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Four Supreme Court justices attend Red Mass in Washington
Catholic News Agency ^ | October 2, 2006

Posted on 10/03/2006 10:16:49 AM PDT by NYer

Washington DC, Oct. 02, 2006 (CNA) - Four Supreme Court justices attended the annual Red Mass, which is traditionally held each autumn to mark the beginning of the court’s new term and draws members of the legal community, Presidential Cabinet members, and occasionaly the President himself.

Archbishop Donald Wuerl of Washington presided at yesterday’s Mass at the Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle, where the Red Mass has been held since 1952.

Four of the five Catholic Supreme Court justices — Chief Justice John Roberts, Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, and Clarence Thomas — attended, reported The Associated Press. Justice Samuel Alito did not attend.

“Morality and ethical considerations cannot be divorced from their religious antecedents. What we do and how we act, our morals and ethics, follow on what we believe,” the archbishop said in his homily. “The religious convictions of a people sustain their moral decisions.”

Faith and politics are distinct, yet interrelated, he continued, citing Pope Benedict’s Deus Caritas Est.

“Politics and faith are mingled because believers are also citizens. Both Church and state are home for the same people,” he stated.

Also present were members of President George Bush's Cabinet — including Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, Commerce Secretary Carlos M. Gutierrez and Housing and Urban Development Secretary Alphonso Jackson — foreign ambassadors and members of the capital's legal community, reported the AP.

The Red Mass dates to 13th century and is conducted to ask the Holy Spirit for guidance for those who seek justice. It takes its name from the red vestments, symbolizing the Holy Spirit, worn by the celebrants. 


TOPICS: Activism; Catholic; Current Events; General Discusssion; Ministry/Outreach; Moral Issues; Prayer; Religion & Culture; Religion & Politics; Theology; Worship
KEYWORDS: catholic; dc; justices; redmass; scotus; washington
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Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts (L) speaks with Archbishop of Washington Donald Wuerl (R) after the Red Mass at St. Matthews Cathedral in Washington October 1, 2006. The Red Mass is traditionally celebrated on the Sunday before the opening of the Supreme Court term. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts (UNITED STATES)


U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas shakes hands with Washington Archbishop Donald Wuerl outside St. Matthew the Apostle Church after attending the annual Red Mass in Washington Sunday, Oct. 1, 2006. Behind them is Attorney General Alberto Gonzales. The worship service is traditionally held the Sunday before the Supreme Court's new term. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)


U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy, left, shakes hands with Bishop Kevin farrell outside St. Matthew the Apostle Church after attending the annual Red Mass in Washington Sunday, Oct. 1, 2006. The worship service is traditionally held the Sunday before the Supreme Court's new term. The woman at center is unidentified. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)


Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia (L) speaks with Archbishop of Washington Donald Wuerl (R) after the Red Mass at St. Matthews Cathedral in Washington October 1, 2006. The Red Mass is traditionally celebrated on the Sunday before the opening of the Supreme Court term. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts (UNITED STATES)

1 posted on 10/03/2006 10:16:51 AM PDT by NYer
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To: Lady In Blue; Salvation; narses; SMEDLEYBUTLER; redhead; Notwithstanding; nickcarraway; Romulus; ...

Members of the clergy, including Most Rev. Wilton D. Gregory, Archbishop of Atlanta, fourth from left speaking, Cardinal Justin Regali, Archdiocese of Philadelphia, center, and Archbishop John Francis Donoghue, retired Archbishop of Atlanta, right, prepare to celebrate the traditional 'Red Mass' to seek blessings for the judicial system at the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in downtown Atlanta, Thursday, Sept. 28, 2006. The service is sponsored by Atlanta's St. Thomas More Society, an association of Catholic lawyers, and is an ancient service with its roots going back to the Middle Ages. (AP Photo/Ric Feld)


Archbishop Wuerl's homily

:

Brothers and Sisters in the Lord,

It is a privilege for me to join each of you at this 53rd annual Red Mass sponsored by the John Carroll Society as part of a noble tradition in our nation’s capital of invoking the blessing of God’s Holy Spirit on all who are engaged in the service of the law, especially the members of the judiciary.

Recently I received a beautiful plant rooted in a very attractive container with gorgeous flowers mixed throughout the arrangement. Within a few short days, however, even though I took great care of it, some of the flowers began to fade. It was only after I removed one of the withered flowers that I made the startling discovery that not all of the flowers were attached to the plant and rooted in the soil, but instead simply were placed in little plastic containers. As the flowers were not part of the plant and not rooted in the soil, they had no source of nourishment and died.

A beautiful flower in an isolated container is much like the branch that Jesus speaks about in today’s Gospel text from St. John, the branch that gets cut off, detached from, isolated from the vine. Such a branch cannot bear much fruit—certainly not for long.

Whatever image we use, the lesson is the same. We cannot be cut off from our rootedness. We cannot become isolated from our connectedness and expect to flourish. As a people, we have a need to be part of a living unity with roots and a lived experience, with a history and, therefore, a future. Our lives as individuals and as a society are diminished to the extent that we allow ourselves to be cut off or disconnected from that which identifies and nurtures us. Branches live and bear fruit only insofar as they are attached to the vine.

No one person, no part of our society, no people can become isolated, cut off from its history, from its defining experiences of life, from its highest aspirations, from the lessons of faith and the inspiration of religion—from the very “soil” that sustains life—and still expect to grow and flourish. Faith convictions, moral values and defining religious experiences of life sustain the vitality of the whole society. We never stand alone, disconnected, uprooted, at least not for long without withering.

A profound part of the human experience is the search for truth and connectedness, and the development of human wisdom that includes the recognition of God, an appreciation of religious experience in human history and life, and the special truth that is divinely revealed religious truth.

Science linked to religiously grounded ethics, art expressive of spirituality, technology reflective of human values, positive civil law rooted in the natural moral order are all branches connected to the vine.

A healthy and vital society respects the wisdom of God made known to us through the gift of creation and the blessing of revelation. We not only need God’s guidance, but we are created in such a way that we yearn for its light and direction. Pope John Paul II in his encyclical Fides et Ratio reminds us: “...God has placed in the human heart a desire to know the truth—in a word, to know himself—so that, by knowing and loving God, men and women may also come to the fullness of truth about themselves.” (Intro., Fides et Ratio)

One reason we gather today in prayer for the outpouring of the gifts of the Holy Spirit is our realization that it is the wisdom of God that fills up what is lacking in our own limited knowledge and understanding. Connected to the vine, we access the richness of God’s word directing our human experience under the guidance of the Holy Spirit. Cut off from the vine, we have only ourselves.

At times our society, like many contemporary cultures heavily nurtured in a secular vision that draws its inspiration elsewhere, can be tempted to think that we are sufficient unto ourselves in grappling with and answering the great human questions of every generation in every age: how shall I live; what is the meaning and, therefore, the value of life; how should we relate to each other; what are our obligations to one another?

The assertion by some that the secular voice alone should speak to the ordering of society and its public policy, that it alone can speak to the needs of the human condition, is being increasingly challenged. Looking around, I see many young men and women who, in such increasing numbers, are looking for spiritual values, a sense of rootedness and hope for the future. In spite of all the options and challenges from the secular world competing for the allegiance of human hearts, the quiet, soft and gentle voice of the Spirit has not been stilled.

Just as we are told in the first reading today that the Spirit of God was shared with some of the elders so, too, today we have a sense that that Spirit continues to be shared. The resurgence of spiritual renewal in its many forms bears testimony to the atavistic need to be connected to the vine and rooted in the soil of our faith experience.

As Jesus assures us in today’s Gospel: “Just as a branch cannot bear fruit on its own unless it remains on the vine, so neither can you unless you remain in me.” The revelation of the mystery of God-with-us is not incidental to that human experience. It gives light and direction to the struggle we call the human condition. Religious faith and faith-based values are not peripheral to the human enterprise. Our history, the history of mankind, is told in part in terms of our search for and response to the wisdom of God.

Religious faith has long been a cornerstone of the American experience. From the Mayflower Compact, which begins “In the name of God, Amen,” to our Declaration of Independence, we hear loud echoes of our faith in God. It finds expression in our deep-seated conviction that we have unalienable rights from “Nature and Nature’s God.”

Thomas Jefferson stated that the ideals and ideas that he set forth in the Declaration of Independence were not original with him, but were the common opinion of his day. In a letter dated May 8, 1825, to Henry Lee, former governor of Virginia, Jefferson writes that the Declaration of Independence is “intended to be an expression of the American mind and to give to that expression the proper tone and spirit.”

George Washington, after whom this city is named, was not the first, but perhaps was the most prominent, American political figure to highlight the vital part religion must play in the well-being of the nation. His often-quoted Farewell Address reminds us that we cannot expect national prosperity without morality, and morality cannot be sustained without religious principles.

Morality and ethical considerations cannot be divorced from their religious antecedents. What we do and how we act, our morals and ethics, follow on what we believe. The religious convictions of a people sustain their moral decisions.

What is religion’s place in public life? As our Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI, tells us in his first encyclical letter, “Deus Caritas Est” (God Is Love): “[f]or her part, the Church, as the social expression of Christian faith, has a proper independence and is structured on the basis of her faith as a community which the State must recognize. The two spheres are distinct, yet always interrelated” (DCE 28). Politics, law and faith are mingled because believers are also citizens. Church and state are home to the very same people.

The place of religion and religious conviction in public life is precisely to sustain those values that make possible a common good that is more than just temporary political expediency. Without a value system rooted in morality and ethical integrity, there is the very real danger that human choices will be motivated solely by personal convenience and gain.

To speak out against racial discrimination, social injustice or threats to the dignity of life is not to force values upon society, but rather to call our society to its own, long-accepted, moral principles and commitment to defend basic human rights, which is the function of law.

Not only did Thomas Jefferson subscribe to the proposition that all are created equal, but his writings indicate that he extended the logic of that statement. All people are obliged to a code of morality that rests on the very human nature which is the foundation for our human dignity and equality. Jefferson recognizes no distinction between public and private morality. In a letter dated August 28, 1789, to James Madison, who later became the fourth president of our country, Jefferson wrote: “I know but one code of morality for all, whether acting singly or collectively.”

Perhaps nowhere is the relationship of values, religious faith, public policy and the application of the law more deeply rooted in its historic expression than here in our nation’s capital. Here is the place where our first president, George Washington, and the first Catholic bishop in our country, John Carroll, recognized so very early on in the life of our country the need to respect, honor and support the understanding that the goals of governance and the expression of faith-based morality mingle and overlap. At the same time, each was respectful of the prerogatives of the other, and both were mindful that all the voices needed to be heard.

In the end, the goal of public policy, and its application and interpretation, must be not what we can do but what we ought to do; not what we have the ability to achieve, but what in our hearts, in our conscience and in our souls we know we must do.

As believers, our hope for a better world is rooted in our faith that God will help us make this happen. Faith is the source of our perennial optimism and our social activism and involvement. If we work and work hard enough, God will be with us to bring about that world of peace, justice, understanding, wisdom, kindness, respect and love that we call His kingdom coming to be on earth.

Our prayer today is that our American democratic society will continue to be a flowering plant connected to the vine with roots sunk deep into the rich soil of our national identity, spiritual experience and faith convictions. May our religious faith, as a foundational part of our national experience, continue to nurture and sustain each branch of our society so that by its very connectedness to the vine it can blossom and flourish.

Thank you.
2 posted on 10/03/2006 10:20:12 AM PDT by NYer ("It is easier for the earth to exist without sun than without the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass.” PPi)
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To: NYer

I thought Clarence Thomas was an Episcopalian.


3 posted on 10/03/2006 10:21:16 AM PDT by ConorMacNessa (HM/2 USN, 3rd Bn. 5th Marines, RVN 1969. St. Michael the Archangel defend us in battle!)
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To: ConorMacNessa
I thought Clarence Thomas was an Episcopalian.

He reconverted back to Catholicism years ago.

4 posted on 10/03/2006 10:25:02 AM PDT by NeoCaveman (The race is on http://BlackwellvStrickland.blogspot.com (now linked on RealClearPolitics.com))
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To: NYer

If we could just get Kennedy to act like the other Catholics on the court we would be in business.


5 posted on 10/03/2006 10:26:15 AM PDT by wagglebee ("We are ready for the greatest achievements in the history of freedom." -- President Bush, 1/20/05)
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To: ConorMacNessa

Clarence Thomas was raised Roman Catholic. He later attended an Episcopal church with his wife, but returned to the Catholic Church in the late 1990s.


6 posted on 10/03/2006 10:27:55 AM PDT by Mrs. Don-o (Justice and judgment are the foundation of His throne.)
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To: NYer

God Bless the Supreme Court Justices as they ponder issues of grave importance to the country's future.


7 posted on 10/03/2006 10:28:59 AM PDT by kevinm13 (The Main Stream Media is dead! Fox News Channel and Freerepublic Rocks!)
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To: NYer
Dear Brothers and Sisters in the Lord,

Today I wish to speak to you on a subject which is a stain upon our nation and which will, if left unchecked, lead it to destruction. I speak of the legalized killing of the unborn. Mother Teresa once said, when addressing the leaders of this nation, that a country which kills its own children has no future......

Something along those lines would have been a good opening, I think. Kennedy certainly, as the SC swing vote, would have benefitted by having his ears flamed.

Unfortunately, I'm not Wuerl's scribe.

8 posted on 10/03/2006 10:30:55 AM PDT by marshmallow
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To: NYer

Justice Kennedy is showing some age. Kennedy will be the key vote in several important decisions this next round, including one on partial birth abortion. There actually could be 5 votes to uphold the partial birth abortion law.


9 posted on 10/03/2006 10:35:34 AM PDT by Always Right
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To: wagglebee

It will never happen.


10 posted on 10/03/2006 10:39:19 AM PDT by trisham (Zen is not easy. It takes effort to attain nothingness. And then what do you have? Bupkis.)
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To: trisham

I've always hoped that if there were four solid conservatives on the court that Kennedy would vote with them. I guess I will know for certain in a few months when rulings from this session begin to come down.


11 posted on 10/03/2006 10:40:56 AM PDT by wagglebee ("We are ready for the greatest achievements in the history of freedom." -- President Bush, 1/20/05)
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To: NYer
"...It takes its name from the red vestments, symbolizing the Holy Spirit, worn by the celebrants."

I think the red vestments symbolize martyrdom, to be prepared to be martyrs for the Truth like Saint Thomas More.

12 posted on 10/03/2006 10:47:27 AM PDT by Nihil Obstat (viva il papa - be not afraid)
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To: NYer
amen.

lots of good quotes here. I adopted one as my tagline.

***

Jefferson may not have made a distinction between public and private morality, but William Jefferson Clinton does.

13 posted on 10/03/2006 10:59:30 AM PDT by the invisib1e hand ("...Church and state are home to the very same people....")
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To: NYer

I love the Red mass. People should be aware that one does not have to go to DC in order to attend this wonderful liturgy. Many Dioceses have a red Mass for their Judicial districts. It is not unsual for even members of the US Supreme Court to some times be the guest. There is also generally a Red Mass Dinner the night before.


14 posted on 10/03/2006 11:07:12 AM PDT by catholicfreeper (Geaux Tigers SEC FOOTBALL ROCKS)
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To: catholicfreeper

Where was Alito???


15 posted on 10/03/2006 11:11:51 AM PDT by CitadelArmyJag ("Tolerance is the virtue of the man with no convictions" G. K. Chesterton)
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To: CitadelArmyJag

I am suprised he didnt attend. He must have had another obligation. I am also shocked a little that only Catholics Justices went. Usually the Justices despite whatever their faith like to attend


16 posted on 10/03/2006 11:13:49 AM PDT by catholicfreeper (Geaux Tigers SEC FOOTBALL ROCKS)
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To: Nihil Obstat

So it does sometimes, but in this context the red vestments symbolise the Holty Spirit, which came to the apostles in the form of fire.


17 posted on 10/03/2006 11:19:19 AM PDT by Romulus (Quomodo sedet sola civitas plena populo.)
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To: wagglebee
I've always hoped that if there were four solid conservatives on the court that Kennedy would vote with them. I guess I will know for certain in a few months when rulings from this session begin to come down.

***************

I hope you are right, but I'm afraid Kennedy will continue as he has, barring a miracle.

18 posted on 10/03/2006 11:20:31 AM PDT by trisham (Zen is not easy. It takes effort to attain nothingness. And then what do you have? Bupkis.)
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To: NYer
I bet this article has the Dims seeing red - hah!
19 posted on 10/03/2006 11:41:19 AM PDT by Puddleglum
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To: Mrs. Don-o

Thomas (who was born a Baptist) also studied for the priesthood, but left both the seminary and the church when he saw seminarians criticize Martin Luther King. Interestingly, he went to Holy Cross (as did I...) after leaving the Catholic Church.


20 posted on 10/03/2006 1:20:14 PM PDT by Revenge of Sith
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