Sunday, March 30, 2008

Being more proactive in reaching out to the young

Complacency will only lead to our downfall

I read with interest the passionate plea by A Former Student,We are losing the battle!” that was published in the Herald dated March 30.In fact this is not the first time such messages of plight from fellow Catholics have been published but it is regrettable that all such pleas seemed to have fallen on deaf ears.

Having my own children in college, I appreciate the tremendous influence of the secular world on our young students who are away from home. The plight of A Former Student is real and I fully agree with him that the Catholic Church is facing a risk of losing a significant number of Catholic students at the tertiary level to other faiths.

We have been under the wrong pretext that being actively involved in the church organizations is all that is required to withstand the temptations of the material world. It could have been true before but definitely not so in our modern era of the internet where all the good values that we cherished have been thrown out as irrelevant.

A Former Student is very true in saying ‘Being active in church activities, singing in the choir, memorising facts and prayers will not make our faith bullet proof. It is also a delusion to think that Praise and Worship, Charismatic Prayer Group and other feel-good factors will sustain the youngsters’ faith.’

Yes, there is much more to just attending church, singing and chanting at mass, reciting prayer, making pilgrimages and participating in rites and rituals. As parents it is easy to take our children to church and make them participate in all the activities there but more difficult to instill the true values that Christ taught which can only be done by our own exemplary behavior. We do lot of things to show that we love God whom we cannot see or touch but do nothing to show that we love fellow men who are physically present amidst us. There is a need to feel the living Christ in not just within ourselves but in those around us as well.

A major reason for our students in campuses to go astray is that we as parents, teachers and pastors have failed in our duties towards them. We have failed to be with them when they needed us most during their lonely years in college when they experience some form of cultural shock. Our Church doesn’t seem to be aware of the problems of the youngsters in their midst, unlike those from other denominations and religions. How often do our priests and other church workers reach out to them? It is sad that they are not even interested to meet them when they come to church.

On the other hand, our brethren from other Christian denominations and even other faiths are so supportive and caring for these students who are ‘lost’ in the wilderness of the big cities and towns. They use all their resources at their disposal to reach out to all students, even those not their own members. Some are willing to even offer financial help to those in need. In short they are there, with love, care and assistance, when these are needed most.

It is important for our bishops, priests and other church authorities to look out for young people like A Former Student who have so much passion and love, recruit them into the Campus Ministry and utilize their ideas and talents in reaching out to fellow students who are in need of company and comradeship.

The Campus Ministry is not a government ministry, where people come to apply for aid, but a Ministry of Christ’s love where that love has to be actively carried to those in need especially those out of our reach. People like A Former Student are assets who should be utilized in that ‘evangelization’ and not considered as threats and conveniently ignored only to be lost into oblivion, which is the standard practice in our Catholic Church today.

Dr.Chris Anthony

Being more proactive in reaching out to the young

Complacency will only lead to our downfall

I read with interest the passionate plea by A Former Student,We are losing the battle!” that was published in the Herald dated March 30.In fact this is not the first time such messages of plight from fellow Catholics have been published but it is regrettable that all such pleas seemed to have fallen on deaf ears.

Having my own children in college, I appreciate the tremendous influence of the secular world on our young students who are away from home. The plight of A Former Student is real and I fully agree with him that the Catholic Church is facing a risk of losing a significant number of Catholic students at the tertiary level to other faiths.

We have been under the wrong pretext that being actively involved in the church organizations is all that is required to withstand the temptations of the material world. It could have been true before but definitely not so in our modern era of the internet where all the good values that we cherished have been thrown out as irrelevant.

A Former Student is very true in saying ‘Being active in church activities, singing in the choir, memorising facts and prayers will not make our faith bullet proof. It is also a delusion to think that Praise and Worship, Charismatic Prayer Group and other feel-good factors will sustain the youngsters’ faith.’

Yes, there is much more to just attending church, singing and chanting at mass, reciting prayer, making pilgrimages and participating in rites and rituals. As parents it is easy to take our children to church and make them participate in all the activities there but more difficult to instill the true values that Christ taught which can only be done by our own exemplary behavior. We do lot of things to show that we love God whom we cannot see or touch but do nothing to show that we love fellow men who are physically present amidst us. There is a need to feel the living Christ in not just within ourselves but in those around us as well.

A major reason for our students in campuses to go astray is that we as parents, teachers and pastors have failed in our duties towards them. We have failed to be with them when they needed us most during their lonely years in college when they experience some form of cultural shock. Our Church doesn’t seem to be aware of the problems of the youngsters in their midst, unlike those from other denominations and religions. How often do our priests and other church workers reach out to them? It is sad that they are not even interested to meet them when they come to church.

On the other hand, our brethren from other Christian denominations and even other faiths are so supportive and caring for these students who are ‘lost’ in the wilderness of the big cities and towns. They use all their resources at their disposal to reach out to all students, even those not their own members. Some are willing to even offer financial help to those in need. In short they are there, with love, care and assistance, when these are needed most.

It is important for our bishops, priests and other church authorities to look out for young people like A Former Student who have so much passion and love, recruit them into the Campus Ministry and utilize their ideas and talents in reaching out to fellow students who are in need of company and comradeship.

The Campus Ministry is not a government ministry, where people come to apply for aid, but a Ministry of Christ’s love where that love has to be actively carried to those in need especially those out of our reach. People like A Former Student are assets who should be utilized in that ‘evangelization’ and not considered as threats and conveniently ignored only to be lost into oblivion, which is the standard practice in our Catholic Church today.

Dr.Chris Anthony

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Religious freedom has its constraints too

EDITORIAL: We welcome Magdi Allam, Muslim Convert and our Brother, and Pledge our Christian Prayer and Solidarity
By Deacon Keith Fournier
3/26/2008

Catholic Online (www.catholic.org)

We commend Magdi Allam for showing us all the way to bear witness to the Risen Lord. Will his words and witness stir all who bear the name Christian to grow in evangelical boldness? Do they herald a new missionary age? We hope they do both.

The conversion of Magdi Allam to the ancient Catholic Christian faith is a story which gives living testimony to the truth of the Resurrection of Jesus Christ and the power of the Resurrected Lord to truly transform all men and women. In the midst of the
The conversion of Magdi Allam to the ancient Catholic Christian faith is a story which gives living testimony to the truth of the Resurrection of Jesus Christ and the power of the Resurrected Lord to truly transform all men and women. In the midst of the "uproar" it has brought, all Christians should pledge their solidarity and prayer to this courageous new Christian.
LOS ANGELES (Catholic Online) - Like many Christians throughout the world, I have been deeply moved by the living faith and witness of Magdi Allam, the popular Italian journalist and former Muslim who, at the Easter Vigil, received the Sacraments of Christian Initiation through the priestly ministry of Pope Benedict XVI.

As a Deacon of the Church, the Vigil Mass is always the highpoint of the Easter Triduum for me.

In addition to my other diaconal work, I have responsibility for adult faith formation and for the the Rite of Christian Initiation. It is a source of deep joy to see that the Risen Lord is truly in our midst. I know that He is alive when I witness authentic conversion in the lives of men and women who encounter Him. It is in that encounter that they, like my brother Magdi, are made new.

This encounter with the Risen Christ is the very heart of the Christian faith.

The One who was raised from the dead in His glorified Body now communicates Himself to us. He does this in so many ways, including through the Sacraments which mediate His Risen life, through His living Word, and by His Holy Spirit at work within us and the world around us. In fact, He communicates through every circumstance of our daily lives. That is because our eyes have been opened and we have truly seen the Lord.

Speaking of his own encounter with Jesus Christ, Magdi Allam wrote:

"I converted to the Christian Catholic religion, renouncing my previous Islamic faith. Thus, I finally saw the light, by divine grace. On my first Easter as a Christian I not only discovered Jesus, I discovered for the first time the face of the true and only God, who is the God of faith and reason."

Throughout the Octave of Easter, the readings of the Sacred Liturgy give testimony to the changed lives of men and women who, though they walked with Jesus during His earthly ministry, were really changed through this encounter with Him in His Glorious Resurrection.

Whether it is the account of Mary of Magdala, the story of the wonderful journey of the Disciples on the road to Emmaus, the surprise of the disciples who were fishing at the Sea of Tiberius or the delight of the eleven, the message is still the same.

Jesus Christ has been raised from the Dead! He lives now in our midst. He also calls the whole world into this living encounter with Him in order to make all men and women new.

Magdi Allam has chosen to be very public about this encounter with the Risen Lord.

He does so, knowing he is at risk.

His Christian courage shows the extraordinary power of the Resurrection of Jesus Christ. Magdi Allam is no longer afraid.

All throughout our Easter Octave, our first readings in the Holy Mass are taken from the Acts of the Apostles, which details the Missionary work of the nascent Christian Church. The Resurrection transformed ordinary, once frightened followers, into courageous disciples and living witnesses.

Perhaps it is the only Book of the Canon of the sacred Scripture yet to be finished.

It is still being written in the living witness of people like Magdi Allam in our own day. They call us all to the courage which befits our Christian vocation. They remind us of the obligation we have to fidelity to our Baptismal vocation, no matter what our state in life.

Though our own encounter with the Lord is often personal, it is never “private”. The Christian faith is profoundly public. It is, in fact, meant to be shouted from the housetops.

We commend Magdi Allam for showing us all the way to bear witness to the Risen Lord.

Will his words and witness stir all who bear the name Christian to grow in evangelical boldness? Do they herald a new missionary age? We hope they do both.

If the One whom we proclaim has truly been raised from the dead, and He most certainly has, we are all called to proclaim that fact to the ends of the earth. Magdi Allam, like the train of witnesses who span over two millennia, has become a witness to the Resurrection.

He gave great credit to Pope Benedict XVI for inspiring his bold witness when he wrote:

“...the courageous and historical gesture of the Pope, who, as soon has he knew of my desire, immediately agreed to personally impart the Christian sacraments of initiation to me. His Holiness has sent an explicit and revolutionary message to a Church that until now has been too prudent in the conversion of Muslims, abstaining from proselytizing in majority Muslim countries and keeping quiet about the reality of converts in Christian countries.

Out of fear.

The fear of not being able to protect converts in the face of their being condemned to death for apostasy and fear of reprisals against Christians living in Islamic countries. Well, today Benedict XVI, with his ...witness, tells us that we must overcome fear and not be afraid to affirm the truth of Jesus even with Muslims.

For my part, I say that it is time to put an end to the abuse and the violence of Muslims who do not respect the freedom of religious choice. In Italy there are thousands of converts to Islam who live their new faith in peace. But there are also thousands of Muslim converts to Christianity who are forced to hide their faith out of fear of being assassinated by Islamic extremists who lurk among us.

By one of those “fortuitous events” that evoke the discreet hand of the Lord, the first article that I wrote for the Corriere on Sept. 3, 2003 was entitled “The new Catacombs of Islamic Converts.” It was an investigation of recent Muslim converts to Christianity in Italy who decry their profound spiritual and human solitude in the face of absconding state institutions that do not protect them and the silence of the Church itself.

Well, I hope that the Pope’s historical gesture and my testimony will lead to the conviction that the moment has come to leave the darkness of the catacombs and to publicly declare their desire to be fully themselves.

If in Italy, in our home, the cradle of Catholicism, we are not prepared to guarantee complete religious freedom to everyone, how can we ever be credible when we denounce the violation of this freedom elsewhere in the world?

I pray to God that on this special Easter he give the gift of the resurrection of the spirit to all the faithful in Christ who have until now been subjugated by fear.”

Magdi Allam, welcome into the Catholic Church, the Body of the Risen Lord. You are our brother.
And, you are a beloved disciple of the Risen Lord Jesus Christ. You need not be afraid. Not only is the Lord with you, but all of us who bear His name pledge our solidarity, prayer and committment of love to you.


Comment:

There is nothing wrong with converting anyone to any other religion as long as he/she does it with a free will.The issue here is not the conversion but the motive behind it.

Why the great publicity given to the baptism of Magdi Allam, a renounced Muslim.Even Tony Blair,the former British Prime Minister,didn't get that when he embraced Catholicism.


Thursday, March 20, 2008

Bin Laden acuses Pope

The Star Online > Worldupdates

MYT 6:31:31 PM

Vatican rejects bin Laden's new "crusade" charges

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - The Vatican rejected on Thursday fresh accusations from Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden that the publication of cartoons mocking Islam's Prophet Mohammad was part of a "new crusade" involving Pope Benedict.

"These accusations are totally unfounded," the chief Vatican spokesman Rev. Federico Lombardi told Reuters, in response to an audio recording by bin Laden which was posted on the Internet to coincide with the birthday of the founder of Islam.

Pope Benedict XVI blesses the faithful during Palm Sunday mass in Saint Peter's square March 16, 2008. The Vatican rejected on Thursday fresh accusations from Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden that the publication of cartoons mocking Islam's Prophet Mohammad was part of a "new crusade" involving Pope Benedict. (REUTERS/Maurizio Brambatti/Pool/Files)

The Saudi-born militant leader said Europe would be punished for the cartoons, which were first published by a Danish paper in September 2005 and unleashed a bloody reaction after other newspapers around the world reprinted them the following year.

Last month several Danish newspapers republished one of the cartoons in solidarity with the cartoonist after three men were arrested on suspicion of plans to kill him. This sparked a fresh outburst of protest by Muslims.

"Your publications of these drawings -- part of a new crusade in which the Pope of the Vatican had a significant role -- is a confirmation from you that the war continues," said bin Laden, addressing "those who are wise at the European Union".

Lombardi said bin Laden's accusations were not surprising.

"It is natural to think that he would lump the Vatican and the Pope together with all his perceived enemies. But this is not correct," he said.

He recalled that the Pope himself had been quick to condemn the Danish cartoons and had launched a wider criticism of depictions of religious figures that offend members of different faiths.

He also pointed out that Pope Benedict, who himself deeply offended many Muslims with a 2006 speech depicting Islam as a violent faith, recently set up a permanent official dialogue with Muslim leaders.


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