|
Adopt-A-Family Christmas Program seeks volunteer
LOS ANGELES --- The Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels Adopt-A-Family
Program is seeking "volunteer angels" to help serve the 300
families to be assisted at Christmas from the Skid Row area
of Los Angeles. The most urgent need is for bilingual (Spanish-speaking)
volunteers to help register families by interviewing the families
in their apartments and hotel rooms, a process taking place
now through Oct. 26. Other volunteer opportunities include
sorting and packaging of food boxes (Nov. 27-Dec. 13), gift
wrapping (Dec. 11-15) and making deliveries on Delivery Day
(Dec. 16). Families may also be "adopted," or sponsored, by
participant-donors. For information, call (213) 637-7501.
Conscientious objection still possible in all-volunteer
U.S. military
WASHINGTON
(CNS) --- Conscientious objection to fighting wars is still
a possibility 33 years after the U.S. ended obligatory military
service. But objectors in the all-volunteer U.S. armed forces
have to be opposed to all wars and not just to a particular
one such as Iraq. Even with volunteers, where the presumption
is that someone enlisting is willing to fight, the law allows
troops to change their minds for religious or philosophical
reasons. One result has been that after the Sept. 11, 2001,
terrorist attacks activities picked up at the Catholic Peace
Fellowship, which helps military personnel filing for conscientious-objector
status or just wanting information about Catholic moral teachings
on war. "Sept. 11 shaped what we have done since," said Holy
Cross Father Michael Baxter, national secretary of the Catholic
Peace Fellowship, based in South Bend, Ind. Through e-mails,
telephone calls and personal contacts, the once-dormant Catholic
group has actively aided about 60 people seeking conscientious-objector
status since Sept. 11 and fielded more than 1,500 requests
for information, said Father Baxter, also an assistant theology
professor at the University of Notre Dame.
Studies show faith has positive effect on people in stressful
events
WASHINGTON (CNS) --- People who had any religious belief coped
better with the stresses associated with Sept. 11, 2001, than
nonbelievers did, according to the principal author of two
studies on that topic. Amy L. Ai, an associate professor of
psychology in the University of Washington's health sciences
department and a researcher for the University of Michigan
Health System, also has tested her theory beyond the terrorist
events of Sept. 11 to include such stressful situations as
Hurricane Katrina and the Kosovo war in the Balkans as examples
of communal stress, and open-heart surgery as an example of
individual stress. Because about 90 percent of the people
interviewed for an earlier study professed belief in some
strain of Christianity or Judaism, there was no basis for
comparison as to whether adherents to one faith fared better
than members of another religion, Ai said in response to written
questions from Catholic News Service. "The 9/11 and Kosovar
studies suggest the similar effect of different faiths," she
added. Ai's reports on post-Sept. 11 trauma were titled "Prayers,
Spiritual Support and Positive Attitudes in Coping With the
Sept. 11 National Crisis" and "Hope, Meaning and Growth Following
the Sept. 11, 2001, Terrorist Attacks."
Pope warns against environmental damage, says it burdens
world's poor
CASTEL GANDOLFO, Italy (CNS) --- Pope Benedict XVI delivered
a strong warning against environmental damage, saying it was
aggravating the already heavy burden on the world's poor.
The pope, speaking at his summer villa outside Rome Aug. 27,
expressed support for the Italian church's first day dedicated
to the protection of creation, which was to be celebrated
Sept. 1. The pope said the created world was a great gift
of God but is presently "exposed to serious risks by life
choices and lifestyles that can degrade it." He said, "In
particular, environmental degradation makes poor people's
existence intolerable." The Compendium of the Social Doctrine
of the Church says the world's poor, who often live in polluted
slums, are connected to the environmental crisis. In cases
of poverty and hunger, it is "virtually impossible" to avoid
environmental exploitation, said the 2004 social doctrine.
Pope Benedict said, "In dialogue with Christians of various
churches, we need to commit ourselves to caring for the created
world, without squandering its resources, and sharing them
in a cooperative way."
Former Catholic Charities head among jet crash victims
ALEXANDRIA,
Va. (CNS) --- A retired Catholic Charities executive, Arnold
Andrews, was among the 49 people who died Aug. 27 in a commuter
jet crash in Lexington, Ky., said Catholic Charities USA president
Father Larry Snyder. "Arnold was a true leader in the Catholic
Charities movement.... His commitment to people who are poor
and vulnerable was an inescapable part of who he was and was
evident in even the briefest conversation with him," Father
Snyder said. Andrews, 64, retired last year as executive director
of Catholic Charities of the Diocese of St. Petersburg, Fla.
From 1999 to 2005 he was a member of the national organization's
board of trustees. The early Sunday morning crash occurred
at Lexington's Blue Grass Airport.
Czech church sells properties to cope with dropping attendance
WARSAW (CNS) --- The Czech Catholic Church has begun selling
its properties at low prices to cope with plummeting church
donations and membership. "The reason is simple: we just don't
have the money to maintain them," said Martin Horalek, spokesman
for the Prague-based bishops' conference. "Some priests are
spending most of their time on the upkeep of their churches
when they should be providing pastoral care for the faithful."
In an Aug. 24 interview with Catholic News Service, Horalek
said property sales by the country's eight dioceses had been
approved at the church's synod in 2005. However, he said church
officials hoped local municipalities would still allow occasional
use of the churches for Mass. Between the 1991 and 2001 censuses,
the Catholic Church's membership dropped from 41 percent to
27 percent of the 10.2 million Czech population. Around 200
church properties, often in poor conditions, were returned
to the Catholic Church in the 1990s after the breakdown of
communism. In July 2004, the bishops' conference stopped seeking
the return of thousands of properties held by the state and
instead demanded compensation.
|