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ATHOLIC
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News & Herald ig Catholics in
Western North Carolina
Volume 2 Number 38
in the Diocese of Charlotte
Above:
Mercy
Sister
Donna Marie
•
June
some of
Vaillancourt points out
4,
1993
the land
features to Ann Scott,part of the land design team for the Well of Mercy project. Sister
Donna, along with Mercy Sister Brigid McCarthy have plans to develop 1 1 0 acres near Union Grove into a facility for psycho-spiritual healing. The Well of Mercy is an outgrowth of the Mercy Institute, which provides counseling as well as psychological and spiritual growth programs.
comes through the earth and nature in a way that no person can The land purchased by the Sisters of Mercy invites
Left: "Spiritually tell
you," says Sister Brigid.
reflection through the solitude, contemplation,
and
creativity.
JO ANN
Photos by
Hope
Well Of Mercy, Well Of
seph Valentine To Become west Diocesan Priest
By JO ANN KEANE Associate Editor
HOUSTONVILLE, N.C. Sisters Brigid
safe, and have support?'" explains Sister Donna. "We would get calls, 'Do you have a place where I can make a private
Vaillancourt ascend the steep grade of the
Associate Editor
woodland like pros. Stopping to examine flora and fauna along the way, they dis-
retreat, or just
cover may apples
a perennial herb said
available facilities, they realized the pro-
have cancer curing capabilities. The forest floor is covered with a healing plant on the very land where the sisters hope healing will take place. One hundred and ten acres of undeveloped farmland waits patiently for the
grams they 'd been offering simply weren' enough. People were crying out for more. And the confines of the Sacred Heart
Jseph Valentine
— Seven
became
years
a Catho-
imorrow, the 37-year-old convert les
a priest.
felt like art
Church in Winston-Salem
assume duties "I don't
— where he
know
exactly what to ex-
pect," Valentine said. "But
the call to join the Church
of the same call to the priest-
will
as parochial vicar.
able to translate what
I
hope
to
be
have learned
in
I
asy,
seminary to help people and inspire them." With five years of seminary behind him, Valentine said he is ready to begin the
on to
learning process. "Schooling just gives
Valentine said. Joining the Church
however, compared to the become a priest, alentine "tried to move away from said, but to no avail. "You don't to pursue a vocation to priesthood;
cide to stop running away from it,"
M
nee he consented to God's plan, iine said he felt at peace.
He "looks
d" to his ordination June 5 by Bishop
Donoghue
at St.
Patrick Cathe-
Charlotte. fter
you the foundation on which to build," he said. "The real learning comes out there on the job." Although unusual for a newly ordained priest to be assigned to his home parish, Valentine did not grow up in the parish.
He
visited St. Leo, felt at
there, joined the
home
RCIA (Rite of Christian
Initiation for Adults)
program and was
received into the Church during Easter
a brief stint at
Holy Family
Clemmons, Valentine will re6 to his home parish St. Leo
h in lly
—
Vigil 1986.
Raised Episcopalian, Valentine drifted See Ordain, Page 16
Summer Schedule Thi s issue of The Catholic News
& Herald will begin our summer schedule of
eekly publication. Those who plan to submit stories or pictures for publication iild
bear in mind that it may be necessary to submit them earlier than usual in order
publication at the time desired. For the remainder of the summer, we will publish editions dated June
>{ssure
My
16, July 30,
1
8 July ,
Aug. 13 and Aug. 27.
We will resume regular weekly issues and begin our third year of publication ' i
—
Mercy McCarthy and Donna
By CAROL HAZARD
TNSTON-SALEM
'
KEANE
the issue of Sept. 3.
—
to
While the
move
apart?'"
sisters referred clients to
campus didn't lend itself to their vision. They needed more space. Facilities at the Sacred Heart campus were quickly di-
the
minishing as other ministries took bits and
earth movers will slag a roadway through
pieces to meet the rising needs of the
the pasture, and deep into the woods,
community.
Sisters of
Mercy
presence.
Soon
winding up on the doorstep of the future home for Well of Mercy. Sisters Brigid and Donna see Well of Mercy as an expansion of the successful
Mercy Institute. Since 1986, Mercy Instiprovided counseling as well as psychological and spiritual growth protute has
grams for nearly 5,000 people. "The Institute came out of a
real
awareness of some of the needs of adults struggling with contemporary issues," says Sister Donna. "There was both psychological pain and spiritual longing." Counseling and programs offered by Mercy Institute helped thousands come in touch with some of their most challenging and painful feelings. Grief and anger
With the support and guidance of the Sisters of Mercy of North Carolina, Sisters
Brigid and Donna set out on a quest to
locate a site conducive to their cause.
"We
started looking," says Sister
Donna. "But everything close to Charlotte was so expensive." They saw existing facilities, potential sites and raw land. "Everything we looked at either didn't feel right,
look right or cost right." They
expanded city,
but
their search further
still
from the
within easy reach of major
communities.
As they
searched, nature continued
to beckon.
See Well, Page 2
melt as participants achieve inner strength
and heal privately within the safe haven offered by the Sisters of Mercy.
Butitwasn'tenough. "Just about everywhere I went, people would ask, 'Do you have a place where I can just grieve, where I can feel
CRISM
Picnic
Nearly 300 retirees attended the
May 26 CRISM picnic in Hickory. See photos on Page 13.
!
Catholic
lie
News
& Herald
June
Fatherhood
By MSGR. JOHN J. Father's
Day
is
And
Alive
Is
Well
MCSWEENEY
rapidly approaching, yet who's noticing.
Coincidence, or a sign of the times?
What
exactly is the role of the father in the current family structure? Fatherhood seems to be under siege. Seemingly daily stories are repor fathers arrested for nonpayment of child support. Talk shows fill the airway: women telling how their fathers and stepfathers afl
We knol
them as children, sexually, mentally or both. these actions are wrong.
But no one seems willing to report that fatherhjl and well, at least in many families. While it if many moms and dads are becoming single parent! alive
traditional nuclear family is not extinct, a relic II
stashed
The
away
father
Father's
Motor Speedway president and general manager H.A. (Humpy) Wheeler with Mercy Sisters Donna Vaillancourt and Brigid McCarthy.
Charlotte
Photo by
Well (From Page
of physical
chats
in the
Smithsonian for spectator vie!
much the heart of the famihJ Day does more than acknowledge thei fatherhood. On this day we also resp&<
is still
very
treasure the ideal of fatherhood as one of giving servid
JOANN KEANE
1)
self giving.
Often, the father is still a son's best friend, a person a boy needs as a roll growing up. For a daughter, that relationship is something special. Have yoi noticed the glint in many young girls' eyes when they say, "Daddy?" Is this an outdated image of family life? If so, maybe we should look in a and ask some questions. Evidence is becoming more compelling that much of society's ills can be to the breakdown of the family unit. In a traditional family, each parent has his own role. Without both parents, there is little possibility for the roles adequately filled. Try as a single parent might, a void remains without the i
And when
a
phone
call
clued them
in to the available Houstonville property, Sisters Brigid
and Donna pulled on They were
jeans and trekked the land.
overwhelmed. This land spoke of healing.
As
the
parent.
wind whistled through the pines, they knew this would be home for Well of
The challenge of fatherhood
tremendous. The challenge today is diffi Dad needs to be of visible Faith ... one who provides generous caring for the wants of a child they have security and the necessities of life ... one who is available to a child, p to a child as the child matures, but in a way that allows the child to grow to autc and self reliance ... one who helps a child build an attitude of faith, opti thankfulness, and openness to life ... one who practices the virtue of patienc] In the Eucharist, Christ serves and helps us, but his service means giving H| to us. Similarly, our fathers serve and help each of us, which means they g) themselves for us.
Mercy.
The Sisters of Mercy of North Carolina
purchased the land, completing the
transaction on Christmas Eve, 1991.
to
It's up to Sisters Brigid and Donna do the rest. While faced with the task
of raising funds to complete their dream, they are on the right track to success. Charlotte
Motor Speedway presi(Humpy)
dent and general manager H.A.
Wheeler hosted a kickoff fundraiser at the Speedway Club on St. Patrick's Day. Clad in festive green, the sisters laid their plans on the table. "Our goals for Well of Mercy are challenging, yet deeply rewarding," say Sisters Brigid and Donna. "We will provide emotional support, spiritual companionship and provide space for
on
toward psychoand wholeness." "Well of Mercy is not intended to be
adults
their journey
logical, spiritual healing
a clinical or therapeutic facility. Instead it
will offer a quiet, nurturing environ-
is
describe in a few words. However, a listing could include:
As his day nears, let's not forget about dad. He is not the monster as porl by bias opinion and segments of the media. Dad's have their failures. Somi proud that they think "Soda Pop," "Popcorn," and the "Boston Pops" are nam! them. But fathers deserve our prayers and a return of concern for the concer have shown. Dad is normally someone who loves his family deeply. He deserves| recognized, not cast away like an old shirt. This Father' s Day, let our prayers be for the fathers of the moment. In a chi world, it is not an easy thing to know how to be a good father, to provide, to discipline, to allow enough freedom, to build autonomy and a cheerful S] And for those fathers not with us, let our hearts say a prayer, and know o we will be reunited. Msgr. McSweeney is vicar general and chancellor of the Diocese of Che t<
Mercy
Sister Brigid
moment
light
Allison
at
McCarthy enjoys a Bobby
with racing legend
the special St. Patrick's
fundraising kickoff held at the
Club
the Charlotte
at
ment where people can embrace them-
Day
Speedway
Motor Speedway.
Photo by
JOANN KEANE
and their Creator through solitude, contemplation and
Vatican Says
No
Final Decision
selves, their lives,
with dining
creativity."
They hope
to
open
Until that point, they will fervently
work towards
raising the necessary complete their mission. The project is set for completion in
$950,000
to
two phases. Phase one
calls for the construction
living areas for guests, residence for
and meeting rooms, a gathering place, and a creekside chapel. Phase two will expand the facility to include rooms for 40 overnight guests, and a more extensive meeting area, along
VATICAN CITY
and Donna explore their land. Despite the soggy footing from a recent downpour, it's a perfect day to scout the property. Slipping along embankments,
female
the surefooted sisters stop.
decisions have been
says Sister Donna.
of the well, septic system, four private
On Allowing Altar
Yet
On a warm spring day, Sisters Brigid
their ministry in
the fall of 1994.
Made
facilities.
"Listen,"
"Do you
hear the
creek?" Invisible through the thick brush, the sound of the babbling creek
is
au-
Nature abounds, and its natural healing will suit Well of
Mercy
clients.
"A sense of the sacred and healing come through the earth and nature in a special
way," says Sister Brigid.
Please pray for the following deceased priests during the
â&#x20AC;&#x201D; The
altar servers
and other forms of no final
lay liturgical participation, but
made
yet,
Vatican
The
officials
month of June:
Time maga-
girls to serve at
Roman
Francis
J.
Gallagher, 1931
as a pastoral one
lated to the larger issue of the or
While church law excludes t mal
Archbishop Geraldo M. Agnelo,
institution of
istry
women
into
th
of acolyte or lector, as a p
many women do in
the readings a
some places women or gir
served at the
altar.
secretary of the Congregation for Di-
vine Worship and Sacraments, said May
26 that the congregation had almost completed its work on a document on the subject. The study was begun after questions about church ministries were raised at the 1987 Synod of Bishops on
The congregation
will submit
Philip B. Edelen, 1944
study to Pope John Paul
Nicholas Liston, 1955 Edward L. Gross, 1963
decisions, he said.
Hugh Kennedy, 1968 Edward Meyer, OSB, 1914 Prior Felix Hintemeyer, OSB, VG, 1924 Gabriel Stupasky, OSB, 1974 Sebastian Doris, OSB, 1990
i
Ki
.
was seen
tion
and
Catholic Masses."
the laity.
Reverend Reverend Reverend Reverend Reverend Reverend Reverend Reverend Reverend
ft
under study but that no decisio been made He emphasized that th<
commented after a re-
port in the June 7 issue of
pared to allow
the issue of female altar se
i
ministry.
officials said.
zine said the pope "appears to be pre-
dible.
staff, offices
(CNS)
Vatican has nearly finished a study on
Girl
II
its
ÂŽ
This newspap' printed on recfl newsprint and J cyclable.
for any final
seems we're close to a solution," Archbishop Agnelo said, but stressed that it was up to the pope to decide what to do with the document. Vatican spokesman Joaquin Navarro-Valls confirmed May 31 that
Thanks To
St.
Jude
"It
Thanks to St.. Jude for pray! swered and favors granted.
AMK
\<
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
"
le 4,
1
The Catholic News
1993
& Hera;
zucharistic Reflections
tow Does Being A Eucharistic /linister Touch Your Life? By As a Catholic
OLGA THRONEBURG
body and blood of our Lord and Savior to the faithful of our Church at the Sacrifice of the Mass at Holy Communion. It humbles me every time when I am asked to serve in this very special way. I ask the Lord to make me worthy of this high honor. I have also served as a Eucharistic Minister for shutins. The time I spent in this ministry brought me so very close to our Lord and to a friend who was unable to attend Mass. As Jesus came to serve us, I want to serve Him in any
Christian, Ifeel blessed to be able to bring the
way I can, and as long as
I
am
able.
have tremendous love for the heart of Jesus, which I find in the Eucharist, le center of our Catholic faith. This love in me I share with the people in my ommunity. The Holy Spirit guides me when I need to speak or just quietly I
itness.
i
For the past three year, we have been blessed to have Eucharistic adoration our church on the first Friday of each month, when following the 8:30 a.m.
we have exposition of the Blessed Sacrament, a holy hour and benediction. Olga Throneburg is a parishioner at Our Lady of the Annunciation Church
tass
i
Albemarle.
The Most Profound Part You hare In Teaching About The Eucharist?
\/hat Is
By KELLY HEBERT
Msgr. Joseph Showfety raises the monstrance during Solemn Benediction
The most profound aspect of teaching children about the Eucharist is conveying the idea that we are actually receiving the body and blood of Jesus Christ. It is expressing the idea that in the Eucharist,
we
receive the greatest gift
we could ever
desire.
a third grade Sunday school class. It is always a wonderful feeling when I see how anxious children are to learn about the many aspects of the Church and many facets of Jesus' life. The Eucharist always seems to heighten their curiosity. When our children are preparing for their First Communion in second grade, they are taught that the Eucharist is actually the body and blood of Christ, but they may not fully understand the significance
Salem Vicariate Eucharistic Devotion
at St.
at the
Winston-
Leo Church.
250 Join Together At
St.
Leo For
I teach
Vicariate Eucharistic Celebration WINSTON-SALEM â&#x20AC;&#x201D; About 250 people, clergy, religious and laity gath-
ered May 23 in to celebrate
St. Leo the Great Church and honor the Lord in the
When
the Lord is shown reverway, it shows appreciation not only for His presence in individual lives but also for His presence every
ence."
ence
in this
come
of that belief. ordinary bread and wine change into the body and blood of Christ?" they ask. Children are still very literal at this age and seek concrete, ingible answers to their questions. We teach them that the transfiguration is an
Blessed Sacrament. The event was spon-
time people
sored by the churches of the Winston-
the Mass.
Salem Vicariate as a means of focusing
Father Kelleher said in the years following the Second Vatican Council,
dual occurrence, not a sign or symbol. With this response, we reaffirm one of le most crucial aspects of our faith, the Eucharistic mystery. As these students
ration for the Eucharistic
"How can
and accept this mystery more fully, and and comfort we all find in the celebration.
mture, they begin to understand egin to experience the joy
attention on the Holy Eucharist in prepa-
month
this
architectural changes often
made
ficult to locate the tabernacle in
in Seville, Spain.
In his homily,
they
Congress
together to celebrate
Father Joseph
it
churches. What's more, Eucharistic de-
Kelleher said devotion to the Lord in the
votions
all
but disappeared.
Now, how-
Eubeen regained while maintaining the central importance of the Mass. The celebration included a Eucharistic procession from the church to two outside altars. Songs and prayers were voiced during the procession and a Solemn Benediction was given at each station. The celebration ended with a re-
me to watch a smile appear on a child's face as he or she begins to nderstand and appreciate the mystery of transfiguration. As an adult member
Blessed Sacrament and belief in His
ever, a sense of the importance of
true presence in the consecrated bread
charistic devotions has
four Catholic community, Ifeel an obligation to teach our true beliefs about the ucharist. It is important that children understand that we are unique in our
the Catholic faith unique. Father Kelleher
It tickles
eliefs
and
in
our celebration.
It
me great joy
brings
to
know
that I
am sharing
these children a part of our faith that will bring them great joy for ears to come. ith
Kelly Hebert
is
a parishioner at St.
Remember
vm
His In Yours.
Elizabeth Church, Boone.
"A valid Will stands as a continuing expression of our concern for loved ones, as well as an ongoing commit-
ment to the Church and the community in which we live'.' Bishop John
F.
Donoghue
many
and wine are characteristics is
pastor of
Y
"/ leave to the
Roman
Catholic Diocese of percent of (or Charlotte the sum of $ the residue of my estate) for its religious, educational
and charitable works. For more information on
how
to
make
a Will that
works, contact Jim Kelley, Director of Development,
Diocese of Charlotte, 1524 East Morehead St., Charlotte, NC 28207, (704) 331-1709 or 377-6871.
make
the Rosary in
Lexington.
"We
are nourished through pres-
when we receive the body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ, "our bodies become tabernacles of Jesus himself. Our devotions to the Lord in the Eucharist are acts of faith and reverence," and
ception in the parish activity center.
German Supreme Court Rules Abortion Law Unconstitutional KARLSRUHE, Germany (CNS) Germany's supreme court declared the country
ou can express your commitment to your Church by making a bequest to the Diocese of Charlotte. Simply have the following statement included in your Will:
Our Lady of
that
dif-
some
'
s
abortion reform law unconsti-
tutional, saying the right to life begins at
abortion, so the unification treaty stipu-
new joint parliament would new abortion law. West Germany outlawed abortion
lated that the
have
to enact a
conception.
except in cases of rape, to protect the
But the same law ruled unconstitutional will go into effect June 16 on a temporary basis, until the parliament can enact a new law. This will eliminate abortion on demand in eastern Germany. "The true winner is mankind," said a statement issued by Bishop Karl Lehmann, head of the German bishops'
of the mother or
conference.
days beforehand. At the time, the law was seen as a major victory for women and for the often-overlooked parliamen
When East Germany and West Germany united in 1990, the East accepted West Germany s constitution. However, '
the
two countries could not agree on
if
the
life
mother would
suffer severe social consequences. East
Germany had
unlimited access to abor-
tion for the first 12
In 1992, the
weeks of pregnancy.
new German
parlia-
ment passed a law permitting abortion within the first 12 weeks of pregnancy, but requiring counseling at least three
See Germany, Page
1
Catholic
& Herald
News
June
4, Hjj
Pro-Life Corner
0
.0
m. s
m-
"As the mother of a 3 1/2-year-old boy and 8-week-old triplets, watching human beings grow and develop has made me realize
what a miracle
is.
The joy and
fulfillment I receive
is
beyond
compare, even during the 3 a.m. feedings."
Marie Withrow St.
Peter Parish, Charlotte
Editorial The Catholic Press
A
number of speakers
at last
The Respect Life Office
week's Cincinnati
Diocese of Charlotte
(704) 331-172(
convention of the Catholic Press Association underlined the need for a strong Catholic press in this
The Pope Speaks
country.
The message was simple: if you want adequate coverage of news about the Church, you have to get it
VATICAN CITY (CNS)
from the Catholic media.
— Pope John Paul
II
said
Joseph Sister Catherine McNamee, president of the National Catholic Educational Association, "many of the so-called 'elite news media' both print and broadcast are telling us what to think and what they 'think' is often in conflict with our own values. Do we need a Catholic press? You bet we do!" Ken Woodward, a Catholic who has been religion editor of Newsweek since 1964, told CPA members that religion is getting much less coverage in secular news magazines than in the past. "Since the culture of journalism is generally ignorant of and often hostile to religion, the effect is to further sequester religious conversation, even about public events, into the private sphere of specifically religious publications and television programs," he
that to better inspire the faithful, priests should practice
said.
he
Said
St.
self-sacrifice
—
—
^
Woodward pointed out that one reason for the lack media are
is
the fact that those in the national
news
*
"
all
y
-
of coverage
I
pope
said this should include such practices
celebration of Mass and the divine office, meditat
cation and an openness to
frequent confession.
recitation of the rosary, adoration of the Eucharist
grace," the pope said at his
j~
said.
He
desires for worldly goods,
The priest's path to holiness demands a "spirit of mortifi*\
»fJm fcJt <m
and renounce
of the Church, and its documents encourage priesi employ every useful means for spiritual progress,
general audience
'
"This
is
May
26.
«(
"These methods are
still
valid and indispensat
the pope said.
The sacrament of penance in particular can help
the ascetic as-
pect of the way to perfection,
priest
which
and needy person, a sjji among sinners in need of forgiveness," he said Priests should also be aware of the special g; they receive in the sacrament of orders, which can them overcome their own human limits, the pope s "It is in this grace that the priest must place trust, and to which he must turn," he said.
in the priest
must
in-
clude sacrifices and struggles against any type of desire or
longing that would make him
seek the goods of this world," said.
The Second Vatican Council
clearly recognized the
form "a
realistic self-image,
with the awarer
that he, too, is a fragile
1
value of priestly holiness in bringing about the renewal
far less religious than the public as a whole.
S
Secular journalists, he said "constitute a professional elite
or subculture which
is
more secular than
far
the
culture of their viewers or their readers."
He
said
news magazine
in general, tend to regard religion as "essentially
come
didn't
and say
right out
more
-
—
and the Catholic Church
— when they can be
particular
sensationalized.
Dear brothers and
sensational or scandalous the better, seems to be
we now
right.
We
26.
sure do need a
Catholic press.
sisters,
turn to the holiness
demanded of
virtue of their special consecration to
cration
was
May
Continuing our catechesis on the priestly ministry,
in
The
their idea.
Sister Catherine
(CNS) Here is the Vatican Pope John Paul IPs remarks in English at his
that the
editors are really interested mostly in stories about religion in general
text of
weekly general audience
peripheral to the public life."
Woodward
—
VATICAN CITY
editors, like intellectuals
priests by God. This conse-
linked to the sacramental character imparted
is
by the sacrament of orders, which enables the priest to act in the person of Christ (cf. Presbyterorum Ordinis, 12).
The
marked by the mystery of the cross. It demands of him a spirit of mortification and an openness to Christ' s grace, which shows its transforming power in the midst of human weakness (cf. 2 Cor 12:9). As well as by making use of the traditional means of priestly sanctification the celebration of Mass and the divine office, visits to the
m
The Catholic
ews & Herald June
Volume Publisher:
Editor:
4,
2,
priest's path to holiness is
—
1993
Blessed Sacrament, praying the rosary, meditation and frequent confession "priests will achieve the holiness proper to their state by sincere and untiring
Number 38
Most Reverend John
—
Donoghue
F.
Advertising Representative:
Gene
VATICAN CITY
Sullivan
(CNS)
—
Only a complete
presentation of Catholic Church teaching can curb the Office:
1524 East Morehead
St.,
Charlotte,
NC
Mail Address: PO Box 37267, Charlotte, Phone: (704) 331-1713 Printing:
Mullen Publications,
NC 28237
faith,
interest in religion in the country.
Inc.
He also praised the The Catholic News published by the
Charlotte, 1524 East
& Herald, USPC 007-393,
Roman
Catholic Diocese of
Morehead
St.,
New Age
ideas, which are Pope John Paul II said. Speaking to bishops from Iowa, Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska May 28, the pope praised the holiness found among U.S. Catholics and the reawakening of
influence of sects and
incompatible with the
28207
Charlotte,
NC
28207, 44 times a year, weekly except for Christmas week and Easter week and every two weeks during June, July and August for $ 1 5 per year for enrollees in parishes of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Charlotte and $18 per year for all other subscribers. Second-class postage paid at Charlotte NC. POST-
MASTER: Send address corrections to The Catholic News & Herald, PO Box 37267, Charlotte, NC 28237.
(Presbyterorum Ordinis, 1 3). As they grow in past charity, they must seek to attain in Christ a unity of a harmony between prayer and ministry, contem tion and action. The Second Vatican Council clearly recogn the importance of priestly holiness for bringing al the renewal of the Church, the spread of the Go! throughout the world and for dialogue with the temporary world. For this reason, the council exhc priests "to use every relevant means approved b> i
Church in striving for that ever greater holiness, w will make them day by day more fitting instrument the service of the whole people of God" (ibid., l \ I
and
gladly
welcome
the English-speaking pilg
visitors present at this audience. In partic
members of the
greet the course
NATO Defense
1
by working together in your prcl you will become ever more effecl
lege. I pray that
sional duties,
builders of understanding and solidarity among peoj |
Upon
all
of you,
I
invoke almighty God's
blessii
Robert E. Gately
Associate Editors: Joann Keane, Carol Hazard Hispanic Editor: Sister Irene Halahan
is
fulfillment of their duties in the Spirit of Ch>
renewal process and re-evalu-
teaching and preaching must place greatest import' on the supernatural life and must not ignore the re
pope said, the quest for has led to a search for new meaning in life,
of sin and of final damnation. "It is a sad fact that some Christians todaj succumbing to the temptation 'to reduce Christii to merely human wisdom, a pseudo-science of
men and women
religious.
In U.S. society at large, the spirituality
our actions with a sense of duty to the cosmos, overturning the true concept of sin and the nee( redemption through Christ," he said. The pope told the U.S. bishops that Cat!
many
ation of lifestyle and activity being conducted by
orders of
The new movements "pay little heed to rev and instead try to come to God through knowle experience based on elements borrowed from spirituality or from psychological techniques.' "They replace personal responsibility to Got
a new sensitivity to the need to protect the environment
and "the desire to go beyond a cold,
rationalistic
!
religiosity."
being,'" he said.
But at the same time, new religious groups, including the New Age movement, "sometimes find their way into preaching, catechesis, workshops and retreats." They influence Catholics who may not be aware that they are incompatible with Catholic teaching, the pope said.
Pope John Paul asked bishops and priests more vigorous in presenting Church teaching de; J with death and final judgment "to eliminate confi t
regarding the true nature of Christian
life
and of
See Pope, Pa
u 'l
0[
The Catholic News
1993
4,
Notebook
Editor's
By BOB GATELY
Light
—
nnati.
K
Despite what a few people seem to think, the convention is not all fun and games. We do spend quite a bit of time in seminars, workshops and other business
J
-
L
Li
'
sessions.
Much
of the interest this year centered on postal
rates
and how much
up.
m not talking here about a general postal rate increase
I'
involving
first class
it is
going to cost us when the rates go
mail. That's
coming but it's probably
about a year away.
still
What gress to end
I
am
its
talking about
is
the decision by
Con-
subsidy for non-profit second and third
class mail. It's going to
mean a jump
mailing costs for
in
most non-profit organizations, including The Catholic
News & Herald. The only question at the moment is how we are going to be hit. We hope that the increase will be phased in over a period le.
however it turns out, in the cost
tper to
uneasy feelings as I listened to the talk about postal rates, there were
moments
very pleasant
for us at the convention.
of our entries in the
— something
ons
We are determined NOT to raise the price of
help meet the increased costs.
espite the
wo
we do plan to adjust our other spending to make up for any
of mailing the paper.
which is
in
only
;ond year of publication. Both of the awards were for photographs taken by
—
Editor Joann Keane one in the category for best black and white feature and the other in the category for best color news photo, he black and white photo, published Jan. 24, 1992 in our Catholic Schools issue,
showed
a first-grader at
the
Assumption School
in
lending a classmate a helping hand with an assignment,
otte
color photo was published
tie
Our Lady of
ican paying
homage to his
May
29, 1992.
It
showed a young African-
culture during an African Liturgical Celebration at
ady of Consolation Parish in Charlotte.
Symbolism Of The Easter Candle
3
By FATHER JOHN DIETZEN 1 just came
back to the Church during Lent after being away (as I realize too many years. I have a question about the Easter candle. As I remember, mdle was put out and carried away during Mass on Ascension Thursday, supposed to symbolize that Jesus had left this earth at that time. In our , the candle was lit until Pentecost. During Mass on that day it was carried to the baptism font and left there. Is this the way things are done now? No one I talked with could help me. (Florida)
1.
A. Your priest was entirely correct. The Easter candle be kept in its prominent location during the entire Easter season, which means until Pentecost. The 50 days from Easter Sunday to Pentecost are celebrated by the Church as one long feast day, sometimes called in Christian tradition the "great Sunday" (General Norms for the Liturgical Year, No. 22, in the Sacramentary). Thus, at the conclusion of the prayers for the feast of Pentecost, the missal instructs, "At the end of the Easter the Easter candle should be kept in the baptistery with due honor." is
i,
tie
unduly pressured in these interfaith matters. Thirty years ago the chief difficulty blocking ecumenical progress was the conflict between two views of authority: one, which viewed the Church as an absolute monarchy, and the other which characterized the authority of the pope and bishops as a collegial service. The Council Fathers favored the principle of collegiality thus paving the way for the establishment of the international synods of bishops, the national episcopal conferences, and thousands upon thousands of
According to Cardinal Ratzinger, the head of the Congregation for the Doctrine is still undergoing gradual changes: "The ministry of unity entrusted to Peter and his successors can be realized in very different ways. History offers examples of different styles but they don't have to be repeated. Today we have to respond to new situations." (National Catholic Reporter 2/26/93) How right he of the Faith, the papacy
is!
Other interesting ecumenical changes were instituted by the council. Whereas once we demanded that Protestants return to Rome, now, according to the Decree on Ecumenism, the reunification of Christendom is not defined in terms of a return to Rome, but rather as a restoration of all things to the Gospel of Jesus Christ. That's a far different approach. Protestant churches are now regarded as valid Christian communities within the Body of Christ, and all Christian churches must share the blame for the discord and division within Christendom. All of these ideas over 30 years old, and yet some Catholics are still scandalized by them. Perhaps we should read the documents. I love one particular quote: "Inspired by no earthly ambition, the Church seeks but a solitary goal: to carry forward the work of Christ Himself under the lead of the befriending Spirit. And Christ entered this world to give witness to the truth, to rescue and not to sit in judgment, to serve and not to be served." (Gaudium et Spes N. 3, par.) "The fruit of faith is love, and the fruit of love is service." (Mother Teresa) (For a free copy of the Christopher News Note, CENTESIMUS ANNUS, send a stamped, self-addressed envelope to The Christophers, 12 East 48 Street, New York,
NY 10017.)
Father John Catoir
is
director of The Christophers.
to
candle has a significant symbolic and functional role in baptisms,
was originally called Pentecost, from the Greek word for and from the fourth century was observed much as we now celebrate it. later the season was broken up. Ascension was seen as the end of Easter and entire Easter time
tys),
ginning of the preparation for the feast of Pentecost. row once again the Church celebrates the whole 50 days as an "octave of ;s,"
than 30 years ago, Pope John XXIII began a process that continues to
unfold in new and mysterious ways. On Jan. 25, 1959 he officially announced the Second Vatican Council, and on Oct,. 11, 1962 he addressed the council's solemn opening, revealing his deep optimism and hope about the future. Sixteen documents flowed from that council under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, but the Declaration on Religious Freedom, which was largely the work of Jesuit Father John Courtney Murray, was by far the most controversial. For instance, in countries where the Catholic Church was in the minority, many earlier popes demanded freedom for the Church but they refused to grant such freedom to Protestants when they were in the minority. All of this was justified on the principle that "error has no rights." The Second Vatican Council reversed this practice and upheld religious freedom as a matter of principle. Today the Church teaches that no one should ever be abused or
Crosswinds
Crosswinds
one long extension of Easter of which the
feast of the
Ascension
is
an
tant part.
ne other reason, a doctrinal one, enters into the reasons for the Church's e today with the Easter candle. Jesus did not "leave the earth" at the
blowing out the Easter candle on that day and carrying it away seem clear more than once that His going to "the right hand Father" was to inaugurate a wholly new kind of presence and power, many ways, particularly in His body the Church and in the sacraments, he ns with us until the end of the world (Mt. 28:20; see also the new Catechism Catholic Church, Nos. 669- 671). sion, as
He made abundantly
is
a series of columns written by staff members of Catholic Social members are not
Services. In order to protect client confidentiality, the staff identified.
introduction to the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults repeats this rubric,
the Easter lie
More
parish councils.
CPA's annual awards competition won honorable
that isn't exactly the usual thing for a paper
iate
One Candle
By FATHER JOHN CATOIR
—
back to work again after a few days of relaxation along with a fair amount at the annual convention of the Catholic Press Association last week in irk ;'s
& Herald
Polluting the environment take
it
is
a concept in
many
people's consciousness.
Some
seriously, others lightly.
The word "pollution" appears in Scripture, where we are instructed in the Old Testament not to come to God with our "polluted" gifts. This week, as I listened to someone who has worked so hard to get on his feet emotionally and to get on with his life, the word came into my mind with a force. A "friend" had learned of his new beginnings and after spending some time together, had totally unhinged him, at least for a few days. The "friend" passed on to him some gossip about him that had no current relevance but somehow seemed to make the "friend" feel important to be the holder of this data. The impact on my client was awful, and even though he knew it had no current significance, emotionally it really got to him, polluting his psyche. The pollution had done its thing! I have always had a concern for the Gospel standard and how it matches the liberties we take with other people's names and reputations. When the liberties we take affect other office personnel, that can be tricky, when it involves family members, it can be devastating.
headers: \\
a recent
pjjtact I*
it is
not possible
Wion (Canon jnce the sjitly
This, of course, does not affect what are called
is
to
It
says simply that
judge whether proper conditions are present for general
961).
code (1983) supplants any differing previous
services,
communal
penitential liturgy.
(A free brochure outlining marriage regulations in the Catholic Church explaining the promises in an interfaith marriage
is
Church law
and
available by sending a stamped
self-addressed envelope to Father John Dietzen, Holy Trinity Church, 704 N. legislation,
requires a confessor to obtain prior permission of the bishop before
ting general absolution.
communal penance
celebrated in perhaps most parishes today, at which individual confession and
absolution take place in the context of a
new Code of Canon Law does not contain that provision.
locesan bishop
);
the Rite of Penance, saying that if
on afterward.
he
i
column I quoted
the bishop before giving general absolution he should be informed of the
Main
Bloomington, III. 61701. Questions for this column should be sent to Father Dietzen at the same address.) Copyright © 1993 by Catholic News Service St.,
& Herald
News
atholic
June
4, 19
How Does Canon Law Affect Us? The Eastern Orthodox Church: The Marriage And The Bond By FATHER CHRISTIAN A.
CARR
In preparing this column, I've consulted Father Stanley Harakar, professor of
Church Law
"Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology." It is important when we Roman Catholics want to learn about something in Orthodox teaching/ discipline, that we "check it out" with one of their experts "from the inside." Moreover, in dealing with any question in connection with the beliefs and practices of the Orthodox, it is advisable to keep in mind a fundamental quality of their religious understanding that can be described as "pneumatic." "Pneuma" means "soul" or "spirit," that which exists, but isn't material. That word ties-in with the life and "work" of the Holy Spirit, the person of the Blessed Trinity who breathes our souls. God's love and wisdom and goodness into our hearts and minds It is this "pneumatic" point-of-view that has, among the Orthodox, traditionally grounded their tendency to be very cautious lest some legal form be used to lessen the force of some theological principle. But the Catholic Church is heir, in large measure, to a jurisprudence influenced by ancient Rome's civil law, which was strictly juridical, clear, precise and not much concerned with equity at all. Equity at
—
relates to fairness rather than to a rigid application of law.
known, a remarkable evolution in our Church's laws over But there are still some basic norms, very good and reasonable in themselves, that if pushed to their outer limits, can cause unwarranted hardship. Some ideas of Roman jurists are alien to Orthodoxy. Such concepts as "validity," "invalidity," "contract," "form," have little or no role in the decisions and procedures or Orthodox matrimonial "tribunals." In recent years, along with a marked increase in the number of annulments granted by our Church's judges, there has been an increase of interest in what our Greek Orthodox brothers and sisters call economia. No English translation gives the exact meaning of the word, but "stewardship" or "prudent administration" is close. There has been, as
is
the centuries and in the post- Vatican II era.
Let's say that
is
it
a king of mystical-practical approach to situations that give rise
to regret/sympathy over the fragility of the
"how
frail
are the sons (and daughters) of
human
Adam
condition.
From experience
of
and Eve," we often discover an
understandable readiness to choose, or to help others to choose, the lesser of two "evils," if that be possible in the circumstances.
Economia
is
then, in effect, a structured
and down-to-earth realization
that
people rarely achieve the ideal of Christian holiness and fidelity to which they're summoned by their faith. But that falling-short can perhaps be healed, at least in part.
How clearly
Our Lord knew (knows)
all that! "I
have come
who need
just." "It is not the well
The Orthodox view
the physician, but the
some marriages
ill."
They cannot be heal Divorce is the only way to deal with a hopeless situation, and this is agains background permeated by deep spiritual devotion: the profound Orthodox ci sciousness of the mysterious, divine, awesome nature of the human pilgrimage contradiction is perceived between granting a divorce, when it is judged as tr necessary, and the keen sense of Christ' s words. Father Stanley pointed out that so jurisdictions in his Church have specific and concrete reasons for granting dissolution of the marital bond. He said that the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese 10 grounds for divorce: "That position," he noted, "is built on the one reason gi\ is
that
are dead.
01
if •it
by Christ: adultery, broadly construed." It is precisely at this point that econor becomes operative. Father Stanley Harakar explains: "Economia is based on an assessment of consequences, when the application of the rule (the permanent
—
marriage) will cause greater harm than a pastoral solution,
NEVER
—
i.e.,
divorce; 2) econot
you go back to the rule or principle (permanence marriage) the next time (that one has to deal with a failed matrimonial union) It's in that sense and under those conditions that the Eastern Orthodox Chu does decree divorce as permissible in some instances. There is no likelihood that Latin Catholic or Roman Church will ever accept that position, for "What God put together, let no one put asunder." But what our Church has always held is that whenever it can be proved defective consent or the inability of one partner (or of both) to enter a genu marriage, for whatever provable reason, an annulment may be obtained, wh declares officially "there wasn't a real marriage," and so the way is opened now one (or both) to marry. Thus annulment is not (repeat: NOT) divorce. There has been a very large increase in the number of annulments granted by Church within the last 20 years or so. This is due to a clearer, more defined broadened understanding of what is genuinely needed in order to have a truly v<' matrimonial covenant (contract) between two people and this healthier, m humane and more Christian understanding is expressed, in a practical way, by tribunals. Thank God for the inherent ability of the Church to recognize wherein tr lies, and to put it into practice. Father Carr is former abbot of the Trappist monastery at Moncks Corner, and holds degrees in both canon and civil law. sets a
precedent
\
to call sinners, not the y
Lifeline so they can escape the impending holocaust.
Steering Toward
The Future By JIM
I'll
never forget the day
to a level street that
pedaling while
Dad
was
MCINERNEY
my father taught me how to ride a bicycle. After walking
relatively free of traffic,
I
hopped on
the bike and
began
kept one hand on the handlebars and another on the seat. After
a few laps he let go of the handlebars, teaching me how to balance and steer. With each lap I grew more confident, secure in the knowledge that Dad still had a firm grip
on the
seat.
of speed. Then
that fateful
my dad.
Looking back I realized that he wasn't "Keep going," he shouted, "don't look back. You're doing fine." I
remembered
there.
crashed.
Dad immediately made me get up and we started all over again. After a few more practice rounds, and crashes, he pronounced me a success and told me how proud he was of me. After we made our triumphant trek home my mom nursed my wounds with smelly stuff that stung and bandgages that I wore as badges of honor for the rest of the day.
Because
I
ick
moment when the bike suddenly became easier to ride. As I lurched forward racing down the street I felt the thrill of freedom and excitement Then came
I
When Aeneas gets home, he runs into a problem. His father refuses to leave, wants to stay and die. He sees no future for himself. Aeneas won't hear it. He t his father that he will carry him, that he is " no great weight." His father accepts, and so they depart. With his wife behind him, he carries father (who represents the past) on his back, and taking his young son (his futi by the hand he leads them out of the devastated city. From the ashes of experience, the poet tells us, Aeneas founds a new city. He was able to do so beca he preserved his heritage and protected his future. We Christans must do the same. Through the teaching and example of Church, we have been bequeathed a heritage that we are not free to abandon to inferno of our modern secular society. We, too, must defend the past. Those v who gave us a sense of balance and taught us to steer our livei|j;i) once carried us
time of the year when we celebrate mothers and fathers I little memory with you because I think there is a lesson in it
this is the
thought I'd share
this
for all of us, especially those of us
who
are confronted with a confusing array of
questions about the ethical care of the aged and the infirm.
Most of us
commandment: "Honor your father and your whole commandment. In its entirety it reads: "Honor
are familiar with the
mother." But that is not the your father and your mother, that you may have long life in the land which the Lord, your God, is giving you." (Exodus 20:12) This is the only one of the Ten Commandments that carries such a promise the promise of long life. It is a positive commandment to do, rather than not do, something.
—
There is an ever increasing trend in our society that says that this commandment, and others, are not relevant anymore. For example, take a look at the Decalogue's prohibition against murder. Twenty years ago the U.S. Supreme Court amended this commandment in the following way. To "You shall not murder" it added: a) unless it is unborn; and b) defective; or c) unwanted; or d) unloved or e) inconvenient; or f) whatever. You don't even have to have a reason. As long as you want to do it, it's okay. Now that we are on the brink of doing the same to the terminally ill, will the aged be far behind? Does Christianity have any influence on medical and social ethics anymore? What place will the beatitudes have in the future if we cannot influence our culture enough to respect life? What will become of the homeless, of those suffering from AIDS, of the poor and the hungry if we cannot get this commandment straight? One of my favorite passages from antiquity is from Virgil's Aeneid. The scene describes the hero, Aeneas, realizing that the defense of his beloved Troy is hopeless. The city is in flames and it is just a matter of time before the enemy reaches his house and slaughters his family. He dashes home to gather his wife, son, and aged father ,
—
—
we must carry. At the same time, we must also prese God's commandments the future by ending the abortion holocaust. If we do not do this, the day will come when there will be no Aeneases lei carry us to safety.
-the
saints
H a
sr
OPTATUS
ST.
OPTATUS
WAS
BISHOP
OF MILEVIS, NUMIPIA, I NORTH AFRICA. OPTATUS WAS HIGHLY PRAISEP BY ST AU6USTIN£§k ANP WAS RANKEP WITH ST. •a
AMBROSE ANP ST AUGUSTS BY ST FULGENTIUS. OPTATUS WAS A LEAPING
OPPONENT OF PONATISM ANC WROTE A FAMOUS TREATISE, REFUTING THE TEACHINGS Of PONATIST BISHOP PARMENIfl THE TREATISE STILL EXISTS IT
ISA HISTORICALLY
IMPORTANT POCUMENT BECAUSE IT UPHOLPS THE SUPREMACY OF THE POPE, T! VALIPITY OF THE SACRAMENT ANP REFERS TO THE VENERATION OF RELICS.
WHEN OPTATUS
PIEP
IS
UNKNOWN, BUT IT MAY HAVE BEEN IN YEAR 387. HIS FEAST IS JUNE A. 1993
CNS Graphics
t
—
.
sh Singer Credits ONDALE,
—
(CNS)
Ala.
who wanted
iod
"It
says Irish-
it,"
pop singer Dana of the of her song, "We Are One
"hristian i:
TV Screens
con-
said. "It's a
DENVER
coming
to
—
A
some-
series of
distributed to dioceses for potential use
of Notre
on
local
TV
cable
company
donating the use of
is
at
outdoor
week of World Youth
times finds
to believe that she
The PSAs, produced with funding
'leBirming-
and her family are
ea,
Dana
living in the Bir-
;es
Network, where her husband
from the U.S. bishops' Catholic Communication Campaign, stress the concept that "we're all part of something bigger," according to an announcement by the Denver event's organizers. Each 30-second spot intends to promote a vision that all people are brothers and sisters regardless of their na-
works.
tional origin.
Dana has performed on the
available in both English and Spanish.
languages, features footage of the 1992 Los Angeles riots, Hurricane Andrew and strife in Bosnia. It urges people not to become cynical but to walk in hope. The other English and Spanish spot, "God's Country," highlights Denver's
In 1987,
"Mother Angelica Live" show and hosts a popular music series, "Say Yes," on EWTN. Before they moved to Alabama some 18 months ago, "my
gat a youth
only contact with
hard
only her
mingham suburb
ime profes-
ofIrondale,notfar
will
from the Eternal
—
ly
n
Word
the song
15 at the
Youth Day
Mass with
;
DhnPaul II. also be feaat other during the
World
1-15
Day
gath-
not be
will
ap-
first
ce before >e.
New
Day
events.
Two
of the
PSAs
One PSA, "Homecoming,"
will
be
in both
trips
and young
ope
EWTN
what we can accomplish together."
ine
The other
targets racism, pointing out
that skin color doesn't matter.
Radio announcements for World Youth Day were part of the package.
One is a radio version of Holtz' s "Commitment" spot. The other, narrated by actor Martin Sheen, emphasizes how people can pull together. The ads will probably be shown on the Vision Interfaith Satellite Network/ American Christian Television System cable channel, according to Cynthia Barnett, marketing director for the firm
and marketing for the
that handles sales
interfaith channel.
The Sony JumboTron
screens, do-
nated by Denver-based Tele-
Commu-
nications Inc., are part of the cable
World
firm's donation of services to
Youth Day.
some
scene,
toilet
humor and an The USCC
instance of rough language. classification
is
— adults. The
A-III
MPAA rating is PG-13 — parents are
was two from the air-
port to
"Commitment," Holtz notes
the value of teamwork, saying, "Imag-
room
the area
Or-
ttended by
)
Television
events during a
Two other PSAs feature University Dame football coach Lou
Holtz. In
stations.
Meanwhile, the nation's largest
xompanied :hoir of 30 people
it
beauty and nature's testimony to the
wonder of God.
two giant-screen TVs for use
America."
She
(CNS)
public service announcements for World Youth Day '93 in Denver have been
my
firmation of
I;
Figure Into
World Youth Day
from Ireland will join them. Singing her song for the youth of the world and pope is "the most beautiful gift" she's ever received, Dana
song for Youth Day
!
Big
sister
the
as
I"
God
Youth Day Song
>r
& Herald
The Catholic News
1993
some matebe inappropriate for chil-
strongly cautioned that
may
rial
to
dren under
do some record-
13.
ings," she said.
"We came
a great
is
be
g to
third
in-
bought a house."
DenYouth
the >rld
Irish-born singer, Dana's
sing for
"We Are One Body"
chosen theme song for World Youth Day 93 '
pe again,"
CNS
photo by Father John T. Igoe.
with
One
na said the lyrics in the
came
when
to her
title
of
she was
back from another U.S. youth I thought, why not evangeough song?" she said. r t are one body/ The body of
And
And we do te refrain.
have
not stand alone,"
"We
dy of Christ/ jht
a
is
Pope John Paul II.
me
ing are capsule reviews of movies re-
are one body/
And he came
The singer has
great
hope
for the
church today. Despite the "conspiracy of silence about the good that the Catholic Church is doing, we will rise above it," she said. "We are one body, one
body
Conference Office for Film and Broadcasting.
part in the daily routines of his
cently reviewed by the U.S. Catholic
"American Heart" Wrenching
come your Savior, that you life./ Thru many tears and / Thru much toil and strife/ Come lave
— Grace,
accompanymother; Ruth, 9; John James, 6; bert, 3. Her mother, brother and
liember of the choir
Carolina Catholic
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In our'Tith year of
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nostalgic in treat-
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mother and older siblings, but the period music and visually arresting images do not sustain what amounts to a slow-moving, highly personal reminiscence. Several racist references.
The
USCC classification is A-II — adults
and adolescents. The MPAA rating is
— parental guidance.
"Sofie" (Arrow) Slow but graceful story of a
close-
some rough language. The USCC clasadults. The MPAA sification is A-III
knit Jewish family in late 19th-century
rating
(Karen-Lise Mynster)
is
R—
—
restricted.
Copenhagen where
their only falls in
daughter love with
wooded lands along
Goofy spoof in which a love-scarred Marine (Charlie Sheen) heading a hostage-rescue mission in the Middle East stumbles upon an old flame (Valeria Golino) in the thick of the fray which turns into an assassination plot led by the numbskull U.S. president (Lloyd Bridges). Director Jim Abrahams' silly but scrappy sequel is a potluck grab bag of rapid-fire sight gags, spills, shootouts and visual jokes spoofing earlier movies.
Much comic
violence, a racy bed-
dutifully marries a dull,
seemingly pros-
perous Jewish merchant (Torben Zeller) to please her parents (Erland Josephson
and Ghita Norby) and preserve the family's Jewish heritage. Director Liv
Ullmann unfolds an episodic family
life,
tale
equal compassion, while focusing on the daughter's struggle to find happi-
ness within the confines of her parents'
world. Subtitles.
Some
sexual innu-
endo and a traumatic scene with nudity.
The
USCC
adults.
classification
Not rated by the
is
A-III
MPAA.
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treating each character with
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go
(20th Century Fox)
Denver with Dana will husband and agent, Damien
and their four children
is
a shattered relationship as well as the
"Hot Shots! Part Deux"
iveling to
-
movie
ing his Catholic childhood, loving
a gentile artist (Jesper Christensen) but
and daughters, I will heal your •ome receive my Spirit/ And be d again," says one verse,
.Monday
cal
ex-con (Jeff Bridges) painfully learns to care about his long-estranged teen-age son (Edward Furlong) while holding down a menial job and being pressured by his former partner in crime (Don Harvey) to pull a new heist. Director Martin Bell's gritty father-son drama captures the tough reality of rebuilding
s
it
(Triton)
which a paroled
violence, several sexual situations and
lave
Charlotte,
tale in
straight in an uncaring society. Brief
that
life."
1109
workingand neighbors. Writerdirector Terence Davies' autobiographiclass family
frustrations ex-cons face in trying to
in Christ."
(Sony Classics) Uneventful, impressionistic look at life in mid- 1 950s Liverpool through the eyes of an 11 -year-old lad as he takes
to
he is a conservative who is out of touch with young people," she said. "If that were so, how can this attraction by the huge crowds of young people to him be explained?"
"The Long Day Closes"
NEW YORK (CNS) — The follow-
hear criticism that
newspaper of the Birmingham "The invitation has not yet it me." lg
Dana
great admirer of "It hurts
d in an in'
the
time and
Ls
llookicre
122 X OakwoodDr., Twin Oaks Specialty Shops, Winston-Salem, NC 27103
—
"atholic
News
& Herald
June
All
contents copyright
©1993 by
4,
1993
CNS
mm
plllllli
r [ a
Goals families
can set and hope
lliili
CNS
to
The
achieve
thing for a family to do is to have a meal together at least once a week. The key word here is "together." For some families this may already be daily practice. Then count your blessings because for many others
By Father David Catholic
Two
my
K.
O'Rourke,
News
OP
Service
who
are not Catholic sometimes have a hard time coping with our Catholic clan. One of the things they usually agree on when the rules get rolled out for family dinners or weddings or anniversaries or even barbecues is that our Catholic family makes much of the way things of
in-laws
ought to be. As one of them puts it, "Catholics have more have-tos and got-tos than any people on this earth." And while we may joke about it, we all admit that it does contain some truth. We do have very real family expectations. That, I suspect, is because we have several generations of a large family living near one another. But for many families today the situation is different. Unlike our family, they reflect the mobility that is more typical of America. Their rela-
and the traditions and expectations have grown thin. Not only do they not have full sets of tives live in different areas,
life, they are having a hard time coming up with anything that a family can do together. Many people, I suspect, can relate to the recent comment of one of my parishioners: "The last thing I need is another great idea for the perfect fam-
rules for family
that we couldn't pull off in a million years. What I need is something simple that we can actually do." I would like to talk about three such things, simple things that a family can do,together, things that are actually possible. But today even the simple things require effort because society has individualized life today to a high degree. ily
first
it is
— from work to commuting to sports and leisure, games on the computer or watching TV — are usually tivities
individual activities. Start a conversation during someone's favorite TV program and you will find out what I
mean. Having a meal together means putting aside
my
individual activities in favor of family time. A meal with the television off, the headphones removed, the stereo way down, the eating arrangements set out as though someone cares, plus all the important expectations that this is not something we rush through as fast as we can in order to get to what we really want to do. This is something we have
work
family
...
...
—
—
—
still
— 1)
takes
much more it
effort
family
The sense that is
<i
worth it.
—2) The
realization
til
no lonj
living as a family
would."
takes
itself,
tha|
effort.
—3) The realization thsj
by the way, is probably one of the best gifts they can give their children. But here again, achieving this goals will require a little more time and planning than we often suspect. The third thing a family can do is to
takes much more effort than though it would. What I am talking about here ha do with being family -minded. Folk j my generation tend to take this granted. Anymore, we can't.
start thinking of themselves as a fam-
The family is central to our Chj tian faith, but in America that Chri I anity has been individualized. Toj ally be a family requires conscious j
This,
probably the toughest point of all, for our society does not look at life this way. Society tends to look at family members as individuals, and whether these individuals are related to each other or not is becoming less and less important. The other two goals I propose for families need to be supported by a familyily.
This
is
j
\
fort.
(Father O'Rourke
is
pastor of\
Dominic Church in Benicia, Ca\ and a free-lance writer.)
FOOD FOR THOUGHT "Strong families are not free of stress, conflict or crisis; rather they ... harnesi order to deal with problems," Bishop John McRaith o Owensboro, Ky., said in a recent pastoral letter.
their strengths in
at.
think parents can expect that younger children will suffer through this kind of family rite. But that does not mean they are not absorbing its values. If these meals together are to occur, however, it is important that in two-parent families the parents present a united front that they both support this goal. The second thing I suggest as a goal in families relates directly to the parents. At least once every three months the parents in four times a year two-parent homes should do something alone together. Whether that means going out to a movie or to dinner or doing something even more special if time and money permit, the parents need to remind themselves and each other-that their
is
as a than
realization that living
happens just by
If
I
relationship
the sense that our family
The
we thought
the patio during the summer months takes effort and planning. It takes effort and planning in advance because the majority of our ac-
to
it.
rare.
Having a meal together, no matter whether it is dinner during the week or Saturday lunch or Sunday brunch or hamburgers on
oriented attitude. What goes into this tude? I can think of three sential ingredients:
I
worth
Plf <
I
"Goals propose for families need to be supported by a family-oriented attitude
Photo byThe Crosiers/Gene
luck
he's on target with that thought,
when a strong
one might conclude that it isn't by chance o
family develops. Furthermore, strong families are not stress
sometimes such families even experience a crisis. Strong families "develop skills of cooperation and shared decision making they learn how to resolve conflict and they forgive one another," to use Bishoi McRaith's words. "Healthy families work hard to establish patterns of open, honest and carini communication," he believes. What goals might a family set, then, to grow stronger or healthier? A famil might lay out plans to: free institutions;
—Become more
skillful at
cooperation, less
enamored
of competition an<
winning.
—Learn
to resolve conflicts, not to run from
them
or feel hopeless because c
them.
—Share the work, power and burden making important decisions. refusing to lean upon resentments as a — Make forgiveness a of
in
crutch.
habit,
—Communicate
clearly
and honestly, realizing how often
disappointment or confusion grow 22
in
the
soil of
angeij
misunderstood words and
David Gibson, Editor, Faith
ide
Alive
counts.
I
The Catholic News
ne 4, 1993
& He;V
I
FAITH IN ACTION
Simple goals that make a difference at home when we work By Linda Allison-Lewis Catholic News Service
My
23-year-old son Christian was ked recently to do free-lance artwork r a diocesan publication. He must ive sensed that Mom, the writer, had mderful ideas for his newest project, is statement was, "Mom, please don't ve me your ideas until I've come up th my own." Hmmm, I thought. "Did I teach that d to talk that way?" My son asked honestly for the reect to create something in his own ly and the freedom to grow in his >rk
without
indie that,
Actually,
I
my interference. think.
he reminded
me
I
can
of three
family has managed to hieve despite many difficult and inful years. We focused on simple als that would make a big difference our lives and how we interacted th one another. Those difficult years taught each of respect, honesty that three goals are worth d the freedom to grow >rking toward, and each of us is hapjr when we practice them. It works als this
—
—
at
and
—
—
for ourselves feels the best.
the freedom to grow. This was the hardest goal for our family to achieve. Living with another's addictions caused each of us to develop a controlling nature, which stemmed from our own feelings about having no control over any part of our lives. To compensate for lack of control we each tried to "fix" the other person, and no one had the freedom to test his or her wings or think for himself or
Third
III.
your reasons for celebrating, for doing something out of the ordinary. Anything good news will do as a reason to rejoice with family and friends.
that's
—
Your decision to celebrate amidst everyday hassles and world a sign you still think good will win over evil, writes Ms. Durkin. Do you limit your celebrating to major holidays, wedding anniversaries and birthdays? Have you done anything special to celebrate a family member's raise, new job, school honors, recovery from illness, sports events? Reflection:
it.
Honesty. This is critical. We've learned that sometimes, in order to heal, honesty freely expressing our feelings is critical to us all. It may not always be easy to hear but it's worth the effort. Respect. This includes respect for each other's feelings, attitudes and boundaries. We've learned we can't live without boundaries. But we lived many years in an addictive home where "respect" and "boundaries" were non-existent words; each person, struggling with his or her own pain, fought merely to survive. Now that we've all "re-learned" the correct way to live, we agree wholeheartedly that respect for one another
—
Mary G. Durkin, author of Making Your Family Work (Thomas More Press, 205 60606-5097. 1988. Paperback, $10.95), says that W. Monroe St., Chicago, "every family needs celebration time" because "shared happiness cements family ties that are often strained by problems." She adds that you don't have to limit
is
herself.
The first dozen times we watched each other go in a
crises
—
is
Reviewing chosen goals for family By Father John Catholic
J.
News
Castelot
Service
Couples frequently select the Scriptural readings for their wedding cer-
emony. To make the choice, they have which ones they find appropriate and meaningful. to decide
The selections, then, reveal the couple's attitudes, their goals in marriage. If the readings are selected only after serious reflection, it undoubtedly will prove helpful if the couple returns to them from time to time after set-
down
tling
to life together. The might follow a pat-
couple's reflection
tern something like this: "These are the ideals we proclaimed
on our wedding day
—
choose, I'm certain
our publicly stated goals. How are we carrying out these goals? What can we do in practical ways to make these ideals realities, to secure our happiness?" One popular choice by couples is
we
Paul's
direction different
from one we would bit
our tongues
hymn to love in First Corinthians
trying desperately to let that indi-
There he enumerates the various qualities of love that can serve as ex-
vidual have the freedom to grow in his or her own way. There is an art to walking the fine line between discipline and allowing the freedom to grow. They are two completely differ-
cellent check-points in assessing the health of the relationship.
ent things. It wasn't easy to walk that
13.
"Love is patient, love is kind." Often people grow impatient at the strange little habits of others. Usually these are little things, but in the constant intimacy of life together they can seem big. How do people handle these irritants? With considerate patience and quiet humor, or with smoldering resentment that can burst eventually into a consuming blaze? Do we handle
life
the irritants with an openness that bespeaks maturity? "It Gove) is not rude, it does not seek its own interests," says Paul. Rudeness seems to be an ugly hallmark of a selfcentered society, and we all live in and are affected by this noxious atmosphere. Do we detect evidence of rudeness in our relationship, a rudeness that strangers might shrug off but which wounds deeply in terms of a shared existence and can leave permanent scars if not checked? Paul was not speaking of some mythical love but of down-to-earth hu-
man love.
A passage in Colossians serves as a thought-provoking reminder of the qualities that should characterize a happy Christian community, and the family is the basic community: "Put on then, as God's chosen ones, holy and beloved, heartfelt compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience, bearing with one another and forgiving one another, if one has a grievance against another; as the Lord has forgiven you, so must you also do. "And over all these put on love, that is, the bond of perfection. And let the peace of Christ control your hearts, the peace into which you were also called in one body" (Colossians 3:12-15). These are practical, necessary goals. But they must be kept always in view, and our relationships have to be evaluated in their light, honestly.
(Father Castelot
is
a Scripture
scholar, author and lecturer.)
fine line at first be-
cause I had all the answers or so I
—
thought.
Through their
"Those difficult years taught each of us that three goals
— respect
(for
each other's feelings, and boundaries), honesty and the freedom are worth to grow working toward."
attitudes
—
honesty my children helped me learn that they were entitled to enough respect to grow at their own pace even if that meant making mistakes and learning lessons from those mistakes. learned in this process that initiate the goals the kids fol-
I've also
when low
I
What action can a family undertake to
give
its
homelife a
new
direction?
—
not only "I have rediscovered the value of sharing meals together as a family dinner but breakfast.... We learn from each other.... can learn how better to help Cathleen Coyle, Crawfordsville, Ind. my children with their problems."
—
I
got involved in Al-Anon because of alcoholism in my family.... When even one in the family gets mentally and spiritually well, it helps the whole family. Change is very hard on people. Others in the family may not like the change. Carole McDowell, San Diego, Calif. Change is work." "I
person
—
suit.
The key to success here? As parents willing to work as hard toward goals as we expect our children to work. And as adults we continue to grow in the process, which means I will grow watching my son develop his
we must be
own ideas
for his
own artwork.
Just between you and me though, my son the artist would have loved the idea I had for his work! (Ms. Allison- Lewis is the mother of three children and the author of "Keeping Up Your Spirits Therapy," an elf
help book by Abbey Press.)
"I can ... try to deal with problems in a nonjudgmental and supportive way. The best way to do this is to start with my own spiritual condition and admit that need help from God in my daily life. My role is to manifest to my family that try to live by even when things are hard and there is misunderstanding." spiritual values Dave Millon, Pueblo, Colo. I
I
—
—
Pray together as a family. Get together in the evening and say an Say grace before meals. Ask your children how God is working in their lives and what they can be thankful for. Communication is so Madelyn Kimball, Naugatuck, Conn. important." "Start simply.
Our Father
together.
—
When do you feel that you are shown respect? respond for possible publication, please write: Faith 3211 Fourth St. N.E., Washington, D.C. 20017-1100.
An upcoming If
you would
Alivel
edition asks:
like to
;
be Catholic
News
& Herald
June
Vatican Post Gives Chance To A Difference, Flynn Says
Civil Rights Figure Cites
As Leaders Rosa (CNS)
Detroit Bishop, Priest
WASHINGTON Parks,
whose
—
refusal to give
Make
EAST RUTHERFORD,
(CNS)
up a Mont-
— The
N.J.
position of U.S. ambassa-
rights
dor to the Vatican offers a real opportunity for the United States to be a "voice
who
of conscience for social and economic justice" throughout the world, said the
gomery, Ala., bus seat sparked the
civil
movement, cited a Detroit bishop and a Detroit priest as two Catholics are carrying on the civil rights
struggle for a
new
man chosen by President Clinton to fill Mayor Raymond L. Flynn of
generation. She said
the priest,
that role.
Father Wil-
Boston said the ambassadorship repre-
1
m
a
i
sents an "extraordinary opportunity" for
most powerful country in the world and the most significant moral force to work together and "make a difference." This could be especially true, he said, in developing countries, where hunger, poverty and AIDS face the people every the
Cunningham, helps blacks
break
the
cycle of poverty at the organi-
he
zation
day.
co-founded,
Focus:
Rosa Parks
Anti-War Catonsville Nine Years Later Their TOWSON, Md. (CNS) hair has thinned and grayed; the lines on their faces have deepened. But the fires of faithful resistance burn on for the Catonsville Nine. Six of them came together recently to mark the 25th anniActivists Reunite 25
Hope. The bishop she named, Auxiliary Bishop Thomas J. Gumbleton of Detroit, has long been known for his activism in human rights and the peace movement. "These are two outstanding (Catholic) people that I know of," Mrs. Parks said in a telephone interview from Detroit, where she has lived since 1957. Sadly, she added, "there was none in Alabama" at the time of the Montgomery bus boy-
—
versary of a protest that rocked the country.
On May
17, 1968, nine
two of them
peace activburned 500
4,
1993
Donates Bone Marrow
Priest
WASHINGTON (CNS) — Thirtyone years ago, Msgr. Joaquin Bazan was ordained a priest and promised to give his life serving people.
Recently, he gave
life to
a dying
stranger in another part of the country,
donating bone marrow to a teen-ager
from leukemia. "This whole (Lenten and Easter) season has been blessed by God and has been a time of special blessing to me," said Msgr. Bazan, pastor of St. John suffering
Baptist de la Salle Parish in the
is
In a letter to the patient, whom does not know, Msgr. Bazan said peop] were praying for him or her in Cathol and Protestant churches and in syn gogues in his neighborhood and in states and six countries around the woi In a year,
if the
patient so desires,
two might meet. First,
though, comes survival. E
data from the donor program indie
In March, on Ash Wednesday, as he was donating blood platelets, Msgr. Bazan was told his bone marrow might match a seriously ill patient. Several weeks later as he was giving blood, he learned his marrow was indeed a perfect match for the patient, whose name and location have been kept confidential by the National Marrow Donor Program. The irony was that five days later Msgr. Bazan celebrated his 56th birthday. That age, he said,
across the country, where
same day it was transplanted into body of the young leukemia patii whose bone marrow had been remov
Wash-
Md.
ington suburb of Chillum,
room
when
that the chances for long-term disei
free survival vary
between 19 and
percent, depending on the severity of illness and the effectiveness of the mate!
In an interview with the Cathol Standard, Washington's archdioces;
newspaper, Msgr. Bazan said, "I thii the most important thing now is praye prayer for that youngster and his far
The priest knows the possibility "As a comm
tl
patient might not make it.
volun-
we do
nity,
we can
the best
with
t
teers'
technology we have today," Msgr. Baz.
marrow, Msgr. Bazan officiated at a wedding and
names are normally removed from the bone marrow registry, so the match was found with literally hours to spare. In May, on the morning he checked
Knights of Columbus hall in Catonsville, Md. As the fires ate at the files that could
into the hospital to donate his
have sent 500 young men into the Vietnam War, the group joined hands and
attended the reception.
F.
Steinfels, senior religion correspondent
said the Lord' s Prayer while they waited
inserted a large hollow needle into his
said. "Then you have to let go and God." Msgr. Bazan gives blood every fe months. "I knew as a priest I wou never have money, but as long as Gi gave me health, I would have blood give," he said. Since he started, Msgr. Bazan h
York Times, appealed in a
for the police to arrest them. Similar
pelvic bone to withdraw close to a quart
given nearly 17 gallons of blood, abc
Fordham University commencement address for Catholic universities to work
events were set off across the country by
of his bone marrow, which was then
and the ensuing federal trial, at which the nine were found guilty of willful injury to government property and willful interference with the draft.
delivered by a courier to an operating
10 times the amount of blood in human body.
ists,
draft files using
Selective Service office housed in the
cott of 1955.
Reporter Urges Catholic Colleges To Retain Religious Identitiy Peter NEW YORK (CNS)
—
The
for
New
priests,
homemade napalm at a
®
ily."
Early the next morning, surgeons
sc!
harder
at
tity. It is
their action
keeping their religious idenbeneficial for both the church
and society, he said May 22, to keep communities where scholars can more vigorously explore certain questions and pursue certain lines alive "intellectual
To give blood, anyone age 17 and older in good health weighing 110 pounds or more can call the American Red Cross at (800) 4483256. Anyone age 18-55 in good health can sign up for the bone marrow donor registry by calling the national donor program at (800) 627-
of thought in the context of a shared vocabulary and tradition." Steinfels said,
however, that Catholic identity had to emerge from the university itself, and could not be imposed by outside authority.
Pope Names U.S. VATICAN CITY (CNS)
Jesuit To Islands Post
— Pope
Majuro, capital of the Marshall Islari in 1983 and had been episcopal vicar the Marshall Islands since 1990 turns 48 on June 4. Father Gould's a pointment was announced at the Vatic May 25, the same day the Vatican e
John Paul II named a U.S. Jesuit who has worked in the Marshall Islands for the past 10 years to head the newly created Apostolic Prefecture of the Marshall Islands. Jesuit Father James C. Gould, a native of Johnson City, N.Y., was assigned to the Carroll Island mission in
7692.
t
y
tai
ill,
DCI
nounced the creation of the aposto prefecture.
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1993
The Catholic News
Vpnston-Salem Student Honored.
&H
Stewardship Questions And Answers Question:
How
can
we make our
fellow parishioners and our families
more
regularly aware of stewardship?
Answer: There
are many ways to make others more regularly aware of One simple way is through prayer. Following are two simple prayers that can be said at Mass (maybe once a month) and at home (maybe once a week):
stewardship.
Stewardship Prayer Lord God, You alone are the source of every good gift, of the vast array of our universe, and the mystery of each human life. We praise You and we thank You for Your great power and your tender faithful love. Everything we are and everything we have is Your gift, and after having created us You have given us into the keeping of Your Son, Jesus Christ. Fill our minds with His truth and our hearts with His love, that in His Spirit we may be bonded together into a community of faith, a parish family, a caring people. In the Name and Spirit of Jesus, we commit ourselves to be good stewards of the gifts
entrusted to us, to share our time, our talent and our material gifts as an outward sign of the treasure we hold in Jesus. Amen
Prayer For Generosity meaning of life consists in giving. You told us that those who cling too tightly to what they have without thought for You or others end up losing everything. You gave us new values by which to measure Lord Jesus, You came
to tell us that the
—
—
the worth of a person's life. Help us to realize it is not temporal success or riches or fame that gives life meaning. Rather it is the service rendered to You and others that brings fulfillment and makes Irian Brother Patrick Elllis, president of
The Catholic University of America JratulatesTawannaL. King of Winston-Salem for being named to Who's Who Among yus in American Universities aand Colleges. She graduated from CUA this spring |a
degree in computer science. She
ber of St. Benedict the versity of
Moor
is
the daughter of Willlie and Gloria
King and a (Photo from The Catholic
Parish in Winston-Salem.
America)
)pe Spoke Of Dangers At 1991 Dnsistory For New Cardinals /ATICAN CITY (CNS) — Like The pope remarks may have '
s at the Vatican, Pope John Paul II Shocked and distressed at the killif Mexican Cardinal Juan Jesus
Ocampo. But
Jas
the pontiff
was
aware of the risks run by today's ral leaders.
U
the consistory for the
Mexican
and 21 others in 1991, the pope )unced words that appear now as a letic warning. As he imposed red >n each of the prelates, he reminded of their responsibilities '"usque ad nal
effusionem'
linis
—
to the point of
your blood!" These are not merely conventional
ling
some of you know
s:
Their experience tie
is
that very
a warning to
said.
and
sisters to the point
of shedyour blood: this is the charge that is inly entrusted to
he told the
new
you
this
morn-
cardinals.
Maryfield Acres Retirement
Community Offers Peace of Mind Care Facility
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force: that their ministry is not only
Washington. The catechism shows a "powerful new understanding of the 'organic' connection between unjust social structures and the traditional Christian focus on
demanding,
can be life-threatening. Cardinal Posadas, archbishop of it
Guadalajara, was the third cardinal to die violently this century. In 1923 Span-
ility
said at a four-day national
workshop
Congo, was slain in tribal violence. Over the last 20 years, a number of bishops have also been killed. They include Archbishop Oscar Romero of San Salvador, who was slain by a Salvadoran death squad as he celebrated Mass 1989 Colombian Bishop Jesus Emilio Jaramillo Monsalve of Arauca was kidnapped and killed by guerrillas; and Bishop Salvatore Colombo of Mogadishu, Somalia, was gunned down by an assailant. The Church's missionaries have worked on the front lines in dangerous places, and many have paid with their lives. Vatican officials have pointed out that the risks seem to be increasing in In
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most popular
English translation
is
awaiting final expected to
Vatican approval and appear in print this fall.
lic social teaching should have been brought out more strongly.
Father Sloyan summarized his view of the catechism: "It is marvelously informative in some matters but woe-
is
"The catechism appears to be embarrassed by the study of the Bible of the
fully deficient in others;
last 200 years,"
Father Gerard S. Sloyan, a Scripture scholar and visiting profes-
cries out at
sor at Catholic University, said at a session May 25.
"In the short run, adaptations of it should be attempted only by people who
May
At another session
25 John
many
know
bishops' Secretariat for Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs, said the new catechism's treatment of other Chris-
the
tian churches
tion very soon."
erally
issue with other parts.
"One
set
of passages
is
simply ap-
text.
Aside from certain limited referNew Testament times, he said, "the word 'pagan' and its cognates should simply not be used... Pagan carries too much derogatory meaning and violates the spirit of the Second Vatican ences in
It
use
book for use as it stands because of uneven quality of its treatments. In
able
brief,
requires a second, revised edi-
it
In Father Sloyan' s view, the cat-
echism fails to explain adequately the dynamic interrelationship of Scripture and tradition in Catholic belief. "Often the status of a received tradition like the doctrine of purgatory or Jesus' descent into the nether world will
be furnished with biblical texts that do See Catechism, Pagte 16
Germany
(From Page
3)
About 160 people from across the country, including religious education
directors,
pastors,
theologians,
catechetical writers and publishers
—
from the East, who strongly opposed giving up abortion on demand. However, before the law was entary deputies
acted, a majority of Christian
Employment Opportunities
Send resume to: Rev. Jim O'Neill, OSFS, Horse Pen Creek Road, Greensboro, NC 27410.
St.
Paul the Apostle Parish, 2715
Demo-
and the state government in predominantly Catholic Bavaria challenged crats
it
Director of Religious Education: Full-time position to work with Youth Minister and other staff members. Well-organized program with enthusiastic and dedicated catechists. This 1,150-family parish is excited about new building and the various optional programs. Salary commensurate with experience, education and diocesan policy.
its
as much theology as the authors cannot be promoted as a depend-
do.
and other religions is gensolid and positive. But he took
hence
points for nuance,
supplementation and correction.
Borelli, associate director of the U.S.
Council."
-800-446-0945 -800-334- 139
— appar— Spanish. The
in the translations in Italian or
ently the
At the same time he cited several areas in which he thought Catho-
Own Home.
Get Acquainted!
The catechism, approved last year by Pope John Paul II, could be seen on various desks around the workshop auditorium in its original French edition or
references to pagans or paganism in the
loor Plans Available or Build
Let's
tion.
26.
guaranteed.
Your
ducted by Catholic University's department of religion and religious educa-
in
palling," Borelli said, citing repeated
recent years.
—
New Zealand May 23- 26 workshop con-
and a bishop from attended the
of Scripture, speakers
May
nursing
and recuperation care are
in its use
was murdered by anarchists, and in 1 974
Clinton, florth Carolina
to
weak
Cardinal Emile Biayende of Brazzaville,
Transportation
admission
is
personal sin," Catholic University of America theologian James Nash said
ish Cardinal Juan Soldevilla of Zaragoza
N.C.
riority
WASHINGTON (CNS)— The new Catechism of the Catholic Church contributes to Catholic social teaching but
Laundry Services •
™v
aw nism Said Good On Social Catechism ^ ^ Teach 'ng. Weak In Scripture Use
some as exaggerated at the time, but it is a point he has occasionally made to others in the Church's pastoral work
Delicious Dining
Maid, Maintenance
&
struck
in 1980.
To serve and give your life for your ers
s
our lives worthwhile. all our activity help build God's kingdom: our obedience bring true freedom, our generosity increase love, our sacrifice bear generous fruit, our death led to eternal life.
May
in the
In
supreme May 28
ruling, the court ruled
German
constitution's protec-
its
that the
court.
tion for all life included
unborn
life.
The
court barred health plans from paying for abortions or state hospitals from
performing them.
r
e Catholic
News
& Herald
June
4,
H
'Qpmtmiqwemonoj Apreciamos
A
Los Voluntaries
MARIA LEFEBER Maria fue una de las primeras mujeres hispanas presentes al comenzarse a celebrar las liturgias en espanol en la iglesia Immaculate Conception en Hendersonville. Maria procede de Madrid, Espana y ha pertenecido a esta parroquia por 29 anos. Su esposo es holandes y tienen tres hijos. Maria es lectora y ministro de la Eucaristia. Ella sirve con mucho fervor y le agradecemos cuanto hace por la comunidad.
Pentecostes La fiesta que acabamos de
ESTER MARTIN Y FRAY BOB KASCHAK, OFMCap Ester Martin, joven espanola de 14 anos de edad, procedente de Barcelona, pertenece a un programa de intercambio, por medio del cual ella puede vivir con una familia americana por un ano y asf aprender el ingles mucho mejor. La
hispana de Immaculate Conception, Hendersonville. El Padre Allen Dec, OFMCap, siente que Ester ha de marcharse para regresar a su pais en el mes de julio. Ella llevara buenos recuerdos nuestros y contara con nuestras
familia Sherrill hospeda a Ester con
oraciones. Fray
una joven encantadora y muy servicial. Ester ha aportado su tiempo y talento musical para animar las liturgias de la comunidad
con Ester. Este fraile Franciscano Capuchino alegre con su musica muchas
gusto, ya que se trata de
Bob tambien comparte
su talento musical tocando la guitarra
celebrar
llenarse del Espiritu Santo. Nosotro
de pascua, de los misterios del sacrificio de la muerte del Sehor, de su victoria en la resurrection. Todo esto sucedio para que el Espiritu de Dios" fuera nuestra herencia. Todos estos acontecimientos tenfan un unico fin: reconciliar la tierra y la humanidad y entregar a Dios un mundo reconciliado. Porque Jesus ha muerte segun la carne, por eso puede desde ahora el ser humano vivir la vida del Dios eternoa ha llegado; esta aquf vive entre nosotros; nos santifica; nos fortalece; nos consuela; es la prenda de la vida eterna y las arras de la victoria
bautizados desde pequenos, ere
;
en
liturgias
la parroquia.
total.
El centro de toda realidad, el mas mtimo corazon de toda infinitud, el mor del Espiritu de Dios, ha llegado a ser
En nuestra nada vive ya verdadera realidad; en nuestra
nuestro centro. la
debilidad, la fuerza de Dios; en nuestra
Dios es mensaje de
mortalidad, la vida eterna.
nuestro Dios.
Este es
el
Pentecostes.
^,Ha
mensaje mas profundo de nuestro
penetrado este
maravilloso lo
corazon? ^Somos suficientemente humildes para recibir este regalo, que es el mismo Dios? ^Sentimos la posesion del Espiritu de Dios? Pues la mayorfa diremos como el hombre del Evangelio: "Creo, pero ayuda mi poca fe" (Mc.
Tambien con los nuevos 9,24). bautizados, despues de. que Pedro
LA FAMILIA TORRES Jose y su esposa Celia han estado en Hendersonville desde hace cuatro anos
importantes de preparation antes de
la
madre canta en el coro, el joven la Palabra de Dios y el mas pequeno
Misa,
la
Pedro y cambieron de vida totalmen
este ano, Pentecostes, es la consumacion
con
la
posesion del
mismo Espmtul
Dios, que sopla donde quiere y soli< suave y pacientemente nuestro an|
respetando
la libertad
humana.
El Espiritu Santo nos da la verda(
nos dejamos llevar y gi segun sus inspiraciones (2 Cor. 3, nos santifica (Rom. 5,5), nos hace templo (I Cor. 6,19), reza dentro nosotros con suspiros inenarrat (Rom. 8,15), nos consuela y fortal( anima, sana y ayuda nuestra debilic habla por nosotros poniendo las palal adecuadas, nos regala con sus doi nos purifica de nuestros pecac enciende en nosotros el amor div nos da la verdadera paz y alegria inte: nos recuerda las palabras de Cristo, impulsa hacia el bien y hacia la acc apostolica, nos ensena e ilumina, muestra su poder, renueva y convi cada dfa (recomendamos la lecture Juan 15, 26-27 y el capftulo 16/ la c de San Pablo a los Romanos, capftu y los Hechos de los Apostoles, 2 el de Pentecostes y los acontecimienti conversiones que sncedieron desj descritos en los capftulos siguiente Conversion diaria requiere ped Espiritu: "Ven, Espiritu Santo, Hem corazones de tus fieles; enciende ellos la llama de tu Amor. Envf; libertad, si
Espiritu y seran creados.
pronuncio su primer sermon de Pentecostes, podemos exclamar: "<<,Que tenemos que hacer?" (Hechos 2,37). La
faz de la tierra.
Y renovar;
Oh, Dios, que, iluminado los corazones de tus hijos la luz del Espiritu Santo: haznos doc
con sus hijos Jose Irvyn, 16 y Keyvin Jose de 1 0 anos. Agradecemos el valioso
lee
respuesta es nueva conversion cada dfa.
a tu Espiritu, para gustar siempre
acolito. jLa familia
Aquellos primeros cristianos se
y gozar de su consuelo. Por
aporte de cada uno sirviendo en la liturgia dominical de la comunidad hispana de Immaculate Conception. El padre ayuda en la organizacion de los detalles
Torres es una "torre" de dedicacion!
convirtieron al escuchar las palabras de
nuestro Senor.
Noticias Diocesanas
Esta es una el habla espanol. Inform maravillosa en su vida. (Guilford County Coalition on In
sirve
en
el altar
de
el
1
Jesucri
Amen.
Apreciamos mucho a estos voluntarios de
la parroquia.
Instituto
Para Formar Catequistas
Excelente programa en ingles, que se ofrecera en el centro de conferencias de la diocesis en Hickory, NC, del sabado
GINA KEMPTON Gina es de Cuba originalmente, pero ha estado en los Estados Unidos desde hace muchos anos. Con su esposo Phil
domingo 27, 1993. Para mas informacion, pueden llamar al
y sus hijos, Melissa y
1281.
P.J. pertenecen a de Immaculate Conception en Hendersonville, ciudad montanosa del oeste de Carolina del Norte. Gina trabaja
26 de junio
al
Centro Catolico Hispano, (704) 335-
Mortality).
Reclamar Anillo Se encontro un anillo dentro c comunidad hispam Charlotte hace varias semanas. Llai la Hna. Pilar, (704) 335-1281. colecta de la
la iglesia
como
voluntaria con la
comunidad
hispana de la parroquia. Gracias a
ella,
tenemos un programa regular de Formation de Fe para preparar a los ninos a recibir el sacramento de la Eucaristia. Todos admiran su fidelidad y dedicacion, ofreciendo un buen ejemplo que anima a los demas.
Apoyo El embarazo es
muy
importante,
dele el mejos coniemzo a su bebe con la
ayuda de: "Apoyo". Si usted esta embarazada y no liable ingles jNo Esta Sola! Esta es su oportunidad de obtener
mas informacion totalmente gratis sobre: su salud durante el embarazo, el parto, la lactancia y el cuidado del bebe.
inmediatamente
al
Llame
(919) 373-3130. Se
Trabajos Busca a una persona respons para cuidar a nina y hacer tra domestico. Necesita hablar un p ingles. Llamar a Russ al tel. (704) 8094 en Charlotte. Desea cuidar a ninos en su hog de Sugar Creek, Charl zona la '
comunicarse con Juana, 7974.
tel.
(704)
1
tiD
The Catholic News
1993
venth Annual
remiere
& Heraki
CRISM Picnic
CRISM
Event Draws Retirees Across Diocese HICKORY -- Nearly 300 people from across the Diocese of Charlotte converged at the Catholic Conference Center May 26 for the Seventh Annual CRISM picnic.
The
CRISM, tries,
picnic
is
the "premiere event" of the year for
Catholic Retirees Invited
said Rachel Greene,
To
Special Minis-
CRISM coordinator.
There was a bittersweet note to this year's picnic, however. Greene bid a fond farewell and introduced her successor, Suzanne Bach. Greene
is
study hospital chaplaincy. Bach has been active in the
Divorced, Separated and
Widowed
^^^^
A'
\
:'A
leaving to
Ministry for the
i
i
diocese.
Two of a
"cane," Retired Bishop Michael
with Loretta applause /
Sister Celeste
>boro,
won
was double lucky, winning a 50/50
Damron of Charlotte.
Begley chats
the picnic, the bishop celebrated the 59th
anniversary of his ordination. Mrs. McCormick,
Donoghue of St. Pius Tenth,
award for "the oldest person (The award wasn't given this year.)
last year's
picnic."
g for $65 and a flag donated and made by th
at
J.
McCormick of Hickory. To a round of
now 92,
to attend the
Fun and games notwithstanding, Bingo is serious business for John Heavern of Charlotte.
Raymond Murphy of Concord gets his blood pressure checked by Jeff Walker, RN.
Tom Moran and Deacon Joe Garavaglia of Hickory Photos by
Rachel Greene,
CAROL HAZARD
CRISM coordinator,
shares a light
Morovich of Lexington. Morovich and Grimminger of Sherril's Ford in the beautiful chapel he built on the Catholic |°'erence Center grounds. Both the Ava Maria chapel and a waterfall and waterwheel Jilt in front of the chapel were main attractions for picnic goers.
tickets at the picnic.
moment
with
Ed
his wife, Margaret, sold raffle
he Catholic
News
& Herald
June
4,
Diocesan News Briefs OWLS Club CHARLOTTE
Couples Workshop
OWLS
The
--
STATES VILLE
—
the
(Older, Wiser and Livelier Seniors) June
Apostle Church
6 meeting will be in St. Gabriel's Community Center Cafeteria at 1 1 a.m. The meeting will be followed by a half hour guided tour of the center and a brown bag lunch with cake, coffee and ice tea
for married couples interested in enrich-
1
in the
new
Dessert
picnic bench area.
And Fashion Show
DENVER
— The Second Annual
Dessert and Fashion
Show sponsored
Them In Parables," at St. Gabriel Church 19-23 from 9 a.m. to noon.
July
Babysitting
is
Cost
and 27 and July 1 1 and 1 8 from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Cost is $35 For more information and registration, call Tina, (704) 8722579 from 9 a.m.-4 p.m.
call the Faith
.
Saturday Devotion
BELMONT — The First Saturday
Belmont Abbey is SaturThe rosary is at 9:30 a.m., confessions at 10:45 a.m. and Mass at Devotion
at
day, June 5.
entertainment.
of Charlotte
1 1
:30 a.m. Bring a chair, since the devo-
be outside, weather permitting. For more information, call Terri or Phil at (704) 568-5118.
at
Natural Family Planning
SHELBY — Natural Family!
(704)
ning, a fertility awareness techi
Mary Church!
will be taught at St.
Womens' Day Of Prayer
VALE — The Mary vale Sisters are
sponsoring a Womens'
The day
designed for
is
parish hall.
all
women.
The
Sunday, June 6
Day of Prayer at
the convent June 26 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
of four
first
at 3
sessi
p.m.
To register, call Frieda Ashwi (704) 484-0997.
If
you have children, bring them along. The sisters will care for them in the day
Guadalupe Pilgrimage
care center they run.
the experience of a life! Coi
The suggested donation
is
$30 per
woman and $10
per child. Snacks and lunch will be provided. To register, write to The
CHARLOTTE — Catholic Singles
Formation Office
784-8402.
tion will
Catholic Singles
is
For registration forms, call I William Pentis at the Oratory o minique May at (704) 825-9244.
offered.
$20. For registration forms,
ing their communication skills June 20
by the Ladies Guild of Holy Spirit Catholic Church is Thursday June 1 0 at 7 p.m. in the church hall. Fashions and show coordination will be provided by Page Collectables of Terrell. There will be male and female models. Hair styling will be provided by Hair Advantage. In addition to refreshments, there will be door prizes and ,
hosting a workshop
is
"He Taught
a five-day parable series, St. Philip
Vale,
Mary vale Sisters, Rt. 1 Box 1 64, N.C. 28168. Or call (704) 276,
GUADALUPE, MEXICO! Guadalupe, Mexico Oct. 1-6 on grimage sponsored by St. Mary CI Sylva. Father James Cahill will tour chaplain.
Cost
is
$975. For informatio
Mary church office, (704) 586
2626.
St.
spiritual
Job Support Group
Inner Child Healing
Group meets Thursdays from 5:30 p.m.at St. Joseph's House. If you need
ing the Child Within" is being offi
more information, call Carole, (704) 542-
7 p.m.
the Catholic Conference Center
Married Couples Retreat ROCK HILL, S.C. A weekend
9900.
assistance with job search methods, tech-
11.
married couples will be presented July 23, 24 at the Oratory by
Caregiver Support Group CHARLOTTE— The Selwyn LIFE
niques or resume development, call Kathleen Martinek, (919)275-3605.
Cost is $141.50 for a double pancy room, $161.50 for single
Hugo and Bobbie May. The
Center at Mercy is sponsoring Caregiver of Older Adults Support Groups open to anyone who is caring for an aging parent, spouse or other family member. One group will meet Tuesday, June 8 from 10 a.m. to 1 1:30 a.m. at Mercy
Tickets are $5. All proceeds will benefit the kitchen fund. For more infor-
mation, call Marie Lisi, (704) 896-7735.
—
retreat for
retreat is
designed to help couples discover the hidden value of their partners. Cost is $1 10 per couple and includes room and board. Registration deadline register,
is
July 7.
To
send a $50 non-refundable de-
Bobbie May, 5617 Clearlake Hickory, N.C. 28601. For more
posit to Dr.,
II is a social, service and group for men and women separated, divorced, widowed and never married from ages 30 to 50 plus. For
Hospital in private dining room #2, and continue meeting every second and fourth Tuesday. The second group will meet Monday, June 14from5:30p.m.to
GREENSBORO — A Job Support
pancy.
Volleyball
Camp
for rising 5th-9th grade girls will be July
12-16 from 9 a.m.-l p.m. at St. Ann's. For information, call Bettie Berry, (704) 372-8310.
The Catholic News & Heral comes parish newsfor the diocese briefs.
Hurting Marriage Ministry CHARLOTTE Looking
—
way
for a
7 p.m. and continue meeting every sec-
ond and fourth Monday
ing to the Charlotte Diocese. If
Happy Timers
LIFE Center at Mercy Hospital. For more information, call the Selwyn LIFE Center at (704) 379-5005.
St.
Ann's
are sponsoring a lasagna
dinner June 4 from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. to
money for an elevator needed new parish activity center. Cost is
at the
Selwyn
for the
$5 for adults and $3 for children under 12.
Adoration
EDEN
—
In preparation for the
Eucharistic Congress,
St.
Joseph of the
Hills is having Adoration of the Blessed
CPR Class CHARLOTTE — Mercy Maternity
Center is sponsoring an Infant and Toddler CPR Class on Saturday, June 12 from 8 a.m. to noon. The class is for new parents, babysitters, grandparents and anyone interested in being prepared for poten-
p.m. to 9 p.m.
education center in the
The
Mercy Medical Mercy Hospital South at Park Road and Highway 51 in Pineville. Park
Dloceean Events "It's A Wonderful World" Waters, Maggie Valley
June 7-13 Living Sr.
Jane Schmenk, OSF
(704)
June & MACS Elementary Graduations All schools, various times Dr. Michael Skube (704) 331-1715 June 14-20 "Grandeur of God" Living Waters, Maggie Valley Sr. Jane Schmenk, OSF (704) 926-3533 June 15 Catholic Social Services board Meeting Catholic Conference Center,
6:00 pm
Sr. Francis Sheridan,
MSE3T
(704) 331-1720
June 20-27 Directed Retreat Living Waters, Maggie Valley Sr. Jane Schmenk, OSF (704) 926-3633 June 20 Living Sr.
July
Jane Schmenk, OSF
(704)
beth
926-3S33
Thomas
at
J
submit news releases and photos t 10 days before date of publicatu
M f™
(704) 875-1535.
CHARLOTTE
— An information
meeting at Charlotte Catholic High School for people interested in Lim-Ex is Saturday, June 12 at 10:30 a.m. LimEx is an educational program facilitated through Loyola University of New Orleans. The course may be taken for masters
FOUR GREAT NAMES
degrees in religious education or
more information,
call
Barbara Martin,
to
KNOW
(704) 847-0178.
at
Cost is $ 10 for pre-registration, $15 at the door. For information and registration, call (704) 543-2309.
Parable Series
CHARLOTTE
— Susan Brady, a
Oratory Religion Camp ROCK HILL, S.C. Registration
—
being taken for the Oratory Religions Camp for girls and boys in grades 1-6. Two sessions are offered: July 11-17
MITSUBIS
is
and July 18-24. Cost
is
MITSUBISHI
6951
E.
Independent!,
531-3131
$85 for each
session.
7001 E.Endepend«
5354444
IMAGINE MUSIC BEAUTIFULLY PLAYED AT EVERY MASS, SPECIAL SERVICE OR GATHERING. YOUR SELECTIONS OF MUSIC OF THE CATHOLIC FAITH PLAYED ON ORGAN OR ELECTRONIC KEYBOARD BY THE AMAZING SYNTHIA, ALL AT THE TOUCH OF A BUTTON.
CALL TODAY FOR A DEMONSTRATION IN YOUR CHURCH. 1003
4
Practicum Waters, Maggie Valley -
photographs, prej
director of Faith Formation, will present
926-3S33
Hickory,
class will be in the maternity
*
you are
pastoral studies or for a certificate. For
threatening situations.
tial life
j
interested in serving, call Scott or Eliza-
Toddler
Infant,
Sacrament Saturday, June 1 2, The Feast of the Body and Blood of Christ, from 7
Upcoming
to
Educational Program
help raise
Good
black and white, are welcome.
Lasagna Dinner
CHARLOTTE — The
It
Registration is needed by Ju For more information, call Bobbw (704) 327-8692.
CHARLOTTE— Volleyball Camp
become involved? Retrouvaille, a ministry for hurting marriages is com-
information, call (704) 327-8692.
I
HICKORY — A retreat on
4100E.lndependei
5354455
J
THE
DEALERSHIPS K
WHERE YOU ALWAYS GET YOUR MONEY'S WOR
PECAN AVE.
CHARLOTTE, NC 28205
HJusie^ Electron ics, Inc.
HYUIIDP
375-8108 1-800-331-0768 (704)
F.J. LaPointe,
Member of
President
St. Gabriel's
J
& Hei.
The Catholic News
e4, 1993
World and National Briefs Condemns Pro-Abortion For Church Vandalism BOSTON (CNS) An auxiliary
hop
ivists
—
lop of the
Boston Archdiocese has
jounced "unknown pro-abortion acfor vandalism at five local
NCCB Officials Charge Deception In
Freedom Of Choice Act
WASHINGTON
(CNS)
—
Two
Catholic pro-life officials have charged supporters of the Freedom of Choice
in the
Act with deception, saying the bill in its current form would do more than codify the Supreme Court' s 1 973 Roe vs. Wade
of church or parish hall doors "by
decision permitting abortion virtually
;ons attempting to protest and/or in-
on demand. "Hiding behind the slogan of 'codifying Roe' is neither accurate nor responsible," said Helen Alvare, director of planning and information for the National Conference of Catholic Bishops' Secretariat for Pro-Life Activities. Gail Quinn, executive director
jsts"
month. In each of
(rches in the past
incidents, glue i|:s
was placed
xe with peaceful pro- life gather-
Bishop Alfred C.
said Auxiliary
,"
;hes in a ;ed that
May 20 statement. "It is sad some pro-abortion
forces in
communities are so intolerant that wish to abridge the rights of free ;ch, peaceful free assembly and reliis practice in order to advance their jram of destruction of the lives of the orn," he added.
of the pro-life secretariat, said in a 8 letter to
Jesuit Apologizes
Missionaries Past Mistakes Idaho (CNS) During sit to a historic Indian mission in met, the superior general of the Jeapologized to Native Americans 3ast mistakes made by missionaries
—
Father Peter-Hans venbach said he wanted to join other *ious leaders who have publicly acwledged insensitivity by the church ard tribal customs, language and ituality. "I want to take this moment order.
my
voice to theirs," Father venbach said May 1 6 at Sacred Heart sion on the Coeur d'Alene Indian srvation. "The Society of Jesus is
ldd
y for the mistakes
it
this deceptively
designed to do."
bill is
To Indians
DESMET,
his
what
"to admit exactly
named id
May
House Judiciary Committee members it was time for FOCA backers 1
made in the
has
Church Opposes New Assisted Suicide Group In Washington State
SEATTLE (CNS) pro-life groups in
—
Church and Washington state are
Pope John Paul II is scheduled to visit the St. Malo Retreat Center Aug. 13 during his visit for World Youth Day. The center is nestled in the mountains of Estes Park,
U.S.
(CNS Photo)
Colo., outside Denver.
New Catechism Analyzed At Catholic University
Says Abortion
But Congress
l,
Is
In Health
May Omit It
WASHINGTON (CNS) — The nahealth care reform proposal exed in June will include some cover-
al
"Catechism of the Catholic Church" is a
known
progressively paralyzing her. She can
replacement for current religious education texts, scholars said at a national workshop on the catechism. Father Peter C. Phan, chairman of the theology
no longer walk, has trouble swallowing and will soon be unable to breathe on her own. Doctors have given her one to 13 months to live and say she will probably choke to death.
ington State Catholic Conference, said
she opposed the new "Compassion in Dying" group on both moral and soci-
grounds. "Is not dying the process of our humanity ?" she asked. "From a moral etal
perspective, this
(we
a violation of what
is
believe), that if
God has
given
life,
God also has the option" on when to take it.
Court Agrees To Hear Military Protesters' Appeal WASHINGTON (CNS) The Supreme Court has agreed to hear an appeal by three peace activists, includ-
—
ing a Catholic priest,
who contend
a
himself from their
the Congress votes," he said
t
;d
on
when
on MTV News if the proposal will
;r
abortions.
"My
position
is this,
services that are traditionally covin private health insurance policies
be covered in the government's cage. "And some, but not all, aborservices are traditionally covered in ate health insurance packages," he lid
"And since they are traditionally should be. Now, Congress may take it out. That will
ed.
ered, I think they
1990 protest. Maryknoll Father Roy Bourgeois of Lutcher, La., and brothers John Patrick Liteky of Baltimore and Charles Liteky of Washington were convicted of trespassing and criminal destruction for pouring blood in a corridor at the School of the Americas at Fort Benning, Ga. The three were protesting the fact the school trains soldiers from Central and South America. They staged their action on the first anniversary of the murder of six Jesuit priests, their housekeeper and trial
for a
her daughter in El Salvador.
department of The Catholic University of America in Washington, gave the catechism mixed reviews from a theological standpoint. He suggested that the best part of the lengthy text, expected to run about 600 pages in its at the
end, "If
you come across anyone inclined to read the whole catechism, tell them to read the fourth part first," he said. Argentine Prelate Says Church Needs
To lic
Intensify Anti-Drug Efforts
NEW YORK (CNS) — The Catho-
Church needs
to intensify
its
efforts
drug problem, said Cardinal Antonio Quarracino of Buenos Aires, Argentina, in an interview May 25 in New York. "We must create awareness of the seriousness of the (drug) problem," the cardinal said. His comments came in reaction to the killing a day earlier of Cardinal Juan Jesus Posadas Ocampo of Guadalajara, Mexico, in what was thought to be a to confront the
drug-related shootout.
WASHINGTON
(CNS)
—
If the
ship around the world would be poorer because of it, said an international panel of English-speaking bishops. In most of
HORIZONS OF THE SPIRIT:
16,
1993
on the world of Spirituality, spiritual classics, issues of Knan formation and the theory and practice of spiritual direction. Faculty is ccomposed ^persons from the Institute of Formative Spirituality and The Oratory. This year, P'fessor Carolyn Gratton, PhD, of Duquesne University will lecture on "The Art of :h
year courses are offered
Kritual
Guidance" and Father Carl Arico of Contemplative Outreach, Ltd.,
^'Centering Prayer:
F"
more information
Key
to the Gift of
write:
Contemplative Prayer."
Horizons of the
Spirit
The Oratory
Box 11586 Rock Hill. SC 29731
P.O.
disease that
is
—
in the Philippines
who have married said
they want back into the active ministry
and the Latin-rite rule of celibacy made optional. At a meeting in Cebu City May 15-16, 36 of the married priests in the country cited a shortage of priests and their own desire to serve the church to back their campaign for reinstatement, UCA News, a Thailand-based Asia church news agency, reported. The group also agreed to form a support group for married priests and their wives and children.
Carmelites Are Moving Out
Of Auschwitz Convent
—
WARSAW, Poland (CNS) The Carmelite occupants of the controversial convent at the former Nazi concencamp
of Auschwitz have begun
spokesman from the convent that sparked worldwide Jewish protest have transferred to a newly opened interfaith center nearby, said Father Marek Glownia, the center's curator. "The Carmelite convent is now a Polish church
Five of the 14
sisters
functioning at the center, and at this
moment five sisters have moved in," he "The remaining
have
their countries, they said, inclusive lan-
said.
guage is a growing concern that has to be addressed in liturgical texts. The Asian and African delegates said inclusive language is not as important in their countries, however. The bishops see progress
the end of June to vacate the old the-
sisters
until
which houses the Auschwitz conThe building had been a storehouse for Zyklon-B, the gas used to kill Auschwitz prisoners. ater,"
vent.
in adapting the liturgy to local cultures
AND SPIRITUAL DIRECTION Monday, July 12 - Friday, July
Lou Gehrig's
commonly
Married Priests In Philippines Seek Renewal Of Ministry CEBU CITY, Philippines (CNS) About a third of the estimated 1 00 priests
said.
the Liturgy didn't exist, Catholic wor-
WORKSHOP ON SPIRITUALITY
as
moving out,
International Commission on English in
THE ORATORY
incurable nervous disorder
tration
English-Speaking Bishops Call Liturgy Commission Essential
he fight we'll have."
A
from an
resource book or reference work, not a
excluded by Congress, President 20. "It depends
suffers
vows to help terminally ill persons commit suicide. Dominican Sister Sharon Park, associate director of the Washthat
federal judge should have disqualified
May
Sue Rodriguez, 42,
WASHINGTON (CNS) — The new
of abortions but such coverage might
iton said
ful.
opposing a new nonprofit organization
English version, comes iton
before her condition becomes too pain-
Workshop
will
from thorough use of native music and dance in South Africa to numerous changes in gesture, posture and liturgical furnishings in India, where priest and people typically sit on the ground during
Mass with
their
footwear
re-
moved.
Supports
Vance-Owen Peace Plan
VATICAN CITY
(CNS)
Dying Canadian Woman Fights For Right For To End Her Life OTTAWA (CNS) Canada's Supreme Court is studying the appeal of a
—
ill
woman
to grant a doctor
permission to help her commit suicide
— The
Vatican fully supports the Vance-Owen peace plan for Bosnia-Herzegovina as the only current proposal likely to stop
the fighting there, said Cardinal
speak
terminally
Official Says Vatican
Angelo
Sodano, Vatican secretary of state. "It's the only plan on the table. The others don't seem to be reasonable plans, acceptable to the parties involved," Cardinal
Sodano told reporters
May
26.
at the
Vatican
s
.
June
Ordain
Crusader Corner By
When I was 5
FRANK MERCOGLIANO
met a little kid that I became friends with. Our parents were good friends or something like that, and we used to play in the pool at the Biltmore Beach Club in Massapequa, N.Y. The kid's name was Joe Corigliano. I guess you can see why we were friends. Over the next 12 years, we became best friends. We were teammates on the first little league team I ever played on. We even had a kid on that team named Sal Vitigliano. Go figure. years old,
I
In those formative high school years,
we spent every Friday game called Brisk,
night playing an obscure Italian card
which is too difficult to explain other than 3 s were good, 4' were bad and there were no 10's. But every summer, and I mean every summer for 12 years, we played paddleball at the Biltmore Beach Club. Paddleball is racquefball with only one wall, and it is just a huge '
summer game in New York. When we were really young, we only played
during the
week, because on the weekends all the adults would come out and take the courts. We kids would get really ticked about that, and
we couldn't wait to get bigger to beat the tar out of the adults in "their
When Joe and I turned into teens, we decide to challenge the adults. We did, and we won. We won a lot. We became a big doubles team; Joe the consistent right side player who was very fundamental, and me, the left side player who didn't mind diving for a ball, even if we played on concrete.
We talked of owning the courts slamming paddleballs all decided to This,
move
Frank and Joe, 50 years old and still over the Beach Club. But it wasn't meant to be. My family forever.
in 1987.
my friends, was devastating. We couldn't move.
my girl I didn't care about the New could
I
still
date
was in Florida, but couldn't play paddleball. York inflation or the taxes, the team was gone. Frank and Joe, RIP 1987. So I finished high school in Florida, then I went to college at Pembroke State, and now I work here at Belmont Abbey. But in those six years since I moved, I had only kept in touch with the girl I was dating when I moved, Jennifer (we broke up in 1987. How that hurts when you're only 18). I never talked with anyone else from friend if I
â&#x20AC;&#x201D;
Massapequa. Jen and I have talked generally twice a year until recently, but I for some reason have never talked with Joe. I couldn't really give a logical explanation as to why. I knew his phone number. I knew his address. I just didn't do it. So last Monday, I did His
little
brother answered. Well, he was
19 now. Joe sounded so different,
I
little
when I remembered him, but he' make sure it was him.
kept checking to
"As a convert,
said.
I
am
particularly
aware of what a great gift the Catholic faith is ... and I felt a need to dedicate myself in a special way to the Church's mission of spreading the Gospel and
making
the love of Jesus Christ
known
Valentine's conversion led to his
"Yeahhhhh..." was his reply in that "who's "23 years old right? (Silence) Joe, right"
"Who
this
read
the books his son
all
at Saint Meinrad
was studying
Seminary, St. Meinrad,
"We felt like the Catholic Church is more like what a religion aught to be," said Mary Valentine, his mother. "Oth-
Ind.
ers are too
modern."
The Valentines, Pfafftown residents and parishioners of Holy Family Church, said they are proud of their son, their only child, and his decision to become a priest.
Valentine
moved with
this?" he
age 12, so he considers himself a "local He attended Summit
boy," he said.
School in Winston-Salem, West Forsyth in Clemmons and completed high school at the North Carolina School of the Arts in Winston-Salem in
Catechism
(From Page
not account for
it,
1
1)
or do so quite inad-
equately," he said. "Meanwhile, the historical
development
came
that explains
how
which might have been encapsulated in a few wellchosen sentences, does not appear."
the doctrine
He
to be,
talist
accusations that they do not be-
lieve
God' s word and belong to a church
that requires belief in things not re-
vealed by God.
IN PARABLES"
In today's literate world with easy
access to inexpensive Bibles, lack of a strong charge to read the Bible "is a
gross omission," he said. "The problem acute because Catholics in every cor-
ner of the globe are being told that their
napolis.
Until entering the seminary, V;
worked in retail music storif; Alabama and North Carolina speci ing in brass and woodwind instrui
tine
repair.
Since music
is an important background will "con handy," Valentine said. But he dot expect to be playing much sax priest, he said. However, there's gi flute and bagpipe. "A jack of all tn master of none," he said.
New York at Morrisville
and received an associate in applied science degree in musical instrument
"Joe has
many
fine gifts to
sh;
said Father Frank O'Rourke, direct
vocations for the diocese. "Persona
have been touched by Joe's simpl of life and his openness to the dive of people in the Diocese of Char!; By being received into the Church adult, he is uniquely qualified to logue with others Moreover, he
who is
are searchii
"highly respec
by the faculty and administration Meinrad as a man of faith, said F) O'Rourke. "Unless life is oriented toward
1
technology in 1980. In addition to a
it is
master of divinity degree from Meinrad, he received a master of
row, he does more than orient hi| toward God. He commits it to Goi
Pope
St.
arts
hollow," Valentine said. To
(From Page 4)
Church's unfailing hope in her Lord, who is 'the resurrection and the life.'" The pope said the new Catechism of
pope said the communities must
Church offers a summary of Church teaching on the uniqueness of
"serious re-evaluation of attitude;
practices" adopted after the Se
each person and the
Vatican Council.
the Catholic
finality
of death;
judgment after death; prayer for the
ful
conversion."
"It is a
The pope
praise
hopeful sign that many
dead; and "a sober reflection on the
vidual religious and communities
existence and eternity of hell."
United States, having experience fruitlessness of self-preoccupatio confusion over the meaning of the < gelical counsels, and the lack of ai; of corporate identity and apostolat now open to serious reflection o
The
truth that the
Church teaches,
he said, affirms that human life has a transcendent goal and that decisions and actions in this life have "irrevocable consequences which cannot be ignored." In speaking about the reform of religious orders in the United States, the
PRESENTED BY
-
"the arduous path of personal and pr
i
td
Church's authentic traditions of gious consecration," he said.
do ill
I
2)
Employment Opportunity He
Health Care Minister: Large Catholic parish is responsible for pastoral car
JULY
19
-
JULY
AM
9:00 COST: $5
-
23, 1993
12:00
PM
per session or
$20 for the week
is
close to the end of the text.
faith is inauthentic."
(MA rk4
SUSAN BRADY
said the first time the catechism
says Catholics should read the Bible
BIBLE SEMINAR
"HE TAUGHT THEM
said Catholics need such expla-
nations in order to deal with fundamen-
He
SUMMER
University of
and thought
con on Nov. 7, 1992 at St. Meinrai Archbishop Daniel Buechlein of In
his parents
from Daytona, Fla., to North Carolina at
degree, Valentine attended the State
semi-demanded. It's been six years. He has no clue it's me. None. I lost my accent and I'm older. "You couldn't guess it in a million years," I say, almost with an air of superiority. "Is this Frank Mercogliano?" He didn't even hesitate. I was stunned. Unbelievable. He knew it was me. We talked for about 45 minutes (Southern Bell is thinking of making me a shareholder). Everything remarkably is the same. Some people have left, but kids still play hockey in the street. People still wonder why the Mets can't win. Well they wonder that everywhere. But best of all, on Memorial Day weekend, Joe was readying for the opening of the Biltmore Beach Club, to play paddleball. The only difference now is that if a ball is hit over the 14-foot fence, Mary Jo Buttafuoco comes out and returns the ball instead of Joey. Everything changed, but nothing changed. I'm glad I called. Somehow, we' 11 get together. Not this summer, but maybe the next. I wonder how many people still are in contact with their best friends from high school. If you haven't talked with them in a while, you should. That's the best I've felt after a phone call in a while. By the way, the Joey Buttafuco comment is true. The guy lived a good threewood away from me, but that's a later column. Frank Mercogliano is sports information director at Belmont Abbey College. is
life
He was ordained a transitional
liturgy, his
After earning his undergraduate
nut" tone.
JOSEPH VALENTINE degree in Catholic
parents' conversion. His father, Ellicott,
1974.
"Joe.... Corigliano?" I said.
4, 19
away from the church when he went to North Carolina School of the Arts, where he majored in saxophone and received a bachelor of music degree in 1978. Despite this diversion, he never stopped looking for God. He read about Eastern mysticism and came to realize that spirituality crosses religious boundaries. His most profound inspiration, however, was found in the writings by Trappist monk Thomas Merton. Hence began Valentine's journey toward Catholicism and his appreciation of the Church' s rich tradition and community. The Catholic Church gave him direction he could find nowhere else, he
High School
it.
.
1)
in the world."
game."
is
(From Page
!
PRE REGISTRATION ENCOURAGED
GABRIEL CHURCH 3016 PROVIDENCE RD. CHARLOTTE, NC 28211 FOR INFORMATION ST.
704-366-2738
BABY SITTING BY PRE- REGISTERING ONLY
a large, non-profit
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hospital plus nine other health care facilities.
seek a Health Care Minister to provide pastoral care in the hospital and to man parish volunteer pastoral ministers. The Health Care Minister will provB pastoral care in the hospital and recruit, coordinate, train and support volunij ministers in other institutions. Strong organizational and training skills, attractive, motivating style, an ability to work with volunteers and health
iw
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with
>n
anM
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M
1279 Great Neck Road, Virginia Beach,
VA 23454.