Blessed Anuarite Nengapeta – A Maria Goretti for Africa

Most of you probably are familiar with the 20th century Italian saint, Maria Goretti. She was murdered early in the century at a very young age when she refused sexual advances of a man. She was canonized by Pope John Paul II, and her murderer, whom she forgave, was converted.

I found out today that there is, one might say, a Maria Goretti for Africa. Her name is Blessed Clementina Anuarite Nengapeta from the former Belgian Congo.

She was born in 1939 in Wamba. Her parents were pagans and she was baptized with her mother and sisters, educated by the Sisters of the Child Jesus and entered the local religious congregation, the Holy Family Sisters, making her profession in 1959. The country gained its independence in 1961 and was plunged into civil war. In 1964, Sr. Anuarite was taken hostage by guerrillas and the leader of that group repeatedly tried to sexually coerce her. She steadfastly refused, and in December of that year she was brutally maltreated and was killed. Before her death, she forgave her murderer with these words: “May God forgive you and I forgive you because you do not realize what you are doing.”

Pope John Paul II beatified her on August 15, 1985 during his second visit to that country (called Zaire at the time). Her feast day is December 1, the date of her death.

Blessed Anuarite, pray for us!

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Church of the Week

 

St. Joseph Catholic Church

Owatonna, Minnesota

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The “Wound” of Diaconal Ordination

Deacon James Keating, Ph.D. has written,
“When Christ inflicts the ‘wound’ of diaconal ordination upon a man, it is to make him vulnerable to the mystery of this obedient service. The desire to serve the Father’s will defines the heart of Christ. Is the deacon aware that Christ is now speaking to him about this desire, about the love of the Father He wishes to dispense upon His church? Did the deacon allow the wound of ordination to open the ears of his heart so that he could hear the movement of Christ’s own Spirit? Does the deacon wish to obey the Spirit so that he does not work in vain (Ps 127: 1)?” — Rev. Mr. James Keating, The Character of Diaconal Ordination, Ignatius Insight, August 17, 2010.

I read this article of his many months ago, and passed it along to my local diaconal community to read.  If any deacons out there haven’t read it, it is well worth the time in doing so. I reread it recently after it was submitted again to the deacons of our diocese by our diaconal committee.

I especially love the excerpt quoted above. The image of the character impressed upon the deacon at ordination as being a “wound” that must remain open for the deacon to be responsive to the calling of Jesus to service in revealing the Father to those to whom we are called; the idea that the primary way deacons serve is by being in constant prayer, constant contact with that “wound” rather than getting caught up in a frenzy of activity; that the key to living the diaconate is found within one’s fidelity to the character received at ordination so as to allow Christ to do the work, to allow Christ to initiate and complete through our responsiveness to Him in all things.

Right before I and my brothers were to process over to the cathedral for our ordination in August, 2009, I turned to Eduardo and said to him in Italian, “Come preghiamo ogni mattina, ‘Ascoltate oggi la voce del Signore. Non indurite i vostri cuori.” This is the verse from the 95th Psalm that we pray the first thing every morning as our Invitatory in the Office, “Listen today to the voice of the Lord. Harden not your hearts.”

How can we be responsive to the Lord if the “wound” or character of the diaconate, permanently impressed on our souls, is calloused over, scarred?

No, it must remain open, vulnerable, sensitive.

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Quote for the Day

“My confidence in Him is very great and all my hopes are centered in Him in whose service we are engaged.” — Mother Mary Francis Bachman, OSF

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Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen’s Case Advances

Yesterday, Pope Benedict received the positio outlining Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen’s cause for canonization. A positio is a very large collection of documents collected by the diocese of Peoria, Illinois that outline his life and will be used to examine his life in detail.

Archbishop Sheen was born in 1895 in Illinois and ordained a priest for the diocese of Peoria in 1919.

The positio will be filed formally with the Congregation for the Cause of Saints who, if they accept the document, will begin examining an alleged healing attributed to Sheen.  The healing in question is of a 72 year old Illinois woman who recovered from complications following lung surgery.

If by chance you are  unaware of Archbishop Sheen, he was a tremendous preacher and evangelist who was able to harness the television screen to preach the Gospel. His television program was extremely popular with both Catholics and non-Catholics alike. His message was always compelling and faithful to the teachings of the Church.

Archbishop Sheen died in 1979.

Read more at: www.ewtn.com/vnews/getstory.asp?number=113538

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Congratulations, Dioceses of Rapid City and Milwaukee

The Holy Father this morning has appointed Msgr. Robert Gruss bishop of Rapid City, South Dakota, and Rev. Donald J. Hying auxiliary bishop of Milwaukee.

Msgr. Gruss is a 55 year old priest from the diocese of Davenport. He was ordained a priest in 1994, after previously being an pilot instructor. He entered the seminary at a later date, attended St. Ambrose University in Davenport and later the North American College in Rome studying at the Angelicum in that city.  Since 2010 he has been the rector of the cathedral in Davenport.

Rev. Donald Hying was born in 1963 in Wisconsin and studied at Marquette University in Milwaukee, later studying at St. Francis de Sales Seminary and finally at the University of St. Mary of the Lake in Mundelein, Illinois. He has held various positions in the archdiocese of Milwaukee. He was ordained a priest in 1989.

Congratulations, archdiocese of Milwaukee and diocese of Rapid City.

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Hear Ye, Bishops, Priests and Deacons

I am reading today for the first time the homily of Archbishop J. Peter Sartain at his installation Mass in Seattle on December 1, 2010. Archbishop Sartain and I studied together in Rome in the late 1970s, and even though we hadn’t seen or spoken to each other in nearly 30 years, he quickly remembered my name without prompting an number of years ago when I met him again in Arkansas, where he was bishop at the time.

I have said this before, and I say it again, Peter is a genuinely decent, holy man. He is a good bishop.

Here is an excerpt from his homily I think worth noting. www.seattlearchdiocese.org/Archdiocese/Sartain/Docs/InstallationHomily.pdf

And so, very conscious of my weaknesses and my faults, what I have, I will offer you:  the gospel of Jesus Christ, the Gospel who is Jesus Christ….It is especially important to bishops, priests, deacons and consecrated religious that Jesus remain literally in our minds and in our hearts at all times, that we recognize he is always before us and we are to follow. We bear his image, his mystery, as our gift to those we encounter in the course of the day. Conscious of our awesome call to serve in the name of Jesus, we will continue to ask pardon for the times we have not been faithful to that call, and especially seek God’s healing for his little ones who have been harmed by clergy andd others acting in the name of the Church….. None of us has anything of our own to offer, and so together we follow him to whom we must give everything, so that through us he may give his everything to those we serve. Pope John Paul II once wrote (in Radiation of Fatherhood), 

I have decided to eliminate from my vocabulary the word ‘my.’ How can I use that word when I know that everything is Yours? … I myself am more ‘Yours’ than ‘mine.’ So I have learned that I may not say ‘mine’ of that which is Yours. I may not say, think or feel it. I must free myself, empty myself of this.”

The name of Jesus should be on our lips in every homily, at every meeting, in every counseling session, at every moment of prayer… at times of confusion and anxiety… at times of distraction… at times of temptation… praying the name of Jesus, we take our place among the leprous and the grieving, the blind and the lame, the sinful and the searching, who cried out to him for help….

My brothers and sisters, I have neither silver nor gold, nor anything of my own to offer you — yet our Lord has sent me to feed you. My food, your food, is to do the Father’s will in his Son, Jesus Christ; to proclaim Christ; to build up the Church; to proclaim the truth in love.”

This is a good meditation for all of us clergy, and lay too, for the upcoming week.

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The Holy Father Sends His Prayers and Thoughts

The Holy Father sent the following telegram to Bishop James Vann Johnston of the diocese of Springfield-Cape Girardeau in Missouri in the wake of the destruction of a large portion of Joplin from the recent tornado.

The Holy Father has followed with deep concern the aftermath of the catastrophic tornado which struck Joplin on Sunday and he asks you to convey to the entire community the assurance of his closeness in prayer. Conscious of the tragic loss of life and the immensity of the work of rebuilding that lies ahead, he asks God the Father of mercies to grant eternal rest to the departed, consolation to the grieving, and strength and hope to the homeless and the injured. Upon the local civil and religious leaders, and upon all involved in the relief efforts, his Holiness invokes the divine gifts of wisdom, fortitude, and perseverance in every good.

Source: http://press.catholica.va/news_services/bulletin/news/27514.php?index=27514&lang=en

As an aside, a tornado also struck here in La Crosse, Wisconsin at the same time one marched through Joplin. Luckily, the hospital in which I work was largely undamaged, although just a couple of blocks from us over 200 homes were damaged or destroyed. This was supposedly the first ever recorded tornado in La Crosse, which sits nestled in the Mississippi  river valley and to now seemingly immune to tornados that do strike periodically “up on the bluffs” as we say here.

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Church of the Week

 

All Saints Catholic Church

New Richland, Minnesota

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Now It’s Up to Us

The Minnesota Legislature passed a constitutional admendment defining marriage in this state as being between one man and one woman.

Now, it is up to us, the voters, to ratify this in the ballot box.

My friends, don’t assume this is a shoo-in. There are so many people out there who misunderstand what is at stake here. As I, and many others have said in the past, those who are pushing for “gay marriage” will argue that this admendment is discriminatory and a violation of human and civil rights, when in fact it has nothing to do with those; rather, it has all to do defining acceptable sexual behavior as it defines the family . It has to do with protecting what human nature and history has always known the human family to be. It has everything to do with defining in law what is in our very nature as humans.

Don’t be fooled by the civil rights argument. If you buy into that, then you have to accept the logical extension of that argument which can and eventually will include seeing marriage as a relationship of multiple individuals, or men/women with their pets. (Don’t laugh. I read recently where someone wants to do that.)

We cannot be silent or inactive. We must speak up and out. We must educate and clarify. Too much is at stake here.

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Quote for the Day

“The Lord be with you always and be you with Him always and in every place.” — St. Clare of Assisi

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Blessed Sr. Dulce Lopes Pontes – The Good Angel of Brazil

You probably won’t see this in the media much, but read about this remarkable woman.

Sr. Dulce Lopes Pontes was beatified today in San Salvador de Bahia in norteastern Brazil. Cardinal Geraldo Majella Agnelo presided over the Mass that was attended by over 70,000 people.

Never heard of Blessed Sr. Dulce? Look at this:

She was born in 1914 in Brazil and joined the Congregation of the Missionary Sisters of the Immaculate Conception of the Mother of God. She devoted her life to the needy, founding hospitals and a social support network which she managed until her death in 1992. She was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1988. In 1991, she was visited on her deathbed by Pope John Paul II during his second visit to Brazil.

Her beatification began in 1999. In 2003, Brazilian and Italian doctors certified an extraordinary healing that occurred after Sr. Dulce’s intercession was called upon. Claudia Santos de Araujo suffered from severe hemorrhaging following childbirth and the doctors gave her only hours to live. A priest prayed for this woman’s health by asking Sr. Dulce’s intercession. In a matter of hours, Claudia was completely cured and she and her child were released from the hospital within two days.

When Sr. Dulce’s body was exhumed and transferred to the Cathedral of San Salvador in 2010, her body was found to be incorrupt.

If another miracle is found attributable to Blessed Sr. Dulce, she will be canonized as Brazil’s first native-born female saint.

Read more about this at: The Catholic News Agency.

Blessed Sr. Dulce, pray for us.

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Deacon Bob’s Audio Homily – 5th Sunday of Easter

Here is my homily for this weekend. As usual, it is a recording made at home, so it lacks something that can only be had from an ambo. I wish I could record it live but I don’t have the necessary devices!

5th Sunday of Easter – Cycle A

5th Sunday of Easter – Part 2

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400,000 hits since 2008

This weblog has had over 400,000 hits since it went online in late 2008. Thank you one and all for your interest in stopping by and especially to all who took the time to offer a comment or two.

I am hopeful we will be able to continue a few conversations, at least, in the years to come.

God bless you all!

Deacon Bob

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Quote for the Day

“What God must have ahead of us if we only leave all to His planning!” — Venerable Solanus Casey, OFM Cap.

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