Posts tagged as:

Beatles

The Day the Earth Stood Still

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on November 18, 2009 · 15 comments

Roe v Wade, Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Dissent, Gordon MacRae, Falsely Accused Priest, Abortion, Beatles, Timothy Leary, Peter Stravinskas, Be to Me a Father and Priest, Humanae Vitae, John Paul II, Seminary formation, George Weigel, Witness to Hope, Ronald Rychlak, Dealing with Dissent, After This Life, Benedict Groeschel, Tom Hoopes, A Reluctant Jubilee

. . . In the end, what was meant to be a sign of unity in the Church was transformed into an open battle in our seminary. The rector, a Sulpician, was a priest from my diocese. He was particularly incensed when I – the only seminarian from our diocese there – signed a petition challenging his authority to bar Catholic seminarians from attending a Mass with the Pope. On October 7, 1979, more than 200,000 people gathered on the National Mall in Washington, DC to welcome the Holy Father and celebrate the Eucharist with him. . . . I was horrified at the way they were singled out and ostracized, and I wasn’t having it. On that day, I parted ways with the “trendy dissent” crowd. . . .

{ 15 comments }

Hey, Jude!

by Fr. Gordon J. MacRae on October 28, 2009 · 7 comments

Saint Jude, St Jude, Liz Trotta, Beatles, Hey Jude, Jude a Pilgrimage to the Saint of Last Resort, Gordon MacRae, Falsely Accused Priest,

. . . We of “a certain age” remember all too well the Beatles’ famous song, “Hey, Jude.” Be careful! Some of the lyrics may escape you, but the melody is addictive. It can easily become “stuck in your head.” I can hear it this very moment playing on neurons that first fired forty years ago. Was the song about the same Jude – the Patron of Hopeless Causes – whom we honor today? I was a teenager when I first heard the Beatles’ “Hey, Jude” in the late 1960’s (UGH! THE SIXTIES!!!). I remember thinking, at age fifteen, that the song was about St. Jude, Hope for the Hopeless. I liked the song, and even took some comfort from it for that very reason. It sounded like a prayer, and it seemed fitting that the Beatles, whose popularity edged toward idolatry – like a lot of the 1960’s – might pray. Prayer or not, it has been sung like one since . . .

{ 7 comments }