Around
the World with VOTF
A
View from Down Under
Reported by Svea Fraser
The
bone-wearying, muscle-cramping 22 hours in a Boeing
727 are well worth it when the destination is Australia.
I headed in that direction in a snow squall on April
1st and returned to Boston on April 21st. In Melbourne,
my home from 1991 to 1997, cockatoos, magpies and kookaburras
in gum trees added to the welcome of my friends. Many
of those friends were keenly interested in VOTF and
several meetings had already been organized, along with
interviews on ABC National Radio and the newspaper The
Age.
I
was amazed at how closely Australian Catholics have
been following the crisis in Boston, and how many have
already signed up on the website as members of VOTF.
Much of the interest has been fueled by publicity on
television and in the press. Two Australian books have
recently been published and both cite VOTF by name -
Muriel Porter's Sex, Power and the Clergy and
Chris McGillion's A Long Way from Rome. A month
ago, the program "Compass", an hour-long documentary
on national public television, reported on our activity
in Boston. A friend of mine taped the program, and it
gave me a strange feeling to see ourselves broadcast
on the other side of the world -everything from the
vigils at the Cathedral to the 7/20 Convention, Arthur
Austin's stirring words at the Chancery Vigil, and comments
made by Louise Aleo and Cathy Mosca! At the end of the
program, the reporter made the poignant admission that
he himself had been a victim of sexual abuse at the
age of 14. Hearts are moved and people are seeking ways
to respond with truth and compassion.
Maria
George, a pastoral associate, was quoted as saying the
discussions about VOTF are valuable. "I felt challenged
about taking the risk to speak out, not to be afraid,
to be visible, to use your voice, even if it comes at
a cost." Mary Williams, a bright star in the constellation
of committed Catholics, said that Melbourne Catholics
are considering launching a local Voice of the Faithful
group. "There's been some talk about it, but the Australian
climate and culture is so very different to the States.
What's so wonderful about this is that it's the middle
ground of the Church, not the radical wing," she told
The Age reporter.
All
of you who are working with such faith and perseverance
need to know that you are a light of hope to people
around the world. Our website has been described by
many as their "favorite," and it is enthusiastically
received. I felt that I was representing thousands of
you, and like the early disciples in The Acts of the
Apostles, encouraging our brothers and sisters in far-flung
places. I hope you can feel the radiation of appreciation
I have for each of you. At the end of one of my talks
(which was enriched by showing the video of "The Solidarity
Walk" and an overview of the 7/20 Boston, MA convention,
"The Response of the Laity") a woman came up to me and,
taking both my hands in hers, looked me in the eye and
said, "Whenever you get discouraged, just remember that
there is a nun in Australia who is praying for you."
Her prayers will not go unanswered!
From
St. Elizabeth's Parish, Sidney, British Columbia, Canada
Reported by MaryAnne Gervais
Congratulations
for a wonderful year. I read about VOTF in The New
Yorker September, 2002 and was deeply inspired.
VOTF, please remember to count me as one of your voices,
for love has inspired changes in our Church.
Last
month I attended the first meeting of a potential affiliate
at St. Elizabeth Parish, Sidney B.C. Canada. I am a
member on my own because Sidney is a distance from me
but I keep in touch with Terry Renshaw from St. Elizabeth's.
Recently
in our Victoria Press (Times Colonist) there was an
article about dwindling numbers in Christian parishes.
The article elicited many letters next day in the editorial
page. I decided to send a letter to our local Catholic
paper and forwarded a copy to our Bishop Remi Roussin.
I would like to share it.
"The
recent article "LOW STANDING IN THE PEWS" (printed in
the Times Colonist) has prompted me to write
this letter. Solutions for the dwindling numbers stand
waiting to be heard as the LAITY finds its voice in
Church reformation.
It
was Blessed Pope John XXIII who called our Church to
'aggiornamento,' an updating, and recognition of the
evolutionary process in the material and spiritual world
of the 20th Century. Thanks to Pope John and his successor
Pope Paul VI, one of the 16 documents of the Vatican
II Council now stands as an achievement never before
reached in the history of the Catholic Church. That
document is the "DECREE ON THE APOSTOLATE OF THE LAITY."
This decree is a channel through which our voice and
energy as Laity is born and comes to light in the Holy
Spirit.
Just
last month in Sidney, B.C. at St. Elizabeth*s Parish,
a group of concerned Catholics joined the Voice of the
Faithful Organization as its first international affiliate
joining over 30,000 Catholics world wide. VOTF attempts
to sit tall in the pews of our Church. Here you will
find a forum with a loving but constructively critical
voice that prays and probes for solutions to the problems
which render our Church sterile in the 21st Century.
As disciples of Christ the whole Church is called to
His mission - man, woman, and child. The mission is
LOVE and the means is a Church which fully integrates
these disciples.
I
congratulate the initiative of the St. Elizabeth's group
and wish many blessings to all who endeavour to be heard
and to act in the name of GOOD."

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