La Corte Suprema bloquea temporalmente el fallo judicial que limita el acceso a píldoras abortivas en medio de un desafío legal

WASHINGTON (OSV News) – La Corte Suprema de EE.UU. dijo el 14 de abril que mantendría temporalmente en vigor el status quo de las regulaciones federales sobre el uso de un medicamento abortivo, dando a la corte tiempo adicional para considerar el fallo de una corte en menor instancia para suspender la aprobación de la Administración de Alimentos y Medicamentos de EE.UU. (FDA por sus siglas en ingles) de dicha píldora. El Departamento de Justicia y la empresa farmacéutica responsable de la píldora abortiva habían pedido a la Corte Suprema que interviniera en el caso.

Una orden firmada por el juez Samuel Alito suspendió hasta el 19 de abril la decisión del juez de distrito Matthew Kacsmaryk.

El 12 de abril, una corte federal de apelaciones congeló parte de la sentencia de Kacsmaryk por la que se suspendía la aprobación por parte de la FDA de una píldora abortiva, dictaminando que el fármaco puede seguir en el mercado, pero bajo normas más estrictas, mientras se tramita un recurso judicial contra dicha aprobación.

Una caja que contiene una pastilla de mifepristona en una foto del 28 de febrero de 2023. Una corte federal de apelaciones congeló el 12 de abril partes de una orden de un juez de la Corte de Distrito de EE.UU. en Texas que habría suspendido la aprobación de la Administración de Alimentos y Medicamentos de EE.UU. de un medicamento abortivo, manteniendo el medicamento en el mercado, pero limitando su acceso. (Foto de OSV News/Callaghan O’Hare, Reuters)

“La corte de distrito revocó un dictamen científico que la FDA ha mantenido a lo largo de cinco administraciones; anuló la aprobación de un medicamento que millones de estadounidenses han utilizado de forma segura durante más de dos décadas; y alteró los intereses de confianza en un sistema de salud que depende de la disponibilidad de la mifepristona como alternativa al aborto quirúrgico para las mujeres que deciden interrumpir legalmente sus embarazos tempranos”, escribió el Departamento de Justicia en su solicitud de amparo al alto tribunal.

El Departamento de Justicia y Danco Laboratories, fabricante de la mifepristona, pidieron al alto tribunal que suspendiera la sentencia de apelación por el caso en curso.

Una coalición de opositores provida al fármaco abortivo mifepristona, el primero de los dos fármacos utilizados en un aborto farmacológico o químico, pretende que se revoque la aprobación del fármaco por parte de la FDA basándose en que la agencia federal infringió su propia norma de seguridad al aprobar la mifepristona hace más de dos décadas. Sin embargo, sus defensores sostienen que la mifepristona plantea objetivamente pocos riesgos para las mujeres que la utilizan para abortar en las primeras fases del embarazo, y afirman que se está señalando al fármaco por motivos políticos.

El 12 de abril, un grupo de tres jueces de la Corte de Apelaciones del 5º Circuito de EE.UU. acordó bloquear temporalmente la sentencia dictada por Kacsmaryk el Viernes Santo, que suspendía la aprobación de la mifepristona por parte de la FDA.

Sin embargo, el tribunal de apelaciones en su decisión de 2-1 también permitió que otras partes de ese fallo entraran en vigor, revocando las normas de la FDA revisadas en 2016 y 2021 sobre un medicamento que la agencia aprobó originalmente en 2000. Esas normas permitían el uso de la mifepristona hasta las 10 semanas de embarazo, en lugar de las siete semanas originales, y permitían su distribución por correo.

La intervención de la Corte Suprema el 14 de abril mantiene por ahora las normas más recientes de la FDA.

Más temprano en ese mismo día, el obispo Michael F. Burbidge de Arlington, presidente del Comité de Actividades Pro-Vida de la Conferencia de Obispos Católicos de EE.UU., dio la bienvenida a la sentencia del tribunal de apelaciones en un comunicado, diciendo que “era correcto reconocer los peligros del aborto químico sin restricciones para la salud y la seguridad de las mujeres”.

“Estamos agradecidos por la restauración de las protecciones, y cualquier limitación en el uso de estos fármacos letales”, dijo el obispo Burbidge. “Esperamos que la sentencia final tenga como resultado la retirada total del aborto químico del mercado. El aborto nunca es la opción correcta para un embarazo difícil o inesperado, ya que siempre acaba con una vida y pone en riesgo otra. Rezamos ardientemente para que nuestra nación apoye y acompañe auténticamente a las mujeres, para que sea impensable acabar con la vida de sus hijos solas en sus propios hogares.”

La Iglesia católica enseña que la vida humana es sagrada y debe respetarse desde la concepción hasta la muerte natural y, como tal, se opone al aborto directo como acto de violencia que acaba con la vida del no nacido. Después de que la Corte Suprema revocara el año pasado su anterior precedente sobre el aborto, los obispos estadounidenses han reiterado el compromiso de la Iglesia de servir tanto a las mujeres como a los niños no nacidos.

(Kate Scanlon es una reportera nacional de OSV News que cubre Washington. Síguela en Twitter @kgscanlon.)

El bien vs el mal: Exorcismo se convierte en tema popular en películas, libros durante la temporada Pascual

Por Carol Glatz

CIUDAD DEL VATICANO (CNS) — Justo cuando los católicos de todo el mundo conmemoraban la resurrección de Jesús y el triunfo del bien sobre el mal el domingo de Pascua, los cines de todo Estados Unidos se preparaban para el estreno del último “thriller de terror sobrenatural” del bien contra el mal con “El Exorcista del Papa” el 14 de abril.

El 11 de abril, las librerías alrededor del Vaticano habían llenado sus estantes con “Esorcisti contro Satana: Faccia a Faccia col Demonio” (“Exorcistas contra Satanás: Cara a Cara con el Diablo”) de Fabio Marchese Ragona, que incluía una breve entrevista con el Papa Francisco y páginas de testimonios de exorcistas y personas consideradas poseídas.

A diferencia de algunos de sus predecesores modernos, el Papa Francisco nunca ha realizado exorcismos, prefiriendo referir a las personas a sacerdotes exorcistas más experimentados, manifestó el Sumo Pontífice a Ragona.

El difunto padre paulino Gabriele Amorth, exorcista de la Diócesis de Roma por muchos años y fallecido en 2016, posa en una foto de 2016. Fue el protagonista de un documental estadounidense de 2017 dirigido por William Friedkin titulado “El diablo y el padre Amorth”. (Foto de CNS /LD Entertainment)

Nadie está a salvo del diablo, que “intenta atacar a todos”, especialmente a aquellos que tienen una gran responsabilidad en la iglesia o en la sociedad, expresó el Santo Padre. “Incluso Jesús experimentó la tentación del diablo”.

El libro también incluye un comentario inédito del difunto padre Gabriele Amorth, un conocido exorcista de la Diócesis de Roma que realizó decenas de miles de exorcismos hasta su muerte el año 2016, a la edad de 91 años.

“Nunca he tenido miedo”, reveló el padre Amorth a Ragona en 2015. “He sido solo un simple instrumento en las manos de Dios, quien es el único capaz de liberar (a las personas) del diablo”.

Aunque muchas personas, incluso cardenales, obispos, y sacerdotes, han mostrado escepticismo o indiferencia hacia este ministerio, el padre Amorth expresó que Jesús le dio la fuerza para seguir adelante y “luchar contra el mal todos los días”.

Quizás fue debido a la conocida fuerza espiritual del sacerdote que los productores de “El Exorcista del Papa” eligieron al actor Russell Crowe, ganador del Oscar por su rol en “Gladiador”, para interpretar al padre Amorth.

Sin embargo, dicha película, inspirada en las dos memorias escritas por el sacerdote italiano, es una obra de ficción que presenta “la posesión aterradora de un niño” y “una conspiración que el Vaticano ha tratado desesperadamente de mantener oculta hace siglos”, según la información proporcionada por los medios de Sony Pictures Entertainment.

Es una mezcla de horror y un toque de humor con “pequeños fragmentos del Código Da Vinci, (e) incluso pequeños fragmentos de ‘En busca del Arca Perdida’”, dijo Crowe en una entrevista en línea el 6 de abril.

Eso, desafortunadamente, no favorece a la imagen de los exorcistas reales.

La Asociación Internacional de Exorcistas, con sede en Roma y cuyo cofundador es el padre Amorth, señaló que “ver el tráiler de la película confirma, como si fuera necesario, no solo su naturaleza como una película sangrienta, un subgénero genuino de las películas de terror”, sino también su falta de fiabilidad en un tema tan sensible y relevante”.

“Como en otras películas, todo es exagerado”, manifestó la asociación en un comunicado el 7 de marzo, luego de que se diera a conocer el tráiler de dicha película.

Tal descripción “distorsiona y falsifica lo que realmente viven y experimentan” los exorcistas católicos y “es insultante en lo que se refiere al estado de sufrimiento experimentado por aquellos que son víctimas de la acción extraordinaria del diablo”, señaló.

“El resultado final es inculcar la creencia de que el exorcismo es un fenómeno anormal, monstruoso, y temible, cuyo único protagonista es el demonio, cuyas reacciones violentas se enfrentan con gran dificultad; esto es exactamente lo contrario de lo que ocurre con los exorcismos celebrados en la Iglesia Católica,” manifestó.

El presidente de la asociación, el padre Francesco Bamonte, miembro de los Siervos del Inmaculado Corazón de María, ha dicho que un exorcismo es un “aspecto fundamental del ministerio pastoral de la iglesia” ya que continúa el ministerio terrenal de Jesús de expulsar demonios y “destruir la tiranía de Satanás sobre la humanidad”.

Muchas películas muestran a un exorcista como un sacerdote que está “nervioso, tenso, y asustado” cuando en realidad está “sereno, tranquilo, y seguro” del poder de Cristo para liberar a los seres humanos del mal, dijo en una charla publicada en el sitio web de la asociación el 24 de febrero de 2017.

“Otro aspecto engañoso de estas películas es la presentación de la lucha entre el bien y el mal” de una manera que sugiere que es una lucha entre “un dios del mal que lucha contra un dios del bien”, acotó.

La Sagrada Escritura ha revelado que “los demonios son ángeles buenos creados por Dios, pero caídos y convertidos en malos para siempre por su libre elección”, dijo. “Los demonios son seres infinitamente inferiores a Dios, y por más activos que estén en el mundo con el fin de hacer un gran daño, no pueden impedir que el plan de Dios y su obra de salvación se cumplan en Cristo”.

También es engañosa, señaló, “la furia destructiva del demonio”, que “no siempre ocurre en los exorcismos o, en todo caso, no con la virulencia representada en las películas”.

“The Pope’s Exorcist” is a 2023 supernatural horror film starring Russell Crowe as the late Pauline Father Gabriele Amorth, a longtime exorcist for the Diocese of Rome. The film is ‘inspired by’ the Italian priest’s memoirs and was released in the United States April 14, 2023. OSV News classification, L — limited adult audience, films whose problematic content many adults would find troubling. Motion Picture Association rating, R — restricted. Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian. (CNS photo/Sony Pictures Entertainment)

El padre Bamonte dijo que el sacerdote exorcista a menudo se representa en las películas como si fuera un independiente o solitario “freelancer”, un médico que hace visitas a domicilio, “sin establecer una relación humana, mucho menos una relación espiritual”.

En cambio, la Iglesia Católica requiere que el sacerdote tenga el permiso y el apoyo de su obispo para realizar el rito del exorcismo, debe evaluar la situación cuidadosamente, hablar con los miembros de la familia y otras personas, y asegurarse de que realmente se trata de un caso de exorcismo, posesión demoníaca, que es muy rara, manifestó.

El exorcista también debe ayudar, preparar, y guiar a la persona que sufre para “adquirir las disposiciones internas necesarias para lograr su liberación”, agregó.

El padre Bamonte dijo que “a diferencia de las películas, afirmamos la certeza de que el bien prevalece sobre el mal, la verdad sobre la mentira, el amor sobre el odio, la humildad sobre el orgullo, y esto es precisamente la verdad que se hace concretamente visible durante los exorcismos”.

Si los católicos no fortalecen su propia formación en la fe o están mal preparados para discernir los hechos de la ficción y las mentiras, dijo, “lo que inicialmente podría haber sido un buen servicio para la Iglesia” al representar el ministerio del exorcismo en una película, “se convierte en el ataque sutil habitual del demonio, de Satanás a la Iglesia Católica”.

Más de 50,000 personas han sido masacradas en Nigeria por ser cristianos en los últimos 14 años, según informe

Por Ngala Killian Chimton

(OSV News) — Al menos 52.250 personas han sido asesinadas en los últimos 14 años en Nigeria sólo por ser cristianas, según revela un nuevo informe publicado el 10 de abril.

El informe, titulado “Cristianos martirizados en Nigeria” y publicado por la Sociedad Internacional para las Libertades Civiles y el Estado de Derecho (conocida como Intersociety), que tiene su sede en el este de Nigeria, dice que 30,250 de ellos han sido asesinados desde 2015, cuando el presidente Muhhamadu Buhari llegó al poder. El informe culpa de esos asesinatos a lo que denomina el islamismo radical de Buhari.
Aproximadamente 34,000 musulmanes moderados también fueron masacrados o asesinados a hachazos en el mismo periodo.

El informe revela que 1,041 “cristianos indefensos” fueron asesinados en los primeros 100 días de 2023, es decir, entre el 1 de enero y el 10 de abril. En el mismo periodo, al menos 707 cristianos fueron secuestrados.

Flores yacen sobre ataúdes durante una Misa funeral en el salón parroquial de St. Francis Xavier Church en Owo, Nigeria, 17 de junio de 2022. La Misa fue por algunas de las 40 víctimas asesinadas en un ataque perpetrado el 5 de junio por hombres armados durante la Misa en la iglesia. 52,250 personas han sido asesinadas en los últimos 14 años en Nigeria sólo por ser cristianas, según revela un nuevo informe publicado el 10 de abril (Foto de OSV News /Temilade Adelaja, Reuters)

El informe indica además que, bajo el mandato del presidente Buhari, se incineraron 18,000 iglesias cristianas y 2,200 escuelas cristianas.

Los ataques contra los cristianos también han provocado problemas importantes en lo que respecta a las personas que se han visto obligadas a huir de sus hogares. Mientras más de 50 millones de cristianos, la mayoría en el norte de Nigeria, se enfrentan a “graves amenazas yihadistas por ser cristianos profesos”, no menos de “14 millones han sido desarraigados y 8 millones se han visto obligados a huir de sus hogares para evitar ser asesinados a hachazos”, dice el informe.

Unos “5 millones han sido desplazados y obligados a instalarse en campos de desplazados internos dentro de Nigeria y en campos de refugiados en las fronteras regionales y subregionales”.

El gran número de cristianos y musulmanes moderados asesinados o desplazados ha provocado escalofríos a muchos, incluido Andrew Boyd, portavoz de Release International, que sirve a la iglesia perseguida en unos 30 países. Describió la conclusión del informe como “un increíble número de muertos”.

“Es absolutamente atroz que tantos cristianos sean objeto de ataques por su fe y sean asesinados en Nigeria, mientras que el gobierno nigeriano parece mantenerse al margen y dejar que suceda. No es menos espantoso que la comunidad internacional parezca contentarse con permanecer al margen y observar”, declaró a OSV News.

Mientras tanto, Ayuda a la Iglesia Necesitada (ACN por sus siglas en inglés), en su propio informe, ha dado voz a los miles de cristianos perseguidos por su fe en Nigeria.

Maryamu Joseph tenía sólo 7 años cuando Boko Haram, una violenta organización extremista yihadista, atacó su comunidad de Bazza y se la llevó por la fuerza a ella y a otras 21 personas al bosque de Sambisa, donde pasó nueve años. No escapó hasta julio de 2022, y contó su historia a ACN.

“¡Nueve años viviendo en la esclavitud! ¡Nueve años de tortura! ¡Nueve años de agonía! Sufrimos mucho a manos de esta gente despiadada y sin corazón”, declaró a AIN. “Durante nueve años vimos derramarse la sangre inocente de mis hermanos cristianos, asesinados por personas que no valoran la vida. Asesinaron sin remordimientos, como si fuera algo normal. Estos nueve años desperdiciados en el bosque de Sambisa no pueden olvidarse en un abrir y cerrar de ojos. Las palabras no pueden hacer justicia a lo que he pasado”.

Andrew Boyd dijo que su organización ha identificado a Nigeria como “un país especialmente preocupante”. Pero las cifras de asesinados, que se cuentan por decenas de miles, y los descorazonadores testimonios de sobrevivientes como Maryamu Joseph, “gritan con más claridad de la que nunca pudimos hacerlo”, afirmó Boyd. Dijo que las estadísticas eran sin duda espantosas, pero no sorprendentes.

“Release International viene informando año tras año de los ataques de militantes islamistas contra los cristianos en Nigeria. No sólo los cristianos de Nigeria se enfrentan a una matanza a manos de Boko Haram y el Estado Islámico, sino que también son asesinados diariamente por extremistas fulani bien armados”, dijo Boyd a OSV News, refiriéndose a los miembros del grupo de pastores fulani que se han unido a grupos extremistas islamistas.

Él advirtió que podría haber “un éxodo masivo de cristianos del país más poblado de África a menos que el presidente nigeriano entrante tome medidas urgentes para proteger a los cristianos de la violencia de estos yihadistas”.

Dijo que su organización estaba trabajando con socios que trabajan en Nigeria “para proporcionar apoyo a los cristianos que están sufriendo”. Esto incluye asesoramiento para traumas. “Muchos han perdido a miembros de sus familias y sus hogares. Estamos trabajando con socios de confianza para ofrecerles consuelo y apoyo. Estamos alzando sus voces y sus preocupaciones en todo el mundo. Y seguiremos haciéndolo”, subrayó Boyd.

Según Open Doors Watch List 2023 (la Lista de Vigilancia 2023 de Puertas Abiertas), publicada el 17 de enero, Nigeria es uno de los lugares más peligrosos “para seguir a Jesús”. Según el informe, Nigeria representa el 89% de los cristianos martirizados en todo el mundo.

(Ngala Killian Chimtom escribe para OSV News desde Yaundé, Camerún.)

Holy Child Jesus parish celebrates Sister Thea Bowman

By Joanna Puddister King
CANTON – Faithful from around the diocese gathered to celebrate Sister Thea Bowman at her home parish of Holy Child Jesus in Canton on Sunday, March 26. Sister Thea died on March 30, 1990 in her family home in Canton from breast cancer. Parishes throughout the country celebrated Sister Thea leading up to the 33rd anniversary of her death.

“We made sure to perform some of Sister Thea’s favorites,” said Myrtle Otto of the musical selections for the event.

Myrtle Otto performs “Oh, It’s Jesus” at the Sister Thea Bowman celebration at Holy Child Jesus on Sunday, March 26. (Photos by Joanna King)

Otto, a student of Sister Thea’s who performed on the Holy Child Singers album “The Voice of Negro America” in 1967, said that some of the songs included in the celebration were “It’s Me, It’s Me, O Lord” and “Every Time I Feel the Spirit.” Otto was featured during the celebration singing “Oh, it is Jesus,” backed up by the combined choirs of Holy Child Jesus and Sacred Heart Camden.

During Mass, Bishop Kopacz often closed his eyes to fully experience the unity of the body of Christ through song. “It was obvious that even without the music, the choir was singing fully and unsparingly, in perfect harmony. The music gave the celebration even more life,” said Bishop Kopacz, referencing the piano player being tied up at another celebration early in the Mass.

Instead of wearing his traditional vestments, Bishop Kopacz opted for a piece of history in the diocesan archives to honor Sister Thea – a vestment from Mound Bayou, one of the first African-American incorporated towns in the United States.

A lifelong friend of Sister Thea, Mamie Chinn present for the event summed up the day perfectly.
“It’s always a good day to celebrate Thea.”

Youth

School is ‘nifty’

JACKSON – St. Richard fifth graders perform their “Fifty Nifty” program on the 50 states for students and parents on Friday, March 23. (Photo by Joanna Pudister King)
(Left) St. Richard Kindergarten teacher, Kate Morris leads her class by the Stations of the Cross on their way back to class. (Photo by Tammy Conrad)
CLARKSDALE – Father Raju and parishioners at St. Elizabeth enjoy a special St. Patrick’s Day Lenten luncheon on Friday, March 17. (Photo by Catelin Britt)

Grandparents day at Annunciation school

COLUMBUS – The McConnell/Thomas family join hands for The Lord’s Prayer during the grandparents day Mass at Annunciation School. (Right) Annunciation students demonstrate their robotics projects to their grandparents. (Photos by Logan Waggoner)

‘Pray for God’s hand’ over Mississippi: destructive tornado kills, injures dozens

By Maria-Pia Negro Chin, Gina Christian

(OSV News) – Powerful tornadoes tore through rural Mississippi the night of Friday, March 24, killing or injuring dozens and causing widespread destruction.

By Saturday night, an update from the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency (MEMA) reported the death toll had risen to 25 and dozens of others were injured; four persons reported missing are accounted for. Multiple state agencies and partners have been working together to help in response and recovery efforts. News reports said that search and recovery crews continue to dig through destroyed homes and buildings on Sunday. Updated reports have the death toll from the storms as 21.

“The loss will be felt in these towns forever,” Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves said in a Twitter post on Saturday. “Please pray for God’s hand to be over all who lost family and friends.”

An aerial view of the aftermath of a tornado, in Rolling Fork, Mississippi, U.S. March 25, 2023 in this screengrab obtained from a video. Dozens are dead or injured after a least one powerful tornado tore through rural Mississippi March 24. (OSV News photo/SevereStudios.com, Jordan Hall via Reuters)

Bishop Joseph R. Kopacz of the Diocese of Jackson, Mississippi, extended his prayers and encouraged Catholics to support all communities affected by this tragic event. “We join in prayer for all those affected by the storms that crossed our state,” he said in a statement posted on the diocesan website March 25.
During his Angelus, Pope Francis also prayed for the victims of the deadly weather and the people recovering from the loss of life and devastating destruction, according to Vatican News.

“We pray also for the victims of the terrible tornado that struck Mississippi in the United States,” the pope said at the end of his Angelus prayer on March 26.

Early Sunday morning, President Joe Biden ordered Federal aid to supplement state and local recovery efforts in the areas affected, due to the major disaster in Mississippi.

According to the White House disaster declaration, funding would be available to aid people in the counties of Carroll, Humphreys, Monroe, and Sharkey, and it can include grants for temporary houses and home repairs, as well as loans to cover uninsured property losses.

The National Weather Service confirmed tornado damage about 60 miles (96 kilometers) northeast of Jackson, Mississippi, with a lot of the destruction reported in Silver City and Rolling Fork, a rural town of more than 1,800 people.

Processing information from damage surveys could take days to complete, but the National Weather Service noted the Rolling Fork/Silver City tornado has a preliminary EF-4 rating, which estimates wind speeds to have been 166-200 mph. Preliminary statistics from the National Weather Service said that tornado traveled approximately 59 miles over the course of an hour and 10 minutes. The Blackhawk/Winona tornado now has a preliminary EF-3 rating, with severe wind speeds in the 136-165 mph range.

“My city is gone. But we are resilient,” Rolling Fork Mayor Eldridge Walker said on CNN. Video and photos of the area showed houses reduced to rubble. On Twitter, Governor Reeves shared photos of relief efforts underway in Rolling Fork, Silver City, Amory and Winona, noting perseverance, unity and even prayer behind the response of responders and volunteers.

In an interview with OSV News, Marvin Edwards, a lay ecclesial minister of Sacred Heart Parish in Winona, shared what it was like to be in the tornado’s path. He said that he and his wife – who live 20 miles away from the parish – were in bed for the night when the tornado struck.

“This is the first time a tornado hit us directly. My emergency tornado watch went off on my cell phone. That’s not unusual, so I didn’t pay a lot of attention. All of a sudden, I heard this loud noise as my wife and I were laying in bed. We jumped up and the roof went away. We didn’t have time (to shelter); all of a sudden it (the tornado) was there,” he told OSV News.

Saying it all happened quickly, Edwards said they were not injured and only saw the damage once it was morning. “The tornado had a mile-wide path, and it picked up (strength) as it moved across the lake,” he said. “It took the roof off my house. I’ve got two cars with a big tree sitting across them; both of them are smashed.”

“As far as I know, all of our parishioners (at Sacred Heart) are OK. We don’t have a lot of parishioners; we’re a small mission church,” he said. “My immediate thought was, ‘I got angels protecting me evidently.’ I just thanked him (God). Something was protecting me.”

A local TV station reported a crisis shelter opened in Rolling Forks to provide a medical station, as well as cots, toiletries, and water. The state’s emergency management agency said shelters have also been opened in Belzoni and Amory to provide shelter to those affected, which includes hundreds of people who lost their homes.

On March 25, Gov. Reeves issued a State of Emergency in all counties affected by the tornado and severe storms that occurred across Mississippi. He called on agencies to set forth the emergency responsibilities delineated in Mississippi’s Comprehensive Emergency Management Plan.

“We give thanks and pray for first responders, who are working tirelessly in affected communities trying to reach those missing, restore power and assist those surviving,” Bishop Kopacz said in a statement on the Diocese of Jackson website.

A man stands amid the debris of a destroyed home in Rolling Fork, Miss., March 26, 2023, after a tornado swept through the town. At least 25 people were killed and dozens of others were injured in Mississippi as the massive storm ripped through more than a half-dozen towns late March 24. (OSV News photo/Cheney Orr, Reuters)

“I encourage all to continue to pray and find ways to support all affected communities,” he added. “We will be reaching out through our Catholic Charities Disaster Response team to assist in recovery efforts.”

The National Weather Service of Huntsville, Alabama, also confirmed four tornadoes touched down in their state overnight March 24-25, all of which were EF-1 or EF-2 strength. The New York Times reported Saturday morning that at least one person died in Alabama as a result of the severe storm system.

In a Saturday afternoon email, Donald Carson, the Diocese of Birmingham’s communications director, noted Alabama did not experience similar levels of lives lost or destruction as the neighboring state.
“We will pray for all whose lives were lost in Mississippi and those who love them and all affected by the storms,” he said.

The Mississippi Emergency Management Agency’s Twitter and Facebook page, @MSEMA, also warned Mississippians that a large portion of the state has the potential for more severe storms Sunday evening and “tornadoes cannot be ruled out.”

(Maria-Pia Chin is Spanish editor for OSV News. Follow her on Twitter @MariaPiaChin. Gina Christian is a national reporter for OSV News. Follow her on Twitter @GinaJesseReina. Megan Marley is digital editor for OSV News. Follow her on Twitter @mnmarley.)

For information on how to support the Diocese of Jackson Catholic Charities’ relief efforts, visit https://jacksondiocese.org/storm-donations

Annual Bishop’s Ball celebrates Catholic Charites 60th anniversary

By Joe Lee
MADISON – Let this sink in: the majority of those served by Catholic Charities are not Catholic.
If that comes as a surprise, consider the organization’s mission, which is to be a visible sign of Christ’s love by helping those who are unable to help themselves; the poor and vulnerable, especially children, women and families.

As final preparations are being made for the annual Bishop’s Ball – which will celebrate Catholic Charities’ 60th anniversary – executive director Wanda Thomas and her team are hard at work assisting the many victims of the March 24 tornado, an EF-4 that was on the ground nearly an hour and took the lives of 21 people in Rolling Fork and Silver City. There’s also significant damage in Amory.

“We are responsible for responding to any individuals in need within the 65 counties covered by the Diocese of Jackson,” Thomas said. “We have outlying offices and programs within the metro Jackson area as well as Raymond, Natchez and Vardaman. We are in the process of starting a new program in Greenwood.”

Those services include adoption and therapeutic foster care, domestic violence emergency shelters, the Born Free/New Beginnings residential substance abuse treatment for mothers, unaccompanied refugee minor group homes, and community-oriented, home-based services for youth at risk of needing psychiatric residential treatment.

There’s also Healing Hearts outpatient mental health clinic, disaster services, support services for veterans and families, kinship navigation services to prevent youth from needing foster care placement, rape crisis and sexual assault, emergency assistance, afterschool tutoring and a summer camp program.

“A lot of the work is behind the scenes, done discreetly and confidentially, but with great devotion,” said Bishop Joseph Kopacz. “This ministry is a vital part of the work and the mission of the Diocese of Jackson. It really goes to the margins, to the most vulnerable in our communities. It’s what the Gospel is all about, and what Pope Francis speaks about. We reach out to people who will never know us, and never be able to repay us.”

If you’re new to the area and haven’t attended the Bishop’s Ball before, it’s a wonderful opportunity to hear more about an organization that could definitely use your assistance right now. The annual event is also great fun, based on a track record of many generous donors returning again and again.

“When I entered the building (for the first time), I began working on the Bishop’s Ball,” said Marsha Burton, senior engagement and major gifts officer with Catholic Charities and a new addition to the team. “The live music this year will be a jazz band to set the mood of quaint and classy. We hired a decorator who will decorate around a diamond theme; the 60th anniversary is a diamond celebration.

“The teamwork from within the agency here is outstanding. This year’s Bishop’s Ball Samaritan Award is being presented to St. Dominic Comprehensive Cancer Center for the compassionate patient care they provided throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. To my knowledge, this is the first healthcare team to receive the award.”

Johnny Maloney and his wife, Sharon, have chaired the Bishop’s Ball in the past, and the Cowboy Maloney family have been honored with the event’s Samaritan Award.

“Besides the great food and fellowship, the Bishop’s Ball has a silent auction and a live auction,” Maloney said. “In the past, the last live auction item has been a dinner with the Bishop at his home for eight people. Attendees get groups together and bid as a party of eight, and that makes the auction fun.”

“I see Catholic Charities as an extension of our parishes,” said Rusty Haydel, who estimates that he and his wife, Yvonne, have attended fifteen Bishop’s Balls over the years. “They’re doing the work that Jesus would want us to do.”

“All the Bishops hold a special place in our heart,” said Mike Crandall, “but we must say that Bishop Kopacz, through his leadership and involvement with Catholic Charities, has become our favorite. He stepped into the ministry at a crucial time, and the organization has thrived through his leadership and encouragement.

“Catholic Charites has allowed Susan and I to have an avenue to give back to society, a mission that we are passionate about. Our goal is that when our time comes and we are called home, we will leave our community in a better place. We work with a lot of nonprofits, but Catholic Charities is our favorite because it serves so many people.”

For more information on the Bishop’s Ball or to sponsor or purchase tickets, visit: https://event.gives/bb2023

Calendar of events

SPIRITUAL ENRICHMENT
FLOWOOD St. Paul, Men’s Retreat sponsored by the Knights of Columbus on May 20. For all men of St. Paul parish age 18 and up. Details: church office (601) 992-9547.

GREENWOOD Locus Benedictus, A Prophetic Call to Thrive: Preparing for the National Black Catholic Congress and a Day of Reflection with the Diocesan Office of Intercultural Ministry, Saturday, April 29 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. All are welcome. Check in at 9:30 a.m. Details: Register by April 21 by calling Sister Amelia Breton at (601) 949-6935.

METAIRIE, La. Five-day Silent Directed Retreat, June 26 – July 2 at the Archdiocese of New Orleans Retreat Center (5500 Saint Mary Street, Metairie). Cost $500, includes room and board. Meet daily with a spiritual director, pray with scripture and spend the rest of the day in silence, prayer and rest. Register at franu.edu/retreat. Details: tyler.trahan@franu.edu or call (225) 526-1694.

PARISH, FAMILY & SCHOOL EVENTS
COLUMBUS Annunciation School, Draw Down and Art Auction, Friday, April 14 at the Trotter Convention Center from 6:30-11 p.m. Adults only (21 and up). Event includes dinner and open bar. Details: email psa.acseagles@gmail.com.

GREENVILLE St. Joseph School, Muffuletta Sale, Pick up on April 20 from 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Tickets available at school or church office. Details: church office (662) 335-5251.

St. Joseph School, Open House, Wednesday, April 12 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Come grow with us! Details: school office (662) 378-9711.

Paul and Wadel Abide Memorial Golf Classic, Friday, May 12 at the Greenville Golf and Country Club. Cost: 4-person scramble $150 per golfer, includes cart fee, drink tickets and entry to social. Non-golfers cost is $60 and includes two drink tickets and entry to social. Enjoy food, drinks, door prizes and awards after golfing. Proceeds benefit St. Joseph School Scholarship Fund. Details: school office (662) 378-9711.

GREENWOOD Locus Benedictus, Mississippi Rural Legal Services will discuss end of life documents and other important issues on April 27 at 10 a.m. Anyone 60 or older will receive free legal advice and assistance in completing necessary documents. Public invited to attend. Details: Magdalene at Locus Benedictus (662) 299-1232.

HERNANDO Cocktails and Catholicism, Second Friday of each month from 7-8:30 p.m., for adults only. Doors open at 6 p.m. Meeting space at Holy Spirit Church (545 E. Commerce Street) in the Family Life Center. On April 14, Sister Mary Lawrence Wright, OP will present: “The Resurrection: Fulfillment of God’s Promises.” Details: RSVP to Deacon Ted at Christ the King at (662) 342-1073.

Holy Spirit, Yard Sale, Friday, May 19-20. Start saving item donations now. Donations accepted beginning May 8. Details: church office (662) 429-7851.

HOLLY SPRINGS CSI – Catholic Service Initiative presented by Northwest Parishes of Mississippi Youth Ministry, Sunday, June 4 through Friday, June 9 at Gregory House. For students completing grades 9-12 in May. Deadline for sign-up is April 30. Cost is $50, with scholarships available upon request. Details: For more information contact Vickie at (662) 895-5007.

JACKSON St. Richard, Bereavement Support Group, Thursday, April 13 at 6 p.m. in the Chichester Room. Featured speaker: Julie Levanway – Hear how Godwinks helped Julie thorugh the pain. All are welcome. Details: Nancy at (601) 942-2078 or ncmcghee@bellsouth.net.

St. Richard School, Flight to the Finish on April 22nd benefiting the Cardinal Men’s Club projects and St. Richard’s students in need of financial aid. Details: To register, go to https://raceroster.com/events/2023/73814/flight-to-the-finish. For more information or to sponsor the event, contact Patrick at patrickmcrews@gmail.com.

JACKSON 17th Annual Sister Thea Bowman School Draw Down, Saturday, April 29 at 6:30 p.m. in the school multi-purpose building. $5,000 Grand prize. Cost $100, second chance insurance extra $20 per ticket. Details: (601) 351-5197 or stbdrawdown@gmail.com.

JACKSON Cathedral of St. Peter, Holy Hour for Healing and Mercy, Sunday, April 16 at 5 p.m. All are invited to attend and pray for healing for victims of abuse by church personnel.

MADISON St. Catherine’s Village, Alzheimer’s Caregiver Support Group, meets fourth Wednesday of each month from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at Campbell Cove building. Lunch provided. All are welcome. Details: call to RSVP (601) 856-0123 or email cynthia.armstrong@fmolhs.org.

MADISON Luella and Floyd Q. Doolittle Golf Tournament, Saturday, April 15 at Whisper Lake Country Club. For information or to register, visit https://bit.ly/DoolittleGolf2023. Details: email somerville3817@gmail.com.

MERIDIAN Knights of Columbus State Convention, April 28-30 at the Threefoot Hotel. For more information visit: kofc-ms.org/convention/2023

NATCHEZ Cathedral School, 39th annual Crawfish Countdown, Friday, May 5. Join us for a fun night of crawfish, ice-cold beverages, chance to win $5,000 and more.

St. Mary Basilica, Blood Drive, Tuesday, April 18 from 1-6 p.m. in the Family Life Center. Details: church office (601) 445-5616.

OLIVE BRANCH Queen of Peace, Divine Mercy Holy Hour, Sunday, April 16 at 2:30 p.m. All are welcome.

SOUTHAVEN Christ the King, Resurrection Party, Sunday, April 16 at 3 p.m. Details: church office (662) 342-1073.

SAVE THE DATE
HERNANDO Holy Spirit, Vacation Bible School, June 5-8 from 6-8 p.m.

MADISON St. Francis, Rocky Railway VBS express, June 19-22 from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. All pre-K4 through fourth graders are invited. Details: mc.george@stfrancismadison.org.

REMINDERS/NOTICES
ENGAGED ENCOUNTER WEEKENDS April 28-30 at Lake Tiak O’Khata in Lousiville; July 14-16 and Oct. 27-29 at Camp Garaywa in Clinton. Please register at www.jacksondiocese.org/family-ministry.

NATIONAL BLACK CATHOLIC CONGRESS GATHERING, July 20-23 at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center in Oxon Hill, Maryland. Join with other Black Catholics and those who minister to Black Catholics for a celebration of faith and culture. Details: nbccongress.org.

INDIANAPOLIS Eucharistic Congress, July 17-21, 2024. Registration is now open. See what Our Lord has in store for this next chapter for the Catholic Church in United States. Purchase tickets at https://bit.ly/3ydav9Q. Details: EucharisticCongress.org.

INDIANAPOLIS National Catholic Youth Conference (NCYC), Nov. 16-18, 2023 at the Indiana Convention Center. This distinctly Catholic three-day conference will include opportunities for spiritual growth, prayer, learning and service. For more information, visit ncyc.us.

WORLD YOUTH DAY: LISBON 2023 Event for young Catholics ages 16-35, though all are welcomed to attend in Lisbon, Portugal. For more information visit: https://www.lisboa2023.org/en/.

Love does such crazy things …

Bishop Joseph R. Kopacz, D.D.

By Bishop Joseph R. Kopacz, D.D.
Alleluia, Christ is risen! Palm Sunday’s Passion Narrative by St. Matthew was the bridge that led the church this year through suffering and death into the light of Christ’s resurrection. This can bring us abundant peace and comfort, yet we do not shed the chains of suffering as if the resurrection covers it over with a blanket of devotion.

The great mystery of our faith is uniquely contained in the Lord’s final words before dying on the Cross in Matthew and Mark’s Gospels. “My God, my God, why have you abandoned me?” Is this a cry of despair from the Lord, or an act of profound trust and love arising from the throes of suffering? In the face of unspeakable suffering that engulfs our world the Christian is impelled to walk the narrow road, and wrestle with the mysteries of suffering and evil in the light of the resurrection.

Chiara Lubich offers her deepest desire as a disciple of the Lord. “I wish to bear witness before the world that Jesus forsaken has filled every void, illuminated every darkness, accompanied every solitude, annulled every suffering, cancelled every sin.”

Mark, along with St. Matthew leave the world hanging with the Lord’s final words of abandonment that are actually the opening lines of Psalm 21. In the first half of the psalm, we discover that the jaws of suffering can inflict unrelenting agony. But the believer is directed to persevere and to know that God is love and does not abandon his creation.

This is evident in the closing verses from which the following is taken. “For he has not despised or abhorred the affliction of the tormented, but has heard when they cried out … From you comes my praise in the great congregation. Those who seek God shall praise the Lord! May your hearts live forever! Our posterity shall serve God; the faithful shall tell of the Lord to the coming generations and proclaim God’s deliverance to a people yet unborn.” Although suffering is ever at hand, in the power of the resurrection abandonment is not the last word. Rather, it is the love of God that is as strong as death because Christ is risen!

Pope Francis, for the 400th anniversary of the death of Francis de Sales quoted from the great saint’s masterpiece, A Treatise on the Love of God in his pastoral letter, Totum amoris est (All is Love).
“In Holy Church, everything pertains to love, lives in love, is done for love and comes from love. The source of this love that attracts the heart is the life of Jesus Christ. ‘Nothing sways the human heart as much as love, and this is most evident in the fact that’ Jesus Christ died for us; he gave us life through his death. We live only because he died, and died for us, and in us.”

For this reason, St. Francis de Sales could eloquently describe Calvary as “the mountain of love.” For there and there alone, do we come to realize that “it is not possible to have life without love, or love without the death of the Redeemer. Except there, everything is either eternal death or eternal love, and the whole of Christian wisdom consists in knowing how to choose well between them.”

Chiara Lubich, the founder of the Focolare Movement that is anchored in the love of Jesus crucified and risen, writes gracefully on the passion of Jesus as the fountain of love. Just like Jesus, who through his suffering gave humanity joy here in earth and lasting joy in the next life, we too can acquire joy by accepting the various kinds of anguish we experience for ourselves and for others.

“Love impelled him to the Cross, considered foolishness by many, but this foolishness has saved humanity and has formed the saints. Suffering teaches what you cannot learn by any other means. It teaches with the greatest authority. It is the teacher of wisdom. Therefore, let’s not be afraid if we learn that suffering awaits us.”

The Father, Jesus, Mary, us. The Father permitted that Jesus feel forsaken by him, for us. Jesus accepted being forsaken by the Father, and deprived himself of his mother, for us. Mary shared the forsakenness of Jesus and accepted being deprived of her Son, for us. We, therefore, have been put in first place. It is love that does such crazy things…

Alleluia, Christ is risen! Happy Easter!