Diocese of Winona Hires Raymond de Souza as Director of Evangelization

Bishop John M. Quinn of Winona has hired Raymond de Souza as director of the Office of Evangelization. Mr. de Souza had been part-time director of the Office of Apologetics for the diocese, but will be full-time starting January 2, 2012.

Mr. de Souza is oft heard saying, “Putting logic at the defense of the faith.” Raymond has become an internationally renowned speaker, giving over 3,000 talks on issues of apologetics and Catholic social teaching in 15 countries on five continents in four languages. He is the program director for Portuguese speaking countries for Human Life International and is Chairman of the Sacred Heart Legion in the United States. He is a host of three program series on EWTN, a member of the Advisory Board of Catholics Come Home and of the Sovereign Order of the Knights of Malta.

He is married to Theresa and has eight children.

I have heard him speak, and without doubt he is engaging and challenging.

I look forward to his presence in southern Minnesota.

Welcome, Raymond and Theresa!

Posted in Church News, Evangelization, Science and Religion | 1 Comment

Update on the Diaconate in the World (and other stats of interest)

Fides (www.fides.org), the Vatican’s agency on world missions, reported on October 23rd its annual statistics on various aspects of the Church througout the world. Included in this report were interesting data regarding the diaconate.

Last year, the number of permanent deacons increased by 952, reaching a total of 38,155. The greatest increase was in America (+552) and Europe (+326), followed by Oceania (+57) and Asia (+23).  Africa experienced a decrease of six. Of the over 38,000 deacons, 37,592 are diocesan deacons (an increase of 1,053) and 563 are religious permanent deacons (a decrease of 101).

An interesting comparison is regarding diocesan priests. They increased worldwide by 1,535, reaching a total of 275,542, including increases in Africa (+888), America (+946), Asia (+780) and Oceana (+26). The numbers in Europe dropped (-1105). Religious priests decreased by 108 worldwide, including a drop in America of 533.

The vocation scene looks more and more promising for our country, especially for the diaconate, but brighter too for the diocesan priesthood.

(By the way, did you know that the Church runs 68,119 kindergartens with 6,522,320 pupils, has 92,971 primary schools with 30,973,114 students and 42,495 secondary schools with 17,114,737 students, and cares for 3, 275,440 university students — all increases since last year? We have 5,558 hospitals and 17,763 pharmacies.)

Let us alway pray for vocations.

Posted in Church News, Deacons | Comments Off on Update on the Diaconate in the World (and other stats of interest)

Deacon Bob’s Homily for the 3rd Sunday of Advent, Cycle B

Here is my homily for the weekend:

Audio: 3rd Sunday of Advent, Cycle B

Text: 3rd-Sunday-of-Advent-Cycle-B

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Pope Benedict on Charity this Gaudete Sunday

The Holy Father paid a pastoral visit today to the Roman parish St. Mary of Graces at Casal Boccone. It was established only 26 years ago. During his visit he made this comment:

“Un altro punto su cui vorrei insistere è la testimonianza della carità, che deve caratterizzare la vostra vita di comunità. In questi anni voi l’avete vista crescere rapidamente anche nel numero dei suoi membri, ma avete visto anche giungere molte persone in difficoltà e in situazioni di disagio, che hanno bisogno di voi, del vostro aiuto materiale, ma anche e soprattutto della vostra fede e della vostra testimonianza di credenti. Fate in modo che il volto della vostra comunità possa sempre esprimere concretamente l’amore di Dio ricco di misericordia ed inviti ad accostarsi a Lui con fiducia.”

My English translation being:

Another point I would emphasize is the witness of charity, that ought to characterize your communal life. In these years you have seen also an rapid increase in your members, but you have added many persons in difficulty and in situations of hardship, who have need of you, of your material help, and also and above all of your faith and your witness as believers. Act in a way that the face of your community may always be able to concretely express the love of God who is rich in mercy and invites you to approach him with faith.”

My homily for this weekend focused on the recognition of the Lord in the lives of the poor, the unborn, the condemned, and the immigrant. All of our parishes have present within them many people who are in difficulty and hardship, and we are called to serve their needs as best we can, for they are the Lord in a distressing disguise.

The joy of Gaudete Sunday lay not only in knowing our Advent journey is half-completed, but in knowing that the Lord is already in our midst by his presence in the lives of the poor man and woman.

I was happy to see that I echoed the Holy Father’s comments on this Gaudete Sunday.

If you read Italian, you can read his entire address at: www.vatican.va/news_services/bulletin/news/28518.php?index=28518&lang=en

 

Posted in Church News, homilies, Popes | Comments Off on Pope Benedict on Charity this Gaudete Sunday

Cardinal John P. Foley Dies

Early this morning, Cardinal John P. Foley died in his sleep. He had been battling leukemia and had suffered kidney cancer in 2006. Cardinal Foley was the president of the Pontifical Council of Social Communications for 23 years, and served as the English-language commentator for the Pope’s Midnight Mass for 26 years.

Pope Benedict elevated him to cardinal in tribute to an extraordinary life of service to the Church.

Eternal rest grant unto him, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon him!

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Fear Sin More Than Persecution, says Pope Benedict

On the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception, Pope Benedict said that the Church should fear the sin of its members more than hatred against Christians. He noted that the Church has suffered persecution throughout its history and since it has the “light and strength of God” it has and will always end up victorious. He reminded us that the “only real danger the Church can and should fear is the sin of her members.”

Something to think about, isn’t it?

We are hearing a lot nowadays about how the media, the government and other sources are more and more antagonistic if not outright hostile to the Church and its teachings. This is so obvious to most of us Catholics, yet seems so hidden to others. We are rightly concerned that our religious liberties are eroding and our culture more and more without a firm mooring in Christian principles. It’s a big deal, quite frankly, and we need to take notice and action.

Yet, here the pope reminds us of a deeper reality: the powers of the world cannot overcome the Church, even though they may persecute her. It is sin that is the real threat to the health of the Church, and to our personal spiritual lives. Sin keeps us apart from Jesus (although he is never far from us). The sin of her members weaken the Church’s credibility in the eyes of the world. It saps her of strength, for it saps her disposition and openness to the grace of God which is always there.

Let us then turn to Jesus ever more fervently for assistance in living out our Christian lives, and let us turn to Mary’s intercession with her Son.

Read more at: www.catholicnews.com/data/stories/cns/1104798.htm

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Quote for the Day

“We must know first hand the experience of the people of our own time – their alienation, their dissatisfaction, their searching for spiritual experience, so that we can proclaim hope from within their experience not from without….” — Joseph P. Chimmici, OFM

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Two Martins Appointed Consultors to the Holy Father

Two days ago, the Holy Father announced several appointments to the Pontifical Council for the Promotion of the New Evangelization. The new members are from various countries – Germany, Poland, Italy, France, Spain, Brazil, Great Britan and the United States.

Those from the United States are: Dr. Ralph Martin and Dr. Curtis Martin.

Ralph Martin is the director of the Graduate Programs in Evangelization at the Sacred Heart School of Theology in Detroit, a seminary to which many of our seminary students from Winona attend for their theology work.

Curtis Martin is the founder and president of the Fellowship of Catholic University Students (FOCUS) and instructor with the Augustine Institute in Denver.

Congratulations, Doctors Martin!

As you know from previous posts on this weblog, the work of evangelizing the world is ever ancient, yet ever new. It is a prodigious task for all of us in our current cultural context. Let us pray that the Church’s efforts to proclaim the Gospel in its entirety be met with success.

And may the catalyst for the New Evangelization, Papa Luciani (Pope John Paul I), pray also for its development and fruitfulness.

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Church of the Week

Mission of San Francisco Solano

Sonoma, California

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Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception

Today is a holy day of obligation for all Catholics as it is the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception. I have always found it interesting that despite its significance in the faith life of the Church, so many Catholics and non-Catholics alike completely misunderstand the feast.

It has to do with the conception of Mary, not Jesus. The Immaculate Conception was the conception of Mary in the womb of her mother Anna.

Throughout the history of the Church, Christians (until the time of the Protestant Reformation) believed that Mary was conceived without the stain of original sin. In 1854, Pope Pius IX simply officially defined as dogma what we had believed for centuries.

Why, you may ask, was Mary’s conception without original sin so important? Wasn’t Mary a creature just like all of us, a human being through and through? Does the Immaculate Conception mean that Mary had no need of redemption and salvation?

Mary was entirely a creature of God, like all of us. She was thoroughly human, and subjected to the influence of sin, although she never sinned herself. How could she remain so sinless, both at the time of her conception and then throughout her entire life?

By a single extraordinary grace from God – because of an intervention initiated by God himself and by the merits of the death and resurrection of Jesus His Son at the earliest moments of her existence – God spared her “the Fall.” Mary needed a savior, just like us (she herself said so in the Scriptures when in the Magnificat she declared God to be her “savior”) and her salvation came from her son Jesus, yet the grace of his death entered her life differently than ours.

Think of it this way: There are two ways of being saved from some terrible event. One way is to be rescued after having experienced the tragedy, for example being healed of devastating disease. We often will say the medicine or the doctor “saved me.” The second way of being saved is by being prevented from experiencing the tragedy itself, for example the people who were scheduled to have been on one of the airline flights that crashed into the Twin Towers or the field of Shanksville, Pennsylvania on 9-11. They were saved by being removed from the danger.

Mary was saved with the latter method.

Was this absolutely necessary? Was there no other way?

St. Thomas Aquinas and others say that Mary’s Immaculate Conception was not necessary for our redemption, but it was part of God’s overall plan, and again a grace freely given in light of the merits of the death of His Son Jesus, a grace for Mary alone. Althought not necessary, it was very fitting.

Let us pray this day that through the intercession of the Immaculate Mary we may grow in our understanding and appreciation of the grace of redemption won for us by our Lord Jesus and the cooperation of his mother the Immaculate Mary.

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Social Doctrine of the Church – The Role of Business Owners and Management

The social doctrine of the Church teaches that economic initiative is an expression of human intelligence and of the necessity of responding to human needs in a creative fashion.

The roles of business owners and management are important for they are central to the network of technical, commercial, financial and cultural bonds in society. The Church teaches that business owners and management must not limit themselves to taking only economic objectives of the company into consideration when making business decisions; rather they have a duty to respect in a concrete manner the human dignity of all who work within the company. They must strive to structure work in such a way as to promote family, especially mothers, in the fulfillment of their duties, and to invest is such a way as to allow individuals and peoples to have opportunity to make good use of their own labor.

Whereas the quest for an equitable profit is acceptable in economic activity, recourse of usury is to be morally condemned. Usury implies avarice, greed and injustice. The pursuit if  profit must be in harmony with the dignity of the people who work at different levels within the company.

For a more comprehensive discussion of this topic, refer to the Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church, nos. 340-345.

Posted in Social Doctrine of the Church | 1 Comment

Papa Luciani – The Forgotten Pope

I was happy to run across an article that was published October 2 of this year in America (www.americamagazine.org) about Pope John Paul I. The article was written by Mo Guernon, who is writing a biography of Luciani.

Guernon calls for the canonization of Luciani. Those of us who knew him echo his call.

I would like to provide you an exerpt of Guernon’s article:

There was a nobility in Luciani’s simplicity, and evidence of his humility abounds. As bishop of Vittorio-Veneto, for example, he visited his parishes by bicycle, a rather unassuming means of transport for a man of his station. Later, when taking official possession of St. Mark’s Basilica, he dispensed with the fanfare traditionally accorded the new patriarch of the ancient archdiocese of Venice. At his official residence he literallly opened his door to all who knocked: priests, penitents, prostitutes, drug addicts, drunks, the destitute – everyone.

Luciani eschewed the accouterments of high ecclesiastical officer, preferring a tattered black cassock to the regal purple and red hues signifying the ranks of bishop and cardinal to which he had reluctantly been raised. Strolling through the streets of Venice, Luciani would furtively stuff his zucchetto in his pocket, content to be mistaken for a parish priest by the pedestrians he encountered. After one such solitary twilight walk, the patriarch returned home sporting a bruised and swollen cheek. When the sisters asked him what had happened, he replied dispassionately, “Oh, nothing…. I met a drunkard…. He hit me in the face.”…..And then there were private instances — only recently disclosed — in which John Paul I revealed his abiding humility in ways the public could not have imagined.

Guernon concludes his article by stating: “Today, a broken world desperately needs moral enlightenment. The life and teachings of the first Pope John Paul can provide that in abundance. Thus it would be an incalculable loss to those in current generations – as well as future ones who never knew him – for his memory to fade into oblivion.”

I say, “Amen!” I am doing my small part in keeping his memory alive. I believe he will someday be recognized among those the Church universally recognizes as a Holy One, a Saint for us to imitate.

You can read the entire article at this link: www.americamagazine.org/content/article.cfm?article_id=13064&comments=1#readcomments

Papa Luciani, pray for us!

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Quote for the Day

“Let your love lead your steps to Jesus wounded, to Jesus crowned with thorns, to Jesus fastened upon the gibbet of the cross.” — St. Bonaventure, OFM

Posted in Saints and Prophets, Spirituality | Comments Off on Quote for the Day

The Need for Laughter in Grieving the Loss of a Family Member

I attended the funeral of a close family member this weekend. The funeral service was appropriately somber and sincere, as they typically are in the Midwest. The committal at the cemetery was during our first real winter storm. Those of you farther south than the Mason-Dixon line probably will never have that experience.

What I will probably recall years down the road about this funeral will be the time with the family in the evening, after all else had been done that day. We sat around the living room, talking and reminiscing about family life, about some 55 years of memories of two families that had close to each other in age and size and residence. There was an instinctive need to laugh. The one whom we were grieving was present in our thoughts, but what we were doing was celebrating the fruit of her life in the lives of her husband, kids, sisters, nephews and nieces. There were so many tales to tell, and stories to be told. So much about which we could laugh.

Laughter is good for the soul, they say. Laughter can be the unmistakable sign of the Spirit, and the expression of Christian hope in the life to come and gratitude for the goodness of marriage and family life.

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Sexual Difference: Dual Unity

Blessed Pope John Paul II, in his The Theology of the Body, talks about “dual unity” or the “double unity.” He said that in creation, God created the unity of two beings, male and female, and this unity lay in the identity of human nature. He said that based on this identity, there exists a duality that demonstrates the masculinity and femininity of created man.

Unity refers then to the common humanity of us all and a common dignity. Although men and women are united in a common humanity, they are irreducibly different. They are two different ways of ‘being a body’ that is proper to human nature. For John Paul II, the sexual encounter between a man and a woman allows them both to unite in a fruitful manner.

This “unity-in-difference” (two sexes within a shared humanity) allows for a personal encounter in a fruitful union of the whole person – physical, emotional, spiritual, and psychological.

You can read more on this by logging on to: www.marriageuniqueforareason.org

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