SYNCRETISM
Interesting. Apparently jealous of the Episcopalians, the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of San Francisco tries its hand at "innovative" worship:
We greet you Spirit of the North. Teach us to plant our feet securely on the earth and to see things as they really are, that the coming of your Spirit may find us standing firm in integrity. Teach us, Spirit of the North, in the solitude of winter, to wait in darkness with the sleeping earth, believing that we, like the earth, already hold within ourselves the seeds of new life.
ALL: May the deep peace of mercy be on us forgiving us, beckoning us, encouraging us; and may our readiness to forgive calm the fears.
We greet you, O Spirit of the East.
Awaken in us with each day, new hopes, new dreams of colors, loves and joys never before imagined. Fill our bodies with your breath, invigorate us. Carry us to the farthest mountains and beyond. In-spirit us that we might reach out to you boldly to grasp the miracles that are given birth with each new dawn.
ALL: May the deep peace of compassion be on us holding us close when we are weary, hurt and alone; and may we be the warm hands and warm eyes of compassion when people reach out to us in need.
We greet you Spirit of the South. You bring the winds of summer and breathe on us the warmth of the sun to sooth and heal our bodies and our spirits. Quicken us, draw us by the urgings of your warm breath to break through the soil of our own barrenness and fear. Teach us to hold sacred the memory of the spring rains that we might have the strength to withstand the heat of the day, and not become parched and narrow in our love. Lead us to accept fatigue with resignation, knowing that life is not to be rushed, that there is no flower of the field that grows from seed to blossom in a single day.
ALL: May the deep peace of gentleness be on us caressing us with sunlight, rain and wind; may tenderness shine through us to warm all who are hurt and lonely.
We greet you Spirit of the West; cool our hot and tired bodies, refresh and bring laughter to our hearts. It is you who usher in the setting sun. Guide our steps at the end of day; keep us safe from evil. Fill us with your peace as you enfold us with your great mystery of night that we might rest securely In your arms until morning call us forth again.
ALL: May the deep blessing of peace be on us stilling our hearts that have fear and doubt and confusion within them; and may peace cover us and all those who are troubled and anxious. May we be peacemakers.
We greet you, Great Spirit of the Earth. It was from you we came as from a Mother; you nourish us still and give us shelter.
Teach us to walk softly on your lands, to use with care your gifts, to love with tenderness all our brothers and sisters who have been born of your goodness. And when the day comes when you call us back to yourself, help us to return to you as a friend, to find ourselves embraced, encircled and enfolded in your arms.
ALL: May the deep peace of community arise from within us, drawing us ever nearer, speaking to us of unity, true community where distinctions of persons is also oneness in being.
Someone who wrote to complain received this Episcopal snotty reply:
The text you cite was part of an apology ceremony—planned largely by local victims of clergy sexual abuse—in which the Archdiocese of San Francisco was a participant. An apology to clergy abuse victims for the pain and suffering caused to them by ministers of the Church was delivered by the Archbishop. The planners felt that because many of the abuse victims are alienated from the Catholic Church, the text was appropriate. The ceremony was not a liturgy and was not held in a church. I think the website describes the apology ceremony for clergy sexual abuse victims, held in June 2003. As I told another person, the text will be removed from the Archdiocesan website.
I suggest you examine the entire Archdiocesan website at www.sfarchdiocese.org
Finally, I hope that there are more important things in this life to which you could give your attention and energy—perhaps following the Holy Father’s message to welcome the immigrant; or volunteering at a soup kitchen; or some other good Christian acts of charity.
Thanks to Mr. Price and Ms. Welborn.

Submitted by Alexis
at 1/14/2005 2:50:54 AM| And the problem with the reply was...? |

Submitted by Ken
at 1/14/2005 7:37:40 AM| "more important things in this life..." I would say that line and what follows are unnecessary and uncharitable. The website today seems to lack the lines "Great Spirit of the ...", which leaves the whole thing less heresy than cornball. |

Submitted by Josh S
at 1/14/2005 8:13:49 AM| They changed it. They don't have the "Spirit of the North/South/East/West" anymore. |

Submitted by Christopher Hathaway
at 1/14/2005 8:13:55 AM| It is interesting how this reply explains the matter as dealing with an apology for abuse by the clergy, and then it ends with more of the same arrogance that helped exacerbate the sexual abuse in the first place. "We were apologizing for being insensitive to abuse. Now f*** off!" ---Such is the accent of power. |

Submitted by EJN
at 1/14/2005 8:14:42 AM| Yes, Snotty indeed. It is frightening but many church leaders are starting to sound alike!!! Are they plagiarizing each others texts? It is almost heading in the direction of the Melnyks, are they friends have they inspired each other? Again what rubbish. |

Submitted by EJN
at 1/14/2005 8:17:23 AM| Just another thought... It must have hit a raw nerve - to be removed from the website after a complaint. Maybe the person that answered the letter is part of the problem - he certainly sounds angry. |

Submitted by Therese Z
at 1/14/2005 8:35:52 AM| I was torn between sending that to you, and hoping you wouldn't see it. The problem is that people can't see the difference between that stupid thing and St. Francis and his "Brother Sun, Sister Moon, praise Him..." prayer. The first turns the world into a spotlight on Me Me Me and the second gathers the world into a vast chorus of praise. The writer of the first obviously has not PRAYED it, just wrote it down, sat back and admired his/her cleverness with words. |

Submitted by Duane
at 1/14/2005 9:12:36 AM| What IS is about the left coast that produces this tripe???? |

Submitted by Prophet & Lost
at 1/14/2005 9:52:22 AM| "What IS is about the left coast that produces this tripe?" Too much LSD in the 60s, I think. Maybe traces of it remain in the water supply. |

Submitted by Mark
at 1/14/2005 9:54:28 AM| I was just going to ask the same question about Philadelphia... |

Submitted by Bill
at 1/14/2005 11:02:13 AM| In a discussion of this over at FreeRepublic.com, "kjvail" said: "Greeting the spirits of the compass directions is lifted straight out of a Wiccan ceremony. I know, I used to be Wiccan." |

Submitted by EJN
at 1/14/2005 11:09:55 AM| Bill - I thought so that is why I made reference to the recent Melnyk mess in PA! |

Submitted by Duane
at 1/14/2005 11:27:43 AM| Check this out in the comments of that entry, about the woman who complained and got blasted: It should be noted that the very fine lady who received this condescending reply from the Archdiocese has thirty-nine years experience as a dedicated inner-city public school teacher, working with… immigrants and their kids. |

Submitted by Philip
at 1/14/2005 11:47:50 AM| The repeating litany of "deep Peace" is also very redolant of ancient Celtic prayers, i.e. "The Deep peace of the running wave to you, the deep peace of the flowing air to you, the deep peace of the quiet earth to you, the deep peace of the shining stars to you, the deep peace of the Son of Peace, to you." Philip |

Submitted by Atlantic
at 1/14/2005 3:50:37 PM| Oh, not more 'ancient Celtic' nonsense. That prayer, Philip, was written just over 100 years ago by William Sharp who wrote under the name of Fiona McLeod. Sharp was prone to the same sort of hyper-romantic airy-fairy imaginings about the Celts that plagues the Celtic spirituality types today. |

Submitted by random papist
at 1/14/2005 5:44:36 PM| Absolutely humiliating! Every time I read this crap I'm pushed ever closer to personally repudiating Vatican II. Whether the council is the problem or not could be endlessly debated, but all the garbage that followed in it's wake, liturgical innovation, lack of discipline, moral laxness, nominal catechisis, etc., is simply unacceptable and a scandal. |

Submitted by Allen Lewis
at 1/14/2005 10:56:28 PM| How similar is this to Native American invocations of the Spirits of the winds? It seems to me to have correspondences with that sort of ceremony. |

Submitted by Ken
at 1/14/2005 11:25:12 PM| Papist - don't you prefer "raving" as a first name? I know I do, although I sometimes settle for Mackeral Snapper :-) But relax and have faith. VC2 has certainly been followed by all sorts of disorder, but you might as well blame the 60s, or the formation which the perpetrators of that disorder gained in the pre-VC2 years, or the failures of an otherwise great and holy trio of pope or any other number of factors. A century or two from now, we hope to be standing in the Presence of God and we will see how He brought a new life into the Church through the Council, despite all of our failings. Pray God the Christians of that time have a good vision of the whole as well, and don't think too ill of us. |

Submitted by Philip
at 1/15/2005 4:03:50 PM| Atlantic, I had no clue that the prayer I referred above, was so recently written. I am not into Celtic spirituality, but did see that prayer in a book which supposedly gathered old prayers from the Hebridean folk of the Isles. It is amazing just what depth of knowledge there is out in e-land that has the capability of shedding light on otherwise, non-illumined data. I appreciate your clarification. |










