In address to Congress Holy Father addresses need for collaboration to protect most vulnerable

By Cindy Wooden
WASHINGTON (CNS) – The past, the promise and the potential of the United States must not be smothered by bickering and even hatred at a time when the U.S. people and indeed the world need a helping hand, Pope Francis told the U.S. Congress.
Making history by being the first pope ever to address a joint meeting of Congress, Pope Francis was introduced to the legislators by the House sergeant at arms Sept. 24 as: “Mr. Speaker, the pope of the Holy See.”
The pope introduced himself, though, as a son of the American continent, who had been blessed by the “new world” and felt a responsibility toward it.

Pope Francis addresses a joint meeting of the U.S. Congress in the House Chamber on Capitol Hill in Washington Sept. 24. (CNS photo/Joshua Roberts)

Pope Francis addresses a joint meeting of the U.S. Congress in the House Chamber on Capitol Hill in Washington Sept. 24. (CNS photo/Joshua Roberts)

Pope Francis condemned legalized abortion, the death penalty and unscrupulous weapons sales. He called on Congress to “seize the moment” by moving forward with normalizing relations with Cuba. And, again referring to himself as a “son of immigrants” – and pointing out that many of the legislators are, too – he pleaded for greater openness to accepting immigrants.
“I would like to take this opportunity to dialogue with the many thousands of men and women who strive each day to do an honest day’s work, to bring home their daily bread, to save money and – one step at a time – to build a better life for their families,” the pope said.
“These are men and women who are not concerned simply with paying their taxes, but in their own quiet way sustain the life of society,” he said. “They generate solidarity by their actions, and they create organizations which offer a helping hand to those most in need.”
Showing he had studied the United States before the visit – something he said he would do during the Rome August break – he used four iconic U.S. citizens as relevant models of virtue for Americans today: Abraham Lincoln, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., Dorothy Day and Thomas Merton.
“A nation can be considered great when it defends liberty as Lincoln did; when it fosters a culture which enables people to ‘dream’ of full rights for all their brothers and sisters as Martin Luther King sought to do; when it strives for justice and the cause of the oppressed as Dorothy Day did by her tireless work; the fruit of a faith which becomes dialogue and sows peace in the contemplative style of Thomas Merton,” the pope said.
Describing political service with the same tone used to describe a vocation to religious life – “you have been invited, called and convened by those who elected you” – the pope recognized the weighty responsibility of being a member of the U.S. Congress.
Dialogue, he said, is the only way to handle the pressure and fulfill the call to serve the common good, promoting a culture of “hope and healing, of peace and justice.”
For the speech, Pope Francis stood in the House chamber in front of Rep. John Boehner, speaker of the House and a Republican from Ohio, and Vice President Joe Biden, president of the Senate. Both men are Catholics. Besides the senators, representatives and their invited guests, the attendees included members of the U.S. Supreme Court and members of President Barack Obama’s Cabinet.
Tens thousands of people watched the speech on giant screen from the Capitol’s West Lawn. Gathered hours before the pope’s morning visit, they were entertained by military bands.
In his speech, Pope Francis gave strong support to several concerns of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Catholic faithful, including defending the right of people to publicly live their faith and join political policy debates from a faith-based perspective.
“It is important that today, as in the past, the voice of faith continue to be heard, for it is a voice of fraternity and love, which tries to bring out the best in each person and in each society,” he said. The dialogue the country needs must be respectful of “our differences and our convictions of conscience.”
“Every life is sacred,” he insisted, calling for the “global abolition of the death penalty” and the “responsibility to protect and defend human life at every stage of its development.”
Some U.S. politicians and pundits have expressed confusion or even anger over Pope Francis’ teaching about the damage provoked when money becomes a god and profits count more than people. The pope insists his words are straight out of Catholic social teaching.
His speech to Congress included more of that teaching, delving deeper into the positive aspects of a market economy – as long as it is ethical and includes controls, solidarity and a safety net for the poorest and weakest members of society.
“The creation and distribution of wealth” obviously is important for continued efforts to reduce poverty in the United States and around the globe, he said. “The right use of natural resources, the proper application of technology and the harnessing of the spirit of enterprise are essential elements of an economy which seeks to be modern, inclusive and sustainable.”
“Business is a noble vocation” when it seeks the common good, Pope Francis said. And today, he told legislators, the common good includes protecting the environment and taking bold steps “to avert the most serious effects of the environmental deterioration caused by human activity.”
The pope then proceeded to the West Portico of the Capitol, where tens of thousands of people with tickets had waited for hours.
“Good morning, everyone,” he said in Spanish, then blessed the crowd.
“I am so grateful for your welcome and your presence here, especially for the most important ones here – the children. I will ask God to bless you. ‘Lord, father of all, bless this people, bless each one of them, bless their families, give them what they need most. And I ask you all please to pray for me. And if there are among you any who do not believe or cannot pray, I ask you please to send good wishes my way. Thank you. Thank you very much. And God bless America.”
(Copyright © 2015 Catholic News Service/United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. The CNS news services may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed, including but not limited to, such means as framing or any other digital copying or distribution method in whole or in part, without prior written authority of Catholic News Service.)

Meditation draws us nearer to God

Reflections On Life
Father Jerome LeDoux, SVD
“Do you take time out to meditate every day?”
The question came from longtime friend Carolyn “Mikki” Ghavam, a Jackson, Mississippi, transplant now living aside a river flowing into Chesapeake Bay.
No, I do not have a time set aside for meditation, because meditation is an integral, natural part of every day, every hour. As far back as the early 1950s, I recall sitting for hours on the seawall of the backwaters of Bay St. Louis, in front of our summer camp that we called “Sunnybank,” watching thunderheads form under the broiling summer sun. There was something far greater than I gathering its might, churning black, then live gray-green rainclouds bursting with lightning and water.
Who could help but meditate at the sight? Or could then seminarians Father Armand Francis Theriault, SVD, and I do more than the terrified apostles in the storm on the lake when a sudden thunderstorm surprised us while fishing in a skiff? Knowing that we were the highest points of the surroundings, we feared that one of those blinding bolts of lightning would turn us into toast. Yes, we meditated.
In a similar way, Mother Nature sometimes drives us into meditation through the likes of a Hurricane Betsy, Camille or Katrina, overwhelming us with killer winds pushing devastating storm surges and spawning deadly tornadoes. Most of the time, we are gently coaxed to meditate by telltale signs all around us. There is a browned water oak standing 130 feet beyond the south side of St. Augustine Residence. It  appears to have no indications of what killed it unless  one looks very closely.
Close scrutiny reveals faint traces of the path of a lightning bolt that hardly disturbed the bark, unlike the bark of pine trees that is severely ripped off by the path of a lightning bolt. That water oak is a deadlier case than that of a live oak standing near the Tomb Of The Unknown Slave at St. Augustine Church in New Orleans. Part of it was electrocuted by touching high-tension wires overhead.
Other signs easing us into meditation are gentler still. Interspersed at infrequent intervals by the booming croaks of bullfrogs, the incredible imitations by a brace of mockingbirds fill the air and human hearts with joy, praise and thanks.
Riding a tram in Rome in September 1957, I was baptized into the local culture as I stood with a firm grasp on an overhead support. Suddenly, the growing crowd moved a young mother flush in front of me. With evident strength and dexterity, she, too, was holding an overhead support while she breast-fed her little baby with delight. Her face indicated that this was what mothers should always do.
Apparition that it was, it was also a supreme moment of meditation. Who could ever possibly think of bringing any harm to such a mother or her baby? And to think that her baby, barring untoward circumstances, is now about 59 years old!
A second apparition from a tram back then was a man – with his back to us to be sure – wetting the old Roman wall in the process of easing nature. It was at that time that I nicknamed the Romans “children of nature.” Surely, a meditation.
“May I?” a Dutch lady asked in 1960, holding her hand over my head.
“Of course!” I answered obligingly. Upon touching my hair, she exclaimed,
“Es ist wie baumwolle!” (It is like cotton). Meditating, now it also looks like cotton.
Powerful meditations are ancient churches, the Catacombs, the Colosseum, Roman Forum and the other ancient ruins of Rome, Herculaneum and Pompeii. And so it is almost universally with the city of man, like the huge Domus Aurea (Golden House) of Nero, vying for attention, dominance and meaning with the City of God.
Flying over the frozen Alps from Zurich to Logano, Switzerland was always a background for meditation. Likewise flying back from Europe became dramatic and heart-stopping as the plane eased away from Scotland toward the icy waters of the North Atlantic. Shortly, one or the other iceberg appeared, then dozens, hundreds and more, starkly outlined from 35,000 feet, reminiscent of the ill-fated Titanic.
Daniel 3 sets us up for praise, thanksgiving and meditation, in particular verses 57, 65, 66 and 70 with regard to winds, peaceful weather, storms, heat, icebergs and such, “Bless the Lord, all you works of the Lord… All you winds, bless the Lord… Fire and heat, bless the Lord… Hoarfrost and snow, bless the Lord.”
Mother Nature, the people around us and the rapidly changing conditions of our environment and life encourage so much meditation that all we must do is stay focused on life as it comes at us, but especially as it unfolds deep within us.
(Father Jerome LeDoux, SVD, lives in retirement at St. Augustine Seminary in Bay St. Louis. He has written “Reflections on Life since 1969.)

Papal visit full of inspiration, challenge

Millennial reflections
Father Jeremy Tobin, O.Praem
Someone told me enthusiastically that Pope Francis made the biggest impact on his life since John XXIII. I have been having similar feelings since this “pope of compassion and mercy” came on the scene. His gifts for penetrating barriers and fostering unity are amazing in this world of labels and distinctions.
We have been needing a Pope Francis for a very long time. Today he stood up in a joint meeting of Congress and delivered. He did not disappoint. Afterwards I received several calls from “disaffected Catholics” who expressed a joy and affirmation. They resonated with his message and felt that they too, were part of us. You see that is what Pope Francis does, whether it is serving food at Catholic Charities in Washington or in a barrio in Paraguay. He brings people together. The National Mall was filled as far as the eye could see. He speaks, he lives, he demonstrates the Joy of the Gospel.
As much as he says, he lives and acts it out. Despite the massive security he reaches out to touch people. Babies are handed to him by Secret Service agents.
He stood up in Congress where President Obama stands to give the State of the Union. Pope Francis gave his “State of the Union.” He did this in perfect English with a charming Argentine accent. How many of us English speaking priests read Spanish as clearly as he reads English? (he practiced this a lot, I am sure). He nailed it.
“We the people of this continent are not fearful of foreigners, because most of us were once foreigners. I say this to you as the son of immigrants.”
He raises up four icons of what America is: Abraham Lincoln on the 150th anniversary of his assassination, Martin Luther King, Dorothy Day and Thomas Merton. These are chosen because “Men and women of good will are marking the anniversaries of several great Americans…They shaped fundamental values which will endure forever in the spirit of the American People.”
To hear the Pope say “I think of the march which Martin Luther King led from Selma to Montgomery 50 years ago as part of his ‘dream’ of full civil and political rights for African Americans,” while the camera focused on the face of Rep. John Lewis who remembers shedding blood on the Edmund Pettus Bridge, makes me proud.
Then he focuses, “in these times when social concerns are so important, I cannot fail to mention the Servant of God, Dorothy Day, who founded the Catholic Worker Movement. Her social activism, her passion for justice and for the cause of the oppressed, were inspired by the Gospel.”
Hearing the Pope at the most prestigious platform of the nation say words like these  energizes us who work for justice and equality and human rights fueled by the Gospel. They affirm that our cause is right.
He also refers to (to date his masterpiece) Laudato Si affirming that business is a noble vocation. I have heard business called many things, but the Pope raises it to a vocation because it can improve the world and create jobs as essential to the service of the common good.  He further talks about “our common home” and speaks to all people. “We need a conversation which includes everyone since the environmental challenge we are undergoing, and its human roots, concern and affect us all.”
He further says in Laudato Si “I call for a courageous and responsible effort to ‘redirect our steps’ (61), and to avert the most serious effects of the environmental deterioration caused by human activity.”
Pope Francis pulls no punches. He knows from the halls of Congress his message will go out to the nation and the world. He planned this for the great conference COP 21 in Paris in December, an international meeting to debate how to fully control climate change.
He spoke of the sacredness of life in all its stages. He urged us to really get a grip on the refugee crisis, the greatest since World War II. When he talks of immigrants he says “See their faces, hear their stories.”
He lives his message every day. He moved on to the Catholic Charities in Washington DC to practice “Compassion in Action” and feed the poor.
Our response? Go and do likewise.
(Father Jeremy Tobin, O.Praem, lives at the Priory of St. Moses the Black, Jackson.)

St Joe adviser recognized for excellence

MADISON – The Dow Jones News Fund announced Terry Cassreino of St. Joseph School in Madison, is a 2015 Dow Jones News Fund Special Recognition Adviser.
Cassreino has advised the school streaming sports radio station, the newspaper and the yearbook at St. Joseph Catholic School for the past three years. He owns a media consulting company and worked as communications director for the Mississippi Democratic Party and the New Orleans housing authority.
Cassreino holds dual bachelor’s in journalism and radio and television from the University of Mississippi. He is certified to teach English and journalism for seventh through twelfth grades after obtaining his license to teach through the Teach Mississippi Institute at the University of Mississippi.
He spent more than 24 years as a reporter, political columnist and editor at Mississippi newspapers including positions as capitol bureau chief for The Sun Herald, managing editor of The Madison County Journal, and assistant managing editor for The Meridian Star and at the Hattiesburg American.
As a Special Recognition Adviser, Cassreino will receive a plaque and a subscription to WSJ.com courtesy of the publishers of The Wall Street Journal.
The Fund also named its National High School Journalism Teacher of the Year, Kirkwood (Mo.) High School teacher and media adviser, Mitch Eden.
The Distinguished Advisers are Sandra Coyer, Puyallup (Wash.) High School; Rachel Rauch, Homestead High School, Mequon, Wis.; Amanda Thorpe, Portage (Mich.) Community High School; and Mitch Ziegler of Redondo Union High School, Redondo Beach, Calif.
The other Special Recognition Advisers are Alena Cybart-Persenaire, Kennedy High School, Waterbury, Conn.; Thomas Kaup, Auburn (Wash.) High School; and Leland Mallett, Legacy High School, Mansfield, Texas.
The selection panel included 2014 Teacher of the Year Chris Waugaman of Prince George (Va.) High School; Richard S. Holden, a News Fund board member and former executive director; Dr. Calvin Hall, chair of the Scholastic Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication and chair of the journalism department at North Carolina Central University, Durham; Ed Sullivan, executive director of the Columbia Scholastic Press Association; and Elena Stauffer, senior program coordinator, University of Arizona School of Journalism.
The National High School Journalism Teacher of the Year Awards is sponsored by the Dow Jones News Fund, Columbia Scholastic Press Association, Poynter Institute for Media Studies and The Wall Street Journal.

Youth Briefs & Gallery

 


 (place cursor over image to read caption)

GRENADA St. Peter Parish LifeNight youth group are meeting on Saturdays at 6:30 p.m. to examine spiritual warfare.

JACKSON  CardinalFest is set for Saturday, Oct. 25 at St. Richard School. Carnival games, Chili cookoff,  and fun for the family. All proceeds benefit St. Richard School.

MEMPHIS  Father/Son Program  for 12-15 year old boys and their dads to learn about God’s gifts of human sexuality, fertility, chastity and His plan for growing up and becoming a man of integrity, Sunday, Oct. 25, from 4 – 7 p.m. at St. Francis Hospital Auditorium, 5959 Park Ave. in Memphis. Pizza and refreshments. Cost is $25 per family if received by Oct. 21. Pre-registration required.  Register online at www.cdom.org or call the Diocese of Memphis NFP Center, 901-373-1285 for more information.

PEARL St. Jude Parish, Sunday hangout, Oct. 11, after the 11a.m. Mass.
– Service project, feeding the hungry at Smith Park,  Sunday, Oct. 18, after Parish School of Religion Class.
– Saturday, Oct. 24, Trunk or Treat from 6:30  – 8:30 p.m.

VICKSBURG  Spooky Sprint and Halloween Carnival, Saturday, Oct. 31 at 8 a.m. at the Southern Cultural Heritage Center. The sprint includes a 5K and 1 mile fun run. Registration is $35. Carnival admission $5. All proceeds go to Vicksburg Catholic School. Register online at www.vicksburgcatholic.org.

SAVE THE DATE
Diocesan high school confirmation retreat, Jan. 16-17, 2016, at Camp Bratton Green @ Duncan Gray Center, Canton. Cost is $40 per student and includes: meals, housing and a really cool tee! Registration will be available in November.

SEARCH FOR CHRISTIAN MATURITY
¡SEARCH! Search for Christian Maturity Retreat, Friday-Sunday, Nov. 20-22, at Camp Wesley Pines, Gallman. All high school juniors and seniors are invited. Cost is $120.
For information and to register visit www.jacksonsearch.com. Details: Jeff & Ann Cook, 601-853-2409, search@jacksonsearch.com.

Hat trick: Annunciation wins third reading award

By Slim Smith
COLUMBUS – Students at Annunciation Catholic School have been wearing school uniforms for years. But not Friday.
“This is their treat for today,” school librarian Terri Doumit said Friday. “We’ll have a bigger celebration later this month.”
For the 203 students at the school – which serves children pre-K through eighth grade – there is reason to celebrate.

Annunciation school librarian Terri Doumit reads to students in the library. Doumit is the driving force behind a very successful summer reading program, which has resulted in three Scholastic Summer Reading Program awards in three years. (Photo by Katie Fenstermacher)

Annunciation school librarian Terri Doumit reads to students in the library. Doumit is the driving force behind a very successful summer reading program, which has resulted in three Scholastic Summer Reading Program awards in three years. (Photo by Katie Fenstermacher)

On Sept. 4, the school’s four-month summer reading program came to an end. When it was over, the students had logged 295,868 minutes of reading – breaking their own record and emerging as the top school in the state for the third consecutive year. The Scholastic Summer Reading program is operated throughout the U.S. and in many other countries. Annunciation finished in the top 2 percent, ranking 159th out of the 6,229 participation schools.
“We’re just thrilled,” said Doumit, who has been the school’s librarian for eight years and is the coordinator of the summer reading program.
Each year, shortly before the end of the school year, Doumit enters each student’s name in the summer reading program website and furnishes the student and parents with the child’s own user-name and password. During the program, students logged in to report how many minutes they read that day.
“It works out, on average, to about 15-to-20 minutes per day for each student,” Doumit said.
As much success as the school has had in this competition, Doumit said the program serves an even greater purpose.
“The bigger goal is to make sure our students have a passion and a love for reading,” she said. “That’s what I especially like about this reading program. The children get to choose exactly what they want to read. As the librarian, I don’t ever want to force them into any genre or category. We want to provide them with books they are interested in. That’s what creates that love of reading.”
Annunciation plans a more formal celebration later this month, when representatives from the program come to the school for an official presentation, Doumit said.
(Slim Smith is a columnist and feature writer for The Dispatch)