Monday, May 4, 2009

Glendon Declines ND Honor


Mary Ann Glendon has declined Notre Dame’s Laetare Medal over the plans to honor pro-abortion president Barack Obama.

From a coming Register issue: Glendon, Notre Dame and
Abortion Politics by Father Raymond J. de Souza

Father John Jenkins likely thought himself very clever. Professor Mary Ann Glendon just took him to school.

In declining to receive the Laetare Medal alongside President Barack Obama’s honorary doctorate of laws at next month’s commencement, Glendon has refused to participate in the shabby manipulation Father Jenkins attempted to engineer. It is a rare personage who could ennoble an award by refusing to receive it, but Glendon has done just that. The Laetare Medal will now be known best for the year in which it was declined. Glendon chose, to use the apt words of Bishop John D’Arcy in this regard, truth over prestige. The significance of Glendon’s refusal is enormous.
The most accomplished Catholic laywoman in America — former ambassador of the United States to the Holy See and current president of the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences — has refused to accept Notre Dame’s highest honor. It is a signal moment for the Catholic Church in the United States. It is a signal moment for the Church’s public witness. It is may even be a signal moment for Notre Dame. What Glendon will not say at Notre Dame will finally be a fitting response to what Gov. Mario Cuomo said there some 25 years ago.

It has been 25 years of deliberate confusion, ambiguity and equivocation at Notre Dame in regard to her presidents — Fathers Hesburgh, Molloy and Jenkins — and abortion politics. What New York Gov. Mario Cuomo did in 1984 was with the willing connivance of Father Theodore Hesburgh. Father Jenkins thought he could outdo the master himself, but he has been taught that this is no longer Father Ted’s Notre Dame. Notre Dame is no longer untouchable by the American bishops and the lay faithful. Father Jenkins must be puzzled at how it has all gone so wrong. He was doing what Notre Dame has done for a long time, namely, to bring the prestige of Notre Dame to bear on the pro-choice side of American politics.

Notre Dame has that prestige not only because of its money or its football fame, but because it is a genuine Catholic university. Visitors to campus know that it is a Catholic university. Her Catholic identity is not merely historical. It is precisely the Catholicity of Notre Dame which makes its recent history on abortion politics so scandalous. It is that scandalous history that Glendon’s refusal may help to correct.

Mario Cuomo in 1984
It is well known that Mario Cuomo went to Notre Dame to argue that faithful Catholics could in good conscience, as legislators and executives, defend abortion rights, pass laws facilitating abortion, and even fund it with tax dollars. Yet his “Religious Belief and Public Morality” speech was as much about Notre Dame as it was about Cuomo. Notre Dame’s leadership put its prestige on the pro-choice side of American politics. Cuomo did not just happen to use a lecture at Notre Dame to address abortion politics. He was brought to Notre Dame in a flagrantly provocative manner to undermine the Church’s pro-life witness in politics. Recall the timeline: In March 1984, John O’Connor became archbishop of New York. That summer, Walter Mondale nominated New Yorker Geraldine Ferraro for vice president. Ferraro attempted to justify her pro-abortion position as being compatible with her Catholic faith, and Archbishop O’Connor corrected her. It became a high-profile controversy. The Catholic Church, in the person of the archbishop of New York, was at odds with a Catholic candidate for national office on a matter of fundamental importance.

The Church’s pro-life public witness was clear — painfully clear for some. Notre Dame decided to invite Cuomo to address the issue. Cuomo was then among the most prominent Catholic politicians in the nation. His political star was rising rapidly after he gave a celebrated keynote address at the Democratic National Convention that summer in San Francisco. His address at Notre Dame was scheduled for Sept. 13, 1984, hosted by Father Hesburgh and Father Richard McBrien, chairman of the theology department. So the stage was set. After the archbishop of New York had clarified that a faithful Catholic could not promote abortion rights, the nation’s premier Catholic university, led by two of the most famous Catholic priests in America, invited the leading Catholic politician in the country to explain why the archbishop of New York was wrong — all this two months before a presidential election in which a vice-presidential candidate was a pro-abortion Catholic. It almost did not matter what Cuomo said; the message Notre Dame sent was clear: The archbishop of New York and his brother bishops did not speak authoritatively for the Church in the United States; Notre Dame had an authoritative voice, too, and she would be heard on the pro-choice side.

Daniel Patrick Moynihan in 1992
In 1992, President George H. W. Bush was due to speak at commencement. By now presidents at commencement were something of a tradition. FDR, JFK and Eisenhower were given honorary degrees, but it was the Carter-Reagan point-counterpoint that made Notre Dame’s commencement something extraordinary. President Carter chose to go to Notre Dame in the first year of his presidency and gave a major address arguing that the West had to get over its “inordinate” fear of communism. Four years later, in his first year, President Reagan made his first public appearance after the assassination attempt at Notre Dame and gave a historic speech, predicting the total defeat of communism. Most commencement speeches are forgettable; Notre Dame had two of the most famous ever. Bush Sr. came in his fourth year, not his first. It was an election year. Bush would be running against a pro-choice Democrat. So Notre Dame’s president, Father Monk Molloy, thought it was a good time to give the Laetare Medal to Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, a staunch pro-abortion Catholic. (It was only when Moynihan declined to favor partial-birth abortion in the mid-1990s that he was mischaracterized as a moderate on abortion.) Cardinals O’Connor and Bernard Law of Boston objected. Father Molloy paid them no heed. But to take on Notre Dame in a public controversy was still a step too far. Both Cardinals O’Connor and Law elected to keep their letters of complaint private.

Catholics and the Obama Campaign
When John Kerry ran for president in 2004, he argued the Cuomo “personally opposed, but” line. When a number of American bishops called him on it, saying that his pro-abortion position was incompatible with being Catholic, he simply avoided or downplayed the subject. Then Sen. Barack Obama, not being Catholic, had no similar trouble in 2008, but tried a truly audacious approach. He would argue, through various Catholic surrogates, that he was actually pro-life, despite his pro-abortion enthusiasm. His campaign deliberately sought to undermine the teaching of the American bishops and to sow division among Catholics. Knowing all this, Father Jenkins had a choice. After Carter-Reagan-Bush Sr.-Bush Jr. he knew that a commencement invitation to President Obama would now be customary. He knew that after the Moynihan flap, his predecessor, Father Molloy, opted not to invite President Bill Clinton to commencement. So he could choose either to invite or not to invite and claim precedent. He also knew that after the 2008 presidential campaign he would be taking sides in a deliberate attempt, for political purposes, to divide the Catholic people from their bishops. Father Jenkins chose. He would deliver to President Obama what Douglas Kmiec and the others could not do — a quasi-official Catholic endorsement. Only a few Catholic institutions — perhaps only Notre Dame — could openly defy the American bishops and still credibly maintain the all-important Catholic identity. After all, they had done it before. To date, President Obama has relied on tertiary actors on the Catholic scene; with a Notre Dame honorary doctorate of law, Obama will get more than he could possible get anywhere outside of the American bishops themselves. Father Jenkins chose to give it to him. Yet a problem remained.

Father Jenkins’s intervention on the pro-choice, pro-Obama side would appear to be simply selling out truth for prestige. Worse still, it might be seen as part of a 25-year attempt to present the pro-choice position as a valid option for Catholics. How to justify inviting President Obama when President Clinton had not come? Father Jenkins thought he had figured it out; Mary Ann Glendon would get the Laetare Medal.

Glendon was deserving of the medal, far more deserving in fact than most who had already achieved it. There was no doubt about that. This year would be perfect. She would be on stage with her former student at Harvard, Barack Obama, and she would give Notre Dame cover. See how broad-minded Notre Dame is? Both points of view on stage at the same time! Glendon has now reminded Father Jenkins and Notre Dame that it is not broad-minded at all to give succor to both sides of a debate on matters of fundamental justice.

Father Jenkins Talks to Himself
It reflects poorly on Father Jenkins that he would use so distinguished a person as Glendon in a shabby bit of manipulation. Yet his failure is now complete. He has managed to turn a commencement into a national controversy, earned the rebuke of dozens of bishops, including his own, in the most blunt terms imaginable. He attempted justifications and rationalizations unworthy of a university president, pretending that the plain meaning of the bishops’ policy could be read to the exactly opposite effect.

Now that the Laetare Medal has been refused, the debacle is complete. Notre Dame is being shunned. Make no mistake — this is Father Jenkins’s doing. Glendon made it clear in her letter that, aside from the invitation to President Obama himself, Notre Dame’s clumsy efforts at spin control were also a major factor in her decision. Those who have been watching Father Jenkins for some time were not surprised. Aside from the Obama fiasco, Father Jenkins is best known for the enormous amount of attention and energy he has devoted to the question of whether “The Vagina Monologues” should be performed on campus. After rejecting the advice of Bishop D’Arcy, Father Jenkins determined that the “Monologues” had a place at a Catholic university. Given the play’s crude opposition to the entire Christian sexual ethic, Father Jenkins created a distinction between promoting views on one hand and providing a forum for views on the other. Father Jenkins had so immersed himself in the “Monologues” that he ended up talking himself into believing that even Pope Benedict XVI was on his side.

After the 2008 papal visit to the United States, I wrote the following about Father Jenkins for a column for the National Catholic Register: “Teachers and administrators, whether in universities or schools, have the duty and privilege to ensure that students receive instruction in Catholic doctrine and practice,” Benedict said. “This requires that public witness to the way of Christ, as found in the Gospel and upheld by the Church’s teaching authority, shapes all aspects of an institution’s life, both inside and outside the classroom. Divergence from this vision weakens Catholic identity and, far from advancing freedom, inevitably leads to confusion, whether moral, intellectual or spiritual.” One might have thought that a fraternal correction, given what happens on many Catholic campuses, but it was certainly not received as such at America’s most famous Catholic university.

In a University of Notre Dame release, university president Father John Jenkins, CSC, said that he “appreciated the Pope drawing the distinction between ‘providing a forum where various views can be expressed and promoting views.’” There is no such distinction in the papal address, but why might Father Jenkins be so keen to distinguish between “providing a forum” and “promoting views”? It was that distinction that he made in allowing the performance at Notre Dame of the play “The Vagina Monologues.” Despite being a crude attack on the Christian teaching on human sexuality, Father Jenkins has made the allowance of the play a centerpiece of his presidency. Subject to withering criticism by Notre Dame’s diocesan bishop, Bishop John D’Arcy, Father Jenkins attempted to spin the papal address in his favor — a wholly implausible project. Careful readers of the National Catholic Register may not recall that column. The editors refused to run it. Too direct, too strong, they said.

It’s not a great failing that the Register’s editors failed to see through Father Jenkins’s arguments early enough; after all, no one other than Bishop D’Arcy seemed eager to call him out on the issue. Father Jenkins no doubt thought himself very clever. He had argued that the Holy Father was endorsing his own position on “The Vagina Monologues,” and no one objected to the obscenity of that argument, not even at the National Catholic Register. So why not try it again with the Obama invitation? He would announce first Glendon’s medal. Then having bought himself an insurance policy against any complaints, he would announce the Obama invitation. But the ground had shifted, even in the last year. The American bishops, having put up with Notre Dame for 25 years, and having had to reap what Notre Dame sowed in Vice President Joseph Biden and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, were not inclined to entertain the clever arguments of Father Jenkins. So they spoke out one after another, dozens of them. Father Jenkins tried again, circulating a series of arguments so implausible as to be laughable. Father Jenkins calls endlessly for dialogue and discussion and debate. In the end, that really means that Father Jenkins does all the talking, for he determines both his position and the position of his putative critics.

The Holy Father calls for integrity in Catholic identity, and Father Jenkins considers it a backdoor endorsement of his “Monologues” policy. The American bishops say that Catholic universities should not honor pro-abortion politicians, and Father Jenkins says that they didn’t really mean it that way. No wonder Father Jenkins is such a great advocate of dialogue. It really means that he is talking to himself. The clever university president was now looking the fool. Glendon is simply too intelligent to participate in Father Jenkins’ foolishness.

An Aside: Father Hesburgh, Father Neuhaus and Civil Rights
After 25 years, it is a sign of vitality in the Church that Notre Dame is paying a higher price than it was made to pay in 1984 for Father Hesburgh’s contumacy. Yet to Father Hesburgh’s (limited) credit, his conscience seemed to bother him somewhat about the whole Cuomo business. A few weeks after Cuomo’s speech, Father Hesburgh wrote the following in a syndicated column: “It is difficult to explain how a moral America, so brilliantly successful in confronting racial injustice in the 60s, has the most permissive abortion law of any Western country, recognizing virtually no protection for unborn human beings, as a biologist will describe the fetus, or, the Holy Innocents, as we call those butchered long ago by Herod in Bethlehem. In West Germany, the highest federal court, mindful of the Holocaust, struck down abortion on demand as violating right-to-life provisions of the country’s constitution. The only countries that agree with our laws are mainly the communist countries, especially Russia and China. ... If Catholics would help articulate this consensus, favoring a more restrictive abortion law short of an absolute ban, Catholic politicians would no longer be able (or feel compelled) to say, “I’m against abortion, but . . . ” Catholic and other politicians could even relive the civil rights revolution in an ultimate context of life and death.” Characterizing the pro-life struggle as the logical extension and successor to the civil rights movement is the position associated mostly closely with the late Father Richard John Neuhaus. But Father Hesburgh makes the same point here. Indeed, even though Father Neuhaus was part of the civil rights movement, Father Hesburgh was a more central part of it, serving as a charter member of the Civil Rights Commission from 1957,and as its chairman from 1969-1972. He was often its most outspoken member, and the wider American society learned about Father Hesburgh as a civil rights advocate rather than as the president of a small Catholic university. So here’s an interesting question. Given that Father Hesburgh, at the very pinnacle of his fame and influence in the 1980s, said such things about abortion, why is he not generally celebrated as a great pro-life champion? Why doesn’t the pro-life movement recognize Father Hesburgh as a hero of human rights — both for black Americans and for unborn Americans? It is because, despite his words, Father Hesburgh’s actions in 1984 put Notre Dame on the side of those who argued that it was possible to be Catholic and pro-choice. Father Hesburgh would never have given Notre Dame’s platform to anyone arguing that it was possible to be Catholic and pro-segregation. That he did so on abortion compromised Notre Dame’s pro-life witness for 25 years, leading to the point where Glendon cannot in good conscience attend Notre Dame’s commencement.

Mary Ann Glendon Bears Witness
It could not have been easy for Glendon to decline the Laetare Medal — after all, she is deserving of it, and the people who nominated her for it are now put in an awkward position. Glendon is proud of her Notre Dame connections, including the 1996 honorary degree that she was awarded. No doubt she is proud of her former student Barack Obama for his laudable achievements. No doubt she would have preferred a quieter honor, one which would not have forced her to choose sides. It is to Father Jenkins’s shame that he tried to use Glendon. It is to her great credit that she refused to be used. In her life of extraordinary accomplishments, the witness given by Glendon by not going to Notre Dame next month is something of a crowning achievement. It matters a great deal that a celebrated laywoman is rejecting this honor. Notre Dame long ago learned how to disregard the advice, admonishment and even the explicit will of the American bishops. For this they paid no apparent price, as there were always those who were willing to take what Notre Dame was offering, including successive presidents of the United States. Now someone has finally said No. And not just someone, but a woman who has ennobled everything she has lent her name to. It will be noticed on May 17 that someone thought some things more important than Notre Dame’s honors; that someone thought some things more important than basking in the glow of a popular president; that someone thought 25 years of deliberate confusion, evasion, equivocation and deception from Notre Dame on abortion politics was enough. Glendon will not collect her Laetare Medal. In not doing so, she has proved worthy of the honor; please God, her courageous decision will make Notre Dame more worthy of the honors it seeks to give.

Support for legal abortion drops in U.S.


.- A new poll from the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press shows a significant drop in Americans’ support for legal abortion, with 44 percent now believing the killing procedure should be illegal in most or all cases and only 46 percent supporting it being legal.

In August 2008 only 41 percent believed abortion should be illegal in most or all cases, while 54 percent thought it should be legal in most or all circumstances, the Pew Research Center said on Thursday. The largest drop in abortion support was found among men. In August 2008 53 percent of men generally supported legal abortion, while in April 2009 only 43 percent did. About 46 percent of men said abortion should generally be illegal, an increase of four percentage points since August.

The percentage of women who believed abortion should be illegal in most or all cases remained steady at 42 percent, but the number of women supporting legal abortion declined from 54 to 49 percent.

The picture for Catholics appeared to be mixed, with Catholics surveyed by Pew in August 2008 more likely to say abortion should be illegal than those polled in April 2009, at a rate of 47 percent and 42 percent, respectively.

The number of Catholics who said abortion generally should be legal declined by two points from 49 percent to 47 percent. However, their numbers peaked at about 56 percent in mid and late October, according to two other Pew surveys.

According to the Pew Forum, support for abortion has “steadily declined” since August among white mainline Protestants, from 69 to 54 percent. Only 23 percent of white evangelical Protestants now favor legal abortion.

College graduates were most likely to support legal abortion by a margin of 58 to 33 percent, while those with a high school education or less were most likely to think it should be illegal, by a margin of 50-38. However, college-educated supporters of legal abortion dropped from 64 to 58 percent while the similarly-minded among those with no more than a high school education dropped from 47 to 38 percent.

Those making over $75,000 a year were most likely to support legal abortion.

CNA contacted the Pew Research Center for additional details and was told further analysis on the data had not been done.

The poll, which also asked about gun rights, surveyed 2,905 people in August 2008 and 1,521 people in April 2009. Pew claims a margin of error of plus or minus three percentage points for the general population surveyed in April.

Polls asking about specific cases in which a respondent would allow abortion tend to show more opposition. A Knights of Columbus-commissioned survey published in October 2008 reported that 72 percent of Catholics said they would limit legalized abortion to cases of rape or incest and to save the life of the mother, would permit it only to save the life of the mother, or do not believe abortion should ever be permitted.

The Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion & Public Life also released on Thursday a poll on the religious dimensions of the torture debate. Though Catholic teaching condemns torture, the survey found that slightly more than half of white Catholics thought the practice can be justified sometimes or often, while only 47 percent said the practice can be justified rarely or never.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Most former Catholics left Church when young, detailed new survey says

Below is an interesting article from CNA about yesterday's Pew report on Catholics in the US. With the increased focus on Catechism at all levels, especially adult catechism, we can only hope and pray that those 'whose spiritual needs were not met' will understand and be able to experience the real spirituality and richness the Catholic Church offers:


.- A new survey provides detailed information about the one in ten American adults who are former Catholics, showing that most left the faith before the age of 24. Those who became Protestant most often said their spiritual needs were not being met, while those who became unaffiliated most often said they just gradually drifted away.

The Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life, which conducted the survey, released the results on Monday in a report titled “Faith in Flux: Religious Conversion Statistics and Changes in Religious Affiliation in the U.S.” The survey, a follow-up to the U.S. Religious Landscape Survey published in February 2008, polled all Americans who had left their childhood religion. The survey used 973 follow-up interviews and claims a margin of error among the entire U.S. population of plus or minus five percentage points.

The survey also distinguished between those Catholics who were now Protestant and those who were now unaffiliated. It claims a margin of error of plus or minus 6.5 percentage points for the first group and plus or minus 7 percentage points for the latter group.

Why Catholics Leave the Church

Catholicism tends to retain childhood members at a rate of 68 percent, which the Pew Forum says is “far greater” than the retention rate of the unaffiliated and is comparable with or better than the retention rates of other religious groups. Former Catholics compose 10.1 percent of the overall U.S. population, while converts to Catholicism make up 2.6 percent.

Of all those raised Catholic, 15 percent have become Protestant, with nine percent now belonging to evangelical denominations and five percent belonging to mainline Protestant denominations. About 14 percent of those raised Catholic are now unaffiliated.

Almost half of Catholics who are now unaffiliated left Catholicism before the age of eighteen, while one-third who are now Protestant did the same. Most in this group said it was their own decision rather than their parent’s decision, the Pew Forum says.

The survey also found few differences in religious commitment between former Catholics and those who have remained Catholic concerning their participation in youth groups or religious education classes.

Regular worship, however, was correlated with continued faith.

Reasons for Leaving

The Pew Forum survey asked respondents to name their own reasons why they left their faith.

About half cited religious and moral beliefs. About 21 percent of the unaffiliated professed non-belief in Catholicism or any religion, 11 percent cited moral or social teachings, and another seven percent cited disbelief in God or a loss of faith as their motive. Eighteen percent of Protestants named a biblical or scriptural reason as a cause.

The survey then asked people to respond to a specific list of issues which they believe made them leave the faith of their upbringing.

Among Protestants who were raised Catholic, 71 percent said that their spiritual needs were not being met. Another 70 percent said they found a religion they liked more, while 54 percent said they just gradually drifted away. About half said they stopped believing in Catholic teachings, while 43 percent professed unhappiness with teachings about the Bible and 32 percent professed dissatisfaction with the atmosphere at worship services.

About 71 percent of unaffiliated former Catholics said they just drifted away from the religion, while about two-thirds said they stopped believing in the religion’s teachings. About 56 percent said they were unhappy with teachings on “abortion/homosexuality,” but the Pew Forum survey did not distinguish between the two issues. Another 48 percent professed unhappiness with Catholic teaching on birth control, while 43 percent said their spiritual needs were not being met. About 39 percent said they were unhappy with the way Catholicism treated women.

Fewer than three in ten former Catholics said the clerical sexual abuse scandal factored into their decision to abandon Catholicism, the Pew Forum reports, with Protestants slightly less likely than the unaffiliated to say so.

“While the ranks of the unaffiliated have grown the most due to changes in religious affiliation, the Catholic Church has lost the most members in the same process,” the Pew Forum survey report said. “Many former Catholics who are now unaffiliated, however, remain open to the possibility that they could some day find a religion that suits them; one-third say they just have not found the right religion yet.”

Archbishop of Washington Donald W. Wuerl, past chairman of the bishops’ Committee on Catechesis and next chairman of the Committee on Doctrine, said the report highlights the importance of Mass attendance among children and teenagers.

“Adolescence is a critical time in religious development and, as the poll shows, what happens in the teen years has a long-lasting affect. We have to help young people and their parents appreciate the importance of going to weekly Mass so teenagers know Jesus is there for them now and always.“

He also noted that only about two to three percent of former Catholic respondents named clerical sexual abuse as a factor when asked generic questions about why they left.

“Catholics can separate the sins and human failings of individuals from the substance of the faith,” he said. “Sexual abuse of a child is a terrible sin and crime, but most Catholic people, because of good personal experience with their priests in their parishes, recognize sex abuse by clergy as the aberration it is.”

Participants in ‘pseudo-ordination’ excommunicated, Cardinal Rigali announces


A Womenpriest's "ordination" ceremony on the St. Lawrence Seaway in 2005

.- Saying it was “most unfortunate” that the “invalid ceremony” took place within his archdiocese, Archbishop of Philadelphia Cardinal Justin Rigali has said that those who participated in a “pseudo-Ordination” of two women on Sunday have been automatically excommunicated by their act.

Cardinal Rigali said those who presented themselves for supposed ordination as well as those who “falsely claim” to ordain them have been excommunicated. On Sunday a self-professed bishop from South Africa named Patricia Fresen and a female bishop from Maryland led a ceremony in a Christian chapel inside Congregation Mishkan Shalom, a Reconstructionist Jewish synagogue in Philadelphia, the Philadelphia Inquirer reports.

The cardinal explained Catholic teaching in a statement, saying the ceremony is “in violation of the constant teaching of the Church, based on Scripture and Sacred Tradition.”

“Both clearly indicate that Jesus called only men to follow Him as Apostles, and the Church has always regarded his choice in this matter as normative for all time. Therefore, she has always followed Jesus' example by choosing only men for the ministry of Holy Orders.”

Saying the teaching on ordination had been confirmed by the Catholic Church as “definitive and irreformable,” he said the Church is “not authorized by Christ to confer Holy Orders upon women, and cannot do so, no matter how ardent a person’s desire may be.”

“All Catholic men and women bring different yet equally valuable gifts to the Church. The Church is strongest when the gifts given by Christ to all her members are celebrated and respected,” he continued. Cardinal Rigali then quoted Pope John Paul II’s 1994 Apostolic Letter Ordinatio Sacerdotalis, which said the role of women in the life of the Church remains “absolutely necessary and irreplaceable.”

“God's gifts, however, are never given to individuals merely for their own fulfillment, but for the unfolding of his plan of salvation in the Church for the benefit of the whole community of the faithful, and no one's true personal dignity in the Church can be fostered in opposition to the will of Christ Himself.

“Consequently, such a pseudo-ordination ceremony denigrates the truth entrusted to the Church by Christ Himself, and demonstrates a complete misunderstanding of the respect and dignity accorded to women by Christ and His Church.”

Roman Catholic Womenpriests, the group that attempted to carry out the “ordinations,” is planning three more ceremonies next month.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Georgetown students react to White House request to cover Jesus' name

Really? Another dissapointment via the CNA today:


President Barack Obama

.- Georgetown University’s decision to comply with a White House request to cover up the “IHS” monogram representing Jesus' name at President Obama’s speech on Wednesday is drawing fire from the Cardinal Newman Society and Georgetown students, who are charging the university with “sacrificing” its “Catholic and Jesuit identity.”

Reports surfaced today from attendees at President Obama's speech on the economy that the White House asked Georgetown University to cover up several emblems, including an IHS monogram above the president's head during his speech at the Jesuit university.

Although President Obama focused his speech on his administration’s plans to spur economic growth, some in attendance noticed that the IHS monogram—an early 3rd century abbreviation for the name of Jesus—was covered up for the speech.

CNA attempted to confirm the report with Georgetown officials, but no one available for comment before press time.

However, Julie Green Bataille, associate vice president for communications at the university, told CNSNews.com that the covering up of Jesus' name was prompted by “logistical arrangements for yesterday’s event.” According to Bataille, “Georgetown honored the White House staff’s request to cover all of the Georgetown University signage and symbols behind Gaston Hall stage.”

She said the “signage and symbols” were covered up because “the pipe and drape wasn’t high enough by itself to fully cover the IHS and cross” and that it seemed more “respectful to have them covered” so that viewers wouldn’t see them “out of context.”

Patrick Reilly, the President of the Cardinal Newman Society, reacted to the report by telling CNA that Georgetown’s decision is another “outrageous example of a Catholic university sacrificing principle for prestige.”

He wondered what the White House will request next month at Notre Dame’s commencement and said, “Christians simply cannot hide our faith in a drawer to satisfy an American president who shows no respect for Catholic identity or values.”

Georgetown students were also outraged by the University’s actions.

Paul Courtney, a Catholic Georgetown student and President of the Georgetown College Republicans, was an attendee at the Wednesday speech. He called the move “disheartening” and “sad” that the University would sacrifice its “Catholic and Jesuit identity” by covering the monogram.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Photos from the Easter Vigil at St Lukes


We had a large number of people enter the Church this Easter - 23 in all which is an amazing thing for a small parish like St. Luke's. Here are some photos from the Easter Vigil Mass last week, my favorite mass of the year:





23 people with sponsors crowd the altar for the rite of confirmation!




Deacon Ken Levin leads those entering the Church in a procession prior to baptisms Below, Father Richard Gagnon leads the blessing of the Pashcal candle outside the Church as everyone gathers around. Nothing fancy at St Lukes - we love our tin-foil covered BBQ pit!



Our 3 Deacons and Father Richard Gagnon lead the beginning of the Easter Vigil at sunset outside the Church






Candlelight vigil during mass, Father Richard with Angie Ryan, newly baptized

‘Orthodox’ Catholics more hopeful about future of Church, poll finds


Interesting news article from CNA this morning: It surprised me that Catholics who identified themselves as 'Orthodox' were more hopeful about the future of the church. Orthodox usually means more traditional - more likely to take the teaching of the Catholic Church as a whole and try to apply it to your life. Here in the south, we are blessed with large numbers of people entering the church largely because it is more traditional and orhtodox.

I always remind myself that the 'Church does not exist to serve my needs as I voice them - it exists to preach the Gospels, keep intact the teaching of Christ, feed the hungry, free the oppressed and help the needy."

In my experience, people who cast themselves as 'progressives' are busy trying to change the Church so it fits their wants. By doing this, I can see where it would be easy to loose sight of what is really important and I'd bet this is why 'orthodox' Catholics are more hopeful!


From CNA this morning:

.- A new poll shows that American Catholics are generally optimistic about the future of their Church, with self-described “Orthodox” Catholics tending to be more hopeful and more churchgoing than self-described “Progressive” Catholics. The results come from the Spring 2009 Le Moyne-Zogby Contemporary Catholic Trends (CCT) survey, which polled 3,812 randomly sampled members of the Zogby Interactive Panel between Feb. 23 and 25. Respondents included 767 Catholics, who described themselves in a variety of ways.

Twenty percent of Catholic respondents described themselves as Progressive, while 11 percent chose Orthodox as a descriptor. Seven percent said they were Evangelical, four percent said they were Fundamentalist, and three percent said they were Born-Again.

According to Zogby, “Progressive” Catholic respondents were the most likely to be pessimistic, with 36 percent being somewhat pessimistic and four percent being very pessimistic about the future of the Church.

Among the “Orthodox” Catholics, six percent were somewhat pessimistic, while only one percent was very pessimistic.

Dr. Matthew Loveland, principal investigator of the CCT project, commented on the poll results in an April 9 Zogby press release:

"These numbers remind us that news headlines are only part of the Catholic religious experience. When asked to reflect on the Church, I expect that most people think of their personal religious lives, not the national headlines. Religion is experienced, most vividly, in the parish and the family. In fact, 76% of respondents said that family connections are an important aspect of their faith. So, to me, these numbers suggest that most Catholics are satisfied with their personal religious lives."

Planned Parenthood Happy About Increase in Abortions



.- The Planned Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA) has over $1 billion in assets and claims an increase of 15,560 abortions in 2007, its annual report for 2007-2008 reveals. Praising the “new direction” of the United States, the largest abortion provider in the U.S. says it will play a “unique role” in shaping the Obama administration’s health agenda.

The letter introducing the report, signed by Planned Parenthood president Cecile Richards and Elena Marks, PPFA chairwoman, professes “enormous optimism” about “the new direction of our country and new opportunities to make lasting change in the lives of women and families, here and around the globe.” “Planned Parenthood is the leading sexual and reproductive health care advocate and provider, with 93 years under our belt,” the letter continues, adding “And in the near future, we will play a unique role in helping to shape the health agenda for the new administration.”

According to the PPFA report, in 2006 Planned Parenthood clinics performed 289,750 abortions and in 2007 performed 305,310 such killing procedures, CNSNews.com says.

Tom McClusky, vice president of the Family Research Council Action, told CNSNews.com the numbers reflect a continual increase in the number of abortions performed by Planned Parenthood. Since 1977, not counting referrals to other clinics, the organization’s abortion clinics have accounted for 4.8 million abortions.

The Planned Parenthood report claims a 100 percent increase in the number of adoption referrals in 2007. In 2006 the organization made 2,410 adoption referrals while it made 4,912 in 2007.

McClusky said this increase was an exception, as very low numbers of referrals had been reported in previous years. None were reported in 2005.

According to the PPFA report, abortion accounts for three percent of services provided by Planned Parenthood. Contraceptives make up 36 percent of the organization’s services.

However, the report does not provide details on how Planned Parenthood spends the more than $300 million it receives from federal funding. Federal law prohibits federal dollars being used for abortions.

In addition to government funding, Planned Parenthood also earned more than $374 million from its clinics and $186 million in “contributions and bequests.”

The organization’s worldwide clinics earned $6.9 million. It claimed to have reached 935,000 individuals in 20 developing countries and also claimed to have supported their “vital work” with more than $2.5 million in grants in 2008.

President Barack Obama’s rescindment of the Mexico City Policy, which barred federal funding for organizations which promote or perform abortions overseas, could help fund Planned Parenthood’s international efforts.

Please pray for those considering an abortion and pray for the unborn.

Friday, April 3, 2009

Yesterday marked the fourth anniversary of the passing of Pope John Paul II. Credeted with ushering in a new dawn for the Catholic Church which is in the words of his predecessor, Pope Benedict, "always young and forever born."

This is a wonderful Thank You video about PJP that sums up his key teachings:

Pray for the Cross

Another shocking story from CNA:


San Diego, Calif., Apr 3, 2009 / 04:50 am (CNA).- Arguing that removing the memorial would cause “real, irreparable harm” to war heroes and their families, the Thomas More Law Center has filed a brief opposing a legal challenge to the constitutionality of California’s historic Mt. Soledad cross which honors veterans of the U.S. armed forces.

Over 2,100 plaques honoring individuals or groups of veterans are displayed near the Mt. Soledad cross, which is the centerpiece of the veterans’ memorial. Some of the plaques display Stars of David in honor of Jewish veterans. A large American flag flies at the memorial’s base.

In 2004 the cross was scheduled to be taken down following an agreement between the City of San Diego and an atheist who sought to remove the memorial. The Law Center then began its legal defense of the cross, prevailing in state and federal courts. It successfully petitioned the federal government to transfer the property from city to federal property, rendering powerless the district court’s order to remove the cross.

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) then filed a federal lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the cross and the propriety of the property transfer. That suit was dismissed by a federal district court judge in July 2008. The ACLU is appealing the ruling to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, where federal government lawyers will defend the constitutionality of the cross. According to a press release from the Law Center, it has filed an amicus curiae brief in the memorial’s defense.

Robert Muise, the Thomas More Law Center attorney and former Marine officer who authored the brief, said the amicus brief demonstrates that tearing down the cross will cause “real, irreparable harm to our war heroes and their grieving families, as compared with the contrived ‘harm’ the ACLU will ‘feel’ because the memorial cross remains.”

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Iraqi Christians have ‘great hope’ in ‘tragic’ situation


Iraqi Christians have ‘great hope’ in ‘tragic’ situation, Kirkuk archbishop says


Kirkuk, Iraq, Apr 2, 2009 / 12:01 am (CNA).- Chaldean Catholic Archbishop of Kirkuk Louis Sako, lamenting the number of Iraqi Christians who have been murdered or driven into exile by persecution, has said that the Christian community possesses “great hope” amid the “tragedy” of its circumstances. A total of 750 Christians have been murdered in the past five years, including Archbishop of Mosul Paulos Faraj Rahho, Archbishop Sako told a press conference convened by the charities Aid to the Ch
urch in Need (ACN), Pro Oriente and Christian Solidarity International.

"Some 200,000 Christians have left the country. This is a tragedy for us," he said, appealing for support to help the Christian community to help its members remain in Iraq or return to their country. Christians themselves are concerned about the proposed withdrawal of U.S. troops, he said, naming the lack of security in the country to be its gravest problem. The Iraqi army and police were not yet strong enough to take over, the archbishop reported. “Under Saddam's regime we had security but no freedom. Today we have freedom, but the problem is security,” he said, according to ACN. Archbishop Sako called on the international community to help both Christian refugees and those Christians who remain in Iraq.


The story above should serve as a wake up call. We make much in our church of the early Christian martyrs who died for our faith. Persecution of Christians is
common throughout the first 4 centuries of Christianity.

What people easily loose site of is that there have been far more Christian martyrs in the last 100 years than there were in the first 400 years after Christ. From the Ottoman empire's persecution of Christians in what is now Turkey, to the Nazis who exterminated large numbers of Catholics (many priests and sisters), to the persecution of Christians in the far east in Laos, China and Vietnam to the persecution of Catholics in Mexico, hundreds
of Christians have died for the faith.

That 750 Christians have perished in Iraq in recent times is a sad testament to how privileged we are in our country. That they have the grace to find hope in the future is a lesson to us all.

Great Comments of SlumDog Millionaire

Great Video review on the recent movie, Slumdog Millionaire:



The Cooperation with Grace - God's grace gives us what we need.

Our freedom is drawn by God - wonderful things happen when we realize that God is intimately involved in our lives and open ourselves to his love.

Watch the commentary and rent the movie - you won't be disappointed!

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Pro-Abortion Law Dean Selected for Head of ND law School

Another disappointing story from the American Papist:

Exclusive: New Notre DameD Law Dean contributed to Obama/pro-abortion Catholic politicians

Notre Dame is really on a roll, isn't it? It appears that the upper administration has made yet another questionable decision.
Yesterday they announced their new Law School dean:
"The chancellor and dean of the Hastings College of the Law at the University of California has been named as the new Joseph A. Matson Dean of the University of Notre Dame Law School. Nell Newton will assume her new responsibilities on July 1. She succeeds Patricia O'Hara, who is stepping down after 10 years as dean."

And who does the new dean of Notre Dame Law support when it comes to political candidates?

[source: Huffington Post.]

That's right, she donated the maximum amount to Barack Obama for his presidential run. And she gave money to Jackie Speier who is a pro-abortion Catholic politician. And she gave money to John Kerry was was a pro-abortion Catholic nominee for President.

... and this is the type of scholar that Notre Dame chose to lead its Catholic Law School?

An informed reader contributes:

"The law school at Notre Dame has made great strides in recent years, recruiting a respectable number of folks that are drawn to Catholic orthodoxy ... The law school has been trying to fill the deanship for some time. There were hopes for an outstanding transitional figure, who could foster both academic rigor and Catholic orthodoxy at Notre Dame. Yesterday, ND announced its new law school dean, Nell Jessup Newton. She may be a gifted administrator, but there are far superior scholars on the current ND faculty ... So much for hope and change."

So much for Catholic identity and witness, too.

Record Numbers of Adults Convert to Catholicism


"Tens of thousands of new Catholics are expected to join the Catholic Church in the U.S. in 2009, with many doing so at the Easter Vigil liturgies on April 11. Converts to Catholicism are known as catechumens if they have never been baptized and as candidates if they have received baptism in another Christian community and now seek full communion with the Catholic Church.

The Archdiocese of Atlanta, where Catholics have traditionally been a minority, estimates that 513 catechumens and 2,195 candidates will enter the Catholic Church in 2009, about 1,800 doing so at Easter. The figures do not include infant baptisms.

Father Theodore Book, director of the Office of Divine Worship for the Atlanta Archdiocese, said the archdiocese has been “blessed with an authentic dynamism” during recent years. He cited the archdiocese’s annual Eucharistic Congress, saying it draws nearly 30,000 participants.

“One of the many blessings that we have received from the Lord is the large number of individuals entering the Church,” he said.

The Archdiocese of Seattle will reportedly welcome 736 catechumens and 506 candidates, while the Diocese of San Diego will baptize 305 and receive into communion 920 other baptized Christians.

The mostly rural Diocese of Birmingham, Alabama reportedly will have 445 new converts. The diocese’s Cathedral of St. Paul could not hold them and their families for the Rite of Election, which had to be held in three separate ceremonies. "

Here in Nashville we also have large numbers of new Catholics and RCIA programs are increasing in candidates. The numbers of adults entering the Church in 2009 is expected to increase from 87,363 adults in 2008.

We have 5 adults at our small, rural parish in Smyrna, TN. The Catholic Church in the Southeast is bursting at the seams. Birmingham and Nashville have record numbers of converts and full classes of seminarians. Both dioceses are struggling to build new churches and in addition to standing room only at most masses, there are now waiting lists for Catholic schools.

Amen to that!

Update:

As many as 150,000 new or returning Catholics are expected to join the Catholic Church in 2009 in the United States with many making the move at forthcoming Easter liturgies across the country.

In some cases the numbers show the growth and vitality of the Catholic Church in places where it has traditionally been a small minority, the USCCB says.

Monday, March 30, 2009

Icons as Visual Scriptures


We make an effort to use icons in our RCIA class as often as we can. Posters depicting icons are on the classroom wall, we use them throughout our powerpoint presentations and we sometimes bring icons to pass around.

To most people in our RCIA class and most American Christians, icons seem odd, even strange. The poses of the subjects look awkward, unappealing and in many cases they simply 'don't look right.' The complete lack of icons in most protestant churches makes it difficult for many converts to Catholicism to understand their use, history and meaning.

Icons are more than decorative art or educational illustrations. They are not idols and we do not worship them. Icons are 'visual scriptures' that allow us to experience the Word of God in ways other than the written word.

Take this icon of the transfiguration, above. Before Christians had access to the Bible the way we do today, an icon such as this was what we as Christians used to teach the Gospels. Accurate teaching of each story could easily be passed down from generation to generation using icons. People learn in visual ways and if your church had an icon such as this, you would remember the story with ease.

In early days, the revealing of a new icon was similar to the release of a new Hollywood movie - it was much talked about and much anticipated.

Just like our liturgy, everything in an icon has meaning - nothing is included unless it serves as an aide to worship or reminder. Next time you see and icon, spend time gazing and reflecting on its meaning. Look up the scripture it represents or research the subject. Mediate, pray. God speaks to us through visual scriptures as much as he does through the written word.

Archbishop Dolan on Obama Speeking at Notre Dame


Thanks to Deacon Greg Kandra for this post:

"They made a big mistake. There's a lot of things that President Obama does that we can find ourselves allied with and working with him on, and we have profound respect for him and pray with him and for him. But in an issue that is very close to the heart of Catholic world view, namely, the protection of innocent life in the womb, he has unfortunately taken a position very much at odds with the Church."
-- Departing Milwaukee Archbishop Timothy Dolan

You can watch his interview on the subject right here.

Archbishop Dolan is turning out to be a true servant of God. I'm pleased that the Pope selected him as the new Archbishop of the NYC Diocese. This is a very Catholic statement - both accepting and non-judgmental yet clearly drawing lines that protect and defend the Church's teaching. In this case, there is no gray area; the head of Notre Dame has erred in asking Obama to speak and is in direct conflict with the teaching of the church to not 'give those who oppose Church teachings a public platform nor award them honors."

We hope and pray that President Obama will have a conversion of heart and that God will work through him to do good. Our support of him as President and our prayers do not mean that we need to give him the stage so he can send conflicting messages to the students of our Catholic universities.

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Doh! Clinton Makes a Fool of Herself in Mexico


This story from the CNA today:

Hillary Clinton leaves flowers for Our Lady of Guadalupe, asks ‘Who painted it?’

.- During her recent visit to Mexico, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton made an unexpected stop at the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe and left a bouquet of white flowers “on behalf of the American people,” after asking who painted the famous image.

The image of Our Lady of Guadalupe was miraculously imprinted by Mary on the tilma, or cloak, of St. Juan Diego in 1531. The image has numerous unexplainable phenomena, such as the appearance on Mary’s eyes of those present in the room when the tilma was opened and the image’s lack of decay.

Mrs. Clinton was received on Thursday at 8:15 a.m. by the rector of the Basilica, Msgr. Diego Monroy.


Msgr. Monroy took Mrs. Clinton to the famous image of Our Lady of Guadalupe, which had been previously lowered from its usual altar for the occasion.

After observing it for a while, Mrs. Clinton asked “who painted it?” to which Msgr. Monroy responded “God!”

Here's more information on Our Lady of Guadalupe, which is the national symbol of Mexico. You'd think as the American Secretary of State, she would know a little bit about our neighbor to the South :)

Homily for Fifth Sunday of Lent

Father Richard Gagnon gave a wonderful homily on the readings for today on John: Jn 12:20-33. Here is a short version:

The gospel reading begins with the line:

"Now there were some Greeks among those who had come up to worship at the feast.
They came to Philip, who was from Bethsaida in Galilee, and asked him, "Sir, we would like to see Jesus."

The Greeks were unlike any civilization in our history. Of particular importance was their inquiring mind. In addition to giving us philosophy as we know it and producing most of the major philosophers, they gave birth to modern science and thought. Recently, archeologists discovered ancient Greek writing on statues far down the Nile in Egypt. The Greeks were so inquiring, they strove to understand the world around them and traveled the world as they knew it looking for answers. Much of this travel was simply to expand their knowlege of the world around them; they had a thirst to know more. In the photo above, you can see a Greek inscription on an Egyptian statue. This statue is far from the Mediterranean, deep down the Nile and leagues away from Greece.

As humans, we all strive to find meaning in life much like the Greeks. This search finds its ultimate termination in a search to know God. In life, there are three paths we can take to know God:

1. We can come to know God through the universe around us. You only have to look at the world around you to see the magnificence and wisdom of God. His fingerprints are all over creation.

2. You can come to know God through Church teaching and the Word - by reading, studying and meditating on the scriptures. God reveals himself to us through Christ, the living Word and the Scriptures.

3. Most importantly, you can come to know God through simply listening and letting God reveal himself to you. Just as the best way to learn about the people in your life if for them to tell you about themselves, God loves us and wants us to be in union with him. If we open our hearts, he will speak.

Friday, March 27, 2009

A Sentence Which is Blatantly Unjust


This from the National Catholic Register:

Sometimes, it’s very hard not to think the world has turned completely upside down.

Watch this unbelievable video showing Black Baptist pastor Walter Hoye peacefully demonstrating outside and Oakland, CA abortion clinic. Rev. Hoye is an African-American pastor who feels a special calling to work for the end of the genocide-by-abortion taking place in the African-American community. As part of his efforts, he stands in front of an abortion clinic in Oakland with leaflets offering abortion alternatives and a sign reading, “Jesus loves you and your baby. Let us help.”

Rev Hoye was arrested under a newly passed law in CA and now sits in and Oakland jail.

Despite the video tape the defense presented at trial showing that prosecution witnesses conjured up phantom patients whom Rev. Hoye had allegedly harassed, as well as claiming that he threatened two escorts and the clinic director, the jury rendered the guilty verdict.

As you can see in the video, abortion worker escorts make an astounding and illegal effort to block Rev Hoye's message, his first amendment rights and his simple message "Jesus loves you and your baby. Let us help.":



You can see the two abortion escorts (in the orange bibs) that Rev. Hoye 'threatened.'

From the Voice magazine.com:

At a hearing on February 19, Judge Hing stated that he had not intended to impose any fine or jail time on Hoye if he would agree to stay away from the abortion clinic. After Hoye refused to agree not to offer alternatives to abortion-minded women, Judge Hing imposed a 30-day sentence and $1130 fine.Dozens in the African-American and pro-life communities from around the nation who came out in support of Pastor Hoye were outraged by the sentence.

The consensus of these leaders is that it was a travesty that Pastor Hoye was found guilty in the first place for standing in the gap for black children targeted by the abortion industry."It is absolutely incredible that in America an individual can be sentenced to jail for engaging in peaceful free speech activity on a public sidewalk," remarked Allison Aranda, Staff Counsel for Life Legal Defense Foundation. Aranda further stated, "Rev. Hoye is being singled out for particularly harsh punishment because he refused to agree not to offer help to women considering abortion.

"It is absolutely incredible that in America an individual can be sentenced to jail for engaging in peaceful free speech activity on a public sidewalk," remarked Allison Aranda, Staff Counsel for Life Legal Defense Foundation.

Pray for Rev. Hoye

Was St. Paul a priest?


Was St. Paul a priest?

This is the Year of St Paul and the focus on Paul generates lots of really good questions. I read this post on Catholic forums today and thought it might be of interest:

I would like to know if St. Paul was a priest?

Michelle Arnold: Catholic Forums apologist gave a quick answer:

Yes, St. Paul was a priest. For that matter he was also a bishop. We know this because of his letters to Timothy, in which he said:


Quote: Hence I remind you to rekindle the gift of God that is within you through the laying on of my hands; for God did not give us a spirit of timidity but a spirit of power and love and self-control. Do not be ashamed then of testifying to our Lord, nor of me his prisoner, but share in suffering for the gospel in the power of God, who saved us and called us with a holy calling, not in virtue of our works but in virtue of his own purpose and the grace which he gave us in Christ Jesus ages ago, and now has manifested through the appearing of our Savior Christ Jesus, who abolished death and brought life and immortality to light through the gospel. For this gospel I was appointed a preacher and apostle and teacher, and therefore I suffer as I do. But I am not ashamed, for I know whom I have believed, and I am sure that he is able to guard until that Day what has been entrusted to me (2 Tim. 1:6-12, emphasis added).

The emphasized passages show that St. Paul "laid hands" on Timothy, which gave him a share in Paul's own "holy calling" (suggesting that Paul ordained Timothy to the priesthood); and that Paul was "a preacher and apostle and teacher" (which indicates that he shared in the apostolic ministry, which is priestly and by which successors to the apostles [the ordained, primarily bishops] were created).

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Here Comes Newt!

This from the wires today:

Veteran Republican politician and former House Speaker, Newt Gingrich, will convert to Catholicism this Sunday, his spokesman has said.

In 2006 Gingrich wrote a book called “Rediscovering God in America” — part of a new canon of work he has done reaffirming the role of religion in public life. The following year, he went on radio with the evangelical minister James Dobson to apologize for having been unfaithful to his second wife. A Baptist since graduate school, Gingrich said he will soon convert to Catholicism, his wife’s faith.

AOL News reports that when Gingrich tweeted his disapproval yesterday of Notre Dame's choice of President Obama as commencement speaker, he was, at least, speaking from experience. "It is sad to see notre dame invite president obama to give the commencement address Since his policies are so anti catholic values," Gingrich says on his Twitter page.

AOL says that a similar kerfuffle erupted in 2005 when Gingrich spoke at Catholic University. Students then said Gingrich's support for the death penalty and his well-publicized marital infidelities violated the school's prohibition against speakers with positions contrary to Vatican teachings.

But all seems to have been forgiven between Newt and the Catholics. He'll officially covert to Catholicism on Easter Sunday, according to his spokesman. Asked about Gingrich's support for the death penalty and other issues, Washington Archdiocese spokeswoman, Susan Gibbs, told AOL she could not comment about the specifics of any one person's conversion, but Gingrich is "in proper standing with the Catholic Church." "Any obstacles to joining the church have been resolved," she said.


Wednesday, March 25, 2009

The Catholic Church in the United States At A Glance

The Catholic Church in the United States At A Glance
(Figures Represent the U.S. Catholic Church Through 2007 Unless Otherwise Indicated)

Laity

There are 67,117,016 Catholics in the United States1 (22% of the U.S. population),
and 1 billion Catholics worldwide2.

New Church Members3

Infant Baptisms: 902,841
Adult Baptisms: 49,415
Received into Full Communion: 87,363


Dioceses and Archdioceses (alphabetical listing - Listing by population)

In the United States, there are 195 archdioceses and dioceses:

145 Latin Catholic dioceses
33 Latin Catholic archdioceses
15 Eastern Catholic dioceses
2 Eastern Catholic archdioceses


Clergy and Religious

Priests4
There are 41,406 diocesan and religious-order priests in the United States.
  • 28,067 diocesan priests
  • 13,339 religious-order priests (Jesuits, Dominicans, Franciscans, etc.)
Seminarians
There are 5,029 seminarians enrolled in the United States.

  • 3,248 enrolled in diocesan seminaries
  • 1,781 enrolled in religious-order seminaries
Permanent Deacons6
There are 16,408 men who are ordained as permanent deacons in the United States. A permanent deacon is a man, either married or single, who is ordained to the order of deacons, the first of three ranks in ordained ministry. They assist priests in administrative and pastoral roles.

Vowed Religious

  • Sisters: 63,032
  • Brothers: 5,040

Catholic Education
  • Total Catholic elementary and high school enrollment: 2,256,990
  • Elementary Schools: 6,266 schools educating 1,576,301 students
  • High Schools: 1,352 schools educating 680,689 students
  • Colleges and Universities: 236 institutions educating 794,321 students
  • Non-residential Schools for Handicapped Persons: 68 schools educating 6,419 students
  • Public School Students Receiving Religious Education:
    • Elementary School students: 3,145,424
    • High School students: 689,552
Catholic Health Care
  • Hospitals: 557 Catholic hospitals treated 83,795,186 patients
  • Other Health Care Centers: 417 centers treated 7,271,716 patients
  • Specialized Homes: 1,538 assisted 756,902 residents
  • Residential Care of Children: 163 locations assisted 30,106 residents
Catholic Charities

Social Services
More than 1,735 local Catholic Charities agencies and institutions provided services to 7,854,104 unduplicated individuals in need of help in 2004.

  • Provided Services that Build Strong Communities to 3,618,993 people
    Social support services 1,698,047
    Education and enrichment 747,021
    Socialization and neighborhood services 609,149
    Health-related services 234,635
    Services to at-risk populations 331,141

  • Provided Food Services to 6,360,939 people
    Food banks and food pantries 2,373,087
    Soup kitchens 1,826,738
    Congregate dining 1,232,217
    Home delivered meals 279,345
    Other food services 649,520

  • Provided Services that Strengthen Families to 1,093,339 people
    Counseling and mental health services 468,844
    Immigration services 341,087
    Addiction services 97,980
    Refugee services 77,801
    Pregnancy services 65,718
    Adoption services 41,909

  • Provided Housing Related Services to 474,999 people
    Housing services 171,787
    Temporary shelter 139,938
    Supervised living 102,297
    Permanent housing 41,424
    Transitional housing 19,553

  • Provided Other Basic Needs Services to 1,384,101 people
    Financial Assistance (not rent, mortgage, etc.) 154,637
    Clothing Assistance 533,828
    Utilities Assistance 167,510
    Assistance with Purchase of Prescriptions 47,136
    Additional Other Basic Needs Assistance 480,990

  • Provided Disaster Services to 567,334 people
From the USCCB Website

Arizona Attorney General to investigate Planned Parenthood for Statutory Rape Cover-up

As a father of pre-teen girls and a Catholic, I found the video below sickening. It is bad enough that an organization takes tax payer money to fund abortions. It is unbelievable that they so blatantly break the law. If you had a 13 year old or 15 year old daughter who was raped by an adult, wouldn't you want to know if she was pregnant? That the state government is going to investigate is good news:

Arizona Attorney General to investigate Planned Parenthood for Statutory rape cover-up

Phoenix, Ariz., Mar 25, 2009 / 06:20 am (CNA).- Following the release of undercover videos showing Arizona Planned Parenthood clinics disregarding laws that mandate the reporting of sexual abuse, the Arizona Attorney General’s Office has reportedly opened an investigation into local branches of the nation’s largest abortion provider.

The videos, taken by the student non-profit group Live Action, showed clinic staffers talking to a student investigator they believed to be a pregnant 15-year-old girl. The student claimed to have become pregnant by her much older boyfriend. Sexual relations between a 15-year-old and an older adult is a felony under Arizona law, while state law also mandates reporting of sexual abuse.

Live Action films conducted investigations at two Phoenix clinics and a clinic in Tucson. Its footage was sent to County Attorneys in Pima and Maricopa counties and to the Arizona Attorney General. The office of the Pima County Attorney in a letter to Live Action said that the footage from the Tucson clinic is “under review and consideration by the Attorney General.”

Previous Live Action investigations in Indiana resulted in the Indiana Attorney General opening a full investigation into the abortion provider.



What do you think???

Monday, March 23, 2009

Pretty in Pink


I had the wonderful opportunity to attend mass this past Sunday at the National Shrine in DC this weekend. It was the fourth Sunday of Lent and as we taught the RCIA lesson on 'Liturgical Life" this week, I had to look up the meaning of the pink or rose colored vestments the priests wore at mass.

This is from the Happy Catholic Blog:

The fourth Sunday of Lent is rather unique; like the third Sunday of Advent ("Gaudete Sunday"), the fourth Sunday of Lent is a break in an otherwise penitential season. The vestments for this day will be rose, as they are on Gaudete Sunday in Advent, and flowers may adorn the Altar. This day is called "Laetare Sunday" (also "Rose Sunday" ), and takes its name from the opening words of the Mass, the Introit's "Laetare, Jerusalem"...

A bit more info comes from Fr. Dwight Longenecker:
The Rose color was made from the very rare crimson dye taken from a tiny gland in the murex mollusc (a kind of sea snail) found only off the coast of Lebanon. Thus, in the ancient world that particular rose color was a sign of great wealth, and royal status. The High Priest in the temple in Jerusalem used it in his vestments. It came to be used on the two refreshment Sundays in the penitential seasons to perk people up.

But there is more to it than that. The rose vestments in Lent, remind us of the royal and priestly status of Our Lord. The priest in persona Christi presents an icon of Christ the King and great High Priest. The fact that this image is stuck in the midst of the two penitential seasons reminds us that locked into the austerity of this world, robed in the squalor and simplicity of human flesh, there lies hidden the Great High Priest of the New Covenant, Christ the King of Kings and Lord of Lords.
This a good example of how everything in the Liturgy and everything in the Church is there for a reason and has meaning. Much like our Eastern-Rite brothers and sisters, we surround ourselves with aides to worship that help guide us back into unity with God. Next time you see something you don't recognize, ask a fellow Catholic!

Harvard AIDS Expert: Pope Correct on Condom Distribution

This article came via Joanna Bogle:

Harvard AIDS Expert: Pope Correct on Condom Distribution

The pope is correct...or put it a better way, the best evidence we have supports the pope's comments.

I would say that this problem of AIDS cannot be overcome with advertising slogans. If the soul is lacking, if Africans do not help one another, the scourge cannot be resolved by distributing condoms; quite the contrary, we risk worsening the problem.
I would say that this problem of AIDS cannot be overcome with advertising slogans. If the soul is lacking, if Africans do not help one another, the scourge cannot be resolved by distributing condoms; quite the contrary, we risk worsening the problem.
BOSTON (LifeSiteNews.com) - Edward C. Green, director of the AIDS Prevention Research Project at the Harvard Center for Population and Development Studies, has said that the evidence confirms that the Pope is correct in his assessment that condom distribution exacerbates the problem of AIDS.

"The pope is correct," Green told National Review Online Wednesday, "or put it a better way, the best evidence we have supports the pope's comments."

"There is," Green added, "a consistent association shown by our best studies, including the U.S.-funded 'Demographic Health Surveys,' between greater availability and use of condoms and higher (not lower) HIV-infection rates. This may be due in part to a phenomenon known as risk compensation, meaning that when one uses a risk-reduction 'technology' such as condoms, one often loses the benefit (reduction in risk) by 'compensating' or taking greater chances than one would take without the risk-reduction technology."

Read the entire article here