As St. John’s Red Storm Reigns Big East Champions, Athletics Chaplain Prays for March Madness Win

By Currents News

Basketball fans have been making a pilgrimage to Madison Square Garden recently to see the St. John’s University men’s basketball team play in New York City.

On Feb. 28 the sold out crowd at the world’s most famous arena witnessed the Johnnies beat Seton Hall University 71 to 6, clinching the Big East regular season title. It’s a first for the Red Storm since 1985.

Father Richard Rock – the team’s chaplain – spoke with Currents News about the moment the game ended. 

“It was unbelievable, you know, with the confetti and everything coming down,” he recalled. “There was such an excitement after such a long period of time and they finally realized that it happened. There was so much joy going on. It was a great experience. They were so excited you couldn’t believe it!”

Father Rock went on to say he believes Lou Carnesecca, the legendary St. John’s basketball coach who passed away late last year, has been watching over the team.

Next up for St. John’s is a game against Marquette, then the Big East Tournament and the NCAA. 

Lenten Pilgrimage to Begin; Ash Wednesday Masses in the Diocese of Brooklyn

By Currents News

Catholics will soon celebrate Lent. As faithful prepare for the death and resurrection of Christ, Brooklyn Bishop Robert Brennan is reminding his flock of an important Gospel message.

Bishop Brennan, the Diocese of Brooklyn, and NET-TV are dedicated to bringing you closer to Christ this Lent.

One of the ways the faithful can do so is by watching all the live Lenten and Easter celebrations on NET-TV. They begin with this week’s Ash Wednesday services.

NET-TV will be airing 4 Masses that day:

  • 8 am English Mass at the Co-Cathedral of St. Joseph
  • 9 am, Spanish Mass at the Co-Cathedral of St. Joseph
  • 10 am, Creole Mass at the Co-Cathedral of St. Joseph
  • 12 pm, English Mass at the Cathedral-Basilica of St. James

Bishop Robert Brennan will be celebrating the Mass at the Cathedral-Basilica of St. James, and it is at that Mass that the Diocese of Brooklyn will embark on a Lenten Pilgrimage.

The pilgrimage is encouraging Catholics to visit 40 churches throughout Brooklyn and Queens during the 40 days leading up to Easter. 

Pilgrims are also welcome to log their progress through the Lenten Pilgrimage app.

Even if you are not able to participate in person, you can still join the community online through the app to see all of the pilgrimage stops and even make prayer requests. To do so, download the Lenten Pilgrimage app from the Apple App Store or Google Play. 

You can also get more information by visiting lent.dioceseofbrooklyn.org/


BISHOP ROBERT BRENNAN’S ASH WEDNESDAY PUBLIC SCHEDULE

Bishop Robert J. Brennan, Bishop of Brooklyn, will celebrate two Masses to mark Ash Wednesday, a day of fasting and prayer to start the Christian observance of the season of Lent, tomorrow Wednesday, March 5, 2025.

The first will begin at 8:30 a.m. at Christ the King High School, located at 68-02 Metropolitan Avenue, in the Middle Village section of Queens. Bishop Brennan will then celebrate Mass and distribute ashes at 12 p.m. at the Cathedral Basilica of St. James, located at 250 Cathedral Place in Downtown Brooklyn.

As is customary, the ashes used on Ash Wednesday are made by burning the blessed palms distributed the prior year on Palm Sunday. Lent ends with the celebration of the Sacred Triduum, the three holiest days on the Christian calendar: Holy Thursday, Good Friday, and the Easter Vigil. Easter Sunday will be celebrated this year on April 20.

Ash Wednesday also begins the 2025 Diocesan Lenten Pilgrimage in Brooklyn and Queens, where the faithful will have the opportunity to visit different churches over the next 40 days. Individual parishes will offer opportunities for Mass, prayer, and reflection during these visits. The complete schedule can be found online at https://lent.dioceseofbrooklyn.org/schedule/

Catholic News Headlines for Friday 2/28/2025

Students at Brooklyn’s St. Bernard of Clairvaux Parish are coming together to create art that celebrates the Jubilee Year.

Pope Francis is continuing his treatment for double pneumonia and will not lead Ash Wednesday services at the Vatican.

Before Central Park there was Seneca Village, a thriving community of freed African Americans in the 18th century – Currents News will show you what it was like to live there.

 

Just three months after its reopening, the Cathedral of Notre Dame is seeing more visitors than ever before, but some are questioning whether it’s the tourism or theology that’s bringing them to Paris.

Children From Faith Formation Program Create Artwork to Celebrate Jubilee 2025

By Katie Vasquez

Every piece of artwork at a limited-time exhibit at St. Bernard of Clairvaux Church in Brooklyn has its own unique design, but the message across them is the same: hope.

The director of the faith formation program at the Bergen Beach church, Melissa Wagner, says it’s because all the art was inspired by the theme of the 2025 Jubilee, “Pilgrims of Hope.”

“We need to take them out of the classroom, out of the workbook, and to do things with them, to introduce their faith in other ways that are exciting and fun,” she tells Currents News.

The 250 children in the program created their own work based off their own interpretation of the Holy Year’s message.

“The love I have for Christianity and our faith and the stained glass made me think of church and being in Jesus’ home,” explains Justin Tasso, a member of the St. Bernard of Clairvaux Church faith formation program. 

“Hope for people battling cancer,” is the vision behind group member Michael Thornton’s art. “I want to give them courage to beat it.”

The exhibit also included interactive displays like painting a mural with spray bottles and tissue paper to create stained glass and ribbons that share individual intentions.

“We had to choose a color and each color meant something different, I chose red for love, and I wrote, “I love my family and teachers,'” Francesca Marino, who is also part of the faith formation program, tells Currents News.

Ultimately, the church hopes that the art sparks discussion about the Jubilee and spreads the Holy Year’s mission of faith and fellowship. 

“I think expressing that sense of hope, that sense of optimism but even beyond optimism,” Father John Maduri, the pastor of St Bernard of Clairvaux Church,” says. “That Christian hope that if we have that faith in God and faith in the Church, and faith in one another and faith in themselves, they can achieve great things.”

“It could really help somebody because people maybe really need a blessing, or something they’re struggling with or to find hope,” group member Christina Antoci adds.

This exhibit was only up for the day, but the church hopes to show the art again throughout the Holy Year. 

Catholic News Headlines for Thursday 2/27/2025

A former Catholic school teacher is putting her book smarts to good use as the published author of books that are teaching kids important life lessons.

Students at St. Bernard Catholic Academy in Brooklyn are putting their creative skills to work with a new Jubilee-themed art exhibition.

Vatican officials say Pope Francis’ condition is improving, but that the prognosis remains cautious.

The last slave of New York State was a Christian woman who was laid to rest in the Diocese of Brooklyn. Currents News tells her story from Green-Wood Cemetery.

Schoolbooks to Storybooks: Retired Teacher Inspiring Young Readers

By Paula Katinas and Katie Vasquez

WOODSIDE — Although Maryann McMahon is a retired school teacher and no longer in the classroom, she’s still teaching kids. But now, rather than telling students to crack open books, she’s writing them.

McMahon, who retired in 2021, is the author of eight self-published children’s books that are infused with life lessons such as tolerance, acceptance, and loving one’s neighbor.

Her latest, “Starky Star Soars Through the Solar System,” came out in September, and she’s already working on a sequel featuring Starky and some of his friends.

“I feel like I always had this calling to write children’s books and to just go out and spread good news, spread kindness, spread love, helping others (with) compassion and empathy,” McMahon explained over hamburgers at Donovan’s Pub in Woodside.

The choice of restaurant was no accident. Not only is it one of McMahon’s favorite places to eat, but one of her books, “A Special Present From Puddles,” was illustrated by Jimmy Jacobson, the co-owner of the pub. Jacobson worked in graphic design and engineering for more than 20 years before going into the restaurant business.

He bought part ownership of Donovan’s Pub 12 years ago. McMahon was showing him some of her books one day and he volunteered his services. “I just said, ‘You know, I’m an artist myself. … Maybe I could do your next book,’ ” Jacobson recalled telling her.

McMahon’s seven other books, including her first, “Vinnie and Vicki — The Vibrant Viruses,” published in 2018, were illustrated by her friend, and art teacher, Agata Olszewska.

McMahon, who began her career teaching first grade Ascension School in Elmhurst in 1983, has also worked as a teacher and assistant principal at St. Raphael School in Long Island City and Holy Child Jesus Catholic Academy in Richmond Hill. She retired from St. Joseph Catholic Academy in Astoria in 2021.

McMahon has been writing children’s stories since the 1990s. It began as a fun hobby — something to entertain herself and others. However, a friend eventually convinced her to publish her work, and she released her first book seven years ago.

Since then, she has published one book a year, all containing brightly colored illustrations and clever titles like, “Bundles and Buttons Bravely Face Their Fears,” “Bundles Baffles a Bully on Halloween,” and “Toothy, the Tenderhearted Tooth.”

“In all the books, there’s also these educational parts. I try to have the characters help each other because I just feel that that just makes it very cohesive,” said McMahon, whose books are available on Amazon. “It’s just nice when one character is helping someone who’s having a hard time.”

She said she particularly enjoys visiting the Diocese of Brooklyn schools to read her books aloud and interact with students.

McMahon, a parishioner of St. Teresa Church in Woodside, said her Catholic faith drives much of what she does. “I’ve always had a strong belief in God,” McMahon said. “I always say to friends and neighbors, ‘Everything will work out. God will take care of us. Don’t worry.’ ”

Maryann McMahon’s books can be found on Amazon.

Catholic News Headlines for Wednesday 2/26/2025

The Vatican says Pope Francis had another restful night and is resuming some of his papal duties while in the hospital. Meanwhile, faithful around the world haven’t stopped praying for his recovery.

U.S. Vice President JD Vance will speak at the National Catholic Prayer Breakfast later this week – he says he’s honored to attend the annual event again this year.

Meet a woman from North Dakota who has been playing the organ for her parish for over 75 years and learn how she’s kept her devotion to the Church over the decades.

Gaza Catholics Send Pope Francis Well Wishes, Prayers for Recovery in Video Message

By Currents News

The Holy Family parish in Gaza, which Pope Francis has called by phone every day since the war began, is sending a message of love as the Holy Father remains hospitalized for double pneumonia. 

Vatican News reports that although he remains in critical condition and has been hospitalized since Feb. 14, Pope Francis has still managed to call the parishioners in keeping with his routine from Rome’s Gemelli Hospital. He was even able to make two video calls to the parishioners on the day that he was hospitalized, despite a blackout in Gaza and his health concerns at the time.

In return, the parishioners have sent a video message of prayer and encouragement as he continues his therapies. 

Parishioners delivered the following message to the pope in Spanish:

Dear Holy Father, we are gathered here in Gaza after today’s Mass. It is very, very cold, but we want to express our gratitude, our closeness, and our prayers. The whole world is praying for you and is deeply grateful, and we all wish you good health. Thank you so much, we wish you good health, we are praying for you always. God bless you always. Shukran, shukran!”

This week, Pope Francis was able to call the Holy Family parish again to express his closeness and personal thanks for the video message.

 

Pew: U.S. Christianity Downturn Leveling, but Catholics Suffer ‘Greatest Net Losses’

by Gina Christian and Currents News

(OSV News)  – A multiyear decline in Christianity in the U.S. may have leveled off, according to a new survey by Pew Research Center. However, the Catholic Church, the survey found, is seeing the greatest net losses of believers compared to other religions in the U.S.

The data indicates that for every one person received into the Catholic Church, another 8.4 individuals have left the faith, either altogether or for another worship tradition. This increases the trend Pew found in 2014, when 6.5 Catholics left the faith for every person who entered.

Pew’s new survey also shows just 29% of the nation’s Catholics attend religious services weekly or more often. Altogether four in 10 Catholics attend religious services monthly or more.

In addition, support among U.S. Catholics for legalized abortion, homosexuality and other stances at odds with church teaching has increased over the past decade and a half.

On Feb. 26, Pew Research released the results of its 2023-2024 Religious Landscape Study. The RLS polled 36,908 U.S. adults on a range of topics regarding religious belief and practice, as well as issues such as abortion, homosexuality, immigration and the role of government.

The survey was conducted in English and Spanish from July 2023 to March 2024, with participants sharing their thoughts online, via mail or phone.

Researchers noted that a multiyear decline in the number of U.S. adults identifying as Christian – noted in Pew’s 2007 and 2014 RLS reports – has appeared to stabilize “at least temporarily” since 2019.

The rise in those who are religiously unaffiliated, or “nones,” has also leveled off for now, after “rising rapidly for decades,” Pew noted.

However, the new survey “cannot answer definitively” whether that short-term stability will be “permanent,” cautioned Gregory A. Smith, senior associate director of research at Pew.

While he and his team “cannot predict the future,” Smith told OSV News the data “very clearly” shows that “the underlying forces that drove the long-term declines are still very much in evidence.”

“The youngest adults in the population are still far, far less religious than the oldest adults,” Smith said. “We know, furthermore, that the oldest cohort of Americans … will decline as a share of the population as the people in that cohort pass away.”

For the stability Pew has observed to prove permanent, “something would have to change,” Smith explained. “Either today’s young adults would have to become a lot more religious as they get older, or new generations are going to have to come along in the future that are far more religious than today’s young adults.”

The report found that 62% of U.S. adults currently describe themselves as Christian, with the majority (40%) Protestant, 19% Catholic and 3% as Christians from other denominations.

The total number of self-identified U.S. Christians is down from 78% in 2007 and 71% in 2014.

In 2007, 24% of the nation identified as Catholic, which dropped to 21% in 2021.

Over one quarter (29%) of the U.S. population identifies as religiously unaffiliated, with most (19%) describing themselves as religiously “nothing in particular,” 5% as atheist and 6% as agnostic. Another 7% of the U.S. population belongs to religions other than Christianity, with 2% being Jewish, and Muslims, Buddhists and Hindus counting as approximately 1% each.

Yet overall, most Americans (86%) believe people have a soul or spirit, and 83% say they believe in God or a universal spirit. A majority (79%) also hold there is a spiritual reality beyond the natural one, and 70% believe in heaven, hell or both.

Still, less than half (44%) say they pray at least once a day, a figure that has held steady since 2021, and 33% report attending religious services at least once a month.

Pew researchers speculated that “in future years we may see further declines in the religiousness of the American public.” It pointed out that “young adults are far less religious than older adults” and “no recent birth cohort has become more religious as it has aged.”

The “stickiness,” or persistence, of a religious upbringing appears to have declined, while that of a nonreligious upbringing “seems to be rising,” said Pew researchers.

Generally, “younger Americans remain far less religious than older adults,” said Pew, noting that 46% of the survey’s youngest respondents (ages 18-24) identified as Christian, with 27% praying daily and 25% attending religious services at least monthly. In comparison, the survey’s oldest respondents (ages 74 and older) saw 80% identify as Christian, 58% pray daily, and 49% attend religious services at least monthly.

Catholics polled by Pew have also shown an increased acceptance of abortion and homosexuality since 2007.

Among Catholic survey respondents, 59% said abortion should be legal in most or all cases, compared to 48% in both Pew’s 2007 and 2014 surveys. The Catholic Church holds that human life must be respected and protected absolutely from the moment of conception, and since the first century has affirmed the moral evil of every procured abortion.

A majority (59%) of religiously affiliated persons in the U.S. say homosexuality should be accepted by society, with 74% of Catholic respondents endorsing that view. The Catholic Church, which teaches that sexual activity can only morally take place in marriage between a man and a woman, also teaches that persons with homosexual inclinations “must be accepted with respect, compassion and sensitivity.”

Catholics have also “experienced the greatest net losses” due to what Pew researchers called “religious switching,” with 43% of the people raised Catholic no longer identifying as such, “meaning that 12.8% of all U.S. adults are former Catholics,” said the report.

However, Smith said, “It is also important to point out that 1.5% of U.S. adults are converts to Catholicism.”

“That’s millions of people,” he said.

“That means there are more converts to Catholicism in the United States than there are Episcopalians, for example. There are more converts to Catholicism than there are members of congregational churches, and so on,” he added.

“There are lots of people who are joining the Catholic Church,” Smith said. “It’s just that they are far outnumbered by those who say they’ve left the Catholic Church.”

Smith also said that “it’s not necessarily that there’s lots and lots of people switching their religion at any one moment in time.

“These are gradual processes,” he explained. “It takes time to observe them.”