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Diocesan youth trek to Washington for Youth Rally and Mass for Life, then March for Life

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Staff reporter

WASHINGTON, D.C. – All endured biting cold and some had transportation problems, but once they were inside the Verizon Center, the hundreds of teens from the Diocese of Wilmington felt the warmth coming from the approximately 16,000 of their peers who joined them Jan. 25 for the annual Youth Rally and Mass for Life.

The rally and Mass preceded the March for Life on the 40th anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion. Read more »

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Enthusiasm buoys Vigil for Life at National Shrine

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Catholic News Service

WASHINGTON — For 39 years, Dave Katich of All Saints Parish in Etna, Pa., wanted to attend the opening Mass for the National Prayer Vigil for Life, but something always kept him away.

Not this year.

Katich and his wife, Debi, finally joined their friends from All Saints, Frank and Sherry Rectenwald, for the four-hour trip to Washington from their homes just north of Pittsburgh for the two days of distinctly Catholic events marking the anniversary of the 1973 Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion.

Gianna Belemjian, 4, rests in the arms of her brother Noah, 15, during the closing Mass of the National Prayer Vigil for Life at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington Jan. 25. The Belemjian family of Rochester, N.Y., was in the nation’s capital for the annual vigil and March for Life. This year marked the 40th anniversary of the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion across the nation. (CNS photo/Nancy Phelan Wiechec)

“I felt compelled to be here,” Katich said an hour before the Mass began in the filled-to-capacity Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception. “It’s probably the most important thing our faith believes, the right to life. Every human being has the God-given right to live.”

The two couples were among the thousands who began filing into the basilica hours before the liturgy. Many of those in attendance prayed overnight in the basilica’s crypt, keeping a vigil for life.

Standing with her mother and younger brother near one of the side chapels about halfway back in the massive church, Isent George, 8, was dwarfed by the throng of people passing back and forth as they sought out old friends and tried to find just the right spot in the hope of catching a glimpse of the celebrants on the main altar. She understood the importance of being at the Mass.

“We should end abortion because it’s actually murdering the embryos that are actually babies formed from God,” she said. “God made that creation and we have no right to kill babies.”

Isent’s mother, Nisha, told CNS she and her husband wanted to make the cross-country trip from St. Helen Parish in Phoenix to show their three children the importance of taking a stand for life and upholding the family’s Catholic faith. The trip east was the family’s first.

“It’s important to speak up and be visible,” she said. “It’s not about women’s freedom. It’s about life.”

On the other side of the basilica near the back, Anne Pirie, 20, of Akron, Ohio, and Jacquie Lustig, 24, of Cottonwood, Idaho, were enthusiastic about participating in the vigil despite being unable to see much of the liturgy from their vantage point. Both are consecrated women within Regnum Christi, the lay movement of the Legionaries of Christ, and students at the order’s Mater Ecclesiae College in Greenville, R.I.

“This is something every Christian should really be interested in. That’s a lot of what my vocation is about. I’m a Catholic layperson and I’m also totally dedicated to God. This is something I want to be a part of and this is a message I want to get out there,” Pirie said moments before Mass began.

“I feel a great need to show my real respect and my love for the people who are involved in this,” Lustig agreed. “Especially being a woman, I have a great love to uphold the dignity of women and I don’t think abortion does justice to that dignity.”

The Mass began with a 45-minute procession as hundreds of clergy entered the basilica and took their places around the main altar. Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley of Boston, chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops Committee on Pro-Life Activities was the main celebrant.

As he began his homily, Cardinal O’Malley recalled the work of Nellie Gray, the founder of the March for Life to protest legalized abortion who died in August at 86. He described Gray as “the Joan of Arc of the Gospel of life.”

The cardinal said he worked alongside Gray as a young priest in the 1970s.

“She was an inspiration for myself and countless others. Surely she continues to pray for us in her place for eternity,” he said.

Cardinal O’Malley then focused on the direction in which he believes the pro-life movement should be headed by calling upon Catholics to work to change society’s negative perception of adoption so that it is seen as a better option than abortion for women, especially those facing a crisis pregnancy.

He said the Year of Faith, which runs through November, “is a call to a deeper conversion so we can become effective apostles of the Gospel of life in the new evangelization.”

Citing the Gospel reading for the Mass — Luke 1:39-45, Mary’s visitation to Elizabeth — Cardinal O’Malley said the “the Gospel of life is imperative to Christ’s disciples.”

“God is urging us to be defenders of life in the midst of the culture of death,” he said in urging widespread efforts to change the perception that adoption is a bad choice for women.

“Too many Americans see abortion as a necessary evil,” he added. “We need to educate the public about the damage done to women by abortion.”

Pointing to the important work done by staff and volunteers at pregnancy centers and programs that support single mothers, Cardinal O’Malley called for broadening such efforts so that women turn away from abortion.

Work also must continue on the legislative and judicial fronts so that legalized abortion comes to an end, he said.

At the same time, he explained, Catholics must work more than ever “to change people’s hearts, to help Americans understand that abortion is evil and it is unnecessary.”

“It’s not just the lucidity of our arguments, but about the effect our words have on others,” the cardinal said. “Our task is to present the truth with civility, empathy and clarity. Being compassionate about the Gospel of life is about building a new civilization with love,” Cardinal O’Malley said.

 

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Defending life, liberty is part of the new evangelizing, archbishop says

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Catholic News Service

WASHINGTON — At a critical time for American Catholics to stand up in defense of life and religious freedom, they must engage in the church’s new evangelization effort, deepening their faith and sharing it in their everyday lives and in the public square, Baltimore Archbishop William E. Lori said Oct. 14.

He made the comments in the homily at a Mass and Pilgrimage for Life and Liberty at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington.

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Military archbishop says morality must guide legal decisions

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WASHINGTON — Lawmakers and those who serve justice must make decisions based on their strong faith and moral convictions, and not on popular cultural trends, Archbishop Timothy P. Broglio said Sept. 30 at the 60th annual Red Mass in Washington.

“The faith we hold in our hearts must motivate the decisions, the words, and the commitment of our everyday existence,” he said. “That existence is extraordinary, because it is infused with divine grace.”

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Seattle parishes can gather signatures for marriage referendum

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SEATTLE — Now that the Easter triduum has passed, parishes in the Archdiocese of Seattle are free to participate in gathering signatures for a referendum challenging a Washington state law that legalized same-sex marriage.

Seattle Archbishop J. Peter Sartain, who testified against the measure when it was still under consideration by the Legislature, had asked parishes not to collect signatures on Palm Sunday or Easter Sunday.

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