WASHINGTON – “Our faith calls us to pray, work, and advocate for protections that allow all laborers to thrive,” said Archbishop Borys Gudziak and Bishop Mark J. Seitz in a joint reflection for Labor Day (Sept. 2). The bishop chairmen called for a more just economy that honors the human dignity of all who labor, inclusive of those who have newly arrived in the country, as well as those whose families have been here for generations. The bishops also addressed affronts to the dignity of children, who have been identified by some as supplemental sources of labor amid widespread worker shortages.
“The Church offers a vision for the future that does not require our society to choose between a thriving economy, economic justice, dignified conditions for all workers, and safeguarding the most vulnerable among us,” the bishops state, calling attention to the plight of those who work in industries without protections due to their immigration status.
Archbishop Gudziak of the Ukrainian Catholic Archeparchy of Philadelphia is chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ (USCCB) Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development, and Bishop Seitz of El Paso is chairman of the USCCB’s Committee on Migration.
The full Labor Day statement is available here (Spanish).
Left to right: Tom Jones along with Grand Knight Bill Pendziwiatr, Maryann Lawhon, The VOICE of JOHN CEO, and Ed Pane, Board Member
The Knights of Columbus Council 8613 Conyngham/ Drums generously donated toward the pro-life educational efforts of The VOICE of JOHN Ministry. Presenting the donation were Grand Knight, Bill Pendziwiatr, along with Knight Tom Jones. Tom Jones recently chaired a Baby Bottle Drive at Saint John Bosco and Sacred Heart Weston Churches. Together they presented the check to Maryann Lawhon, The VOICE of JOHN CEO and Ed Pane, LCSW who serves on the Board of Directors.
The Knights of Columbus stands firmly with us in defense of the Sanctity of Human Life. Tom Jones spoke of how “the killing of the child in the womb destroys not only that child, but generations of youth”.
The VOICE of JOHN is a pro-life ministry which has taken a lead in education throughout the State by developing a curriculum for grades K – 12. More recently Lawhon spoke alongside Geri Featherby as they presented at Marywood University and Misericordia University, speaking of the post abortive healing journey and offering rape intervention from a pro-life perspective.
The mission of the Ministry is to reach out with compassion to men and women facing a crisis pregnancy, offer healing for those suffering from post-abortive syndrome, to offer guidance to those facing end of life decisions, and to advocate for children with Down Syndrome or other genetic anomalies. Lawhon is now a national speaker, educating on issues of abortion, infanticide, euthanasia, and assisted suicide.
To arrange for a speaker at your church, school, or civic organization, contact The VOICE of JOHN Ministry at thevoiceofjohn1977@gmail.com or call our office at 570-788-JOHN (5646).
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Gate of Heaven Church, Dallas recently held its annual Summer Music Camp. The theme of this year’s camp was “On Pilgrimage with Jesus “.
During the week, campers participated in a mock pilgrimage to sites of Eucharistic Miracles in honor of the current Eucharistic Revival and in solidarity with the National Eucharistic Pilgrimage, which took place this past May-July.
Other camp activities included choir rehearsals, games, crafts, daily teachings, and snacks. The camp concluded with a youth liturgy in which music campers participated.
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Pictured are St. Martha’s parishioners and Festival volunteers. First row, from left: Josephine Shaul, Rev. Philbert Takyi-Nketiah. Second row: Leann Everett, Amanda Matysik, Samuel Matysik, Hannah Matysik, Abigail Matysik, Phoebe Clink, Madilyn Everett, Caroline Myers, Julia Myers, Allison Myers. Third row: Raphael Micca, Janet Romano, Rebecca Micca, Megan Howanitz, Ann Howanitz, Victoria Zultevicz, Krista Zultevicz, Sharon Telesky. Fourth row: Mary Dluzeski, Garrett Sutton, Joan Pauley, Mark Stransky, Dorothy Howanitz, Andrea Shaul, Ellen Shaul, Joann Ftorkowski, Barbara Simmons, Emma Zylo, Stanley Ftorkowski. Fifth row: John Dluzeski, Richard Matysik, Christopher Zultevicz, Bonnie Zultevicz, Gene Zultevicz, Donna Cragle, Ronald Narcavage, Joy White, Thomas White.
FAIRMOUNT SPRINGS – Holy Spirit Parish will hold its annual Festival and Chicken Dinner at St. Martha’s Church, 260 Bonnieville Road, Fairmount Springs, on Saturday, August 31 from 5:00 until 11:00 p.m. and Sunday, September 1 from 12:00 noon until 11:00 p.m. Mass will be offered at 4:00 p.m. on Saturday and at 10:00 a.m. on Sunday.
St. Martha’s Festival features Polish and American food, a café with cakes, pies, and coffee, as well as an ice cream stand, children’s games, a dime pitch, basket raffle, and a large indoor flea market. Barbecue chicken dinners will be available for outdoor dining or take out on both Saturday and Sunday. There will be live music nightly, with the Lance Thomas Band performing on Saturday and 404 Band on Sunday. The Festival will be held rain or shine under the big tent.
St. Martha’s Church, which is celebrating its centennial this year, has hosted Labor Day chicken dinners since the 1920s. In the early years of the church, local farmers donated chickens, which were dispatched, cleaned, and prepared by the women of the church. In 1980, the dinner expanded into the two day Festival that continues today.
For more information, visit www.facebook.com/saintmartha or call Florence Brozoski at 570-864-3780 or the church at 570-864-8588.
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(Shown are Committee Members, from Left to Right) Front Row: Dr. Chris Carr, Kurt Kushner, Tony DePaola. 2nd Row: Jim Biondo, Raphael Micca, Kevin Berli, Jack Walsh, John Brzycki, Joe Adcroft, Frank Socha, Father Brian VanFossen (Conference Chaplain). 3rd Row: Mike Kilmer (Conference Chairman), Dr. Lou Guarnieri, Paul Binner, Alex Piochocki, David Sutton, Joe Alinoski, Ralph Marino, Tim Pawlik, Deacon Marty Castaldi and John Leskosky. Also in attendance was Christopher Calore.
Members for ‘Be A Catholic Man’ recently gathered to plan for its ninth annual Catholic Men’s Conference. This year’s theme will be ‘Come Follow Me’. The event will be held at Holy Redeemer High School, 159 S. Pennsylvania Ave., Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Saturday, October 5th, 2024, from 8 am to 3 pm.
Nationally known speakers will be: Deacon Harold Burke-Sivers, John Edwards, Father Bill Casey, and concluding with Mass Offered by Bishop Joseph Bambera. These informative talks are conducive for fathers and sons, clergy, and men of every age.
Admission can be acquired by mailing $40.00 ($30.00 if mailed by Sept. 15th). Students are $15.00. Priests, Deacons and Seminarians are free.
Mail to: “Be A Catholic Man”, PO Box 669, Wyalusing, Pa. 18853. (Please write “Men’s Conference” on the check memo and include ones contact info, e-mail, and Parish.) Online registries: www.BeACatholicMan.com.
For more information, call 570-721-0872.
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His Excellency, Bishop Joseph C. Bambera, announces the following appointments, effective August 8, 2024:
Reverend Christopher Mahowald, FSSP, from Pastor, Saint Michael the Archangel Church, Scranton to ministry with the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter North American Province.
Reverend Anthony Dorsa, FSSP, from Parochial Vicar, Saint Michael the Archangel Church, Scranton, to Pastor, Saint Michael the Archangel Church, Scranton.
Reverend Matthew Kane, FSSP, from ministry with the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter North American Province, to, Parochial Vicar, Saint Michael the Archangel Church, Scranton.
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His Excellency, Bishop Joseph C. Bambera, announces the following appointment, effective July 5, 2024:
Reverend William A. Asinari, to Parochial Vicar, Saint Jude Parish, Mountain Top, and Our Lady Help of Christians Parish, Dorrance.
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Families need a Child Tax Credit that helps all kids thrive. This week, the Senate will vote on a tax package that includes a strengthened Child Tax Credit. Please urge your Senators to advance an improved Child Tax Credit that prioritizes the poorest children, so its benefits can be targeted to those who need them most. Every year, the Child Tax Credit (CTC) lifts millions of American families out of poverty and helps them live according to their dignity and with greater economic security. While the USCCB has long supported the CTC, the current credit must be improved because it excludes many of the poorest children.
Earlier this year, the House of Representatives acted with strong bipartisan support to pass a tax package that included a strengthened Child Tax Credit. Although this represented a compromise, the strengthened Child Tax Credit would take meaningful steps to support the well-being of families in need and is the best opportunity to improve the credit now, when it is urgently needed. Now is the time for the Senate to act. Please reach out to your Senators and encourage them to pass a strengthened Child Tax Credit. The benefits of the CTC help foster the welcoming of new life and the building of the family. The Senate must act to ensure these benefits are reaching the families who need them most.
As the U.S. bishops stated in their pastoral document, Putting Children And Families First, “Those with the greatest need require the greatest response. This is the ‘option for the poor’ in action. While every family needs support, poor families and families facing discrimination carry the greatest burdens and require the most help. With limited resources, we need to focus assistance on those with the greatest needs.” We will continue to advocate for a future improved Child Tax Credit that:
• benefits the lowest income families, • continues to include mixed-status families, • is available for the year before birth to help mothers in need welcome new life, • ensures the credit does not undermine the building of families, and • does not offset the cost of the credit by cutting programs that serve those most in need
Please urge your Senators to advance an improved Child Tax Credit to help support families and lift children out of poverty. We encourage you to add your own personal story about why strengthening the Child Tax Credit is important to you.
You can read the most recent USCCB letter advocating for an improved Child Tax Credit here.
You can read Archbishop Gudziak’s statement welcoming the bipartisan Child Tax Credit agreement here.
Our Lady of Fatima Blessed Grotto, Wilkes-Barre, was the location for ‘A Rosary for America’ which took place on the Grotto Grounds July 20, 2024.
Shown are caretakers and supporters of the Grotto.
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Pilgrims pray during a July 19, 2024, Encounter impact session at Lucas Oil Stadium during the National Eucharistic Congress in Indianapolis. (OSV News photo/Bob Roller)
Tony Meléndez sang to his guitar, telling the audience gathered at Lucas Oil Stadium July 19 for the National Eucharistic Congress’ Encounter session that Jesus can heal them. And he was living proof.
The 62-year-old guitarist, who was born without arms and with a clubbed foot, talked about his life and how God used for his glory the differences that had caused his mother to cry for her baby after his birth. The seven surgeries that were required to correct his foot physically optimized his ability to play the guitar with his feet, he said. Meléndez showed a video of playing in 1987 for Pope St. John Paul II, who kissed him and told him to share his gift with the world. He has since played in 45 countries.
The third day of the national congress, held July 17-21 in Indianapolis, had as its theme “Into Gethsemane” — and it saw wide encouragement for congress-goers to experience healing in the Eucharist and then to bring Jesus’ healing to others.
“Healed people heal people,” Mary Healy, a Scripture professor at Detroit’s Sacred Heart Major Seminary, said. She spoke about Jesus’ healings in Scripture and shared powerful examples of people living today who have been healed of serious medical conditions through prayer.
What Jesus did 2,000 years ago “he is still doing now, today, and he wants us to know it, and he wants us to experience it,” she said, adding, “the Lord wants his church to be healed people, set free, made whole, so that we can go out and be his instruments of healing.”
The Cultivate impact session for families focused on healing through the sacraments.
“Healing is an ongoing encounter with God’s love that brings us into wholeness and communion,” Bob Schuchts, author and founder of the Tallahassee, Florida-based John Paul II Healing Center.
“Think about the little girl that Jesus brought back to life,” he said. “Think how joyful her parents were and how their faith in God might have been restored.”
He encouraged children to “believe everything in the Bible, including the healings.”
“Every time we receive Jesus in the Eucharist, we can say, ‘Jesus, heal this part of me that’s dead inside; this part that’s grieving; heal this relationship I have,’ and he answers those prayers,” Schuchts said. “If he’s really truly present, is there anything he can’t do now that he did back then?”
It might happen as a miracle, or it might happen over time — such as for Schuchts and his siblings decades after their parents’ divorce.
“When you lose the love in families, hearts get broken,” he said, adding it was only after returning to the sacraments that he and his family experienced healing and peace.
Before a crowd of about 5,000, Mari Pablo of Evangelical Catholic reflected on the difficulties of living out the faith and helping others to do so in ministry at the Renewal impact session.
“Being Catholic doesn’t mean that you don’t suffer or have struggles,” she said. “We’re the religion that has crucifixes everywhere. But the story doesn’t end there. He conquered death and the grave. I know suffering, pain, death and healing are hard. But we’re created for so much more. We’re created for heaven.”
At the Awake youth impact session, more than 1,000 teenagers raised their voices in song to God and heard a message of healing for their hearts.
“My soul needs a friend, so I’ll run to the Father,” they sang along to the popular Matt Maher worship song.
“You are here turning lives around. You are here healing every heart. I worship you. I worship you.”
Catholic motivational speaker Jackie Francois Angel, in her presentation, told the youth that God “loves us so deeply, but unfortunately so many of us don’t know how good we are. So many of us don’t think we’re good enough.”
“God’s love is unconditional. He proved his love for us. And while we are all sinners, Christ died for us. He doesn’t stop loving us when we do bad things. He loves us in spite of that,” Angel said. “He loves all of us because he created us. We don’t earn God’s love, which also means we can’t lose God’s love. God’s love is unconditional.”
The clergy Abide impact session continued with a focus on forming men and women as Eucharistic missionaries and laying the groundwork for them to bear fruit as evangelizers in an increasingly secularized culture. Pastors were encouraged to build a culture in their parishes and dioceses in which the families in their flocks can be formed and equipped to live and share the Gospel in a new “apostolic age.”
Nearly 2,000 Latino Catholics joined the morning Mass in Spanish attended by Philadelphia Archbishop Nelson J. Pérez, and then heard the Archbishop Gustavo García-Siller of San Antonio preach on how the Eucharist, as Christ’s medicine, heals “our inability to love” and gives us hope.
“Through our full, conscious and active participation in the Eucharistic celebration, we are transformed in God’s love,” he said, and we are “empowered to practice the corporal and spiritual works of mercy, which are, as Pope Francis reminds us, the protocol on which we will be judged.”
Thousands of Catholics gathered in Lucas Oil Stadium at the early morning Mass in English heard Cardinal Wilton D. Gregory of Washington reflect on St. John’s words: “God is light and in him there is no darkness at all.”
He reflected that while theologians and scholars have focused on Christ’s presence in the Eucharist historically, it is often “the uncomplicated faith of ordinary people that serves as an assurance of the wonder of this gift.”
He emphasized that believing in Jesus’s real presence in the Eucharist “must also prompt our equally important active response to that presence in charity, in each of our lives offered in service and with care for others.”
Congress-goers that day had an opportunity to live out “the determined pursuit of social justice and the genuine compassionate outreach toward the poor and the neglected” Cardinal Gregory said comes from a belief in the Real Presence, by joining in packing several hundred thousand meals that afternoon for Indianapolis’ people suffering from hunger and homelessness. Many participants walking around the surrounding area of the congress could see people in poverty sleeping under highways or asking for help to get a meal.
In fact, the day saw a powerful testimony to the power of belief in the Real Presence and radical commitment to the Gospel at the Empower session from Martha Hennessy, the granddaughter of Servant of God Dorothy Day.
Hennessy, who remains active in the Catholic Worker movement at the Maryhouse Catholic Worker community in New York City, said that her grandmother’s devotion to the Eucharist stays with the movement “as we continue to practice corporal and spiritual works of mercy as Jesus gave of himself to us.”
Hennessy noted her grandmother’s practice upon receiving the Eucharist in holy Communion was to remain silent for 20 minutes after “to allow herself to absorb the presence of God within her before returning to her work.”
She shared comments from Day about her devotion to the Eucharist, such as this one: “Scripture, on the one hand, and the Eucharist, the Word made flesh, on the other, have in them that strength which no power on Earth can withstand.”
Hennessy also shared Day’s reflection that “our need to worship, to praise, to give thanksgiving makes us return to the Mass daily. The Mass begins our day. It is our food, drink, our delight, our refreshment, our courage, our life.”
After the morning sessions concluded, the expo hall in the Indiana Convention Center was packed at lunchtime for a performance of the three-piece Dominican friar band, The Hillbilly Thomists. People sang, danced and clapped along to the friars’ much-anticipated performance, which had been delayed a day due to travel difficulties.
Philip and Melissa Smaldino, from Yorktown, Indiana, who are expecting their seventh child in October, watched the band from the sidelines along with their six little ones.
“My wife and I came back to Christ in the Catholic Church about 10 years ago, and Eucharistic adoration and confession were really important for that,” Philip Smaldino told OSV News. The couple said they especially enjoyed the periods of Eucharistic adoration, both at Lucas Oil Stadium in the evenings and also the “absolutely packed” family holy hour at St. John the Evangelist Church, where the children got to bring Christ flowers.
“Our hope is we grow in our faith and devotion to Christ and the Eucharist through it all,” he said. “Melissa and I, but especially the kids, too.”
At the midmorning press conference at the nearby Crowne Plaza Hotel, reporters learned that the mass disruption in flights due to a software glitch was not expected to impact attendance. With tens of thousands already participating in the congress, what congress organizers did note, however, was that many participants with one-day passes were now changing their registration for the full five-days after experiencing one day of the congress.
“I’ve been a priest 35 years, 12 years a bishop. And other than a papal visit … I don’t remember an event like this,” Archbishop Perez said.
“You can sense the energy, right?” he added. “You can sense the energy of what’s happening here, which is touching hearts.”