View - Catholic Diocese of Brownsville
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View - Catholic Diocese of Brownsville
Volume 6, Issue 4 Serving More Than A Million Catholics in the Diocese of Brownsville Hundreds registering for YouthBLAST 2014 Lumen Christi Award The Valley Catholic Sisters honored for sharing the light of Christ Special to The Valley Catholic PEÑITAS — Sister Carolyn Kosub, Sister Emily Jocson and Sister Fatima Santiago of the Missionary Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary were awarded the national 2014 Lumen Christi Award, which in Latin means, “Light of Christ.” “We’re overwhelmed and amazed, because, of course, we never did this with the idea of getting publicity or personal recognition,” Sister Kosub said. “We just are here to be with the people, to serve them and to have our faith grow together because they were already people of great faith. We just helped bring them together as a community. “We’ve come a long way by the grace of God and there’s just no other way to explain it. It’s fantastic.” The three women first came to the tornado-stricken colonia of Pueblo de Palmas, in Peñitas, Texas, in 2003 at the request of thenBishop Raymundo J. Peña. Upon arrival, the sisters were shocked not only by the destruction they encountered, but also by the poverty. Moreover, they were deeply moved by the richness of faith they found there. They decided to make this colonia the focus of their missionary efforts and moved into the community to live in solidarity with the residents. Since that time, the sisters have worked tirelessly to listen to the residents, establish trust and meet their most basic needs. In 2004, they created Proyecto Desarrollo Humano (The Project for Human Development), an outreach center dedicated to health, social services, education and evangelization. Through the center, the sis» Please see Lumen Christi, p.15 OCTOBER 2014 Blessing of Altar Photo by Cesar Riojas/The Valley Catholic The Litany of the Saints was sung as part of the dedication rite for the new altar on Sept. 15 at the historic Immaculate Conception Cathedral in Brownsville. See page 8 for more photos. LIVING THE GOSPEL LIGHT OF CHRIST THOSE WHO SERVE WESLACO — YouthBLAST, a conference for high school youth, is set for Saturday, Oct. 25. Hundreds of high school students from across the Diocese of Brownsville are expected to unite in celebration of their faith at Mary Hoge Middle School, 302 S. International Blvd. in Weslaco. The event runs from 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. The cost is $25 and includes meals and a T-shirt. The theme of YouthBLAST 2014 is taken from the Beatitudes, “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” (Mt 5:3) In Rio de Janeiro, Pope Francis asked the young people “with all my heart” to read the Beatitudes again and to make them the action plan for their lives: “Look, read the Beatitudes: that will do you good!” International World Youth Day gatherings occur about every three or four years, but the Holy Father invites us to celebrate World Youth Day in our parishes and dioceses every year. “YouthBLAST coincides with the 30th Sunday of Ordinary Time (Oct. 26), which in the United States is the national celebration of World Youth Day,” said Angel Barrera, director of youth ministry for the diocese. This particular Sunday is intended to highlight the presence, energy, and diversity of youth and is an opportunity for the entire faith community to join in affirming the gifts of the young Catholic Church. “Youth ministry, especially at the parish level, is a real encounter of people working together to experience Christ and the Church in a very real, human, incarnational way,” Barrera said. “Youth ministry has developed into more than just a healthy alternative for kids — it is part of the history — but there is much more to that. “Some people see youth min» Please see YouthBLAST p.12 EN ESPAÑOL Artículos sobre la Fiesta de la Virgen del Rosario, un testimonio de conversion de un ex imán, y el matrimonio y la boda de 20 parejas “VERBUM MITTITUR SPIRANS AMOREM” (“The WORD is sent breathing love.”) Volunteers from near and far respond to help refugees Page 3 Meet the Sisters working in Peñitas Page 8 Father Oliver Angel, JCL Page 9 Paginas 11-13 DIOCESE 2 Triunfo de la Santa Cruz V iajo mucho. No quiero decir que es una cruz tener que hacerlo-- no llega a compararse con lo que cargan otros -- pero sí les confieso que no cuento el embarcar y desembarcar de aviones entre mis actividades favoritas. Sin embargo, forma parte del ritmo de mi vida como obispo. Conozco bien la rutina de seguridad. Quito mis zapatos, el saco y el cinturón; con prisa saco de la mochila la bolsita de plástico con los líquidos de tres onzas. Con toda precaución para no ser causa de demora en la línea de espera, me acerco al aparato con aspectos de burbuja enorme al estilo Star-Trek para que me tomen la radiografía. Siempre me dicen lo mismo: Espérese aquí a un lado. Sin excepción me cachean alrededor del pecho, buscando el objeto que provoca el curioso relucir debajo de la camisa negra. Es la Cruz que siempre traigo puesta, un crucifijo que he usado por más de treinta años, que antes usaba mi papá. Me he acostumbrado a sacarlo para que los de la seguridad lo vean, pero de todos modos me inspeccionan atentamente. Pronto me dejan pasar. Me pregunto ¿por qué no me la quito antes de pasar por la línea de seguridad? Sería más conveniente, y evitaría la demora de siempre. Pero, no, por instinto de gracia, o por ser un poco terco – ¿quién puede juzgar su propio caso? – no me la quito. Resisto quitarme la Cruz porque no es un sombrero, o un cinturón. De alguna manera, ser cristiano significa sentir que la Cruz forma parte esencial de nuestro propio ser. Y eso no se puede quitar para evitar algunos momentos extras en la línea de seguridad. ¿Qué significa amar la Cruz de Cristo? Significa corresponderle el amor ofrecido desde ahí. Implica una respuesta al Hijo de Dios quien acepto ser Hijo de María precisamente para poder asumir dentro de su divinidad lo que pertenece a nuestra humani- The Valley Catholic - The triumph of the Holy Cross I travel frequently. I will not say doing so is a cross- it does not compare to what others carry — but I do confess that boarding and disembarking from airplanes is not one of my favorite activities. Nevertheless, it’s part of my life as a bishop. I know airport security measures really well. I take off my shoes, and my belt; and from my backpack I quickly take out the plastic bag with the 3.4-ounce liquids. Careful not to cause a delay in the waiting line, I approach the enormous Star Trek style, bubble-like machine so TSA employees can run the scan. They always tell me the same thing: Wait here to the side. Without fail they pat down my chest area looking for the curious object detected under my black shirt. It is the Cross I always wear, a crucifix I have used for more than 30 years, which my father once wore. I am used to taking it out so that the security guards can see it, but they inspect me meticulously either way. Soon they let me pass. I ask myself, why don’t I take it off before passing the security line? It would be more convenient, and I would avoid the regular delays. But no, by instinct of grace, or because I am stubborn – who can judge his own case? – I don’t take it off. I resist taking off the Cross because it’s not like a hat or a belt. In some way, being Christian means feeling the cross as an essential part of our own being. And that cannot be taken off to avoid a few extra minutes in the security line. What does it mean to love Christ’s Cross? It means to reciprocate the love he offered from there. It implies a response to the Son of God who accepted to be the Son of Mary precisely to be able to assume within his divinity what belongs to our humanity. We cannot talk about what belongs to the human being without mentioning sin and death. It is the language of the faith to say it this way. But we must get to the point. On the Cross, Christ loves us until death, and he accepts being a victim to the power of sin. On the Cross dad. No podemos hablar de lo que pertenece al ser humano sin mencionar el pecado y la muerte. Bueno, es el lenguaje de la fe decirlo así. Pero debemos llegar al grano. En la Cruz, Cristo nos ama hasta la muerte, y acepta ser víctima del poder del pecado. En la Cruz se muestra como víctima triunfante precisamente porque siendo Dios el poder del pecado lo puede matar, pero no puede quitarle la vida (para decirlo de una manera paradójica). No 700 N. Virgen de San Juan Blvd., San Juan, TX 78589-3042 5FMFQIPOFt'BY Bishop Daniel E. Flores Publisher Brenda Nettles Riojas Editor Rose Ybarra The Valley Catholic email: [email protected] Follow us on facebook Catholic Diocese of Brownsville www.cdob.org Assistant Editor Subscription rate ZBG Studio/Graphic Design $15 per yeart$17 outside of Texas $25 out of U.S. Terry De Leon South Texas Circulation The Valley Catholic, Circulation Advertising Evana Zamora (956) 784-5055 Gustavo Morales (956) 266-1527 Gilbert Saenz (956) 451-5416 OCTOBER 2014 a publication of the Diocese of Brownsville, is published monthly Member of the Catholic Press Assocition MOST REVEREND DANIEL E. FLORES BISHOP OF BROWNSVILLE he shows himself as a triumphant victim precisely because by being God, the power of sin can kill him but cannot take away his life (to say it in a paradoxical way). We cannot love the Cross without confessing that sin and death are real, strong and beyond our strength to abolish or control. And further, loving the Cross implies confessing that God had to intervene to overcome the nefarious power of what ails us. Today’s world doesn’t talk much about sin and tries to evade the word – apparently to avoid leaving any sign of judgment or responsibility in secular-speak (a word I use to name the campaign to erase the traits of religious meaning from everyday language). At the moment, though, there is no reason to engage in discussions about judgment or responsibility. First things first. We call sin that nefarious power within human beings and within history that always results in the crucifixion of human beings. Be it the last illness and natural death, be it an unjust sentence, be it betrayal, or Cain’s fratricide, be it the poverty of the innocent, whatever it may be, the most obvious fact is that men suffer the Cross because human reality and history give testimony to this inexorable experience. If modern men and women who have no interest in religion do not want to talk about responsibility or judgment, and because of that they do not talk about sin, it’s okay, it’s a topic for another day. But they should be honest and admit that suffering has a cause, and it is not limited podemos amar la Cruz sin confesar que el pecado y la muerte son cosas reales, fuertes, y más allá de nuestras fuerzas para abolir o controlar. Y además, amar la Cruz implica confesar que Dios tuvo que intervenir para superar el poder nefasto de lo que nos aflige. El mundo de hoy no habla mucho del pecado, y busca como evitar la palabra—supuestamente para evitar rasgos de juicio o de responsabilidad en el modo de habla-secular (palabra que he inventado para nombrar la campaña de borrar seña de los significados religiosos en el idioma común). Pero por el momento, no hay para que entrar en discusiones de juicio o responsabilidad antes de tiempo. Lo primero, primero. Nosotros llamamos pecado a ese poder nefario dentro del ser humano y dentro de la historia que siempre resulta en crucificar al hombre. Sea la enfermedad última y la muerte natural, sea condena injusta, sea la traición, o el fratricidio de Caín, sea la pobreza de los inocentes, sea lo que sea, lo más obvio es que el hombre sufre la cruz porque la realidad humana y su historia dan testimonio de esta experiencia inexorable. Si los modernos sin interés en la to natural causes such as illnesses or earthquakes. Human beings themselves have been responsible for actions afflicting other human beings. These actions of hate and vengeance, the lies invented to justify the rejection of the unwanted, the savage appetite to maintain control and power, the game that betrays the vulnerable - all this shows that the world has walked a crooked and mistaken historic path since before books were written to record it. I repeat the question: What does it mean to love Christ’s Cross? We will experience the Cross with or without Christ Jesus. In other words the Cross is the sign of our own most profound wound. By embracing the Cross with Christ, we love the God of love that offers us an exit from the vicious cycle of sin, suffering and death. In Jesus Christ, God accepted being crucified with the rest, that is, with all of us. They crucified him, and he accepted being crucified. One has to do with the game of the world under the power of sin, the other has to do with our Lord’s freedom, surrendering voluntarily. We love the self-gift He gives, the love, which motivated God our Lord to identify in a definite way with our condition, giving us proof that love triumphs over sin. To believe in the Cross means to believe that in the end the love of God present in us defeats hate, and that life defeats death. On the Cross, God’s justice shows itself as a sign of mercy offered to us. In the larger scheme of things, what one does in the security line at airports, taking off the Cross or leaving it on, doesn’t reach astounding heights. But what does touch upon our salvation is our attitude in front of Christ’s Cross. The Cross is the center of a Catholic’s life; to say I am Christian is equivalent to saying I believe in the power of Christ’s Cross. If by God’s grace you and I reach eternal salvation, without a doubt it will be because we have persevered in the faith we have in the Lord’s Cross, and because we have reciprocated the victorious love he has offered us. religión no quieren hablar de responsabilidad o juicio, y por eso no hablan de pecados, está bien, es tema para otro día. Pero que tengan la honestidad de admitir que el sufrimiento tiene causa, y no se limita a causas naturales como enfermedades y terremotos. El mismo ser humano ha sido el que ha sobreabundado en obras afligiendo a otros seres humanos. Estas obras de odio y venganza, las mentiras inventadas para justificar el rechazo de los indeseables, el apetito voraz para mantener el control y poder, el juego que traiciona a los vulnerables, — todo esto muestra que el mundo ha caminado un camino histórico chueco y equivocado desde antes que existiesen los libros para catalogarlo. Repito la pregunta: ¿Qué significa amar la Cruz de Cristo? Nosotros viviremos la Cruz con Cristo o sin Él. Es decir que la Cruz es símbolo de nuestra más profunda herida. Pues, abrazando la Cruz con Él, amamos el Dios de amor que nos ofrece salida del ciclo interminable de pecado, sufrimiento y muerte. En Cristo Jesús, Dios aceptó ser crucificado con los demás, o sea, con todos nosotros. Lo crucificaron, y aceptó ser crucificado. Uno tiene que ver con el juego del mundo bajo el poder del pecado, el otro tiene que ver con la libertad del Señor, voluntariamente entregándose. Amamos la entrega, el amor, que motivó al Señor Dios identificarse de una manera definitiva con nuestra condición, dándonos prueba que el amor triunfa sobre el pecado. Creer en la Cruz significa creer que al fin y al cabo, el amor de Dios presente en el hombre vence sobre el odio, y la vida sobre la muerte. En la Cruz, la justicia de Dios se muestra como misericordia ofrecida hacia nosotros. En la gran esquema de las cosas, lo que hace uno en la línea de seguridad de los aeropuertos, quitándose la cruz, o dejándola puesta, no llega a alturas asombrosas. Pero lo que sí toca a la salvación es nuestra actitud delante de la Cruz de Cristo. La Cruz es el centro de la vida de un católico; decir que soy cristiano equivale decir que creo en el poder de la Cruz de Cristo. Si por la gracia de Dios llegamos usted y yo a la salvación eterna, sin duda será porque hemos perseverado en la fe que tenemos en la Cruz del Señor, y en corresponderle el amor victorioso que Él nos ha ofrecido. Bishop Flores’ Schedule October 2014 Oct. 1 10 a.m. Pharr Children’s Mass at Oratory School Oct. 2 8 a.m. McAllen Children’s Mass at Our Lady of Sorrows Church Oct. 19 5 p.m. Weslaco Misa para Movimiento de Cursillos de Cristiandad Oct. 23 6:30 p.m. McAllen White Mass at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Parish Oct. 25 4 p.m. Weslaco Mass for 2014 Youth BLAST Oct. 25 7 p.m. McAllen Mass at Sacred Heart Church Oct. 25 8 p.m. McAllen Bread, Wine & Cheese Social at Sacred Heart Church Oct. 26 6 p.m. Edinburg Mass at St. Joseph Church Oct. 30 6 p.m. Brownsville Red Mass OCTOBER 2014 DIOCESE - The Valley Catholic New church for Holy Rosary Parish Faithful save for five years to build sanctuary The Valley Catholic MISSION — As a parishioner walked in to the new Our Lady of the Holy Rosary Church in Mission for Mass, he gasped and said, “Oh, my God!” “That is the kind of reaction we are getting,” said Father Oliver Angel, JCL, who has been pastor of the church for seven years. Father Angel himself had to adjust to the size of the new 11,741 square-foot sanctuary, which is located at 923 Matamoros St. “It is so vast compared to the old church,” he said. “The first few Masses were an emotional experience for me and the parishioners. We worked for this for a long time.” Bishop Daniel E. Flores blessed and dedicated the new church on Aug. 29. Bishop Emeritus Raymundo J. Pena and Bishop James A. Tamayo of the Diocese of Laredo were also in attendance at the three-hour service. Designed by Milnet Architectural Services in McAllen, the new church seats more than 700. “The architectural style of the church is modern with an Italian Late Renaissance façade with the vocabulary found in the Palazzo del Te in Mantua, Italy designed by the architect Giulio Romano,” said architect Rudy Molina of Milnet Architecture Services. “The three niches framed at the entrances by the columns are symbolic of the Holy Trinity with the emphasis on the center window, which features a dove in stained glass.” Blue accents were used throughout the church in honor of Our Blessed Mother. The aerial » Please see Holy Rosary, p.13 3 Red Mass committee honors two Brownsville natives The Valley Catholic The Valley Catholic The architectural style of the new Our Lady of the Holy Rosary Church is modern with an Italian Late Renaissance façade. The altar and baptismal font are monolithic – formed out of one single piece of stone – a tradition that dates back to classical Roman and Judaic times. The 11,741 square-foot sanctuary seats 724. BROWNSVILLE — The 21st Annual Red Mass celebration is set for Thursday, Oct. 30 at three historic Brownsville locations. The intentions of the Red Mass are for all protectors and administrators of the law, including lawyers, judges, government officials and their support staffs. The festivities will begin with a procession at 5:30 p.m. from the Dancy Building, 1100 E. Monroe St., to the Immaculate Conception Cathedral, 1218 E. Jefferson St., where Bishop Daniel E. Flores will celebrate Mass at 6 p.m. Immediately following the Mass, a banquet will be held at Brownsville Market Square, 1150 Market Square St. Texas Supreme Court Justice Eva Guzman, the first Latina on the court, will deliver the keynote address. Two Brownsville natives who have expressed Christ’s love through dedicated service to others will be honored at the banquet: Sister Norma Pimentel of the Missionaries of Jesus and executive director of Catholic Charites of the Rio Grande Valley and Jesuit Father T.J. Martinez, founder of Cristo Rey High School in southeast Houston, which provides a tuitionfree Catholic education to children whose families are living at or below the federal poverty level. » Please see Red Mass, p.16 Responding to the call “My neighbor is in trouble that is why we are here. The true reason is they need us.” “God called my daughter and me to volunteer… We don’t realize how much we are serving God, but seeing their smiling faces is enough.” - Herminia Forshage, 54, St. Joseph Parish, Edinburg - Sonia Ann Briones, 57, Harvey Drive Church of Christ, McAllen “There are families here, children here and we don’t even know what they have been through. We simply serve them. I have the time, what better way to use it?” - Rachel, 85, First Presbyterian Church, Mission “They need the help… This is something I can do and I enjoy it. It’s nice to come help and talk with the patients.” “We said to God, ‘Use us. We are doing it for you’… God called us to love, to step out and speak louder.” - Sylvia Cardenas, 78, Holy Spirit Parish, McAllen - Altland Family, 44, 42, 12, 10, Christ American Baptist Church, Pennsylvania “I feel it is very important to witness to them and to welcome them with compassion and love as they journey into something new in the United States - Brother Andre Lemay, OFM, 66, Holy Family Parish/Sacred Heart Parish, Edinburg/McAllen Living the joy of the Gospel “I fell in love with the stories of the people. I feel like I need to help them. Maybe give them what they need.” - Carmen Garza, 46, Our Lady of Sorrows Parish, McAllen Meet some of the volunteers who help refugees from Central America at the respite center at Sacred Heart Church in McAllen. The center opened June 10 and hundreds of volunteers have served more than 7,500 people. To volunteer call (956) 292-5852. DIOCESE »Women speak for themselves en la Frontera 4 The Valley Catholic - OCTOBER 2014 The feminine Church, Mary our guide H ail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with you; blessed are you among women...” Bead after bead we meditate on the life of Jesus Christ and venerate his Holy Mother when we pray the Rosary. Bead after bead, we are reminded that God entrusted salvation in the hands of a woman. For a Church too often criticized by some who claim women are excluded from an institution led by a hierarchy of men, the Virgin Mary stands as a witness to the value placed on women. In October, the month of the Rosary, we offer roses to a woman who has been elevated to a place of honor in the Church. We also celebrate the feast day of Mary, Queen of the Holy Rosary on Oct. 7. A devotion promoted by popes and saints and practiced for centuries, the Rosary honors and contemplates Our Blessed Mother, Mary. With each Ave Maria we invite her to pray for us as she guides us to her son and with each decade we meditate on the mysteries of salvation. Pope Francis, who entrusted the world to Mary during a Marian celebration during the Year of Faith, reminds us, “When the Church looks for Jesus, she always knocks at his mother’s door and asks, ‘Show us Jesus.’ It is from Mary that the Church learns true discipleship.” It is from Mary and her son who we as women draw strength and inspiration to share our charisms. Pope Francis, has spoken often about women in the Church. He has said that without women, the Church grows barren. “A Church without women would be like the apostolic college without Mary. The Madonna is more important than the apostles, and the church herself is feminine, the spouse of Christ and a mother.” Brenda Nettles Riojas Editor, The Valley Catholic “The Church is not ‘il Chiesa’ (‘the Church, masculine); it is ‘la Chiesa’ (feminine),” he said. Pope Francis said more exploration is needed in developing a theology of women in the Church. “I believe that we have much more to do in making explicit this role and charism of women. We can’t imagine a Church without women, but women active in the Church, with the distinctive role that they play.” “The role of women in the Church must not be limited to being mothers, workers, a limited role… No! It is something else!” As we continue to explore the role of women, the month of October also gives witness to several women who have influenced the Church, among them two Doctors of the Church, St. Therese of Lisieux, whose feast day we celebrate Oct. 1, and St. Teresa of Avila, who we honor on Oct. 15. Also, in this month’s edition of The Valley Catholic, we feature three special women honored nationally by Catholic Extension with the 2014 Lumen Christi Award, which in Latin means, “Light of Christ.” Sister Carolyn Kosub, Sister Emily Jocson and Sister Fatima Santiago of the Missionary Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary came to the Rio Grande Valley 11 years ago and made the colonia of Pueblo de Palmas, in Peñitas their home and the focus of their work. Through their tireless efforts they have done amazing work and empowered a community. (See page one and page eight.) When I started working for the Diocese of Brownsville 16and-a-half years ago, some of my friends were surprised. They were concerned my talents might be undervalued and that I would not have a voice in the Church. I admit there was an adjustment, but not the way you might think. The adjustment took the form of learning to embrace my work as a ministry, and more importantly learning to listen to God’s voice and not my own. I have also come to value working alongside men of intellect who respect the gifts and opinions women offer. I will not deny that, just as in the secular sphere, instances exist where some men do not esteem a woman’s viewpoint. But I have come to appreciate that each person, male and female, have a role in the work of the Church. Men and women are different, but each created with equal dignity. They complement each other, called to serve, to labor together in the vineyard. I work with many talented and educated women whose gifts bear much fruit in the Church, women who hold leadership positions in key ministries. I have also met countless others who contribute to the life of their local parishes. These women are an inspiration, and mentors through their example of self-giving love and their commitment to living the Gospel values. The feminine presence in the Church is evident as we take note of all the women active in different roles. Each has a distinct gift to offer. St. Therese of Lisieux reminds us that just as there are different flowers, we are each unique. This month of the Rosary, I trust Our Blessed Mother will continue to draw us to her son and to inspire our work in building up the Kingdom of God alongside our brothers. »Family Life Through the eyes of love G od sees us: who we are; how we think; what we do, through eyes of love. As the divine parent, He knows us intimately. The lyrics to the song by Dan Schutte “Yahweh, I know you are near,” state: “Lord, you have searched my heart, and you know when I sit and when I stand. Your hand is upon me protecting me from death, keeping me from harm. You know my heart and its ways, you who formed me before I was born in the secret of darkness before I saw the sun in my mother’s womb.” As human parents, we see our children and/or grandchildren through eyes of love. We know that they, like us are imperfect human beings and that although we are made “in the image and likeness of God” (Genesis 1:26 ) we each have our strengths and our limitations which are usually the two sides of the same coin: the blessing and the curse. As a child, I recall my mother, Carmen Colegio Reyna delighting in what my siblings and I would do and say. I believe she saw us through “eyes of love” and intuitively understood that each of the five of us were unique in our gifts and talents and in how we saw the world and respected our individuality. From my perspective, she parented us accordingly. I recall a Lydia Pesina Director, Family Life Office lesson I learned from her when I was in first grade which was my first school experience since I did not attend Kindergarten. My classroom teacher Mrs. Reed had requested “goodies” from each student for a Christmas party and I was assigned “cookies”. At the grocery store I insisted I wanted to take a small box of Animal Crackers when my mother was buying a regular package of cookies explaining that the cookies were for sharing and not just for me. Because I stubbornly insisted, she let me buy and take the small box of Animal Crackers. When I saw what the other students had taken to share I realized what my mother meant. I am 60 years old and can still remember the smirk on the teacher and assistant teacher’s faces. Lesson learned! My husband Mauri and I were childless for eleven years and then adopted our daughter as an infant. Being an only and much awaited child, I know I have always seen her through eyes of love. Growing up she was quite precocious and I learned how important it was to read as much as I could on parenting to find ideas on how to best parent and then place decisions in prayer for the Lord to guide us. Parenting is not a science with predictable results but it is one of the most important things I believe I will do in my life. There is a philosopher that states that a prophet is not called to success but to fidelity and I would say that is true of parenting: a parent is not called to be successful but rather to be faithful in what and how we teach, nurture and guide with eyes of love and the rest is up to them. As a grandmother, it is a joy to see my daughter parent her 18-month-old son, Elian. It is a joy to watch her delight in him as we have delighted in her all her life and as I see my mother at 90 years of age continue to delight in all of us. My mother still tells us stories of what she remembers us doing as children and also what she remembers about her grandchildren and great grandchildren (and she just became a great-great grandmother recently). Seeing others with eyes of love does not mean that we don’t see the faults and shortcomings but rather that we strive to see the potential that God has given each us in our own unique journey of life. I wonder if God tells stories of how he sees each of us through eyes of love! The Valley Catholic Father Amador Garza, rector of the Basilica of Our Lady of San Juan del ValleNational Shrine, offers the Blessing of the Animals every year. Blessing of the Animals The Valley Catholic Several churches in the Diocese of Brownsville will have the Blessing of the Animals in honor of St. Francis of Assisi, patron of animals and the environment on or around Oct. 4. The faithful bring their dogs, cats, fish, birds and other animals to the church grounds for prayers, poetry and a special blessing. All animals are invited but should be properly restrained. For a complete schedule, please visit the Diocese of Brownsville’s web site www.cdob.org Blessing of the Animals Prayer “Blessed are you, Lord God, maker of all living creatures. You called forth fish in the sea, birds in the air and animals on the land. You inspired St. Francis to call all of them his brothers and sisters. We ask you to bless this pet. By the power of your love, enable it to live according to your plan. May we always praise you for all your beauty in creation. Blessed are you, Lord our God, in all your creatures! Amen.” »Birthday & Anniversary Wishes The list of birthdays and ordination anniversaries is provided so that parishioners may remember the priests, deacons and religious in their prayers and send them a note or a card. » 2 2 4 8 10 11 13 13 14 16 16 18 31 October Birthdays Rev. Marco A. Reynoso Rev. Tony O’Conner, SM Rev. Francisco Acosta Rev. Robert DeLong, MSF Rev. Cesar U. Partida Rev. Paul Roman, FSSP Rev. Joel Grissom, SM Rev. Eddie Villa Rev. Franciscus Eka Yuantoro Rev. Edouard Atangana Rev. Msgr. Heberto Diaz Rev. Jean Olivier Sambu Rev. Tomas Mateos 10 Brother Moises Lopez, MSC 11 Sister Jane F.Ambrose, SHSp 14 Sister Elizabeth Iruka,DMMM 17 Sister Gayle Hurban, SSND 5 Deacon Jesus P. Galvan 5 Deacon Sergio Garcia 6 Deacon Bruno Cedillo 6 Deacon Francisco R. Flores 13 Deacon Eduardo Ovalle 14 Deacon Ignacio R. Gonzalez 15 Deacon Eduardo Reyna 17 Deacon Guillermo Castañeda Jr. 20 Deacon David Espinoza 22 Deacon Oscar Garcia 23 Deacon Alvin H. Gerbermann » Anniversaries 17 Rev. Luis Javier Garcia, JCL November » Birthdays 5 Rev. Mario Castro 9 Rev. Eduardo Gomez 10 Rev. Raju Antonisamy, OMI 16 Rev. Ruben Delgado 17 Rev. Jose J Ortiz, CO 20 Rev. Lawrence Klein 22 Rev. Luis Fernando Sanchez 23 Msgr. Agostinho Pacheco 28 Rev. Esteban Hernandez 7 Deacon Genaro Ibarra 10 Deacon Catarino Villanueva 11 Deacon Israel Sagredo 12 Deacon Juan F. Gonzalez 14 Deacon Inocencio Diaz 15 Deacon Alberto X. Chapa 20 Deacon Jesus Reyes 20 Deacon Benito Saenz 24 Deacon Juan Barbosa 28 Deacon Heriberto Solis 29 Deacon Francisco Garza 30 Deacon Graciano Rodriguez 5 Sister Colette Kraus, SSND 13 Sister Leticia Benavides, MJ 13 Sister Nancy Boushey, OSB » Anniversaries 27 Rev. Jose Rene Angel, JCL 28 Rev. Samuel Arispe 4 Deacon George Terrazas 11 Deacon Jose Luis Mendoza 30 Deacon Reynaldo Q. Merino OCTOBER 2014 DIOCESE - The Valley Catholic »Sunday Readings The Word of God in the Life and Mission of the Church OCTOBER 5 ( Twenty-seventh Sunday in Ordinary Time) Reading1 IS 5:1-7 Responsorial Psalm PS 80:9, 12, 13-14, 15-16, 19-20 Reading 2 PHIL 4:6-9 Gospel MT 21:33-43 OCTOBER 12 (Twenty-eighth Sunday in Ordinary Time) Reading 1 IS 25:6-10A Responsorial Psalm PS 23:1-3A, 3B-4, 5, 6 Reading 2 PHIL 4:12-14, 19-20 Gospel MT 22:1-14 OCTOBER 19 (Twenty-ninth Sunday in Ordinary Time) Reading 1 IS 45:1, 4-6 Responsorial Psalm PS 96:1, 3, 4-5, 7-8, 9-10 Reading 2 1 THES 1:1-5B Gospel MT 22:15-21 OCTOBER 26 (Thirtieth Sunday in Ordinary Time) »Making Sense of Bioethics The good, bad in end of life planning P lanning for end of life situations is important. We should put in place an advance directive before our health takes a serious turn for the worse and we are no longer able to indicate our own wishes or make our own decisions. Advance directives can be of two types: living wills and health care agents. Bringing about a pregnancy by intThe best approach is to choose a health care agent (a.k.a. a “proxy” or a “durable power of attorney for health care”). Our agent then makes decisions on our behalf when we become incapacitated. We should designate in writing who our health care proxy will be. The National Catholic Bioethics Center (http://www.ncbcenter.org) and many individual state Catholic Conferences offer helpful forms that can be used to designate our proxy. Copies of our completed health care proxy designation forms should be shared with our proxy, our doctors, nurse practitioners, hospice personnel, family members and other relevant parties. In addition to choosing a health care proxy, some individuals may also decide to write up a living will in which they state their wishes regarding end of life care. Living wills raise concerns, however, because these documents attempt to describe our wishes about various medical situations before those situations actually arise, and may end up limiting choices in unreasonable ways. Given the breathtaking pace of medical advances, a person’s decisions today about what care to receive or refuse may not make sense at a later timepoint. In the final analysis, it Reading 1 EX 22:20-26 Responsorial Psalm PS 18:2-3, 3-4, 47, 51 Reading 2 1 THES 1:5C-10 Gospel MT 22:34-40 The word of the Lord abides for ever. This word is the Gospel which was preached to you” (1 Pet 1:25; cf. Is 40:8). With this assertion from the First Letter of Saint Peter, which takes up the words of the Prophet Isaiah, we find ourselves before the mystery of God, who has made himself known through the gift of his word. This word, which abides for ever, entered into time. God spoke his eternal Word humanly; his Word “became flesh” (Jn 1:14). This is the good news. This is the proclamation which has come down the centuries to us today. Matachines Festival The Valley Catholic St. Francis Cabrini Church in Pharr is hosting its second annual Matachines Festival on Saturday, Nov. 15. A procession featuring dancers from across the diocese will begin at 2 p.m. at Junior’s Supermarket, located at 6501 S. Cage Blvd. in Pharr and end at the parish. For more information, call (956) 787-3554. 5 Father Tadeusz Pacholczyk Priest of the Diocese of Fall River is impossible and unrealistic to try to cover every medical situation in a living will, and it is preferable to have a proxy, a person we trust, who can interact with the hospital and the health care team, weigh options in real time, and make appropriate decisions for us as we need it. A new type of living will known as a “POLST” form — a tool for advance planning — also raises concerns. The POLST form (which stands for Physician Orders for Life Sustaining Treatment) is a document that establishes actionable medical orders for a patient’s healthcare. The form is typically filled out with the help of trained “facilitators” — usually not physicians — who ask questions about patients’ health care wishes, and check boxes on the form that correspond to their answers. The facilitators receive training that can lead them to paint a rather biased picture of treatment options for patients, emphasizing potential negative side effects while sidestepping potential benefits or positive outcomes. POLST forms thus raise several significant moral concerns: 1. The approach encouraged by the use of POLST forms may end up skewed toward options of non-treatment and may encourage premature withdrawal of treat- ments from patients who can still benefit from them. 2. Filling out a POLST form may preclude a proxy from exercising his or her power to protect the rights of the patient, since the form sets in motion actual medical orders that a medical professional must follow. As a set of standing medical orders, the POLST approach is inflexible. Many POLST forms begin with language like this: “First follow these orders, then contact physician or health care provider.” Straightforwardly following orders created outside of a particular situation may be ill-advised, improper and even harmful to the patient. 3. In some states, the signature of the patient (or his or her proxy) is not required on the POLST. After the form has been filled out, it is typically forwarded to a physician (or in some states to a nurse practitioner or a physician’s assistant) who is expected to sign the form. Thus, in some states, a POLST form could conceivably be placed into a patient’s medical record without the patient’s knowledge or informed consent. In a recent article about POLST forms in the Journal of Palliative Medicine, approximately 95% of the POLST forms sampled from Wisconsin were not signed by patients or by their surrogates. Fortunately, in some other states like Louisiana, the patient’s signature or the signature of the proxy is mandatory for the form to go into effect. The implementation of a POLST form can thus be used to manipulate patients when they are sick and vulnerable, and can even » Please see Planning, p.13 Los dichos and the spiritual life G rowing up I often heard my grandmother and my mother speak with “dichos” (Spanish proverbs). Two have stayed with me. The first, “Dios tarda pero no olvida.” (God delays but he doesn’t forget.) In other words God listens to your prayer but may not answer right away. “Sometimes God may take years to answer your prayer,” my grandmother would say. The second, “Dios aprieta pero no ahorca.” (God squeezes but not enough to choke you.) That was her way of saying, “God will never give you what you cannot handle.” In other words with God’s help everything is possible and he will never leave you. Often I would hear my grandmother and mother say, “Si Dios quiere,” (If God wants) or “Primero Dios” (first God; let’s see what he says). Little did I know then as a child that their faith and their dichos were preparing me for a spiritual life. They were my first catechists and my role models in the faith. As Catholics everything that we do is to save our souls and to recover the grace that was once lost by our spiritual parents Adam and Eve. Ultimately we are all on our journey back home, to heaven. To make it to heaven we are in need of God’s grace. This is the spiritual journey that we must all embark upon and the only food that can sustain us on this journey is found at the altar at Mass every day. Jesus Deacon Luis Zuniga Director, Office for Pastoral Planning & San Juan Diego Ministry Institute. in the Eucharist. Jesus reminds us in the Gospel of John: “A thief comes only to steal and slaughter and destroy; I came so that they might have life and have it more abundantly.” (John 10:10). In the world that we are living today, I am convinced that the devil wants us to believe that God doesn’t love us. In Jesus we see how much God really loves us, all we have to do is look at the cross. “For God so loved the world that he gave* his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him might not perish but might have eternal life.” (John 3:16). Many people today say, “I’m spiritual but not religious.” This leads me to believe that there is a disconnection with the faith or a dissatisfaction with life. Which is why I suspect some people distance themselves from the Church. The sad part is that they haven’t taken the time to know their faith or appreciate the rich tradition of the faith. We cannot give what we don’t have and we cannot speak of that which we have not experienced. If we have never been in love then we don’t know what love is or if we have never experienced the death of a loved one then we don’t know what death is. The same can be said if we have never been forgiven then we don’t know the love of God. Thomas Merton (1915-1968), a Catholic writer, thinker and mystic was a Trappist monk at Our Lady of Gethsemani Abby in Kentucky who once said, “We are not at peace with others because we are not at peace with ourselves, and we are not at peace with ourselves because we are not at peace with God.” This is what Catholic spirituality is really about, to help us understand our relationship with God. Even in our struggles with everyday life God is there with us. Ultimately we need to find peace with ourselves and with others so that we can be at peace with God our loving creator. I remember 28 years ago when I was on retreat and heard these powerful words, “En la vida, nada es concidencia, todo es providencia, la mano de Dios esta en todo.” In English it means, “In life nothing is coincidence, everything is providence, the hand of God is in everything.” I pray we may live conscious that God loves us so that we may see the hand of God every day in our lives and see God’s providence in everything. Everything in our lives is meant to be a grace for us and we are called to be channels of God’s grace to everyone whose lives we touch. Courtesy photc )DFWRUÀFWLRQ"&KXUFKKLVWRULDQVDUH unclear if Pelagia was a real person. »Feast Day - Oct. 8 Spotlight on St. Pelagia Special to The Valley Catholic On Oct. 8, we have the celebration of a feast which could be for one of several women saints. It is not known if their stories, which come down to us from the Desert Fathers of Egypt of the 4th and 5th centuries, are factual or a fiction written to illustrate and teach virtue and Christian life. One is inclined to believe in Pelagia’s existence but whether her name was Pelagia, Thais, Margaret, Appolinaria or Theodora or some other name is not as important as the life of this young woman. Regardless of the real identity of this woman, her story shows us God’s love and acceptance of all peoples regardless of what their life may have been like prior to their conversion. God’s forgiveness is not reserved for only a few, but for all. Pelagia, according to the Bishop of Edessa, St. Nonnus, was an actress from Antioch. She was very beautiful, very wealthy and was known to live a sexually promiscuous life. According to the Desert Fathers traditions, St. Nonnus was speaking with a group of bishops outside the basilica of St. Julian, Martyr. While he was talking with these bishops, Pelagia, riding on a white horse and wearing her famous jewels and scantily dressed like the prostitutes of her day passed by. She was accompanied by many admirers and attendants. St. Nonnus went on to explain that he was pleased to see her because of God’s great lesson to him through her. Here was a woman who took a great deal of time and effort to make herself look beautiful and to practice her dancing so as to be pleasing to men. He went on to say, “But we are less zealous in the care of our dioceses and of our own souls.” The story goes on to tell of Pelagia being irresistibly drawn to the Church the following day and hearing St. Nonnus preach, she then repented her dissolute life and asked to be baptized. St. Nonnus agreed. Eight days later Pelagia is said to have given all her property away to the poor, dressed in men’s clothing and disappeared from the city. Later she is said to have made her way to Jerusalem and lived as a hermit in a cave, coming to be known as “the beardless monk.” 6 DIOCESE The Valley Catholic - OCTOBER 2014 Our Mother Church Restoration of new altar complete Photos by Cesar Riojas/The Valley Catholic Immaculate Conception Cathedral in Brownsville, ÀUVWGHGLFDWHGLQIRXU\HDUVDIWHU%OHVVHG3RSH 3LXV,;GHÀQHGWKHGRFWULQHRI2XU/DG\LPPDFXODWHO\ conceived, received a newly consecrated altar and renovated sanctuary Sept. 15 on the feast of Our Lady of Sorrows. The founder of the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate, St. Eugene de Mazenod, was present LQ5RPHZKHQWKHGRJPDZDVGHÀQHGDQGVKRUWO\ WKHUHDIWHUKHVHQWWKHÀUVW2EODWHSULHVWVWRWKH5LR Grande Valley. St. Eugene’s relics were deposited in the altar during the dedication ceremony led by Bishop Daniel E. Flores. $ÀUHLQGHVWUR\HGWKHFDWKHGUDO·VRULJLQDO)UHQFK Gothic sanctuary. Bishop Flores said, “The renovation completed in September sought to restore the architectural and artistic integrity of the sanctuary, while allowing for the adaptations needed for the Church’s liturgical practice.” To see photo album visit the Catholic Diocese of Brownsville Facebook page. OCTOBER 2014 DIOCESE - The Valley Catholic 7 »Hope in Action: A Spotlight on Youth Student-athlete strives for spiritual growth Special to The Valley Catholic Fernando Dávila has been a part of the Oratory School System since Pre-K 3. He is now a junior at the Oratory Athenaeum for University Preparation where he is an active member of both the football and soccer teams — the Ocelots. One of his most memorable experiences has been the year he spent in Ireland at the Dublin Oak Academy, a Catholic boarding school for boys whose mission is to form Catholic Leaders focusing on the complete human, spiritual and apostolic formation. Dávila states that aside from the breathtaking landscape of Ireland, what he appreciated most was daily Mass celebrated with his peers, many from Latin American countries. He is currently taking dual enrollment courses with South Texas College where his favorite subject is Math. Dávila considers math fun! Dávila’s various acts of charity include school fundraising for scholarships, Pennies for Pasta benefitting children with Leukemia, Shoes for Orphans and “Inteletón”, and a seasonal Mexican charity that benefits children’s hospitals. Name: Fernando Dávila School/ Grade: Oratory Athenaeum for University Preparation/ 11th grade How I Serve: I serve in the altar as an acolyte and play the guitar in the chorus at my school’s weekly masses. Talents/ Gifts: I enjoy playing soccer, American football and playing the guitar. Best Movie Ever: “Nacho Libre” Most listened to song on my iPod: “Blue Suede Shoes” by Elvis Presley I was really young when I first Courtesy photo Courtesy Fernando Dávila, a junior at Oratory Athenaeum in Pharr, balances academics, athletics and a strong faith life. heard the music of Elvis, his voice, his style, his originality, really struck a chord. TV show I never miss: “Prison Break” Book I’d read again and again: “The Alchemist” Future Plans: Finish High School and study at an excellent university. Since being raised by a family of ranchers, I’d really like to study Agriculture. It’s in our blood. Meaningful quote: “Ubi concordia, ibi Victoria.” (Where there is unity, there is the victory) - Publius Syrus. Who has made an influence in your life or who you admire and why? My parents have made a great influence in my life. They are always there for me and they make sure I get not always what I want, but surely what I need. Thanks to them, I am who I am today. — If you would like to nominate a student to be featured in “Hope in Action: A Spotlight on Youth,” please email Angel Barrera, director of Youth Ministry, at abarrera@cdob. org. Twins Daphne and Denise with their older sister, Maria. The girls need sponsors to continue their education in Mexico. Benefactors can sponsor a child for just $15 a month. Building a brighter future Sponsors needed to support education in Nuevo Progreso The Valley Catholic NUEVO PROGRESO, Mexico — “Please help me send my twin daughters to kindergarten this school year. I can’t do it without you. I need help. Thank you, Marina.” That is an excerpt from just one of the letters that Sister Maureen Crosby of the Sisters of St. Dorothy has received from parents in Nuevo Progreso, Mexico who need assistance to send their children to school. Sister Crosby enlists sponsors from the United States and Canada to help make the dream of an education a reality for hundreds of poor children in Nuevo Progreso and Estación Canelas. “The goal of my ministry is to see that the children get an education in order to apply for better work positions and help change their country for the better,” said Sister Crosby, who has worked in this ministry for more than 23 years. “Without an education, this cannot be done.” The students do not pay tuition to attend school but there are other obstacles to obtaining an education. They are charged for uniforms, registration fees, exams, lunches and even toilet paper and drinking water. Other students will not attend school due to a lack of personal hygiene products and undergarments. The ministry also provides those items for the students who need them. Several of the students who have received assistance from the program have gone on to attend university. The waiting list of students needing a sponsor is currently very long. Sister Crosby is asking families to please consider spon- soring a student. “I am looking and praying to receive more sponsors, generous people like yourselves,” Sister Crosby said. “If they are in need and show promise, we accept them.” Sponsors receive a photo of the student, grades and notes and may correspond with the student by mail. The students who receive assistance are monitored for grades and attendance. All the money goes directly for the child’s education. The program is a non-profit organization and is operated by volunteers. The fee is $180.00 annually and can be paid in monthly installments as low as $15.00 monthly. This will put one child through school for one academic year. For more information, call (956) 787-8571 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday or email Sister Crosby at mcrosby@ cdob.org Catholic school educators honored Special to The Valley Catholic Educators were honored for their milestone years of service to Catholic education in the Diocese of Brownsville at the annual Eucharistic Celebration/Diocesan Teacher Inservice held on Aug. 29 at Our Lady of Sorrows Church in McAllen. 5 YEARS St. Joseph Academy (Brownsville): Anabel Aldrete, David Bonnet, Rose Champion, Gus Zavaletta, Jr. Oratory Schools (Pharr): Jesus Barrientos, Martha Duran, Cecilia Garcia, Maribel Garcia, Patricio Garcia, Nalda Gonzalez, Ismelda Moroles, Cynthia Urbina, Catalina Faz St. Joseph School (Edinburg): Aimee Closner Incarnate Word Academy (Brownsville): Sonia I. Khamo Guadalupe Middle School (Brownsville): Dandy Pilon San Martin de Porres School (Weslaco): Susan Garcia, Natividad Ramirez Immaculate Conception School (Rio Grande City): Pamela Reyes, Mitchelle Rodriguez Our Lady of Guadalupe School (Mission): Sister Colleen Matarese, SSD, Ana Torres Our Lady of Sorrows School (McAllen): Jesus Lopez 10 YEARS St. Joseph Academy (Brownsville): Rene Lerma, Monica Leyendecker, Lupita Montoya, Christian Putegnat, Pamela Quantz Oratory Schools (Pharr): Elizabeth Shuttlesworth St. Joseph School (Edinburg): Estela Peralez Incarnate Word Academy (Brownsville): Reynaldo Garza, Margaret Mendoza, Sister Marilyn Springs, IWBS, Alicia Trevino San Martin de Porres School (Weslaco): Sheila Vemu Immaculate Conception School (Rio Grande City): Gilberto Martinez, Cresencio Rivas St. Mary School (Brownsville): Leticia Silva Our Lady of Sorrows School (McAllen): Yvonne Arizpe, Denia De Los Reyes, Frances Fabela, Martha Finn, Martha Jarvis, Sylvia Pedroza 15 YEARS Our Lady of Sorrows School (McAllen): Liz Camarena, Melissa Cuevas, Hugo De La Rosa, Noemi Peralez, Jessica Ramirez Juan Diego Academy (Mission): Robert J. Schmidt St. Joseph Academy (Brownsville): Christine Gloor Oratory Schools (Pharr): Gloria Irma Ceballos, Juliana Ruiz Aguilar 20 YEARS St. Luke School (Brownsville): Rosie Ruiz, Elma Wood Incarnate Word Academy (Brownsville): Jose Antonio Davila Oratory Schools (Pharr): Rev. Jose E. Losoya, C.O. Juan Diego Academy (Mission): Sister Marcella Ewers, D.C. St. Mary School (Brownsville): Blanca Chavez, Maricela Sanchez, Leonor Zamora Our Lady of Guadalupe School (Mission): Diana Olivarez 25 YEARS Incarnate Word Academy (Brownsville): Sister Irma Gonzalez, IWBS, Enedelia R. Varela Our Lady of Sorrows School (McAllen): Mary Gonzalez, Velma Gonzalez St. Mary School (Brownsville): Maria Dolores Ongaro 30 YEARS St. Joseph Academy (Brownsville): Brother Francis Garza, FMS Our Lady of Sorrows School (McAllen): Luis Abraham 60 YEARS St. Joseph Academy (Brownsville): Brother Paul Phillip, FMS 8 DIOCESE The Valley Catholic - OCTOBER 2014 Bringing hope to the colonias Three missionary Sisters who empowered a community Courtesy Photos Since 2004, the sisters have worked tirelessly to listen to the residents, establish trust and meet their most basic needs. They created Proyecto Desarrollo Humano (the Project for Human Development), an outreach center dedicated to health, social services, education DQGHYDQJHOL]DWLRQ,QWKH\EXLOW6W$QQH Church. To learn more about their work visit www.catholicextension.org or www.cdob.org. OCTOBER 2014 DIOCESE - The Valley Catholic Those Who Serve: 9 Father Oliver Angel, JCL Priest responds to a need in our diocese Judicial vicar gives insight on his call to study canon law By ROSE YBARRA The Valley Catholic MISSION — “As a seminarian, if you would have asked me to make a Top 10 list of what advanced degree I wanted to pursue, canon law would have been my 11th choice,” said Father Oliver Angel, who has served as pastor of Our Lady of the Holy Rosary Church in Mission for seven years. “I found canon law boring.” In discussions with thenBishop Raymundo J. Peña, however, he learned that the Diocese of Brownsville had an urgent need for canon lawyers. After much prayer and discernment, Father Angel answered that call. He enrolled in the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C. to study canon law. “We reviewed and discussed interesting case studies on the first day of class,” he said. “After that, I was singing a different tune. I was fascinated.” Today, Father Angel, 43, is the judicial vicar for both the Diocese of Brownsville and the Diocese of Laredo. “To my knowledge, he is the only judicial vicar serving in two dioceses in the United States,” said Father Jose Rene Angel, who is Father Oliver Angel’s older brother. He is also the pastor of Resurrection Church and a canon lawyer, serving as adjutant judicial vicar for the diocese. “Father Oliver was asked to join the faculty at Catholic University but declined so he could honor his commitment to the Diocese of Brownsville.” The bishop or archbishop of every diocese/archdiocese is obliged by canon law to appoint a judicial vicar. The judicial vicar oversees the tribunal or court for the local Church. The tribunal handles marriage cases (i.e., petitions for annulment) and other matters governed by canon law. “The greatest reward, especially with marriage cases, is helping people,” Father Oliver Angel said. “The annulment process helps them to heal their hurts and move on with their lives.” The third of five boys, Father Oliver Angel was born and raised in León in the Mexican state of Guanajuato in a spiritual and pious family that holds dear their faith and the right to worship openly and freely. His great-grandfather was killed in Mexico during the Cristero War (1926-1929) for being a member of the Knights of Columbus and his death has had a deep and lasting legacy on the The Valley Catholic Above, Father Oliver Angel accepts a lapel pin for attorneys from Bishop Daniel E. Flores at the 2013 Red Mass. Right, Father Oliver Angel extends his hand in prayer at the 2013 Chrism Mass. family. Father Oliver Angel said his religious upbringing and his older brother inspired him to become a priest. He entered a junior seminary at the age of 12. Father Oliver Angel was originally in formation for a religious community in Mexico but in the seminary, he felt called to the diocesan priesthood. Before he could arrange a meeting to discuss his change of heart with his archbishop in León, he and several other seminarians were invited by Bishop Peña to come and see the Diocese of Brownsville for a week. “I didn’t even know where Brownsville was,” Father Oliver Angel said. “I decided to go anyway, thinking, ‘I can always go and take a nice paid vacation for one week in the U.S. and see how it works and have fun.’ “Bottom line, I visited the Valley, I loved it and I stayed.” After living in metropolitan areas all his life, he welcomed the slower pace of South Texas. “I was kind of saturated with big city life,” Father Oliver Angel said. “I liked all the little towns in the Valley. All the communities were all very welcoming.” He was ordained to the priesthood by Bishop Peña at the Basilica of Our Lady of San Juan del Valle-National Shrine on May 26, 2001. In additional to his many years of service to the diocesan tribunal, Father Oliver Angel has also served in parish ministry at Resurrection Church in Alamo, St. Benedict Church in San Benito and San Martin de Porres Church in Weslaco. 10 IN THE NEWS The Valley Catholic - Judges: Deporting children can be a death sentence Catholic News Agency/EWTN WASHINGTON, D.C. — Many U.S. immigration cases are effectively life-or-death trials, and the Justice Department should not be fast-tracking deportation hearings for child migrants, said federal judges at a talk in Washington, D.C. “We deal with cases which are often in effect death penalty cases, situations where if the person is removed from the United States, they may be killed upon return to their country,” said Judge Dana Leigh Marks, president of the National Association of Immigration Judges. The U.S. Justice Department recently began moving child migrant cases to the front of the immigration court dockets to help address the surge in unaccompanied children crossing the border. Judge Marks criticized the policy, which speeds up deportation proceedings, saying that the cases need special attention and “more time.” Catholic bishops have already argued that child migrants face a dire situation if they are deported, and must have due process. More than 40 percent of immigrants at hearings in fiscal year 2013 did not have an attorney, said Judge Marks. This, combined with the Justice Department’s policy of fast-tracking the deportation hearings of child migrants, puts the children at a disadvantage. “Our domestic law and international law have long recognized that children are different. They are a vulnerable population who needs special protections,” Marks argued. “You need more time in order to gain the trust and confidence of a child who is in a scary situation when they come to court. They need to be re-united with family members and with responsible adults who can help them to locate counsel.” “This is not an amusement park where you can fast-pass removal proceedings,” said Judge Denise Noonan Slavin, executive vice president of the National Association of Immigration Judges. Judge Marks added that the fast-tracking policy puts “subtle pressures” on judges who are already overtaxed by their workload. “I can honestly say that I have, in the 27 years that I have been an immigration judge, never been told what the ultimate outcome should be in a case. However, there are subtle pressures when you know that you are supposed to do the case as quickly as possible,” she explained. The number of pending immigrant cases is at 375,000, “the highest it’s ever been,” Marks stated. The fast-tracking of child migrant cases also means that the children often have their deportation hearings before their parents, who have been in the country longer. “If the child is coming here to be with his parents who are already in the court’s docket,” Judge Slavin said, “it doesn’t make any sense to hear the child’s case first. It makes more sense to hear the parent’s case first rather than send them to the back of our line 15-18 months out while the child’s case is heard.” OCTOBER 2014 Paul Harring/CNS photo Pope Francis walks through the AustroHungarian cemetery for soldiers of World War I in Fogliano di Redipuglia, Italy, Sept. 13. The pope prayed for the fallen of all wars and also celebrated an outdoor Mass in front of the nearby Redipuglia war memorial, which honors the 100,000 Italian soldiers who died during World War I. . ‘War is madness’ Pope asks us to pray that hearts will be transformed By CAROL GLATZ Catholic News Service VATICAN CITY — When will people ever learn that war is madness and conflicts are only resolved by forgiveness, Pope Francis asked. The pope said it is believed that more than 8 million soldiers and 7 million civilians died during World War I — a four-year-long conflict that began 100 years ago. The number of so many lost lives “lets us see how much war is insanity,” Pope Francis said after praying the Angelus with those gathered in St. Peter’s Square Sept. 14, the feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross. “When will we learn this lesson?” he asked, telling people to look at the crucified Christ “to understand that hatred and evil are defeated with forgiveness and good, and to understand that responding with war only augments evil and death.” The pope’s remarks came the day after a morning visit to Italy’s largest war memorial —Redipuglia, a town in northeast Italy near the border with Slovenia. Giovanni Bergoglio, the pope’s Italian grandfather who later immigrated to Argentina, fought nearby during the Italian campaign against the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The memorial made of enormous stone steps leading to three bronze crosses pays homage to more than 100,000 Italian soldiers, while a nearby military cemetery is the final resting place for some 15,000 Austro-Hungarian soldiers — all of whom lost their lives in nearby battlefields. The pope laid a floral wreath at the cemetery, celebrated Mass at the memorial, and prayed for all victims of all wars. The gorgeous landscape used to be a place where men and women worked hard to raise their families, children played and the elderly daydreamed, he said in his homily. Instead of safeguarding God’s creation, especially his “most beautiful of all, the human being,” people have set about destroying it through war, he said. “Greed, intolerance, a lust for power, these are the reasons that incite decisions to go to war,” he said. Also, “behind the scenes, there are special interests, geopolitical plots, lust for money,” he said, as well as the powerful arms industry. But the most shocking aspect of so much bloodshed is the continued legacy of indifference, the pope said. Being indifferent began with Cain murdering his brother Abel and then rebuking God for asking where his now dead brother was, replying, “Am I my brother’s keeper?” Above the tombs of so many dead, Pope Francis said, “hovers the sneering motto of war” -- Cain’s complaint of “What do I care?” “All these people, here in eternal rest, they had plans, had dreams, but their lives were broken. Why? Because humanity said, ‘What do I care?’” Today the world is still up in arms with a kind of “World War III (waged) ‘in bits and pieces’ with criminal acts, massacres and destruction,” he said. “To be honest, the newspaper front page should have the headline: ‘What do I care?’” Those who plot terror, organizations fueling conflict, as well as arms manufacturers, all have ‘What do I care’ engraved in their hearts,” he said. Oratorian priest to be canonized Blessed Vaz posed as poor laborer to evangelize Sri Lanka By CAROL GLATZ Catholic News Service VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis accelerated the sainthood process of Blessed Joseph Vaz, an Indian missionary and Oratorian priest credited with reviving almost single-handedly the Catholic Church in Sri Lanka during severe persecution by Dutch colonial authorities in the 17th century. Pope Francis moved the sainthood process forward without formally recognizing a miracle needed for the canonization of Blessed Vaz, a 17th-century Oratorian missionary from Goa, India, known as the “apostle of Sri Lanka.” The dates for the canonizations of Blesseds Vaz was to be announced during a yet-unscheduled ordinary consistory. Courtesy photo An image of Blessed Joseph Vaz, an Oratorian priest who is expected to be canonized in 2015. St. John Paul II beatified Blessed Vaz during his first trip to Sri Lanka in January 1995. Pope Francis was scheduled to visit Sri Lanka, together with India, 20 years later, this January. “January 2015 marks 500 years of the birth of St Philip Neri, so the canonization of our brother will be a perfect start for this Jubilee year,” said Father Mario Avilés, procurator general of the Confederation of the Oratory of St. Philip Neri. Blessed Vaz, born in India in 1651, entered Sri Lanka in 1687 disguised as a poor laborer in order to minister to the underground church. At the time, the Dutch had taken control of Sri Lanka’s coastal areas from the Portuguese. Fearing the island’s Catholics might remain loyal to the Portuguese, the Dutch made Catholicism illegal, banished Catholic priests and confiscated Catholic churches and schools. Aided by lay leaders, Blessed Vaz often went barefoot, with a rosary round his neck, ministering to and organizing Catholics throughout the island where the church had had no priests for over three decades. He was the lone Catholic pastor of Sri Lanka until other priests joined him in 1697 at his request. Surviving two years in prison for being a suspected Portuguese spy, Blessed Vaz was then given permission to work as a missionary in the Sinhalese kingdom of Kandy until his death in 1711. OCTUBRE 2014 NOTICIAS EN ESPAÑOL 11 - The Valley Catholic Eric Sánchez/ The Valley Catholic ‘Me decidí a aceptar a Jesus’ &YJNÈOIPZFT predicador católico en la India ACI Prensa/EWTN Noticias ROMA — Mario Joseph era imán musulmán y tras convertirse al cristianismo afirma que Dios lo protegió de las amenazas de muerte y tortura por parte de su propia familia. El ex imán compartió su testimonio de conversión y posterior persecución al programa Changing Tracks, transmitido por la Fundación E.U.K Mamie dirigida por la comunidad religiosa Hogar de la Madre. Mario Joseph creció en la India en una familia musulmana. Inscrito a temprana edad en un colegio musulmán en Kerala, estudió filosofía y teología durante 10 años. Se convirtió en imán antes de los 18 años. Después de que una persona le preguntara quién era Jesús, Mario comenzó a investigar sobre el cristianismo. Estudiando el Corán, se dio cuenta de que el nombre de Jesús se menciona con mayor frecuencia que el nombre de Mahoma. Asimismo, María, conocida en árabe como Mariam, era la única mujer mencionada por su nombre en el Corán. En el Islam, María es reconocida como una virgen perpetua que fue concebida sin pecado. El Corán describe a Jesús como la “Palabra de Dios” y el “Espíritu de Dios”. Dice que Jesús sanó a los enfermos, devolvió la vida a los muertos y se subió vivo al cielo. No atribuye nada de eso al Profeta Mahoma. Cortesía Mario Joseph, el ex imán que se convirtió al cristianismo asegura que Jesús lo libró de morir a manos de su padre. Asimismo, Mario Joseph comenzó a ver a Dios como padre, algo que también enseña el cristianismo. “Cada vez que pienso que el creador del universo es mi papá, tengo una especie de alegría que no puedo expresar”, dijo en la entrevista. Con esta motivación, explicó, “me decidí a aceptar a Jesús”. Sin embargo, esta conversión provocó una violenta reacción de su familia. Cuando su padre lo encontró en una casa de retiro católica, lo golpeó gravemente hasta perder el conocimiento. Cuando despertó, se encontraba desnudo en una pequeña habitación de su casa. Sus brazos y piernas estaban atados y había pimiento picante en su boca y heridas. Mario Joseph dijo que su padre estaba obedeciendo la ley del Corán, que castiga a los que abandonan el Islam. Fue privado de comida y agua por varios días y su hermano lo obligó a beber orina como castigo. Después de 20 días su padre entró en la celda y lo amenazó con un cuchillo a menos que renunciara a Jesús. “Cuando supe que era mi último momento... pensé, ‘Jesús murió, pero regresó. Si yo creo en Jesús y muero, también recuperaré mi vida’”. En este momento se sintió lleno de energía, tiró de la mano de su padre y gritó el nombre de Jesús. Su padre se cayó y se cortó severamente con su propio cuchillo. Cuando los familiares llevaron a su padre al hospital olvidaron cerrar la habitación. El joven salió corriendo y cogió un taxi. El conductor era cristiano y le ayudó a conseguir comida y bebida. “Ese día, realmente entendí que mi Jesús está vivo, incluso ahora. Cuando lo llamé, él me salvó”. En la actualidad, Mario Joseph vive en una casa de retiro católica en la India, en donde realiza conferencias en diferentes idiomas. Tomó el nombre de “Mario”, versión masculina de María en italiano, y el de Joseph, por el esposo de María. Mario Joseph confesó que no esperaba estar vivo después de su conversión a los 18 años. Hay personas que aún buscan matarlo y sus padres celebraron una ceremonia fúnebre para significar que él era un paria. En una tumba marcaron como fecha de muerte la de su bautismo. A pesar de que no ha tenido contacto con los miembros de su familia, Mario reza por ellos. Incluso si nunca aceptan el cristianismo, explicó Mario, “Yo siempre digo ‘Jesús, llévalos al cielo’”. Una imagen de la Virgen del Rosario en la nueva Iglesia Nuestra Señora del Rosario en Mission. Cuenta la leyenda que la Virgen se apareció en 1208 a Santo Domingo de Guzmán en una capilla del monasterio de Prouilhe (Francia) con un rosario en las manos, le enseñó a rezarlo y le dijo que lo predicara entre los hombres; además, le ofreció diferentes promesas referentes al rosario. 'JFTUBEFMB7JSHFOEFM3PTBSJP ACI Prensa/EWTN Noticias Su fiesta fue instituida por el Papa san Pío V el 7 de Octubre, aniversario de la victoria obtenida por los cristianos en la Batalla naval de Lepanto (1571), atribuida a la Madre de Dios, invocada por la oración del rosario. La celebración de este día es una invitación para todos a meditar los misterios de Cristo, en compañía de la Virgen María, que estuvo asociada de un modo especialísimo a la encarnación, la pasión y la gloria de la resurrección del Hijo de Dios. Desde el principio de la Iglesia, los cristianos rezan los salmos como lo hacen los judíos. Más tarde, en muchos de los monasterios se rezan los 150 salmos cada día. Los laicos devotos no podían rezar tanto pero querían según sus posibilidades imitar a los monjes. Ya en el siglo IX había en Irlanda la costumbre de hacer nudos en un cordel para contar, en vez de los salmos, las Ave Marias. Los misioneros de Irlanda más tarde propagaron la costumbre en Europa y hubieron varios desarrollos con el tiempo. NOTICIAS EN ESPAÑOL 12 The Valley Catholic - » La Alegría de Vivir »Vida Familiar Deportacion inmediata de menores…No es solución! E l senador republicano de Texas, John Cornyn y el representante de cámara Henry Cuellar, un demócrata, han propuesto una enmienda o reforma a la ley que existe en cuanto a la deportación de menores de edad que se encuentran detenidos por las autoridades de en forzamiento y control de fronteras (ICE como corresponde a sus siglas en ingles) con lo cual se aceleraría el proceso de remoción de dichos infantes y jovencitos de nuestro país y de vuelta a su país de origen. El gran problema que tiene el sistema actual es la falta de suficientes jueces en las cortes migratorias para escuchar cada caso y decidir si el menor tiene alguna oportunidad de permanecer legalmente en nuestro país acogiéndose a las leyes de asilo, o siendo reclamado por un familiar directo que ya viva legalmente aquí. Los señores Cornyn y Cuellar proponen que en un plazo de 3 días una corte decida si un menor tiene elementos suficientes para presentar un caso o si debe regresarse a su país de origen inmediatamente. Es una propuesta interesante, pero difícil que se pueda llevar a cabo inmediatamente, sobre todo si hay un tremendo rezago, de años, en las cortes migratorias con los casos que ya tienen, pues hay escases de jueces ya que no hay partidas de gastos autorizadas para contratar más, además quienes serán los encargados de representar a esos menores, pues ciertamente si un juez decidirá algo en su caso tendría que escuchar argumentos y lo justo es que sean hechos por un abogado que sepa de leyes de inmigración y que tenga como prioridad lo mejor para ese menor y no lo rápido que puede ayudar a nuestro gobierno federal a deshacerse del problema. Otro gran punto a considerar es a quién serán entregados esos menores en custodia una vez que lleguen a su país de origen, cuando se detienen menores mexicanos se les turna a las autoridades de protección al menor de nuestro país vecino, es todo un sistema implementado para proteger al menor en situación de orfandad, o riesgo por violencia intrafamiliar, pero cuando los YouthBLAST, continued from pg. 1 istry as a good option instead of getting involved with gangs or doing drugs, but it’s not the mission of youth ministry today. We’re not babysitting, we’re providing an experience of God and Church for the young people and their families.” Bishop Daniel E. Flores will serve as the keynote speaker and celebrate Mass at YouthBLAST. Other presenters include missionary Ennnie Hickman, who has traveled the United States and abroad for nearly two decades and Christian singer/songwriter David Moore. As a host of the summer con- OCTUBRE 2014 Msgr. Juan Nicolau Sacerdote jubilado de la Diócesis de Brownsville menores son OTM (como los clasifican las autoridades fronterizas abreviando la expresión en inglés “other than mexican” o sea provenientes de cualquier otro país distinto a México) las autoridades no tienen una respuesta pues no todos los países tienen organizadas instituciones de protección al menor con instalaciones donde puedan recibirlos mientras buscan a sus familiares, en muchos casos los padres se encuentran en nuestro país, y no es fácil contactar a quienes podrían ocuparse de la tutela de esos menores una vez llegados a su país de origen. Además, ¿qué información será usada para ubicar dichos sujetos que se hagan responsables de los menores deportados? Si todo lo que se tiene es la información que pueda proporcionar el menor, quien asegura que no mentirán con tal de no regresar a aquel sitio tan peligroso de donde vienen huyendo, o que los datos que proporciones no los han dado bajo cohesión. En buena consciencia, ¿quién puede regresar a una creatura a un lugar donde se sospecha que pueden maltratarlo o puedan traficar con el por estar en una situación tan vulnerable? El gobierno federal está tratando de responder de una manera justa y humana al tratar de acondicionar albergues temporales en distintos estados de la unión americana para resolver este problema, pero la respuesta de ciertos grupos protestando e incluso bloqueando las propuestas del gobierno en cuanto a los lugares donde se les dará alberge a estos menores dan pena ajena, dejan ver el racismo, la intolerancia y la ignorancia que existe en nuestra sociedad. — Mons. Juan Nicolau, Ph.D. STL es un sacerdote jubilado de la Diócesis de Brownsville. Es psicoterapeuta familiar y consejero profesional con licencias. ferences in Steubenville and as a missionary with Adore Ministries, Hickman has helped transform thousands of lives. He is currently working to expand his apostolate to the under-served families and young adults in Houston, where he lives with his wife, Cana, and their six children. Moore, who was the founder and lead singer of the band The Glory Estate, has written many songs that have been played on Christian Radio stations. Moore currently resides at St. Thomas More Catholic Church and the Newman Catholic Center in Corpus Christi. For more information on YouthBLAST, please contact Monica Benitez at (956) 784-5036 or visit http://www.cdobym.org/ youthblast Con ojos de amor D ios nos ve: quienes somos; cómo pensamos; qué hacemos, a través de ojos de amor. Como el padre divino, Él nos conoce íntimamente. La letra a la canción de Dan Schutte “Yahveh, sé que estás cerca,” dice: “Señor, has buscado mi corazón, y sabes cuándo me siento y cuando estoy de pie. Tu mano está sobre mí protegiéndome de la muerte, guardándome del peligro. Tú conoces mi corazón y sus caminos, tu quien me formó antes de haber nacido en el secreto de la oscuridad antes de haber visto el sol en el vientre de mi madre.” Como padres humanos, vemos a nuestros hijos y/o nietos a con ojos del amor. Sabemos que ellos como nosotros son humanos imperfectos y que aunque fuimos concebidos “en imagen y semejanza de Dios” (Génesis 1:26) cada uno tenemos nuestras destrezas y nuestras limitaciones las cuales usualmente son las dos caras de la misma moneda: la bendición y la maldición. De niña, recuerdo a mi madre, Carmen Colegio Reyna disfrutando de lo que mis hermanos y yo hacíamos y decíamos. Yo creo que nos veía a través de “ojos de amor” y entendía intuitivamente que cada uno de nosotros cinco éramos únicos en cuanto a nuestros regalos y talentos y en cómo veíamos el mundo y respetaba nuestra individualidad. Lydia Pesina Directora, Oficina de Vida Familiar Desde mi perspectiva, ella nos educó bien. Recuerdo una lección que aprendí de ella cuando estaba en primer grado, la cual fue mi primer experiencia escolar ya que no asistí al pre-escolar. Mi maestra la Sra. Reed había encargado “golosinas” de cada estudiante para una fiesta Navideña y a mí me encargaron las galletas. En el supermercado yo insistí en que quería una pequeña caja de galletas de animalitos cuando mi madre compraba un paquete regular de galletas explicando que las galletas eran para compartir y no sólo para mí. Debido a que fui muy insistente, ella me dejó comprar la pequeña caja de galletas. Cuando vi lo que los otros estudiantes habían llevado me di cuenta lo que mi madre quiso decir. Tengo 60 años y aún recuerdo la mueca de la maestra y la asistente. ¡Lección aprendida! Mi esposo Mauri y yo no tuvimos hijos por once años y después adoptamos nuestra hija de pequeña. Al ser hija única y muy deseada, yo sé que siempre la he visto con ojos de amor. Mientras crecía ella fue muy precoz y aprendí lo importante de leer todo lo posible sobre la crianza para encontrar ideas sobre cómo ser buen padre y así hacer decisiones con oración para que el Señor nos guiara. Ser padre no es una ciencia con resultados predecibles pero es una de las cosas más importantes que haré en mi vida. Hay un filósofo que dice que el profeta no es llamado a ser exitoso sino a la fidelidad y yo diría que lo mismo es cierto para la crianza: un padre no es llamado a ser exitoso sino a ser fieles en qué y cómo enseñamos, nutrimos y guiamos con ojos de amor, y el resto está en ellos. Como abuela, es una dicha ver a mi hija criar a su hijo de 18 meses, Elián. Es una dicha mirarla disfrutarlo como nosotros la hemos disfrutado toda su vida y como veo a mi madre de 90 años seguir disfrutándonos. Mi madre aún nos cuenta historias de lo que recuerda qué hacíamos de niños y también lo que recuerda de sus nietos y bisnietos (ella acaba de convertirse en tatarabuela recientemente). Ver a otros con ojos de amor no significa que no vemos sus faltas y carencias sino que nos esforzamos para ver el potencial que Dios nos ha dado en nuestro propio y único camino de vida. ¡Me pregunto si Dios cuenta historias de cómo nos ve a través de los ojos del amor! OCTUBRE 2014 NOTICIAS EN ESPAÑOL 13 - The Valley Catholic Papa: El amor de Cristo puede sostener matrimonios Inspira en los 20 nuevos matrimonios un proyecto solidario Por FRANCIS X. ROCCA Catholic News Service CIUDAD DEL VATICANO — Presidiendo la boda de 20 parejas en la Basílica de San Pedro, el papa Francisco celebró el matrimonio como la unión de un hombre y una mujer teniendo roles complementarios durante su viaje en común por la vida. “Esto es de lo que se trata el matrimonio: hombre y mujer caminando juntos, donde el esposo ayuda a su esposa a ser cada día mejor mujer y donde la mujer tiene la tarea de ayudar a su esposo a ser cada día mejor hombre”, dijo el papa el 14 de septiembre. “Aquí vemos la Holy Rosary continued from pg. 3 view of the church also features a silhouette of Mary. The plan itself is an eight-sided polygon, which allows the faithful to be at an equal distance from the altar, Molina added. The overall exterior height of the altar area is 77 feet to the top of the cross. “When we pray, earth mingles with heaven,” Father Angel said. “We wanted to reflect that in our new church.” The stained glass windows include 12 installations featuring the apostles of Jesus. Other features include a new tabernacle and a statue of St. Joseph from Spain and a rep- Planning continued from pg. 5 lead to mandated orders for nontreatment in a way that constitutes euthanasia. The POLST template represents a fundamentally flawed approach to end of life planning, relying at its core on potentially inappropriate medical orders and dubious approaches to obtaining patient consent. Notwithstanding the pressure that may be brought to bear on a patient, no one is required to agree to the implementation of a POLST reciprocidad de las diferencias”. El papa habló durante una Misa matrimonial para parejas de la Diócesis de Roma. En su típico estilo franco, el papa Francisco admitió que la vida matrimonial puede ser agotadora, “pesada y a menudo hasta nauseabunda”. Pero el papa les aseguró a las novias y a los novios que el sacrificio redentor de Cristo les permitiría resistir la “peligrosa tentación del desánimo, la infidelidad, la debilidad, el abandono”. “El amor de Cristo, que ha bendecido y santificado la unión de esposo y esposa, puede sostener el amor de ellos y renovarlo cuando, humanamente hablando, se torna perdido, herido o gastado”, él dijo. El papa Francisco también ofreció consejos prácticos para atender la discordia marital. “Es normal que los esposos y esposas argumenten”, él dijo. “Siempre pasa. Pero mi consejo es este: nunca dejen que termine el día sin haber hecho las paces. Nunca. Un pequeño gesto es suficiente. Así el viaje puede continuar”. Los recién casados tienen edades entre 25 y 56 años y representaban una variedad de situaciones, con algunos ya teniendo hijos o habiendo vivido juntos antes del matrimonio. La cohabitación, aunque no es impedimento canónico para el matrimonio, va en contra de la enseñanza de la Iglesia Católica sobre el matrimonio y el amor sexual. Como un regalo de agradecimiento al papa, las parejas contribuyeron conjuntamente a un centro educativo y recreativo para jóvenes desaventajados que ha de ser establecido por la rama local de Caritas en un vecindario suburbano de Roma. lica of the image of Our Lady of Guadalupe from Mexico City. The altar and baptismal font are monolithic – formed out of one single piece of stone – a tradition that dates back to classical Roman and Judaic times. Some pieces, including a statue of Our Lady of Holy Rosary, were moved from the old church to the new one. The community hopes to convert the old church into a columbarium, a facility used for internment of urns with cremated remains. Cremation of human remains was prohibited for much of the history of the Church but today, it is not only allowed, but growing in popularity among the faithful. Discussions to build a new church began in 2009 as most of the weekend Masses in the old church, which was built in 1951 as a mission church of Our Lady of Guadalupe Parish, had overflow crowds. form. Patients are free to decline to answer POLST questions from a facilitator, and should not hesitate to let it be known that they instead plan to rely on their proxy for end of life decision making, and intend to discuss their healthcare options uniquely with their attending physician. — Rev. Tadeusz Pacholczyk, Ph.D. earned his doctorate in neuroscience from Yale and did post-doctoral work at Harvard. He is a priest of the diocese of Fall River, MA, and serves as the Director of Education at The National Catholic Bioethics Center in Philadelphia. Paul Harring/CNS photo (OSDSDRÀFLyHO 14 de septiembre los primeros matrimonios de su SRQWLÀFDGRDOFDVDU a veinte parejas a las que recordó que esta institución es un “símbolo de vida real, no es una novela.” Most of the funds to construct the new sanctuary were raised through parish festivals and raffles. The total cost of the church building was $1,796,060.00, with 85 percent of the amount paid, Father Angel said. Our Lady of the Holy Rosary Church offers seven Masses every weekend. 14 DIOCESE The Valley Catholic - Bishop Flores visits Central America “Children are literally forced to move drugs within the country or face death if they refuse.” Photos courtesy of Bishop Daniel E. Flores Bishop Daniel E. Flores, who serves on the board of Catholic Relief Services, visited Central America Aug. 24-28 to learn more about the migration of so many children from Honduras and Guatemala to the United States. He said, “The families we met reminded us all that the greatest resource in a country is the hope present within its people.” To read more about his journey visit the bishop’s blog (En Pocas Palabras KWWSELVKRSÁRUHVEORJVSRWFRP OCTOBER 2014 Latest priest assignments The Valley Catholic Effective Sept. 1 Rev. Daniel Herve Oyama, appointed Temporary Priest in Charge of San Pedro Mission in San Pedro while continuing as Chaplain at Valley Baptist Health Systems and Valley Regional Medical Center in Brownsville Effective Sept. 4 Very Rev. Oliver Angel, JCL, reelected Member of the Presbyteral Council for the Mission Deanery Rev. Jose Rene Angel, JCL, elected Member of the Presbyteral Council for the Pharr Deanery Rev. Esteban Hernandez, elected Member of the Presbyteral Council for the Weslaco Deanery Rev. Jose M. Villalon, Jr., elected Member of the Presbyteral Council for the San Benito Deanery Rev. Joaquin Zermeño, elected Member of the Presbyteral Council for the Rio Grande City Deanery Effective Sept. 5 Rev. Edouard Atangana, STL, appointed Interim Director of the Diaconate Formation Program, retaining all other assignments Rev. Artemio Jacob, appointed Temporary Parish Administrator of Sacred Heart Parish in Escobares and its missions Our Lady of Guadalupe in El Sauz and Santa Rosa de Lima in Rosita Effective Sept. 17 Rev. Arturo Cardenas, appointed Parochial Vicar of Christ the King Parish in Brownsville Effective Sept. 19 Rev. Cesar Uriel Partida, appointed Parochial Vicar of Saint John the Baptist Parish in San Juan and relieved of his responsibilities at Christ the King Parish in Brownsville OCTOBER 2014 DIOCESE 15 - The Valley Catholic »Media Resource Center Recommended by SISTER MAUREEN CROSBY, SSD Coordinator of the Media Resource Center - Diocese of Brownsville »Worth Watching FORGIVENTHE BLESSINGS OF CONFESSION Format:DVD Length:25 minutes Audience: Children Publisher: Herald Entertainment The facts:The Blessings of Confession This joyful presentation reminds old and young alike about the great gift of God’s forgiveness through the Sacrament of Reconciliation! SANCTITY WITHIN REACH Format:DVD /Book Length:90 Audience: High School / Adult Publisher: Ignatius Press The facts: He unpacks the life and spirituality of tis avid mountain climber and fun-loving Italian youth who dying living behind an astounding legacy of good works. »From the Medicine and ministry continued from pg. 1 Bookshelf IDIOT PSALMS – NEW POEMS Format: paperback Length: 96 pp Audience: Adults Author: Scott Cairns Publisher: Paraclete Press (2014) The facts: Scott Cairns embarks upon a pilgrimage not from one place to another, but from the unknowing to unknowing. Though theses poems push toward holy wisdom, they must content themselves with the refracted approximations of this puzzling world”. MANY ARE CALLED 4 San Pedro Casino Nights (San Pedro) 4-5 Re-Marriage Retreat )DPLO\/LIH2I¿FH The Valley Catholic Lumen Christi, ters have worked to develop human potential, strengthen family bonds and help the residents of Pueblo de Palmas obtain the basic skills to succeed. The center contains classroom space for instruction and activities, a kitchen and hall space for large assemblies, a computer lab, a medical and dental clinic, and a pre-kindergarten classroom. The sisters have empowered the residents of Pueblo de Palmas and built a true faith-based community. The people served by the center live at or below the federal poverty level, relying on irregular income, which the men earn from day labor jobs in agriculture and construction. Most of the women are mothers who are learning English through the center’s English as a Second Language classes. They are realizing their full potential by means of 5 Format: paperback Length: 82 pages Audience: children age 8-14 Author: Gabrielle Gniewek Art Work: Sean Lam Publisher: Manga Hero; Second edition (2012) The facts: The palace is astir, preparing for the long-awaited wedding of its beloved Prince, who leaves the safety of the kingdom borders to fetch his bride, now missing in exile for 7 years… though whether the bride wants WRUHWXUQWRWKHYHU\SODFHVKHÀHGIURPLVDQ entirely different story. A past will be revealed, a score will be settled, and a future will be formed All Day All Day All Day 6:30 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 7 p.m. All Day 6 p.m. 6:30 p.m. Mass for children with special needs and their families (Holy Family, Brownville) 5 Sacred Heart Jamaica (Hidalgo) 10-12 Holy Family Kermes (Brownsville) 14 Professional Day 2I¿FHRI&DWHFKHVLV The Valley Catholic Bishop Daniel E. Flores receives the gifts from Sister Therese Ann Ridge, a chaplain at Doctors Hospital at Renaissance in Edinburg and Sister Maria Elena 5H\HVDFKDSODLQDW6DQ-XDQ1XUVLQJ+RPHLQWKLVÀOHSKRWR Euthanasia Prevention Coalition. “Most of the patients who have broached this issue weren’t even terminal. “The truth is that we are not islands. How physicians respond to the patient’s request has a profound effect, not only on a patient’s choices, but also on their view of themselves and their inherent worth.” Dr. Toffler continued, “When a patient says, ‘I want to die’; it may simply mean, ‘I feel useless.’ When a patient says, ‘I don’t want to be a burden’; it may really be a question, ‘Am I a burden?’ When a patient says, ‘I’ve lived a long life already’; they may really be saying, ‘I’m tired. I’m afraid I can’t keep going.’ And, finally, when a patient says, ‘I might as well be dead’; they may really be saying, ‘No one cares about me.’” The White Mass is generally held on or around the feast of St. Luke (Oct. 18), the patron of physicians. The event is free to attend, but kindly RSVP so organizers may plan accordingly. To RSVP, call Gloria Morales in the Office of Health Ministry at (956) 7845007. the Women’s Wellness Program and leadership training. “God has done amazing things in and through us, that’s all I can say,” Sister Jocson said. “At the beginning, we saw that people were afraid of one another. They didn’t know their neighbors. They didn’t go out of their houses. “Now with all the programs, they know their neighbors, they are concerned for one another, they help one another. It’s very inspiring to hear, after all these efforts, something has happened to them. They have changed. They look at their neighborhood and their neighbors differently.” In 2009, the sisters took yet another step to form community – they secured donations, found a plot of land, and supervised construction of a brand new church, which was dedicated in2 0 1 3 and is home to the newest parish in the Diocese of Brownsville. Today, in an area that was once a drug- smuggling highway, St. Anne Church gleams as a symbol of hope and possibility. “The work of the sisters on the border shows why women religious are the ‘unsung heroes’ of the Catholic Church,” said Catholic Extension Vice President of Mission Joe Boland. “They represent hope to the people of the Rio Grande Valley, particularly the women and children, who face daily battles with extreme poverty.The sisters are living out what Pope Francis has called all of us to do – to go out into the streets and serve. We hope that by honoring them they might inspire others to do the same.” Catholic Extension is a national organization dedicated to supporting and strengthening the Catholic Church in the poorest regions of the United States. As the 2014 recipients of the Lumen Christi Award, the sisters will receive a grant of $25,000 in support of their ministry; in addition, the Diocese of Brownsville, which nominated the sisters, also will receive a grant of $25,000. Bishop Emeritus Raymundo J. Peña’s Calendar October 1-3 October 6-10 October 11-13 October 17 October 18 October 22 October 24-26 October 29 October 30 October 4 Incarnate Word Academy Fall Festival (Brownsville) White Mass for health professionals set for Oct. 23 McALLEN — Bishop Daniel E. Flores will celebrate the 11th annual White Mass for health care professionals at 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 23 at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church, 2209 Kendlewood Ave., in McAllen. All health care professionals of all faiths are invited to attend. Named for the white garments traditionally worn by medical professionals, the White Mass provides healthcare professionals an opportunity to unite as a medical community and to reaffirm their vocation as a healing ministry of Christ Jesus. A reception and conference will be held at the parish hall after the Mass. Dr. William Toffler, co-founder of the Physicians for Compassionate Care, will deliver the keynote address. Physicians for Compassionate Care advocates against assisted suicide, safeguarding life until its natural end. Dr. Toffler hails from Oregon, where voters approved assisted suicide 11 years ago. “Since assisted suicide has become an option, I have had at least a dozen patients discuss this option with me in my practice,” Dr. Toffler said in a blog post for the » Calendar of Events Assumption Alumni Homecoming Retreat Vacation Confessions at Evins Mass at Holy Family Serra Club Priest Appreciation Banquet at Country Club Bronc Awakening 21 at Camp Loma de Vida Evins Ministry Red Mass at Immaculate Conception Cathedral On going: 8 a.m. Mass Monday - Saturday at St. Joseph Chapel of Perpetual Adoration, 727 Bowie St., Alamo 3 p.m. Mass at St. Joseph Chapel of Perpetual Adoration, 727 Bowie St., Alamo 7 p.m. Holy Hour Weekly every Thursday at 727 Bowie St., Alamo 1st: Vocations to the Consecrated Life (active and contemplative) and for the Sisters and Brothers in our diocese and the success of their mission 25 YouthBLAST (Youth Minsitry) 25-26 St. Joseph the Worker Festival (San Carlos) 27 Theology Class 2I¿FHRI&DWHFKHVLV 28 Clase de Teologia 2I¿FHRI&DWHFKHVLV November 1 All Saints Day 2 All Souls Day 2 Daylight Savings Time Ends 2 Mass for children with special needs and their families (Holy Family, Brownville) Advisory Team (Catechesis) 6 7-9 Catholic Engaged Encounter )DPLO\/LIH2I¿FH 13 Professional Day (Catechesis) 15 Walking by Faith Pilgrimage (Youth Minsitry) 15 St Theresa Festival (Faysville) 17 Theology Class 2I¿FHRI&DWHFKHVLV 18 Clase de Teologia 2I¿FHRI&DWHFKHVLV 21-23 RCYC Oklahoma (Youth Ministry) 22 Convalidation Conference )DPLO\/LIH2I¿FH 15-16 Retiro PreMatrionial )DPLO\/LIH2I¿FH 27 Happy Thanksgiving 'LRFHVDQ2I¿FHV&ORVHG 28 Thanksgiving Holiday 'LRFHVDQ2I¿FHV&ORVHG 30 First Sunday of Advent San Antonio Edinburg Grulla McAllen Edinburg Edinburg Brownsville 2nd: Vocations to the Permanent Diaconate the deacons (permanent and transitional) of the diocese and their families 3rd : Vocation to Married Life: for the welfare and sanctification of all the families in the diocese and for building up the Kingdom in our domestic churches 4th: Vocations to the priesthood and the priests of the diocese for the success of their ministry 5th: Vocations to the Pro-Life Intentions Please submit your schedule to be published in The Valley Catholic by the first Friday of each month by email at [email protected] or fax: (956) 784-5082. 16 DIOCESE The Valley Catholic - OCTOBER 2014 Our Catholic Family Sister Maria Elena Maldonado, RSM August 17, 1929 - September 13, 2014 Valley native served the community for more than 60 years The Valley Catholic Sister Maria Elena Maldonado of the Sisters of Mercy died on Sept. 13 in St. Louis. She was 85. Sister Maldonado was born on Aug. 17, 1929 in Mercedes to Raymundo Maldonado and Juana Garces. She entered the Sisters of Mercy community in 1948, serving as a religious sister for 66 years. All but four of those years were served in the Rio Grande Valley, said Sister Denise Sausville of the Sisters of Mercy. “She never felt at home serving anywhere else,” Sister Sausville said. “The Valley was where she wanted to be. As a Valley native and a Red Mass, continued from pg. 3 One of seven children born to Mexican immigrant parents, Justice Guzman was born in Chicago and raised in Houston. She was appointed to Place 9 of the Supreme Court of Texas on October 8, 2009, by Texas Gov. Rick Perry. Before her appointment, Justice Guzman Mexican-American, she was able to relate to the community better than the rest of us. The people loved her very much. Many of them called her, ‘Madre,’ because she was like a spiritual mother to them.” Sister Maldonado dedicated her life to the field of education, as administrator, teacher and in religious education. She spent her first years as a religious sister serving schools in Missouri and Arkansas. In the Valley, Sister Maldonado served in the schools/parishes of Immaculate Heart of Mary (Harlingen); Our Lady of Guadalupe (Mission); Sacred Heart (Edinburg, McAllen and Mercedes); Immaculate Conception (Rio Grande City); Our Lady of Mercy (Mercedes) and St. Pius X (Weslaco). Sister Maldonado taught thousands of students throughout served as an Associate Justice on the Houston-based Texas Fourteenth Court of Appeals, having been appointed in 2001 by Gov. Perry. She also served as a trial court judge on the 309th Family District Court after her appointment by then-Gov. George W. Bush, according to her official website. Catholic Charities of the Rio Grande Valley, which works to eliminate spiritual and material poverty, offers many services to her ministry and remembered every one of them, Sister Sausville said. Many of them kept in touch with her over the years, inviting her to their special events and out for meals. A large contingent of her former students attended her Rosary service and funeral. “I never went anywhere with Sister Elena that people weren’t coming up to her,” Sister Sausville said. “All over the Valley, people knew her. She used every opportunity to evangelize people.” In her retirement, Sister Elena was in ministry in Weslaco and La Feria guiding Bible study groups. She also visited the sick and homebound and ministered to youth in the juvenile justice system. She served on the Board of Directors of ARISE – South Tower, a community based ministry cosponsored by the Sisters of Mercy. “She had a very full retirement,” Sister Sausville said. “She couldn’t visualize herself not doing any kind of ministry.” Sister Maldonado was preceded in death by her parents, her brother, Raymundo and a sister, Ninfa Escamilla. She is survived by her sisters Petra Flynn of Weslaco and Elpidia Enriquez of Michigan and numerous nieces and nephews. A Memorial Mass was held on Sept. 15 at. St. Catherine’s Residence Chapel in St. Louis with the Sisters of Mercy community. A visitation and Rosary service was held Sept. 16 at St. Pius X Church in Weslaco. Bishop Daniel E. Flores celebrated a Mass of Christian Burial Sept. 17 at Our Lady of Mercy Church in Mercedes, which burial following at Our Lady of Mercy Catholic Cemetery in Mercedes. Please consider making a donation in Sister Maldonado’s memory to: Sisters of Mercy, 101 Mercy Drive, Belmont, NC 28012, ARISE, P.O. Box 778, Alamo, TX 78516 or Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic School, 611 Dunlap, Mission, TX 78572. the community including disaster relief, rental and utility assistance, food programs, jail ministry, funeral assistance, immigration services and counseling. In addition to these programs, Sister Pimentel and Catholic Charities have undertaken the operation of a respite center for Central American refugees at Sacred Heart Parish in McAllen. Thousands of individuals have been assisted since the center opened in June. Father Martinez founded Cristo Rey High School in 2009. The son of Brownsville mayor Tony Martinez, he earned a bachelor’s degree in political science from Boston College, a law degree from the University of Texas at Austin and a master’s degree in educational leadership from Harvard. Less than 24 hours after graduating from Harvard, he headed to Houston to establish Cristo Rey High School. Father Martinez was diagnosed with Stage 4 stomach cancer in March and is undergoing treatment at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center. The Red Mass is a long-standing tradition in the Catholic Church, dating back to the 13th century. For tickets or sponsorship information in Cameron County, call Monica Gonzalez at (956) 6401327 or Analisa Figuero at (956) 621-0550; in Hidalgo County, call Esther Cantu at (956) 318-2470. Sister Maria Elena Maldonado, RSM