The Comings and Goings of Lent!

The Comings and Goings of Lent!

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Dear Parishioners: Last week Sister Jeanne ,OLM School Principal, informed me that she will not be returning as our School Principal  next year.  After seventeen years of service Sister-Jeanneat OLM School she intends to move on to new endeavors.  Sister Jeanne first arrived at Our Lady of Mercy to teach the First Grade but then soon took the helm as School Principal. Her tenure at OLM School has been marked by tremendous growth in the school as well as an ever growing tradition of excellence.  As a Religious Sister of Mercy she has dedicated fifty-four years to serving the Church in Catholic Education.  Twenty-two of these years were spent as a classroom teacher and thirty-four in administration.  After so many years of fruitful service she certainly deserves some time of rest and renewal.  Her excellent leadership of our parish school will be missed by our school children, families and faculty but Fr. Connors and I will also miss her wise counsel and joyful spirit.

In the secular world people retire from their jobs and take up golf, knitting, gardening or sailing.  In the religious world, sisters, brothers and priests do not really “retire” from their 5592990869_96ea1c6fd2_zchosen vocation.  Instead they take up service to God and His people in a new way and in new venues.  So Sister Jeanne may be leaving OLM School but she isn’t ‘retiring” as a faithful and loving servant of God and dedicated Sister of Mercy.  We thank her for all she has done for our parish school and for our Church.  We are deeply grateful for her dedication to making Our Lady of Mercy one of  the best schools in the  Diocese.  Her commitment to  excellence and her deep  faith have made OLM School a great success and so we say: “Well done good and faithful servant!” In the coming months we will officially  celebrate Sister Jeanne’s  service to our parish and we will inform you of the details once they are arranged. We will soon begin working with the Diocesan Catholic School Office to assemble a search committee for a new principal.  During this time of transition, I ask for your prayers for Sister Jeanne and our parish school, may Our Lady of Mercy continue to guide and protect us all.

Next weekend we will formally begin the Annual Catholic Charity Appeal  (CCA) at OLM.  Each year we are asked to support the charitable works of our local Church  by donating to the CCA.  The good works of our Diocesan Church need our financial and spiritual support in order to continue bringing the “Good News” to the poor, the sick, the suffering and the needy. OLM has always been a leader in the Diocese in supporting the Appeal and I am hopeful that your generosity can once again help us not only reach but surpass this year’s parish goal of $193,684.  Last year we were able to raise almost $230,000 and I am confident with your support we can do that again.  Last year also saw a great increase in the number of ccalogo_faith_good_worksparishioners supporting the Appeal with over 600 parish families pledging their support.  For nearly 150 of these families it was the very first time they ever donated to the Catholic Charity Appeal!  We take up our in-pew solicitation of the CCA at all Masses next weekend.  I am grateful to Mr. and Mrs. Kevin McDevitt for once again serving as the Chairs of the OLM Catholic Charity Appeal and Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Zubiago for chairing the Bishops Partners in Charity at OLM.  Whatever gift you can afford to give to this crucial charitable appeal is greatly appreciated and I look forward to your support next weekend.

Ash Wednesday saw great crowds at Masses as we came forward to pledge the next forty days lent3repenting and being faithful to the Gospel.”  Lent has begun and with it the call to pray, fast and give alms.  I hope and pray that it is truly a time of reform, repentance and renewal for you and your family.  With a greater commitment to prayer, fasting from sin, and giving to the poor and needy we can deepen our faith and renew our relationships with one another and God. Lent has begun, are you ready!?  So pray, fast and give alms! Remember Fridays are for fish and the Stations of the Cross! God Bless.

 

Pope Francis' Ash Wednesday Homily

Pope Francis' Ash Wednesday Homily

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“Rend your hearts and not your garments” (Joel 2:13). With these insightful words of the prophet Joel, the liturgy introduces us into Lent today, indicating the conversion of the heart characteristic of this time of grace. The prophetic call is f1tom14a challenge for all of us, without exception, and reminds us that conversion is not a matter reducible to outward forms or vague intentions, but engages and transforms one’s entire existence from the center of the person, from the conscience. We are invited to embark on a journey in which, in defiance of the routine, we strive to open our eyes and ears, but especially the heart, to go beyond our “little garden.”

To open oneself to God and to others: we live in an increasingly artificial world, in a culture of “doing”, [a culture] of the “useful”, in which we exclude God from our horizon without even realizing it. Lent calls us to “give ourselves a ‘shake-up’”, to remember that we are creatures, that we are not God.

We run the risk of closing ourselves to others also: we risk forgetting them, too - but onlyAshW1jpg-2011781_p9 when the difficulties and sufferings of our brothers challenge us, only then we can start our journey of conversion towards Easter. It is an itinerary that includes the cross and sacrifice. Today’s Gospel shows the elements of this spiritual journey: prayer , fasting and almsgiving (cf. Mt 6,1-6.16-18 ). All three involve the need not to be dominated by the appearance of things: the appearance of things does not matter – nor does the value of life depend on the approval of others or on success, but from how much we have inside.

The first element is the prayer. Prayer is the strength of the Christian and of every believing person. In the weakness and fragility of our life, we can turn to God with the confidence of children and enter into communion with Him. In the face of so many wounds that hurt us and that could harden the heart, we are called to dive into the sea of prayer, which is the sea of God’s boundless love, to enjoy its tenderness. Lent is a time of prayer, a more intense, more diligent prayer, [one] more able to take care of the needs of the brethren, to intercede before AshWednesdayGod for the many situations of poverty and suffering.

The second element of the Lenten journey is fasting. We must be careful not to make a formal fasting, or one that in truth “satisfies” us because it makes us feel as though we have all in order. Fasting makes sense if it really affects our security, and also if a benefit to others comes from it, if it helps us to grow in the spirit of the Good Samaritan, who bends down to his brother in need and takes care of him. Fasting involves choosing a sober life, which does not waste, which does not “discard”. Fasting helps us to train the heart to essentiality and sharing. It is a sign of awareness and responsibility in the face of injustices, abuses, especially towards the poor and the little ones, and is a sign of our trust in God and His providence.

The third element is almsgiving: it is a sign of gratuity because alms are given to someone from whom you would not expect to receive anything in return. Gratuity should be one of the characteristics of a Christian, who, aware of having received everything from God freely, that is without any merit, learns to give to others freely. Today often gratuity is not part of everyday life, where everything is bought and sold. Everything is calculation and measurement. Almsgiving helps us to live the gratuitousness of the gift, which is freedom from the obsession with possessing things, [freedom from] the fear of losing what one has, from the sadness of those who do not want to share their well-being with others.ASH-WEDNESDAY-09_rhoy-cobilla

With its calls to conversion, Lent comes providentially to rouse us, to shake us from our torpor, from the risk of moving forward [merely] by inertia. The exhortation that the Lord speaks to us through the prophet Joel is loud and clear: "Return to me with all your heart” (Joel 2:12). Why must we return to God? Because something is wrong in us, in society, in the Church - and we need to change, to turn things around, to repent! Once again Lent comes to make its prophetic appeal, to remind us that it is possible to realize something new within ourselves and around us, simply because God is faithful, continues to be full of goodness and mercy, and is always ready to forgive and start over from scratch. With this filial confidence, let us set out on our way!

Pope Francis' Lenten Message

Pope Francis' Lenten Message

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Dear Brothers and Sisters, As Lent draws near, I would like to offer some helpful thoughts on our path of conversion as individuals and as a community. These insights are inspired by the words of Saint Paul: "For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sake he became poor, so that by his poverty you might become rich" (2 Cor 8:9). The Apostle was writing to the Christians of Corinth to encourage them to be generous in helping the faithful in Jerusalem who were in need. What do these words of Saint Paul mean for us Christians today? What does this invitation to poverty, a life of evangelical poverty, mean to us today?

Christ’s grace

Kramskoi_Christ_dans_le_désertFirst of all, it shows us how God works. He does not reveal himself cloaked in worldly power and wealth but rather in weakness and poverty: "though He was rich, yet for your sake he became poor …". Christ, the eternal Son of God, one with the Father in power and glory, chose to be poor; he came amongst us and drew near to each of us; he set aside his glory and emptied himself so that he could be like us in all things (cf. Phil 2:7; Heb 4:15). God’s becoming man is a great mystery! But the reason for all this is his love, a love which is grace, generosity, a desire to draw near, a love which does not hesitate to offer itself in sacrifice for the beloved. Charity, love, is sharing with the one we love in all things. Love makes us similar, it creates equality, it breaks down walls and eliminates distances. God did this with us. Indeed, Jesus "worked with human hands, thought with a human mind, acted by human choice and loved with a human heart. Born of the Virgin Mary, he truly became one of us, like us in all things except sin." (Gaudium et Spes, 22).

By making himself poor, Jesus did not seek poverty for its own sake but, as Saint Paul says "that by his poverty you might become rich". This is no mere play on words or a catch phrase. Rather, it sums up God’s logic, the logic of love, the logic of the incarnation and the cross. God did not let our salvation drop down from heaven, like someone who gives alms from their abundance out of a sense of altruism and piety. Christ’s love is different! When Jesus stepped into the waters of the Jordan and was baptized by John the Baptist, he did so not because he was in need of repentance, or conversion; he did it to be among people who need forgiveness, among us sinners, and to take upon himself the burden of our sins. In this way he chose to comfort us, to save us, to free us from our misery. It is striking that the Apostle states that we were set free, not by Christ’s riches but by his poverty. Yet Saint Paul is well aware of the "the unsearchable riches of Christ" (Eph 3:8), that he is "heir of all things" (Heb 1:2).

So what is this poverty by which Christ frees us and enriches us? It is his way of loving us, his way of being our neighbour, just as the Good Samaritan was neighbour to the man left half dead by the side of the road (cf. Lk 10:25ff). What gives us true freedom, true salvation and Getty_Jeff_J_Mitchell_Pope_Palm_Sunday_2013-255x272true happiness is the compassion, tenderness and solidarity of his love. Christ’s poverty which enriches us is his taking flesh and bearing our weaknesses and sins as an expression of God’s infinite mercy to us. Christ’s poverty is the greatest treasure of all: Jesus wealth is that of his boundless confidence in God the Father, his constant trust, his desire always and only to do the Father’s will and give glory to him. Jesus is rich in the same way as a child who feels loved and who loves its parents, without doubting their love and tenderness for an instant. Jesus’ wealth lies in his being the Son; his unique relationship with the Father is the sovereign prerogative of this Messiah who is poor. When Jesus asks us to take up his "yoke which is easy", he asks us to be enriched by his "poverty which is rich" and his "richness which is poor", to share his filial and fraternal Spirit, to become sons and daughters in the Son, brothers and sisters in the firstborn brother (cf. Rom 8:29).

It has been said that the only real regret lies in not being a saint (L. Bloy); we could also say that there is only one real kind of poverty: not living as children of God and brothers and sisters of Christ.

Our witness

We might think that this "way" of poverty was Jesus’ way, whereas we who come after him can save the world with the right kind of human resources. This is not the case. In every time and place God continues to save mankind and the world through the poverty of Christ, who makes himself poor in the sacraments, in his word and in his Church, which is a people of the poor. God’s wealth passes not through our wealth, but invariably and exclusively through our personal and communal poverty, enlivened by the Spirit of Christ.

PAPA AI RAGAZZI DETENUTI, 'NON FATEVI RUBARE LA SPERANZA'In imitation of our Master, we Christians are called to confront the poverty of our brothers and sisters, to touch it, to make it our own and to take practical steps to alleviate it. Destitution is not the same as poverty: destitution is poverty without faith, without support, without hope. There are three types of destitution: material, moral and spiritual. Material destitution is what is normally called poverty, and affects those living in conditions opposed to human dignity: those who lack basic rights and needs such as food, water, hygiene, work and the opportunity to develop and grow culturally. In response to this destitution, the Church offers her help, her diakonia, in meeting these needs and binding these wounds which disfigure the face of humanity. In the poor and outcast we see Christ’s face; by loving and helping the poor, we love and serve Christ. Our efforts are also directed to ending violations of human dignity, discrimination and abuse in the world, for these are so often the cause of destitution. When power, luxury and money become idols, they take priority over the need for a fair distribution of wealth. Our consciences thus need to be converted to justice, equality, simplicity and sharing.

No less a concern is moral destitution, which consists in slavery to vice and sin. How much pain is caused in families because one of their members – often a young person - is in thrall to alcohol, drugs, gambling or pornography! How many people no longer see meaning in life or prospects for the future, how many have lost hope! And how many are plunged into this destitution by unjust social conditions, by unemployment, which takes away their dignity as breadwinners, and by lack of equal access to education and health care. In such cases, moral destitution can be considered impending suicide. This type of destitution, which also causes financial ruin, is invariably linked to the spiritual destitution which we experience when we turn away from God and reject his love. If we think we don’t need God who reaches out to us though Christ, because we believe we can make do on our own, we are headed for a fall. God alone can truly save and free us.600x474

The Gospel is the real antidote to spiritual destitution: wherever we go, we are called as Christians to proclaim the liberating news that forgiveness for sins committed is possible, that God is greater than our sinfulness, that he freely loves us at all times and that we were made for communion and eternal life. The Lord asks us to be joyous heralds of this message of mercy and hope! It is thrilling to experience the joy of spreading this good news, sharing the treasure entrusted to us, consoling broken hearts and offering hope to our brothers and sisters experiencing darkness. It means following and imitating Jesus, who sought out the poor and sinners as a shepherd lovingly seeks his lost sheep. In union with Jesus, we can courageously open up new paths of evangelization and human promotion.

Jesus-Crucified-On-Cross-Picture-WallpaperDear brothers and sisters, may this Lenten season find the whole Church ready to bear witness to all those who live in material, moral and spiritual destitution the Gospel message of the merciful love of God our Father, who is ready to embrace everyone in Christ. We can so this to the extent that we imitate Christ who became poor and enriched us by his poverty. Lent is a fitting time for self-denial; we would do well to ask ourselves what we can give up in order to help and enrich others by our own poverty. Let us not forget that real poverty hurts: no self-denial is real without this dimension of penance. I distrust a charity that costs nothing and does not hurt.

May the Holy Spirit, through whom we are "as poor, yet making many rich; as having nothing, and yet possessing everything" (2 Cor 6:10), sustain us in our resolutions and increase our concern and responsibility for human destitution, so that we can become merciful and act with mercy. In expressing this hope, I likewise pray that each individual member of the faithful and every Church community will undertake a fruitful Lenten journey. I ask all of you to pray for me. May the Lord bless you and Our Lady keep you safe.

From the Vatican, 26 December 2013 Feast of Saint Stephen, Deacon and First Martyr

Lent is Coming?  Are You Ready?

Lent is Coming? Are You Ready?

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Dear Parishioners:Ash-Wed-Polish-640x445This week the Church across the globe once again enters into the solemn forty day fast of Lent.  Ash Wednesday marks the beginning of the Season of Lent. It is a season of penance, reflection, and fasting which prepares us for Christ's Resurrection on Easter Sunday. At OLM we have four Masses for Ash Wednesday: 7:30AM, 9:00AM, 12:05PM and 7:00PM. Ash Wednesday is the beginning of our forty days of prayer, fasting and almsgiving.  It is a time for us to truly: “Repent and believe in the Gospel!”

How do we repent for the forty days of Lent?  There are many ways to take up the cross of Lent and truly repent.   “The Three Ps”  of Lent: prayer, penance and the poor are the truest path to a good Lent.   Prayer is essential for the life of any Christian.  The best prayer for the Catholic Christian is the Eucharist, the source and summit of our faith.  At Our Lady of Mercy we have an extra Daily Mass during Lent at 12:05PM.  So I invite you to consider coming to  Mass daily during Lent, at 7:30AM before work or school or at 12:05PM as you sacrifice some of your lunch hour for God.  40 days of Lent

There are also other opportunities for prayer and devotion during Lent.  We can take up the cross and walk with Christ to Calvary as we pray the Stations of the Cross every Friday at 7:00PM.  Could you possibly give up a half-hour once a week to join us for the Stations?  Are you willing to sacrifice even one Friday night during Lent for our Lord who sacrificed His life for you? On March 22nd we begin our Annual Parish Mission as we enter into a “retreat” as a community of faith.  This year our Mission Preacher is Father Mark Spalding from Louisville, XBP335575Kentucky.  So mark your calendar now and plan on attending this important spiritual event in the life of our parish.

What about penance? Well, first and foremost Lent is a time for us to return to the Sacrament of Confession most especially if we haven’t been in awhile.  Confessions at OLM are Monday nights at 6:00PM and Saturday afternoons at 3:00PM.  Additionally during the Parish Mission guest priests will be available to hear confessions each night of the Mission. So get to Confession this Lent, it’s good for the soul!PARISHIONERS WAIT IN LINE FOR CONFESSION AT CHICAGO BASILICA

What other sacrifice can we make during Lent?  Can we give up some personal pleasure or luxury in our lives for forty days?  What could it be? Cigars, alcohol, candy, dessert, the internet, television, video games or texting?  This kind of traditional penance, fasting from something, is not meant to make us merely physically healthier (although it might help) but more importantly spiritually healthier.  Giving up something in Lent should help us to deepen our relationship with the Lord who fasted forty days in the desert.

Perhaps we might also take on something extra during Lent, more time spent in prayer at home or at Church, reciting  the  Rosary daily, or even reading and reflecting upon the Scriptures daily.  Perhaps we might try to break some bad “spiritual” habits and  try lent3arrive to Sunday Mass early to pray or even on time if we are often late. All of these are wonderful ways to strengthen our commitment to Christ during Lent.

Almsgiving is also central to Lent.  Helping the poor with our charity is an important part of our lives as Catholic Christians. We help the poor by giving not just from our surplus but by truly  offering financial and spiritual support that entails some sacrifice.  We can practically help the poor during Lent with financial donations to Operation Rice Bowl, the Catholic Charity Appeal, or the OLM Outreach.  Volunteering at the OLM Outreach Office, McAuley House or Emmanuelproverbs_5887c House are other ways to help the poor. In his first Lenten Message to the Church, Pope Francis reminds us:  “Lent is a fitting time for self-denial; we would do well to ask ourselves what we can give up in order to help and enrich others by our own poverty. Let us not forget that real poverty hurts: no self-denial is real without this dimension of penance. I distrust a charity that costs nothing and does not hurt.” Prayer, Penance and the Poor. God Bless.

Enough Already!!!!!! Praying for the End of Winter Snow!!!

Enough Already!!!!!! Praying for the End of Winter Snow!!!

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Dear Parishioners:snow-shovel-100208-02Let it snow, let it snow, let it snow! NOT!  Enough already of the white stuff that seems to fall every other day lately.  Last weekend as you can see by the Weekly Budget results many of our parishioners didn’t make it to Mass due to the snowstorm.  It snowed again on Tuesday and now we await the next snowfall!  Pray that it ends! The bad weather lately reminds me of an incident in World War II.  In 1944 when   General George Patton’s Third Army was poised for the breakthrough across the Rhine River, foul weather threatened to postpone the attack.

One morning Patton phoned the Head Chaplain of the Third Army, Father James H. O’Neill, and said: “This is General Patton; do you have a good prayer for weather? We must do dm-patton-1_1something about the weather if we are to win the war.”  After hanging up the     receiver, Father O’Neill looked out at the bad weather which had plagued the Third Army’s operations for the past three months. As he searched through his prayer books, he could find no formal prayers pertaining to weather so he composed an  original prayer, which he typed on a note card:  “Almighty and most merciful Father, we humbly beseech Thee, of Thy great goodness, to restrain these immoderate rains with which we have had to contend. Grant us fair weather for Battle. Graciously hearken to us as soldiers who call upon Thee that, armed with Thy power, we may advance from victory to victory, and crush the oppression and wickedness of our enemies and establish Thy justice among men and nations.”  Father Praying_hands_rosary_by_TheLobO’Neill  quickly reported to General Patton’s office. After reading the prayer, Patton returned it to O’Neill and directed him to “have 250,000 copies printed and see to it that every man in the Third Army gets one.”  Let us pray to end the snow and cold sooner rather than later!

In the midst of all this snowy weather I must offer thanks to Paul Anderson and our OLM Maintenance Staff  for working so hard in shoveling and plowing the snow.  They do a great job ensuring our parking lots and sidewalks are cleared of snow and safe for those coming to Mass.  I am most grateful for their dedication to this tough assignment.

By now I hope you have seen the two statues recently put up in our Church.  The St. Joseph statue next to the Blessed Mother  Shrine was donated last year in memory of Monsignor Lolio and had been in the Candle Room. OLM St JOe Also the statue of the Sacred Heart was recently restored to its original beauty and repaired of the damage to its hands. It too has been given a much more prominent place in Church.  This statue was part of the old Our Lady of Mercy Church on Main Street and is nearly one hundred years OLM Sacred Heartold.  It was made in Germany most likely in the early 1900s.  We hope to put up some new lighting to highlight these beautiful statues.  May good Saint Joseph and the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus protect us and guide our parish.

We have recently restored and refinished some of the ciboria we use at Mass for Holy          Communion.  They are nearly fifty years old and some of them were made in France.  We also refinished some our  candle sticks and are making a new processional cross out of the cross from the high altar of the old OLM Church. These items should be ready for Easter.   All of these restored or refinished items  are available to be memorialized in memory of a deceased loved one. As the month of February ends, we look forward to March and the Holy Season of Lent.  Ash Wednesday is March 5th as we begin the solemn fast of forty days once again.

In preparation of Ash Wednesday, we ask you to please bring your blessed palm branches from last year to Mass next weekend. They are to be collected and used to make the ashes for Ash Wednesday.  Containers will be available at the entrances of Church so you can deposit these old palm branches.  More about Lent next week, but mark your calendar now for Stations of the Cross of Fridays and a Lenten Mission which begins the week of March 23.  More details about it next week.   God Bless.

 

Who Pays Taxes and Who Doesn't? The Church? The NFL?

Who Pays Taxes and Who Doesn't? The Church? The NFL?

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Dear Parishioners:In my work as the Diocesan Lobbyist at the RI Statehouse I often have some odd encounters.  Recently while I was there a rather prominent special-interest lobbyist engaged in a short exchange with me.  He thinks that the Church should not have tax-exempt status.  He’s not a secular humanist but an active Catholic who regularly attends Mass. He was responding to School Choice Statehousethe call for School Choice in our state. As you may know School Choice involves allowing all parents especially the economically disadvantaged decide which school to send their children. However, for the poor the choice is limited because they cannot afford tuitions and often there are not enough seats in the Charter Schools.  So School Choice calls for a tax-credit or voucher system that would enable all families a choice in their children’s education. This lobbyist felt that if the Catholic Church along with Jewish Schools of RI, Christian Schools and non-religious private schools wanted School Choice they should pay taxes.  He was really directing his emphasis upon the Catholic Church.  His argument for removal of exempting for  religious groups is not new and seems to be picking up more supporters as our nation gets more secular.BHHS Ambassadors I often hear this type of argument anytime I lobby on a particular issue or if Catholic Bishops speak out on a social issue like abortion, marriage, immigration, peace or poverty.  These calls for the federal government to revoke the tax-exempt status of churches usually take place in election years! The most common arguments made for taxing churches are that exemptions deny the government important sources of revenue.  Also  many claim that  churches often abuse their tax-exempt status by violating IRS guidelines that prohibit them from engaging in political activity.  The IRS specifically IRS_logodefines “politics” as seeking to influence the election of candidates and “lobbying” as seeking to influence legislation.   The Catholic Church cannot and does not endorse candidates or political parties.  However, the Church can educate their followers about the voting record of elected officials and the stance on issues of political candidates.  This is part of the Church's mission of education not a political endorsement.  The Church can and does lobby on both local and national level  elected officials about issues of concern. None of this activity is illegal or prohibited by the IRS. In fact, many non-profit, tax exempt groups do the same thing and they are often non-religious.  In fact, the IRS exempts many different types of organizations from paying taxes, including labor unions, chambers of commerce, social clubs, and “social welfare” organizations such as the National Organization for Women (NOW) and the  American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). Interestingly enough I just read an article about the National Football League (NFL) and its tax-exempt status.  Some US Senators are now questioning why the NFL is tax exempt since the NFL Commissioner is paid $30 million a year.  By the way the NFL spent over $5 million lobbying US Congress over the last few years.NFL-Money-CBA_JPG For the record, all priests pay Federal and State income tax and property tax on their personal property like homes and cars.  The Catholic Church is tax-exempt as an institution because She provides a public good.  In fact, the Catholic Church is the second largest provider of social services and education after the government.  Should we pay  taxes?  Would that curtail some of the good works we provide to all people, Catholic or not?  Perhaps we should begin to look at non-profits which don’t provide as much to the common good of our nation before we go after Churches.  My lobbyist friend works for an extremely large tax-exempt non-profit himself.  When I brought this to his attention he began to waiver his position slightly. You can hear more about the “Church in the Public Square” on Monday at 7:00PM.  I hope you join us.  Happy Presidents’ Day. Have a great school vacation