Sunday, January 3, 2021

Catholics must engage Biden on extreme abortion positions to save the unborn, expert claims January 1, 2021 CNA Daily News News Briefs

 

Catholics must engage Biden on extreme abortion positions to save the unborn, expert claims

CNA Staff, Jan 1, 2021 / 04:09 pm (CNA).- During his upcoming administration, presumed President-Elect Joe Biden will have to deal with the issue of abortion, and Catholics must engage with him says Charles C. Camosy in an op-ed published by First Things on the last day of 2020.

Camosy, an associate professor of Theological and Social Ethics at Fordham University, says that “Biden doesn’t agree with the U.S. bishops about everything, but he does care about what they say and regularly tries to fit their concerns into Democratic policy proposals.”

“Perhaps Biden’s newly-created office dedicated to reaching out to conservatives should at least be something worth paying attention to,” writes the theologian, but warns that “if there is to be any outreach, then the Biden administration will need to address the greatest problem with today’s Democratic party. And that is abortion.”

“No one supports a consistent life ethic more strongly than I do,” says Camosy, author of ‘Resisting Throwaway Culture: How a Consistent Life Ethic Can Unite a Fractured People.’ “But in advocating for the full vision of St. John Paul II’s Evangelium Vitae, it does not follow that we must give all issues equal weight.”

“The U.S. bishops, though they rightly have many priorities, are quite right to claim that abortion must remain the ‘preeminent priority.’ How could ‘the greatest universal genocide’ be anything else?” Camosy writes.

The author observes that “Joe Biden used to be something close to a pro-life Democrat, but he has dramatically changed his views in recent years, especially in the lead-up to the 2020 campaign. If his administration shifts the so-called Mexico City Policy so that U.S. tax dollars fund abortions overseas, as he has promised to do, Biden will become more directly complicit in abortion than at perhaps any other time in his life. He has also reversed himself on the Hyde Amendment, which means he is in favor of forcing pro-life citizens to pay for abortions with their tax dollars.”

But, “Biden has supported Hyde and even late-term abortion bans in the past. He has said he believes there should be room in the Democratic Party for pro-lifers. In the past he has supported conscience protections,” writes Camosy, asking: “Is there any hope we can get that guy back?”

“Given what is at stake for millions of prenatal lives—as well as their mothers (who are often coerced into abortions they don’t want)—Catholics have no choice: We must engage Biden after his inauguration.”

Reminding readers that “Biden is a political animal,” Camosy argues that Catholics could push for “a grand bargain” that would entail “much lower thresholds for legal abortion and much higher levels of support for pregnant women and families. The combination of socially conservative and economically progressive policies fits well with Catholic teaching. And it would save hundreds of thousands of prenatal lives by reducing both supply and demand for abortion.”

“Catholics committed to the fullness of the teaching of the Church have an opportunity. We can encourage Biden to return to his pro-life roots, pointing out the moral urgency of the pro-life cause.”

Charles Camosy resigned from the board of Democrats for Life of America (DFLA), writing in a column in the NY Post that the Democratic Party’s extreme support of abortion left him “no choice” but to leave his party.

Read Comosy’s full op-ed here: https://www.firstthings.com/web-exclusives/2020/12/catholics-and-the-incoming-biden-administration


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Largest recorded earthquake in Croatia kills 7; destroys homes and churches This devastated region of Croatia will need years to recover from the effects of the earthquake and the Catholic Church will surely be on the frontline of this daunting mission. January 1, 2021 Stjepo Bartulica The Dispatch

 

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Largest recorded earthquake in Croatia kills 7; destroys homes and churches

This devastated region of Croatia will need years to recover from the effects of the earthquake and the Catholic Church will surely be on the frontline of this daunting mission.

The author stands in front of a structure destroyed in the December 29, 2020 earthquake in Croatia.
The ruins of the local parish in Žažina, Croatia. The church organist was killed under the rubble as the church collapsed.

The earthquake that struck the area around Petrinja in Central Croatia on December 29th with a magnitude of 6.4 was the strongest ever to hit Croatia. In 1969 a somewhat stronger quake completely destroyed Banja Luka in neighboring Bosnia. Even the great 1880 earthquake, which shattered Zagreb in 1880 and prompted its rebuilding in Habsburg style, was less intense than the blow to Petrinja. Zagreb had its own destructive quake this year, when on March 22nd a 5.3 magnitude shock hit the city and caused huge destruction in the old centre and to the Cathedral and many other churches. Many, who lost use of their homes, are still unable to return.

The Petrinja event was, however, on a different scale. Its horror only slowly emerged, the repeated aftershocks paralyzing attempts to take stock. The area, with the exception of the principal city of Sisak, is underpopulated, economically declining, and does not – despite proximity to Zagreb, which is only fifty miles away – make many headlines. Suddenly everyone’s focus switched there.

The government has been slow in its response, but the population has reacted with great speed to organize help for those in trouble. Football team supporters (known here as the Bad Blue Boys), mountain rescue volunteers, a great number of existing or spontaneously formed groups of citizens were either on the spot or filling up lorries of essential supplies. Nobody told them, and nobody paid them. They just did it.

The earthquake has left seven people dead, including a 12-year-old girl, and many more seriously injured. Photographs circulating of Petrinja, but also of surrounding villages, including stark portraits of gutted and devastated baroque churches, have about them an eerily apocalyptic quality. This is partly because, apart from the emergency services, struggling to unearth victims and extricate survivors, so many photos are devoid of local people. The pressure is constant to avoid excessive co-mingling because of the deadly threat of Corona virus.

This is an area where suffering and hardship are part of recent history and where physical courage and moral endurance are both ingrained, particularly among the older generation. Sisak was on the front line during the war in the early 1990s, but both Petrinja and Glina were occupied by the Serb rebels who subsequently killed over 300 civilians. The buildings were looted, the Croats expelled, many lost family members. One elderly lady, who was pulled through the window of her devastated home by neighbors, her door having been jammed shut, remarked: “My son, it was awful as they pulled me through the window, but if we survived the war, we will survive this as well!”

On the face of it, moving everyone to Croatia’s empty hotels rather than supplying them with tents, shelter in the barracks or halls, and handing out food parcels would make sense. Perhaps it may happen. But people in this area have no wish to leave their ruined houses, which as soon as they were vacated in the past war years were stripped of the contents. And, of course, the farmers anyway cannot leave their livestock unattended. The fear of more quakes is also very real as several families told me that they prefer to sleep in their car rather than inside the house.

As through all the history of Croatia, not least the Communist period and the ensuing war, the Catholic Church is a central focus for the social needs of the area. The local bishop Vlado Košić stated that the priority is to deliver food and water to the most needy, as well as providing shelter for thousands of people who have evacuated their homes. The bishop called for two days of fasting and prayer for the all those afflicted.

The diocese’s Caritas office is now heading the relief effort and is being overwhelmed by requests for help. In addition, churches in the Sisak diocese have suffered major damage or have been destroyed. The Cathedral of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross has been badly damaged and will require major renovations. Tragically, the organist of the local parish in Žažina was killed under the rubble as the church collapsed.

On a more hopeful note, Croatian media reported that the first child born in 2021 was a baby boy named David, who was born in Sisak one minute past midnight.

This devastated region of Croatia will need years to recover from the effects of the earthquake and the Catholic Church will surely be on the frontline of this daunting mission.

For those wish to give:

Sisak Caritas office
Trg Vere Grozaj bb
44000 Sisak
Iban: HR1024070001100357106
Purpose: Earthquake relief


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About Stjepo Bartulica  1 Article
Stjepo Bartulica is associate professor of political philosophy at the Catholic University of Croatia and Member of Parliament.

Pope Benedict’s secretary reflects on awful 2020 with German magazine Archbishop Gänswein celebrated Christmas and New Year’s with Pope emeritus Benedict in the monastery building Mater Ecclesiae in the Vatican Gardens, where the men and four Italian nuns reside. January 1, 2021 Catholic News Agency The Dispatch

 

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Pope Benedict’s secretary reflects on awful 2020 with German magazine 

Archbishop Gänswein celebrated Christmas and New Year’s with Pope emeritus Benedict in the monastery building Mater Ecclesiae in the Vatican Gardens, where the men and four Italian nuns reside.

Archbishop Georg Gänswein (Photo: Daniel Ibañez - EWTN)

CNA Staff, Jan 1, 2021 / 01:29 pm (CNA).- Archbishop Georg Gänswein has spoken about life with Pope emeritus Benedict XVI and a personally challenging year. “I’m grateful to God that 2020 is finally over,” the 64-year-old told the German tabloid magazine “Bunte”, saying Rome had at times turned “eerily quiet” during the coronavirus pandemic.

Gänswein, who hails from the Black Forest region of Germany, is prefect of the Papal Household, but has been on leave from his duties as prefect since February in order to be able to dedicate his time exclusively to the former pope as Benedict XVI’s private secretary.

Since the election of Pope Francis in 2013, Gänswein had worked in both roles, commuting between two offices – until the stress took its toll. The archbishop suffered from acute hearing loss in 2017 and is now living with a severe case of tinnitus. In late January of last year, Pope Francis informed Gänswein he should devote his time and energy entirely to his role as secretary to Benedict. “For this purpose, he released me from my service in the prefecture. My duties there have been reassigned for an indefinite period”, Gänswein said.

Following a treatment for kidney problems in September, Gänswein said, he had a “clarifying, very fortifying and encouraging meeting with Pope Francis” about the decision to be removed from active duty as Prefect, which he stressed he knew was not any kind of “punishment” in the first instance.

Gänswein celebrated Christmas and New Year’s with Pope emeritus Benedict in the monastery building Mater Ecclesiae in the Vatican Gardens, where the men and four Italian nuns reside.

“I pray the Liturgy of the Hours daily with Pope emeritus Benedict and also the Rosary. A considerable amount of my time is reserved for prayer. Every priest, every bishop, even the Pope, prays not only for himself but for the people entrusted to them. Also and especially for those who do not want to or cannot pray”, Gänswein told the magazine.

He also said Benedict XVI remained very alert mentally. “Physically, however, he has become quite weak,” he said. “At 93, he is at a blessed age.”


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About Catholic News Agency  557 Articles
Catholic News Agency (www.catholicnewsagency.com)

Catholic bishop released five days after kidnapping in Nigeria January 1, 2021 CNA Daily News News Briefs

 

Catholic bishop released five days after kidnapping in Nigeria

CNA Staff, Jan 1, 2021 / 10:42 pm (CNA).- A Catholic bishop in Nigeria, who was kidnapped on Sunday, has been released unharmed, according to the Archdiocese of Owerri.

The diocese, which is in southeastern Nigeria, announced in a social media post late on Jan. 1 that Bishop Moses Chikwe and his driver, Ndubuisi Robert, had been released by their abductors “unhurt and without ransom.”

“More details to come,” the announcement continued. “To GOD be the glory.” The post was accompanied by a photo, with the words “welcome back our beloved Bishop, God heard [the] prayers of his people.”

Chikwe, the auxiliary bishop of Owerri archdiocese, was kidnapped by unidentified gunmen on the evening of Sunday, Dec. 27, in Owerri, the capital of Imo State in southeastern Nigeria.

The website of the Nigerian newspaper The Sun reported that the bishop was kidnapped “alongside his driver in his official car” and that the vehicle “was later returned to Assumpta roundabout, while the occupants were believed to have been taken to an unknown destination.”

The bishops of Nigeria had urged prayer for the 53-year-old Chikwe’s safety and release. Catholics in southern California had also been praying for the bishop’s safe return. Chikwe served for several years as a priest in the Diocese of San Diego, before returning to his country.

Chikwe was ordained a priest on July 6, 1996, in Nigeria, after which he completed his master’s degree in educational administration at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, and his PhD in education at UCLA. Fr. Chikwe served for six years as a priest in residence at St. Joseph’s Cathedral in downtown San Diego and at the V.A. Hospital in La Jolla as chaplain; he also frequently said Mass at St. Mark’s parish in San Marcos, Calif.


He returned to his home diocese where he became director of education and was ordained auxiliary bishop on Dec. 12, 2019.

In a Dec. 29 statement, Archbishop Anthony Obinna of Owerri urged “all Christ’s faithful and people of goodwill” to disregard reports that kidnappers had killed Bishop Chicwe. “This information is unconfirmed, misleading and does not come from the Catholic Archdiocese of Owerri,” he added.

Bishop Chikwe’s abduction is the latest in a series of kidnappings that have targeted clergy in Nigeria, but previous abductions have involved priests and seminarians, not bishops.

Earlier this month, the U.S. State Department listed Nigeria among the worst countries for religious freedom, describing the West African nation as a “country of particular concern (CPC).” This is a formal designation reserved for nations where the worst violations of religious freedom are taking place, the other countries being China, North Korea, and Saudi Arabia.


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