Monsignor Sean G. Ogle’s Homily from Thursday’s Mass on 10/13/22
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Diocese of Brooklyn to Celebrate First Mass of Hope and Healing Since the Pandemic
On Oct. 13, the Diocese of Brooklyn will celebrate a special Mass. It’s a liturgy for survivors of sexual abuse, offering them a chance for hope and healing.
The first step in coping with sexual abuse in the church is to listen to the stories of victim-survivors, and that’s just what this Mass is.
It was requested by survivors and the Diocese of Brooklyn celebrates it every year. This the first time since the pandemic.
This year’s liturgy will also be the first for the diocese’s new Victim Assistance Coordinator, Elizabeth Harris. The retired NYPD detective worked with the Manhattan child abuse squad for over a decade.
“We hope that they can come together and see that there are people on their side that believe them and want to do better for them,” said Harris.
After the Mass at Resurrection Ascension in Rego Park, survivors will be able to speak with the Office of Protection of Children and Young People.
The Bishop of Brooklyn, Robert Brennan, will be the main celebrant and homilist.
The Mass will be broadcast live at 7:00pm on Oct. 13, on NET-TV, available on Verizon Fios Channel 548, Spectrum Channel 97, or Channel 30 on Optimum. The Mass can also be watched online at https://netny.tv/.
Pregnant & Diagnosed with Cancer, They Told Her to Have an Abortion; She Refused and is Now Cancer Free with a Healthy Baby Boy
Currents News Staff
October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month. We have the story of a mom in Detroit who says her baby saved her life.
She was diagnosed with terminal cancer when she was just 14 weeks pregnant but refused to follow the doctor’s advice to get an abortion, and instead delivered a healthy baby boy.
Mother of four, Jessica Hanna, is now cancer-free and joins us to share her story.
Staten Island Community Rallies Around Migrants While Waiting for Elected Officials to Act on Crisis
By Jessica Easthope
Communicating through a translation app, the language barrier couldn’t hide the desperation of one father who said his son only has a little to eat.
But people in the Travis neighborhood on Staten Island are doing whatever they can.
Lina Maldonado came Wednesday to drop off food, clothing and toiletries.
“We have things others are in dire need of so if we can give it why not, it’s important for me to do so,” she said.
People stopped by all morning with supplies. One of them, a parishioner and catechist at St. Michael’s in Sunset Park.
“What can we say and do but help and provide as much as we can,” he said.
He says his faith is driving him to help – but he can’t do it forever.
“I try to do the best I can for my fellow man for my brothers and sisters but I can only do so much, but faith does play a role, I can only feel hope love and respect for these individuals,” he said.
The two hotels are part of the city’s 48 emergency shelters housing more than 18,000 migrants. Mayor Eric Adams said as busloads keep coming – more shelter is needed, whether some neighborhoods welcome them or not.
“This is a citywide crisis and all of us are going to be impacted and Staten Island is going to be impacted like the other four boroughs,” Mayor Adams said.
Eileen manages a commercial driving school in Travis. She’s been collecting bags of clothing and giving them to migrants who walk by her business.
“They’re here now, we have to help them. That’s just how I was raised. I just can’t imagine how bad it was in their country that they needed to come here,” she said.
The community in Travis is being pushed to the brink – people say the problem is now too big to ignore.
“The problem’s not going to stop whether you close the borders, it’s not going to stop now it’s just between governors and it’s not right using people as pawns,” said the St. Michael’s parishioner.
“This needs to be evenly distributed among all 50 states, not just New York, we’re going to go bankrupt,” Eileen said.
On Thursday, Congresswoman Nicole Malliotakis is expected to discuss federal solutions to the crisis and her efforts to stem the flow of migrants and speed up the asylum process. For now, the people here continue to rely on donations.
Catholic News Headlines for Wednesday 10/12/22
New York City is struggling to house the migrants who continue to arrive in the Big Apple.
Crime on New York City subways is skyrocketing.
Bodega owners, who are victims of shoplifting or looting, are getting some help.
CCBQ Creates New Affordable Housing With On-Site Services
Charities Brooklyn and Queens is spearheading city support for seniors with a new state of the art building.
The Bishop Rene Valero Senior Residence in Astoria is a six-story building that offers 102 affordable units.
It also offers on-site social services and an adult senior center complete with everything from educational forums to fitness classes.
Bishop Brennan was at the dedication and praised the work of Catholic Charities, who has been providing affordable housing in this city for the last 47 years.
Diocese of Brooklyn Honors Individuals in Ethnic Ministries for Their Service
The Bishop of Brooklyn praised the work of more than a dozen ethnic ministries at the second Shining Star awards dinner over the weekend.
The annual event honors individuals in cultural ministries for their service to the church and for preserving their traditions in this big city.
Among the countries celebrated Friday evening: Pakistan, the Philippines, and the Dominican Republic.
Homilies in Your Home: Luke 11:42-46
Most Reverend Bishop Robert J. Brennan’s Homily from Wednesday’s Mass on 10/12/22
Pope Prays For Unity of Church As He Celebrates Anniversary of Vatican II
By Cindy Wooden
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — The Second Vatican Council was the universal Catholic Church’s response to God’s love and to Jesus’ command to feed his sheep, Pope Francis said, celebrating the 60th anniversary of the council’s opening.
The council reminded the church of what is “essential,” the pope said: “a church madly in love with its Lord and with all the men and women whom he loves,” one that “is rich in Jesus and poor in assets,” a church that “is free and freeing.”
Pope Francis presided over the Mass Oct. 11 in St. Peter’s Basilica, where the council sessions were held in four sessions from 1962 to 1964. The date is also the feast of St. John XXIII, who convoked and opened the council; the glass urn containing his body was moved to the center of the basilica for the liturgy.
The Gospel reading at the Mass recounted Jesus asking St. Peter, “Do you love me?” and telling him, “Feed my sheep.”
In his homily, the pope said the council was the church’s response to that question and marked a renewed effort to feed God’s sheep, not just those who are Catholic, but all people.
The debates that followed the council and continue today are a distraction from the church’s mission, Pope Francis said.
“We are always tempted to start from ourselves rather than from God, to put our own agendas before the Gospel, to let ourselves be caught up in the winds of worldliness in order to chase after the fashions of the moment or to turn our back the time that providence has granted us,” he said.
Catholics must be careful, he said, because “both the ‘progressivism’ that lines up behind the world and the ‘traditionalism’ that longs for a bygone world are not evidence of love, but of infidelity,” forms of “selfishness that puts our own tastes and plans above the love that pleases God, the simple, humble and faithful love that Jesus asked of Peter.”
“A church in love with Jesus has no time for quarrels, gossip and disputes,” the pope said. “May God free us from being critical and intolerant, harsh and angry. This is not a matter of style but of love.”
Jesus, the good shepherd, “wants his flock to be united under the guidance of the pastors he has given them,” the pope said, but the devil loves to sow division; “let us not give in to his enticements or to the temptation of polarization.”
“How often, in the wake of the council, did Christians prefer to choose sides in the church, not realizing that they were breaking their mother’s heart,” the heart of their mother, the church, Pope Francis said.
How often, he asked, did they prefer “to be on the ‘right’ or ‘left,’ rather than with Jesus? To present themselves as ‘guardians of the truth’ or ‘pioneers of innovation’ rather than seeing themselves as humble and grateful children of Holy Mother Church?”
The council, he said, taught the church to see the world around it and to share God’s love with all, knowing that “if it is fitting to show a particular concern, it should be for those whom God loves most: the poor and the outcast.”
With Orthodox, Anglican and Protestant representatives present, as they were at the council, Pope Francis also prayed that “the yearning for unity” would grow within each Christ, “the desire to commit ourselves to full communion among all those who believe in Christ.”
Thanking God for the gift of the council, the pope asked the Lord to “save us from the forms of polarization that are the devil’s handiwork. And we, your church, with Peter and like Peter, now say to you: ‘Lord, you know everything; you know that we love you.’”
Pope Francis, who was ordained to the priesthood in 1969, is the first pope ordained after the Second Vatican Council. His immediate predecessor, now-retired Pope Benedict XVI, attended all four sessions of the council as a theological adviser — a “peritus” — to the archbishop of Cologne, Germany. St. John Paul II participated in all four sessions as a full member of the body, first as auxiliary bishop of Krakow, Poland, and then as archbishop of the city.
Among the more than 400 priests concelebrating the Mass, the Vatican liturgical office said there were five who were present at Vatican II.
According to the websites GCatholic.org and catholic-hierarchy.org, there are six bishops alive in the world today who participated in at least one session of the Second Vatican Council. Among them is Nigerian Cardinal Francis Arinze, an 89-year-old former Vatican official who was ordained a bishop in 1965 and attended the council’s last session; he was one of the concelebrants at the anniversary Mass.
Before the Mass, passages were read from the speech St. John XXIII gave at the council’s opening. Known by its opening words in Latin, “Gaudet Mater Ecclesia,” the speech begins: “Mother Church rejoices.”
Selections from the council’s four constitutions also were read. Pope Francis has asked Catholics to prepare for the Holy Year 2025 by re-reading and studying the documents: Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy (“Sacrosanctum Concilium”); Dogmatic Constitution on the Church (“Lumen Gentium”); Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Revelation (“Dei Verbum”); and Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World (“Gaudium et Spes”).
Catholic News Headlines for Tuesday 10/11/22
Students in the Diocese of Brooklyn are joining in prayer for peace and unity.
President Joe Biden and other G7 leaders are meeting virtually today.
New York City Mayor Eric Adams is pleading for help from the federal government to deal with the influx of migrants in the city.
Tattling on those who park illegally could soon be lucrative.