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3 churches newsletter, 24 September 2017
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Bubbles and Queen Nefertiti
“O Lord my God, when I in awesome wonder consider all the works Thy hand hath made…”
Last week I found myself sitting on a park bench in Berlin. I was gathering my strength to visit some museums there in one of the world’s greatest concentrations of culture in one place – the so-called Museum Island where many of humanity’s treasures are gathered.
But it was not the contents of these that caught my attention It was the chap on the lawn with a big pool of soapy stuff blowing those huge balloons with two sticks. He was surrounded by a gang of children gazing in amazement as the enormous bubbles wobbled off up into the heavens. Many were desperate to have a go, and the frenzy of excitement hit new heights. So here we were, surrounded by the priceless achievements of the human race – but the kids just wanted the bubbles, their faces and voices capturing the “awesome wonder” of what air can do with soap.
An hour later I found myself inside face-to-face with one of the most famous sculptures in the world – the head of Nefertiti. This limestone carving of the Queen of Egypt, wife of Akhenaten, from about 1350 BC, stops you in your tracks.
“Perfection” an American lady behind me said. Indeed, you cannot help but marvel at the beauty of the Egyptian queen and the skill of the sculptor.
Then I suddenly remembered the laughing kids outside. In front of Nefertiti, as when faced with a stunning landscape like the Rockies, we can be taken to a different place. May we never lose our childlike “awesome wonder”, the excitement deep in our human spirit when we consider God’s works, either in nature itself or through human gifts – or even in soapy water in a Berlin park.
Fr Matthew
3 churches newsletter, Sunday 17 September 2017
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Surprising Korea
Martyrs 20th September
You may be amazed to discover that by 2015 the Catholic Church in South Korea had 5,560,971 members (10.6% of the population) with 4,901 priests and 1,668 parishes.
A Portuguese Jesuit was possibly the first Catholic missionary in Korea, arriving in 1593. However, Catholicism in Korea really began in 1784 when a layman Yi Seung-hun was baptized in China. He returned to Korea with religious texts, and baptized many fellow countrymen. Interestingly the Church continued without formal missionary priests until clergy from France arrived in 1836. During the 19th century, the Church was targeted by the government chiefly for its opposition to ancestor worship, important to Korean culture. Despite a century-long persecution that produced thousands of martyrs – 103 were canonized by Pope St John Paul in 1984, including the first Korean priest, St Andrew Kim, ordained in 1845 and martyred in 1846 – the Church in Korea expanded.
Current surveys show that more than 45% of South Koreans practice no religion, that about 22% are Buddhists, and that 28% are Christians with just under 11% being Catholics and 18% being Protestants, meaning that Christianity is the largest religion. The Catholic Church in South Korea has seen prodigious growth in recent years, increasing its membership by 70%. In 2014 alone, the Church grew by 2.2% as over 98,000 Koreans became Catholic. There has also been an increase in vocations to the priesthood and religious life. Part of this growth can be attributed to the Church’s positive perception by the pubic because of its role in the democratization of South Korea, its participation in works of social welfare, and its respectful approach to interfaith relationship and matters of traditional Korean spirituality.
There are now 15 dioceses in the South, but in North Korea all Christianity is officially suppressed, and unofficial estimates by South Korean Church officials place the number of Catholics there at only 5,000. Pope Francis visited South Korea in 2014, when he beatified 124 more martyrs. An invitation for North Korea’s Catholics to be allowed to attend was declined.
Fr Matthew
3 churches newsletter, 10 September 2017
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