Monday, March 07, 2011

The Blue Chapel in Union City: Legends & Landmarks


From above, through the fixed levitating lens of a Google Earth satellite, the Convent of the Dominican Sisters of the Perpetual Rosary -- referred to since 1915 by West Hoboken (and now Union City) residents as the “Blue Chapel” because of its glowing bluestone masonry walls and cool-tinted stained glass memorial windows -- appears to be occupied.

The elevated grounds, perimetered by plumb pointed trap rock stone walls 15 feet in height, are seemingly maintained. Giant hedge bushels, planted ages ago in a centered convent court outlined above by roofed abbey walkways, are still finely sculpted and manicured. Old growth trees dating back to the early 1890s still forest and shroud the now-endangered architectural monument bounded by Central Avenue on the west, 13th Street on the south, Morris Street on the east and 14th and West streets on the north.

Little can that sacred satellite sense that since 2009, after nearly 120 years of Dominican Order nun occupation, the ornamental iron gates of the closed-off cloister campus have remained locked, save for the daily presence of a property caretaker.

One must be at ground level, at the 14th Street sidewalk entrance, to hear the footstepped echoes still emanating from the abandoned chambers within.
Entire article can be read here.

Shared by Sue Cifelli.

ACN News - Christians in Pakistan “oppressed, repressed and depressed”



The outlook for Christians in Pakistan is bleak according to the country’s Catholic leader, who described how Shahbaz Bhatti’s death has robbed minority groups of a “great leader” and left them feeling “oppressed, repressed and depressed.”

Archbishop Lawrence Saldanha of Lahore said the murder of the Federal Minister for Minorities showed how extremist religious parties were gaining the upper hand over a “very weak” government.

The archbishop, who is President of Pakistan’s Catholic Bishops’ Conference, said the country’s 2.5 million Christians were now increasingly exposed to violence and intimidation from people “whose mindset is centered more and more on an extremist form of Islam.”

Speaking from Lahore in an interview with Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need (ACN), Archbishop Saldanha said, “The murder of Shahbaz Bhatti means that we have lost a great leader of our community who stood up for us and articulated the concerns and fears of our people. We do not have a leader now.”

The archbishop went on, “Our people are quite down. They are fearful of the future – more so than before.”

“People feel like second class citizens. We cannot speak out. We feel oppressed, repressed and depressed.”

Accusing the government of failing to tackle fundamentalism effectively, he said, “The situation is now precarious for us.”

“The religious parties have put a lot of pressure on the government which is very weak and cannot put up a stand against the menace of extremism.”

Describing Mr. Bhatti as “a man of great integrity who had his opinions and stuck to them,” Archbishop Saldanha said he strongly doubted that that whoever succeeds him would display the same courage and determination in defense of minority rights.

The archbishop was speaking five days after Mr. Bhatti’s murder on the streets of Islamabad, where masked men shot him at point blank range as he left his mother’s home en route for a cabinet meeting.

Catholic leaders have stressed how Mr. Bhatti’s death is a hammer blow coming less than two months after Salman Taseer, the Governor of the Punjab, was killed by his own bodyguard.

Both men had spoken out against Pakistan’s notorious Blasphemy Laws, which impose death sentences or life imprisonment for acts of disrespect for the prophet Mohammed and the Qur’an.

Their criticism of the law came amid widespread concerns that the legislation was being abused by extremists who use it as the pretext for acts of violence in response to unproven allegations of disrespect towards Islam.

The archbishop went on to describe improved security for Christian buildings, describing how his Sacred Heart Cathedral in Lahore was under police guard with cameras, cement barriers, sandbags and perimeter walls raised by three feet. “It is like Fort Knox,” he said.

Paying tribute to his faithful, Archbishop Saldanha told ACN, “Our people are very resilient and determined. For centuries, they have been suffering. This is nothing new for them. They have always been under the thumb. We carry on with God’s grace.”

He went on to appeal for prayer and action especially by charities including ACN.

Archbishop Saldanha said, “We continue to need work done that highlights the problems we face.”

“We also need people who are willing to support the victims of violence so that they can be free from fear and the threat of further attacks.”


With picture of Archbishop Lawrence Saldanha of Lahore


Editor’s Notes:



Directly under the Holy Father, Aid to the Church in Need supports the faithful wherever they are persecuted, oppressed or in pastoral need.  ACN is a Catholic charity - helping to bring Christ to the world through prayer, information and action.

Founded in 1947 by Father Werenfried van Straaten, whom Pope John Paul II named “An Outstanding Apostle of Charity,” the organization is now at work in over 145 countries throughout the world.

The charity undertakes thousands of projects every year including providing transport for clergy and lay Church workers, construction of church buildings, funding for priests and nuns and help to train seminarians. Since the initiative’s launch in 1979, 43 million Aid to the Church in Need Child’s Bibles have been distributed worldwide.

For more information contact Michael Varenne at michael@churchinneed.org or call 718-609-0939 or fax718-609-0938. Aid to the Church in Need, 725 Leonard Street, PO Box 220384, Brooklyn, NY 11222-0384. www.churchinneed.org

Friday, March 04, 2011

"The Deafening Silence"

"Antipathy" by Martin Grommel
Picture source

Somehow I got on Timeless Pearls' mailing list. Today, I read a very powerful article on suffering. Please read.
Walking up to the gate bearing the infamous phrase, “Arbeit Macht Frei**,” I heard a young one wailing. Spooked, I turned around and saw a women walking past with a small child. It was a coincidence, but it certainly set the tone for my experience with Auschwitz. As soon as you step onto the grounds, you felt the death looming over the area.
You can read the rest here

**Work brings freedom.

Pope praises Saint Francis de Sales ideas on "universal call to holiness"

Prayer to the Sacred Heart of Jesus

Picture source

Jesus in the Eucharist,
immortal King of ages,
Who from the humble throne of the Tabernacle would conquer the world,
O Jesus,
do not permit that any of us who are close to Thy Sacred Heart,
the never-failing source of living water, should perish of thirst.
Do not permit the members of our household to fall fainting on the road of life because they refuse to nourish themselves with Thee,
the Bread sent down from Heaven for earth's exiles.

Because Thou art Jesus,
cross the abyss that separates them from Thee;
pay no attention to their ignorance;
win them in spite of their weakness,
heeding only Thy pity and the prayer of faith and love that,
unknown to them, we offer Thee at Thy merciful request. O Jesus, save them, by Thy grace!...

By the Immaculate Queen, let them drink the chalice of thy love!...

- Holy Hour by The Rev. Fr. Mateo Crawley-Boevey, SS.CC.
Book Four

Thursday, March 03, 2011

"Why I Avoid Both the Catholic Left and the Catholic Right"

My friend Mary B shared this article on Facebook. Although there is a lot I do not agree with, I found the writer's perceptions and thoughts to be very interesting.  The gist of what she wrote gives one food for thought. e.g. spending more time in prayer and in making sacrifices instead of arguing on social networks.

Why I Avoid Both the Catholic Left and the Catholic Right.

Wednesday, March 02, 2011

Pope Benedict XVI: ST. FRANCIS OF SALES: GREAT MASTER OF SPIRITUALITY AND PEACE


Picture source

During today's general audience, which was held in the Paul VI Hall, the Pope spoke about St. Francis de Sales, bishop and doctor of the Church who lived in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.

Born in 1567 to a noble family in the Duchy of Savoy, while still very young Francis, "reflecting on the ideas of St. Augustine and St. Thomas Aquinas, underwent a profound crisis which led him to question himself about his own eternal salvation and about the destiny God had in store for him, experiencing the principle theological questions of his time as an authentic spiritual drama". The saint "found peace in the radical and liberating truth of God's love: loving Him without asking anything in return and trusting in divine love; this would be the secret of his life".
Read the rest at VIS

Tuesday, March 01, 2011

Chicago: Pro-life flash mob surprises “Walk for Choice”


A pro-abortion “Walk for Choice” rally was held in downtown Chicago’s Daley Plaza on Saturday, February 26. Participants of the “Walk her for Choice” were protesting HR Bill 3 which limits taxpayer funding for Planned Parenthood.

As a response to the “Walk for Choice,” anonymous teens and young adults organized a “Pro-Life Flash Mob” over the span of a few days. The goal of the event was not to counter-protest, but to give a positive message of joy and life to Chicago.

The youth assembled inconspicuously around the plaza before the rally hiding their giant yellow balloons in black trash bags. When the “Walk for Choice” had assembled, the youth prompted by music coming from a backpack sound system then proceeded to unveil the helium balloons imprinted with the word “LIFE.”

These exclusive videos shows the “Pro-Life Flash Mob” taking the “pro-choicers” by surprise with Life, Spirit, and Truth!

As participants of the “Walk for Choice” were asked to wear orange for the event, so the Pro-Life flash mob jovially asks in their sign: “ORANGE YOU GLAD TO SEE US???”

Which side has more joy?
Check out a longer video at Jill Stanek's blog

On Dealing with Temptations


St. Francis de Sales gave the following advice to St. Jane de Chanal on patience and bearing temptations.

"...while a temptation displeases you there is nothing to fear; for why does it displease you, save because you do not will it? ... these burdensome temptations come from the malice of the Devil; but the pain and suffering that we feel come from the mercy of God who, against the will of the enemy, draws from his malice holy tribulations, by which He refines the gold that He would put into His treasures.

...your temptations are from the Devil and from Hell, but your pains and afflictions are from God and Paradise. The mothers are from Babylon, but the daughters are from Jerusalem. Despise the temptations; embrace the tribulations...

Thy Will be Done by St. Francis de Sales, Sophia Press

Life on the Rock - Courage - Fr. Mark and Doug with Fr. Paul Check

Local Event: Fr. Vince's Teaching of Mary in the Family

Father Vince Crowing Our Lady

MARY IN THE FAMILY
. . . PEACE in the Family





According to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, “the Christian family is a communion of persons, a sign and image of the communion of the Father and the Son in the Holy Spirit.”  However, our families are under increased attacks in today’s society to include divorces, substance abuse, falling from the faith, etc.  When our families are damaged, our relationship with God also suffers.  Our families need help and they can find it through the intercession of the Blessed Mother Mary and the Sacraments.  She was the “Rock” of the most perfect family, the Holy Family, and we can look to her so that our families can be more like the Holy Family of Jesus, Mary, and Joseph.  Fr. Vince Inghilterra, Associate Director of the Priestly Discernment Program at Franciscan University at Steubenville, Ohio, will share how you can start the conversion in you and your family’s life… to bring God’s love, peace and joy into your family through the intercession of the Blessed Mother and how vital her role is in the family.

An evening with FR. VINCENT INGHILTERRA

a passionate priest that echos Blessed Mother’s on-going call for CONVERSION & PRAYER

Fri., March 18, 2011
Holy Family Church
830 Main St., Honolulu HI 96818
Ph#: (808) 422-1135
7:00 pm - Stations of the Cross
7:30 pm to 9:30 pm – Fr. Vince

Sat., March 19, 2011
Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church
91-1004 North Rd, Ewa Beach HI 96706
Ph#: (808) 689-8681
5:00 pm - Sunday Mass
6:30 pm to 8:30 pm – Fr. Vince

FATHER VINCENT INGHILTERRA was the spiritual director for the 2nd Marian Conference held on Oahu in 2009. He spent his initial months of retirement from the U.S. Army on Oahu, Hawaii before accepting his current position as the Associate Director of the Priestly Discernment Program at Franciscan University at Steubenville, Ohio in August 2010. Fr. Vince is currently assisting 45 men discerning to enter a seminary to become priests.

Fr. Vince was born in Paterson, New Jersey and was commissioned as a U.S. Army Chaplain in 1970. He served with the New Jersey National Guard from 1972 through 1984. He entered active duty in October 1984 at Fort Hood, Texas. He has completed post-graduate work at the Ohio State University, University of Indiana, University of California Los Angeles and received a Doctorate of Ministry from Princeton Theological Seminary. Fr. Vince was ordained a Roman Catholic Priest on May 20, 1972. He made his profession as a Franciscan of San Damiano on November 21, 2008.