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Catholic News 2

IMAGE: CNS photo/Mike Nelson, EPABy Dennis SadowskiTUMACACORI, Ariz. (CNS) -- Jesuit Father EusebioFrancisco Kino, an Italian missionary to the American Southwest known as the "Padreon Horseback," was honored Jan. 10 at the Tumacacori National HistoricalPark with Kino Legacy Day.The celebration of the priest --who founded 24 missions and was also known as an astronomer, builder, mapmaker,linguist, agriculturalist and stockman -- kicked off the yearlong celebrationof the National Park Service's 100th anniversary.Bob Love, superintendent ofTumacacori National Historical Park, said Father Kino played a key role in thepark's story.But that morning, park rangersleft much of the storytelling to Tucson Bishop Gerald F. Kicanas, whose diocesecovers the land that Father Kino crisscrossed, building his missions when hetraveled more than 15,000 miles by horseback.During Mass, held outside theruins of Mission San Jose de Tumacacori church, the bishop told the crowd whatit is to be a great miss...

IMAGE: CNS photo/Mike Nelson, EPA

By Dennis Sadowski

TUMACACORI, Ariz. (CNS) -- Jesuit Father Eusebio Francisco Kino, an Italian missionary to the American Southwest known as the "Padre on Horseback," was honored Jan. 10 at the Tumacacori National Historical Park with Kino Legacy Day.

The celebration of the priest -- who founded 24 missions and was also known as an astronomer, builder, mapmaker, linguist, agriculturalist and stockman -- kicked off the yearlong celebration of the National Park Service's 100th anniversary.

Bob Love, superintendent of Tumacacori National Historical Park, said Father Kino played a key role in the park's story.

But that morning, park rangers left much of the storytelling to Tucson Bishop Gerald F. Kicanas, whose diocese covers the land that Father Kino crisscrossed, building his missions when he traveled more than 15,000 miles by horseback.

During Mass, held outside the ruins of Mission San Jose de Tumacacori church, the bishop told the crowd what it is to be a great missionary. He compared missionaries such as Father Kino to archers, ardent with a singular, fixed target.

"They teach Christ, they preach Christ, they lead to Christ," he said. "That was the purpose of Kino's whole life, to lead the native peoples to Christ. To teach them about a God who loved them dearly and who was there among them, always at their side."

The Tumacacori mission church dates to the early 1800s. It had a short-lived tenure as an active church. Apache attacks, upheaval following war with Mexico and one particularly hard winter led to its abandonment by the mid-1800s. The site was named a national monument by President Theodore Roosevelt in 1908, and in 1990 Congress created Tumacacori National Historical Park, which includes the old monument land and the remains of two smaller missions.

Father Kino was born in 1645 in the northern Italian town of Segno and was educated by Jesuits. As a young man, he fell seriously ill and prayed for God's grace and healing, calling on the Jesuit missionary St. Francis Xavier as intercessor. When he got well, he joined the Jesuits.

He yearned to do missionary work in China, but was sent to Mexico instead. He worked in Baja California for three years and spent the rest of his life in Pimeria Alta, what is now the northern part of Mexico's Sonora state and southern Arizona.

He first arrived in Tumacacori (pronounced Too muh ka' koh ree) in January 1691, responding to an invitation of its O'odham people. Shortly after, there were four Kino missions in O'odham communities. Today, San Xavier del Bac remains the only active Kino mission in Arizona. Located just south of Tucson, the northernmost point of the Sonoran mission trail, it is a popular destination for pilgrims and tourists.

Tumacacori, about 20 miles from the border city of Nogales, Arizona, covers 360 acres and is among the smallest of the 23 national parks within Arizona.

During the Kino Legacy Day, the park service set up displays of heritage horses, livestock and other items associated with the missionary priest who brought cattle, other livestock, European farming tools and seeds to the area so the missions would be self-sufficient.

Southern Arizona rancher Dean Fish said Father Kino's lasting impact on the area is significant.

Cattle raised for beef remains a large part of the economy in Arizona's Santa Cruz County, Fish said.

"We're honored to be a part of that, to feed America a little bit and to be able to work and be a part of God's land," he said.

Mark O'Hare of the Kino Heritage Society handed out Kino wheat to Tumacacori visitors. The grains came from a line of winter wheat the Jesuit brought to the missions.

O'Hare, a Tucson native and admirer of Father Kino since boyhood, runs the society's website, padrekino.com. He said the group was formed in 2010 to make Father Kino's life and legacy more known to the public and to assist the Diocese of Tucson in promoting his cause for canonization.

"Spiritually, he was this man of great faith," O'Hare told Catholic News Service. "He was what we'd call a white martyr, not someone who died for the faith, but someone who dedicated his life for the salvation of souls."

The Mexican Archdiocese of Hermosillo in Sonora, the Diocese of Tucson and the Italian Archdiocese of Trent, where Father Kino was born, have all been advocating for his canonization.

The Vatican received the diocesan petition and documentation on Father Kino's life and work in 2006, but has yet to act to name him venerable, the next step in the sainthood process.

Tucson resident Rosie Garcia, president of the Kino Heritage Society, said moving his cause along would a blessing for area. She marks her admiration for the missionary with the vanity Arizona license plate that reads KINOLND.

"He was a man of peace and that is what we need right now -- peace in these border areas where there is so much turmoil," she said.

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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.

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By Cindy WoodenVATICAN CITY (CNS) -- When he told Pope Francis that writingthe meditations for the papal Way of the Cross service was tough, CardinalGualtiero Bassetti of Perugia-Citta della Pieve said the pope told him,"Remember, you aren't doing it for me, but for the church."The Good Friday service, which takes places at night atRome's Colosseum, is broadcast around the world. Tens of thousands of people gatherwith the pope around the ancient Roman amphitheater to meditate on the lastmoments of Jesus' life.Each year the pope asks a different person to write themeditations and prayers that are read out after each station is announced.Cardinal Bassetti was chosen for the March 25 service."For every station I tried to make a reference tocurrent events because, as Pope Francis says, 'God is real and shows himselftoday,'" the cardinal told the Vatican newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano.Reflecting on Christ's passion, the cardinal also urgedpeople to reflect on how human sin and sufferin...

By Cindy Wooden

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- When he told Pope Francis that writing the meditations for the papal Way of the Cross service was tough, Cardinal Gualtiero Bassetti of Perugia-Citta della Pieve said the pope told him, "Remember, you aren't doing it for me, but for the church."

The Good Friday service, which takes places at night at Rome's Colosseum, is broadcast around the world. Tens of thousands of people gather with the pope around the ancient Roman amphitheater to meditate on the last moments of Jesus' life.

Each year the pope asks a different person to write the meditations and prayers that are read out after each station is announced. Cardinal Bassetti was chosen for the March 25 service.

"For every station I tried to make a reference to current events because, as Pope Francis says, 'God is real and shows himself today,'" the cardinal told the Vatican newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano.

Reflecting on Christ's passion, the cardinal also urged people to reflect on how human sin and suffering continue today. His meditations refer to modern martyrs being killed "in every corner of the globe" just because they are Christians. He refers to the suffering of migrants and refugees fleeing poverty and persecution but risking disease and death as they make the perilous journey toward a new life.

"Without a doubt, though, it was most difficult to write about violence against children," both those reduced to slavery in forced work and those abused by adults, he said. "When I wrote those lines I felt like I was not using a pen on paper, but a chisel on marble, such was the suffering in writing about those plagues."

Reading and praying about the stations in preparation for writing, the cardinal said he was struck particularly by portrayals of the use and abuse of power.

In the first station, "Jesus is condemned to death," Pilate has political power and can "give or take a life according to his own interests," he said. In the fourth station, "Jesus meets his mother," one sees the power love has to give life; and the 11th station, "Jesus is nailed to the cross," illustrates divine power in "the ability of the Lord to open the path to eternal life when human eyes see only death and humiliation."

Standing before Pilate, the cardinal wrote in the first station, "Jesus is alone before the power of this world. And he submits to human justice completely."

Pilate and the crowds -- including men and women today -- hand him over to be crucified, he wrote. They are "dominated by a sensation that is common to all people: fear -- the fear of losing their security, their goods, their lives."

The Vatican publishing house, Libreria Editrice Vaticana, printed booklets with the complete texts of the prayers and meditations. They were to be handed out free of charge to people joining the pope at the Colosseum and available for sale at the Vatican bookstore.

By participating in the Via Crucis service and remembering Christ's passion, Christians assert their faith that suffering is not absurd and that, in the end, Christ is victorious over both evil and death, Cardinal Bassetti told L'Osservatore Romano.

At the same time, he said, it means "recognizing that in our daily crosses, Jesus is with us."

Most of the cardinal's meditations and prayers were designed to help Catholics recognize how much they need God's mercy, the great cost paid by Jesus for their salvation and how Christ continues to suffer today in the lives of so many people.

In his meditation for the third station, "Jesus falls for the first time," Cardinal Bassetti asks a question countless have asked throughout history, "Where is God?"

"There are situations that seem to negate God's love," he wrote. "Where is God in the death camps? Where is God in the mines and factories where child slaves work? Where is God in the rickety boats that sink in the Mediterranean?"

Cardinal Bassetti's prayer for that station is "for all those situations of suffering that seem to have no sense," including for "Christians killed in hatred of the faith, for victims of every kind of persecution, for children who are slaves, for the innocent who die in wars."

The prayers for the seventh and ninth stations, when Jesus falls again, are likewise prayers for lists of people who find themselves thrown or pushed down to the ground under the weight of almost unbearable suffering: abused women, orphans, those whose families have broken up and the unemployed.

For the 13th station, "Jesus is taken down from the cross," the cardinal focuses on Joseph of Arimathea who requested permission to bury Jesus. Taking Jesus while he is still "a loser," Joseph of Arimathea shows "the strength of faith, a faith that becomes acceptance, gratuity and love. In a word: charity."

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Follow Wooden on Twitter: @Cindy_Wooden

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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.

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IMAGE: CNS photo/Chaz MuthBy Chaz MuthVATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Don't fall for hate and fearmongering from others; make new friends instead and always help and showconcern for others, Pope Francis told the world's teens."Be brave and go against the tide, be friends ofJesus, who is the prince of peace," he said in a written message for theJubilee of Mercy for Young People, scheduled to be celebrated in Rome anddioceses around the world April 23-25.In his written message, released by the Vatican Jan. 14,the pope said the Year of Mercy is open to everyone so they may experience"a time of grace, peace, conversion and joy."God invites everyone, he said, because "there are nowalls or distances which can prevent the father's mercy from reaching andembracing us."While three days in April have been set aside for thosebetween 13 and 16 years of age, every day of the jubilee year marks "achance for us to grow in holiness."It is also a time to realize "that life together asbrothers and sisters is ...

IMAGE: CNS photo/Chaz Muth

By Chaz Muth

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Don't fall for hate and fearmongering from others; make new friends instead and always help and show concern for others, Pope Francis told the world's teens.

"Be brave and go against the tide, be friends of Jesus, who is the prince of peace," he said in a written message for the Jubilee of Mercy for Young People, scheduled to be celebrated in Rome and dioceses around the world April 23-25.

In his written message, released by the Vatican Jan. 14, the pope said the Year of Mercy is open to everyone so they may experience "a time of grace, peace, conversion and joy."

God invites everyone, he said, because "there are no walls or distances which can prevent the father's mercy from reaching and embracing us."

While three days in April have been set aside for those between 13 and 16 years of age, every day of the jubilee year marks "a chance for us to grow in holiness."

It is also a time to realize "that life together as brothers and sisters is like a great party, perhaps the most beautiful party we can imagine, the endless party that Jesus has taught us to celebrate by his Spirit."

However, the pope said, "I cannot forget those of you who are living in situations of war, extreme poverty, daily troubles and loneliness. Don't ever lose hope! The Lord has a great dream which, with your help, he wants to come true."

Other young people around the world have not forgotten about those who are less fortunate and they "are working for peace and justice for everyone everywhere," he said.

"Don't be taken in by the messages of hatred or terror all around us. Instead, make new friends. Give of your time and always show concern for those who ask your help," he said.

Pope Francis reminded young people that preparing for a pilgrimage or jubilee celebration didn't just mean getting backpacks and banners ready, "but your hearts and minds as well."

He urged them to grow closer to Jesus and draw nourishment from the sacraments. Becoming more merciful during the Year of Mercy means not only growing "in a love which is courageous, generous and real," it is means greater spiritual growth, too.

"You are preparing to be Christians capable of making courageous decisions in order to build daily, even through little things, a world of peace," he said.

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Editors: The pope's message for the Jubilee of Mercy for young teens can be found in English at:

http://w2.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/messages/pont-messages/2016/documents/papa-francesco_20160106_messaggio-giubileo-ragazzi.html

And in Spanish at:

http://w2.vatican.va/content/francesco/es/messages/pont-messages/2016/documents/papa-francesco_20160106_messaggio-giubileo-ragazzi.html.

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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.

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By VATICANCITY (CNS) -- Pope Francis will deliver his monthly prayer intentions on video oversocial media as part of a Jesuit-run global prayer network. Thenew video messages, featuring the pope asking for prayers and action on variouschallenges facing the world today, will begin Jan. 6, the feast of the Epiphanyof the Lord.Oftenpeople are inundated with so much bad news that they might feel helpless, but"to pray together with Pope Francis for these challenges will us help alot," Jesuit Father Frederic Fornos told Vatican Radio Jan. 4.TheJesuit priest is the head of the international Apostleship of Prayer, aJesuit-run outreach that has given Catholics the pope's monthly prayerintentions since 1890.Workingwith the Vatican Television Center, the apostleship will launch the monthlyvideos of the pope's universal prayer intentions on Facebook, Twitter, Instagramand YouTube.Whilethe pope will speak in Spanish, the videos will have subtitles for a total of 10languages, Father Fornos said.P...

By

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Pope Francis will deliver his monthly prayer intentions on video over social media as part of a Jesuit-run global prayer network.

The new video messages, featuring the pope asking for prayers and action on various challenges facing the world today, will begin Jan. 6, the feast of the Epiphany of the Lord.

Often people are inundated with so much bad news that they might feel helpless, but "to pray together with Pope Francis for these challenges will us help a lot," Jesuit Father Frederic Fornos told Vatican Radio Jan. 4.

The Jesuit priest is the head of the international Apostleship of Prayer, a Jesuit-run outreach that has given Catholics the pope's monthly prayer intentions since 1890.

Working with the Vatican Television Center, the apostleship will launch the monthly videos of the pope's universal prayer intentions on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube.

While the pope will speak in Spanish, the videos will have subtitles for a total of 10 languages, Father Fornos said.

Pope Francis' general prayer intentions for 2016 will include: greater care for creation; more support for families in difficulty; just compensation for small farmers; greater respect for women and indigenous peoples; helping sports contribute to peace; encouraging journalists to respect truth and be more ethical; greater support for countries that take in refugees; and an end to the use of child soldiers.

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Follow Glatz on Twitter: @CarolGlatz.

 

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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.

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HOUSTON (AP) -- The Latest on the Final Four with Villanova and Oklahoma playing in the first semifinal and North Carolina and Syracuse in Game 2. (all times local):...

HOUSTON (AP) -- The Latest on the Final Four with Villanova and Oklahoma playing in the first semifinal and North Carolina and Syracuse in Game 2. (all times local):...

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BRUSSELS (AP) -- Partial, symbolic airline service will begin Sunday at Brussels Airport after a 12-day shutdown of passenger flights caused by a deadly bombing attack, the airport's chief executive said Saturday....

BRUSSELS (AP) -- Partial, symbolic airline service will begin Sunday at Brussels Airport after a 12-day shutdown of passenger flights caused by a deadly bombing attack, the airport's chief executive said Saturday....

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(Vatican Radio) Support appears to be growing for a law that would ban abortion in Poland with the Prime Minister and church leaders pledging to back the proposed legislation. Bishops of Poland's influential Catholic Church plan to convey their pro-life views to the faithful on Sunday.Listen to Stefan Bos' report: In an open letter to be read in churches on Sunday, Polish bishops express support for a proposed new anti-abortion law. Their statement urges protection of human life "from conception to natural death."Under current Polish legislation abortion is only allowed in three cases: When the pregnancy poses a threat to the woman's health or life, if it results from a crime such as incest or rape, or if medics determine that the unborn child has a severe and irreversible handicap or an incurable and life-threatening disease.However the bishops write "that when it comes to the life of the unborn, we can't remain at the current compromise set out in ...

(Vatican Radio) Support appears to be growing for a law that would ban abortion in Poland with the Prime Minister and church leaders pledging to back the proposed legislation. Bishops of Poland's influential Catholic Church plan to convey their pro-life views to the faithful on Sunday.

Listen to Stefan Bos' report:

In an open letter to be read in churches on Sunday, Polish bishops express support for a proposed new anti-abortion law. Their statement urges protection of human life "from conception to natural death."

Under current Polish legislation abortion is only allowed in three cases: When the pregnancy poses a threat to the woman's health or life, if it results from a crime such as incest or rape, or if medics determine that the unborn child has a severe and irreversible handicap or an incurable and life-threatening disease.

However the bishops write "that when it comes to the life of the unborn, we can't remain at the current compromise set out in the law," which was adopted in 1993. The bishops add: "We call on people of goodwill, believers and nonbelievers, to act so as to fully protect the life of the unborn from a legal point of view."

They also note that the life of every person is protected by the fifth of the Ten Commandments in the Bible saying: 'Thou shalt not kill'. 

GOVERNMENT SUPPORT

Poland's prime minister and the powerful leader of its conservative ruling Law and Justice party have both said they would support tougher legislation, in a country where nearly 90 percent of the 38 million population is known to be Catholic. 

And Prime Minister Beata Szydlo has called the bishop’s letter in support of a ban a clear call for change. She told Polish radio that she wants "a complete ban on abortion".

But she also made clear that this is her "personal opinion and not necessarily that of all members" of her conservative ruling Law and Justice party. Szydlo said that if the bill is taken up by parliament, she will not insist that all party members vote in favour of the proposed anti-abortion legislation. "Each of us will be guided by our own conscience.”

The proposed legislation is expected to be examined by parliament soon. A new pro-life group "Stop Abortion" is rapidly gathering the necessary 100,000 signatures in support of a vote for the new law.  

The law, tabled by pro-life activists, does not go as far as a total ban but it does call for a tightening of legislation only to allow abortions to save the mother's life. Individuals who perform illegal abortions would also be punished by up to five years in jail, instead of the current maximum of two years.

FEMINIST GROUPS

Feminist groups claim that between 100,000 and 150,000 women either undergo illegal abortions in Poland or turn to clinics abroad. Legal abortions in the country of 38 million people are limited to around 700 to 1,800 per year.

Critics opposing the legislation say Poland currently has already the most stringent abortion laws in Europe.

The debate in European Union member Poland is expected to be closely followed by other EU states including Hungary.

Hungary's new constitution, enacted in 2011, says that human life is protected from the moment of conception, which analysts believe could lead the way to further abortion restrictions.

 

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(Vatican Radio)  Pope Francis on Saturday lead a prayer vigil for Divine Mercy, in which he spoke of the many faces of the mercy of God.The prayer vigil took place on the eve of Divine Mercy Sunday and coincided with the 11th anniversary of Pope St. John Paul II’s death.Listen to Devin Watkins’ report: Thousands of people gathered in St. Peter’s Square on Saturday in the Octave of Easter for the celebration of a prayer vigil for Divine Mercy.In remarks prepared for the occasion, Pope Francis reflected on the ‘vast ocean’ that is the mercy of God, saying “so great and infinite is his mercy, to the point that it is greatly challenging to describe it in all its entirety”.Turning to the testimony of Scripture, Pope Francis noted that the Bible expresses God’s mercy as nearness to His people and in the expression of tenderness, especially in the prophet Hosea.The Holy Father went on to name the many faces of God’s mercy.&l...

(Vatican Radio)  Pope Francis on Saturday lead a prayer vigil for Divine Mercy, in which he spoke of the many faces of the mercy of God.

The prayer vigil took place on the eve of Divine Mercy Sunday and coincided with the 11th anniversary of Pope St. John Paul II’s death.

Listen to Devin Watkins’ report:

Thousands of people gathered in St. Peter’s Square on Saturday in the Octave of Easter for the celebration of a prayer vigil for Divine Mercy.

In remarks prepared for the occasion, Pope Francis reflected on the ‘vast ocean’ that is the mercy of God, saying “so great and infinite is his mercy, to the point that it is greatly challenging to describe it in all its entirety”.

Turning to the testimony of Scripture, Pope Francis noted that the Bible expresses God’s mercy as nearness to His people and in the expression of tenderness, especially in the prophet Hosea.

The Holy Father went on to name the many faces of God’s mercy.

“How many expressions there are of God’s mercy! This mercy comes to us as closeness and tenderness, and because of this, comes also as compassion and solidarity, as consolation and forgiveness. The more we receive, the more we are called to share it with others; it cannot be kept hidden or kept only for ourselves. It is something which burns within our hearts, driving us to love, thus recognizing the face of Jesus Christ, above all in those who are most distant, weak, alone, confused and marginalized.”

The prayer vigil coincided with the 11th anniversary of Pope John Paul II’s death on Divine Mercy Sunday, 2 April 2005.

Pope Francis himself will visit the Shrine of Divine Mercy during the 28th World Youth Day to take place this summer in Krakow, Poland.

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Vatican City, Apr 2, 2016 / 10:20 am (CNA/EWTN News).- After the death of Mother Angelica, founder of EWTN, on Easter Sunday, many in and around the Vatican praised the bold nun’s courageous witness at a time of crisis in the Church, and expressed their appreciation for the work EWTN continues to do. In an April 1 Memorial Mass for Mother Angelica in Rome, Cardinal George Pell praised the nun’s effectiveness in spreading the Good News, and thanked God for “her message, her courage and her faith.”He prayed that the Church in the United States would “throw up other giants equally unexpectedly to help strengthen our faith and lead us to Christ.”Mother Mary Angelica of the Annunciation, a Poor Clare, has been widely credited for having changed both Catholic media and the face of Catholicism in the United States. She passed away on March 27 after a lengthy struggle with the aftereffects of a stroke. She was 92 years old.Cardinal Pell, Prefect...

Vatican City, Apr 2, 2016 / 10:20 am (CNA/EWTN News).- After the death of Mother Angelica, founder of EWTN, on Easter Sunday, many in and around the Vatican praised the bold nun’s courageous witness at a time of crisis in the Church, and expressed their appreciation for the work EWTN continues to do. 

In an April 1 Memorial Mass for Mother Angelica in Rome, Cardinal George Pell praised the nun’s effectiveness in spreading the Good News, and thanked God for “her message, her courage and her faith.”

He prayed that the Church in the United States would “throw up other giants equally unexpectedly to help strengthen our faith and lead us to Christ.”

Mother Mary Angelica of the Annunciation, a Poor Clare, has been widely credited for having changed both Catholic media and the face of Catholicism in the United States. She passed away on March 27 after a lengthy struggle with the aftereffects of a stroke. She was 92 years old.

Cardinal Pell, Prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy, offered Mass April 1 for the repose of Mother Angelica’s soul at the parish of St. Anne’s in Vatican City. The 6 p.m. celebration coincided with her 11 a.m. funeral in Hanceville, Ala. 

In his homily, Cardinal Pell compared Mother Angelica’s life and work at EWTN to the day's Gospel from John, saying that “the spread and effectiveness” of EWTN, founded with an investment of just $200, “was as unexpected as the apostles’ huge catch of fish.”

He also jested about Mother Angelica’s “boisterous” TV personality in spite of being a contemplative Franciscan nun, provoking laughter when he said that her religious name, Mary Angelica, was perhaps a bit “incongruous,” since “she was not angelic in any conventional sense.”

Mother came from a broken home, the cardinal noted, with a father who abandoned her at the age of five and a mother who struggled with depression. Additionally, she did poorly in school, aside from becoming the drum majorette in her high school marching band.

The Poor Clare’s life, then, “brings a message of encouragement for all those who were or are children from broken homes,” he said, noting that many children from such backgrounds “are tempted to be resentful, short of self-confidence, uncertain of their ability to contribute or build a good family.”

“Mother Angelica is one more example of what can be achieved from difficult beginnings...She truly cast fire upon the earth.”

Mother Angelica launched Eternal Word Television Network (EWTN) in 1981. Today it transmits 24-hour-a-day programming to more than 264 million homes in 144 countries. What began with approximately 20 employees has now grown to nearly 400. The religious network broadcasts terrestrial and shortwave radio around the world, operates a religious goods catalog and publishes the National Catholic Register and Catholic News Agency, among other publishing ventures. It is the largest religious network in the world.

In addition to EWTN, Mother also founded the Our Lady of the Angels Monastery, the Franciscan Missionaries of the Eternal Word, the Shrine of the Most Blessed Sacrament, and the Knights of the Holy Eucharist.

Her decision to open Our Lady of the Angels Monastery in Irondale, Ala. in 1962, a largely Protestant region, was “an unlikely launching pad for an international television network, although probably not quite as unpromising a spot as Bethlehem and Nazareth,” the cardinal said.

Cardinal Pell noted that in a short time EWTN “pioneered the digital revolution in broadcasting, and many experts visited to examine just what they were doing. There was an enormous development and progression.”

Part of this is due to Mother’s blunt, conservative and effective way communicating, he said, noting that she could at times be divisive and even "over-the-top" in some ways, but “thank God she spoke that way.”

Concelebrants at the Mass in Rome were Msgr. Dario Eduardo Vigano, Prefect of the Secretariat for Communications, Fr. Federico Lombardi SJ, Vatican spokesman and Director of the Holy See Press Office, and Fr. Jeff Kirby.

In attendance at the Mass were the U.S. ambassador to the Holy See Ken Hackett, and Paraguay’s ambassador to the Holy See Esteban Kriskovich, as well as representatives from numerous religious, Vatican and secular organizations. 

In addition to Cardinal Pell, many other voices in the Vatican have expressed their appreciation for Mother Angelica and for the work and apostolate of EWTN.

In a March 29 letter to EWTN Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Michael Warsaw, Vatican spokesman and Director of the Holy See Press Office Fr. Federico Lombardi SJ and Vice-director of the Holy See Press Office Greg Burke voiced their appreciation for Mother's work.

They praised not only Mother Angelica’s personal commitment to evangelization, but also the rapid growth of EWTN and the dedication of the network’s employees.

“We would like to send our condolences to the entire EWTN family on the death of Mother Angelica,” Lombardi and Burke wrote. “She was certainly a powerful witness in her television apostolate, and a great source of good for Catholic media.”

The two said they have “watched with awe the growth of the network over the years,” and have been first-hand witnesses not only of Mother Angelica’s great dedication to the Lord, “but also those who have shared her vision and come to work with EWTN.”

They offered prayers for both Mothers’ eternal happiness, and for “the continued success of EWTN.”

Similarly, Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz of Krakow also voiced his sorrow for Mother Angelica’s passing in a March 31 letter to both Warsaw and Reverend Mother Dolores Marie, who currently oversees Our Lady of the Angels Monastery, which Mother Angelica founded.

In addition to being the Archbishop of Krakow, the cardinal was the longtime secretary to St. John Paul II both before and during his 27 year pontificate, and as such had met Mother Angelica when she visited the Polish Pope in Rome.

Mother Angelica, he said, “was a wonderful woman dedicated to Jesus and to the Church. She devoted her life to ministry, converting untold numbers of people to the Church.”

The Poor Clare left “an indelible mark on the Catholic Church and the world as a whole,” he said.

Cardinal Dziwisz praised her as someone will always be remembered for her “personal sermons,” and said she “will live on forever in the hearts of all those that her sermons have touched through her gift to the world, the Eternal Word Television Network.”

In a letter from Pope Francis that was read aloud at Mother Angelica’s April 1 funeral, the Pope said that he was “saddened” to learn of her death, and extended his “heartfelt condolences to the Poor Clares of the Perpetual Adoration of Our Lady of the Angels Monastery, and to the EWTN community.”

Francis expressed his gratitude “for Mother Angelica’s service to the Gospel through social communications and through a life of prayer,” and commended her soul “to the merciful love of Almighty God.”

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