Inside
NCR
Well, Halloween is over and the kids
are coming down from their sugar highs. We grownups (who should have resisted
the urge to help get rid of all that candy) are marking more mature
celebrations, like All Saints and All Souls days.
At least once a year, the church is wise to remind us that we need
saints, and counting all the uncanonized folk whove made it to heaven
along with the haloed canonized elite, there should be plenty to choose from.
Fr. Richard McBrien, in this weeks column on Page 21, notes that we
dont honor saints so much by lighting vigil lights in front of their
images (though churches do like that revenue!), but by imitating them.
Calling someone a living
saint can sound at once saccharine and presumptuous, but our church has
them in every era. One of them, in my view, is Jean Vanier -- a man of fierce
gospel faith who has an absolutely unshakable confidence in the power of love
to transform human beings. NCR Rome correspondent John Allen Jr.
recently interviewed Vanier and his feature is this weeks cover story on
Page 14, together with a story about a LArche community right in
NCRs backyard, in Overland Park, Kan. Vaniers LArche
communities are signs of hope in a weary world, just as the ark in the Genesis
story carried weary travelers hopeful of a new beginning.
If, like me, youre weary of the seemingly never-ending waves
of the clergy sex abuse scandal, reading about people like Vanier can be an
adrenalin boost.
Another small glimmer of hope is a new Los Angeles Times
survey of American priests, analyzed by NCR editor-at-large Arthur
Jones on Page 5. Despite priests loss of trust in their bishops and low
morale over the current climate in the church, a large number of U.S. priests
-- 70 percent -- say theyre happy and satisfied in their vocation. The
survey reveals nothing we havent heard before, but reinforces the theory
that people in the church, though unhappy with much in the institution, are
still committed to it.
More good news on the NCR
home front. Many of you have been calling, e-mailing and writing to inquire how
our editor Tom Roberts is doing after his cardiac bypass surgery last month.
Tom is doing so well that there are reports of Tom Roberts
Sightings here in Kansas City.
In fact, Tom felt strong enough to make his first post-op foray
into society Oct. 17, just nine days after his surgery. The occasion was the
visit to Kansas Citys Rockhurst University by Fr. Peter-Hans Kolvenbach,
the Jesuit superior general. Kolvenbach celebrated Mass and preached at St.
Francis Xavier Church. As the covertly photographed image (shot by NCR
copy editor and sometime paparazza Patty McCarty) above reveals, a
hale-looking Roberts was seen chatting with the multilingual Jesuit leader
after the Mass.
Were locking the NCR doors on Tom for now, though, to
ensure he gets the doctor-prescribed R&R he needs before heading back to
the newsroom. If his great progress continues as it has, were confident
that he will be back soon. Please keep those prayers coming for his speedy and
full healing!
-- Pat Morrison
My e-mail address is pmorrison@natcath.org
National Catholic Reporter, November 01,
2002
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