Catholic News Headlines for Friday, 7/09/21

Pope Francis is back at work! The Holy Father will be leading the people in prayer this Sunday from a hospital, a week after he underwent intestine surgery.

A relic of the teen set to be the first millennial saint will be here in Brooklyn! We tell you the story of Carlo Acutis, the servant of God who has inspired Catholics around the world.

Catholics in Miami are praying for the victims of that Surfside condo collapse – an update on the situation there as teams still try to find the dozens missing.

 

A Closer Look at the ‘Heart’ of St. John’s University: St. Thomas More Church

Currents News Staff

St. John’s University: a Catholic institution that’s been on a mission for 150 years continues its legacy with St. Thomas More Church. It’s now at the center of St. John’s Queens Campus, according to 1970’s alum Father Bernard Tracey.

It was placed in the campus’ academic center, also known as the heart of the campus, where students of all faiths and denominations go throughout the day.

“It’s really an example of ‘if you build it, they will come,’” said St. John’s University Spokesperson Brian Browne.

 Although St. Thomas More Church opened its doors in 2004, Browne says its construction was long awaited.

“If you go back into our archives, there was always a design for a free standing church on campus, but inevitably, other things had to get built,” said Browne. “We always had a chapel at every one of our campuses but we didn’t have the church that we have today.”

Today, it’s a church adorned with all original art focused on Jesus ‘the teacher – from the mosaics, to the stained glass, to the pipe organ built into the walls.

In memory of the more than 75 St. John’s alums who died in the attack, there’s a special shrine dedicated to the fallen of 9/11: the cross, made from steel, recovered at the site.

The church also pays tribute to its Vincentian roots with a circular mosaic, designed and made by hand in Italy, that tells the story of St. Vincent and the birth of the university in Brooklyn.

 There’s even a refuge within a refuge.  

“There was a blessed sacrament chapel that was created for students to be able to go into that quiet spot while they’re there, even if they’re not attending Mass, they can still go there and pray,” said Executive Vice President for Mission Father Bernard Tracey. 

After years of planning, its construction was made possible by a St. John’s grad who suggested it be named after St. Thomas More, the 15th century adviser to King Henry VIII who was beheaded because of his opposition to the king’s divorce, remarriage, and ultimate separation from the Catholic church.

Another reason why Brian Browne calls St. Thomas More is an extension of the classroom, but that’s not all.

“The weekly Sunday night Mass here at St. Thomas More Church is the largest student event held weekly at St. John’s and it’s a great experience,” said Browne. “We also have a church community of neighbors from the surrounding community who’ve been celebrating Sunday Mass here for years on campus. We’re so blessed to have it here.”

Catholic News Headlines for Thursday, 7/8/21

He was only a teenager but now Carlo Acutis could be a saint – a relic of his is on its way to Brooklyn! Why this 15-year-old is loved by hundreds of thousands around the world.

From a rescue mission to recovery effort – prayers for the souls lost in Surfside.

And a papal checkup – the Holy Father was running a fever, but now tests are looking up.

Blessed Carlo Acutis Relic Set to Arrive in the Diocese of Brooklyn

By Jessica Easthope

There have been songs written about him and art exhibits dedicated to him, but soon you can experience Carlo Acutis’ legacy firsthand.

One of his relics will be coming to the Diocese of Brooklyn this Wednesday, July 14, and will be presented to Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio.

If canonized, Blessed Carlo Acutis will be the first ever millennial saint. Acutis died at the age of 15 in 2006 within a week of being diagnosed with leukemia.

His mother gave him the nickname “Cyber Apostle of the Eucharist” because Acutis combined his two passions – technology and the body of Christ – with a website he designed cataloguing every Eucharistic miracle. Before his evangelization efforts surrounding the Eucharist touched the world, they touched his own mother.

“I started to get closer to the Church. I started to go back to Mass. And this was actually because of Carlo. Carlo was for me a kind of little ‘Savior,’” Acutis’ mother Antonia Salzano said.

Relics belonging to Acutis are responsible for unofficial reports of his intercession as well as his first recognized miracle. A four-year-old Brazilian boy with a rare disorder kissed a piece of a t-shirt Acutis wore and was miraculously healed.

“It’s hard not to be inspired, it’s hard not to feel ‘okay how do I become a better Catholic because of this man,’ how can I get there?” said Michael Lichens, the editor of Catholic Exchange.

Hundreds of thousands viewed his beatification Mass live online last October and more than 41,000 people went to venerate his body when it was on display in Assisi, Italy. Now a relic is coming to the Diocese of Brooklyn’s more than 1.5 million Catholics.

With the arrival of this relic, devotion to Acutis and prayers for his canonization may soon multiply – maybe the miracle he needs is waiting in the Diocese of Brooklyn.

What Catholics Need to Know During a ‘Papal Health Scare’

News Analysis

By John Allen Jr. and Currents News Staff

ROME (Crux) — As Pope Francis recovers over the next week in Rome’s Gemelli Hospital from surgery on Sunday, July 4, for colon diverticulitis, this seems an apt moment to lay out the nature and trajectory of the disease such a situation inevitably involves.

I’m not talking about the colon condition that prompted Pope Francis’ surgery, which is, according to medical experts, fairly common among adults and more common as people age, and not in itself life-threatening. Instead, I’m talking about the distinctive media fever known as the “Papal Health Scare.”

Here’s the thing: Popes generally are old men, and thus prone to various forms of health issues. Most of the time it’s not really a big deal, just normal wear and tear, but of course you never know when something might turn serious — and, in an absolute monarchy, any threat to the monarch’s health is, ipso facto, a threat to the kingdom.

As a result, media organizations quickly develop a fever at any sign of papal illness. It’s generally fed by a near-total communications blackout from the Vatican, refusing or delaying the release of even basic details about the pontiff’s condition. The stubborn Vatican mantra often is that such matters pertain to the pontiff’s private life.

Combine intense media interest with an informational vacuum, and what you usually get is chaos. As we move through the next few days, here are three points about papal health scares to bear in mind.

First, every pontiff gets one free pass regarding his health, meaning one occasion when people are inclined to believe the reassurances they’re given and to take Vatican statements about the situation at face value, and Pope Francis has now used up his.

During the free pass stage, when the Vatican says “the pope is suffering from X,” you don’t immediately get an avalanche of skeptics speculating that it’s really the far more serious Y. When the Vatican says “the pope has decided X” during his recovery in the hospital — appointed a bishop, say, or approved a document — most people accept that it really was the pope, as opposed to some shadowy Vatican figure manipulating a weakened or diminished pope to pursue his own agenda.

In the same vein, when the Vatican says this is simply a temporary setback and the pontiff will soon be back on the job at full capacity, people generally take that seriously too.

Yet from here on out, every time Pope Francis is sidelined by a health issue again, the tendency will grow not to be so easily reassured, and to push back harder against soothing official communiques that project an air of “nothing to see here” while simultaneously refusing to address obvious questions about what’s really happening.

So, Pope Francis’ team should enjoy the present climate of trust while it lasts — because, inevitably, it won’t last long. We’ll see, actually, if it even outlasts this episode.

Second, the next seven days, which is the length of time Pope Francis is projected to remain at the Gemelli, are likely to be marked by much higher-than-normal levels of Vatican coverage in press outlets. News organizations are paying to have people in position in Rome, some at the Gemelli and some working out of offices or hotel rooms, and aside from what’s likely to be a brief and anodyne medical bulletin each day at noon, there won’t be much news about the pontiff’s condition to report.

Yet the media, like nature, abhors a vacuum, and there’s only so many times a correspondent on an expense account can tell his or her editor there’s nothing more to say. As a result, we’re likely to see coverage of all sorts of Vatican and pope stories which, otherwise, might not break through the noise.

This point, by the way, is why one insta-theory which popped up Sunday never really held water. Some observers wondered if the Vatican had deliberately withheld any advance announcement the Holy Father would be getting surgery on Sunday in order to create a sensation and distract attention from Saturday’s announcement of ten criminal indictments, including a cardinal, for their alleged roles in an embarrassing financial scandal centering on the Secretariat of State’s efforts to buy property in London.

To begin with, there’s no reason the Vatican would want people to ignore that story. The indictments can be framed as proof that Pope Francis’ reforms are working, and the fact they include a means suggests nobody is above the law anymore. Beyond that, anybody who’s been around a papal health scare before knows there’s now a flock of journalists in Rome who will be in need of something to report, and the indictments and looming trial seem tailor-made to fill the void.

If you like Vatican news, in other words, this week should be prime time.

Third, part of the nature of a papal health scare is that we tend to over-interpret both good and bad news. If the day’s medical bulletin tells us the Holy Father is doing fine, we’ll wax about his indomitable spirit and his remarkable recovery; if we hear his return to the Vatican might be delayed due to a post-operative complication, then we’ll float grim prognoses and start rolling out backgrounders on various worst-case scenarios.

(One time-honored example of the genre is the piece about how there’s no mechanism in Church law for removing an incapacitated pope who’s incapable of making that decision for himself. If I had some loose change for every time somebody did that story in the Pope St. John Paul II years, I’d never have to sweat the rent again.)

The trick is not to be seduced either by the highs or the lows, realizing that in all likelihood they’re both exaggerated. Just average out what you hear over the next week, and you’ll likely be fairly close to reality.

In some ways, these papal health scares often seem a bit silly when they’re over, as if we all got carried away for nothing. The reason they keep happening, however, is because one day it won’t just be a “scare” — and the thinking seems to be, better to overreact to something minor than to underreact to something potentially mammoth.

Catholic News Headlines for Wednesday, 7/7/21

From doctors to postal workers, the COVID epicenter was once again a canyon of heroes. But some didn’t make it to the parade. They say parades are nice, but fair contracts would be even nicer.

By a slim margin, we have a winner in the Democratic primary for New York City mayor, but can Eric Adams lead the city into recovery?

The Holy Father’s health — but is it the media who has a fever?

Rosita’s rosaries — for a century they’ve been in the palm of her hand.

NYC’s Hometown Hero Parade Honors Essential Workers From Diocese of Brooklyn and Beyond

By Emily Drooby

They call her the first lady of the COVID-19 vaccine: Sandra Lindsay. She was the Grand Marshal of the NYC Hometown Heroes ticker tape parade. Sandra was also the first person in America to receive the life-saving COVID vaccine.

Following closely behind her in the parade was Michelle Chester, the woman who gave her the shot.

“We’ve accomplished so much, still more to go,” Michelle said. “But it’s a proud moment and I’m proud of each and every individual standing here today.”

Sandra is a hero to many.

“She showed bravery, she took the shot, being the very first one,” said Sylvia Pinder, who watched her drive by from the sidewalk.

Sylvia and other grateful New Yorkers filled the sidewalk as confetti filled the sky and essential workers filled what’s being called the canyon of heroes.

With her son by her side and her cross close to her heart, Catholic nurse Katie says the pandemic will forever define her career.

“It was really, really hard,” Katie said. “The things that I saw, I think were traumatizing, probably for the rest of my life, but I’m so glad that we were all able to stick together.”

But thousands, including paramedics, EMTs, and firefighters, boycotted the celebration in Manhattan. Instead of a parade, what they want is fair pay and better treatment by the city.

Eric Adams, the new Democratic candidate for mayor of New York City, addressed their position.

While walking along the parade route, he said he respected their decision.

“We have to deal with pay equity,” Eric said. “They decided to boycott and I respect that.”

For some, this was a time to take a stand, but for others this was a moment to let loose after a tense year.

The Diocese of Brooklyn had a strong presence at the parade including Vincent Levien and members of the Diocese of Brooklyn’s Emergency Task Force. They were front and center and honored for their frontline work.

“We were honored to help save lives and we are honored to be on NY-Presbyterian’s float,” Vincent said.

Like the emergency task force, members of SOMOS Community Care also get their inspiration to help others from their faith.

“If I didn’t have the faith that I have, I don’t think that I would have been here,” said Dr. Yomaris Pena. “Every night when I had doubts, I would go in and I would pray.”

100-Year-Old St. Teresa of Avila Parishioner Makes Rosaries for Evangelization

By Jessica Easthope

There are 59 beads in every rosary. Rosita Lewis knows the breakdown by heart, after all, she has made hundreds.

“I remember everything, I don’t need any book to tell me that,” she said. “I know the rosary and I just keep doing it from my brain.”

It started more than 30 years ago soon after she joined St. Teresa of Avila Parish in South Ozone Park, Queens. But this isn’t Rosita’s hobby – she says it’s her calling. She’s never said no to God or anyone who has asked for one.

“Whoever asks me for a rosary or whoever I think needs one, I just give it to them with joy,” Rosita said.

Each bead glides down the string she uses. Rosita says that every decade of the rosary has helped keep her alive for so many decades. She just celebrated her 100th birthday in June.

“I have no other recreation, I don’t care to go any place, I believe it’s the rosary,” she explained as her secret to a long life.

The rosary has become the center of Rosita’s faith. She prays it four times a day. Over the years, she has sent her handmade rosaries to Haiti, Jamaica and her native Trinidad & Tobago in hopes that they help people connect with their faith. Rosita makes her rosaries extra strong and with every uniform knot, her faith has become unbreakable.

“I believe firmly in my God and my Church, anything He says, whatever I read about Him, I never doubt it,” she said.

Some rosaries she can make in minutes – others take hours. Rosita takes it one section at a time, the same way she’s lived her life, one day at a time.

“Sometimes I feel a kind of numbness,” Rosita said touching her fingers together. “But yet, I can still make the rosaries, maybe that’s my mystery,” she said.

Each bead make Rosita’s rosaries complete, and each rosary – helps her complete her life’s mission.

Florida Condo Collapse Survivor Says He’s Alive ‘Only by the Grace of God’

Currents News Staff

Amid all of the tragic stories coming out of Florida, there are some amazing stories of survival.

Erick de Moura should have been asleep in his 10th floor apartment the night of the collapse, but a last minute decision to stay at his girlfriend’s house longer than usual is why he’s alive today.

He joined Currents News to share how he’s kept the faith throughout the tragic event.

 

Catholic News Headlines for Tuesday, 7/6/21

After surgery to remove part of his colon, Pope Francis is on the move, alert, and even up walking.

Then more about the pontiff’s condition, just how serious is diverticulitis? We speak with a doctor for a diagnosis.

And prayers pouring in — from politicians to pilgrims and a pastoral visit on the horizon, nothing is stopping the Holy Father’s plans from taking off on a two country tour come September.

Stay with us for the latest on Pope Francis’ road to recovery.