Posted on 09/15/2009 3:52:35 PM PDT by Alex Murphy
CHICAGO, Illinois, September 15, 2009 (LifeSiteNews.com) - A publisher associated with the Archdiocese of Chicago has revoked and apologized for a prayer they distributed that praised the late pro-abortion senator Edward Kennedy as one who promoted "values of peace, justice, equality, and liberty." The prayer has been replaced with another one, urging prayer for the soul of Kennedy, but excising the words of praise.
Liturgy Training Publications issued the original prayer as a suggested Prayer for the Faithful for use at Sunday Masses after the prominent Catholic senator's death on August 25.
The text of the prayer, available in the publisher's online Prayer of the Faithful resource, read: "For those who have given their lives to service to their country, promoting values of peace, justice, equality, and liberty; especially, Senator Edward M. Kennedy, that he may find his eternal reward in the arms of God. ... We pray..."
Kennedy, a professed Catholic who succumbed to brain cancer August 25, was a staunch advocate of abortion, embryo-destructive research, and same-sex "marriage." The Boston archdiocese met with controversy and opposition from the pro-life Catholic community after it hosted a public funeral ceremony for the senator August 29. Pro-life Catholics, including American Life League president Judie Brown and Human Life International president Rev. Tom Euteneuer, had called for a private Catholic ceremony for the publicly pro-abortion figure, to avoid public scandal.
The Mass prayer triggered complaints from the pro-life Catholic blogosphere, including popular Catholic writer Rev. John Malloy, who encouraged prayers for Kennedy on his pro-life blog, but noted: "To pray for Senator Kennedy as one who promoted peace, justice, equality, and liberty, ignoring the 49 million+ babies killed through legalized abortion, would be simply to pray a lie at Mass."
Liturgy Training Publications director John Thomas quickly issued personal apologies to Fr. Malloy and others who complained for what he called the "extremely poor use of words" in the prayer.
"Upon reflection, the editors who adapted and wrote the prayer recognize their poor judgment," Thomas wrote in his letter to Fr. Malloy. Thomas explained that the prayer had been adapted from a standard text for "Prayers on the Inauguration of a Public Official."
Within about a day of original publication, the prayer was removed and replaced with a more generic version calling for prayers for Kennedy as a member of "all our beloved dead."
Malloy told Chicago Catholic News that he was satisfied with the outcome, and that he felt Thomas' apology was sincere.
"I think we pray for everyone who's dead, our enemies, we pray for them, but we don't extol them," Malloy noted.
The text of the prayer, available in the publisher's online Prayer of the Faithful resource, read: "For those who have given their lives to service to their country, promoting values of peace, justice, equality, and liberty; especially, Senator Edward M. Kennedy, that he may find his eternal reward in the arms of God.... We pray...."
...."Upon reflection, the editors who adapted and wrote the prayer recognize their poor judgment," Thomas wrote in his letter to Fr. Malloy. Thomas explained that the prayer had been adapted from a standard text for "Prayers on the Inauguration of a Public Official."
Within about a day of original publication, the prayer was removed and replaced with a more generic version calling for prayers for Kennedy as a member of "all our beloved dead."
Why would a prayer praise anyone anyway? It’s a prayer, not a reference.
But, the swimmer asked the Pope personally to intercede with God. Because stealing from one group of people and giving to another us good works — how can at least one dead innocent adult and millions of dead innocent babies compare to that????
Good! They must have heard about this from someone (dare we hope...Rome, or even their own bishop?) enough to knock them back.
For folks who don’t normally go to a Catholic mass, these ghastly “prayers of the faithful” are supposed to be rather neutral prayers for the religious authorities, the civil authorities, the parish, the dead, etc. But they were taken over by weirdos because, as usual, Vatican II guidelines were very vague.
The result is that the USCCB left and the crazy lefty publishing houses (such as missalette publisher OCP) use the prayers to put in their lefty cause of the month. If I’m at mass and they use these prayers, I simply don’t say them, and I notice there are a lot of other folks who don’t either.
Another Obama-Saul Alinsky-Archdiocese of Chicago dot to connect.
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