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David H Lukenbill Website

David H Lukenbill Website

Monthly Archives: June 2015

Book Excerpt: Carceral World, Communal City

25 Thursday Jun 2015

Posted by David H Lukenbill in Publications: Book Excerpts

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This website is the home site of my criminal reformation apostolate; here you can find details about the Lampstand Foundation which I founded as a 501c (3) nonprofit corporation in Sacramento, California in 2003.

I have written ten books and each one of my books is a response to a likely objection to Catholicism that will be encountered when doing ministry to professional criminals; and for links to all of the Lampstand books which are available at Amazon, go to http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=david+h+lukenbill

I also maintain a daily blog, The Catholic Eye, https://catholiceye.wordpress.com/

The work connected to the apostolate is listed under the home page categories (to your left) which I will be expanding as needed.

________

Book Excerpt

We need deep knowledge leaders with the endurance and strength of spirit surviving the prison yard and the death row cell.

A Symbiotic Relationship

12) The effectiveness of the criminal transformative teaching I am asserting is dependent upon the existence of a deep understanding of the principles of Catholic social teaching.

When I first began working with the social teaching and realized that the guiding principles animating it also formed the foundational ideas of the nonprofit sector, I assumed that the social teaching could be used effectively by anyone.

I now realize that—though that hope remains attainable—the most optimal use of the teaching can only come from being an active, well-catechized Catholic.

However, Merkle (2004) also instructs us on how to advance the knowledge of the social teaching of the Church in the world:

Some ecologists say it is not the general conditions of an ecosystem that ultimately determine its capacity to sustain itself, but that single factor that is in short supply in a given system that determines its carrying capacity. Is community that single factor that marks the Church’s capacity to transform Social Catholicism for this new century? Some caution that the Church must link the social encyclical tradition to new social carriers, or face irrelevance in the social realm. These carriers might occupy different places along the sociological matrix of community: from association, to movements, or groups, yet as collectives within the Church, all have a common dimension in some degree. (p. 241, highlighting added) Merkle, J. A. (2004). From the Heart of the Church: The Catholic Social Tradition. Collegeville, Minnesota: Liturgical Press.

13) Through the work of The Lampstand Foundation we plan to build a new platform from which the social teaching can enter into congruence with one of the “new social carriers” called for, and become part of the criminal transformative community.

Criminal transformation and Catholic social teaching form a symbiotic relationship, a natural law of criminal transformation, where the truth of the teaching is the only reality strong enough to trump the truth of the world—the city of men—which is the truth the criminal lives by. (pp. 16-17)

David H. Lukenbill (2008) Carceral World, Communal City, Sacramento, California: The Lampstand Foundation, Chulu Press.

In the Company of Saints at Christmastime

04 Thursday Jun 2015

Posted by David H Lukenbill in Unpublished Work, Liturgy

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This website is the home site of my criminal reformation apostolate; here you can find details about the Lampstand Foundation which I founded as a 501c (3) nonprofit corporation in Sacramento, California in 2003.

I also maintain a daily blog, The Catholic Eye, https://catholiceye.wordpress.com/

The work connected to the apostolate is listed under the home page categories (to your left) which I will be expanding as needed.

________

Today’s Second Post:

It is Christmastime and the chapel is filled with flowers sharing their fragrance and beauty with all of us in Mass today, a gray, cold, and cloudy day.

My wife and I are converts to the Catholic Church, having been baptized in 2004, so we’re still in the process of learning about this universal community stretching through eons of time and encompassing so much temporal and spiritual space; but one thing we have learned is how much deeper we appreciate Christmas—the Advent Season—since becoming Catholic.

For many months the glow from our baptism carried me happily along in the observance of the sacramental life of the Church so familiar to Cradle Catholics, attending Sunday Mass regularly, supporting the Church, blending many of the rituals around the liturgical seasons into our daily life; but then as the glow from the baptism wore somewhat off I encountered a period of spiritual dryness.

My spiritual dryness came largely from the increased reading and study of Catholic life in the United States and around the world as I began to see the human failures and satanic work in the priestly abuse of children; seemingly connected to the deep trough of relativism the Church in America and Europe had been wallowing in for several decades as she struggled to combat enemies from within and without.

I began exploring membership in lay Catholic organizations which I felt would recapture the glow of baptism but what I found was that what I thought I needed from Catholic organizations was something I only needed to do myself; embrace the daily practice of communion, prayer, and devotion.

The spiritual dryness I thought was calling me deeper back into the Church through lay organizational involvement was instead just a simple call back to the Church’s liturgy.

In June of this year (2008) I began attending daily Mass and observing daily practice of praying the rosary, and midday and evening prayers which I knew was part of living a deeper sacramental life in the Church. After several weeks of daily practice I began to realize that the blessing and grace I was receiving from it was so wonderful in itself, that I needed no further organizational stimulus to maintain it.

I also found, in the daily homiletic teaching from the priests of my parish, refreshment and broadening of spiritual grace that was deeply enhancing my individual journey into Catholicism as well as the sacramental grace received through daily reception of the Holy Eucharist, which is described in the Daily Roman Missal (2004):

The Holy Eucharist

By which Christ associates his Church

and all her members with the sacrifice on the cross.

The fruits of this sacrament are:

An increase in the communicant’s union with Christ.

Forgiveness of venial sins.

Preservation from grave sins.

A strengthening of the unity of the Church as the Mystical Body of Christ, because of the strengthening of the bonds of charity between the communicant and Christ.

(Midwest Theological Forum, Sixth Edition, Large Print, p. 2146)

However, the most wonderful grace is that received from being in the company of saints—Mass with the saints—both those whose stories we acknowledge each day, and the many saints surrounding me in the parish pews whose stories I do not know but whose faith and devotion to Holy Mother Church is so evident through their daily practice, and so beautifully represented in the profusion and arrangment of flowers this Christmas.

My fellow worshippers, almost all women, whose apostolates are reflected in their prayer intentions when they call for prayers for the apostolate of life, for vocations, for recovery; ah what work these women do.

I have no doubt that those who come to daily mass are among the most deeply faithful, and so how much more will their prayers bring comfort to the suffering.

Women, who have been so marginalized throughout human history, yet retain the clarity of spirit—as did Mary, the mother of our Lord and Mary Magdalene—to see the truth of Christ; and it is they who are first in the daily mass, they who do almost all of the readings, they who mostly distribute the body and blood of our Lord; they the saints aborning, they, who I am privileged to be among each morning.

By David H. Lukenbill, Christmastime 2008

Women’s Ordination

04 Thursday Jun 2015

Posted by David H Lukenbill in Unpublished Work, Women's Ordination

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This website is the home site of my criminal reformation apostolate; here you can find details about the Lampstand Foundation which I founded as a 501c (3) nonprofit corporation in Sacramento, California in 2003.

I also maintain a daily blog, The Catholic Eye, https://catholiceye.wordpress.com/

The work connected to the apostolate is listed under the home page categories (to your left) which I will be expanding as needed.

________

Today’s Post:

Though unpublished as an article, last year Lampstand published a book supporting the ordination of women to the priesthood of the Catholic Church, and in the Preface I wrote the following:

For this book, a quote from Groppe (2009) frames the over-arching theme:

In a culture that systematically denigrates, commodifies, and violates women’s bodies in advertising, film, and pornography, it is imperative that the church bear public and symbolic witness to the mystery that women and men alike can serve as an icon of Wisdom made flesh. (p. 171)

That is bare bone essence, isn’t it?

The Church stands in the world as a sign of contradiction and as the world since time immemorial excluded women from full personhood; the Church must ensure that within her embrace, woman’s full personhood is deeply rooted and complete; which can only be accomplished by priestly ordination and full equality with men in the leadership of the Church on earth as that equality is certainly so in Heaven.

I have come to believe, fully and completely, that the institutional Church has been wrong in not ordaining women to be priests; just as the Church was wrong for centuries in seeing the earth as the center of the solar system, and slavery as acceptable and usury not; and this wrongness, in the treatment of women, will become obvious to criminals being evangelized, for they know, better than most, the pain and sorrow of being marginalized, even though their marginalization is self-imposed while that of the women in the Church comes from the Vatican and twisted history.

Underneath and alongside the institutional church, the deeper reality of the supernatural church has always existed, the Church founded and shaped by Christ, the Church the people in their hearts have always seen—for the institutional church has too much that has been claimed as doctrine, then changed—but the supernatural church, the mystical church, has always known the true and equal power of the women in the Church.

My Catholic belief is centered on the Great Story; that throughout human history the idea of God has been prevalent within the human heart and mind; and of the four major religions: Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, only three, Christianity, Islam, and Buddhism can claim an individual as founder, and of them only one, Christianity, can claim a founder who was God; the other two merely claiming to be prophet and enlightened respectively.

Christ’s Godhood is certified by eye witness accounts of miracles he performed unexplainable by any human ability; in particular, his resurrection.

Christ formed his church on the rock of Peter, and the gates of hell have not prevailed against it, and as the Roman Catholic Church survives still, I know that, as a Catholic, I am of the People of God, and I am as certain that God is in the soul of each human being on earth.

“Question Authority”; that was the foundational mantra of the 1960s; choosing to question the authority that was instructing them to do something they felt was wrong and incorrect teaching is, unfortunately, an aspect of Catholic institutional life; but it is corrected by the Catholic teaching mandating listening to one’s conscience, as Gaudium et Spes (1965) teaches us:

  1. In the depths of his conscience, man detects a law which he does not impose upon himself, but which holds him to obedience. Always summoning him to love good and avoid evil, the voice of conscience when necessary speaks to his heart: do this, shun that. For man has in his heart a law written by God; to obey it is the very dignity of man; according to it he will be judged.

This comes from the point made in Romans 2:14-16:

14 When Gentiles who have not the law do by nature what the law requires, they are a law to themselves, even though they do not have the law. 15 They show that what the law requires is written on their hearts, while their conscience also bears witness and their conflicting thoughts accuse or perhaps excuse them 16 on that day when, according to my gospel, God judges the secrets of men by Christ Jesus.

All human beings have the eternal written on their hearts and even within those who do not believe in God, even some who call themselves Humanists, as is evident when the father of Humanism, Abraham Maslow (1971) writes about the first step to the supreme heights a human being can reach, that of self-actualization:

As a simple first step toward self-actualization, I sometimes suggest to my students that when they a given a glass of wine and asked how they like it, they try a different way of responding. First, I suggest that they not look at the label on the bottle. Thus they will not use it to get any cue about whether or not they should like it. Next, I recommend that they close their eyes if possible and that they “make a hush.” Now they are ready to look within themselves and try to shut out the noise of the world so that they may savor the wine on their tongues and look to the “Supreme Court” inside themselves. Then, and only then, they may come out and say, “I like it” or I don’t like it.” (p. 46)

This “Supreme Court” is conscience, the ability to determine right from wrong or even good wine from bad wine, according to taste, the taste of a well-informed conscience, or, of listening, in that quietness, that “hush” , which, as Christians call it, the still small voice, which, when heeded, serves us well.

Catholic teaching is absolutely correct, one’s conscience, one’s connection with God, is surely what one must align with, which calls for the attitude, “trust but verify” and verify through our own study, our own conscience, our own listening to that still small voice from God, our own entering into the hush.

Catherine of Siena (1980) captures this elegantly, in The Dialogue, God is the speaker:

Imagine a circle traced on the ground, and in its center a tree sprouting with a shoot grafted into its side. The tree finds its nourishment in the soil within the expanse of the circle, but uprooted from the soil it would die fruitless. So think of the soul as a tree made for love and living only by love. Indeed, without this divine love, which is true and perfect charity, death would be her fruit instead of life. The circle in which this tree’s root, the soul’s love, must grow is true knowledge of herself, knowledge that is joined to me, who like the circle have neither beginning nor end. You can go round and round within this circle, finding neither end nor beginning, yet never leaving the circle. This knowledge of yourself, and of me within yourself, is grounded in the soil of true humility, which is as great as the expanse of the circle (which is the knowledge of yourself united with me, as I have said). But if your knowledge of yourself were isolated from me there would be no full circle at all. Instead there would be a beginning in self-knowledge, but apart from me it would end in confusion. (pp. 41-42)

David H. Lukenbill (2014) Women in the Church, St. Catherine of Siena, Fr. Teilhard de Chardin, & Criminal Reformation. Sacramento, California: The Lampstand Foundation, Chulu Press.  (pp 9-14)

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