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ISSUE 29 FEBRUARY 2021
THE YEAR OF
Saint Joseph
E D U CATI O N
LE GACY
PLE N A RY
In the Norbertine tradition PAGE 10
Archbishop Foley 30th Death Anniversary PAGE 14
Assembly takes multimodal approach PAGE 24
Official magazine for the Catholic Archdiocese of Perth The Record Magazine ISSUE29.indb 1
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Photo: Max Hoh
FEBRUARY 2021
ISSUE 29 OUR MISSION STATEMENT
Our mission is to provide news, features and perspectives for the Catholic community of the Archdiocese of Perth and Western Australia.
COMMUNICATIONS MANAGER
We work to support Catholics to engage in the message of the Gospel and our coverage
AND EDITOR
seeks to reflect the needs and interests of the Church – local, national and international – in a
Jamie O’Brien
complete and authentic manner, reflecting always the voice of Christ in His universal Church.
jamie.obrien@perthcatholic.org.au DISCL AIMER
PRODUCTION Michelle Tan
The Record Magazine is published bi-monthly.
michelle.tan@perthcatholic.org.au
Views expressed in published articles are not necessarily those of the publisher or Editor. The Editor may refuse copy or material, including advertisements, for publication. Inclusion of an advertisement in The Record Magazine does
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Copyright 2021. No part of The Record Magazine may be reproduced in any form without prior written consent from the publisher. The Record Magazine liability in the event of an error is limited to a printed correction. Printed in Australia by Scott Print. This publication is printed using vegetable inks, is ECF (Elemental Chlorine Free) and has ISO approval for international environmental certification.
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F E AT U R E D T H I S M O N T H
08
Year of Saint Joseph An intercessor, support & guide in times of trouble
20
Port Pirie’s New Bishop Karol Kulczycki “Ready to go wherever God leads”
22 Archbishop William Foley blessed the Victoria Square Catholic Migrant Centre and placed a cross of St Francis whom he much admired.
Interviewing Principal Geri O’Keefe Mother Teresa Catholic College’s Principal
Photo: The Record Newspaper
14
“Lord to whom shall we go? You have
the message of eternal life...” — John 6:67
John Lazberger Floreat-Wembley parishioner receives OAM
F R O M T H E E D I T O R Jamie O’Brien Welcome to the first issue of The Record Magazine for 2021.
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Commencing from this issue, we are looking at stories from across the community; these are real stories of faith, hope and life. In this Issue 29 of The Record Magazine, we talk about the Year of St Joseph, and what it means for each one of us
Recipe Oat Slice
today. We speak to new Port Pirie Bishop, Karol Kulczycki SDS, who previously served in the Archdiocese of Perth. OAM recipient and Floreat-Wembley parishoner, John Lazberger, talks about his service to the community through social welfare organisations. Mother Teresa Catholic College’s (Baldivis) Principal, Geri O’Keefe, tells us about her 47 years of experience in schools across Victoria and Western Australia. Don’t forget that these and many more stories are available at www.therecord.com.au. The Record Magazine is a magazine for the people and I hope you will enjoy taking the time to engage with us. Please feel free to share your thoughts via editor@therecord.com.au.
FROM THE ARCHDIOCESE
04 06
From Archbishop Timothy Costelloe Lenten Pastoral Letter 2021 IN THIS EDITION
10 12 16 24 26 29 30
2021 CMLF Lenten Journal Archbishop Foley’s Death Anniversary Australian Catholic Superannuation Mercy Sisters 175th Anniversary Plenary 2020 Multimodal Approach Activity Page Colouring Page
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Look beyond the surface to a much deeper truth
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Archbishop Timothy Costelloe SDB recently spoke to the Catholic Education community at the Annual Commissioning Mass. In this Year dedicated to Saint Joseph, who was both a (foster) father and a teacher, these reflections have a special significance.
T
he Gospel passage of today’s Mass (Matthew
not divine quality - but rather about the capacity, and the
23:8-12) is a good example of why we need to be
passionate desire, of a true father to be a life giver, to be a
careful in our interpretation of Scripture and also
life affirmer, to be, in other words, a source of life for others.
why we, as Catholics, are very fortunate to have
Jesus tells us we should call no one on earth our father
a teaching authority which can guide us in our
for we have only one father who is in heaven, but because
interpretation of the Scriptures. Often, of course, the correct
we do in fact call people fathers, as Jesus well knew and
interpretation of a Scriptural text is quite obvious.
knows, we might more profitably say that we only recognise
No one, for example, would take Jesus literally, although I
fatherhood as genuine and noble when it is a reflection of
hope we would take him seriously, when he says that if your
the fatherhood of God.
tongue causes you to sin you must cut it out and if your hand
And so it is with teachers and, by extension, with anyone
causes you to sin you must chop it off.
who is engaged in the task of forming and educating children
We instinctively understand the nature of this kind of
and young people. We should call no one on earth a teacher,
language and recognise that on this occasion what Jesus is
says Jesus, nor allow others to call us teachers, because
really doing is stressing the gravity of sin and the damage it
we have only one teacher and that teacher is Christ, who
causes, and the lengths, therefore, to which we should go to
himself tells us that he is the Way, and the Truth and the Life.
avoid falling into sin.
Or, again, perhaps we should rather say, because we have
On other occasions the very graphic language of Jesus
looked beyond the surface of Jesus’ words to their deeper
is taken literally by Christians or at least by those in the
meaning, that we only recognise a genuine and trustworthy
Catholic tradition. When Jesus says, “My flesh is real food
and reliable teacher, and especially one who has accepted a
and my blood is real drink”, we understand Jesus to be
position in a Catholic school, when he or she is a reflection
speaking of the gift of himself in the Eucharist where we do
of and witness to Christ, for it is Christ who seeks, through
indeed eat his body and drink his blood, under the outward
teachers, to form and shape and lead young people into the
appearances of bread and wine.
fullness of life.
It is the long history of the Church, and the accumulated
We believe that every human being is made in the image and
wisdom of the Church, as well as our belief in the Lord’s
likeness of God and that, in a very real sense, the journey
promise to animate the Church through the gift of his Holy
of life is a journey into an ever deeper living out of this
Spirit, that we can be confident of the true and deepest
fundamental truth.
meaning of the Scriptural texts we read, because we read
As teachers, as educators, as those engaged in the education
them within the context of the Church’s faith.
of the young in any way, we know that we are the first
The words of Jesus in today’s Gospel invite us to look beyond
collaborators with the parents who send their children to us
their surface and literal meaning to a much deeper truth
in the formation and in the journey of maturation of young
which is, in fact, vitally important both for those who are
people as they prepare for life both while they are at school
fathers and those who are teachers.
and, much more importantly, for the life which awaits them
True fatherhood, genuine fatherhood, will inevitably be a
beyond their school years.
reflection of the fatherhood of God. And the fatherhood
What an incredible privilege this is, and what an enormous
of God is not about the maleness of God – this is a human,
responsibility it is.
+ Archbishop Timothy Costelloe SDB ARCHBISHOP OF PERTH
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SPECIAL REPORT: Open yourself to God’s healing power this Lent, says Archbishop Costelloe
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The difficult realities we face can threaten to overwhelm us,
for ourselves. Archbishop Costelloe then goes on to say
but that can also be a reminder to us of how much we need
that it is this mysterious mix of good and evil, of noble
God, says Perth Archbishop Timothy Costelloe SDB in his
intentions and ignoble actions, of high ideals not realised in
2021 Lenten Pastoral Letter.
reality, that the season of Lent allows us to confront and
Released one week ahead of Ash Wednesday on Thursday
address, and to do so not in despair or self-condemnation
11 February, the four page letter looks closely at the
but in hope and trusting faith.
Church’s teaching on original sin.
“If we adopt, as an image of sin, a person bent over him or
At the very heart of the Church’s teaching on original sin,
herself in such a way as to be unable to look outwards, the
explained Archbishop Costelloe, is the fundamental truth
six weeks of Lent offer us an opportunity to allow God to
that sin enters the world, and is active in the world, not
heal us of our infirmity and allow us to stand straight and
through God’s doing but through our own doing.
tall."
He highlights, with reference to the story of Adam and Eve,
He emphasises that in our Catholic tradition the three main
that from the very beginnings of human history, human
ways in which we open ourselves to God’s healing power
beings have not lived in fidelity to God’s creative intention.
are through our prayer, our fasting and our alms-giving.
“Made in the image of God, a communion of self-giving
“These are, in a sense, the exercises to which we need to
and life-giving love, we instead often find ourselves living
be faithful each day if we are to remain upright rather than
lives of self-centredness, of isolation, and even of cruelty,”
slowly deteriorate and find that we are once again curving
Archbishop Costelloe said.
in on ourselves.
“This dark truth of our human story, itself the ongoing
“They are the divinely prescribed remedies which can keep
consequence of original sin, is of course eclipsed by the
us strong and true."
bright light of salvation which comes to us in Jesus Christ.
Archbishop Costelloe concludes his Pastoral Letter saying
"Sin is real and powerful but grace is more powerful still.”
that if during the coming six weeks of Lent we can find the
Lent, continues Archbishop Costelloe, is a time when we
courage and humility to acknowledge that we are, indeed,
are all invited, and challenged, to recognise that, like Saint
sinful people, and that our sinfulness is not something trivial
Paul, we too have a battle raging within us that so often
but rather, because of its destructive effects on others and
leads us to be much less than God has created us and is
on ourselves, something very serious, then we will have
calling us to be.
begun the journey towards a true celebration of Easter.
“For many Christian thinkers across the centuries, beginning
“And if over these same six weeks, by our openness to God’s
with Saint Augustine, this lack of harmony between where
grace, our faith is strengthened and deepened so that we
God is calling us and where we find ourselves at any given
truly understand and believe that the greatness of our sins
time, is powerfully captured in the idea of the human
is absolutely eclipsed by the incredible love, compassion
person as curved in on him or herself.”
and forgiveness of the Lord, then as Easter comes we will
“It is as if we are caught in a destructive pattern of
know what it means to have died with Christ and risen with
looking inward and focusing on our own selfish and often
him.
destructive desires rather than looking outward and
“If through our prayers, our fasting and our alms-giving we
focusing on the needs of others.”
have allowed the Lord to help us stand straight, with eyes
Archbishop Costelloe highlighted that experience teaches
fixed on him and therefore also on those he loves, we will
us that living this kind of self-centred life may bring us
know what Jesus meant when he said to his disciples, “I
momentary satisfaction but it does not bring us deep or
have come that they might have life and have it to the full”
lasting happiness.
(John 10:10).
“There is something within us that calls us to a more generous, more noble, more truly human way of living. In our best moments, which may be few or many, we recognise
Go to www.perthcatholic.org.au to read the full
that this is both what God wants for us and what we want
Pastoral Letter.
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St Joseph AN INTERCESSOR, SUPPORT AND GUIDE IN TIMES OF TROUBLE
W O R D S Junno Arocho Esteves, CNS
Marking the 150th anniversary of St Joseph being declared patron of the universal church, Pope Francis proclaimed a year-long celebration dedicated to the foster father of Jesus on 8 December 2020.
I
n his Apostolic Letter, Patris Corde (“With a father’s heart”), Pope Francis said Christians can discover in St Joseph, who often goes unnoticed, “an intercessor, a support and a guide in
times of trouble.” “St Joseph reminds us that those who appear hidden or in the shadows can play an incomparable role in the history of salvation. A word of recognition and of gratitude is due to them all,” he said. As Mary’s husband and guardian of the Son of God, St Joseph turned “his human vocation to domestic love into a superhuman oblation of himself, his heart and all his abilities, a love placed at the service of the Messiah who was growing to maturity in his home.” Despite being troubled at first by Mary’s pregnancy, he added, St Joseph was obedient to God’s will “regardless of the hardship involved.” “In every situation, Joseph declared his own ‘fiat,’ like those of Mary at the Annunciation and Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane,” Pope Francis said. “All this makes it clear that St Joseph was called by God to serve the person and mission of Jesus directly through the exercise of his fatherhood and that, in this way, he cooperated in the fullness of time in the great mystery of salvation and is truly a minister of salvation.” St Joseph’s unconditional acceptance of Mary and his decision to protect her “good name, her dignity and her life” also serves as an example for men today, Pope Francis added.
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“Today, in our world where psychological, verbal and physical violence toward women is so evident, Joseph appears as the figure of a respectful and sensitive man,” he wrote. Pope Francis also highlighted St Joseph’s “creative courage,” not only in
“
finding a stable and making it a “welcoming home for the Son of God (who came) into the world,” but also in protecting Christ from the threat posed by King Herod. “The Holy Family had to face concrete
... (he) guarded
problems like every other family, like so
the intimate
many of our migrant brothers and sisters
secret that lies at
misfortune and hunger. In this regard, I
who, today, too, risk their lives to escape
the bottom of the
consider St Joseph the special patron of
heart and soul.”
because of war, hatred, persecution and
all those forced to leave their native lands poverty,” the Holy Father said.
As a carpenter who earned “an honest living to provide for his family,” Christ’s earthly guardian is also an example for both workers and those seeking employment and the right to a life of dignity for themselves and their families. “In our own day, when employment has once more become a burning social issue, and unemployment at times reaches record levels even in nations that for decades have enjoyed a certain degree of prosperity, there is a renewed need to appreciate the importance of dignified work, of which St Joseph is an exemplary patron,” he said. The Apostolic Penitentiary, a Vatican tribunal that deals with matters of conscience, also issued a decree on 8 December stating that plenary indulgences will be granted to Catholics not only through prayer and penance, but also through acts of justice, charity and piety dedicated to the foster father of Jesus. Among the conditions for receiving an indulgence are a spirit detached from sin, receiving sacramental confession as soon as possible, receiving Communion as soon as possible and praying for the Holy Father’s intentions. However, the decree also highlighted several ways to obtain the indulgence throughout the year, including to those who “meditate on the prayer of the ‘Our Father’ for at least 30 minutes or take part in a spiritual retreat of at least one day that includes a meditation on St Joseph.” As a “just man,” the document continued, who guarded “the intimate secret that lies at the bottom of the heart and soul,” St Joseph practiced the virtue of justice in “full adherence to the divine law, which is the law of mercy.” “Therefore, those who, following the example of St Joseph, will perform a corporal or spiritual work of mercy, will also be able to obtain the gift of the plenary indulgence,” it said.
The statue of St Joseph at St Mary’s Cathedral, Perth. Pope Francis has
Indulgences will also be granted to families and engaged couples who recite the rosary together and thus imitate
proclaimed a year-long celebration
the “same climate of communion, love and prayer lived in
dedicated to the foster father of Jesus.
the Holy Family.”
Photo: Archdiocese of Perth
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Centre for Life, Marriage and Family launches 2021 Lenten Journal Perth Archdiocesan Centre for Life, Marriage and Family (CLMF) has this year launched a Lenten Reflection Journal to help Perth Catholics across the Archdiocese of Perth prepare themselves for the season of Lent.
C
LMF Driector Derek Boylan, Life Services Manager Bronia Karniewicz and Project Officer Sarah Paverd-Joyce first published a Lenten Journal last year to celebrate the 25th
anniversary of the now St (Pope) John Paul II’s encyclical Evangelium Vitae (The Gospel Of Life).
●
L E FT
CLMF Director Derek Boylan (right), Project
Officer Sarah Paverd-Joyce (middle) and Life Services Manager Bronia Karniewicz are creators of the Journal. Photo: Supplied. ●
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A B OV E
A Lenten Candle Photo: Adobe Stock Image.
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ge.
Following the earlier successful Advent and Lent Journals produced by the CLMF, the journal features daily Mass readings, accompanied by questions to encourage readers to think about how they can prepare for Easter in their personal life, family, and community. “It is my hope that this journal will help you grow closer to God; to be challenged by God, and for you to allow God to call you into being an ever more faithful witness of thez Gospel in your home and community life,” Archbishop Costelloe SDB said. Included in the Journals are supplementary sections, aimed at deepening our understanding and experience of different forms of prayer, including Lectio Divina and the Stations of the Cross. Speaking to The Record ahead of the release of the Journal, Mr Boylen said Lent calls us to unite our suffering with the suffering of Christ, and discover the kind of faith communities, homes, and families that God is calling us to become. “Taking time for deep reflection can help us gain new perspectives, learn to recognise and appreciate God's presence in our lives, and create an ongoing dialogue with Jesus,” Mr Boylen said. CLMF hopes this resource leads people into a deeper reflection of their dignity and the incomparable worth of every human person as they journey with Christ to the Cross and Salvation.
CLMF 2021 Lenten Journals are available for purchase online for $15 (inclusive of GST) plus postage here: https://CLMFjournal.ecwid.com/. To know more information and bulk orders, email: lifeservices.clmf@perthcatholic.org.au or call (08) 9241 5000.
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T O P
L E F T
CLMF has successfully
launched Advent and Lent journals in previous years. Photo: Supplied. ●
R I G H T
Archdiocesan Centre for
Life, Marriage and Family (CLMF) 2021 Lenten Journals are available for purchase online. Photo: Supplied.
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ARCHBISHOP WILLIAM FOLEY
Celebrating a visionary who dared to dream big W O R D S Amanda Murthy
E
ven 30 years after his passing, Perth fourth
In 1954, the newly ordained Father Foley served at Shenton
Archbishop, William Joseph Foley is celebrated for
Park parish, then at St Mary’s Cathedral as Assistant Priest.
his many contributions as senior leader of the local
His services extended to those at home and in the hospitals
Catholic Church (1983 to 1991).
of Shenton Park and Royal Perth Hospital’s crisis ward.
Known for recognising and embracing the realities of Modern
Subsequently, taking on the responsibilities of three roles at
Church, while having the courage to dream big, Archbishop
once – as Director of Missions, Migration and Welfare for the
Foley was born in Nedlands, Western Australia in 1931.
next seven years.
In his youth, William Foley was educated by the Loreto Sisters
Archbishop Foley would witness first-hand the qualities
at Nedland’s St Theresa School, later attending Christian
needed in future parish priests of the Archdiocese of Perth
Brothers College in Perth.
when he took on the responsibility of diocesan Vocations
Upon accepting his calling to the priesthood, he enrolled into
Director in 1969.
St Charles Seminary in its fourth year of operation.
Two years later, Fr Foley, in his first role as Parish Priest, was
As a seminarian, William Foley also studied in Genoa, Italy,
challenged to build a new Church from the ground up for the
alongside more than 50 men from China, who were some of
then Langford Parish, which began as a bush cabin, with a
the last to escape before the communist regime took over.
curtained annex for a bedroom.
This would expose William to the hardships faced by the
At Maddington and Lynwood parishes, Archbishop Foley
Asian community and develop a deep sense of compassion
would shoulder the burden of developing a new parish, with
for the Asian migrants in WA.
many parishioners from migrant communities, including the UK, Ireland and several Asian countries. As many of these families he had personally welcomed into WA, he was fully aware that these people did not have much to begin with. This was a challenge he took on for
From left: Rabbi Dabid Freilich, Sheik Ibrahim Abdullah, Archbishop Foley and Rabbi Charles Wellach. Photo: The Record.
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seven years until he received a call in September 1976 from then Archbishop Sir Launcelot Goody to return to St Mary’s Cathedral, this time as Dean. With so much to offer, it was in July 1981 at the age of 50 that Fr Foley would humbly accept a new role and challenge, being appointed as the sixth Bishop of Geraldton. Archbishop Foley was just 52 years of age when he was appointed Archbishop of Perth, following his installation on 15 December 1983 at St Mary’s Cathedral. Expressing his vision and mission for the Church in Perth, the new Archbishop said he wanted “to provide the climate in which the skill of all members of the Church could be fostered and developed. “For the church to be relevant, its leaders must hear people in real life and help them find ways of hearing Christ speaking to them,” Archbishop Foley said. “An opportunity had to be given in the life of the Church to hear and involve the laity. There was a richness that had not been tapped sufficiently. The challenge is to make God real in the lives of the people.” He was a big advocate on
“
For the church to be relevant, its leaders must hear people in real life and help them find ways of hearing Christ speaking to them.”
inclusiveness and quickly focused his attention on building relationships with the wider community, noted through his role as Chairman of the Association of Churches in WA. Former Director of Catholic Education Western Australia and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Notre Dame Australia,
“I worked very closely with Archbishop Foley during my
Dr Peter Tannock AM summed up the contribution of
appointment. He was a simple, humble man with genuine
Archbishop Foley to Education, in a tribute article published
vision, generosity of spirit and much courage. He was always
in The Record Newspaper in 1991.
accessible, willing to hear a case and able to decide ‘yes’ or ‘no’ in a way that was very affirming. “Archbishop Foley’s short time as Archbishop was marked by many significant developments in Catholic Education WA. “He presided over the implementation of the Religious Education Guidelines, which have far-reaching implications for the nature and direction of CEWA. “He supported the development and diversification of the role of Catholic Education Commission and its office in WA. “He strongly supported the establishment of the University of Notre Dame Australia and initiated the establishment of the Catholic Education Office in Leederville.” Archbishop Foley passed away in his sleep on 10 February 1991 at the age of 59. He was last seen in public, at the Aboriginal cultural festival called ‘Kyana’ at the Esplanade the day before.
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Dedicated 92-year-old Floreat-Wembley parishioner John Lazberger has this week been awarded a Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) in this year’s Australia Day Honours list for service to the community through social welfare organisations.
VOLUNTEER SERVICE SEES DEDICATED FLOREAT-WEMBLEY PARISHIONER RECEIVE OAM W O R D S Theresia Titus
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ORDER OF AUSTRALIA
T
he OAM, which is awarded by the Governor-
The family relocated to Perth in 1964 where Mr Lazberger
General, His Excellency General the Honourable
had the opportunity to establish a computer service
David Hurley AC DSC, to a total of 371 recipients
organisation along with various other businesses over the
this year, acknowledges “individuals who
years.
have demonstrated outstanding service or exceptional
A devout Catholic, Mr Lazberger, has also dedicated his time
achievement in any field endeavour or service”.
voluntarily to St John of God Hospital Subiaco from 1978,
Speaking exclusively to The Record journalist Theresia Titus,
continuing for the next 14 years, serving as Deputy Chair of
Mr Lazberger said first of all, it’s an honour and a wonderful
the Finance Committee and Advisory Board.
surprise.
“It was a great privilege and pleasure to work with the Sisters
“I feel greatly humbled and honoured by this award which
of St John of God. I have the greatest admiration and respect
came as a great surprise to me,” Mr Lazberger said.
for their ministry and the work they undertake.”
“I thank my mother and father who decided to come to
From the year 2000, and continuing for the next 20 years,
Australia 80 years ago—we went straight to Kalgoorlie, and if
Mr Lazberger served on the Operations Committee and
it hadn’t been for them, I wouldn’t be where I am today—what
Finance Committee of St Vincent De Paul Society WA as well
a wonderful country in all aspects.
as chairing their Mental Health and Homelessness Advisory
“When I came here, I was 10 years old. I couldn’t speak
Committee for a number of years.
English and Australia has given me a hell of a lot of
“It was also with privilege that for more than 20 years I have
opportunities, which I was happy to take and have taken. I
had the honour to work alongside with Board members, staff
have never in my wildest dreams expected an honour of this
and volunteers who have been so incredibly committed and
kind,” he added.
dedicated to the work of St Vincent de Paul including Mental
Arriving from Molat, the former Yugoslavia in 1938, a young
Health & Homelessness.
John Lazberger went to school at the now John Paul II
“These people have also provided strength, vision and
College Kalgoorlie, before deciding to become an accountant.
expertise who have helped to guide the Society to where it is
The opportunity opened many doors and was one that led him to be actively involved with many notfor-profit works. Mr Lazberger moved to Melbourne in 1956 where he had the chance to work for leading international companies, holding senior finance and management positions.
“
today. I pay tribute to them.”
... to give somebody, to give something, back to the community.”
Giving his time voluntarily was also undertaken as husband to his wife Annette (nee Wells) of 60 years, whom he married on 19 December 1960, and father of four children and now grandfather to six grandchildren. The importance of having
not-for-profit work is, as Mr Lazberger explained, “to give somebody, to give something, back to the community”, and he believes the younger generations of today are as capable of dedicating their lives for others. “I guess really, it’s a dedication, you want to succeed, and you want to do good. I think the present generation can do the same. “I think they’re going to carry this country through in the world elegantly. Their way of doing things is different to ours, but they’ll achieve it their way.”
John Lazberger and his wife Annette (nee Wells). Photo: Supplied
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FOUR FINANCIAL HABITS TO DEVELOP IN 2021
AUSTR A LIA N CATH O LIC SU PE R A N NUATI O N A N D R ETI R E M E NT FU N D :
The start of the year is usually a time when people vow to cultivate healthy habits and ditch those that no longer serve them. Given that money touches many parts of our lives, managing our personal finances is a habit that is useful to help us achieve our goals and provide peace of mind. Not sure where to start? The tips below provide some things you may like to consider to stay on top of your money.
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AUSTRALIAN CATHOLIC SUPERANNUATION
1.
TRACK YOUR MONEY A budget is an effective way to identify which of your expenses are essential and those that
2.
START SMALL AND START TODAY Whatever your goals are, you’ll have a higher chance of
you could potentially reduce. It also helps you
realising them if you start saving today. Thanks to the
assess all sources of income that keep your
power of compounding, even small amounts that you save
household running.
can grow by reinvesting the returns with the initial amount.
You can use Australian Catholic
To get started, you may like to set up an automatic transfer
Superannuation’s Budget Calculator to assist
from your regular account so that a certain amount
you with staying on top of your income and
is transferred to a high interest savings account, an
expenses and to help you get a step closer to
investment or your super each time you receive your pay.
your goals.
If there’s one thing that the global pandemic has taught
After you’ve created a budget, the next steps
us, it’s to expect the unexpected. Having money for
are to implement and stick to it, as well as
unexpected situations such as a job redundancy or a
to conduct regular reviews to ensure it’s
major car repair can minimise the need for you to take up
meeting your needs. In fact, why not set up
a personal loan or use your credit card, both of which can
a reminder in your calendar to do a budget
attract high interest charges.
check-in over the next few months.
3.
MAKE YOUR SUPER WORK HARDER FOR YOU Planning for retirement may not be your priority especially if
your spouse’s super. These contributions can also help
you have many more years before you leave the workforce.
grow your spouse’s super especially if they’ve taken a
However, the funds you set aside now can determine
career break.
whether you have enough to live on after you stop working.
use your super contributions towards a deposit for your first home under the First Home Super Saver Scheme
other advantages of making voluntary contributions to your
(FHSS).
super or your spouse’s super. If you meet the Australian Tax
Another thing you may like to check is whether you have
Office’s eligibility criteria, you may benefit in the following
multiple super accounts. Having more than one account
ways:
could mean that you’re paying multiple fees and insurance
•
•
4.
•
In addition to growing your nest egg, there are a couple of
receive a government co-contribution of up to $500
premiums out of your super balance.
to your super if you are a low or middle income earner,
Consider consolidating multiple super accounts to ensure
who has made an after-tax contribution.
that you are not using your retirement savings to cover
save on taxes if you make post-tax contributions to
unnecessary costs.
MANAGE YOUR DEBT If you have debt with interest that isn’t tax deductible, consider reducing those with the highest interest rates first. You may like to check with your lender to ascertain if there are any early repayment penalties. Other ways that may help manage your debt include making repayments more frequently or consolidating your loans.
Australian Catholic Superannuation understands that different people have different preferences when it comes to learning, so we offer various ways for you to learn more about making your money work harder for you. Choose one or several of the following resources that suit you within www.catholicsuper.com.au: •
Determining whether to increase your loan repayments or to use any surplus cash flow for other purposes can
Advice - comprehensive advice (cost for service) or limited financial advice at no additional cost for members
•
articles (/news-hub)
decisions and with identifying opportunities to become
•
webinars (/seminars)
debt-free in the best possible way, while taking your
•
videos (/education/video-education)
be complex. A financial adviser can help you with these
circumstances and other goals into account.
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EDUCATION
Norbertines community in Australia prepared for all the good works
Queens Park, one of the few schools in the world with a link to the Order. Speaking with The Record, Prior of the Norbertine Community in Australia, Father Peter Joseph Stiglich O Praem,
W O R D S Theresia Titus
who lives at the Priory next to the College, said the spirit of community
O
n Christmas Eve in 1120, the
in Ireland, upon the invitation from
first 40 Norbertine Canons
then Archbishop of Perth, Redmond
professed in the Valley of
Prendiville, to Abbott Felim Colwell O
Prémontré, France.
Praem.
This year, Norbertine Canons
Now aged in his 90s, Fr Cooney, one
worldwide will celebrate the 900th
of the founding fathers, still lives at
anniversary of the Order founded by
the Queens Park Priory with three
Saint Norbert of Xanten with a year-
Norbertine Brothers studying to
long jubilee.
become Norbertine priests.
Australia’s Norbertine community
Just a few years after the arrival of the
was founded in Perth in 1959 when
three Norbertine Canons, St Norbert
young priests Father Peter O’Reilly O
College was opened by Archbishop
Praem, Father John Reynolds O Praem
Prendiville, on 27 February 1966,
and Father Stephen Cooney O Praem
and has since grown to be known as
arrived in Perth from Kilnacrott Abbey
“the hidden gem on Treasure Road” in
instilled in the Order differentiates it from the others. “We are a small, independent community and follow the rule of St Augustine which some other [Orders] do. However, one of the hallmarks from St Norbert of Xanten was that he followed the rule because it starts with: ‘the first reason you have come together is to be common in the house, to be at one heart and mind on the way
L E F T
College Principal Simon Harvey
and Prior of the Norbertine Community in Australia, Father Peter Joseph Stiglich O Praem. Photo: Theresia Titus ●
R I G H T
Class of 2020 graduate
Chloe Reder received the All-Rounder Award presented by College Principal Simon Harvey. Photo: St Norbert College/Lisa Quartermain
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St Norbert College managed to secure a spot in the top 50 schools in WA for 2020 amid a challenging year. Photo: St Norbert College/Lisa Quartermain
and other key liturgical events, while following restrictions, were also incredible,” he continued. With the motto Ad Omnia Paratus – Prepared for All Good Works”, the College community aims to provide “an authentic Catholic education in the Norbertine tradition”, which is more than academic results. Class of 2020 graduate Chloe Reder told The Record the College community she belonged to since Year 7 had prepared her to pursue her aspiration in becoming a midwife. “When I look back at everything that the school did, including the rules that they gave out, it all helped me to get
“
... the first reason you have come together is to be common in the house, to be at one heart and mind on the way to God’
where I am today,” Miss Reder said. “The College helped me to move into the future; to get the marks, a job and into uni. I couldn’t have got here if I didn’t go to school and learn these things.” Ranked in the top 12 WA Catholic schools and the top 50 WA schools for 2020, based on median ATAR results, 920 students are returning to the College in the new academic year, along with 100 staff, to be involved in
to God’,” Fr Peter said. “Hence in our
“If we focus too much on the
the many celebrations planned for the
formula, we promise life and community
challenging period we had, we would
900th anniversary of the Order the
and the vows of poverty, chastity and
forget the gains and wins we had
College community belongs.
consecrated celibacy. But the first thing
during the year - that we never thought
“It will be a privilege to be able to
we promise is life in the community.”
possible,” Mr Harvey said.
celebrate 900 years of the Norbertines
It was also the community spirit
“The support we receive from the
throughout the world,” Mr Harvey said.
that enabled St Norbert College -
community, parents and family - and the
“We, as staff, students, parents and
an apostolate of the Order and the
teachers’ focus on the students’ - needs
members of our community, owe a
only Norbertine-owned school in
just escalated to another level. I believe
sense of gratitude to the Norbertines
Australia - to enjoy a successful 2020,
that is something we need to celebrate.
for founding St Norbert College.”
a challenging year for many, including
“The collaborative nature of our staff
those in the education sector as
“We’re very comfortable saying that
working with our students and parents
COVID-19 crippled the world.
the greatest strength [that] people have
in a remote learning sense, I think it was
attributed to us is a sense of community
College Principal Simon Harvey believes
just amazing, and that’s the greatest
- and we get that directly from the
that as challenging as 2020 was, there
win. To be able to look at opportunities
Norbertines. We must treasure their
were many gains and wins worth
to celebrate our community, such as
warm and genuine presence in our
celebrating at the College.
the graduation of our Year 12 students
school community.”
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Port Pirie’s Bishop “ready to go wherever God leads” W O R D S Amanda Murthy
The Basilica of the Sacred Heart of Jesus in Trzebinia, Poland, proudly displayed the Church’s universality during a three-hour live-streamed Mass on Polish Catholic television, to officially welcome Salvatorian Bishop Karol Kulczycki SDS as the 12th Bishop of Port Pirie (formerly Port Augusta) on 29 September 2020.
where I was first ordained to the priesthood in Trzebinia, back in 1994. “Yes, there was much preparation and coordination to do in terms of organising the Mass, speaking to bishops for advice, guidance and support – which was a busy time for me and all who helped behind the scenes - but it was very important that I prepared myself spiritually. So, I
20
T
dedicated one week, where I went away in private to the
Bishop Kulczycki made history as the first priest from
spent 21 years as a missionary priest in the dioceses
the Polish-Salvatorian province, to be ordained a Bishop
of Perth, Bunbury and Geraldton (from 1997), before
on Australian soil.
returning to Poland in 2018 after being elected Vice-
The Australian celebrations took place at Saint Mark’s
Provincial of the Polish province of the Society of the
Cathedral in Port Pirie on 28 October, with the
Divine Saviour.
installation concelebrated by past and present bishops
Reflecting on his journey, Bishop Kulczycki shared that
from the Adelaide Province.
although he had always been a Church-going Catholic,
“Due to COVID-19, I could not return to Australia for
it was a mere 15 minutes of deep contemplation before
a while and instead God blessed me with two amazing
the Blessed Sacrament as an 18-year old, that would
celebrations, with many people from all over the world
change his life forever.
reaching out to me to express their prayers and support
“I attended a Salvatorian-run retreat, and like any other
upon the announcement of my appointment – I honestly
teenager, I took this as a time to spend time with friends;
could not ask for more,” he said.
we celebrated Mass every morning, participating in all
“It was an extremely meaningful and emotional in the
the activities planned without putting much thought
best way, a blessing to have the Mass at the basilica
into it.
he Port Pirie Diocese is one of the largest in
monastery to have the time to reflect, give thanks, pray
Australia, stretching from Uluru to Port Lincoln
and rely on God’s grace as I humbly accepted this new
and from the Western Australian border to the
role,” Bishop Kulczycki added.
River Murray.
Born in Poland in 1966, Bishop Kulczycki previously
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“On one of the days, the priest challenged us to sit before the Blessed Sacrament for 30 minutes. I had never prayed for so long in my life, I thought to myself! “For the first 15 minutes I was praying the traditional prayers and not really concentrating at times, but for the final 15 minutes, as I knelt there in silence, something amazing happened. “I heard a strong call by God, calling me by name, and a voice asking me what I am going to do about it?” Bishop Kulczycki left the retreat a changed man but vowed that he would give himself three years to complete his studies, before making any further decisions. “There were times that I tried to make other plans for my future, but for those three years, everything I did always directed me back to the priesthood and it was then that I knew, there was nothing left to do, but to drop everything and follow Him.
“
... calling me unexpectedly to religious and priestly life; directing my heart to serve Him in Australia.”
“I find it amazing to recount that after becoming a priest in the Salvatorian order, my first placement was at the vocations office, running retreats for young people, the same kind of retreats that led me to realise my very own vocation! “It was at the vocations office that I also met many fellow priests from different countries, many who served in Australia – and another calling to serve God in another part of the world was answered – the rest was history!” In a statement prior to the ceremony, Bishop Karol said God has always worked in “mysterious ways” in his life. “Firstly, calling me unexpectedly to religious and priestly life; secondly, directing my heart to serve Him in Australia and now serving Him and His people in Port Pirie Diocese,” he said. During the Australian installation service, Bishop Karol spoke of the three components of building a “family of families” – common home, common table and common goal. “I relate how God is working in our daily life by relating it to a relationship between an idealistic family-life. For me these three factors are extremely important, as a family of God in His Church, having a place we can all call home, sit together at the same table (although sometimes challenging) is a step in building strong communities. “Building our relationship with God, through the three components mentioned above. By understanding our human
●
A B OV E
A screenshot of the livestream from Bishop Karol Kulcyzki’s
relationships and their importance, we can understand how
installation mass at the Sacred Heart of Jesus in Trzebinia, Poland. Photo:
God is working with us, and in us.
Sourced. ●
“My mission will always be to be opened to God’s call, to go
L E F T
Bishop Karol Kulczyki at his installation Mass on 29
September 2020. Photo: Supplied. ●
T O P
R I G H T
Bishop Karol and
other concelebrants outside the Basillica of the Sacred Heart of Jesus in
wherever He leads, to serve His people,” he concluded.
Trzebinia, Poland. Photo: Supplied.
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You’ve been a leader for a number of years. What can you tell me about this experience?
Mother Theresa Catholic
I have been so blessed to have had many years in this profession, and
College’s
access to great faith formation. I was a Brigidine Sister for 11 years,
Foundation
where I was an untrained teacher for some of those early years. I’ve
Principal Geri
spent 47 years in schools in Victoria and Western Australia, and 26
O’Keefe. Photo: Supplied
years as a principal. This includes the seven-and-a-half-years that I have been Foundation Principal of this college and other leadership roles, as well as six-and-a-half years as Coordinator of Primary Curriculum and Teaching, as well as Coordinator of Leadership at Leederville. I also served in the rural and remote areas of Australia, including in the Kimberley.
LEADERSHIP: With some 47 years of experience across the education sector, Mother Teresa Catholic College’s Foundation Principal Geri O’Keefe spoke to The Record journalist Amanda Murthy about why community building, religious values and education go hand-in-hand.
‘Do as Mother Teresa did’, Principal Geri’s recipe to success WORDS Amanda Murthy
“Strong in Faith and Love” is your school’s motto. How does the school uphold this motto for students and staff? Our motto comes from the words of our patron Saint Teresa of Kolkata. They remind all of us in the college community of the way she lived her life – with great outreach to every person, with great love and humility, with a sense of service. We try to model her inclusivity and limitless service in everything we do here. Mother Teresa said and put to action so many other beautiful things including, “Give only Jesus to all you meet”. She made no distinctions as to race or religion, social status or world views and modelled what Christian love is supposed to be. At the same time, the staff and our older students know that Mother Teresa’s great challenge was her “Dark Night of the Soul” (as coined by St John of the Cross). For many years, Mother Teresa was deprived of any sense of God’s presence in her own life. She shared the burden of Jesus’ sense of being utterly abandoned in the Garden of Gethsemane – and yet, to everyone she encountered she radiated joy and cheerfulness. “We shall never know the good that a simple smile can do” and “Let us always meet each other with a smile, for a smile is the beginning of love.” So this is what I try to remind myself and instil, as a leader, in the staff and students of this college.
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What were some of the steps taken by Mother Teresa College to remain connected as a school community, especially during the earlier
queries about their work all day long using the TEAMS platform.
stages of the pandemic?
We remained open the whole time for
The staff worked hard to set up the
workers, and staff delivered ‘thank you’
online learning, staff trialed it the week
cards and chocolates to these parents.
before home-schooling started, to make
Members of the Extended Leadership
sure everything would run smoothly.
Team organised online messages of
Teachers and extended members of the
encouragement and care from all
leadership team checked-in with every
staff to all the 570 plus families of our
family at least once a week.
school.
Our Teachers and Educational
You can see how hard the staff worked
Assistants supported the home-
behind the scenes, out of their kindness
schooling by responding to children’s
and generosity.
students whose parents were essential
“ ... (make) no distinctions as to race or religion, social status or world views and modelled what Christian love is supposed to be.”
will become their means of contribution and decision-making for the whole college, and together we will work in community to bring out the best in one another and our students. We also have many opportunities for the staff to connect – to have fun and share stories, including faith-journey sharing. Our staff-parent sessions
Can you tell me about your
support a friendly and understanding
leadership style?
environment and sense of belonging.
Our leadership style at MTCC is different in the sense that all staff exercise leadership. We work on six pillars that can increase in number according to staff consensus. Our current pillars are: Making Jesus Real, Inquiry Learning, Sustainability, Well-being, Technology and Student Learning Data. Each staff member chooses a pillar to commit to, and that
We also encourage the students to be leaders by encouraging them to express and implement their ideas, acknowledging their efforts and supporting them the best we can. Our team for evangelisation and religious education focuses on Catholic curriculum, catechesis and Christian Service Learning, encouraging young people to contribute to society by ’Making Jesus Real’ in their lives.
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Sisters of Mercy remembered for equal, caring and compassionate outlook It was 1845 when the newly elevated Perth Bishop John Brady came to call on the Sisters of Mercy in Dublin.
A
s recalled by the Sisters, Bishop Brady was ascetic, undoubtedly holy, but also naive, misguided and ill-informed, seeking sisters to join a missionary
band which he had convinced (and had somehow convinced himself) was to tend to more than 5,000
caring and compassionate outlook for all Western Australians, no matter who they were, the first Sisters of Mercy arrived in Perth, Western Australia on Friday 9 January 1846. The sisters arrived in the blistering summer heat, dressed in their dark woollen habits, with no accommodation prepared, and a small, dominantly Protestant community in the city hostile to their presence. Their first experiences in the colony were in stark contrast to the vision of millions of souls ripe for conversion inspired by Brady. There were, in fact, only 337 Catholics in the colony, and an unspecified, but not large, number of Aboriginal peoples. Recounting this day in her letter to the sisters back in Dublin, Sr Ursula wrote, “We had a most delightful sail.
European children and two million Aboriginal peoples awaiting Catholic instruction in the 16-year-old Swan River Colony. Fired by Bishop Brady’s words, the Sisters of Mercy agreed to send three sisters and three novices on this mission and Ursula Frayne was selected as their Superioress. The Irish sisters were part of a group totalling 27 missionaries from Spain, Italy and France. Ursula Frayne and her six companions sailed up the Swan River from Fremantle to the young, struggling township which, in time, would become the modern, vibrant, multicultural city of Perth. With the vision of creating a better, more equal,
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“The weather was glorious; a strong breeze tempered the heat of the burning sun, and filling our sails, propelled us along so smoothly that we hardly felt the motion. The scenery was charming, the river broad and winding. Nature here had an undivided empire; human industry had literally done nothing”. Despite their initial trials, the Sisters wasted no time commencing their mission, opening their first school on 26 January 1846.
“
When only one Catholic
It was, instead, her role as an educator that is still
girl turned up at the newly
clearly evident today.
... her minted Mercy School (a which rose only role as an number to five after a week), Sr educator that is Ursula wrote: “[t]his was rather discouraging to still clearly in persons who had come journey of sixteen evidence today. athousand miles in order
to teach some at least of the four thousand little ones … I fancy His Lordship had mentally included the Aboriginal natives who might possibly number 4,000 roaming about the wilds of Australia, and whom it might be possible to Christianise”. But by September of that year it had grown to 60 children, the largest school ever known in Perth. Although they did end up being visited quite regularly by the Aboriginal peoples, Sr Ursula and her sisters quickly realised that converting the Aboriginal people and their families to Catholicism was not ever going to be their chief mission in Australia. However, the original ideal of atheist conversion, which had brought her to the colony in the first
Mercedes College in Victoria Square at Perth’s centre traces its origins back to Ursula’s first school of 1846 and was the first school Australiawide to be founded by a religious order, the first permanent school in Western Australia, and Western Australia’s first secondary school. The Sisters went on to open the first secondary school in Western Australia in 1849. Nearly two decades after they first arrived in Australia, the Sisters of Mercy established the St Joseph’s Girls Orphanage in Victoria Square. Eight years later, the Sisters took over management of the Subiaco Boys Orphanage, situated on the current site of MercyCare’s Wembley campus. In 1901, the Sisters moved St Joseph’s to the Subiaco site, where they remained until March 2002. For the next century and a half the Sisters of Mercy delivered education, welfare and health services in Perth and beyond without judgement; caring for all. Courtesy Institute of Sisters of Mercy of Australia and Papua New Guinea and MercyCare.
place, proved remarkably tenacious. This ideal underpinned the establishment of the so-called Benevolent Institution – a small residential house for Aboriginal children and destitute European children adjacent to the sisters’ convent. The greatest legacy of Ursula Frayne in Perth, however, was not to be in the problematic moral minefield of Aboriginal care and conversion.
An original photo of Ursula Frayne. Photo: Institute of the Sisters of Mercy Australia and Papua New Guinea
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Plenary Council President, Archbishop Timothy Costelloe SDB, recently announced an additional 15 new delegates nationwide, who have been called to join the existing 267 delegates ahead of the first assembly of the Plenary Council (PC) to be held in October 2021.
FIRST PLENARY COUNCIL ASSEMBLY TAKES MULTI-MODAL APPROACH, FIFTEEN NEW DELEGATES FROM ACROSS AUSTRALIA CALLED
W O R D S Amanda Murthy
T
he announcement was made in
Education Consultant, Ms Catherine
conjunction with another major
Nguyen and Iona Presentation College,
update, confirming that the first
Dean of Mission and Catholic Identity,
Assembly which was scheduled to be
Ms Gemma Thomson.
held in Adelaide, will now take place
In a letter released to delegates in
with a combination of online and faceto-face participation, as uncertainty remains over restrictions on travel and gatherings.
SDB spoke about some of the factors surrounding Australian Catholic Bishops Conference’s (ACBC) decision to adopt this ‘multi-modal’ approach.
two additional delegates who have
“After considering a range of
delegates, including those that must be called and those who may be called.
possibilities, the Bishops confirmed that the first Assembly of the Plenary Council will go ahead from
The two additional delegates have been
3 to 10 October in
named as Catholic Education Western
2021,” Archbishop
Australia Catechist Service Religious
Costelloe said.
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Gemma Thomson. Photo: Supplied.
December 2020, Archbishop Costelloe
The Archdiocese of Perth has received joined the current group of 12
Iona Presentation College, Dean of Mission and Catholic Identity, Ms
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n of
Ms
lied.
Catholic Education Western
Rev Father Vincent Glynn, Episcopal Vicar for Education and Faith Formation,
“We had essentially been preparing for an in-person gathering, while at the
Ms Catherine Nguyen.
same time trying to devise a backup
Photo: Feby Plando
pictured speaking with other
plan if COVID-related restrictions
delegates of the Plenary
remained in place,” he said.
Council. Photo: Ron Tan.
Australia Catechist Service Religious Education Consultant,
“Now we can focus solely on ensuring that the first assembly can honour and carry forward the listening, dialogue and discernment that has already taken place, albeit in ways we couldn’t have imagined a year ago.” Noting that while the details still need to be determined and the circumstances of the various parts of Australia would need to be considered, Archbishop Costelloe said the basic idea would be that Council delegates gather in small groups, and that small groups interact with each other online
“We also decided the Assembly will
to retain the national character.
be conducted using a combination
“We are mindful that other issues
of videoconferencing and in-person
such as the technical logistics and
delivery in diocesan, inter-diocesan or
support, easy access and use for all
provincial groups.”
delegates, the challenging nature of
The possible challenges faced by the Plenary Council, as explained by Archbishop Costelloe, include the issue of social distancing, which he said will most likely be a part of the “new normal”. “With a group of more than 300, many of the spaces at our venue will not allow us to gather while maintaining mandated social distancing measures.” Other significant factors include relevant financial, health and travel risks. “While they are not the primary concern, further delaying a decision on the celebration of the first Council Assembly would have created significant financial risks in terms of
being online for long periods of time and the challenge of doing communal discernment must be addressed in order for the first assembly to be successful,” Archbishop Costelloe stated. Archbishop Costelloe reminded Australian Catholics that the Plenary Council is a two year long journey, and that there will be a second assembly in Sydney in July 2022.
the Assembly will be conducted using a combination of videoconferencing and in-person delivery in diocesan, inter-diocesan or provincial groups.”
“The first assembly will inevitably take on a somewhat different flavour because of the multi-modal format, but the key principles of prayer, of discernment and of renewal in Christ remain central.”
deposits on accommodation, venue hire and a range of other expenses,” Archbishop Costelloe cited.
Archbishop Costelloe has this
Archbishop Costelloe added that the
week elected and welcomed
decision to migrate to a multi-modal format was made to ensure that further planning could now proceed with greater certainty under the current circumstances.
15 new delegates nationwide, who will be joining the existing 267 delegates, as they journey in anticipation towards the first PC Assembly, to be held in October 2021. Photo: Ron Tan.
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OAT SLICE C O U R T E S Y St Norbert College
A great lunchbox filler, this oat slice, created by food science & technology teacher Mrs Leon Rogers, was the most requested recipe from parents at St Norbert College Open Day and is on the menu every day in the school canteen. Despite its name, there are no oats in the buttery, chunky, fruit and seed slice, so named because it resembles a muesli bar.
INGREDIENTS • 125g butter
• 1 cup coconut
• 1 cup sugar
• ½ cup chopped dried dates
• 1 tablespoon golden syrup
• ½ cup chopped dried apricots
• 1 egg • 1 cup plain flour
• ½ cup pumpkin seeds
• 1 teaspoon baking powder
• ½ cup sunflower seeds
METHOD 1. Preheat oven to 170C. 2. Line a small lamington tray with baking paper. 3. In a large bowl place all the ingredients in the given order and mix thoroughly. 4. Spread evenly over lamington tray and bake in oven for approximately 25 minutes. 5. Turn dish around and cook for another 5 minutes. 6. Allow to cool in the tray prior to slicing.
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ACTIVIT Y PAGE
ACROSS 1
So be it!”
26 Papal vestment
3
Commandment word
28 Patron saint of servants
6
There were 40 days and nights of this
29 Irish bishop-saint whose feast day is February 6
10 A dove brought back this branch back to Noah
30 Nevada diocese
11 Administer a sacrament 14 “Take, ___; this is my body.” (Mt 26:26)
33 One of the Twelve 35 It burned without being consumed
15 “I have finished the ___” (2 Tim 4:7)
36 Catholic actor Martin ___, of “The West Wing” fame
16 Tribe of Israel
39 Floor length vestment
18 How many times each 41 ___ of Contrition day the soldiers of 42 Patron saint of farmers Joshua marched around 43 Top monk Jericho (Josh 6:3) 44 Direction from 19 David, to Goliath Bethlehem to 20 David asked Saul if the Jordan he pursued a “___ 44 What Catholics receive dog” (1 Sam 24:14) on the first day of Lent 24 NT epistle 46 Plant in the story 25 “Blessed art ___ of the fall among women” DOWN 1
Diocese of Honolulu greeting
29 Prayer book
2
St. ___ Stein
4
32 Father of Jesse
False teaching
5
34 Chant, as a monk
Read at Mass
7
37 Church days
The Archdioceses of Tokyo and Mandalay are here
38 “Cheer, cheer for old ___…”
8
“…hallowed be thy ___.”
9
What you should not cast before swine
12 Catholic actor Frawley’s famous TV role 13 What a catechumen participates in (abbr.)
31 Son of Seth
39 Refer to a biblical passage 40 There were 3 popes with this name in the 20th century
ANSWERS
17 Biblical twin 21 “I fear no ___; for thou art with me” (Ps 23:4) 22 Catholic novelist Koontz 23 Magi leader 24 Saint of Orleans 27 James’s father (Mt 10:3) 28 OT prophetic book
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