Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Pain, suffering and human mortality shouldn't be explained away, ignored or denied, but embraced by faith in God, said an expert in the philosophy and ethics of science. In fact, only a concrete encounter with the Lord can provide solace for people grappling with the question of how there can be a God who is good when there is also agony and death, especially of innocent children, said Evandro Agazzi, a member of the Italian National Committee for Bioethics and the Committee for the Ethics of Research and Bioethics of the Italian National Research Council. Agazzi, an Italian philosopher, physicist and mathematician, was the guest speaker at a September 17 lecture organized by the Ut Vitam Habeant Foundation -- a Rome-based Catholic foundation, headed by Cardinal Elio Sgreccia. People's faith and trust in a benevolent God have been challenged for millennia by the existence of death, pain and suffering, especially when such ills were not considered to be the direct result of moral evil, Agazzi told an audience of more than 250 people. Ancient philosophers and other thinkers have proposed a wide variety of approaches: passive resignation; a cynical frustration that laments the burden of life; "death as liberation, so we need to get life over with as soon as possible"; or a naive belief in the harmony of nature, which will make sure all the bad will be balanced out by the good. "The real problem was the meaning of pain and suffering" and one's response to it, he said.

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

The new movie “Last Ounce of Courage” is a statement calling on people to “stand up for their rights and defend their religious freedom,” says a young Catholic actor with a large role in the film. Hunter Gomez, a 21-year-old actor from Arizona, said the family film is about faith and urges Americans to not “be complacent anymore,” he told CNA September 11. Gomez plays the role of Christian Revere, grandson of the movie’s main character Bob Revere, who is played by Marshall Teague. Christian finds himself rebuked for bringing a Bible to school and sees Christmas being ignored or secularized in a town where it was once celebrated by locals. “He comes home and he feels like his rights are being stepped on,” Gomez summarized. “He can’t put a cross wherever he wants or bring a Bible to school or read a Bible in public.” Christian, whose father died in war, asks his grandfather, the town’s part-time mayor, what his father died for. The question prompts the Revere family to decide to stand for their beliefs and inspire their town. Gomez said the movie is about supporting all faiths, not just Christianity. He said it has been “very well received” and is not a partisan film. “It has no political agenda. It’s simply about standing up for your rights and becoming involved in political discussion.” Gomez is presently a student at Arizona State University. His home parish is the Catholic Community of the Blessed Sacrament in Scottsdale, Ariz. He said he feels free to speak about his faith in daily life. “But you have to be careful,” he said. “You can’t say certain things.” He said there is a “misconception” that those who are vocal about their faith, especially Catholics, “can come across as a bigot or someone that is deemed by the public as crazy. I think we should be able to live in a society where especially young people can be expressive and excited about their faith and say ‘I’m a Christian’ and not have to hide that.” Gomez advised Americans to “directly confront” social pressures to conceal their faith through discussion and dialogue. The “Last Ounce of Courage” movie runs special screenings on September 11 and opens nationwide September 14.

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Pro-life supporters gathered near Time Warner Cable Arena in Charlotte Aug. 31 for what was intended to be a peaceful, prayerful vigil in support of the right to life for the unborn and in memory of the 3,300 lives lost daily through abortion in the U.S. They were met by a handful of people who want to keep abortion legal and who tried to drown out the prayer vigil with their shouts. The prayer vigil was the first of several pro-life demonstrations planned before and during the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte September 4-6. More than 40 people gathered to pray the rosary at the beginning of the ecumenical prayer vigil in front of the location where the convention was held. The two-and-a-half hour event was hosted by the Charlotte-based grass-roots organization America, Defend Life! and the Washington-based Christian Defense Coalition. "We are humbled to be able to offer a visual and symbolic expression of the damage caused by abortion in our country every day. At the same time, we are praying for the women and their children who have been bruised," said Brice Griffin, spokeswoman for America, Defend Life! The vigil participants were met by a handful of protesters carrying signs reading "Abortion on Demand and Without Apology," and shouting statements including, "Abortion is not murder! A fetus is not a baby until it is born!" The vigil participants, who were wearing "America, Defend Life!" T-shirts and holding rosaries and pro-life signs with a picture of a fetus reading, "I am a Person," prayed more loudly and spread out a bit more along the sidewalk so that their voices could be heard and their signs read by passers-by.

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

The Fellowship of Catholic University Students (Focus) has a presence on 16 new campuses this academic year, with missionaries at Harvard University, the U.S. Coast Guard Academy and a new “digital campus.” “We believe that the key to building a better future lies with the young leaders on campus,” Focus' president, Curtis Martin, said Aug. 23. “Our goal is to inspire thousands upon thousands of men and women who, 10 years from now, 20 years from now, 30 years from now, will be in positions of influence — such that they will transform our culture.” The Colorado-based organization’s lay missionaries are typically recent college graduates who have committed two years or more to work in evangelization and campus outreach. They go to college campuses at the invitation of the local bishop and with the local Catholic campus ministry’s support. They aim to communicate the Gospel to young adults through personal outreach and friendship. Four missionaries based at the main office in Genesee, Colo., will offer missionary support to campuses without a team physically present through the new “digital campus.” Missionary teams serve 74 campuses in 31 states, including the District of Columbia. The organization has been a seedbed for vocations, with 384 participants entering religious life since its founding in 1998. In 2012 alone, 41 men and nine women who participated in Focus made a commitment to religious life. New campuses include Franciscan University of Steubenville, Baylor University, Carnegie Mellon University, the University of Oklahoma, Northwestern University and the University of Virginia. Other new campuses are the University of North Texas, Tulane University, the University of Mary Washington, the University of Tennessee, the University of Tulsa and the University of Wisconsin-LaCrosse. The same missionary team will serve Farleigh Dickinson University and Drew University in Madison, N.J. The missionary organization began with two part-time missionaries on a single campus. It has grown to 361 full-time missionaries today.