Mother Cabrini in the Spotlight at USCCB
This week the United States Council of Catholic Bishops (the USCCB) began their plenary session on Mother Cabrini’s feast day. The homily at the opening Mass by the president of the USCCB, Archbishop Timothy Broglio, mentioned Mother Cabrini several times. He concluded by saying, “Saint Frances Cabrini even obliged the poor to give from their poverty to help those more needy than they. It was also a way of insisting on the dignity of all and the common responsibility for others. It is a message that is very appropriate today and every day…Charity demands our attention to the little ones, the weak, the simple, fraternal correction and unlimited pardon to those who ask.”
The stained-glass image of Mother Cabrini at St. Frances Cabrini Shrine in NYC was included on the slides used at the plenary session. Each bishop attending received prayer cards from the Shrine: one with a Cabrini prayer of thanksgiving for receiving communion, and one designed for use by new migrants containing the location of each of the three shrines.
World Day of Prayer for Vocations
The purpose of the World Day of Prayer for Vocations is to publicly celebrate vocations to ordained ministry and religious life in all its forms. Many parishes and religious institutes commemorate this day with prayerfor vocations and vocation promotion events. Considering that 73 percent of women and men professing final vows participated in one or more parish activities and 88 perecent served in one or more parish ministries before entering religious life, our presence and participation in activities that mark this special day is essential.
Holy Spirit, stir within us the passion to promote vocations to the consecrated life, societies of apostolic life, diocesan priesthood, and permanent diaconate.
Inspire us daily to respond to Your call with boundless compassion, abundant generosity, and radical availability.
Help us to remember our own baptismal call to rouse us to invite the next generation to hear and respond to Your call.
Inspire parents, families, and lay ecclesial ministers to begin a conversation with young Catholics to consider a how they will live lives of holiness and sacred service.
Nudge inquirers and motivate discerners to learn more about monastic life, apostolic life, missionaries, cloistered contemplative life, and evangelical Franciscan life.
Ignite our Church with the confident humility that there is an urgent need for religious sisters, brothers, deacons, and priests to live in solidarity with those who are poor, neglected, and marginalized.
Disrupt our comfortable lives and complacent attitudes with new ideas to respond courageously and creativity with a daily ‘YES!’ Amen.
Calls for Greater Lay Involvement as Church Tackles Abuse
~ Dennis Sadowski, Catholic News Service
National Review Board chairman Francesco Cesareo offered the U.S. bishops meeting in Baltimore a series of recommendations that he said will strengthen the church’s response to the ongoing clergy sexual abuse crisis.
The recommendations made June 11 during the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ spring general assembly in Baltimore included a call for a greater role for
laity investigating allegations of abuse or reaction to reports of abuse against bishops.
Cesareo said that National Review Board members recommend a thorough review of the “Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People” and a revision in the audit process regarding diocesan implementation of the charter, which governs the church’s response to clergy abuse allegations.
Strong measure are necessary to show that while progress has been made since the charter’s adoption in 2002, the bishops would demonstrate that they are serious in their response to clergy abuse in response to the mistrust and serious questions laypeople still harbor.
Cesareo stressed to the bishops the need to carry out what Pope Benedict XVI described as the laity’s co-responsibility to help build the church.
He told the Catholic News Service that co-responsibility means “together we can have a role to play for the well-being of the church.”
Cesareo also admitted that he has used strong and firm language in delivering the review board’s recommendations “to show the urgency of the situation and that we can’t just keep pushing this down the road.”
In his address to the assembly, Cesareo said that the audit is a means for the bishops to establish their credibility with laypeople.
“A strengthened audit would provide a means for improving your dioceses’ existing methods to protect and heal,” Cesareo said. “Virtually all your dioceses, including those where problems came to light under the microscope of the media and attorney generals, have easily passed the audit for years since the bar is so low. Now is the time to raise the bar on compliance to ensure the mistakes of the past are not repeated.”
Casareo also recommended that the charter “should be revised immediately to explicitly include bishops and demand for greater accountability.”
“You have a great opportunity,” Casareo said, “to lead by example and help show diocese and episcopal conferences around the world not only how important it is for lay involvement to ensure greater accountability and transparency, but also how laity and the episcopacy can be co-responsible for the church’s well-being.”
To read the entire account: https://www.catholicnews.com/services/englishnews/2019/cesareo-repeats-call-for-greater-lay-involvement-as-church-tackles-abuse.cfm