Fr. Richard John Neuhaus

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Sorry for the multiple postings. Fr. Richard John Neuhaus’ funeral will be on Tuesday. I am hoping that EWTN will broadcast it.

The World Over, Raymond Arroyo’s weekly news program will be having a special memorial to Fr. Neuhaus, either at the beginning or the end of the program.
 
This is such a loss. He was a strong voice, and in the best possible way: not through shouting, but through firmness and clarity, seasoned with an incredible wit.

It is interesting to note that he died so soon after Avery Cardinal Dulles. When Richard Neuhaus, former Lutheran minister, was received into the Catholic Church, one of his sponsors was fellow theologian Fr. Avery Dulles, SJ. (The other was theologian George Weigel.)

With the loss of these two faithful voices, we can only pray in confidence that the Lord will provide to fill the gap they leave in the Church Militant.

Blessings,

Gerry
 
Was praying for him upon news of his illness. He was on my heart and mind when at work today.

Was a brand new Catholic during Pope JPII’s funeral mass. I have EWTN’s DVD coverage. Subscribed to 1st Things for a year.

I am somber at his loss.
 
:imsorry: :bighanky:

Thank you Fr Neuhaus for being the wonderful example of a holy priest who inspired so many of us. You joined the Catholic church and became a priest right when we needed you the most. Say hi to Blessed Mother Teresa and Pope JPII for us.
You now are living in that “new house” that you so truly deserve.
I realize Catholics are not supposed to automatically cannonize people who have just died. I will still keep you in my prayers since prayers for the dead are never wasted.
 
I had the great privilege of attending a daily mass presided by Fr. Neuhaus last fall at his home parish in the East Village. I am so glad I had the opportunity to meet him just that once.

I will always cherish having had the opportunity to receive the body of Christ from the hands of a saint.
 
He will definately be missed, but he is home with the Lord now.
 
I already posted my thoughts, but this was just so special to me: After I had been thinking about Fr. Neuhaus off and on all day, the librarian at our college just contacted me. She was clearing some shelf space and getting rid of older magazines; thought I might be interested in some. It was two years (2003-2004) of First Things!

She didn’t know who Fr. Neuhaus was, and didn’t know of his death. She just thought the magazines looked like something I would appreciate.
 
I already posted my thoughts, but this was just so special to me: After I had been thinking about Fr. Neuhaus off and on all day, the librarian at our college just contacted me. She was clearing some shelf space and getting rid of older magazines; thought I might be interested in some. It was two years (2003-2004) of First Things!

She didn’t know who Fr. Neuhaus was, and didn’t know of his death. She just thought the magazines looked like something I would appreciate.
Consider them a gift from Fr. Neuhaus!
 
For those CAF members who might be in the Manhattan area, here are the funeral arrangements for Fr Richard John Neuhaus, as posted on the First Things website:
Funeral Arrangements for Richard John Neuhaus
A Funeral Mass will be celebrated for Father Richard John Neuhaus at the Church of the Immaculate Conception—414 E. 14th Street, New York City—on Tuesday, January 13, 2009, at 10 a.m.
Bishops and priests who wish to attend are asked please to inform Nathaniel Peters (by e-mail or phone 212-627-2288) by Sunday afternoon, January 11, at the latest.
A Christian wake service in the form of a Vigil for the Deceased will be celebrated at the Church of the Immaculate Conception on Monday evening, January 12, at 7:30 p.m. Clergy who plan to attend are asked to sit with the congregation.
In lieu of flowers, donations are requested for Fr. Neuhaus’ work, the Institute on Religion and Public Life, online at this page or by mail to:
Institute on Religion and Public Life 156 Fifth Avenue Suite 400 New York, NY 10010
Let us continue to pray for the repose of his soul.
 
Fr. Neuhaus, RIP

I find it interesting that so many of the real leaders and thinkers in our Catholic community are converts. Cardinal Dulles, Fr. Neuhaus, Cardinal Lustiger (sp), Thomas Merton, Jimmy Akin, Scott Hahn. And the priest who brought the last rites for Fr. Neuhaus.
Looking back, it has always be this way, I guess. This is the “Year of St. Paul” isn’t it?
 
Rest in peace, noble soul. May the Lord richly bless you for all the good you have done for his Church.

Eternal rest grant unto him, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon him. May the souls of all the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest in peace. Amen.

:signofcross:
 
Fr. Neuhaus certainly added a lot to the intellectual credibility of the Church. His conversion was noted by leading men and women of serious thought. And his work, thus, in ecumenism through intellectual pursuits was significant. Russell Shaw once commented insightfully about how certain Catholic apostolates have not managed to appeal to the more thoughtful Catholic populous and failed in reaching out to them, thusly. Such could not be said of Neuhaus. His work was, rather, a tribute to its importance and value.

While, in recent years, Fr. Neuhaus at times became a bit cliched, and sometimes tended to focus less on serious thought than ideology, his long life and work still stands as noteworthy in its importance to the Church, the secular and religious worlds, and public discourse on serious issues.

Several years ago, I heard him in a broadcast radio interview on Good Friday. He was discussing his book, Death on a Friday Afternoon. It is his wise reflection upon the topic based upon meditation, priestly ministry, life experience with friends and family, and even his own near encounter of the past. Most importantly, of course, the passion of Christ. At this time of his own passing it would make for an excellent read.

Go forth now, good servant, into the light of Christ!
 
I read the New York Times’ obituary of Fr. Neuhaus. There were a lot of fascinating things contained in the article.
Father Neuhaus underwent several conversions in his life. He was born in Pembroke, Ontario, and emigrated to the United States. He was a Lutheran minister, like his father, but at the age of 54 was ordained a Roman Catholic priest. Politically, he evolved from a liberal Democrat and admirer of Senator Eugene J. McCarthy to a conservative and occasional adviser to President Bush.
No matter which side he was on, Father Neuhaus was always in leadership. The Rev. Max L. Stackhouse, a professor emeritus at Princeton Theological Seminary, said he first glimpsed Pastor Neuhaus marching in Selma, Ala., in a row of clergy members flanking the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Something that caught my attention was this interesting tidbit:
In 1968, Pastor Neuhaus was a delegate for Senator McCarthy to the Democratic Convention in Chicago. When the Chicago police clashed with demonstrators, he was among those arrested and tried for disorderly conduct.
Two years later, he made an unsuccessful bid to become the Democratic candidate for a Congressional seat representing the 14th District, in Brooklyn.
I found that rather fascinating. But, I suppose that the same things that young Fr. Joseph Ratzinger had seen as a result of the paradigm shift of the late 1960s and 1970s led the former Lutheran pastor in his search for Truth.
He joined conservative clergy members in a campaign against the National Council of Churches and the World Council of Churches, accusing the organizations of a taking a leftist approach to international affairs and cozying up to Marxist governments. He wrote the founding manifesto for the Institute on Religion and Democracy, a group that challenges mainline Protestant denominations it considers too liberal.
In 1990, after years of uneasiness in the Lutheran church, Father Neuhaus was accepted into the Catholic church by Cardinal John O’Connor of New York in the chapel of the cardinal’s residence on Madison Avenue. A year later the cardinal ordained him a priest. Father Neuhaus insisted that his conversion was not so much political as theological. He said the goal of Martin Luther’s Reformation had always been a united Christian church.
“I have long believed that the Roman Catholic Church is the fullest expression of the church of Christ through time,” he said in an interview then.
As I may have noted earlier in this thread, one of his sponsors was then-Fr. Avery Dulles, who, himself was a convert to Catholicism.

Fr. Neuhaus, in his December 5th column on First Things, thanked his readers and supporters for “storming heaven” with their prayers on his behalf. I pray that he now storms heaven on our behalf.
 
I found that rather fascinating. But, I suppose that the same things that young Fr. Joseph Ratzinger had seen as a result of the paradigm shift of the late 1960s and 1970s led the former Lutheran pastor in his search for Truth.
I would read it differently. I think it was about a consistent pursuit for justice as well as his own very nature to engage in thoughtful and active leadership which pushed the envelope beyond comfortable boundaries. Indeed, this is what his entire life (including his shocking conversion to Catholicism) was about and what made him such an admirable and important man of our times.
 
For those interested, “The World Over” will dedicate tonight’s programming to the memory of Fr. Richard John Neuhaus.
 
I saw the World Over this evening. It was hard to watch it because it made me sad. Fr. Neuhaus really made a lot of contributions the Church in the United States.

He was also a very devoted parish priest. I do hope that someone will edit a compilation of his homilies. It would have been incredible to have heard him preach. First Things used to post his Mass schedule.

I would have been all for naming him a bishop.
 
I am glad I saw the tribute last night on Raymond’s show, it was well done. What an incredible man, what a great loss.
 
I’ve seen this comment repeatedly. So, I’m wondering…

“Why, exactly? And for what diocese?”
Through First Things, he could prove that he could be a good administrator. The doctrine, liturgy and theology are beyond the shadow of a doubt. I would love to have had him in my diocese.
 
Through First Things, he could prove that he could be a good administrator. The doctrine, liturgy and theology are beyond the shadow of a doubt. I would love to have had him in my diocese.
But an administrator is not the same as a bishop. And when you are administering your own handpicked staff it is a little different than overseeing a diocese with its myriad of people problems. Could he have effectively handled that? Which is one of the reasons I ask, “For what diocese?” as, surely, it would have to be a practical match for his unique talents. Avery Dulles was also a brilliant man. To the point that the pope made him a cardinal But never a bishop was he. There’s something in that to be reflected upon. Bishop is a particular pastoral ministry which requires its own skill set. Not everyone is cut out for it, even if they are good, holy, and intelligent men.
 
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