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

Catholic News 2

By Dennis SadowskiORLANDO, Fla. (CNS) -- For some it was about keeping young people in the church. Others wanted to hear about diocesan ministries in another locale and perhaps bring an idea home. A few more were glad they could be heard by a bishop or two.Whatever their reason to travel to hot, humid Florida for four days in the middle of summer, the 3,500 delegates to the "Convocation of Catholic Leaders: The Joy of the Gospel in America" headed home July 4 with renewed energy to set a new course for the U.S. Catholic Church.The convocation, years in planning, was the first time in a century that the bishops convened church leaders -- clergy, religious, seminarians, parish volunteers and professional staff among them -- to respond to social and spiritual quandaries that have left millions of people drifting on the margins of society.Clergy -- more than 155 prelates and 300 priests -- recognize that the church must respond to those quandaries. While cardinals, archbishops and bish...

By Dennis Sadowski

ORLANDO, Fla. (CNS) -- For some it was about keeping young people in the church. Others wanted to hear about diocesan ministries in another locale and perhaps bring an idea home. A few more were glad they could be heard by a bishop or two.

Whatever their reason to travel to hot, humid Florida for four days in the middle of summer, the 3,500 delegates to the "Convocation of Catholic Leaders: The Joy of the Gospel in America" headed home July 4 with renewed energy to set a new course for the U.S. Catholic Church.

The convocation, years in planning, was the first time in a century that the bishops convened church leaders -- clergy, religious, seminarians, parish volunteers and professional staff among them -- to respond to social and spiritual quandaries that have left millions of people drifting on the margins of society.

Clergy -- more than 155 prelates and 300 priests -- recognize that the church must respond to those quandaries. While cardinals, archbishops and bishops played leading roles throughout the convocation, they also were on hand to listen. They joined breakout sessions; some did not speak at all. During the final gatherings of diocesan delegations and affiliated groups July 4, bishops could be seen quietly watching and taking notes as the conversations on practical steps to undertake back home unfolded.

Pope Francis fueled the impetus for the gathering. His 2013 apostolic exhortation, "Evangelii Gaudium" ("The Joy of the Gospel"), gave planners at the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' another reason for organizing the gathering.

The pope's document lays out a vision of the church dedicated to evangelization -- missionary discipleship -- in a positive way, with a focus on society's poorest and most vulnerable, including the aged, unborn and forgotten.

His call for a more merciful church joyfully working on the peripheries of society to heal the wounded inspired the delegates throughout the convocation.

Seeing the pope's call embraced by the delegates was exciting for Jonathan Reyes, executive director of the USCCB Department of Justice, Peace and Human Development and one of the event's lead planners.

Planners were unsure of what to expect as the convocation drew closer, but in the end, Reyes said the outcome "exceeded expectations."

"The joy of the Gospel is real," he said.

Meanwhile, more than 50 delegates interviewed by Catholic News Service said they felt the church -- in all its perturbations and ministries -- began to emerge from its many silos and turfs. They said they realized that no matter their views, they were members of one family and that they could be of better service if they imitated Jesus.

"The walls need to come down," said Sister Kathleen Burton, a Sister of St. Joseph who is co-director of the Office of Faith Formation, Family Life and Lay Ministry Formation in the Diocese of Camden, New Jersey.

"There's a renewed sense of evangelization and re-evangelization," she told CNS. "We're being challenged that we don't wait for people to come to us, but we've got to go out to them."

Delegates acknowledged that missionary discipleship will not be easy, but yet they offered views that indicated they were willing to move beyond their comfort zones in their ministry and take risks to answer the pope's invitation.

They also acknowledged that it was the words of Hosffman Ospino, associate professor of theology and religious education at Boston College, during the convocation's first plenary session that got them to begin thinking differently about church.

Near the end of his presentation, Ospino called on the church to begin "building a language of communion" rather than focusing on how to best serve specific groups of people.

"It's the church serving the church," he said. "We all are the church."

That understanding is becoming particularly important given that Hispanics make up about 40 percent of parish membership nationwide. Whites are at about 50 percent, with African-Americans, Asian-Americans and Native Americans encompassing about 10 percent.

"In the end, when we see the church is filled with different people and we're all worshipping the same, you see we're all one church. These are the things we've been advocating for so long," observed Juan Jose Rodriguez, director of the Pastoral Juvenil program at the Southeast Pastoral Institute in Miami.

The institute coordinates and assists Hispanic ministries in the 30 dioceses of the southeastern U.S.

For many delegates, seeing the church's diversity -- Latinos, African-Americans and Africans, Native Americans and Asians from across the continent -- was an inspiring sight, helping them better understand the idea of the church as family.

Michelle Boyd, a Turtle Mountain Chippewa and a member of the Congregation of the Great Spirit, a Native American parish in Milwaukee, called the diversity among delegates "really amazing." Such diversity also is what gives Boyd hope for the church's future.

The parish incorporates traditional Native American songs and prayers in liturgy and it is what attracted Boyd to return to the Catholic Church. She said similar practices along with outreach in social services, such as the parish's food pantry, show a church going to the peripheries.

"The love is there," she told CNS. "Why can't we all just exercise the love?"

Derek Rotty, director of evangelization and discipleship at St. Mary's Parish in Jackson, Tennessee, in the Diocese of Memphis, told CNS that embracing diversity should make it easier to go to the peripheries. It's something he said his parish must undertake.

Rotty described the parish of about 1,700 families as essentially two parishes - one serving the area's growing Hispanic population and another made up of longtime residents. He said that attending the convocation has enabled him to understand the importance of melding the two into one faith community.

For African-Americans, the convocation gave black participants a chance to address concerns of lingering racism both within the church and society. Reynolds-Anthony Harris, a delegate representing the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, found the convocation an opportunity to discuss "doing things differently."

"There's a sense that the church is really working to acknowledge itself and to open its doors," he said. "I didn't know that before I got here."

Vanessa Griffin Campbell, director of the Office of Ministry to African American Catholics in the Diocese of Cleveland, said the key in embracing diversity and going to the peripheries will be teamwork, with collaboration among laypeople, clergy and diocese staff being a priority.

The church should "not just open the doors on Sunday," she said, "but make sure our doors are open Sunday to Sunday."

- - -

Follow Sadowski on Twitter: @DennisSadowski.

- - -

Copyright © 2017 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

ROME (AP) -- When doctors and nurses at the Vatican's showcase children's hospital complained in 2014 that corners were being cut and medical protocols ignored, the Vatican responded by ordering up a secret in-house investigation. The diagnosis: The original mission of "the pope's hospital" had been lost and was "today more aimed at profit than on caring for children."...

ROME (AP) -- When doctors and nurses at the Vatican's showcase children's hospital complained in 2014 that corners were being cut and medical protocols ignored, the Vatican responded by ordering up a secret in-house investigation. The diagnosis: The original mission of "the pope's hospital" had been lost and was "today more aimed at profit than on caring for children."...

Full Article

TOKYO (AP) -- Keeping North Korea from having a nuclear-armed intercontinental ballistic missile has long been considered a key U.S. red line, and one the North has thumbed its nose at for years. Its Fourth of July ICBM launch is just the latest step in its long march toward, and maybe over, that line....

TOKYO (AP) -- Keeping North Korea from having a nuclear-armed intercontinental ballistic missile has long been considered a key U.S. red line, and one the North has thumbed its nose at for years. Its Fourth of July ICBM launch is just the latest step in its long march toward, and maybe over, that line....

Full Article

NEW YORK (AP) -- Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski reached their biggest audience ever when they talked Friday about President Donald Trump's tweets about their show....

NEW YORK (AP) -- Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski reached their biggest audience ever when they talked Friday about President Donald Trump's tweets about their show....

Full Article

On good days, American high jumper Jamie Nieto can shuffle 130 steps without a cane or walker....

On good days, American high jumper Jamie Nieto can shuffle 130 steps without a cane or walker....

Full Article

HELSINKI (AP) -- Volvo will begin producing electric motors on all its cars from 2019, becoming the first major automaker to forgo traditional engines that rely exclusively on internal combustion....

HELSINKI (AP) -- Volvo will begin producing electric motors on all its cars from 2019, becoming the first major automaker to forgo traditional engines that rely exclusively on internal combustion....

Full Article

NEW YORK (AP) -- A police officer was shot to death early Wednesday, ambushed inside her command post RV by an ex-convict who once ranted online about his treatment in prison and about police getting away with killing people, authorities said. He was later killed after pulling a gun on police....

NEW YORK (AP) -- A police officer was shot to death early Wednesday, ambushed inside her command post RV by an ex-convict who once ranted online about his treatment in prison and about police getting away with killing people, authorities said. He was later killed after pulling a gun on police....

Full Article

WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Donald Trump expressed frustration with China on Wednesday for failing to do more to cut off support to North Korea and exert pressure to curb its nuclear pursuits....

WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Donald Trump expressed frustration with China on Wednesday for failing to do more to cut off support to North Korea and exert pressure to curb its nuclear pursuits....

Full Article

T here were 35,000 cases of child trafficking and 1,25,750 cases of women trafficking reported in India in 2016-17, with West Bengal state topping in both categories, a senior official of the National Anti-Trafficking Committee (NATC) has said.  "Among 35,000 reported cases of child trafficking, 13,000 were registered in West Bengal. In percentage terms, it comes to 37," NATC Chairman Sk. Jinnar Ali told reporters in Kolkata on Sunday, on the sidelines of NATC’s West Bengal conference. He said in terms of women trafficking, the eastern state accounted for nearly 42 per cent of the cases in the country.  The women victims were mostly trafficked to Mumbai, Chennai and Dubai. Ali said most of the cases of trafficking in women in the past one year came fromt three districts of North 24 Parganas, South 24 Parganas and Murshidabad  of West Bengal. RehabilitationThe NATC conference announced it would build six more schools for the trafficking vict...

T here were 35,000 cases of child trafficking and 1,25,750 cases of women trafficking reported in India in 2016-17, with West Bengal state topping in both categories, a senior official of the National Anti-Trafficking Committee (NATC) has said.  "Among 35,000 reported cases of child trafficking, 13,000 were registered in West Bengal. In percentage terms, it comes to 37," NATC Chairman Sk. Jinnar Ali told reporters in Kolkata on Sunday, on the sidelines of NATC’s West Bengal conference. He said in terms of women trafficking, the eastern state accounted for nearly 42 per cent of the cases in the country.  The women victims were mostly trafficked to Mumbai, Chennai and Dubai. Ali said most of the cases of trafficking in women in the past one year came fromt three districts of North 24 Parganas, South 24 Parganas and Murshidabad  of West Bengal. 

Rehabilitation

The NATC conference announced it would build six more schools for the trafficking victims, besides various other initiatives to curb trafficking.  "We have already started 19 schools in various districts of West Bengal for the women trafficking victims. Six more schools are coming up in Malda, Murshidabad and North 24 Parganas district this year in a bid to bring the victims back to mainstream society," Ali said. The initiatives are funded by the Union Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment.

Ali said the trafficking victims recovered so far were being trained under the National Skill Development Programme (NSDP) of the central government.  "We have placed 25 people in West Bengal in various sectors after training since 2016," he said.

Preventive measures

Talking about the initiatives to curb trafficking in the state, the NATC Chairman said the statutory body was instituting a five member committee in each of the 23 districts. Representatives from police and state administration would be part of such panels.  The NATC will also have a toll free number and a mobile app for trafficking-related issues and grievances from July 28.  "We will also have block-level action committees in all the districts and conduct police station-level meeting at regular intervals to collect grassroots-level information about the nuances of trafficking," Ali added.  (Source: Ians)

Full Article

The Gulf crisis involving Qatar and its neighbouring nations has hit many Catholic families says the region’s Catholic Church authority.   From a social point of view, the ongoing row between Qatar and Saudi-led Gulf states‎ has led "many people to lose their jobs" and "created a situation of uncertainty for the future," Bishop Camillo Ballin of the Apostolic Vicariate of Northern Arabia told AsiaNews.The prelate whose jurisdiction includes Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Bahrain, spoke about the situation of Catholic immigrants in Qatar who have been badly affected by the serious dispute that broke out in June between Riyadh and Doha. "This situation ends up touching Christians who have no personal interests in local politics," Bishop Ballin said. Uncertainty "does not encourage investment and the result is a blockaded country." The tiny, oil- and gas-rich state of Qatar has been cut off and isolated by some of the...

The Gulf crisis involving Qatar and its neighbouring nations has hit many Catholic families says the region’s Catholic Church authority.   From a social point of view, the ongoing row between Qatar and Saudi-led Gulf states‎ has led "many people to lose their jobs" and "created a situation of uncertainty for the future," Bishop Camillo Ballin of the Apostolic Vicariate of Northern Arabia told AsiaNews.

The prelate whose jurisdiction includes Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Bahrain, spoke about the situation of Catholic immigrants in Qatar who have been badly affected by the serious dispute that broke out in June between Riyadh and Doha. "This situation ends up touching Christians who have no personal interests in local politics," Bishop Ballin said. Uncertainty "does not encourage investment and the result is a blockaded country." 

The tiny, oil- and gas-rich state of Qatar has been cut off and isolated by some of the Arab world's most powerful countries, which have accused it of supporting terrorist groups. In a co-ordinated move, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), and Egypt cut off diplomatic ties with Qatar on June 5 and restricted its access to their airspace and ports while sealing its only land border, with Saudi Arabia.  The effects are already being felt in Qatari food stores, international airspace, the global oil market and elsewhere.

Saudi and its allies have extended the deadline by 48 hours for Qatar to accept a list of 13 demands or face further sanctions. The initial deadline expired on July 2.   The four said early Wednesday they had received Qatar's response to their demands for ending the diplomatic crisis just ahead of a planned meeting in Cairo.  In a joint statement they said they would respond ``in a timely manner,'' though they did not elaborate on what steps they could take.

Bishop Ballin explained that the Catholic community in Qatar is made up of "economic migrants and labourers, largely from Asian countries, especially India, the Philippines, Bangladesh and Pakistan."  Christians work in various fields, some specializing in "nursing, pharmacy, medicine and education". Others are unskilled labourers who do many things "to maintain their families".  "In daily life, there are still no visible effects of the crisis,” Bishop Ballin noted, “because Iran and Turkey are providing the country with all its needs. However, these imports are more expensive and end up affecting poor people."

Many are afraid that if "there are other sanctions or if the countries that froze bank accounts decide to withdraw their money, it will be a tragedy for Qatar. The first to lose will be the poorest."  The impact "is already visible in the labour market and in the fact that large investors are not interested in new projects.”  “Instability is a clear danger that has been unfolding at a regional level since the fall in oil prices.

The Italian bishop explained that there is great fear that a new conflict in the region could have great repercussions, “especially on jobs and people’s lives."  He said that "those who leave are certainly not planning to come back, at least not immediately.”  Meanwhile, the Church is trying to “help those who stay, but it is not easy because the needs are great and the climate of uncertainty does not help.” “Moreover, the Church cannot provide for thousands of families. If there is no work, the only alternative is to leave."  A dozen priests are in daily contact with the community.

Qatar's native population is just 313,000 Qatari citizens while there are 2.3 million expatriates, which fluctuates considerably depending on the season and job availability.  Overall, Catholics number more than 300,000, among Latin, Maronite, Assyrian-Malaysian and ssyhrian-Malankarese rites. 

Non-Arab foreigners represent the vast majority of the foreign population. Indians are the largest group (650,000), followed by Nepalis (350,000), Bangladeshis (280,000), Filipinos (260,000), Egyptians (200,000), Sri Lankans (145,000) and Pakistanis (125,000).   (Source: AsiaNews)

Full Article

Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube Soundcloud

Public Inspection File | EEO

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