In Opening Arguments, Cardinal Pell's Lawyers Make His Case for Appeal

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

In Opening Arguments, Cardinal Pell's Lawyers Make His Case for Appeal In opening arguments, Cardinal Pell’s lawyers make his case for appeal The legal team for Australian Cardinal George Pell set out its case for appeal at the Supreme Court of Victoria Wednesday morning. Judges heard the opening arguments for the defence as they sought leave to appeal. Bret Walker, arguing on June 4, told the three-judge Court of Appeal, led by Chief Justice Anne Feguson, that Pell was seeking leave to appeal on the grounds that his conviction by a jury was “unsafe.” In a controversial verdict, the cardinal was convicted on Dec. 11 of five counts of sexual abuse of minors. Pell’s legal team is seeking appeal on three separate grounds, the first of which is that a guilty verdict was returned despite the lack of proof beyond reasonable doubt. If successful, an appeal on that ground would see Pell’s conviction overturned and the cardinal set free. In March, Pell was sentenced to six years in prison. The secondary appeals, made on more procedural grounds, could lead to a retrial if successful. At the opening of the two-day hearing, Justice Ferguson noted that the judges had reviewed the evidence from the trial, visited Melbourne’s St. Patrick’s Cathedral, and inspected the vestments Pell is alleged to have been wearing at the time of the supposed abuse. Ferguson explained that the purpose of the hearing was not to re-litigate the trial, or for the defence or prosecution to present the whole of its argument, which had been submitted in writing. Walker argued that the evidence used to convict Pell was clearly insufficient to allow the jury to reach a unanimous finding of guilt beyond reasonable doubt. “The main argument, ground one, is one of those challenges to verdicts that used to go by the expression ‘unsafe and unsatisfactory,’” he told the judges. Focusing his argument initially on the first supposed assault, in which Pell is alleged to have committed acts of sexual assault on two choir boys simultaneously for five to six minutes, despite the busy time and place in which it was alleged to have happened, Walker highlighted what he called serious inconsistencies in the evidence. “Nobody apart from the alleged victims and the alleged perpetrator were present in the room called the priest’s sacristy with which [the judges] are now familiar.” The circumstances of the alleged assault, supposed to have taken place immediately following Sunday Mass, included, Walker noted for the judges, the full vestments Pell was supposed to have been wearing at the time. Describing the circumstances of the alleged assault as “matters of physical improbability to the point of impossibility,” Pell’s lawyer also said the inconsistency in the dates of Pell’s alleged crimes points the weakness of his conviction. Prosecutors initially charged that the assault might have happened sometime between Pell’s installation in August of 1996 and the end of December of the same year, but during the trial evidence left only two dates for the jury to consider: Dec. 15 or 22, 1996, the first two occasions when Pell celebrated Sunday Mass in the cathedral. Walker then drew the judges’ attention to prosecution attempts to introduce a third possible date during the appeal process, suggesting Nov. 3 as a possibility, calling it an indication that prosecutors did not believe their own arguments. “The notion that on appeal the unsafe and unsatisfactory nature of a verdict on a case put to the jury of either the 15 or 22 of December can or should be answered or rehabilitated by a distinctly new case (for) 3 November being advanced is in itself disturbing, should disturb this court.” Walker argued that even though the prosecution had withdrawn the argument suggesting Nov. 3 as a possibility, “it is an appropriate reflection, forensically manifested by the Crown, of the doubts to which I am going to speak, involved in the theory that this supposed first incident indeed took place on the 15 or 22 December – and if it didn’t take place on one of those two dates then the Crown case fails.” “Date is important,” Walker said. “Pell was appointed in July, installed in August, but didn’t say his first Sunday high Mass at the cathedral until 15 December.” The defence also argued that, on whatever Sunday the assault was supposed to have taken place, the circumstances of the allegations did not add up. According to the narrative of the alleged victim and sole witness, the alleged abuse had to take place after Sunday Mass, at which Pell had presided and for which he was still fully vested. Walker argued that witness accounts of Pell’s public visibility after Mass meant that for him to have assaulted the two teenagers for a period of 5-6 minutes alone in the sacristy was “literally and logically impossible according to the complainant’s account,” and that there was no other account offered of the alleged abuse. The difficulty in establishing a possible date for the alleged offense, together with witnesses who testified to Pell’s visibility after Mass, meant, Walker said, that the prosecution case could not mount a credible claim to being beyond reasonable doubt. “If you have to be, for the offending, in a particular place in a particular time, then credible evidence, never challenged, places the archbishop in a position carrying out an activity at a time rendering the offending, according to the complainant’s account impossible, or put more softly simply not a realistic possibility.” Walker also presented several other lines of argumentation that he said showed the weakness of the prosecution’s case and the failure of investigators to call or interview material witnesses. He specifically argued that the alleged date for a second offense by Pell was unsupported by even the alleged victim’s testimony and had been chosen simply as “the next time the prosecution could suggest that the Archbishop was at Sunday Mass in the cathedral.” The defence also argued that the jury had been effectively invited consider the alleged victim as credible, despite the defense being unable to test his credibility in court. It was, Walker said, impossible to raise a reasonable doubt about evidence which could not be properly subjected to in person cross- examination. Pell, who was present in court, turns 78 this week. The hearing is set to continue June 5-6. The judges could deliver their verdict at any point during the two days, or reserve their judgment to a later date..
Recommended publications
  • Page 1 of 2 Cardinal Pell Hopes for a Pope Who Knows How to Govern
    Cardinal Pell hopes for a Pope who knows how to govern - Vatican Insider Page 1 of 2 LANGUAGE: Italiano English Español www.vaticaninsider.com The Pope’s speeches :: Tuesday 05 March 2013 :: Home :: News :: World News Inquiries and Interviews :: The Vatican :: Agenda :: About us SEARCH 03/ 4/2013 OTHER NEWS Cardinal Wuerl is looking above all for a Cardinal Pell hopes for a Pope who knows how to govern Pope with a spiritual vision 14 Like 101 5 America’s Cardinal Wuerl is looking for a pope with a spiritual vision who can... When Australia’s Cardinal George Pell goes into the conclave to elect the new Pope he will be looking for a candidate that is Cardinal Toppo: “It is the Church that a strategist, a decision maker, has good and proven pastoral produces the Pope” qualities, and the ability to govern India has five cardinal electors in the Conclave. Cardinal Toppo talks about... GERARD O'CONNELL ROME Benedict XVI's parting gift: First ostension of Holy Shroud since 1975 to take... Cardinal George Pell, 71, the Archbishop of Sydney, participated in the 2005 This coming 30 March the Holy Shroud will conclave which elected Benedict XVI and is now in Rome again to vote in the be broadcast live on television for... conclave to elect his successor. Diaz: “Cardinal Mahony should reflect on the example set by the Pope” In this interview at Domus Australia he reflects on the resignation of Benedict “Vatican Insider” interviews the former U.S. XVI and speaks about the major challenges facing the Church today ambassador to the Holy See, Miguel..
    [Show full text]
  • 'We Dare Not Fail'
    It’s All Good Son’s actions help mom realize what’s important in life, writes columnist Patti Lamb, page 12. Serving the Church in Central and Southern Indiana Since 1960 CriterionOnline.com March 1, 2019 Vol. LIX, No. 20 75¢ This year’s Lent could be just what struggling ‘We dare not fail’ Church needs WASHINGTON (CNS)—When Lent begins on March 6, Catholics in the United States will likely be more than ready for it. This set-aside time for prayer and reflection—after all the Church has been through in recent months—could provide both a healing balm and a needed boost forward, some say. Ash Wednesday, the start of Lent, is typically a big Catholic draw, filling churches with nearly Easter- or Christmas-size Mass crowds even though it is not a holy day of obligation. Conventual Franciscan Father Jude DeAngelo, director of campus ministry at The Catholic University of America in Washington, hopes this year is no exception. “We in the American Catholic Church have been through a year of tremendous suffering and tremendous upheaval and frustration,” he told Catholic News Service (CNS), referring to the past months of allegations of sexual misconduct and cover-up by Church leaders. See list of penance services, page 10, The priest said pope’s Lenten some Catholics message, page 16. stopped going to Church, “scandalized by the actions of a few,” but that he hopes and prays they come Pope Francis and Church leaders from around the world attend a penitential liturgy during a meeting on the protection of minors in the Church at the Vatican on Feb.
    [Show full text]
  • How the Catholic Church Sexual Abuse Crisis Changed Private Law
    CARDINAL SINS: HOW THE CATHOLIC CHURCH SEXUAL ABUSE CRISIS CHANGED PRIVATE LAW MAYO MORAN* ABSTRACT For several decades now, the unfolding of the Catholic Church sexual abuse crisis has been front-page news. It has wreaked havoc on hundreds of thousands of lives, cost the Church billions of dollars, and done irreparable harm to a once-revered institution. Along the way, it has also helped to transform the all- important private law of responsibility. When the crisis began to break in the early 1980s, the few survivors who sought legal redress faced a daunting array of obstacles. Limitations periods alone had the effect of barring almost all child sexual abuse claims. Immunities also helped to shield the Church. Private law itself was generally hostile to institutional liability, particularly where the harm resulted from the criminal act of an individual. All of that has changed. Among the catalysts for change within private law, the Catholic Church sex abuse crisis looms large. The scale of the crisis and the universal nature of the Church were certainly both important factors, but so too was the Church's response. From the initial impulse to cover up instances of abuse to choices made in the legal and political arenas, it appeared willing to do almost anything to protect itself. Yet the Church had traditionally bene®ted from special treatment precisely on the ground that it was not an ordinary, self-interested legal actor. The tension between the Church's mission and its approach to covering up abuse began to attract notice. Courts and legislators were prompted to act.
    [Show full text]
  • Judge Sentences Cardinal Pell to Six Years in Prison on Abuse Charges
    Judge sentences Cardinal Pell to six years in prison on abuse charges MELBOURNE, Australia — Cardinal George Pell, 77, was sentenced to six years in prison March 13, just over two weeks after a Melbourne court allowed the publication of news that he had been found guilty of sexually abusing two boys. Cardinal Pell, who continues to maintain his innocence, will try to appeal the verdict. The court has set June 5-6 as the dates to consider the basis for the appeal. In December, a jury had found him guilty on five charges, each of which carried a maximum jail term of 10 years. The jury unanimously found that Cardinal Pell, shortly after being named archbishop of Melbourne in 1996, sexually assaulted two choirboys in the sacristy of Melbourne’s St. Patrick’s Cathedral. The guilty verdict regarded one count of “sexual penetration,” in this case oral sex, and four counts of indecent acts with or in the presence of a minor under 16 years of age. Judge Peter Kidd spent more than one hour explaining the reasoning behind his sentencing and the factors he considered. He repeatedly referred to the cardinal’s position of authority over the choirboys and the breach of trust his actions caused. “You were a pillar of St. Patrick’s Cathedral by virtue of your position,” Kidd told the cardinal. “The brazenness of your conduct is indicative of your power over the victims,” he said. The judge also said he had to consider the cardinal’s age and health problems, including noting that the stress of imprisonment would exacerbate his hypertension and heart condition.
    [Show full text]
  • Briefing of the Vice Director of the Holy See Press Office, Paloma García Ovejero, on the 26Th Meeting of the Council of Cardinals with the Holy Father Francis
    N. 180912e Wednesday 12.09.2018 Briefing of the Vice Director of the Holy See Press Office, Paloma García Ovejero, on the 26th meeting of the Council of Cardinals with the Holy Father Francis At 13.00 today, the Vice Director of the Holy See Press Office, Paloma García Ovejero, gave a briefing on the 26th meeting of the Council of Cardinals with the Holy Father Francis. The Council of Cardinals met, as scheduled, for three days: Monday 10, Tuesday 11 and Wednesday 12 September. All members were present, apart from His Eminence Cardinal George Pell, His Eminence Cardinal Francisco Javier Errázuriz, and His Eminence Cardinal Laurent Monsengwo Pasinya. The Holy Father, as usual, participated in the work of the Council, although he was absent on three occasions: late Monday morning, for the audience with His Eminence Cardinal Beniamino Stella; on Tuesday morning, due to the ad Limina Apostolorum visit of the Episcopal Conference of Venezuela; and this morning, for the General Audience. The meetings on Monday and Tuesday took place in the morning from 9.00 to 12.00, and in the afternoon from 16.30 to 19.00. The session concluded this morning at 10.30. The majority of the Council’s work was dedicated to the final adjustments to the draft of the new Apostolic Constitution of the Roman Curia, provisionally entitled Praedicate evangelium. The Council of Cardinals has already submitted to the Holy Father the provisional text which will however undergo stylistic revision and a canonistic review. As already communicated on Monday, during the first session of this 26th meeting, the Council of Cardinals asked the Pope to reflect on the work, structure and composition of the Council itself, also taking into consideration the advanced age of some members.
    [Show full text]
  • COMUNICATO: 4A RIUNIONE DEL DECIMO CONSIGLIO ORDINARIO DELLA SEGRETERIA GENERALE DEL SINODO DEI VESCOVI
    N. 0554 Sabato 09.11.2002 COMUNICATO: 4a RIUNIONE DEL DECIMO CONSIGLIO ORDINARIO DELLA SEGRETERIA GENERALE DEL SINODO DEI VESCOVI COMUNICATO: 4a RIUNIONE DEL DECIMO CONSIGLIO ORDINARIO DELLA SEGRETERIA GENERALE DEL SINODO DEI VESCOVI Il Decimo Consiglio Ordinario della Segreteria Generale del Sinodo dei Vescovi si è riunito per la quarta volta nei giorni 5 - 7 novembre 2002 nella sede della Segreteria Generale. Sotto la guida di Sua Eminenza Reverendissima Jan P. Schotte, C.I.C.M., Segretario Generale del Sinodo dei Vescovi, hanno partecipato alla riunione gli Eminentissimi Cardinali Godfried Danneels, Arcivescovo di Mechelen-Brussel, Malines-Bruxelles (Belgio); Francis Arinze, Prefetto della Congregazione per il Culto Divino e la Disciplina dei Sacramenti (Città del Vaticano); Dionigi Tettamanzi, Arcivescovo di Milano (Italia); Jorge Mario Bergoglio,S.I.., Arcivescovo di Buenos Aires (Argentina); Lubomyr Husar, M.S.U., Arcivescovo Maggiore di Lviv degli Ucraini (Ucraina); gli Eccellentissimi Arcivescovi Henry Sebastian D'Souza, Arcivescovo Emerito di Calcutta (India); Orlando B. Quevedo, O.M.I., Arcivescovo di Cotabato (Filippine); Laurent Monsengwo Pasinya, Arcivescovo di Kisangani (Repubblica Democratica del Congo); Henryk Muszyński, Arcivescovo di Gniezno (Polonia); John Olorunfemi Onaiyekan, Arcivescovo di Abuja (Nigeria); George Pell, Arcivescovo di Sydney (Australia). Hanno inoltre offerto la loro collaborazione alcuni esperti della Nona Assemblea Generale Ordinaria. Per la Segreteria Generale del Sinodo sono intervenuti i Rev.mi Monsignori Fortunato Frezza, Sotto Segretario, John A. Abruzzese, Etienne Brocard e Daniel Estivill. Non hanno potuto prendere parte ai lavori, trattenuti da urgenti motivi nelle loro sedi, gli Eminentissimi Cardinali Norberto Rivera Carrera, Arcivescovo di México (Messico); Francis Eugene George, O.M.I., Arcivescovo di Chicago (U.S.A.); Cláudio Hummes, O.F.M., Arcivescovo di São Paulo (Brasile); Walter Kasper, Presidente del Pontificio Consiglio per la Promozione dell’Unità dei Cristiani (Città del Vaticano).
    [Show full text]
  • Holy Week in a Time of Pandemic
    Price € 1,00. Back issues € 2,00 L’O S S E RVATOR E ROMANO WEEKLY EDITION IN ENGLISH Unicuique suum Non praevalebunt Fifty-third year, number 15 (2.642) Vatican City Friday, 10 April 2020 HolyHoly WeekWeek inin aa timetime ofof pandemicpandemic page 2 L’OSSERVATORE ROMANO Friday, 10 April 2020, number 15 The Holy Father appointed Fr Krzysztof Chudzio as Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of Przemyśl for Latins, Poland, assign- VAT I C A N ing him the titular episcopal See of Marazanae. Until now he has served The Holy Father appointed Fr Mi- as parish priest of Jasienica Rosielna BULLETIN chael G. McGovern as Bishop of (3 Apr.). Belleville. Until now he has served as episcopal vicar ad interim of Vi- Bishop-elect Chudzio, 56, was AUDIENCES ing the seminary he studied electric- cariate I, vicar forane of the Deneary born in Przemyśl, Poland. He was al studies. He holds a degree in I-C and parish priest of the Saint ordained a priest on 14 June 1988. Saturday, 4 April philosophy and theology. He was or- Raphael the Archangel Parish in dained a priest on 18 December The Holy Father appointed Fr Fran- Cardinal Marc Ouellet, PSS, Prefect Old Mill Creek (3 Apr.). 1989. cisco Castro Lalupú as titular Bish- of the Congregation for Bishops Bishop-elect McGovern, 55, was op of Putia in Byzacena and Auxili- Cardinal Luis Antonio G. Tagle, The Holy Father accepted the resig- born in Chicago, USA . He holds a ary Bishop of the Archdiocese of Prefect of the Congregation for the nation of Bishop Edward K.
    [Show full text]
  • Charting the Roles of Women in the Catholic Church
    FutureChurch Charting the roles of women in the Catholic Church Current breakdown of male/female leadership in Vatican dicasteries Pope Francis has called for “a more incisive presence for women” in the Catholic Church. At the most recent Consistory of cardinals on February 12 and 13, 2015, Fr. Federico Lombardi reported that the cardinals expressed the hope of “an increasingly active role” for women. Although Pope Francis stated the door is closed on the question of ordination for women to the priesthood, he has been emphatic in his call for a stronger presence of women elsewhere. He recently appointed Sr. Mary Melone, the first women to date, to head a Pontifical University; Sr. Luzia Premoli, the first women to be appointed as a member of the Congregation on Evangelizat ion of Peoples, and has stated that women should take up positions of greater leadership within the Vatican. So how many women are in positions of leadership within the Curia? How many assert real influence? While it is difficult to accurately measure the level of influence women exercise, the chart below has been generated to further that discussion by showing the current roles women play now in Vatican congregations, pontifical councils, and other commissions, committees and offices. Secretariats, Congregations, and Pontifical Councils There are two secretariats, nine congregations and twelve pontifical councils. Below is a chart indicating the number of Vatican officials broken out in terms of male/female roles from undersecretary and above. FutureChurch 2 Vatican Males in Females in Secretariat leadership and titles leadership Congregations Pontifical Council Secretariat of Secretary of State: Cardinal Pietro 3 0 State Parolin Secretary: Archbishop Paul Richard Gallagher Undersecretary: Msgr.
    [Show full text]
  • CDW News Sept.Oct 2009.Pdf
    Members Most Rev. Arthur J. Serratelli Volume XLV September -October 2009 Bishop of Paterson, Chairman Justin F. Cardinal Rigali Archbishop of Philadelphia Address of Bishop Serratelli to the Most Rev. Daniel M. Buechlein, OSB 2009 National Meeting of Diocesan Liturgical Commissions Archbishop of Indianapolis Most Rev. Charles J. Chaput, OFM Cap. Archbishop of Denver The 2009 National Meeting of Diocesan Liturgical Commissions took place in Most Rev. Wilton D. Gregory Archbishop of Atlanta Plymouth, Michigan from October 6-9. 160 Diocesan liturgists, representing 97 Most Rev. George H. Niederauer Dioceses in the United States of America, considered the topic Liturgical Formation Archbishop of San Francisco with Patience and Zeal with the assistance of major presentations by Daniel Cardinal Most Rev. Kevin J. Farrell Bishop of Dallas DiNardo, Archbishop Daniel Pilarczyk, and Sr. Katarina Schuth, OSF. At the Most Rev. Ronald P. Herzog meeting, co-sponsored by the USCCB Committee on Divine Worship and the Bishop of Alexandria in Louisiana Most Rev. Octavio Cisneros Federation of Diocesan Liturgical Commissions, the members heard an address by Auxiliary Bishop of Brooklyn Bishop Arthur Serratelli, Chairman on the Committee on Divine Worship. Bishop Serratelli’s address is presented here for the benefit of our readers: Consultants Roger M. Cardinal Mahony Archbishop of Los Angeles Broadway, Hollywood, Carnegie Hall, and the New York Philharmonic: all were Most Rev. John G. Vlazny thrilled by the art of Leonard Bernstein. He captured the ear and the heart of 20th Archbishop of Portland in Oregon Sr. Janet Baxendale, SC Century America, influencing music with his exuberant and dramatic style.
    [Show full text]
  • Child Sexual Abuse and the Case of Cardinal George Pell
    IJCJ&SD 9(4) 2020 ISSN 2202-8005 Reckoning with Denial and Complicity: Child Sexual Abuse and the Case of Cardinal George Pell Kate Gleeson1 Macquarie University, Australia Abstract This article is concerned with public responses to allegations of child sexual abuse by representatives of powerful state-like entities such as the Catholic Church. It focuses on the responses of hegemonic groups and individuals to the recent trials and acquittal of the most senior Catholic figure ever to face child sexual abuse charges, Australian Cardinal George Pell, and his sworn testimony denying knowledge of sex crimes committed by a priest he associated with in the past. The article examines organised political campaigns denying the possibility of child sexual abuse in relation to a more generalised cultural denial permeating society about the entrenched nature of child abuse. As a means for coming to terms with the denial of atrocities, this article invokes philosophical debates about responsibility for mass crimes in the context of war tribunals, such as those formulated by Simone de Beauvoir and Hannah Arendt. Keywords Child sexual abuse; denial; complicity; Catholic Church; institutional abuse. Please cite this article as: Gleeson K (2020) Reckoning with denial and complicity: Child sexual abuse and the case of Cardinal George Pell. International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy 9(4): 31-44. https://doi.org/10.5204/ijcjsd.1688 Except where otherwise noted, content in this journal is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence. As an open access journal, articles are free to use with proper attribution. ISSN: 2202-8005 © The Author(s) 2020 Kate Gleeson: Reckoning with Denial and Complicity: Child Sexual Abuse and the Case of Cardinal George Pell Introduction Countries around the world are reeling from revelations of systemic institutionalised child abuse.
    [Show full text]
  • Briefing by the Director of the Holy See Press Office, Greg Burke, on the 27Th Meeting of the Council of Cardinals with the Holy Father Francis
    N. 181212d Wednesday 12.12.2018 Briefing by the Director of the Holy See Press Office, Greg Burke, on the 27th Meeting of the Council of Cardinals with the Holy Father Francis At 1 pm today, the Director of the Holy See Press Office, Greg Burke, gave a briefing on the 27th meeting of the Council of Cardinals with the Holy Father Francis. The Council of Cardinals met for three days: Monday 10, Tuesday 11 and Wednesday 12 December. The meeting was attended by Their Eminences Cardinal Óscar Rodríguez Maradiaga, S.D.B .; Cardinal Reinhard Marx; Cardinal Seán Patrick O'Malley, O.F.M. Cap.; Cardinal Giuseppe Bertello; and Cardinal Osvald Gracias. Cardinal Secretary of State Pietro Parolin was not present as he was representing the Holy See at the Intergovernmental Conference for the formal adoption by the United Nations member states of the Global Compact for migrations, which took place in Marrakech, Morocco, from 10 to 11 December. The Holy Father, as usual, took part in the work, even though he was absent this morning for the general audience. Following the request expressed by the Cardinals at the end of the 26th meeting of the Council of Cardinals (10- 12 September 2018), regarding reflection on the work, structure and composition of the Council itself, also taking into account the advanced age of some members, the Holy Father Francis wrote at the end of October to Their Eminences Cardinal George Pell, Cardinal Javier Errázuriz and Cardinal Laurent Monsengwo Pasinya to thank them for the work they have done in these five years.
    [Show full text]
  • October 9Th 2016 : 5491 1614 by THURSDAY 5Pm Mobile: 0417 562 243 the YEAR of MERCY Phone: 54912441 Or 0410402027 28Th Sunday [email protected]
    BULLETIN NOTICES Fr Paul Mercovich SUNDAY (C) Please forward any notices for the bulletin to Kim Collins (Laffin) Presbytery October 9th 2016 : 5491 1614 By THURSDAY 5pm Mobile: 0417 562 243 THE YEAR OF MERCY Phone: 54912441 or 0410402027 28th Sunday [email protected] NEXT WEEKS MASS TIMES NEXT WEEKENDS MASS ROSTER 3rd SUNDAY OF THE MONTH SPECIAL MINISTERS OF THE EUCHARIST: Val Bourke√* Sandra Patton*√ Julie McGrath* Nursing Home • SUNDAY, 8.30 A.M. – READERS: Anne Calnin CHARLTON PRAYERS OF FAITHFUL: Brian Heenan GIFTS : Mary and Jeff McLoughlan SATURDAY, 7.00 P.M. – ALTAR SERVERS: Maddison and Elliot Fitzpatrick WEDDERBURN FLOWERS: Eily Rosewall HOME VISITING: Mary Anne Sait SUNDAY, 10.30 A.M. – COUNTERS: This week: Frank and Val Bourke ST. ARNAUD Next week: Bill and Maree Fitzpatrick CHURCH CLEANING: P Matthews, D Hobbs, M McGrath SUNDAY, 10.30 A.M. – DONALD *Lay Led Liturgy Michael (Mick) Fannings Funeral Mass will be held on Tuesday 11th October at 11.00 am at St Josephs. OUR THOUGHTS & PRAYERS: RECENT DEATHS: MICK FANNING ANNIVERSARIES: MARY DONALDSON AGNES DALTON KEITH MCLOUGHLAN DICK THOMPSON MARY MCDONALD MICHAEL MCCORMACK EILEEN BOURKE MARIE NOONAN PRAYERS FOR THE SICK Bailey Delaney Vin Sait Fr John Keane St. Teresa (1515-1582) was born in Avila and died in Alba, Spain. Next synod on youth after proposal When only a child of seven, she on married priests rejected ran away from home in the hope of being martyred by the Moors; in this way, she said she could come to see God. At the age of eighteen she joined the Carmelite Order and chose Christ as her heavenly Spouse.
    [Show full text]