Subscriptions to The Catholic Herald
Full refund within 30 days if you're not completely satisfied.
page:
contents page
previous next
zoom out zoom in
thumbnails double page single page large double page
fit width
clip to blog
Look up postcode WN4 0SD Open www.tangney-tours.com Call +441293590115 Call +448009173572 Call +441942726418 Send email to info@tangney-tours.com Call +35316266193 Open C.Perrotta Open vanpoulles.co.uk Open Twitter.com/catholicherald Open www.vanpoulles.co.uk Open www.facebook.com/tangneytours Call +441293590100 Go to page 13 Open Facebook.com
page:
contents page
previous next
zoom out zoom in
thumbnails double page single page large double page
fit width
clip to blog

2 HOME NEWS

MARCH 9 2012 THE CATHOLIC HERALD

FFolllooww Thhee CCatholicc Heerald oonn Twwitttteer At Twitter.com/catholicherald

Archbishop appeals for grandmother on death row

BY MADELEINE TEAHAN

THE ARCHBISHOP of Westminster has appealed for clemency on behalf of a British Catholic grandmother who faces execution in Texas. Writing in an editorial for Faith Today magazine, Archbishop Vincent Nichols made an appeal for Linda Carty who is currently on death row in Texas under threat of lethal injection.

The Archbishop of Westminster wrote: “We will do all we can to raise awareness of her case in the hope that justice and clemency will prevail.”

The archbishop added: “Linda finds great solace and comfort from the prayers of the Catholic community around the world. She sings Amazing Grace in her prison cell to keep her spirits up and to give her hope.

“She can, of course, be assured of our prayers and of the support of Faith Today.”

He called on Catholics and supporters of Carty to sign an online petition calling for her release from death row and to hold prayer vigils dedicated to her acquittal.

Carty possesses both American and British citizenship and would be the first British black woman to be executed for over a century.

Supporters have formed a campaign group called Save Linda Carty and have started an online petition protesting her innocence.

The 53-year-old was convicted of abducting and murdering Joana Rodriguez in 2002 in an attempt to abduct her newborn son. All procedures for appeal have been exhausted and her death by lethal injection is now imminent.

In an interview with Faith Today Carty, who protests her innocence, said that her faith was everything to her since being behind bars for 10 years.

Explaining that she converted to Catholicism 15 years ago she said: “Because of my Catholic education I’d really always felt Catholic, so embracing it properly about 15 years ago made a lot of sense. I’ve got a rosary with me in my cell and I say it often; I’ve got a Bible as well, and I read the word of God most days.

“It’s difficult to see a priest in here – I put in requests, but nothing happens. Occasionally there’s a service led by a pastor from another church, and I always go to it – I love the Lord, and I love church services. But it’s years since I went to Mass or received Holy Communion – those things just aren’t possible in here. I do receive Bible Alive, which is sent to all prisoners on death row, and I read it. And it helps so much to know that there are other Christians out there praying for me, and doing what they can to help me.”

Carty also called on Catholics, laity and clergy to help her in her release through prayer and action. She said: “I believe in God, and ultimately that makes a whole world of difference. But this is the moment when I need support. I need it from the British Government, I need it from the leaders of the Catholic Church – and I need it from my fellow Catholics too.

“Because one day I’m going to get out of here: and on that day, the first thing I’ll do will be to go to church to give thanks to God for what he’s done for me. And the next thing I’ll do is go and hug Jovelle [her daughter] and those grandsons I’ve never hugged.”

Supporters of Carty have argued that she would never have reached this point had she been better served by her first lawyer and had the British Government been alerted to her plight earlier.

Her current barrister, Michael Goldberg, is working voluntarily because he is so convinced that her

‘I have a rosary in my cell and I say it often, but it’s been years since I went to Mass’

current situation is unfair. He told Faith Today: “Linda wasn’t given a chance to present a proper defence, and that completely goes against the American system of justice. If she’d had that, I’m convinced there’s no way she would have been convicted and sentenced to death.”

Carty has received the support of Bianca Jagger, a Catholic and the Goodwill Ambassador for the Council of Europe. The first wife of the Rolling Stones singer wrote to David Cameron in September 2010 urging him to support Carty’s appeal for clemency. She wrote: “The death penalty is a violation of our most inalienable right: the right to life, a cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment done in the name of justice. There is no excuse for any country in the world, in the 21st century to continue to execute their citizens.”

Priest blesses bus named after Brighton nun

A PRIEST in Brighton has blessed a bus named in honour of a British nun who sheltered Jews from the Nazis. Fr Ray Blake of St Mary Magdalene church in the Arundel and Brighton diocese blessed the bus while it was parked outside his church as a mark of remembrance of the brave nun Mother Riccarda Beauchamp Hambrough. Mother Riccarda, whose Cause for sainthood is currently being considered by the Vatican, helped to save the lives of about 60 Jews by hiding them from the Nazis in her Rome convent, the Casa di Santa Brigida.

Legal Bill will harm domestic abuse victims, says archbishop

BY MADELEINE TEAHAN

THE ARCHBISHOP of Southwark has written to the Secretary of State for Justice to say that a proposed Government Bill will seriously harm victims of domestic abuse.

Archbishop Peter Smith of Southwark is co-signatory of a letter signed by 10 religious leaders criticising the Legal Aid Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Bill, which would restrict the amount of legal aid victims of domestic abuse can access.

Recognising domestic abuse as “one of the greatest ills in our society” the faith leaders say that Government proposals due to be debated in the House of Lords this week risk undermining the progress made by successive governments in tackling domestic abuse.

In their letter to Kenneth Clarke MP they state: “Legal aid is nothing short of essential for many victims of domestic abuse to escape the horrendous circumstances that they face. Without this support they would be unable to secure recourse in relation to fundamental issues such as injunctions, housing or access to children, potentially trapping them in a cycle of mistreatment and fear.

“It is clear that legal aid frequently allows for the resolution of domestic abuse cases before they escalate, in some cases avoiding serious injuries or even loss of life.

“We welcome the Government’s decision, reflected in the Bill, to protect the provision of legal aid in many cases where domestic abuse is involved. Yet, by deviating from the standard definition of domestic abuse utilised across Government departments and police forces, the Bill risks restricting the overall number of cases entitled to support, and consequently causing harm to many individuals and families.”

The faith leaders’ concerns echo those of faith-based charities working with domestic abuse victims.

The charities argue that certain forms of evidence of domestic abuse which were once deemed credible will no longer be the case under the new law. For example, police attendance at a domestic violence incident and medical records will not be deemed sufficient as evidence.

A spokesman for St Antony’s Centre, a member of Caritas Social Action Network (CSAN), the

Church’s domestic social action arm, said: “We represented a wife in divorce and financial proceedings. She had been the subject of violent and abusive behaviour from her husband for many years and had moved out of the family home to return to her parents. The husband remained in the jointly owned family home, running his business and during the case he even moved his girlfriend into the house.

“Legal aid was essential in the negotiation of the husband buying out our client’s share of the property. Under the proposed change this client would not have been able to obtain legal aid... she would have been alone in representing herself at court, facing the perpetrator of the violence.”

CSAN’s Chief Executive Helen O’Brien said: “Civil legal aid frequently plays a fundamental role in protecting victims of domestic abuse and ultimately allowing them to break away from the horrific circumstances that they face. We regard the new restrictions as unjustifiable and believe that the Bill should be amended in order to protect some of the most vulnerable people in our society.”

VANPOULLES

Quality Church Supplies for over 100 Years

Est. 1908

For all your Lent & Easter requirements

Palms, Paschal Candles,

Wax Reliefs, Easter Banners and much more.

Tel 01293 590100 Fax 01293 590115 sales @vanpoulles.co.uk

Lent & Easter

Brochure available

NOW

www.vanpoulles.co.uk

FODO PILGRIMS FODO PILGRIMS THE PILGRIMAGE OF A LIFE TIME THE HOLY LAND and JORDAN: 10 Days

13th October - 23rd October. Full board. Jesrusalem, Bethlehem, Nazareth, Sea of Galilee, Jericho,

Dead Sea, Qumran, Madaba, Amman, Petra etc.

From London. Early booking essential.

Write to: The Pilgrimage Secretary, 39 Station Road, Garswood, Nr.Wigan, WN4 0SD

Tel. +44 (0)1942726418

or Fr. C.Perrotta,

Sarsfield House, Sarsfield Road, Ballyfermot, Dublin 10

Tel. +35 316266193

Full text: English and Welsh bishops’ pastoral letter on same-sex marriage

Dear brothers and Sisters in Jesus Christ, this week the Coalition Government is expected to present its consultation paper on the proposed change in the legal definition of marriage so as to open the institution of marriage to same-sex partnerships.

Today we want to put before you the Catholic vision of marriage and the light it casts on the importance of marriage for our society.

The roots of the institution of marriage lie in our nature. Male and female we have been created, and written into our nature is this pattern of complementarity and fertility. This pattern is, of course, affirmed by many other religious traditions. Christian teaching fills out this pattern and reveals its deepest meaning, but neither the Church nor the state has the power to change this fundamental understanding of marriage itself.

Nor is this simply a matter of public opinion. Understood as a lifelong commitment between a man and a woman, and for the creation and upbringing of children, marriage is an expression of our fundamental humanity. Its status in law is the prudent fruit of experience, for the good of the spouses and the good of the family. In this way society esteems the married couple as the source and guardians of the next generation. As an institution marriage is at the foundation of our society.

There are many reasons why people get married. For most couples, there is an instinctive understanding that the stability of a marriage provides the best context for the flourishing of their relationship and for bringing up their children. Society recognises marriage as an important institution for these same reasons: to enhance stability in society and to respect and support parents in the crucial task of having children and bringing them up as well as possible.

The Church starts from this appreciation that marriage is a natural institution, and indeed the Church recognises civil marriage. The Catholic understanding of marriage, however, raises this to a new level. As the Catechism says: “The matrimonial covenant, by which a man and a woman establish between themselves a partnership of the whole of life, by its nature is ordered toward the good of the spouses and the procreation and education of offspring; this covenant between baptised persons has been raised by Christ the Lord to the dignity of a sacrament” (para 1601).

These rather abstract words are reflected, however imperfectly, in the experience of married couples. We know that at the heart of a good marriage is a relationship of astonishing power and richness, for the couple, their children, their wider circle of friends and relations and society. As a Sacrament, this is a place where divine grace flows. Indeed, marriage is a sharing in the mystery of

God’s own life: the unending and perfect flow of love between Father, Son and Holy Spirit. We know, too, that just as God’s love is creative, so too the love of husband and wife is creative of new life. It is open, in its essence, to welcoming new life, ready to love and nurture that life to its fullness, not only here on earth but also into eternity.

This is a high and noble vision, for marriage is a high and noble vocation. It is not easily followed. But we are sure that Christ is at the heart of marriage, for his presence is a sure gift of the God who is Love, who wants nothing more than for the love of husband and wife to find its fulfilment. So the daily effort that marriage requires, the many ways in which family living breaks and reshapes us, is a sharing in the mission of Christ, that of making visible in the world the creative and forgiving love of God.

In these ways we understand marriage to be a call to holiness for a husband and wife, with children recognised and loved as the gift of God, with fidelity and permanence as the boundaries which create its sacred space. Marriage is also a crucial witness in our society, contributing to its stability, its capacity for compassion and forgiveness and its future, in a way that no other institution can.

In putting before you these thoughts about why marriage is so important, we also want to recognise the experience of those who have suffered the pain of bereavement or relationship breakdown and their contribution to the Church and society. Many provide a remarkable example of courage and fidelity. Many strive to make the best out of difficult and complex situations. We hope that they are always welcomed and helped to feel valued members of our parish communities.

The reasons given by our Government for wanting to change the definition of marriage are those of equality and discrimination. But our present law does not discriminate unjustly when it requires both a man and a woman for marriage. It simply recognises and protects the distinctive nature of marriage.

Changing the legal definition of marriage would be a profoundly radical step. Its consequences should be taken seriously now. The law helps to shape and form social and cultural values. A change in the law would gradually and inevitably transform society’s understanding of the purpose of marriage. It would reduce it just to the commitment of the two people involved. There would be no recognition of the complementarity of male and female or that marriage is intended for the procreation and education of children. We have a duty to married people today, and to those who come after us, to do all we can to ensure that the true meaning of marriage is not lost for future generations.

NEWSBULLETIN Sistine Chapel choir to sing at Westminster Cathedral THE SISTINE CHAPEL choir is to perform its first ever concert in Britain at Westminster Cathedral in May.

The choir, consisting of 20 men and about 35 boys, is the personal choir of the Pope and sings whenever he requests its presence.

Archbishop Vincent Nichols of Westminster said the concert, on May 6, would be a “historic moment”. Mgr Massimo

Palombella, director of the Sistine Chapel choir, said he was looking forward to it immensely. He said: “I have long admired the quality and precision of the English sound and it will be a joy, too, to be able to develop closer ties with Maestro Martin Baker, whose magnificent work cultivating the place of the choir at the service of the liturgy is exemplary.”

Bishops appoint two key officials THE BISHOPS’ conference of England and Wales has appointed an Oratorian and a Dominican as its chief officials for ecumenism and liturgy.

Fr Robert Byrne, a prison chaplain and provost of the Oxford Oratory for eight years, has been appointed as the national ecumenical officer and secretary to the bishops’ Department for Dialogue and Unity.

Dom Paul Gunter, a monk of Douai Abbey since 1985, has been named secretary to the bishops’ Department for Christian Life and Worship. Dom Gunter has taught at the Pontifical Institute of Liturgy and in 2010 was appointed consulter to the Office of the Liturgical Celebrations of the Supreme Pontiff. In the same year he was charged with bringing the 1962 Missal up to date in accordance with Summorum Pontificum.

Shroud replica on display A LIFE-SIZE replica of the Shroud of Turin has been on display at Norwich’s Catholic cathedral this week.

The replica is the centrepiece of an exhibition at the Cathedral of St John the Baptist which ends tomorrow. Fr Patrick Limacher, deacon of the cathedral, said Christ’s wounds evident on the Shroud “reminds us of man’s inhumanity to man”.

Bishop calls for prayers AUXILIARY Bishop David McGough of Birmingham has urged Catholics to pray for dementia sufferers.

Ahead of the National Week of Prayer for Dementia, the bishop said: “Few of us can imagine the isolation, and consequent anxiety, that this affliction brings both to those who suffer and their families.” The week runs from March 12 to 19.

Correction: Liverpool closures WE would like to clarify that the Archdiocese of Liverpool is not reviewing “dozens of parishes” for closure. We would also like to point out that Our Lady of Good Help church in Waverley, St Gregory in Netherley, and St Paschal Baylon in Childwall are not, in fact, earmarked for closure, but were closed last year after consultation.

Tangney Tours

II S

A S S

RO ME

ME DJUG O RJE

I A G O

S A NT

I MA

FAT

K RA K O W

HO LY LA ND

HO L

I E UX

I S

LLO URDE S

Lourdes Groups & Diocese Lourdes Groups & Diocese

Brochures now available for the following:

SOLL: 31 May - 6 June, Exeter & Stansted by Air

Plymouth: 1 - 8 June by air from Exeter Middlesbrough: 1 - 8 June by air from Teesside Birmingham: 2 - 8 June by air and coach from Birmingham

Paisley: 29 June - 6 July by air from Glasgow

Leeds: 6 - 12 July by air from Yorkshire Scotland from Glasgow: by air - 13 - 20 July Nottingham: 16 - 21 July by air from East Midlands

Motherwell: 20 - 27 July by air from Glasgow Brentwood: 22 - 27 July by air, 22 - 28 July by train Westminster: 22 - 28 July by Air, Train & Coach Hexham & Newcastle: 27 July - 3 August from Newcastle

The Catholic Association - Southwark, Clifton, Portsmouth, Northampton, East Anglia, The Carmelites,

Stonyhurst: by Air, Train and Coach: 24 - 31 August

Raphael: 3 - 7 September by Air

Visit our website for more information!

Lourdes by Air - 2012

9 to 13 April - Easter 4 nights from: £511pp

Spring Bank - 1 to 8 June: £640pp 6 to 8 June, 2 night special: £299pp

Lourdes and Shrines tour 21 - 27 October, 6 nights by luxury coach - Lourdes, Rocamadour,

Nevers and more. From £519 per person

Holy Land 2012 Holy Land 2012

Join Fr Stephen Webb, the 7th to 14th of June,

departing from London and Manchester.

Price: £1,199 half board per person. Join Fr Stephen Myers, the 3rd to 10th

September, departing from London. Price: £1,199 half board per person.

If the above dates are unsuitable, please contact us as you may be able to join one of our other groups, or why not lead a group yourself?

STOP PRESS! STOP PRESS!

Join Fr Mark Madden 5th - 14th May 2012

A full board Parish Pilgrimage Contactusforafreebrochure

Join us on: www.facebook.com/tangneytours

II S

A S S

RO ME

ME DJUG O RJE

I A G O

S A NT

I MA

FAT

K RA K O W

HO LY LA ND

HO L

I E UX

I S

LLO URDE S

5126

Established 1974

www.tangney-tours.com e-mail: info@tangney-tours.com FREE BROCHURE LINE: 0800 917 3572 THE CATHOLIC HERALD MARCH 9 2012

BBeeccoommee aa ffaann ooff TThhee CCaatthhoolliicc HHeerraalldd At Facebook.com

3

HOME NEWS

Midwives must manage staff for abortions, court rules

BY SIMON CALDWELL

A SCOTTISH court has ruled that two senior Catholic midwives have no right to conscientiously object to overseeing staff involved in lateterm abortions in a state-run hospital.

The Court of Session, Scotland’s supreme civil court, ruled that Mary Doogan, 57, and Concepta Wood, 51, could not invoke the conscience clause of the 1967 Abortion Act to opt out of their duties at Glasgow’s Southern General Hospital because they were not directly involved in performing the abortions.

The pair, who worked as labour ward coordinators, had been obliged to delegate, supervise or support staff involved in performing up to three late-term abortions a week. They claimed that such indirect involvement made them culpable in procedures they found to be abhorrent.

But the judge, Lady (Anne) Smith, said in a ruling last week that the conscience opt-out of the 1967 act was qualified, adding that nothing the midwifery nurses “have to do as part of their duties terminates a woman’s pregnancy”.

“They are sufficiently removed from direct involvement as, it seems to me, to afford appropriate respect for and accommodation of their beliefs,” the judge said. “The nature of their duties does not, in fact, require them to provide treatment to terminate pregnancies directly.”

Miss Doogan said that she Mrs Wood were “greatly saddened” by the verdict.

“Neither Connie [Wood] nor I

stand in judgment of any woman who chooses to terminate her pregnancy for whatever reasons,” she said. “We are more than aware of the difficult choices that some expectant mothers may be faced with in a crisis pregnancy.

“However, in holding to the view that life should be protected from conception to natural death, neither do we wish to be judged for exercising what is our legal right to refuse to participate in the process of medical termination of pregnancy. We wish now to take some time to consider all options that are available to us, including appeal,” she said.

Paul Tully, general secretary of the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, a lobby group which has supported the nurses, said his organisation “will now be considering their further legal options” with the midwives.

Miss Doogan has been absent from work for two years because of ill-health and Wood moved to other work because of the dispute, the court was told.

The midwives have served for more than 20 years at the hospital and the dispute arose only when their employers – National Health Service Greater Glasgow and Clyde – demanded in 2007 that mid-term and late-term abortions would be performed on the labour ward rather than on the gyneacology ward. The late abortion procedure, Mr Tully explained, “entails the mother being given drugs to induce labour, and then having to go through labour and deliver the baby. In more advanced pregnancies the baby is killed first by an ultrasound-guided lethal injection while still in the womb.”

During the case, which was heard in January, the midwives said attempts by their employers to compel them to oversee such abortions also breached their rights under Article 9 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which guarantees the right to freedom of religion.

Archbishop Mario Conti of Glasgow said the ruling caused him “deep concern”.

“I wish to put on record my admiration for the courage of the midwives who have, at very great cost to themselves, fought to uphold the right to follow one’s conscience,” Archbishop Conti said.

“It is fundamental to the functioning of society that all citizens act in accordance with an informed conscience,” the archbishop said.

“Any law or judgment that fails to recognise this contradicts that most basic freedom and duty which we all have as human beings, namely to follow our conscience and act accordingly,” he added. “Any assault on this principle undermines the very basis of the law itself and society’s moral cohesion, which the law should seek to guarantee.”

Neil Addison, a Catholic barrister and the director of the Thomas More Legal Centre, a Catholic charity dedicated to upholding religious freedom, said the courts had used the European Convention on Human Rights “to protect murderous terrorists but have refused to use it for two midwives who do not want to kill unborn children”.

“What is more surprising is the extremely restrictive interpretation the judge has put on the conscientious objection clause in Section 4 of the Abortion Act,” Mr Addison said. “As the judge has interpreted it, believing Catholics, Muslims, etc, will never be able to take any form of supervisory or management role as midwives or nurses unless they are willing to be complicit in the provision of abortions.”

He said the decision was “in stark contrast to recent decisions in the United States courts, which have applied the American First Amendment to protect the conscience rights of pharmacists who refused to dispense the morning-after pill”. Editorial Comment: Page 13

Catholic schools embrace Gove’s academy model

BY MARK GREAVES

DOZENS, if not hundreds, of Catholic schools are preparing to convert to academy status, it emerged this week.

The news comes after 13 schools, including five schools in the Diocese of Westminster, became academies last week. The total number of Catholic academies, which are independent of local authority control, is now 68.

Gail Meill, director of education for the Diocese of Nottingham, said that six Catholic schools in the diocese were now academies, but that by the end of the academic year there would be 40.

She said that by converting in clusters – a group of schools becoming academies under a single academy trust – schools could support each other more.

As a result of the cuts, she said, many local authorities had been forced to reduce their services or hand them over to outside bodies and were “not necessarily able to offer the same level of services to schools as had been given in the past”.

She said that groups of academies could offer each other the support that once might have been provided by the local authority. She also explained that academy status offered a financial advantage and the chance for schools to strengthen their Catholicity across the curriculum. She added that voluntary-aided schools actually already had freedom over their curriculum, “but governors and heads didn’t always recognise they had it”.

Up until now dioceses have paid 10 per cent of capital costs for their schools, but if schools become academies these costs are covered entirely by the Government.

Last week’s wave of conversions involved three schools run by religious orders – two by the Faithful Companions of Jesus and one by the Society of the Sacred Heart – as well as a joint Catholic-Anglican school and four schools in the dioceses of Nottingham, Hexham and Newcastle and East Anglia.

Meanwhile, the Catholic Education Service for England and Wales (CESEW) has rejected the claim that Catholic schools “shun” poorer pupils.

A report by the Guardian newspaper suggested that three-quarters of Catholic primary and secondary schools had a more affluent mix of pupils than their local area. The claim was based on an analysis of the number of pupils eligible for free school meals.

Maeve McCormack, policy manager at the CESEW, said the argument was flawed because poor families did not necessarily claim for free school meals. She said: “The lower number of applications for free school meals in Catholic schools is an issue of real concern to us, as it suggests that many children who would be eligible for free school meals are not claiming them... for some families we know there is a cultural stigma attached to claiming free school meals and we are keen to work to remove that stigma and ensure that children from all backgrounds are given the support that they need to benefit.”

She pointed to data from the Department of Education which showed that 18.6 per cent of pupils at Catholic primary schools live in the 10 per cent most deprived areas of England, compared with 14.3 per cent of primary school pupils nationally. About 17 per cent of pupils at Catholic schools lived in the 10 per cent most deprived areas compared to 12 per cent of pupils nationally.

Parish sells Pugin furniture to fund L’Arche project

Cardinal: open Cause of murdered Minister

BY ED WEST

MORE THAN 100 i t ems of monumental and gothic furniture from the presbytery of St Thomas of Canterbury and the English Martyrs Church in Preston are to be sold next week to help fund a L’Arche community.

Lancashire auction house Silverwoods will sell the lots, most of which date back to the time when the church, which was designed by Edward Pugin and extended and furnished by Pugin & Pugin, the family firm, was built. The c i ty’s s ixth Catholic church, with room for 700 people, i t was constructed at a time when the city’s Catholic populat ion was booming, and opened in 1888.

Much of the furniture is in the Gothic style in oak and mahogany and includes a 19ft long oak wind-out dining table and several very imposing three- and fourpart glazed bookcases up to 10ft in l ength and 8ft in height.

As well as the many monumental pieces of furniture, the sale features an unusual Dickens desk, estimated at £400 - £500, altar tables, prayer chairs, desks, s ideboards and bedroom furniture.

It also includes a selection of oil paintings on canvas depicting martyrs, saints and other religious scenes, six watercolour scenes by Preston artist Edwin Beattie, brass candlesticks and ornamental crucifixes.

The proceeds of the sale will help the church fund a joint project with the L’Arche community, a Christian ecumenical organisation that helps people with disabilities to l ive in a community setting alongside volunteer helpers.

The money will be spent on modernising the church presbytery, which was once large enough to house six priests but is now used by just one, into a series of flats.

Fr Thomas Singleton, parish priest at the church, said there was no sadness about the sale, “none whatsoever”.

He said: “With this project we’ve got to clear it of all furniture and turn it into a community of flats, one of which is for the priest. The house will be brought up to scratch, put to good use.”

He added: “We can’t be a museum. We’re not in hoc to the furniture, were not in thrall. Buildings have to serve a purpose.

“I think i t ’s a positive move forward for us. Otherwise it’s buildings gradually decaying and running out of money and wasting resources. One person living in a huge house is a waste.”

The sale will be on view on Wednesday 14 and Thursday 15 March at 18 Garstang Road, Preston.

BY JOHN NEWTON

CARDINAL Keith O’Brien has called for the Church to consider declaring Shahbaz Bhatti a saint.

In a statement on March 2 – the first anniversary of Mr Bhatti’s death – Cardinal O’Brien, Archbishop of Saint Andrews and Edinburgh, expressed his hope that the Church will look into the option of canonising Mr Bhatti.

Appointed federal minister for minorities, a Cabinet position in Pakistan’s government, Shahbaz Bhatti took up the cause of religious freedom, speaking out against persecution and in so doing knowingly put his life in danger.

Noting that the canonisation process normally begins five years after the candidate’s death, Cardinal O’Brien said: “When that time comes I believe the Church should very seriously examine the question of whether Shahbaz Bhatti might be declared a saint.”

The cardinal went on to say: “It would be wonderful to think that... Shahbaz Bhatti could become a patron for justice and peace in Pakistan or indeed Asia.”

Cardinal O’Brien’s call to examine Mr Bhatti’s worthiness for sainthood was made in a statement to Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need, which is one of the organisers behind an event in central London tomorrow honouring the Pakistani politician.

Pugin’s parish in Kent marks 200th anniversary of his birth

A CATHOLIC church in Ramsgate built by architect Augustus Pugin has been awarded £40,000 for urgent restoration work only a few days after celebrating the 200th anniversary of the architect’s birth.

St Augustine’s Church in Ramsgate celebrated the bicentenary of Pugin’s birth last Thursday with a congregation of his fans. A group, known as the Friends of St Augustine, was formed in 2011 to raise funds for the restoration of the church.

In his homily Fr Marcus Holden spoke of Pugin’s faith which informed everything he did. He said: “He did not create dead art or fossilised things to be admired merely as works of interest. Everything had a living context. He was there to decorate function, in other words to make the working reality beautiful. The function was the living breathing Christian faith... He once wrote about his roodscreens, but the same could be said of every item and detail he designed for his churches, ‘The mere inspection of them is nothing... It is when they become associated with the life of divine worship that they produce the full power and lift the soul in ecstasy’.”

The celebrations began with the Latin High Mass and the laying of a wreath on Pugin’s tomb by his great-great-grandson Robert Pugin Purcell.