Lorde - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Wed, 12 Oct 2016 08:26:03 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Lorde - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Lorde gives West Auckland mum $10,000 https://cathnews.co.nz/2016/10/14/lorde-gives-west-auckland-mum-10000/ Thu, 13 Oct 2016 15:52:59 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=88166 A West Auckland mother is stunned after superstar songstress Lorde donated $10,000 to help her struggling family. Family of Devora Busch and Richard Barry started a Give a Little page to help the family after they faced losing their home if they could not raise more than $250,000 to fix their leaky home. The Titirangi Read more

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A West Auckland mother is stunned after superstar songstress Lorde donated $10,000 to help her struggling family.

Family of Devora Busch and Richard Barry started a Give a Little page to help the family after they faced losing their home if they could not raise more than $250,000 to fix their leaky home.

The Titirangi couple have three children, one of whom, 10-year-old Rheegan, is severely autistic and among New Zealand's highest-needs children. Continue reading

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Lorde donates $20,000 to help feed hungry Kiwi kids https://cathnews.co.nz/2016/07/01/lorde-donates-20000-feed-hungry-kiwi-kids/ Thu, 30 Jun 2016 16:50:25 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=84265 Singer Lorde has donated $20,000 to a struggling Hutt Valley charity that feeds hungry schoolchildren. Fuel the Need got the donation via its Givealittle page yesterday. An apparent message from the pop star on the website reads "Good on you Manuel and Fuel the Need. Hope this helps a little bit." The message also says Read more

Lorde donates $20,000 to help feed hungry Kiwi kids... Read more]]>
Singer Lorde has donated $20,000 to a struggling Hutt Valley charity that feeds hungry schoolchildren.

Fuel the Need got the donation via its Givealittle page yesterday.

An apparent message from the pop star on the website reads "Good on you Manuel and Fuel the Need. Hope this helps a little bit."

The message also says she is "passionate about all kids having access to food at school". Read more

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From presbytery to feeding poor kids for Akld master chef https://cathnews.co.nz/2015/09/01/from-presbytery-to-feeding-poor-kids-for-akld-master-chef/ Mon, 31 Aug 2015 19:01:29 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=76011

A celebrated Auckland master chef who spent some time as a teenager living in a Catholic presbytery is helping feed some of the city's poorest kids. Michael Meredith, 41, was named as the city's outstanding chef by the Auckland hospitality industry earlier this year, the second time he was been given this accolade. That is Read more

From presbytery to feeding poor kids for Akld master chef... Read more]]>
A celebrated Auckland master chef who spent some time as a teenager living in a Catholic presbytery is helping feed some of the city's poorest kids.

Michael Meredith, 41, was named as the city's outstanding chef by the Auckland hospitality industry earlier this year, the second time he was been given this accolade.

That is one of many awards over the years for the man who was the founder chef at The Grove, near St Patrick's Cathedral.

Now he runs the celebrated Meredith's restaurant in Mt Eden.

It is a long way from coming to New Zealand as a teenager from Samoa and being reunited with family members and living in the Catholic presbytery in Mt Albert.

At the time, he and his brother were among the poor of the parish.

"As a kid you don't want to be called out in front of the church and [be seen to have] needed helped. I look back now and I laugh about it.

"But back then it was quite embarrassing, as a 13-year-old.

"And like any ethnic kid that comes into a European society, you're not immediately accepted."

Mr Meredith is a minor shareholder and a culinary advisor for "Eat My Lunch", an enterprise aiming to feed as many underprivileged Auckland kids lunch a day as it can.

A New Zealand Herald feature article spelled out how it works.

Its formula is simple: it sells and delivers lunches to those who can afford them so that it can make and deliver lunches to some of the poorest kids in Auckland.

In its first 12 weeks, Eat My Lunch (EML) delivered more than 25,000 lunches to 16 schools, and was praised by Lorde on social media (she bought a 1000 lunches for others, spurring EML to launch its "Give Two" option).

Mr Meredith said the giving was a big drawcard for him.

He has kids himself, so he understands that being hungry at school is bad for learning.

Sources

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A normal priest for normal people https://cathnews.co.nz/2014/02/07/normal-priest-normal-people/ Thu, 06 Feb 2014 18:11:03 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=54028 synod

With the sometimes rabid exception of people at the ultra-traditionalist fringe of Catholicism who sputter at seeing him being respectful toward non-Catholics and acting "undignified," Catholics are very pleased with Pope Francis. More notable, though, is the wild adulation he draws from those outside the Church, even more adulation, it appears, than he draws from Read more

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With the sometimes rabid exception of people at the ultra-traditionalist fringe of Catholicism who sputter at seeing him being respectful toward non-Catholics and acting "undignified," Catholics are very pleased with Pope Francis.

More notable, though, is the wild adulation he draws from those outside the Church, even more adulation, it appears, than he draws from Catholics.

Pope Francis has been named Time magazine's Person of the Year. An international men's magazine declared him best dressed, more for what he does not wear than for what he does.

The youth music channel MTV named him its man of the year, partnering him with a 17-year-old singer from New Zealand who was their woman of the year.

The rock music magazine Rolling Stone featured him on its cover. A magazine focused on the interests of people who are gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgendered put the pope on its cover, as have many other unlikely publications around the world.

Personally, I like the cartoon on the Christmas issue of The New Yorker showing Pope Francis making a snow angel. A graffiti artist in Rome has portrayed him as a superhero.

I was recently at dinner with a mixed group of Catholics and Jews; the Jews spoke of the pope even more admiringly than we Catholics did.

Pope Francis: A normal Catholic, a normal priest

The comparatively quiet satisfaction that Catholics have with Pope Francis is easy to understand. What he says and does is not very different from what we are used to seeing in our own priests.

Most of us priests have administered baptisms where the star of the show was more interested in being fed than in being initiated as a Christian.

Most of us, unless the architecture makes it impossible, have had small children escape their parents to join us at the altar. (I've asked them to "mind my chair" for me while I'm away from it, something they willingly do till they get bored, climb down and return to the pews.)

Most of us have given a sympathetic hearing to people in pain and "bent the rules" on their behalf.

To put it simply, Jorge Mario Bergoglio, a.k.a. Pope Francis, is a normal Catholic, and therefore a normal priest. And it is his normalcy that surprises and attracts people.

With the exception of Pope John XXIII, Catholics have not seen popes as their priests: "The pope is the pope, and Father So-and-So is my priest." People accepted the difference, whether they were happy with it or not.

Some lay folk and even some priests wanted priests to act more like popes than pastors. And, too many priests have been willing to oblige.

Now, we are seeing a pope who looks more and more like what most Catholics expect from a priest. And they like it. That is encouraging for those priests who strive to be good shepherds, companions and healers to the People of God.

The world's wild enthusiasm for Pope Francis

But, what are we to make of the wild enthusiasm that Pope Francis has aroused among those outside the Church?

Clearly, the world is starved for normalcy and simple decency in our public figures, whether they be politicians, financial leaders, entertainers, sports stars or even religious leaders.

We have come to expect scandal, corruption, egoism, selfishness, abuse of power, betrayal, manipulation, self-righteous hypocrisy, greed, pettiness, violence and a host of other less-than-inspiring characteristics.

That a man in a position of world leadership can attract so much attention and affection by simply being a decent human being is a sad commentary on our world.

And yet, the response of people to Pope Francis is a hopeful sign. We are fed up with the sort of men and women who usually get into the headlines and on the magazine covers.

Yet people have not given up hope that there might be men and women around who can take a stand against so much that the world considers "normal," not through confrontation, but by simply being sincerely interested in people and their good.

The world still looks for goodness, for kindness and for common sense.

In other words, the world wants normalcy.

Christian opportunity: Incarnating the Incarnation

That presents a challenge and an opportunity for Christians. Incarnating the Incarnation, living as a disciple of Christ, is the most normal thing a human being can do, because Jesus is the norm for humanity.

For someone baptised into union with Christ, living otherwise presumably takes extra effort.

Pope Francis is showing how enthusiastically the world responds to a loving, caring, forgiving, friendly and good-natured believer.

One out of every three people in the world is a Christian, and half of those are Catholic. How might the world respond, how different would the news of the world be, if all of us simply acted normal?

The world is waiting, ready and even looking forward to finding out.

Father William Grimm MM is publisher of ucanews.com

Source: ucanews.com

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What do Pope Francis and Lorde have in common? https://cathnews.co.nz/2013/12/13/pope-francis-lorde-common/ Thu, 12 Dec 2013 18:30:07 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=53246 MTV's college channel in namined Pope Francis and pop singer Lorde as its man and woman of the year. MTVU says both figures challenged their followers with unexpected stands. Since becoming Pope, Francis has urged the Catholic Church not to become obsessed with "small-minded rules" The New Zealand teenager Lorde released a debut single, "Royals," Read more

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MTV's college channel in namined Pope Francis and pop singer Lorde as its man and woman of the year.

MTVU says both figures challenged their followers with unexpected stands.

Since becoming Pope, Francis has urged the Catholic Church not to become obsessed with "small-minded rules"

The New Zealand teenager Lorde released a debut single, "Royals," that puts down a culture of conspicuous consumption, and distributed it first for free. Read More

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