September 28 - North Texas Catholic
Transcription
September 28 - North Texas Catholic
North Texas Catholic Bringing the Good News to the Diocese of Fort Worth Vol. 23 No. 14 September 28, 2007 Vatican says food, water must be provided to vegetative patients CATHOLIC CHARITIES MARCH — An estimated 500 people, all participants at the annual Catholic Charities USA convention held in Cincinnati, march across the John Roebling Suspension Bridge Sept. 15 en route to the convention at the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center in downtown Cincinnati. (CNS photo/E.L. Hubbard, CATHOLIC TELEGRAPH) Catholic Charities delegates discuss poverty, racism at convention By Dennis O’Connor CINCINNATI (CNS) — Singing “This Little Light of Mine” and walking across a Civil War-era suspension bridge from Covington, Kentucky, to the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center in Cincinnati Sept. 15, about 500 participants at the annual Catholic Charities USA convention demonstrated their desire to lead the way out of poverty and racism. Echoing the convention theme, “Crossing the Rivers of Freedom,” the marchers followed in the footsteps of numerous former slaves making their way to freedom. The final destination for the delegates, the Freedom Center, was named for the part the Ohio River Valley played as a stop along the underground railroad. “This is a wonderful way to end a day of discussion about the role racism plays in our society,” said Shelley Borysiewicz, spokeswoman for Catholic Charities USA. Earlier in the day, Father Bryan Massingale, a Marquette University theology professor, and Bishop Ricardo Ramirez of Las Cruces, New Mexico, led discussions focused on the Catholic Charities 2007 briefing paper, “Poverty and Racism: Overlapping Threats to the Common Good.” “From that discussion, and then actually crossing the bridge and coming up to a prayer service at the Freedom Center, I think, provides a thought-provoking visual experience of people seeking freedom” from poverty and racism, Borysiewicz said. The Sept. 13-16 convention was co-hosted by Catholic Social Services of Southwestern Ohio, Catholic Social Services of Miami Valley, and Catholic Social SerSEE CATHOLIC CHARITIES’…, P. 14 By John Thavis VATICAN CITY (CNS) — In a brief document approved by Pope Benedict XVI, the Vatican said it was generally a moral obligation to provide food and water to patients in a vegetative state. Nutrition and hydration, even by artificial means, cannot simply be terminated because doctors have determined that a person will never recover consciousness, the Vatican said Sept. 14. Exceptions may occur when patients are unable to assimilate food and water or in the “rare” cases when nutrition and hydration become excessively burdensome for the patient, it said. The text was prepared by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in the form of a response to questions raised by the U.S. bishops’ conference. It was signed by U.S. Cardinal William J. Levada, prefect of the doctrinal congregation, and approved by the pope before publication. The congregation’s document strongly reaffirmed points made by Pope John Paul II in a landmark speech in 2004, when he said nutrition and hydration, even by “artificial” means such as feeding tubes, should generally be considered ordinary care and not extraordinary medical treatment. That was a key point, because the church teaches that “extraordinary” means of treatment for unresponsive patients can sometimes be discontinued. The late pope’s speech prompted questions in the theological and medical communities, and the U.S. bishops’ Committee on Doctrine submitted questions to SEE ADMINISTERING…, P. 12 Hurricane Humberto hits Texas, Louisiana; six churches damaged By Carol Zimmermann WASHINGTON (CNS) — Hurricane Humberto, which began as a tropical storm, made landfall in Texas and Louisiana Sept. 13. The storm’s high winds knocked down trees and power lines in the area and caused minor destruction, including water damage and the loss of shingles in six churches in the Diocese of Beaumont. The storm intensified when it hit the eastern tip of Texas with sustained winds of up to 80 mph and heavy rains before weakening and going through Louisiana. It was the first hurricane to make landfall on the Gulf Coast since Katrina and Rita two years ago. Karen Gilman, editor of the East Texas Catholic, Beaumont’s diocesan newspaper, said she SEE MOST DAMAGE…, P. 21 Bishop Vann addresses international gathering of aviation chaplains at DFW Airport By Joan Kurkowski-Gillen Correspondent Once, as a seminarian who studied in Rome, and later, as a parish priest who chaperoned his share of religious pilgrimages, Fort Worth Bishop Kevin Vann has had a taste of what it’s like to minister to people in airports. Waiting to depart for Europe during one excursion, the easygoing pastor recalled sitting in the New York’s JFK Airport terminal an extra four or five hours as airline personnel rechecked all the passenger luggage because of a security issue. One frustrated traveler noticed the priest’s Roman collar and began to vent her frustration. “Can’t you do something about this?” she demanded, assuming a member of the clergy could end the delay. In a reassuring tone, thenFather Vann reminded the passenger that safety, not speed, was the priority. “You don’t want to be 30,000 feet over the Atlantic and find out you have a problem,” he reasoned, trying to calm her. More recently, the pastor was traveling through LaGuardia International Airport in New York when he was stopped by a fellow passenger. She asked him to pray for her autistic daughter. “So I sat down and prayed with her,” he says, recalling the quiet moment of devotion. “She gave me her daughter’s name, and I still have it in my Liturgy of the Hours [book of liturgical prayers], where it’s a reminder to pray for that family.” SEE AIRPORT CHAPLAINS…, P. 7 Bishop Kevin Vann accepts a token of appreciation from Bishop Donald “DD” Hayes, head of the DFW Airport Interfaith Chaplaincy and a member of the Gospel Inspirational Fellowship Tabernacle Church Ministries in Fort Worth. Bishop Vann spoke to an international gathering of aviation chaplains in early September at American Airlines Conference Center, Fort Worth. (Photo by Joan Kurkowski-Gillen) Page 2 NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC, September 28, 2007 Diocesan WORLD Diocese of Fort Worth issues statement on removal of pastor of Vietnamese Martyrs Church, Arlington The following press release, including a statement from Bishop Kevin Vann, was issued by the Diocese of Fort Worth to the local news media and posted on the diocesan Web site (www.fwdioc.org) Thursday, Sept. 20. The pastor of the Vietnamese Martyrs Catholic Church in Arlington has been removed from office Thursday by Bishop Kevin Vann after an investigation of allegations of past sexual harassment of two women while the priest served a parish in another state. Bishop Vann informed the superiors of the Congregation of Mother Coredemptrix that he was as of today removing Father Bartholomew Hoa Thai Do from his office as pastor of Vietnamese Martyrs Catholic Church in Arlington as well as removing his priestly faculties. Father Do is a member of the Congregation of Mother Coredemptrix, which ministers at the request of the Bishop of Fort Worth to the Arlington Vietnamese Martyrs Catholic Church. Bishop Vann said: “My pastoral care and concern for the Vietnamese people here in our Diocese was preceded by the care of my late predecessor, the Most Reverend Joseph Delaney, who saw the need to establish parishes for the Catholics from Vietnam present in the Diocese. Because of this pastoral care, the present situation and recent developments are a cause of great concern to me and the wider Catholic community. The results of our internal investigation are not convicting, yet they are not exonerating either. YOUTH DAY COUNTDOWN — A counter, Since religious order priests serve at the discretion of the diocesan Bishop, and given all of the difficulties, I will not be accepting Father Bartholomew Hoa Thai Do back as pastor of Vietnamese Martyrs. A pastor is needed who can bring all parishioners together, and who has no cloud of past allegations about him, allegations which involve current residents of our Diocese. As of this date, I hereby remove Father Bartholomew Hoa Thai Do’s faculties.” The Catholic Diocese of Fort Worth invites anyone who wishes to report sexual misconduct by anyone who serves the church to contact Victims Abuse Coordinator Judy Locke at (817) 560-2452 ext. 201 or Father Michael Olson at (817) 560-2452 ext. 107. seen Sept. 15 above an entrance to St. Mary’s Cathedral in Sydney, Australia, keeps track of the days until the start of World Youth Day 2008. The opening Mass for World Youth Day will be July 15 at Royal Randwick Racecourse in Sydney. (CNS photo/Nancy Wiechec) Pope Benedict’s Marian devotion keeps clear focus on Christ By John Thavis MARIAZELL, Austria (CNS) — When Pope Benedict XVI came to the Austrian Marian shrine of Mariazell, he spoke a lot about Jesus Christ and said relatively little about Mary. That was indicative of the “style” of this pope’s Marian devotion, which Vatican officials have described as prudent, thoughtful, and very Christocentric. In general, the pope sees attachment to Mary as a wonderful way for the faithful to draw closer to Christ, but has been wary of anything that tends to exaggerate or over-sentimentalize her role in the church. “We rest awhile with the mother of the Lord, and we pray to her: Show us Jesus ... the one who is both the way and the destination,” the pope said in his sermon Sept. 8 to 30,000 people at Mariazell, where a small statue of Mary and Jesus has been drawing pilgrims for 850 years. Later, in a prayer liturgy at the sanctuary, he noted that Mary had received the fullness of God’s grace and said, “We learn to look always, like Mary, to Christ, and to make him our criterion and our measure.” A week earlier, at a Marian sanctuary in Italy, the pope recited six prayer intentions addressed to Mary — each of which quickly proceeded to invoke the lessons of Jesus. When he first visited Mariazell as a cardinal in 2004, church sources said the pope gave a long talk on the Christological focus of Marian devotion. In many ways, Mariazell seems to fit that focus. It is not a place of apparitions or spectacular events, and the devotion has always been quiet and low-key. It’s a small place unable to host huge crowds, yet significant in the religious history of the region. In the Mariazell area, images of Mary always show her with Christ, Vatican officials pointed out before the trip. When Pope John Paul II came to Mariazell in 1983, he entrusted Austria to Mary in a long prayer that seemed to leave her figure in high relief. The late pope had a strong personal devotion to Mary, and believed she had intervened in 1981 to save his life, by guiding a would-be assassin’s bullet away from vital organs. Pope John Paul’s episcopal motto, “Totus Tuus,” meant “Totally Yours” and expressed his dedication to Mary. He gave her great space in his writings and catechesis, and he consecrated populations and continents to her care. As a young theologian, Pope Benedict wrote little about Mary and said that, at that time, some of her ancient titles seemed exaggerated to him. By 2002, in the book, God and the World, he told an interviewer that “the older I am, the more important the Mother of God is to me and close to me.” But he also said that reverence for Mary “should not lead us to forget the `first’ of Christ: Everything comes from him.” For that reason, he opposed a movement to grant Mary the title of “co-redemptrix” or “coredeemer” with Christ, saying it could give rise to misunderstandings. In a 1985 book-length interview, he outlined six points illustrating Mary’s proper importance to the faith. The first was that Marian devotion helps Christians understand Christ’s incarnation. “It is ... in direct service to faith in Christ — not, therefore, primarily out of devotion to the Mother — that the church has proclaimed her Marian dogmas,” he said. The other five points were: — Mariology expresses the correct integration between Scripture and tradition. — As a Jewish girl who became the mother of the savior, Mary binds together the old and new people of God, Israel and Christianity. — Correct Marian devotion balances mind and heart, the lucidity of reason with the warmth of affection for Jesus’ mother. — Mary is the figure and archetype of the church as a mother, and represents the church’s human face. — In her virginity and motherhood, Mary sheds a new light on the “mystery of woman.” The pope summed up his views by saying: “As a creature of courage and of obedience [Mary] was and is still an example to which every Christian — man and woman — can and should look.” In later years, the pope developed these ideas and enriched them. And although, as the Vatican’s chief doctrinal official, he was very cautious about reports of Marian apparitions, he seemed to widen his views on that topic, too, saying that apparitions were a spiritual “sign of the times” POPE IN AUSTRIA — Pope Benedict XVI waves after visiting the Cistercian Abbey of the Holy Cross in Heiligenkreuz, Austria, Sept. 9. (CNS photo/Miro Kuzmanovic, Reuters) that showed Mary’s connection to Christ. In God and the World, the pope said he understands that many people feel they can “talk” to Mary in an unselfconscious way that they would not dare to do with Christ. “This is the language of the heart,” he said. North Texas Catholic Publisher: Bishop Kevin W. Vann Editor: Jeff Hensley Associate Editor: Mary Martin Secretary: Judy Russeau Editorial Office: 800 West Loop 820 South, Fort Worth, Texas 76108, (817) 560-3300; FAX (817) 244-8839. Circulation Office: Rita Garber, 800 West Loop 820 South, Fort Worth, Texas 76108, (817) 560-3300. NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC (USPS 751-370) (ISSN 0899-7020) is published semi-monthly, except for the months of June, July, and August when it is published monthly, by the Most Rev. Kevin W. Vann, Bishop of the Diocese of Fort Worth, 800 West Loop 820 South. Subscription rates are $24 for one year, $46 for two years, $68 for three years. Periodical postage paid at Fort Worth, Texas. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to North Texas Catholic, 800 West Loop 820 South, Fort Worth, Texas 76108. Deadline for information for the North Texas Catholic is noon of Wednesday of the week before the paper is published. The NTC is published two times a month on Friday, except for the months of June, July, and August when it is published one time each month. The appearance of advertising in these pages does not imply endorsement of businesses, services, or products. Readers must exercise prudence in responding to advertising in all media. NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC, September 28, 2007 Page 3 Diocesan Multiple locations across diocese to participate in National Life Chain Oct. 7 The annual National Life Chain will be held Sunday, Oct. 7, from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. in multiple locations across the Diocese of Fort Worth, in solidarity with participants in more than 1,000 locations across the United States and Canada. Life Chain participants will take part in the event from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. in each time zone across North America. Life Chain participants traditionally gather on well-traveled roadways on the first Sunday of October to offer silent witness to the value and dignity of human life. Participants of all faiths silently pray while holding professionally printed signs with approved pro-life messages for passing motorists to view, gathering peacefully to display support for life and opposition to abortion. Those interested in participating in this pro-life witness within the Diocese of Fort Worth are invited to choose from among the multiple Life Chain locations listed below. For more details about the Life Chain at each site, the local coordinators’ contact information is provided. For more information on the National Life Chain, visit the national Web site at www. NationalLifeChain.org, or call the Fort Worth coordinator, Julie Vecera, at (817) 297-1557. For information about opportunities to participate in pro-life activities within the Diocese of Fort Worth, contact Catholics Respect Life at (817) 623-2430 or visit the organization’s local Web site at www.catholicsrespectlife.org. Life Chain locations within diocese ARLINGTON Pioneer Pkwy. at Fielder Rd. John Gleason, (817) 457-9564 CARROLLTON Frankford at Josey Paul Kramer, (972) 492-2029, krzykra@aol.com CLEBURNE W. Henderson St. (In front of stadium) Elizabeth Victory, (817) 558-9805, ElizabethVictory@hotmail.com LAKE CITIES / GRAPEVINE / SOUTHLAKE Southlake Blvd. at Village Center Dr. Mary Solis, (817) 329-0402, VPSolis@yahoo.com LEWISVILLE Main St. at I-35 Judy Lance, (972) 436-2273, advandpregctr@msn.com LINDSAY Hwy. 82 Ray & Joan Sedge, (940) 759-2153 DENTON MANSFIELD 1200 University Dr. Cheryl Spooner, (940) 206-8435, Peace2DA@yahoo.com Hwy. 287 at 157 (Cooper St.) Kathi Miller, (817) 335-9258, Kathi@HatterCPA.com FLOWER MOUND MUENSTER Hwy. 2499 at Forest Vista Myra Jean Myers, (972) 539-6770, MyraJean@OutDrs.net Hwy. 82 Martha Sicking, (940) 759-2907, ams90@ntin.net FORT WORTH NORTH RICHLAND HILLS 3900 S. Hulen at Arborlawn Julie Vecera, (817) 297-1557, Jprolife@gmail.com Rufe Snow at Loop 820 (Chick-fil-A) Larry Stevens, (817) 847-6376, LarryStevens@earthlink.net GAINESVILLE SPRINGTOWN 602 N. Grand Ave. Catherine Bezner, (940) 665-4364, wcbezner@sbcglobal.net Hwy. 199 at Hwy. 51 Barbara Estes, (817) 221-2636, BnBEstes@aol.com KELLER TROPHY CLUB Rt. 377 between FM 1709 and Watauga Alana Demma, (817) 337-1721, DemmaRespectLife@verizon.net Trophy Lake Dr. at Trophy Club Dr. Brian Smith, (817) 491-1424, BrianandAndrea@sbcglobal.net WICHITA FALLS Holliday St. and Broad St. Mike Bahr, (940) 224-3221, SBahr@sw.RR.com Responding to God’s Call Vocation awareness — Want to transform your life? Volunteer! By Father Kyle Walterscheid V olunteers don’t get paid a thing, so why do so many people do it? What benefit, if any, is there to volunteering? I would like to respond by first asking what makes a Christian community? Is it simply a people united by a common faith, or does it require a much deeper investment, such as putting common prayer and faith into action? The typical experience that so many Christians go through each week is the running to church on Sunday as part of the holy day of obligation, but does Christianity require something much deeper? Indeed it does. For 10 years of my life I was going to Mass on Sunday and putting money in the collection basket, thinking this was all there was to my Christian duty — but something was missing. I was deeply disconnected. I did not feel like part of the community. This experience recently came up again in my life as a priest. I have been celebrating Mass once a month at the University Catholic Community at the University of Texas in Arlington for the past two years for the Catholic Alumni Association. We have Mass and a meeting once a month. Someone suggested something significant was missing from our newly formed community. They suggested that we needed Children and Youth Holy Hour to be observed Oct. 5 The Franciscan Friars of the Renewal within the Diocese of Fort Worth will lead a local observance of the Worldwide Children and Youth Holy Hour Oct. 5 at 6:30 p.m. at St. Patrick Cathedral, 1206 Throckmorton Street in downtown Fort Worth. The event will include eucharistic adoration, the recitation of the rosary, and the crowning of the statue of Our Lady of Fatima. Father Kyle Walterscheid, director of the Office of Vocations, is shown walking out of Sacred Heart Parish in Muenster following his ordination to the priesthood in May 2002. Even then, he appeared to be inviting people to ask if they were being called to a vocation. Young people within the Diocese of Fort Worth are invited to gather at the cathedral to unite their prayers with those of schoolchildren who will also be gathered Oct. 5 at the Basilica of to do something more than celebrating Mass and planning meetings; we needed to come together to volunteer our time and talent in a common project. That’s it! A Christian community is made of volunteers united by a common faith and prayer who invest themselves in the community by volunteering their time and talent. This was the bond that I was missing while going through college and then as a single Christian living out on my own. Volunteering is at the heart of the Christian community! While the Eucharist is the holy source and summit of the Christian community, and common worship unites us, without the common bonds and interaction that volunteering brings, we will simply not have a Christian community for long. Acts 2:42 states four essential elements of the daily life of the new Christians as: devoting themselves to the teachings of the apostles, to the communal life, to the breaking of the bread, and to prayers. Volunteering is part of the communal life, and it doesn’t cost a thing! That’s why it is countercultural. Our culture sees little or no value to investing our time in things that don’t add to the gross national product. Our society puts a dollar sign on everything and everybody. Christianity does not! Society tells us that money will bring us happiness, yet we know our happiness comes from God. Volunteering helps us value each other as persons and not as objects created to make a quick buck off one’s neighbor or for big business. This may be why volunteering has doubled among teens in the last 20 years, according to the Corporation for National and Community Service, a govern- ment agency that tracks volunteering trends. It has also noted that the number of college-aged volunteers has increased 30 percent between 2002 and 2006. Teenagers and young adults seem to be catching on to the true value of volunteering as they search for a deeper meaning to life. For college students, there is a secondary benefit too. Employers are now beginning to look at volunteering as significant part of any résumé. If two people are equally qualified for a job, the job is most likely to go to the one who has a better sense of service and has a proven record of volunteering. I was elated this past year to provide recommendations to employers many times over as students who volunteered in campus ministry asked me, as their chaplain, to be a reference for their employment opportunities. As we volunteer in the community, we then receive the deep bonds of knowing and loving our neighbor, which produces the joys and laughter of life as well as the sharing of sorrows and pains. Volunteering is an expression of love, and it will go a long way in bringing us to understanding God’s love for us. Once regular volunteering is a part of our lives, then we will be connected and fulfilled; we will look forward to every Mass and the holy Eucharist as the source and summit of life. Volunteering will transform your life as God reveals to you his love and your vocation. the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington D.C. The national gathering has been celebrated annually for the past five years. In celebration of the 90th anniversary year of Our Lady of Fatima, Pope Benedict XVI has granted an apostolic blessing to all who participate in the holy hour. For more information about the local gathering, contact Eileen Nelson at (817) 926-5399, or Kim Ball at (817) 426-5085 or via e-mail to jc-kim-ball@ sbcglobal.net. Father Kyle Walterscheid is the director of Vocations for the Diocese of Fort Worth. He can be reached by e-mail to kwalterscheid @fwdioc.org. Page 4 NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC, September 28, 2007 Local faithful to participate in ‘40 Days for Life’ campaign Local Catholics will join members of other religious traditions in observing “40 Days for Life,” a nationwide ecumenical campaign designed to call attention to the sanctity of life at all stages. The campaign began Sept. 26, and it will continue through Nov. 4, according to a flyer from Catholics Respect Life, a pro-life organization within the Diocese of Fort Worth. Throughout the period of this campaign, participants will hold a vigil Monday through Saturday evenings from 7:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. outside the Planned Parenthood abortion center, located at 301 S. Henderson Street in Fort Worth, where they will pray for an end to abortion. Those participating are also encouraged to fast and pray throughout these 40 days. It is expected that more than 80 cities in 32 states will take part in this “largest simultaneous pro-life mobilization in history,” states the flyer. Catholics Respect Life has volunteered to organize the local efforts. The pro-life organization is also looking for volunteers to act as shift leaders or to lead prayer during the vigil. To volunteer, call Gisele Ferguson at (817) 605-9269, or call the Catholics Respect Life office at (817) 623-2430. Catholics Respect Life to offer Mass in honor of Our Lady of Fatima Catholics Respect Life, a pro-life ministry in the Diocese of Fort Worth, is sponsoring a Mass and procession Saturday, Oct. 13, in honor of Our Lady of Fatima. The Mass will begin at 7 a.m. at St. Mary of the Assumption Parish, 509 W. Magnolia in Fort Worth, with Bishop Kevin Vann as the main celebrant. The procession will immediately follow the Mass. For more information, call Nan Wilsterman at (817) 346-0926 or e-mail to nan4life01@hotmail. com. Bishop Vann to preside at Mass for children who have died before birth On Oct 6, Bishop Kevin Vann will celebrate the annual diocesan Memorial Mass for children who have died before birth. The liturgy, to take place at St. Mary of the Assumption Church, 509 West Magnolia in Fort Worth, will begin at 2 p.m. Refreshments will be served in the church hall following the liturgy. “The bishop’s intention is to bring this special liturgical celebration to those who have lost children before birth through miscarriage, still birth, or abortion, in order to help them in the process of healing from their loss,” said Chuck Pelletier, president of the sponsoring organizations — Mother and Unborn Baby Care, and Catholics United for Life. Flowers will be provided for parents to offer during the liturgy in memory of their children, should they wish to do so. Reservations are requested but not required. For more information or to make a reservation, call (817) 738-1086, or e-mail to mubcare@ charter.net. Sidewalk counseling, prayer training to be offered Oct. 6 Training for those seeking to offer counseling and prayerful presence in front of abortion centers will be offered Saturday, Oct. 6, from 10 a.m. to noon at St. Rita Church, 5550 E. Lancaster Avenue in Fort Worth. “Learn how, what, where, and why we pray in front of abortion centers,” invite training organizers. “Learn how to approach couples entering the abortion center and offer help, love, and alternatives before they enter.” Organizers invite everyone to consider joining the people on the sidewalk in front of the abortion centers who “offer prayer to our Lord for those who participate in abortion.” For more information or to make a reservation, contact John Bezner at jhbezner@yahoo.com or (940) 634-1434. Fr. Charles Becker to speak at St. Mary of the Assumption Church The Fort Worth Queen of Peace Center will host a presentation entitled “The Blessed Mother Speaks to the Apostles of the Last Times” Tuesday, Oct. 16, at St. Mary of the Assumption Church, 509 W. Magnolia Avenue in Fort Worth. The event will begin at 6:45 p.m. with the recitation of the rosary. Mass will follow, and the presentation, given by Father Charles Becker, will be offered after Mass. Fr. Becker, who has made over 40 pilgrimages to Medjugorje, has developed rosary prayer groups throughout the Archdiocese of Chicago and has made frequent appearances on the Eternal Word Television Network (EWTN). He will also offer the presentation at St. Monica Church in Dallas at 7 p.m. Monday, Oct. 15. For more information on either presentation, call (817) 244-7733, (817) 558-9805, or (817) 2448191. Official Assignments The following assignment has been made by Bishop Kevin Vann: Rev. Philip M. Binh Tran, CMC, has been appointed parochial administrator of Vietnamese Martyrs Parish in Arlington, effective Sept. 20. People Events & of Importance for the Church of Fort Worth PRO-LIFE COORDINATORS MEET — Andy Rivas (left), executive director of the Texas Catholic Conference, listens as Kelly Shackelford, president of the Free Market Foundation, outlines pro-life strategies during an Aug. 23 meeting at The Catholic Center in West Fort Worth. Pro-life coordinators from throughout North Texas attended the planning session. (Photo by Joan Kurkowski-Gillen) DCCW Assembly to be held Oct. 25 With the theme “Bringing Light to Women in OUR World,” the Fort Worth Diocesan Council of Catholic Women (DCCW) will hold their biennial DCCW Assembly Oct. 25 at Sacred Heart Church, 1501 9th Street in Wichita Falls. Keynote speaker Kay Keglovits, a parishioner at St. Maria Goretti Church in Arlington who is described in promotional materials as a “dynamic and faith-filled presenter,” will focus upon “Spirituality and Women” in her presentation to the assembly. Bishop Kevin Vann will preside at the assembly Mass. Reports from officers will be heard during the day; workshops will be offered; and participants will vote upon bylaw changes that have been proposed and distributed to members. Each parish has been asked to contribute a $25 gift or gift certificate, to be offered in a silent auction in order to raise funds for the Fort Worth chapter of the DCCW. The $20 registration fee for the day includes lunch and assembly materials; the fee is $25 if received after Oct. 15. According to the mission statement for the national organization, the council “acts through its membership to support, empower, and educate all Catholic women in spirituality, leadership, and service. NCCW (National Council of Catholic Women) programs respond with Gospel values to the needs of the church and society in the modern world.” For more information about registration for the assembly, contact Betsy Kalina at (817) 275-0787. Presentation to be offered on Vatican II at Most Blessed Sacrament The diocesan office of Adult Catechesis and RCIA will host a catechetical presentation entitled “Vatican II Almost 50 Years Later: Catching the Spirit of Vatican II with John Paul II and Benedict XVI” Tuesday, Oct. 16, at Most Blessed Sacrament Church, 2100 North Davis Drive in Arlington. The program, to be given in the parish hall from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., will be presented by Douglas Bushman, director of the Institute for Pastoral Theology at Ave Maria University in Naples, Florida. Bushman “will help us to know and understand the spirit and implementation of Vatican II, especially from the writings and teachings of Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI, and how this spirit can motivate and shape the mission of catechesis and evangelization in the church today,” said Lucas Pollice, diocesan director of Adult Catechesis and RCIA. According to Pollice, the event is a “perfect presentation for those involved in catechesis at all levels and for anyone desiring to learn more about the legacy of Vatican II and the New Evangelization.” Bushman, a theologian, holds a licentiate degree in sacred theology granted by the pontifical faculty of the University of Fribourg, Switzerland. He has received national recognition for his work to develop the teachings of Vatican II, Pope John Paul II, and Pope Benedict XVI. For more information about the presentation, contact Lucas Pollice at (817) 560-3300 ext. 260 or e-mail to lpollice@fwdioc.org. Faith and Fiction group to meet Oct. 18 “Faith and Fiction: Conversations on Spirituality and Imagination,” a venue for discussing novels and films with themes that shed light on the journey of faith, will meet Thursday, Oct. 18, at the Catholic Renewal Center, 4503 Bridge Street in Fort Worth. The topic of discussion will be Peace Like a River, by Lief Enger. Those planning to participate are asked to read the book, reflect on it in light of personal experiences, and come to the session with questions, insights, or observations to share. A potluck supper will be served at 6:15 p.m., and the discussion will take place from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Future dates and topics include the following: Nov. 15, Possession, by A. S. Byatt; Dec. 13, the film “Joyeux Noel,” directed by Christian Carion; Jan. 17, The Book Thief, by Markus Zusak; Feb. 21, 84 Charing Cross Road, by Helene Hanff; and March 27, Wuthering Heights, by Emily Bronte. To ensure good conversation, space will be limited. To reserve a spot or for more information, call the Catholic Renewal Center at (817) 429-2920 or e-mail to danluby@ udallas.edu. ‘Parental Survival Course’ to be offered Oct. 27 in Keller Dr. Ray Guarendi, a clinical psychologist, will speak at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Church, located at 2016 Willis Lane in Keller, Oct. 27. Dr. Guarendi will present a program entitled “Parental Survival Course: Turning Trials to Triumphs” from 9 a.m. to noon. Described by event organizers as an “extremely entertaining” presenter, Dr. Guarendi, the father of 10 children of his own, will provide practical advice to parents. He can be heard locally on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays from noon to 1 p.m. on Catholic radio station KATH 910 AM. Tickets to the event at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton are $10 per person or $20 per family. To order tickets, contact Frank Laux at (817) 939-8594, or for more information, visit online at www.sjcktc.org. St. Andrew to offer Scripture study program St. Andrew Parish recently announced that it will offer Catholic Scripture Study, a doctrinally based Catholic Scripture study program. Participants will meet weekly, beginning Monday, Oct. 1, from 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. in the parish hall, located at 3717 Stadium Drive in Fort Worth. The classes will continue through May. All the major books of the Bible are to be covered in a five-year cycle. The weekly meetings will involve class discussion, and material for study and daily reflection will be provided. The program is open to all people who have an interest in Scripture and the Catholic Church. Participants are asked to commit to regular attendance for the current year’s course. For more information, call Alice Curran or Michele Salcedo at (817) 927-5383. Childcare is available by calling (817) 924-6581. Ministry Formation Day in Wichita Falls set for Oct. 6 “Encountering the Living Christ” is the theme of the diocesan Ministry Formation Day, to be held Oct. 6 at Notre Dame High School, 2821 Lansing Blvd. in Wichita Falls. The event is an opportunity for enrichment, fellowship, and development of practical skills for ministry. Ministry Formation Day, to be offered in English and Spanish, will begin at 8 a.m. with the viewing of exhibits. Registration and a continental breakfast will follow from 8:30 a.m. to 9 a.m. The English keynote address will be presented at 10 a.m. by Father Nathan Stone, SJ, from Montserrat Jesuit Retreat House. The Spanish keynote, which will begin at 11:15 a.m., will be presented by Jesús López of Los Angeles. During the English keynote address, a breakout session with Spanish-language workshops will be held, and while the Spanish keynote is offered, English-language workshops will take place. There also will be a second round of workshops in the afternoon, beginning at 1:30 p.m. After another opportunity to view exhibits at 2:30, Ministry Formation Day will conclude at 3 p.m. All are welcome to attend. The cost, which includes lunch, is $25. Scholarships are available. For more information, call The Catholic Center at (817) 560-3300 or visit the diocesan Web site at www.fwdioc.org. ‘Theology of the Body’ workshop to be offered at St. Maria Goretti “Whether you’re married, engaged, or single; teen, young adult, or older adult, it’s important to know what it means to be made in God’s image and likeness,” states promotional material for a “Theology of the Body” DVD series to be offered at St. Maria Goretti Parish, 1200 S. Davis Drive in Arlington. The four-week series will begin Oct. 19, with food and drinks being served at 6:30 p.m. and the program starting at 7 p.m. Based on an eight-part DVD series by Christopher West, four weeks of the program will be presented this fall, and the remaining four parts will conclude in the spring. “Christopher West unpacks John Paul II’s ‘Theology of the Body,’ translating it into a language everyone can understand,” information from the parish states. “The human body is a ‘theology,’” the material explains, “because it is meant to be a sign of God’s own life and love in the world.” Each week of the series may be taken independently of the other. The cost is $5 per person for the study guide and $5 per person each week for pizza and drinks. To register or for more information, contact John Cox, director of faith formation at St. Maria Goretti, at (817) 274-0643 ext. 226 or by e-mail to jcox@smgparish.org. The deadline for registration is Oct 14. NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC, September 28, 2007 Page 5 People and Events Ian Myers earns Eagle Scout award Ian Matthew Myers, a parishioner of St. Vincent de Paul Church in Arlington, achieved Eagle Scout rank with Ian Myers the National Council of the Boy Scouts of America (BSA). He accepted the award from BSA Longhorn Council Troop 32 Scoutmaster Brian Polhemus at an Eagle Court of Honor, held April 15. Myers’ Eagle Scout project consisted of building a chess garden at the Senior Recreation Center located at 1000 Eunice Street in Arlington. He received an award at a special dedication ceremony from Pete Jamieson, director of Parks and Recreation for the city of Arlington for the project, which consisted of laying concrete foundations for three custom-designed outdoor concrete picnic tables and benches at the recreation facility. Myers, a member of the Order of the Arrow Brotherhood, served as the senior patrol leader for the Ad Altare Dei pilgrimage tour, sponsored by the Catholic Committee on Scouting in July 2007. He received the Arrow of Light Award, the Parvuli Dei Award, and the George Perdue Award from Troop 32. He also received the 125 Miler Award from the BSA High Adventure canoe trip to Ely, Minnesota. Myers, a home-schooled student, received the Bud Manley Youth Leadership Award from St. Vincent de Paul Church’s Men’s Club and the parish’s Discipleship Award for High School Youth, and has also received numerous awards and honors through various civic and volunteer organizations. A freshman student at Ave Maria University (AMU) in Naples, Florida, Myers was awarded an AMU Citizenship Scholarship and the National Eagle Scout Association Academic Scholarship. He is the son of Larry Myers and Patty Myers of Arlington. St. Maria Goretti Parish to host blessing of animals Sept. 30 Series on Catholic social teaching continues at St. Michael’s St. Maria Goretti Parish will host its annual blessing of the animals Sunday, Sept. 30, at 2:30 p.m. The procession of animals — everything from dogs and cats to hamsters and even horses — will take place behind parish center, located at 1200 South Davis Drive in Arlington. This unique blessing is conducted each year in remembrance of St. Francis of Assisi and his love for all creatures. St. Francis, whose feast day is Oct. 4, wrote a Canticle of the Creatures, an ode to God’s living things, which included the words, “All praise to you, Oh Lord, for all these brother and sister creatures.” For more information, contact Cindy Alford at (817) 274-0643 or e-mail to calford@smgparish.org. St. Michael Church, located at 3713 Harwood Road in Bedford, is currently hosting a series on Catholic social teaching. The Thursday evening sessions, being offered through Oct. 25, take place from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. By participating in these seminars, according to information from the parish, participants will gain a better understanding of current social justice issues, possible solutions, and how their faith is calling them to action. The next program, “Poverty, Global Migration, and Effects of World Trade,” will be presented Oct. 4 by Father Juan Molina of Catholic Relief Service. Fr. Molina will present in-depth introduction to Catholic Relief Services and how it carries on the work of global solidarity on behalf of the U.S. Catholic community. A question and answer period will follow the lecture. Future topics to be covered include the following: Oct. 11, “Health Care and the Uninsured,” by Catholic Health Association of Texas; Oct. 18, “Abortion and Capital Punishment,” by Bishop Kevin Vann; Oct. 25, “Political Responsibility,” by Ralph McCloud, diocesan director of Community and Pastoral Services. Reservations are requested. To make a reservation or for more information, call Martín Peña, director of social outreach/pastoral care at St. Michael Parish, at (817) 2838746 ext. 30 or e-mail to mpena@ smcchurch.org. Viking Run set for Nov. 3 at Gateway Park in Arlington Bring the entire family to the first annual Viking Run, to be held Saturday, Nov. 3, at Gateway Park in East Ft. Worth. The 1-mile timed run/walk will start at 8 a.m., with the 5K run/walk following at 8:30 a.m. A warm-up will take place at 7:30 a.m. An awards ceremony is planned immediately following the 5K Race. The run will benefit Nolan Catholic High School Project Graduation. This program provides an alcoholand drug-free set of celebrations for Nolan’s graduating class. Join us for food, music, and lots of fun, encourage organizers. Those interested in participating may register online at www.Vikingrun.com or at the park on race day beginning at 6:45 a.m. Race information packets are available at Luke’s Locker, 1540 S. University Drive in Fort Worth, (817) 877-1448. For more information, contact Mary Berger by e-mail to Mary@racetimeproductions.com. Knights fall festival set for Oct. 6 The Knights of Columbus Council #4709 will hold a fall festival Oct. 6 at the council’s hall, located at 3809 Yucca Ave. in Fort Worth. The event will take place from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. and will include face painting, a hayride, pony rides, a bounce house, fishing pond, games, and other entertainment. A variety of foods will be available. All proceeds from the purchase of games, food, and beverages will be used to help support the activities of Council #4709. For more information, contact the Knights of Columbus at (817) 838-0223 or via e-mail to kc4709@ sbcglobal.net. St. John Parish to host annual Fall Fest Oct. 5-6 NATIONAL MERIT SEMIFINALISTS — Nolan Catholic High School in East Fort Worth recently announced that four of its seniors, (l. to r.) Andrea Meza, Christine Dryden, Christopher Fitzer, and Catherine Samson, have been chosen as semifinalists in the National Merit Scholarship Program. These seniors are among 16,000 students, or approximately one-third of the 50,000 high scorers on the 2006 Preliminary SAT/National Merit Qualifying Test, designated as semifinalists. “The entire Nolan Catholic High School family salutes the special achievement of these four seniors,” said NCHS Principal Stephen Hiner. “They are among the highest scoring entrants in the state of Texas.” About 90 percent of all semifinalists are expected to attain finalist standing, and approximately half of the finalists will be selected as Merit Scholarship winners. St. John the Apostle Parish’s annual Fall Fest will be held Friday, Oct. 5, from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. and Saturday, Oct. 6, from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. The event, organized by the Knights of Columbus Council #8512, will take place on the church grounds, located at 7341 Glenview Drive in North Richland Hills. The festival will include live entertainment, ethnic foods, games, a “six on six” soccer tournament, and craft items for purchase. For more information, contact the parish office at (817) 284-4811. RECOGNIZING POLICE, FIREFIGHTERS — Knights of Columbus Council #9884 hosted its sixth annual Police and Fire Appreciation Luncheon Sept. 15 at St. Philip the Apostle Church in Lewisville. The barbecue, which is held each year on the Saturday closest to Sept. 11, is an opportunity to offer community recognition for the first responders in Flower Mound, Lewisville, Highland Village, and Double Oak, and to express appreciation for the job that these men and women perform each day. The police and firefighter crews attend as their schedules allow. Grand Knight Bill Miller presented a certificate of appreciation to each of the fire houses and the police department of each community. Our Lady of Victory to host annual fall festival Oct. 13 Our Lady of Victory School will host its annual fall festival Oct. 13 from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. on the school grounds, located at 3320 Hemphill Street in South Fort Worth. The festival will feature food, live entertainment, music, games, an obstacle course, a bounce house, and rides. Information on safety and nutrition will be provided by the Texas Department of Transportation and the Department of Health. The Harris Methodist Mobile Health Unit will offer mammograms and other health screening services from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Mammograms may be scheduled in advance by calling 1-888-442-7747. For more information about the festival, contact Margaret Torres at (817) 228-0730. St. George School to host fall carnival Oct. 13 Everyone is invited to come and join in the fun and festivities at the St. George School Fall Carnival Oct. 13 from noon to 8 p.m. Carnival games for people of every age, pony rides, and a “Spook House” are among the planned activities. A wide variety of foods will be available to enjoy, including ethnic dishes, roasted corn on the cob, funnel cakes, hamburgers, and hot dogs. Entertainment will include folklorico dancers and dragon dancers. St. George School is located east of downtown Fort Worth off of Belknap Street at 824 Hudgins Avenue. The carnival will take place on the school grounds, in the 800 block of Karnes between 121 Airport Freeway and Maurice. For more information, call the school office at (817) 222-1221. Lewisville Knights to sponsor youth Soccer Challenge Oct. 13 The third annual Knights of Columbus Soccer Challenge, sponsored by the Lewisville KC Council #9884 and the Greater Lewisville Area Soccer Association, will be held Saturday, Oct. 13, at the Chinn Chapel soccer fields in Flower Mound from 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. The district competition will follow on the same day. The competition is designed for players to demonstrate their skill with the penalty kick. Each player will be allowed 15 consecutive shots at the goal from the penalty line (12 yards from the goal). The goal will be divided into a series of five scoring zones. The Soccer Challenge is open to all youth, ages 10 through 14, as of Sept. 1, and living in communities within the Lewisville ISD area (except for The Colony, which will hold its own event). Proof of age is required. High school athletes are encouraged to discuss the competition with school athletic directors to avoid any potential eligibility conflicts. Full details can be found on the Greater Lewisville Area Soccer Association (GLASA) Web site at www. glasasoccer.org. North Texas Catholic deadlines for submission The North Texas Catholic is published twice monthly, except during the months of June, July, and August when it is published monthly. The deadline to submit information is noon on the Wednesday of the week before the paper is published. Items for the Oct. 12 issue must be received by noon on Wednesday, Oct. 3. Items for the Oct. 26 issue must be received by noon on Wednesday, Oct. 17. Nolan Catholic to host homecoming event Oct. 19 All Nolan Catholic High School alumni are invited to take part in this year’s homecoming celebration Friday, Oct. 19 on the school grounds at 4501 Bridge St. in East Fort Worth. Former Nolan students are encouraged to bring their family members for a pre-game alumni barbecue dinner to be served at 5:30 p.m. The first 100 alumni at the dinner will receive an alumni T-shirt. Children in attendance will enjoy the jump house and Viking face “tattoos” compliments of the junior varsity cheerleaders, according to information from the school. From 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., current students will be giving tours of the school. At 7:30 p.m., the football game will begin, with the Nolan Catholic Vikings taking on John Paul II High School. At halftime, the alumni will gather in the south end zone to form a spirit line, welcoming the Vikings back for the second half. For more information or to RSVP for the dinner by Oct. 9, call (817) 457-2920 ext. 1670, or e-mail to alumni@nolancatholichs.org. Calix support group meets monthly at Holy Family Calix, a monthly support meeting for Catholics who are alcoholic and others who are struggling with addiction and seeking recovery, is offered the first Saturday of each month at Holy Family Church, 6150 Pershing Avenue in West Fort Worth. The next meeting will be held Oct. 6, beginning at 10 a.m. in the chapel. Calix meetings focus on enhancing spiritual growth through sharing Eucharist, discussion, and fellowship. For more information, call Deacon Joe Milligan at (817) 737-6768 ext. 105. Page 6 NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC, September 28, 2007 Diocesan Seminarian Jack McKone receives sacrament of holy orders as a deacon Story and Photos by Kathy Cribari Hamer A ll nine siblings were present at the family’s home parish of St. Rita in East Fort Worth Sept. 8, when their brother, Jack Ells McKone, was ordained to the diaconate for the Diocese of Fort Worth. But other special guests were present as well, according to Bishop Kevin Vann, principal celebrant and homilist. The first guest, St. Paul, was present through the second reading, “We know that all things work for good for those who love God….” The bishop also named the seminarian’s father, Peter, and his mother, Marcella, who passed away in January 1987, and St. Rita Parish, Nolan Catholic High School, and the missions as strong contributors to McKone’s vocation. “They all worked together to bring us to this moment and this place,” he said. Above: Seminarian Jack McKone takes his place in the front pew of his home parish, St. Rita in Fort Worth, at the beginning of his diaconate ordination liturgy. His father, Peter, and his sister, Donna, stand behind him offering their support; all nine of his siblings were present for the Mass. St. Rita was faithful to prayer through difficult times, Bishop Vann said, and “speaks to you to be faithful to prayer.” Mary, the mother of God, was an example of saying “yes” in all moments. The last guest was the Lord, whose presence would be reflected through the sacraments and the word the new deacon would proclaim. “We rejoice with St. Paul, St. Rita, Mary our mother, and the Lord,” Bishop Vann said, “as you say ‘yes’ to the word of God, and ‘yes’ to serve the Left: Jack McKone lies prostrate as the assembly prays the Litany of the Saints. Lord as his deacon.” In a recent interview, Deacon McKone said that the Lord called him to service a long time ago. “I was always called — in God’s time. “Looking back, I think of the action of the Holy Spirit in my life, and I don’t think I had the maturity to be a priest in my 20s. It’s a big blessing to be a young person who answers the call for a vocation, and it is their whole life.” But it is also a blessing, he said, for a man with maturity who has experienced family or career. By the time Jack McKone came to the seminary, he had enjoyed a career as a selfproclaimed “gear-head.” He graduated from Nolan Catholic in 1970 and studied at The University of Texas in Arlington, before taking a job at a car dealership. “Hey, if it had an internal combustion engine in it, that was pretty cool,” he admitted. Left: Deacon Jack McKone assists Bishop Kevin Vann at the eucharistic table. Deacon McKone is expected to finish his seminary training by the end of this semester, paving the way for his ordination to the priesthood in January. Above: Bishop Kevin Vann lays hands on Jack McKone, invoking the Holy Spirit during the moment of ordination to the diaconate for the Diocese of Fort Worth. God willing, Deacon Jack McKone will be ordained to the priesthood in January. His career continued, and he became manager of parts and service at David McDavid Automotive Group until 2001. It was that expertise that led him to where his heart was, when Peter Flynn, director of Finance and Administration for the Diocese of Fort Worth, asked him to work on five donated school buses, and help get them to Honduras, where they would be given to Fort Worth’s sister diocese in Juticalpa. A caravan of volunteers drove through Mexico to Honduras and delivered the buses to Juticalpa’s bishop, Bishop Mauro Muldoon, OFM. On the way, they dropped off Jack McKone in Guatemala, where he had previously worked as a parish volunteer. It was May 2001, and McKone stayed there until November 2002 as an in-country representative of St. John the Apostle Parish in North Richland Hills and other parishes of the diocese making a contribution to mission work in Guatemala. Deacon McKone will finish his seminary training at the end of this semester, and his priestly ordination is scheduled, God willing, for January. This diaconate ordination previewed the next one, as he was presented to the bishop, lay prostrate in prayer, received the sacrament of holy orders through the laying on of hands, was vested, and was presented the Book of Gospels. “When I had on the chasuble and stole, I thought, ‘Wow, this is real. This is really happening.’ It’s a feeling of honor and weight,” he said, “and very much a chosen-ness. It’s not earned; it’s given.” While he finishes this last semester, the new deacon will work at a parish, teaching Scripture, preaching, and performing baptisms and weddings. “The single most important job a priest has is the Word,” Deacon McKone said. “To do it right is time consuming. It takes six to eight hours to prepare a good homily. “I think it is important to let guys know what a joyful experience the seminary is. Sometimes I think people don’t follow the call because they think they are not worthy. There are even people who don’t receive Communion because they think they are not worthy. But no one can make you worthy, because we are all sinners. “I’ve been looking at vocations for a long time. I’d look at nuns and priests and say, ‘I can’t do that.’ “But maybe I was relying on my own effort too much,” Deacon McKone said, “instead of relying on God.” NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC, September 28, 2007 Page 7 Diocesan Airport chaplains from around the world gather at DFW Airport to share insights, learn how to better serve the millions who pass through the world’s airports each year Story and Photos by Joan Kurkowski-Gillen FROM PAGE 1 Those travel experiences mirror what goes on daily in the lives of airport chaplains around the world, the bishop said in an address that opened the 40th annual conference of the International Association of Civil Aviation Chaplains (IACAC). The Sept. 9-14 event, hosted by the DFW Airport Interfaith Chaplaincy at the American Airlines Conference Center in Fort Worth, brought together 70 chaplains from 24 countries. Designed to showcase the value of airport chaplaincy programs, the annual gathering gives members an opportunity to share ideas and explore the relationship between the church, the chaplaincy, and the millions of people they serve each year. Chapels are found in 140 airports around the world, including 40 in the United States. DFW International Airport has five chapels located in Terminals A, B, C, D, and E. Deacon Ed Scarbrough of the Diocese of Dallas conducts a Sunday morning Communion service in Terminal D at 7 a.m. and another at 8 a.m. in Terminal C. The interfaith space is a place where people of all beliefs are welcome to pray, meditate, or sit in quiet reflection. Airport chaplains offer daily or weekly worship services, but most of their time is spent walking through bustling terminals where they minister to airline employees and passengers. In his remarks, Bishop Vann told the gathering of airport ministers that they are given unique opportunities to bring God to people that pastors in regular parish life simply do not have. Travel, he pointed out, takes away the security of routine and the defenses we build up in everyday life. When delays or other problems occur, those anxieties are heightened. “We realize we’re not in control and we’re not the sole determiners of our destiny. That brings us in conflict with the current ethos and culture,” the bishop said. In the selfsufficient Western civilization and in a culture that is increasingly hostile to God, “travel unsettles us.” Above: Bishop Kevin Vann shares some of his experiences of ministering to people in airports with members of the International Association of Civil Aviation Chaplains. The organization’s 40th annual conference was held at American Airlines Conference Center in Fort Worth Sept. 9-14. Left: Father Michael Zaniolo (left), a chaplain at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport, and Marge Wick, who serves as the office manager for the chaplaincy program at DFW International Airport, spend a moment conversing with Bishop Kevin Vann at the airport chaplains’ conference. But that unsettling can create an opening and reawakening to God. “Even if it’s only for a moment,” he explained. “I believe God’s providence places each one of you in those openings to faith in people’s lives.” The bishop cautioned his listeners to be watchful for those opportunities. Gate agents, security personnel, baggage handlers, flight crews, and travelers are all part of the flock God has placed in the life of an airport chaplain. “Be ready to respond to those who cross our paths in the airport,” he encouraged. “Pray for wisdom and discernment as we meet the folks who come our way.” Father Michael Zaniolo has spent the past six years dealing with the anxieties that trouble air travelers. The Chicago priest, who celebrates daily Mass in the interfaith chapel at O’Hare International Airport, says passengers often ask for prayers and confession just before they board a flight. “When people are traveling, they feel very vulnerable,” he says. “The airport is not home to anyone.” Taken out of their comfort zone, airport visitors feel a sense of isolation as they’re forced to navigate their way around a strange environment. “And air travel often makes people more aware of their own mortality,” Fr. Zaniolo points out. “That’s one of the reasons they request the sacraments.” The chaplain says his presence in the airport is an outlet for airport workers who spend long hours inside planes or standing behind ticket counters and can’t get involved in parish activities. “The chapel is open 24 hours a day, and when I’m walking in the terminals, they have access to a priest,” he explains. “They have someone they can talk to about their marriage, job, or kids. Sometimes, I’m more available than their own pastor would be.” Deacon Claudio Cimaschi’s Above: Deacon Claudio Cimaschi, who serves in the chaplaincy program at Zurich Airport in Switzerland, lifts his hands in prayer while the assembly recites the Our Father. congregation includes a special group of travelers. In addition to the 22,000 employees working at the Zurich Airport, the Catholic chaplain ministers to hundreds of refugees from Africa and the Middle East who arrive in Switzerland seeking political asylum. The immigrants live in a restricted area of the airport for 10 to 15 days, while officials determine their status. Deacon Cimaschi, fluent in five languages, is allowed access into the high security zone. “I hear their stories and give them comfort, prayers, and reflection,” says the airport chaplain, who was enjoying his first trip to Texas. “There are a lot of tears.” Most of the refugees have escaped persecution in the Sudan, Nigeria, or Iraq and use French or English to communicate with Swiss airport employees. Deacon Cimaschi, a former Air France agent, gave up a lucrative promotion with the airline “because the Lord called me to follow him.” That was more than 10 years ago, and the church deacon has never regretted the choice. “I may have less pay and maybe less praise, but there’s more satisfaction,” the airport chaplain asserts. “But you must be filled with Christ. Only then can you do this work.” Page 8 NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC, September 28, 2007 Diocesan / State Red Mass for those in legal profession to be celebrated Oct. 19 at the cathedral GIFTS HONORING MARY — In preparation for the observance of the Birth of the Blessed Mother Sept. 8, students at St. Rita School in Fort Worth attended Mass Sept. 7, bringing gifts of food to help feed the poor and homeless in the school’s East Side community. The students were extremely generous in their tribute to Mary, according to the school administration, resulting in donations that filled the St. Rita pantry. Shown packing the donated items are seventh graders (l. to r.) Zenaida Avelar, Madeleine Alonso, Joseph Hughes, and Taylor Templin. The 2007 Red Mass, offered for judges, attorneys, law school professors and students, government officials, and those of all faith traditions who work in any capacity within the legal profession, will be celebrated at 6 p.m. Oct. 19 at St. Patrick Cathedral, 1206 Throckmorton Street in downtown Fort Worth. Bishop Kevin Vann will preside as the celebrant and homilist. A reception will follow in the Fort Worth Convention Center. According to the event’s organizers, the Red Mass is offered to invoke divine guidance and strength while initiating the legal year. It is celebrated in honor of the Holy Spirit as the source of wisdom, understanding, counsel, and fortitude. The custom of celebrating the Red Mass, said local attorney Robert Gieb, who is organizing this year’s liturgy, “originated in Europe in the 13th century. The Red Mass has also been traditionally identified with the opening of the Sacred Roman Rota, the supreme judicial body of the Catholic Church. The inauguration of the Red Mass in the United States occurred in New York City on Oct. 6, 1928.” Red Masses are held in Catholic churches across the country each fall, including the annual Red Mass celebrated at the Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle in Washington, D.C., on the first Monday in October. This Mass is attended by the Justices of the Supreme Court; members of Congress; members of the president’s Cabinet; diplomats; and, at times, the President of the United States. Cathedral parking will be available in the parking lot adjacent to the cathedral, on the parish property between 12th and 13th streets. For more information about the Red Mass, contact Robert Gieb at (817) 336-5681 or by e-mail to rgieb@flash.net. Texas Catholic Conference to host Scripture seminar Oct. 8-11 Mikhail Gorbachev to speak at UD Oct. 8 The Texas Catholic Conference will host its 24th annual Scripture seminar Oct. 8-11 at the Hilton Austin Airport hotel, located at 9515 New Airport Drive in Austin. This year ’s theme is “Matthew in Dialogue with Paul: Jesus and the Kingdom of God in Matthew and Paul; and Jesus as the Wisdom of God in both Matthew and Paul.” Guest speakers for the seminar are Father Andreas Hock, SSD, assistant professor at St. John Vianney Theological Seminary in Denver, and Judith Ryan, assistant professor at the University of St. Thomas School of Theology at St. Mary Seminary in Houston. Presentation topics include “Reward and Punishment,” “Love and Inner Forces,” and “A New View of Old Blessings.” The Texas Catholic Conference, an association of the 15 Catholic dioceses in Texas, seeks to encourage and foster cooperation and communication among the dioceses and the ministries of the Catholic Church within the state. All are invited to attend the Scripture seminar. The registration fee is $225 and covers the cost of seminar materials and some meals. For more information or to register, contact Becky Sierra at (512) 339-9882 or becky. sierra@txcatholic.org. For more information on the Texas Catholic Conference, visit online at www. TXCatholic.org. Mikhail Gorbachev, former president of the Soviet Union and Nobel Prize-winning statesman, will serve as the distinguished guest for the University of Dallas’ Eugene McDermott Lectureship on Monday, Oct. 8, at the Belo Mansion, located at 2101 Ross Avenue in Dallas. The event includes a reception to be held at 6 p.m., followed by the lecture, presented by Gorbachev at 7 p.m. TRIDENTINE MASS Latin Indult Mass : p.m. Sundays St. Mary of the Assumption Church W. Magnolia, Fort Worth High Mass Second and Fourth sundays Low Mass First and Third Sundays “We are honored to engage a lecturer of President Gorbachev’s caliber,” said Dr. Frank Lazarus, UD president. “This is a rare and special opportunity for the university to share not only with our students, faculty, alumni, and friends but also with the entire community.” A limited number of general admission seats are available for $100; reserved seating packages are available for $500 and up. For more information about tickets or sponsorship packages, contact Carol Little at (972) 721-4046. For more information about the University of Dallas, visit the university’s Web site at www. udallas.edu. NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC, September 28, 2007 Page 9 Diocesan / National Franciscan Friars of Sacred Heart Province begin celebration of 150th anniversary The Franciscan Friars of the Sacred Heart Province, based in St. Louis, Missouri, have officially begun a year of celebration to mark the 150th anniversary of the arrival of the friars from Germany in the United States. A local community of Franciscan Friars currently resides at St. Maximilian Kolbe Friary while also serving in ministry at St. Francis Village, a retirement community in Crowley. Father Vincent Elsen, OFM, although officially retired from diocesan Hospital Ministry, is always eager to respond to the needs of the local church, according to Ralph McCloud, diocesan director of Community and Pastoral Services. According to archival information, nine Franciscan Friars originally settled in the Midwest after arriving by steamship in New York on Sept. 14, 1858. The friars had left Saxony at the invitation of Bishop Henry Damian Juncker of Alton, Illinois. The group of friars was soon established in Teutopolis, Illinois, which became the headquarters for the Sacred Heart Province. The kick-off for the province’s celebration of the sesquicentennial jubilee was a province-wide convocation held Aug. 6-8 at Our Lady of the Lake University in Mundelein, Illinois. Author and speaker Father Richard Rohr, OFM, served as the main presenter and spoke of the need to heal wounds of the past in order to move forward into the future. The next celebration of the jubilee year was held at the regional level at various locations throughout the province, which stretches from Bayfield, Wisconsin, to San Antonio and to Knoxville, Tennessee. Multiple regional prayer services took place Monday, Sept. 17, on the feast of the Stigmata of St. Francis of Assisi. The theme for the services was “Let These Wounds Speak!” which, according to a press release from the religious order’s communication office, “highlighted the fact that, in uniting human brokenness with the dying and rising of Jesus Christ and his Body, the church, any person can come to a new level of healing, hope, and happiness.” The focus of the services was to connect participants with the sufferings of people throughout the world, as all friars throughout the province prayed together at the same time in different places. For more information about the Franciscan Friars of Sacred Heart Province, visit online at www.thefriars.org. For more information about the friars’ ministry at St. Francis Village in the Diocese of Fort Worth, visit the village’s Web site at www. saintfrancisvillage.com. Franciscan Capuchins of Texas distribute scholarships to Hispanic youth The Franciscan Capuchins in Texas recently announced that 10 students within the state have been designated as recipients of scholarships through the Franciscan-Capuchin Scholarship Project. The Texas Capuchins established this scholarship program in favor of young Hispanic students needing financial assistance to attain a college education. The scholarships are distributed based on financial need, community service, past academic achievement, and projected studies. The 10 recipients who each received a $500 scholarship this fall are Ericka Bustamantes, Cecilia Cruz, Cynthia Dorado, Julie Garcia, Belinda Lopez, Erica Muñoz, Joel Perez, Alejandra Sanchez, Luz Solorzano, and Xochitl Villalpando. “We congratulate the young REMEMBERING SEPTEMBER 11 people who don’t give up on their dreams, and who, through some struggles, find ways to succeed in their lives,” a Capuchin press release states. “We are proud to be an active part in the fulfillment of their dreams.” For those wanting to learn more about the FranciscanCapuchin Scholarship Project, call Father Oscar Guerendiain at (214) 637-6673 or e-mail to ogueren@yahoo.com. GROUND ZERO — Firefighters and police officers surround a reflecting pool Sept. 11 at New York’s World Trade Center site during a moment of silence marking the sixth anniversary of the terrorist attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people in New York, Washington, and Shanksville, Pennsylvania. (CNS photo/Mike Segar, Reuters) Left: Franciscan Father Christopher Kennan, a chaplain with the New York Fire Department, calls the names Sept. 9 of five firefighters who were killed in the terrorist attacks on the twin towers of the World Trade Center Sept. 11, 2001. (CNS photo/Octavio Duran) Page 10 NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC, September 28, 2007 Viewpoints We are called to be heralds of the Gospel of Life By Lucas Pollice O ctober is Respect Life Month and we celebrate Respect Life Sunday on Oct. 7. This is a time in which the Church calls us to pause and ponder the Gospel of Life, the “good news” that reveals the sacredness and dignity of the human person and of our great responsibility to be witnesses to the immense gift of human life and to build a true culture of life in our society and culture. This Gospel of Life, the great dignity of the human person and the sacredness of human life, is revealed from the very beginning, in the book of Genesis, as God completes the wondrous work of his creation: God created man in his image; in the divine image he created him; male and female he created them. God blessed them, saying: “Be fertile and multiply; fill the earth and subdue it. Have dominion over the fish of the sea, the birds of the air, and all the living things that move on the earth.” (GENESIS 1:26-27) This profound passage reveals that human beings, man and woman, are the pinnacles of God’s creation, and as creatures created in the image and likeness of God, possess a dignity that far exceeds the rest of creation. Human beings were created like God, to share in and possess his life. The dignity of the human person as created in the image and likeness of God is at the heart of the commandment, “Thou shall not kill.” While the commandment is itself strongly negative and prohibitive, expressing the absolute moral norm prohibiting the willful killing of innocent life, the commandment in the light of Genesis is far more positive, revealing the absolute dignity of each and every human life, and the responsibility of every person to respect, defend, and promote human life in all stages and circumstances. As Pope John Paul reminds us, “In giving life to man, God demands that he love, respect, and promote life. The gift thus becomes a commandment and the commandment itself is a gift.” (EVANGELIUM VITAE, THE GOSPEL OF LIFE, 52) Thus, human life is indeed sacred, and life belongs to God and not to man alone. God alone is the Lord and Master of life. He is the source and creator of life, who out of love creates new human life and also in his mysterious plan of love calls man and woman to himself through the sleep of death. This gift and sacredness of human life is entrusted to the human family as a great gift and This gift and sacredness of human life is entrusted to the human family as a great gift and responsibility to be ministered to, to be welcomed and treasured, something of which to be in awe, for life is indeed sacred. Man is not the arbiter of life, but rather the recipient and treasurer of life. responsibility to be ministered to, to be welcomed and treasured, something of which to be in awe, for life is indeed sacred. Man is not the arbiter of life, but rather the recipient and treasurer of life. It does not belong to man to determine when life begins or when it ends, but it belongs to him the grave responsibility of protecting, promoting, and defending the gift of God entrusted to him. As John Paul II states: With regard to things, but even more with regard to life, man is not the absolute master and final judge, but rather—and this is where his incomparable greatness lies — he is the “minister of God’s plan.” Life is entrusted to man as a treasure which must not be squandered, as a talent which must be used well. Man must render an account of it to his Master. (EVANGELIUM VITAE, THE GOSPEL OF LIFE, 52) Thus, the dignity and sacredness of human life must be respected and defended from its very beginning, from the mysterious and remarkable moment of conception in the mother’s womb. In fact, the moment of conception, when the gametes of man and woman meet, in a real and certain way speaks profoundly of the miracle and sacredness of life. For at the moment of conception, the divine and the human meet in a marvelous miracle of creation, when the man and the woman cooperate with God as co-creators with him in the creation of a new life that bears both the This poster depicting Mary’s cousin Elizabeth greeting Mary as she arrives to visit her, and the unborn John the Baptist leaping in greeting of the unborn Jesus in Mary’s womb, depicts the theme of the USCCB’s 2007 Respect Life Program — “The Infant in My Womb Leaped for Joy.” Sunday, Oct. 7 is Respect Lie Sunday. October is Respect Life Month. (Poster Copyright © 2007, United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, all rights reserved.) istic aspects already well determined. Right from fertilization the adventure of a human life begins, and each of its capacities requires time — a rather lengthy time — to find its place and to be in a position to act.” (EVANGELIUM VITAE, THE GOSPEL OF LIFE, 60) Human life must also be respected until natural death, until the moment when God through his providence calls one from this life into the next. Thus, man can never determine for himself when life ends, or deliberately kill any innocent human life at any stage of his or her existence. The commandment “Thou shall not kill” also prohibits the willful taking of another’s or one’s own life, whether through direct action or acts of omission, to relieve suffering or disease. As Pope John Paul states: “Nothing and no one can in any way permit the killing of an innocent human being, whether a fetus or an embryo, an infant or an adult, an old person, or one suffering from an incurable disease, or a person who is dying. Furthermore, no one is permitted to ask for this act of killing, either for himself or herself or for another person entrusted to his or her care, nor can he or she consent to it, either explicitly or implicitly. Nor can any authority legitimately recommend or permit such an action.” (EVANGELIUM VITAE, THE GOSPEL OF LIFE, 57) image of God and the unique image of the parents. Far from being a mere biological act or phenomenon, the moment of conception is the moment of creation, the very beginning of the journey of life for a unique and separate human being. From that moment on, a new life exists, a new life, though in a very simple cellular form, bears personhood and contains within itself everything that is human, a physical body and a spiritual soul. Each and every person who ever walked the earth was at one time that new life growing within his or her mother’s womb. Particularly through the capabilities of modern science, conception and the very earliest moments and days of human life reveal in a profound way the mystery and sacredness of life, the miracle of conception and the miraculous growth from two cells into the complexity of the human body and spirit. John Paul II bears witness to this truth: As Catholics, we are all called to be the witnesses to the “Gospel of Life” through our own lives, actions, and attitudes. This witness to life begins first and foremost in the family, the “cradle of life” where life is created, nurtured, and loved. We also witness through our actions and attitudes by supporting and defending life in many ways through prayer, education, public witness, and political action and influence. The month of October provides numerous opportunities for us to support and defend life and to help transform our culture and society into a true culture of life that welcomes and embraces human life at all stages and in all circumstances. May we all be ambassadors of life and witnesses to the truth and beauty of the Gospel of Life! But in fact, “from the time that the ovum is fertilized, a life is begun which is neither that of the father nor the mother; it is rather the life of a new human being with his own growth. It would never be made human if it were not human already. This has always been clear, and ... modern genetic science offers clear confirmation. It has demonstrated that from the first instant there is established the programme of what this living being will be: a person, this individual person with his character- Lucas Pollice is director of Catechesis and Adult Faith Formation and RCIA for the diocese. Lucas holds a degree in theology from the Franciscan University of Steubenville and has a master’s degree in theological studies from the Institute for Pastoral Theology of Ave Maria University. He is adjunct professor of theology with the Cardinal Newman Institute in Fort Worth. Lucas and his wife, Mary, have four children, Cecilia, Nicholas, Timothy, and Christian. NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC, September 28, 2007 Page 11 Views The Value of Human Life ‘we need truth’ By Cardinal Justin Rigali S ince 1972 the Catholic bishops in the United States have set aside the first Sunday in October as Respect Life Sunday. On October 7, Catholics will again pray for — and renew their resolve to bring about — a culture of life and an end to the killing of innocent human beings, especially those who are vulnerable due to their age, size, health, or dependency. The theme of the 2007 Respect Life Program — The Infant in My Womb Leaped for Joy — calls to mind an extraordinary scene in Luke’s Gospel (1:39-56). Mary, newly pregnant with the Lord Jesus, is visiting her elderly cousin Elizabeth whose son, John, will soon be born. The moment Mary’s greeting reaches Elizabeth’s ears and John’s, the tiny prophet announces to his mother the Messiah’s arrival, as if his entire being were exclaiming: Behold! The Lamb of God! There was no confusion as to what and who were nestled under their mothers’ hearts. Yet 2,000 years later, many welleducated people do not know — or claim they do not know — the truth about human life before birth. In April the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the federal ban on partial-birth abortion, in an opinion that explicitly recognizes the humanity of unborn children and the grief women experience after abortion. Yet the killing of unborn children at any stage of pregnancy remains legal, provided that the lethal act is performed while the child is mostly inside his or ‘If truth does not exist for man, then neither can he ultimately distinguish between good and evil. And then the great and wonderful discoveries of science become double-edged....’ — Pope Benedict XVI her mother’s body. In June, President Bush vetoed a bill to fund stem-cell research requiring the destruction of human embryos, and directed his administration to investigate alternative means of producing pluripotent stem cells “by ethically responsible techniques.” Yet some supporters of embryonic stem-cell research continue to dismiss concerns about destroying human embryos, because they are “no bigger than the period at the end of this sentence.” We will not see the day when all human life is respected and defended unless we address a deeper problem. As Pope Benedict XVI has said: “If truth does not exist for man, then neither can he ultimately distinguish between good and evil. And then the great and wonderful discoveries of science become doubleedged: They can open up significant possibilities for good, for the benefit of mankind, but also, as we see only too clearly, they can pose a terrible threat, involving the destruction of man and the world. We need truth” (Homily at Marianzell, Austria, Sept. 8, 2007). Days after Pope Benedict’s homily, the New Jersey Supreme Court claimed to have no way of knowing the truth about “when human life begins.” Dismissing a lawsuit against an abortion clinic which concealed the truth about abortion from women, the court claimed there is “clearly no consensus” on whether, as a matter of “biological fact,” the unborn child is a “human being.” The court cited “moral, theological, [and] ideological” disagreement to ignore biological fact. We need truth. Some ethicists suggest that patients who apparently lack conscious awareness — although otherwise healthy and not imminently dying — can be dehydrated and starved to death because their lives are not fully human but “vegetative.” This ignores the insight expressed in 2004 by Pope John Paul II and recently reaffirmed by the Holy See under Pope Benedict XVI, that “the intrinsic value and personal dignity of every human being do not change, no matter what the concrete circumstances of his or her life. A man, even if seriously ill or disabled in the exercise of his highest functions, is and always will be a man, and he will never become a ‘vegetable’ or an ‘animal.’” We need truth. On this Respect Life Sunday, we ask Catholics and all people of good will to witness to the truth about the incomparable dignity and right to life of every human being. This is no sectarian creed. The “recognition of the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice, and peace in the world” (Preamble, United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, 1989). And that is the truth. Cardinal Justin Rigali, archbishop of Philadelphia, is chairman of the USCCB Committee on Pro-Life Activities. The Ice Cream of the Future — and how being at home in the Church helps link Past/Present/Future into a perfect unity By Kathy Cribari Hamer I t was Amon Carter Stadium, in the middle of a pretty good TCU football game, and my son-in-law Dustin brought me a snack: Dippin’ Dots. The ice cream of the future. Dippin’ Dots, cryogenically encapsulated, flash-frozen beadlets, are my absolute favorite food, especially in the banana split flavor. In fact, real banana splits cannot hold a candle to banana-split-flavored Dippin’ Dots. If you did hold a candle to Dippin’ Dots, however, they would simply melt — maybe even flash-melt — into cream that is delicious anyway. That’s the greatness of them. While they are frozen, the dots crunch, tingle, and sometimes freeze your mouth and paralyze your lips until you feel like the dentist has injected you with a local anesthetic for a root canal, and your words come out sounding like the voice of ‘Rocky.’ Those side effects do not, incidentally, deter true Dippin’ Dots devotees. Dippin’ Dots are frozen with liquid nitrogen, and the unusual technique and subsequent texture, give the dessert its space-age second name: “The ice cream of the future.” That day at the football game, the dots gave me a sort of brain-freeze, which left me, well, brilliant, for a few seconds, and suddenly I had this thought: “I really hope I live until ‘the future,’” I told my children, “so that I can see if they are calling this ‘ice cream of the present.’ “But if ice cream of the future becomes ice cream of the present, Blue Bell will be ice cream of the past, won’t it?” I asked. “Then what will be the ice cream of the future?” “If the old ‘ice cream of the future’ becomes ‘ice cream now,’” my daughter Meredith interjected, “what would you say if you were going to have some ice cream? Would you say, ‘I am going to eat some ice cream now,’ or ‘some now ice cream?’ “If you said, ‘I am going to have some ice cream now,’ would that mean ‘ice cream that we have now,’ or would it mean ‘I’m going to have ice cream today?’” Meredith mused. “It’s problematic,” I acknowledged, “but right now my most important problem is that I can’t buy ice cream of the future in every store.” “Guess you’ll have to wait,” Meredith replied. On the same weekend as the Dippin’ Dots football game, my youngest daughter Abby had come to town, and one of the things she wanted to do was attend Mass at TCU. The Catholic Community gathers there every Sunday evening at 5 p.m., when Father Charles Calabrese celebrates liturgy with students and SEE HAMER, P. 22 Page 12 NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC, September 28, 2007 National / International Administering food, water to patient in vegetative state is morally obligatory, says new Vatican document FROM PAGE 1 the congregation in 2005 to clarify the issues. After a lengthy study, the congregation released its responses to two basic questions. First, it said, administering food and water to a patient in a vegetative state is morally obligatory “to the extent to which, and for as long as, it is shown to accomplish its proper finality, which is the hydration and nourishment of the patient.” “In this way suffering and death by starvation and dehydration are prevented,” it said. Second, the congregation said it was not morally acceptable to discontinue such care even when physicians judge that the patient will never regain consciousness. “A patient in a ‘permanent vegetative state’ is a person with fundamental human dignity and must, therefore, receive ordinary and proportionate care which includes, in principle, the administration of water and food even by artificial means,” it said. The congregation’s accompanying commentary explored the reasons behind the church’s teaching and explained a few scenarios where exceptions might apply. It noted that the very expression “vegetative state,” which the church reluctantly uses because it is a common medical term, is unfortunate and misleading. Patients in this state maintain full human dignity, right up to natural death, it said. Moreover, such patients are not necessarily terminally ill and generally carry on basic metabolic functions. They are simply unable to feed themselves, it said. SCHIAVO VIGIL — People pray in support of keeping Terri Schiavo alive during a protest outside the Woodside Hospice in Pinellas Park, Florida, in this March 18, 2005, file photo. The case of Schiavo, a brain-damaged woman, fueled debate and legal wrangling about whether a person in a persistent vegetative state must receive food and water. Schiavo died 13 days after her feeding tube was removed March 18, 2005, at the order of a Florida judge. (CNS photo/Jim Stem, Reuters) “If they are not provided artificially with food and liquids, they will die, and the cause of their death will be neither an illness nor the ‘vegetative state’ itself, but solely starvation and dehydration,” it said. The commentary said the artificial administration of food and water usually does not impose a heavy burden on the patient or the relatives, although it acknowledged that the burden could become notable when such treatment continues for months or years. Nutrition and hydration does not require excessive expense and does not of itself require hospitalization, it said. “It is not, nor is it meant to be, a treatment that cures the patient, but is rather ordinary care aimed at the preservation of life,” it said. In that sense, it said, the general ethical principle is that “the provision of water and food, even by artificial means, always represents a natural means for preserving life and is not a therapeutic treatment. Its use should therefore be considered ordinary and proportionate, even when the ‘vegetative state’ is prolonged.” That was also the conclusion of Pope John Paul’s 2004 speech and reflects the development of church statements over the last 50 years, the Vatican said. In a brief discussion of exceptions to this basic moral principle, the congregation outlined three possible situations: — In very remote or impoverished places, artificial provision of food and water may be physically impossible. — Because of complications, a patient may be unable to assimilate foods and liquids, so their provision becomes useless. — In some rare cases, artificial nourishment and hydration may be excessively burdensome for the patient or may cause significant physical discomfort. The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, in a question-and-an- swer commentary on the Vatican document, also looked at the potential exceptions. It said there are medical situations in which it is moral to withhold nutrition and hydration — for example, a patient in the last stages of stomach cancer might refuse nutrition and hydration because it causes pain and produces little benefit. But the vegetative state is not itself a case of imminent dying and, therefore, it is generally not a burden to nourish such patients, it said. The USCCB commentary said providing such nutrition and hydration could impose significant financial burdens on Catholic health care facilities, which are sometimes obliged to bear the cost of health care for families that are poor or have no health insurance. “In the loving care that they provide to such persons, with the assistance of the entire Catholic community, they can provide concrete examples of the church’s commitment to human life,” it said. In an interview with Vatican Radio, U.S. Dominican Father J. Augustine Di Noia, undersecretary of the doctrinal congregation, said the insistence on nutrition and hydration as an ordinary means of treatment does not represent a change in church teaching. It should be remembered, he said, that the person in a persistent vegetative state generally does not face imminent death and so is “not actually dying, in that sense, any more than any of us.” “The church is not here enjoining a kind of excessive prolongation of life, but simply saying that to withdraw nutrition and hydration is to end a life that would otherwise continue naturally,” Fr. Di Noia said. What the congregation is also saying is that the “quality of life” frequently mentioned as a determining factor in medical care is not a judgment that is “in our hands to make,” he said. He said the church teaches that life is a gift from God and that human dignity endures through a person’s entire physical development — from the mother’s womb to the moment of natural death. Editor’s Note: The text of the Vatican document can be found at the Vatican Web site at http://www. vatican.va/phome_en.htm, then by clicking the following links: Roman Curia (the second circle graphic); Congregations; Doctrine of the Faith; Doctrinal Documents, where links to both the Vatican document and the accompanying commentary are available. Catholic leaders welcome Vatican documents on artificial nutrition By Nancy Frazier O’Brien WASHINGTON (CNS) — Catholic health care and ethical groups thanked the Vatican Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith for clarifying its stand on artificial nutrition and hydration for patients in a persistent vegetative state in a pair of Sept. 14 documents. “The Catholic health ministry is grateful for the clarification provided today,” said Sister Carol Keehan, a Daughter of Charity who is president and CEO of the Catholic Health Association, in a Sept. 14 statement. “Patients in a persistent vegetative state, while making up a very small percent of all patients, pose some of the most challenging and heart-wrench- ing situations for families and caregivers,” she added. “This clarification affirms the church’s belief in the value of their lives in spite of the circumstances of their condition.” The Vatican’s responses to two questions posed by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and its commentary on those responses “provide a clear rejection of the claim of certain theologians that the provision of food and water for patients in the persistent vegetative state is not morally obligatory,” said the Philadelphia-based National Catholic Bioethics Center in a Sept. 14 statement. The USCCB questions were prompted by confusion in the United States over a 2004 talk by Pope John Paul II in which he said nutrition and hydration, even by artificial means such as feeding tubes, should generally be considered ordinary care and not extraordinary medical treatment. “The [Vatican] commentary takes pains to note that John Paul II’s address stands in conformity with previous tradition, and is not, in any way, an innovation or abandonment of previous teaching,” the bioethics center statement said, adding that the commentary’s “review of previous [papal and Vatican] statements speaks to the claim of those who have said John Paul II’s address was completely unexpected and without precedent.” Sr. Carol said the latest Vatican documents make clear that “the provision of artificially administered nutrition and hydration to patients in a vegetative state is morally obligatory except when they cannot be assimilated by the patient’s body (and, hence, don’t achieve their purpose) or cause significant discomfort.” In addition, she said, “artificially administered nutrition and hydration cannot be discontinued for a patient in a persistent vegetative state even when physicians have determined with reasonable certainty that a patient will never recover consciousness.” Sr. Carol told Catholic News Service that she did not see a need for any revisions to the “Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services,” most recently revised by the U.S. bishops in 2001. The directives guide Catholic health care facilities in addressing a wide range of ethical questions, including nutrition and hydration. “The Vatican made clear they were clarifying, not issuing new doctrine,” she said. Directives 57 and 58 state: “There should be a presumption in favor of providing nutrition and hydration to all patients, including patients who require medically assisted nutrition and hydration, as long as this is of sufficient benefit to outweigh the burdens involved to the patient. The free and informed judgment made by a competent SEE VATICAN…, NEXT PAGE NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC, September 28, 2007 Page 13 National / International Lutheran Services staffer named USCCB domestic social policy director By Nancy Frazier O’Brien WASHINGTON (CNS) — Kathy Saile, who begins work in mid-October as director of domestic policy for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, said the thing that “sold me on the position” was the USCCB’s commitment to integrate more closely the work of the pro-life, social policy, and Catholic Campaign for Human Development offices. Catholic social ministry “is not piecemeal work,” said Saile, who has been associate director of public policy for Lutheran Services in America in Washington since August 2004. She previously worked as director of the Office of Peace and Justice for Catholic Social Service of Central and Northern Arizona and CCHD director for the Phoenix Diocese, 2001-2004; coordinator of social justice and outreach ministries at the Franciscan Renewal Center in Scottsdale, Arizona, 1997-2001; and as a loaned executive to Catholic Charities USA, May-July 2003. Msgr. David Malloy, USCCB general secretary, announced the appointment Sept. 13. “Kathy Saile brings to this important position strong commitment to the Catholic Church and its social teaching, impressive knowledge of key domestic issues, and extensive policy and advocacy experience,” he said in a statement. “Her service in diocesan social ministry and here in the nation’s Kathy Saile, who will begin her work as the director of domestic policy for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops in midOctober, is pictured in Washington Sept. 18. (CNS photo/Bob Roller) capital will be great assets in helping the bishops articulate and advance the church’s principles and policies seeking economic and social justice in our nation,” he said. Saile, 42, said her work in Washington has brought her into contact with an “interesting, diverse coalition” whose members did not always agree on every issue. One of those contacts was Women’s Information Network, or WIN, a group that promotes the involvement in politics of Democratic women who believe a woman has a right to choose abortion. “It’s not always easy being a pro-life woman in D.C.,” she said. “But one of the things I chal- lenged them on was the Democrats’ litmus test on abortion…. I think the Democrats are hurting themselves by having this litmus test for candidates.” One Catholic media outlet reported after Saile’s appointment was announced that she “was a 2006 dinner-party speaker” for WIN, “a group dedicated to empowering pro-choice women.” The dinner in question, she told Catholic News Service Sept. 18, involved about seven women at a private home for a discussion of faith and politics. “The issue of abortion was raised,” Saile said, “and I challenged people that it was not mutually exclusive to be socially progressive on issues like health care, poverty, and housing and to be pro-life.” Saile holds a master’s degree in social work from Arizona State University and a bachelor’s degree in organizational communication from Ohio University. In a statement at the time of her USCCB appointment, she expressed thanks for “this opportunity to integrate my commitment to social justice and my faith in my professional life.” As director of domestic policy, she will be the staff leader of USCCB efforts on poverty in the U.S., health care, hunger, housing, work, agriculture, the death penalty, and other national issues, working with the bishops’ new Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development. Vatican documents offer clarity on subject of artificial nutrition, say Catholic health care officials FROM PREVIOUS PAGE adult patient concerning the use or withdrawal of life-sustaining procedures should always be respected and normally complied with, unless it is contrary to Catholic moral teaching.” Ron Hamel, CHA’s senior director of ethics, told Catholic News Service in a Sept. 18 phone interview that after Pope John Paul’s 2004 talk “there was some confusion about what it meant concretely for Catholic health care organizations.” With its latest documents the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith “has clarified the ambiguity and has essentially reinforced the papal allocution,” Hamel added. “The [Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith] has spoken, and the debate about feeding tubes in patients [in a persistent vegetative state] has been settled.” The Vatican documents also “made it a bit clearer that there is the possibility of exceptions,” he said. Artificial feeding and hydration does not need to be continued, the Vatican commentary said, when the patient can no longer assimilate foods and liquids, so their provision becomes useless; when a feeding tube causes significant physical discomfort or leads to other medical problems; or in remote or impoverished places where feeding tubes are not available. Some Catholic health care facilities “are going to need to look at their policies and practices and possibly make some adjustments,” Hamel said. But in general, he said, “I don’t think this is going to affect Catholic health care very much.” Although there are no hard statistics on the matter, Hamel said he thought that “not many” of the estimated 10,000 U.S. patients in a persistent vegetative state were in Catholic facilities. Much of the recent discussion of the issue in the United States has focused on Terri Schindler Schiavo, the brain-damaged Florida woman who died in March 2005 after a court ordered her feeding tube removed. The Terri Schindler Schiavo Foundation, founded by Schiavo’s parents and siblings after her death, also thanked the Vatican for issuing the documents. “It is our fervent hope that the clergy, religious, and those who administer Catholic health care, as well as the laity who persistently ignored the basic right to life of our daughter and sister Terri, and who persist to this day to dissent from this basic moral teaching of the church by claiming that Pope John Paul II’s March 20th allocution is ‘up for discussion,’ will begin to open their eyes and hearts to the immutable and incontrovertible truth reaffirmed by the Holy See today,” the foundation leaders said in a Sept. 14 statement. INDONESIAN QUAKES — Villagers sit in front of their house, which collapsed during a Sept. 12 earthquake, in Lais in Bengkulu province, Indonesia, Sept. 13. At least two earthquakes were felt in the region, causing severe damage and death. (CNS photo/Beawiharta, Reuters) New edition of Catholic blessings and prayers book published By Mark Pattison WASHINGTON (CNS) — The original Catholic Household Blessings and Prayers book, introduced in 1989, was a big seller for the U.S. bishops’ publishing office. In 18 years, it sold 150,000 copies — including 50,000 in its first year. The book also spun off several shorter paperback versions on specific topics found in the original. Now, a revised edition has been published, and backers hope sales approach the numbers they did nearly two decades ago. This edition, like the original, was compiled by the staff of the bishops’ Committee on the Liturgy. While the first book had a four-year gestation period — due largely to acquiring Vatican approval for the texts of prayers written specifically for the book — the new edition of Catholic Household Blessings and Prayers, while first suggested about six years ago, took about a year and a half from start to finish. How did that come about? “It was never submitted for confirmation to the Holy See,” said Msgr. James P. Moroney, executive director of the bishops’ liturgy office. It didn’t need confirmation, he added, because the new texts in the book — accounting for more than two-thirds of the new edition’s content — aren’t new in themselves. “This edition is drawn from authorized texts that were already approved: the Manual of Indulgences, the Book of Blessings, the Liturgy of the Hours, and so forth — approved liturgical books,” Msgr. Moroney said in a Sept. 10 telephone interview with Catholic News Service. “All the prayers come from sources that the bishops previously reviewed.” Like the Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church, issued earlier this decade by the Vatican, the new Catholic Household Blessings and Prayers is “a compen- Above is pictured the cover of the revised edition of Catholic Household Blessings and Prayers. (CNS) dium of devotional prayers and blessings that are wonderfully appropriate for households of faith throughout the country to use,” Msgr. Moroney said. Checking in at around 600 pages, the new Catholic Household Blessings and Prayers has 10 sections, including basic and daily prayers, family prayers, prayers for Catholic living, and excerpts from the New American Bible for times of need. The original edition was used by many parishes as a gift to newly married couples or to new parents as they prepared for a child’s baptism. To help promote the book, USCCB Publishing, the publishing arm of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, will launch an aggressive ad campaign in major Catholic magazines and hopes to reach an estimated 500,000 people with an e-mail and banner-ad marketing campaign. The new Catholic Household Blessings and Prayers costs $34.95 with quantity discounts for as few as 10 copies. It can be ordered from USCCB Publishing by phone at (800) 235-8722, or on the Web at www.usccb publishing.org. Page 14 NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC, September 28, 2007 National / International Anger, unease permeate Lebanon after assassination of politician By Doreen Abi Raad BEIRUT, Lebanon (CNS) — An atmosphere of uneasiness and anger permeated Lebanon in the aftermath of the assassination of a Christian politician just days before lawmakers were scheduled to elect a new president. A pro-government Christian member of parliament and five others were killed when a car bomb blasted through a Christian suburb of Beirut Sept. 19. Antoine Ghanem was the seventh prominent anti-Syrian figure to be assassinated in Lebanon since 2005. “We have had enough. Enough,” said Aurore Rebehmed, a 34-year-old Christian mother. Immediately after hearing about the blast, Rebehmed, who said she was frantic, drove several miles to check on her two young daughters who were visiting their grandparents, just a block away from the explosion. “I was only thinking, ‘What if my children are out playing in the street?’” she said. “When I arrived, my daughters were telling me, ‘Look what the bad guys have done.’” Antoine Ghanem The attack ex(CNS photo/Mohamed Azakir, Reuters) acerbated an already tense situation in Lebanon since the war with Israel in 2006, followed by a political stalemate between the ruling majority and the opposition, two political assassinations, and a standoff between Sunni militants and the Lebanese army, in which some 400 were killed. Rebehmed expressed worry for her family’s safety. “We don’t know who will be the next one to be attacked or where it will happen,” she said. Maronite Father Joseph Mouannes, secretary of the Lebanese bishops’ communications commission, said the bishops “strongly condemn this act.” “It is a huge crime against humanity, and it is a huge crime against freedom and democracy,” he said. “They can’t stop freedom and the dignity of a nation and its people by killing people,” Fr. Mouannes said. “They are not able to kill the spirit of a nation, the spirit of Lebanon, the spirit of freedom, especially the freedom of the Christian society and the freedom of democracy.” “We are praying to God to protect our country,” said Fr. Mouannes. “We have to elect a president to build a new democracy — a free Lebanon.” Lebanon’s parliament was scheduled to convene Sept. 25 to choose a successor to President Emile Lahoud, whose extended mandate expires in November. Under the Lebanese Constitution, the presidential post is reserved for a Maronite Catholic. Catholic Charities’ Vision Award presented to Xavier University president, Dr. Norman Francis FROM PAGE 1 vices of Northern Kentucky. During the opening session Sept. 14, Catholic Charities USA officials presented the 2007 Vision Award to Dr. Norman C. Francis, president of Xavier University of Louisiana in New Orleans, in honor of his leadership in the city after Hurricane Katrina. After the floods following Hurricane Katrina, Francis immediately went to work leading the recovery of the severely damaged Xavier campus. He also chaired the governor’s Louisiana Recovery Authority, managing the recovery effort for the entire state. “Our Vision Award is presented to those who, in their life and work, share Catholic Charities commitment to ensuring that the needs of individuals, families, and communities — especially the poor and vulnerable — are front and center in conversations about the kind of society we want,” said Father Larry Snyder, president of Catholic Charities USA. “In the face of one of the most extraordinary crises this nation has ever experienced, Dr. Francis remained a voice of reason, possibility, and hope,” he added. The university president said he was “honored and pleased” to accept the award. Today, in the United States, he said, “we have to deal with catastrophes equitably, honestly, and with moral values. And I am happy to say Catholic Charities has established a principle and model for working together: We have to work together across lines — across race, across culture, and across economic backgrounds.” NATIONAL & INTERNATIONAL NEWSBRIEFS Moral obligation to Iraqi people seen for U.S. whenever troops leave NEW YORK (CNS) — The United States has a moral obligation to the people of Iraq that must be met regardless of when U.S. troops ultimately withdraw from that country. That was the conclusion of the panelists at “Exit or No Exit? Morality and Withdrawal from Iraq,” a New York forum held Sept. 18 and attended by 450 people on the Lincoln Center campus of Jesuit-run Fordham University. “We must distinguish between the ethics of intervention and the ethics of exit,” said Gerard F. Powers, director of policy studies at the Joan B. Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies at the University of Notre Dame and former director of the U.S. bishops’ Office of International Justice and Peace. “The U.S. intervention may have been an optional, immoral war, but the post-intervention U.S. involvement is not an optional moral commitment,” he said. Quoting the U.S. Catholic bishops, Powers said that the U.S. intervention “has brought with it a new set of moral responsibilities to help Iraqis secure and rebuild their country and to address the consequences of war for the region and the world.” Pope warns against undermining democracy in war against terrorism CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy (CNS) — Pope Benedict XVI warned politicians against undermining the foundations of democracy in their fight against terrorism. “Terrorism is a serious problem whose perpetrators often claim to act in God’s name and harbor an inexcusable contempt for human life,” he told a group of politicians promoting Christian democracy. Countries have a right to defend themselves, he said, “but this right must be exercised with complete respect for moral and legal norms, including the choice of ends and means.” The pope’s comments came during a Sept. 21 audience at his summer residence in Castel Gandolfo with some 200 members of the executive committee of Centrist Democratic International, an international association of political parties promoting Christian democracy. Pope Benedict said that in democratic nations “the use of force in a manner contrary to the principles of a constitutional state can never be justified.” Southern California dioceses agree to $198.1 million settlement SAN DIEGO (CNS) — The Diocese of San Diego and the Diocese of San Bernardino, which broke off from its southern neighbor in 1978, agreed Sept. 7 to pay $198.1 million to settle lawsuits with 144 victims of sexual abuse by priests between 1938 and 1993. The dioceses had originally offered $95 million to settle the claims. The plaintiffs sought $200 million. Earlier in the year, the San Diego Diocese filed for bankruptcy protection hours before a trial was to begin in one of the first lawsuits alleging that the church was responsible for sexual abuse by priests. The judge in the bankruptcy case had recently threatened to throw out the bankruptcy case if the church didn’t reach an agreement with the plaintiffs. The settlement is one of the largest in the country. Under the agreement, the San Bernardino Diocese and its insurer, Catholic Mutual, will pay $15.1 million for 11 cases. The San Diego Diocese will pay $77 million and Catholic Mutual will cover another $75.7 million for a total of 111 cases. San Diego will pay another $30.2 million for 22 cases involving members of religious orders. A statement from the San Diego Diocese said it hoped at least part of that amount could be recovered from the religious orders. Work starts on new Kosovo cathedral dedicated to Mother Teresa OXFORD, England (CNS) — Work has started on a new cathedral in Kosovo dedicated to Blessed Mother Teresa of Calcutta. “This is a good project, and it has our government’s full backing,” said Xhavit Beqiri, spokesman for the Kosovo presidency. “Mother Teresa is a great authority worldwide and a positive symbol for Kosovo. So I think the cathedral will have support from everyone living here.” A groundbreaking ceremony in Kosovo’s capital, Pristina, was held Sept. 5 at the 32-acre site, which will also include a Catholic cultural and educational center. Two days after a 2005 groundbreaking ceremony, the site was damaged by a grenade explosion. Bishop Dode Gjergji of Sape, Albania, who is the apostolic administrator of Prizren, Kosovo, said donations for the cathedral were being collected throughout Kosovo, which forms part of Serbia and has been under U.N. administration since 1999. Catholics make up only 3 percent of the 2.1 million inhabitants of Kosovo. NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC, September 28, 2007 Page 15 Good Newsmakers Medical volunteers provide treatment on annual seven-day missions FROM PAGE 24 derstanding between people of different cultures. Impressed by his parish’s efforts to improve the quality of life in a Third World country, Dr. Runyon suggested that Holy Family add a new facet to its partnership. With the pastor’s blessing, the Fort Worth specialist began organizing a team of doctors, dentists, and nurses for a medical mission trip to Catacamas and outlying villages. Finding willing participants like Holy Family parishioner Dr. Tracy Papa was easy. The obstetrician brings an ultrasound machine on the trip to check the condition of developing fetuses and their mothers. Honduran women usually deliver their babies at home or, if they can find a ride, at the maternity clinic in Catacamas. But even that health facility is not equipped to perform Caesarean sections, induce labor, or offer prenatal screenings. “The patients weigh heavy on your heart,” says Papa, a veteran of three trips. “There are no ambulances, no pharmacies, and if a woman needs a C-section, she has to find a ride to Juticalpa.” Juticalpa is the see city of the diocese and has a population of around 35,000 — and a hospital. The country’s lack of health care accounts for its high infant and maternal mortality rate, she points out. One case that the doctor came across this year illustrates just how risky pregnancy is in Honduras. While performing routine physicals in a countryside village, Dr. Papa examined an expectant mother with very high blood pressure. A strong indicator of preeclampsia, the pregnancy-related condition can lead to seizures, kidney damage, or death if left untreated. “We were able to put her in the back of a pickup and drive her to the maternity clinic in Catacamas,” the doctor says, remembering the mother who was days away from delivery. At the clinic, nurses could monitor the woman’s progress during labor and administer needed medication. “So many times I want to do more, provide more, but that’s just not possible,” the OB specialist adds. The troupe of volunteer doctors and nurses adhere to an intense schedule during their seven-day stay. Based at a retreat center in Catacamas, the North Americans travel to outlying areas as much as four hours away. After arriving to a warm welcome from the entire village, they work from sunup to sundown, seeing as many as 400 to 600 people in a day. The pace is grueling, admits Dr. Papa. “It’s hot and frustrating because I can’t provide the level of care I want,” says the doctor, who often encounters patients with conditions that could be easily controlled with proper medication. “But just being there does something for them. Everyone benefits from a kind word or a gentle touch.” Along with their stethoscopes, blood pressure cuffs, and other medical instruments, the doctors bring a commodity most Hondurans cannot access. More than $300,000 in pharmaceuticals and medicine were bought or donated for the 2007 mission trip. Dr. Runyon rents a cargo plane to ship the drugs and equipment to Honduras before the medical team arrives. Repeat volunteer Julie Montague usually works in the field assisting Dr. Runyon as he extracts teeth, but this year she stayed in Catacamas, dispensing medicine and supplies from a retreat center hall-turnedpharmacy. As the emergency room nurse doled out skin creams, antacids, and other pills, one truth became evident. Small gestures make a big difference to people rich in faith but little else. “Just handing them a bottle of vitamins makes their day,” Montague says, recalling the grateful smiles of barefoot children and their parents. “We may not make a difference in the large scheme of their lives, but what we can give them is peace of mind and a sense of hope.” Examining the infants is always a priority for the medical team. “In that sense we do save a lot of lives,” the nurse says. “Just hearing their baby is okay from someone viewed as all-knowing, gives a mom the boost of confidence she needs. It’s a small victory.” Americans may lead busier, career-driven lives, but take away the trappings of materialism, and people are basically the same everywhere, Montague suggests. “They want their kids to be safe and healthy,” she says. “ They worry about their kids the same “T he patients weigh heavy on your heart,” says Dr. Tracy Papa, a veteran of three trips and a Holy Family parishioner. “There are no ambulances, no pharmacies, and if a woman needs a C-section, she has to find a ride to Juticalpa.” Juticalpa is the see city of the diocese and has a population of around 35,000 — and a hospital. RIGHT: Dental lab technician Darryl Clark, foreground, and Deacon Mike Mocek, from Holy Family Parish in Fort Worth, take a break before a pickup bed outfitted in part as a field dental lab. The pace on the seven-day medical mission trips to Catacamas can be grueling as literally thousands of underserved rural residents are seen for medical and dental procedures, unavailable the rest of the year. RIGHT: Men, women, and children seeking medical and dental treatment must wait for hours on end outside the facilities that serve as a field hospital of sorts at the clinics provided by medical volunteers from the Diocese of Fort Worth. way I worry about mine.” A cradle Catholic who attends Good Shepherd Parish in Colleyville, Montague considers her involvement in the last two mission trips to be “one of the most spiritual things I’ve ever experienced in my life.” Chiseling out time from her hectic professional and home life to serve the people in an impoverished country is a way of living out the tenets of her Catholic faith. In return, she is given the gift of witnessing simple, unshakable faith. Participating in Sunday Mass with the local residents is one of the highlights of her journey. The villagers have no money, so their offertory gifts reflect their daily lives. “They bring up vegetables they’ve grown in the garden, corn tortillas, or chicken they’ve cooked,” Montague says. “It’s truly the fruits of their labor, and it’s profound.” When Montague and the others fly out of Honduras after a week of heart-wrenching charitable work, they leave knowing there is much more to do. A hospital in Catacamas could alleviate some of the human suffering. Land for a Catholic hospital was donated and surveys completed. City officials promised to pave the road and channel additional power and water to the site. “We just need the money to get it built and funded,” says Dr. Runyon, who expects the project to cost an estimated $25 million. “The Hondurans always ask when we’re going to get started.” The challenge of financing the hospital frustrates him, but despite setbacks, “I’m going to keep doing these missions,” the doctor insists. Not returning to one of the poorest corners of the earth isn’t an option for the low-profile humanitarian. With dusty, unpaved roads, no cars, and hillsides full of homes that are little more than huts, Honduras is a picture of poverty, “like you’ve never seen. But the people are rich in faith,” says Dr. Runyon, using a medical term to describe the outpouring of warmth and generosity he’s experienced. “It’s infectious.” Page 16 NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC, September 28, 2007 Scripture Readings Oct. 7, Twenty-seventh Sunday in Ordinary Time. Cycle C. Readings: 1) Habakkuk 1:2-3; 2:2-4 Psalm 95:1-2, 6-9 2) 2 Timothy 1:6-8, 13-14 Gospel) Luke 17:5-10 W By Dan Luby aiting tables is hard work, especially if you do it right. Balancing the demands of finicky diners, passionate chefs, and intense managers on a busy Saturday night can be like juggling chain saws. So when I see a server snubbed by prima donna customers who act as if their food is being served by a robot, it annoys me more than a little. That’s why I find Jesus’ story about table service in Sunday’s Gospel somewhat challenging. It ends with this rhetorical question: “Is he grateful to that servant because he did what was commanded?” The implied answer is, “Of course not.” Does that mean we shouldn’t say “thanks” to a hard-working waiter or acknowledge a coworker’s job well done or express appreciation to friends for loving support? Not at all. Gratitude is an essential virtue for those who follow Jesus. What it does mean, I think, is that we ought not be in the habit of fulfilling our responsibilities with the expectation of rewards above and beyond the reward of the work itself. Baptism, and the membership in the body of Christ which it confers, commits us to following Jesus, to living in a way that makes evident the presence and mercy and love of God. Every time we celebrate Eucharist, every time we profess our faith through the creed, every time we pray “Our Father,” we reaffirm that central commitment to be not only hearers, but doers of the word. If we focus on our responsibilities as Christians — welcoming the stranger, challenging injustice, doing good to those who injure us, and loving with the abandon and openhandedness of Christ himself — then we won’t obsess over whether or not we are “properly” thanked. We will know instead that we have expressed our gratitude for the faith we’ve received by living it out with generosity and compassion. “With the strength which comes from God, bear your share of the hardship which the Gospel entails.” – 2 Timothy 1:8 QUESTIONS: What is one way in the coming week that I can imitate the love of Jesus anonymously? Who is one person in my life to whom I might express my gratitude more freely? Copyright © 2007, Diocese of Fort Worth Children must be guided early on with God’s law, says pope By Carol Glatz Catholic News Service VATICAN CITY — Young children must be guided from a very early age with moral law so that they will have direction as they weather life’s storms and resist its temptations, Pope Benedict XVI said. “God’s law must be impressed on the soul from the beginning ‘like on a piece of wax,’” the pope said, citing the teachings of St. John Chrysostom at his Sept. 19 weekly general audience. Early infancy “is in fact the age that is the most important” because it marks the time when “the great directives that point to the right course to [take in] life” really take hold in a person, he said. Pope Benedict returned briefly to the Vatican from his papal summer villa south of Rome for the weekly audience in St. Peter’s Square. The pope dedicated his talk to the life and writings of St. John Chrysostom, the fourth-century doctor of the church and archbishop of Constantinople, now Istanbul, Turkey. The 1,600th Pope Benedict XVI greets Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley of Boston during his weekly general audience in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican Sept. 19. (CNS photo/ L’OSSERVATORE ROMANO/Catholic Press Photo) anniversary of his death is being celebrated this year. The saint saw that humanity must strive to first accurately know “true doctrine” and then translate it into one’s own life by following moral principles and virtues, the pope said. St. John Chrysostom, he said, urged people to provide chil- dren early on with the “spiritual weapons” they would need to protect themselves later during adolescence and the teen years from “the violent winds” of lust and other strong desires. Aided by the virtue of temperance and a solid Christian formation, “well-prepared married couples thus block off the road to divorce,” he said. Everything in life will unfold “with joy, and [parents] can teach their children the virtues,” the pope said. With the birth of a child, “the three become just one flesh” as the child is the bridge that connects the two parents creating “a tiny church” — a domestic church, he said, quoting St. John Chrysostom. St. John Chrysostom also reminded the lay faithful that they are responsible for the salvation of others, the pope said. St. John Chrysostom said that as social beings people are not meant to just be interested in themselves, said the pope. Through baptism, every Christian becomes “king, priest, and prophet” who is responsible for bringing the truth of Christ to the world, the pope said. Among the 15,000 faithful gathered in the square were Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley of Boston and Greek Orthodox Metropolitan Methodios of Boston. The two leaders were heading a 100-member Catholic-Orthodox ecumenical pilgrimage from the United States to Rome, then Istanbul, Turkey, and ending in St. Petersburg, Russia. St. John Chrysostom, whose Western feast day was Sept. 13, led the church of Constantinople before the split between the Christian East and West and is venerated as a doctor of the church by Catholics and Orthodox. NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC, September 28, 2007 Page 17 Scripture Readings October 14, Twenty-eighth Sunday in Ordinary Time. Cycle C. Readings: 1) 2 Kings 5:14-17 Psalm 98:1-4 2) Timothy 2:8-13 Gospel) Luke 17:11-19 By Jean Denton L arry has been a theater teacher at a public high school for more than 20 years. Although his entire life is intensely infused with his Christian faith, he knows he can’t be proselytizing among students. That’s not his mode of operating anyway. But he says, “I’ve never backed down from saying to the young people, ‘You need to know where your gift comes from, and it’s not from me.’” When Larry was coming of age, drifting in and out of college trying to find himself, he found Jesus instead. It happened during a Catholic retreat to which he’d been invited by a friend. The friend must have been an astute one to recognize Larry’s need for faith and a seeming desire to be persuaded. Once converted, Larry says now, “It changed my life.” Totally. “I instantly wanted to give something back to God,” he says. Within two months he had formed a theater company called The Agape Players, and at age 21 he was leading the troupe around his Southern California community bringing performances of “Godspell” and the stories of Paul (“The Servant”) and Peter (“The Witness”) to Catholic churches and other small venues. He hasn’t looked back, as his career has been alternately in youth ministry and theater — and often a combination. Always though, in his work with young people, in the performances and original plays he produces, he shares the basic message of Christ. His work has been unabashedly “for God.” I’ve heard conversion stories before. But the way Larry’s conversion immediately compelled him to live every aspect of his life for God was a notably radical response to the gift of faith. In reading the Scriptures for this weekend, Larry’s life-changing attitude came back to me in the passage from Timothy: “If we have died with him, we shall also live with him.” While the Gospel story about the leper may suggest the message is about thanksgiving, it was that reminder in Timothy that points us back to a message of conversion in the Old Testament story of Naaman who was drawn, indeed by gratitude, to change his life to live entirely for God. “I will no longer offer holocaust or sacrifice to any other god except to the Lord.” — 2 Kings 5:17 QUESTIONS: When have you felt such gratitude to God that you desired to “give something back”? How can you translate that desire into a lasting response? Copyright © 2007, Diocese of Fort Worth It’s an image we have trouble grasping, but we’re called to Help God gather in the By Jeff Hedglen can clearly remember going out in the fields as a child picking raspberries. I was not very good at the task as I was more of a one for the basket and two for me kind of kid. For me, this exercise was a treat. Little did I suspect that for a lot of people harvesting crops is vital for survival. I remember when apples were only available to us in the fall, and the other fruits and vegetables had their seasons too. These days we can have pretty much any type of fruit and vegetable we want, any time we want. Big city Kroger-shopping folks like me, can easily lose sight of the fact that many people around the world are hard at work pulling in the crop they have nurtured all summer. They have prayed for that magical mixture of rain and sun to produce the optimum yield. Back when there were no grocery stores, we were all more aware that human life depended on a good harvest. As the har- I In the words of St. Teresa of Avila: “Christ has no body now but yours, no hands, no feet on earth but yours, yours are the eyes through which he looks compassion on this world. Christ has no body now on earth but yours.” Living the implication of these words is the way we live out the call of Jesus.... vest went, so went the town. So, naturally harvest was a time to celebrate. Imagine getting paid twice a year, and your pay is based on a number of variables, some of which are in your control and some of which are not. When that payday comes and there is enough money to make it to the next harvest — there would be a huge party. For many of us, the days of being in tune with the ebb and flow of the harvest are so far removed from us that a very poignant image from the Gospels can pass us by. “The harvest is abundant but the laborers are few; so ask the master of the harvest to send out laborers for his harvest” (Matthew 9:37-38). In this example Jesus is not calling for fruit pickers to flock to the orchards. Rather it is humanity that is the crop, and we are the ones called to the harvest. Jesus harvest is letting us know that there are many people who have yet to be gathered up into his Church, and it is up to us to make this happen. In the words of St. Teresa of Avila: “Christ has no body now but yours, no hands, no feet on earth but yours, yours are the eyes through which he looks compassion on this world. Christ has no body now on earth but yours.” Living the implication of these words is the way we live out the call of Jesus to be laborers in the fertile soil of the kingdom. Most of the time people come to know Jesus as a direct result of another person. Think about your own faith journey. I’ll bet there are a number of people you can point to who have helped you come to, and grow in, your faith. These people were Christ’s hands and feet for you. Everywhere we go in our daily lives, we have the opportunity to be the face of Christ to those we encounter. It might seem silly to think you can be the face of Christ to the person you sit next to in math class, or to the person in the cubicle next to you, but this is exactly what St. Teresa is getting at in her famous quote. If being Jesus’ hands and feet seems too hard for you to accomplish on your own, you are right. We cannot be Jesus on our own power; we simply must make ourselves available to the power of the Spirit within us. We make ourselves available by doing our best to be Christlike with every move we make, every step and every breath we take. Too often we go through our day on autopilot. We need to be focused and intentional in our thoughts, words, and actions. If we see each person we come in contact with as a person who needs Jesus in their life, and we realize that it we who are called to be Jesus in their life, then we just might become Jesus’ hands and feet on earth, and in doing so, we will bring forth a rich and bountiful harvest. Jeff Hedglen, youth minister at St. Bartholomew Parish in Southwest Fort Worth, is the principal organizer of Camp Fort Worth each summer. Readers with questions can contact Jeff at jeff@stbartsfw. org. Page 18 NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC, September 28, 2007 América El 6 de octubre será el Día de Formación en Wichita Falls “Encontrando a Cristo Resucitado” es el tema del Día de Formación. Este día se llevará a cabo el sábado, 6 de octubre, en Notre Dame High School, 2821 Lansing Blvd. en Wichita Falls. Este acontecimiento es una oportunidad para el enriquecimiento de todos los servidores y ministros de la diócesis, además de ser una oportunidad para compartir con compañeros y compañeras de la Iglesia diocesana. El Día de Formación es también una oportunidad para el desarrollo de habilidades y destrezas prácticas para la Evangelización en las diversas parroquias de la Diócesis. Este Día de Formación, que será ofrecido tanto en inglés como en español, comenzará a las 8 de la mañana, con la oportunidad de visitar a los diversos exhibidores de libros y materiales católicos. Inscripciones y un desayuno seguirá, a partir de las 8:30 de la mañana hasta las 9. Mientras la comunidad Hispana participa de diversos talleres en español, a las 10 de la mañana se ofrecerá la conferencia principal en inglés por el Padre Nathan Stone, SJ, de la casa de retiro de los Padres Jesuitas, Montserrat. El Padre, quien es nativo de Texas, pasó varios años como maestro voluntario en Chile. El modelo ignaciano lo inspiró, y entró a la Compañía de Jesús en 1992. Después de varios años de formación, fue ordenado sacerdote en el año 2000, como miembro de la provincia chilena. La conferencia principal en español será a las 11:15 de la mañana y será presentada por Jesús López de Los Ángeles. López trabaja a tiempo completo en el ministerio de la evangelización en la comunidad hispana de Los Angeles. Nacido en Michoacán, México, López ha ofrecido conferencias, cursos, y retiros a través de los Estados Unidos, México, Perú, El Salvador, y Guatemala. López y su esposa Araceli son los padres de tres niños. Después del almuerzo habrá una segunda ronda de talleres que comenzará a la 1:30 de la tarde. Varios de los temas serán “Jesús ya hizo su parte, ahora te toca a ti…”, “Para instruir o dar temas, hace falta mucho más que una lengua…” y “Los jóvenes también necesitan atención…” entre otros. Después de los talleres se ofrecerá una última oportunidad para visitar a los exhibidores, y todo concluirá a las 3 de la tarde. Todas las personas que participan ahora, o estén pensando en ofrecer sus servicios a la parroquia en el futuro, pueden asistir. El costo, que incluye almuerzo, es de $20 por persona si se inscriben antes del 24 de septiembre; después de esa fecha, el costo es $25. Hay becas disponibles. Para más información, llame el Centro Católico al (817) 560-3300 o visite nuestra página Web en www.fwdioc.org. Dios te llama ¿Estás escuchando? El Obispo Kevin Vann te invita a un fin de semana Vocacional el 19 al 21 de octubre Catholic Renewal Center Todo joven soltero o soltera entre los años de 18-35 que tiene alguna inquietud sobre la vida sacerdotal o religiosa está invitado. El fin de semana se llevará a cabo en español. Cupo limitado. Fecha limite: 1 de octubre Para más información, comunícate con: 1 (888) 560-3370 Sr. Yolanda Cruz, SSMN Ext. 114 Sr. Elvira Mata, MCDP Ext. 273 Padre Kyle (817) 366-0439 www.fwdioc.org FORMA DE INSCRIPCION Fin de Semana Vocacional Nombre: ____________________________________________________________________________________ Domicilio: ______________________________ Ciudad: __________________, TX Código Postal: ________ Edad: ________ Mujer: ________ Hombre: _______ Teléfono: ___________________ Otro: _______________ Parroquia: _________________________________________________ Ciudad: __________________________ Correo electrónico: _________________Selecciona uno: ____Soltero _____ Casado ____Divorciado ____Viudo Envía tu forma a: Centro Católico / Attn: Hna. Yolanda Cruz, SSMN / 800 W. Loop 820 S. / Fort Worth, TX 76108 GALAXIA REMOLINO Y GALAXIA ACOMPAÑANTE — La galaxia Remolino y la galaxia Acompañante son vistas en esta imagen tomada por el Telescopio Espacial Hubble. El Observatorio del Vaticano llevará a cabo una conferencia internacional del 1 al 5 de octubre en Roma, sobre la formación y evolución de galaxias discos. (Foto CNS/NASA) Inmigración: Congreso detiene su trabajo, pero iglesias continuan trabajando Por Patricia Zapor WASHINGTON (CNS) — Los esfuerzos del congreso para aprobar un proyecto de ley de reforma de inmigración pueden haber sido empujados hacia la lista de “quizás después de la elección del 2008”, pero en todo el país una amplia gama de esfuerzos conectados con la iglesia continúan intentando a influenciar lo que el público en general piensa sobre los inmigrantes y cómo ellos son tratados. En Tennessee, un inmigrante colombiano que ha servido durante mucho tiempo como intérprete de personas de habla hispana en los tribunales de Nashville ha autopublicado una guía para los inmigrantes sobre como ajustarse a su nuevo hogar. En otra parte del estado, las iglesias han estado intentando apoyar las familias afectadas por redadas de inmigración realizadas en parques de casas rodantes durante la primavera. En otras partes, agencias eclesiásticas ayudan a la gente a legalizar su estado, hermanos y hermanas religiosos oran semanalmente fuera de los centros de detención de inmigrantes, activistas parroquiales cabildean ante sus miembros del congreso, y grupos en todo el país están poniendo en agenda programas educativos, concentraciones, y eventos de oración por los inmigrantes y por los asuntos de la inmigración. La hermana Jane Burke, de las Hermanas Escolásticas de Notre Dame, quien dirige el programa Justicia Para Inmigrantes, de la Conferencia Estadounidense de Obispos Católicos, dijo que la orientación subyacente de muchos esfuerzos relacionados con la inmigración en parroquias y diócesis es “llegarle a la gente que está en las bancas” y ayudarle “No tenemos que debatir el asunto para hablar los unos con los otros”, ella dijo. “Pero sí necesitamos hablar los unos con los otros”. La hermana Jane Burke, SSND a entender los principios básicos de la enseñanza social católica y cómo éstos aplican al trato de los inmigrantes. La misión es mucho como edificar la paz, dijo ella a Catholic News Service. “No tenemos que debatir el asunto para hablar los unos con los otros”, dijo. “Pero sí necesitamos hablar los unos con los otros”. De hecho, la hermana Burke dijo que las técnicas de edificar la paz están siendo enseñadas a la gente que trabaja en todas las diócesis y otros grupos religiosos para ayudar a los católicos a entender la enseñanza de la iglesia, según ésta se relaciona con los inmigrantes. En esa misma línea, El Centro Nacional de Vida Pastoral, con sede en Nueva York, mediante Catholic Common Ground Initiative, ha preparado un programa que las parroquias y otros grupos pueden usar para llevar a cabo un diálogo sobre la inmigración. Un folleto de 22 páginas esboza cómo llevar a cabo una discusión sobre la inmigración que será daba en tres sesiones. Éste recomienda usar materiales específicos, incluyendo el vídeo “La línea en la arena”, producido por Catholic Relief Services. NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC, September 28, 2007 Page 19 América Siempre tenemos que respetar la dignidad del ser humano ¡Aunque esté en estado vegetativo! Por Pedro A. Moreno, OPL Director, Instituto Luz de Cristo V eintenas de pacientes en los hospitales e instituciones de cuidado medico del área metropolitana de Dallas y Fort Worth se encuentran en lo que se define como un estado vegetativo persistente, o EVP. Según una declaración de la Asociación Médica Mundial, hecha en septiembre del 1989, además de haber perdido el conocimiento, el cuerpo del paciente todavía mantiene las funciones necesarias para continuar la supervivencia vegetativa. En esta declaración, la Asociación Médica Mundial reconoce que la recuperación del estado vegetativo es posible, en especial durante los primeros días o semanas, pero la tragedia es que muchas personas en EVP viven por muchos meses o años, si se les proporciona alimentación y otros medios artificiales. I magínense ustedes por un momento que ésto le sucediese a algún miembro de su familia. ¿Cuál sería su modo de proceder? ¿Qué es lo que espera Dios de nosotros en este momento? ¿Cuál es la manera más apropiada para que un seguidor de Cristo proceda bajo estas circunstancias? Estas mismas preguntas le hicieron los Obispos de los Estados Unidos a la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe, y hace tan solo dos semanas se recibió unas respuestas y una serie de comentarios a las mismas. El titulo de esta declaración es Respuestas de la Santa Sede sobre Alimentación e Hidratación Artificiales. La serie de notas adicionales a este documento de la Santa Sede lleva por nombre Comentario Vaticano a las Respuestas sobre Alimentación e Hidratación Artificiales. D ios nos creo según su imagen y semejanza. Por ser imagen y semejanza de Dios es que cada ser humano tiene un alma inmortal dotada de inteligencia y voluntad. Por ser imagen y semejanza de Dios tenemos dignidad, y es en respeto a esa dignidad que tenemos que cuidar de cada ser humano. No podemos contribuir o colaborar con un proceso que termine por quitarle la vida a otro ser humano. A limentación: nutrición ofrecida por vía natural o artificial — es algo que no se le puede negar a ningún ser humano, ¡aunque se encuentre en un estado vegetativo persistente! Hidratación — el proporcionar líquidos y agua sea por vía natural o artificial — es otro detalle importante que no le podemos negar a otro ser humano, ¡aunque se encuentre en un estado vegetativo persistente! Estos dos elementos, la alimentación y la hidratación, son lo mínimo que podemos ofrecerle a otro ser humano. Ofrecerle esto a un enfermo no es algo extraordinario; estos dos detalles constituyen cuidados ordinarios, proporcionados a pacientes que estén en este trágico estado de salud. Ofrecerle alimentación e hidratación a un ser humano enfermo e inconsciente es una manera de respetar que ese ser, que ahora depende tanto de nosotros, es imagen y semejanza de Dios, tiene dignidad, y es merecedor o merecedora de nuestro respeto y amor. Necesitamos seguir estos pasos, pues el amor y la vida van tomados de la mano. Pedro Moreno es director diocesano del Instituto Luz de Cristo. Sus escritos espirituales han recibido múltiples premios de la Asociación de Periodismo Católico de los Estados Unidos y Canadá. Vive en el noroeste de Fort Worth con su esposa Maria Mirta y sus tres hijas Maria, Patricia y Mirangela. Pedro es Laico Dominico. El Vaticano dice que se debe dar alimento y agua a pacientes que estén en estado vegetativo Por John Thavis CIUDAD DEL VATICANO (CNS) — En un breve documento aprobado por el Papa Benedicto XVI, el Vaticano dijo que era generalmente una obligación moral darles alimento y agua a los pacientes que estuvieran en estado vegetativo. La nutrición e hidratación, incluso por medios artificiales, simplemente no se puede suspender porque los doctores hayan determinado que una persona nunca recobrará conciencia, dijo el Vaticano el 14 de septiembre. Pueden ocurrir excepciones cuando los pacientes no puedan asimilar alimento ni agua, o en casos “raros” cuando la nutrición e hidratación se conviertan en pesos excesivos para el paciente en cuestión, se decía. El texto fue preparado por la Congregación de la doctrina de la Fe en forma de respuestas a preguntas presentadas por la conferencia de obispos de Estados Unidos. Fue firmado por el cardenal de EEUU William J. Levada, prefecto de la congregación de doctrina y aprobado por el Papa, antes de su publicación. En el documento de la congregación se reafirmó enérgicamente los puntos señalados por el Papa Juan Pablo II, en un documento señero del año 2004, cuando dijo que la nutrición e hidratación, incluso por medios “artificiales”, como tubos de alimentación, se debería considerar generalmente como tratamiento médico normal y no extraordinario. Eso fue un punto clave, pues la iglesia enseña que los medios “extraordinarios” de tratamiento para pacientes que no responden pueden a veces ser descontinuados. El discurso del pasado Papa originó preguntas de la comunidad teológica y médica, y el Comité sobre Doctrina de los Obispos de EEUU presentó una serie de preguntas ante la congregación, en el año 2005, para que se aclarara el asunto. Después de un estudio extendido, la congregación dio a conocer sus respuestas a dos de las preguntas básicas. En primer lugar, se decía, la administración de alimento y agua a pacientes en estado vegetativo es moralmente obligatoria “siempre y cuando — y por el tiempo debido — en que haya muestras de que se cumple su propósito, que es la hidratación y alimentación del paciente”. “De esta forma, se evita el sufrimiento y muerte por inanición y deshidratación”, se decía. En segundo lugar, la con- Como se ve en esta foto archivada, la gente ruega por mantener a Terri Schiavo viva, durante una protesta fuera del Hospicio Woodside, en Pinellas Park, Florida, el 18 de marzo, 2005. El caso de Schiavo, una mujer con daño cerebral, impulsó una extensa discusión legal alrededor del caso de personas en estado vegetativo persistente: ¿deben recibir alimento o agua? Schiavo murió 13 días después de que su tubo de alimentación fue retirado, en el 18 de marzo, 2005, por orden de un juez en Florida. (CNS foto/Jim Stem, Reuters) gregación dijo que no era moralmente aceptable descontinuar el cuidado, incluso cuando los médicos opinen que el paciente en cuestión nunca recobrará la conciencia. “Un paciente en ‘un estado vegetativo permanente’ es una persona que tiene dignidad humana fundamental y debe, en consecuencia, recibir cuidado ordinario y proporcionado, en el que se incluye, en principio, la administración de agua y alimento, incluso por medios artificiales”, se decía. En comentarios que acompañaban la declaración de la congregación, se exploraban las razones que apoyaban las enseñanzas de la iglesia y se explicaban algunos casos concretos en donde se podrían aplicar excepciones. Se hacía notar que la misma expresión de “estado vegetativo”, que la iglesia usaba con renuencia, pues es un término médico, es desafortunado y puede conducir a engaño. Los pacientes que se encuentren en ese estado mantienen completa dignidad humana, precisamente hasta que llegue la muerte natural, se decía. Además, tales pacientes no están necesariamente desahuciados y en general presentan funciones de metabolismo básico. Simplemente no pueden alimentarse a sí mismos, se decía. En el comentario se decía que la administración artificial de alimento y agua generalmente no impone una carga pesada sobre el paciente o los familiares; aunque se admitía que este cargo podría llegar a ser notorio si tal tratamiento se continuase durante meses o años. La administración de alimento y fluidos no requiere excesivos gastos, y por sí, el tratamiento no requiere hospitalización, se decía. En una breve discusión sobre excepciones a este principio moral básico, la congregación señaló tres posibles situaciones: — En lugares muy remotos o empobrecidos, proporcionar artificialmente alimento y fluidos podría ser físicamente imposible. — Debido a complicaciones, un paciente podría ser incapaz de asimilar alimento o fluidos, de tal manera que lo que se le proporcione sería inútil. — En algunos casos muy raros, la alimentación e hidratación artificiales podrían ser excesivamente pesadas para el paciente o podrían causar una molestia física significativa. La Conferencia de Obispos Católicos de los EEUU (USCCB, por sus siglas en inglés), en un comentario de preguntas y respuestas sobre el documento del Vaticano, también se fijó en posibles excepciones. Se decía que hay situaciones médicas en las cuales sería moral suspender el alimento y la hidratación, por ejemplo, cuando un paciente se encuentra en las últimas etapas de cáncer estómacal, en la cual dicho paciente podría rechazar el alimento y los fluidos, debido al dolor. Esto le produjera poco beneficio. Pero el estado vegetativo en sí mismo no presenta un caso inminente de muerte y, por lo tanto, generalmente no es una sobrecarga proporcionada a la alimentación de tales pacientes, se decía. En el comentario de la USCCB se decía que proporcionar tal nutrición e hidratación podría representar la imposición de un peso económico significativo para las instalaciones católicas de cuidado de salud, que se ven algunas veces obligadas a afrontar los gastos de cuidado de salud de familias que son pobres o carecen de seguro médico o de hospital. Page 20 NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC, September 28, 2007 América Elena SernaValenzuela sostiene a su hijo, Diego, durante una Misa al aire libre en una calle de Chicago, el 13 de septiembre. Elena perdió a su hermano, Joel, hace cuatro años, víctima de la violencia de pandillas. En la parroquia de San Nicolás Tolentino empezaron a celebrar Misas este verano, en respuesta a la violencia que azota la comunidad. Varias personas que asistieron a Misa han perdido algún sér querido, víctimas de la violencia de pandillas. (Foto CNS/Karen Callaway, Catholic New World) Empiezan obras de construcción de una catedral en Kosovo dedicada a la Madre Teresa OXFORD, Inglaterra (CNS) — Han empezado las obras de construcción de una nueva catedral en Kosovo dedicada a la beata Madre Teresa de Calcuta. “Este es un buen proyecto, y tiene todo el apoyo de nuestro gobierno”, dijo Xhavit Beqiri, vocero de la presidencia de Kosovo. “La Madre Teresa es una gran autoridad en todo el mundo y un símbolo positivo para Kosovo, así que creo que la construcción de la catedral tendrá el apoyo de toda la gente que vive aquí”. “Esperamos también que nuestro ministro de finanzas encuentre fondos para esta construcción de la catedral”, añadió Beqiri. Beqiri le dijo a Catholic News Service (CNS por sus siglas en inglés, Servicio Católico de Noticias) en una entrevista por teléfono, el 13 de septiembre, que los planes para la construcción de la catedral habían sido iniciados personalmente por el primer ex-presidente de Kosovo, Ibrahim Rugova, de quien ampliamente se informó que se había convertido de la fe del islam al catolicismo, antes de su muerte en enero del año 2006. “Los católicos han sido muy importantes en nuestra historia, especialmente en tiempos modernos”, dijo. “De este modo, la idea de una catedral católica se justifica no solamente para los católicos, sino para todos los albaneses de Kosovo y de toda esta región, como parte de Europa”. Se llevó a cabo una ceremonia de inicio de la excavación en la capital de Kosovo, Pristina, el 5 de septiembre, en un lugar que tiene 32 acres de extensión y en el que también se incluirá un centro católico cultural y educativo. Dos días después de una ceremonia de inicio de excavación en el año 2005, el lugar fue dañado por la explosión de una granada. Los católicos conforman solamente un 3 por ciento de los 2,1 millones de habitantes de Kosovo. A la madre Teresa se le dio el nombre de Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu cuando nació en el seno de una familia de etnia albanesa, en Skopje, hoy día — Macedonia. Viajó a la India como misionera, y fundó la congregación de las Misioneras de la Caridad en 1950. A la madre Teresa se le dio el premio Nobel de la Paz en 1979, murió en 1997, y fue beatificada en 2003. El Papa hace llamado a cooperación para reducir agotamiento de ozono CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italia (CNS) — El Papa Benedicto XVI hizo un llamado a una cooperación más intensa para reducir el agotamiento del ozono, diciendo que éste es un elemento importante para proteger los regalos de la creación. Los comentarios del 16 de septiembre fueron los más recientes en una serie de declaraciones ecológicas del Papa, quien se ha enfocado últimamente en la responsabilidad cristiana de salvaguardar el medioambiente. El Papa señaló que el 16 de septiembre marcó el 20mo aniversario de la aprobación del Protocolo de Montreal, acuerdo que redujo las emisiones de químicos que reducen la capa de ozono protectora de la tierra en la estratosfera. Él dijo que agotamiento del ozono ha causado “daño serio al ser humano y al ecosistema”. Los expertos han vinculado el agotamiento del ozono con un aumento en la radiación ultravioleta que causa el cáncer de la piel. El Papa dijo que el histórico Protocolo de Montreal fue un paso adelante importante para atender el problema. “En los últimos 20 años, gracias a una cooperación internacional ejemplar involucrando la política, la ciencia y la economía, resultados importantes han sido obtenidos con consecuencias positivas para las generaciones presente y futuras”, dijo. “Tengo la esperanza que esta cooperación sea intensificada por todas las partes con la orientación de promover el bien común, el desarrollo, salvaguardar la creación, y fortalecer la alianza entre el hombre y el medioambiente”, dijo. El Protocolo de Montreal, que ha sido firmado por 191 países, es ampliamente considerado como el acuerdo internacional más exitoso sobre asuntos ambientales. Las diócesis sureñas de California acuerdan pagar convenio por $198.1 SAN DIEGO (CNS) — La Diócesis de San Diego y la Diócesis de San Bernardino, que se separaron de su vecino sureño en 1978, el 7 de septiembre acordaron pagar $198.1 millones para hacer convenios con 144 víctimas de abuso sexual por parte de sacerdotes,cometido entre 1938 y 1993. Las diócesis habían ofrecido originalmente $95 millones para transar las demandas judiciales. Los demandantes pedían $200 millones. Anteriormente este año, la Diócesis de San Diego solicitó protección por bancarrota horas antes que un juicio había de comenzar en una de las primeras demandas que alegaba que la iglesia es responsable por el abuso sexual cometido por sacerdotes. El juez en el caso de bancarrota había amenazado recientemente con desechar el caso de bancarrota, si la iglesia no llegaba a un acuerdo con los demandantes. El acuerdo es uno de los más grandes en el país. La Arquidiócesis de Los Ángeles anunció en julio un acuerdo para convenios por $660 millones en 508 demandas. Bajo el acuerdo, la Diócesis de San Bernardino y su aseguradora, Mutual Catholic, pagarán $15.1 millones en 11 casos. La Diócesis de San Diego pagará $77 millones, y Catholic Mutual cubrirá otros $75.7 millones para un total de 111 casos. San Diego pagará otros $30.2 millones en 22 casos involucrando a miembros de órdenes religiosas. Una declaración de la Diócesis de San Diego dijo que ésta tiene la esperanza que por lo menos parte de esa cantidad pueda ser recuperada de las órdenes religiosas. “La realidad requiere admisión”, dijo el obispo Robert H. Brom, de San Diego, al personal diocesano, en una reunión unas horas después que el acuerdo fue anunciado. “Lamentablemente, para nuestra vergüenza, esto sucedió. Y estamos aprendiendo más y más sobre las consecuencias del abuso sexual y cuán horribles éstas son”. Ya que los jueces estatales habían permitido que daños punitivos fueran solicitados en varios de los casos pendientes, la diócesis se arriesgaba a ser responsabilizada por cifras extraordinarias si esos casos hubiesen procedido a juicio. ‘Jesus te invita al sacramento del matrimonio’ Renovando el amor matrimonial / bendiciendo su unión “Jesús te invita al sacramento del matrimonio” es un programa de preparación matrimonial para parejas que quieren bendecir su unión, libre o civil, con el sacramento del matrimonio. Parejas ya casadas pueden asistir para enriquecer y fortalecer su matrimonio. El objetivo de este programa es que las parejas lleguen a conocerse y comprenderse más profun- damente, y así hacer crecer su amor. El programa consiste de seis semanas, empezando el domingo, 7 de octubre, de las 2:30 p.m. a las 5 p.m., en el Centro Católico, 800 W. Loop 820 S., Fort Worth. Es muy importante que se registren lo más pronto posible. Si desean más información, favor llamar a Suzanna Ordóñez al teléfono (817) 560-3300 ext. 256. Clases del método natural para la planificación familiar El método natural para la planificación familiar es un método seguro, natural, de bajo costo, y altamente confiable para evitar un embarazo, lograr un embarazo, espaciar el tiempo entre cada nacimiento, o para aceptar y respetar su fertilidad, de modo que no comprometa su salud o sus valores personales. Las clases en español empezarán el domingo, 30 de septiembre, a las 10:30 a.m. en el salón parroquial de la Iglesia All Saints, 214 N.W. 20th St. en Fort Worth. Es muy importante que se registren lo más pronto posible. Si desean más información, favor llamar a Suzanna Ordóñez al teléfono (817) 560-3300 ext. 256. Fiesta anual de Otoño Iglesia Católica San Juan el Apóstol 7341 Glenview Dr. North Richland Hills 76180 El viernes 5 de octubre (4 p.m.-9 p.m.) y el sábado 6 de octubre (10 a.m.-8 p.m.) Entretenimiento en vivo Cosas hechas en casa Comidas étnicas Juegos Torneo de fútbol (soccer) de 6 en 6 Compre para las fiestas / algo para todas las edades ¡Venga y acompáñenos en un fin de semana lleno de diversión para toda la familia! Organizado por Knights of Columbus Council 8512 NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC, September 28, 2007 Page 21 Diocesan / State / National Special Collection: Priest Care Fund U.S. bishops pledge to use church resources to stop human trafficking WASHINGTON (CNS) — Calling human trafficking “a horrific crime against the basic dignity and rights of the human person,” Bishop Gerald R. Barnes of San Bernardino, California, said the Catholic bishops “pledge to use the resources of the church to help end this affliction.” “We also pledge to use our teaching authority to educate Catholics and others about human trafficking,” said Bishop Barnes, chairman of the U.S. bishops’ Committee on Migration. “It is hard to imagine that, in the 21st century, fellow human beings could be exploited and forced to work in the sex industry and other industries against their will,” Bishop Barnes said in a statement dated Sept. 12 and released the next day by the U.S. bishops’ conference in Washington. “As many as 700,000 persons are trafficked globally each year,” the bishop said, including an estimated 17,500 trafficked each year into the United States. “Men, women, and children have been forced to work in prostitution and have been forced into different types of manual labor, without pay or protection.” Human trafficking, Bishop Barnes said, is “a modern-day form of slavery, and it is the largest manifestation of slavery today.” He cited Pope Benedict XVI’s 2006 statement, “Migrations: A Sign of the Times,” in which the pope deplored the “trafficking of human beings — especially women — which flourishes where opportunities to improve their standard of living or even to survive are limited.” Bishop Barnes also quoted “It is hard to imagine that, in the 21st century, fellow human beings could be exploited and forced to work in the sex industry and other industries against their will….” Human trafficking is “a modern-day form of slavery, and it is the largest manifestation of slavery today.” — Bishop Gerald Barnes Bishop Thomas G. Wenski of Orlando, Florida, from his remarks at a 2004 press conference announcing the launch of an anti-trafficking initiative in central Florida: “The Catholic Church ... in the United States stands ready to work with our government to end this scourge. We cannot rest until trafficking in human persons is eliminated from the globe.” While the church provides social services to rescued human trafficking victims, “much more must be done,” Bishop Barnes said. “Catholics in our own country can help, particularly by educating fellow Catholics and others about the realities of this crime. Parishes can serve as a meeting place to discuss this issue and as a center for action to help identify survivors and provide them support,” he said. “We call upon all Catholics to seek ways to assist dioceses and local governments in helping survivors,” he added. “Catholics also can help educate fellow Catholics and others about the human consequences of this crime.” Bishop Barnes called for more effective implementation of the Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000, saying the law has not protected survivors of human trafficking or held accountable nations which do not apprehend or prosecute traffickers. He also called on Congress “to enact comprehensive immigration reform, which would provide legal avenues for men, women, and their families to enter the country and work legally and safely.” He said, “Undocumented persons eager to find work are easy prey for human traffickers.” Bishop Barnes said the U.S. government must emphasize the recovery and care of victims, especially “child trafficking victims, who are most susceptible to the long-term horrors of this crime.” Economic conditions in their homelands often lead people to seek work in another country and that, combined with “demand in developed nations for the services of the sex trade and forced labor,” drives trafficking, Bishop Barnes said. “Human trafficking will never be truly defeated without eliminating the consumerism which feeds it and prosecuting those actors in receiving countries, including our own, that benefit because of the exploitation of vulnerable human beings,” he said. Most damage from Hurricane Humberto is minor, reports Beaumont Diocese FROM PAGE 1 went to sleep the night of Sept. 12 thinking there was no imminent danger of a hurricane, but then saw on the news in the middle of the night that the storm had intensified. That was just before the power went out in her home, as it did for most of the Beaumont area. According to the local energy company, about 100,000 customers were without power in the local vicinity. Power was not expected to be restored for a few days. The damage at local churches was primarily from lost shingles or water damage caused by water leaking under doors or through windows. Gilman told Catholic News Service Sept. 14 that one of the damaged churches still had the tarps it used after Hurricane Rita and they were immediately put on the church roof when the shingles were blown off by Hurricane Humberto. “Most of the damage is minor and a nuisance,” she said, adding that there was primarily “a lot of cleanup.” One hardship is that the area is still recuperating from Hurricane Rita. One of the most damaged Catholic churches from that storm just reopened two months ago, although workers are still finishing the interior. Another church, torn down because of extensive damage, still hasn’t been rebuilt. Since Hurricane Rita, parishioners have been attending Mass in the parish hall. Catholic Charities USA is collaborating with the local Catholic Charities agency to assess poststorm damages, the needs of local residents, and recovery efforts. Agency officials were especially concerned because the area has been recently saturated with large amounts of rain, making it more prone to severe flooding. Page 22 NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC, September 28, 2007 Diocesan Campus ministry reaches Arizona State students with office on wheels MESA, Arizona (CNS) — A college campus is accustomed to high-speed objects flying across its grounds: students bicycling down the mall, professors hurrying to their next class, a sport utility vehicle adorned with pictures of Pope John Paul II disseminating campus ministry information. OK, so only students at Arizona State University’s Polytechnic campus in Mesa will experience that last example. That’s because Father Michael Goodyear, a Legionaries of Christ priest who is chaplain of Polytechnic’s John Paul II New- man Center, recently outfitted his SUV with pictures and messages of his office’s namesake. “When Bishop [Thomas ] Olmsted [of Phoenix] asked me to come to the Polytechnic and initiate campus ministry, there was no history of anything there,” Fr. Goodyear said. “We didn’t have an office space, no Newman Center. There was no list of Catholic students,” he said. “We had nothing.” Many of those challenges remain for Fr. Goodyear, who is entering his second year as chaplain at Arizona State University’s east campus. He still has no office on campus, but he did manage to procure one on wheels. “We thought, ‘What can we do to get the word out that we’re there and create a buzz on campus and have a space?’” he said. “What’s in our grasp is a vehicle.” He drives his “popemobile” on campus and it serves as an advertisement for the Newman Center and as a mobile office. Few students live on the sprawling Mesa campus. Most are commuters who attend classes and leave. Fostering community on campus has been difficult. Hamer… It was like being home.” Abby described her parish, St. Leo, where she and her new husband, Chad, are members. She explained how Chad, with a Christian background, had spent his deployment time studying and learning about the Catholic faith, and was confirmed at St. Leo on Easter morning. “At our first Mass there, I told Chad what everything was. But going through it all together with him was like seeing it for the first time. And when I learned he was really liking it,” she said, “it felt so good. The Catholic Church is my home. It is so familiar and so comforting. And it is the same everywhere.” On a recent Sunday at her own university, Abby got a taste of how her present, her past, and her future mixed, and came out better than each of them as one. She may have felt disconnected from the new class of TCU freshmen, but her experience and musical training made her able to make music with them and lead. She may have missed the past of her school and church, but the joy and contentment of her present life in another Catholic community blended and sweetened the loss. And she may have been doubtful about the future, in a world that was becoming boundless, but there she was, in an environment that throughout her life had given her faith and hope. That day’s closing hymn, which had been previously selected, was Abby’s favorite. She strummed the rousing chords and listened as her friends sang, “Leaping the mountains, bounding the hills, see how our God has come to meet us! God’s face is lifted, God’s voice is joy....” As for Meredith’s views on my favorite ice cream, she says she doesn’t like ice cream of the future, so she is looking forward to getting past that to see what comes next. “But I do need to know how far in the future we’re talking about, before ice cream of the future is ice cream of now. Will it be 2020 or 2050? Because I think I want to wait and see what happens after that.” “Why don’t you like ice cream of the future?” I asked her. “Because it’s too futuristic. But if you write about this,” my daughter Meredith said, “please don’t mention my name.” Kathy Cribari Hamer, a member of St. Andrew Parish, has five children, Meredith, John, Julie, Andrew, and Abby. Her column is syndicated in a number of the best Catholic diocesan newspapers across the U.S. In May of 2005, her column received the first place award for best family life column by the Catholic Press Association of the U.S. and Canada. FROM PAGE 11 neighbors of the TCU campus, in a simple gathering, music provided by a small choir of college students. Abby has played guitar most of her life and participated in music ministry while she studied at TCU, but she had not been back for more than a year. On her return, visiting from Seattle, she brought her guitar, and sneaked into the room during pre-Mass rehearsal. She hoped to be allowed to play. The music director, Stephen Kinch, was playing piano, as the choir practiced Mass parts. Abby tip-toed to the front and touched his shoulder lightly. Stephen stopped playing, jumped up, and enveloped Abby in a bear hug, and introduced her to the mostly freshman choir. “This is Abby,” he said, “guitar-player extraordinaire.” Then he spoke to Fr. Charlie. “We have a special guest tonight,” he said. And Fr. Charlie opened his arms to Abby as well. It was just the way you want things to be when you go home. What did that feel like, I asked Abby later, and she replied, “It was fun and humbling. I mean, this is where I play guitar. I have been playing here since I was in high school. Father Michael Goodyear, a Legionaries of Christ priest and chaplain of Arizona State University Polytechnic’s John Paul II Newman Center in Mesa, Arizona, stands outside his sport utility vehicle adorned with pictures of Pope John Paul II Aug. 15. (CNS photo/Andrew Junker, Catholic Sun) “Getting started is not easy. At the beginning, it’s going to be slow, so I’ve tried to encourage the students to work with it,” Fr. Goodyear told The Catholic Sun, newspaper of the Phoenix Diocese. His popemobile gives the students something to rally around, he said. “We want to take it out [to go] hiking and, in the tradition of John Paul II, kayaking, as he would so often do with his students. We even have visions of flipping the kayak upside down and celebrating Mass on it like he did,” Fr. Goodyear said. But his popemobile reaches beyond the campus, too. “It’s evangelization 24/7,” Fr. Goodyear said. The car also features oft-repeated messages of Pope John Paul. “Do not be afraid” and “God is with you” adorn the Toyota FJ Cruiser’s doors. “It might just be a reminder that somebody needs on the freeway or in the streets or parked at the grocery store,” Fr. Goodyear said. He has worked with students for 13 years and has found great things happen when he challenges students “concretely into taking the church and her mission into their hands.” Thankfully, the chaplain has found a few students ready to take on that responsibility. Freshman Anthony Mancuso said he got involved in the Newman Center because of the community it helps build. “There are so many ups and downs associated with college that it is comforting to know that there is a community and a God always there to support you no matter what the situation is,” he said. By Jean Denton Copyright © 2007, Jean Denton NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC, September 28, 2007 Page 23 Calendar PRESENTATION ON ADDICTION Author Constance Curry and her adult daughter, addiction counselor Kristina Wandzilak, will offer a presentation at Good Shepherd Church, 1000 Tinker Road, Colleyville, Oct. 3, from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. The two Catholic women, authors of The Lost Years, will recount their family’s story of addiction and redemption. The presentation is designed for youth in grades 9-12 and for adults of all ages. The presentation will be offered at no charge. For more information, contact Mary Kelly at (817) 421-1387. MEMORIAL MASS Bishop Kevin Vann will celebrate the annual diocesan Memorial Mass for children who have died before birth. The liturgy will take place at St. Mary of the Assumption Church, 509 West Magnolia in Fort Worth, Oct. 6 at at 2 p.m. Refreshments will be served in the church hall following the liturgy. Flowers will be provided for parents to offer during the liturgy in memory of their children, should they wish to do so. Reservations are requested but not required. For more information or to make a reservation, call (817) 738-1086, or e-mail to mubcare@ charter.net. OUR LADY OF FATIMA MASS Catholics Respect Life will sponsor a Mass and procession in honor of Our Lady of Fatima at St. Mary of the Assumption Church, 509 W. Magnolia, Fort Worth, Oct. 13. Bishop Kevin Vann will celebrate the Mass at 7 a.m. A procession will follow the Mass. For more information, call Nan Wilsterman at (817) 346-0926 or e-mail her at nan4life01@ hotmail.com. MINISTRY FORMATION DAY Ministry Formation Day will be held Oct. 6, at Notre Dame High School in Wichita Falls. The event will begin at 8 a.m. with registration and a continental breakfast. Many exhibitors from various publishers and businesses will be present during the day. There will be a choice of breakout sessions in English and Spanish. Father Nathan Stone, SJ, the English-language keynote speaker, will present “Encountering the Living Christ.” A catered barbecue lunch will also be included in the day’s activities. For more information, contact Sister Elvira Mata, MCDP, at (817) 560-3300 ext. 273 or visit the diocesan Web site at www.fwdioc.org. TALK ON BLESSED MOTHER Father Charles Becker, a priest of the Archdiocese of Chicago, will give a talk Oct. 16 at St. Mary of the Assumption Church, 509 W. Magnolia St., Fort Worth. This event, sponsored by the Fort Worth Queen of Peace Center, will begin with the rosary at 6:45 p.m. followed by Mass and Fr. Becker’s talk entitled, “The Blessed Mother Speaks to the Apostles of the Last Times.” For more information contact the Queen of Peace Center at (817) 244-7733 or (817) 558-9805. Fr. Becker will also speak in Dallas Monday, Oct. 15. For additional Dallas details call (214) 368-1966. NATURAL FAMILY PLANNING Natural Family Planning is safe, healthy, and effective, according to the Couple to Couple League. Many couples who use NFP find that they grow in love and respect for one another as they learn to appreciate God’s design for marriage. The CCL offers classes in the sympto-thermal method of NFP. Since the class consists of four meetings at monthly intervals, engaged couples are encouraged to attend a class starting at least four months before their wedding. For more information or to register for a class starting Nov. 9 at 7 p.m. at St. Peter the Apostle Church, 1201 S. Cherry Lane, Fort Worth, contact Bill and Mary Kouba at (817) 370-9193. ST. AUGUSTINE’S GROUP St. Augustine’s Men’s Purity Group, a ministry for men who struggle with sexual impurity issues on the Internet and other sources, meets regularly in Room 213 at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton School, located at 2016 Willis Lane, Keller, and at 1301 Paxton (Padre Pio House) in Arlington. For additional information, visit the Web site at www.sampg.com, or e-mail to Mark at seasmenspurity@yahoo.com. To Report Misconduct If you or someone you know is a victim of sexual misconduct by anyone who serves the church, you may • Call Judy Locke, victim assistance coordinator, (817) 560-2452 ext. 201 or e-mail her at jlocke@fwdioc.org • Or call the Sexual Abuse Hotline (817) 560-2452 ext. 900 • Or call The Catholic Center at (817) 560-2452 ext. 107 and ask for the vicar general, Father Michael Olson. To Report Abuse Call the Texas Department of Family Protective Services (Child Protective Services) 1 (800) 252-5400 ‘THEOLOGY OF THE BODY’ A “Theology of the Body” DVD workshop will be held at St. Maria Goretti Parish, 1200 S. Davis Dr., Arlington. Christopher West unpacks John Paul II’s Theology of the Body, translating it into a language everyone can understand. This workshop is based on an eight-part DVD series by West with questions and discussion to follow each presentation. The first four-part series will begin Oct. 19, with the remaining four-week series to conclude in the spring. Each week may be taken independently of the other. Food and drinks will be served each evening at 6:30 p.m. with the program beginning at 7 p.m. The cost is $5 per person for the study guide and $5 per person each week for pizza and drinks. To register, contact John Cox at St. Maria Goretti Parish in Arlington at (817) 274-0643 ext. 226 or by e-mail at jcox@smgparish.org. Deadline for registration is Oct 14. ‘YES! I AM CATHOLIC’ “Yes! I am Catholic, 2007-2008,” will begin Oct. 29 at St. Andrew Church, 3717 Stadium Drive, Fort Worth. The series will be held in the parish hall from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. “The Mystery Of Faith, A Study Series Of The Mass” will be the topic for this series. Class dates and speakers are as follows: Oct. 29, “We Gather As The Body Of Christ — Introductory Rites,” presenter: Bishop Kevin Vann; Jan. 28, “We Come To Hear The Word of God — Liturgy of the Word,” presenter, Dr. Toni Craven, Brite Divinity School, TCU; March 31, “We Come To Share in The Supper of The Lord — Liturgy Of The Eucharist,” presenter, Mary McLarry, retired director of Worship, Diocese of Fort Worth; April 28, “Sent Forth To Make a Better World — Concluding Rites” and review of series,” presenter, Father Tom Stabile, TOR. For more information or to register for the series, call (817) 927-5383. Childcare is available by calling (817) 924-6581 24 hours in advance. Adrian’s Floor & The Tile Dentist Tile Sales & Installation • Floors • Walls • Decorative Tiles Tile & Grout • Cleaning • Sealing • Repairs • Re-grouting/Recaulking of floors, tubs, showers & more New Sales & Installation • Wood • Laminates • Carpet • Vinyl • Tile ST. RITA INTERNATIONAL FAIR ST. VINCENT DE PAUL PICNIC BLESSING OF ANIMALS St. Rita’s 29th annual International Fair will be held Oct. 6 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. The day will come to a close with a celebration of Mass at 5 p.m. This daylong event will celebrate the multicultural community with a festival of ethnic foods, entertainment, silent auction, and games and activities for families. The church is located at 712 Weiler Blvd. in Fort Worth. For more information, call the parish office at (817) 451-9395. The St. Vincent de Paul 2007 annual parish picnic will be held Sept. 30 from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. at St. Vincent de Paul Church, 5819 W. Pleasant Ridge Rd., Arlington. A barbeque dinner, prepared by the St. Vincent de Paul Men’s Club, will be served from 1:45 p.m. to 5 p.m. The cost for meal tickets is $6 in advance and $7 at the door. Children age eight and under eat free. Entertainment will be provided by the band “Flip Side.” A silent auction will be held from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. with games and family fun throughout the day. The Men’s Club will be selling meal tickets after each Mass. For more information, contact the parish office at (817) 478-8206. The Blessing of Animals will take place Sept. 30 behind the St. Maria Goretti Center, 1200 S. Davis Dr., Arlington, at 2:30 p.m. This custom is conducted in remembrance of St. Francis of Assisi’s love for all creatures. St. Francis, whose feast day is Oct. 4, wrote a Canticle of the Creatures, an ode to God’s living things: “All praise to you, Oh Lord, for all these brother and sister creatures.” For more information, contact the parish office at (817) 274-0643. ST. GEORGE SCHOOL CARNIVAL All are invited to enjoy the fun and festivities at the St. George School carnival to be held Oct. 13 from noon to 8 p.m. Carnival games where everyone is a winner, are among the planned activities. A wide variety of foods will be available to enjoy including egg rolls, Mexican food, hamburgers, hot dogs, cotton candy, funnel cakes, and more. A “Drive for the Kids” sponsored by Dodge, will help raise funds for the school. St. George School is located east of downtown Fort Worth at 824 Hudgins Ave. The carnival will take place on the school grounds, in the 800 block of Karnes between 121 Airport Freeway and Maurice. For more information, call the school at (817) 222-1221. SKINNER MEMORIAL RUN / WALK St. Andrew School, 3304 Dryden Road, will honor the spirit of Judi K. Skinner with its 14th annual 5K/1-Mile Fun Run/Walk Oct. 13. The 5K event will begin at 7:30 a.m. followed by the 1-mile event at 7:40 a.m. All entrants will receive a race T-shirt as well as a pancake breakfast prepared by the Knights of Columbus. The race is a memorial to Judi K. Skinner, a dedicated parent who was instrumental in the development of the St. Andrew’s Spirit Club. Skinner lost her battle with aplastic anemia in 1993. For the 5K run, awards are given to designated age groups as well as the overall winners. All participants in the 1-mile event will receive ribbons. Entry fees are $15 per person or $45 per family until Oct. 7. Forms may be obtained by visiting the Web site, www. standrewsch.org, or by calling the school office at (817) 924-8917. NOLAN HOMECOMING The Nolan Catholic High School Homecoming will be held Oct. 19. on the school grounds at 4501 Bridege St. in Fort Worth. Alumni and family are invited to a pre-game alumni barbeque dinner at 5:30 p.m. The first 100 alumni at the dinner will receive an alumni T-shirt. Kids will enjoy the jump house and Viking face “tattoos” compliments of the junior varsity cheerleaders. Current students will conduct tours of the school from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. The Nolan Catholic Vikings will play the John Paul II High School’s football team at 7:30 p.m. Reservations for the dinner are requested by Oct. 9 and may be made by calling (817) 457-2920 ext. 1670 or by e-mailing to alumni@nolancatholichs.org. PARENTAL SURVIVAL COURSE Dr. Ray Guarendi, a clinical psychologist, will speak at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Church, 2016 Willis Lane in Keller, Oct. 27 from 9 a.m. to noon. Dr. Guarendi provides practical advice to parents since he himself is the father of 10 children. Dr. Guarendi can be heard locally on KATH 910 AM, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays from noon to 1 p.m. Tickets are $10 per person or $20 per family. To order tickets, contact Frank Laux at (817) 939-8594 or for information, visit www.sjcktc.org. (817) 913-5579 VIKING RUN www.adriansflooring.com All are invited to the first annual Viking Run Nov. 3 at Gateway Park in East Fort Worth. The 1-mile timed run/walk will begin at 8 a.m., and the 5K-run/walk will begin at 8:30 a.m. with a warm-up at 7:30 a.m. Participants may register at www.Vikingrun. com or beginning at 6:45 a.m. on race day. Race packets will be available for pick-up at Luke’s Locker, 1540 S. University Dr., Fort Worth, (817) 877-1448. The awards ceremony with refreshments and music will follow the 5K race. All proceeds from the run will benefit Project Graduation, a program that provides an alcohol and drug-free set of celebrations for Nolan’s graduating class. For race information, contact Mary Berger at Mary@racetimeproductions.com. Now Your Parents Can Live At Home Their comfort is our first priority. Up to 24-hour care. Hygiene asst., meals, light housework, companionship, custom care plans Visiting Angels® www.visitingangels.com/fortworth (817) 224-9700 ST. JOHN’S FALL FESTIVAL The Knights of Columbus #8512 will host its annual fall festival Oct. 5 from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. and Oct. 6 from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. The festival, to be held at St. John the Apostle Church, 7341 Glenview in North Richland Hills, will include live entertainment, homemade items, ethnic foods, and games for all. For more information, contact the parish office at (817) 284-4811. KC FALL FESTIVAL The Knights of Columbus #4709 will host its annual fall festival Oct. 6 from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. at 3809 Yucca Ave., Fort Worth. All are invited to enjoy the day’s activities including entertainment, hayrides, face painting, bounce house, fishing pond, toss game, cakewalk, pony rides, and more. Various refreshment items will be available for purchase. For more information, call (817) 838-0223 or e-mail to KC4709@ sbcfglobal.net ST. BONIFACE, SCOTLAND The city of Scotland and St. Boniface Church will join together Oct. 6 and 7 to mark the town’s 100th birthday with a two-day centennial and Oktoberfest celebration. The event will include German sausage, historical tours and displays, a Scotland history book, antique tractor show, unique vendors, special centennial postal cancellation, limited-edition centennial items, activities for the children, home-baked goods, and a dance featuring an authentic German band. Bishop Kevin Vann will celebrate Mass at St. Boniface Church, Oct. 7. All are invited to join in the celebration of this special event. For more information, call Jerry or Margaret Smith at (940) 541-2285 or the Scotland City Hall at (940) 541-2360. COURAGE SUPPORT GROUP Courage D/FW, a spiritual support group for those striving to live chaste lives according to the Catholic Church’s teachings on homosexuality, meets every second and fourth Friday evenings. For information, email to CourageDFW@Catholic.org or call (972) 938-5433. ST. JUDE FESTIVAL St Jude Parish in Mansfield will host its 31st annual festival Oct. 6 from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. on the parish grounds at 500 E. Dallas, Mansfield. A variety of food will be served including turkey legs and ethnic food from Italy, Mexico, and Czech Republic. Games will include a new putt-putt golf event, petting zoo, live pony rides, and much more. There will be a silent auction and live entertainment all day with teen rock Christian band “In His Hands” on center stage at 1:30 p.m. followed by a live Mariachi band from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m., adult Christian band “Not Called Common” from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m., and rounding out the evening “Los Banditos Clan,” well-known Mexican band. Plus many other local artists, vocalists, and authentic Mexican dancers will be present. Festival entrance is free, as is parking. For more information, call the parish office at (817) 473-6709. MARRIAGE ENCOUNTER A Marriage Encounter weekend will be held Oct. 12-14 at the Catholic Renewal Center of North Texas, 4503 Bridge Street in East Fort Worth. A marriage enrichment program designed to help couples deepen their relationship, Marriage Encounter is centered on three principles: building communication between husband and wife, nurturing the commitment of marriage vows, and strengthening the couple’s faith. Reservations are required, and space is limited. For more information or to make a reservation, call (817) 451-6005. OLV FALL FESTIVAL All are invited to join the celebration of Our Lady of Victory School’s annual fall festival Oct. 13 from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. on the school grounds at 3320 Hemphill in Fort Worth. The festival will feature food, music (DJ, live entertainment), games, obstacle course, bounce house, and rides. Harris Methodist Mobile Health Unit will be present from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. for mammograms (call 1888-442-7747, then choose option 1 then option 2 to pre-schedule a mammogram). TX-DOT and the Department of Health will provide information on safety and nutrition. For more information, call the school office at (817) 924-5123. Classified Section INTERNAL AUDITOR ACCOMPANIST The Diocese of Fort Worth is seeking a full-time auditor for our Internal Audit program at The Catholic Center. Primary duties will include reviewing and testing the compliance with laws, accounting procedures and policies, and administrative procedures and policies as they relate to the temporal affairs of entities of the Diocese of Fort Worth. Qualifications include a bachelor’s degree in accounting or related field, two to five years experience in auditing or related field, expertise in computer usage, and knowledge of the Roman Catholic Faith. Knowledge of the workings of the Diocese of Fort Worth is helpful. English/ Spanish bilingual applicants are preferred. For a full job description and application, visit the diocesan Web site at www.fwdioc.org. The Diocese of Fort Worth offers excellent pay and benefits. If interested in this new position, e-mail a résumé to msimeroth@fwdioc.org or fax to (817) 244-8839, to the attention of Mark Simeroth, director of Human Resources. Application due date is Oct. 5. Qualified applicants will be contacted for an interview. An accompanist experienced with piano and organ is needed for weekend Masses at St. Matthew Church. Responsibilities include rehearsals with two choirs weekly, holy day Masses, availability for parish funerals, weddings, and major parish celebrations throughout the year preferred. Applicant must be familiar with post-Vatican II Catholic liturgy. Send résumés to St. Matthew Church; Attn: Sheila Patel, 2021 New York Ave., Arlington 76010 or call (817) 860-0130, to apply. HOME CAREGIVERS Visiting Angels, a non-medical home-care service, is seeking experienced caregivers for on-call positions, PT to live-in. Great supplemental income. Call (817) 224-9701. SERVICES AVAILABLE Topsoil, sand, gravel, washed materials, driveways, concrete, backhoe, and tractor services. Custom mowing lots and acres. Call (817) 732-4083. ADVERTISE IN THE NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC NORTH TEXAS CATHOLIC, September 28, 2007 Page 24 Good Newsmakers For several years medical volunteers from our diocese have traveled to Catacamas, Honduras, to Relieve Suffering By Joan Kurkowski-Gillen Correspondent I t’s a tragedy that the visitor from the United States still recalls in detail. A young mother was preparing tortillas over a small fire pit on the family’s dirt floor while her children played nearby. One of the girls gave her brother an innocent push, and he stepped backward into the pot of boiling corn meal. The burns on his foot were severe. The visiting medical team pooled together enough money to send the injured boy to a surgeon in Juticalpa, Honduras. “There are a lot of cases like that,” says Dr. Bill Runyon, remembering the hundreds of sick and impoverished patients he has met on mission trips to Honduras. “We do what little we can, but to them it’s huge.” The one-week medical mission trip organized by the Fort Worth oral and maxillofacial surgeon each year provides some remote villagers with their only opportunity for professional health care. “It’s a drop in the bucket,” admits Runyon. The seasoned professional knows the work that 30 doctors and nurses accomplish in seven days can’t meet the overwhelming needs of even one small corner of a country where intestinal worms in children are common but hospitals are scarce. “That’s what mission work is all about,” he adds. “We’re serving our fellow human beings, who aren’t as lucky as we are.” The parishioner of Holy ABOVE: Dr. Robert Portman, M.D., listens to the chest of a Honduran girl at the medical mission at Catacamas in Olancho Province, in the Diocese of Juticalpa. Juticalpa is the sister diocese of the Diocese of Fort Worth. RIGHT: Long lines of men, women, and children seeking medical and dental treatment at the clinics provided by volunteers from the Diocese of Fort Worth show how great the need for treatment is in the Catacamas area. Family Church in West Fort Worth first became acquainted with Central America while serving in the U.S. Army. “The Armed Services are very active in providing medical support to indigent people LEFT: A makeshift dental chair, a table of medical tools of various kinds, and the waiting room intruding into the procedural space show the need for medical facilities in this far-flung area of the Juticalpa Diocese. 3 Sept. 8 Jack McKone was ordained to the diaconate at his family’s home parish of St. Rita on Fort Worth’s East Side, and all nine of his siblings were present for the Mass (as well as his dad). 6 ment between the Diocese of Fort Worth and the Diocese of Juticalpa, Honduras, the parish partnership program was started to provide Honduran Catholics with the financial resources needed to build chapels, schools, and retreat centers. Meant to support and enhance the church’s already strong presence in the region, the building projects were also an opportunity to form bonds of friendship and mutual unSEE MEDICAL, P. 15 MAILING LABEL: Please enclose label with address change or inquiries concerning mail delivery of your paper. Thank you. Inside... This issue of the NTC Life Chain is set for Oct. 7 at a number of broadly distributed locations around the diocese. Eighteen of them and the contact persons for each site are listed on page 3. all over the world,” explains Runyon, who performed cleft lip and palate surgeries in foreign countries as a military doctor. A few weeks after his discharge, the Fort Worth native was sitting at Sunday Mass when his pastor, Father Joseph Pemberton, began talking about Holy Family’s ongoing involvement with San Francisco de Asis Church in Catacamas, Honduras. As part of a long-term covenant agree- Usually we only key local news here, but this week, a lot of the best news stories start on the outside pages of the paper, so take a look at this cool JP II, campus ministry office on wheels. 22