How Bizarre is this Dennis Kozak FaithfulVoice ,Long Island
Empower
the laity and then let them take positions on issues.
The
following are inspired words from the Guru of Heresy, the beloved James Muller
and is taken from the votf website
http://www.nd.edu/%7Endmag/w2002-03/muller.html
the
full text is at the end of this Kozak commentary
"I
seem to be a specialist in novel organizations," Muller comments. He
traces his unusual combination of medical researcher and social activist to his
time at Notre Dame. "Notre Dame in the early 1960s gave me two things: an
excellent educational grounding in science and an appreciation of the full
meaning of being a Catholic."
My
comments:
Heretical
and diabolical organizations are hardly novel. They can be traced back to when
Satan was cast from Heaven and will continue until Jesus returns again.
If Notre Dame gave him an appreciation of the full meaning of being
Catholic then the good doctor should know that THAT will not occur until we
stand before the judgment seat of God.
When
asked what the recourse of the laity is when they are consulted by their
bishops but ignored when the final decision is made, Muller points to the one
area in which the laity is in complete control -- money. Some VOTF members call
it "the oxygen of the church." Muller would invoke the leverage of
financial support to enforce what he stresses should be the accountability of
the hierarchy to the laity in non-doctrinal areas. (This position was
seconded in October 2001 by Governor Frank Keating of Oklahoma, who heads a
commission appointed by U.S. bishops to monitor church follow-up to the sexual
abuse scandal.)
My
Comments:
So
THIS is how the democracy will work. The hierarchy established by Jesus Christ
disagrees with the enlightened laity of votf and votf cuts off the money.
Money
is the oxygen of the church????? I guess the Holy Spirit has been voted out (by
a 2/3rds majority of course)
"It
is a struggle to keep traditional Catholics in VOTF," Muller concedes,[but we must, for now,
because without them NOBODY would pay any attention to the crazy notions of our
leadership , Kozak comment] "but we must keep 'structural change' undefined [so we can suck as much
money out of the unsuspecting traditional Catholic as possible,: Kozak comment] until its specifics can
be determined by a lay voice that includes all spectrums." This means
first establishing a functioning vehicle for representative and effective lay
influence in church decision-making, then discussing controversial issues. Empower the laity and
then let them take positions on issues.[and then we can have that vote on electing the
“pre-eminent” pope, cardinals, bishops and priests, :Kozak comment
]
How about we make a deal with the good doctor? We promise not to do any heart surgery and he promises not to make Jesus’ church any more novel than it has been for two thousand years
Works
for me.
In
His presence , Dennis
mailto:Dennis4@FaithfulVoice.com
Date: Wed Jan 15 04:37:01 2003
Subject: Jim
Mueller's Vision: Keep the Faith, Change the Church...I don't think so...
Jim Mueller, with his WORLDLY genius in
full gear, knows that if he is crystal clear and spells out the specifics of
his agenda he will NOT attract the numbers he's determined to lure into Votf.
Any genuine proponent espousing a
particular agenda IDENTIFIES THE PROBLEM AREAS as he defines them; then,
CLEARLY AND CONCISELY PROPOSES A SOLUTION. He doesn't skate around KEY
ISSUES UNLESS, HE HAS A HIDDEN AGENDA.....Usurp the power of the people,
blinded by the prevailing darkness, then morph into the American Catholic
Church with all its deviants.
Genius, that Mueller is in worldly
affairs, he doesn't quite make the grade in
Scripture
101...to quote Jesus Christ-Mathew 16:18......
"You
are Peter, (rock), and upon this rock, I will build my church and the gates of Hell
shall not prevail against her".
Striving so diligently to win the
battle only to lose the war is fools folly...
Ann,
LI,NY.
The following is the fulltext of the article mentioned above.
Keep the Faith, Change the Church
By Richard Conklin '59M.A
Two
decades ago, cardiologist Jim Muller '65 helped launch an effort of American
and Soviet physicians to oppose nuclear warfare, a movement that resulted in a Nobel
Peace Prize. Now he wants to reform the Catholic church.
On
a sunny September afternoon, Muller sits in his modest office in Boston's West
End and talks about a lay initiative called Voice of the Faithful (VOTF). A few
blocks away in Superior Court, the Archdiocese of Boston is handing $10 million
in funds from its insurance coverage to 86 victims of sexual abuse by one of
its priests. Muller's earnest words echo the organization's trademarked motto:
"Keep the faith, change the Church."
The
nationally publicized revelations early last year of sexual abuse by some
Catholic clergy and the tragic failure of their bishops to protect victims left
Muller and many other committed Catholics in a crisis of faith. The scandal
"awakened me to the terrible flaws in our church," Muller says.
"I reached the painful conclusion that I must either attempt to correct
these deep structural defects or leave the Catholic church." The
"deep structural defects" Muller and VOTF see in the church center on
what they perceive as a lack of a significant voice for the laity. Had there
been such a voice, VOTF members argue, there would not have been a sexual abuse
scandal.
Voice
of the Faithful began in January 2002 in Muller's parish, when 30 persons
gathered for a session about the church scandal in the basement of a parish
school in the upscale Boston suburb of Wellesley. These lay-led discussions
were soon joined by members of other parishes and augmented by e-mail
correspondence. "One night in March," Muller recalls, " I was
unable to park within four blocks as more than 500 people overflowed our small
meeting rooms. A holiness, a spirit, guided the meetings. We knew by April that
we had the germ seed for a world movement."
Muller
has some experience with world movements. In 1980, he co-founded International
Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW). Within five years the
group had 150,000 members in 41 countries, and Muller was in Oslo to witness
the Nobel Peace Prize award to IPPNW. When it comes to growing Voice of the
Faithful, he has one great advantage over organizing the physician's group --
this time around he has the Internet. VOTF is very much web-driven, with its
comprehensive site voft.org getting about 20,000 hits a month.
The
reform movement now claims more than 25,000 members in 21 countries. It is
rooted among the 62 million American Catholics who represent about 6.5 percent
of the world membership of the church. Media coverage, particularly at the
beginning, was an enormous help in recruiting members; 125 reporters attended
VOTF's first national conference last July.
"I
seem to be a specialist in novel organizations," Muller comments. He
traces his unusual combination of medical researcher and social activist to his
time at Notre Dame. "Notre Dame in the early 1960s gave me two things: an
excellent educational grounding in science and an appreciation of the full
meaning of being a Catholic." He was graduated in 1965, the year Vatican
II concluded with the publication of its Decree on the Apostolate of the Laity,
which proclaimed, "As sharers in the role of Christ the Priest, the
Prophet, and the King, the laity have an active part to play in the life and
activity of the Church." He remains a close friend of President Emeritus
Father Theodore Hesburgh, CSC, and holds up notes he has taken on Hesburgh's
1946 doctoral dissertation on the role of the laity in the church.
The
discussions in the parish school basement clarified one thing for Muller:
"The problem is a concentration of power in the hierarchy," he
asserts. "It is as though the executive, legislative and judicial branches
were combined. We want to give a significant voice to the laity, and to that
extent we want -- I know the word is inflammatory -- more 'democracy' in the
church." Muller makes it clear it is not a democracy of theology he
envisions -- there will be no votes on the Nicene Creed. He sees a governance
partnership that would call for substantial consultation with the laity by
bishops. The VOTF website defends lay input in this way, "We have
intellectual, emotional and spiritual contributions to make and knowledge to
impart on myriad real-life issues. These include, but are not limited to, human
sexuality, women's rights, democratic processes, and the contextual roles of
science and history in the healthy life of the church."
In
spring 2002, Muller outlined his vision to the Boston Globe. "If I had a
dream of what this would look like three years from now, our enrollment would
be half the Catholics in the world, every parish would have a chapter, and
every diocese, every nation, and the world would, too, and that organization
would be a counterbalance to the power of the hierarchy -- it would have a
permanent role, a bit like Congress."
History
does not favor VOTF. As church historian John O'Malley of Weston Jesuit School
told The New Yorker last year, "There has never been a truly significant
revolution from within the Catholic church by lay people." And the U.S.
bishops' guarded -- at best -- reaction to VOTF might well stem from their
memories of the ill-fated Call to Action conference in 1976, which pushed the
Catholic Left envelope well beyond what they could embrace.
Muller,
now chairman of VOTF's board of trustees, knows he must keep conservative
Catholics in the tent. In his analysis, progressives and traditionalists agree
on the problem -- sexual abuse by clergy and a subsequent "institutional
cover-up." They disagree on possible causes: Liberals cite such factors as
a clerical culture of secrecy and a lack of women priests, while conservatives
tend to list such bete noires as moral permissiveness and ordination of
homosexuals. He hopes, however, they will come together on what he stresses is
the underlying cause: centralized power.
Voice
of the Faithful thus far is deliberately centrist. The organization refuses to
take official positions on such hot-button topics as mandatory celibacy,
women's ordination and birth control. But the crucial question remains: Can the
center hold? VOTF has a three-part mission, and there is little potential for
disagreement in two of them: Support for victims of clerical sexual abuse and
encouragement for the vast majority of priests ministering with integrity. It
is the third objective -- structural change in the church -- that holds the
seeds of divisiveness that some bishops have accused VOTF of fostering.
"It
is a struggle to keep traditional Catholics in VOTF," Muller concedes,
"but we must keep 'structural change' undefined until its specifics can be
determined by a lay voice that includes all spectrums." This means first
establishing a functioning vehicle for representative and effective lay
influence in church decision-making, then discussing controversial issues.
Empower the laity and then let them take positions on issues.
Muller
hopes VOTF can carefully move to this goal in ways acceptable to the right,
center and left. For example, the governing council of VOTF is expected to push
for parish personnel review boards that will have access to the dossiers of
priests assigned to a parish. He believes this is the kind of proposal that
will have across-the-board support. VOTF has already devised a "bishop
monitoring form" so parish affiliates can track the progress of their
local ordinaries in implementing the Charter for the Protection of Children and
Young People approved last June by U.S. bishops meeting in Dallas (and later
modified at the Vatican's insistence). How successful VOTF will be in finding a
middle road is yet to be seen. Meanwhile, some conservatives are referring to
the "Voice of the Not-So-Faithful."
Muller
has another concern. Not many young people are joining his movement. Indeed,
its membership looks a lot like Muller himself, well-educated middle-class
people who grew up in the church prior to Vatican II and for whom Catholicism
is a native language. He thinks young people today don't have the same
relationship to the institutional church as older generations. He hopes they
will be attracted to VOTF as a vehicle for creating a church they consider
relevant.
When
asked what the recourse of the laity is when they are consulted by their
bishops but ignored when the final decision is made, Muller points to the one
area in which the laity is in complete control -- money. Some VOTF members call
it "the oxygen of the church." Muller would invoke the leverage of
financial support to enforce what he stresses should be the accountability of
the hierarchy to the laity in nondoctrinal areas. (This position was seconded
in October 2001 by Governor Frank Keating of Oklahoma, who heads a commission
appointed by U.S. bishops to monitor church follow-up to the sexual abuse
scandal.)
In
Boston, VOTF has promoted a tax-deductible means of giving to archdiocesan
causes that bypasses the cardinal's fund. Church officials have said they will
not accept money in this manner.
On
the inside of Muller's office door hangs a white coat, reminding a visitor that
the occupant is, first and foremost, a physician. Muller has a lifelong
research interest in the onset of heart attacks and is currently director of
clinical research in the cardiology division of Massachusetts General Hospital,
a major teaching hospital of the Harvard Medical School. He also continues to
teach young cardiologists at the hospital clinic, a short walk from his
building. The majority of his professional time is spent as director of
operations at the Center for Integration of Medicine & Innovative
Technology, a nonprofit consortium seeking to apply the newest technology to
medicine in ways that range from developing an artificial kidney to using
wireless communications in the operating room.
His
ability to speak Russian (a language choice suggested by his father after
seeing Sputnik cross the Indianapolis sky) has accounted for an unusual
dimension of his medical career. Muller studied the language at Notre Dame, and
while at Johns Hopkins Medical School he ferreted out a travel grant to do five
months of medical study in Moscow. The experience solidified his Russian,
warmed him to another culture, introduced him to Soviet medicine and started
him thinking about the possibility of international cooperation in areas of
common concern.
It
was at an Oslo news conference preceding the awarding of the 1985 Nobel Peace
Prize to IPPNW that the cooperation between doctors in the two countries was
dramatized in an incident that seemed taken from a Hollywood script. A
correspondent for Moscow radio and television collapsed from a heart attack,
and in the midst of a gaggle of international print, radio and television
media, Muller, aided by the American and Soviet doctors who had worked together
on nuclear issues, resuscitated the victim. "It was a dramatic parable
underlining the message of international cooperation the Peace Prize was
intended to convey," says Muller. For his work with the physician's group,
he received an honorary doctor of laws from Notre Dame in 1986.
Some
of Muller's investigations of heart disease have entered the popular press,
such as the fact that most heart attacks occur in the morning, that moderate
drinkers have a better chance of surviving a heart attack and that tea drinking
benefits those with cardiovascular disease. But his most important
heart-related research has contributed a medical term to the English language
-- "vulnerable plaque." It has long been known that most heart
attacks are caused by plaque blocking arteries that nourish the heart. Only
recently, however, have researchers like Muller demonstrated that some arterial
plaques are stable and unlikely to rupture, while others, named "vulnerable
plaque" by Muller, are unstable and trigger 80 percent of heart attacks.
Currently,
doctors cannot reliably distinguish between stable and unstable plaque. There
is an estimated billion-dollar-plus market for such a diagnostic tool, and
Muller thinks he has one. He is co-founder and chairman of the board of a
start-up company called InfraReDx, which has developed a catheter-delivered
infrared light that can reveal the chemical composition of tissue and thus
detect vulnerable plaque.
Muller's
dual career as social activist and medical scientist has not been easy. His
co-workers in VOTF, who are used to receiving Muller e-mails written between
midnight and 5 a.m., describe him as serene under pressure. Muller, however, is
candid about the stress his hyperactivity has caused over the years. Family
considerations caused him to resign as IPPNW secretary in 1984, and he gave
himself over to organizing VOTF only after talking with his wife, Kathleen, who
shared his concern about the church and urged him to go ahead.
Muller
is often asked if his movement will outlast the uproar over the church scandal.
"The scandal has given us enormous liftoff," he says. "We shall
see whether it puts us in orbit."
*
* *
Dick
Conklin recently retired as associate vice president of University Relations at
Notre Dame.