Sub-
titled "A story of a survival in the tensions of the Catholic
Church", it has obviously been written " con amore ". I can say
that with gold-plated certainty, because I count Father as a friend and I know
his ardent love for the Church, even if the evidence of his life's work did not
already demonstrate the fact.
The book
is a novel, but everything in it happened in one way or another, even though
the names have been changed, and some characters are the "telescoped"
product of two personalities. Anyone who lived through the period the book
re-creates will, as I did, immediately see through the delightfully altered
names of people and places to recognize the Archdiocese of Sydney, St.Patrick's
Seminary Manly that was, St. Columba's Minor Seminary, Springwood etc., etc.
Anyone who loves the Catholic Church and it's Priesthood will quickly come to
read the book "con amore" also.It traces the journey to Priesthood of
two best mates and schoolmates , and their encounter with the post-Conciliar
false "spirit of the Council" rogues.the book is very special for me,
not only because I know the author, but because I knew or knew of, many of the
real characters.
Let us
"taste and see":
Father
Mark O'Brien has just arrived in Rome to commence post-graduate studies and
comes to meet his best friend Father Harry Stuart whose studies are more
advanced due to his arrival in Rome a couple of years earlier.Harry is talking
to the Queensland Priest Father Harry Jenkins. The Second Vatican Council is
continuing............"Greg Jenkins took great interest in the newcomer.
Harry had spoken so so much of his life-long friend, but always in glowing
terms, and Jenkins wondered whether or not this Mark O'Brien was a candidate
for canonization.
One free
afternoon, Father Jenkins invited Father O'Brien to accompany him on a walking
tour. They went across the Tiber and had spent a good while examining the Roman
Forum, when Jenkins decided it was coffee time. They found a nice place near
the Colosseum. Mark was somewhat disappointed at the break in the tour- he was
getting immersed in the history.
They
settled at one of the little tables on the wide footpath, looking out across
the ancient amphitheatre, Constantine's Arch and other surrounding remnants of
past grandeur.
"What
do you think of Rome?"asked Jenkins.
Mark
smiled,"That hardly matters-I'm sure Rome won't be concerned what I think
of her; but I love the place anyway."
"Anything
in particular?"
"Well,
of course, Peter and Paul are here, plus some other apostles-catacombs,
remnants of the Empire. The Pope - should have mentioned him first"he
laughed. Then there's the Council -biggest event in the Church for
centuries."
"How
are you going on the Council documents? "
"Read
everything that,s released so far."
"You
don't muck around , do you ,Mark.
"Didn't
come here to muck around , Greg."
Jenkins
took a pack of cigarettes from his pocket. He offered Mark one. It was refused.
But Mark told him to go ahead and have one.
Jenkins
blew out the first cloud of smoke, then looked at Mark squarely. An enticing
smile came over his face. Mark thought it looked too deliberate.
If I may
say so Mark, you and Harry are going to be quite a force back home."
Mark
lowered his cup a little. "What makes you think so?"
"I've
never met anyone like you two- you've got all the gifts. I think you're going
to be a pair of giants."
Mark
laughed once more. " Then we'd better make sure we don't put our feet in
it," he said looking straight into Jenkins' eyes.
Jenkins'
smooth smile re-appeared." That's very good " he said. I'd say each
of you is going to make quite a splash."
" As
long as what we do helps people, and the church," said Mark.
"The
people are the Church" said Jenkins.
"
Now that's a revelation - I thought the Church was just buildings " said
Mark, looking at him squarely.
That
smile was there again on Jenkins's face. "Sorry", he said, " I
shouldn't be trying to teach you. It's just that I think the Church hasn't been
taking enough notice of what the people are thinking. This Council's not going
far enough."
"it's
certainly going long enough", said Mark.
Jenkins
gave a laugh, " Then you're getting a bit tired of all these Bishops
around the place,eh?"
" I
didn't,t say that. It's a tremendous event- I just think it could be a lot
simpler."
"
Everything's black and white with you, isn't it , Mark" said Jenkins
through his smile.
Father John O'Neill - Tried and True |
"If
that means everything's clear, then yes."
"So
we have all the answers , then."
"In
the necessary things, yes."Jenkins' smile changed to a smirk. Mark's
inherited Irish brow hardened. "If we haven't the basic answers to man's
questions, then Christ is pointless," he said, almost glaring at Jenkins.
" What's the use of God becoming man if He leaves us in our confusion, and
our weakness.".........
The story
continues and the divide between those seeing in the Church and the Council the
hermeneutic of continuity as the only possibility, and those who chose a
hermeneutic of rupture to secure their New Church opens before our eyes. Just
as it happened. Jenkins by the way - the real man became a Queensland suffragan
Bishop. But by the force of his personality, he became the
"Godfather" of the Queensland bishops - and the wreckage of
"Jenkins'" activity persists from Brisbane to Cairns.
Father
John O'Neill is Parish Priest of Doonside in Parramatta Diocese, having
survived the Episcopates of Cardinals Freeman and Clancy in Sydney, and then the
all too vulnerable Bishop Bede Heather (resigned) and Bishop Kevin Manning
(Emeritus, and now out of retirement to act as Apostolic Administrator of
Wilcannia Forbes). Doonside is fortunate indeed.
Father's latest work is "BENJAMIN"available at http://www.connorcourt.com/catalog1/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=128
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