• Home
  • About Us
  • Support
  • Concerts & Events
  • Music & Media
  • Faith
  • Listen Live
  • Give Now

Catholic News 2

Vatican City, Nov 28, 2016 / 10:34 am (CNA/EWTN News).- After the death of Jesuit Fr. Peter Hans Kolvenbach, former head of the order, over the weekend, Pope Francis has sent a letter to the Society praising the priest’s fidelity and offering prayers for the repose of his soul.“Learning of the news of the holy death of Fr. Peter Hans Kolvenbach S.J., former Superior General of the Society of Jesus, I wish to express to you and to the entire Jesuit family my most sincere condolences,” the Pope said in a Nov. 28 letter.Addressed to the current head of the Society, Fr. Arturo Sosa, the letter recalled the “integral fidelity” with which Fr. Kolvenbach served Christ and the Gospel, as well as his “generous commitment to exercising his ministry for the good of the Church.”Francis offered his prayers for Fr. Kolvenbach, asking, through Divine Mercy, for “eternal peace for his soul.”“Spiritually present in the rite of funerals, I c...

Vatican City, Nov 28, 2016 / 10:34 am (CNA/EWTN News).- After the death of Jesuit Fr. Peter Hans Kolvenbach, former head of the order, over the weekend, Pope Francis has sent a letter to the Society praising the priest’s fidelity and offering prayers for the repose of his soul.

“Learning of the news of the holy death of Fr. Peter Hans Kolvenbach S.J., former Superior General of the Society of Jesus, I wish to express to you and to the entire Jesuit family my most sincere condolences,” the Pope said in a Nov. 28 letter.

Addressed to the current head of the Society, Fr. Arturo Sosa, the letter recalled the “integral fidelity” with which Fr. Kolvenbach served Christ and the Gospel, as well as his “generous commitment to exercising his ministry for the good of the Church.”

Francis offered his prayers for Fr. Kolvenbach, asking, through Divine Mercy, for “eternal peace for his soul.”

“Spiritually present in the rite of funerals, I cordially impart to you, to your brother (Jesuits) and to the many sharing in the sadness of this loss, my apostolic blessing.”

Fr. Kolvenbach, who died Nov. 26 just days before his 88th birthday, was a Dutch priest of the Armenian Catholic Church who served as the Society of Jesus’ Superior General from 1983-2008, when he resigned due to poor health.

Born in Druten, Netherlands, Nov. 30, 1928, Fr. Kolvenbach entered the Society of Jesus at age 20 in 1948.

After finishing his studies in philosophy he transferred to Lebanon, where he graduated in theology and was ordained a priest of the Armenian Catholic Church in 1961.

He then taught in several different universities around the world – including in Lebanon, Paris, and The Hague – before being named Rector of the Pontifical Oriental Institute in Rome. Prior to his appointment as rector, he had been Vice Provincial of the Middle East.

At the 33rd General Congregation of the Jesuits in 1983, he was elected General Superior after the resignation of Fr. Pedro Arrupe, who had suffered a stroke two years earlier. Fr. Kolvenbach became the 29th Superior General of the Jesuits, and the first from an Eastern rite.

His resignation was accepted and formalized during the 2008 General Congregation, when Fr. Adolfo Nicolas Pachon was elected as his replacement.

After stepping down Fr. Kolvenbach returned to Lebanon, where he spent the remainder of his ministry and where he died over the weekend.

Full Article

IMAGE: CNS photo/Tom TracyBy Ana Rodriguez-SotoMIAMI(CNS) -- While many celebrated loudly on the streets, the death of Fidel Castrotriggered a more subdued reaction among the Cuban exiles who attended the noonMass Nov. 26 at the National Shrine of Our Lady Charity."Todayis a day like any other," Luis Gutierrez told the Florida Catholic, Miami's archdiocesannewspaper. "The fact that 'el caballo' has died means nothing."Gutierrezused the Cuban slang -- "caballo," or horse -- for Castro, whose death had beenannounced earlier that morning. The 90-year-old reportedly died late at nightNov. 25. But his 57-year-old regime continues to rule Cuba, with his youngerbrother, Raul Castro, now at the helm.Thatis why, despite the joy on the streets of Little Havana, Westchester and Hialeah,the death of Fidel Castro in 2016 means much less than it would have in 1976 oreven 2006. An oppressive regime still shackles basic freedoms on the island,keeping a stranglehold on a beleaguered economy.In1976, ...

IMAGE: CNS photo/Tom Tracy

By Ana Rodriguez-Soto

MIAMI (CNS) -- While many celebrated loudly on the streets, the death of Fidel Castro triggered a more subdued reaction among the Cuban exiles who attended the noon Mass Nov. 26 at the National Shrine of Our Lady Charity.

"Today is a day like any other," Luis Gutierrez told the Florida Catholic, Miami's archdiocesan newspaper. "The fact that 'el caballo' has died means nothing."

Gutierrez used the Cuban slang -- "caballo," or horse -- for Castro, whose death had been announced earlier that morning. The 90-year-old reportedly died late at night Nov. 25. But his 57-year-old regime continues to rule Cuba, with his younger brother, Raul Castro, now at the helm.

That is why, despite the joy on the streets of Little Havana, Westchester and Hialeah, the death of Fidel Castro in 2016 means much less than it would have in 1976 or even 2006. An oppressive regime still shackles basic freedoms on the island, keeping a stranglehold on a beleaguered economy.

In 1976, Cuba's Communist Party approved a new socialist constitution and Fidel was elected president. Before that, starting in 1959, he was prime minister following the successful revolution he led to overturn the Batista regime. In 2006, while he underwent intestinal surgery, Fidel temporarily turned over power to younger brother Raul. He resigned in 2008 and Cuba's National Assembly named Raul the new president. Raul, now 85, was re-elected in 2013.

"(Fidel's) been out of it for 10 years. It's his brother and the clique that surrounds him," said Gutierrez, noting that he has been coming to noon Mass at the shrine every Saturday for decades.

"She brought me," he said, referring to Cuba's beloved patroness, Our Lady of Charity.

Gutierrez is not exaggerating. He is the man who, at age 22, smuggled her image into Miami on her feast day, Sept. 8, 1961. Nearly 10,000 exiles welcomed her that night during an emotional Mass at Bobby Maduro Stadium, which has since been torn down.

Her presence provided a spiritual boost to the early exiles and ultimately resulted in the construction of the shrine -- known as La Ermita -- along Biscayne Bay. It remains a beacon of Cuban faith and patriotism, and also a place where exiles and immigrants from all the nations of Latin America come to give thanks or seek Mary's intercession.

"I pray the rosary every day," Gutierrez said, adding that his prayers that day remained the same. "I pray for my family and for freedom in Cuba."

His feelings were echoed by Marizol and Alfredo Mendez, who also come to the shrine every Saturday, out of devotion to Mary and to spend some time "in peace," as he put it.

"It's a relief, a new dawn," said Alfredo of Castro's passing.

He and Marizol left Cuba for Spain and arrived in the U.S. five years later, in 1978. They have never gone back.

As for Fidel's death, Marizol noted, "We got rid of the horse but the saddle remains."

For the Mendezes and all the others celebrating on the streets or marking the day quietly at home, Castro's death caused memories to surface: of lives interrupted or ended, of courage and sacrifices made, of parents and grandparents who longed to see this day but died before doing so.

Alfredo Mendez recalled the violent, early days of Castro's revolution, when priests and religious were persecuted. He personally sheltered one of them: Father Feliciano del Vals of the church of San Juan de Letran in Havana's El Vedado neighborhood.

The priest was among thousands arrested in the days prior to the Bay of Pigs invasion in 1961, a failed effort backed by the United States, Mendez said, and held for two weeks in miserable conditions at the Blanquita Theater in Havana. After the invasion, the priest found refuge for 40 days with Mendez's family.

After a futile search for asylum in a foreign embassy, he was rearrested, put on a ship, the Covadonga, and sent into exile in Spain with more than 100 other priests -- including Miami Auxiliary Bishop Agustin Roman, the shrine's longtime rector, who died in 2012.

"I followed that bus the whole way," Mendez said, referring to the exiled priests. Then, with resignation in his voice, "We have to keep waiting."

It's those memories, that pain, that hurt, that Father Fernando Heria, the shrine's newly appointed rector, spoke of during his homily at the Mass. His uncle was killed by a Castro firing squad Sept. 16, 1961.

"Today is not a typical Saturday," Father Heria said. "It's not that we rejoice at the death of any human being, because that would be a sin. But it's that, on this day, we want to turn over to God the pain we have carried around for more than 57 years."

"We have to begin to heal," Father Heria continued. "We have to go to the Almighty and turn all our pain over to him. Be not afraid to tell the Lord, I have a pain that only you can take away."

Father Heria also spoke about the need for unity among the Cuban people, reminding them that Our Lady of Charity was "the first Cuban 'balsera' (rafter)."

"Don't forget," he added. "Charity unites us. The maternal love of the daughter of God, of the wife of God, of the Mother of God, unites us."

In that sense, said Carlos Perez, Castro's passing is cause for hope, if not joy.

"He was an obstacle to reconciliation among Cubans. He sowed distrust among Cubans. He sowed the separation of families," said Perez, who left Cuba 20 years ago, at the age of 43. His father left the island when Carlos was 11 and died in the U.S. The two never saw each other again.

Perez spent 17 years in Chile and Bolivia -- where he met his wife -- before coming to Miami eight months ago. The move here allowed him to reconnect with his family.

"And it was as if nothing had happened. I received the same tenderness as always, the same love as always," he said.

Later that evening, Miami Archbishop Thomas G. Wenski celebrated the 8 p.m. Mass at the shrine. In his homily, he echoed the words in the statement he had issued earlier that day, when the news of Castro's death first broke.

"The death of Fidel provokes many emotions -- both in and outside the island. Nevertheless, beyond all possible emotions, the passing of this figure should lead us to invoke the patroness of Cuba, Our Lady of Charity, asking her for peace for Cuba and its people," the archbishop said. "May our holy Lady of Charity listen to her people and hasten for Cuba the hour of its reconciliation in truth, accompanied by freedom and justice."

- - -

Rodriguez-Soto is editor of the Florida Catholic, newspaper of the Archdiocese of Miami.

- - -

Copyright © 2016 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. www.catholicnews.com. All rights reserved. Republishing or redistributing of CNS content, including by framing or similar means without prior permission, is prohibited. You may link to stories on our public site. This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To request permission for republishing or redistributing of CNS content, please contact permissions at cns@catholicnews.com.

Full Article

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- 'Tis the season for bright, cheery holiday music playing ad nauseam on the radio, in shopping malls and television commercials. But if you're not feeling the Christmas spirit, there's still a song for you....

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- 'Tis the season for bright, cheery holiday music playing ad nauseam on the radio, in shopping malls and television commercials. But if you're not feeling the Christmas spirit, there's still a song for you....

Full Article

NEW YORK (AP) -- You might have thought about it, heard it. A lot. You might have even felt it: Dictionary.com's word of the year is "xenophobia."...

NEW YORK (AP) -- You might have thought about it, heard it. A lot. You might have even felt it: Dictionary.com's word of the year is "xenophobia."...

Full Article

BEIRUT (AP) -- Syrian government forces captured more than a third of opposition-held eastern Aleppo on Monday, touching off a wave of panic and flight from the besieged enclave as rebel defenses in the country's largest city rapidly collapsed....

BEIRUT (AP) -- Syrian government forces captured more than a third of opposition-held eastern Aleppo on Monday, touching off a wave of panic and flight from the besieged enclave as rebel defenses in the country's largest city rapidly collapsed....

Full Article

CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) -- The white man accused of fatally shooting nine black parishioners at a church was allowed Monday to act as his own attorney, opening the door to courtroom spectacles at his death penalty trial, including Dylann Roof questioning survivors of the attack and relatives of the dead....

CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) -- The white man accused of fatally shooting nine black parishioners at a church was allowed Monday to act as his own attorney, opening the door to courtroom spectacles at his death penalty trial, including Dylann Roof questioning survivors of the attack and relatives of the dead....

Full Article

HAVANA (AP) -- Hundreds of thousands of Cubans bade farewell to Fidel Castro on Monday, pledging allegiance to his socialist ideology and paying tribute before images of the leader as a young guerrilla gazing out over the country he would come to rule for nearly half a century....

HAVANA (AP) -- Hundreds of thousands of Cubans bade farewell to Fidel Castro on Monday, pledging allegiance to his socialist ideology and paying tribute before images of the leader as a young guerrilla gazing out over the country he would come to rule for nearly half a century....

Full Article

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Defense Department is conducting a leaks investigation related to the sex scandal that led to the resignation of former CIA Director David Petraeus, The Associated Press confirmed Monday, the same day Petraeus was meeting with President-elect Donald Trump in New York....

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Defense Department is conducting a leaks investigation related to the sex scandal that led to the resignation of former CIA Director David Petraeus, The Associated Press confirmed Monday, the same day Petraeus was meeting with President-elect Donald Trump in New York....

Full Article

As police responded to the attack at Ohio State University, school officials blasted an ominous message to students with a set of instructions: "Run Hide Fight."...

As police responded to the attack at Ohio State University, school officials blasted an ominous message to students with a set of instructions: "Run Hide Fight."...

Full Article

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- A man plowed his car into a group of pedestrians at Ohio State University and began stabbing people with a butcher knife Monday before he was shot to death by a police officer. Police said they are investigating whether it was a terrorist attack....

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- A man plowed his car into a group of pedestrians at Ohio State University and began stabbing people with a butcher knife Monday before he was shot to death by a police officer. Police said they are investigating whether it was a terrorist attack....

Full Article

Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube Soundcloud

Public Inspection File | EEO

© 2015 - 2021 Spirit FM 90.5 - All Rights Reserved.