Select Page

Blog Test 1

No Results Found

The page you requested could not be found. Try refining your search, or use the navigation above to locate the post.

Newsletter – 31 August 2018

August 31, 2018 Along with We Are Church Int'l, CCRI is asking for your support for young LGBT people attending the Youth Synod (October 2018). Pope Francis has called a Synod on Youth Damage is done when a child or young person is made to feel that being LGBT would...

To all who are outraged about the abuse within our Church:

August 25, 2018 We have remained silent too long. It is time for us, the People of God, regardless of where we are - active Catholic, former Catholic, Christian, and all faiths - to speak out and take an active leadership in bringing us all into the one Body of...

Join We Are Church Ireland in supporting the LGBT community

11 June 2018 Pope Francis has said about gay people "Who am I to judge?" But the Catholic Catechism still refers to the LGBT community as "objectively disordered." Would Jesus use these words? Pope Francis is to visit Ireland 25-26 August 2018 and we are calling on...

Newsletter – 26 November 2017

Year of the Laity In view of giving visibility and voice to the laity in the Catholic Church, CCRI has declared today as the beginning of a worldwide celebration of the Year of the Laity. This will go from the Feast of Christ the King, November 26, 2017, to this same...

Newsletter – 27 October 2017

October 27, 2017 Calling on all who support Pope Francis: Silence implies Consent - We must Speak Up!  "Alone, the Pope cannot change the world. A Pope for the People needs a People for the Pope." Gaston Roberge, S.J., India Pope Francis is under attack by the...

Newsletter – 8 October 2017

October 8, 2017 To all who support Pope Francis: Opposition to Pope Francis encourages support to flourish A small minority of Catholics are voicing their disquiet, opposition - even to Pope Francis’s emphasis on mercy and God’s love for all.  You may have read the...

Newsletter – 24 July 2017

To all supporting the Renewal of our Church: A response from the Vatican re our calling for a Year of the Laity Please consider signing our open letter to Cardinal Kevin Farrell as head of the Dicastery on the Laity Family and Life. As you will see, the letter is an...

Newsletter – 15 June 2017

Questionnaire to be completed by Young People To involve young people in preparations for the Synod of Bishops on youth in 2018, the Vatican has released the long-awaited online questionnaire YOUNG PEOPLE, THE FAITH AND VOCATIONAL DISCERNMENT to better understand the...

Open Letter to the People of God

(Please use links at left hand side to find out more about emboldened and underlined text.)
It is amazing how similar the battle for national rights parallels the battle for church rights. This week I received an email from civil rights activist and Georgia house representative, John Lewis. He was a friend of Martin Luther King and was brutally beaten by police in Selma, Alabama, in 1965 while marching for civil rights. In his email, he said: “While we have made progress toward a vision of a more fair, just and open country, the majority of Americans are afraid this country is headed in the wrong direction…. Some leaders reject decades of progress and want to return to the dark past, when the power of law was used to deny the freedoms protected by the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and its Amendments.”

Does that sound familiar for those of us who are working steadily for the reform of our Church? Could we not utter these very same words? “While we have made progress toward a vision of a more fair, just and open [church] , the majority of  [people] are afraid this [church] is still headed in the wrong direction….Some [church] leaders reject decades of progress and want to return to the dark past, when the power of law was used to deny [the message of Jesus that is recorded in the Gospels.”
 Lewis went on to say: “It took massive, well-organized, non-violent dissent and criticism of this great nation and its laws to move toward a greater sense of equality in America….Often, the only way we could demonstrate that a law on the books violated a higher law was by challenging that law. By putting our bodies on the line and showing the world the unholy price we had to pay for dignity and respect.”