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The Good Shepherd |
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The Silence
of the Lambs
Hannibal Lecter: What became of your lamb, Clarice?
FBI Agent
Clarice Starling: Screaming. Some kind of screaming,
like a child's voice.
Hannibal Lecter: What did you do?
FBI Agent
Clarice Starling: I went downstairs, outside. I
crept up into the barn. I was so scared to look inside, but
I had to.
Hannibal Lecter: And what did you see, Clarice? What
did you see?
FBI Agent
Clarice Starling: Lambs. The lambs were screaming.
They were slaughtering the spring lambs! And they were
screaming.
As
the lambs were led to the
slaughter, their screams reach a
deafening shrill of anguish. A
natural instinctive cry
acknowledging their slaughter
was
forthcoming.
When the undocumented are
stopped for a broken tail light,
there is a silent scream of
despair knowing their American
Dream will be snatched away
within a few hours as they are
led to their slaughter in
silence.
With dignity and
resolve, the
undocumented are
led to their
slaughter.
The lambs are
the undocumented
of the Diocese
of Phoenix.
The silence of the
lambs is the silence of the undocumented.
The silence of the
lambs is also the silence of the Diocese of Phoenix.
Silence from the
undocumented is chilling but even more disturbing is the silence from
the Diocese of Phoenix. Not only from the bishop but even
more glaring is the silence of the priests of the diocese,
the Diocesan Hispanic Lay Council and the Hispanic Diocesan
staff. They have a responsibility to stop the slaughter and
their silence indicts them as co-conspirators with all
crimes against humanity the bishop imposes upon himself for
his silence.
They are like the
German people who as the Nazis Gestapo was arresting Jews
simply because they were Jews, the German people turned
their backs on the Jews and saw nothing they did not want to
see. They are as guilty as the Nazis Gestapo for abdicating
their responsibility to make visible great wrongdoing
against humanity.
The Germans after the war
tried to cover up the killing of 6 million Jews. The Germans
rationalized they were not aware of what was being done to
the Jewish population in Germany.
Olmsted, the parish priests, the
Hispanic lay council and the
Hispanic ministry staff are
guilty as the Nazis Gestapo for
abdicating their responsibility
to make visible great wrongdoing
against humanity.
This silence is an abdication to
the sin of pride. |
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To be silent is to condone. Olmsted's silence gives tacit approval to Arpaio's tyranny against Hispanics. Olmsted Needs to be Fired!
Installed as Bishop of the
Diocese of Phoenix on December
20, 2003, Bishop
Thomas J. Olmsted shepherd's
crosier
had a luminous brilliance.
The crosier's
radiance has since
tarnished because of Olmsted's
being oblivious to the silence
of the lambs.
Jesus asked obedience of Peter.
Jesus asks obedience of Olmsted.
Thomas J. Olmsted
has disobeyed Jesus. Olmsted's
silence has not protected Jesus'
flock.
Olmsted should now be exiled
to a solitary existence in a monastery in the
desert far away to reflect on
the meaning of obedience;
however, Olmsted would probably
welcome this solitary existence
since he likes living in a cave
oblivious to the turmoil taking
place outside his cave. A more
fitting exile would be to strip
him of his priesthood and send
him out into the streets of
Phoenix as a homeless person to
experience firsthand the daily
life of the undocumented he was
once entrusted to protect when
he was the shepherd of this
flock.
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At
a "Encuentro Catolico" event, above, Wanda Gonzalez, left, and Melissa Serrano
join the procession before the Consecration of the Virgin ceremony. Hispanics
are the future of the Catholic Church in the United States but unless the Church
changes, Wanda and Melissa will probably eventually end up becoming either a
Pentecostal, Evangelical or member of the American Catholic Church.
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Bishop Olmsted and the Silence of the
Lambs
PHOENIX
(By
Jon
Garrido, The Jon Garrido News Network) January 11, 2010
The duty of shepherds was to
keep their flock intact and protect it
from wolves and other predators. The
shepherd was also to protect migration
of the flock.
Metaphorically, the term is used for
God, especially in the Judeo-Christian
tradition (e.g. Psalm 23), and in
Christianity especially Jesus, who is
called the Good Shepherd. The Ancient
Israelites were a pastoral people and
there were many shepherds among them. It
may also be worth noting many Biblical
heroes were shepherds, among them the
Old Testament prophet Amos, who was a
shepherd, as well as King David, and
Moses. In the New Testament angels
announced the birth of Jesus to
shepherds.
The same metaphor is also applied to
priests and with Roman Catholic bishops
having the shepherd's crosier among
their insignia. In both cases, the
implication is the faithful are the
"flock" who have to be tended. This is
in part inspired by Jesus' injunctions
to Peter, "Feed my sheep." (John Chapter
21).
The Great Shepherd is one of the thrusts
of Biblical scripture. This illustration
encompasses many ideas, including God's
care for his people as well as the
tendency of humans to put themselves
into danger's way and their inability to
guide and take care of themselves apart
from the direct power and leading of
God.
"Feed my sheep." (John Chapter 21)
Jesus calls to the men disciples with
whom he has shared many meals. "Come,
have some breakfast!"
They squat around the fire and eat the
bread and fish Jesus has prepared. Hot
fish! Hot bread after a long night's
work!
Jesus, the great Feeder of men is
feeding his flock.
Jesus calls Peter aside. "Do you love
me, Peter?"
With pain, Peter remembers how three
times he had vehemently denied Jesus
just before his crucifixion. He can
hardly look Jesus in the eye. He
mumbles, "Yes, Lord, you know that I
love you."
"Peter, feed my sheep," says Jesus.
Three times Jesus asked Peter to
reaffirm his love once for each time
Peter had denied him. Three times Jesus
reaffirms Peter's call to ministry.
Jesus not only forgives Peter, he
restores him fully to his confidence.
"Feed my sheep"
Not physical food. Jesus is talking
about spiritual food teaching,
praying, leading, exhorting, serving and
tending. Jesus is asking for Peter's
love, but with that love, Jesus requires
obedience.
Peter knows what he's saying. Jesus had
once described the crowds as harassed
and helpless, like sheep without a
shepherd.
"Yes, I love you, Jesus," says Peter
clearly, lifting his eyes to meet the
Master's.
"Then feed my sheep," says the great
Feeder of men. "Peter, I need you
to feed my sheep for me."
"Yes, Lord, of course I will," whispers
Peter, as his eyes flood with tears.
"You can count on me."
John Chapter 21: Verse 16
A second time he said to him, "Simon,
son of John, do you love me?" He said to
him, "Yes, Lord; you know that I love
you." He said to him, "Tend my sheep."
The second instruction by Jesus is to
tend my sheep. In 1887, Antonio Vincent
wrote concerning this word, "the verb
tend denotes all that is included in
the office of a shepherd guiding,
guarding, folding...."
The Lord tells us we must tend the
sheep. Who are the sheep? Certainly it
refers to all who are under our care
especially the defenseless and
persecuted namely, the undocumented.
The shepherds responsibility of tending
to his sheep is comprehensive. He will
go to no end of trouble and labor to
supply them with the finest grazing, the
richest pasturage, ample winter feed and
clean water. He will spare himself no
pains to provide shelter from storms,
protection from ruthless enemies and the
diseases and parasites to which sheep
are so susceptible. ... From early dawn
until late at night this utterly
self-less shepherd is alert to the
welfare of his flock. For the diligent
sheep man rises early and goes out first
thing every morning without fail to look
over his flock. It is the initial,
intimate contact of the day. With a
practiced, searching, sympathetic eye he
examines the sheep to see they are fit
and content and able to be on their
feet. In an instant he can tell if they
have been molested during the night
whether any are ill or if there are some
which require special attention.
Repeatedly throughout the day he casts
his eye over the flock to make sure all
is well. Nor even at night is he
oblivious to their needs. He sleeps as
it were with one eye and both ears
open ready at the least sign of trouble
to leap up and protect his own.
So let us not neglect our responsibility
in caring for the family of God. We must
be willing to minister to hurts, to
encourage the disheartened, to pray for
those who are sick, to help the needy,
and to reach out to those who are
strangers in our mist the
undocumented.
You shall not oppress the stranger; you
know the heart of the stranger, for you
were strangers in the land of Egypt.
(Exodus 23:9).
Let us never neglect the job the Lord
has given us to tend the sheep. We must
not only care about them, but we must
also take care of them.
In John 21:16,
the word poimainoo (Greek for shepherding)
is used which signifies to tend a flock,
not only to feed, but to take care of,
guide, govern, defend, etc., by which to
intimate it is not sufficient merely to
offer the bread of life to the
congregation of the Lord, but the
shepherd must take care the sheep be
properly collected, attended to,
regulated, guided, etc.; and it appears
Peter perfectly comprehended our Lord's
meaning, and saw it was a direction
given not only to him, and to the rest
of the disciples, but to all their
successors in the Christian ministry;
for himself says, 1 Peter 5:2: "Feed the
flock of God which is among you, taking
the oversight, not by constraint, but
willingly...."
John Chapter 21: Verse 17
He said to him the third time, "Simon,
son of John, do you love me?" Peter was
grieved because he said to him the third
time, "Do you love me?" And he said to
him, "Lord, you know everything; you
know that I love you." Jesus said to
him, "Feed my sheep.
This is the third opportunity given
Peter to affirm his love for Jesus.
Remember, Peter had denied Christ three
times at the palace of the High Priest.
Now he is given a chance to affirm his
love three times. Jesus three fold
question and three fold commission of
apostolic mission contrast directly with
Peters three denials. Three times Peter
said he did not even know the Lord; now
three times he said he loved the Lord.
No matter how great a person is, he may
fall. But Gods grace and forgiveness
will restore the repentant.
Now Jesus gives Peter a third command
feed my sheep. First he said to feed my
lambs, then tend my sheep, and now feed
my sheep. Too often churches tend to
their flock but neglect to feed them.
Many churches have fabulous programs to
meet the needs of their members
programs for all ages, support groups,
counseling groups, and addictive
behavior groups. They have times of
fellowship and activities for the whole
family. They tend their sheep well.
But Jesus said we must also feed the
sheep. We must be fed from Gods word.
We must learn about God and his nature,
his attributes, his personality. We must
be taught how to rely on the Holy
Spirit. We must go from the milk of a
new believer to the meat of Gods word.
As Paul wrote in Hebrews 5:12-14, "In
fact, though by this time you ought to
be teachers, you need someone to teach
you the elementary truths of God's word
all over again. You need milk, not solid
food! Anyone who lives on milk, being
still an infant, is not acquainted with
the teaching about righteousness. But
solid food is for the mature, who by
constant use have trained themselves to
distinguish good from evil."
How does this maturity come? It comes
from being fed. As we learn from Gods
word, we will grow in his grace. But how
will the sheep grow if they are not
being fed? That is our responsibility.
We must be willing to not only tend the
flock, but also feed it with spiritual
food.
The Diocese of Phoenix
Bishop Olmsted did not initially neglect
social justice issues. According to the
East Valley Tribune, Olmsted has
spoken out against capital punishment
and contraception. The Arizona Daily
Star reported with the bishops of
Tucson and Hermosillo, Mexico, Olmsted
drew attention to the dangers immigrants
face crossing the border. The bishops
called for hospitality for immigrants as
well as the promotion of social justice
in both Mexico and the United States.
"Whatever happens to the least of us is
what happens to Christ," Bishop Olmsted
said. He also joined with the other
bishops of Arizona in opposing a ballot
measure for Proposition 200, which
proposed removing public services from
undocumented immigrants. "The Catholic
Church recognizes," the statement said,
"a sovereign state has the right to
control its borders in furtherance of
the common good. Nonetheless, all human
beings are entitled to basic inalienable
rights. In the Holy Father's Post-Synodal
Apostolic Exhortation titled, 'The
Church in America,' it is specifically
noted 'attention must be called to the
rights of migrants and their families
and to respect for their human dignity,
even in cases of non-legal
immigration.'"
Since this beginning advocacy, there has
been a progression of hostility
spreading like the Angel of Death
passing through Egypt to kill all
firstborn. Within the city of Phoenix,
there are many Angels of Deaths. One
Angel of Death is satanic Mormon Russell
Pearce spreading his hatred throughout
Arizona like a deadly virus annihilating
the undocumented by removal. Maricopa
County Sheriff Joe Arpaio is another
Angel of Death now arresting 1,000
undocumented a month and on the same day
of arrest, without notification to
remaining family, the undocumented are
deported by ICE. As devastating as this
may be, having a more adverse impact is
a family left without a father as head
of household to provide for wife and
children patiently waiting through the
evening and into the night for a father
who has mysteriously vanished.
Arizona
now lays claim to the beginning of
blatant racism toward the undocumented
and is in the forefront of a national
movement to remove the undocumented from
the workplace and our communities.
All of these are barbaric acts against
God but a greater sin against God is
silence from those who are entrusted to
safeguard our Hispanic community by
using every available resource to fight
the injustices of those that would hurt
us.
Where is the Diocese of Phoenix when
shouts for help are heard on every
street corner where the undocumented
seek work?
Behind the walls of the Diocese of
Phoenix compound sits a bishop oblivious
to the cries of those being persecuted.
How does one reach this out of touch
uncaring bishop? It is harder to gain
entrance into this guarded compound than
it is to gain entrance into the inner
sanctum of the White House and I have
been there twice.
The lack of advocacy in Phoenix is
attributed primarily to Bishop
Olmsted but there are others who share
blame for their silence. The spineless
parish priests have a fiduciary
responsibility to stand up and be
counted to help bring about change in
the diocese. They too are silent and
they too will be held accountable to God
for not protecting the flock that has
been entrusted to them. Some silently
acknowledge the lack of care for the
undocumented but claim they are bound by
obedience to Olmsted but obedience to
Jesus trumps Olmsted.
Some day Jesus will judge them and ask,
"Who is the Messiah? When you saw the
wrong, why did you choose to be obedient
to Bishop Olmsted and allow my sheep to
be led to slaughter? Am I not greater
than Olmsted? Am I not the Messiah?"
John the Baptist accepted Jesus was the Messiah. John made it very clear to those who came to hear
him, even to his own disciples standing
there by his side.
Gazing at Jesus, as He walked by, John
said, Look, the Lamb of God!
When Johns two disciples heard him say
this, they followed Jesus (John
1:35-37). This is not the case for the
Diocese of Phoenix parish priests who
continue obedience to Olmsted.
There is no valid justification for
parish priests for not abiding with the
responsibility of shepherding the flock
entrusted to Olmsted.
The parish priests have a responsibility
to stop the slaughter and their silence
indicts them as co-conspirators with all
crimes against humanity the bishop
imposes upon himself for his silence.
The Diocese of Phoenix parish priests,
the Diocesan Hispanic Council and the
Diocesan Hispanic Ministry staff are
like the German people who as the Nazis
Gestapo was arresting Jews simply
because they were Jews, the German
people turned their backs on the Jews
and saw nothing they did not want to
see. The German people are as guilty as
the Nazis Gestapo for abdicating their
responsibility to make visible great
wrong doing against humanity.
The Germans after the war tried to cover
up the killing of 6 million Jews. The
Germans rationalized they were not aware
of what was being done to the Jewish
population in Germany.
To me there is no difference between the
Diocese of Phoenix parish priests, the
Diocesan Hispanic Council, and the
Diocesan Hispanic Ministry staff and the
German people looking the other way as
the Nazis Gestapo arrested German Jews.
It is clear to all Hispanics, the Nazis
Gestapo is reincarnated as the Angel of
Death known to all as Maricopa County
Sheriff Joe Arpaio.
The Diocese of Phoenix Hispanic Council
Only a handful of persons know there is
a Diocese of Phoenix Hispanic Council.
Lack of transparency shields them from
public view. They too are indicted
co-conspirators in their silence. They
could have an active influential voice
in insisting Bishop Olmsted follow the
mandate of Jesus to protect, feed and
tend his flock in demanding advocacy for
the undocumented.
They will not do this for they are obedient to Olmsted not
Jesus. Further down the pecking order is
the Diocese of Phoenix Hispanic Ministry
staff. Their obedience to Olmsted is
well known and their silence has been
recorded.
A letter will be sent by Hispanic News to the Vatican, the
Apostolic Nuncio to the United States,
and every member of the United States
Conference of Catholic Bishops
Requesting Pope Benedict XVI Force
Bishop
Olmsted of the Diocese
of Phoenix to Resign.
Installed as Bishop of the Diocese of
Phoenix on December 20, 2003, Bishop Thomas J. Olmsted shepherd's
crosier had a luminous brilliance.
The crook's radiance
has since
tarnished because of Olmsted's oblivion
as evident from the silence of the
lambs.
Jesus asked obedience of Peter. Jesus
asks obedience of Olmsted. Thomas J. Olmsted
has disobeyed Jesus.
Olmsted's silence has not protected
Jesus' sheep.
Olmsted is no longer worthy to be bishop
of the Diocese of Phoenix. Olmsted is
not worthy to carry the shepherd's
crosier and wear a bishop's miter. The
crosier once entrusted to Olmsted
should be stripped away leaving him a
simple priest without a flock. Olmsted
should then be exiled to a solitary
monastery in the desert far away to
reflect on the meaning of obedience to
Jesus; however, Olmsted would probably
welcome this solitary existence since he
likes living in a cave oblivious to the
turmoil taking place outside his cave. A
more fitting exile would be to strip him
of his priesthood and send him out into
the streets of Phoenix as a homeless to
experience first hand the daily life of
the undocumented he once was entrusted
to protect when he was the shepherd of
this flock.
The next installments of this series now
being drafted include:
1. Racism in Arizona against
Hispanics is creating a dichotomy
of civilizations, one community
being Hispanic and the other White. This
goes against the second most important
commandment of God to 'love thy
neighbor as thyself.' Neither must
bear false witness against thy neighbor.
Yet, this is the evil mantra where
white extremists spit venom epitaphs
against the undocumented and anyone with
a brown face. This in itself is evil but
where is the white Catholic community
who know this is wrong? Their silence
condones this evil and Bishop Olmsted's
silence is responsible for this malaise.
2. The Future of the Catholic Church
in America
3. The Demise of the Catholic Church
in the Americas starting with the end of
Liberation Theology brought about
John Paul providing Evangelicals and
Pentecostals to become the primary
advocates for Latinos beginning in South
America and spreading northward into the
United States. When John Paul II went to
Latin America, he found 8,000 (3 million
per year) Catholics were leaving the
church each day to become Pentecostals
or Evangelicals.
4. Lack of Catholic advocacy
participation is driving Hispanics away
from the Catholic Church to other
churches. This hemorrhage could be
stopped by a visible church of advocacy.
The lack of Catholic advocacy provides
fertile ground for advances of
Evangelicals, Pentecostals, Baptists and
Mormons in the United States. Hispanics
often say they feel socially isolated
and harassed under local and national
laws. The Catholic Church remains
silent. Witness Bishop Olmsted.
If you want to become involved making change contact me: