Interview
with
Bishop
Sam
Jacobs:
CCR
in
the
Church
Bishop
Jacobs,
you
travel
widely
within
the
United
States,
how
do
you
see
Catholic
Charismatic
Renewal
in
the
United
States
today?
I
think
it is
still
very
strong.
It is
not
as
strong
as it
was
in
the
early
days
when
people
just
flocked
to
it,
but I
think
we
have
passed
the
honeymoon
stage
and
now
we’re
in
the
rooting
stage,
trying
to
come
into
a
fuller
understanding
of
the
power
of
the
Holy
Spirit
in
our
lives,
and
sharing
it
with
other
people.
I see
it
very
vibrant
in
the
ethnic
communities
in
the
States
— the
Hispanic,
the
Filipinos,
the
Koreans,
the
Haitians.
We
see
that
this
manifestation
of
the
gifts
of
the
Spirit,
the
power
of
the
Spirit,
the
Baptism
of
the
Spirit,
this
grace
of
Pentecost,
is
moving
very
rapidly
and
very
strongly
in
these
ethnic
groups.
In
the
Anglo
groups,
not
as
much,
but
it is
still
strong.
I
also
see
it in
our
youth,
at
least
in
our
local
area.
I see
the
young
people
coming
into
the
fullness
of
the
gifts
of
the
Spirit,
and
being
open
to
the
Spirit
and
witnessing
and
reaching
out,
praying
for
healing
and
coming
together
for a
time
of
prayer,
sharing
and
fellowship.
It’s
exciting
to
see
young
people
turned
on,
it’s
exciting
to
see
the
groups
turned
on.
It’s
exciting
to
see
anyone
open
up to
the
gifts
of
the
Spirit.
How
has
the
attitude
of
the
U.S.
Bishops
toward
CCR
developed
over
the
years?
Well,
I
think
it is
an
interesting
phenomenon
the
way
the
Bishops
of
the
United
States
responded
to
the
Baptism
of
the
Holy
Spirit
and
Charismatic
Renewal.
Early
on,
back
in,
I’d
say,
1974–75,
the
Bishops
of
the
United
States
began
to
speak
of
the
need
to
have
a
Liaison
in
each
Diocese.
Now,
there
is no
other
movement
that
has a
Liaison
for
that
movement
in
Dioceses,
and
yet
the
American
Bishops
felt
that,
because
of
this
outpouring
of
the
Holy
Spirit,
there
should
be a
Liaison
that
would
connect
Renewal
to
the
Bishop.
He
would
be
the
Renewal’s
liaison
with
the
Bishop
and
the
Bishop’s
liaison
with
Renewal.
Of
180
Dioceses
in
the
States,
over
170
would
have
Liaisons
—
some
active,
some
not,
but
at
least
someone
named
as a
Liaison.
There’s
an Ad
Hoc
Committee
of
Bishops
that
has
been
in
existence
since
1974/75.
An Ad
Hoc
Committee
is
supposed
to
last
only
a few
years
and
then
die
out,
but
every
three
years
when
it is
brought
up
“should
this
committee
continue,”
the
overwhelming
response
has
been
“yes.”
I am
presently
the
chairperson
of
this
committee,
and
we
meet
twice
a
year
and
we
look
at
what
is
going
on in
Renewal
and
see
how
we
can
support
it
and
pastor
it.
We
wrote
[a
document
on
Catholic
Charismatic
Renewal,
entitled
Grace
for a
New
Springtime,]
in
honour
of
the
thirtieth
anniversary
of
Renewal
in
the
States.
How
has
Grace
for a
New
Springtime
been
received
by
the
Bishops?
It’s
interesting.
I had
the
opportunity
to
present
this
statement
to
the
Administrative
Committee
which
is
made
up of
about
fifty
Cardinals,
Bishops
and
Archbishops.
When
I
presented
it to
them
it
was
very
well
received.
There
were
very
few
minor
additions
and
clarifications
they
said
they
would
like
to
see
in
the
document.
But
their
response
was
overwhelming,
“yes,
go
with
it.”
And
we
were
authorised
to
print
it,
not
as a
document
of
the
Conference,
but
as a
document
of
the
Ad
Hoc
Committee
with
the
approval
of
the
Administrative
Committee.
It
was
really
affirming
to us
when
we
presented
this
document
and
our
brother
Bishops
said
“yes,
we
approve.”
How
has
Catholic
Charismatic
Renewal
influenced
the
Church?
Well,
what
are
the
fruits.
If
you
look
at
the
fruits
of
Renewal,
I
think
you
will
find
in
many
parishes,
if
not
in
all
parishes,
that
many
people
who
are
involved
in
ministry
have,
at
one
time
or
other,
experienced
the
Baptism
of
the
Spirit
in
their
lives.
Many
people
who
are
Eucharistic
ministers,
lectors,
visitors
to
the
sick,
many
people
in
parish
councils,
many
people
in
the
religious
education
program
—
many
of
these
people
will
say
that
something
happened
in
their
lives,
and
they
were
Baptised
in
the
Holy
Spirit,
and
are
open
to
the
gifts
of
the
Spirit,
and
are
now
ministering
in
the
Church.
And
so I
think
that
is
one
of
the
ways
in
which
we
see
the
fruits
of
the
Spirit.
I
think
we
are
beginning
to
see
where
people
are
becoming
more
conscious
of
the
gifts
of
the
Spirit.
Before
it
was
limited
to
the
seven
gifts
in
Isaiah.
Now
people
are
more
conscious
of
all
the
gifts.
People
who
may
have
difficulty
with
Charismatic
Renewal
and
say,
“ah,
that’s
not
my
thing.
I
don’t
feel
comfortable
with
that
prayer
style,”
or
whatever
— yet
they’ll
call
the
prayer
line
of
the
Charismatic
Renewal
prayer
group
and
say
“would
you
pray
for
such
and
such.”
Where’s
that
coming
from?
There’s
a
sense
of
“you’re
a
prayer
warrior
and I
need
your
prayers.
Could
you
come
and
pray
over
this
person
who
is
sick
with
the
gift
of
healing.”
Although
some
people
are
hesitant
to
become
part
of,
or
allow
themselves
to
experience,
this
grace
of
Pentecost
in a
fuller
way
in
their
lives,
they
may
be
the
first
ones
to
ask
for
those
in
Renewal
to
minister
upon
them.
I
think
we
are
seeing
more
and
more
Healing
Services,
and
more
and
more
people
being
healed.
I am
really
seeing
this
permeating
more
and
more
into
the
life
of
the
parish,
where
the
gifts
of
the
Spirit
are
becoming
more
evident
in
the
parishes.
There
seems
to be
an
underlying
openness
to
healing
prayer
among
Catholics.
Do
you
agree?
But I
think
they
are
coming
with
a
great
expectation.
I see
people
coming
not
only
because
the
healer
happens
to be
in
town
but
because
there’s
a
Healing
Service.
The
expectation
is ‘I
need
healing,
and I
don’t
care
who’s
praying.
I
need
healing.’
People
will
probably
be
coming
in
greater
numbers
when
the
man
or
woman
who
has
the
ministry
of
healing
comes
to
town,
but I
am
also
saying
that
more
and
more
people
are
exercising
the
gifts
and
taking
advantage
of
the
gifts,
and
not
waiting
for
the
healer
to
come
in.
Looking
now
to
the
local
parish
prayer
group
— we
have
over
80
groups
here
in
Melbourne
based
in
parishes
—
what
would
you
like
to
say
to
them?
What
is
their
mission?
I
think
their
mission
is to
bring
this
grace
of
Pentecost
to as
many
people
in
the
parish
as
possible,
and
one
of
the
ways
of
doing
it is
through
the
Life
in
the
Spirit
Seminar,
and
to
exercise
the
gifts
of
the
Spirit
freely,
under
guidance,
with
discernment,
helping
people
to
open
up to
the
gifts
of
the
Spirit.
But I
think
that
a lot
of
prayer
groups
are
dying
or
static,
because
they
have
forgotten
their
purpose.
They
have
forgotten
why
God
sent
them
out,
and
when
you
forget
your
purpose
and
you’re
no
longer
doing
that
which
God
called
you
to
do,
then
you
will
tend
to
die
or
become
stagnant.
I
think
many
prayer
groups
do
not
really
enter
into
a
time
of
praise
and
worship
in an
abandoned
way.
It’s
like
they
say
“let’s
praise
God
for
ten
minutes
and
then
do
something
else,”
whereas
it
should
be
“let’s
abandon
ourselves
to
worship
the
Lord
in
praise
and
song
and
tongues.”
Many
prayer
groups
don’t
really
exercise
the
gifts
of
the
Spirit.
They
say,
“we’ll
let
Brian
do
it,
because
Brian
always
gives
a
prophecy,
and
so
we’ll
let
Brian
give
the
prophecy.
Or
we’ll
let
Mary
give
an
exhortation
because
Mary
knows
how
to
give
the
exhortation.”
But
what
about
me?
God
may
want
to
use
me,
and I
must
be
open
that
God
may
use
me to
give
a
prophetic
word,
or a
word
of
exhortation,
or
whatever.
If I
wait
for
someone
else
to do
it, I
may
stifle
the
gifts
of
the
Spirit.
Likewise,
they’ll
say,
“well,
if
anyone
wants
healing,
Joe
and
Mary
are
in
the
back
of
the
room,
and
they
have
been
set
aside
to
pray
for
healing.”
The
gifts
are
in
the
body
— why
aren’t
they
all
praying
for
this
outpouring
of
power
upon
this
person?
So if
we no
longer
exercise
the
gifts
in
the
prayer
meeting
as
well
as
outside
the
prayer
meeting,
then
the
meeting
will
begin
to
die.
When
there
is no
more
teaching,
and
people
are
not
fed
and
not
formed,
people
say
“why
am I
going
to
prayer
meetings?
I’m
not
getting
fed?
I’m
here
to
praise
God,
but
I’m
also
here
to
receive
from
God
the
word
he
wants
to
form
me
with.”
There
are a
lot
of
prayer
groups
that
do
not
have
teaching
or
formation
going
on,
and
so
they
begin
to
die.
Also,
people
aren’t
encouraged
or
empowered
to
exercise
ministry
gifts.
The
same
people
do
the
same
things
all
the
time.
The
same
people
set
up
the
chairs,
the
same
people
give
the
teaching,
the
same
people
do
the
book
ministry.
We
have
these
new
people
coming
in,
and
they
say,
“well,
I
guess
I’m
not
really
needed
because
no
one
asked
me to
do
anything.
They’re
always
asking
so
and
so,
but
I’m
never
asked,
and
so I
don’t
feel
part
of
this
group.”
If
leadership
is
not
helping
people
to
exercise
these
gifts,
and
calling
people
forth
so
that
they
become
part
of
the
community
and
not
just
an
observer,
things
will
begin
to
die.
If
you
don’t
have
a
Life
in
the
Spirit
Seminar
on a
regular
basis,
things
begin
to
die.
People
should
be
bringing
new
people
into
the
prayer
meeting
every
week.
People
should
be
encouraged
to
bring
new
people
into
the
prayer
meeting
on a
regular
basis
because
they
witness
to
that
person.
It’s
the
‘come
and
see’
of
the
Gospel,
where
the
woman
at
the
well
said
to
the
people
of
the
town
“come
and
see.”
She
didn’t
do
the
teaching.
She
brought
them
to
Jesus.
Jesus
evangelised,
and
they
finally
said,
“We
came
because
you
told
us to
come,
but
we
believe
because
of
his
word.”
We
need
to
have
people
going
out
to
the
highways
and
byways
inviting
people
through
witnessing
how
Jesus
touched
their
life,
what
Jesus
is
doing
in
their
life,
how
Jesus
has
made
a
difference,
and
then
to
say
“come
and
see.”
And
as
people
come,
we
need
to
have
a
Life
in
the
Spirit
Seminar
going
on,
so
that
people
can
go
through
the
Seminar
and
hear
the
Word
of
God
and
what
God
is
doing
and
what
God’s
plan
is,
and
be
open
to
the
possibility
that
God
may
want
to
indeed
baptise
them
at
this
moment
in
his
Holy
Spirit.
I run
across
prayer
groups
in
the
States
and
say
“when
was
the
last
time
you
ran a
Life
in
the
Spirit
Seminar?”
“Well,
maybe
two
years
ago.”
“How
large
is
your
group?”
“Well,
we
are
about
five
or
six.”
“Do
you
understand
why
you’re
dying?
You’re
not
replenishing
yourselves.
You’re
not
doing
what
God
told
you
to
do.”
There’s
one
prayer
group
in
Rhode
Island
whose
pastor
said,
“well
I
will
start
a
Life
in
the
Spirit
Seminar
every
week
if
there
is
one
person
new
each
week.”
He
had
52
Life
in
the
Spirit
Seminars
in a
year,
and
he
had a
different
group
each
time
working
with
him.
He
may
have
had
one,
or he
may
have
had
twenty.
He
said
to
the
prayer
group,
“You
bring
me
one
new
person
and I
will
start
a
Life
in
the
Spirit
Seminar
for
that
one
person
to
bring
them
into
the
fullness
of
the
gifts
of
the
Spirit.”
That’s
the
attitude
we
have
to
have
— not
to
wait
for a
hundred
to
come,
and
not
to
wait
for
someone
to
come
from
outside.
We go
out
to
them
and
witness
to
them,
and
say,
“Come
and
see.”
And
as
they
come
to
share
in
the
experience
of
the
prayer
group,
if
God
is
going
to
touch
them
in
this
way,
he’ll
touch
them.
But
they
need
to be
present
to
get
that
touch.
[Also
important
is]
the
ministry
outside,
the
ministering
of
signs
and
wonders
outside
the
prayer
meeting.
So
those
are
some
of
the
things
that
have
helped
prayer
groups
either
flourish
or,
if
they
are
not
doing
them,
become
stagnant.
How
can
people
in
prayer
groups
give
confidence
to
others
so
that
they
will
come
to
the
prayer
meeting?
How
can
the
‘fear
factor’
be
overcome?
Well
I
think
part
of
the
thing
is to
make
a
friend.
You
first
become
a
friend
to
this
person.
You
befriend
them.
You
support
this
person.
They
begin
to
feel
comfortable
with
you.
And
when
they
feel
comfortable
with
you,
you
stay
with
them.
You
don’t
just
drop
them
off,
and
leave
them
hanging,
but
they
must
feel
the
support
of a
friend.
They
can
say,
“Brian,
I was
having
problems
with
such
and
such
last
night.
What
was
that
all
about?”
and
walk
them
through
it,
and
help
them.
If
they
say,
“I’m
afraid
of
this
tongues”
—
walk
them
through
it.
As
people
who
have
been
befriended
and
walked
through
and
cared
for
and
pastored,
then
when
the
grace
of
God
falls
upon
them,
they’re
open
to
receive
that
outpouring
of
the
Spirit,
because
someone
was
there
with
them.
They
say,
“If I
know
I
have
a
support
system,
and
you’re
going
to be
with
me,
then
it’s
easy
for
me to
walk
the
journey.”
What
is
your
hope
for
CCR?
I
would
hope
that
we
would
just
continue
to
grow
and
everyone
would
be
Baptised
in
the
Spirit,
and
that
the
Life
in
the
Spirit
would
be
evident
in
everyone
of
us,
and
that
the
power
of
God
would
be
manifested
in
and
through
us.
If we
are
living
an
active
life
in
the
Spirit
and
we
follow
the
lead
of
the
Spirit
and
are
moving
in
the
gifts
of
the
Spirit,
then
the
Church
is
going
to be
transformed.
It’s
an
ideal.
That
doesn’t
say
we’re
not
going
to
have
struggles.
That
doesn’t
say
we’re
not
going
to
have
valleys.
That
doesn’t
say
we’re
going
to do
everything
perfectly.
The
early
Church
had
the
vision
and
the
early
Church
struggled.
But
they
moved
in
the
power
of
the
Spirit.
When
they
abused
the
gifts
of
the
Spirit,
Paul
had
to
correct
them,
and
then
they
moved
in
the
power
of
the
Spirit.
That’s
what
my
vision
is —
that
the
day
will
come
where
our
parishes
will
be
very
alive
to
the
power
and
the
presence
of
the
Spirit,
where
Parish
Council
meetings
are
meetings
where
people
are
atuned
to
the
voice
of
the
Spirit,
and
so
suggestions
and
recommendations
that
are
being
made
to
the
pastor
about
how
they
should
move
in
this
parish
is
because
the
Spirit
has
spoken,
and
people
are
open
and
are
sharing
either
prophetically
or an
exhortation
or
discernment
or
whatever
—
exercising
those
gifts,
and
their
focus
is
not
administration
as
much
as
ministering.
When
we
can
come
into
parish
life
where
we
are
following
the
lead
of
the
Spirit
in
ministry,
then
administration
will
take
care
of
itself.
God
will
give
the
gifts
of
administration
to
people
to
care
for
it,
but
it’s
a
parish
that
is
full
of
life.
I
think
that
one
of
the
reasons
that
some
of
the
other
Churches
are
growing
rapidly
outside
the
Catholic
Church
is
because
many
of
them
are
open
to
the
gifts
and
power
of
the
Spirit,
and
people
hear
and
see
and
are
attracted,
and
people
go
because
people
want
to go
where
life
is.
Many
of
our
own
parishes
are
dead
in
many
ways,
because
we
have
locked
ourselves
into
a
corner,
and
we do
the
same
things
the
same
way,
without
life.
Do
you
see
particular
liturgical
change?
I
think
we’re
going
to
see
the
spontaneity
in
worship
coming
into
the
Church
more
and
more.
I
think
we
are
going
to
see
where
the
gifts
of
the
Spirit
are
evident
in
liturgy,
where
the
word
is
preached
with
anointing,
where
a
prophetic
utterance
will
come
from
the
body
of
the
believers,
where
people
will
be
praying
with
expectancy
of
healing
after
Eucharist.
As
they
say,
“say
but
the
word
and I
shall
be
healed,”
let’s
put
that
word
into
practice.
And
where
we’ll
see a
more
joyful
spirit
in
the
presence
of
God.
One
of
the
things
I try
to do
in
liturgy
is,
when
people
come
to
Mass,
I
want
them
to
leave
with
the
sense
“I
met
God.
I was
in
the
presence
of
God.
Something
happened
to me
while
I was
here,
and
it
was
God.
He
spoke
to me
in
the
homily.
I
felt
his
presence
whenever
we
went
into
worship.
I
sensed
the
very
presence
of
the
Lord
Jesus
Christ.
I
experienced
his
healing.”
Whatever,
[I
want
it to
be]
that
people
experience
something
and
then
they
go
out
to do
something
that
will
touch
the
lives
of
other
people.
I see
that,
liturgically,
we
are
going
to
come
more
and
more
into
a
more
spontaneous
type
of
celebration.
And
we
are
going
to
struggle
—
there
are
those
that
want
a
quiet
celebration,
and
there
are
those
that
want
a
more
spontaneous
celebration,
and
both
are
good.
But
there
are
times
for
contemplation
and
times
for
joyful
celebration,
and
we
have
to
learn
how
to
balance
the
two
and
encourage
people
to
move
in
the
fullness
of
worship.
Do
you
have
a
particular
message
for
priests?
I say
to
priests
not
to be
afraid.
God
is
calling
us
priests
to
pastor
the
various
groups
and
movements
that
come
from
God.
That
which
is of
God
needs
to be
pastored
so
that
things
continue
to be
done
the
way
God
wants
it to
be
done.
Priests
do
not
necessarily
have
to be
involved
in
the
Charismatic
Renewal
movement,
but
if
there
is a
prayer
group
in
their
community,
and
there
are
people
who
are
baptised
in
the
Spirit
evidently,
they
need
to
pastor
those
people
and
continue
to
form
them
and
teach
them,
and
free
them
to
use
the
gifts,
but
give
them
some
pastoral
guidance
so
that
they
don’t
go
off
track.
My
experience
is
that
when
they
come
to a
priest
having
experienced
being
baptised
by
the
Holy
Spirit
and
say,
“Father,
I
need
your
help,”
they
really
want
to
remain
plugged
into
the
Church.
They
don’t
want
to go
off,
but
when
the
priest
rejects
them,
when
they
don’t
include
them,
but
play
down
that
experience,
and
laugh
at it
or
mock
it,
or
say
that
it is
not
of
God
and
“I
forbid
you
to do
X, Y
and
Z,”
then
that
person
may
go to
where
they
are
accepted,
and
they
may
go to
another
Church
— not
because
that
is
what
they
want
to
do,
they
want
to
root
themselves
in
the
Catholic
Church,
but
they
get
rejected.
And
so
pastors
must
not
reject,
even
though
that’s
not
their
experience,
they
are
called
to
pastor
it,
no
matter
what
the
experience
is.
If it
is of
God,
it
needs
to be
pastored
and
not
put
down.