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Catholic News 2

Acts 14: 21-27; Rev 21: 1-5; Jn 13: 31-33, 34-35In the lovely book, Chicken Soup for the Soul, there's a story about a man who came out of his office one Christmas morning and found a little boy from a nearby project looking with great admiration at the man’s new vehicle. The little boy asked, "Does this car belong to you?" And the man said, "Yes. In fact my brother gave it to me for Christmas. I've just gotten it."  With that, the little boy's eyes widened. He said, "You mean to say that somebody gave it to you? And you didn't have to pay anything for it?"  And the man said, "That's right.  My brother gave it to me as a gift." With that the little boy let out a long sigh and said, "Boy, I would really like..."  And the man fully expected the boy to say, "I would like to have a brother like that, who would give me such a beautiful car," but instead the man was amazed when...

Acts 14: 21-27; Rev 21: 1-5; Jn 13: 31-33, 34-35

In the lovely book, Chicken Soup for the Soul, there's a story about a man who came out of his office one Christmas morning and found a little boy from a nearby project looking with great admiration at the man’s new vehicle. The little boy asked, "Does this car belong to you?" And the man said, "Yes. In fact my brother gave it to me for Christmas. I've just gotten it."  With that, the little boy's eyes widened. He said, "You mean to say that somebody gave it to you? And you didn't have to pay anything for it?"  And the man said, "That's right.  My brother gave it to me as a gift." With that the little boy let out a long sigh and said, "Boy, I would really like..."  And the man fully expected the boy to say, "I would like to have a brother like that, who would give me such a beautiful car," but instead the man was amazed when the little boy said, "Wow! I would like to be that kind of brother.  I wish I could give that kind of car to my little brother." Somehow that child understood the secret of the “new commandment” of love, which Jesus gave to his apostles during his last discourse, as described in today’s gospel: “Love one another as I have loved you.” True love consists, not in "getting" something from the lover, but in "giving" something to the loved one.  The most familiar example of this type of love is a mother’s love for her child.

Introduction: Today’s readings are about new things: the New Jerusalem, a new heaven and a new earth, and a new commandment. In the reading from the Book of Revelation, God promises that his saving and healing work in the world is ongoing: "See, I am making all things new" (Rev 21:5).  The first reading, from the Acts of the Apostles, describes how the small Christian communities helped the work of renewal in their members by their agápe love, imitating the agápe love of Paul and Barnabas.  The second reading from the Book of Revelation explains how God renews His Church by being present in her members and in their parish communities and liturgical celebrations. Today’s gospel passage gives us the secret of Christian renewal as the faithful practice of Jesus’ new commandment:  “Love one another as I have loved you” (John 13: 35). Jesus has added a new element to the Old Testament command of love by telling us that the true test of discipleship is to love other people in the same way that he has loved us. Hence, the renewal of Christian life means a radical change of vision and a reordering of our priorities in life. Such a renewal brings us to embrace new attitudes, new values and new standards of relating to God, to other people and, indeed, to our whole environment. For most of us, “renewal" is something that comes at different stages in our lives, each time bringing us to a deeper understanding, insight and commitment.

First reading: Acts 14: 21-27: Each Jewish synagogue served the faith community year round as a) a House of Prayer (b) a House of Study and (c) a House of Assembly or Socialization. When Jesus came upon the scene, he also fostered the idea of small communities.  He gathered a small group of twelve men to travel with him, to share prayer, ministry, faith and values. He promised his followers that wherever two or three would gather in his name, he would be present among them. After his death and resurrection, Jesus’ disciples tried to establish small Christian communities wherever they found a welcome. Paul and Barnabas knew that evangelization and baptism were but the first steps in a lifelong process of turning to, and being transformed by, Christ. Hence, in their subsequent visits to Christian communities, they continued to instruct their converts. Already in the first Christian century, believers understood that catechesis is a cradle-to-grave endeavor. Paul and Barnabas also considered their mission an extension of the small community’s outreach to the world. Because of this they were accountable to the Christian community that had sent them. Therefore, they returned to relate all that they had done, careful to credit their success and the increasingly universal character of the Church to God, who “had opened the door of the faith to the Gentiles” (v. 27). It is a welcome sight to see modern Christian communities, which are criticized for too much structural set-up,  returning to their first century roots by establishing congregations that are a network of individual Christians, bound together in prayer, faith, mutual support, service, missionary outreach and accountability.  We may not be called to the same kind of missionary activity as were Paul and Barnabas, but we must be as unselfish in our service of others as were these early Christians.

Second Reading, Revelation 21:1-5: The Book of Revelation was written to bolster the faith of persecuted early Christians. Today's passage begins the final section of the book. The scene is really a vision of the new age of eschatological fulfillment inaugurated by the death and resurrection of Jesus. The ancient city of Jerusalem had long been for the Jews a token of God's presence with them. God had aided them in capturing and holding it, in making it their capital, in building the Temple there, and in returning to it after their exile in Babylon. Within the holiest chamber of the Jerusalem Temple, they kept the stone tablets of the Law given to Moses and kept in a chest known as the Ark of the Covenant. God dwelt in a particular way above this chamber. These details give richness to the image of the “New Jerusalem" spoken of in Revelation.   The image is also a metaphor for the Church, which is always called to reveal God's presence among us. Today’s passage from the Book of Revelation (21:3) gives us the assurance that “God’s dwelling is with the human race." It affirms the fact that God is present at every moment of human history, even those most desperate and threatening. Jesus' death and resurrection have created a state in which a once-distant God is now present to every person and in every situation.   Moreover, Jesus has given us the insight and power to transform everything in our lives by practicing agápe love in our interactions with people. It is through this constant love-centered interaction among us that the "new earth, the new heaven and the new Jerusalem" can begin to come into existence - not at some unknown future time and in some other place but here and now.

Exegesis:  Today's Gospel reading comes from Chapters 13:1--17:26 of St. John's Gospel, known as "The Last Discourse," which took place at the Last Supper, on the night before Jesus went to the Cross. In these chapters, Jesus has  left urgent messages for his Apostles and for us – things that he wanted to tell us before he went away. This farewell discourse is a powerful and intimate part of Jesus' teaching on the Christian concepts of glory and love.

The Christian concept of glory: The glorification mentioned in today’s passage refers, above all, “to the glory which Christ will receive once he is raised up on the cross (John 3:14; 12:32). St. John stresses that Christ's death is the beginning of his victory: his very crucifixion can be considered the first step in his ascension to his Father. At the same time it is glorification of the Father, because Christ, by voluntarily accepting death out of love, as a supreme act of obedience to the Will of God, performs the greatest sacrifice man can offer for the glorification of God. The Father will respond to this glorification which Christ offers Him by glorifying Christ as Son of Man, that is, in his holy human nature, through his resurrection and ascension to God's right hand. Thus the glory which the Son gives the Father is at the same time glory for the Son.” (The Navarre Bible: Text and Commentaries). As Christ's disciples, we also will find our highest motivation and glory by identifying ourselves with Christ's obedience in our daily lives, especially by keeping his new commandment of sacrificial, unconditional and forgiving agápe love.

The new commandment: In the second part of Jesus’ farewell discourse, he gives his followers a new commandment:  they must love one another as he has loved them.  They would be known, not by the sign of the fish, or even of the cross, but by their mutual love, the fruit of their conversion. Just as Solomon was able to discern the identity of the true mother by her love in the story of the disputed child, so will the world be able to identify the true disciples of Jesus by their love for one another. The command of Jesus is both new and old. It repeats the precept of Lev. 19:18 to love one’s neighbor as one’s self. What is new is that this love characterizes the new life inaugurated by Jesus and is proof of one’s love for God (1 Jn. 4:7). Jesus’ new commandment calls for love without limits, conditions, or prerequisites. This love opens our eyes to facts that we might otherwise overlook: that the poor in the world belong to our family; that those who live in despair might be saved by our care of them; that peace can come to the world through our efforts

The nature of Christian love: Jesus speaks of agápe, a love that requires total commitment and trust. It is the kind of love with which God loves us, a love that should be the model of the love we have for others.  This love should be more than just a warm feeling toward others; it should be a compassionate gift of ourselves to the spiritual and bodily needs of our brothers and sisters. Agápe implies a reaching out to others in a caring attitude for their wellbeing without expecting any favor in return.  It is strong, positive, difficult, determined action.  Jesus repeats the command to love one another three times, first explaining what it is ("a new commandment"), how it is to be applied  ("as I have loved you"), and finally noting that this love would stand as the trademark of his disciples. Not only is this a new commandment, but also, Jesus teaches, it is the greatest.  To love, in fact, is to know God—"Whoever does not love does not know God, for God is love" (1 John 4:7-8). The early Christians practiced this love literally. That is why Tertullian stated that the heathens held the Christian congregations in high regard: "See, how these Christians love one another."  The fact is that Jesus' death and resurrection served, not just as an example of how to love, but as the agent that actually freed us from our selfish love through His indwelling presence.  It was this new kind of love which was manifested by the first disciples of Jesus in Jerusalem (Ac 2:44-45), and in the churches in Macedonia (2 Co 8:1-5).  It was a love that was attentive to the poor and the needy. During his life on earth, Jesus Himself was lovingly present to those who were not at all lovable.  He allowed himself to be moved with pity and compassion when he encountered those in need, and he was moved to tears in the midst of sadness.  He openly shed tears at the tomb of Lazarus.  He shed tears also over the city of Jerusalem.  Even the anger that Jesus displayed in the Temple was rooted in love -- the love for His Father and for His Father's house.  Jesus loved by serving others, by helping them and by healing others.  His was a love that healed and built up, that challenged and inspired people.  It was a deeply forgiving and sacrificial love. “No one has greater love than this, to lay down one's life for one's friends" (15: 13).

Life messages: 1) Let us learn to love ourselves so that we may learn to love each other.   The old commandment (Leviticus 19:1-2, 9-18) says: “Love your neighbor as yourself.”  How do we learn to cherish others and care for them if we  have never learned to do the same for ourselves?  We live in a culture that devalues life and worships death—a culture in which people drug themselves into oblivion. Women and girls are willing to starve themselves to fit some unrealistic media image of beauty and worth.  People and relationships are sacrificed on the altar of “workaholism.”  How are we to love ourselves when we are told over and over again that we are unlovable?  How do we reclaim our basic worth?   We can become whole and holy only when we learn to love ourselves properly, acknowledging the presence of the Triune God in our souls, making our bodies the “temple of the Holy Spirit.” Only those persons who are fully convinced that they are themselves lovable can reach out comfortably and unconditionally to love those who themselves cannot love but can only hurt and hate and destroy. It is through constant love-centered interaction with God and each other that the "new earth, the new heaven and the new Jerusalem" can begin to come into existence.

2) Let us love others in our daily lives:  We are asked to love as Jesus loved in the ordinary course of our lives.  This means that we should love others by allowing ourselves to be moved with pity for them. We love others by responding to their everyday needs. We can show love by materially sharing with those who have less. We love others by comforting and protecting those who have experienced loss.  We love others by serving others in every possible way no matter how small.  We love others by forgiving rather than condemning, by challenging rather than condoning.  We love others by responding to the call of God in our lives and by walking in the footsteps of Jesus.  We love others by making sacrifices for them.  This is how the world will know that we are the Disciples of Christ.

3) Let us demonstrate our love for others: When we are assembled and have guests, we have an opportunity to demonstrate our love for another.  They must see Christians as people who are glad to see one another, who are willing to take the time to visit with each other and who know each other's names.  Our assemblies may be the only time some guests have the opportunity to see Christians interact with love and concern for one another, an interaction that reveals the strong love and appreciation for one another which the members have.  Christians will often sin against one another and offend one another.  But others should see in us a quickness to forgive, even as Christ has forgiven us.

Two World War II veterans, a German and an American, were attending a three-day seminar.  As they were washing dishes one evening after dinner they exchanged stories about the war. The American told of the horror he felt as a young pilot during the particularly savage bombing of a city in Germany.  He had orders to bomb a hospital, which he would know by the huge Red Cross painted on the roof.  The German -- somewhat shocked by the story -- revealed that his wife had been giving birth to their baby in that very hospital when it was being bombed, resulting in the death of the mother and the baby.  After a few minutes of silence the two men fell into each other’s arms weeping.  Imagine being in heaven, at the end of the world, where we fall weeping upon one another, waves of reconciliation breaking upon us as we adjust ourselves to this dimension of pure love which Jesus demands from his followers in today’s gospel passage.   

(Source: Homilies of Fr. Anthony Kadavil)

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(Vatican Radio) Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko has agreed to a deal with Russian President Vladimir Putin to secure the release of Ukrainian pilot Nadezhda Savchenko who is serving a 22-year jail sentence in Russia. The presidents of Russia and Ukrainia had a telephone conversation over the fate of jailed high-profile prisoners, raising the possibility of a swap. The call came after Ukraine jailed two alleged Russian special forces soldiers for several crimes including terrorism.Listen to Stefan Bos' report: Yevgeny Yerofeyev and Alexander Alexandrov were accused of involvement in Ukraine's conflict with pro-Russian rebels in the east. That's why a court in Kiev sentenced the two Russian citizens to 14 years in prison each on charges of fighting for allegedly waging "an aggressive war" alongside Russia-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine.They were also found quilty of committing a terrorist act and using weapons to provoke an armed...

(Vatican Radio) Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko has agreed to a deal with Russian President Vladimir Putin to secure the release of Ukrainian pilot Nadezhda Savchenko who is serving a 22-year jail sentence in Russia. The presidents of Russia and Ukrainia had a telephone conversation over the fate of jailed high-profile prisoners, raising the possibility of a swap. The call came after Ukraine jailed two alleged Russian special forces soldiers for several crimes including terrorism.

Listen to Stefan Bos' report:

Yevgeny Yerofeyev and Alexander Alexandrov were accused of involvement in Ukraine's conflict with pro-Russian rebels in the east. That's why a court in Kiev sentenced the two Russian citizens to 14 years in prison each on charges of fighting for allegedly waging "an aggressive war" alongside Russia-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine.

They were also found quilty of committing a terrorist act and using weapons to provoke an armed conflict.

Russia has always denied sending troops to eastern Ukraine and said the men were volunteers who had left active service.

FATE DISCUSSED

Yet shortly after the sentencing Monday the Kremlin said Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko and Russian President Vladimir Putin discussed by phone the "fate" of the two Russians as well as Ukrainian military pilot Nadia Savchenko, who Russia imprisoned on murder charges.

While the Kremlin did not explicitly mentioned it, observers expect the Kiev court's verdict against the Russians to open the door for a prisoner exchange. Poroshenko has previously proposed swapping Savchenko -- who is a national hero and has denied the charges against her -- for the Russians.

The Kremlin said the two leaders agreed that Moscow would "soon" allow Ukraine's consul-general in Rostov-on-Don to visit Savchenko in prison. Poroshenko's office afterward said the Ukrainian leader urged Moscow to "immediately" free Savchenko.

Citing her deteriorating health, he also urged Putin to allow Ukrainian and German doctors to examine her.

Tensions remain however between Moscow and Ukraine over Kiev's moves towards the West, including military cooperation.

Last month Ukraine and Britain, for instance, signed an agreement under which both nations will share information on potential threats, participate in joint exercises while the British military will also train Ukrainian forces.  

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(Vatican Radio) As Britain’s Queen Elizabeth turns 90 years old, the Royal Household of Windsor Cricket team is arriving in Rome on Thursday for an encounter with the Vatican XI, St. Peter’s Cricket Club, sponsored by the Pontifical Council for Culture. In September 2014 St. Peter’s Cricket Club was invited to play the Royal Household at Windsor Castle during the Vatican team’s first foreign tour. The players were invited to attend Evensong in St. George’s Chapel, Windsor, during which prayers were offered for Pope Francis and his ministry.During their visit to Rome, the Royal Household team will visit St. Peter’s Basilica on Friday morning , followed by a tour of the Vatican Museums. Solemn Vespers for both teams will be held at the International Pontifical College ‘Mater Ecclesiae’ at 7pm, with prayers offered for Queen Elizabeth, who will be marking her 90th birthday on Thursday. British Ambassador to the Holy See, Nigel Bake...

(Vatican Radio) As Britain’s Queen Elizabeth turns 90 years old, the Royal Household of Windsor Cricket team is arriving in Rome on Thursday for an encounter with the Vatican XI, St. Peter’s Cricket Club, sponsored by the Pontifical Council for Culture. 

In September 2014 St. Peter’s Cricket Club was invited to play the Royal Household at Windsor Castle during the Vatican team’s first foreign tour. The players were invited to attend Evensong in St. George’s Chapel, Windsor, during which prayers were offered for Pope Francis and his ministry.

During their visit to Rome, the Royal Household team will visit St. Peter’s Basilica on Friday morning , followed by a tour of the Vatican Museums. Solemn Vespers for both teams will be held at the International Pontifical College ‘Mater Ecclesiae’ at 7pm, with prayers offered for Queen Elizabeth, who will be marking her 90th birthday on Thursday. British Ambassador to the Holy See, Nigel Baker, will be attending both Vespers and a dinner during which a gift for Her Majesty the Queen will be presented by St. Peter’s Cricket team.

On Saturday, St George's Day and the name day of Jorge Mario Bergoglio, the two teams will play each other in a T20 match at the Capannelle Cricket Ground, starting at 10.30am. On Sunday morning Australian Cardinal George Pell will preside at Holy Mass at the Venerable English College to which the Royal Household team have been invited, prior to their return to England on Sunday afternoon. 

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(Vatican Radio) Catholic Relief Services (CRS) says it’s a now desperate race against time to find survivors from the powerful earthquake in Ecuador that hit some of the poorest and most vulnerable communities in the nation. Tom Hollywood is CRS’s zonal representative for Latin America and is currently in Ecuador. He spoke to Susy Hodges about the massive scope of this tragedy.  Listen to the interview with Tom Hollywood, CRS's zonal representative for Latin America, currently in Ecuador:   “Poorest and most vulnerable”As the death toll from Ecuador’s earthquake continued to climb, Hollywood described the quake as “massive and devastating” in its impact. He pointed out that the areas that had been hit hardest by this disaster were “some of the poorest, some of the most vulnerable” in Ecuador.“These were populations already struggling and suffering from extreme poverty,” he explained.Saying ti...

(Vatican Radio) Catholic Relief Services (CRS) says it’s a now desperate race against time to find survivors from the powerful earthquake in Ecuador that hit some of the poorest and most vulnerable communities in the nation. Tom Hollywood is CRS’s zonal representative for Latin America and is currently in Ecuador. He spoke to Susy Hodges about the massive scope of this tragedy. 

 

Listen to the interview with Tom Hollywood, CRS's zonal representative for Latin America, currently in Ecuador: 

 

“Poorest and most vulnerable”

As the death toll from Ecuador’s earthquake continued to climb, Hollywood described the quake as “massive and devastating” in its impact. He pointed out that the areas that had been hit hardest by this disaster were “some of the poorest, some of the most vulnerable” in Ecuador.

“These were populations already struggling and suffering from extreme poverty,” he explained.

Saying time is essential, Hollywood agreed that it's now a desperate race against time to find survivors who are still trapped under the rubble of collapsed buildings.

Asked about the most urgent needs for survivors, the CRS representative said temporary shelter was a key concern with “thousands of people having to sleep out in the open.”  A supply of clean water and food were the other main needs, he said, especially as many of the families in the worst-hit areas were already “struggling to put food on the table.”

Hollywood said a number of remote rural areas have not yet been reached by rescue workers and CRS was sending out teams to assess the extent of the damage and the population’s needs in these remote areas where aid has not arrived.  

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Vatican City, Apr 19, 2016 / 06:09 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Pope Francis has offered his praise to the Jesuits in Italy for their longstanding work with refugees, but asked the foreigners for their pardon on behalf of all who have been closed-minded and indifferent to their plight.“I was a stranger and you welcomed me,” the Pope said in a video message directed to refugees and workers who help them, calling to mind Chapter 25 of Matthew’s Gospel.“Too often we have not welcomed you! Forgive the closure and indifference of our societies, who fear the change of life and mentality that your presence requires,” he said.Francis noted that after coming to a new country, refugees are frequently treated as burdens and problems which only bring more cost. However, “you are instead a gift.”“You are the testimony of how our heavenly and merciful God transforms the evil and injustice of those who suffer into a good for all,” the Pope said, explai...

Vatican City, Apr 19, 2016 / 06:09 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Pope Francis has offered his praise to the Jesuits in Italy for their longstanding work with refugees, but asked the foreigners for their pardon on behalf of all who have been closed-minded and indifferent to their plight.

“I was a stranger and you welcomed me,” the Pope said in a video message directed to refugees and workers who help them, calling to mind Chapter 25 of Matthew’s Gospel.

“Too often we have not welcomed you! Forgive the closure and indifference of our societies, who fear the change of life and mentality that your presence requires,” he said.

Francis noted that after coming to a new country, refugees are frequently treated as burdens and problems which only bring more cost. However, “you are instead a gift.”

“You are the testimony of how our heavenly and merciful God transforms the evil and injustice of those who suffer into a good for all,” the Pope said, explaining that each refugee can be a bridge “that unites peoples who are far away, that makes possible the meeting of cultures and different religions,” and which lead to a path of “rediscovering our common humanity.”

Pope Francis offered his words in a video message for the 35th anniversary of Centro Astalli, the Italian headquarters of the Jesuit Refugee Service. Published April 19, the message coincides with the presentation of the center’s annual report in Rome.

In his brief comments, Francis spoke directly to both the workers and volunteers of the center, as well as the refugees they assist.

He pointed to the first part of the passage in Matthew 25: “I was a stranger.” Each refugee, he said, has “the face of God and the flesh of Christ.”

Speaking directly to the refugees who receive help from the center, Francis told them that their experiences of both pain and hope serve as a reminder that every person on the earth is a stranger and a pilgrim who has been welcomed by someone “with generosity and without any merit.”

“Whoever, like you, has fled from their own land due to oppression, war, nature disfigured by pollution and deforestation, or from the unjust distribution of the planet’s resources, is a brother with whom to share one’s bread, home and life,” the Pope observed.

He said the Astalli Center is prime example of what the daily welcoming of peoples ought to look like, and thanked the workers and volunteers, both lay and consecrated, for their work.

Through their work, they show “in the facts that if we walk the path together there is less fear,” he said, and urged them to be concrete witnesses “of the beauty of encounter. Help our society to listen to the voice of the refugees.”

“Continue to walk with courage at their side, accompany them and be their guide,” Pope Francis said in conclusion, adding that “refugees know the roads that lead to peace, because they know the acrid smell of war.”

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Washington D.C., Apr 19, 2016 / 06:35 am (CNA/EWTN News).- A new survey says most Americans think the Obama administration’s federal contraception mandate is unfair to the Little Sisters of the Poor and other religious groups defending themselves before the U.S. Supreme Court.About 53 percent of Americans said the process required by the government is “unfair,” while only 32 percent did not, according to a new Marist Poll commissioned by the Knights of Columbus.The federal government has exempted many other organizations’ employee health care plans from a requirement to provide contraception and drugs that can produce abortions. But it has no exemption for the Little Sisters of the Poor, who help run houses to care for the elderly poor.“It is not reasonable for the government to demand that some – and only some – religious employers engage in activity that is totally unnecessary to the government’s stated purpose of providing elective ...

Washington D.C., Apr 19, 2016 / 06:35 am (CNA/EWTN News).- A new survey says most Americans think the Obama administration’s federal contraception mandate is unfair to the Little Sisters of the Poor and other religious groups defending themselves before the U.S. Supreme Court.

About 53 percent of Americans said the process required by the government is “unfair,” while only 32 percent did not, according to a new Marist Poll commissioned by the Knights of Columbus.

The federal government has exempted many other organizations’ employee health care plans from a requirement to provide contraception and drugs that can produce abortions. But it has no exemption for the Little Sisters of the Poor, who help run houses to care for the elderly poor.

“It is not reasonable for the government to demand that some – and only some – religious employers engage in activity that is totally unnecessary to the government’s stated purpose of providing elective and morally problematic drugs to employees,” Carl Anderson, Supreme Knight of the Knights of Columbus, said April 18.

“Such action doesn’t just violate the rights of employers like the Little Sisters, it is also at odds with the American people’s understanding of basic fairness, and our long-standing commitment to protecting the deeply-held beliefs of every American – especially when those beliefs are the minority view.”

The federal government has adjusted the rule several times. It presently provides what it describes as an “accommodation” that requires the Little Sisters of the Poor and other religious organizations to sign a form for the government that directs their insurance providers to offer the objectionable coverage through their health plan.

The Little Sisters and other plaintiffs say that since sending the government their objection is the action that prompts the coverage through their own health plans, they are forced to act as “gatekeepers” and “facilitate” the objectionable coverage. Furthermore, they argue the government is “hijacking” their health plan, which is an agreement between them and their insurer.

Failure to comply with the mandate would result in steep fines, which the Little Sisters say would be crippling to their ministry of caring for the elderly and dying poor.

A Supreme Court decision on the case is expected by June.

The Marist Poll survey of 1,020 adults was sponsored by the Knights of Columbus, a Catholic fraternal organization with over 1.8 million members worldwide.

It claims an overall margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.

 

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By Junno Arocho EstevesVATICAN CITY (CNS) --Refugees, often perceived by society as an added cost or a problem, are a giftand a reflection of the face of God, Pope Francis said.People who escape oppression,war, pollution or "the unjust distribution of the planet's resources are abrother and sister with whom to share bread, home and life," he said in avideo message tothe Centro Astalli, the JesuitRefugee Service center in Rome."Youare witnesses of how our clement and merciful God can transform the evil and injustice you havesuffered into a good for all," he said. Thepope's message torefugees and volunteers April 19 marked the 35th anniversary of the center's founding by FatherPedro Arrupe, superior of the Jesuits from 1965 to 1983.PopeFrancis said the center'swork in assisting refugees is a courageous form of following Jesus' words,"For I was a stranger, and you welcomed me."Everyrefugee "who knocks on our doors bears the face of God, the flesh ofChrist," he said. "Your experience o...

By Junno Arocho Esteves

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Refugees, often perceived by society as an added cost or a problem, are a gift and a reflection of the face of God, Pope Francis said.

People who escape oppression, war, pollution or "the unjust distribution of the planet's resources are a brother and sister with whom to share bread, home and life," he said in a video message to the Centro Astalli, the Jesuit Refugee Service center in Rome.

"You are witnesses of how our clement and merciful God can transform the evil and injustice you have suffered into a good for all," he said.

The pope's message to refugees and volunteers April 19 marked the 35th anniversary of the center's founding by Father Pedro Arrupe, superior of the Jesuits from 1965 to 1983.

Pope Francis said the center's work in assisting refugees is a courageous form of following Jesus' words, "For I was a stranger, and you welcomed me."

Every refugee "who knocks on our doors bears the face of God, the flesh of Christ," he said. "Your experience of pain and of hope reminds us that we are all foreigners and pilgrims on this earth, welcomed by someone with generosity and without reward."

The pope asked forgiveness from the refugees for society's indifference toward their plight out of fear "for the change of life and mentality that your presence requires."

However, he added, the presence of refugees can serve as bridge to unite distant lands as well as different cultures and religions, allowing people to "rediscover our common humanity."

In welcoming refugees, the pope said, the Centro Astalli has continued Father Arrupe's "prophetic vision," and he thanked them for showing that in walking together, "the path becomes less frightening."

"Thirty-five years are only the beginning of a path that becomes more necessary, the only path for a reconciled coexistence," he said. "May you always be witnesses of the beauty of encounter; help our society listen to the voice of refugees."

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NEW YORK (AP) -- Former football star Michael Strahan is leaving the daily talk show he co-hosts with Kelly Ripa to work full-time on "Good Morning America."...

NEW YORK (AP) -- Former football star Michael Strahan is leaving the daily talk show he co-hosts with Kelly Ripa to work full-time on "Good Morning America."...

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NEW YORK (AP) -- Anyone who used Fox News Channel's prime-time lineup as their main source of campaign news over the past month may be forgiven for thinking there was only one presidential nomination contest....

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HELENA, Mont. (AP) -- The first time Jason Ebert needed an air ambulance, it saved his life. The second time, it nearly broke the bank....

HELENA, Mont. (AP) -- The first time Jason Ebert needed an air ambulance, it saved his life. The second time, it nearly broke the bank....

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