3 Minute Roundup

Call to conversion not about making people feel bad, says pope
VATICAN CITY — The Lenten call to conversion is not an attempt to make people feel bad about themselves, but to promote their true good, which is eternal life, Pope Benedict XVI said.
Celebrating Mass March 7 at the Rome parish of St. John of the Cross and reciting the Angelus at the Vatican afterward, the pope focused on the day’s Gospel story in which Jesus tells his followers they must convert or they will perish. At the parish, which was founded in 1989, the pope said Lent is “an invitation to the conversion of our lives and to doing appropriate acts of penitence.”
The crowd Jesus was addressing in the day’s Gospel story thought that people who met a sudden and violent death were sinners, while the fact that members of Jesus’ audience were still alive meant they had nothing to worry about, the pope said. But Jesus warned them that by not recognizing their own sins and not setting out on the path to conversion, they would not be saved, he said.
“During Lent, each one of us is called by God to make a change, thinking and living according to the Gospel, correcting things in our way of praying, acting, working and relating to others,” he said. (CNS)
 
St. Louis seminary exceeds goal in first capital campaign
ST. LOUIS — The first capital campaign in the history of St. Louis’ Kenrick-Glennon Seminary exceeded its goal by 21.7 percent, with $60.8 million in pledges. The goal had been set at $50 million to provide repairs, updates and physical improvements to a building that dates to 1931, while increasing its endowment.
St. Louis Archbishop Robert J. Carlson, in a letter in the Feb. 26 issue of the St. Louis Review, archdiocesan newspaper, said donations to the “Faith for the Future” campaign are an expression of hope, especially during challenging economic times. The pledges are “a powerful statement of our hope in God’s providence,” he noted.
Archbishop Carlson also told the Review that the response to the campaign “shows the people’s belief that we have to form good priests for the future so we can be a eucharistic people.”
Frank Cognata, chief development officer of the archdiocese, said the seminary has formed more than 2,700 priests in the past, and the funds will help prepare even more in the future. He said it was especially noteworthy that the campaign was conducted in a down economy and that participation met expectations. More than 2,000 volunteers helped make the campaign possible, with many of them making personal visits to potential donors. (CNS)
 
Religious attacks by media must be rejected, say officials
VATICAN CITY — Anti-religious commentary distributed by media outlets can create tensions and incite violence and therefore must be rejected, said Vatican and Muslim representatives.
Attacking religion in the mass media especially via satellite television channels must be opposed considering “the dangerous effect” that these broadcasts can have on social cohesion and on peace between religious communities, said a statement issued after the annual meeting of officials from the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue and from al-Azhar University in Cairo, Egypt. The Vatican released a copy of the statement to journalists March 2.
The Feb. 23-24 meeting in Cairo focused on the role religions can play in either causing or preventing religious violence. The al-Azhar meeting was chaired by Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, president of the pontifical council, and by Sheik Mohammed Abd al-Aziz Wasil, president of al-Azhar’s permanent committee for dialogue with the monotheistic religions.
The meeting’s final statement said greater attention must be paid to the fact that manipulating religion or religious beliefs for political or other interests can lead to violence. (CNS)
 

Diocese responds with open hearts to Haiti relief efforts

Written by Cathy Locher
Sunday, 31 January 2010
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Sarah Minier, a seventh-grade student at Ss. Peter and Paul School in Alton, offers a petition for victims of the earthquake in Haiti during Mass Sunday evening, Jan. 24, at Ss. Peter and Paul, for the people of Haiti. Msgr. Carl Kemme, diocesan administrator was the celebrant, with two Haitian priests who serve in the Springfield diocese, Father Raphael Paul and Father Delix Michel, standing on either side of him.The Jan. 12 devastating earthquake in Port au Prince, Haiti and its ongoing tragic aftermath drew an instant response of prayers, donations and requests from parishes, schools, individuals and organizations from throughout the Diocese of Springfield, as to what people could do to help.

“Every day we receive donations and inquiries from people asking us how they can help,” Vicki Compton, director of the diocesan Office for the Missions, said. “We are eager to help people in any way we can.”

Second collections for Haiti relief efforts were authorized to be taken at weekend liturgies in all parishes in the diocese. Donations the diocese receives are being sent by the diocesan Office of Finance to Catholic Relief Services.

Numerous schools, parish organizations and affiliated groups have initiated fund-raisers. There have been out-of-uniform day fund-raisers at some schools like Cathedral School in Springfield, where many students brought in not just the suggested $2 fee, but $5 or $10 as a donation, telling school secretary Johna Keen, “Two dollars just isn’t enough for the kids.”

Father Delix Michel, parochial administrator at Ss. Peter and Paul Parish in Alton, is a Haitian priest from the Diocese of Gonaïves. He learned both the minor seminary and major seminary in

Port au Prince where he had studied for 10 years had collapsed with priests and seminarians inside.

“They have already found 14 bodies,” said Father Michel. “Jean Claude Lespinansse, my canon law and history of the church teacher; Father Chery, a church pastor who studied canon law in Italy; Archbishop Joseph Serge Miot; Father Nicholas Christian, a retired priest; Msgr. Charles Benoit, a young priest who had just arrived back from a vacation in New Jersey; and Father Henry Jean Baptiste, died, they were all found in one place. Those buildings were huge, they had been standing for 50 years.

“We had seven Catholic churches that collapsed: The church in Jacmel; the Catholic church in Leogane; Sacre-Coeur in Port au Prince; the cathedral of Port au Prince, St. Louis Roi de France; St. Anne in Port au Prince. The churches are all big because they are modeled on the French cathedrals in Paris.

Father Michel delivered the homily at a special Sunday evening Mass Jan. 24, at Ss. Peter and Paul, for victims of the earthquake. Every pew in the church and choir loft was filled, with over 600 in attendance.

Msgr. Carl Kemme, diocesan administrator, was the celebrant, with seven priest-concelebrants.

“It is devastating for all of us Haitians who live outside Haiti, as well as for those who live in Haiti, to think about the tragedy,” said Father Michel. “Never before had Haiti suffered such a big earthquake.

“At first my heart was broken to see the tragedy, the calamity, the sad pictures of people, dead bodies, and people trapped in destroyed buildings, crying out for help,” said Father Michel.

“I could not stop crying; I could not keep from being in tears, as I was looking at my people on television. I wanted to be close to them, to help them any way I could. You feel powerless; you are speechless, witnessing such an unbearable situation through the television.

“God is our hope, the hope that shines through the crucifix of the churches that collapsed. Through that cross Christ is saying, ‘I am alive. Turn to me.’ Haiti will shine one day … God is asking us to comfort one another and to comfort the Haitians,” Father Michel said.

Seeing the out-pouring of generosity from American people, and seeing people from throughout the world responding to the people of Haiti with offers of assistance, is a comfort to Father Michel. “I cannot stop thanking God for these generous people,” he said.

In Springfield, Hospital Sisters Mission Outreach is actively helping to get medical supplies to Haiti. By Jan. 25 it will have the equivalent of six 40-foot shipping containers filled with 50 tons of supplies, valued at over $1 million sent to Haiti, said Bruce Compton, president and CEO of Mission Outreach. On Jan. 26, a 40-foot shipping container of medical supplies will go to Food for the Poor. On Jan. 27, a team of 20 medical personnel from Wisconsin will leave for Haiti carrying the supplies with them.

A medical clinic started in 2002 by Springfield’s Brent DeLand in the neighborhood of Sarthe, four miles north and east of the International Airport, survived the earthquake intact with only hairline cracks in some of its walls. Some of its partners, such as the Missionaries of Charity’s baby hospital, sustained damage, “but the sisters and children are all OK,” said DeLand.

“They have food there, but they initially didn’t have a means to cook the food,” he said. “The Missionaries of Charity brothers have a hospital in another part of Cite’ Sole, called Man Pele, named after the Brazilian soccer star. Their hospital received considerable damage to its outer security wall. The brothers and patients are fine, but also initially without food and water. The formation house for the men Missionaries of Charity survived the earthquake. The three brothers there are hungry, but fine.”

A Haitian medical doctor is the medical director at Sarthe. “We provide free service in terms of the physician services, free medicine, free lab. We have a nurse, a nurse educator, two medical assistants, and a pharmacy staff person. In the afternoons the medical assistants can start IVs and do IV infusions,” DeLand said.

“Our staff are overworked and underpaid,” he said. “We have a $42,000 budget in a normal year. We have served 67,562 patients since we started in 2002. Our per-patient cost is pretty minimal. We do work to the extent that we have the capability. We are in the midst of updating our lab. The new lab came mostly from Mission Outreach.”

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Diocese of Springfield in Illinois