Grieving the loss and grateful for the life and work of Michael Bernard Kelly, Gay Catholic, witness to the tradition, disciple of the Divine and another “Holy Irritant” to those who exclude the invited and demonize the different .
Kittredge Cherry
Australian Catholic for Equality
Today we hold in our thoughts and our hearts our dear sibling in Christ Dr Michael Bernard Kelly who for a lifetime loved, advocated and served his rainbow Catholic siblings. Eternal Rest be his, and let perpetual light shine upon him, may he rest in peace, Amen.
I am deeply saddened to say goodbye to my beloved friend, mentor, brother, teacher, priest, bishop and fellow companion on the journey Michael Bernard Kelly. I will treasure your wisdom, guidance and love that you shared with me over all these wonderful years and I will be forever grateful that I was blessed to have you in my life. Trying to make sense of your passing I was reminded of the quote below from Henri Nouwen. Until the day we meet again on the distant shore go in peace and love my friend.
Creative imp of a dynamic spirituality which gave us the Rainbow Sash Movement and the language of the Erotic Contemplative.
Dance into the wedding feast of the lamb with the colours of the rainbow surrounding you and all who have lived the passion of human love in its rich diversity and expression.
Michael Bernard Kelly RIP
Michael Bernard Kelly
Tributes
Michael was a personal friend and we were working on an interview for this Q Spirit blog in the last months before he died. Much of the content in this tribute comes from material he sent me to go with the interview.
He enjoyed reflecting with me about the role of art in his spiritual journey. “I have become very aware that we have very few images, symbols and icons of the Resurrection — compared with so many, many, many, images, rituals and symbols around the passion and crucifixion. I, too, have no shortage of those — and I love them dearly. However, at this stage of my life it is the Resurrection that draws me, and I want to focus on symbols and icons that express this,” he wrote in a recent email.
Today we hold in our thoughts and our hearts our dear sibling in Christ Dr Michael Bernard Kelly who for a lifetime loved, advocated and served his rainbow Catholic siblings. Eternal Rest be his, and let perpetual light shine upon him, may he rest in peace, Amen.
“Dying is a gradual diminishing and final vanishing over the horizon of life. When we watch a sailboat leaving port and moving toward the horizon, it becomes smaller and smaller until we can no longer see it. But we must trust that someone is standing on a faraway shore seeing that same sailboat become larger and larger until it reaches its new harbor. Death is a painful loss. But when we think about the One standing at the other shore eagerly waiting to welcome our beloved friend into a new home, a smile can break through our tears.“ HM
Nouwen
Svante Talltorp
I am an old friend of M since 1995 when I lived in Melbourne for many years. Du you happen to know when and where the funeral for dear M will be held. I will light a candle in my parish church here in Stocholm Sweden. lived in Melbourne for many years and M and myself spend lots of times together. Deep talk over dinners at my place or at a cheap restaurant, or we went to see a movie together. A very good and close friendship which we kept up despite me moving to Sweden in late 2003. I have returned to Australia nearly every year. I met up with M often during all these visits. Last time I was I Melbourne was exactly one year ago
Comments
Vale Michael Bernard Kelly. I never met him nor did I hear that he had died. And so, your post has led me to some very interesting reading. What an extraordinary, brave and prophetic man he was.
Thanks for all this. He was only 66, very young.
Cheers,
Greg Burke
Vale Michael Bernard Kelly. I never met him nor did I hear that he had died. And so, your post has led me to some very interesting reading. What an extraordinary, brave and prophetic man he was.
Thanks for all this. He was only 66, very young.
Cheers,
Greg Burke