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Pope plans to write document dedicated to St. Thérèse of Lisieux

Individuals become Christian because they have been touched by Christ’s love, not because they have been convinced or coerced by someone else, Pope Francis said.

The Catholic Church needs missionary disciples who have hearts like St. Thérèse of Lisieux and who “draw people to love and bring people closer to God,” he told people at his weekly general audience in St. Peter’s Square June 7.

“Let us ask this saint for the grace to overcome our selfishness and for the passion to intercede that Jesus might be known and loved,” he said.

The pope continued his series of talks about “zeal” for evangelization by focusing on St. Thérèse, the 19th-century French Carmelite nun who is patron saint of missions and a doctor of the church.

Before beginning his general audience talk, the pope walked with his cane to a large reliquary containing the relics of St. Thérèse that was placed on a table near where he sits to deliver his catechesis. He placed a large white rose before the ornate reliquary and stood a few moments in prayer.

During his catechesis he announced he was planning to dedicate an apostolic letter to her to mark the 150th anniversary of her birth this year.

Pope Francis has said he has a special devotion to the saint, once telling an interviewer that he used to keep a photo of this 19th-century French Carmelite nun on his library shelf when he was archbishop of Buenos Aires. He told journalist Sergio Rubin in 2010, “When I have a problem I ask the saint, not to solve it, but to take it in her hands and help me accept it, and, as a sign, I almost always receive a white rose.”

St. Thérèse displayed patience, trust in God and a “spirit of humility, tenderness and goodness,” that God “wants from all of us,” Pope Francis has said.

During his Wednesday general audience talk, the pope asked Christians to find inspiration in the life of St. Thérèse, who lived “according to the way of littleness and weakness,” defining herself as “a small grain of sand.”

She lived in poor health and died at the age of 24, but “her heart was vibrant, missionary,” the pope said.

The Carmelite nun wanted to be a missionary and served, from her monastery, as a “spiritual sister” to several missionaries, accompanying them through her letters and prayers, he said.

“Without being visible, she interceded for the missions, like an engine that, although hidden, gives a vehicle the power to move forward,” Pope Francis said. “Such is the power of intercession moved by charity; such is the engine of mission!”

Therefore, missionaries are not only those who “travel long distances, learn new languages, do good works and are good at proclamation,” he said. “No, a missionary is anyone who lives as an instrument of God’s love where they are” so that “through their witness, their prayer, their intercession, Jesus might pass by.”

St. Thérèse’s daily resolution was to “make Jesus loved” and to intercede for others, the pope said. “Following the example of Jesus the Good Shepherd, her zeal was directed especially toward sinners.”

Apostolic zeal never works with proselytism or coercion, he said. “One does not become a Christian because they are forced by someone, but because they have been touched by love.”

“The church needs hearts like Thérèse’s, hearts that draw people to love and bring people closer to God,” he said.

The pope ended the audience with his usual greetings to special guests and then went to Rome’s Gemelli hospital for abdominal surgery that was scheduled for that afternoon. He was expected to remain for several days, according to the Vatican press office.

— Carol Glatz, Catholic News Service

Missouri-based network connects abortion survivors worldwide

Melissa Ohden said she never planned to start an organization.

Ohden, who joined the Catholic Church in 2014, belongs to St. Andrew the Apostle Parish in Gladstone, Missouri. She leads the Abortion Survivors Network, the world’s only organization dedicated to providing “a safe place for (abortion) survivors to finally share their story, be themselves, be vulnerable, to finally heal.”

Ohden first became involved with pro-life ministry in 2007, sharing her own story of having survived a saline infusion abortion in 1977 at 31 weeks.

As she shared her story at various events, other abortion survivors began asking her for help.

For years, Ohden connected survivors with other survivors, guided them to counselors, helped them write their testimonies and invited them to policy groups. Mostly though, she just helped survivors, including Kim Marvin of Kirkland, Washington, heal from the emotional and spiritual wounds they suffer as a result of the abortion.

Born in 1961, Marvin’s mother sought the services of an OB-GYN in Seattle whose clientele consisted mostly of patients seeking illegal abortions (abortion was illegal in any state until 1967) and underwent a saline injection abortion when Marvin was around two months gestation.

About 10 years ago, Marvin tracked down Abby Johnson, a former abortion industry worker whose story is told in the 2019 movie “Unplanned,” after a pro-life event and begged her for the name of someone with whom she could talk. Johnson gave Marvin Ohden’s contact information.

Marvin’s first phone call to Ohden lasted nearly two hours. Ohden encouraged Marvin to write her story.

Meanwhile, Ohden was serving other abortion survivors and praying for all of them, including Marvin. In 2019, Ohden said she realized God had been calling her to a ministry for abortion survivors all along and officially started ASN with one specific purpose.

“My long-term vision would be for ASN to be so well-known and understood — not just in the pro-life movement, but in our culture — that survivors and families know that they’re not alone and that they have a place to go to for healing and hope.”

“Folks like me,” she continued, “and people like my biological mother deserve to know that they’re not alone, and they deserve to have their lives transformed. . . . So, that’s what I’m in the business of doing now — serving these abortion survivors with community support and healing support.”

ASN organizes and facilitates confidential healing groups using a curriculum she wrote specifically for abortion survivors. In 2020, nine years after the first phone call, Marvin called Ohden and asked to be connected with other survivors.

Now, Marvin serves as the international coordinator for ASN, regularly meeting online with abortion survivors from countries as far away as Germany, Australia and Sri Lanka.

Marvin described meeting other survivors as “a gift from heaven,” a gift she would not have experienced had it not been for Ohden’s willingness to share her story.

“It’s really hard to get this message out because people don’t want to hear it,” Marvin said. “We have to educate that we exist. That, to me, is the biggest hurdle because I’d say 80 to 90 percent of the population does not know that you can survive an abortion. … With that statistic, that’s an uphill (battle), but it’s an opportunity as well.”

—Marc and Julie Anderson, OSV News

Pope asks Catholics to welcome everyone, create communion

The Holy Spirit invites the faithful to share in God’s love and to make the Church a loving home whose door is open to everyone, Pope Francis said.

“Our God is a communion of love: and this is how Jesus revealed Him to us,” the pope said before praying the Angelus with some 20,000 visitors gathered in St. Peter’s Square June 4.

In his talk, Pope Francis reflected on the solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity of Father, Son and Holy Spirit celebrated that day.

He said this “God of communion” can be seen “through the image of a family gathered around the table, where life is shared.”

The Holy Spirit invites the faithful “to sit at the table with God to share in his love,” which is “what happens at every Mass, at the altar of the Eucharistic table, where Jesus offers himself to the Father and offers himself for us,” he said.

The pope asked that Catholics reflect on the following questions: “Do we bear witness to God-as-love? Or has God-as-love become in turn a concept” that no longer invigorates or generates life?

“If God is love, do our communities bear witness to this? Do they know how to love?” and “do we know how to love in the family? Do we keep the door open always, do we know how to welcome everyone — and I emphasize, everyone — to welcome them as brothers and sisters?” he asked.

“Do we offer everyone the food of God’s forgiveness and Gospel joy?” he asked, or does the Christian community feel less like a home and more like an office or privileged place “where only the elect can enter?”

Pope Francis asked that the faithful “commit ourselves to bear witness to God-as-love, creating communion in his name” and living “the church as that home where one loves in a familiar way, to the glory of God the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.”

— Carol Glatz, Catholic News Service

Movie review: ‘Padre Pio’

Viewers may be misled by the title of director and co-writer Abel Ferrara’s historical drama “Padre Pio” (Gravitas). The film is less a profile of the titular saint, played passionately by Shia LaBeouf, than a portrait of San Giovanni Rotondo, the Apulian town of his Capuchin monastery, in the period immediately after World War I.

Moviegoers in search of an uplifting hagiography, accordingly, should look elsewhere. All the more so since Ferrara’s script, penned with Maurizio Braucci, includes graphic material that precludes endorsement for a wide range of age groups as well as themes suitable only for the fully catechized.

As Father Pio grapples with tormenting Satanic visions, the Italian social tensions that would eventually set the scene for the rise of Fascism mount. These are personified in wealthy, corrupt local landowner Renato (Brando Pacitto) on the one side and a group of virtuous socialists, including young would-be revolutionary Luigi (Vincenzo Crea), on the other.

The screenplay suggests points of coherence between Marxism and Christianity. But if that sounds like an uneasy mix, the attempted blending of the events unfolding inside the walls of the Franciscan refuge and those transpiring beyond it is equally unstable. Thus the picture manages to be at once respectful of Christian spirituality and anti-clerical.

The former stance leads to the moving scene in which Padre Pio receives the stigmata. The latter gives us the sight of the local parish priest, Don Anselmo (Piergiuseppe Francione), a dedicated ally of the oppressors, blessing their guns with holy water before a showdown with the good guys.

Such a caricature is, unfortunately, in keeping with the movie’s ham-handed approach to history and ideology. It’s a shame that LaBeouf’s all-in performance – as is well-known, his participation in this project has resulted in his conversion to Catholicism – should come wrapped in such a burdensome husk.

Somewhere inside Ferrara’s flawed political and social retrospective is an intriguing biopic struggling to get out of confinement. A narrower focus would have yielded much stronger results.

The film contains brief but intense gory violence, demonic behavior, rear nudity, references to incest, several rough terms, and a couple of crass expressions. The OSV News classification is A-III — adults. The Motion Picture Association rating is R — restricted. Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian.

— John Mulderig, OSV News

 

Mount St. Joseph Academy honors

The following students at Mount St. Joseph Academy in Rutland have received special honors.

Brian Pierce is the class of 2023 valedictorian. The son of Laura LaVictorie Pierce and Brian Pierce of Middletown Springs attended Christ the King School in Rutland prior to his enrollment at MSJ.

While at the Catholic high school, he maintained high academic honors and was actively involved in a variety of clubs and activities including the Josephite Chapter of the National Honor Society, National Spanish Honor Society, National Art Honor Society, and the MSJ Student Government. In addition, he earned varsity letters in soccer, alpine skiing, and tennis. He was a member of the 2021 Division 4 state championship boys’ soccer team and represented MSJ as an academy host/student ambassador.

In addition to his school honors, he volunteered at the Rutland Regional Medical Center and is currently a member of the Fair Haven Rescue Squad and Regional Ambulance Service as a certified EMT.

He will be attending Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in the fall, majoring in nuclear engineering.

Ryan Laforest is the Class of 2023 salutatorian. The son of Martine Cadesca and Kernizan Laforest of Coral Springs, Florida, maintained high academic honors throughout his career at MSJ and was a member of the Student Government and the Josephite Chapter of the National Honor Society.

He was actively involved in a variety of clubs and activities earning a varsity letter in boys’ soccer as part of the 2021 Division 4 state championship team.

He also served MSJ as an academy host/student ambassador.

He will be attending North Carolina State University in the fall.

Each year Mount St. Joseph Academy honors one or more members of the graduating class with the Veritas et Puritas Award. The phrase Veritas et Puritas translates as “truth and purity” and has been the motto of the academy since its founding in 1882 by the Sisters of St. Joseph.

This year the award went to Dominic Valente, son of Nancy and Michael Valente of Mount Holly.

At MSJ he maintained high academic honors and was a member of the Josephite Chapter of the National Honor Society. In addition to academics he was a member of the Mount St.

Joseph Academy boys’ soccer program that earned a state championship in 2021. He also earned varsity letters as member of the boys’ baseball team.

He will be attending Paul Smith’s College in the fall.

BIRTH-day Picnic

The Vermont Right to Life Committee Inc. will host a BIRTH-day Picnic to celebrate the first anniversary of the Overturning of Roe v. Wade on June 24 from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. on the Statehouse lawn in Montpelier.

Savannah Craven of Students for Life, the guest speaker at the 2023 Rally for Life, will be the guest speaker. Several other speakers will be included.

The BIRTH-day Picnic will include games, exhibit tables, prizes, cake, popcorn, and fun.

Pack your picnic lunch and bring your lawn chairs.

For more information, go to vrlc.net.