The Good Catholic Life #0206: Thursday, December 22, 2011

Published: Dec. 22, 2011, 10:11 p.m.

b'Today\\u2019s host(s): Scot Landry\\nToday\\u2019s guest(s): Fr. Roger Landry, executive editor of The Anchor, the newspaper of the Fall River diocese; and Gregory Tracy, managing editor of The Pilot, the newspaper of the Boston archdiocese\\nLinks from today\\u2019s show:\\n\\n\\n\\nSome of the stories discussed on this show will be available on The Pilot\\u2019s and The Anchor\\u2019s websites on Friday morning. Please check those sites for the latest links.\\n\\nToday\\u2019s topics: Christmas message from Cardinal Se\\xe1n and Bishop Coleman; Profile of Cardinal Se\\xe1n in the Boston Herald; Pastoral letter for undocumented immigrants; the famous musical Fr. Pat; New pastor; New saints\\nSummary of today\\u2019s show: In our last news show of the year, Scot Landry, Fr. Roger Landry, and Gregory Tracy discuss Cardinal Se\\xe1n\\u2019s Christmas message that will air on Vatican Radio, as well Bishop George Coleman\\u2019s message to the Fall River diocese; a laudatory front-page profile of Cardinal Se\\xe1n in the Boston Herald; a pastoral letter from Hispanic bishops of the US to undocumented immigrants; the famous musical Fr. Pat from La Salette who\\u2019s celebrating 40 years of ministry; a new pastor for Catholics in Townsend; and miracles to make new American saints.\\n1st segment: Scot welcomed Fr. Roger and Greg to show and noted how today is the first day of winter, but it\\u2019s 53 degrees outside. He asked Fr. Roger how his Christmas planning is going and whether it\\u2019s easier for priests when Christmas is on a Sunday. Greg talked about Christmas traditions for his family, which is a blended family of both Cuban traditions and New England traditions. Scot and Fr. Roger talked about their family gathering in New Bedford at Fr. Roger\\u2019s church on Christmas Eve.\\n2nd segment: Scot said Cardinal Se\\xe1n recorded a Christmas message for the world to air on Vatican Radio. WQOM listeners get a preview of the message today.\\n\\n[Cardinal Se\\xe1n\\u2019s Christmas message to air on Vatican Radio across the world]\\n\\n\\nThis is Cardinal Se\\xe1n O\\u2019Malley from the Archdiocese of Boston. At Christmas our God comes to us as a humble pilgrim in search of hospitality. Nourished by the bread of life that comes to us from the manger, let us open our hearts in welcome to this Divine Humble Pilgrim, to the Lord Jesus. By reaching out with compassion and loving care we can give Him hospitality as he comes to us disguised in the hungry, the homeless, the mentally ill, the imprisoned, the stranger, the immigrant. Jesus came to reveal the merciful face of the father: the poor, the sick, the marginalized were the protagonists of His Gospel. It is our task to be the merciful face of Christ - as the Father sent me, so I send you Jesus tells us.\\nHe does not send us alone but with our brothers and sisters whose faith and solidarity sustains us. And He gives us the spiritual food of His Body and Blood in the Eucharist. At Christmas we come to the manger to see the Baby Pictures and rejoice as we look at our Family Album. But our faith tells us that Christ born at Bethlehem 2000 years ago is still, Emmanuel, God with us. He comes to offer us His friendship and love and to invite us to a life of discipleship in His Church. At Bethlehem the Shepherds were filled with joy and wonder and were anxious to share that joy with others. Knowing the Lord, carries with it an obligation to make Him known and loved.\\nChristmas is the feast of the Child, the Christ child, our God who made Himself small to be close to us. Jesus says in the Gospel- Unless you become like a little child you shall not enter the Kingdom of Heaven. God came to us in the humility and simplicity of a little baby\\u2014God\\u2019s love in face of a child, always new, always fresh, that never tires of loving us, of giving us another chance. We can go to Him only in the humility and simplicity of a child. Children have a sense of trust in their parents - God wants us to have that trust in Him and in His love. At Christmas we are able to catch a glimpse of the face of God and His love. When we discover His love, we discover who we are. Merry Christmas to all of you who are listening.\\n\\nScot said he was struck how we can describe Jesus by serving those who come disguised as the poor, the hungry, the ill, the immigrant. Greg was thinking of how in the Old Testament God would show himself as a cloud with thunder and lightning that terrified the people who said they didn\\u2019t want to see him. So instead God came in a form that wouldn\\u2019t terrify us, but is a sign of meekness.\\nScot said at Christmas, God talks on flesh to show us his love. His face is that of a baby. Fr. Roger said it is a remarkable sign. The child wrapped in swaddinling clothes is a very ordinary sign for the extraordinary Lord to appear in.\\nPope Benedict talked a few years ago about this translation confusion about what the angels say to the shepherds. What is the good will they t alk about? It\\u2019s not just peace to those of us who are Christian. It is God\\u2019s good will and our good will comes in response to God\\u2019s good will by imitating that humility of God by going out in serving all the rest, not to be afraid to be poor or immersed in the lowest human reality to continue to serve Christ\\u2019s mission of lifting up others. We need to become like children. We need to abbreviate ourselves like a God abbreviated himself in a child.\\nScot said a few weeks ago he trashed a slam-piece in the Boston Herald against the Church, but today, Joe Fitzgerald has a really good profile of the Cardinal. He talks about his Christmas traditions growing up in eastern Ohio.\\n\\n\\n\\n\\n\\u201cMy father always waited until Christmas Eve to get our tree because he wanted us to be excited when we got up,\\u201d he recalled, smiling. \\u201cHe and my uncle Ed would go to get it together. Ed was our bachelor uncle, the fun uncle, the one who\\u2019d set up our electric trains. \\u201cBy Christmas Eve, of course, the trees were pretty well picked over, so sometimes they\\u2019d have to buy two, then drill holes into one in order to stick in replacement branches.\\u201d\\nThe absurdity of that story made him laugh. \\u201cThen we\\u2019d all go to my grandmother\\u2019s house for dinner, all the uncles, aunts and cousins, an all-day affair where we\\u2019d sing carols before heading off to Mass together. I came from a very faith-filled family.\\u201d\\n[\\u2026]\\nIt meant telling his parents, Ted and Mary Louise, of the path he had chosen to follow. \\u201cTheir reaction was a blessing to me. They said, \\u2018That\\u2019s great. Try it! And then if you decide it isn\\u2019t for you, you can always come home.\\u2019 They wanted me to know I had their support one way or the other, which was a wonderful attitude. You don\\u2019t want to be so enthusiastic that a kid feels he can\\u2019t turn back.\\u201d For O\\u2019Malley, there was no turning back. \\u201cI never had any doubts.\\u201d\\n\\nThe cardinal then talked about his work in Washington, DC, among Spanish-speaking immigrants in the turbulent Sixties and Seventies. And at the end of the article:\\n\\n\\u201cAnd I guess that\\u2019s the message I\\u2019d most want to give others this Christmas, that we have a loving and all-powerful God who wants us to feel how close He is to us. \\u201cThat would be it; I\\u2019d love us all to catch just a glimpse of the love He has for us.\\u2019\\n\\nFr. Roger said Joe Fitzgerald is one of the best columnists in New England. He\\u2019s always written sympathetically of believers and has always been on the side of the mission of Christ in the world. Despite his Irish last name, he is Protestant but is very fair and friendly to Catholics. Greg said the editors could have buried the column, but they made it a front-page headline.\\nGreg said most people\\u2019s only exposure to the Cardinal is a soundbite in the news or his policy decisions, but very few people actually know the man. It brings to a wide audience a picture of this man who comes from a background of faith and has a very normal background and upbringing.\\nScot said Bishop George Coleman of the Diocese of Fall River also has a Christmas message in The Anchor this week.\\n\\nDear friends in Christ, This holy season provides me the opportunity once again to share with each and every one of you the Good News that God has become man and is born among us. Of course, Our Lord\\u2019s Nativity is an event that happened long ago. The basic story is surely familiar to all of you: the Virgin Mary gave birth to Jesus, the Son of God, in Bethlehem more than 2.000 years ago. Christ entered the world not as a conquering king at the head of an army in a mighty show of power, but as a defenseless child, born in poverty.\\nThe first Christmas can seem like an occurrence from a long time ago that once took place in a faraway land. Yet, it is an event which happens even today and which can speak to all of us again. The birth of a child is always a momentous occasion which fills all people with hope.\\nBut, this Child was no ordinary infant; for, Hc was the Son of God. And, when He takes on our human flesh with all its weaknesses, He reveals in Himself and in the power of the Holy Spirit, the true nature of humanity, the true worth of all human life, and the dignity of every person.\\nWe cannot, however; overlook the challenges that face us today: a slow economy, unemployment and underemployment, addictions and drugs, crime and violence, wars, and a morbid fascination with darkness. We bring all these troubles to Christ. We offer them to Him. We ask Him to transform them for us and to turn them into something life-giving. As our Holy Father Benedict XVI assures us, the birth of Christ has the power to change the world, \\u201cfor it bas the power to choose hearts, to enlighten minds, and to strengthen Wills? (homily at Mass in Manger\\u2019s Square in Bethlehem, May 13,209).\\nAt Christmas, Jesus calls us to be witnesses of His victory over sin, death, and sadness. Therefore,let nil men and women, believers and non-believers, but especially all Christians, rejoice at the birth of Christ, which brings a divine light into the world now and forever.\\nMay the Infant Jesus bless you and your families with the peace and joy of this holy season.\\n\\nScot reiterated that Christians must rejoice at the joy of Christmas and be joyful witnesses. Greg said earlier in the letter he spoke about the idea that we can easily think of the coming of Christ as something that happened 2,000 years ago, but Christ can be born in our heart at any time. We need his help to overcome his sin and so we need his presence to be born in us.\\nScot noted how he said that we need to bring our troubles to Christ and ask him to transform them. Fr. Roger said \\u201cJesus\\u201d means God saves. \\u201cEmmanuel\\u201d means God with us. We\\u2019re not alone in facing our challenges. We have the one who conquered sin and death on our side. He may not take them away, but he will help us not to be overcome by them.\\nIt\\u2019s time to announce this week\\u2019s winner of the WQOM Benefactor Raffle.\\nOur prizes this week are \\u201cLet Us Adore Him\\u201d, a music CD of traditional Christmas hymns by the Dady Brothers and Friends; by Fr. Dave Pivonka, and , also by Fr. Pivonka.\\nThis week\\u2019s benefactor card raffle winner is Richard Grande from Concord, MA. Congratulation, Richard!\\nIf you would like to be eligible to win in an upcoming week, please visit . For a one-time $30 donation, you\\u2019ll receive the Station of the Cross benefactor card and key tag, making you eligible for WQOM\\u2019s weekly raffle of books, DVDs, CDs and religious items. We\\u2019ll be announcing the winner each Wednesday during \\u201cThe Good Catholic Life\\u201d program.\\n3rd segment: Scot said earlier this week a group of US Hispanic bishops wrote a pastoral letter to undocumented immigrants in the US.\\n\\n\\n\\nFr. Roger said a lot of immigrants feel totally abandoned, like the wandering Holy Family in Bethlehem, who are told there\\u2019s no room for them in our country. The bishops said regardless of their legal status, they have a home in the Catholic Church and they will be welcomed with open arms. The bishops noted that they are sometimes scapegoated for some of the economic issues facing our country. Fr. Roger said it was an unprecedented of the 33 Latino bishops in the US. It doesn\\u2019t mean that immigration laws aren\\u2019t important, but that we need to have our eyes open that beyond the legal issues and real concerns for safe borders, we do need to look at those in our country as people beloved by God.\\nScot noted statistics that show that there are more low-income jobs than those willing to take them in the US, but there are only about 70,000 visas available for immigrants who would want these jobs. Greg said the bishops are advocating for a rational immigration reform.\\nFr. Roger said immigration isn\\u2019t just an issue to be solved. It\\u2019s our brothers and sisters who need to know the love of God.\\n4th segment: Last Saturday, the Women Affirming Life breakfast saw record numbers. Increasingly, women are bringing their own young daughters to the breakfast to begin preparing them to take up the battle for life. Scot said having women leading the pro-life side disproves the argument that legal abortion is a necessary right for women.\\n\\n\\u201cThat so many Catholics come together and so readily share their values through this event is a sign of hope not only for the Pro-Life movement but for the Catholic Church as well,\\u201d said Marianne Luthin, director of the Archdiocese of BostOn Pro-Life Office, which oversees WALI.\\n\\nThe primary speaker was Sister Maris Stella Karalekas of the Sisters of Life religious order, which is dedicated to pro-life work. Fr. Roger said they not only care for women in crisis pregnancy but also taking the message out to the world and educating people about pro-life.\\nMoving to a new topic, he reviewed an article in the Pilot about the new CatholicTV show for women called \\u201cThe Gist\\u201d.\\n\\n\\n\\nScot talked about the hosts and the audience it\\u2019s aimed at. He noted that we talked about it at length on . Greg talked about how the show can be a good outreach to young mothers who might have drifted away from Church and discover it on cable TV.\\n\\nIn the Anchor this week is a profile of Fr. Pat of the LaSalette Shrine in Attleboro and his 40 years of musical ministry. He does two concerts a day during Advent at the shrine which is famous for its Christmas lights and displays. He\\u2019s had a busy year traveling to India and cutting new CDs. He has a beautiful gift of using music to connect the faith to where people are in their faith today.\\n\\n\\n\\nScot said in the Pilot this week are some new priest assignments announced, including Fr. Jeremy St. Martin who has been made pastor of St. John the Evangelist in Townsend, and leaving his ministry as coordinator of deaf Catholic ministry in the archdiocese. Scot said Townsend is the farthest corner of the Archdiocese. Greg said he always shows a special preference for Townsend and Ashby when covering stories about events there because of how far they are.\\nScot said there is an article about Mother Marianne Cope, who ministered alongside St. Damien of Molokai among the lepers. Scot said she was named Servant of God only in 2003, beatified in 2005, and will be canonized soon, which is very quick. Fr. Roger said there were many miracles attributed to Bl. Marianne. He also noted that Bl. Kateri Tekakwitha will also be canonized. It\\u2019s very exciting for our country, which has only 10 saints so far. As far as they are aware, she is the first American laywoman who will be a saint.'