Witness for Life – May 1

Posted by on 28 Apr 2010 | Tagged as: Parish News

From Sr. Lucy at the archdiocesan Family Life Office:

Witness for Life
Saturday, May 1st
8:00 AM Mass at Old St. Patrick’s Cathedral, NYC

Come to all or part of the morning.

The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass begins our day in Old St. Patrick’s Cathedral. The main celebrant will be Fr. Emile Frische.

Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament follows, then people can either remain in the Church to adore Our Lord or attend the rosary procession to the local abortion clinic (two blocks away – Planned Parenthood).

Upon return from the clinic (approx 10:15) we will have a social (complete with coffee and donuts) with a short (10 min.) presentation by the Sisters of Life. You will hear of concrete ways to be of service, as Co-Workers, helping vulnerable pregnant women that are currently being served by the Sisters.

Promote this to your friends and keep the spiritual success of this effort for Life in your prayers.

God bless.

Sr. Lucy Marie
Respect Life Coordinator
Archdiocese of New York
1011 First Ave., 7th Floor
New York, NY 10022
212-371-1011 X3192

Pro-Life Symposium – April 9

Posted by on 07 Apr 2010 | Tagged as: Parish News

From Patrick Langrell, the archdiocesan Director of Young Adult Outreach:

Dear friends,

This Friday, from 9am – 6:30pm, Advocates for Life (a division of Americans United for Life) and Columbia University’s Law Students for Life are presenting a daylong legal symposium which will dissect some of the most dynamic and evolving areas of abortion law to offer an in-depth look on how current controversies fit into pro-life jurisprudence and how their resolution will impact the pro-life movement.

The symposium, “Looking Back, Looking Forward: Pro-life Strategy & Jurisprudence for the 21st Century” is drawing some very impressive speakers, including Clarke Forsythe, William Saunders, Piero Tozzi, Teresa Collet and many, many more.

Entry is free for all students (must bring ID) and is $15 for everyone who receives these CatholicNYC emails (discounted from the normal $35 fee). For advance registration, please visit ovationtix.com.

You can see the full schedule and speaker lineup on the facebook event here.

7pm-10pm: After the Symposium, there will be a Closing Reception, with the keynote address given by special guest, Dr. Charmaine Yoest, President and CEO of Americans United for Life.

You can RSVP by email or by calling Kellie Fiedorek at 202-905-6197.

Your friend in Christ,

Patrick Langrell

Director of Young Adult Outreach
Archdiocese of New York
1011 First Avenue
New York, N.Y. 10022

Witness for Life – March 6

Posted by on 02 Mar 2010 | Tagged as: Parish News

From Sr. Lucy, the archdiocesan Respect Life coordinator:

Witness for Life
Saturday, March 6th
8:00 AM Mass at Old St. Patrick’s Cathedral, NYC
Come to all or part of the morning

The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass (8:00 AM) begins our day in Old St. Patrick’s Cathedral.

Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament follows, then people can either remain in the Church to adore Our Lord or attend the rosary procession to the local abortion clinic (2 blocks away – Planned Parenthood).

Upon return from the clinic (approx 10:15am) we will have a social (complete with coffee and donuts) with a short (10 mins) presentation by the Sisters of Life. You will hear of concrete ways to be of service, as Co-Workers, helping vulnerable pregnant women that are currently being served by the Sisters.

Promote this to your friends and keep the spiritual success of this effort for Life in your daily prayers.

God bless you.

Sr. Lucy Marie
Respect Life Coordinator
Archdiocese of New York
1011 First Ave., 7th Floor
New York, NY 10022
212-371-1011 X3192

Eucharistic Vigil for Life – Feb. 28 – Mar. 12

Posted by on 24 Feb 2010 | Tagged as: Parish News

EVFL2010 Poster OLG

Witness for Life – February 6

Posted by on 02 Feb 2010 | Tagged as: Parish News

From Sr. Lucy, SV, the archdiocesan Pro-Life Coordinator:

Witness for Life ~ Saturday, Feb. 6th
8:00 AM Mass at Old St. Patrick’s Cathedral, NYC
Come to all or part of the morning

The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass (8:00 AM) in Old St. Patrick’s Cathedral begins our day.

Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament follows, then people can either remain in the church to adore our Lord or attend the rosary procession to the local abortion clinic (2 blocks away – Planned Parenthood).

Upon return from the clinic (approx 10:15 AM) we will have a social (complete with coffee and donuts) with a short (10 mins) presentation by the Sisters of Life. You will hear of concrete ways to be of service, as Co-Workers, helping vulnerable pregnant women that are currently being served by the Sisters.

Promote this to your friends and keep the spiritual success of this effort for Life in your daily prayers.

See you Saturday!

Witness for Life – January 9

Posted by on 05 Jan 2010 | Tagged as: Parish News

From the archdiocesan Family Life / Respect Life Office:

Dear Friends,

Just a reminder that this month the typical first Saturday Witness for Life has been moved to Jan. 9th.

Witness for Life ~ Saturday, January 9th
8am Mass at Old St. Patrick’s Cathedral, NYC
Rev. James Miara, main celebrant

The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass (8am) begins our day in Old St. Patrick’s Cathedral.

Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament follows, then people can either remain in the church to adore Our Lord or attend the rosary procession to the local abortion clinic (2 blocks away – Planned Parenthood).

Upon return from the clinic (approx 10:15am) we will have a social (complete with coffee and donuts) with a short (10 mins) presentation by the Sisters of Life. You will hear of concrete ways to be of service, as Co-Workers, helping vulnerable pregnant women that are currently being served by the Sisters.

Promote this to your friends and keep the spiritual success of this effort for Life in your daily prayers.

Sr. Lucy Marie
Respect Life Coordinator
Archdiocese of New York
1011 First Ave., 7th Floor
New York, NY 10022

Pro-Life March in Washington, DC – January 22

Posted by on 05 Jan 2010 | Tagged as: Parish News

From the archdiocesan Family Life / Respect Life Office:

Join us on pilgrimage as we commemorate the 37th anniversary of Roe vs. Wade, the Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion in our country. Hundreds of thousands will gather from throughout our nation to pray that hearts and minds may be opened to the Gospel of Life and that laws may be changed.

Join the Archdiocese of New York’s Family Life / Respect Life Office bus leaving from St. Malachy’s Church, 239 West 49th Street (between B’way and 8th Avenue) on Friday, January 22nd.  The bus will depart at 5:00 AM sharp!  The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass will be offered in Maryland at 10:30 AM with Archbishop Timothy Dolan and other NY pilgrims.

Seats will be available on a first-come, first-served basis.  Cost for the day trip will be $35.  Please email Sr. Margaret to register, or call 212-371-1011, x3195.  If you are not able to make the trip but would like to make a donation for others, we would be most grateful.  More than 40 buses will be traveling to DC from all over the archdiocese.  For more information, visit flrl.org.

US Bishops Point Out Shortcomings in Senate Health Care Bill

Posted by on 23 Dec 2009 | Tagged as: Miscellaneous

“We regret to say that in all the areas of our moral concern, the Senate health care reform bill is deficient.”

In a letter sent yesterday to members of the US Senate, the US Conference of Catholic Bishops called on the legislative body to delay passage of its health care reform bill until it better guarantees the rights to life and to the free exercise of conscience.  Click here to read the letter on the Bishops’ website.

USCCB logo

December 22, 2009

United States Senate
Washington, DC 20510

Dear Senator:

On behalf of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), we strongly urge the Senate not to move its current health care reform bill forward without incorporating essential changes to ensure that needed health care reform legislation truly protects the life, dignity, consciences and health of all.

The Catholic bishops of the United States have long supported adequate and affordable health care for all, and insisted that providing health care that clearly reflects these fundamental principles is a public good, moral imperative and urgent national priority. In our letter of November 20 we urged the Senate to act as the House has in the following respects:

• keep in place current federal law on abortion funding and conscience protections on abortion;

• protect the access to health care that immigrants currently have and remove current barriers to access; and

• include strong provisions for adequate affordability and coverage standards.

Disappointingly, the legislative proposal now advancing to final approval in the Senate does not meet these moral criteria. Specifically, it violates the longstanding federal policy against the use of federal funds for elective abortions and health plans that include such abortions — a policy upheld in all health programs covered by the Hyde Amendment as well as in the Children’s Health Insurance Program, the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program — and now in the House-passed “Affordable Health Care for America Act.” We believe legislation that fails to comply with this policy and precedent is not true health care reform and should be opposed until this fundamental problem is remedied.

Protecting Human Life and Conscience

Despite claims to the contrary, the House-passed provision on abortion keeps in place the longstanding and widely supported federal policy against government funding of elective abortions and plans that include elective abortions. It does not restrict abortion, or prevent people from buying insurance covering abortion with their own funds. It simply ensures that where federal funds are involved, people are not required to pay for other people’s abortions. The public consensus on this point is borne out by many opinion surveys, including the new Quinnipiac University survey of December 22 showing 72 percent opposed to public funding of abortion in health care reform legislation.

The abortion provisions in the Manager’s Amendment to the Senate bill do not maintain this commitment to the legal status quo on abortion funding. Federal funds will help subsidize, and in some cases a federal agency will facilitate and promote, health plans that cover elective abortions. All purchasers of such plans will be required to pay for other people’s abortions in a very direct and explicit way, through a separate premium payment designed solely to pay for abortion. There is no provision for individuals to opt out of this abortion payment in federally subsidized plans, so people will be required by law to pay for other people’s abortions. States may opt out of this system only by passing legislation to prohibit abortion coverage. In this way the longstanding and current federal policy universally reflected in all federal health programs, including the program for providing health coverage to Senators and other federal employees, will be reversed. That policy will only prevail in states that take the initiative of passing their own legislation to maintain it.

This bill also continues to fall short of the House-passed bill in preventing governmental discrimination against health care providers that decline involvement in abortion (Sec. 259 of H.R. 3962), and includes no conscience protection allowing Catholic and other institutions to provide and purchase health coverage consistent with their moral and religious convictions on other procedures.

Continue Reading »

US Bishops Reiterate Opposition to Senate Health Bill

Posted by on 21 Dec 2009 | Tagged as: Miscellaneous

In a statement released on December 19, the US Conference of Catholic Bishops continued to express its grief and disappointment that the health care reform bill currently advancing through the US Senate allocates taxpayer monies to fund abortion.  Despite the attempts of several senators to remove or restrict this allocation of funds, the bill will undoubtedly overturn established legal precedent and—for the first time—establish the US Government as a provider of abortion within our borders.   In its statement, the Conference also mentions other areas of concern regarding the overall bill.

USCCB logo

HEALTH REFORM BILL NEEDS MORE WORK DESPITE NEW LANGUAGE ON ABORTION, SAY CATHOLIC BISHOPS

Federal government must not expand its role enabling abortions
Bill should not go forward unless and until problems remedied
Protection of life, conscience rights; fairness to legal immigrants; affordability top issues

WASHINGTON–The Senate health reform bill should not move forward in its current form, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo of Galveston-Houston, Bishop William Murphy of Rockville Centre, New York, and Bishop John Wester of Salt Lake City said December 19, as senators proceeded closer to a vote. Cardinal DiNardo chairs the bishops’ Committee on Pro-life Activities. Bishop Murphy chairs the bishops’ Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development. Bishop Wester chairs the bishops’ Committee on Migration.

“Yesterday the bishops commented on good-faith efforts by Senator Robert Casey (D-PA) to improve the pending Senate health care reform bill on the issues of abortion and conscience rights,” Cardinal DiNardo, Bishop Murphy and Bishop Wester said. “Today a Manager’s Amendment was proposed to make final changes in that bill. The amendment includes some improvements from Senator Casey’s proposal, including adoption tax credits and assistance for pregnant women, but differs from that proposal in other ways: It does not seem to allow purchasers who exercise freedom of choice or of conscience to “opt out” of abortion coverage in federally subsidized health plans that include such coverage. Instead it will require purchasers of such plans to pay a distinct fee or surcharge which is extracted solely to help pay for other people’s abortions. Further the government agency that currently manages health coverage for federal employees will promote and help subsidize multi-state health plans that include elective abortions, contrary to longstanding law governing this agency.

Therefore, while we appreciate the good-faith efforts made by Senators Robert Casey and Ben Nelson (D-NE) to improve the bill, our judgment is the same as it was yesterday: This legislation should not move forward in its current form. It should be opposed unless and until such serious concerns have been addressed. The bishops’ conference continues to study that 383-page amendment’s implications from the perspective of all the bishops’ moral concerns — protection of life and conscience, affordable access to health care, and fairness to immigrants. We will continue to work vigorously for authentic health care reform that clearly reflects these fundamental principles because such reform is a public good, moral imperative and urgent national priority.”

Holy Innocents Mass – December 28

Posted by on 21 Dec 2009 | Tagged as: Parish Events

An invitation from the Sisters of Life:

Dear Friends,

Monday, Dec. 28th marks the Feast of the Holy Innocents. Each year the Franciscan Friars and Sisters of the Renewal and all of the Sisters of Life gather to commemorate this day by prayer and witness – please join us!

Mass 8:00 am – Fr. Benedict Groeschel main celebrant joined by Msgr. Phillip Reilly and other priests:

Church of the Holy Innocents / 128 West 37th Street (btn B’dway and 7th Ave.)

Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament follows Mass, then people can either remain in the Church to adore our Lord or attend the rosary procession to the local abortion clinic. Upon return from the clinic there will be a special luncheon. Please promote this to your friends and keep the spiritual success of this effort for Life in your prayers.

US Bishops on “Abortion Compromise” in Senate Health Bill

Posted by on 19 Dec 2009 | Tagged as: Miscellaneous

The US Conference of Catholic Bishops released the following statement on Friday, December 18, urging the US Senate to reject any “compromise” or change to the nation’s current abortion laws that would, through using taxpayer monies to fund the morally objectionable procedure, coerce citizens to pay for others’ abortions.

USCCB logo

‘ABORTION COMPROMISE’ DOES NOT ADDRESS CORE PROBLEM IN SENATE HEALTH BILL, SAYS CARDINAL DINARDO, BISHOPS’ PRO-LIFE CHAIR

‘Compromise’ would make citizens pay for others’ abortions
Senate should mirror House of Representative’s Hyde amendment language
Bill doesn’t meet goals of affordability, fairness to legal immigrants, protection of life

WASHINGTON—Responding to reports of a new “compromise” proposal on abortion in the U.S. Senate’s health care reform bill, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo today reaffirmed the position of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops that the legislation will be morally unacceptable “unless and until” it complies with longstanding current laws on abortion funding such as the Hyde amendment. Cardinal DiNardo is Archbishop of Galveston-Houston and Chairman of the Conference’s Committee on Pro-Life Activities.

The Cardinal commented on efforts by Senator Robert Casey (D-PA) to improve the Senate bill’s treatment of abortion.

“Senator Casey’s good-faith effort to allow individuals to ‘opt out’ of abortion coverage actually underscores how radically the underlying Senate bill would change abortion policy. Excluding elective abortions from overall health plans is not a privilege that individuals should have to seek as the exception to the norm. In all other federal health programs, excluding abortion coverage is the norm. And numerous opinion polls show that the great majority of Americans do not want abortion coverage.”

“I welcome Senator Casey’s good-faith effort to improve this bill,” said Cardinal DiNardo. “In particular he has sought to improve protection for conscience rights, and to include programs of support for pregnant women and adoptive parents that we favor in their own right. However, these improvements do not change the fundamental problem with the Senate bill: Despite repeated claims to the contrary, it does not comply with longstanding Hyde restrictions on federal funding of elective abortions and health plans that include them.”

Cardinal DiNardo had written to the Senate on December 14, saying that “the Catholic bishops of the United States strongly support authentic reform of our ailing health care system.” His letter cited “three moral criteria for reform: respect for life and conscience; affordability for the poor; and access to much-needed basic health care for immigrants,” noting that so far the Senate bill “has fallen short of the example set by the House version of this legislation in each of these areas.”

On abortion funding, the Cardinal urged the Senate to “incorporate into this bill the longstanding and widely supported policies of current law, acknowledged and reaffirmed by the Senate itself” when it approved the Consolidated Appropriations Act for the new fiscal year on December 13. This Act reaffirmed the Hyde amendment and other laws that exclude elective abortions from health plans receiving federal funds — including the plans that cover the Senators themselves and all other federal employees. The Senate so far has failed to reflect this same policy in its health care bill as the House has done, he said [see www.usccb.org/healthcare/DiNardo_1214_letter.pdf].

Cardinal DiNardo said December 18: “We continue to oppose and urge others to oppose the Senate bill unless and until this fundamental failure is remedied. And whatever the immediate outcome in the Senate, we will continue to work for health care reform which truly protects the life, dignity, conscience and health of all. As the bishops have said many times, ‘providing affordable and accessible health care that clearly reflects these fundamental principles is a public good, moral imperative and urgent national priority.’ In particular we will work vigorously to ensure that the substance of the House’s provision on abortion funding is included in final legislation. A special debt of gratitude is owed to House and Senate members, especially Rep. Bart Stupak (D-MI) and Sen. Ben Nelson (D-NE), who have placed their votes and reputation on the line to stand up for unborn children. Making this legislation consistent with longstanding federal law on abortion will not threaten needed authentic reform, but will help ensure its passage.”

US Bishops Express Regret Over Senate Health Care Bill

Posted by on 11 Dec 2009 | Tagged as: Miscellaneous

USCCB logo

The USCCB released the following statement on Wednesday, December 9.

Bishops Deeply Disappointed by Senate Vote to Table Nelson-Hatch-Casey Amendment

WASHINGTON—“The Senate vote to table the Nelson-Hatch-Casey amendment is a grave mistake and a serious blow to genuine health care reform,” said Cardinal Francis George, President of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. “The Senate is ignoring the promise made by President Obama and the will of the American people in failing to incorporate longstanding prohibitions on federal funding for abortion and plans that include abortion.”

Bishop William Murphy, Chair of the bishops’ Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development, said: “Congress needs to retain existing abortion funding restrictions and safeguard conscience protections because the nation urgently needs health care reform that protects the life, dignity, conscience and health of all. We will continue to work with Senators, Representatives and the Administration to achieve reform which meets these criteria. We hope the Senate will address the legislation’s fundamental flaw on abortion and remedy its serious problems related to conscience rights, affordability and treatment of immigrants.”

Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, Chair of the bishops’ Committee on Pro-Life Activities, said: “Congress needs to separate facts and truth from political rhetoric on abortion funding. Even our opponents claim they do not support federal funding for elective abortions and they want current restrictions to apply. The way to settle this often misleading debate is simply, clearly and explicitly to apply Hyde restrictions to all the federal funds in the legislation. That is what the House did and what the final bill must do. The Senate should not approve this bill in its current form.”

Bishop John Wester, Chair of the bishops’ Committee on Migration, pointed out: “For many years the bishops have strongly supported accessible and affordable health care for all. Health care must protect, not threaten, human life and dignity; respect, not violate, consciences of providers, taxpayers, and others. We believe universal coverage should be truly universal, not deny health care to those in need because of where they come from or when they arrive here. The Senate proposal falls short in these areas. Immigrants deserve access to health care for their benefit and the common good of all of society. We urge Senators to resist amendments that would leave immigrants and their families behind as the nation reforms health care. We urge Senators to support amendments that improve health-care access for immigrants and their families and to oppose efforts that deny them access.”

Cardinal George concluded: “While we deplore the Senate’s refusal to adopt the Nelson-Hatch-Casey amendment, we remain hopeful that the protections overwhelmingly passed by the House will be incorporated into needed reform legislation. Failure to exclude abortion funding will turn allies into adversaries and require us and others to oppose this bill because it abandons both principle and precedent.”

Witness for Life – December 5

Posted by on 30 Nov 2009 | Tagged as: Parish News

From the Sisters of Life:

Witness for Life ~ Saturday, December 5th

8am Mass at Old St. Patrick’s Cathedral, NYC

Come to all or part of the morning.

The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass at Old St. Patrick’s Cathedral begins our day.

Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament follows, and then participants can either remain in the church to adore our Lord or attend the rosary procession to the local abortion clinic (Planned Parenthood – 2 blocks away).

Upon return from the clinic (approx 10:15am) we will have a social (complete with coffee and donuts) with a short (10 mins) presentation by the Sisters of Life.  You will hear of concrete ways to be of service, as Co-Workers, helping vulnerable pregnant women that are currently being served by the Sisters.

Promote this to your friends and keep the spiritual success of this effort for Life in your daily prayers.

“Bringing Morals to the Public Square”

Posted by on 29 Nov 2009 | Tagged as: Miscellaneous

The following essay was penned by Carl Anderson, the Supreme Knight of the Knights of Columbus.  It appeared a week ago on Zenit.

BRINGING MORALS TO THE PUBLIC SQUARE
Catholic Political Leaders Need to Make Principled Stand
By Carl Anderson

As much of the world moves in a secular direction, some commentators have taken to speaking of a “post-Christian” society.

Certainly, the days of the close embrace of Christianity by civil authority are a thing of the past. We might say we live in a “post-embrace” world. But that does not — and must not — mean that Christianity is headed for a marginal “ghetto” existence.

Indeed, it was Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger (now Benedict XVI) who wrote in the 1980s: “In the long run, neither the embrace nor the ghetto can solve for Christians the problem of the modern world.”

As the Church faces a culture that is increasingly secular and finds little place for Christianity in the public square, it will be up to Christians, who value conscience, to create the “creative minorities” Benedict XVI has called for to bring moral reasoning into the public discourse.

Continue Reading »

US Bishops on the Senate Health Care Bill

Posted by on 25 Nov 2009 | Tagged as: Miscellaneous

USCCB logo

Late last week, the US Bishops sent the following letter to each member of the US Senate.  In it, the bishops outline their concerns regarding the health care reform bill currently progressing through the upper chamber.

November 20, 2009
United States Senate
Washington, DC 20510

Dear Senator:

On behalf of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), we strongly urge the Senate to incorporate essential changes to the Senate’s health care reform bill to ensure that needed health care reform legislation truly protects the life, dignity, consciences and health of all. We especially urge the Senate to act as the House has in the following respects:

  • keep in place current federal law on abortion funding and conscience protections on abortion;
  • protect the access to health care that immigrants currently have and remove current barriers to access;
  • and include strong provisions for adequate affordability and coverage standards.

The Catholic Bishops of the United States have long supported adequate and affordable health care for all. As pastors and teachers, we believe genuine health care reform must protect human life and dignity, not threaten them, especially for the most voiceless and vulnerable. We believe health care legislation must respect the consciences of providers, taxpayers, and others, not violate them. We believe universal coverage should be truly universal, not deny health care to those in need because of their condition, age, where they come from or when they arrive here. Providing affordable and accessible health care that clearly reflects these fundamental principles is a public good, moral imperative and urgent national priority.

Sadly, the legislative proposal recently unveiled in the Senate does not meet these moral criteria. Specifically, it violates the longstanding federal policy against the use of federal funds for elective abortions and health plans that include such abortions – a policy upheld in all health programs covered by the Hyde Amendment, the Children’s Health Insurance Program, the Federal Employee Health Benefits Program – and now in the House-passed “Affordable Health Care for America Act.” We believe legislation that violates this moral principle is not true health care reform and must be amended to reflect it. If that fails, the current legislation should be opposed.

Continue Reading »

Open House at The Gianna Center – December 8

Posted by on 25 Nov 2009 | Tagged as: Miscellaneous

Gianna - The Catholic Healthcare Center for Women

Manhattan Declaration

Posted by on 25 Nov 2009 | Tagged as: Miscellaneous

The Manhattan Declaration

On November 20, Archbishop Timothy Dolan joined dozens of religious and cultural leaders from around the country in signing the Manhattan Declaration.  As drafted and agreed upon by the original signers, the Declaration reaffirms their commitment as Christians to work for the protection and promotion of the common good in American society.

From the Manhattan Declaration’s website:

Christians, when they have lived up to the highest ideals of their faith, have defended the weak and vulnerable and worked tirelessly to protect and strengthen vital institutions of civil society, beginning with the family.

We are Orthodox, Catholic, and evangelical Christians who have united at this hour to reaffirm fundamental truths about justice and the common good, and to call upon our fellow citizens, believers and non-believers alike, to join us in defending them. These truths are:

  1. the sanctity of human life
  2. the dignity of marriage as the conjugal union of husband and wife
  3. the rights of conscience and religious liberty.

Inasmuch as these truths are foundational to human dignity and the well-being of society, they are inviolable and non-negotiable. Because they are increasingly under assault from powerful forces in our culture, we are compelled today to speak out forcefully in their defense, and to commit ourselves to honoring them fully no matter what pressures are brought upon us and our institutions to abandon or compromise them. We make this commitment not as partisans of any political group but as followers of Jesus Christ, the crucified and risen Lord, who is the Way, the Truth, and the Life.

In just under a week, over 110,000 others have attached their names to the Declaration.

To read the Declaration, click here.  To sign it, click here.

Witness for Life – September 12

Posted by on 02 Sep 2009 | Tagged as: Parish News

From the archdiocesan Pro-Life Office:

Witness for Life ~ Sat, Sept 12th
8am Mass at Old St. Patrick’s Cathedral, NYC

Come to all or part of the morning.

Note: The Witness for Life usually takes place the first Sat of each month – this month Planned Parenthood is closed on the 1st Sat (due to Labor Day) and also the Sisters of Life will be welcoming 9 new postulants to our community – therefore the change in date.

The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass begins our day in Old St. Patrick’s Cathedral. Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament follows, then people can either remain in the church to adore our Lord or attend the rosary procession to the local abortion clinic (2 blocks away – Planned Parenthood).

Upon return from the clinic (approx 10:15am) we will have a social (complete with coffee and bagels) with a short (10 mins) presentation by the Sisters of Life. You will hear of concrete ways to be of service, as Co-Workers, helping vulnerable pregnant women that are currently being served by the Sisters.

Promote this to your friends and keep the spiritual success of this effort for Life in your daily prayers.

Sr. Lucy Marie
Respect Life Coordinator
Archdiocese of New York

USCCB: Abortion Neutral Health Care Reform

Posted by on 02 Aug 2009 | Tagged as: Miscellaneous

USCCB logo

On July 29, Justin Cardinal Rigali, Archbishop of Philadelphia and the chair of the US Bishops’ Committee on Pro-Life activities, released the following letter urging Congress to keep abortion and abortion funding out of the current health care reform proposals being debated.

TO: Members of the House Energy and Commerce Committee

Dear Representative:

As you consider the “America’s Affordable Health Choices Act” (H.R. 3200), I urge you to consider the overall priorities and concerns presented by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops in Bishop William Murphy’s July 17 letter to all members of Congress (www.usccb.org/sdwp/national/2009-07-17-murphy-letter-congress.pdf). The bishops’ conference views health care as a basic right belonging to all human beings, from conception to natural death. We therefore have long supported universal health care reform that respects human life and dignity, provides access for all with a special concern for immigrants and the poor, preserves pluralism with respect for rights of conscience, and restrains costs while sharing them equitably.

In this particular letter I am writing specifically about our fundamental requirement that health care legislation respect human life and rights of conscience. Much-needed reform must not become a vehicle for promoting an “abortion rights” agenda or reversing longstanding current policies against federal abortion mandates and funding. In this sense we urge you to make this legislation “abortion neutral” by preserving longstanding federal policies that prevent government promotion of abortion and respect conscience rights.

In this regard several features of H.R. 3200, as introduced on July 14, need to be addressed:

1. The legislation delegates to the Secretary of Health and Human Services the power to make abortion a basic or essential benefit in all health plans, or in the “public plan” created by the legislation. This would be a radical change: Federal law has long excluded most abortions from federal employees’ health benefits plans and places no requirement on private plans, most of which also decline to cover elective abortions.

2. Because some federal funds are authorized and appropriated by this legislation without passing through the Labor/HHS appropriations bill, they are not covered by the Hyde amendment and other provisions that have prevented direct federal funding of abortion for over three decades. The legislation needs its own provision against abortion funding to ensure consistency with the policy in all other federal health programs.

3. Provisions such as those requiring timely access to all benefits covered by qualified health plans could be used by courts to override and invalidate state laws regulating abortion, such as laws to ensure women’s safety and informed consent and to promote parental involvement when minors consider abortion. These laws are modest, widely supported, and constitutionally sound, but they could fall before a new federal mandate to maximize “access” to abortion. It should be made clear in the legislation that such laws will not be preempted.

4. Several federal laws have long protected the conscience rights of health care providers. These laws prevent governmental bodies from discriminating against individual and institutional health care providers that decline involvement in abortion, and respect the moral and religious convictions of health professionals on abortion and other procedures in programs funded under the Public Health Service Act and other federal laws (see www.usccb.org/prolife/issues/abortion/crmay08.pdf). President Obama recently stated that he accepts these current laws and will do nothing to weaken them. Congress should make the same pledge, by ensuring that this legislation will maintain protection for conscience rights.

As long-time supporters of genuine health care reform, the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops is working to ensure that needed health reform is not undermined by abandoning longstanding and widely supported policies against abortion funding and mandates and in favor of conscience protection.

During committee consideration, Reps. Bart Stupak (D-MI) and Joseph Pitts (R-PA) plan to offer amendments to address these problems in H.R. 3200 as introduced. I strongly urge you to support their efforts. By your actions on these issues, you have the ability to help reform our health care system in a way that will truly serve the poor and needy and uphold the dignity of all.

Sincerely,

Cardinal Justin Rigali
Archbishop of Philadelphia
Chairman
USCCB Committee on Pro-Life Activities

USCCB: “Let the Taxpayers Beware!”

Posted by on 27 Jul 2009 | Tagged as: Miscellaneous

Over the weekend, the USCCB’s Secretariat for Pro-Life Activities released the following essay by its Assistant Director for Education and Outreach, Susan E. Willis. In it, Willis evaluates two pending pieces of federal legislation aimed at reducing the number of abortions in our country, and she helps the Catholic voter discern which of the two bills authentically serves the causes of life and justice.

LET THE TAXPAYERS BEWARE!
by Susan E. Wills
July 24, 2009

It should be called the Planned Parenthood Economic Stimulus Package of 2009.

Instead, co-sponsors Tim Ryan (D-OH) and Rosa DeLauro (D-CT) have given their “new” (though largely recycled) bill the promising title “Preventing Unintended Pregnancies, Reducing the Need for Abortion and Supporting Parents Act.” Sponsors describe the bill as a “common ground” approach to reducing unintended pregnancies and abortions, one that should appeal to opposing sides in the abortion debate.

Sure, the bill is dressed up with some funding for after-school programs, and some (very poorly crafted) efforts to provide support for pregnant students. But make no mistake. The bill is “about access to birth control,” according to Congressman Ryan (MSNBC’s “Hardball,” May 19, 2009). In the same interview, Ryan explained: “We have to have birth control and contraception offered to these poor women who don’t have access to contraception, period, dot. There’s no other way we’re going to be able to reduce [abortions].” About what you’d expect in a bill whose co-sponsors enjoy a 100% pro-choice rating from NARAL.

Accordingly, their bill calls for grants for comprehensive sexuality education (abstinence-only educators need not apply!). It substantially increases funding for the federal Title X Family Planning Program. It denies state choice, making family planning services a mandatory Medicaid entitlement in all states, and greatly expands family planning eligibility under Medicaid to all women who are eligible under state law for prenatal, labor, and delivery care.

Some people might find this approach sensible. But they ignore at least two things. First, since at least 1980, taxpayers have been funding “family planning services” to the tune of over $1 billion per year. In 2006 such public expenditures totaled $1.85 billion. So today, virtually all teenagers who are sexually active and do not want to become pregnant are already using contraception. Only 7% are not using it, according to the Guttmacher Institute.

Second, contraceptives don’t work very well in real life. In the first 12 months of contraceptive use, 16.4% of teens (1 in 6) will become pregnant. Among low-income cohabiting teens, the failure (pregnancy) rate over 12 months is 48.4% for birth control pills and 71.7% for condoms.

Numerous studies in the United States and Europe have found that greater access to contraception fails to reduce unintended pregnancies and abortions. A recent $10 million intervention in England giving at-risk teens comprehensive sex education and contraception is a perfect example. Teens in the program had a pregnancy rate 2.5 times higher than a similar group of at-risk teens (16 vs. 6 percent).

Why does increased access to contraception fail at the population level? Thinking they are protected from pregnancy and disease, more young people become sexually active and have more partners, offsetting any reduction in pregnancy from individual contraceptive use. And the increased level of sexual activity causes STD rates to soar. In the U.S., 1 in 4 teen girls has at least one STD; many of these are incurable and some are fatal.

The sharpest decline in unintended pregnancies and abortions since 1990 has occurred among those under 18, due not to comprehensive sex ed or contraception, but chiefly to the growing number of young people choosing to remain abstinent. Visit the Secretariat’s website for contraception facts and citations at www.usccb.org/prolife/issues/contraception/index.shtml, and let your member of Congress know that the Ryan/DeLauro bill cannot fulfill the promises in its title. The real abortion-reduction bill in Congress now is the Pregnant Women Support Act (S.1032, H.R.2035), which needs our support.

Pro-Life Commercial

Posted by on 15 Jul 2009 | Tagged as: Miscellaneous

Here’s another great ad from the folks at CatholicVote.org.

For their other commercials, click here.

All of CatholicVote.org’s commercials have been produced by Grassroots Films.

US Bishops Oppose New Stem Cell Guidelines

Posted by on 08 Jul 2009 | Tagged as: Miscellaneous

Human Embryo

In a statement released yesterday, Justin Cardinal Rigali, Archbishop of Philadelphia and chair of the US Bishops’ Committee on Pro-Life Activities, voiced the bishops’ opposition to new guidelines issued by the Obama administration, through the National Institutes of Health, allowing the use of federal taxpayer monies to fund embryo-destructive research.  Below is the full text of Cardinal Rigali’s statement.

In April I criticized the NIH’s draft guidelines for destructive embryonic stem cell research, saying that under these guidelines ‘federal tax dollars will be used to encourage destruction of living embryonic human beings for stem cell research – including human beings who otherwise would have survived and been born.’

The final guidelines issued yesterday are even broader. Parents who are asked to consider having their embryonic children destroyed for research will not even have to be informed about all their other options – only about the options that happen to be available at their particular fertility clinic. Moreover, under the final guidelines, stem cell lines that existed previously or that are produced in foreign countries may be made eligible for federally funded research even if they were obtained in ways that violate one or more of the NIH’s own informed consent requirements.

The comments of tens of thousands of Americans opposing the destruction of innocent human life for stem cell research were simply ignored in this process. Even comments filed by the Catholic bishops’ conference and others against specific abuses in the draft guidelines were not addressed. For example, federally funded researchers will be allowed to insert human embryonic stem cells into the embryos of animal species other than primates; federal grants will be available even to researchers who themselves destroyed human embryos to obtain the stem cells for their research. Existing federal law against funding research in which human embryos are harmed or destroyed is not given due respect here.

This debate now shifts to Congress, where some members have said even this policy does not go far enough in treating some human beings as objects to be created, manipulated and destroyed for others’ use. I hope Americans concerned about this issue will write to their elected representatives, urging them not to codify or further expand this unethical policy.

Click here for Cardinal Rigali’s April letter, and here for a more thorough overview of the new NIH guidelines.

Pregnancy Help Celebrates 15th Anniversary

Posted by on 31 May 2009 | Tagged as: Parish Events, Parish News

pregnancy-help

Founded by a group of St. Vincent Ferrer parishioners, Pregnancy Help, Inc., is celebrating its fiftheenth anniversary this Tuesday, June 2, at the 5:30 PM Mass. All are invited to attend.  A reception in the priory will follow the Mass.

Click here to learn more about Pregnancy Help and its important work.

Witness for Life – June 6

Posted by on 31 May 2009 | Tagged as: Parish News

From the Sisters of Life:

Dear Coworkers of Life,

Join the Sisters of Life Saturday, June 6th for their First Saturday Witness for Life! This will be our final Witness until September.

Mass at Old St. Patrick’s Cathedral (263 Mulberry Street) will begin at 8am. Come to all or part of the morning.

The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass begins our day in Old St. Patrick’s Cathedral (the Sisters of Life will provide a singing Schola), Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament follows, and people can either remain in the Church to adore our Lord or attend the rosary procession to the local abortion clinic run by Planned Parenthood.

Upon return from the clinic (approx 10:15am) we will repose the Blessed Sacrament and have a social (complete with coffee and bagels) with a short (15 mins) presentation by the Sisters of Life. You will hear of concrete ways to be of service, as Co-Workers, helping vulnerable pregnant women that are currently being served by the Sisters.

Promote this to your friends and keep the spiritual success of this effort for Life in your daily prayers.

God Bless You.

“Stand 4 Marriage Rally” – June 9

Posted by on 31 May 2009 | Tagged as: Parish News

From Sr. Lucy Marie, SV, the archdiocesan pro-life coordinator:

Dear Friends,

On May 22nd the New York State Assembly voted in favor of redefining marriage. The beautiful gift of marriage as the sacred union of man and woman, our religious freedoms, authentic family life and our children are once again under great attack. The Senate may vote on this issue in the next three weeks — so it is essential that we take action immediately to show them our support for the real definition of marriage.

Join us Tuesday, June 9th for the “Stand 4 Marriage Rally” in Albany. The Family Life/Respect Life Office is sponsoring a FREE bus (through the generosity of the Knights of Columbus). The bus departs at 7:15am from St. Joseph’s Seminary in Yonkers. Donations will be welcome toward the driver cost.

The Rally is an ecumenical effort put on by New Yorkers for Constitutional Freedoms. Already tentatively scheduled to attend are Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council, Bishop Harry Jackson, Jr. of the High Impact Leadership Coalition, State Conservative Party Chairman Michael Long, and many pro-family legislators. The New York State Catholic Conference has encouraged our attendance on one of their recent Action Alerts against Same Sex “Marriage.” 

The rally begins at 10:30 AM and lasts until 12:30 PM.

After 12:30 PM, attendees are strongly encouraged to go in the State Capitol and let our legislators know that there is tremendous support for the traditional definition of marriage throughout the State of New York. Some attendees will be participating in prayer rallies at each of the four corners of Capitol as well.

Lunch can be purchased (or bring it) while in Albany, and we expect to depart at 2:30pm.

RSVP by email – seats are limited.

If you are in the upper counties and wish to drive please join us there as well!

And of course, let us continue to keep this in our prayers.

God bless you.

Sr. Lucy Marie
Respect Life Coordinator
Archdiocese of New York
1011 First Ave., 7th Floor
New York, NY 10022
646-794-3192
Mon-Thurs 9:45am-4:45pm

UPDATE (6/3/09):

From Sr. Lucy:

Our bus to Albany for the “Rally 4 Marriage” is almost filled, and the Knights of Columbus have generously provided a second bus.

Both buses will depart from Dunwoodie, Seminary in Yonkers (201 Seminary Ave) at 7:00am – new time adjustment and there are 2 separate second stop pickups.

* Sacred Heart Church, 301 Ann Street, Newburgh. Bishop Lagronegro will celebrate Mass upon arrival – approx 8:15am – and pick up new passengers.
* St. Patrick Church, 137 Moseman Road, Yorktown Heights. Mass will be celebrated upon arrival at approx 8:00am and pick up new passengers.

RSVP if you wish to attend and please indicate location of pickup – either Yonkers (7am), Newburgh (8:15am), or Yorktown Heights (8am). Please reply by email – I am not able to take all the phone calls that are coming in.

FYI – Our New York State Bishops Conference is now headed up by Archbishop Dolan.  Just today it released a statement on Marriage.

Gallup Poll: Majority is “Pro-Life”

Posted by on 15 May 2009 | Tagged as: Miscellaneous

Earlier today, Gallup released it’s latest “Pro-Life/Pro-Choice” poll.  For the first time since Gallup debuted the poll in 1995, a majority of respondents labeled themselves “Pro-Life.”

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Advocates on both sides of the issue will debate the merits of this poll, but the graph above seems to confirm one thing—when abortion becomes an issue of national political interest, opinions tilt “Pro-Life.”  

For example, look at the two most significant shifts to the “Pro-Life” stance.  They occur between 1995 and 1998, and again between 2008 and 2009.  In the first instance, abortion became a national issue when Congress passed two separate laws banning partial-birth abortion (in 1995 and 1997), both of which were vetoed by President Clinton.  As you will remember, the debate was fierce, but in the end few could deny the barbarity of the procedure. In the second instance, last year’s presidential campaign again brought abortion into the national spotlight, and this exposure has continued since Inauguration Day as significant shifts have taken place in executive policy regarding abortion. Currently, national attention is focused on the use of public funds for the procedure, as well as on the uncertain future of conscience protections now enjoyed by medical professionals who object to abortion.  In both cases, prolonged national attention seems to have caused measurable shifts in the public’s attitudes toward abortion. 

Also worth noting is the first time to two lines of the graph intersect.  In the middle of 2001, the poll registered an equal number of respondents on each side of the issue.  At the time, the nation was engaged in a prolonged debate over the use of embryonic stem cells in medical experimentation, and whether public funds should be used for such research.  Again, it seems that when the dignity of human life becomes a national issue, significant though not overwhelming shifts take place in public opinion toward the defense of life.

Of course, a poll is just a poll.  But trends are read by both sides to help determine future action.  And in this regard, the Pro-Life cause has reason to hope and to continue its important witness.

Saint Gianna Molla (1922-1962)

Posted by on 28 Apr 2009 | Tagged as: Liturgical Feasts

Give her the reward of her deeds;
they will proclaim her as she enters the gates, alleluia.

st-gianna

A saint of and for our time.

The following is the biography published by the Vatican on the occasion of St. Gianna’s canonization, which took place on May 16, 2004:

Gianna Beretta was born in Magenta (Milan) October 4, 1922. Already as a youth she willingly accepted the gift of faith and the clearly Christian education that she received from her excellent parents. As a result, she experienced life as a marvellous gift from God, had a strong faith in Providence and was convinced of the necessity and effectiveness of prayer.

She diligently dedicated herself to studies during the years of her secondary and university education, while, at the same time, applying her faith through generous apostolic service among the youth of Catholic Action and charitable work among the elderly and needy as a member of the St. Vincent de Paul Society. After earning degrees in Medicine and Surgery from the University of Pavia in 1949, she opened a medical clinic in Mesero (near Magenta) in 1950. She specialized in Pediatrics at the University of Milan in 1952 and there after gave special attention to mothers, babies, the elderly and poor.

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Witness for Life – May 2

Posted by on 23 Apr 2009 | Tagged as: Parish News

From Sr. Lucy, SV, the Respect Life Coordinator for the archdiocese:

Join the Sisters of Life on Saturday, May 2nd, and Witness for Life!

8am Mass at Old St. Patrick’s Cathedral, NYC (263 Mulberry Street)

Fr. Aquinas Guilbeau, O.P., will be the main celebrant.

Come to all or part of the morning.

Last month, within minutes of our arrival at the clinic, we had a young woman turn around – thanks to the prayers of all present and the great mercy of God!

The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass begins our day in Old St. Patrick’s Cathedral (the Sisters of Life will provide a singing Schola), Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament follows, and people can either remain in the Church to adore our Lord or attend the rosary procession to the local abortion clinic.

Upon return from the clinic (approx 10:15am) we will repose the Blessed Sacrament and have a social (complete with coffee and bagels) with a short (15 mins) presentation by the Sisters of Life. You will hear of concrete ways to be of service, as Co-Workers, helping vulnerable pregnant women that are currently being served by the Sisters.

Promote this to your friends and keep the spiritual success of this effort for Life in your daily prayers.

God Bless You.

Sr. Lucy Marie

Members of President’s Council on Bioethics Question Obama’s Recent Move on Embryonic Stem Cell Research

Posted by on 01 Apr 2009 | Tagged as: Miscellaneous

On March 26, several members of the President’s Council on Bioethcs, an official White House advisory board, issued a joint statement detailing their concerns over President Obama’s March 9 executive order allowing federal monies to fund embryo-destructive stem cell research.  The order overturned the Bush Administration policy barring funds for such purposes.

Seeking to clarify what the executive order actually means for science and ethics, the statement concludes: 

With respect to the progress that had been made in reconciling the needs of research and the moral concerns of many Americans, we can only judge, therefore, that the president’s action has taken a step backward, and we regret that.

Click here for the full statement.

NYC Bill Targets Pro-Life Witness

Posted by on 31 Mar 2009 | Tagged as: Parish News

From the Catholic Advocacy Network:

A bill is pending before the New York City Council (Intro 826) that would restrict the free speech rights of peaceful pro-life witnesses outside abortion clinics in the five boroughs of New York City. The bill is scheduled to be presented for a vote on Thursday, April 2. The Catholic Advocacy Network joins with the Catholic Community Relations Council in sharing concerns about this legislation. We urge you to read an article from the March 26 edition of Catholic New York (copied below), which explains the issue in more detail and suggests contacting your local New York City Council member. You can find the name, address and email of your Council representative here: http://council.nyc.gov/html/members/members.shtml.

“Bill Unfairly Targets Pro-Life Witness”
by Rosemary Ginty

A bill is pending before the New York City Council, Intro. 826, that would unfairly restrict the free speech rights of peaceful pro-life witnesses outside of abortion clinics.

Proponents of Intro. 826 argue that the bill is necessary to prevent people from blocking or obstructing the entrances to abortion clinics, and to prohibit “harassment” of those seeking to enter the clinics.

We entirely support the idea that anyone who damages property, or commits a legitimate offense against a person should be prosecuted.

But Intro. 826 goes far beyond that. It unconstitutionally infringes on the First Amendment right to free speech. The proposal contains vague and uncertain terms, that are left undefined and unclear. This would chill the free speech rights of persons seeking to provide information to women entering abortion clinics, out of fear of an arrest or civil suit based on an ambiguous law. It is a established principle of constitutional law that any prohibition of speech must be very clearly defined and very strictly limited, especially when the speech occurs in a public forum like the city sidewalks. Intro. 826 fails this test.

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