All posts by Light of Truth

100,000 attend Archbishop Jala’s state funeral

Nearly 100,000 people from across north-eastern India, particularly Meghalaya State, attended the state funeral of Archbishop Dominic Jala in Shillong.

Archbishop John Moolachria of Guwahati, president of the North East India Bishops Council, led the Mass at the Cathedral of Mary Help of Christian, Laitumkhrah, down-town Shillong.

He was assisted by 15 archbishops and bishops from northeastern India other dioceses in India.

The mortal remains was brought to the Cathedral of Mary Help of Christians in Laitumkhrah on October 21 morning.

After the Mass, Archbishop Jala was laid to rest in a grave close to the Cathedral Church.

Crusader nun rescues two teenage girls from traffickers

An anti-trafficking crusader nun in Chhattisgarh has done it again.

She has rescued two more teenage girls from the central Indian state who were sold to brothels in Pune and Goa.

The girls, aged 19 and 16, are siblings of a Bhil tribal family in the Kerasa village of Surguja district.

Traffickers exploit the tribe’s acute poverty, bemoans Franciscan Missionaries of Mary Sister Annie Jesus Mary, who helped rescue the girls.

The nun is the director of Jeevan Jharna Vikas Sanstha (JJVS, foundation for the progress of life stream) at Kansabel in Chhattisgarh.

Youth awarded at ICYM event at Medchal

The second national youth conference, 2019, hosted by the archdiocese of Hyderabad, organised by the Indian Catholic Youth Movement (ICYM) at the Catholic Health Association of India (CHAI) concluded. With over 450 people, from 70 dioceses, showcasing 14 regional cultures from all over India, the five-day conference which commenced on October 13th, was an exceptional journey for youth in attendance.

Church should redeem flock, not chase miracles

The Vatican’s strategy to make up for shrinking numbers of the faithful in the traditional catchments of Europe and the West has energized the Catholic Church in India.

However, the process of canonization, mandating two miracles, has nevertheless led to a controversy over the archaic practice, centered on medical as well as theological grounds.

On October 13, Pope Francis conferred sainthood on Thrissur-born Mother Mariam Thresia, the founder of the Congregation of the Holy Family.

This prompted the Kerala chapter of the Indian Medical Association (IMA) to seek an explanation from Doctor V.K. Sreenivasan, a neonatologist at the Amala Institute of Medical Sciences in Thrissur, for reportedly “certifying the miraculous cure of a newborn afflicted with a seemingly incurable primary pulmonary hypertension.”

The child reportedly recovered dramatically after its parents prayed to Mother Thresia from the hospital bed in 2009.

“Dr Sreenivasan, who travelled to the Vatican as a witness, has to tell us what specific markers he had found in the child’s condition to claim supernatural healing. We come across many instances of a cure, often very rare and medically the least anticipated. But to call them miracles is outside the pale of medical ethics,” says Doctor N Sulphie, the IMA state general secretary.

The criticism from within the Church against miracles is centered on the legacy of saints, hailed as iconic examples rather than miracle workers or intercessors. The fullness of heroic lives of virtues, as witnessed by fellow humans, should be sufficient for their veneration as role models. Miracles are merely the interpretation, attributing divinity to causes mortals espouse.

Says Fr Paul Thelakat, the chief editor of “Sathyadeepam” (Light of Truth): “I do know that the Church has strict procedures with respect to miracles and relics, but I may suggest a real rethinking from the theological and scientific point of view two items in canonization, namely the necessity of two miracles and relics. It is time to have a cultural, theological and pastoral re-evaluation of the meaning and the relevance of relics in our times.”

India, home to Christianity for centuries, has survived the paradox of being without a saint for nearly 2,000 years. The first Indian saint was Gonzalo Garcia, a martyr, canonized in 1862. Out of a total of six saints in the country, five were canonized after 2000.

Reading Bible may become mandatory in Philippine schools

A Philippine legislator has filed a bill in Congress to make the reading of the Bible mandatory in the country’s public schools.

House Minority Leader Bienvenido Abante Jr., a pastor of the Metropolitan Bible Baptist Church and Ministries, noted that Filipinos seem not to have truly appreciated the “relevance, importance and power” of the Bible.

“If only Biblical discipline, principles and standards are taught and inculcated in the minds of our children, there would not be so many problems of leadership, governance and peace and order,” said the legislator.

In filing the bill, Abante said it is best to strengthen the “moral, spiritual, ethical, intellectual and social character and personal discipline” of young people while they are in school.

Under House Bill 2069, the subjects English and Filipino, in public elementary and high school, shall include the reading, discussion and examination of the Bible.

Abante said the Bible should be read and studied because religion is allowed to be taught in public elementary and high schools where literary works such as Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey are also being read and studied.

In the case of Muslim students, English and Filipino subjects should also include the reading, discussion and examination of the Quran, the bill provides. Bishop Arturo Bastes of Sorsogon, former head of the Episcopal Commission on Biblical Apostolate of the bishops’ conference, supported the proposal. “This is very good. I hope this gets approved. It is good news for us to read the Good News of God,” he said.

Father Conegundo Garganta, executive secretary of the Episcopal Commission on Youth, also welcomed the bill describing it as “great news and a relevant act.”

Lahore archbishop urges Pakistan, India to dialogue for peace

A Catholic bishop of Pakistan has expressed concern over the confrontation between Pakistan and India over the disputed region of Kashmir and wishes the leaders of both the nuclear-armed nations take on the path of dialogue to save humanity.

“Atomic weapons will never be needed or used if world leaders remain firm in their commitment to build global peace,” Arch-bishop Sebastian Shaw of Lahore said, during a ceremony to commemorate the historic meeting between St Francis of Assisi and Sultan al-Malik al-Kamil of Egypt, 800 years ago in Egypt 1219.

The ceremony took place amidst high tensions between India and Pakistan, particularly over the disputed region of Kashmir.

Recalling that both countries have nuclear weapons, Archbishop Shah urged Prime Ministers Narendra Modi of India and Imran Khan of Pakistan to “choose the path of dialogue to establish peace and save humanity.”

The ceremony, held in St Mary’s Catholic Church, was organized by Fr Francis Nadeem, the custodian of Mariam Saddeeqa run by which is under the Capuchin Friars Minor of Pakistan. “Today we celebrate the 800th anniversary of the meeting between St. Francis of Assisi and the Sultan of Egypt Al-Kamil. We promise to become means of peace in our society, just as these two great men of history have shown us the way of dialogue,” Fr Nadeem said.

The celebration started by ringing peace bells, an act of unity and solidarity with the international community of Europe. Archbishop Shah who returned from Belgium said that on the Feast of St Francis on 4 October at 2 p.m., peace bells would be rung in 40 countries of the world. He thus urged that all the priests and faithful ring the church bells for peace.

Philippines to host world’s tallest Marian statue

The tallest statue of the Virgin Mary in the world is about to be ready in the Philippines.

Almost 100 meters (315 feet) high, the statue is expected to be ready in 2021, in time for the 500th anniversary of Christianity’s arrival in the Philippines

The Marian monument-sculpture-shrine of The Mother of All Asia, also called “The Tower of Peace,” is located at the Montemaría (literally, “Mary’s Mount”) Pilgrimage Site in Batangas City, some 310 km south of the national capital of Manila.

It was designed by the renowned (and recently deceased) constructivist Filipino sculptor Eduardo De Los Santos Castrillo.

The Mother of All Asia will then be the tallest statue of the Virgin Mary in the world, a position now occupied by the Venezuelan 153-feet-tall “Our Lady of Peace” statue, which was built in 1983.

The Montemaría Pilgrimage site’s centrepiece, this image of the Virgin Mary is dedicated to the unity and peace of all peoples and countries in Southeast Asia.

Redemptorists in Vietnam mark mission’s 50 years

Redemptorist missionaries have improved the religious and material lives of tens of thousands of ethnic groups in Vietnam’s Central Highlands despite challenges and sufferings for half a century.

Thousands of Catholics from the ethnic Jarai, Bahnar and Kinh majority groups attended special ceremonies on Oct. 14-16 to commemorate the start of the Redemptorist mission in Gia Lai province 50 years ago.

Bishop Alosius Nguyen Hung Vi of Kontum presided at the Mass held at Pleikly Evangelization Centre, the cradle of Catholicism for Jarai villagers.

Bishop VI said the local Church was extremely grateful to Redemptorist Missionaries who volunteered to live among ethnic villagers, brought the Good News to them, translated the Scriptures into their languages and helped them conserve their cultures.

He said at first only four Redemptorists worked with the Jarai group and later with other ethnic groups.

New Sri Lankan president must unite nation, says Caritas

Caritas  Sri Lanka has stressed the need for only candidates committed to restoring national unity to stand for the presidency next month. The charity-linked Catholic National Commission for Justice, Peace and Human Development said it had studied various aspects of the current political scene, plus a range of social and economic issues faced by the people.

The commission wants to see the introduction of an action plan to combat ethnic and religious conflicts as well as concerns about missing people and enforced disappearances.

“Draft a new constitution in consultation with all stakeholders in order to ensure devolution of power and to fulfil the aspirations of all communities,” urged the Catholic charity, which is also the national secretariat of the Justice, Peace and Human Development Commission of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference.

“Establish an independent judiciary supported by a culture of justice and transparency,” it continued, “and introduce good governance in all state and private institutions, with proper monitoring mechanisms, and restore law and order in the country.”

Catholic mystic singer found safe in Bangladesh

Police in northern Bangladesh have found a prominent Catholic mystic singer safe and sound nearly a month after his mysterious disappearance. Subas Rozario, 40, was found alive and well in Hari Narayanpur, a village in Kushtia district, on Oct. 18, police said. The village is close to the mausoleum of Lalon Shah, a 19th century Bengali musician, philosopher, humanist and social reformer who popularized baul (mystic) philosophy and songs.