role in informing Americans about the council, died April 2 in hospice care in Phoenix. He was 84.
His funeral Mass was to be celebrated April 10 at St. Francis Xavier Church in Phoenix.
Kaiser spent 10 years as a Jesuit seminarian and scholastic, from 1949 to 1959, before leaving the order and turning to journalism.
He was one of those who broke the official secrecy during Vatican II, using his Jesuit ties to cultivate sources who regularly informed him about daily proceedings in the council.
For his coverage, he received the Overseas Press Club’s Ed Cunningham Award in 1963 for the “best magazine reporting from abroad.” His book “Pope, Council and World: The Story of Vatican II” was a No. 1 best-seller in London and Dublin.
Kaiser later covered religion for The New York Times and CBS-TV News; he covered the election of Pope Francis for Newsweek. He became an internationally recognized commentator and lecturer on the meaning of Vatican II.
An activist with regard to church politics, he pushed for reforms through several organizations, some of which he co-founded, including Catholic Church Reform International and a web community of U.S. Catholics called takebackourchurch.org. He was a board member of Accelerating Catholic Church Reform.
He was the editor of Just Good Company, an online journal of religion and culture. He wrote at least 15 books, several of which were about church reform.
He proposed that the American church “become an autochthonous church, modeled on the ancient churches of the Middle East. … Catholics united with Rome, with their own patriarchs, their own liturgies, and their own mostly married clergy.”
In a Catholic News Service review of his 2006 book, “A Church in Search of Itself: Benedict XVI and the Battle for the Future,” Rachelle Linner described Kaiser as “an engaging writer with an admirable ability to make complex situations and ideas understandable without facile simplification.” She called the book “a work of both journalism and activism.”
This book is about the institutional church, the Vatican and the 2005 conclave and, “at the same time, it is about ‘the people of God church’ that Kaiser discovered on his worldwide travels,” Linner wrote.
In the book, Kaiser discussed issues such as clericalism and priesthood, enculturation, liberation theology and the challenges of religious pluralism by providing profiles several cardinals, women religious, theologians and bishops.
“One does not have to agree with Kaiser’s call for a ‘people’s church’ to recognize the concern that motivated the long years of research and travel that resulted in this book,” said the reviewer.
One of his last books was “Inside the Jesuits: How Pope Francis is Changing the Church and the World,” published in 2014, and an obituary in the National Catholic Reporter said in his final months, Kaiser continued to write, with “a computer on his chest” while he was “hooked up to oxygen.”
NCR’s Thomas Fox said he was writing an epilogue for a book by Kaiser to be published in June: “Whistle: Tom Doyle’s Steadfast Witness for Victims of Clerical Sexual Abuse,” about a Dominican priest who for 40 years, Fox said, has been one of the church’s most outspoken critics of clergy sex abuse.
Kaiser is survived by a daughter, a son and grandchildren.
Catholic journalist known for Vatican II reporting, activism dies at 84 – Catholic Sentinel – Portland, OR
Gary Puleo, Bridgeport pastor’s book addresses church’s challenges, Mainline Media
/in Maine /by SOL ReformThe Rev. Ronald Popivchak recently took Pope Francis up on his invitation last fall for clergy and laymen to submit their ideas on ways the Catholic Church can upgrade its profile.
And so the pastor of Ss. Peter and Paul Ukrainian Catholic Church in Bridgeport appointed himself administrator, overseer, leader – a metaphorical bishop for a day, as it were.
In his newly published book, “Bishop for a Day: Ideas to Heal and Renew the Catholic Church,” Popivchak — a gregarious man who is a self-avowed fishing buff and prefers being called Father Ron — covers a lot of ground in a quick and easy read of 91 pages filled with opinions and solutions surrounding such issues as parish closures, abortion, clergy sex abuse scandals, contraception, women in the church and youth.
“About a year and a half ago I decided to sit down and gather up all the facts I could and my ideas to try to help the church and the bishops and present them,” Popivchak noted. “I saw five or six priests in our town and neighboring towns charged with sex abuse and the church couldn’t get a handle on it. It bothered me, and also seeing the diocese going bankrupt. None of this is healthy for the church.”
In his introduction Popivchak writes, “For the first time in modern history, the Holy Father wants to know what we the priests and you the laity think about the thorny issues of family life! Divine Providence indeed! And if the Pope himself wants ideas, far be it from me to refuse this invitation. But I write not only out of obligation, but mainly out of love for the faithful and respect for the bishops. And I write as a Pastor with decades of experience with the sole purpose of helping the Church and her betroubled leaders in these difficult times.”
With streams of light radiating through a stained glass window onto a bishop’s miter, the striking cover sets the premise for the book, Popivchak said.
“The Holy Spirit is trying to enlighten the church, but the church isn’t reacting to it. If that hat were on my hat, what would I do? That’s the conceit I try to convey.”
Among the many things about the modern church he would attempt to rectify is the church’s long-held view on women’s secondary status, Popivchak allowed.
“If you remove half the population in decision making, what’s going to happen? It’s a shame how women have been (excluded),” he said.
Recalling how the dozen apostles were all male, Popivchak writes, “When the going got tough on that first Good Friday, only one man, the Beloved John, remained at His side. It is also true that Our Lord had many female followers and confidantes, such as sisters Martha and Mary, and the women at the cross. Matthew’s Gospel reads: ‘And many women were there, watching from a distance, the same women who had followed Jesus from Galilee and looked after Him. Among them were Mary Magdala, Mary the mother of James and Joseph, and the mother of Zebedee’s sons.’ Countless such modern-day Marys and Marthas are capable and willing to ‘look after’ Our Lord and His Holy Church today. It only remains for the Bishops to invite them into the Chancery door.”
Popivchak believes his bold foray into publication, a “semi-self-published” effort accomplished in collaboration with Infinity Publishing of West Conshohocken, is unprecedented in the area.
“I’ve been here 43 years and I think this is the first time a priest in the area has come out with a book,” said the man who grew up near Pittsburgh, earned a doctorate in Theology at The Catholic University and has published works in the Cambridge Dictionary of Christianity and The Mariner.
The book has been selling out via Amazon,BarnesandNoble.com and other literary outlets “because people want to read about ideas that will help the church,” Popivchak said. “The poor church is struggling and so many dioceses have declared bankruptcy in this country.”
When it comes to recruiting priests, Popivchak is adamant that the church needs to “hype” the job more aggressively.
“How can any organization seeking recruits — U.S. Army, U.S. Navy, anybody — find newcomers to the service without advertising? Go to Madison Avenue. Put a billboard on the Schuylkill Expressway. What’s it going to cost you? You spend $3 billion on the sex abuse scandal and you don’t have $10,000 to put up a billboard on I-95, going south or north, where the young people are driving every day? Ideas like that, which everybody else is using — and the church seems blind to them.”
Bishops need to come out of their “seclusion,” he added.
“Anybody who is a big time guy, when there’s a crisis, gets on television and tells the people what’s going on. Why can’t they pick a bishop who is photogenic, put him on television on Saturday night or Sunday morning and tell the American people what went on with this sex abuse scandal? They’re scared to do anything like that.”
For all his seemingly revolutionary pitches, Popivchak said he doesn’t consider his book controversial.
“It’s just ideas you can take or leave. Some of the ideas are very easy to enforce and implement,” he said.
Bridgeport pastor’s book addresses church’s challenges – King Of Prussia Courier – Main Line Media News
Church reviews sex abuse priest Anthony McSweeney’s move to Norwich, BBC
/in International /by SOL ReformThe Catholic Church is reviewing how it dealt with the transfer of a priest who was found to have indecent videos of teenage boys.
Anthony McSweeney, 68, was last month jailed after he was found guilty of indecent assault between 1979 and 1981.
In 1998, he was found to have pornographic videos while at St Peter’s Catholic Church in Essex.
Bishop of East Anglia Alan Hopes is reviewing how McSweeney was allowed to move to St George’s, Norwich.
Southwark Crown Court heard how McSweeney and his friend John Stingemore, who died before the trial, assaulted a 15-year-old boy.
McSweeney was also found guilty of making indecent images of children.
The court had heard how a cleaner at St Peter’s Catholic Church found sex toys, truncheons and indecent videos in McSweeney’s possession.
He was threatened with being “banished” from the priesthood, the court heard, but moved to a new parish six months later.
Bishop Hopes said “questions have been raised” about how the Catholic Church dealt with McSweeney after the items were found.
“This incident was, at the time, referred to the police who decided not to investigate,” he said.
“It was, therefore, regarded by the Church as a matter of clergy discipline and dealt with accordingly.
“At that time no allegations of child abuse had been made against Father McSweeney, and no concerns had been raised in that regard.”
He said the matter was now being reviewed.
Full article: http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-norfolk-32204942
David Hench, Newly disclosed letter rekindles sex abuse case against Maine priest, lawyer says, Portland Press Review
/in Maine /by SOL ReformNewly disclosed letter rekindles sex abuse case against Maine priest, lawyer says – The Portland Press Herald _ Maine Sunday Telegram
SOL Reform PA Lobby Day – April 15, 2015
/in Pennsylvania /by SOL ReformApril is Child Abuse Prevention Month AND
Sexual Assault Awareness Month
FRIENDS AND SUPPORTERS OF STATUTE OF LIMITATION REFORM IN PENNSYLVANIA
PLEASE JOIN US FOR OUR SUPER SOL REFORM LOBBY DAY
STATE CAPITOL – HARRISBURG, PA
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2015
10:00 AM TO 3:30 PM
10:00 A.M. – 1:00 P.M.
MEETING LOCATION FOR VISITING SOL REFORM ADVOCATES: Room 101 East Wing
state representative and state senator, if PA resident.
10:00 A.M. – 3:00 P.M.
EAST WING ROTUNDA (Outside of Cafeteria)
1:15 P.M. – 2:30 P.M.
GATHER ON FRONT CAPITOL STEPS FOR PRESS CONFERENCE WITH SOL REFORM BILL SPONSORS
REP. LOUISE BISHOP, REP. TOM MURT AND REP. MARK ROZZI AND SPECIAL GUEST ADVOCATES
2:30 P.M. – 3:30 P.M.
DE-BRIEF MEETING OF ASSIGNED ADVOCATES: Room 101 East Wing
THANK YOU FOR YOUR CONTINUED SUPPORT OF OUR EFFORTS TO HELP
VICTIMS OF CHILDHOOD SEXUAL ABUSE AND TO PROTECT OUR CHILDREN.