June 7, 2018

Page 1

pope francis:

Lector:

Full text of Francis’ exhortation ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’

Love of Scripture drives convert’s lection circuit

PAGEs PF1-PF12

PAGE 3

Memorial day: Catholic

PAGE 6

cemeteries remember veterans

Soccer: Catholic Charities benefit for refugee children

PAGE 14

CATHOLIC SAN FRANCISCO Newspaper of the Archdiocese of San Francisco

Serving San Francisco, Marin & San Mateo Counties

www.catholic-sf.org

June 7, 2018

$1.00  |  VOL. 20 NO. 12

Christian crowd vows to ‘reclaim Jesus’ from polarized US Rhina Guidos Catholic News Service

WASHINGTON – Saying that Jesus Christ has been “hijacked” in the name of politics, a large crowd of national Christian leaders and members of their congregations vowed during a prayer service and vigil May 24 to “reclaim Jesus” from those who not only use his name for their political and personal gain, but reject the gentleness, kindness, love of neighbor, the poor and the truth that Christ embraced. “We believe two things are at stake: the soul of a nation and the integrity of faith,” said the Rev. Jim Wallis, speaking to a crowd that overflowed onto the steps and street outside the National City Christian Church in Washington. Rev. Wallis was one of the organizers of the “Reclaiming Jesus” event, which gathered Baptist, Catholic, Anglican and other Christian clergy for prayer, song and a quiet vigil outside the White House. Religious leaders at the event spoke of the dehumanization of people around the country based on their race, economic status, immigration

(CNS photo/Jonathan Ernst, Reuters)

People pray during an interfaith vigil titled “Reclaiming the Integrity of Faith During Political and Moral Crisis” May 24 outside the White House in Washington. status, gender or because of the faith they practice. While saying the event was “not about Donald Trump,” some criticized a culture of lies, disregard for truth,

rule of law and denigration of the poor and marginalized by “political leadership.” Some also seemed to take issue with those seeking to use the name of Jesus and faith for personal gain.

“When Jesus’ name is forgotten or silenced or even co-opted, and used, when the integrity of faith is compromised for temporal political gain, that is not merely hypocrisy, that is idolatry,” said the Rev. Wallis. Episcopal Bishop Michael Curry, who famously preached about love at the recent royal wedding of Meghan Markle and England’s Prince Harry, continued the theme of love at the event and said the reason so many attended the “Reclaim Jesus” event was because they believe in the teachings of Christ. “You shall love your neighbor as yourself. Oh, that’s why we’re here, love your neighbor, love the neighbor you like and the neighbor you don’t like, love the neighbor you agree with and the neighbor you don’t agree with, love your Democrat neighbor, love your Republican neighbor, your black neighbor, your white neighbor, your Latino (neighbor), your LGBT neighbor,” he said. Bishop Curry said several Christian leaders gathered just before Ash Wednesday this year to figure out a way to “help Christian people, people see ‘reclaim jesus’, page 6

Border refugee stories epiphany for ‘jaded’ immigration judge Christina Gray Catholic San Francisco

Two Catholic Charities co-workers who worked as intake volunteers at the country’s largest immigrant detention center in April returned home to San Francisco humbled after a week of listening to the stories of families literally running for their lives from gang or domestic violence in Central America and Mexico. On their own time and dime, Bette Stockton, a retired San Francisco immigration judge and current volunteer for Catholic Charities’ Refugee and Immigrant Services program, and Amanda McArthur, an immigration legal counselor in the same department, traveled to the South Texas Family Residential Center in Dilley, Texas. Twelve hours a day for a week, they and other trained volunteers of the CARA Pro Bono Project, a nonprofit legal consortium, packed into a doublewide trailer on the perimeter of the detention facility and talked to the women about the fears that

(Photo by Christina Gray/Catholic San Francisco)

Bette Stockton, a retired San Francisco immigration judge and current volunteer for Catholic Charities’ Refugee and Immigrant Services program, and Amanda McArthur, an immigration legal counselor in the same department, discuss their experiences visiting the South Texas Family Residential Center in Dilley, Texas.

propelled them to grab their children and run, often with only the clothes on their backs. “We spoke to so many women who said, ‘I left everything behind, I didn’t have very much, but I had a roof over my head and I was able to at least put food on the table for my children,’” Stockton told Catholic San Francisco on May 22. She said the women were “extremely sincere” that they would would not have left everything behind to begin a journey, often on foot, if they did not fear for their lives and those of their children. The Catholic Legal Immigration Network, the American Immigration Council, the Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services and the American Immigration Lawyers Association, collectively known as CARA, recruits and trains attorneys, students, interpreters, social workers and others to help ensure that families detained in Dilley receive competent, pro bono representation and preparation for the asylum process.

Duggan’s Serra Catholic Family Mortuaries Duggan’s Serra Mortuary Driscoll’s Valencia Street Serra Mortuary Sullivan’s Funeral Home & Cremation

650/756-4500 415/970-8801 415/621-4567

www.duggansserra.com

see border, page 15

Index On the Street . . . . . . . . 4 National . . . . . . . . . . . . .7 World . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Faith . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . 19


2 ARCHDiocesE

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

Parish priest polls high in Marin survey of favorite clergy

need to know MARIN FATHER’S DAY FEST: “One Heart, One Community” honors dads for the second year at Sacred Heart Parish Center, 10189 State Route 1, Olema, June 17, noon-4 p.m. Day includes local food, beverages and games plus entertainment by Los Centzontles. Admission $10, children free, with food at $10 per plate and drinks $2-5. (415) 663-1139; sacredheart@horizoncable.com. www.marinsacredheart.com. Religious Freedom Week: The following events have been scheduled in the archdiocese in recognition of the U.S. bishops’ Religious Freedom Week, June 22-29. June 22: Memorial of the English martyrs Sts. John Fisher and Thomas More. Archbishop Cordileone leads vespers at 5:45 p.m. at Star of the Sea Church, 4420 Geary Blvd., San Francisco, followed by Young Adults (21-39) Happy Hour with the archbishop, 6:15 p.m. at Steins on Clement Street. June 24: Mass for Religious Freedom at St. Matthew Church, One Notre Dame Ave., San Mateo, on the Nativity of St. John the Baptist. Msgr. John Talesfore celebrates Mass in Spanish at 8:45 a.m. and in English at 10:45 a.m., followed by coffee and donuts. June 27, 7:30 p.m.: Young Adults Religious Freedom Mass with Auxiliary Bishop Robert F. Christian, OP, St Dominic Church, 2390 Bush St., San Francisco. June 29: 7 p.m. vespers for religious freedom on the feast day of Sts. Peter and Paul at Sts. Peter and Paul Church, 666 Filbert St., San Francisco, followed by a discussion of international implications of religious freedom. Wine and cheese, coffee and cookies provided.

Archbishop cordileone’s schedule June 1-15: U.S. Bishops Spring General Meeting, Ft. Lauderdale, Florida June 19: 120th anniversary of Salesians, Corpus Christi June 20-21: Chancery meetings June 22: Dignity Health board meeting; Religious Freedom Week vespers, Star of the Sea, 6 p.m. June 23: Mass for Opus Dei, cathedral, 10 a.m.

LIVING TRUSTS WILLS

Lidia Wasowicz Catholic San Francisco

Father Paul Perry, known to parishioners, patients and prisoners as the quirky, quiet, quintessential servant of Christ, has been selected Marin County’s most popular Catholic priest among newspaper readers. The 77-year-old parochial vicar at St. Sebastian Parish in Greenbrae, chaplain at Marin General Hospital and former associate chaplain at San Quentin State Prison polled high in the “favorite pastor, priest, rabbi” category of the Independent Journal’s annual “Best of Marin” survey. While declining to disclose exact figures, IJ publisher Robert Devincenzi said four times as many participants cast ballots this year as in 2017. Of more than 20 clergy write-in candidates, the Rev. Chris RankinWilliams of St. John’s Episcopal (Photo by Lidia Wasowicz/Catholic San Francisco) Church came in first, followed by Father Paul Perry, parochial vicar at St. Sebatian Parish in Greenbrae, begins each day at 3 Father Perry, Rabbi Stacy Friedman a.m. with an hour of prayers followed by a half-hour on the organ. of Rodef Sholom, Rabbi Yisrael Rice Donning a bulletproof vest, passyears, chats with visitors or moves of Chabad of Marin and the Rev. Dr. ing a series of high-security checkamong the congregation, recognizing Joanne Whitt of First Presbyterian points and seeking dispensation for familiar faces and welcoming new Church, who all received the same carrying contraband – wine – to celones, greeter Pat Leahy said. number of votes, Devincenzi said. ebrate liturgies for the condemned Such antics have cast Father Perry Father Perry shrugs off the honor, on death row; as a “pastoral people priest,” said brought to his attention by the parish Leading the first Kairos retreat at Deacon Dave Previtali, a staff member secretary. San Quentin and watching the transat St. Sebastian since 1997. “I didn’t know anything about it,” formation of sneering gang leaders “It is wonderful that he has received he said,Church timidity tingeing his tone. Goods & Candles Religious Gifts & Books this recognition … because his work is who sought a temporary escape from “Only two things mean something to normally under the radar,” said fellow their cells into smiling believers who me: Am I doing what Jesus wants me found a permanent connection with Deacon Bill Turrentine. “He is a true to do and am I pleasing the archbishJesus over the three intense days of ‘man for others,’ pouring himself out op, my boss.” contemplation; bidding farewell to quietly for those who need his help.” Father Perry’s denigration of self 100 felons, many teary-eyed, at an They have included congregations and dedication to service prompted 5 locations in California Epiphany organ recital of Christmas longtime St. Sebastian catechist Patri- he shepherded at nine parishes over carols. decades, students he taught at cia Lazor to send in his name. Your five Local Store: “‘I play every morning in my Marin Catholic High School from 1970 “He does tend to hide his light and 369 Grand Ave., S.San Francisco,650-583-5153 church, and now I play for you,’” he to 1979, convicts he counseled, celetalents,” she said, listing a litany of Near SF Airportbrated - Exitand 101converted Frwy @ from Grand 1999 to 2017, told them. “No one moved.” his good works. His next goodbye will be to his parthe hospitalized he continues to visit Another vote came from Kathleen www.cotters.com cotters@cotters.com ish of 18 years. Father Perry retires Wednesday and Friday Woodcock, a St. Sebastian parishioner every Monday, July 1 with continued residence at and Carmelite sisters in Marinwood for 55 years. St. Sebastian. where he celebrates weekly Mass. “Father is quirky with a great sense “At a time when there is a priest Of the many highlights brightenof humor,” the eucharistic minister, shortage, Father Paul’s response to ing his 51-year vocation, Father altar server and lector said. “What need has never been, ‘I am too busy,’ Perry considers his interactions you see is what you get: a very reverbut rather, ‘How can I help?’” said Fawith inmates the most momentous. ent, humble man who loves his God ther Mike Quinn, pastor of St. Mary His expression transforms from and his ministry.” Star of the Sea Parish in Sausalito. menacing to meek, his posture from He shares the love through his “We are blessed to have this wonderaggressive to accepting as he re“approachability” as he performs on ful man and priest in our midst.” enacts some movie-worthy scenes: the organ, which he has played for 66

PROBATE

MICHAEL T. SWEENEY ATTORNEY AT LAW 782A ULLOA STREET SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94127

(415) 664-8810

www.mtslaw.info

FREE INITIAL CONSULTATION

Serving the poor since 1845

St. Vincent de Paul Society

www.yes-svdp.org www.yes-svdp.org www.yes-svdp.com

Serving Servingthe thepoor poorsince since1860 1860

STS.TV. INCENT VINCENTDEDEPAUL PAULSOCIETY SOCIETY

Church Goods & Candles

Religious Gifts & Books

! e r o t S

• •FREE FREE FAST PICKUP same day FREEAND same daypickup pickup • MAXIMUM TAX • •Maximum Tax Deduction Maximum TaxDEDUCTION Deduction • WE •DO THE PAPERWORK do paperwork •We We doDMV DMV paperwork • RUNNING OR or NOT, NO RESTRICTIONS • •Running no restrictions Running ornot, not, no restrictions • DONATION HELPS COMMUNITY • •100% helps your 100% helpsYOUR yourcommunity community

The Mater Dolorosa Parish Community extends our prayful wishes, congratulations and our prayers on the appointment of Auxiliary Bishop Robert F. Christian, for the Archdiocese of San Francisco. God’s blessing!

l a c o L

800-YES-SVDP 800-YES-SVDP(800-937-7837) (800-937-7837)

1040 Miller Ave. So. San Francisco, CA 94080 (650) 583-4131 Parish Center

r u o Y

Donate DonateYour Your Car Car

Mater Dolorosa Church

369 Grand Ave., S.San Francisco Exit 101 Frwy @ Grand www.cotters.com - 650-583-5153 - cotters@cotters.com

CATHOLIC SAN FRANCISCO Archbishop Salvatore J. Cordileone Publisher Mike Brown Associate Publisher Rick DelVecchio Editor/General Manager Editorial Christina Gray, associate editor grayc@sfarchdiocese.org Tom Burke, senior writer burket@sfarchdiocese.org Sandy Finnegan, administrative assistant finnegans@sfarchdiocese.org Advertising Joseph Peña, director Mary Podesta, associate director Chandra Kirtman, advertising & circulation coordinator Production Karessa McCartney-Kavanaugh, manager Joel Carrico, assistant how to reaCh us One Peter Yorke Way San Francisco, CA 94109 Phone: (415) 614-5639 | Fax: (415) 614-5641 Editor: (415) 614-5647 delvecchior@sfarchdiocese.org Advertising: (415) 614-5642 advertising.csf@sfarchdiocese.org Circulation: (415) 614-5639 circulation.csf@sfarchdiocese.org Letters to the editor: letters.csf@sfarchdiocese.org


ARCHDiocesE 3

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

Love of Scripture drives convert lector Lidia Wasowicz Catholic San Francisco

A former Baptist Army brat who rarely attended church and frequently changed addresses has found religion in the Bible and home at the pulpit. Connaitre Chateaubriant, nee Laurence Sims, has developed such passion for professing the word of God since his conversion to Catholicism that he volunteers as a lector at five Marin County parishes. “I love reading Scripture,” states the 67-year-old Mill Valley runner and physical therapist. On a recent typical weekend, he did so on Saturday at the 5 p.m. vigil Mass at St. Sebastian in Greenbrae and on Sunday at the 7:30 a.m. service at St. Raphael in San Rafael and the 11 a.m. liturgy at St. Hilary in Tiburon. St. Rita in Fairfax and St. Patrick in Larkspur round out his lection circuit. “I have to remember where I am because each parish has its own guidelines for the lectors,” said Chateaubriant, a name he formally adopted at age 32 because of his fondness for France. “In one of my churches the lector remains on the altar for the duration of the Mass, in three I am the sole lector, and in 2 I read one of the 2 readings.” He prefers narrative passages and finds the Pauline epistles the most challenging. “With the translation from Greek, the sentences are long and without structure,” he explained. “When I read St. Paul, I usually have to add my own punctuation.” To provide proper nuance and inflection, he spends the previous night in reflection. “When I prepare to do a reading, I always go back to the Bible to see what the original reading was,” he said. “If I do not understand it when I proclaim it, how can I expect the parishioners to understand it?”

(Photo by Lidia Wasowicz/Catholic San Francisco)

Connaitre Chateaubriant, a Catholic convert and lector at five Marin County parishes, reads the Scripture at St. Hilary Church in Tiburon, one of three parishes at which he read that particular weekend.

To deepen his comprehension, he is a “frequent and insightful participant” in the Sunday morning Bible study at St. Sebastian, said Deacon Bill Turrentine. When questions or reading options arise, he calls Father William Brown. “C.C. has inspired me since my arrival in Marin County eight years ago,” the St. Hilary pastor said, “because he is very committed to doing a good job in proclaiming God’s word, and he always dresses in his Sunday best.” His dedication extends to all his parishes.

“I know he works very, very hard (at) doing the best he can wherever he is needed,” said Msgr. Michael Padazinski, the pastor of St. Patrick, the starter church for Chateaubriant’s ministry. “I’m very impressed with him.” Emboldened by a Scripture class, the former baptized but non-practicing Baptist who converted at age 21 responded to a notice in the church bulletin seeking lectors. Vetted by the pastor and trained by instructors at Marin Catholic High School during a two-day session, he spent a sleepless night in anticipation of his debut at the lectern. “To this very day, 13 plus years after I read for the first time, and having done it hundreds of times, I still get a trifle bit nervous,” he admitted. Nerves have not kept him from expanding his parish roster, which reached five with the addition of St. Raphael in January 2016. Multiple home bases formed the norm for the Colorado native born into a military family that moved six times before he turned 13. His father, a career Army sergeant, struggled to support his wife and three young children on less than $10,000 a year. Chateaubriant, who lost his mother to a kidney infection when he was 2 and she 23, recalls a new 1956 Oldsmobile being repossessed and his stepmother being hounded by bill collectors. His father spent his last $100 to bring their dog Sparky to Poitiers, France, their home from 1963 to 1965. Without television, Chateaubriant took up running, working up to a 4:22 mile. His knees shot by decades of pavement pounding, he now clocks in at 12 minutes. “Who am I?” he asks. “A runner who enjoys reading Scripture (which) has helped me to become a better person.”

Upcoming Public Retreats at Vallombrosa Please visit vallombrosa.org/calendar to register or call 650-325-5614. All retreats have single day attendance options.

The Wizard of OZ as a Healing Journey – June 15-17. You could be an orphan being raised by an aunt and uncle. Or a dog under a death sentence, a brainless guy with big dreams, a man of tin with nothing inside, or a leader afraid of his shadow. On this journey everyone belongs. Join Fr. Nathan Castle, OP, for a brief tour of Oz as a means of reexamining our own stories and helping each other find our way all the way home. Saints Alive: One Big Happy Family – June 22-24. We say we believe “in all that is seen and unseen.” We savor the love of the family and friends we can see. Would you like to take a peek into the often unseen world where you and the saints are friends? Spend the weekend with Fr. Nathan Castle, OP and a saint or two of your choosing. Why wait for heaven when the Reign of God is in our midst? Star Spangled Saints - July 5-11 with Alice Camille & Fr. Paul Rebeaux. Our Yearly Six Day retreat! America is a big idea. So is Catholicism. How do we hold “American” and “Catholic” together with integrity? The story of U.S. saints traces our country’s history, with its grand dreams of liberty. It also courageously records our failures to include everyone in the emerging social landscape. American Catholic history is a saga of justice and its pursuit by a variety of unlikely heroes. Their stories remind us that sainthood isn’t for plaster statues, but for real people living responsively in their own generations—like us. 250 Oak Grove Avenue | Menlo Park, CA 94025 (650) 325-5614 | vallombrosa.org


4 on the street where you live

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

Retiring principals look forward ‘to next adventure God has in store’ and ‘reading stack of books’ Tom Burke catholic San Francisco

Margo Wright will retire as principal of St. Robert School, San Bruno in just a few weeks. She has served seven years in the post. “It has been my honor to serve as principal of St. Robert Catholic School,” Margo told me via email. “I believe God led me to this position and I’m extremely glad I took the plunge and said Margot Wright yes. My background had been in business before entering the teaching profession, then on to administration. Now, as I look back, I can see how the many previous life experiences helped me move forward in administration.” Margo said the best part of being a principal “is the exposure to the entire school” and “getting Lisa Graham to know 300 children or more each year, as well as an entire school of excellent educators and amazing dedicated parents. It certainly keeps you busy, but definitely worth it. What a blessing!” Retirement, she said, “will take some getting used to, I’m sure, but I’m looking forward to the next adventure God has in store for me.” Lisa Graham has worked as an educator since 1974 with a specialty in English literature, and serving as an administrator for 20 years including the last nine years as principal of Immaculate Conception Academy Cristo Rey from where she will retire at the end of this school year. “I am fortunate to have been at ICA Cristo Rey,” Lisa told me via email. “I became the first lay principal in ICA history in the 2009-2010 school year; the year ICA transitioned to the Cristo Rey model, so there was plenty new!” Lisa said it has been “a joy to experience the work-study program develop and strengthen and to see a steadily increasing enrollment as more and more families become aware of the opportunity at ICA Cristo Rey.” Under her leadership, a Certified Nursing Assistant program in partnership with the USF School of Nursing has been added to the curriculum as well as introducing coding instruction as an elective course.

IN STEP: Archbishop Riordan High School raised more than $3,000 for the WinterFaith Shelter Walk on May 6. Sponsored by the San Francisco Interfaith Council since 1989, the effort helps the homeless during the city’s coldest months serving dinner, lodging and breakfast to 80-100 men at five alternating religious communities, one of which is St. Mary’s Cathedral. Pictured from left are Crusader supporters at the walk: Alex Ruivivar, Fabian Fazio, Sebastian Fazio, Cole Richardson, Joan Cuddihy, Muireann Kavanagh, Anthony Thomas, Maoliosa McElwain, Riordan chaplain Father John Jimenez and Riordan Social Justice Club moderator John Ahlbach. Riordan has been the leading fundraising team for the walk for four straight years! will be the first in their families to attend college,” Lisa said. Her immediate retirement plans include getting “at the stack of books I’ve been looking forward to reading!”

BENEDICTINE ANNIVERSARY: Stephanie Sanchez, a junior at Woodside Priory in Portola Valley, with Pope Francis April 21 in Rome where she and students from Benedictine schools throughout the world helped commemorate the 125th anniversary of the Benedictines’ Sant’ Anselmo house of studies. “The Abbot Primate invited five teachers and 15 students to attend to represent the seven regions of the Order of St. Benedict throughout the world,” Priory campus minister, Molly Buccola, told Catholic San Francisco. “We specifically chose Steph because she is a faithful Catholic who serves as a leader on Priory’s Retreat Team and a junior who could return to share her experience with the Priory community throughout the school year next year, as a senior.” Stephanie was in Italy for 10 days touring Rome with stops at Monte Cassino, St. Benedict’s first monastery, Subiaco, St. Benedict’s birthplace, and the Vatican. “Year after year, 100 percent of our students are accepted to college and it is entirely rewarding to be celebrating that 80 percent of the Class of 2018

Donate Your Vehicle

Catholic San Francisco (ISSN 15255298) is published 26 times per year by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of San Francisco, 1500 Mission Rd., P.O. Box 1577, Colma, CA 94014. Periodical postage paid at South San Francisco, CA. Postmaster: Send address changes to Catholic San Francisco, 1500 Mission Rd., P.O. Box 1577, Colma, CA 94014

D O N AT E O N L I N E

vehiclesforcharity.com

1.800.574.0888

(415) 614-5506 This number is answered by Rocio Rodriguez,

Archdiocesan Pastoral Outreach Coordinator. This is a secured line and is answered only by Rocio Rodriguez.

(415) 614-5503 If you wish to speak to a non-archdiocesan

employee please call this nunmber. This is also a secured line and is answered only by a victim survivor.

Email items and electronic pictures – hi-res jpegs - to burket@ sfarch.org or mail to Street, One Peter Yorke Way, San Francisco 94109. Include a follow-up phone number. Street is toll-free. Reach me at (415) 614-5634; email burket@sfarch.org.

CATHOLIC SAN FRANCISCO

TAX DEDUCTION FOR YOUR CAR, TRUCK or SUV

HELPLINES FOR  CLERGY/CHURCH SEXUAL ABUSE VICTIMS

YOUNG ADULT GROUP: Thanks to Bob Dunn of All Souls Parish in South San Francisco for asking us to help get the word out on a new young adult group forming there welcoming men and women ages 18-40. Divine Word Father Briccio Tamoro, pastor, and Amanda George, director of young adult ministry for the archdiocese are also in on the brainstorming. “The group is open to every parish and non-Catholics,” Bob told me. “We are working to create a home by building peer communities in all of our parishes throughout the archdiocese.” The work will be done in accordance with goals established by the archdiocese including providing a leadership formation program which recruits, forms, catechizes, energizes and equips young adult leaders to form peer communities; inviting young adults into a deeper relationship with Jesus Christ; assisting the diverse young adults of the archdiocese in discerning their mission in the world and integrating that mission in their work, family and community life. Contact allsoulschurchssf.org, (650) 871-8944, redunn111@gmail.com.

Monterey Dental Office Modern, State-of-the-Art Office Cosmetic & Family Dentistry

Dr. Lan-Huong Nguyen, Parishioner St. Finn Barr Special Discounts for Seniors, Low Income Families & Students

749 Monterey Blvd. Phone: (415) 239-9140 San Francisco, CA 94127 Fax: (415) 239-9141

Annual subscriptions $24 within California   $36 outside California Address change? Please clip old label and mail with new address to: Circulation Department One Peter Yorke Way, San Francisco, CA 94109 delivery problems? Please call us at (415) 614-5639 or email circulation.csf@sfarchdiocese.org


ARCHDiocesE 5

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

1

2

3

(Photo by Drew Altizer and Arthur Kobin)

(Courtesy photo)

4

5

(Photo courtesy Debra Greenblat)

6

(Courtesy photo)

(Courtesy photo)

(Courtesy photo)

Around the archdiocese 1

CATHOLIC CHARITIES LOAVES AND FISHES DINNER: More than 350 supporters donated more than $750,000 toward the work of Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of San Francisco as part of Catholic Charities’ Loaves & Fishes Awards Dinner and Gala, May 24 at San Francisco’s Palace Hotel. The event honored San Francisco community and civic leader Katie Cardinal, pictured here with Archbishop Salvatore J. Cordileone at the dinner. Jilma Meneses, Catholic Charities chief executive officer said, “Serving as Catholic Charities board member and volunteer, Katie has brought unwavering commitment to some of the most vulnerable populations in our community and passion for social justice. We were pleased to honor her gifts, advocacy, and compassion.” KTVU Channel 2 news anchor Heather Holmes was the evening’s emcee.

2

SACRED HEART CATHEDRAL PREPARATORY: The San Francisco school presented Spirit awards May 16 to freshman Finn Malone, sophomore Penelope Ades and junior Kathleen McFadden for their “high level of Irish spirit at a variety of school events,” the school said. Freshman, Danna Lenis-Granada, sophomore Aidan Quigley and junior Isa-

bella Castillo received Service awards for active participation “in service opportunities directed by our school.” Freshman Isabella Suchikul, sophomore Peter Chan and junior Purva Joshi received Leadership awards “for their support of the SHC Mission” with leadership as a class or club officer, a participant in liturgical activities, or service centered events. Pictured from left: Aidan Quigley, Kathleen McFadden, Penelope Ades, Isabella Castillo, Peter Chan, Isabella Suchkul, Finn Malone, Danna Lenis-Granada, Purva Joshi and principal Gary Cannon.

3

ST. PAUL OF THE SHIPWRECK PARISH: Rose Isles, pictured here with pastor, Father Dan Carter, was honored May 26 at a year-end family Mass with a special Papal Blessing for her leadership as director of religious education for the combined program of Shipwreck, Our Lady of Lourdes Parish and All Hallows Parish for the last 30 years.

4

ST. STEPHEN SCHOOL, SAN FRANCISCO: Students, with the student council’s monthly charity free dress program raised almost $6,000 for local and national charities, including hurricane and fire relief. In April alone, they donated $2,797.26 for Pennies for Patients and collected more than 3000

non-perishables for Catholic Charities Homeless and Housing Program.

5

MERCY HIGH SCHOOL, BURLINGAME: Special rites helped conclude the school year at the all-girls school. Mercy Burlingame Class of 2018 kicked off graduation events with the annual Senior Pinning Ceremony May 3. More than 30 alumnae gathered to welcome seniors into the network of over 8,000 women who have graduated from Mercy Burlingame. The school celebrated seniors and honored Mercy mothers at its annual Mother Daughter Mass and brunch May 20. Student body officers were installed May 21. Pictured at right

are incoming student body officers taking their oath of office in a transition ceremony with the outgoing senior student body officers pictured at left.

6

ST. MATTHEW SCHOOL, SAN MATEO: Students enjoyed what principal, Adrian Peterson, called a “color run” May 15, a part of the school’s end of year Spirit Week. All students take part. Other spirit week events included free dress, entertainment by students taking on-campus instrument lessons, and beach day where students bring beach blankets and eat lunch on the playground with beach balls and sunglasses. Pictured are students who helped in the effort.

Archdiocese-wide

HOLY HOUR for

Vocations to the Priesthood CONGRATULATIONS

Bishop Robert Christian

I

May the Lord grant you His abiding grace, strength and peace as you begin a new chapter in your distinguished ministry. With Love in Christ, +Metropolitan Gerasimos of San Francisco

I

Sunday, June 10, 2018 3:00-4:00 pm +St. Matthew 1 Notre Dame Avenue, San Mateo +St. Cecilia, 2555 17th Ave., San Francisco +St. Isabella, 1 Trinity Way, San Rafael


6 ARCHDiocesE

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

Archdiocesan cemeteries remember veterans

(Courtesy photo)

Pictured is Dominican Father Daniel Syverstad, pastor, St. Raymond Parish, Menlo Park, delivering his Memorial Day homily at Holy Cross Cemetery, Menlo Park. Father Lawrence Goode, pastor, St. Francis of Assisi Parish, East Palo Alto, concelebrated.

More than 1,000 people came to pray at Masses on Memorial Day, May 28, at Holy Cross Cemetery, Colma; Holy Cross Cemetery, Menlo Park; Our Lady of the Pillar Cemetery, Half Moon Bay; Mount Olivet Cemetery, San Rafael. “All of our cemeteries had increased visitation over the weekend, with lots of flowers and flags decorating the graves,” Monica Williams, director of cemeteries, told Catholic San Francisco. Girl Scouts placed flags on all graves in the military section, and Cub/Boy/Girl Scouts from Our Lady of Mercy Parish, Daly City, pre-

sented the colors and brought up the gifts for Mass at Holy Cross, Colma. Father Raymund Reyes, vicar for clergy, was principal celebrant. Deacon Mike Ghiorso and Deacon Bill McLoughlin assisted. Jesuit Father John Piderit, vicar for administration; Father Charles Puthota, pastor, St. Veronica Parish, and Msgr. Michael Harriman, retired pastor, St. Cecilia Parish, concelebrated. Father Jose Corral, pastor, Our Lady of the Pillar Parish, was principal celebrant in Half Moon Bay; Father Mark Reburiano, pastor, St. Isabella Parish, was principal celebrant in San Rafael.

‘Reclaim Jesus’: Christian crowd says Christ ‘hijacked’ by politics FROM PAGE 1

of goodwill, to find their voice, to reclaim and renew the faith that Jesus has given us and to find a way to live that faith in our public lives and in the public square.” That’s how the event was born, he explained. “We are not a partisan group, we are not a leftwing group, we are not a right-wing group, we are a Jesus movement, that’s who we are,” he said. “And we came together, Protestant, Catholic, evangelical, Republicans, Independents and Democrats, we came together, liberal and conservative and whatever’s in the middle, we came together because what binds us together is Jesus of Nazareth. And his way, his teaching and his life, that’s what binds us together.” The procession toward the White House, he implored, was not to be seen as a protest, but a procession of Christian people and one started by the early Christians. “This is what they did on Pentecost, this is a Pentecostal moment, that’s what’s going on,” he said, adding that it was a manifestation that “we are committed to following the way of Jesus.” And being committed to following Jesus means being committed to the truth, said the Rev. Walter Brueggemann, a theologian and minister of the United Church of Christ. “Jesus promises ‘you will know the truth and the truth will set you free.’ Therefore we reject the practice and pattern of lying that is invading our political and civil life,” he said. “The normalization of lying presents a profound and moral danger to the fabric of our society.” Jesus’ way also means loving your neighbor, hav-

St. Clare’s Retreat

(CNS photo/Jonathan Ernst, Reuters)

Franciscan Father Richard Rohr, Bishop Michael Curry, who is presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church, and the Rev. Jim Wallis, president of Sojourners, chat before leading an interfaith vigil titled “Reclaiming the Integrity of Faith During Political and Moral Crisis” May 24 in Washington.

ing respect for all creatures and also not bearing false witness, he said. The ninth commandment at Mount Sinai, he said, was “you shall not bear false witness.” But what Moses really meant, Rev. Brueggemann said, was: “You shall not invent fake worlds for your own convenience. Fake worlds destroy neighbors. Fake worlds close off futures. Fake worlds make common life impossible. Fake worlds make violence.” Lies can never lead toward the path Jesus wants for humanity, he said. “As long as we dwell in this culture of lies, we shall never be the land of the free, and the home of the brave,” he said. “We will continue to be the land of the frightened, and the home of the anxious. We have known this forever. Reclaim Jesus and we will be free and we will be brave.”

2381 Laurel Glen Road, Soquel, CA. 95073

JULY July 6-8 Men’s and Women’s Silent Retreat: Fr. Serge Propst, OP – Inner Peace July 27-29 Men’s & Women’s Silent Retreat (Marian): Fr. Joseph Nassal, CPPS – Mary’s Magnificat: Proclaiming the Greatness of God August Aug. 17-19 Teams of Our Lady – English Married Couples Non-Silent Retreat – Inner Peace september Sept. 7-9 Women’s Silent Retreat: Fr. Serge Propst, OP – Inner Peace Sept. 11-13 Silver Angels (Fresno), Men’s & Women’s Non-Silent Retreat – Fr. Robert Barcelos, OCD Sept. 14-16 Women’s Silent Retreat: Fr. Serge Propst, OP – Inner Peace Sept. 28-30 Women’s Silent Retreat: Fr. Serge Propst, OP – Inner Peace For more information 831-423-8093 E-mail: stclaresretreatcenter@gmail.com Web site: www.stclaresretreat.com

Staffed by Franciscan Missionary Sisters of Our Lady of Sorrow

SAN DAMIANO RETREAT

Franciscan Father Richard Rohr closed the event at the church with a prayer as he sent the group on the way to the candlelight procession. “May you know the height and the length and the depth and the breadth, may you know the love that surpasses all knowledge, and may you walk in that love into the empire,” he said during the blessing. On the grounds of Lafayette Park, a green space that faces the north side of the White House, Franciscan Father Joseph Nangle watched as the crowd filed in to pray in front the president’s residence. Father Nangle missed the event at the National City Christian Church because he was hearing confessions at Our Lady Queen of Peace Church in Arlington, Virginia, but “I had to come,” he said, because he wanted to support the message of love and welcome that Christ stands for. “I had to be part it,” he said of the event. “And I wanted there to be Catholic presence.” Marie Dennis, co-president of the Pax Christi International Catholic peace movement, also was present for the vigil that included songs and some prayers. She said, she, too, felt that Jesus needed reclaiming, just as what he stood for needs reclaiming. “In this moment of history, we don’t seem to care about the poor, the most marginalized, we don’t seem to care about the earth,” she said. And some are using the figure of Jesus to justify policies and practices that go against what Christ stood for, she said. She was concerned about the lack of charity shown to immigrants and refugees, how the poor are being treated, and also the role of the U.S. at the international level when the country seems to be moving away from world peace, including by pulling out of the Iran nuclear deal. A lot of what’s being said and done, and sometimes by those mentioning the name of Jesus, “is the opposite of the Christian message,” she said. Editor’s note: Leaders of the “Reclaim Jesus” event posted a declaration explaining their position at www. reclaimingjesus.org.

Corpus Christi Festival Sunday June 10, 2018 9am - 5pm

Benefits Group Projective Dream Work The Gift of of a Moment (Silent Retreat) with Ishpriya, 6/3-8 withSr.students of the late Jeremy Taylor

Dinner Gala Dance

6/15-17 Benefits of Group Projective Dream Work with students the late Jeremy Taylor, Staying OurofRight Size...What an6/15-17 Order!

Saturday June 16, 2018 6:30pm - 1am

(Recovery Retreat) with Sr. B. Moore Staying Our Right Size…What an Order! (Recovery Retreat) with Sr. B. Moore, 6/29- 7/1 6/29-7/1

Solemn Mass 120 Years

LGBTQ Day of Dialog LGBTQ Day of Dialog with San Damiano staff, 7/8

with San Damiano staff7/8 More information or to register 710 Highland Dr., Danville 925-837-9141 Visit us at sandamiano.org

Tuesday June 19, 2018 at 7pm

62 Santa Rosa Ave. (at Alemany Blvd.) San Francisco 94112 • 415.588.2911


national 7

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

Young adult leaders discuss ‘unique moment’ in church Kelly Sankowski Catholic News Service

WASHINGTON – About 130 leaders of young adult ministries from more than 60 dioceses across the country gathered at the St. John Paul II National Shrine in Washington May 15-17 for the National Young Adult Ministry Summit to talk about the best ways to reach out to young adults. The summit, coordinated by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ National Advisory Team on Young Adult Ministry, was described by one young adult leader as “a unique moment in the history of the church” leading up to the October Synod on Young People, the Faith and Vocational Discernment. Jonathan Lewis, the event’s chair and the executive director of evangelization, young adult ministry and chaplaincies in the Archdiocese of Washington, said there has historically been a strong culture of youth ministry in the life of the church, but there hasn’t been the same investment in professional ministry to young adults. With recent cultural, social and economic shifts in

Court upholds decision overturning California assisted suicide

RIVERSIDE – A California appeals court denied Attorney General Xavier Becerra’s request for an immediate stay on a lower court ruling that overturned the state’s assisted suicide law. The decision was handed down May 23 by the 4th District Court of Appeal in Riverside. The court gave Becerra and other interested parties 25 days to provide more arguments as to why the court should grant the stay and suspend the lower court ruling. The attorney general requested the stay after Judge Daniel A. Ottolia of Riverside County Superior Court ruled May 15 that the California Legislature violated existing law when it passed the End of Life Option Act during a special session dedicated to health care. The 2015 law, which went into effect in June 2016,

(CNS photo/Tyler Orsburn)

Catholic leaders are seen in a breakout session May 16 during the National Young Adult Ministry Summit at the St. John Paul II National Shrine in Washington.

society, young adults are often “living in an unstable season of life,” where they are managing debt, discerning their vocation and moving frequently, said Lewis. The summit alternated between large plenary sessions and smaller breakout sessions on various topics such as digital outreach, the current realities in understanding and reaching Gen Z, just getting started with authorized doctors to prescribe lethal prescriptions to any patient determined by two doctors to have six months or less to live.

Cardinal, other faith leaders, scientists urge action on climate change

BRAINTREE, Mass. – Boston Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley and other faith leaders joined scientists in issuing a call to action to address the “ecological and moral emergency” of climate change while there “is still time.” The group issued the statement at an afternoon news conference held May 23 at the headquarters of the Boston archdiocese in Braintree. Its release marked the third anniversary of Pope Francis’ environmental encyclical, “Laudato Si’, on Care for Our Common Home.” Climate change affects all aspects of “our shared

young adult ministry, intercultural competency and reaching young adults through current events. “The thing I loved the most is it has been a conversation,” said Alison Pope, a parish leader from the Diocese of San Angelo in Texas. Instead of having one expert who tells everyone what they need to do, Pope said summit participants acknowledged that no one really knew the answer, and they had “a true dialogue, with every voice being heard, whether it is considered ‘expert’ or not.” “We were bleeding out the young church severely in Nevada,” said Christina Davis, the director of youth and young adult ministries in the Diocese of Reno. “When I went in our parishes, I rarely saw young people at all.” After holding listening sessions in her diocese, they found that many young people felt unwelcome and did not think there was a place for them in the church. While much of the conversation around young adult ministry centers on how to get those people to return to the church, one of the participants pointed out that “we need to have the same conversation about what to do to prevent them from leaving in the first place.” lives and requires us to work together to protect our common home,” the group’s statement said. “As a community of scientists, we see greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuels and deforestation causing dangerous changes to the climate and threatening the stability of the planet,” it continued. “We are trained to simply report the facts, but now our findings compel us to public advocacy. “As a community of faith leaders, we have worked together to alleviate poverty, to fight racial and social injustice, and to defend human life,” the statement said. “All of these social goods are negatively impacted by climate change, which devastates the most vulnerable and jeopardizes us all.”

senior living


8 world

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

Teaching on all-male priesthood is definitive, cardinal-designate says Cindy Wooden Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY – That only men can be validly ordained to the priesthood is a truth that is part of the Catholic faith and will not and cannot change, said Cardinal-designate Luis CardinalLadaria, prefect of designate Luis the Congregation Ladaria for the Doctrine of the Faith. “It gives rise to serious concern

Irish bishop hopes papal visit can help bring healing

to see that in some countries there still are voices that put in doubt the definitive nature of this doctrine,” the cardinal-designate wrote May 29 in the Vatican newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano. St. John Paul II, confirming the constant teaching and practice of the church, formally declared in 1994 that “the church has no authority whatsoever to confer priestly ordination on women and that this judgment is to be definitively held by all the church’s faithful.” Cardinal-designate Ladaria said some people continue to question see vatican, page 16

Jim Laufenberg Brok er A ssoc., G R I , C R S • Probate • Conservatorship Sales • Income Property • Commercial Property

DUBLIN – An Irish bishop said he hopes Pope Francis’ August visit can help bring healing after a divisive referendum that will pave the way for abortion on demand up to 12 weeks’ gestation. In a May 25 referendum, voters opted by a margin of 66.4 percent to 33.6 percent to remove the right to life of the unborn from the constitution. Bishop Brendan Leahy of Limerick told Massgoers May 26 that the result “is deeply regrettable and chilling for those of us who voted ‘no.’” He said “the final result of the referendum is the will of the majority of the people, though not all the people.” “It is a vote, of course, that does not change our position. Our message is one of love: love for all, love for life, for those with us today, for those in the womb,” he said. Referring to Pope Francis’ Aug. 25-26 visit, Bishop Leahy said: “In August, we will unite as a family, to renew that sense of family when the World Meeting of Families comes here. We have the privilege of Pope Francis coming, and today I cannot think of his visit being more timely: to come here and remind us of the importance of family, of the love we have of family, of the reality that, yes, families get bruised sometimes, but they should never be broken.”

Holy Spirit offers gifts that should be cherished, pope says

VATICAN CITY – Pope Francis asked Catholics to recognize and be thankful for the undeserved gift of the Holy Spirit they received with the sacrament of confirmation. “It is a gift to be cherished with care” and to follow with docility, “letting oneself be molded like wax from the burning love” of the Holy Spirit, the pope said May 30 at his weekly general audience in St. Peter’s Square During the audience the pope was treated to a performance by taekwondo athletes from South Korea. The initia-

2355 Market St., SF, CA 94114  |  Jim@sf-realty.com Ofc Direct: 415-437-4510  |  Cell: 415-269-4997 DRE#: 01201131

tive was supposed to include athletes from North Korea, but the North decided not to participate, South Korean media reported May 25. The North Korean taekwondo federation reportedly cited the military exercises between South Korea and the United States May 25 as the main reason for withdrawing from the scheduled event. Even though the North Korean athletes “did not arrive,” the performance for the pope “was still a message of peace,” Greg Burke, the Vatican spokesman told reporters.

Marriage proclaims ‘love is possible,’ pope says

VATICAN CITY – Marriage is a sacrament not only for the bride and groom, but for the entire Catholic Church, because it proclaims that “love is possible,” Pope Francis said. “It is true there are difficulties, there are problems with the children or with the couple themselves – arguments, fights,” he said May 25 at morning Mass in the Domus Sanctae Marthae. Seven couples celebrating their 25th or 50th wedding anniversaries were among those present at the Mass. But the witness of couples who continue in love, who overcome the difficulties, he said, proclaims the beauty of God’s plan for humanity. In the day’s Gospel reading from St. Mark, Jesus is asked by the Pharisees if it is lawful for a husband to divorce his wife. Most members of the crowds who followed Jesus listened to him because they were thirsting for truth and for help in growing in faith, the pope said. But he said the Pharisees were interested only in trying to trip up Jesus by trying to reduce religion to a list of “yes you can” and “no you can’t” items. But Jesus raises the bar, talking about creation and describing “marriage as if it were the most beautiful thing” that God made at the beginning of the world, he said. Catholic News Service

Accessible Home Lift Company

senior living to Advertise in catholic San FrancIsco

* Assisted Living * 24 Hour Monitoring * Comfortable Private or Semi-Private Suites * Beautiful San Francisco Views * Enchanting Garden

call (415) 614-5642 Visit www.catholic-sf.org

David R. Wall – Director

w w w . b u en av i s ta m a n or h o u s e . c o m

Retirement Home ColumbianColumbian Retirement Home An Independent Living Facility Independent Living Facility Located in Historic Marysville, California An Independent Living FacilityAn Located in Historic Marysville, California

Located in Historic Marysville, California

Rates Starting at $1250 per Month (Discount Available)

Includes Comfortable Private Rooms, 24 Hour Medical Starting at $1150 per Month Rates Starting at Rates $1150Monitoring, per Month Emergency Complete Dining Program Includes with Delicious Meals,Includes Snacks, Full Housekeeping Comfortable Private Rooms, 24 Hour Medical Emergency Complete Services, Spacious Living RoomMonitoring, with HD TV, Dining Comfortable Private Rooms, 24 Hour Medical Emergency Monitoring, Complete Dining Serving the BayProgram Area with Delicious Meals, Snacks, Program with Delicious Meals, Snacks, Full Housekeeping Full Housekeeping Services, Spacious Living Room Services, Spacious Living Room On Site Chapel,Two Spacious Courtyards, with HD TV, On Site Chapel, Two Spacious Courtyards, Free Lighted Parking, and Security with HD TV, On Site Chapel, Two Spacious Courtyards, Free Lighted Parking, and Security High Quality Home Putting Green, Free Lighted Parking and Security th th Care Since 1996 230 8 Street Marysville,230 CA8 Street Marysville, CA (Across from St. Joseph’s Parish) (Across from St. Joseph’s Parish)

230 8For Street Marysville, Information and a Tour CA For Information and a Tour (530) (Across from St.743-7542 Joseph’s Parish) (530) 743-7542 kofccenter@comcast.net kofccenter@comcast.net www.columbianretirementhome.org www.columbianretirementhome.org th

Attendant CNA Respite Care 415-759-0520 | www.irishhelpathome.com HCO License #384700001 IrishHelpAtHome

For Information and a Tour

(530) 743-7542 kofccenter@comcast.net www.columbianretirementhome.org

California Knights of Columbus Retirement Facilities California Knights of Columbus Retirement Facilities

California Knights of Columbus Retirement Facilities

• Residential Accessibility for the Disabled and Seniors • Stair Lifts/Vertical Platform Lifts • Overhead Track Systems • Patient Transfer Lifts • Ramps • Repair & Maintenance • Rentals

Call us today for a free estimate.

800.606.1115 | www.accessiblehomelift.com


world 9

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

Pope ‘ashamed’ by church’s failure to listen to abuse survivors Junno Arocho Esteves Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY – In a letter to Catholics in Chile, Pope Francis expressed shame for the church’s failure to listen and defend survivors of sexual abuse at the hands of the clergy. Released by the Chilean bishops’ conference May 31, the letter from the pope said that the time of “revision and purification” in the church was possible through the efforts of abuse survivors “who, against all hope or painted as discredited, did not tire of looking for the truth.” They are “victims whose cries reached to heaven. I would like to once again publicly thank all of them for the courage and perseverance,” the pope wrote. The Vatican announced earlier in the day that “the pope will send the president of the Chilean bishops’ conference a letter written personally by him and addressed to all the people of God, as he had promised the bishops.” The Vatican also announced that Pope Francis will send Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta and Father Jordi Bertomeu Farnos back to Chile and visit the Diocese of Osorno “with the aim of advancing the process of reparation and healing of abuse victims.”

Shortly after, Bishop Juan Ignacio Gonzalez Errazuriz of San Bernardo, president of the Chilean bishops’ commission for abuse prevention, and Auxiliary Bishop Fernando Ramos Perez of Santiago, secretarygeneral of the Chilean bishops’ conference, held a news conference in Santiago to release the eight-page letter. In his message, the pope said it has been a “time of listening and discernment” for the church to get to the root of the sexual abuse crisis in the Chilean church and to find concrete solutions and not “mere strategies of containment.” He also acknowledged the church’s shortcomings in not listening to survivors of abuse. “Here, I believe, lies one our principal faults and omissions: to not know how to listen to victims. Thus, partial conclusions were built that lacked crucial elements for a healthy and clear discernment. I must say with shame that we did not know how to listen and react in time,” the pope wrote. In January, the pope sent Archbishop Scicluna and Father Bertomeu to Chile to listen to people with information about Bishop Juan Barros of Osorno, who, according to survivors, see chile, page 15

senior living

Supple Senior Care LLC AdId: X 50001741213 - 01 CustId: 5029809030 Dir/Iss: SFRCA YP1 12/2011 UDAC: DQC - PCW ATTUID: td2935 Date: 09/23/2011 09:56:AM

Owned Licensed •Irish Bonded • Insured Licensed • Bonded We Provide Qualified• Insured Staff We ProvideInQualified Staff Quality-Care Your Home Quality-Care In Your Home Full Time Or Part Time Full Time Payroll Full OrService Part Time Full Payroll Service www.suppleseniorcare.com www.suppleseniorcare.com

415-573-5141 415-573-5141• 650-993-8036 • 650-993-8036

CA lic#384700020

“The Most Compassionate Care In Town” Irish Owned And Operated

YPH: 102723 Home Health Servs YPSH: Rep: 130340 - ap9315 PHELPS AMY

 Substantial Savings  Caregiver of Your Choice  Enjoy Remaining in Your Home

 Licensed & Bonded  Live-In (2 caregivers)  Hourly  24/7

We are an Irish-Owned family business with decades of experience in the Home Care industry.

www.irishreferralagency.com • (415) 757-8527

With so many things to do, we suggest getting an early start on your want-to-do list. There’s a lot to do at Peninsula Del Rey Retirement Community — clubs, events, socializing, and more. So, go ahead and make your want-to-do list. But please don’t include a bunch of chores. We’ll take care of most of those for you. We invite you to see all that Peninsula Del Rey has to offer (including assisted living services if needed) at a complimentary lunch and tour. Please call 650.264.9050 now to schedule.

I n de p e n de n t & A s s i s t e d L i v i ng R e s i de nc e s

165 Pierce Street • Daly City, CA PeninsulaDelRey.com • 650.264.9050 Conveniently located between San Francisco and the Peninsula with easy access to Highway 280 & 101 RCFE# 415600867


10 faith

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

Sunday readings

Tenth Sunday in Ordinary Time GENESIS 3:9-15 After the man, Adam, had eaten of the tree, the Lord God called to the man and asked him, “Where are you?” He answered, “I heard you in the garden; but I was afraid, because I was naked, so I hid myself.” Then he asked, “Who told you that you were naked? You have eaten, then, from the tree of which I had forbidden you to eat!” The man replied, “The woman whom you put here with me – she gave me fruit from the tree, and so I ate it.” The Lord God then asked the woman, “Why did you do such a thing?” The woman answered, “The serpent tricked me into it, so I ate it.” Then the Lord God said to the serpent: “Because you have done this, you shall be banned from all the animals and from all the wild creatures; on your belly shall you crawl, and dirt shall you eat all the days of your life. I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and hers; he will strike at your head, while you strike at his heel.” PSALM 130:1-2, 3-4, 5-6, 7-8 With the Lord there is mercy, and fullness of redemption. Out of the depths I cry to you, O Lord; Lord, hear my voice! Let your ears be attentive to my voice in supplication. With the Lord there is mercy, and fullness of redemption. If you, O Lord, mark iniquities, Lord, who can stand? But with you is forgiveness, that you may be revered. With the Lord there is mercy, and fullness of redemption.

W

I trust in the Lord; my soul trusts in his word. More than sentinels wait for the dawn, let Israel wait for the Lord. With the Lord there is mercy, and fullness of redemption. For with the Lord is kindness and with him is plenteous redemption and he will redeem Israel from all their iniquities. With the Lord there is mercy, and fullness of redemption. 2 CORINTHIANS 4:13–5:1 Brothers and sisters: Since we have the same spirit of faith, according to what is written, I believed, therefore I spoke, we too believe and therefore we speak, knowing that the one who raised the Lord Jesus will raise us also with Jesus and place us with you in his presence. Everything indeed is for you, so that the grace bestowed in abundance on more and more people may cause the thanksgiving to overflow for the glory of God. Therefore, we are not discouraged; rather, although our outer self is wasting away, our inner self is being renewed day by day. For this momentary light affliction is producing for us an eternal weight of glory beyond all comparison, as we look not to what is seen but to what is unseen; for what is seen is transitory, but what is unseen is eternal. For we know that if our earthly dwelling, a tent, should be destroyed, we have a building from God, a dwelling not made with hands, eternal in heaven.

MARK 3:20-35 Jesus came home with his disciples. Again the crowd gathered, making it impossible for them even to eat. When his relatives heard of this they set out to seize him, for they said, “He is out of his mind.” The scribes who had come from Jerusalem said, “He is possessed by Beelzebub,” and “By the prince of demons he drives out demons.” Summoning them, he began to speak to them in parables, “How can Satan drive out Satan? If a kingdom is divided against itself, that kingdom cannot stand. And if a house is divided against itself, that house will not be able to stand. And if Satan has risen up against himself and is divided, he cannot stand; that is the end of him. But no one can enter a strong man’s house to plunder his property unless he first ties up the strong man. Then he can plunder the house. Amen, I say to you, all sins and all blasphemies that people utter will be forgiven them. But whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will never have forgiveness, but is guilty of an everlasting sin.” For they had said, “He has an unclean spirit.” His mother and his brothers arrived. Standing outside they sent word to him and called him. A crowd seated around him told him, “Your mother and your brothers and your sisters are outside asking for you.” But he said to them in reply, “Who are my mother and my brothers?” And looking around at those seated in the circle he said, “Here are my mother and my brothers. For whoever does the will of God is my brother and sister and mother.”

It’s more than it seems

ill we ever be finished with the problems of Adam and Eve in the garden? Eve seems to get the blame, and through her, Eve-women are forever, supposedly, the cause of having brought evil into the world. So women should remember how terrible they are, repent of having been born female, and accept their social submission to men as just punishment for their innate moral weakness and susceptibility to temptation. They are incapable, in this line of interpretation, of making good moral decisions. They need to be told what to do, and kept under firm control by male authority – political, ecclesial, and interpersonal. But there’s more to the sister Eloise story than these easy clichés. Rosenblatt, RSM First, this is not a factual or historical account. It offers a parable-like story, a somewhat playful account to deal with several perennial questions: Why do men and women find themselves in conflict? What got broken in the relationship of human beings with God? If human beings are fundamentally good, where does evil come from? Wasn’t life on this earth intended to be harmonious and pleasant? What

scripture reflection

makes it so tough? The answer to these questions is not, “It is women’s fault.” Let’s look at Adam. He doesn’t come off as the innocent bystander. God is engaging in a legal-sounding inquiry. We know that God is all-seeing. But God asks ironically, “Where are you?” As if to say, “Adam, what is going on in your mind?” The woman is not hiding from the sound of God’s voice, preoccupied with her body or how she looks. She has heard the voice and is ready for dialogue with God. Adam has to be smoked out of his avoidance. The question, “Where are you?” is not curiosity on God’s part. It’s a question for Adam to examine himself, to come to consciousness. It’s Adam who doesn’t know where he is. He dissembles. He whines that he’s afraid, as though he wants to manipulate God into being easy on him. He severs himself from his union with the woman. He won’t admit his own responsibility. In this “J” strand of several compositional hands in Genesis, God earlier empathized with Adam’s loneliness. Even his naming all the animals didn’t provide Adam a partner. So God, in tenderness, gave Adam the great gift of the woman’s companionship. She’s drawn out from his own flesh, not molded from the dust and blown into being as Adam was. But now Adam renounces his former joy at her companionship. He’s angry at her because he realizes he’s in trouble. Shift the blame. Cheeky and insulting, he fault-finds God and disowns the woman, the human being given him out of divine compassion and love. Adam will do just about anything to

exonerate himself, even accuse God of causing the problem. “The woman whom you put here with me – she gave me fruit from the tree, so I ate it.” In his desperation to protect himself from blame, he reduces the woman to a thing, an alien object. She is now “the woman whom you put here with me,” not the woman inseparable from his own flesh, fashioned from his rib, the answer to his longing for love and communion. He rejects God’s gift, degrades her dignity, and severs the memory of her origin from his own body. He ends up, in effect, contemptuous of his own body, his own existence. This does profound violence to who he is. Maybe this is the mythic story of how all violence in the world began, especially the violence of men against women. And how it is healed. Adam makes a wordy defense of himself. He talks too much, and this only makes clearer his moral fragility, his self-deception, his inability to take responsibility for his actions, and his willingness to throw the woman under the bus to exonerate himself. The woman makes a simple admission: “The serpent tricked me into it, so I ate it.” God accepts her candor and confession as the truth. Judgment made. Case closed. The serpent is not recognized as a conversation partner with God. The sure destiny, unseen right now, is that the woman will one day defeat the forces of evil. The story is more than it seems.

nary Time. 1 Kgs 19:9a, 11-16. Ps 27:7-8a, 8b-9abc, 13-14. Phil 2:15d, 16a. Mt 5:27-32.

abbot. 1 Kgs 21:17-29. Ps 51:3-4, 5-6ab, 11 and 16. Jn 13:34. Mt 5:43-48.

Saturday, June 16: Saturday of the Tenth Week in Ordinary Time. 1 Kgs 19:19-21. Ps 16:1b-2a and 5, 7-8, 9-10. Ps 119:36a, 29b. Mt 5:33-37.

Wednesday, June 20: Wednesday of the Eleventh Week in Ordinary Time. 2 Kgs 2:1, 6-14. Ps 31:20, 21, 24. Jn 14:23. Mt 6:1-6, 16-18.

Sunday, June 17: Eleventh Sunday in Ordinary Time. Ez 17:22-24. Ps 92:2-3, 13-14, 15-16. 2 Cor 5:6-10. Mk 4:26-34.

Thursday, June 21: Memorial of St. Aloysius Gonzaga, confessor. Sir 48:1-14. Ps 97:1-2, 3-4, 5-6, 7. Rom 8:15bc. Mt 6:7-15.

Monday, June 18: Monday of the Eleventh Week in Ordinary Time. 1 Kgs 21:1-16. Ps 5:2-3ab, 4b-6a, 6b-7. Ps 119:105. Mt 5:38-42.

Friday, June 22: Friday of the Eleventh Week in Ordinary Time. Optional Memorial of St. Paulinus of Nola, bishop and confessor. Optional Memorial of Sts. John Fisher, bishop and martyr and Thomas More, martyr. 2 Kgs 11:1-4, 9-18, 20. Ps 132:11, 12, 13-14, 17-18. Mt 5:3. Mt 6:19-23.

Mercy Sister Eloise Rosenblatt holds a doctorate in theology and is an attorney practicing family law. She lives in San Jose.

Liturgical calendar, daily Mass readings Monday, June 11: Memorial of St. Barnabas, apostle. Acts 11:21b-26; 12:1-3. Ps 98:1, 2-3ab, 3cd-4, 5-6. Mt 5:12a. Mt 5:1-12. Tuesday, June 12: Tuesday of the Tenth Week in Ordinary Time. 1 Kgs 17:7-16. Ps 4:2-3, 4-5, 7b-8. Mt 5:16. Mt 5:13-16. Wednesday, June 13: St. Anthony of Padua, priest, doctor of the church. 1 Kgs 18:20-39. Ps 16:1b-2ab, 4, 5ab and 8, 11. Ps 25:4b, 5a. Mt 5:17-19. Thursday, June 14: Thursday of the Tenth Week in Ordinary Time. 1 Kgs 18:41-46. Ps 65:10, 11, 1213. Jn 13:34. Mt 5:20-26. Friday, June 15: Friday of the Tenth Week in Ordi-

Tuesday, June 19: Tuesday of the Eleventh Week in Ordinary Time. Optional Memorial of St. Romuald,


opinion 11

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

R

Mercy, truth and pastoral practice

ecently a student I’d taught decades ago made this comment to me: “It’s been more than 20 years since I took your class and I’ve forgotten most everything you taught. What I do remember from your class is that we’re supposed to always try not to make God look stupid.” I hope that’s true. I hope that’s something people take away from my lectures and writings because I believe that the first task of any Christian apologetics is to rescue God from stupidity, arbitrariness, narrowness, legalism, rigidity, tribalism FATHER ron and everything else that’s rolheiser bad but gets associated with God. A healthy theology of God must underwrite all our apologetics and pastoral practices. Anything we do in the name of God should reflect God. It’s no accident that atheism, anti-clericalism, and the many diatribes leveled against the church and religion today can always point to some bad theology or church practice on which to base their skepticism and anger. Atheism is always a parasite, feeding off bad religion. So too is much of the negativity towards the churches which is so common today. An anti-church attitude feeds on bad religion and so we who believe in God and church should be examining ourselves more than defending ourselves. Moreover more important than the criticism of atheists are the many people who have been hurt by their churches. A huge number of persons today no longer go to church or have a very strained relationship to their churches because what they’ve met in their churches doesn’t speak well of God. I say this in sympathy. It’s not easy to do God adequately, let alone well. But we must try, and so all of our sacramental and pastoral practices need to reflect a healthy theology of God, that is, reflect the God whom Jesus incarnated and revealed. What did Jesus reveal about God? First, that God has no favorites and that there must be full equality among races, among rich and poor, among slave and free, and among male and female. No one person, race, gender, or nation is more favored than others by God. Nobody is first. All are privileged. Next, Jesus taught that God is especially compassionate and understanding toward the weak and toward sinners. Jesus scandalized his religious contemporaries by sitting down with public sinners without first asking them to repent. He welcomed everyone in ways that often offended the religious propriety of the time and he sometimes went

A

against the religious sensitivity of his contemporaries, as we see from his conversation with the Samaritan woman or when he grants a healing to the daughter of a Syro-Phoenician woman. Moreover he asks us to be compassionate in the same way and immediately spells out what that means by telling us the God loves sinners and saints in exactly the same way. God does not have preferential love for the virtuous. Shocking to us too is the fact that Jesus never defends himself when attacked. Moreover he is critical of those who, whatever their sincerity, try to block access to him. He surrenders himself to die rather than defend himself. He never meets hatred with hatred and dies loving and forgiving those who are killing him. Jesus is also clear that it’s not necessarily those who explicitly profess God and religion who are his true followers, but rather those, irrespective of their explicit faith or church practice, who do the will of God on earth. Finally, and centrally, Jesus is clear that his message is, first of all, good news for the poor, that any preaching in his name that isn’t good news for the poor is not his gospel. We need to keep these things in mind even as we recognize the validity and importance of the ongoing debates among and within our churches about whom and what makes for true discipleship and true sacrament. It is important to ask what makes for a true sacrament and what conditions make for a valid and licit minister of a sacrament. It is important too to ask who should be admitted to the Eucharist and it is important to set forth certain norms be followed in preparation for baptism, Eucharist and marriage. Difficult pastoral questions arise around these issues, among other issues, and this is not suggesting that they should always be resolved in a way that most immediately and simplistically reflects God’s universal will for salvation and God’s infinite understanding and mercy. Admittedly, sometimes the long-term benefit of living a hard truth can override the short-range need to more quickly take away the pain and the heartache. But, even so, a theology of God that reflects the compassion and mercy of God should always be reflected in every pastoral decision we make. Otherwise we make God look stupid – arbitrary, tribal, cruel and antithetical to church practice. Marilynne Robinson says Christianity is too great a narrative to be underwritten by any lesser tale and that should forbid in particular its being subordinated to narrowness, legalism and lack of compassion. Oblate Father Ron Rolheiser is president of the Oblate School of Theology, San Antonio, Texas.

Grace under pressure

chapter in a remarkable American and Catholic life will close on June 6, when Abbot Thomas Frerking, OSB, concludes more than two decades of service as leader of the monastic community at St. Louis Abbey. His story deserves to be better known. William Preston Frerking was born into a historically Presbyterian family in St. Louis on July 29, 1944. Two years later he was struck by polio, the childhood disease most dreaded by parents before the Salk and Sabin vaccines. His doctor, pergeorge weigel haps without knowing it, spoke prophetically when he told the boy’s parents, “He may be crippled in body, but don’t cripple his mind.” They didn’t. And as William Frerking was completing an outstanding undergraduate career at Harvard, he was encouraged to apply for a Rhodes Scholarship. He so impressed those conducting the preliminary screening of Rhodes candidates that he eventually found himself a finalist, just one interview away from landing perhaps the most coveted academic prize in the Anglosphere. There was a hitch, though. Cecil Rhodes wanted his scholars – think Pete Dawkins and Bill Bradley – to exemplify the

ancient maxim, mens sana in corpore sano [a sound mind in a sound body]. And thus far, none of the Rhodes’ judges had had the nerve to ask William Frerking about his disability – unmistakable because of the braces with which he walked and the crutches he sometimes used. The issue could not be indefinitely avoided, however. So at the conclusion of the final interview, during which the candidate had wowed the Rhodes jury yet again, one member of the selection committee asked, softly, “And about the athletics?” Missing nary a beat, young Mr. Frerking answered, “I play a mean game of bridge.” He got his Rhodes Scholarship. The result, however, was not what he or the Rhodes selection committee might have imagined. During his years at Trinity College in Oxford, this young scholar in philosophy experienced a profound religious conversion through his encounter with the Oxford Catholic chaplaincy. Received into the Catholic Church in 1970, he completed his formal education with two Oxford degrees: an M.A. in theology and a D.Phil. in philosophy, the latter earned with a dissertation written under the guidance of the great Elizabeth Anscombe. Then, during five years of teaching at Notre Dame, William Frerking began to hear a call to monastic life. In 1979, he entered what was known in those days as St. Louis Priory, see weigel, page 14

Letters The death of Alfie Evans

In his defense of socialized medicine and yes, health care rationing and death squads, Father Gerald Coleman (“The Death of Alfie Evans,” May 24), pins what he thinks was moral justification – even moral mandamus under Catholic teaching – to have disconnected Baby Alfie’s ventilator. Father Coleman appears not to understand that the core of the controversy was never about medical facts or the catechism, but who decides such issues. His venture into “Evengelium Vitae” and the catechism to justify in substance the outcome and the U.K. government’s decision to pull the plug was a disingenuous diversion from that key issue. Father Coleman’s defense of the outcome, his pillorying of those who disagreed, and his diversion from the real controversy demonstrated he’s fine with the power of the state to dictate life and death. What Father Coleman and like advocates cannot do by pulling out “Evengelium Vitae” and the catechism in the debate is substitute the state as the rightful executive agent to balance these cherished church teachings. But that doesn’t stop them from slipping in socialized medicine to the mix and implying the two are one – and that all is well. One can bet Father Coleman’s poorly disguised partisanship supports single payer and all that stands for – and if so, he should be honest enough to proclaim the state, not the individual, is best suited morally to make life and death decisions. Donald J. Farber San Rafael

Descent into barbarism

Not since the Reformation have the Catholic bishops of England and Wales so disgraced themselves as they did in conspiring with the government of England and the National Health Service of England to terminate Alfie Evans life. All Catholic teaching squarely puts that decision in the hands of the parents whose guardianship of Alfie comes not from the state but from God. In this case the Catholic bishops overruled God. The parents had options, viable options for the most precious son, an option denied them by the state with the complicity of the Catholic bishops, If the state has this power over life and death, what differentiates England from communist China, North Korea and the old Soviet Union? It is a descent into barbarism. Shame on the Catholic bishops of England and Wales. Shame. Stephen Firenze San Mateo

Doing our best to love God and others

With all the ills of society and the lack of morals and values, perhaps the following thoughts could help us back to a reality we’ve forgotten. The world would be an infinitely better place if people could understand and accept this basic concept. Suppose you were standing on a sandy beach stretching for miles and on the tip of your finger was one tiny speck of beach sand almost microscopic sparkling in the sun. That speck represents our time on this earth compared to eternal time represented by all the grains of sand on the beach and all the beaches of the earth. That’s how long our life is, these few years, like the blink of an eye compared to the infinite stretches of eternity. Why have we and the billions who have come before us and the billions who will come after us been given this moment by God? So that we do our best to love God and love others during this moment, and to spend eternity which is our real life with him. And that’s the only reason we’ve been put on our tiny planet in the vastness of space. For the sake of each of us, for the sake of others, and for the sake of the world we must understand our reason for being here and what we’re supposed to be doing here. Choosing to give up our future with God by not living as we’re meant to is to believe that that one grain of sand is more important than all the vast and uncountable sands of eternity. How could anyone make that choice? Joan Kelly North Providence, Rhode Island

Letters policy Email letters.csf@sfarchdiocese.org write Letters to the Editor, Catholic San Francisco, One Peter Yorke Way, San Francisco, CA 94109 Name, address and daytime phone number for verification required SHORT letters preferred: 250 words or fewer


12 opinion

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

Suicidal thoughts

W

done it successfully over the centuries, and so can you. I explain the process of renewal in my video. I promise it will lead you to a happier life. Keep mind, if you do decide to take your life you’ll be putting a blight on the conscience of everyone who ever cared about you, especially your parents and relatives living and dead. Also, you’ll be setting a terrible example for your children and grandchildren. Let your final act be one of heroism not despair. “Don’t be afraid,” said the Lord.” Those words appear 365 times in the Bible. It means that you have the power to banish needless anxiety. Jesus would never have promised to be your strength and your joy if He didn’t intend to follow through. You have the power to imagine yourself as a hero or heroine. You can choose to be Joan of Arc or the Angel Gabriel. Be a winner for all eternity. Just around the corner of the dark tunnel you might be in, there’s an underground railway ready to whisk you away to freedom, refreshment and healing. Believe the Lord Jesus who said, “Fear is useless, what you need is trust” (Luke 8:50).

that all the good things of life can be regained, once you open your eyes to the love of God, and exercise a little patience. I explain how to clear your mind of self-sabotage. If you’ve read my columns over the years, you’ll recognize my line of reasoning. First, I lay the groundwork for joy to begin the liberation process. Slowly the suicidal thoughts begin to lose their power. Remember, I ran a drug and alcohol rehab for a few years, and I know what I’m talking about. This two-pronged strategy begins with the pursuit of spiritual joy, and proceeds with the rejection of deadly, self-destructive thoughts. One of the first things you need to grasp is the fact that you are not your thoughts. You are the observer of your thoughts. More precisely, you can reject the phony belief that you have no choice. You really want liberation, not death. Suicide is permanent and it has eternal consequences. You have been deceived. It’s no solution; only a knee jerk reaction. Delete suicide from your mind. You are destined for happiness, here and hereafter. With God’s help, happiness can be yours once again. It takes an act of the will to persevere in praying for God’s grace to enable you to change your direction. Millions of desperate souls have

hen you have a little time, please visit my website JohnCatoir.com, and scroll down past the white cross, then click on the left side under my portrait and view my video interview on the topic of spiritual joy. It has a section on suicidal thoughts, that has helped a lot of people. One lady who was overwhelmed with despair at first didn’t want to have anything to do with a priest. She was lost at the bottom of a pit and saw no way out. Nevertheless, there was a way out. She found out FATHER JOHN slowly that safety, freedom CATOIR and happiness were all waiting for her as soon as she discovered the escape hatch. A new life and a new love was just around the corner. She prayed and received the grace to reverse her thinking. In time she lived to discover great peace and happiness. Once she decided to spend a little time with this video of mine, she gradually came to understand

Father John Catoir is a canon lawyer and a priest of the Diocese of Paterson, New Jersey.

Oh, Susanna! The poetry and pro-life power of baby names

T

he big news from the Social Security Administration is the ousting of a champion: Liam has dethroned Noah as the nation’s most popular boy name. This was the headline of its newly released baby-name report, an annual synthesis of Social Security card applications from the past year that offers a fascinating cultural statement and doubles as a tip sheet for expectant parents. Those hoping to avoid preschool confusion and the fate of forever appending the first initial of your last name may want to eschew Emma, Christina which secured the No. 1 spot Capecchi among girl names for the fourth consecutive year, as well as Olivia and Ava, which held their ground at No. 2 and No. 3, respectively.

SCRIPTURE SEARCH

®

Gospel for June 10, 2018 Mark 3:20-35

YOUR ONE-STOP TRAVEL CENTER!

HEARD SATAN STAND NO ONE PLUNDER UNCLEAN WILL

OUT OF HIS MIND O

D

E

K

W

B

O

H

O

U

S

E

S

U

N

S

C

L

C

H

O

A

N

L

UP TO HOLLAND AMERICA LINE’S READY TO SET ALL DESTINATIONS ON SALE! Summer 2018 to Spring 2019SAIL UP TO

FREE ONBOARD ANNIVERSARY PLUS SPECIALTY DINING 600 SPENDING MONEY guests in ONBOARD S A L Efora ALL stateroom

$

ANNIVERSARY S A L E DEC. 5, 2017 - FEB. 14, 2018 - 6 to 60 day Cruises & select Cruisetours - $100 Refundable Deposit per person

600

$

PER STATEROOM

SPENDING MONEY

DEC. 5, 2017 - FEB. 14, 2018

PER STATEROOM

- 6 to 60 day Cruises & select Cruisetours - $100 Refundable Deposit per person

READY• SET• SAIL

Alaska Voyage of the Glaciers

Alaska Voyage

Alaska

of the Glaciers Scandinavia Cruisetours Alaska 7-days between Vancouver, 10 nights Anchorage to Cruisetours B.C. and Anchorage (Whittier) & RussiaVancouver, B.C.

N

A

T

N

F

A

L

R

T

O

J

B

A

N

E

O

S

S

J

S

O

P

R

A

M

A

R

M

F

P

J

N

N

W

E

E

G

E

S

E

J

H

A

I

N

I

D

B

N

D

A

D

D

E

I

S

A

L

N

T

O

I

T

N

L

M

L

S

C

L

U

O

R

S

A

C

C

I

Y

M

M

T

L

N

T

T

N

A

H

E

A

R

D

I

P

U

S

U

P

S

I

S

T

E

R

S

N

P

Onboard spending - $100 FREE

H

O

M

E

D

D

E

D

I

V

I

D

Travel Agency Since 1939 Full Service TravelTravel Agency SinceFull 1939Service Owned & Operated Full Service Agency Since 1939Family Family Owned & Operated

Sponsored by Duggan’s Serra Mortuary 500 Westlake Avenue, Daly City 650-756-4500 ● www.duggansserra.com

Fares from*

$599

$1,849

Fares from*

British Isles

Summer Caribbean

• Prepaid gratuities (hotel Fares from*

service charges) Fares from*

Summer

Fares from* per stateroom!

Onboard spending - $100 FREE

for ALL guests in

a stateroom Italian Community Services

Italian Community Services

Provides Bay Area Italian-American provides Bay AreaCommunity Italian-American seniors and families Italian Services seniors and families with trusted resources with trusted resources to help them live healthy, provides Bay Area Italian-American seniors and indepenfamilies to help them live health, independent and dent trusted and productive Wethem are committed to honoring with resourceslives. to help live healthy, indepenproduction lives. We are committed to an and the Italian and culture, with dentpreserving and productive lives. language We are committed to honoring honoring and preserving the Italian emphasis on the and support comeswith froman and preserving thestrength Italian language andthat culture, Scandinavia languages and culture, with an emphasis & Russia community, family, education and goodwill. emphasis on the strength and support that comes fromon 11 days roundtrip the strength and support Copenhagen community, educationthat andcomes goodwill.from Mayfamily, – September 2018 family, community, education and goodwill. Fares from* • Translation for seniors/new immigrants

••••••••••••••••• Los678 Angeles Green Street • San Francisco, CA 94133 September 2018 – April 2019 Coloniale John F. Fugazi 415Casa •362•6423 • www.italiancs.com Fares from* 678 Green Street • San Francisco, CA 94133

Fares from* $1,999 $699 $1,999 $699 $1,849 • 50% reduced deposit ADDITIONAL SAVINGS AVAILABLE Onboard spending - $75 FREE

SPECIALTY DINING

• Community service coordination • Translation for seniors/new immigrants • Information and referrals Mexico•&Community service coordination ••••••••••••••••• California Coast • Information and referrals 7 days roundtripCasa Coloniale John F. Fugazi

Mexico &Caribbean Californiaonboard Coast $300 spending money

Fares from*

see capecchi, page 13

Onboard spending - $100 FREE

Onboard spending - $75 FREE Onboard spending - $75 FREE Onboard spending - $100 FREE Cruise Marketplace for travel from September Suite reservations: 1, 2018 to August 31, 2019 (excluding Grand Voyages and segments) and receive low with Dublin Overnight receive up to 12 days roundtrip London 7 days roundtrip fares and these incredible offers:* with Dublin Overnight (Southampton) Ft. Lauderdale 12 days roundtrip London 7 days roundtrip 7 days roundtrip (Southampton) Ft. Lauderdale Los Angeles May – September 2018 May – September 2018 May – September 2018 May – September 2018 September 2018 – April 2019

British Isles

FREE

$1,799

Fares from*

During the promotion, you can book any Onboard spending - $75 FREE $1,799 spending - $75 FREE $599 $1,849 cruise or Land+Sea Journey now through The BONUSOnboard OFFER

$1,849 415•362•6423

Onboard spending - $75 FREE

Onboard spending - $75 FREE

spending - $75Figone FREE Travel whenOnboard booking with

Family Owned & Operated

FIGONE TRAVEL GROUP FIGONE TRAVEL GROUP FIGONE TRAVEL GROUP CST # 100209-10

© 2018 Tri-C-A Publications www.tri-c-a-publications.com

10 nights Anchorage to 11 days roundtrip ANY STATEROOM ANYWHERE May – September 2018 May – September 2018 Vancouver, B.C. Copenhagen Fares from* May – September 2018 May SAILS – September 2018Fares from* HOLLAND AMERICA

7-days between Vancouver, B.C. and Anchorage (Whittier) May – September 2018

PLUS

1495Oak), Laurel 1495 Laurel San CA 94070 1494 LaurelStreet, St. Suite B. Carlos, (White SanStreet, Carlos San Carlos, CA 94070 (800) 826-4333 · www.cruisemarketplace.com (800)(800) 826-4333 · www.cruisemarketplace.com 826-4333 · www.cruisemarketplace.com » Next to Trader Joes « » NextST.toCHARLES PARISHIONER ASTA - BBB Trader Joes « » Next to Trader Joes «

ST. CHARLES PARISHIONER

CST # 100209-10

CROWD DEMONS CANNOT NOT BE ABLE STRONG MAN’S BLASPHEMIES SISTERS

YOUR ONE-STOP TRAVEL CENTER! YOUR ONE-STOP TRAVEL CENTER!

CST # 100209-10

Following is a word search based on the Gospel reading for the Tenth Sunday in Ordinary Time, Cycle B: a lesson about how all are united in Christ. The words can be found in all directions in the puzzle. HOME OUT OF HIS MIND DIVIDED HOUSE ENTER SINS OUTSIDE

instincts and pray – all leading up to the formulation of at least five suggestions for each gender. Until you’ve read Kate’s consultations, you can’t appreciate the value this provides to a pregnant woman scratching her head over baby names as she launders onesies and writes baby-shower thank-you cards or evicts a toddler from the nursery. There’s proof in the pudding: Countless clients have named a child with one of Kate’s picks. Her interest in names was first influenced by her mom, an Irish poet. Kate has always filed away surprising selections and winsome pairings, scrolling favorite names in a notebook at age 14. Today Kate appreciates the pro-life power of a name, personalizing a baby in utero and conferring it with dignity. She marvels over her unexpected ministry – a term she didn’t initially think in until a reader used it. “I’m so blessed that my funny little interest has turned into something amazing that actually helps other people and gives glory to God,” she said. It goes to show that ministries can’t be confined to a narrow box, she adds. Many of her friends also have discovered novel avenues for their Godgiven talents, with outcomes they’d never imagined on a timeline entirely his. She’s counting on perfect timing to decide the CRUISES • TOURS • LAND PACKAGES • AIR name of her seventh baby, due September, whose gender is unknown. Agreeing on a boy name is CRUISES • TOURS • ALL LAND PACKAGES • AIR CRUISES • TOURS • DESTINATIONS LAND PACKAGES • AIR ON SALE! Summer 2018 to Spring 2019 Our love of a v sound buoyed by vowels was also reflected in a few newcomers to the top 10, including Oliver (No. 9) and Evelyn (No. 9). New moms are dusting off their grandmothers’ names, but they’re threading that antique lace to red bandana, according to the list of names that made the biggest leaps in popularity. A gust of Wild-West spunk emerged in 2017 with the likes of Oaklynn, Oaklee, Luella and Sunny, alongside fast-galloping boy names like Wells, Wilder and Ridge. Among those who read the report with great interest was a pregnant mom in upstate New York who posted the top 10 to Instagram and commented on Logan’s surge to No. 5. Kate Towne has a trained eye – not only because she has named six sons with her husband but because the 39-year-old stay-at-home mom is the preeminent Catholic baby naming consultant. Kate is paid to provide consultations for expectant parents based on her proven expertise, showcased delightfully on her popular blog Sancta Nomina, Latin for “holy names.” For $50, she will contemplate a couple’s preferences, factor in names of the baby’s siblings, scan the saints, conduct research, tap into her exhaustive knowledge, examine her

www.italiancs.com

.

.

.

.


opinion 13

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

The infinite value of people with disabilities Father Ed Dougherty, MM

A

t a recent U.N. gathering, the Holy See brought together a group of panelists to highlight the value of disabled persons in our society. A video was presented that told of a woman who was pregnant and had just discovered her child would be born with Down Syndrome. She emailed an organization for the disabled, saying, “I’m scared: what kind of life will my child have?” Their response was to compile video clips of people with Down Syndrome answering her question. From different places around the world and in different languages, they took turns delivering pieces of the message written in subtitles beneath their beautiful, smiling faces: “Dear future mom, don’t be afraid. Your child will be able to do many things. He’ll be able to hug you. He’ll be able to run towards you. He’ll be able to speak and tell you he loves you.” They explained all the things a child with Down Syndrome would be able to do, including work, travel, and independent living, adding, “Sometimes it will be difficult. Very difficult … But isn’t it like that for all mothers?” Tears flowed at the U.N. as mothers joined their children on screen, one at a time in each different location, mother and child hugging each other as the final words of the message were delivered: “Dear future mom, your child can be happy. Just like I am. And you’ll be happy too. Right, mom?” Each in turn, they looked

(CNS photo/Paul Haring)

Pope Francis greets a disabled man after celebrating Mass in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican in this June 17, 2013, file photo. The pope has shown special concern for the aged, the sick and those with disabilities. to their mothers, whose smiles and warmth answered the question, “Right, mom?” This short video message so beautifully captures the impact people with disabilities have on the world around them. The mothers in that video looked happy because of the bonds they had created with their children. It is important to remember that those bonds of love within a family or community are often strengthened through unique challenges faced

capecchi: The poetry and pro-life power of baby names FROM PAGE 12

difficult having already named six. Pregnancy after pregnancy, her chosen girl name has not wavered: Susanna, honoring her mom (Susanne), her grandma (Anna) and St. Susanna. Kate can refer to her new book, “Catholic Baby Names for Girls and Boys: Over 250 Ways to Honor Our

Lady,” and hope for grace from the novena she’s praying to St. Gerard, patron saint of pregnant women. Ultimately, she’s confident the name will feel right, chosen for a baby to be embraced by a band of brothers, steeped in Catholic tradition and swaddled in love. Christina Capecchi is a freelance writer from Inver Grove Heights, Minnesota.

together. The entire group may cultivate teamwork, learn empathy, and discover that everyone has amazing talents, if only given the circumstances to thrive. On a day devoted to persons with disabilities during the Jubilee Year of Mercy in 2016, Pope Francis said, “The world does not become better because only apparently ‘perfect’ – not to mention fake – people live there, but when human solidarity, mutual acceptance and respect in-

crease…. Each of us, sooner or later, is called to face – at times painfully – frailty and illness, both our own and those of others.” Sadly, in some parts of the world, disability-based abortion threatens to eliminate certain populations of the disabled, which the Holy See called, “the greatest hate-crime of this generation.” Francis correctly highlights that it is an illusion to think we can eradicate the obstacles of life. All we are doing by weeding out people with disabilities is creating a society that is less compassionate and less oriented towards problem solving. But this is not the way that Christ has taught us to live. We are called to care for one another and in so doing we discover the joy of becoming more like Christ. This is why the mothers and their children featured in the U.N. video radiated such joy. They had discovered Christ in their relation to one another. What greater gift could a person bring into your life? So have the courage to embrace those with disabilities in your family and community, and you will awaken Christ within each other and help to build a compassionate society that values all people as children of God. Maryknoll Father Ed Dougherty is a member of The Christophers’ board of directors. For free copies of the Christopher News Note “Where There is Hatred, Let Me Sow Love,” write: The Christophers, 5 Hanover Square, New York, NY 10004; or e-mail: mail@christophers.org.


14 from the front

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

Charities’ soccer benefit June 16 for refugee children

Weigel: Grace under pressure

Catholic San Francisco

FROM PAGE 11

Soccer players of all ages take the field June 16 for Futbol con Corazon, bringing “together community members and unaccompanied minors for a day of soccer, community and fundraising,” Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of San Francisco, the day’s sponsor, said. The games take place at Sacred Heart School, 150 Valparaiso Ave., Atherton, 1–5 p.m. The event was founded three years ago by Diana Otero, Catholic Charities director of Refugee and Immigrant Services of San Mateo, to raise vital funds for unaccompanied minors, children who bravely left their families and fled their countries to escape persecution, abandonment, exploitation, serious deprivation and/or violence living in the Bay Area and receiving services through Catholic Charities, the organization said. “Our program is designed to advise and guide unaccompanied minors through the immigration process and to help immigrants know their rights under the law,” Catholic Charities said. People are invited to attend and donate to the (Courtesy photo) cause as well as bring their own teams to the tourSoccer players at a past Futbol con Corazon benefiting ney. “Those interested in fielding a team of up to Catholic Charities Refugee and Immigrant Services. seven friends, family, and co–workers can do so at employees from companies like Google, Walmart three sponsorship levels: $5,000, $2,500 and $1,000. and many others,” Catholic Charities said. “Our Our unaccompanied minors will make up the rest Catholic Charities staff and community volunteers of the team,” Catholic Charities said. “They are stushare their time and talent serving as coaches, dents – children – going to school, participating in referees, cheerleaders, greeters, food preparers, after–school programs, volunteering, and working water bearers, and more. It’s a robust partnership in when they are of age to do so.” service of resilient youngsters who long for safety, Due to the event’s success, Catholic Charities is care, family, and a place to call home.” doubling the number of teams this year from eight to 16. Volunteers are also welcome. CatholicCharitiesSF. “Our kids have played with the San Mateo Sheriff, org/futbol; dotero@CatholicCharitiesSF.org; (650) Redwood City and Requested East Palo Alto city officials,Directors TelThe Most Funeral in TheandMost Requested Funeral in the the Archdiocese Archdiocese of of San San Francisco Francisco 295–2160. emundo Univision reporters and anchors,Directors and

The Most Funeral the Archdiocese of San San Francisco Duggan's SerraRequested Mortuary, Daly City andDirectors Sullivan's & in Duggan's Serra Funeral Services, Francisco The Most Requested Funeral the Archdiocese of San San Francisco Duggan's Serra Mortuary, Daly City andDirectors Sullivan's &in Duggan's Serra Funeral Services, Francisco Duggan's Serra Mortuary, Daly City and Sullivan's & Duggan's Serra Funeral Services, San Francisco The Most Funeral the Archdiocese of San San Francisco Duggan's SerraRequested Mortuary, Daly City andDirectors Sullivan's & in Duggan's Serra Funeral Services, Francisco Duggan's Serra Mortuary, Daly City and Sullivan's & Duggan's Serra Funeral Services, San Francisco

eventually taking the religious name “Thomas.” After making final vows in 1984, he was ordained a priest in 1986 and taught theology for several years before becoming the abbey school’s headmaster in 1992 and abbot of the monastery in 1995. Because of the long-term effects of his polio, he has led his brother-Benedictines from a motorized wheelchair for the past several years. His retirement coincides with the 40th anniversary of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s 1978 commencement address at Abbot Thomas’s undergraduate alma mater, Harvard. In what was perhaps his most controversial public statement, the great Russian chronicler of the evils of the communist system, speaking “as a friend, not an adversary,” nonetheless criticized the West for what he described as its “loss of will power,” “psychological weakness,” and “spiritual exhaustion.” Of the many extraordinary people it has been my privilege to know, few have offered as profound a contrast to that critique as Abbot Thomas Frerking. For me, as for many others, he has been a model of determination, strength and spiritual depth. In a culture that Solzhenitsyn rightly criticized for its obsession with “unlimited freedom in the choice of pleasures,” Abbot Thomas has lived a vocation of self-giving and self-denial, gently summoning the students he taught, their parents and the monks who kept re-electing him their superior to a nobler understanding of freedom as a matter of choosing the good, freely. That achievement was not only the expression of a keen mind honed by contact with the brilliance of Elizabeth Anscombe; above all, it was the expression of a soul nourished daily by the Eucharist he celebrated and the Divine Office he prayed in community. Abbot Thomas, as I’ll now call him for the last time, embodies Hemingway’s definition of courage as “grace under pressure.” In his case, the grace is supernatural in origin, and its effect has been the sanctification of others. George Weigel is Distinguished Senior Fellow and William E. Simon Chair in Catholic Studies of the Ethics and Public Policy Center, Washington, D.C.

500 Westlake Avenue, Daly City 500 Westlake Avenue, Daly City 500 WestlakeFD1098 Avenue, Daly City FD1098 500 Westlake Avenue, Daly City DuggansSerra.com FD1098 DuggansSerra.com FD1098 500 Westlake Avenue, Daly City 650-756-4500 DuggansSerra.com 650-756-4500 DuggansSerra.com FD1098 650-756-4500 650-756-4500 DuggansSerra.com

funeral services

to Advertise in catholic San FrancIsco call (415) 614-5642  |  Visit www.catholic-sf.org

650-756-4500

6201 Geary Blvd., San Francisco 6201 Geary Blvd., San Francisco FD228San Francisco 6201 Geary Blvd., FD228 6201 Geary Blvd., San Francisco Sullivansfh.com 415-621-4567 FD228 Sullivansfh.com 415-621-4567 FD228 6201 Geary Blvd., San Francisco Sullivansfh.com 415-621-4567 Sullivansfh.com 415-621-4567 My Funeral, FD228 My Cremation, My Way (R) My Funeral, My 415-621-4567 Cremation, My Way (R) Sullivansfh.com

Funeral and Memorial Receptions

Matt, Bill, Dan and Joey Duggan My Funeral, My Cremation, My Way (R) Matt, Bill, Dan and Joey Duggan My Funeral, My Cremation, My Way (R) Matt, Bill, Dan and Joey Duggan Matt, Bill, and Joey Duggan Family Owned/Operated * Unlimited Reasonable CostsDan * World-Wide Shipping * My Funeral, My Cremation, My Way Parking (R) ** Most Family Owned/Operated * Unlimited Parking Most Reasonable Costs * World-Wide Shipping * Multilingual Staff * 3 Indoor Reception Rooms * Kind Knowledgeable StaffDan * Free Matt, Bill, andPre-Arrangement Joey Duggan Family Owned/Operated * Unlimited Parking * Most Reasonable Costs World-Wide Shipping *Info Multilingual Staff * 3 Indoor *Reception * Kind Knowledgeable Staff ** World-Wide Free Pre-Arrangement Family Owned/Operated UnlimitedRooms Parking * Most Reasonable Costs Shipping * Info Multilingual Staff * 3 Indoor Reception Rooms * Kind Knowledgeable Staff * Free Pre-Arrangement Info Multilingual Staff * 3 Indoor Reception * Kind Knowledgeable Staff * Free Pre-Arrangement Family Owned/Operated * UnlimitedRooms Parking * Most Reasonable Costs World-Wide Shipping *Info

Gathering Room Available Award winning family restaurant 333 El Camino Real, Millbrae, CA 94030 650.697.3419

McAVOY O’HARA Co.

Multilingual Staff * 3 Indoor Reception Rooms 7747 * KindElKnowledgeable Camino Real Staff * Free Pre-Arrangement Info

Colma, CA 94014 | FD 1522

&

111 Industrial Road suite. 5 Belmont, CA 94002 | FD 1923

Affordable Catholic Funeral & Cremation Services Specializing in Chapel Services & interments at Holy Cross Catholic Cemetery We provide on-line arrangements Nationally Certified Bereavement Facilitators 5 Star Yelp Reviews 650.757.1300 |

fax 650.757.7901

|

toll free 888.757.7888

| www.colmacremation.com

S ERV ING W I TH TRUST AND CONFI DE NCE SI NCE 1850

Ev e r g r e e n M o r tu a r y 4545 G E ARY B O U L E VA R D a t T E N T H AV E N U E For information prearrangements, and assistance, call day or night (415) 668-0077

“California’s Premier Catholic Funeral Company” FD 523


from the front 15

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

Border: Refugees stories epiphany for ‘jaded’ immigration judge FROM PAGE 1

“I really believe in the Catholic mission of going out into the community and working and that’s how I ended up at Catholic Charities,” said McArthur, who provides legal services to both documented and undocumented immigrants at Catholic Charities. McArthur is accredited by the Department of Justice and provides much of the same work a lawyer can at a very low cost to the client because Catholic Charities is registered through the DOJ. She is not Catholic, but has a strong personal conviction about “welcoming the stranger.” Her desire to go to Dilley, she said, was a “direct response” to U.S. immigration policies and what is happening at the border. “I felt like maybe I needed to go someplace where people are not represented,” she said. Stockton, a lifelong Catholic, served as an immigration judge in San Francisco for 21 years, retiring in 2011. After finding common ground with McArthur at Catholic Charities, the pair planned their trip with the blessing of program director Francisco Gonzalez. In Dilley, Stockton and McArthur were trained along with other volunteers on the intake process for CARA representation. The end goal is to get families out of detention moving toward the asylum process. If a person comes here seeking refuge and can establish that they have a “credible fear” claim based upon any one of the protected five asylum grounds, said Stockton, the detainee may be physically allowed into the United States and pursue their application for asylum afterward.

When they didn’t produce the money, the gang came in the middle of the night, kicked them off their own land and took the husbands away. The women and children ran into the darkness with their children. The next day they presented themselves at the border. Stockton admitted that her career had made her a cynic, but the trip to Dilley changed that “By the time I was ready to retire, I had become very jaded,” she said. “I was sick and tired of immigration fraud.” How there were claims made that were within the box of what you needed to prove in order to be eligible to receive asylum. “But the question was, did it happen to that person?” “A lot of it was because the stories were very repetitious, as we saw in just one week in Dilley,” she said. “The stories are raw, that’s the word I use,” she said. “I believed that that these things happened to these women and that was something very moving in my opinion. McArthur and Stockton described the privilege of being able to listen to stories that have perhaps never been shared with anyone. “I don’t think many of these women have ever been listened to,” said Stockton. McArthur said she wishes that more people would volunteer to do this work. “It’s not like, oh, you have to be a retired immigration judge to do this,” she said, or a lawyer. “We have so much here, each one of us, each day has so much to give and so much privilege already that gosh it would just be great if more people understood what actually is happening with these people,” she said.

“Our main goal was to get as much information as we could from each individual, so that person could communicate their fears and how it fell within the law to the asylum officer,” she said. “These people, so many of them are so incredibly traumatized,” said McArthur. The women say things like they want a better life for my children. “But we need to know what happened to you that you want a better life here?” In the U.S., a “better life” is often construed as economic opportunity, but Stockton said the lives of the people she talked to are so simple, a “better life” mostly means freedom from relentless fear. Nearly three-quarters of the stories they heard involved gang violence, domestic violence, extortion or death threats. “The typical story at least as far as I was concerned, was extortion or death threats by gangs,” said McArthur. Another story that was quite common, she said, was a person living in between two gang territories or had to travel between two different gang territories for work would be accused of “spying” for each and threatened with death. “Whether those threats were carried out or not I don’t know, but if someone was saying that to me I would leave too,” she said. “I did ask them, are you aware of anyone who had a similar threat made who decided not to go along and stayed?” Stockton said. She was told, often “very matter of factly,” that they were killed. A woman and her sister who lived on a rural road in Mexico with their families told McArthur that members of a gang told them to sell their livestock to come up with money they wanted. “They obviously didn’t have anything and their animals were their only livelihood,” Stockton said.

Chile: Pope ‘ashamed’ by church’s failure to listen to abuse survivors FROM PAGE 9

had allegedly witnessed their abuse by his mentor, Father Fernando Karadima. Pope Francis said their visit was made after “verifying the existence of situations that we did not know how to see and listen.” “As a church, we cannot continue walking while ignoring the pain of our brothers and sisters,” he said. The church, he continued, must say “never again” to a culture that not only allowed sexual abuses to occur but also “considered a critical and questioning attitude as betrayal.” “The culture of abuse and cover up is incompat-

ible with the logic of the Gospel given that the salvation offered by Christ is always an offering, a gift that demands and requires freedom,” the pope said. The pope also encouraged Chilean Catholics to continue their devotion to popular piety which is “one of the few areas where the people of God is above the influence of that clericalism that seeks to control and restrain the anointment of God upon the people.” Like Christ, who did not hide his wounds after his resurrection but rather showed them to his disciples, the church must also be willing to show its own wounds to “be able to understand and be moved by the wounds of the world today.”

business cards

Emily Smith-Silvestri CABRE#01927979

St. Bart’s Parishioner

“A church with wounds doesn’t place itself at the center, it doesn’t think itself perfect, it doesn’t look to cover up and conceal its evil, but instead places them before the only one who can heal wounds and he has a name: Jesus Christ. After the letter’s release, Juan Carlos Cruz, one of three survivors who met with Pope Francis April 27-29, said he was moved by the pope’s letter. “There are phrases in the letter that are things that we spoke about with the pope, such as the culture of cover-ups. It is an emotional feeling to know that he was listening to us and it wasn’t just a salute,” Cruz said May 31 in an interview with Chilean radio station Tele 13.

to Advertise in catholic San FrancIsco Visit www.catholic-sf.org | call (415) 614-5642 email advertising.csf@sfarchdiocese.org

*QUALIFIED MECHANICS TO SERVE YOU

• Brakes • Tune up • Oil changes

tires • batteries & Accessories California smog check inspection-repair station

Josie T. Brooks

Parishioner St. Anthony of Padua/ Immaculate Conception

John Conway

Nativity Church Parishioners

Expert in Trust Sales …Here to help.

1115 Howard Ave., Burlingame, California 94010

c: 650-346-1361 Emily.Smith@sothebysrealty.com www.emilysmithrealty.com

Menlo Park Chevron

El Camino Real & Oak Grove Ave. 650 323-4239 MenloChevron@gmail.com www.menlochevron.com

Remember to give God in your gifts

REALTOR BRE #00812964

RICHARD J. HUNT, G.R.I. Broker Associate

(415) 682-8544

rjhunt@sbcglobal.net Homes & Income Properties Sales and Exchanges

OVER 40 YEARS EXPERIENCE Easy freeway access. Call for directions.

415.225.9501 Cell • 415.334.1880 Bus. Josie.brooks@cbnorcal.com

RESIDENTIAL BROKERAGE

1390 Noriega Street San Francisco, CA 94122

ccv

(Serving the Bay Area Since 1968)


ion or rvices tecost Tours,

n and ay otha imum er ersons renger comes p ion to ro n-govor c. in ded echase ss,offer

ckness n, and along d ecline er chase. dl plan on e note er United st, rmine

he nt

ncludarticier this he actors, o actors or nd are e, age or d arnd nt and es red in be ission as rs.conwhen of panies

r-

d may g ceived e.g

m

epright uating at

ct,

g you de A of ent ve the se . le

ot se en T

IA)

ay h-

o r-

ou mo

2012 HOLY LAND PILGRIMAGES

16 from the front

May 26-June 6 & September 18-29

Vatican: travel DiCicco Fr. Mario directory Doctrine on all-male priesthood definitive

Join Franciscan

Join Franciscan

Fr. Mario DiCicco in a pilgrimage to TURKEY:

Cradle of Earliest Christianity

to Advertise in catholic San FrancIsco

October 6-20, 2018 Follow the Footsteps of St. Paul in Asia Minor and on the Island of Cyprus. See the Ruins of the 7 Churches of the Book of Revelation with a Journey to the Island of Patmos. Visit Istanbul and the Great Basilica of Hagia Sophia and the Blue Mosque. Visit Cappadocia, home of Sts. Basil and Gregory Nazianzen, with its surreal landscape. Celebrate Mass at the home of the Blessed Mother in Ephesus. And much more. Fr. Mario has a PhD in New Testament and can help you appreciate the missionary journeys of the great Apostle Paul which began at Antioch where the followers of Jesus were first called Christians. Call: (312) 888-1331 or write: mmdicicco@gmail.com Website: FrMarioTours.weebly.com

call

(415) 614-5642

fax

(415) 614-5641

Visit

www.catholic-sf.org

Catholic San Francisco and Pentecost Tours, Inc. invites you

to join in the following pilgrimages

Ireland

with Judy and Deacon Rick Simon & Spiritual Leaders: Fr. Tom Farrell, Sacred Heart Parish, Shawano, Tour 71023 WI Fr. Adam Bradley, St. Pius X Parish, Appleton, WI Catholic San FranciscoTour 81108

Oct. 8-19, 2018

invites you toBelfast, join Giant’s Causeway, Visit: Dublin, Downpatrick, Saint Meinrad Graduate Theology Programs Derry, Knock, Westport, Kylemore, Connemara, Croagh Catholic San Francisco and Sr. Jeana Visel, OSB Patrick, Galway, Limerick, Rock of Cashel & others to jointo on ainvites 12-dayyou pilgrimage

3,399

$ Marcel Emerald Isle Fr. J.The Portelli

+ $399 per person* from San 8-15, Francisco if2018 paid by 6-30-18 November

Base Price: $3,499 + $399 per person* after July 15, 2018

*Estimated airline taxeson & fuelan surcharges are subject to increase/decrease atto ticketing (30 days prior) 8-day pilgrimage

Rome and An 8-day pilgrimage to

Assisi

Fr. J. Marcel Portelli

$

Greece & Turkey Daily Mass Will Be Celebrated

A pilgrimage in the footsteps of the Apostle, St. Paul

Oct. 13-23, 2018

Day 1: Saturday, October 13, 2018, USA / ISTANBUL Pilgrims gather this evening at an international airport 11 days for our overnight flight to Istanbul. Meals and beverages Includes Aegean Cruise With Fr.Paw Lwin are served on board.

$

3,199

Day 2: Sunday 10/14, INSTANBUL / THESSALONIKI Upon our arrival in Istanbul, we board our connecting flight to Thessaloniki, Greece’s second largest city and the birthplace of Aristotle. Upon our arrival, + $559 per person* frombefore San Francisco if paidwe by enjoy 7-5-18a brief orientation tour checking in at our hotel $ $ Base Price: and 3,299 + 559 per for dinner overnight. [D]person* after March 8, 2018 *Estimated airline taxes & fuel surcharges are subject to increase/decrease at ticketing (30 days prior)

Day 3: Monday 10/15, THESSALONIKI / PHILIPPI / THESSALONIKI Today, we enjoy a day trip to Philippi, a city named after Philip of Macedonia, father of Alexander the Great. Philippi was the first European town to hear the preaching of St Paul. Paul, Timothy, and Luke were able to make many converts among the Philippians, especially among those of rank. We’ll visit the legendary prison of St. Paul, the theatre, Forum and St. Lydia’s Baptistery before returning to Thessaloniki for dinner and an overnight. [B,D]

Eastern Europe Day 4: Tuesday 10/16, THESSALONIKI / KALAMBAKA This morning we have free time to explore on our own or shop in with Thessaloniki. BishopSuggestions Donald J.includes: Hying a visit to either of the main squares located on the waterfront: Platia Elefterias or Platia Aristotelous. Both areas are full of cafes and restaurants and provide an ideal environment in which to relax andpilgramage soak up the bustling activity 12 day of the city. This afternoon, we visit the Rotonda, TriumExplore Czech Republic andthe Poland phal Arch ofAustria, Galerius, the sea front and White Tower before making our way to Kalambaka to check in at our hotel and freshen up for dinner. Overnight in Kalambaka. [B,D]

Oct. 15-26, 2018 $

Nov. 8-15, 2018

2,499

3,299

+ $479 per person* from San Francisco if Thessaloniki paid by 7-6-18 White Tower,

Earlyper registration priceSan $3,099 + $329* + $439 person* from Francisco if per paidperson by 7-15-18 from San $ Francisco $ if deposit is paid by 7-15-17

Base Price: 2,599 + 439 per person* after July 15, 2018

*Estimated airline taxes &$3,199 fuel surcharges are subject increase/decrease ticketing (30 days prior Base price + $329* pertoperson afterat 7-15-17

Base Price: $3,399 + $479 per person* after July 7, 2018

*Estimated airline taxes & fuel surcharges are subject to increase/decrease at ticketing (30 days prior)

Visit Munich, Salzburg, Prague, Krakow, Auschwitz, Warsaw and more

For a FREE brochure on this pilgrimage contact:

*Estimated Airline Taxes & Fuel Surcharges subject to increase/decrease at 30 days prior

Catholic San Francisco

415.614.5640

Please leave your name, mailing address and your phone number California Registered Seller of Travel Registration Number CST-2037190-40

(Registration as a Seller of Travel does not constitute approval by the State of California)

Early registration price $2,499 + $439* per person from San Francisco if deposit is paid by 7-15-18

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

FROM PAGE 8

the infallibility of St. John Paul’s declaration in the document “Ordinatio Sacerdotalis” because “it was not defined ‘ex cathedra’” or formally, solemnly proclaimed as infallible. The argument, the cardinal-designate wrote, is that “a later decision by a future pope or council could overturn it.” But “sowing these doubts creates serious confusion among the faithful not only about the sacrament of orders as part of the divine constitution of the church, but also about how the ordinary magisterium can teach Catholic doctrine in an infallible way,” he wrote. A teaching of the church is infallible not only when it is solemnly pronounced by a council or by a pope speaking “ex cathedra,” he said. A teaching is recognized as infallible also when it is “the ordinary and universal teaching of bishops spread throughout the world when, in communion among themselves and with the pope, they propose Catholic doctrine that is to be held definitively.” That is what St. John Paul did, he said. “He did not declare new dogma, but with the authority conferred on him as successor of Peter, he formally confirmed and made explicit – to remove any doubt – that which the ordinary and universal magisterium had considered as belonging to the deposit of faith throughout the history of the church.” “Christ willed to confer this sacrament on the Twelve Apostles – all men – who, in turn, communicated it to other men,” Cardinal-designate Ladaria wrote. 5: Wednesday 10/17, KALAMBAKA DELPHI “The Day church always has seen itself as bound to/this Today, we Lord, begin which in Kalambaka, where the archidecision of the excludes thatwe thevisit ministetectural wonder of Meteora Monasteries, prominently rial priesthood can be conferred validly on women.” perched atop soaring cliffs. Next, we set off for the city In response he said, the doctrinal of Delphi to viaquestions, the National Highway. References are made to Delphi in connection with is Apollo in such litcongregation “has repeated that this a truth erary works the Iliad, belonging to theas deposit of the theOdyssey, faith.” and Oedipus Rex. Upon arrival in Delphi, have an orientation tour of That candidate for thewe priesthood be male, theacity before checking in at our hotelmust for dinner and an he said, belongs to the “substance of the sacraovernight. [B,D] ment” and cannot be changed because the sacraThursdayby 10/18, DELPHI / ATHENS mentDay was6:instituted Christ. Our first stop todaycannot is the ruins of Delphi were Just because women be ordained, hethat once the famed Temple of Apollo. From there, we make said, adoes notstop imply but athe mutual brief at “subordination, the nearby Theatre, Athenian enrichment.” Treasury, and the Castalian Spring. We continue to Museum view some of thethough treasures. Thethe exalted role of of Delphi Mary intothe church, even Housed in the museum the Charioteer (a famous she was not one of the Twelveare Apostles, shows the statue), the Naxian Sphinx, and the Statue of Antinoos. importance ofboard both the andand masculine inway the to Next, we our feminine motor coach make our church, he said, which a challenge to enjoy modern culAthens. Upon ourisarrival there, we a panoramic tour,“struggles beginning with Hadrian’s Arch and a view ture that to understand the meaning andof the RoyalofPalace, the Stadium, theman Temple Zeus, and goodness the difference between andof woman.” the Theatre of Dionysius. visit Mars Hill,Franthe site Cardinal-designate Ladaria We noted that Pope where St Paul expounded the subject of monothecis also has reaffirmed the teaching on an all-male ism before the pagan Greeks (this address is recorded priesthood. in Acts 17:22-31). We visit the Acropolis and the museum. The word “acropolis” is used in a broad sense In “The JoyGreek of the Gospel” in 2013 he wrote, “The to designate thepriesthood fortified height of a city. reservation of the to males, asLocated a sign on of the Acropolis of Athens is the famous Parthenon (the main Christ the spouse who gives himself inwe thewalk Euchatemple of Athena). Time permitting, down to rist, is not a the question open to discussion.” explore Ancient Agora and the ruins of the prisonresponding where Socrates held andquestion ultimatelyon carried And, to awas reporter’s a tripout death sentence to Sweden in 2016, he said, “As for thehisordination of by clear drinking hemTheChurch, Parthenon women in the Catholic the last, word lock poison. (Please was given by St. John Paul II, and this holds.this pedesnote: trian area would mean there would a great deal of VOCATION HOLY HOURS be additional walking). The Office of Vocations for the Archdiocese San to We will of proceed Francisco has announced Holy Hours our Junehotel 10, 3to p.m., check in for dinner and an at churches in San Francisco, San Mateo and Marin [B,D] counties. The prayer services are openovernight. to everyone including those discerning vocations and those wishing Day 7: Friday 10/19, ATHENS/ PIRAEUS / MYKONOS to pray for vocations the priesthood. A Holy Hour This morning, weto board our ship at the Piraeus pier for an Aegeanexercise cruise. Once weup set our first stop is the is a devotional made ofsail, meditation, vocal picturesque 29 square-mile islandofofthe Mykonos, prayer and singing, with exposition Blessedknown for its narrow winding paths, windmills, and over 350 Sacrament. Archbishop Salvatore J. Cordileone tiny chapels that beautifully paint the island’swill characpreside at the Holy Hour in San Francisco at Ce- free teristically blue and white canvas. We enjoySt.some cilia Church; Fatherits Tom Martin willthe preside the near time to wander streets, browse manyat shops harbor, relax andChurch enjoy theinbreathtaking Holy the Hour at St.orMatthew San Mateo,view. and We return to theGinter ship towill set preside sail for Kusadasi, Turkey. Father Andrew at the Holy Hour [B] at St.Day Isabella Church in10/20, San Rafael. Both priests are / 8: Saturday KUSADASI (EPHESUS) assistant directors of vocations for the archdiocese. PATMOS SHORE EXCURSION - ANCIENT EPHESUSofAND THE HOUSE Father Patrick Summerhays is director vocations OF VIRGIN MARY: Drive through the colorful town of Kufor the archdiocese. “We invite all parishes to have sadasi to reach Mt. Koressos. Situated in a small valley, it Holy is Hours for vocations,” Father Summerhays said. lies here where you will visit the humble chapel which on the site all of the littletohouse The Virgin Mary is “We also invite people pray where individually for vobelieved to have spent her last days. Despite webthe many cations.” Signing up at the Invisible Monastery thepeople Christian stilltofavors this belief site iscontroversies, a specific canWorld commit personally and the site way has been officially sanctioned by the Vatican pray for vocations: www.invisiblemonastery.com/. for pilgrimage. Continue on to Ancient Ephesus and accompanied by your guide, walk through the Magnesian Gate which is the entrance to the ancient city of Ephe-


17

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

CATHOLIC SAN FRANCISCO

With prayers of thanksgiving,

classifieds

to Advertise in catholic San FrancIsco call (415) 614-5642  |  Visit www.catholic-sf.org

The Sovereign Order of Malta

help wanted

congratulates

Catholic Journalist Wanted

Bishop-elect Robert Christian

Catholic San Francisco, the official newspaper of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of San Francisco, seeks an experienced Catholic journalist for a part-time role covering San Mateo County, the paper’s primary readership area. Catholic San Francisco is published 26 times a year and enjoys a strong subscriber, advertiser and donor base in San Francisco, San Mateo and Marin counties, home to nearly a half-million Catholics.

on the occasion of his investiture archdiocese With prayers of thanksgiving,of san francisco

The successful candidate will meet the following criteria: – Proven aptitude with print news research, writing and editing norms – Proven aptitude in initiating story ideas and following through with interviewing, research, drafting and editing in collaboration with an editor and colleagues – Proven ability to write deeply researched, long-form articles – Active, engaged membership in a parish in the coverage area – Working knowledge of Catholic teaching, liturgy, social thought, church organization and how the church interacts with the world, and the ability to communicate this knowledge accurately and on deadline – Commitment to self-directed, ongoing formation on all of the above – Availability for weekend assignments and occasional assignments outside the coverage area. Vehicle required. – Basic news photography skills – Conversational Spanish ability preferable

Praying the Rosary

The Sovereign Order of Malta

The rosary is prayed at the following locations on days and times specified.

congratulates

St. Cecilia Church, 17th Avenue and Vicente, San Francisco, Monday through Saturday, 8:35 a.m. Star of the Sea Church, Eighth Avenue at Geary Boulevard, San Francisco, Saturday 3:20 p.m.; second Sundays 3:15 p.m. for priests and vocations; Holy Rosary Society third Sundays 1 p.m., St. Joseph Perpetual Adoration Chapel; 2,000 Hail Mary Devotion, second Saturday after 8:30 a.m. Mass; Tuesdays 7:30 p.m. before the Blessed Sacrament in the church. (415) 751-0450; www.starparish.com admin@starparish.com Facebook: starparishsf.

Bishop-elect Robert Christian

St. Monica Church, 24th Avenue at Geary Boulevard, San Francisco, Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. before 8:30 a.m. Mass. on the occasion of his investiture St. Gabriel Church, 40th Avenue at Ulloa, San Francisco, Monday through Friday after the 8:30 a.m. Mass.

Reply with a resume and cover letter to csf@sfarchdiocese.org.

Sts. Peter & Paul Church, 666 Filbert St. across from Washington Square, San Francisco, second Sunday of the month in Cantonese, parish pastoral center, 11:30 a.m., Kelly Kong (510) 794-6117; Wednesday, 7 p.m., English, http://salesiansspp.org/. National Shrine of St. Francis of Assisi, 624 Vallejo St. at Columbus, San Francisco, Porziuncola Chapel, Saturdays, 2:30 p.m. followed by Chaplet of Divine Mercy. www.ShrineSF.org, info@shrinesf.org, (415) 986-4557. St. Benedict Parish for the Deaf at St. Francis Xavier Church, 1801 Octavia Street, San Francisco, rosary in sign language, all Sundays except June, July and August, 9:45-10:15 a.m.; stbenz1801@gmail.com; www.sfdeafcatholics.org. Like us on Facebook: www.facebook.com/stbenedictparish. St. Ignatius Church, 650 Parker Ave., San Francisco, Monday through Friday, following the 12:05 p.m. Mass; Saturday, before the 8 a.m. Mass, (415) 422-2188. St. Kevin Church, 704 Cortland Ave., San Francisco, Fridays after 9 a.m. Mass, (415) 648-5751. St. Stephen Church, 451 Eucalyptus Drive at 23rd Avenue, San Francisco, Monday thru Saturday following the 8 a.m. Mass; info@SaintStephenSF.org. Church of the Nativity, 210 Oak Grove Ave., Menlo Park, Monday through Friday following 8 a.m. Mass, Saturday following 8:30 a.m. Mass; Sunday 7 p.m.

elderly care giver Seeking Live-In position Experienced, Reliable, Honest with Excellent References

415-766-1514

St. Veronica Church, 434 Alida Way, South San Francisco. Monday through Saturday 7:50 a.m. St. Francis of Assisi Church, 1425 Bay Road, East Palo Alto, rosary in Spanish Sundays before 9:30 a.m. Spanish Mass; (650) 322-2152. Holy Angels Church, 107 San Pedro Road, Colma, Monday through Saturday approximately 8 a.m. following 7:30 a.m. Mass, (650) 755-0478. St. Dunstan Church, 1133 Broadway, Millbrae, Monday through Saturday, 7:40 a.m. before 8 a.m. Mass. St. Pius Church, 1100 Woodside Road, Redwood City, Monday through Saturday 7:30 a.m., Monday and Wednesday 4:40 p.m.; mary246barry@sbcglobal.net. St. Luke Church, 1111 Beach Park Blvd., Foster City, Monday through Saturday following the 8:30 a.m. Mass.

Complete Fireplace & Gutter Service

St. Isabella Church, One Trinity Way, San Rafael, Monday, 5 p.m. includes four mysteries, Chaplet of Divine Mercy, adoration; (415) 479-1560. St. Anthony of Padua Church, 1000 Cambridge St., Novato, Monday through Saturday after 9 a.m. Mass. St. John the Evangelist, 19 Saint Marys Ave., San Francisco, Monday through Saturday at 9:30 a.m. after 9 a.m. Mass; Scriptural Rosary on 1st Saturday of every month at 9:30 a.m.

Is your parish praying the rosary?

Catholic San Francisco would like to let its readers know. If your parish has a regular praying of the rosary to which all are invited, just send the day, time, location and contact information to Tom Burke, burket@sfarch.org.

415-485-4090

The information should come from a person in authority in the parish who can be emailed for follow up and who would be responsible for contacting CSF with changes to the parish rosary schedule.

Questions? Contact Tom Burke, burket@sfarch.org.


18 arts & life

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

Father’s sobering, hopeful account of impact of son’s suicide Al Donner Catholic San Francisco

“Cops, Cons, and Grace: A Father’s Journey Through His Son’s Suicide.” By Brian Cahill. Resource Publications (Eugene, Oregon, 2018). 196 pp., $23. On Dec. 1, 2008, Brian Cahill was honored by 500 people at a dinner. He had just retired as head of San Francisco Catholic Charities, culminating 40 years of generous charity service. Surrounding him was his family, including son John Cahill, a San Jose police officer. On Dec. 4, 2008, Cahill responded to a knock at the door. A police officer stood there to tell Brian that his son John had just ended his own life. The devastation of that life-shattering loss is Cahill’s personal story in “Cops, Cons, and Grace: A Father’s Journey Through His Son’s Suicide.” The 162-page book peels back John’s struggles before the end of his life and Brian’s subsequent struggles to deal with the death. The book is an immensely personal account of the father’s and son’s lives before and after the suicide. The account shows the depths of their mutual love and friendship. It is rich in fondly yet sadly recollected companionship details from John’s childhood through adulthood. – days spent backpacking or fishing, days and evenings at home just enjoying being together, son and father. Cahill’s account is both sobering and hopeful. Walking with him on his journey as told in his account could be useful for any person who has suffered the unexpected loss of a loved one, and who at first struggles to understand and then to cope with that loss. Cahill’s own professional career was devoted to helping people in need, and also as a volunteer, including counseling felons in San Quentin State Prison. After John dies Cahill struggles to understand, then search for peace and meaning in his son’s sudden death. On that journey he finds some resolution through his Catholic faith, his wife Donna, other family members, counselors and law enforcement friends. In his journey Cahill gains understanding of how John’s inability to restore an orderly life after the breakup of his marriage and those impacts on John’s daughters, were central to his decision to end his own life. Perhaps most startling are times when Cahill recounts hearing the unmistakable voice of his deceased son. In the four months after John’s death Cahill describes hearing the familiar voice of his son talking directly to him, crisp and clear, offering guidance and reassurance.

In one instance Cahill visits the remote forest site of John’s death. He writes: “After about 10 minutes I hear, ‘Dad, I’m okay.’ I answer, ‘I’m not always okay.” I hear, ‘You will be.’ ” Another unanticipated strength Cahill receives comes from some inmates in San Quentin where he has been a volunteer counselor and part of a faithsharing group with prisoners. Some have little hope of ever leaving prison yet have grown in their faith and come to accept their own situations in life. Sometime after John’s death, Cahill resumes prison visits. Several inmates reach out to him with genuine support and love, a response that helps him grow in understanding and continue the recovery of his own life. Cahill’s account raises a specific alert to people who work in law enforcement. It is a career field with a very high suicide rate; in 2017 some 140 U.S. police officers died in suicide. Cahill explores the factors that contribute to that high suicide rate, where warning signs may not be noticed. Police work requires firm control in difficult and dangerous situations. But an officer’s loss of control in their personal life can hit them as an unmanageable disaster. Cahill wants readers to understand suicide, especially those of police officers, and of suicide’s enduring ramifications for those left behind. He now volunteers in police counseling, hoping to help both the public safety community and society in general to recognize when an officer might consider suicide as a way out of troubled personal situations. Brian Cahill was a leader in charity works through his 40-year career, including eight as head of Catholic Charities for the Archdiocese of San Francisco. He remains active in a variety of helping activities, especially with cops and cons. As an account of faith and family, of helping when and where needed, Cahill’s book may be a useful resource for people who have suffered the unexpected and unexplainable death of a person close to them, regardless of the circumstances. Al Donner, a Canisius College alum, is a retired journalist who covered California and national politics and currently writes for the California Catholic Conference and The Catholic Voice (Diocese of Oakland), frequently on the value of life.

home health care

Sister Patricia Anne Cloherty, PBVM

Presentation Sister Patricia Anne Cloherty, baptismal name Mary Dolores, died May 12 at the Presentation Motherhouse in San Francisco. Born in San Francisco Sister Patricia Anne was a Sister of the Presentation for 69 years. Sister Patricia Anne held an undergraduate degree in education from the University of San Sister Patricia Francisco, and a graduate degree Anne Cloherty, in religious studies from ImmacuPBVM late Heart College, Los Angeles with credentials in elementary education and administration. Sister Patricia Anne taught at schools including San Francisco’s St. Anne, St. Elizabeth and Epiphany where she also served as the parish director of religious education for eight years. Sister Patricia Anne also served several terms in congregational leadership. “Always known as willing to be of service and to act with a listening heart, the following years found her in various administrative roles at the Presentation Motherhouse,” the sisters said. Survivors include her sister Nora Kelly and her brother Patrick Cloherty. Their brother, Father John Cloherty, retired pastor, Our Lady of Mount Carmel Parish, Mill Valley, died in 2017. A funeral Mass was celebrated May 21 at the motherhouse with interment at Holy Cross Cemetery, Colma. Remembrances may be made to the Sisters of the Presentation, Development Office, 281 Masonic Ave., San Francisco 94118.

Sister Barbara Hubbard, OP

Dominican Sister Barbara Hubbard, formerly known as Sister Alice Josepha Hubbard, died on May 18 at the Dominican Life Center in Adrian, Michigan. She was 87 years of age and P U B in the L 67thI year Cof her A T religious profession in the Adrian Dominican Congregation. Sister Barbara, who held a graduate degree in English from the University of Detroit, taught for a short Sister Barbara time at Notre Dame High School in Hubbard, OP Belmont, and subsequently served at the Jesuit Retreat House in Los Altos, as well as in schools in Michigan, Illinois, and East Africa. Sister Barbara became a resident of the Dominican Life Center in Adrian, Michigan in 2006. A funeral Mass was celebrated May 23 in the sisters’ St. Catherine Chapel with interment in the congregation cemetery. Remembrances may be made to Adrian Dominican Sisters, 1257 East Siena Heights Drive, Adrian, MI, 49221.

to Advertise in catholic Sanmost FrancIsco “The compassionate care in t Visit www.catholic-sf.org | call (415) 614-5642 email advertising.csf@sfarchdiocese.org

home health care

Trusted name in home care

Better Health Care Companionship, Housekeeping, Medication Reminders, Well Experienced, Bonded & Insured Lower Rates Hourly & Live in

415-960-7881 650-580-6334

CSF content in your inbox: Visit catholic-sf.org to sign up for our e-newsletter.

or 650-993-8036 415-573-5141 or 650-99

www.irishreferralagency.com • (415) 757-8527

*Irish owned *Irish owned & operated Lic.#384700020 *Serving from San Francisco to North

realty

*Serving from San Francisco to North San Mateo

Jim Laufenberg, Broker Assoc., GRI, CRS

2355 Market St, San Francisco, CA 94114 Cal BRE#: 01201131 Jim@sf-realty.com (415) 269-4997 mobile

health care agency Supple Senior Care

“The most compassionate care in town” 1655 Old Mission Road #3 415-573-5141 Colma, SSF, CA 94080

 Lic. & Bonded  Live-In (2 caregivers)  Hourly  24/7 Irish-Owned. Decades of experience

• Probate • Conservatorship Sales • Income Property • Commercial Property

I

SUPPLE SENIOR C

the professionals

health care agency

Obituaries

Serving the Bay Area High Quality Home Care Since 1996

counseling When Life Hurts It Helps To Talk • Family • Work • Relationships • Depression • Anxiety • Addictions

Attendant CNA Respite Care 415-759-0520 | www.irishhelpathome.com HCO License #384700001 IrishHelpAtHome

Dr. Daniel J. Kugler

Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist Over 25 years experience

Confidential • Compassionate • Practical

(415) 921-1619 • Insurance Accepted 1537 Franklin Street • San Francisco, CA 94109


calendar 19

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

THURSDAY, JUNE 7 VOCATION WEEKEND: Redwoods Monastery Monastic Experience Weekend with Cistercian Nuns of the Strict Observance in Whitethorn, an opportunity for young women discerning a religious vocation to listen deeply to God’s voice and experience the richness of monastic life: silence, the beauty of nature, private and communal prayer, and meditation. Sisters will be available to guide personal discernment. Cost of program is free. Dress is casual. Bring clothes suitable for outdoor work and hikes. To apply: www.contemplativeretreat.org or call Sister Suzanne, (707) 986-7419.

SATURDAY, JUNE 9 HANDICAPABLES MASS: Mass at noon then lunch, both in lower halls, St. Mary’s Cathedral, Gough Street at Geary Boulevard, San Francisco, Gough Street entrance. All disabled people, caregivers invited. Please RSVP by contacting Diane Prell, activities coordinator, (415) 452-3500; www. Handicapables.com. Dates are subject to change.

SUNDAY, JUNE 10 VOCATION HOLY HOURS: The Office of Vocations for the Archdiocese of San Francisco has announced Holy Hours June 10, 3 p.m. at churches in San Francisco, San Mateo and Marin counArchbishop ties. The prayer Cordileone services are open to everyone including those discerning vocations and those wishing to pray for vocations to the priesthood. A Holy Hour is a devotional exercise made up of meditation, vocal prayer and singing, with exposition of the Blessed Sacrament. Archbishop Salvatore J. Cordileone will preside at the Holy Hour in San Francisco at St. Cecilia Church; Father Tom Martin will preside at the Holy Hour at St. Matthew Church in San Mateo, and Father Andrew Ginter will preside at the Holy Hour at St. Isabella Church in San Rafael. Both priests are assistant directors of vocations for the

archdiocese. Father Patrick Summerhays is director of vocations for the archdiocese. “We invite all parishes to have Holy Hours for vocations,” Father Summerhays said. “We also invite all people to pray individually for vocations.” https://twitter.com/SFPriest.

SATURDAY, JULY 7 FIRST SATURDAY MASS: Holy Cross Cemetery, 11 a.m., Father Tom Parenti, retired pastor, St. Brendan Parish, San Francisco, principal celebrant and homilist. Mass remembers all Father Michael beloved dead Strange, PSS and that they enjoy the blessed hope of the resurrection. All Saints Chapel, 1500 Mission Road, Colma. (650) 756-2060; www.holycrosscemeteries.com. Saturday, Aug. 4, retired Sulpician Father Michael Strange, principal celebrant and homilist.

SATURDAY, JUNE 16 SOCCER FUNDRAISER: Sacred Heart School, 150 Valparaiso Ave., Atherton, 1-5 p.m. in support of Catholic Charities Refugee and Immigrant Services San Mateo County especially outreach to unaccompanied minors. Put together a team with your friends or co-workers (up to seven players) to play with us. Your contribution will help make this day unforgettable for these amazing and resilient children. Diana A. Otero, (650) 295-2160; dotero@ CatholicCharitiesSF.org.

SUNSAY, JUNE 17 MARIN FATHER’S DAY FEST: “One Heart, One Community” honors dads for the second year at Sacred Heart Parish Center, 10189 State Route 1, Olema, noon-4 p.m. Day includes local food, beverages and games plus entertainment by Los Centzontles. Admission $10, children free, with food at $10 per plate and drinks $2-$5. Sacred Heart Church, (415) 663-1139;

home services

plumbing

electrical

HOLLAND Plumbing Works San Francisco ALL PLUMBING WORK PAT HOLLAND

415-205-1235

fences & decks

650.291.4303

construction CAHALAN CONSTRUCTION Painting • Carpentry • Tile Siding • Stucco • Dryrot Additions • Remodels • Repairs Lic#582766

415.279.1266 mikecahalan@gmail.com

SUNDAY, JUNE 24 RAVIOLI DINNER: Our Lady of Angels gym, Hillside Drive, Burlingame, nohost cocktails, 4 p.m., dinner at 5 p.m., $25, RSVP by June 18, Dorene Campanile, 1620 Howard Ave., Burlingame 94010. (650) 344-7870.

Catholic San Francisco

gift subscription – perfect for students and retirees and others who have moved outside the archdiocese. $27 a year within California, $36 out of state. Catholics in the archdiocese must register with their parish to receive a regular, free subscription. Email circulation.csf @sfarchdiocese.org or call (415) 614-5639.

SUNDAY, JULY 22 ‘COURAGE TO GRIEVE’: St. Dominic Parish, 2390 Bush St. at Steiner, San Francisco, for eight Sundays, 3:30-5:30 p.m. This group requests a commitment of all eight weeks, not a drop-in group. A pre-group interview is required with Deacon Chuck McNeil. deaconchuck@stdominics.org, (415) 567-7824.

FRIDAY, OCT. 26 PRIESTS RETIREMENT LUNCH: Reserve now for the Priests Retirement Luncheon, 11:30 a.m., St. Mary’s Cathedral, Patrons Hall, Gough Street at Geary Boulevard, San Francisco. The annual St. John Vianney Luncheon benefits the Priests Retirement Fund, which covers medical expenses, assisted living, and nursing care for retired priests of the archdiocese. Since 2011, more than $1.8 million has been raised, providing invaluable financial assistance to retired priests. The luncheon also provides an opportunity to come together with our priests and show our gratitude to these men for their life’s work and their unyielding devotion. www.sfarchdiocese.org/ PRFlunch.

flooring

painting S.O.S. Painting Co. Interior-Exterior • wallpaper • hanging & removal

High Quality Affordable Floor Installation in the Bay Area

Lic # 526818 • Senior Discount

415-269-0446 • 650-738-9295 www.sospainting.net F ree E stimates

Joseph Clancy Painting victorian restoration

RESIDENTIAL & COMMERICAL FREE ESTIMATES O: (415) 668-1021 • C: (415) 806-9262 jclancypainting@gmail.com

Send CSF afar Spread the good news through a

HANDICAPABLES MASS: Mass at noon then lunch, both in lower halls, St. Mary’s Cathedral, Gough Street at Geary Boulevard, San Francisco, Gough Street entrance. All disabled people, caregivers invited. Please RSVP by contacting Diane Prell, activities coordinator, (415) 452-3500; www.Handicapables.com. Dates are subject to change.

to Advertise in catholic San FrancIsco Visit www.catholic-sf.org | call (415) 614-5642 email advertising.csf@sfarchdiocese.org

Fully licensed • State Certified • Locally Trained • Experienced • On Call 24/7

Lic. #742961

John Spillane

650.322.9288 Service Changes Solar Installation Lighting/Power Fire Alarm/Data Green Energy

CA LIC #817607 BONDED & INSURED

• Retaining Walls • Stairs • Gates • Dry Rot • Senior & Parishioner Discounts

ALL ELECTRIC SERVICE

sacredheart@horizoncable.com. www. marinsacredheart.com.

SATURDAY, JULY 21

LICENSE #664830

Hardwood Floors * Refinishing * Carpets * Linoleum • Custom Floor Coverings * Mobile Showroom Commercial & Residential Lic#945009

Mobile: (415) 297-1715 Office: (415) 769-5367 chaconflooring@yahoo.com www.chaconflooring.com Warehouse/Showroom:

45 Boutwell St., San Francisco, CA 94124

BONDED

handyman All Purpose

Quality interior and exterior painting, demolition , fence (repairs), roof repairs, skylight repair, gutter (cleaning and repairs), landscaping, gardening, hauling, moving, carpenter Call Grant Cell (415) 517-5977 24 Hours

.

NOT A LICENSED CONTRACTOR


T:9.625 in

20

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

To heal is human.

450 Stanyan Street, San Francisco, CA 94117 | 415.668.1000 | Learn more at dignityhealth.org/stmarys

17-DHR-0877_02_Heal_9.625x13.75_SMMC_m1 Clients:01-Campaigns-Projects:Dignity-Health:02-DHR-Jobs:17-DHR-0877_BA_Catholic_Identity_Print:02-Production:01-PrintAds:17-DHR-0877_02_Heal_9.625x13.75_SMMC_m1

T:13.75 in

As the only Catholic hospital in San Francisco, St. Mary’s Medical Center believes in the healing power of human connection. From words of encouragement when they’re needed most to actions that speak louder than words, our doctors and nurses know that warmth is part of proper care. Humanity inspires all they do, and you’ll find it at every Dignity Health facility. Discover the power of expertise and human values combined. Because while medicine can help you recover, humanity can help you heal—body, mind, and spirit.


Now accepting clients! Now accepting clients!

WILLIAMJJ. HANNA, Psy.D. WILLIAM . HAN NA, Psy. D. CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGIST, PSY 22136 C LINICA L PSYC H O LOGI S T, PSY 22136 INDIVIDUAL PSYCHOTHERAPY I NDI V I D UAL PSYCHOTH ERA PY

Licensed Clinical Psychologist Specializing Addiction, c ensineRelapse d Cl i niPrevention, cal Psych ologis tRecovery, Specializi Grief and Loss, Trauma, Depression & Anxiety

R e l a p se P rev e n tion , Addiction, Recov e andDepres Marin Counties e f a n d Serving Lo ss, Sonoma Tra u ma, s ion & Anx

Call: 415.747.1238

for a free 30-minute consultation E-mail: drhanna@drwilliamhanna.com Visit: drwilliamhanna.com


Holy Cross Catholic Cemetery  1500 Mission Road, Colma  |  650-756-2060 Holy Cross Catholic Cemetery  Santa Cruz Ave. @ Avy Ave., Menlo Park  |  650-323-6375 Tomales Catholic Cemetery  1400 Dillon Beach Road, Tomales  |  415-479-9021 St. Anthony Cemetery Stage Road, Pescadero | 650-752-1679 Mt. Olivet Catholic Cemetery  270 Los Ranchitos Road, San Rafael  |  415-479-9020 Our Lady of the Pillar Cemetery  Miramontes St., Half Moon Bay  |  650-712-1679 St Mary Magdalene Cemetery  16 Horseshoe Hill Road, Bolinas  |  415-479-9021


CATHOLIC SAN FRANCISCO Newspaper of the Archdiocese of San Francisco

Serving San Francisco, Marin & San Mateo Counties

www.catholic-sf.org

June 7, 2018

$1.00  |  VOL. 20 NO. 12

introduction 1. “Rejoice and be glad” (Mt 5:12), Jesus tells those persecuted or humiliated for his sake. The Lord asks everything of us, and in return he offers us true life, the happiness for which we were created. He wants us to be saints and not to settle for a bland and mediocre existence. The call to holiness is present in various ways from the very first pages of the Bible. We see it expressed in the Lord’s words to Abraham, “Walk before me, and be blameless” (Gn 17:1). 2. What follows is not meant to be a treatise on holiness, containing definitions and distinctions helpful for understanding this important subject, or a discussion of the various means of sanctification. My modest goal is to repropose the call to holiness in a practical way for our own time, with all its risks, challenges and opportunities. For the Lord has chosen each one of us “to be holy and blameless before him in love” (Eph 1:4).

Chapter 1: The Call to Holiness The Saints Who Encourage and Accompany Us

3. The Letter to the Hebrews presents a number of testimonies that encourage us to “run with perseverance the race that is set before us” (12:1). It speaks of Abraham, Sarah, Moses, Gideon and others (cf. 11:1-12:3). Above all, it invites us to realize that “a great cloud of witnesses” (12:1) impels us to advance constantly toward the goal. These witnesses may include our own mothers, grandmothers or other loved ones (cf. 2 Tim 1:5). Their lives may not always have been perfect, yet even amid their faults and failings they kept moving forward and proved pleasing to the Lord. 4. The saints now in God’s presence preserve their bonds of love and communion with us. The Book of Revelation attests to this when it speaks of the intercession of the martyrs: “I saw under the altar the souls of those who had been slain for the word of God and for the witness they had borne; they cried out with a loud voice, ‘O sovereign Lord, holy and true, how long will it be before you judge?’” (6:910). Each of us can say, “Surrounded, led and guided by the friends of God ... I do not have to carry alone what, in truth, I could never carry alone. All the saints of God are there to protect me, to sustain me and to carry me.” 5. The processes of beatification and canonization recognize the signs of heroic virtue, the sacrifice of one’s life in martyrdom and certain cases where a life is constantly offered for others even until death. This shows an exemplary imitation of Christ, one worthy of the admiration of the faithful. We can think, for example, of Blessed Maria Gabriella Sagheddu, who offered her life for the unity of Christians.

The Saints ‘Next Door’

‘Gaudete et Exsultate’: Apostolic Exhortation

The call to holiness in today’s world As a resource for our readers, Catholic San Francisco presents the full text of Pope Francis’ apostolic exhortation “Gaudete et Exsultate,” signed on March 19, the feast of St. Joseph. “In the ordinary course of each day, the pope reminds us, ‘We need to recognize and combat our aggressive and selfish inclinations, and not let them take root’ (no. 114),” U.S. bishops’ president Cardinal Daniel DiNardo said when the pope’s message was released on April 9. “Yet, he says, this ‘battle is sweet, for it allows us to rejoice each time the Lord triumphs in our lives’ (no. 158).” For extra copies of this special 12-page pullout section, please email your name and address to csf@sfarchdiocese.org, subject line: Gaudete, or call (415) 614-5639.

6. Nor need we think only of those already beatified and canonized. The Holy Spirit bestows holiness in abundance among God’s holy and faithful people, for “it has pleased God to make men and women holy and to save them, not as individuals without any bond between them but rather as a people who might acknowledge him in truth and serve him in holiness.” In salvation history, the Lord saved one people. We are never completely ourselves unless we belong to a people. That is why no one is saved alone as an isolated individual. Rather, God draws us to himself, taking into account the complex fabric of interpersonal relationships present in a human community. God wanted to enter into the life and history of a people. 7. I like to contemplate the holiness present in the patience of God’s people: in those parents who raise their children with immense love, in those men and women who work hard to support their families, in the sick, in elderly religious who never lose their smile. In their daily perseverance I see the holiness of the church militant. Very often it is a holiness found in our next-door neighbors, those who, living in our midst, reflect God’s presence. We might call them “the middle class of holiness.” 8. Let us be spurred on by the signs of holiness that the Lord shows us through the humblest members of that people who “shares also in Christ’s prophetic office, spreading abroad a living witness to him, especially by means of a life of faith and charity.” We should consider the fact that, as St. Teresa Benedicta of the Cross suggests, real history is made by so many of them. As she writes: “The greatest figures of prophecy and sanctity step forth see ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’, page pf2


PF2 ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’: Apostolic Exhortation

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

‘Gaudete et Exsultate’: Apostolic Exhortation you can do this in the power of the Holy Spirit, and holiness, in the end, is the fruit of the Holy Spirit in your life (cf. Gal 5:22-23). When you feel the temptation to dwell on your own weakness, raise your out of the darkest night. But for the most part, the formative stream of the eyes to Christ crucified and say, “Lord, I am a poor sinner, but you can work mystical life remains invisible. Certainly the most decisive turning points the miracle of making me a little bit better.” In the church, holy yet made up of in world history are substantially co-determined by souls whom no history sinners, you will find everything you need to grow toward holiness. The Lord book ever mentions. And we will only find out about those souls to whom we has bestowed on the church the gifts of Scripture, the sacraments, holy places, owe the decisive turning points in our personal lives on the day when all that living communities, the witness of the saints and a multifaceted beauty that is hidden is revealed.” proceeds from God’s love, “like a bride bedecked with jewels” (Is 61:10). 9. Holiness is the most attractive face of the church. But even outside the 16. This holiness to which the Lord calls you will grow through small gesCatholic Church and in very different contexts, the Holy Spirit raises up tures. Here is an example: A woman goes shopping, she meets a neighbor and “signs of his presence that help Christ’s followers.” St. John Paul II reminded they begin to speak, and the gossip starts. But she says in her heart, “No, I us that “the witness to Christ borne even to the shedding of blood has become will not speak badly of anyone.” This is a step forward in holiness. a common inheritance of Catholics, Orthodox, Anglicans and Protestants.” Later, at home, one of her children wants to talk to her about his hopes and In the moving ecumenical commemoration held in the Colosseum during the dreams, and even though she is tired, she sits down and listens with patience Great Jubilee of the Year 2000, he stated that the martyrs are “a heritage that and love. That is another sacrifice that brings holiness. Later she experiences speaks more powerfully than all the causes of division.” some anxiety, but recalling the love of the Virgin Mary, she takes her rosary and prays with faith. Yet another path of holiness. Later still, she goes out The Lord Calls onto the street, encounters a poor person and stops to say a kind word to him. 10. All this is important. Yet with this exhortation I would like to insist One more step. primarily on the call to holiness that the Lord addresses to each of us, the 17. At times life presents great challenges. Through them, the Lord calls us call that he also addresses personally to you, “Be holy, for I am holy” (Lv anew to a conversion that can make 11:44; cf. 1 Pt 1:16). The Second his grace more evident in our lives, Vatican Council stated this clearly: “in order that we may share his ho“Strengthened by so many and liness” (Heb 12:10). At other times such great means of salvation, all we need only find a more perfect the faithful, whatever their condiway of doing what we are already tion or state, are called by the Lord doing: “There are inspirations that – each in his or her own way - to tend solely to perfect in an extraorthat perfect holiness by which the dinary way the ordinary things we Father himself is perfect.” do in life.” 11. “Each in his or her own way,” When Cardinal Francois-Xavier the council says. We should not Nguyen van Thuan was imprisgrow discouraged before examples oned, he refused to waste time of holiness that appear unattainwaiting for the day he would be able. There are some testimonies set free. Instead, he chose “to live that may prove helpful and inspirthe present moment, filling it to ing but that we are not meant to the brim with love.” He decided, “I copy, for that could even lead us will seize the occasions that presastray from the one specific path ent themselves every day; I will that the Lord has in mind for us. accomplish ordinary actions in an The important thing is that each beextraordinary way.” liever discern his or her own path, 18. In this way, led by God’s grace, that they bring out the very best of we shape by many small gestures themselves, the most personal gifts the holiness God has willed for us, that God has placed in their hearts not as men and women sufficient (cf. 1 Cor 12:7), rather than hopeunto ourselves but rather “as good lessly trying to imitate something stewards of the manifold grace of not meant for them. God” (1 Pt 4:10). The New Zealand We are all called to be witnesses, bishops rightly teach us that we are but there are many actual ways of capable of loving with the Lord’s bearing witness. Indeed, when the unconditional love because the great mystic, St. John of the Cross, risen Lord shares his powerful life wrote his Spiritual Canticle, he prewith our fragile lives: ferred to avoid hard-and-fast rules “His love set no limits and, once for all. He explained that his verses given, was never taken back. It were composed so that everyone (CNS photo/Bob Roller) was unconditional and remained could benefit from them “in his or faithful. To love like that is not easy her own way.”(12) For God’s life is because we are often so weak. But communicated “to some in one way just to try to love as Christ loved and to others in another.” us shows that Christ shares his 12. Within these various forms, I own risen life with us. In this way would stress too that the “genius of Pope Francis, ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’ our lives demonstrate his power at woman” is seen in feminine styles work - even in the midst of human of holiness that are an essential weakness.” means of reflecting God’s holiness in this world. Indeed, in times when women tended to be most ignored or overlooked, the Holy Spirit raised Your Mission in Christ up saints whose attractiveness produced new spiritual vigor and important 19. A Christian cannot think of his or her mission on earth without seeing reforms in the church. it as a path of holiness, for “this is the will of God, your sanctification” (1 We can mention St. Hildegard of Bingen, St. Bridget, St. Catherine of Siena, Thessalonians 4:3). Each saint is a mission planned by the Father to reflect St. Teresa of Avila and St. Therese of Lisieux. But I think too of all those and embody at a specific moment in history a certain aspect of the Gospel. unknown or forgotten women who each in her own way sustained and trans20. That mission has its fullest meaning in Christ and can only be underformed families and communities by the power of their witness. stood through him. At its core, holiness is experiencing, in union with Christ, 13. This should excite and encourage us to give our all and to embrace that the mysteries of his life. It consists in uniting ourselves to the Lord’s death unique plan that God willed for each of us from eternity, “Before I formed and resurrection in a unique and personal way, constantly dying and rising you in the womb I knew you, and before you were born I consecrated you” anew with him. (Jer 1:5). But it can also entail reproducing in our own lives various aspects of Jesus’ earthly life: his hidden life, his life in community, his closeness to the outcast, his poverty and other ways in which he showed his self-sacrificing love. The For You Too contemplation of these mysteries, as St. Ignatius of Loyola pointed out, leads 14. To be holy does not require being a bishop, a priest or a religious. We are us to incarnate them in our choices and attitudes. Because “everything in frequently tempted to think that holiness is only for those who can withdraw Jesus’ life was a sign of his mystery,” “Christ’s whole life is a revelation of from ordinary affairs to spend much time in prayer. That is not the case. We the Father,” “Christ’s whole life is a mystery of redemption,” “Christ’s whole are all called to be holy by living our lives with love and by bearing witness in life is a mystery of recapitulation.” “Christ enables us to live in him all that everything we do, wherever we find ourselves. he himself lived, and he lives it in us.” Are you called to the consecrated life? Be holy by living out your com21. The Father’s plan is Christ, and ourselves in him. In the end, it is Christ mitment with joy. Are you married? Be holy by loving and caring for your who loves in us, for “holiness is nothing other than charity lived to the full.” husband or wife as Christ does for the church. Do you work for a living? Be As a result, “the measure of our holiness stems from the stature that Christ holy by laboring with integrity and skill in the service of your brothers and achieves in us, to the extent that, by the power of the Holy Spirit, we model sisters. Are you a parent or grandparent? Be holy by patiently teaching the our whole life on his.” Every saint is a message that the Holy Spirit takes little ones how to follow Jesus. Are you in a position of authority? Be holy by from the riches of Jesus Christ and gives to his people. working for the common good and renouncing personal gain. 15. Let the grace of your baptism bear fruit in a path of holiness. Let everything be open to God; turn to him in every situation. Do not be dismayed, for see ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’, page pf3 FROM PAGE PF1

‘(Jesus) wants us to be saints and not settle for a bland and mediocre existence.’


Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

‘Gaudete et Exsultate’: Apostolic Exhortation pf3

‘Gaudete et Exsultate’: Apostolic Exhortation FROM PAGE PF2

22. To recognize the word that the Lord wishes to speak to us through one of his saints, we do not need to get caught up in details, for there we might also encounter mistakes and failures. Not everything a saint says is completely faithful to the Gospel; not everything he or she does is authentic or perfect. What we need to contemplate is the totality of their life, their entire journey of growth in holiness, the reflection of Jesus Christ that emerges when we grasp their overall meaning as a person. 23. This is a powerful summons to all of us. You too need to see the entirety of your life as a mission. Try to do so by listening to God in prayer and recognizing the signs that he gives you. Always ask the Spirit what Jesus expects from you at every moment of your life and in every decision you must make so as to discern its place in the mission you have received. Allow the Spirit to forge in you the personal mystery that can reflect Jesus Christ in today’s world. 24. May you come to realize what that word is, the message of Jesus that God wants to speak to the world by your life. Let yourself be transformed. Let yourself be renewed by the Spirit so that this can happen, lest you fail in your precious mission. The Lord will bring it to fulfillment despite your mistakes and missteps, provided that you do not abandon the path of love but remain ever open to his supernatural grace, which purifies and enlightens.

Activity That Sanctifies

grows slack, and our generous and ready spirit of service begins to flag. This denatures our spiritual experience. Can any spiritual fervor be sound when it dwells alongside sloth in evangelization or in service to others? 31. We need a spirit of holiness capable of filling both our solitude and our service, our personal life and our evangelizing efforts, so that every moment can be an expression of self-sacrificing love in the Lord’s eyes. In this way every minute of our lives can be a step along the path to growth in holiness.

More Alive, More Human

32. Do not be afraid of holiness. It will take away none of your energy, vitality or joy. On the contrary, you will become what the Father had in mind when he created you, and you will be faithful to your deepest self. To depend on God sets us free from every form of enslavement and leads us to recognize our great dignity. We see this in St. Josephine Bakhita: “Abducted and sold into slavery at the tender age of 7, she suffered much at the hands of cruel masters. But she came to understand the profound truth that God, and not man, is the true Master of every human being, of every human life. This experience became a source of great wisdom for this humble daughter of Africa.” 33. To the extent that each Christian grows in holiness, he or she will bear greater fruit for our world. The bishops of West Africa have observed that “we are being called in the spirit of the new evangelization to be evangelized and to evangelize through the empowering of all you, the baptized, to take up your roles as salt of the earth and light of the world wherever you find yourselves.” 34. Do not be afraid to set your sights higher, to allow yourself to be loved and liberated by God. Do not be afraid to let yourself be guided by the Holy Spirit. Holiness does not make you less human, since it is an encounter between your weakness and the power of God’s grace. For in the words of Leon Bloy, when all is said and done, “the only great tragedy in life is not to become a saint.”

25. Just as you cannot understand Christ apart from the kingdom he came to bring, so too your personal mission is inseparable from the building of that kingdom: “Strive first for the kingdom of God and its righteousness” (Mt 6:33). Your identification with Christ and his will involves a commitment to build with him that kingdom of love, justice and universal peace. Christ himself wants to experience this with you in all the efforts and sacrifices that it entails but also in all the joy and enrichment it brings. You cannot grow in holiness without committing yourself, body and soul, to giving your best to this CHAPTER 2: endeavor. 26. It is not healthy to love silence TWO SUBTLE ENEMIES OF HOLINESS while fleeing interaction with others, to want peace and quiet while 35. Here I would like to mention avoiding activity, to seek prayer two false forms of holiness that while disdaining service. Everycan lead us astray: gnosticism and thing can be accepted and integratPelagianism. They are two heresies ed into our life in this world and befrom early Christian times, yet they come a part of our path to holiness. continue to plague us. In our times We are called to be contemplatives too, many Christians, perhaps even in the midst of action and to without realizing it, can be seduced grow in holiness by responsibly and by these deceptive ideas that reflect generously carrying out our proper an anthropocentric immanentism mission. disguised as Catholic truth. Let us 27. Could the Holy Spirit urge us to take a look at these two forms of carry out a mission and then ask us doctrinal or disciplinary security CNS photo/Nancy Wiechec) to abandon it or not fully engage in that give rise “to a narcissistic and it, so as to preserve our inner peace? authoritarian elitism whereby inYet there are times when we are stead of evangelizing, one analyzes tempted to relegate pastoral engageand classifies others, and instead ment or commitment in the world to of opening the door to grace, one second place as if these were “disexhausts his or her energies in Pope Francis, ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’ tractions” along the path to growth inspecting and verifying. In neither in holiness and interior peace. We case is one really concerned about can forget that “life does not have a Jesus Christ or others.” mission, but is a mission.” 28. Needless to say, anything done out of anxiety, pride or the need to Contemporary Gnosticism impress others will not lead to holiness. We are challenged to show our com36. Gnosticism presumes “a purely subjective faith whose only interest is a mitment in such a way that everything we do has evangelical meaning and certain experience or a set of ideas and bits of information that are meant to identifies us all the more with Jesus Christ. We often speak, for example, of console and enlighten but which ultimately keep one imprisoned in his or her the spirituality of the catechist, the spirituality of the diocesan priesthood, own thoughts and feelings.” the spirituality of work. For the same reason in Evangelii Gaudium I concluded by speaking of a spirituality of mission, in Laudato Si’ of an ecologiAn Intellect Without God and Without Flesh cal spirituality and in Amoris Laetitia of a spirituality of family life. 37. Thanks be to God, throughout the history of the church it has always 29. This does not mean ignoring the need for moments of quiet, solitude been clear that a person’s perfection is measured not by the information or and silence before God. Quite the contrary. The presence of constantly new knowledge they possess but by the depth of their charity. “Gnostics” do not gadgets, the excitement of travel and an endless array of consumer goods understand this because they judge others based on their ability to underat times leave no room for God’s voice to be heard. We are overwhelmed by stand the complexity of certain doctrines. They think of the intellect as sepawords, by superficial pleasures and by an increasing din, filled not by joy but rate from the flesh and thus become incapable of touching Christ’s suffering rather by the discontent of those whose lives have lost meaning. flesh in others, locked up as they are in an encyclopedia of abstractions. In How can we fail to realize the need to stop this rat race and to recover the the end, by disembodying the mystery, they prefer “a God without Christ, a personal space needed to carry on a heartfelt dialogue with God? Finding Christ without the church, a church without her people.” that space may prove painful, but it is always fruitful. Sooner or later, we 38. Certainly this is a superficial conceit: There is much movement on the have to face our true selves and let the Lord enter. This may not happen unsurface, but the mind is neither deeply moved nor affected. Still, gnosticism less “we see ourselves staring into the abyss of a frightful temptation, or have exercises a deceptive attraction for some people, since the gnostic approach the dizzying sensation of standing on the precipice of utter despair or find is strict and allegedly pure, and can appear to possess a certain harmony or ourselves completely alone and abandoned.” In such situations we find the order that encompasses everything. deepest motivation for living fully our commitment to our work. 39. Here we have to be careful. I am not referring to a rationalism inimical 30. The same distractions that are omnipresent in today’s world also to Christian faith. It can be present within the church, both among the laity make us tend to absolutize our free time, so that we can give ourselves over in parishes and teachers of philosophy and theology in centers of formation. completely to the devices that provide us with entertainment or ephemeral pleasures.(29) As a result, we come to resent our mission, our commitment see ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’, page pf4

‘Be holy by loving and caring for your husband or wife, as Christ does for the church.’


PF4 ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’: Apostolic Exhortation

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

‘Gaudete et Exsultate’: Apostolic Exhortation FROM PAGE PF3

Gnostics think that their explanations can make the entirety of the faith and the Gospel perfectly comprehensible. They absolutize their own theories and force others to submit to their way of thinking. A healthy and humble use of reason in order to reflect on the theological and moral teaching of the Gospel is one thing. It is another to reduce Jesus’ teaching to a cold and harsh logic that seeks to dominate everything.

A Doctrine Without Mystery

40. Gnosticism is one of the most sinister ideologies because, while unduly exalting knowledge or a specific experience, it considers its own vision of reality to be perfect. Thus, perhaps without even realizing it, this ideology feeds on itself and becomes even more myopic. It can become all the more illusory when it masks itself as a disembodied spirituality. For gnosticism “by its very nature seeks to domesticate the mystery,”(38) whether the mystery of God and his grace or the mystery of others’ lives. 41. When somebody has an answer for every question, it is a sign that they are not on the right road. They may well be false prophets who use religion for their own purposes, to promote their own psychological or intellectual theories. God infinitely transcends us; he is full of surprises. We are not the ones to determine when and how we will encounter him; the exact times and places of that encounter are not up to us. Someone who wants everything to be clear and sure presumes to control God’s transcendence. 42. Nor can we claim to say where God is not, because God is mysteriously present in the life of every person in a way that he himself chooses, and we cannot exclude this by our presumed certainties. Even when someone’s life appears completely wrecked, even when we see it devastated by vices or addictions, God is present there. If we let ourselves be guided by the Spirit rather than our own preconceptions, we can and must try to find the Lord in every human life. This is part of the mystery that a gnostic mentality cannot accept, since it is beyond its control.

that, united to contemplation, do not prevent the latter but rather facilitate it such as works of mercy and devotion.”

Contemporary Pelagianism

47. Gnosticism gave way to another heresy likewise present in our day. As time passed, many came to realize that it is not knowledge that betters us or makes us saints, but the kind of life we lead. But this subtly led back to the old error of the gnostics, which was simply transformed rather than eliminated. 48. The same power that the gnostics attributed to the intellect others now began to attribute to the human will, to personal effort. This was the case with the Pelagians and semi-Pelagians. Now it was not intelligence that took the place of mystery and grace but our human will. It was forgotten that everything “depends not on human will or exertion, but on God, who shows mercy” (Rom 9:16) and that “he first loved us” (cf. 1 Jn 4:19).

A Will Lacking Humility

49. Those who yield to this Pelagian or semi-Pelagian mindset, even though they speak warmly of God’s grace, “ultimately trust only in their own powers and feel superior to others because they observe certain rules or remain intransigently faithful to a particular Catholic style.” When some of them tell the weak that all things can be accomplished with God’s grace, deep down they tend to give the idea that all things are possible by the human will, as if it were something pure, perfect, all-powerful, to which grace is then added. They fail to realize that “not everyone can do everything,” and that in this life human weaknesses are not healed completely and once for all by grace. In every case, as St. Augustine taught, God commands you to do what you can and to ask for what you cannot, and indeed to pray to him humbly: “Grant what you command, and command what you will.” 50. Ultimately, the lack of a heartfelt and prayerful acknowledgment of our limitations prevents grace from working more effectively within us, for no room is left for bringing about the potential good that is part of a sincere and genuine journey of growth. Grace, The Limits of Reason precisely because it builds on na43. It is not easy to grasp the truth ture, does not make us superhuman that we have received from the all at once. That kind of thinking Lord. And it is even more difficult would show too much confidence in to express it. So we cannot claim our own abilities. that our way of understanding Underneath our orthodoxy, our this truth authorizes us to exercise attitudes might not correspond to a strict supervision over others’ our talk about the need for grace, lives. Here I would note that in the and in specific situations we can church there legitimately coexist end up putting little trust in it. Undifferent ways of interpreting many less we can acknowledge our conaspects of doctrine and Christian crete and limited situation, we will life; in their variety, they “help to CNS photo/Nancy Wiechec) not be able to see the real and posexpress more clearly the immense sible steps that the Lord demands riches of God’s word.” of us at every moment once we are It is true that “for those who long attracted and empowered by his gift. for a monolithic body of doctrine Pope Francis, ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’ Grace acts in history; ordinarily guarded by all and leaving no room it takes hold of us and transforms for nuance, this might appear as us progressively. If we reject this undesirable and leading to confuhistorical and progressive reality, sion.”(39) Indeed, some currents of we can actually refuse and block grace even as we extol it by our words. gnosticism scorned the concrete simplicity of the Gospel and attempted to 51. When God speaks to Abraham, he tells him, “I am God Almighty, walk replace the Trinitarian and incarnate God with a superior Unity, wherein the before me and be blameless” (Gn 17:1). In order to be blameless, as he would rich diversity of our history disappeared. have us, we need to live humbly in his presence, cloaked in his glory; we need 44. In effect, doctrine, or better, our understanding and expression of it, “is to walk in union with him, recognizing his constant love in our lives. We need not a closed system, devoid of the dynamic capacity to pose questions, doubts, to lose our fear before that presence that can only be for our good. inquiries. ... The questions of our people, their suffering, their struggles, their God is the Father who gave us life and loves us greatly. Once we accept dreams, their trials and their worries, all possess an interpretational value him and stop trying to live our lives without him, the anguish of loneliness that we cannot ignore if we want to take the principle of the Incarnation seriwill disappear (cf. Ps 139:23-24). In this way we will know the pleasing and ously. Their wondering helps us to wonder, their questions question us.” perfect will of the Lord (cf. Rom 12:1-2) and allow him to mold us like a potter 45. A dangerous confusion can arise. We can think that because we know (cf. Is 29:16). So often we say that God dwells in us, but it is better to say that something or are able to explain it in certain terms, we are already saints, we dwell in him, that he enables us to dwell in his light and love. He is our perfect and better than the “ignorant masses.” St. John Paul II warned of the temple; we ask to dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of our life (cf. Ps temptation on the part of those in the church who are more highly educated 27:4). “For one day in your courts is better than a thousand elsewhere” (Ps “to feel somehow superior to other members of the faithful.”(41) In point 84:10). In him is our holiness. of fact, what we think we know should always motivate us to respond more fully to God’s love. Indeed, “you learn so as to live: Theology and holiness are inseparable.”(42) An Often Overlooked Church Teaching 46. When St. Francis of Assisi saw that some of his disciples were engaged 52. The church has repeatedly taught that we are justified not by our own in teaching, he wanted to avoid the temptation to gnosticism. He wrote to St. works or efforts, but by the grace of the Lord, who always takes the initiative. Anthony of Padua, “I am pleased that you teach sacred theology to the brothThe Fathers of the Church, even before St. Augustine, clearly expressed this ers, provided that ... you do not extinguish the spirit of prayer and devotion fundamental belief. St. John Chrysostom said that God pours into us the very during study of this kind.” source of all his gifts even before we enter into battle.(53) St. Basil the Great Francis recognized the temptation to turn the Christian experience into a remarked that the faithful glory in God alone, for “they realize that they lack set of intellectual exercises that distance us from the freshness of the Gospel. true justice and are justified only through faith in Christ.” St. Bonaventure, on the other hand, pointed out that true Christian wisdom 53. The Second Synod of Orange taught with firm authority that nothing hucan never be separated from mercy toward our neighbor: “The greatest posman can demand, merit or buy the gift of divine grace and that all cooperation sible wisdom is to share fruitfully what we have to give. ... Even as mercy is the companion of wisdom, avarice is its enemy.”(44) “There are activities see ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’, page pf5

‘Don’t be afraid of holiness.’


Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

‘Gaudete et Exsultate’: Apostolic Exhortation pf5

‘Gaudete et Exsultate’: Apostolic Exhortation The Summation of the Law

FROM PAGE PF4

with it is a prior gift of that same grace: “Even the desire to be cleansed comes about in us through the outpouring and working of the Holy Spirit.” Subsequently, the Council of Trent, while emphasizing the importance of our cooperation for spiritual growth, reaffirmed that dogmatic teaching: “We are said to be justified gratuitously because nothing that precedes justification, neither faith nor works, merits the grace of justification; for ‘if it is by grace, it is no longer on the basis of works; otherwise, grace would no longer be grace’ (Rom 11:6).” 54. The Catechism of the Catholic Church also reminds us that the gift of grace “surpasses the power of human intellect and will”(57) and that “with regard to God, there is no strict right to any merit on the part of man. Between God and us there is an immeasurable inequality.”(58) His friendship infinitely transcends us; we cannot buy it with our works, it can only be a gift born of his loving initiative. This invites us to live in joyful gratitude for this completely unmerited gift, since “after one has grace, the grace already possessed cannot come under merit.”(59) The saints avoided putting trust in their own works: “In the evening of this life, I shall appear before you empty-handed, for I do not ask you, Lord, to count my works. All our justices have stains in your sight.”(60) 55. This is one of the great convictions that the church has come firmly to hold. It is so clearly expressed in the word of God that there can be no question of it. Like the supreme commandment of love, this truth should affect the way we live, for it flows from the heart of the Gospel and demands that we not only accept it intellectually but also make it a source of contagious joy. Yet we cannot celebrate this free gift of the Lord’s friendship unless we realize that our earthly life and our natural abilities are his gift. We need “to acknowledge jubilantly that our life is essentially a gift and recognize that our freedom is a grace. This is not easy today in a world that thinks it can keep something for itself, the fruits of its own creativity or freedom.”(61) 56. Only on the basis of God’s gift, freely accepted and humbly received, can we cooperate by our own efforts in our progressive transformation.(62) We must first belong to God, offering ourselves to him who was there first and entrusting to him our abilities, our efforts, our struggle against evil and our creativity, so that his free gift may grow and develop within us: “I appeal to you, therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God” (Rom 12:1). For that matter, the church has always taught that charity alone makes growth in the life of grace possible, for “if I do not have love, I am nothing” (1 Cor 13:2).

60. To avoid this, we do well to keep reminding ourselves that there is a hierarchy of virtues that bids us seek what is essential. The primacy belongs to the theological virtues, which have God as their object and motive. At the center is charity. St. Paul says that what truly counts is “faith working through love” (Gal 5:6). We are called to make every effort to preserve charity: “The one who loves another has fulfilled the law ... for love is the fulfillment of the law” (Rom 13:8, 10). “For the whole law is summed up in a single commandment, ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself’” (Gal 5:14). 61. In other words, amid the thicket of precepts and prescriptions, Jesus clears a way to seeing two faces, that of the Father and that of our brother. He does not give us two more formulas or two more commands. He gives us two faces, or better yet, one alone: the face of God reflected in so many other faces. For in every one of our brothers and sisters, especially the least, the most vulnerable, the defenseless and those in need, God’s very image is found. Indeed, with the scraps of this frail humanity, the Lord will shape his final work of art. For “what endures, what has value in life, what riches do not disappear? Surely these two: the Lord and our neighbor. These two riches do not disappear!” 62. May the Lord set the church free from these new forms of gnosticism and Pelagianism that weigh her down and block her progress along the path to holiness! These aberrations take various shapes, according to the temperament and character of each person. So I encourage everyone to reflect and discern before God whether they may be present in their lives.

CHAPTER 3

IN THE LIGHT OF THE MASTER

(CNS photo/Gregory A. Shemitz)

‘Always ask the Spirit what Jesus expects from you at every moment of your life.’

New Pelagians

Pope Francis, ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’

57. Still, some Christians insist on taking another path, that of justification by their own efforts, the worship of the human will and their own abilities. The result is a self-centered and elitist complacency bereft of true love. This finds expression in a variety of apparently unconnected ways of thinking and acting: an obsession with the law, an absorption with social and political advantages, a punctilious concern for the church’s liturgy, doctrine and prestige, a vanity about the ability to manage practical matters and an excessive concern with programs of self-help and personal fulfillment. Some Christians spend their time and energy on these things, rather than letting themselves be led by the Spirit in the way of love, rather than being passionate about communicating the beauty and the joy of the Gospel and seeking out the lost among the immense crowds that thirst for Christ. 58. Not infrequently, contrary to the promptings of the Spirit, the life of the church can become a museum piece or the possession of a select few. This can occur when some groups of Christians give excessive importance to certain rules, customs or ways of acting. The Gospel then tends to be reduced and constricted, deprived of its simplicity, allure and savor. This may well be a subtle form of Pelagianism, for it appears to subject the life of grace to certain human structures. It can affect groups, movements and communities, and it explains why so often they begin with an intense life in the Spirit only to end up fossilized ... or corrupt. 59. Once we believe that everything depends on human effort as channeled by ecclesial rules and structures, we unconsciously complicate the Gospel and become enslaved to a blueprint that leaves few openings for the working of grace. St. Thomas Aquinas reminded us that the precepts added to the Gospel by the church should be imposed with moderation “lest the conduct of the faithful become burdensome,” for then our religion would become a form of servitude.(64)

63. There can be any number of theories about what constitutes holiness, with various explanations and distinctions. Such reflection may be useful, but nothing is more enlightening than turning to Jesus’ words and seeing his way of teaching the truth. Jesus explained with great simplicity what it means to be holy when he gave us the beatitudes (cf. Mt 5:3-12; Lk 6:20-23). The beatitudes are like a Christian’s identity card. So if anyone asks, “What must one do to be a good Christian?” the answer is clear. We have to do, each in our own way, what Jesus told us in the Sermon on the Mount.(66) In the beatitudes we find a portrait of the Master that we are called to reflect in our daily lives. 64. The word happy or blessed thus becomes a synonym for holy. It expresses the fact that those faithful to God and his word, by their self-giving, gain true happiness.

Going Against the Flow

65. Although Jesus’ words may strike us as poetic, they clearly run counter to the way things are usually done in our world. Even if we find Jesus’ message attractive, the world pushes us toward another way of living. The beatitudes are in no way trite or undemanding, quite the opposite. We can only practice them if the Holy Spirit fills us with his power and frees us from our weakness, our selfishness, our complacency and our pride. 66. Let us listen once more to Jesus, with all the love and respect that the Master deserves. Let us allow his words to unsettle us, to challenge us and to demand a real change in the way we live. Otherwise, holiness will remain no more than an empty word. We turn now to the individual beatitudes in the Gospel of Matthew (cf. Mt 5:3-12).

“Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”

67. The Gospel invites us to peer into the depths of our heart to see where we find our security in life. Usually the rich feel secure in their wealth and think that if that wealth is threatened the whole meaning of their earthly life can collapse. Jesus himself tells us this in the parable of the rich fool: He speaks of a man who was sure of himself yet foolish, for it did not dawn on him that he might die that very day (cf. Lk 12:16-21). 68. Wealth ensures nothing. Indeed, once we think we are rich, we can become so self-satisfied that we leave no room for God’s word, for the love of our brothers and sisters or for the enjoyment of the most important things in life. In this way we miss out on the greatest treasure of all. That is why Jesus see ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’, page pf6


PF6 ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’: Apostolic Exhortation

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

‘Gaudete et Exsultate’: Apostolic Exhortation FROM PAGE PF5

calls blessed those who are poor in spirit, those who have a poor heart, for there the Lord can enter with his perennial newness. 69. This spiritual poverty is closely linked to what St. Ignatius of Loyola calls “holy indifference,” which brings us to a radiant interior freedom: “We need to train ourselves to be indifferent in our attitude to all created things, in all that is permitted to our free will and not forbidden; so that on our part we do not set our hearts on good health rather than bad, riches rather than poverty, honor rather than dishonor, a long life rather than a short one and so in all the rest.” 70. Luke does not speak of poverty “of spirit” but simply of those who are “poor” (cf. Lk 6:20). In this way, he too invites us to live a plain and austere life. He calls us to share in the life of those most in need, the life lived by the apostles, and ultimately to configure ourselves to Jesus, who though rich “made himself poor” (2 Cor 8:9). Being poor of heart: That is holiness.

“Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth.”

sons are unafraid to share in the suffering of others; they do not flee from painful situations. They discover the meaning of life by coming to the aid of those who suffer, understanding their anguish and bringing relief. They sense that the other is flesh of our flesh, and are not afraid to draw near, even to touch their wounds. They feel compassion for others in such a way that all distance vanishes. In this way they can embrace St. Paul’s exhortation: “Weep with those who weep” (Rom 12:15). Knowing how to mourn with others: That is holiness.

“Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled.”

77. Hunger and thirst are intense experiences since they involve basic needs and our instinct for survival. There are those who desire justice and yearn for righteousness with similar intensity. Jesus says that they will be satisfied, for sooner or later justice will come. We can cooperate to make that possible, even if we may not always see the fruit of our efforts. 78. Jesus offers a justice other than that of the world, so often marred by petty interests and manipulated in various ways. Experience shows how easy it is to become mired in corruption, ensnared in the daily politics of quid pro quo, where everything becomes business. How many people suffer injustice standing by powerlessly while others divvy up the good things of this life. Some give up fighting for real justice and opt to follow in the train of the winners. This has nothing to do with the hunger and thirst for justice that Jesus praises. 79. True justice comes about in people’s lives when they themselves are just in their decisions; it is expressed in their pursuit of justice for the poor and the weak. While it is true that the word justice can be a synonym for faithfulness to God’s will in every aspect of our life, if we give the word too general a meaning, we forget that it is shown especially in justice toward those who are most vulnerable: “Seek justice, correct oppression; defend the fatherless, plead for the widow” (Is 1:17). Hungering and thirsting for righteousness: That is holiness.

71. These are strong words in a world that from the beginning has been a place of conflict, disputes and enmity on all sides, where we constantly pigeonhole others on the basis of their ideas, their customs and even their way of speaking or dressing. Ultimately, it is the reign of pride and vanity, where each person thinks he or she has the right to dominate others. Nonetheless, impossible as it may seem, Jesus proposes a different way of doing things: the way of meekness. This is what we see him doing with his disciples. It is what we contemplate on his entrance to Jerusalem: “Behold, your king is coming to you, humble, and mounted on a donkey” (Mt 21:5; Zec 9:9). 72. Christ says, “Learn from me; for I am gentle and humble of heart, and you will find rest for your souls” (Mt 11:29). If we are constantly upset and impatient with others, we will end up drained and weary. But if we regard the faults and limitations of others with tenderness and meekness, without an air of superiority, “Blessed are the merciful, we can actually help them and stop wastfor they will receive mercy.” ing our energy on useless complaining. 80. Mercy has two aspects. It involves St. Therese of Lisieux tells us that “pergiving, helping and serving others, but fect charity consists in putting up with it also includes forgiveness and underothers’ mistakes and not being scandalstanding. Matthew sums it up in one ized by their faults.” golden rule: “In everything, do to others 73. Paul speaks of meekness as one of as you would have them do to you” (7:12). the fruits of the Holy Spirit (cf. Gal 5:23). The catechism reminds us that this law is (CNS photo/Gregory A. Shemitz) He suggests that if a wrongful action of to be applied “in every case,”(71) espeone of our brothers or sisters troubles us, cially when we are “confronted by situwe should try to correct them but “with a ations that make moral judgments less spirit of meekness,” since “you too could assured and decision difficult.”(72) be tempted” (Gal 6:1). Even when we 81. Giving and forgiving means reprodefend our faith and convictions, we are ducing in our lives some small measure Pope Francis, ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’ to do so “with meekness” (cf. 1 Pt 3:16). of God’s perfection, which gives and forOur enemies too are to be treated “with gives superabundantly. For this reason, meekness” (2 Tm 2:25). In the church we in the Gospel of Luke we do not hear the have often erred by not embracing this words, “Be perfect” (Mt 5:48), but rather, demand of God’s word. “Be merciful, even as your Father is merciful. Judge not, and you will not be 74. Meekness is yet another expression of the interior poverty of those who judged; condemn not, and you will not be condemned; forgive, and you will be put their trust in God alone. Indeed, in the Bible the same word - anawim forgiven; give, and it will be given to you” (6:36-38). usually refers both to the poor and to the meek. Someone might object: “If Luke then adds something not to be overlooked: “The measure you give will I am that meek, they will think that I am an idiot, a fool or a weakling.” At be the measure you get back” (6:38). The yardstick we use for understanding times they may, but so be it. It is always better to be meek, for then our deepand forgiving others will measure the forgiveness we receive. The yardstick est desires will be fulfilled. we use for giving will measure what we receive. We should never forget this. The meek “shall inherit the earth,” for they will see God’s promises accom82. Jesus does not say, “Blessed are those who plot revenge.” He calls blessed plished in their lives. In every situation, the meek put their hope in the Lord, those who forgive and do so “seventy times seven” (Mt 18:22). We need to think and those who hope for him shall possess the land ... and enjoy the fullness of ourselves as an army of the forgiven. All of us have been looked upon with of peace (cf. Ps 37:9.11). For his part, the Lord trusts in them: “This is the one divine compassion. If we approach the Lord with sincerity and listen carefulto whom I will look, to the humble and contrite in spirit, who trembles at my ly, there may well be times when we hear his reproach, “Should not you have word” (Is 66:2). had mercy on your fellow servant, as I had mercy on you?” (Mt 18:33). Reacting with meekness and humility: That is holiness. Seeing and acting with mercy: That is holiness.

‘Be holy by working for the common good and renouncing personal gain’

“Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted.”

75. The world tells us exactly the opposite: Entertainment, pleasure, diversion and escape make for the good life. The worldly person ignores problems of sickness or sorrow in the family or all around him; he averts his gaze. The world has no desire to mourn; it would rather disregard painful situations, cover them up or hide them. Much energy is expended on fleeing from situations of suffering in the belief that reality can be concealed. But the cross can never be absent. 76. A person who sees things as they truly are and sympathizes with pain and sorrow is capable of touching life’s depths and finding authentic happiness. He or she is consoled not by the world but by Jesus. Such per-

“Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God.”

83. This beatitude speaks of those whose hearts are simple, pure and undefiled, for a heart capable of love admits nothing that might harm, weaken or endanger that love. The Bible uses the heart to describe our real intentions, the things we truly seek and desire, apart from all appearances. “Man sees the appearance, but the Lord looks into the heart” (1 Sm 16:7). God wants to speak to our hearts (cf. Hos 2:16); there he desires to write his law (cf. Jer 31:33). In a word, he wants to give us a new heart (cf. Ez 36:26). 84. “Guard your heart with all vigilance” (Prv 4:23). Nothing stained by see ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’, page pf7


Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

‘Gaudete et Exsultate’: Apostolic Exhortation pf7

‘Gaudete et Exsultate’: Apostolic Exhortation FROM PAGE PF6

falsehood has any real worth in the Lord’s eyes. He “flees from deceit, and rises and departs from foolish thoughts” (Wis 1:5). The Father, “who sees in secret” (Mt 6:6), recognizes what is impure and insincere, mere display or appearance, as does the Son, who knows “what is in man” (cf. Jn 2:25). 85. Certainly there can be no love without works of love, but this beatitude reminds us that the Lord expects a commitment to our brothers and sisters that comes from the heart. For “if I give away all I have, and if I deliver my body to be burned, but have no love, I gain nothing” (1 Cor 13:3). In Matthew’s Gospel too, we see that what proceeds from the heart is what defiles a person (cf. 15:18), for from the heart come murder, theft, false witness and other evil deeds (cf. 15:19). From the heart’s intentions come the desires and the deepest decisions that determine our actions. 86. A heart that loves God and neighbor (cf. Mt 22:36-40), genuinely and not merely in words, is a pure heart; it can see God. In his hymn to charity, St. Paul says that “now we see in a mirror, dimly” (1 Cor 13:12), but to the extent that truth and love prevail, we will then be able to see “face to face.” Jesus promises that those who are pure in heart “will see God.” Keeping a heart free of all that tarnishes love: That is holiness.

“Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God”

to do so will be viewed negatively, regarded with suspicion and met with ridicule. 92. Whatever weariness and pain we may experience in living the commandment of love and following the way of justice, the cross remains the source of our growth and sanctification. We must never forget that when the New Testament tells us that we will have to endure suffering for the Gospel’s sake, it speaks precisely of persecution (cf. Acts 5:41; Phil 1:29; Col 1:24; 2 Tm 1:12; 1 Pt 2:20, 4:14-16; Rv 2:10). 93. Here we are speaking about inevitable persecution, not the kind of persecution we might bring upon ourselves by our mistreatment of others. The saints are not odd and aloof, unbearable because of their vanity, negativity and bitterness. The apostles of Christ were not like that. The Book of Acts states repeatedly that they enjoyed favor “with all the people” (2:47; cf. 4:21, 33; 5:13), even as some authorities harassed and persecuted them (cf. 4:1-3, 5:17-18). 94. Persecutions are not a reality of the past, for today too we experience them, whether by the shedding of blood as is the case with so many contemporary martyrs or by more subtle means, by slander and lies. Jesus calls us blessed when people “utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my account” (Mt 5:11). At other times persecution can take the form of gibes that try to caricature our faith and make us seem ridiculous. Accepting daily the path of the Gospel even though it may cause us problems: That is holiness.

87. This beatitude makes us think of the many endless situations of war in our The Great Criterion world. Yet we ourselves are often a cause 95. In the 25th chapter of Matthew’s of conflict or at least of misunderstandGospel (vv. 31-46), Jesus expands on the ing. For example, I may hear something beatitude that calls blessed the merciabout someone and I go off and repeat it. ful. If we seek the holiness pleasing to I may even embellish it the second time God’s eyes, this text offers us one clear around and keep spreading it. ... And the criterion on which we will be judged. “I more harm it does, the more satisfaction was hungry and you gave me food, I was I seem to derive from it. The world of gosthirsty and you gave me drink, I was a sip, inhabited by negative and destructive stranger and you welcomed me, I was people, does not bring peace. Such people naked and you clothed me, I was sick and are really the enemies of peace; in no you took care of me, I was in prison and way are they “blessed.” you visited me” (vv. 35-36). 88. Peacemakers truly “make” peace; they build peace and friendship in sociIn Fidelity to the Master ety. To those who sow peace Jesus makes 96. Holiness, then, is not about swoonthis magnificent promise: “They will be ing in mystic rapture. As St. John Paul called children of God” (Mt 5:9). He told II said, “If we truly start out anew from his disciples that wherever they went the contemplation of Christ, we must they were to say, “Peace to this house!” learn to see him especially in the faces of (Lk 10:5). those with whom he himself wished to be The word of God exhorts every believer identified.” The text of Matthew 25:35-36 to work for peace, “along with all who is “not a simple invitation to charity: It call upon the Lord with a pure heart” (cf. is a page of Christology that sheds a ray 2 Tm 2:22), for “the harvest of righteousof light on the mystery of Christ.” In ness is sown in peace by those who make this call to recognize him in the poor and (CNS photo/Gregory A. Shemitz) peace” (Jas 3:18). And if there are times the suffering, we see revealed the very in our community when we question heart of Christ, his deepest feelings and what ought to be done, “let us pursue choices that every saint seeks to imitate. what makes for peace” (Rom 14:19), for 97. Given these uncompromising unity is preferable to conflict. demands of Jesus, it is my duty to ask 89. It is not easy to “make” this evanChristians to acknowledge and accept Pope Francis, ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’ gelical peace, which excludes no one but them in a spirit of genuine openness, embraces even those who are a bit odd, sine glossa. In other words, without any troublesome or difficult, demanding, “ifs or buts” that could lessen their force. different, beaten down by life or simply Our Lord made it very clear that holiness uninterested. It is hard work; it calls for great openness of mind and heart cannot be understood or lived apart from these demands, for mercy is “the since it is not about creating “a consensus on paper or a transient peace for a beating heart of the Gospel.” contented minority” or a project “by a few for the few.”(76) Nor can it attempt 98. If I encounter a person sleeping outdoors on a cold night, I can view him to ignore or disregard conflict; instead, it must “face conflict head-on, resolve or her as an annoyance, an idler, an obstacle in my path, a troubling sight, it and make it a link in the chain of a new process.” We need to be artisans of a problem for politicians to sort out or even a piece of refuse cluttering a peace, for building peace is a craft that demands serenity, creativity, sensitivpublic space. Or I can respond with faith and charity, and see in this person ity and skill. a human being with a dignity identical to my own, a creature infinitely loved Sowing peace all around us: That is holiness. by the Father, an image of God, a brother or sister redeemed by Jesus Christ. That is what it is to be a Christian! Can holiness somehow be understood apart from this lively recognition of the dignity of each human being? “Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, 99. For Christians, this involves a constant and healthy unease. Even if for theirs is the kingdom of heaven” helping one person alone could justify all our efforts, it would not be enough. 90. Jesus himself warns us that the path he proposes goes against the flow, The bishops of Canada made this clear when they noted, for example, that even making us challenge society by the way we live and, as a result, becomthe biblical understanding of the jubilee year was about more than simply ing a nuisance. He reminds us how many people have been, and still are, performing certain good works. It also meant seeking social change: “For persecuted simply because they struggle for justice, because they take serilater generations to also be released, clearly the goal had to be the restoration ously their commitment to God and to others. Unless we wish to sink into an of just social and economic systems, so there could no longer be exclusion.” obscure mediocrity, let us not long for an easy life, for “whoever would save his life will lose it” (Mt 16:25). 91. In living the Gospel, we cannot expect that everything will be easy, for Ideologies Striking at the Heart of the Gospel the thirst for power and worldly interests often stands in our way. St. John 100. I regret that ideologies lead us at times to two harmful errors. On the Paul II noted that “a society is alienated if its forms of social organization, one hand, there is the error of those Christians who separate these Gospel production and consumption make it more difficult to offer this gift of self demands from their personal relationship with the Lord, from their interior and to establish this solidarity between people.” In such a society, politics, union with him, from openness to his grace. Christianity thus becomes a sort mass communications and economic, cultural and even religious institutions of nongovernmental organization stripped of the luminous mysticism so become so entangled as to become an obstacle to authentic human and social development. As a result, the beatitudes are not easy to live out; any attempt see ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’, page pf8

‘Christian wisdom can never be separated from mercy toward our neighbor’


PF8 ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’: Apostolic Exhortation

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

‘Gaudete et Exsultate’: Apostolic Exhortation FROM PAGE PF7

wishes them to be offered to him in order to stir our devotion and to profit our neighbor. Hence mercy, whereby we supply others’ defects, is a sacrifice more acceptable to him, as conducing more directly to our neighbor’s well-being.” 107. Those who really wish to give glory to God by their lives, who truly long to grow in holiness, are called to be single-minded and tenacious in their practice of the works of mercy. St. Teresa of Calcutta clearly realized this: “Yes, I have many human faults and failures. ... But God bends down and uses us, you and me, to be his love and his compassion in the world; he bears our sins, our troubles and our faults. He depends on us to love the world and to show how much he loves it. If we are too concerned with ourselves, we will have no time left for others.” 108. Hedonism and consumerism can prove our downfall, for when we are obsessed with our own pleasure we end up being all too concerned about ourselves and our rights, and we feel a desperate need for free time to enjoy ourselves. We will find it hard to feel and show any real concern for those in need, unless we are able to cultivate a certain simplicity of life, resisting the feverish demands of a consumer society that leave us impoverished and unsatisfied, anxious to have it all now. Similarly, when we allow ourselves to be caught up in superficial information, instant communication and virtual reality, we can waste precious time and become indifferent to the suffering flesh of our brothers and sisters. Yet even amid this whirlwind of activity, the Gospel continues to resound, offering us the promise of a different life, a healthier and happier life. 109. The powerful witness of the saints is revealed in their lives, shaped by the beatitudes and the criterion of the Final Judgment. Jesus’ words are few and straightforward yet practical and valid for everyone, for Christianity is meant above all to be put into practice. It can also be an object of study and reflection but only to help us better live the Gospel in our daily lives. I recommend rereading these great biblical texts frequently, referring back to them, praying with them, trying to embody them. They will benefit us; they will make us genuinely happy.

evident in the lives of St. Francis of Assisi, St. Vincent de Paul, St. Teresa of Calcutta and many others. For these great saints, mental prayer, the love of God and the reading of the Gospel in no way detracted from their passionate and effective commitment to their neighbors; quite the opposite. 101. The other harmful ideological error is found in those who find suspect the social engagement of others, seeing it as superficial, worldly, secular, materialist, communist or populist. Or they relativize it, as if there are other more important matters or the only thing that counts is one particular ethical issue or cause that they themselves defend. Our defense of the innocent unborn, for example, needs to be clear, firm and passionate, for at stake is the dignity of a human life, which is always sacred and demands love for each person regardless of his or her stage of development. Equally sacred, however, are the lives of the poor, those already born, the destitute, the abandoned and the underprivileged, the vulnerable infirm and elderly exposed to covert euthanasia, the victims of human trafficking, new forms of slavery and every form of rejection. We cannot uphold an ideal of holiness that would ignore injustice in a world where some revel, spend with abandon and live only for the latest consumer goods even as others look on from afar, living their entire lives in abject poverty. 102. We often hear it said that with respect to relativism and the flaws of our present world the situation of migrants, for example, is a lesser issue. Some Catholics consider it a secondary issue compared to the “grave” bioethical questions. That a politician looking for votes might say such a thing is understandable, but not a Christian, for whom the only proper attitude is to stand in the shoes of those brothers and sisters of ours who risk their lives to offer a future to their children. Can we not realize that this is exactly what Jesus demands of us when he tells us that in welcoming the stranger we welcome him (cf. Mt 25:35)? St. Benedict did so CHAPTER 4 readily, and though it might have “complicated” the life of his monks, he ordered that all guests who knocked at the monastery door be welcomed “like Christ,” with a gesture of veneration; the poor and pilgrims were to be met with “the greatest care and solicitude.” 103. A similar approach is found in the Old Testament: “You shall not wrong a stranger or oppress him, for you yourselves were strangers in the land of Egypt” (Ex 22:21). “When a stranger resides with you 110. Within the framework of in your land, you shall not oppress holiness offered by the beatitudes him. The stranger who resides with and Matthew 25:31-46, I would like you shall be to you as the citizen to mention a few signs or spiritual among you; and you shall love him attitudes that, in my opinion, are as yourself; for you were strangers necessary if we are to understand in the land of Egypt” (Lv 19:33-34). the way of life to which the Lord Pope Francis, ‘Gaudete et Exsultate This is not a notion invented by calls us. I will not pause to explain some pope or a momentary fad. In the means of sanctification already today’s world too we are called to known to us: the various methods follow the path of spiritual wisdom of prayer, the inestimable sacraproposed by the prophet Isaiah to show what is pleasing to God. “Is it not to ments of the Eucharist and reconciliation, the offering of personal sacrifices, share your bread with the hungry and bring the homeless poor into your different forms of devotion, spiritual direction and many others as well. Here house; when you see the naked, to cover him, and not to hide yourself from I will speak only of certain aspects of the call to holiness that I hope will your own kin? Then your light shall break forth like the dawn” (58:7-8). prove especially meaningful. 111. The signs I wish to highlight are not the sum total of a model of holiness, but they are five great expressions of love for God and neighbor that I The Worship Most Acceptable to God consider of particular importance in the light of certain dangers and limita104. We may think that we give glory to God only by our worship and prayer tions present in today’s culture. There we see a sense of anxiety, sometimes or simply by following certain ethical norms. It is true that the primacy violent, that distracts and debilitates; negativity and sullenness; the selfbelongs to our relationship with God, but we cannot forget that the ultimate content bred by consumerism; individualism and all those forms of ersatz criterion on which our lives will be judged is what we have done for others. spirituality - having nothing to do with God - that dominate the current Prayer is most precious, for it nourishes a daily commitment to love. Our religious marketplace. worship becomes pleasing to God when we devote ourselves to living generously and allow God’s gift, granted in prayer, to be shown in our concern for our brothers and sisters. Perseverance, Patience and Meekness 105. Similarly, the best way to discern if our prayer is authentic is to judge 112. The first of these great signs is solid grounding in the God who loves to what extent our life is being transformed in the light of mercy. For “mercy and sustains us. This source of inner strength enables us to persevere amid is not only an action of the Father; it becomes a criterion for ascertaining who life’s ups and downs but also to endure hostility, betrayal and failings on the his true children are.” Mercy “is the very foundation of the church’s life.” part of others. “If God is for us, who is against us?” (Rom 8:31): This is the In this regard, I would like to reiterate that mercy does not exclude justice source of the peace found in the saints. and truth; indeed, “we have to say that mercy is the fullness of justice and the Such inner strength makes it possible for us in our fast-paced, noisy and agmost radiant manifestation of God’s truth.” It is “the key to heaven.” gressive world to give a witness of holiness through patience and constancy 106. Here I think of St. Thomas Aquinas, who asked which actions of ours in doing good. It is a sign of the fidelity born of love for those who put their are noblest, which external works best show our love for God. Thomas anfaith in God (pistis) can also be faithful to others (pistos). They do not desert swered unhesitatingly that they are the works of mercy toward our neighbor others in bad times; they accompany them in their anxiety and distress, even even more than our acts of worship: though doing so may not bring immediate satisfaction. “We worship God by outward sacrifices and gifts, not for his own benefit but for that of ourselves and our neighbor. For he does not need our sacrifices but see ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’, page pf9

SIGNS OF HOLINESS IN TODAY’S WORLD

‘When somebody has an answer for every question, it is a sign that they are not on the right road.’


Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

‘Gaudete et Exsultate’: Apostolic Exhortation pf9

‘Gaudete et Exsultate’: Apostolic Exhortation Joy and a Sense of Humor

FROM PAGE PF8

122. Far from being timid, morose, acerbic or melancholy, or putting on a dreary face, the saints are joyful and full of good humor. Though complete113. St. Paul bade the Romans not to repay evil for evil (cf. Rom 12:17), not to ly realistic, they radiate a positive and hopeful spirit. The Christian life is seek revenge (v. 19) and not to be overcome by evil but instead to “overcome “joy in the Holy Spirit” (Rom 14:17), for “the necessary result of the love of evil with good” (v. 21). This attitude is not a sign of weakness but of true charity is joy; since every lover rejoices at being united to the beloved. ... strength, because God himself “is slow to anger but great in power” (Na 1:3). The effect of charity is joy.” The word of God exhorts us to “put away all bitterness and wrath and wranHaving received the beautiful gift of God’s word, we embrace it “in much gling and slander, together with all malice” (Eph 4:31). affliction, with joy inspired by the Holy Spirit” (1 Thes 1:6). If we allow the 114. We need to recognize and combat our aggressive and selfish inclinaLord to draw us out of our shell and change our lives, then we can do as St. tions, and not let them take root. “Be angry but do not sin; do not let the Paul tells us, “Rejoice in the Lord always; I say it again, rejoice!” (Phil 4:4). sun go down on your anger” (Eph 4:26). When we feel overwhelmed, we can 123. The prophets proclaimed the times of Jesus, in which we now live, always cling to the anchor of prayer, which puts us back in God’s hands and as a revelation of joy. “Shout and sing for joy!” (Is 12:6). “Get you up to a the source of our peace. “Have no anxiety about anything, but in everything, high mountain, O herald of good tidings to Zion; lift up your voice with by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving, let your requests be made strength, O herald of good tidings to Jerusalem!” (Is 40:9). “Break forth, O known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will mountains, into singing! For the Lord has comforted his people, and he will guard your hearts” (Phil 4:6-7). have compassion on his afflicted” (Is 49:13). “Rejoice greatly, O daughter 115. Christians too can be caught up in networks of verbal violence through of Zion! Shout aloud, O daughter of Jerusalem! Behold, your king comes the internet and the various forums of digital communication. Even in Cathto you; triumphant and victorious is he” (Zec 9:9). Nor should we forget olic media, limits can be overstepped, defamation and slander can become Nehemiah’s exhortation, “Do not be grieved, for the joy of the Lord is your commonplace, and all ethical standards and respect for the good name of strength!” (8:10). others can be abandoned. The result is a dangerous dichotomy, since things 124. Mary, recognizing the newness that Jesus brought, sang, “My spirit can be said there that would be unacceptable in public discourse and people rejoices” (Lk 1:47), and Jesus himself “rejoiced in the Holy Spirit” (Lk look to compensate for their own discontent by lashing out at others. It is 10:21). As he passed by, “all the people rejoiced” (Lk 13:17). After his resstriking that at times, in claiming to uphold the other commandments, they urrection, wherever the disciples went, there was “much joy” (Acts 8:8). completely ignore the eighth, which forbids bearing false witness or lying, Jesus assures us, “You will be sorrowful, but your sorrow will turn into and ruthlessly vilify others. Here we see how the unguarded tongue, set on joy. ... I will see you again and your hearts will rejoice, and no one will take fire by hell, sets all things ablaze (cf. Jas 3:6). your joy from you” (Jn 16:20, 22). “These things I have spoken to you, that 116. Inner strength, as the work of grace, prevents us from becoming carried my joy may be in you, and that your joy may be full” (Jn 15:11). away by the violence that is so much a part of life today, because grace defuses 125. Hard times may come when the cross casts its shadow, yet nothing vanity and makes possible meekness of heart. The saints do not waste energy can destroy the supernatural joy that “adapts and changes but always complaining about the failings of others; they can hold their tongue before endures, even as a flicker of light born of our personal certainty that when the faults of their brothers and sisters, and avoid the verbal violence that everything is said and done, we are infinitely loved.” That joy brings deep demeans and mistreats others. Saints hesitate to treat others harshly; they security, serene hope and a spiritual fulfillment consider others better than themselves (cf. Phil 2:3). that the world cannot understand or appreciate. 117. It is not good when we look down on oth126. Christian joy is usually accompanied by a ers like heartless judges, lording it over them and sense of humor. We see this clearly, for example, in always trying to teach them lessons. That is itself St. Thomas More, St. Vincent de Paul and St. Philip a subtle form of violence.(95) St. John of the Cross Neri. Ill humor is no sign of holiness. “Remove proposed a different path: “Always prefer to be vexation from your mind” (Eccl 11:10). We receive taught by all, rather than to desire teaching even the so much from the Lord “for our enjoyment” (1 Tm least of all.”(96) And he added advice on how to keep 6:17) that sadness can be a sign of ingratitude. We the devil at bay: can get so caught up in ourselves that we are un“Rejoice in the good of others as if it were your able to recognize God’s gifts. own, and desire that they be given precedence over 127. With the love of a father, God tells us, “My you in all things; this you should do wholeheartedly. son, treat yourself well. ... Do not deprive yourself You will thereby overcome evil with good, banish of a happy day” (Sir 14:11, 14). He wants us to be the devil and possess a happy heart. Try to practice Pope Francis, ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’ positive, grateful and uncomplicated: “In the day this all the more with those who least attract you. of prosperity, be joyful. ... God created human beRealize that if you do not train yourself in this way, ings straightforward, but they have devised many you will not attain real charity or make any progress schemes” (Eccl 7:14, 29). in it.”(97) Whatever the case, we should remain resilient and imitate St. Paul: “I 118. Humility can only take root in the heart through humiliations. Withhave learned to be content with what I have” (Phil 4:11). St. Francis of Asout them, there is no humility or holiness. If you are unable to suffer and sisi lived by this; he could be overwhelmed with gratitude before a piece offer up a few humiliations, you are not humble and you are not on the path of hard bread or joyfully praise God simply for the breeze that caressed to holiness. The holiness that God bestows on his church comes through the his face. humiliation of his Son. He is the way. 128. This is not the joy held out by today’s individualistic and consumerHumiliation makes you resemble Jesus; it is an unavoidable aspect of the ist culture. Consumerism only bloats the heart. It can offer occasional and imitation of Christ. For “Christ suffered for you, leaving you an example, so passing pleasures but not joy. Here I am speaking of a joy lived in comthat you might follow in his steps” (1 Pt 2:21). In turn, he reveals the humility munion that shares and is shared, since “there is more happiness in giving of the Father, who condescends to journey with his people, enduring their inthan in receiving” (Acts 20:35) and “God loves a cheerful giver” (2 Cor 9:7). fidelities and complaints (cf. Ex 34:6-9; Wis 11:23-12:2; Lk 6:36). For this reason, Fraternal love increases our capacity for joy, since it makes us capable the apostles, after suffering humiliation, rejoiced “that they were counted of rejoicing in the good of others: “Rejoice with those who rejoice” (Rom worthy to suffer dishonor for [Jesus’] name” (Acts 5:41). 12:15). “We rejoice when we are weak and you are strong” (2 Cor 13:9). On 119. Here I am not speaking only about stark situations of martyrdom but the other hand, when we “focus primarily on our own needs, we condemn about the daily humiliations of those who keep silent to save their famiourselves to a joyless existence.”(102) lies, who prefer to praise others rather than boast about themselves or who choose the less welcome tasks, at times even choosing to bear an injustice so as to offer it to the Lord. “If when you do right and suffer for it, you have Boldness and Passion God’s approval” (1 Pt 2:20). 129. Holiness is also parrhesia: It is boldness, an impulse to evangelize This does not mean walking around with eyes lowered, not saying a word and to leave a mark in this world. To allow us to do this, Jesus himself and fleeing the company of others. At times, precisely because someone is comes and tells us once more, serenely yet firmly, “Do not be afraid” (Mk free of selfishness, he or she can dare to disagree gently, to demand justice 6:50). “I am with you always, to the end of the world” (Mt 28:20). These or to defend the weak before the powerful, even if it may harm his or her words enable us to go forth and serve with the same courage that the Holy reputation. Spirit stirred up in the apostles, impelling them to proclaim Jesus Christ. 120. I am not saying that such humiliation is pleasant, for that would be Boldness, enthusiasm, the freedom to speak out, apostolic fervor, all masochism, but that it is a way of imitating Jesus and growing in union these are included in the word parrhesia. The Bible also uses this word to with him. This is incomprehensible on a purely natural level, and the describe the freedom of a life open to God and to others (cf. Acts 4:29, 9:28, world mocks any such notion. Instead, it is a grace to be sought in prayer: 28:31; 2 Cor 3:12; Eph 3:12; Heb 3:6, 10:19). “Lord, when humiliations come, help me to know that I am following in 130. Blessed Paul VI, in referring to obstacles to evangelization, spoke of your footsteps.” a lack of fervor (parrhesia) that is “all the more serious because it comes 121. To act in this way presumes a heart set at peace by Christ, freed from from within.” How often we are tempted to keep close to the shore! Yet the the aggressiveness born of overweening egotism. That same peacefulness, Lord calls us to put out into the deep and let down our nets (cf. Lk 5:4). He the fruit of grace, makes it possible to preserve our inner trust and persevere bids us spend our lives in his service. Clinging to him, we are inspired to in goodness, “though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death” (Ps put all our charisms at the service of others. May we always feel compelled 23:4) or “a host encamp against me” (Ps 27:3). Standing firm in the Lord, the by his love (2 Cor 5:14) and say with St. Paul, “Woe to me if I do not preach Rock, we can sing: “In peace I will both lie down and sleep; for you alone, O the Gospel” (1 Cor 9:16). Lord, make me dwell in safety” (Ps 4:8). 131. Look at Jesus. His deep compassion reached out to others. It did not Christ, in a word, “is our peace” (Eph 2:14); he came “to guide our feet into make him hesitant, timid or self-conscious as often happens with us. Quite the way of peace” (Lk 1:79). As he told St. Faustina Kowalska, “Mankind will the opposite. His compassion made him go out actively to preach and to not have peace until it turns with trust to my mercy.”(98) So let us not fall send others on a mission of healing and liberation. Let us acknowledge our into the temptation of looking for security in success, vain pleasures, possesweakness but allow Jesus to lay hold of it and send us too on mission. We sions, power over others or social status. Jesus says, “My peace I give to you; I do not give it to you as the world gives peace” (Jn 14:27). see ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’, page pf10

‘Fraternal love increases our capacity for joy, since it makes us capable of rejoiceing in the good of others.’


PF10 ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’: Apostolic Exhortation

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

‘Gaudete et Exsultate’: Apostolic Exhortation nese martyrs St. Paul Miki and companions, the Korean martyrs St. Andrew Taegon and companions, or the South American martyrs St. Roque Gonzalez, St. Alonso Rodriguez and companions. are weak, yet we hold a treasure that can enlarge us and make those who We should also remember the more recent witness borne by the Blessed receive it better and happier. Boldness and apostolic courage are an essenTrappists of Tibhirine, Algeria, who prepared as a community for martial part of mission. tyrdom. In many holy marriages too, each spouse becomes a means used 132. Parrhesia is a seal of the Spirit; it testifies to the authenticity of our by Christ for the sanctification of the other. Living or working alongside preaching. It is a joyful assurance that leads us to glory in the Gospel we others is surely a path of spiritual growth. St. John of the Cross told one proclaim. It is an unshakable trust in the faithful Witness who gives us the of his followers, “You are living with others in order to be fashioned and certainty that nothing can “separate us from the love of God” (Rom 8:39). tried.” 133. We need the Spirit’s prompting lest we be paralyzed by fear and 142. Each community is called to create a “God-enlightened space in excessive caution, lest we grow used to keeping within safe bounds. Let us which to experience the hidden presence of the risen Lord.” Sharing the remember that closed spaces grow musty and unhealthy. When the aposword and celebrating the Eucharist together fosters fraternity and makes tles were tempted to let themselves be crippled by danger and threats, they us a holy and missionary community. It also gives rise to authentic and joined in prayer to implore parrhesia: “And now, Lord, look upon their shared mystical experiences. threats, and grant to your servants to speak your word with all boldness” Such was the case with Sts. Benedict and Scholastica. We can also (Acts 4:29). As a result, “when they had prayed, the place in which they think of the sublime spiritual experience shared by St. Augustine and his were gathered together was shaken; and they were all filled with the Holy mother, St. Monica: Spirit and spoke the word of God with boldness” (Acts 4:31). “As the day now approached on which she was to depart this life, a day 134. Like the prophet Jonah, we are constantly tempted to flee to a safe known to you but not to us, it came about, as I believe by your secret arhaven. It can have many names: individualism, spiritualism, living in rangement, that she and I stood alone leaning in a window that looked onto a little world, addiction, intransigence, the rejection of new ideas and a garden. ... We opened wide our hearts to drink in the streams of your approaches, dogmatism, nostalgia, pessimism, hiding behind rules and fountain, the source of life that is in you. ... And as we spoke of that wisregulations. We can resist leaving behind a familiar and easy way of doing dom and strained after it, we touched it in some measure by the impetus things. Yet the challenges involved can be like the storm, the whale, the of our hearts. ... Eternal life might be like that one moment of knowledge worm that dried the gourd plant or the wind and sun that burned Jonah’s which we now sighed after.” head. For us, as for him, they can serve to bring us back to the God of ten143. Such experiences, however, are neither the most frequent nor the derness, who invites us to set out ever anew on our journey. most important. The common life, whether in the family, the parish, the 135. God is eternal newness. He impels us constantly to set out anew, religious community or any other, is made up of small everyday things. to pass beyond what is familiar, to the fringes and beyond. He takes us to This was true of the holy community where humanity is most wounded, formed by Jesus, Mary and Joseph, where men and women, beneath the which reflected in an exemplary way appearance of a shallow conformity, the beauty of the Trinitarian commucontinue to seek an answer to the nion. It was also true of the life that question of life’s meaning. God is not Jesus shared with his disciples and afraid! He is fearless! He is always with ordinary people. greater than our plans and schemes. 144. Let us not forget that Jesus Unafraid of the fringes, he himself asked his disciples to pay attention to became a fringe (cf. Phil 2:6-8; Jn 1:14). details. So if we dare to go to the fringes, The little detail that wine was runwe will find him there; indeed, he is ning out at a party. already there. Jesus is already there The little detail that one sheep was in the hearts of our brothers and missing. sisters, in their wounded flesh, in their The little detail of noticing the widtroubles and in their profound desolaow who offered her two small coins. tion. He is already there. The little detail of having spare oil 136. True enough, we need to open for the lamps should the bridegroom the door of our hearts to Jesus, who delay. stands and knocks (cf. Rv 3:20). SomeThe little detail of asking the distimes I wonder, though, if perhaps ciples how many loaves of bread they Jesus is already inside us and knockhad. ing on the door for us to let him escape The little detail of having a fire from our stale self-centeredness. In burning and a fish cooking as he the Gospel, we see how Jesus “went Pope Francis, ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’ waited for the disciples at daybreak. through the cities and villages, 145. A community that cherishes the preaching and bringing the good news little details of love, whose members of the kingdom of God” (Lk 8:1). After care for one another and create an the resurrection, when the disciples open and evangelizing environment, is a place where the risen Lord is preswent forth in all directions, the Lord accompanied them (cf. Mk 16:20). This ent, sanctifying it in accordance with the Father’s plan. There are times is what happens as the result of true encounter. when, by a gift of the Lord’s love, we are granted amid these little details 137. Complacency is seductive; it tells us that there is no point in trying consoling experiences of God. to change things, that there is nothing we can do because this is the way “One winter night I was carrying out my little duty as usual. ... Suddenly, things have always been and yet we always manage to survive. By force of I heard off in the distance the harmonious sound of a musical instrument. habit we no longer stand up to evil. We “let things be” or as others have I then pictured a well-lighted drawing room, brilliantly gilded, filled with decided they ought to be. Yet let us allow the Lord to rouse us from our elegantly dressed young ladies conversing together and conferring upon torpor, to free us from our inertia. Let us rethink our usual way of doing each other all sorts of compliments and other worldly remarks. Then my things; let us open our eyes and ears, and above all our hearts, so as not to glance fell upon the poor invalid whom I was supporting. Instead of the be complacent about things as they are but unsettled by the living and efbeautiful strains of music, I heard only her occasional complaints. ... I fective word of the risen Lord. cannot express in words what happened in my soul; what I know is that the 138. We are inspired to act by the example of all those priests, religious, Lord illumined it with rays of truth that so surpassed the dark brilliance and laity who devote themselves to proclamation and to serving others of earthly feasts that I could not believe my happiness.” with great fidelity, often at the risk of their lives and certainly at the cost 146. Contrary to the growing consumerist individualism that tends to of their comfort. Their testimony reminds us that, more than bureaucrats isolate us in a quest for well-being apart from others, our path to holiness and functionaries, the church needs passionate missionaries, enthusiastic can only make us identify all the more with Jesus’ prayer “that all may be about sharing true life. The saints surprise us, they confound us, because one; even as you, Father, are in me, and I in you” (Jn 17:21). by their lives they urge us to abandon a dull and dreary mediocrity. 139. Let us ask the Lord for the grace not to hesitate when the Spirit calls us to take a step forward. Let us ask for the apostolic courage to share the In Constant Prayer Gospel with others and to stop trying to make our Christian life a museum 147. Finally, though it may seem obvious, we should remember that of memories. In every situation, may the Holy Spirit cause us to contemholiness consists in a habitual openness to the transcendent, expressed in plate history in the light of the risen Jesus. In this way, the church will not prayer and adoration. The saints are distinguished by a spirit of prayer stand still, but constantly welcome the Lord’s surprises. and a need for communion with God. They find an exclusive concern with this world to be narrow and stifling, and amid their own concerns and commitments, they long for God, losing themselves in praise and contemplaIn Community tion of the Lord. I do not believe in holiness without prayer, even though 140. When we live apart from others, it is very difficult to fight against that prayer need not be lengthy or involve intense emotions. concupiscence, the snares and temptations of the devil and the selfishness 148. St. John of the Cross tells us, “Endeavor to remain always in the of the world. Bombarded as we are by so many enticements, we can grow presence of God, either real, imaginative or unitive, insofar as is permittoo isolated, lose our sense of reality and inner clarity, and easily succumb. ted by your works.” In the end, our desire for God will surely find expres141. Growth in holiness is a journey in community, side by side with othsion in our daily lives: “Try to be continuous in prayer, and in the midst of ers. We see this in some holy communities. From time to time, the church bodily exercises do not leave it. Whether you eat, drink, talk with others or has canonized entire communities that lived the Gospel heroically or ofdo anything, always go to God and attach your heart to him.” fered to God the lives of all their members. We can think, for example, of the seven holy founders of the Order of the Servants of Mary, the seven blessed sisters of the first monastery of the Visitation in Madrid, the Japasee ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’, page pf11 FROM PAGE PF9

‘God is eternal newness. He impels us constantly to set out anew, to pass beyond what is familiar, to the fringes and beyond. He takes us to where humanity is most wounded, where men and women, beneath the appearance of a shallow conformity, continue to seek an answer to the question of life’s meaning. God is not afraid! He is fearless! He is always greater than our plans and schemes. ‘


Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

‘Gaudete et Exsultate’: Apostolic Exhortation pf11

‘Gaudete et Exsultate’: Apostolic Exhortation FROM PAGE PF10

CHAPTER 5

149. For this to happen, however, some moments spent alone with God are also necessary. For St. Teresa of Avila, prayer “is nothing but friendly intercourse, and frequent solitary converse, with him who we know loves us.” I would insist that this is true not only for a privileged few but for all of us, for “we all have need of this silence, filled with the presence of him who is adored.”Trust-filled prayer is a response of a heart open to encountering God face to face, where all is peaceful and the quiet voice of 158. The Christian life is a constant battle. We need strength and courage to the Lord can be heard in the midst of silence. withstand the temptations of the devil and to proclaim the Gospel. This battle 150. In that silence, we can discern, in the light of the Spirit, the paths is sweet, for it allows us to rejoice each time the Lord triumphs in our lives. of holiness to which the Lord is calling us. Otherwise, any decisions we make may only be window dressing that, rather than exalting the Gospel Combat and Vigilance in our lives, will mask or submerge it. For each disciple, it is essential to 159. We are not dealing merely with a battle against the world and a worldly spend time with the Master, to listen to his words and to learn from him mentality that would deceive us and leave us dull and mediocre, lacking in always. Unless we listen, all our words will be nothing but useless chatter. enthusiasm and joy. Nor can this battle be reduced to the struggle against our 151. We need to remember that “contemplation of the face of Jesus, died human weaknesses and proclivities (be they laziness, lust, envy, jealousy or and risen, restores our humanity, even when it has been broken by the any others). It is also a constant struggle against the devil, the prince of evil. troubles of this life or marred by sin. We must not domesticate the power Jesus himself celebrates our victories. He rejoiced when his disciples made of the face of Christ.” progress in preaching the Gospel and overcoming the opposition of the evil So let me ask you, Are there moments when you place yourself quietly one: “I saw Satan fall like lightning from heaven” (Lk 10:18). in the Lord’s presence, when you calmly spend time with him, when you bask in his gaze? Do you let his fire inflame your heart? Unless you let More Than a Myth him warm you more and more with his love and tenderness, you will not 160. We will not admit the existence of the devil if we insist on regarding catch fire. How will you then be able to set the hearts of others on fire by life by empirical standards alone, without a supernatural understanding. your words and witness? If, gazing on the face of Christ, you feel unable It is precisely the conviction that this malign power is present in our midst to let yourself be healed and transformed, then enter into the Lord’s that enables us to understand how evil can at times have so much destructive heart, into his wounds, for that is the abode of divine mercy. force. 152. I ask that we never regard prayerful silence as a form of escape True enough, the biblical authors had limited conceptual resources for and rejection of the world around us. The Russian pilgrim who prayed expressing certain realities, and in Jesus’ time epilepsy, for example, could constantly says that such prayer did not separate him from what was easily be confused with demonic possession. Yet this should not lead us to an happening all around him. “Everybody was kind to me; it was as though oversimplification that would conclude that all the cases related in the Gospel everyone loved me. ... Not only did I feel [happiness and consolation] in had to do with psychological disorders and hence that the devil does not exist my own soul, but the whole outside world also seemed to me full of charm or is not at work. He is present in the very first pages of the Scriptures, which and delight.” end with God’s victory over the devil. 153. Nor does history vanish. Prayer, because it is nourished by the gift Indeed, in leaving us the Our Father, Jesus wanted us to conclude by asking of God present and at work in our lives, must althe Father to “deliver us from evil.” That final word ways be marked by remembrance. The memory of does not refer to evil in the abstract; a more exact God’s works is central to the experience of the covtranslation would be “the evil one.” It indicates a enant between God and his people. God wished to personal being who assails us. Jesus taught us to ask enter history, and so our prayer is interwoven with daily for deliverance from him, lest his power prevail memories. We think back not only on his revealed over us. Word but also on our own lives, the lives of others 161. Hence, we should not think of the devil as a and all that the Lord has done in his church. myth, a representation, a symbol, a figure of speech This is the grateful memory that St. Ignatius of or an idea. This mistake would lead us to let down our Loyola refers to in his Contemplation for Attainguard, to grow careless and end up more vulnerable. ing Love, when he asks us to be mindful of all the The devil does not need to possess us. He poisons us blessings we have received from the Lord. Think with the venom of hatred, desolation, envy and vice. Pope Francis, ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’ of your own history when you pray, and there you When we let down our guard, he takes advantage of will find much mercy. This will also increase your it to destroy our lives, our families and our communiawareness that the Lord is ever mindful of you; he ties. “Like a roaring lion, he prowls around, looking never forgets you. So it makes sense to ask him to for someone to devour” (1 Pt 5:8). shed light on the smallest details of your life, for he sees them all. 154. Prayer of supplication is an expression of a heart that trusts in Alert and Trustful God and realizes that of itself it can do nothing. The life of God’s faithful 162. God’s word invites us clearly to “stand against the wiles of the devil” people is marked by constant supplication born of faith-filled love and (Eph 6:11) and to “quench all the flaming darts of the evil one” (Eph 6:16). great confidence. Let us not downplay prayer of petition, which so often These expressions are not melodramatic, precisely because our path toward calms our hearts and helps us persevere in hope. Prayer of intercession holiness is a constant battle. Those who do not realize this will be prey to has particular value, for it is an act of trust in God and, at the same time, failure or mediocrity. an expression of love for our neighbor. For this spiritual combat, we can count on the powerful weapons that the There are those who think, based on a one-sided spirituality, that Lord has given us: faith-filled prayer, meditation on the word of God, the celprayer should be unalloyed contemplation of God, free of all distraction, ebration of Mass, eucharistic adoration, sacramental reconciliation, works as if the names and faces of others were somehow an intrusion to be of charity, community life, missionary outreach. If we become careless, the avoided. Yet in reality, our prayer will be all the more pleasing to God and false promises of evil will easily seduce us. As the sainted Cura Brochero obmore effective for our growth in holiness if, through intercession, we atserved, “What good is it when Lucifer promises you freedom and showers you tempt to practice the twofold commandment that Jesus left us. with all his benefits, if those benefits are false, deceptive and poisonous?” Intercessory prayer is an expression of our fraternal concern for oth163. Along this journey, the cultivation of all that is good, progress in the ers, since we are able to embrace their lives, their deepest troubles and spiritual life and growth in love are the best counterbalance to evil. Those their loftiest dreams. Of those who commit themselves generously to who choose to remain neutral, who are satisfied with little, who renounce the intercessory prayer we can apply the words of Scripture, “This is a man ideal of giving themselves generously to the Lord, will never hold out. Even who loves the brethren and prays much for the people” (2 Mc 15:14). less if they fall into defeatism, for “if we start without confidence, we have 155. If we realize that God exists, we cannot help but worship him, at already lost half the battle and we bury our talents. ... Christian triumph is times in quiet wonder, and praise him in festive song. We thus share in always a cross, yet a cross that is at the same time a victorious banner, borne the experience of Blessed Charles de Foucauld, who said, “As soon as I with aggressive tenderness against the assaults of evil.” believed that there was a God, I understood that I could do nothing other than to live for him.” In the life of God’s pilgrim people, there can be Spiritual Corruption many simple gestures of pure adoration, as when “the gaze of a pilgrim 164. The path of holiness is a source of peace and joy, given to us by the rests on an image that symbolizes God’s affection and closeness. Love Spirit. At the same time, it demands that we keep “our lamps lit” (Lk 12:35) pauses, contemplates the mystery and enjoys it in silence.” and be attentive. “Abstain from every form of evil” (1 Thes 5:22). “Keep 156. The prayerful reading of God’s word, which is “sweeter than honawake” (Mt 24:42; Mk 13:35). “Let us not fall asleep” (1 Thes 5:6). ey” (Ps 119:103) yet a “two-edged sword” (Heb 4:12), enables us to pause Those who think they commit no grievous sins against God’s law can fall and listen to the voice of the Master. It becomes a lamp for our steps and into a state of dull lethargy. Since they see nothing serious to reproach thema light for our path (cf. Ps 119:105). As the bishops of India have reminded selves with, they fail to realize that their spiritual life has gradually turned us, “devotion to the word of God is not simply one of many devotions, lukewarm. They end up weakened and corrupted. beautiful but somewhat optional. It goes to the very heart and identity of 165. Spiritual corruption is worse than the fall of a sinner, for it is a comChristian life. The word has the power to transform lives.” fortable and self-satisfied form of blindness. Everything then appears accept157. Meeting Jesus in the Scriptures leads us to the Eucharist, where able: deception, slander, egotism and other subtle forms of self-centeredness, the written word attains its greatest efficacy, for there the living Word for “even Satan disguises himself as an angel of light” (2 Cor 11:14). So Solois truly present. In the Eucharist, the one true God receives the greatest mon ended his days, whereas David, who sinned greatly, was able to make up worship the world can give him, for it is Christ himself who is offered. for disgrace. When we receive him in holy Communion, we renew our covenant with Jesus warned us against this self-deception that easily leads to corruption. him and allow him to carry out ever more fully his work of transforming our lives. see ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’, page pf12

SPIRITUAL COMBAT, VIGILANCE AND DISCERNMENT

‘The path of holiness is a source of peace and joy, given to us by the Spirit.’


PF12 ‘Gaudete et Exsultate’: Apostolic Exhortation

Catholic san francisco | June 7, 2018

‘Gaudete et Exsultate’: Apostolic Exhortation FROM PAGE PF11

He spoke of a person freed from the devil who, convinced that his life was now in order, ended up being possessed by seven other evil spirits (cf. Lk 11:24-26). Another biblical text puts it bluntly, “The dog turns back to his own vomit” (2 Pt 2:22; cf. Prv 26:11).

Discernment

166. How can we know if something comes from the Holy Spirit or if it stems from the spirit of the world or the spirit of the devil? The only way is through discernment, which calls for something more than intelligence or common sense. It is a gift that we must implore. If we ask with confidence that the Holy Spirit grant us this gift and then seek to develop it through prayer, reflection, reading and good counsel, then surely we will grow in this spiritual endowment.

An Urgent Need

167. The gift of discernment has become all the more necessary today, since contemporary life offers immense possibilities for action and distraction, and the world presents all of them as valid and good. All of us, but especially the young, are immersed in a culture of zapping. We can navigate simultaneously on two or more screens and interact at the same time with two or three virtual scenarios. Without the wisdom of discernment, we can easily become prey to every passing trend. 168. This is all the more important when some novelty presents itself in our lives. Then we have to decide whether it is new wine brought by God or an illusion created by the spirit of this world or the spirit of the devil. At other times, the opposite can happen, when the forces of evil induce us not to change, to leave things as they are, to opt for a rigid resistance to change. Yet that would be to block the working of the Spirit. We are free, with the freedom of Christ. Still, he asks us to examine what is within us - our desires, anxieties, fears and questions - and what takes place all around us - “the signs of the times” - and thus to recognize the paths that lead to complete freedom. “Test everything; hold fast to what is good” (1 Thes 5:21).

meaning of the inspirations we believe we have received, to calm our anxieties and to see the whole of our existence afresh in his own light. In this way we allow the birth of a new synthesis that springs from a life inspired by the Spirit.

Speak, Lord

172. Nonetheless, it is possible that even in prayer itself we could refuse to let ourselves be confronted by the freedom of the Spirit, who acts as he wills. We must remember that prayerful discernment must be born of a readiness to listen: to the Lord and to others and to reality itself, which always challenges us in new ways. Only if we are prepared to listen do we have the freedom to set aside our own partial or insufficient ideas, our usual habits and ways of seeing things. In this way, we become truly open to accepting a call that can shatter our security but lead us to a better life. It is not enough that everything be calm and peaceful. God may be offering us something more, but in our comfortable inadvertence we do not recognize it. 173. Naturally, this attitude of listening entails obedience to the Gospel as the ultimate standard, but also to the magisterium that guards it as we seek to find in the treasury of the church whatever is most fruitful for the “today” of salvation. It is not a matter of applying rules or repeating what was done in the past, since the same solutions are not valid in all circumstances, and what was useful in one context may not prove so in another. The discernment of spirits liberates us from rigidity, which has no place before the perennial “today” of the risen Lord. The Spirit alone can penetrate what is obscure and hidden in every situation, and grasp its every nuance, so that the newness of the Gospel can emerge in another light.

The Logic of the Gift and of the Cross

174. An essential condition for progress in discernment is a growing understanding of God’s patience and his timetable, which are never our own. God does not pour down fire upon those who are unfaithful (cf. Lk 9:54) or allow the zealous to uproot the tares growing among the wheat (cf. Mt 13:29). Generosity too is demanded, for “it is more blessed to give than to receive” (Acts 20:35). Discernment is not about discovering what more we can get out of this life but about recognizing how we can better accomplish the mission Always in the Light of the Lord entrusted to us at our baptism. 169. Discernment is necessary This entails a readiness to make not only at extraordinary times sacrifices, even to sacrificing when we need to resolve grave everything. For happiness is a problems and make crucial deciparadox. We experience it most sions. It is a means of spiritual when we accept the mysterious combat for helping us to follow (CNS photo/Paul Haring) logic that is not of this world: the Lord more faithfully. We need Pope Francis greets visually impaired people, accompanied by their dogs, during his general “This is our logic,” says St. Boit at all times to help us recognize audience in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican Oct. 18, 2017. In his exhortation, “Gaudete et naventure, pointing to the cross. God’s timetable, lest we fail to Exsultate” (“Rejoice and Be Glad”), the pope says that the path to holiness is made up of small Once we enter into this dynamic, heed the promptings of his grace steps in prayer, in sacrifice and in service to others. we will not let our consciences and disregard his invitation to be numbed, and we will open grow. ourselves generously to discernOften discernment is exerment. cised in small and apparently 175. When in God’s presence we examine our life’s journey, no areas can be irrelevant things, since greatness of spirit is manifested in simple everyday off limits. In all aspects of life we can continue to grow and offer something realities. It involves striving untrammeled for all that is great, better and greater to God even in those areas we find most difficult. We need, though, to more beautiful, while at the same time being concerned for the little things, ask the Holy Spirit to liberate us and to expel the fear that makes us ban him for each day’s responsibilities and commitments. For this reason, I ask all from certain parts of our lives. Christians not to omit in dialogue with the Lord a sincere daily “examination God asks everything of us, yet he also gives everything to us. He does not of conscience.” Discernment also enables us to recognize the concrete means want to enter our lives to cripple or diminish them but to bring them to fulthat the Lord provides in his mysterious and loving plan to make us move fillment. Discernment, then, is not a solipsistic self-analysis or a form of egobeyond mere good intentions. tistical introspection but an authentic process of leaving ourselves behind in order to approach the mystery of God, who helps us to carry out the mission A Supernatural Gift to which he has called us for the good of our brothers and sisters. 170. Certainly, spiritual discernment does not exclude existential, psycho176. I would like these reflections to be crowned by Mary because she lived logical, sociological or moral insights drawn from the human sciences. At the beatitudes of Jesus as none other. She is that woman who rejoiced in the the same time, it transcends them. Nor are the church’s sound norms suffipresence of God, who treasured everything in her heart and who let herself cient. We should always remember that discernment is a grace. Even though be pierced by the sword. Mary is the saint among the saints, blessed above it includes reason and prudence, it goes beyond them for it seeks a glimpse all others. She teaches us the way of holiness and she walks ever at our side. of that unique and mysterious plan that God has for each of us, which takes She does not let us remain fallen, and at times she takes us into her arms shape amid so many varied situations and limitations. without judging us. Our converse with her consoles, frees and sanctifies us. It involves more than my temporal well-being, my satisfaction at having Mary our mother does not need a flood of words. She does not need us to tell accomplished something useful or even my desire for peace of mind. It has her what is happening in our lives. All we need do is whisper, time and time to do with the meaning of my life before the Father, who knows and loves again, “Hail Mary ...” me, with the real purpose of my life, which nobody knows better than he. 177. It is my hope that these pages will prove helpful by enabling the whole Ultimately, discernment leads to the wellspring of undying life: to know the church to devote herself anew to promoting the desire for holiness. Let us ask Father, the only true God, and the one whom he has sent, Jesus Christ (cf. Jn the Holy Spirit to pour out upon us a fervent longing to be saints for God’s 17:3). It requires no special abilities nor is it only for the more intelligent or greater glory, and let us encourage one another in this effort. In this way, we better educated. The Father readily reveals himself to the lowly (cf. Mt 11:25). will share a happiness that the world will not be able to take from us. 171. The Lord speaks to us in a variety of ways at work, through others and at every moment. Yet we simply cannot do without the silence of prolonged prayer, which enables us better to perceive God’s language, to interpret the real Copyright 2018 by Libreria Editrice Vaticana. Retrieved from Origins, the documentary service of Catholic News Service.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.