
Peter MALONE
FAREWELL, THE CLIFFS, SHOREHAM
FAREWELL, THE CLIFFS, SHOREHAM
The MSC are moving out of The Cliffs after 75 years or so. That is, Brian Gallagher is moving out.
The Victoria-Tasmania community recently had a farewell gathering, prayer and a meal. Photos of us and, for those who have not been to Shoreham recently, some views.
Frank Andersen, Brian Gallagher, Des Holm, Peter Curry
Paul Castley, Khoi, Philip Malone
Michael Sims, Ahn - going into the Pre-novitiate, Peter Malone
(Absent, Ted McCormack, Terry Bowman, Mark Hanns)
There have been several eras at Shoreham.
First, from the 1940s to the early 1960s. Holidays for the students and the staff. Large numbers of students - and a big marquee at the side of the building to accommodate those who could not fit into the huts.
Second, from the 1960s to the 1990s, still in use, not such big numbers, others having holiday time there. Repairs and some building going on.
Third, when Brian Gallagher finished his term as Provincial, he went to Shoreham in 1999, gradually renovating the buildings, setting the place up as a haven for retreats, small numbers. He was joined for several years by Chris Chaplin.
The MSC will still own the property but will lease it – and it will remain as a retreat centre. More news about Shoreham when the new era gets going in 2020.
MSC BURSARS’ MEETING, ROME
MSC BURSARS’ MEETING, ROME
Report, Rene Balboa, Province Manager.
Photos from Humberto Henriques MSC, General House.
Six months ago, the Fr General, Abzalon Alvarado Tovar, sent us a letter about the proposed meeting of the Provincial Bursars/Treasurers. This is the first time for it to be held. While the travel to Rome seemed to be very long and there would be too many days to be away when many of us have other tasks, a congregation of 18 of the 20 MSC provinces and 3 unions were present. The oldest was 89 years old and the youngest was 34. Only two provinces of North Germany, South Germany-Austria were unable to share their experience with us.
The theme “something is being born, can’t you see it?” Is 43:19 and as a EEITworking theme “THE ECONOMY AT THE SERVICE OF THE MISSION”. The meeting was a way of knowing and loving the Congregation more and of establishing personal links among more than thirty MSCs. The whole general administration accompanied us. This allowed us from then on to put a name, a face and heart to the brothers of all the provinces and unions of the congregation.
A climate of optimism accompanied us, knowing that the strength of the congregation is on Spirituality and Mission and that the strength will continue to live more or less in more than 50 countries.
The presence of 7 Lay people (three women and four men) was highlighted. Presentations on Vow of Poverty, Transparency, Solidarity and Self-Sufficiency among others, were made by the different speakers from other MSC provinces and other religious organisations.
Presentations were made by each province, union and general administration on organisation, locations of provinces & communities and financial matters. Learning the status and difficulties of the provinces, the meeting concluded with the aim to foster close communication, update the policies and guidelines at all levels: general administration, regional, provincial and communities.
Considering the enthusiasm and motivation of the attendees, a follow-up of bursars’ meeting at regional level like APIA was planned. The meeting concluded on the 10th of December 2019.
The congregation thanked the CJ Sisters for their hospitality in providing the attendees with the food and venue at their general house in Via Nomentana, Rome, Italy.
FROM INDIA TO KIPPAX, ACT: MICHAEL NITHAN STEPHAN MSC
FROM INDIA TO KIPPAX, ACT: MICHAEL NITHAN STEPHAN MSC
Welcome to our confrere from India, working in Kippax.
We invited him to introduce himself,
I Michael Nithan Stephan son of Stephan and Joseph Selvi, born on 12th August 1990 in India. I have an older brother called Sengol Cyril who is a carpenter and married. My parents are farmers who live in small village called Silamaganadu which is located in south part of Tamil Nadu. I joined the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart upon completing school in June 2008. It was not an accident or a long dream that I would like to join in MSC but through one of my cousins called Fr. Inigo who is good friend of MSC community in Bangalore. I was inspired by the charism of the congregation and decided to live in the community. It was almost 10 years of formation, I made my first profession in 2011, took my perpetual vows in 2017 and I did my regency in one of the parish in Bangalore in 2014. After completing my studies in philosophy and theology, I was ordained as a deacon in 8th June 2018. I did my deaconate ministry in our MSC parish at Dindigul where I taught at the MSC school Chevalier Academy. And I was doing my ministry in one of the parishes called St. John the Evangelist church in Bangalore.
Receiving faculties from Archbishop Christopher Prowse.
This is my first time in Australia and being outside India. It is a very exciting time for me as I have the opportunity to experience a new culture and get to meet and work with my brother MSCs here in Australia. I am looking very much forward to living in the community in Kippax and working in the parish with Fr. Gerard and Fr. Kimi. I am very happy to be here in Australia and enjoining my ministry. I am experiencing the real love and hospitality from the parishners and the community where I live. Thanks to all the MSCs confreres.
THE PRINTED MSC AUSTRALIA MAGAZINE
THE PRINTED MSC AUSTRALIA MAGAZINE.
Have you seen copies of the printed MSC Magazine, MISSIONARIES OF THE SACRED HEART?
Beside the MSC Logo on the top of the front cover, there are the words, the encouragement,
Be on earth the heart of God.
The new issue is out, Issue 4, Summer 2019.
There is a photo of the cover and contents (clearer photos beyond the capacity of the editor or his phone/camera. (Perhaps, that could be an enticement to read the magazine).
Some of the material is drawn from website items. The rest of the material is exclusive to the magazine.
Copies are available from:
Missionaries of the Sacred Heart
1A Waltham St,
Coogee. NSW. 2034.
(02) 9665 8999
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
A SURPRISING LETTER FROM OUR MSC CONFRERE, JONAS HASSAN, WHO WORKS IN FORMATION IN CAMEROUN.
A SURPRISING LETTER FROM OUR MSC CONFRERE, JONAS HASSAN, WHO WORKS IN FORMATION IN CAMEROUN.
Jonas studied at Marymount, Castle Hill, in a renewal program in 2017. He also visited MSC communities in Australia, especially the Northern Territory. He keeps in touch, especially with Formation news. This was an unexpected letter about his current holiday – not exactly our idea of a holiday.
Jonas writes. Hello Peter. Hope you are doing fine. Am on holidays. My family is fine but all spend the night on the mountain because they know neither the day nor the hour that the terrorist group Boko Haram will target them once more. They leave their house around 5pm and go down at 6am. Many of them left the village permanently and others settled temporarily in Mora and Maroua. They seek to kill only men.
The big problem is the children suffering from the cold weather of December, and especially the school, that is among the five big primary schools in the diocese with nearly 1500 children that are at risk of depopulation.
I wanted to go to the presbytery but my parents have forbidden me and the parish asked me to go to Mora. I will stay either at Mora or at Kourgui in an ancient presbytery. I can spend the day in the village but by 16h I leave. The government says it has no staff because all went to North and south west of Cameroon in trouble since 3 years. The soldiers are tired and discouraged by the duration of the war and especially the high ranks soldiers who take everything.
I have already been to some officers to hear them, but nothing came out. It is expected by 15th December reinforcements with the last exit. I experienced such a situation in 2014 in Bourha when hundreds of Nigerian Christians took up my parish hunted by the same terrorist group but right now am very overwhelmed. A special intention for the villagers. Thanks.
Mora is a town in northern Cameroon. Mora has a population of 55,216 making it the 5th biggest city in Far North. The German fort of Mora was the last German fort in Cameroon to surrender during World War I
A HAPPY MSC DAY: PROFESSING HIS FIRST VOWS, KENJI KONDA, MSC
A HAPPY MSC DAY: PROFESSING HIS FIRST VOWS, KENJI KONDA, MSC
Saturday, December 14, in the community Chapel at St Mary’s Towers, Douglas Park, Kenji Konda completed his novitiate and made his first profession - a province celebration, a community celebration.
Provincial superior, Chris McPhee, received the vows.
Kenji’s mother was present at the ceremony.
His Novice Master was Peter Harvey-Jackson MSC.
Kenji and his family have had a long contact with the MSC, originally in Japan, but especially in Sydney, the parishes of Randwick and Coogee where he served on the Parish Councils, and long involvement with Adrian Meany in the MSC Missions Office.
We share the community blessing over Kenji
We have some quotations from Kenji, from a recent article in the MSC Magazine.
With his work in preparing the novitiate for the incoming new novices, Kenji noted: “for these reasons and others, the thought of taking vows never really entered my mind. In fact, were it not for my community, it may have taken even longer to register. The belief started to set in when I began noticing the subtle changes in the way the members here behaved towards me. Of course, over the course of the past 12 months, I had grown accustomed to being showered with the joy and delight as I progressed through each stage of the novitiate program – the community have been totally supportive and encouraging throughout the process – but things were a little different now. It is difficult to describe because the experience is at the effective level, a genuine sense of being brought into the fold and accepted as “one” – much more and at a far deeper level than ever before.
It is like an expression of their approval, a sign that I am now welcome to make my profession as a Missionary of the Sacred Heart, following in the footsteps of many great men who have gone before them and now me. As it was for my community members, it is a significant moment in my life and a day that all MSC share in common regardless of their vocation. Whether he is a brother or priest, each MSC is professed, giving the vows a unifying and universal quality.
Through this experience and also with guidance from my Novice Master, I have come to the realisation that much of the undertaking and understanding of the vows has to do with perception and how I view these commitments in light of my faith through the person of Jesus. The vows, therefore, should not carry a negative connotation, and are certainly not about control. There is a liberating element which transcends beyond the limitations of my worldly consciousness – a source of uninhibited freedom to seek and explore God’s love for me and the opportunity to allow this love to continually transform my life and beyond.
With thanks for photos taken by Sean Donovan, MSC Mission Office.
REMEMBERING 130 YEARS OF ANNALS – A COMMEMORATIVE LUNCH
REMEMBERING 130 YEARS OF ANNALS – A COMMEMORATIVE LUNCH
Two months before he died, Paul Stenhouse planned to celebrate the 130 years of Annals and his completion of the final edition.
He wanted a lunch at Sacred Heart Monastery, Kensington, an invitation to those who had supported Annals over the years.
Sadly, Paul died, but that week at the end of November was his week, the Tuesday night vigil and sharing of memories, the packed requiem Mass at Our Lady of the Rosary Church, Kensington, travelling to St Mary’s Tower, Douglas Park, for his burial.
In our post on his Mass and Funeral (November 28th), a link was included, still active, to the Catholic Weekly report of the Mass, with photos.
We included the core of Michael Fallon’s eulogy – in full in the Catholic Weekly (easily found by Googling).
Then there was a double page spread of tributes to Paul. Below, find the text and the photos.
THE LUNCH
The celebration was a Province event, with Provincial, Chris McPhee, present. With Kensington Monastery as the host, the meal was blessed by Community Leader, John Kelliher. The lunch was chaired by Peter Malone.
Paul’s brother, Richard, was present as well as Tricia Kavanagh, Paul’s cousin, who worked on Annals in the early 1970s.
Paul, when he realised he could not give an address outlining the history and achievement of Annals, he asked a contributor, emeritus Professor, Michael Wilding, to stand in for him.
Peter Macinante, a cousin who began work in the Annals Office in 1982, added some memories – with some touches of humour, ‘Andiamo’, ‘Mother Machree…’.
We closed formalities with a toast to Annals and a prayer for eternal rest for Paul. Amen.
CATHOLIC WEEKLY DOUBLE PAGE TRIBUTE
Defender of the Faith: Fr Paul Stenhouse MSC
Father Paul Stenhouse, who died last week at the age of 83, would have made a brilliant intelligence officer or spy. It was not for nothing that Archbishop Anthony Fisher OP paid tribute to him at his funeral on 27 November as “one of the sharpest intellects amongst the Australian clergy.”
His gifts in dealing with people from every walk of life, his abilities with seemingly arcane languages, his extraordinary range of contacts among churches, politicians, community organisations, ethnic groups and in world affairs combined with his journalistic ability to distil complex historical, social and political issues into expertly-written yet deeply engaging concise copy are beyond summing up in any normal sense.
Yet he was much more: deeply intelligent and highly educated with a genuine interest in everything and everyone around him, always sensitive to the feelings of others, matching his equally deep faith in Christ and his Church. He wanted to share the Gospel with everyone without imposing faith on a single person. He loved other human beings and wondered at the precious uniqueness of every person he met.
Fr Paul Stenhouse MSC, centre, with other Australian representatives of churches in Jerusalem in 1971.
Meanwhile, his scepticism of so many false idols, his calling-out of sham posturing or pretence in politics and public life or treachery and deceit in international affairs made him a minor Cassandra. And he was loved by everyone he knew.
Yet despite the fact that he was primarily known as editor of Annals Australasia, a journalist on an equal footing with professionals who worked on the biggest newspapers in the world and a brilliant scholar of Arabic and semitic studies he was, above all other things, a Catholic priest.
The tributes have poured in since his death in care on 19 November.
Fr Stenhouse after a Campion College lecture with Giles Auty, centre, one of numerous outstanding writers who Fr Stenhouse corralled for contributions to Annals, and Peter Coleman, former editor of The Bulletin and Quadrant.
Former Prime Minister Tony Abbott told The Catholic Weekly the influence of the legendary Catholic journalist and editor would live on. “Father Stenhouse was a distinguished scholar in several fields including Islam. Above all, he was a fine priest with a deep faith and a gift of communicating it to others.
“I have lost a friend but have gained much from his friendship. Although writers die, their writings never do. Paul’s spirit will live on through his works,” Mr Abbott said.
Aid to the Church in Need
Among the many bodies paying tribute to Fr Stenhouse this week was a statement from the International Office of Aid to the Church in Need, the global charity which aids persecuted Christians, with which Fr Stenhouse was involved extensively at both the Australian and international levels.
“At international meetings and in talks in London and elsewhere, his own indomitable spirit and oratory challenged, entertained and inspired audiences,” the ACN statement said.
“Paul helped the charity to steer a course after the founder, Fr Werenfried, died and whilst he asked tough questions – based on his extraordinary knowledge of the Middle East in particular – he also bestowed the blessing of deep and abiding friendship on so many.
“He would travel the world to help a friend in need – and through Annals, often running articles and adverts on ACN – he inspired the Faith in so many.” Archduke Philipp Habsburg, a member of the General Council of ACN, paid his own tribute. “What a man and what a priest! It was so good to know him still being there with his endless knowledge, wisdom, humour and humility. We will miss him greatly,” the Archduke said.
John McCarthy QC, Australia’s former Ambassador to the Vatican and, like Fr Stenhouse, a former Chair of ACN Australia, said that with the passing of Fr Stenhouse, the Church had lost one of its most outstanding scholars of Islam as well as a great commentator and advisor on the Middle East.
“Australia has lost a world figure in the struggle for religious freedom and the end of persecution of Christians,” he told The Catholic Weekly.
Fr Stenhouse sharing a light -hearted moment with Professor James Franklin at the Monastery of the Sacred Heart in Kensington.
“His legacy is enormous in these areas. All of us are in his debt. May this great defender of the Faith rest in peace.”
Leading Australian theologian Dr Tracey Rowland, at whose marriage Fr Stenhouse presided, paid tribute to not only the academic but the human gifts Fr Stenhouse shared.
“Fr Paul was one of the most highly educated priests I ever met, and I have met a few, but what really stood out to me about him was how he also had a really highly developed affective side as well,” she told The Catholic Weekly.
The practical intellectual
“Some people are great scholars, others are gifted in pastoral care, he was able to occupy both ends of the spectrum at once. He was highly integrated.
“He also loved the Church, the glorious moments in her history and the high culture to which she gave birth. Fr Paul was also an Australian without being ocker. He had buckets of cultural capital and shared it as a kind of common Catholic patrimony.”
Greg Sheridan, the long-serving Foreign Affairs editor of The Australian newspaper, described Fr Stenhouse as much more than a friend.
Greg Sheridan, Foreign Affairs editor of The Australian newspaper, was among those paying tribute to an extraordinary figure. Fr Stenhouse won recognition as a highly accomplished journalist and editor. Photo: Giovanni Portelli
“Paul Stenhouse was a gifted polymath, a cosmopolite of astonishing diversity and virtuosity, a prodigious reader, a knower of infinite facts and theories, and a deeply wise, friendly, good, pastoral priest,” he said. “Surprising as it may seem, that combination is not quite as common as you might think.
“Paul was a friend of mine, but I was very slack about maintaining the friendship properly. Because he was so affable and easy going, and because I suffer from that tendency which besets many journalists to get in touch with friends when I need their help, my contact with him was spasmodic.
“As a priest, he officiated at my wedding, helped me when I was sick, offered wise counsel more than once.
A respected public intellectual
“But I also shamelessly drew on him as a great public intellectual, and talked to him about Islam, Indonesia, the Balkans, Lebanon, the Middle East more widely, medieval Christianity, contemporary Christianity and any other subject which from time to time I needed input on.
“I met him through another great polymath, the former Labor cabinet minister John Wheeldon. John was the associate editor of The Australian when I joined the paper in 1984. Although a conscientious atheist, John had the greatest admiration for Paul and the two were firm friends, although they tended to show off a bit in my company by speaking to each other in a variety of languages which I couldn’t understand.
“Paul befriended many journalists. He combined with his great learning a deep, priestly, pastoral personality, an ever friendly and cheerful demeanour and loads of common sense. My only difficult encounter with him came many years ago when I gave a lecture to a small group on Islam in Indonesia. Paul rose to ask a question. He lavished my feeble remarks with unjustified praise and then, politely and kindly, took them apart piece by piece.
“Paul rose to ask a question. He lavished my feeble remarks with unjustified praise and then, politely and kindly, took them apart piece by piece.”
“And here is his true genius. I liked him just as much afterwards as before, and while I was perhaps none the wiser for the encounter, I was certainly better informed.”
Because of his (entirely justified) scepticism of the state of contemporary Australian tertiary education and because of the importance he saw in creating an answer, helping to establish and then promote Campion College, Australia’s first Liberal Arts tertiary institution, became a personal mission.
Campion founder Karl Schmude paid tribute to Fr Stenhouse’s support and personal encouragement.
Fr Stenhouse was a strong supporter of Campion College, Australia’s first Liberal Arts College. He saw in it part of the answer to the malaise of Australian tertiary education which has fallen prey to ideological control and political correctness in recent decades. Photo: Courtesy Campion College
“He had a special fondness for Campion,” Mr Schmude told The Catholic Weekly.
“He was, from the outset, a strong supporter of the College, and he served as an early member of the Campion Board. The initial meetings of the Board in the early 2000s took place, at his invitation, at the MSC Monastery in Kensington – and for many years he generously publicised Campion in the pages of Annals.”
It was at Campion, on 19 October, that Fr Stenhouse gave his final public address as the College hosted the Australian Chesterton Conference. The moment was poignant. The longtime journalist and editor clearly knew the end was near but drove himself to honour the commitment to an institution he loved dearly and saw as vital for the future.
“A kind-of intrepid, scholarly Indiana Jones”
As editor of Annals Australasia over five decades (his only appointment as a Missionary of the Sacred Heart), Fr Stenhouse assembled a stellar range of contributors ranging from figures such as Giles Auty, the well-known English art critic and columnist who migrated to Australia in 1995, through to Wanda Skowronska, the Catholic psychologist and author who were among the many willing contributors who made Annals the best-informed and most interesting Australian Catholic journal. Dr Skowronska told The Catholic Weekly that among his many gifts, his erudition was remarkable.
“Once I emailed him with a question and he wrote back saying he was in the middle of Kashmir at the moment (at some relatively remote place) trying to decipher some inscriptions but he would get back to me as soon as he could,” she told The Catholic Weekly.
He was, she said, “a kind of intrepid, scholarly Indiana Jones, forging ahead always for Christ, making friends in different parts of the world.”
As former NSW Premier and now ACU Chancellor John Fahey looks on, Fr Stenhouse speaks after being presented with his Doctorate (honoris causa) by the university in 2015. Photo: Giovanni Portelli
“I recall once walking up to his office, and finding him poring over a manuscript with his finger going rapidly from right to left. After I entered this office with floor to ceiling bookshelves (the room’s ceilings were several storeys high), I could see that the manuscript was in Arabic and I asked if he were reading something interesting and he said ‘yes’ in a matter of fact way. But such was his graciousness he put aside the papers to answer the questions I had for some particular article I was working on. He was kind like that to many people.”
Fr Stenhouse left school at the age of 14 to become a journalist working on several NSW newspapers but, first through his preparation for priesthood and then subsequently he achieved remarkable academic heights.
Academic heights
Archbishop Anthony Fisher OP prays over the coffin of Fr Stenhouse at Our Lady of the Rosary Church on 27 November. Photo: G Portelli
In 2015 Australian Catholic University awarded him its highest honour, Doctor of the University (honoris causa) “in recognition of his significant contributions to knowledge and the life of learning in Australia and internationally, to higher education, to journalism and Catholic culture, and to priestly service and pastoral care of the Catholic community.” Recalling him this week, ACU Deputy Vice Chancellor Coordination, Hayden Ramsay, described Fr Stenhouse as “a public intellectual—a rare thing for a priest In these days.
“He was a learned man; a man who trained himself to doctoral level and beyond in the languages and cultures of the Middle East,” Prof Ramsay told The Catholic Weekly.
“Fr Stenhouse knew the importance of being able to read the Koran in the original and understand the religious dimension behind key social issues of our day.
“He could speak with authority on the terrible persecution of Christians in the 21st century.
“I knew him only as an elderly man. He was sweet and kind – and not afraid to state truth. Despite his national importance, he was in a special way an ornament of his Order and of the Archdiocese of Sydney.”
Speaking at Fr Stenhouse’s Requiem Mass at Our Lady of the Rosary in Kensington on 27 November, Archbishop Anthony Fisher OP mourned his death.
Fr Stenhouse was, said Archbishop Fisher, “a man of deep faith and humanity, a keen observer of culture and society, a prolific writer and editor, a scholar and linguist, he was above all a loyal son of the Church and friend to many, including my predecessor and myself.
“I have only known him personally since he started dying in 2003. That made the last act of his grand opera an unpredictably long one and a tribute to his determination.
“But when I saw him in the hospice he told me he had put the last Annals to bed: it was clear he had finally decided to die.
“Paul was a missionary through and through. At the heart of everything Paul did was his mission to promote the Catholic faith. Annals was a testament to that mission.
Good and faithful servant
“His missionary vocation took him all over the world and allowed him to collect exotic languages, stories and friends along the way.
“He translated chronicles of ancient Samaritan high priests in Rome, lived in Tito’s Yugoslavia, travelled in and out of war-torn Beirut.
“Whether you agreed with Paul or not – and mostly I found I did – his conversation was always erudite and interesting. Vale good and faithful servant: enter now into the joy of your master.”
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KHOI DOAN NGUYEN MSC, NEW BOOK: TOWARDS CALVARY, The Stations of the Cross in Everyday Life.
KHOI DOAN NGUYEN MSC, NEW BOOK: TOWARDS CALVARY, The Stations of the Cross in Everyday Life.
Khoi’s third book, the first in Vietnames, the second, A Quiet Place Within, Contemplation from the Heart. He lives at Cuskelly House, the MSC Formation House in Blackburn, Melbourne, where he is the Director of the Pre-Novitiate program.
TOWARDS CALVARY
For generations, the fourteen stations of the cross have been part of the Catholic observance of Lent when we recall and reflect on the journey of Jesus to Calvary. But the command of Jesus to take up our cross is not limited to a forty day period in the church’s year but to the everyday experiences and challenges of being faithful disciples.
This understanding is at the heart of Towards Calvary. Khoi Doan Nguyen has taken the traditional number of fourteen stations but has modified them, recalling other incidents in the Gospel stories, offering new insights for our consideration, inviting us to fresh understandings of what it means to journey with Jesus to Calvary in our everyday lives.
The story of Jesus’ passion and death is not exclusively for Lent or Easter. It is the central story of Christianity; about human life and transformation. It is the story of our everyday life.
Khoi Doan Nguyen is a Missionary of the Sacred Heart in Australia. He graduated Bachelor of Theology and Master of Theological Studies at the University of Divinity in Melbourne.
He has published two books in Vietnamese, Return and Limitation and Forgiveness, and one in English, A Quiet Place Within (Coventry Press). He has also written articles on theology, spirituality and social justice in Compass, The Swag, and Populus Dei (the monthly Vietnamese Catholic Magazine in Australia). He was ordained a priest in 2018 and is currently a formator for his congregation.
To buy this book, Google: Coventry Press. Towards Calvary Khoi
40th ANNIVERSARY OF SILOAM, THE PROGRAM FOR SPIRITUAL DIRECTORS, 1979-2019.
40th ANNIVERSARY OF SILOAM, THE PROGRAM FOR SPIRITUAL DIRECTORS, 1979-2019
SILOAM, a program for Spiritual Direction, celebrates 40 years in 2019.
The program was established by Brian Gallagher MSC, drawing on his studies in Boston in spiritual direction and a Clinical Pastoral Education program.
Sacred Heart Monastery, Kensington, was the first venue. In 1980, it transferred to Sacred Heart Monastery, Croydon, Vic, where it continued until it became part of the Heart of Life Spirituality Centre in 1983 (and its several venues in Surrey Hills, Canterbury, Wantirna, Box Hill).
Its aim and scope, history and courses, the list of graduates to 2015, can be found in Heart of Life Spirituality Centre, A History (Peter Malone MSC, 2017).
Here is a list of members of the Chevalier Family who have completed the SILOAM program, as well as a list of staff members and course presenters.
MSC
Brian Gallagher
John Conroy
John Flynn
Peter Malone
Paul Castley
Terry Naughton
Tarcis Wignyosomarto
Noel Mansfield
Chris Chaplin
John Kelliher
Juan Diamante Jr
Patrick Bai
Mark Hanns
Steve Dives
Alo Lamere
Dominic Gleeson
Joshua Gopini
Thang Nhu Nguyen
OLSH SISTERS
Margaret Fahey
Cathie Mwagioidi
Rotee Uriam
Rosaleen O’Brien
Mary Manuera
MSC SISTERS
Tess Venker
Mechtilde Schnieder
And
Paul Beirne
Carol Dyer
Clare Shearman
DIRECTORS
Brian Gallagher, 1983-1991
Peter Malone, 1992
Susan Richardson, 1993=2001
Cheryl Bourke, 2002-2007
Susan Richardson, 2008-2013
Paul Beirne, 2014-
STAFF
MSC
Brian Gallagher
Peter Malone
Paul Castley
Frank Andersen
Frank Fletcher
Philip Malone
Chris Chaplin
OLSH
Robyn Reynolds
MSC
Anneliese Reinhard
Tess Venker
Rosalind Cairns
Reception
Margaret O’Loughlin
Phyl Coffey
Peter Curry
Siloam participants have come from:
Australia
Germany
India
Indonesia
Papua-New Guinea
Philippines
CELEBRATING THE FAREWELL TO THE MSC FROM THE RESIDENCE AT DARAMALAN COLLEGE.
CELEBRATING THE FAREWELL TO THE MSC FROM THE RESIDENCE AT DARAMALAN COLLEGE.
On 8th December, Foundation Day for the MSC, a Mass was celebrated to honour the MSC presence at the College, the withdrawal by the last three MSC, Fr Harold Baker, Fr Jim Littleton, Br John Walker. You will read the background in the text of Fr Littleton’s homily below.
Many MSC lived in the Residence since the 1960s. The building will be incorporated into the school.
Homily for 8th December 2019, James Littleton MSC
The 8th day of December is a very important day in the history of the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart – and so it is fitting that we have an MSC celebration today.
On the 8th of December1854 Fr Jules Chevalier founded the Society of the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart in Issoudun in central France.
From very small beginnings and despite some apparently insuperable difficulties, our religious congregation has spread all over the world. Today we have Missionaries working in 55 different countries in all five continents.
Our worldwide membership reached a peak of about 3300 members in the 1970s, but now is only about 1600. While numbers have decreased significantly in first world countries, they have increased remarkably in third world countries. Our withdrawal from Daramalan College is symptomatic of these worldwide changes. In the 1970’s there were at one stage 26 MSC living and working at Daramalan; this has been reduced to only a few in recent years.
It is in this context that the scriptural reading from the Letter to the Hebrews to which you have listened is apposite. It begins with the phrase: “There is no eternal city for us in this life but we look for one in the life to come.” I do not have exact statistics on the number of MSC who have lived and worked at Daramalan but it could be as many as 100. Fr Harold Baker holds the record of having been here for 45 years, I come next with 31 years. It is sad for us to leave, but as Scripture says: “There is no eternal city for us in this life.”
The Responsorial Psalm to the first reading is taken from Psalm 21 and it contains the beautiful phrase which you have recited: “O God you come to meet us, blessing us with success”. There is no doubt that over the 58 years of its existence, God has blessed the work of
the staff at Daramalan and here I refer particularly to the work of lay staff. Many have absorbed the MSC ethos and live it out in their private lives, as well as in their relationships with students and other staff members. I venture to say that the MSC Charism is more alive now and more clearly articulated than when there were many professed MSC on the staff. And despite occasional problems the achievements of the College over the years have been spectacular. God has indeed blessed the College.
The Message of the reading for today’s gospel would be summed up in the phrase: “Go out to all the world and tell the good news”. This was the instruction Jesus gave to the disciples before his ascension into heaven. The Church has done that over the years sometimes with success and sometimes with mistakes. The MSC are a missionary group. Together with lay staff, we have endeavoured to bring the Good news of God’s love to the people of Canberra. And we have taken confidence from the promise of Jesus in today’s gospel: “Know that I am with you always; yes, to the end of time”. A beautiful promise that gives all our staff much confidence.
With friend and supporter, Bishop Pat Power
Might I conclude by quoting from two numbers of the MSC Constitutions: “As Missionaries of the Sacred Heart we live our faith in the Father’s love revealed in the Heart of Christ. We want to be like Jesus who loved with a human heart; we want to love through him and with him and to proclaim his love to the world”. (Number 10)
“Following the example of Jesus, we will strive to lead others to God with kindness and gentleness, to unite them to him by love and to free them from fear”. (Number 12)
Those two numbers express something of the spirit of Daramalan at this time and for that we give thanks.
Photos: thanks to Bernard Kane.
Jim and Harold with Michael Fallon,