The History of the Charismatic Renewal in Canada
CCHA, Study Sessions, 50 (1983) 307-324
The Nature and History of the
Catholic Charismatic Renewal in Canada
by James HANRAHAN, C.S.B.
St. Thomas More College, Saskatoon
In approaching this subject I am acutely aware of certain difficulties.
First, is the intrinsic difficulty of writing about a movement of the Holy Spirit. After all, we have the word of Jesus The Wind blows wherever it pleases; you hear its sound, but you can not tell where 'it comes from or where it is going. That is how it is with all who are born of the Spirit. (John 3:8)
Second, there is the difficulty, in treating development as recent as the charismatic renewal, of finding the needed perspective. One may look, say, at the spirituality of the seventeenth century and
have some confidence that one can see the movement of the Spirit through several generations, but here we are looking only at the past fifteen years.
Third, it must be noted that our subject is not located in one place, as, say, Ste. Anne de Beaupré, nor can we draw on any clearly defined body of material. The renewal spans the country and is largely unrecorded except in the memories of those involved.
Fourth, I have a special difficulty in that I must write as one who has been and is still actively involved. I know that this places particular demands on me to exercise care in using evidence and in presenting my analysis. At the same time, I think it can also be seen as an advantage; one not involved could also find problems.
What we are looking at is the charismatic renewal as it has
developed in the Catholic Church in Canada. The background of this
may be found in the Pentecostal Movement, which is generally seen as
having started on January 1, 1901, with an experience of the power of
the Holy Spirit in a bible school in Topeka, Kansas, conducted by
Rev. Charles F. Parham.
A closer background is found in the Neo-Pentecostal or Charismatic Movement that grew up in many of the
mainline Protestant Churches after starting in the Anglican Church in
Van Nuys, California in 1960. Both of these movements existed in
Canada before developments in the Catholic Church began. The
Catholic Charismatic renewal started in the United States at a prayer
and study weekend held at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh in
February 1967. It spread almost at once to Notre Dame University
and quickly then, more broadly.
The beginning of the charismatic renewal in the Catholic Church
in Canada can probably best be said to have taken place in Combermere,
Ontario, on August 20-21, 1968. Certainly there were individual Canadian Catholics who had experienced the power of the Spirit in the
renewal before that time, but this seems to have been the first group
experience that was to lead to further developments. For those two
days a number of people from Ann Arbor, Michigan, including Steve
Clark and Jim Cavnar, visited Madonna House in Combermere. They
spoke about the action of the Holy Spirit in the United States as they
had witnessed and shared in it since early 1967, and they prayed over
many in the Combermere community.
Catherine Doherty, the remarkable woman who was the principal
foundress of Madonna House, had long felt a lack in the Latin Church
and especially in North America of the deep awareness of the role of
the Holy Spirit found in the Eastern tradition of her youth. When the
first reports of the charismatic renewal began to appear in May 1967,
she was very interested. Early in 1968 she opened contacts with some
of the leaders and asked Bishop J.R. Windle whether he would approve of her inviting them to Combermere. He agreed readily and arrangements
were made. Those who were present in Combermere for those days of teaching
and prayer agree that it was a wonderful experience. They felt the power
of the Spirit and the presence of Christ in a new way. They prayed
in tongues and rejoiced to receive the Holy Spirit's gifts. And this was
not just an experience of a couple of days; it stayed with them and
became a normal and accepted part of their life.
This charismatic experience, appropriately called, in scriptural
language, "the baptism in the Holy Spirit" or, to avoid confusion with
the Sacrament of Baptism, "the release of the Holy Spirit", is central to the charismatic renewal.
The experience is practically always
described in terms of an awareness of the presence of Christ, but the
ways in which this is felt and its effects of it vary so greatly that the
total experience may be said to be unique to each individual. Awe, love,
joy, peace, an overwhelming power, a sense of forgiveness, acceptance
— these and many old similar words recur in people's descriptions of
their experience, with many shadings and in varying combinations.
Some Pentecostal Churches make the gift of tongues a sort of test of
true baptism in the Holy Spirit, but in the Catholic experience, the effects
are much more varied. Prayer in tongues is quite commonly found but
such effects as peace of soul in the face of troubles, a hunger for and
a new understanding of Scripture, a deeper appreciation of the sacraments, conversion of life, and others are also often experienced and
are seen as signs of the Spirit's action.
In Combermere, many members of Madonna House found in this
experience precisely the sort of unity with the others that Catherine
Doherty had long been calling for among them, and in this unity they
experienced also a new openness to others and an ability to exercise
their ministries and use their gifts which they had not known before.
Catherine encouraged them, but always in relation to the main purpose
of Madonna House in service. The prayer life of the community was
affected, especially by the use of healing prayer. In their common
prayer, however, since not everyone had taken up the charismatic forms,
they were careful to maintain the bond of peace and did not use tongues
as a normal part of their worship.
From 1968 to 1980 there was a Sunday evening prayer meeting
at Madonna House. Some of the staff participated, but this was not
really a continuing prayer group; rather it was a service offered to guests
at the house. In 1980, they re-examined the place of the prayer meeting
in their life and decided to drop it. It had never been central for the
members of the community at Madonna House and its dropping did not
mean a turning away from the charismatic experience which remains
part of their life.
A significant distinction may be useful here. What can be seen at
Combermere is a prolonged series of prayer meetings without the
establishment of a prayer group. The meeting was an apostolic undertaking of Madonna House offered to the guests who came there. The
guests, coming and going, could benefit from the meetings, but they
could not form a lasting group. That development, which would be so
characteristic of the charismatic renewal, was still to come.
Madonna House never undertook any sort of systematic outreach
in the charismatic renewal. Some members, however, notably Fathers
Robert Wild and Francis Martin, have made significant contributions through their writings.
And the initiative of one man provided the spark for the
development of prayer groups elsewhere in Canada.
Among those for whom the visit of the people from Ann Arbor
was a decisive moment was Father Jim Duffy. In October 1968, he
was sent to Marian Centre in Regina, and he went with the resolve
that if he could find six people who wanted to pray he would get a
prayer group started.
The staff at the Marian Centre were very busy. There could be no
thought of gathering them into a weekly charismatic prayer group.
Father Duffy pondered and prayed. On January 1, 1969, he gathered
three other members of the staff plus a visiting priest for a first
private meeting. There was a genuine desire among them for a session
like that in Madonna House the previous summer, and afterward, there
was agreement that another meeting should be held, but they were
uncertain as to when this should be and decided to leave it up to the
Holy Spirit. Actually, the next meeting was not held until May 24, the
Vigil of Pentecost.
Again it was a private meeting, that is, held without any open announcement or general invitation, but this time there were
seven people there — Father Duffy had found his six others — and there
was common agreement that another meeting should be held the next
week and that it should be an open meeting at the Catholic Centre in
Regina.
On June 8, 1969, then, nineteen people gathered at the Catholic
Centre for the first open prayer meeting in Regina. Father Duffy
explained the nature of such a meeting and they went on to pray and
praise the Lord, with moments of silence and readings from Scripture.
During the meeting, Father Duffy asked the Lord to give a sign to show
that these meetings were in accordance with his will. Later in the week,
when the staff of the Marian Centre was on retreat, he felt moved to
pray with one of them who then experienced the gift of tongues. This
was at once seen as the sign that had been asked for.
The group went
on meeting week by week and grew slowly both in numbers and in the
manifestation of gifts. They began to pray in tongues, then to sing
praise in tongues, to speak in tongues with an interpretation, to pray for
healing, and to experience it. One of the aspects of any prayer group is the need to develop
a committed nucleus that can carry the group through difficult times
and provide a basis for growth. We can see this happening in Regina.
During the first eight weeks (June 8 to August 3) forty-five names were
recorded as having taken part in the group; of those, ten had attended
at least four meetings. In eight weeks, in the spring (February 8 to
March 29), sixty-five names were recorded and twenty people were
there at least four times.
The Madonna House community at Marian
Centre helped to get the group started. Of the ten regulars during the
first eight weeks, five were from there. But in order to take on a life
of its own, the group had to develop its own nucleus, and it did. Only
Father Duffy and one other from Marian Centre were among the regulars
in the later eight weeks, and the other was not one of those who had
been there at the start. The people from Madonna House were, of course, subject to transfer to new appointments; they also found it necessary,
once the group got going, to limit their attendance in order to take care
of other concerns of Marian Centre. On the other hand, four of the
five regulars who were not from Marian Centre were still among the
twenty regulars in the spring. By the spring the group had found its identity.
At the end of January, they had decided to establish a core
group of about twelve people. The meeting of February 8 was the first
at which the core acted as a team, and that marked the real beginning
of growth. In the previous eight weeks, the average size of a meeting
had been just twelve, lower than the summer before; the eight weeks
beginning February 8 averaged twenty-six, and the weeks after that
jumped to about sixty.
By the time Father Duffy was transferred from
Regina to the West Indies in the fall of 1970, the group in Regina was
well established.
Well before that, the renewal had begun to spread. In early July 1969, when the Regina group was still in its infancy, Father Duffy went
to Edmonton to give a retreat which soon became a charismatic experience. By the fall, a group was starting up at the Oblate Fathers'
retreat house at St. Albert, north of Edmonton. This was charismatic but somewhat muted in character, perhaps because of its situation. It
closed down in 1970.
Other groups started up and folded, but always
started up again. By the summer of 1971, it was clear that the renewal
was established in Edmonton. Opportunities for the spread of the renewal came especially from
the work Father Duffy was invited to do with the communities of Sisters.
During 1970 he spoke on prayer and conducted prayer days with several
particular communities and also with gatherings of Sisters from various
groups. He worked with the Precious Blood Sisters, the Sisters of Sion,
Sisters of Service, the Grey Nuns, and the St. Joseph Sisters, but most
of all with the Sisters of Charity of St. Louis. In December 1969, he
was asked to assist at the second session of the Chapter of Renewal
of the Sisters of St. Louis at Radville, Saskatchewan.
Out of this came an invitation for him to conduct a series of prayer days and retreats for
the Sisters at centers throughout Western Canada so that all the members of the community could hear him. This was carried out from January
to April 1970, and took him to Vancouver and Calgary as well as
back to Regina and Radville. Vancouver was especially interesting.
The charismatic renewal was already underway in Vancouver
when Father Duffy went there in February for the first time. It was
largely the result of the zeal of Rev. Bernice Girard, Pentecostal
chaplain at the University of British Columbia. She had been interested
in encouraging the Neo-Pentecostal Movement among Anglicans and
others in Vancouver for some time, and when news broke about the
beginnings of the Catholic charismatic renewal during the summer of
1967 she was very interested.
In the spring of 1968, she organized
an ecumenical conference of Pentecostals and Neo-Pentecostals to which
she invited Kevin Ranaghan from Notre Dame. No lasting Catholic
group seems to have come from that, although a number of Catholics
began to participate in meetings run by Bernice Girard. A Catholic
group started in the summer of 1969 in a bookstore run by Mary Kelly,
at the initiative of Sister Barbara Ann Chase who had just come from
Seattle to work at catechetics in Vancouver. After some weeks at the
store, the group settled at the Cénacle Convent.
Father Duffy's visits to Vancouver can serve to illustrate the
character of the renewal there in early 1970. He went there primarily
to see the Sisters of St. Louis but was also swept up in other activities.
On the evening he first arrived, February 19, he was taken to one
of Bernice Girard's meetings. The next two days were largely taken up
with the Sisters. On the 22nd. Sunday, he was on an open line show on radio with Bernice Girard.
On Monday he was invited to the Precious
Blood Sisters, who turned out to be intensely interested in the charismatic renewal. And that evening he was asked to lead a prayer meeting
at St. Augustine's parish, conducted by the Oblate Fathers. He found
about fifty people there, and a meeting filled with tongues and encouraging prophecy, but he felt they needed some instruction on the baptism
in the Holy Spirit and the gifts. His sense of this need may have
stemmed in part from his having had supper with the priest recently
appointed as Chaplain to the charismatic renewal in Vancouver by a
somewhat concerned Archbishop. His second visit, in April, was more
of the same. Besides praying with the Sisters, he preached at Frasendew
Assembly Church, was on the radio again, was introduced as a Catholic
Pentecostal priest, and took part in a prayer meeting at the Cénacle
with about twenty-five, mostly young, people.
This development in Vancouver points to an aspect of the renewal
which has provided some of its most remarkable achievements and also
some of its striking failures. The charismatic renewal in the Catholic
Church owes much to the Pentecostal and Neo-Pentecostal Movements
that preceded it. The awareness of this debt and a good deal of shared
experience have made possible a deeper ecumenical relationship than is
commonly found. This must be seen as of great value and of great
hope for the future, as a real sign of the action of the Spirit. But at
the same time, it certainly has posed dangers.
Without a deepening, truly
Catholic understanding of the experience, such ecumenical relations
can be easily distorted. There have been cases of individuals and even
of whole groups of Catholic charismatics abandoning the Church. As
Father Duffy perceived, instruction is especially needed in this context.
While all this and much more was going on in Western Canada,
the renewal was beginning elsewhere in the country as well. In Ontario,
outside of Combermere, it is not easy to say with certainty where the
first activity was. It may have been in Sault Ste. Marie at St. Mary's
College in the fall of 1969. A group of women from there made a
retreat in Michigan which turned out to be a sort of Life in the Spirit
Seminar. Three of them, shortly after, received the gift of tongues.
Wondering what to do, they contacted the retreat master, who put them
in touch with a Sister in Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan. With her, they
decided to form a prayer group at St. Mary's, where Father Ed O'Reilly,
C.S.B. was interested. In the beginning, the group was international in
membership and met sometimes in Canada and sometimes in the United States.
Then it settled down as simply a Canadian group for some years
until recently when it has become international again. Windsor was another place where the beginnings were early, perhaps
ahead of Sault Ste. Marie. It was probably the first place where a
significant number of Canadian Catholics became involved in the renewal. Ann Arbor was only a few miles away, and there was a large
early group at the Gesu parish, the Jesuit church in Detroit. Their
influence was soon visible in Windsor, but for quite a while there was
little felt the need for a distinct group in Windsor itself. Sometime in
1969, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Heisler began to hold a meeting in their home,
the start of a group which, when it outgrew the house and moved to
Holy Rosary Church, became known as the John XXIII Group.
Other
groups soon started, at St. Theresa's Church, Holy Redeemer College,
Assumption Church, and elsewhere.
19
In Toronto, during the fall, winter, and spring of 1969-70, a number
of people who had made one of the Faith and Sharing retreats organized
by Jean Vanier, gathered each Friday evening at St. Augustine's
Seminary for follow-up sessions of Scripture study and sharing. The
combination of this with the influence of the Full Gospel Business
Men's Fellowship provided the rather unlikely background for the
emergence of two charismatic groups in 1970.
The sessions at St. Augustine's were usually led by two seminarians,
Jim Hanna and Don Lizzotti, who had been to the Full Gospel Business
Men's meetings. The others found their style of prayer puzzling but
attractive, and some of them also went to the Full Gospel meetings. In
May 1970, the organizers of the Vanier sessions decided to suspend
operations until September. Some of those who had been attending,
however, was unwilling to give up meeting and arranged to continue
on Thursday evenings at a private home. By the end of the summer, the
meeting, still led by Don Lizzotti, had become a clearly charismatic
group and had outgrown the space of a private home. At one meeting they had eighty-five people jammed into every available nook and cranny.
Most of them moved to a day nursery run by the Sisters of the
Immaculate Conception to become the Emmanuel Prayer Group. After
two years that space, too, became too small and the group finally settled
in the basement of St. Basil's Church. At the time the move was being made to the day nursery, one
couple, Orval and Margaret Mooney, decided that they should try to
start a group in their parish, Holy Rosary. This had been in their hearts
for some time. Earlier in the year, while the Vanier sessions were
still on, they had arranged for Kevin Ranaghan to speak at Holy Rosary and he had encouraged them to think of a parish group that would
be specifically Catholic in character. In September they invited Father
George Kosicki to help persuade the priests of the parish, his Basilian
confreres, that the idea should be accepted. And with Father John
Gaughan, then the Treasurer General of the Basilians, they worked out
a format for a prayer meeting centered on the Eucharist.
22
From
Emmanuel and Holy Rosary many other groups sprang up in the city.
In Ontario, there was no one figure that played anything like the
role that Father Duffy had played in the West. The general picture
that emerges from the groups in Sault Ste. Marie, Windsor and Toronto,
and many others that could be cited, are of great variety.
This is true everywhere, of course, and it is one of the signs that this
really is the work of the Holy Spirit — the Spirit of God deeply respects
our human spirits, and when he touches us he does so in precisely
the way we need, the way which will best enable us to respond in full
freedom, and this can be seen in the development of groups as well as
of persons — but it can perhaps be seen best in Ontario. Each group
started in its own way, with its own background, and as the renewal
spread the various influences balanced and reinforced one another.
In Quebec, the first French-speaking group was started by Sister
Flore Crête in Montreal. A Sister of Providence, she was studying at Notre Dame in 1967 when the renewal started up there. When she
returned home in 1969, she wanted to get a group started. Her superiors
objected to her starting one in the motherhouse, so she began in a very
small way in her family home.
Greater impetus came the following year with the return to Quebec
of Father Jean-Paul Regimbai, a Trinitarian, who had been introduced
to the renewal in Phoenix, Arizona, where he had been sent for reasons
of health. A wide-ranging apostolate soon developed from his experience
there and his health improved enough that his superior called him home
in 1970 and named him Director of a retreat house in Granby, Quebec.
He at once began to bring a charismatic influence into the retreats.
People were healed, and soon hundreds of people were coming and
groups were starting up.
The English-speaking renewal in Quebec started with the arrival of
Father Joe Kane, O.M.I., in 1970. Having had some time as a missionary in Peru, he had returned for a break and while taking a refresher
course had found the renewal in Seattle, Washington. He was influential
in the early development of charismatic activity in Vancouver,
26 then came to Montreal. His work there quickly led to the involvement
of other priests, Oblates and diocesan, and the foundation of several
groups
Two features of the renewal in Quebec, which can be seen in these
beginning and in later developments, should be mentioned here. One of
them is somewhat different from experience elsewhere, while the other
is a common feature but especially striking in Quebec.
The first is the very significant role of priests in the renewal in
Quebec. In the beginning, there was controversy. This is hardly surprising. The cultural forms of Pentecostal piety had been alien to Catholics
everywhere, but in Quebec, a double sort of translation was needed.
There was great sensitivity in Quebec, as the Seventies were beginning, to the threat posed by the dominant English-speaking culture of the
continent. The renewal could be seen as part of that threat. And many
in the Church were very much aware of the dangers of the vagaries
of new doctrines and forms of worship in the Church. For some,
Jean-Paul Regimbai embodied these dangers. He was denounced to the
Archbishop of Sherbrooke, and while that in itself was soon settled a
shadow remained. Here, one might say was the temptation that Ronald Knox had seen as characteristic of movements of religious
enthusiasm and experience, which those who had gone through it could
only see as the power of God in their lives, was being challenged and
questioned by those in authority in the Church, and the temptation was
to proclaim the experience by denying the authority. But the response
of the leaders of the renewal in Quebec was an ecclesial one. They
requested and received permission from Archbishop Paul Grégoire of
Montreal to hold a seminar at the Grand Seminary in Montreal, especially
for priests and religions to provide them with information about the
charismatic renewal, its history, the experience involved, and its developing theology. Called in this way to understanding and to leadership,
the priests responded vigorously. Within six months after the sessions
held at the beginning of September 1972, the numbers of people
involved in the renewal doubled.
This development is significant especially because one of the
important aspects of the renewal has been the effective lay leadership
it has called forth. In fact, in the rest of Canada, one of the problems
faced by the renewal has been a lack of priests willing to become
involved. This has often left people who were hungry for Catholic
teaching without any voice able to speak to them in the name of the
Church and has sometimes led to a gap between the experience of
prayer and the sacramental life of the Church. Priests, on the other
hand, have often found it difficult to know how to respond to a lay
leadership strong in the experience of prayer, rooted in the word of
God and filled with a deep pastoral concern for their groups, but lacking
instruction in and understanding of precisely those aspects of the Church's
teaching and practice that priests have been taught to emphasize. The relationship between priest and lay leader is a delicate and demanding one on
both sides, one which must be founded on deep love and mutual
respect. When, as sometimes happens, it turns into a competition for
power, this must be seen as a failure. Rather, this relationship needs to be
seen as a powerful call of the Holy Spirit to the whole Church to
grow in unity and in true community. Such community is not a univocal
reality and it is not surprising that the Spirit's call has found a somewhat
different response in the Church in Quebec than in the rest of Canada.
The second aspect of the development of the renewal in Quebec
is its rapid growth. This has been true elsewhere in Canada and, indeed,
worldwide, but has not always been as explosive or as visible as in
Quebec. At the beginning of 1973, only eighteen groups were known in
Quebec, six English-speaking and twelve French-speaking. By the time
of the bi-lingual conference held at Loyola that summer, there were
fifty groups; 4,000 attended the conference. One year later an entirely
French-speaking conference in Quebec City drew 6,500 and 400 groups
existed. In 1977 about 40,000 gathered in the Olympic Stadium in
Montreal for the closing session of a conference, with about half of
them probably to be counted as actively involved in the renewal. By
1979 there were some 822 groups in the province with a membership
of over 38,000
This rapid growth has been attributed to the sort of changes that had been taking place in the society and church of Quebec during the
Sixties and Seventies. Before the Second Vatican Council, Quebec had
begun its own Quiet Revolution. Schools and hospitals and other social
services had been, if not exactly secularized, at least thoroughly democratized. A clear pattern of life characteristic of a rural and religious
society shifted and changed; the clerically dominated cultural monolith
that had been perceived as Quebec gave way to a sort of secular
pluralism. The religious practice fell dramatically. Then came the renewal,
and it has been argued that the charismatic conversion, working within a framework in which
the Church has lost a major part of its power to control and
to constrain, enabled a body, which had been held down, to
pull itself together, recognize its own reality and become free.
It is always a mistake, however, to attribute too much influence to
particular causes in order to explain an event that is much broader.
By 1979 there were probably about 500 prayer groups outside of Quebec
with some 20,000 members. In proportion to the Catholic population
that is not much different from the experience of Quebec, but less
visible because so widely spread.
In Atlantic Canada, the renewal started in the summer of 1970 in
both Cape Breton and Prince Edward Island. Father John McLeod, who
was the pastor of New Waterford in Cape Breton visited Ann Arbor and
returned to start a group in his parish. At about the same time Fathers
Joe Kane and Fred Miller, O.M.I., gave a retreat to the Sisters of St.
Martha in Charlottetown. They offered an ecumenical session for the
clergy and opened their evening services to clergy and laity. Among
those who attended were Father Faber MacDonald, now Bishop of
Grand Falls, Newfoundland, and Father Gerry Tingley
In 1971, in Halifax, some people who wanted to learn to pray
went to ask Archbishop Hayes for help. By that time he had heard of
developments in Charlottetown, so he invited Fathers Faber MacDonald,
Gerry Tingley and Ted Butler to Halifax to meet with some people
at his residence. A small group then began to meet at each other's
homes until they moved to St. Thomas Aquinas Church.
In the fall of 1973, beginnings were made in Newfoundland and
New Brunswick. A leadership session was held in Charlottetown and
Father Phil Lewis came from Newfoundland to see what was going on.
He went back to start a group in his parish in Freshwater, near
Placentia. In Saint John, New Brunswick, Father Bill Comerford
C.Ss.R., had invited Faber MacDonald and Gerry Tingley from Prince
Edward Island, and from that came the first English-speaking group in
New Brunswick. In November 1973, Father Oscar Melanson started
a French-speaking group at the Maison Ste. Croix in St. Joseph, New
Brunswick.
Again we may glance at a couple of features of the renewal in
Atlantic Canada. One has to do with structures and represents a common
problem and development. The other is the involvement of Bishops in
the renewal; this may be seen as remarkable, to begin with, but becoming
more common.
The renewal has been remarkably free from structures. It has
recognized the authority of the Bishops, but apart from that no one
really has any sort of effective control beyond the limits of a local
group. Still, some sort of structure is needed to arrange conferences
and to provide leadership in other ways. The leadership session held
in Charlottetown in 1973 was intended to lead to the formation of an
Atlantic Pastoral Committee. One was formed but was allowed to drop
the following year when it became obvious that the concept was not
generally acceptable. In 1976, another leadership meeting at Halifax
led to the founding of the Atlantic Service Committee, the change of
title being expressive of a somewhat diminished role. This Committee
has organized conferences at Charlottetown, Halifax, Moncton, St.
John's, Antigonish, and Sackville.
38
Similar structures exist in the
Western Provinces, Ontario and Quebec, with the latter one probably
exercising the most directive role.
Archbishop James Hayes of Halifax is the only Canadian Bishop
to have been personally involved in the initiation of the renewal in his
diocese. When he attended the 1972 International Conference at Notre
Dame, he was one of only three bishops present. Since that time, one
of the notable features of the renewal in Canada has been the active
interest and involvement in it of the bishops of all regions. They are
present in numbers at every regional conference and have not hesitated
to speak out in support of the renewal.
In April 1975, the Canadian
Bishops issued a message on the charismatic renewal addressed to all
Canadian Catholics. This was extraordinary not only in its solemn
character, being the common statement of all the bishops rather than merely a document of some commission or committee, but also in the
way in which the bishops spoke in favor of the renewal and at the same
time pointed out some negative aspects with a voice that seemed to
come from within the renewal itself rather than from the sort of prudent
distance adopted by most such statements down to that time. In this,
the statement of the Canadian Bishops differed from those of their
American brothers in 1969 and later in 1975, both of which were
more cautious and reserved, and differed, indeed, from the statement
some of their own number had issued the previous year.
The charismatic renewal in the Catholic Church in Canada is still
a very recent phenomenon. I have no doubt that it is a work of the
Holy Spirit for the renewal of the Church, but for the final effects
of such action, we must wait with patience and acceptance upon the Lord.
I have tried to give an account of the origins of the renewal and touch on some significant features. Many aspects have, perforce, been
left undeveloped. Such development as the formation of covenant
communities is obviously important, but it has seemed to me at once too
complex and too recent to be taken up here.
In some areas of the country active membership in the renewal
seems to have declined in the past few years. In others, it has just
about held steady. And in some, it is still growing rapidly. Many of the
leaders have expressed concern about such aspects as the need for sound
teaching, the slowness of new leaders in emerging, and especially the
frustration of the 'swinging door syndrome'. It is easy to understand
such concerns, yet it seems to me important not to exaggerate them.
There are probably about 60,000 Canadian Catholics now actively
involved in prayer groups while perhaps the total who have been so
involved over the time since the renewal began here would be five times
that many or more. That is the result of the 'swinging door'; but should
this be seen mainly as a matter for concern or as a reason for praising
God? In its own best self-understanding, the charismatic renewal has
always seen itself not as a movement destined to grow ever strong and clearer in its own self-identity but as a weak instrument chosen
by God to be filled with his power in order to bring about, and to
disappear before, the renewal of the whole Church. In this context, the
'swinging door' may come to be seen as moved by the wind of the
Holy Spirit. In any case, full renewal is still to be achieved and we can
only pray to the Father, through his Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, to
let his Spirit come now, with a mighty wind and tongues of fire, as
at a New Pentecost
References at the link below
https://www.erudit.org/en/journals/sessions/1983-v50-n1-sessions1827479/1007048ar.pdf
James HANRAHAN, C.S.B. ( OBIT)
https://www.legacy.com/ca/obituaries/theglobeandmail/name/thomas-hanrahan-obituary?pid=189956685
Short Story was written by an Evangelical Pastor and friend of Father Joe Kane O.M.I.
( I am searching for his name )
https://teresa-httpsitesgooglecomsitefaithful.blogspot.com/p/a-sharing-venture-by-evangelical.html