The
S outher n C ross
November 16 to November 22, 2016
Bishop Dowling: How to resist injustice
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Reg no. 1920/002058/06
no 5007
www.scross.co.za
This is the Real Presence at Mass
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Cremation FAQ: What’s allowed, and what isn’t
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Watch out for bogus ‘bishop’ BY MAnDlA ZIBI
T Jezzy the cat from Muizenberg in Cape Town enjoys a back issue of The Southern Cross from 2005 while reader Magdalena Kus was having a spring-clean clear-out.
Forest secretly grew Celtic cross
T
HE Celtic cross, an emblem of Irish Christianity for centuries, greets passengers who fly into the Northern Irish city of Derry—but its origins were long a mystery. More than 90m long and 60m wide, the cross is set on a hill, made of thousands of lighter trees amidst a backdrop of darker trees in a forest in County Donegal, just across the border in north-western Ireland. While the cross has been visible for several years, its origins remained a mystery, until recently when Irish TV station UTV uncovered the history of the wooded cross. It was planted by the late forester Liam Emmery, who died in 2010 at the age of 51 after suffering from poor health for a couple of years. The cross had remained mostly a mystery even to his family, until recently. “Liam was in an accident and he was unwell for two years, and he had suffered brain damage. So that’s why I suppose I had forgotten” about the Celtic cross in the forest, Liam’s wife Norma told UTV. “Because if he was here, we’d all have heard about it because he would have been so proud.” Gareth Austin, a horticultural expert, said that the cross was a feat of horticultural engineering. The dry autumn has made the cross particularly visible this year. “For Liam to have created that and to give
The Celtic cross that is visible from the air in a forest in Country Donegal, Ireland. (Photo: YouTube) the gift of that to the rest of us, we’re going to be appreciating this for the next 60 or 70 years,” Mr Austin said. Mrs Emmery said that it made sense that it was the symbol her husband chose to plant in the forest. “He just loved things to be perfect, and I think the Celtic cross is perfect for him.” The origins of the Celtic cross have been debated by historians for years. Some say the ring around the cross-section of the cross represents the halo of Christ, while others say it is a symbol adopted from pagan beliefs about the sun, to show Christ’s supremacy over the life-giving pagan solar deities. Many believe that either St Patrick or St Declan introduced the cross to Ireland.—CNA
HE Southern African bishops and the Vatican have warned local Catholics to be on the lookout for a man who claims to be the Nigerian-born Catholic bishop of Highveld diocese. There is no such Catholic diocese—though there us an Anglican diocese of that name— and there are no Nigerian-born bishops in South Africa. Dr Simon Peter Nnolumfu, the bogus bishop, styles himself as the leader of the Order of Missionaries of Mercy, “The Vatican and the Nigerian Catholic Church are mystified by the claims of this man,” Archbishop William Slattery of Pretoria told The Southern Cross. “Bishops are appointed by the pope in public ceremonies. The pope issues a personal letter to the appointee, which is read in public. Then there is a laying of hands on him by three other bishops,” said the archbishop, who is also the spokesman for the Southern African Catholic Bishops’ Conference. “No such ceremony took place for this man,” he added Therefore, Dr Nnolumfu has no authority to act in the name of the Catholic Church in South Africa or anywhere else, Archbishop Slattery said. “People should not believe him, nor should they contribute funds to his church,” Archbishop Slattery said. Dr Nnolumfu is not the first person to present himself illicitly as an ordained leader of a mainstream church.
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oreover, it is not uncommon that founders of micro-churches give themselves the title “bishop”. “In certain sections of the Christian denominations in South Africa, men are continually declaring themselves ‘bishops’,” said Archbishop Slattery. “Religion in South Africa is the least regulated of the professions. The Commission for the Promotion and Protection of the Rights of Cultural, Religious and Linguistic Communities (CRL Rights Commission) spoke of the abuse of belief systems, but their recommendations are far from satisfactory,” he said. The commission, chaired by Thoko Mkhwanazi-Xaluva, was tasked among other things with investigating questionable and
abusive religious practices in order to make recommendations to parliament for changes in the law. At the moment, religious bodies are governed by the same legislation as non-profit organisations, which is problematic because “the administration of a soup kitchen and that of a church earning millions were simply not comparable”, Ms Mkhwanazi-Xaluva has said. Mr Nnolumfu, the bogus bishop, is the subject of a letter by former Vatican Cardinal Francis Arinze to the Congregation for the Evangelisation of Peoples in Rome. In the letter, the Nigerian prelate relates how he first met the “bishop” at a papal Mass at the Vatican. “This man…attended the concluding papal Mass in St Peter’s Square on the solemnity of the Sacred Heart on 3rd June 2016 and concelebrated the Mass as one of the bishops. “He greeted me while we were vesting and told me that he was a bishop in South Africa and that he originated from Agulu town in Awka diocese in Nigeria. My doubt on [sic] him began that day,” Cardinal Arinze said in the letter.
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n his letter, Cardinal Arinze mentions reports that Mr Nnolumfu recruits “doubtful candidates”, after which he organises for them to be ordained as priests in Yaounde, Cameroon, “by some bishop said to be of some Oriental rite”. “One of such ‘priests’ tried to function in Oguta in Owerri dioceses without success.” Elsewhere in the letter Cardinal Arinze noted: “It would seem that [Mr Nnolumfu] regards himself and his ‘church’ as part of the Old Catholic Church. [He] speaks of this socalled church as having some married bishops under special conditions.” On the Who’s Who in South Africa website Dr Nnolumfu makes no reference to leading a breakaway sect. On LinkedIn he claims to head the “Catholique Diocese of Highveld”. His Facebook page, on which he is “friends” with many local Catholics, features official Catholic logos, including one depicting the papal coat of arms and the legend, “I stand with the Catholic Church”. The Congregation for Evangelisation has issued a warning concerning the activities of the Order of the Missionaries of Mercy and Dr Nnolumfu.