Cardinal O'Malley's Homily on Boston Tragedy

Cardinal O'Malley's Homily on Boston Tragedy

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Sunday April 21, 2013 – Good Shepherd Sunday

Cardinal Seán O’Malley – Cathedral of the Holy Cross

Jesus said “they will strike the shepherd and the sheep will scatter”; that is what happened to His disciples after the Crucifixion, as they scattered in fear, doubt and panic.

On Easter the Good Shepherd returns to gather the scattered;  Mary Magdalene in grief, Thomas in doubt, Peter in betrayal.  We too are scattered and need the assurance of the Good Shepherd, who lays down his life for us, who comes to gather us in our scattered in our brokenness and pain, scattered by failed marriages, lost employment, estranged children, illness, the death of a loved one, soured relationships, disappointments and frustrations.

This week we are all scattered by the pain and horror of the senseless violence perpetrated on Patriots Day.  Last Sunday at the 11:30 Mass here at the Cathedral of the Holy Cross, Fr. O’Leary led a special blessing for the many runners who participated in the Mass.  Some people here were among those injured and those who witnessed the terrible events that unfolded at the finish lineof the Marathon, but everyone was profoundly affected by the wanton violence and destruction inflicted upon our community by two young men unknown to all of us.

It is very difficult to understand what was going on in the young men’s minds, what demons were operative, what ideologies or politics or the perversion of their religion.  It was amazing to witness, however, how much goodness and generosity were evidenced in our community as a result of the tragic events they perpetrated.

It reminds me of a passage in Dorothy Day’s autobiography where she speaks about experiencing a serious earthquake in California when she was a young girl.  Suddenly neighbors that never spoke were helping each other, sharing their food and water, caring for children and the elderly.  She was amazed and delighted, but a few weeks later people retreated to their former individualism and indifference.

Dorothy Day spent the rest of her life looking to recapture the spirit of community.  That led her to the Communist Party and eventually it led her into the Catholic Church and to found the Catholic Worker Movement, dedicating herself to the care of the homeless, the drug addict

This past week we have experienced a surge in civic awareness and sense of community.   It has been inspiring to see the generous and at times heroic responses to the Patriots Day violence.  Our challenge is to keep this spirit of community alive going forward.  As people of faith, we must commit ourselves to the task of community building.

Jesus teaches us in the Gospel that we must care for each other, especially the most vulnerable; the hungry, the sick, the homeless, the foreigner; all have a special claim on our love.  We must be a people of reconciliation, not revenge.  The crimes of the two young men must not be the justification for prejudice against Muslims and against immigrants.

The Gospel is the antidote to the “eye for an eye and tooth for a tooth” mentality.  The parable of the Good Samaritan is the story about helping one’s neighbor when that neighbor was from an enemy tribe, a foreign religion, a hostile group.  The Samaritan cuts through centuries of antipathy by seeing in the Jewish man who had been beaten and left for dead not a stranger or an enemy, but a fellow human being who has a claim of his humanity and compassion.

We know so little about the two young men who perpetrated these heinous acts of violence.  One said he had no friends in this country, the other said his chief interests were money and his career.  People need to be part of a community to lead a fully human life.  As believers one of our tasks is to build community, to value people more than money or things, to recognize in each person a child of God, made in the image and likeness of our Creator.

The individualism and alienation of our age has spawned a culture of death.  Over a million abortions a year is one indication of how human life has been devalued.  Violent entertainment, films and video games have coarsened us and made us more insensitive to the pain and suffering of others.  The inability of the Congress to enact laws that control access to automatic weapons is emblematic of the pathology of our violent culture.

When Pope John Paul II visited Madrid in 2003, addressing one million young people, he told them; “Respond to the blind violence and inhuman hatred with the fascinating power of love.”  We all know that evil has its fascination and attraction but too often we lose sight of the fact that love and goodness also have the power to attract and that virtue is winsome.  Passing on the faith means helping people to lead a good life, a moral life, a just life.  Thus part of our task as believers is to help our people become virtuous.

Plato thought that virtue was knowledge.  As Chain Ginott, the concentration camp survivor, reminds us, doctors, nurses, scientists and soldiers were part of the Holocaust machinery, showing that knowledge is not virtue, and often science and technology have been put at the service of evil.  It is only a culture of life and an ethic of love that can rescue us from the senseless violence that inflicts so much suffering on our society.

Like Christ our Good Shepherd, we who aspire to be Jesus’ disciples and to follow His way of life, we too must work to gather the scattered, to draw people into Christ’s community.  It is in His Gospel that we find the answers to the questions of life and the challenging ideals that are part of discipleship; mercy, forgiveness, self sacrifice, service, justice and truth.

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John Lennon once said, ‘Everything will be OK in the end.  If it’s not OK, it’s not the end.’  Our faith goes beyond that optimism.  Love is stronger than death.  We are going to live forever in the Resurrection Christ won for us on the Cross.   The innocent victims who perished this week; Martin Richard, Krystle Campbell, Lu Lingzi, Officer Sean Collier, will live in eternity.  Life is not ended, merely changed – that is the message of Easter.  As Martin Luther King expressed, ‘Death is a comma, not a period at the end of a sentence.’

Although the culture of death looms large, our Good Shepherd rose from the grave on Easter and His light can expel the darkness and illuminate for us a path that leads to life, to a civilization of solidarity and love.  I hope that the events of this past week have taught us how high the stakes are.  We must build a civilization of love, or there will be no civilization at all

Prayers for Boston

Prayers for Boston

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We offer our prayers in solidarity of the people of Boston and for all the victims, the injured and their families.  May God be with them all! "In the midst of the darkness of this tragedy we turn to the light of Jesus Christ, the light that was evident in the lives of people who immediately turned to help those in need today. We stand in solidarity with our ecumenical and interfaith colleagues in the commitment to witness the greater power of good in our society and to work together for healing." Sean Cardinal O'Malley, Interfaith Service for Boston

Death and Taxes!

Death and Taxes!

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Dear Parishioners: I hope you survived Tax Day on April 15th!  The old adage  that “the only things certain in this life are death and taxes ” came to mind as I filed my Federal and Rhode Island Income Tax Returns last week! The Catechism of the Catholic Church instructs us that: “submission to authority and co-responsibility for the common good make it morally obligatory to pay taxes...” (CCC No. 2240)  So while some may bemoan the paying of taxes, we are obligated to pay them for the common good of our state and nation.  In fact, the Catechism instructs us that it is a duty to pay our taxes.  So it seems both God and Caesar want us to pay taxes!

TaxessLikewise, the state has obligations to its citizens like providing for the peace, harmony and needs of all citizens especially the disadvantaged.  The Catechism also states: “Political authorities are obliged to respect the fundamental rights of the human person. They will dispense justice humanely by respecting the rights of everyone, especially of families and the disadvantaged.” (CCC No. 2237) So its clear that both citizens and state have duties and responsibilities.  Each are called to provide for justice, solidarity, freedom, and peace. Yes we have a duty to pay our taxes but our government is obligated to provide necessary services like education, healthcare, social services, fire and police services, and upkeep of our infrastructure.

No doubt most of us claimed our charitable deductions on our income tax return.  Giving to the Church and other worthwhile charities isn’t only an important thing to do, it is also tax deductible.  However, there is currently “tax reform” legislation pending in U.S. Congress that would eliminate all charitable deductions from the tax code. This would effect not only Churches but also universities and colleges and every other charity that depends upon voluntary donations.  As you can imagine the charitable community and churches are actively opposing such “reform” as it could have a devastating effect upon financial support of these charities.

There is a common misconception that the Catholic Church pays no taxes.  Some even believe that we priests also do not pay taxes.  Well I can assure you that priests pay income taxes as I sent my return and check to both the U.S. Government and State of Rhode Island last week! While the Catholic taxes 22Church is tax exempt organization, priests are not.  It is true that the Church pays no property taxes and this is true for all religious and non-profit groups not just the Catholics. This increasingly is a source of animus from many in our society especially atheist and secular humanist groups.  They usually direct their vitriol to the Catholic Church whenever our bishops teach about a moral issue.

The customary cries of “separation of church and state” loudly shouted whenever the Church teaches about the sanctity of life and marriage or the dignity of the human person including even undocumented immigrants. Sadly these folks have misinterpreted the principle of separation of church and state and rather ironically they never seem to attack the many liberal Protestant Ministers who advocate for abortion on demand and the redefinition of marriage.

While the Catholic Church is a tax exempt organization there is no exemption from teaching the truth about human life, marriage and human dignity even in the public square. The separation of church and state is not meant to stifle the Church’s prophetic voice but rather protect the Church from government intervention in their church.

Yes, death and taxes are certainties of every life but our lives are meant to be lived not hidden in fear in an room but alive with the faith and active in our society.  Our Holy Father, Pope Frances reminded us of this in his Easter Message to the World: “Let us be renewed by God’s mercy, let us be loved by Jesus, let us enable the power of his love to transform our lives too; and let us become agents of this mercy, channels through which God can water the earth, protect all creation and make justice and peace flourish.” God Bless. Have a great week!

Spring, the Season of Sacraments!!

Spring, the Season of Sacraments!!

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Dear Parishioners:Last Saturday OLM School hosted its  Spring Fling at Warwick Country Club.  This annual event for our parish school is very important for fundraising.  There was a nice meal, dancing and both a silent and live auction.  I am grateful to the committee who worked so hard to ensure such a terrific evening for all those in attendance.  Also I thank the many generous donors who help support our school.  Channel 12’s own Mike Montecalvo and Danielle North acted as the auctioneers for the live auction.  I thank them for the great job they did in raising the bids! There were a whole host of auction items to bid on from having your child serve as the OLM Principal for a day to luxury box seats for a New England Patriots game next fall.

However, the item that drew the highest bids was a Dinner for Eight cooked by our own resident executive chef, Father Shemek.  It proved to be a popular item and so we had to add a second dinner for eight!  Both dinners sold for $3,000 a piece!  We are grateful for the bidders support as all the proceeds go to directly support our school. Father Shemek promises the dinners won’t be all cabbage and kielbasa! By the way, while I cannot cook like Father Shemek, I am responsible for providing the wines and cigars for the dinners! Bon Appetit!

The Spring Fling was a great way to kick off the season of spring! The better weather and warm sun are arriving just in time for the April School Vacation! I wish all of our students and teachers a great vacation.  Enjoy the week off and we hope you return  all tanned, rested and ready for the final weeks of school! Of course, springtime always brings with it the usual First Communion Celebrations, Confirmations, weddings and Graduations!

first-communion-3-3It’s hard to believe but we are getting ready for the celebration of  First Communion.  Father Shemek and I are truly looking forward to celebrating First Communion here at OLM for the first time.  Its always a joyful and faith-filled event in the life of the children as well as our parish family. On Saturday, May 11th there will be two First Communion Masses here at OLM, one at 10:00AM for OLM School children and one at Noon for our OLM RE children.  Of course, it will be followed by the May Crowning on Mother’s Day!

Bishop Tobin will be at OLM on Sunday, May 19th to celebrate the Sacrament of Confirmation for our 9th Grade Confirmation Candidates.  The Mass will be celebrated at 1:00PM on Pentecost Sunday, a fitting day to call forth the Holy Spirit upon our young Catholics!  This is to be the last spring confirmation at OLM as we have changed the RE Program so that the Sacrament of Confirmation is now to be celebrated in the fall  as our future 9th graders enter high school.

Confirmation by CrespiThis serves to remind the candidates that Confirmation is a sacrament of initiation not a “graduation” from Religious Education as it has too often become for many!  Also it gives these young Catholics the many graces of the sacrament when they need it most, just as they begin their high school years! We know that the high school years can present both good and bad opportunities for teenagers. We hope and pray that with the grace of God to help them and the gifts of the Holy Spirit to guide them, they may always choose the path of Christ!

So going forward Religious Education classes are to be completed at the end of 8th Grade followed by Confirmation at the beginning of 9th grade.  This style of Religious Education program is being adopted by many parishes across the state. We anticipate an October date for Confirmation for our present 8th graders. It’s seems that our spring calendar at OLM is to be very full and includes May Devotions on Mondays and OLM School Graduation in June along with a few weddings too! All signs of the new life we celebrate in this Easter Season!  I am away this week visiting priest friends at the seminary in sunny Miami!  I too hope to return tan, rested and ready! God Bless. Go Sox!!

 

Giving Thanks and Celebrating Easter for Fifty Days!

Giving Thanks and Celebrating Easter for Fifty Days!

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Dear Parishioners: “Why do you seek the living one among the dead? He is not here, but he has been raised” asks the Gospel of Easter Day. Why indeed?  Christ is Risen! He has truly Risen!  And so we continue to celebrate this wonderful season of joy and glory for fifty days!  Let us continue to celebrate the Easter Alleluia and the Resurrection of the Lord with the same faith and gusto has we did on Easter Sunday.

We had large crowds at all our Holy Week services here at Our Lady of Mercy.  Both Deacon John and Father Shemek noted that they were so very thrilled by such a great turn out for the most important and holiest days of the Church Year.  I echo their enthusiasm for such a display of devotion, faith, hope, love and joy!  Alleluia indeed! Doubting  Tommy 2013

My thanks to all who helped to make Holy Week and Easter such a tremendous event for our parish.  The many volunteers who clean and polish, set up and clean up for the services, those who decorate the Church so beautifully, those altar servers who served so reverently,  the Lectors and Ministers who ministered so well, the Ushers who greeted our visitors and parishioners with such service and welcome, our musicians and choirs who sang and performed so beautifully and all of the many good and faithful parishioners who prayed and worshiped so devotedly over the Sacred Triduum.  With gratitude and thanks for all you do!

In your name, I also welcome and congratulate those who celebrated the Sacraments at the Easter Vigil.  We welcome Adam and Aimee Couto and their three children who joined the Catholic Church this Easter.  We offer our prayers to their youngest son, Dylan who was baptized, and their daughter, Madison and son, Jacob, who were received into the Church and made their Frist Communion.  We also offer prayers for Adam and Aimee who were received into the Church and received the Sacraments of Eucharist and Confirmation.  Welcome to our Catholic Family at OLM!

Pope Francis at EasterI must also congratulate the others who received the Sacrament of Confirmation at the Easter Vigil: Anthony Gelsomino, John Nolin, Craig Conway and John Duffy.  May the Holy Spirit continue to guide and lead them in the faith and help them always to be willing and faithful members of the Church.  Best wishes to you all! I also wish to thank all those who were so generous in supporting the OLM Outreach “Irish Celebration” a couple of weeks ago.  We had a great crowd for corned beef, Irish bread, step dancers and live music.  Thanks to the many volunteers who helped with event and thanks to all those who donated to McAuley House.  We were able to send the good folks at McAuley House $1,500 raised at the event.  Thank you one and all for a great time and for supporting a great cause.

On Easter Monday thanks to the many good folks of OLM we not only reached our Catholic Charity Appeal Goal but surpassed it.  My thanks to the over 500 parish families who have been so generous in supporting the good works of the Diocese of Providence through the Charity Appeal.  We are still trying to reach our donor goal of 600 families.  So if you have not yet donated to the CCA, I encourage to do so.  Just imagine all the good works for the poor and needy if all 2,200 families registered at OLM gave to the Charity Appeal!

Finally, I wish to congratulate our Parish Trustee, Joe Cavanagh, who is to receive the Lumen Gentium Award for Respect Life from Bishop Tobin.  It is a fitting recognition of Joe’s steadfast and dedicated support of the sanctity of marriage and human life in our state.  The Lumen Gentium Awards Dinner is scheduled for May 16th and for more information on tickets or purchasing an ad please go to www.diocesepvd.org/lumen-gentium

Easter was early this year but now April has arrived and we’ve moved the Saturday Vigil Mass forward to 5:00PM.  Of course, it’s also baseball season and as I write this column on Monday I am joyfully listening to the Red Sox beat the Yankees in the season opener in the Bronx.  Happy Easter! God Bless. Go Sox!

 

Happy Easter! Celebrate the Risen Christ!!

Happy Easter! Celebrate the Risen Christ!!

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Dear Parishioners: Happy Easter! "This is the day the Lord has made! Let us rejoice and be glad! Alleluia!"  The Resurrection we celebrate on Easter is the very foundation of our faith, our hope, and our love. It is so central to our faith that we celebrate it every Sunday at Mass. I hope and pray those who join us at Mass this Easter begin to reclaim Sunday as the Lord's Day in their lives. May they be anchored in faithfulness to Sunday Mass which is  our weekly family meal with the risen Jesus.

The triumph, the life, the light, the raising up, the salvation which exploded on that  Easter morning as Jesus rose from the dead continues in His Church every day. The power of the risen Christ shows itself in the extraordinary community that is the Church. God's love for us is so personal, so  risenjesus31passionate, so intense that He gave His only begotten Son for our salvation.  St. Paul asks a very interesting question in one of his Letters:  “What would it be like if Christ did not rise from the dead?”  Thankfully St. Paul answers his own question: “If Christ did not rise from the dead, then we have lived in vain, and we have believed  in vain.”

But Christ did rise from the dead! He did leave the tomb. He did conquer death. And so our life is neither a staircase leading nowhere or a meaningless journey because of Easter. Pope Benedict, Pope Emeritus reminds us: “God exists: that is the real message of Easter. Anyone who even begins to grasp what this means also knows what it means to be redeemed.”

Indeed because of our hope in the resurrection, our lives find their ultimate purpose and destiny in God, in life eternal. But also because of Easter, nothing that we do in this life is ever meaningless, however big or small. Because of Easter, every good deed we make, even the smallest act of kindness, becomes something of tremendous value. The road of life, the road which we all travel, can often be uphill; filled with pot-holes of suffering, sidetracked by failure and even detoured by defeat. And yet we can endure the harshness of our journey because of the hope that we celebrate today: the Risen Christ, endless glory, lasting peace, and eternal happiness. We took the forty days of Lent, preparing for Easter, very seriously at OLM.  I offer my congratulations to those who, by more fervent prayer, more self-denial, and greater charity to those in need, responded so well to the Ash Wednesday invitation of the Lord to “return to me with all your heart!” The forty days of Lent are behind us, so now let’s celebrate the fifty days of the Easter Season leading up to Pentecost Sunday.

At Easter we look around the Church and beyond at the “explosion of new life” for it’s just not the lilies in full bloom but also the risen life of Christ is in full bloom!  Our faith tells us that the victory of Jesus over sin, Satan, and death at Easter is not just His triumph alone — He shares it with all of us!  He shares it with those baptized, confirmed, receiving Him for the first time in Holy Communion, and those joining His Church this Easter! Alleluia! Welcome one and all!

He shares it in a few weeks with our parish children who share the risen life of Jesus as they make their First Holy Communion! Alleluia! He shares it in a few weeks with our parish young people who are to be confirmed with the gift of the Holy Spirit. Alleluia!  He shares it over the next couple of months, with young couples who begin new lives in the sacrament of marriage. Alleluia!

The Resurrection of Christ is radiating life and light all over! Alleluia! For fifty days we’ll keep the Easter candle lit brightly, we’ll smell the powerful aroma of the lilies; we’ll joyfully sing out “alleluia,” and we’ll stay close to Jesus through the sacraments.  The darkness, gloom, and death of Good Friday do not have the last word. The night is over; winter is gone. The light and life of Easter Sunday morning triumph! It’s morning. it’s springtime in the Church. Saint Augustine said it so well: “We are an Easter People and Alleluia is our song!” Father Shemek, Deacon John and I wish you a Blessed Easter, may it be full of peace, joy and happiness!