All posts by Light of Truth

FAITH CAN HELP CLEANSE SOCIETAL WATERS OF RACISM, SAYS CARDINAL WUERL

With faith, people can confront and help to overcome the evil of racism, Washington Cardinal Donald W. Wuerl said in an April 17 talk at The Catholic University of America.

“The elimination of racism may seem too a great task for any one of us or even for the whole church,” he said. “Yet we place our confidence in the Lord, because in Christ, we are brothers and sisters, one to the other. With Christ, we stand in the spirit of justice, peace and love.”

Wuerl, who as the archbishop of Washington is Catholic University’s chancellor, was invited by its president, John Garvey, to speak on his recent pastoral letter, “The Challenge of Racism Today.”

Speaking at the university’s Pryzbyla Centre to an audience consisting mostly of seminarians and other students, the cardinal compared racism to a residue that has contaminated streams that flow into the societal well from which people drink. He warned that the unhealthy contaminants causing racism in our culture can be subtle and ubiquitous. “We have the possibility to be that fresh stream of water flowing into the societal well,” he said. Noting that the U.S. bishops in their 1979 pastoral letter “Brothers and Sisters to Us,” identified racism as a sin, the cardinal said that evil has spanned continents and centuries and continues in today’s world.

FILIPINO POLL CANDIDATE RAPPED FOR ‘JESUS CHRIST’ NICKNAME

A man standing for election to a village council in the southern Philippines has been criticized by a church leader for using the nickname “Jesus Christ” on his certificate of candidacy.

The Commission on Elections upheld the use of the name by 40- year-old Charlie Bucao Talledo.

But Father Bobby Puracan, chancellor of Surigao Diocese in Mindanao, cautioned against using the name for political purposes.

“The term ‘Christ’ is a title that means ‘Messiah’ or ‘the anointed one’ from the Greek ‘Christos’,” he said. “He is the central figure of Christianity, so we must be careful in using it.”

Father Puracan said he knows Talledo, who always attracts the attention of people every time he attends Mass.

“During the singing of the Lord’s Prayer, he would go to the middle of the church and raise his arms, getting unnecessary attention,” said the priest. There were also incidents when Talledo walked around the city dressed like Jesus while carrying a crucifix attached to a baton.

NIGERIA: 2 CATHOLIC PRIESTS, WORSHIPPERS KILLED BY HERDSMEN

Two Catholic Priests and at least 17 worshippers have been killed in an attack by herdsmen on St Ignatius Catholic Church in Ukpor -Mbalom community in Gwer East Local Government of Benue State in Nigeria.

Stressing that the country will not bow to the machinations of evildoers, President Buhari vowed that the assailants would be hunted down and made to pay for the sacrilege committed. The Catholic Diocese of Makurdi confirmed the killing of two of its priests, Fathers Joseph Gor and Felix Tyolaha, in an early hour attack on St Ignatius Quasi Parish.

A statement by its Director of Communications, Rev Fr Moses Iorapuu, said that the attacks were perpetrated by herdsmen who stormed the Mbalom community and killed the two priests during the morning mass at the church.

The Diocese expressed regret at the nonchalant attitude of the security agencies in containing the killings. It said the herdsmen, who stormed the community, burnt down houses, destroyed crops and killed people. The church, there- fore, urged the relevant authorities to stop the killings in the Benue valley.

PRIEST SHOT HEARING CONFESSIONS IN MEXICO; SECOND CLERIC MURDERED IN COUNTRY IN 3 DAYS

Then-Deacon Juan Miguel Contreras Garcia in vocations video. The priest was murdered outside Guadalajara.

A priest on the outskirts of Guadalajara has been murdered, the second priest in a week killed in Mexico. Father Juan Miguel Contreras Garcia, 33, was shot dead late on April 20 in Tlajomulco de Zuniga by unidentified attackers in his parish office, reportedly while hearing a confession. “We make an urgent call to build a culture of peace and reconciliation. These lamentable events call all of us to a much deeper and sincere conversion. It is time to look honestly at our culture and society, and to ask ourselves why we have lost respect for life and for the sacred,” said Cardinal José Francisco Robles Ortega, the Archbishop of Guadalajara.

The cardinal asked the Catholic faithful to accompany their priests with prayer and in the pastoral service to the communities entrusted to them.

SINGING PRIEST’S TV PERFORMANCE RECEIVES STANDING OVATION FROM JUDGES

A Catholic priest brought Britain’s Got Talent judges to tears, following his audition on the national TV talent show.

Fr Ray Kelly, a parish priest from Ireland, went through to the next round of the competition after receiving the coveted four ‘yeses’ from the judging panel, after singing a rendition of REM’s Everybody Hurts. The judges praised his performance at the auditions, including judge Simon Cowell, who described it as one of his ‘favourite auditions ever.’

The 65-year-old priest of almost 30 years has been a parish priest in Oldcastle and Moylagh, Co Meath since 2006, and has already become a hit online with his musical performances.

MYANMAR CHURCHES SHELTER FLEEING CIVILIANS IN KACHIN

Hundreds of civilians have fled their homes and are seeking refuge in churches in Myanmar’s conflict-torn Kachin State amid the military’s offensive against Kachin rebels.

More than 900 civilians from Kasung and Zup Mai villages are taking refuge in two Catholic Churches and a Baptist Church in Namti town after church groups rescued them on April 22. Father Peter Hka Awng Tu, parish priest of St Columban’s Cathedral, said people from Zup Mai had to walk for three days after fleeing their homes on April 20.

The priest said clothes donated by parishioners and food were given to the displaced people on April 23.

He said they rescued fleeing civilians, including women, children and the elderly, after he had a meeting with the military’s northern commander, who gave the green light. “At present people can’t go back to their villages as it is not safe for them because more fighting could erupt. Church groups will continue providing humanitarian assistance,” Father Awng Tu told.

On April 20, Myanmar’s military launched an offensive against the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) by using airstrikes near Kasung village that led to hundreds of people fleeing their homes.

More than 1,000 civilians from Kasung, which is about 25 kilometers from Namti town, fled their homes in August 2017 following clashes between the military and the KIA.

More than 2,000 people remain trapped in a jungle since heavy fighting between Myanmar’s military and the KIA erupted near Awng Lawt and nearby villages on April 11.

About 200 Catholics remain stranded after attending a jubilee celebration on April 8-9 in Tanai, a gold and amber mining region, and cannot return to their village, according to Father Awng Tu.

MISSIONARY OF MERCY: I AM AN INSTRUMENT OF GOD IN BANGLADESH

“I am nothing but an instrument in God’s hands, a channel to show the world His mercy,” Fr Jyoti Francis Costa, tells Asia News. We met the assistant to the general secretary of the Bengali Episcopal Conference (Cbcb) in Rome, where he participated in the meeting convoked by Pope Francis with the Missionaries of Mercy. The Pope created this body of priests during the Extraordinary Jubilee of 2016 to “absolve even the most serious sins.” Fr Costa is one of the two missionaries chosen for Bangladesh.

Reflecting on his delicate assignment he states: “I am superior to none. I am there to listen, console the anxieties, welcome the faithful who want to be reconciled with God. I have no merit, it is the love of God that converts hearts.”

The priest is incardinated in the archdiocese of Dhaka, but thanks to the assignment he has been able to visit “parishes, dioceses and pilgrimage centres. Here the local Churches have organized masses, meetings, seminars and retreats.” In particular, he recounts, “I went on several occasions to the dioceses of Barisal [in the south of the country,] and Sylhet [to the east]. Some meetings have been dedicated to religious and consecrated persons, others to all the local faithful and neighboring parishes.”

With the papal mandate, since 2016 he has been able “to preach to thousands of people the teachings of the Gospel and the mercy of the Lord. Moreover, thanks to the special faculties granted us by the Pope, I have been able to confess to many faithful and absolve the sins reserved for the Apostolic See. I have listened to many personal stories and experiences.”

THE AUSTRALIAN NUN WHO MAKES DUTERTE’S BLOOD BOIL

She has been described as frail, old, skinny and weak, but she made the tough-talking leader of the Philippines seethe in public. “Who are you?” fumed President Rodrigo Duterte. “You do not have the right to criticize us…. Just because you are a nun? The president even admitted that he personally ordered an investigation into the activities of Sister Patricia Anne Fox. Who indeed is this 71-year-old Australian nun whose detention hogged the headlines in Manila?

Sister Pat, as her friends call her, and her Congregation of Religious Sisters of Our Lady of Sion have been working in the Philippines since 1990. Marie Theodor Ratisbonne and his brother Marie-Alphonse Ratisbonne established the missionary congregation in France in 1843. In 1890, the congregation established its presence in Australia with a mission “to improve Catholic- Jewish relations and to witness God’s faithful love for the Jewish people.”

“I fell in love with the Filipino people. I was inspired by their resilience and sense of humour, even in the middle of a crisis,” she told.

She said her congregation needed “to see the world through the eyes of the poor” and they saw the widespread poverty in Asia.

PAKISTAN’S TOP JUDGE TO HEAR ASIA BIBI’S DEATH SENTENCE APPEAL

Pakistan’s top judge has announced he will take up the appeal of a Catholic mother of five children who has been on death row since 2010 for blasphemy.

Chief Justice Saqib Nisar told lawyer Saif ul Malook — the chief counsel for Asia Bibi — to prepare for her appeal. “Be ready, Saif ul Malook. I am going to fix your case soon and I myself will preside over the bench,” Nisar told Malook on April 21.

The judge made his comments as the lawyer appeared before the Supreme Court seeking police protection for taking on Bibi’s case after it had been withdrawn by the Punjab police. Nisar ordered the Punjab police to again provide Malook with protection.

Malook said that he had high hopes of Bibi’s conviction being struck down by the Supreme Court.

“Bibi’s family and everyone else who understands her ordeal, are ecstatic at the news that her appeal will be heard soon,” Malook said. Bibi was arrested in 2009 for allegedly insulting the Prophet Muhammad during an argument with Muslim women at an orchard in a small town in Punjab province.

PAKISTAN: FIRST CHRISTIAN CHAPEL OPENS IN AN ISLAMIC UNIVERSITY

For the first time in the history of Pakistan, a Christian chapel has been opened in an Islamic university. This is the church of St Mary, housed in the atrium of the Agriculture University of Faisalabad. It was inaugurated, on April 15th by Joseph Arshad, archbishop of Islamabad-Rawalpindi and president of the Pakistani Episcopal Conference, formerly titular of the diocese of Faisalabad. During the ceremony, he said: “The presence of a church inside the university enclosure will offer a message of love and harmony throughout the country. Christians will come here to pray for the progress and prosperity of the institute and of the country.”

The new chapel is a novelty for the majority Muslim country. Up until now, more than 177 universities and colleges have been allowed to build only Islamic mosques. Christian places of worship were only allowed in Christian institutions. At the same time, there are no Hindu or gurdwara temples for Sikhs.