"Be bearers of hope, beauty, goodness and truth" - Pope Francis (Photo Courtesy Arise Milwaukee)
Wednesday, December 11, 2013
Pope Francis Named "Person of the Year!" Time Magazine Doesn't Miss Chance to Stir Up Trouble
Being named Time Magazine's person of the year is a big accomplishment. However, myself and so many other people may be wondering what the real reason is behind this award. Time Magazine initially wrote that "Pope Francis rejected some church dogma and teaching and brought many Catholics back to the church who had previously lost hope." Although they quickly corrected this mistake as Pope Francis does not reject any teachings or traditions, it kind of makes me wonder if that was the initial reason why they named him as "Person of the Year."
I can see Pope Francis receiving this award for renewing hope in Catholics by stating that he upholds the significant teachings of the Catholic Church, but was this rewarding him for what Time thought was a willingness to reconstruct the teachings of the church as a whole? My point is, the media just seems to feast on the Catholic church and anything their leaders say. When they listen to Pope Francis speak, they are not listening with earnest and sincere hearts, but are instead waiting for any sentence that they can twist around in order for a good story suggesting change or upheaval. We have seen this with Pope Francis' words against abortion, gay marriage and women priests.
One day I just want the secular media to reward a church leader, who is in good standing, for actually bring people closer to God through the church's great dogma and teachings, not because they want to twist certain words around.
-USA Today:
Calling him "The People's Pope," Time magazine on Wednesday named Pope Francis its Person of the Year.
"What makes this pope so important is the speed with which he has captured the imaginations of millions who had given up on hoping for the church," Time said in its cover story announcing the news.
Time's other 10 finalists were a mixed crew that included President Obama, NSA leaker Edward Snowden, Syria President Bashar Assad, Iran President Hassan Rouhani, Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, gay rights activist Edith Windsor -- and singer Miley Cyrus,
Pope Francis, 76, was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio in Buenos Aires. He was named archbishop of Argentina in 1998, became a cardinal in 2001 and was elected pope by the papal conclave in Vatican City on March 13. He replaced Pope Benedict XVI, 86, who announced his resignation Feb. 11 citing a "lack of strength of mind and body" due to his advanced age.
Francis had earned a reputation for humility and commitment to the poor long before assuming leadership of the world's 1.2 billion Catholics.
"As Pope, he was suddenly the sovereign of Vatican City and head of an institution so sprawling—with about enough followers to populate China—so steeped in order, so snarled by bureaucracy, so vast in its charity, so weighted by its scandals, so polarizing to those who study its teachings, so mysterious to those who don't, that the gap between him and the daily miseries of the world's poor might finally have seemed unbridgeable," Time says. "Until the 266th Supreme Pontiff walked off in those clunky shoes to pay his hotel bill."
Obama was Person of the Year in 2012 -- and in 2008. He is the only person among last year's finalists to make the list again this year.
Time selected its first "Man of the Year" in 1927. The selection is based on the person who the magazine's editors believe most influenced the news this year, for good or bad. Time's readers, in a poll completed last week, selected Egypt's General Abdul Fattah al-Sisi as their Person of the Year.
Thursday, December 5, 2013
Real Catholic Men Stand Up For The Faith
This story just showed me how much our world needs so many good strong Catholic men to stand up for the faith and all of the Catholic Church's teachings. Please pray for our world. Pray to end abortion, obsession with contraception and sinful same-sex marriage. Pray that God has mercy on our souls.
Horror: Violent mob of topless pro-abort feminists attacks praying men defending cathedral (VIDEO)
Buenos Aires, December 2nd, 2013 (LifeSiteNews.com) – Extremely disturbing video footage from Argentina shows a mob of feminists at a recent protest attacking and sexually molesting a group of Rosary-praying Catholic men who were peacefully protecting the cathedral in the city of San Juan from threats of vandalism.
The women, many of them topless, spray-painted the men’s crotches and faces and swastikas on their chests and foreheads, using markers to paint their faces with Hitler-like moustaches. They also performed obscene sexual acts in front of them and pushed their breasts onto their faces, all the while shouting “get your rosaries out of our ovaries.” (Note: Some of the most graphic content has been removed from the video. Uncensored footage is available here. Viewer discretion strongly advised.)
According to InfoCatolica, some of the women chanted a song, with the lyrics: “To the Roman Catholic Apostolic Church, who wants to get between our sheets, we say that we want to be whores, travesties and lesbians. Legal abortion in every hospital.”
During the attack some men were visibly weeping. None of them retaliated against the abuses heaped on them.
While the site of the protest was the front of the cathedral, InfoBae reports that "the whole city awoke to graffiti in favor of abortion."
Inside the cathedral, 700 people were also in prayer accompanied by their bishop Mos. Alfonso Delgado.
After unsuccessfully trying to get into the building, the women burned a human-sized effigy of Pope Francis. “If the pope were a woman, abortion would be legal,” they shouted.
The attack took place on Sunday, November 24th during the National Women’s Encounter, which annually brings together Argentinean feminists who support “women’s rights.”
The police reportedly told the media they were unable to intervene because “they are women."
The parish priest Fr. RĂ³mulo Campora said to the Diario de Cuyo that “the burning of the image of Pope Francis is an offense, not just to the Church but to every Argentinean because the pope is Argentinean.”
Archbishop Listecki: Love One Another Weekly Communication
One of the things that I have been grateful for in this Archdiocese of Milwaukee is a new communication resource that Archbishop Listecki has started entitled "Love One Another." In this weekly initiative, I feel that Archbishop Listecki seeks to reach out to the Archdiocesan community on a more personal level, sharing personal stories and experiences along with updates on local church news, events, and feast days of saints. You can find these articles on the Archdiocese of Milwaukee website and sign up to have it emailed to you. Below is the latest edition.
Love One Another
December 3, 2013
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
There are certain romantic images that captured our imagination as students in Catholic grammar school. One such image was that of the missionary. The scene of the cassock dressed priest holding the crucifix, preaching and converting the natives, or the image of the religious sister dressed in habit and surrounded by children as she introduced them to Christ through the words of sacred Scripture. Those images were as influential as the recruitment poster of Uncle Sam with his finger pointed outward, saying, “I want YOU for the U.S. Army.”
Well, Christ wants you. The idea of being a missionary and bringing Christ to the world was attractive to anyone of faith. However as we grew older, we realized that the missionary life was not as romantic as it may seem in the pages of magazines or presented in the movies. It was a difficult life of sacrifice.
Today we honor St. Francis Xavier, S.J., one of the greatest missionaries in the history of the Church. St. Francis was one of the first members of the Society of Jesus. Influenced by St. Ignatius and the Spiritual Exercises to dedicate his whole life to Christ, he fought against those in authority who would abuse the native population, cared and nursed the sick and catechized people throughout the Far East. As John Coulson wrote:
“When one considers the conditions of travel, the means of transport, the delays and difficulties which beset him at every stage, the area he covered is physically an astounding achievement. It is even more remarkable when one considers that he left behind him a flourishing church wherever he went and that the effects of his labors remain to the present day.”
St. Francis fell sick and died at the age of 46 while attempting to enter into China. He left the mark of Christ on southern India, Ceylon, Malacca and Japan. He is the patron of foreign missions. The Jesuits hold a special place of honor for St. Francis Xavier, alongside of St. Ignatius.
We should all be grateful for the work of the missionaries who carry the message of Jesus to every part of the world. Hopefully their image and work will challenge us to boldly proclaim Christ in this foreign land of secularism. We should do it not because it’s romantic, but because we love Christ, who commands us to LOVE ONE ANOTHER.
Alive in faith,
Most Reverend Jerome E. Listecki
Archbishop of Milwaukee
December 3, 2013
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
There are certain romantic images that captured our imagination as students in Catholic grammar school. One such image was that of the missionary. The scene of the cassock dressed priest holding the crucifix, preaching and converting the natives, or the image of the religious sister dressed in habit and surrounded by children as she introduced them to Christ through the words of sacred Scripture. Those images were as influential as the recruitment poster of Uncle Sam with his finger pointed outward, saying, “I want YOU for the U.S. Army.”
Well, Christ wants you. The idea of being a missionary and bringing Christ to the world was attractive to anyone of faith. However as we grew older, we realized that the missionary life was not as romantic as it may seem in the pages of magazines or presented in the movies. It was a difficult life of sacrifice.
Today we honor St. Francis Xavier, S.J., one of the greatest missionaries in the history of the Church. St. Francis was one of the first members of the Society of Jesus. Influenced by St. Ignatius and the Spiritual Exercises to dedicate his whole life to Christ, he fought against those in authority who would abuse the native population, cared and nursed the sick and catechized people throughout the Far East. As John Coulson wrote:
“When one considers the conditions of travel, the means of transport, the delays and difficulties which beset him at every stage, the area he covered is physically an astounding achievement. It is even more remarkable when one considers that he left behind him a flourishing church wherever he went and that the effects of his labors remain to the present day.”
St. Francis fell sick and died at the age of 46 while attempting to enter into China. He left the mark of Christ on southern India, Ceylon, Malacca and Japan. He is the patron of foreign missions. The Jesuits hold a special place of honor for St. Francis Xavier, alongside of St. Ignatius.
We should all be grateful for the work of the missionaries who carry the message of Jesus to every part of the world. Hopefully their image and work will challenge us to boldly proclaim Christ in this foreign land of secularism. We should do it not because it’s romantic, but because we love Christ, who commands us to LOVE ONE ANOTHER.
Alive in faith,
Most Reverend Jerome E. Listecki
Archbishop of Milwaukee
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