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Bishop names James Walsh as director of pastoral planning

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James Walsh

Bishop Larry Silva has hired a retired HMSA vice president and an active member of several local Catholic boards as the diocese’s new Director of Pastoral Planning.

James Walsh, a graduate of the University of Notre Dame who also has an MBA from the University of Hawaii, will step into the position March 3.

His job will combine the duties of the Diocesan Director of Parish Resources, a post formerly held by Sharon Chiarucci who retired at the end of 2013, and the continuing implementation of the diocesan strategic plan referred to as the “Road Map.”

Before he retired in 2009, Walsh had served for 10 years at HMSA as vice president for professional relations/advocacy and vice-president of provider services. He was also the administrator of several departments at Straub Medical Center for more than 20 years.

He is on the boards of the St. Francis Foundation and the Hawaii Catholic Community Foundation and is the chairman of the parish pastoral council of St. John Apostle and Evangelist Church in Mililani.

He is a former board member of Catholic Charities Hawaii which honored him with the Ulu Award for his distinguished service.

Walsh’s office will be at St. Stephen Diocesan Center.


Kathleen T. Choi: Once upon a Protestant

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I’ve often written about why I treasure Catholicism. Today I thought I’d praise the things I believe our Protestant brethren do especially well.

Biblical knowledge. Fundamentalists and evangelicals, in particular, know their way around the Bible like they know their morning commute. When they read the New Testament, they hear all the Old Testament echoes. They’ve memorized favorite passages of comfort and praise. They can explain God’s plan of salvation with numerous Scriptural references. Few Catholics know their Bible as well as the average Baptist layman.

Religious education. The Bible was once only available in Latin and its interpretation was reserved for the clergy. The Reformation changed that, and conservative Protestants feel obliged to promote Scriptural literacy. Sunday school kids get prizes for memorization and “sword drills” (finding a quotation quickly). They attend Bible camp in the summer. Lay adults meet in weekly Bible study groups, trusting that the Holy Spirit will guide their understanding.

Sermons. A Protestant sermon runs about twice as long as a Catholic one. What’s impressive is how many preachers can hold your attention for 20 minutes. To a Protestant minister, nothing is more important than the Sunday sermon. Many ministers seclude themselves and spend an entire day or more preparing their sermons. Catholic priests seldom have that much free time, and their homilies can reflect that limitation.

Evangelization. We Catholics resist door-to-door evangelists and wince when asked if we’ve accepted Jesus as our personal savior. But at least conservative Protestants recognize the Christian’s duty to proclaim the Good News. Our grandparents believed Catholicism was the one true church and prayed for conversions. Our parents supported Catholic missions. The fear of appearing intolerant has silenced our generation. The Vatican’s “New Evangelization” won’t work until we figure out how to share our faith without sounding unbearably self-righteous.

Hymns. Catholics have always had beautiful liturgical music. We’re way behind, though, when it comes to songs a congregation can easily sing. Modern composers like David Haas and Marty Haugen do great work, but I miss Protestant standards like “Blest Be the Tie That Binds” or “Abide with Me.” It’s not surprising that the world’s favorite hymn, “Amazing Grace,” written by a Protestant.

Architecture. I love soaring arches and stained glass windows like those in our cathedral. However, I also like the plain, white churches that Protestant missionaries brought to Hawaii. These meeting halls honor simplicity. Only the pulpit, communion table and baptismal font are needed. Anything else might distract worshipers from attending to the Word. It’s not gold and candles that make a church feel holy; it’s the numerous heartfelt prayers offered there.

Sense of Ownership. As an adult Protestant, I knew how my church worked. A lay person chaired an annual budget meeting which laid out projected expenses and invited discussion. Immediately after approving the budget, we signed individual pledge cards, knowing exactly how much the church needed and what our share would be. In most Protestant denominations, the local church hires and fires their pastor (or at least has a voice in the process). These are two reasons why Protestants feel their church is their responsibility.

Protestant Sunday School teachers introduced me to God. They taught me Bible stories and how to pray. A Protestant urged me to make a lifetime commitment to Jesus Christ. Another mentored my study of Church history and Protestant theology. It was that study which led me to become a Catholic. I wonder what kind of Catholic I’d be if I hadn’t had 40 happy years as a Protestant. Bless, Holy Mary, the land of my birth.

Kathleen welcomes comments. Send them to Kathleen Choi, 1706 Waianuenue Ave., Hilo, HI 96720, or e-mail: kathchoi@hawaii.rr.com.

At 80 years, Aiea couple honored for being longest married

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Posing with Angelino Ronquilio, third from left, and Eva Ronquilio, seated, in St. Elizabeth Church in Aiea, Feb. 9, are from left, Sandra Ronquilio, son Ben Ronquilio, daughter Eva Davidson, son Ronald Ronquilio, Joyce Ronquilio and son Thomas Ronquilio. (HCH photo | Patrick Downes)

 

1934: Franklin Delano Roosevelt was president. You could buy a new house for less than $6,000, although the average yearly wage was only $1,600. Gas cost 10 cents a gallon and a loaf of bread 8 cents.

1934 was also the year Angelino Benji Ronquilio married his lovely wife Eva in St. Elizabeth church in Aiea.

Six-thousand-dollar houses and 8-cent loaves of bread will never return, but the Ronquilios were back at St. Elizabeth this past Sunday, Feb. 9, albeit in a newer church. They were being honored by their parish and by World Wide Marriage Encounter as the longest married couple in Hawaii for 2014.

This coming Aug. 18 marks their 80th wedding anniversary.

Slim, sure of foot and sporting a fashionable red, white and blue aloha shirt, Angelino, who is close to 100 years old, accompanied his cheerful wheelchair-bound wife to the front of the church. Joining them in the first pew were their four children and other family members.

In his homily, Deacon Kin Borja called the eight-decade-long union an inspiration to all married couples. After the homily, the celebrant Father Oliver Ortega, blessed the couple.

After Mass, David and Susan Shanahan, Worldwide Marriage Encounter’s Hawaii executive couple, presented the Ronquilios with a framed certificate of congratulations.

They have four children, 12 grandchildren and a large number of great- and great-great-grandchildren.

Bishop to educators: learn from the past, plant seeds for the future

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Catholic educators hold hands praying the Our Father at the educator’s conference, Jan. 31 in the Co-Cathedral of St. Theresa. (HCH photos | Darlene Dela Cruz)

 

Bishop Larry Silva urged the hundreds of Oahu’s Catholic school teachers and administrators who gathered Jan. 31 in the Co-Cathedral of St. Theresa for the Annual Conference of Catholic Educators to learn from the past, live in the present and “plant seeds” for the future.

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Bishop Larry Silva preaches at educators conference Mass. (HCH photo | Darlene Dela Cruz)

More than 700 educators filled the church while an overflow of 100-or-so participated in the parish hall by way of video screens.

Five priests concelebrated the Mass.

Using the liturgy’s Old Testament reading about King David’s adulterous affair with Bathsheba that resulted in her pregnancy and the king’s murder of her husband, the bishop warned how present day “lusts” for sex, power and money can be “murderous” to future generations.

“The story is a wake-up call to all of us, so that we do not so lust after the things of the present moment that we forget where we came from, or our ultimate destiny,” the bishop said.

Bishop Silva said that, as followers of Jesus, “we are totally engaged in the present, but we never leave the past behind, bringing the classic wisdom of our ancestors into the current time, and even trying to learn from their sins and mistakes.”

“And we not only live for ourselves and our own time,” he said, “but we plant seeds that will grow — we know not how — for centuries after us.”

He said that Catholic schools are called to connect ancient wisdom with modern learning.

The bishop said that “the twenty-first century is filled with all kinds of sexual lusts that can lure us and our students into murdering the future.”

He said that the “lust for power” leads to a “rejection of God’s law” and “ultimately to division and war.”

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Sacred Hearts Sister Georgene Perry, honored for her 60-year career in Hawaii Catholic schools. (HCH photo | Darlene Dela Cruz)

The “lust for wealth,” he said, “makes us blind to the plight of the poor, who have so little and who often suffer all the more when the rich get richer.”

Bishop Silva told the educators that with the “fresh and innovative ways” of modern education, “we must also be prophets of the future, not insisting that we have it all now, but realizing that we, too, plant mustard seeds that grow steadily and slowly over time.”

“And so how wonderful it is for us to be here,” he concluded, “to celebrate the mission that has been entrusted to us as Catholic educators. We bring the greatest meaning to the present when we link it effectively to the past and to the future.”

At the end of Mass, school superintendent Michael Rockers and associate superintendent Lovey Ann DeRego presented service awards to 20 Oahu educators marking 20, 30, 40 and 60 years of service.

Receiving a standing ovation for 60 years in the field of Catholic education was Sacred Hearts Sister Georgene Perry, a student counselor at Sacred Hearts Academy.

The conference concluded with a keynote talk by Kathy Mears, executive director of the National Catholic Educational Association Elementary Schools Department.

Opting out of marriage: Why has the number of church weddings dropped 60 percent?

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A Catholic wedding paints a beautiful picture of God’s grace, joining a man and a woman for a lifetime of faithful commitment, an image of the Lord’s unbreakable bond with his bride, the church.

Recent statistics have shown, however, that more and more Catholics are opting out of the sacrament. The decline of Catholic weddings around the world is nothing short of alarming. The Diocese of Honolulu is no exception.

It is difficult to pinpoint why Catholic marriage numbers are on the rocks. Local priests and lay people who work in marriage preparation note several factors that may be contributing to the trend. They include a rejection of the preparation time and cost of a Catholic wedding, a lack of understanding of what marriage truly is, and a growing disinterest in real marital commitment.

The statistics

1optingoutmarriage-chartAccording to a 2011 study published in Our Sunday Visitor, the number of Catholic marriages in the U.S. dropped almost 60 percent over the last three decades. In 1972, U.S. dioceses reported 415,487 Catholic weddings; in 2010, there were 168,400.

That means in 2010, there were only 2.6 marriages per 1,000 Catholics.

Catholic marriage rates in Hawaii haven’t fared much better. In the 1992 Official Catholic Directory, the Diocese of Honolulu reported 1,103 weddings in Hawaii. By 2012, the number was 454. In the last 20 years, church weddings in the Islands fell by about 60 percent.

The Catholic Directory shows that the decline in Hawaii’s Catholic marriages began at the turn of this century. From the 1940s to the 1990s, church weddings consistently averaged about 1,000. Since the year 2000, the number has barely risen above 800, save for a small spike in 2002.

According to Mary Duddy, moderator of the diocesan Tribunal, the marriage rates reported in the books include mixed faith marriages, the weddings of out-of-state visitors who want to get married in Hawaii, and the convalidations of couples already married in civil ceremonies.

The declining statistics are certainly felt in Island parishes, said Father Tom Gross, pastor of St. John Vianney Church in Kailua.

“The numbers do indeed reflect the reality of Catholic marriages,” said Father Gross. “Here at St. John Vianney, we had eight marriages in 2013. One was a convalidation. Four were weddings from the mainland. Three were from Hawaii.”

“The reason” for this downward trend, he said, “is hard to say for certain.”

Societal changes

Shifting societal attitudes toward marriage, Father Gross believes, have led to an overall decline in weddings in general. “People don’t feel the need to get married,” he said, as more couples instead have taken to cohabitation without the binding commitment of marital vows.

“I have to admit that I am really surprised when a couple comes to get married and they are not living together,” Father Gross said. “Often they have even bought a house together before even considering the wedding plans.”

Cohabitation that includes sexual relations before marriage is contrary to Catholic teaching. Father Gross said it is difficult to underscore to today’s couples the importance the church places on matrimony when other relational options are readily available.

“The biggest pastoral challenge is really trying to stick to what the church teaches in the midst of a world that really doesn’t believe it or accept it,” he said.

Father Dennis Koshko of Holy Trinity Church in Kuliouou said marriage is also being discussed less among families and children. With a rise in the rate of divorced and single parents, he said, many young men and women never grew up witnessing a long-lasting marriage.

“Couples have no role models,” Father Koshko said.

When interviewing men and women for matrimony, Father Koshko said it is an opportune time to embrace such misgivings about the sacrament. These discussions, he added, can help couples learn to develop a fruitful relationship through God and the church.

But a prevailing secular perception of marriage is difficult to overcome.

Bishop Larry Silva, in his recent response to the Vatican’s survey for its upcoming synod on the family, said “the secularization of society” and “an exaggerated sense of the individual” have been roadblocks to a true understanding of marriage.

“Couples often enter into marriage with the attitude that the experience must be fulfilling for them, rather than thinking of what they can give to the other person and their children,” he wrote in his December response to the questionnaire.

“Clergy and others encourage them to look beyond the wedding,” the bishop said, “and to reflect deeply on the meaning of marriage, its sacramental nature, commitment, children and the challenges they will face.”

Cost and preparation

The price and preparation requirements for a church wedding may be among the factors deterring couples. Geri Simbahon, who works with couples preparing for marriage at St. Joseph Church in Waipahu, said civil weddings offer financially strapped young people a quick, no-frills way to exchange their vows.

“It’s easier money-wise to go straight to the point,” she said.

Local parishes vary in the fees and donations “suggested” for weddings. Costs can range from $300 at a small neighborhood church like St. Anthony in Kalihi, to $2,000 at St. Augustine Church in Waikiki, a popular location for destination weddings.

Simbahon said some people are turned off as well by the expense of an Engaged Encounter retreat and other marriage prep programs mandated by the diocese. Couples have also complained to her about the time and instruction required by the diocese before a wedding.

Father Gross, however, is quick to dispel the notion that “the preparation process is long and complicated.”

“It really isn’t,” he said.

The diocese’s “Norms for the Preparation and Celebration of Marriage” note that a couple should contact their parish ideally one year before their intended wedding date. A minimum of six months is needed, the document states, for adequate sacramental preparation; exceptions to that time frame can be granted at a pastor’s discretion.

Several meetings are required between the couple and the priest or deacon who will celebrate the wedding rite. These meetings are intended to complete necessary canonical paperwork and other liturgical and logistical details, as well as to properly catechize the couple on the sacrament of matrimony.

Simbahon said the church requires such thorough marriage instruction so couples “know what they’re going through.”

“I think it’s a beautiful sacrament,” said Simbahon, who has been married to her husband Al for almost 44 years. “If the couple puts their heart into it … it’ll be a lifetime.”

Diocesan young adult ministry coordinator Makana Aiona said modern-day couples often want to “jump that first step” of faith formation before a wedding. However, Aiona said those fundamentals are necessary to developing not just dedicated husbands and wives, but also “people who are passionate about their relationship with God.”

Of the sacramental preparation time he and his wife Stephanie had before their wedding last month, Aiona said, “we kind of wanted to do more.”

Differing views

Two local Catholics who have had civil marriages represent the differing views on church weddings. One parishioner, a 35-year-old woman who asked to remain anonymous, said she opted for a ceremony outside the church because she and her husband “wanted to be in a setting where we ‘feel’ (God) the most and where we enjoy the most.”

She said she doesn’t plan to have her marriage convalidated, as she believes “our vows hold true for the rest of our lives, no matter where they were taken.”

Jewel Jose, 42, of St. Joseph Church in Waipahu wed her husband Eddie in a civil ceremony in 2009. It was the best thing for her family situation at the time, she said. Later, she told Eddie she wanted to participate in the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults. That required them to have their marriage convalidated.

“I always wanted a church wedding,” Jewel Jose said. “It all just fell into place.”

She encourages people, even those who have fallen away from the church, to seek an understanding and appreciation of the beauty and significance of a Catholic wedding. God has become the “foundation” of their family since their marriage convalidation, she said, and “it was the most meaningful ceremony I’ve ever done.”

“I wouldn’t have it any other way,” Jose said.

The elect: Hawaii’s 2014 catechumens

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West Honolulu

Cathedral of Our Lady of Peace

  • Chelsi Lynn Valdez

Co-Cathedral of St. Theresa

  • Gariss Y. Pereira
  • Donovan Keola Wong

Blessed Sacrament, Pauoa

  • (no catechumens)

Holy Family

  • Sophia Andreas
  • Brendan Daley
  • Briana Hayashi
  • Joseph McCallister

Our Lady of the Mount, Kalihi

  • (no catechumens)

St. Anthony, Kalihi

  • Malcolm S. Atuatasi
  • Liliomoana S. Atuatasi
  • Severino M. Bulagay Jr.
  • Pino M. Tupua

St. John the Baptist, Kalihi

  • Axiel Alanis
  • Loghan Bellamy
  • Kevin Doone
  • Isaiah Milam-Akau
  • Jacob Palma
  • Jennifer Rubiniol
  • Cody Timu
  • Maicyn Udani
  • Justin Valencia

St. Philomena, Salt Lake

  • Jarod Hiromasa
  • Kim Nicole McDonnell
  • Olivia Eunbi Son Nartatez
  • Fiailoa Muliaga Malae

St. Stephen, Nuuanu

  • Todd Aoki
  • Andrew Echard

East Honolulu

Holy Trinity, Kuliouou

  • Puanani Hardwick
  • Kelly Hardwick

Newman Center/Holy Spirit, University of Hawaii

  • Shanice Cambra

Sacred Heart, Punahou, and St. Pius, Manoa, combined

  • Donna Culannay
  • Claudette Nishigaya
  • Alex Oda
  • Chase Ogoshi
  • Mick Panos
  • Heather Postema
  • David Sugiki
  • Matthew Sugiki
  • Ann Tashiro
  • Christopher Ugale
  • Irene Wong

St. Augustine, Waikiki

  • (no catechumens)

St. Patrick, Kaimuki

  • (no catechumens)

Sts. Peter and Paul, Honolulu

  • Philip Mulno
  • Anita Nguyen
  • Jun Sakakibara
  • Lisa Tang
  • Leslie Vu

Star of the Sea, Waialae

  • Lulu Feng
  • George Gan
  • Kam Lai Lee
  • Sai Fong Lum
  • Dudley Makahanaloa
  • Valeriya Li Souza
  • Dennis Takashi

Mystical Rose Oratory, Chaminade University

  • Scott Janssen
  • Clarence Monzano
  • Linda Spracklen

Windward Oahu

Our Lady of Mount Carmel, Waikane

  • (no catechumens)

St. Ann, Kaneohe

  • Arthur Asuncion
  • Russell Chun
  • Kristen Perreira
  • Roxane Perreira
  • Sean Wedemeyer

St. Anthony, Kailua

  • Cathy Bachl
  • Julie Bondio
  • Elizabeth Clark
  • Mariana Kaczynski
  • Duane Miyashiro
  • Lopaka Nottage
  • Blake Otto
  • Liane Shelby

St. George, Waimanalo

  • Nestor Marquez

St. John Vianney, Enchanted Lake

  • Kamaile Ain Lee Loy
  • Audra Ambrose
  • Stephanie Deskins
  • Ke’alohi Kahikina

St. Roch, Kahuku

  • (no catechumens)

Leeward Oahu

Immaculate Conception, Ewa

  • Vilma J. Tanare
  • Jeffrey R. Yoder

Our Lady of Perpetual Help, Ewa Beach

  • Shannon Ancheta
  • Ezra Dela Cerna
  • Aiden Gouveia
  • Bryan Ilar
  • Kenneth Pascual

Sacred Heart, Waianae

  • Michael J. Alontaga
  • Jayda L. Alontaga
  • Elisha Faasu
  • Myah Jackson
  • Theresa Molia
  • Reid Nonaka

St. Joseph, Waipahu

  • Ryan Carvalho
  • Gregory Carvalho
  • Bradley Carvalho
  • Angielyn Dela Cruz
  • Angielina Dela Cruz
  • Mark A. Galiza
  • Micah Gomes
  • Precious Ibe
  • Kalolanine “Kalo” Manupule
  • Sailine Manupule
  • Pilimilose Manupule
  • Melody Nacnac
  • Ryan Nolasco
  • John Rathjen
  • Analinda R. Tauyan
  • Mike Vergara

St. Jude, Waikele

  • Noah Alcaraz
  • Kelly Anaya
  • Chaz De la Pena
  • Bill Geiger
  • Kelley Henley
  • Schuyler Henley
  • Donald Henley
  • Claire Henley
  • Simon Henley
  • Donson Henley
  • Kortney Long
  • Anela Nagaishi
  • Evyn Potes
  • Hailey Potes
  • Keoni Wun

St. Rita, Nanakuli

  • Mary Kay McGlothin
  • Keala Mae Pomaikai
  • Brandy Keao Tautua’a

Central Oahu

Our Lady of Good Counsel, Pearl City

  • Tracy Bailey
  • Ryan K. Bustamante-Tolbe
  • Karen Ho

Our Lady of Sorrows, Wahiawa

  • (no catechumens)

Resurrection of the Lord, Waipio

  • Joseph Wayne Aubrey
  • Linda Hang

St. Elizabeth, Aiea

  • Justin Fiaui Ah-San
  • Moanlisa Taualofa Ah-San
  • Victoria Kamalei Baker
  • Stephanie Ann Bogan
  • Timothy Ray Bogan
  • Dylan Alexander Bogan
  • Lauren Elizabeth Bogan
  • Nicky Christopher
  • Aileen Gace DeJesus
  • Kipas Engichy Elias
  • Tausaga Junior Fiaui
  • Andrew Nojiri
  • Cheech Hyon Chin Pak
  • Chelsea Shigematsu

St. John Apostle and Evangelist, Mililani

  • Shannon Cuesta
  • Kento Ibarra
  • Kevin Ibarra
  • Braylen Kaopua-Medeiros
  • Solomon Torres

St. Michael, Waialua

  • (no catechumens)

Kauai

Holy Cross, Kalaheo

  • Deja Rend Chang Wo
  • Kieiki Iwase
  • Sherwood Ohara
  • Caitlin Tachibana

Immaculate Conception, Lihue

  • Mary Jane Garasi
  • Orlando Mateo
  • Jonathan McDowell
  • Justin Stiles

St. Catherine, Kapaa

  • Nico Michael Cocumelli
  • Emma Rose McCartney
  • Kaonani’ihanalei McGarry
  • Benjamin James Kaulu Rittmeister

St. Raphael, Koloa

  • (no catechumens)

St. Theresa, Kekaha

  • Aliya Boyd
  • Kalikokalehua-opanaewa Kamyoung

Maui

Christ the King, Kahului

  • Renee Bascar
  • Athalia Bowes
  • Shayne Casio
  • Larry Rhoden

Holy Rosary, Paia

  • (no report)

Maria Lanakila, Lahaina

  • Christian Pascua
  • Mariella Pascua
  • Marion Sidon
  • Marvin Sidon

Our Lady Queen of Angels, Kula

  • (no report)

St. Ann, Waihee

  • (no report)

St. Anthony, Wailuku

  • (no catechumens)

St. Joseph, Makawao

  • Midori Allen
  • Noelani Allen
  • Kyle Castillo
  • Zasha Kamilimilionalani Jimenez
  • Keilana Johnston
  • Scott McKay
  • Nathan Pele
  • Brandon Stenger
  • Kenneth Stenger
  • Kristina Waymire Krau

St. Mary, Hana

  • (no report)

St. Rita, Haiku

  • Lei Ana Kikue Bland
  • Lisa Lei Kuwahara
  • Wesley William Weeks

St. Theresa, Kihei

  • Sierra Meleana Tanner

Molokai

St. Damien, Kaunakakai

  • (no report)

St. Francis, Kalaupapa

  • (no catechumens)

Lanai

Sacred Hearts, Lanai City

  • (no report)

West Hawaii Island

Annunciation, Waimea

  • (no catechumens)

Our Lady of Lourdes, Honokaa

  • (no report)

Sacred Heart, Hawi

  • Keao Kainoa
  • Erin Thomas-Kaholoa’a

St. Benedict

  • (no catechumens)

St. Michael, Kailua-Kona

  • Kaleina Llanes-Whitman
  • Natalie Montes
  • Ale’a Yniques
  • Tiana Yniques

East Hawaii Island

Holy Rosary, Pahala

  • (no catechumens)

Immaculate Heart of Mary, Papaikou

  • (no catechumens)

Malia Puka O Kalani, Keaukaha

  • (no report)

Sacred Heart, Naalehu

  • (no catechumens)

Sacred Heart, Pahoa

  • (no report)

St. Anthony, Laupahoehoe

  • (no catechumens)

St. Joseph, Hilo

  • Andrelyn Dela Cruz
  • Kyle Dela Cruz
  • Anilouve Dela Cruz
  • Joshua Lewis

St. Theresa, Mountain View

  • (no catechumens)

Ethnic Communities

Chinese Catholic Community

  • Lum Tong Sai Fong
  • Lee Kam Lai

Korean Catholic Community

  • Pilsun Amina
  • Rachael Chung
  • Lisa Um Han
  • Mia Kim
  • Jinsil Kim
  • John Kim
  • Marcus Obara
  • Youngho Oh
  • Hakyo Pak
  • Kelly Sunny
  • Yunhee Yoo

Vietnamese Catholic Community

  • Luu Thanh Liem
  • Nguyen Thi Hoa Nien

Island parishes to baptize more than 200 this Easter Vigil

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Hawaii parishes have reported the names of 204 catechumens to be baptized at Easter Vigil ceremonies April 19 across the diocese. The actual number may be slightly more because eight parishes had not yet submitted their lists to the diocesan Office of Worship by Feb. 21.

Hawaii has 66 parishes, of which 18 are reporting no Easter Vigil baptisms this year.

In anticipation of their baptisms, the catechumens, also called the “elect,” will be welcomed in four Rites of Election next week on Maui, Kauai, Oahu and the Big Island.

At each rite, those who have been preparing for baptism over the past year through the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults, or RCIA, or the Rite of Christian Initiation of Children, RCIC, will sign their names in the Book of the Elect, signifying their desire to be received into the church at Easter.

Here is the Rite of Election schedule:

  • Kauai: March 9, 9:30 a.m., Immaculate Conception, Lihue
  • Maui: March 9, 2 p.m., St. Theresa Church, Kihei
  • Big Island: March 9, 2 p.m. at Annunciation Church, Waimea
  • Oahu: March 9, 2 p.m. Co-Cathedral of St. Theresa, Honolulu

Bishop Silva will preside at the Oahu rite.

Leeward Oahu parishes are leading the number of catechumens this year. St. Joseph Church in Waipahu leads with 16, followed by St. Jude in Kapolei with 15.

Overall, not taking likely adjustments into account, the number of elect this year is one more than last year’s total of 203.

In addition to the catechumens, others will be welcomed into “full communion” with the Catholic Church during the Easter Vigil. These are people who are already baptized and who will receive one or both of the remaining sacraments of initiation — Confirmation or First Eucharist.

The diocese has not compiled the number of those receiving full communion this year.

Number of Hawaii catechumens over the past decade

  • 2005…………. 195
  • 2006…………. 188
  • 2007…………. 157
  • 2008…………. 185
  • 2009…………. 193
  • 2010…………. 219
  • 2011…………. 208
  • 2012…………. 190
  • 2013…………. 203
  • 2014…………. 204

 

No meat, no worries: Fare to share for your Fridays in Lent

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A pinch of persistence and a dash of culinary cleverness are all it takes to create marvelous meatless meals during Lent.

Diocesan staff proved just that at the annual Hawaii Catholic Herald Lenten Luncheon, Feb. 19 at St. Stephen Diocesan Center. The event, which began more than a decade ago, continued its tradition of calling on diocesan department members to bring forth their best meat-free dishes. Their recipes aim to provide Herald readers with savory and sweet ideas to get through the upcoming Fridays of abstinence.

Quick and hearty, simple and tasty describe this year’s Lenten luncheon recipes. Busy Catholics who are always on-the-go will appreciate the following fare, all of which can be prepared without arduous penance in the kitchen.

Easy Somen Lent Salad

Contributed by Charleston “Chucky” Unciano

Office of Youth and Young Adult Ministry

  • 2 packages somen noodles (cooked, rinsed and drained)
  • 1/2 pound fishcake (kamaboko), julienne cut
  • Small bag of chopped romaine lettuce
  • 1 cucumber, peeled and julienne cut
  • 4 stalks green onion, chopped (saimin style)
  • 3 carrots, peeled and julienne cut
  • Aloha brand soy sauce or Kikkoman brand somen sauce

Lay somen noodles evenly in a 9×13-inch pan. Add a layer of lettuce, followed by a layer of cucumbers. Finish with the green onions. Garnish with fishcake. Pour soy sauce or somen sauce evenly over the dish to dress the salad. Serve immediately.

Slow-Cooker Vegetarian Chili

Contributed by Jayne Mondoy

Office of Religious Education

  • 1/2 cup olive oil
  • 4 onions, chopped
  • 2 green bell peppers, seeded and chopped
  • 2 red bell peppers, seeded and chopped
  • 4 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 package (14 ounces) firm tofu, drained and cubed
  • 4 cans (15.5 ounces) black beans, drained
  • 2 cans (15 ounces) crushed tomatoes
  • 2 teaspoons salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper
  • 2 teaspoons ground cumin
  • 6 tablespoons chili powder
  • 2 tablespoons dried oregano
  • 2 tablespoons distilled white vinegar
  • 1 tablespoon liquid hot pepper sauce, such as Tabasco

Heat olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add onions; cook and stir until they start to become soft. Add green peppers, red peppers, garlic and tofu; cook and stir until vegetables are lightly browned and tender (about 10 minutes). Pour black beans into the slow cooker and set to “Low.” Stir in the vegetables and tomatoes. Season with salt, pepper, cumin, chili powder, oregano, vinegar and hot pepper sauce. Stir gently and cover. Cook on “Low” for 6-8 hours.

Cheesy Tuna Noodle Casserole

Contributed by Donna Aquino

Hawaii Catholic Herald

  • 1 package frozen vegetable blend
  • 1 package Kraft Deluxe Macaroni and Cheese Dinner
  • 3/4 cup milk
  • 1/4 cup Zesty Italian dressing
  • 1 can tuna (in water)
  • 1 cup shredded cheddar cheese

Heat oven to 375 degrees. Place vegetables in a colander in sink. Cook macaroni as directed on package; when done, pour macaroni and water into the colander to drain the pasta and thaw the vegetables. Place veggies and macaroni back in the saucepan and onto the stove. Stir in cheese sauce, milk and dressing. Add tuna and 1/2 cup cheddar; mix well. Spoon into 2-quart casserole dish. Cover and bake 35 minutes or until heated through. Top with remaining cheddar cheese and bake 3-4 minutes or until cheese is melted.

Black Bean and Mango Enchiladas

Contributed by Lori Gress

Diocesan Tribunal Office

  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1 teaspoon paprika
  • 1 teaspoon ground cumin
  • 1 teaspoon ground coriander
  • Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
  • Juice of 1 lime
  • 1 bunch of green onions, chopped (green and white parts)
  • 1 large ripe mango, chopped
  • 2 cans (15 ounces) black beans, rinsed and drained
  • 1/2 cup sour cream
  • 1 cup shredded cheddar cheese, divided
  • 1 can (28 ounces) red enchilada sauce
  • 8 whole grain flour tortillas (8-inch diameter)

Grease an 11×7-inch baking pan. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Heat oil in a pot, add the onions and mango, stirring 1-2 minutes. Add the spices and lime juice, and stir. Add the beans; stir and cook thoroughly on low-medium heat. Stir in the sour cream and 1/2 cup of cheddar cheese. Remove from heat. Soften two tortillas by microwaving them for 10 seconds. Roll about 1/2 cup of the bean and mango mixture into each tortilla, placing the filled tortillas seam-side down in the pan. Repeat with the rest of the tortillas. Sprinkle the remaining cheddar cheese and pour the red enchilada sauce over the rolled tortillas. Cover the pan with foil and bake for 20 minutes. Remove the foil and bake for 10 more minutes.

Tofu Poke

Contributed by Patrick Downes

Hawaii Catholic Herald

  • Oil, for deep frying
  • 1 pound firm tofu, cut into 1-inch cubes
  • Cornstarch, for dredging
  • 5 shiitake mushrooms, sliced
  • 1 tomato, diced
  • 1 Maui onion, chopped
  • 1/2 Japanese cucumber, diced
  • 1/8 cup furikake
  • Poke sauce (See below)

Dredge tofu cubes in cornstarch and deep-fry until golden. Drain on paper towels. Toss fried tofu, vegetables and furikake in a mixing bowl with the poke sauce.

Poke sauce

  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 1/2 cup soy sauce
  • 1/4 cup sesame oil

Whisk together until the sugar is dissolved.

Roasted Vegetable Spaghetti

Contributed by Darlene J.M. Dela Cruz

Hawaii Catholic Herald

  • 4 medium-sized zucchini, cut into 1/2-inch pieces
  • 1 bag baby carrots
  • 1 tray mushrooms
  • 1 medium-sized onion, cut into 1/2-inch pieces
  • 1 package thin spaghetti
  • 7-8 garlic cloves, minced
  • Olive oil
  • Dried Italian herb seasoning blend, to taste
  • Salt and pepper, to taste
  • Parmesan cheese

Heat oven to 425 degrees. In a large mixing bowl, combine zucchini, carrots, mushrooms and onions. Drizzle enough olive oil over the vegetables to coat them evenly. Season the mixture with salt, pepper and Italian herbs. Mix and place vegetables on a baking sheet to roast in the oven for 25 minutes. On the stovetop, cook spaghetti as directed on package. Drain pasta and set aside in a separate mixing bowl. Place pasta pot back on the stove, and in it, quickly saute the minced garlic in olive oil. Pour the hot oil and garlic over the pasta and mix, seasoning with salt and pepper. Toss the roasted vegetables with the pasta, and add more seasonings as desired. Top with Parmesan cheese.

Ginataang Bilo-Bilo (Filipino dessert soup)

Contributed by Margie Sison

Diocesan Business Office

  • 1 cup glutinous rice flour
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 3 cups coconut milk, diluted with 1/2 cup water
  • 2 cups large tapioca pearls
  • 1 cup jack fruit, cut into strips
  • 5 ripe “saba” cooking bananas, each peeled and cut into 6 small pieces
  • 2 sweet potatoes cut into cubes

Mix rice flour with water and shape dough into balls measuring 1/4-inch in diameter. In a large pot, bring coconut milk, sugar, sweet potatoes, jack fruit and tapioca to a boil. When tapioca turns transparent, add the flour balls and bananas. Add remaining coconut milk when rice balls are tender. Boil for 5 more minutes. Serve hot and enjoy!


Catholic Charities president says faith requires good works

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1charitiessnyder

Father Larry Snyner

“Why does Catholic Charities do what it does? Well, we don’t have a choice.”

That was the bottom line for Father Larry Snyder, president of Catholic Charities USA, in the opening talk Feb. 19 at the charitable agency’s “Partners in Excellence” conference at the Catholic Charities Hawaii campus in Honolulu.

Father Snyder explained his conclusion with a review of Scripture, a walk through the history of the Catholic Church in America, quotes from popes and bishops, and an assessment of the fight against poverty in the United States.

He traced the biblical underpinnings of Catholic charitable work back to Genesis’ account of creation and the Mosaic Law, through the New Testament and the teachings of Jesus.

Father Snyder said that God’s declaration in Genesis that he made human beings “in my own image and likeness” is “foundational and fundamental” to Catholic charitable work.

“If the image of our God lies deep within each human being, then every human being is worthy of dignity and respect,” he said. “That influences the work we do every day.”

Father Snyder said the Old Testament’s imperative to care for “widow, orphan and the stranger among us” is translated today as a “preferential option for the poor.”

The poorest are special to God, he said. “The greater the need, the greater the claim they have on God’s love.”

Charity’s mandate culminates in Jesus’ uncompromising message, Father Snyder said, that “if you don’t love your neighbor, then you don’t really love your God.”

Jesus’ description of the Last Judgment and his washing of the Apostles’ feet make his central point, he said. “You will find that at the heart of the Gospel is a command, a mandate of service, especially to those in need.”

Father Snyder traced the charitable labors of the Catholic Church in America back to 1727 and the arrival of 12 French Ursuline Sisters in New Orleans who came to establish Catholic schools for Catholic children.

Encountering much greater needs, the sisters also opened an orphanage and a hospital, and reached out to women driven to prostitution.

The Ursulines’ example was replicated over the years and across the country as the Catholic Church, then primarily a community of immigrants, identified itself with the poor, Father Snyder said.

He quoted the U.S. bishops of 1866 who wrote, “it is a very melancholy fact and a very humiliating avowal for us to make that a very large portion of the vicious and idle youth of our cities are the children of Catholic parents.”

“We were a church of the poor because the immigrants were poor,” Father Snyder said.

While the descendents of European immigrant Catholics are no longer poor, Father Snyder said, a new group of immigrants, 12 million of whom are undocumented, is primarily Hispanic and Catholic.

“We have a very similar situation to what was going on back then,” he said.

Father Snyder quoted Pope Benedict’s first encyclical, “Deus Caritas Est” to describe “what Catholic charitable organizations should do and what they should look like.”

“Employees of Catholic charitable organizations must have professional training and development to ensure that the poor, or those in need who turn to us, are going to receive the best possible service they can, because they deserve it,” he said.

“But just as important, if not more important,” Father Snyder said, “is that those people need a formation of the heart, because that goes much more to the crux of why we do this and how we do the work that we do.

Father Snyder said the so-called “safety net,” the mix of public assistance that keeps the poor from hitting bottom, only perpetuates poverty.

“Our goals should be better,” he said. He called for a “bridge” or a “trampoline.”

“Anything but a net,” he said.

“If our goal is to give people an opportunity to thrive, then we are going to do things very differently,” he said.

Father Snyder said that Catholic Charities USA has concluded through recent listening sessions that there are “three things” that will help lessen poverty in America: changing the social services delivery system, engaging the business world, and relying on proven results.

He said poverty should not be approached by categorizing poor people by their “deficits” but by looking at their “assets, and build on that.”

He said that anti-poverty efforts should tap into the “good will” of the for-profit business world whose products and “tremendous” resources in research and development could go a long way in helping people who are poor.

Father Snyder also said that charitable organizations should switch from measuring success by “outputs” — for example, how many food baskets were distributed — to “outcomes,” how has the nutrition of families improved.

“This is a change of attitude mentality for us,” he said. “We have to be able to look at what works, what doesn’t work and if it is not working, change it or move on.”

Father Snyder said that Catholic Charities Hawaii is one of six national “poverty labs,” a project of the University of Notre Dame studying the effectiveness of charitable agencies.

Panel: pope’s message validates Catholic Charities’ mission

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The Catholic Charities panel on the message of Pope Francis, from left,  Father Larry Snyder, Archbishop Anthony Apuron, Kathy Brown and Jerry Rauckhorst. (HCH photo | Patrick Downes)

 

A high-ranking Catholic Charities panel, in a presentation Feb. 20 at the Catholic Charities Hawaii campus in Honolulu, described the charismatic leadership of Pope Francis as a strong affirmation of the church’s ministry to the poor and an unprecedented opportunity for evangelization.

The president of Catholic Charities USA Father Larry Snyder; Archbishop of Guam Anthony Apuron; Kathy Brown, Catholic Charities USA’s senior director of mission and Catholic identity; and Jerry Rauckhorst, president of Catholic Charities Hawaii, discussed the present papacy before an audience of about 60 at the Catholics Charities USA Partners in Excellence conference at Catholic Charities Hawaii’s headquarters.

Drawing on direct quotes from Pope Francis and the observations of journalists and social commentators, the panel drew a portrait of an intriguing and electrifying pontificate that, in less than a year, has transformed the world’s view of the pope and the Vatican’s image of itself.

“Each pope brings his own style,” Father Snyder said, opening the discussion.

Using labels that emerged from the second Vatican Council, he identified Pope Francis as a “Kingdom Catholic,” one who sees the church as a pilgrim people, open to the world and justice-oriented, rather than a “Communion Catholic,” like Pope Benedict XVI, who was more dedicated to the church’s inner life and more wary of the world.

Father Snyder said that politicians of different persuasions, as well as politically-leaning church leaders, have tried to use the pope’s words to their advantage, but “he is not a politician.”

“He is a prophet,” he said. “He transcends politics.”

The priest also refuted those who claim the pope’s words are often taken out of context when they find the plain meaning to be troublesome.

“He is a very clear communicator,” Father Snyder said. “He says what he means to say. He speaks his heart and mind.”

Archbishop Apuron said that Pope Francis calls for a church that identifies with the poor.

That can only happen, he said, “if bishops, priests, religious and laity leave the comfort of their homes, convents and residences and minister to the poor.”

“We need to see the suffering of our brothers and sisters,” he said.

“Pope Francis has lived poverty,” the archbishop said. “We have to live it first in order to understand the people who live in poverty.”

The pope said that to know the poor is to “understand Jesus,” Archbishop Apuron said.

He said Pope Francis wants priests to literally and figuratively “unlock the doors of the church,” to be “more compassionate and merciful as our God is merciful.”

Brown drew from a variety of sources to demonstrate how the new pope’s popularity has surged past that of world leaders and entertainers in what has been called a “Francis tsunami.”

And it’s not just a Catholic thing, she said.

“He is impacting us in the church and people in society of all persuasions,” Brown said.

“He has also had a tremendous impact on the culture of Rome,” she said, where ecclesiastical opulence now looks kitschy next to Pope Francis’ plain white cassock.

“Simple is now chic,” she said.

“The pope has given us a new framework,” she said, “of a church of the poor, for the poor — a poor church.”

“The poor are to be the center of the church,” Brown said.

Brown listed three “emerging pillars” of this papacy, the first being “leadership as service,” where pastors are to be shepherds who “smell of their sheep” rather than privileged princes.

The second is the “social gospel.”

“He is very robustly prolife,” Brown says, with a scope that is inclusively anti-abortion, anti-poverty and anti-war.

The third pillar is “mercy as the core Christian message.”

Brown said the pope’s popularity offers the church a golden moment for evangelization.

“We have a massive missionary opportunity,” she said. “We must not let this opportunity pass.”

Initiating conversations

Rauckhorst, in his comments, echoed that thought.

“I have never had so many people in the community come up to me” to talk about a church leader, he said. “He has resonated with Catholics, non-Catholics, non-Christians.”

“Those conversations are so energizing,” he said.

He said that Pope Francis’ words and example are “a real validation of the work of Catholic Charities Hawaii in the community.”

“Pope Francis takes it to a new level of inspiration for me,” Rauckhorst said.

He said the work of Catholic Charities is not a one-way ministry.

“The alignment with the poor, that identification with the poor is not about what we can give them,” he said, “but what we can get, gain and learn from them.”

“It’s what they bring to us, what they call us to be,” he said.

Rauckhorst closed with a quote by Pope Francis, “The church cannot and must not remain on the sidelines in the search for justice.”

In the question and answer session following the presentations, Archbishop Apuron said that the pope’s human authority comes from his actions.

“The pope is honestly leading by example,” he said. He “takes dogma down to earth and walks it with the people.”

“He will continue to be pastoral, to meet the people, to uplift them and bring them to a deeper spiritual experience,” the archbishop said.

Father Snyder predicted that, in the coming year, Pope Francis will begin to see changes in the structure of the Curia, the church’s central bureaucracy.

“We already see a change of mindset,” he said, to that of service.

Brown forecasted a change in the kind of bishops the pope will appoint.

“We are going to see a return of bishops with more pastoral experiences,” she said.

Father Snyder suggested the pope may be challenged in trying to reconcile the pastoral needs of the church’s more liberal northern hemisphere and its more conservative southern hemisphere.

“We are in for a very interesting ride,” he said.

The Feb. 19-21 conference was the eighth of 10 regional meetings across the country over the past year hosted by Father Snyder and five of Catholic Charities USA’s top leaders covering topics of professional development and Catholic identity.

Attending the Hawaii meeting were about 20 representatives from the U.S. Pacific island territories of American Samoa, Guam, Saipan and the Marshall Islands, and 75 employees of Catholic Charities Hawaii.

The conference included an optional one-day pilgrimage to Kalaupapa.

Pope Francis, with Benedict present, creates new cardinals

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VATICAN CITY — On a feast day commemorating the authority Jesus gave to St. Peter and his successors — the popes — Pope Francis created 19 new cardinals in the presence of retired Pope Benedict XVI.

To the great surprise of most people present, the retired pope entered St. Peter’s Basilica about 15 minutes before the new cardinals and Pope Francis. Wearing a long white coat and using a cane, he took a seat in the front row next to Lebanese Cardinal Bechara Rai, patriarch of the Maronite Catholic Church.

Pope Benedict’s presence at the consistory Feb. 22, the feast of the Chair of Peter, marked the first time he had joined Pope Francis for a public prayer service in the basilica. Pope Benedict resigned Feb. 28, 2013, becoming the first pope in almost 600 years to do so.

Cardinal Theodore E. McCarrick, retired archbishop of Washington, said all the already existing cardinals went over to greet Pope Benedict. “The ushers kept saying, ‘Please, your eminences, take your seats, the Holy Father is coming,’ and we thought, ‘But, but ….’”

Before beginning the service, Pope Francis walked over to Pope Benedict, who removed his zucchetto to greet Pope Francis. The scene was repeated at the end of the consistory.

The new cardinals, including Cardinal Gerald Lacroix of Quebec and Vincent Nichols of Westminster, England, publicly recited the Creed and swore obedience to the pope and his successors before receiving from Pope Francis a red hat, a ring and the assignment of a “titular church” in Rome, becoming part of the clergy of the pope’s diocese.

After they received their red hats, each of the new cardinals walked over to Pope Benedict and greeted him.

Cardinal Lacroix, accompanied by his mother and father at an afternoon reception, said Pope Benedict’s presence “surprised me so much that I broke down in tears.”

When he went to greet the retired pope, he said he told him, “Holy Father, you are the one who called me to be a bishop.”

Only 18 of the archbishops Pope Francis had chosen to be among the first cardinals created during his pontificate were present.

The oldest of the new cardinals — and now the oldest cardinal in the world — Cardinal Loris Capovilla, 98, was not present at the ceremony although he became a cardinal the moment Pope Francis pronounced his name. A papal delegate will deliver his red hat to his home in northern Italy.

In his homily Pope Francis did not mention the standard point that the cardinals’ new red vestments are symbols of the call to serve Christ and his church to the point of shedding their blood if necessary. Rather, he focused on their being called to follow Christ more closely, to build up the unity of the church and to proclaim the Gospel more courageously.

The Bible, he said, is filled with stories of Jesus walking with his disciples and teaching them as they traveled.

“This is important,” the pope said. “Jesus did not come to teach a philosophy, an ideology, but rather a ‘way,’ a journey to be undertaken with him, and we learn the way as we go, by walking.”

After listening to a reading of Mark 10:32-45, Pope Francis also spoke about the very human, worldly temptation of “rivalry, jealousy (and) factions” the first disciples faced.

The reading is a warning to the cardinals and to all Christians to put aside concerns of power and favoritism and “to become ever more of one heart and soul” gathered around the Lord, he said.

Pope Francis told the new cardinals, who come from 15 different countries — including very poor nations like Haiti and Ivory Coast — that the church “needs you, your cooperation and, even more, your communion, communion with me and among yourselves.”

“The church needs your courage,” he said, “to proclaim the Gospel at all times” and “to bear witness to the truth.”

The pope also told the cardinals that the church needs their “compassion, especially at this time of pain and suffering for so many countries throughout the world,” and for so many Christians who face discrimination and persecution. “We must struggle against all discrimination,” he said.

“The church needs us also to be peacemakers, building peace by our actions, hopes and prayers,” he said.

The consistory brought to 218 the total number of cardinals in the world; 122 cardinals are under the age of 80 and eligible to vote in a conclave.

The 18 cardinals who received their red hats from the pope were Cardinals:

  • Pietro Parolin, Vatican secretary of state, Italian, 59.
  • Lorenzo Baldisseri, general secretary of the Synod of Bishops, Italian, 73.
  • Gerhard Muller, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, German, 66.
  • Beniamino Stella, prefect of the Congregation for Clergy, Italian, 72.
  • Vincent Nichols, archbishop of Westminster, England, 68.
  • Leopoldo Brenes Solorzano of Managua, Nicaragua, 64.
  • Gerald Lacroix of Quebec, 56.
  • Jean-Pierre Kutwa of Abidjan, Ivory Coast, 68.
  • Orani Tempesta of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 63.
  • Gualtiero Bassetti of Perguia-Citta della Pieve, Italy, 71.
  • Mario Poli of Buenos Aires, Argentina, 66.
  • Andrew Yeom Soo-jung of Seoul, South Korea, 70.
  • Ricardo Ezzati Andrello of Santiago, Chile, 72.
  • Philippe Ouedraogo of Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, 69.
  • Orlando Quevedo of Cotabato, Philippines, 74.
  • Chibly Langlois of Les Cayes, Haiti, 55.
  • Fernando Sebastian Aguilar, retired archbishop of Pamplona, Spain, 84.
  • Kelvin Felix, retired archbishop of Castries, St. Lucia, Antilles, 81.

Father Joseph Grimaldi, diocesan priest: That which inspires

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When I see people at Mass so intense in their faith and devotions, I get inspired. Although very often they thank me and so on for being with them, I see it that we are here to help each other. For me to say Mass, I need them as much as they need me. Sometimes there might be a week when I am feeling down and when I see them I get inspired. The next week they might be feeling down and when they see me they get inspired. I think that’s what we do, we help each other.

In my prayer practice I find that each season of the liturgical year has its own impact, its own message for us. Take, for example, the powerful message of the readings of the first Sunday of Lent where the Lord cares for us more than a mother even cares for her own daughter or son. How do we apply that to our lives? Sometimes we think of ordinary Sundays as being just ordinary. But if we ponder the Gospels in relation to the events of our lives, we find they are never that ordinary. These different seasons of the liturgical year inspire us to make certain resolutions. They invite us to get back to meditation as we try to do the will of God as best we can.

What do I mean by meditation? Meditation is something we all have difficulty with at some point in our lives. I look at it this way. If, after the first time we try it and after about two minutes we think we have spent hours, we will just give up and move on to doing something different. But if we are earnestly persevering in it, time will fly by. First times are always difficult; it gets better as you meditate more. What do you do when you meditate? Pick up a piece of Scripture and find five minutes to set aside for quiet and peace as you apply it to your daily life. Think about how it relates to you in your personal life, in all the activities, people and work interactions that will be presented to you that day.

I am working on another canonization, Cora Evans. She was born, raised and married as a Mormon, but dismayed with the church, she left it. For 10 years she searched, and eventually in her prayer she discovered the Catholic Church. One of the important things considered when we try to canonize someone, is their relevance for the people today. Cora was a mystic, but many of us are not mystics. She bore the crown of thorns; most of us won’t have it. She had the stigmata, which most of us won’t have either. But the one thing that we can relate to is that she was a woman of prayer. In her busy schedule as a wife, mother and housekeeper, she always spent time in prayer. That prayer time eventually spread to touch and inspire other lives. It is her devotedness to her prayer life and relation to the Lord that basically makes her a saint that other people can imitate.

Father Joseph Grimaldi is a priest of the Diocese of Honolulu. He arrived in Hawaii 40 years ago to become the principal of Damien High School. He has served as judicial vicar and vicar general in the diocese, as well as being involved with the investigative cases of St. Damien de Veuster and St. Marianne Cope. He has been appointed postulator for the cause of Cora Evans by the bishop of Monterey. He will be leaving Hawaii to retire in Michigan to be closer to his roots and family in New York. He cherishes all the memories and beautiful events of his life here.

Evangelization takes the stage: Diocese’s new drama group will tell the story of Jesus

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The cast of “The Passion of Christ” rehearse a scene from the play, March 2 at St. Stephen Diocesan Center. (HCH photo | Darlene Dela Cruz)

 

The life and death of Jesus take center stage this month as the diocese’s new Faith in ACTion drama group presents its first major production, “The Passion of Christ.”

The play will be performed in Paliku Theater at Windward Community College. Showings are scheduled for March 27, 28 and 29 at 7:30 p.m., and March 30 at 3:30 p.m.

Comprised of a cast of parishioners from all over Oahu, “The Passion of Christ” traces Jesus’ story from his youth to the crucifixion. It features music composed by Na Hoku Hanohano award-winner Glenn Medeiros and choreography by noted local dancer Celia Chun Wright.

“The Passion of Christ” is based on a dynamic, Gospel-inspired script by Deacon Modesto Cordero, head of the diocesan Office of Worship. Combining his own original writing with royalty-free works from the Christian website DramaShare, Deacon Cordero aimed to create a production that showed the many different sides of Jesus, including the joyful and the miraculous.

“The life of Christ was not all sadness and misery,” he said.

The play finally came to fruition after almost two years in the works. Deacon Cordero initially tried a smaller-scale version of it with the acting troupe at his home parish, St. John Apostle and Evangelist in Mililani. The show was a hit, and the deacon was eager to bring it to a larger stage.

A longtime theater aficionado, Deacon Cordero has been promoting what he calls “evangelization through dramatization.” His idea for “The Passion of Christ” quickly drew interest from actors, musicians and artists in other parishes.

Deacon Cordero approached Bishop Larry Silva about establishing a diocese-wide “drama ministry.” This spurred the start of the Faith in ACTion community. A grant from the With Grateful Hearts diocesan capital campaign helped its mission.

“The group has grown so fast and so big,” Deacon Cordero said.

With about 40 actors and 40 members in behind-the-scenes production, the team began rehearsals for “The Passion of Christ” in August. They did their first test-runs of the play on the Paliku Theater stage last week.

“The Passion of Christ” has been a labor of love for all those involved. Members of the cast and crew have spent long hours making props, configuring costumes, learning several group dances and songs, and memorizing lines from the 100-page script.

The time and effort is worth it, they said, to be able to share their faith in a unique and vibrant way.

Enthusiastic cast

Choreographer Celia Chun Wright, a parishioner of St. George Church in Waimanalo, said she appreciates being part of a project that brings local young adults together with other faithful. Wright, who has taught dance for more than 10 years and performed with local dance companies, decided to volunteer for “The Passion of Christ” at the recommendation of a friend.

“I felt this was a wonderful start to reach out, connect and encourage a different type of participation,” Wright said. “The cast is always very enthusiastic and ready to work.”

Patrick Alvior of St. John Apostle and Evangelist Church is among the young Catholics in the play. He previously worked on the parish’s version of “The Passion of Christ,” and will be playing the lead role of Jesus in this month’s shows. The opportunity to perform for a larger audience, Alvior said, is a fun challenge.

“It’ll be nice to do it at an actual theater,” he added.

Musical director Capino brought to the production her expertise in vocal performance. She has been teaching Alvior and the cast new songs and standard hymns integrated into the script. Capino’s friend, Josh Cullen, recorded the instrumental backing tracks for the show and introduced her to the Faith in ACTion team.

“I’ve never done anything like this before,” Capino said.

Musician Medeiros took time from his duties as vice principal of Maryknoll High School to co-write with Deacon Cordero original music for “The Passion of Christ.” Three songs will be debuted in the show: “Hosanna,” “We are Forgiven,” and “Alleluia.”

“Deacon Modesto would describe the scene, and I’d try to translate the emotions of the situation described into music,” Medeiros said. “I feel very strongly about what Deacon Modesto and Bishop Larry Silva are doing to celebrate God in the form of original plays.”

The cast and crew of “The Passion of Christ” will soon get to share with the diocese their hard work. Ticket sales for the four shows have been “steady,” said Deacon Cordero, and he hopes more people will show their support for the dedicated and talented drama community.

“We really look forward to having all four shows sold out,” he said.

For tickets and information, call 222-0644 or 585-3342, or email diocesehawaiidrama@rcchawaii.org.

Notable & quotable: ‘Who am I to judge,” and other memorable sound bites from Pope Francis over the past year

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VATICAN CITY

In his formal documents, many speeches and unscripted morning homilies the past year, Pope Francis has given the church a bounty of memorable sound bites.

Here’s a look at what could be the top 10 most quotable quotes.

“Brothers and sisters, good evening. You all know that the duty of the conclave was to give a bishop to Rome. It seems that my brother cardinals have gone almost to the ends of the earth to get him… but here we are.”

(First words as pope: March 13, 2013)

“The Lord never tires of forgiving. It is we who tire of asking for forgiveness.”

(First Angelus as pope, March 17, 2013)

“This is precisely the reason for the dissatisfaction of some, who end up sad — sad priests — in some sense becoming collectors of antiques or novelties, instead of being shepherds living with ‘the odor of the sheep.’ This I ask you: Be shepherds, with the ‘odor of the sheep,’ make it real, as shepherds among your flock, fishers of men.”

(Chrism Mass, March 28, 2013)

“Ask yourselves this question: How often is Jesus inside and knocking at the door to be let out, to come out? And we do not let him out because of our own need for security, because so often we are locked into ephemeral structures that serve solely to make us slaves and not free children of God.”

(Pentecost vigil, May 18, 2013)

“Men and women are sacrificed to the idols of profit and consumption: it is the ‘culture of waste.’ If a computer breaks it is a tragedy, but poverty, the needs and dramas of so many people end up being considered normal. … When the stock market drops 10 points in some cities, it constitutes a tragedy. Someone who dies is not news, but lowering income by 10 points is a tragedy! In this way people are thrown aside as if they were trash.”

(General audience, June 5, 2013)

“Faith is not a light which scatters all our darkness, but a lamp which guides our steps in the night and suffices for the journey. To those who suffer, God does not provide arguments which explain everything; rather, his response is that of an accompanying presence, a history of goodness which touches every story of suffering and opens up a ray of light.”

(“Lumen Fidei,” June 29, 2013)

“If someone is gay and is searching for the Lord and has good will, then who am I to judge him? … The problem is not having this tendency, no, we must be brothers and sisters to one another. The problem is in making a lobby of this tendency: a lobby of misers, a lobby of politicians, a lobby of masons, so many lobbies.”

(News conference during flight from Brazil to Rome, July 28, 2013)

“An evangelizer must never look like someone who has just come back from a funeral.”

(“Evangelii Gaudium,” Nov. 24, 2013)

“Gossip can also kill, because it kills the reputation of the person! It is so terrible to gossip! At first it may seem like a nice thing, even amusing, like enjoying a candy. But in the end, it fills the heart with bitterness, and even poisons us.”

(Angelus, Feb. 16, 2014)

“The perfect family doesn’t exist, nor is there a perfect husband or a perfect wife, and let’s not talk about the perfect mother-in-law! It’s just us sinners.” A healthy family life requires frequent use of three phrases: “May I? Thank you, and I’m sorry” and “never, never, never end the day without making peace.”

(Meeting with engaged couples, Feb. 14, 2014)

The Francis style: A plain cassock, a simple apartment, a cheap car, phone calls are all gestures that teach

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Pope Francis steps into his Ford Focus car as he leaves a meeting with Italy’s President Giorgio Napolitano at the  Quirinal presidential palace in Rome Nov. 14. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

 

VATICAN CITY

From the moment Pope Francis, dressed simply in a white cassock, stepped out on the balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica for the first time and bowed, he signaled his pontificate would bring some style differences to the papacy.

Some of the style changes are simply a reflection of his personality, he has explained. Others are meant to be a lesson. But sometimes the two coincide.

Answering questions from students in June, he said the Apostolic Palace, where his predecessors lived “is not that luxurious,” but he decided to live in the Domus Sanctae Marthae, a Vatican guesthouse, “for psychiatric reasons.”

Living alone or in an isolated setting “would not do me any good,” he said, because he’s the kind of person who prefers living in the thick of things, “among the people.” However, he added that he tries to live as simply as possible, “to not have many things and to become a bit poorer” like Christ.

Unlike his choice of residence, his decision to travel in Rome in a blue Ford Focus instead of one of the Mercedes sedans in the Vatican motor pool was meant to be a message.

Meeting with seminarians and novices in July, he said too many people — including religious — think joy comes from possessions, “so they go in quest of the latest model of smartphone, the fastest scooter, the showy car.”

“I tell you, it truly grieves me to see a priest or a sister with the latest model of a car,” he said. For many priests and religious, cars are a necessity, “but choose a more humble car. And if you like the beautiful one, only think of all the children who are dying of hunger.”

A few days after his election, Pope Francis told reporters who had covered the conclave, “How I would like a church which is poor and for the poor.”

In October, he traveled to the birthplace of St. Francis of Assisi and met clients of Catholic charities in the room where St. Francis had stripped off his cloak and renounced his family’s wealth. The pope said he knew some people were expecting him to say or do something similarly shocking with the church’s material goods.

Living simply is important, he said, not just out of solidarity with the poor, but because it is so easy to get attached to worldly possessions, turning them into idols. The church, he said in Assisi, “must strip away every kind of worldly spirit, which is a temptation for everyone; strip away every action that is not for God, that is not from God; strip away the fear of opening the doors and going out to encounter all, especially the poorest of the poor, the needy, the remote, without waiting.”

The first year of Pope Francis’ pontificate also has been one of encounters.

A pope, like priests around the world, celebrates Mass every day. Before he became very infirm, Blessed John Paul II would invite visiting bishops and special guests to attend his early morning Mass in the chapel of the papal residence. Pope Benedict XVI’s morning Mass generally was more familial, including his secretaries, his butler and the women who ran the apartment.

With a much larger chapel in the Domus Sanctae Marthae and more priests and bishops in residence there, Pope Francis has had a larger congregation for his morning Masses. Although the Masses are considered private by the Vatican, Pope Francis has been inviting Vatican employees to attend, beginning with the garbage collectors and gardeners.

While transcripts of his morning homilies are not printed in the Vatican’s official daily news bulletin, excerpts are provided by the Vatican newspaper and Vatican Radio.

In the first months of his papacy, especially as the weather warmed up, he’d go for a walk, dropping in on Vatican workers in the garage or the power plant. And, when he has a request of a Vatican office or wants to make sure something he requested is being done, he simply picks up the phone.

Every Vatican office — not to mention the Jesuits and other religious orders — has a funny story about someone answering the phone and thinking it’s a joke when they hear, “This is Pope Francis.”

But his phone calls go well beyond the inner circle of the Vatican and the church. Pope Francis has called journalists and people either he has read about or who have written to him with stories of suffering and desperation. His telephone calls, in some ways, have taken the place of his Buenos Aires habit of riding public transportation and walking the streets of the poorer neighborhoods to stay in touch with how people really live.

While he will pose with pilgrims for photos and “selfies,” reciprocate when given a big hug, sign autographs for children and accept cups of “mate” — an herbal tea popular in parts of Latin America — he learned in Argentina that there are times when the ministry of an archbishop or pope can be used by the powerful, and he has taken steps to make sure that does not happen.

At his morning Mass and at his large public liturgies, Pope Francis gives Communion only to the altar servers and deacons, then he sits down and prays.

In a 2010 book written with Buenos Aires Rabbi Abraham Skorka, Pope Francis said that at large Masses for special occasions — Masses attended by government officials and leading business people — “I do not give Communion myself; I stay back and I let the ministers give it, because I do not want those people to come to me for the photo op. One could deny Communion to a public sinner who has not repented, but it is very difficult to check such things.”


Everything he does is evangelization: Hawaii observers find the Holy Father’s attraction extends beyond Catholicism’s borders

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It may be too early to measure a “Pope Francis effect” in the Islands tangibly in numbers of new churchgoers or priestly vocations, but some local Catholics said the pontiff in his first year has nonetheless made a refreshing impact on the faithful and non-Catholics alike.

Several diocesan staff who attended papal events in 2013 said they have been inspired by Pope Francis’ genuine expressions of his love for people. Lisa Gomes and Makana Aiona of the diocesan Office of Youth and Young Adult Ministry witnessed the pope’s personability last July at World Youth Day in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

“I was lucky enough to see him driving by from about 10 feet away,” said Aiona, the diocese’s young adult ministry coordinator. “I think what was apparent to me about Pope Francis was his longing to be with the people. We all could see that if he was given the time, he’d walk through the crowd and greet everyone there personally.”

“I think that it’s his consistency that makes everything he does evangelization,” Aiona added. “From the way he smiles, to the words he speaks, to what he wears. Pope Francis uses every moment of his life to witness to Jesus.”

Gomes, director of the youth and young adult ministry office, was moved when she saw that, “despite death threats, protestors and the large crowds, Pope Francis rode around in his little Fiat with his window rolled down, and that he visited one of the most dangerous favelas (slums) in Rio de Janeiro.”

“He’s simple, he’s humble, he’s real,” Gomes said. “I pray that the Holy Spirit will continue to guide his decisions, and that he’ll continue to lead us through his example and witness.”

Diocesan religious education director Jayne Mondoy was at Pope Francis’ audience for hundreds of catechetical leaders at the Vatican last fall. The pope, she said, took “a full 15 minutes … shaking hands, blessing, acknowledging, making eye contact” with as many of the people in Paul VI Hall as he could.

“All while flashing that joyful smile,” Mondoy said.

What most “impressed” her about Pope Francis’ style “was as though he had nothing else in the world to do than to be fully present to us. He modeled a ‘theology of presence.’”

The pontiff’s down-to-earth nature has made him a figure beloved not just by local Catholics, but by Islanders of other faiths and Christian denominations. Capuchin Franciscan Father Michel Dalton, pastor of Immaculate Conception Church in Ewa, said Pope Francis’ “persona” and “spirituality” has resonated with many of his non-Catholic friends, including a member of Sufism.

“Even they are calling him their pope,” Father Dalton said. “That’s how universal his appeal is.”

Rich Meiers, digital content director at Hawaii News Now, said he has noticed Pope Francis’ popularity skyrocket on the local news outlet’s website and social media pages. Meiers said Internet headlines he posts on the pope “receive a lot of attention.”

“The media recognizes Francis’ popularity, but more importantly, the media recognizes Pope Francis’ ability to attract readers, viewers from all religions and beliefs,” said Meiers, a Catholic.

“This pope has addressed controversial issues that other popes have shied away from,” he added. “That alone has made Francis a media favorite.”

Pam Aqui, a member of the Basic Christian Community, said the local group comprised of Catholics and other faithful “speaks of (Pope Francis) in the most positive terms, especially one Protestant member who really loves and appreciates him.”

“She sees him as a bridge between Protestants and Catholics,” Aqui said. “I do think that people in general are thinking more positively about our church. (The pope) shook up the status quo in a good way.”

“I pray for him daily because this is very new for him,” she noted. “I imagine it’s very hard to have all eyes on you all the time.”

Aqui, a parishioner at St. John Vianney Church in Kailua, was commissioned by the White House last year to craft a gift for Pope Francis’ installation Mass. Her koa rosary was presented to the pontiff by a U.S. delegation, which included Vice President Joe Biden.

Retired diocesan social ministry director Carol Ignacio said the most important things Islanders can take away from Francis’ first year are his return to the fundamental value of honesty and his “ability to change.” He has made an impact on both believer and non-believer alike, Ignacio said, because he has brought a heartfelt, fearless approach to evangelization.

“If you were to articulate what is it that he’s attempting to do and be,” Ignacio said, “it is to walk that mission of Jesus the best he can, in his humanness.”

“Your core mission, everything is measured against that,” she added. “They see him — whether they’re believers, unbelievers or whatever — living out the mission as we (Catholics) claim the mission to be.”

“They may not even believe in the mission, but he’s living the mission,” Ignacio said.

The Francis effect: Catholics love the pope, but for the lapsed, not enough to return to church

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Pope Francis prays during his general audience in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican Feb. 26. (CNS photo/Tony Gentile, Reuters)

 

WASHINGTON

Pope Francis’ popularity began immediately after his March 13, 2013, election when he walked onto the balcony and humbly greeted the crowd in St. Peter’s Square.

His appeal has been on a fast track ever since, causing many to speculate a possible “Francis effect” of increased numbers of Catholics going to church.

Although there has been anecdotal evidence of a resurgence of interest in the church since the pope’s election, it may still be too early to see if this interest translates to new or returning members to the fold.

A Pew Research Center report released March 6, reiterates what most people likely realize: Pope Francis is immensely popular among U.S. Catholics — so much so that eight in 10 have a favorable view of him. But according to the poll’s results, the pope’s popularity has not brought more people to Mass or the sacraments.

The polling — conducted Feb. 14-23 among 1,821 adults nationwide that included 351 Catholics — found no change in the number of Americans — 22 percent — who identify themselves as Catholic now and those who did prior to the election of Pope Francis. The data also found no change in self-reported rates of weekly Mass attendance among Catholics, which the report said remains at 40 percent.

The survey, “Catholics View Pope Francis as a Change for the Better,” also did not find evidence that Catholics are volunteering or going to confession more often now than in the previous year but it did find that seven in 10 U.S. Catholics see Pope Francis representing a major change in direction for the church. It also showed that during the past year 26 percent of Catholics have become “more excited” about their Catholic faith and 40 percent of Catholics have been praying more often.

The poll, conducted by landline and cellphones, has an overall margin of error of plus or minus 2.6 percentage points.

The margin of error in this poll and others is one factor that makes it difficult to fully measure the “Francis effect,” according to Mark Gray, director of Catholic polls and a research associate at Georgetown University’s Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate, or CARA.

Too early to tell

He noted in a blog last December that although Pope Francis’ popularity could be bringing people back to church, it may be in smaller numbers than would cause a poll to fluctuate.

In the blog, he said, it’s “really too early to know anything more than anecdotes,” but he told Catholic News Service Feb. 27 that CARA will have more evidence to measure the pope’s impact on the pews once it receives the 2013 data on sacramental practice from the Official Catholic Directory this summer. This data will enable CARA to make comparisons with previous years without margins of error since the numbers are directly from church records of baptisms, marriages, and other sacraments and rites.

Some observers told CNS that the pope’s impact shouldn’t be measured in returning Catholics, but in the restored image of the Catholic Church since Pope Francis was elected and the number of Catholics who feel proud of their faith again. Others say the measurement of the pope’s impact will take at least another year, and might be more noticeable after the synod on the family this fall.

Eileen Burke-Sullivan, associate theology professor at Creighton University in Omaha, Neb., said she has visited with Catholic lay leaders and deacons in recent parish presentations, where she has heard stories of adult children, inspired by the example of Pope Francis, wanting to come back to the church.

“I think there is a bounce right now,” but the key is what they will find when they return: “Will it be different, or the same old same old?” she told CNS March 4.

She said parishes can act on the momentum generated by the pope by following his example of consultation.

Burke-Sullivan, who holds the Barbara Reardon Heaney Endowed Chair in pastoral liturgical theology at Creighton, said parishes should consider taking on serious studies and prayerful reflections of what they want to do differently to attract people and not drive them away and also how they can be more of a “field hospital” after battle as Pope Francis has described the church.

But even as local parish leaders — and pollsters — try to figure out what the pope’s appeal means, church leaders don’t deny that they have seen a ripple effect from the pope’s example, which they say should ultimately point to God.

Bishop Rodolfo Wirz Kraemer of Maldonado, president of the Uruguayan bishops’ conference, told CNS there has not been an automatic or immediate increase in Mass attendance since the pope’s election. “There is a growth but it is a slow process.”

“What I have seen is a renewal … a greater interest of the people for the gospel, for the church … for Christ,” he added.

Bishop Guilherme Werlang of Ipameri, president of the Brazilian bishops’ commission for justice and peace, had a similar reaction.

“I think it’s too early to state that there has been an increase in participation. What we can say is that at this first moment of enthusiasm, there has been a greater number of people at Masses … but we want people to return to the church because of Christ not because of the pope.”

Contributing to this story was Lise Alves Sao Paulo.

Obituary: Edward Vargas | 1948-2014

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1vargasDeacon for 13 years, port chaplain, served at St. Jude, Kapolei

Deacon and diocesan port chaplain Edward Vargas, who served at St. Jude Parish in Kapolei, died March 16 at Kaiser Medical Center in Honolulu. He was 65 and a deacon for 13 years.

His neighbor and friend of 20 years, Deacon John Coughlin, remembered Vargas with affection and humor.

Coughlin, who was ordained in 2007, said that Vargas and his wife Lana were instrumental in guiding him into the diaconate formation process.

He was “always encouraging, always helping to allay fears and misgivings, always encouraging and listening after a challenging formation weekend,” said Coughlin, who is now co-director with his wife of the diocesan diaconate formation program.

“Ed was the first deacon to be assigned to St. Jude,” Coughlin said. “People learned of the diaconate from observing Ed.”

Coughlin also said that Vargas’ diaconate had its light moments, recalling in particular his “ongoing battle with the paschal candle during the Easter Vigil.”

Whether it was wax spilling on his head or a candleholder that refused to release the candle, the drama continued annually, Coughlin said.

“Maybe that’s why he worked so hard to move me toward the diaconate,” Coughlin joked, “to have someone with him to share the mortification of being defeated by a four-foot cylinder of molded beeswax.”

Vargas was born on Nov. 24, 1948, in Manhattan, N.Y., and raised in Brooklyn. At age 12 his family returned to Puerto Rico where he attended high school. After he graduated, the family moved back to New York City and Vargas joined the U.S. Navy. He met and married his wife while on a three-year tour of duty in Christchurch, New Zealand. His eldest daughter was born in New Zealand.

After New Zealand, Vargas spent 27 years in the submarine force. His duty stations included Maryland, Connecticut, California, Washington and Hawaii. He retired in 1992 with the rank of master chief petty officer.

In a profile he wrote while preparing for the diaconate, he said his decision to live in Hawaii after his navy career was “an easy one” because the Islands reminded him of Puerto Rico.

Vargas said that in navigating his life after the Navy he had “always contemplated involving myself with the church in some way” and felt a “strong calling” to the diaconate.

He was ordained a deacon with five others by Bishop Francis X. DiLorenzo at St. Jude Church on July 26, 2001.

At St. Jude, Deacon Vargas worked in a wide variety of parish ministries including the RCIA, Baptism, First Holy Communion and Confirmation preparation. He was also a lector, eucharistic minister and a Knight of Columbus.

He attended Hawaii Pacific University and for a time was employed by St. Louis School and Our Lady of Peace Cathedral.

Vargas’ seafaring background made him the ideal candidate for the position of port chaplain of the Apostleship of the Sea, to which Bishop Larry Silva appointed him on April 1, 2011.

The Apostleship of the Sea is an international Catholic port ministry established in 1922 by Pope Pius XI.

The local post, which at the time of Vargas’ appointment had been vacant for several years, serves the spiritual needs of Catholic merchant mariners, fishermen, oceangoing workers, recreational sailors and others who dock in Oahu’s main port city of Honolulu.

When he took the assignment, Deacon Vargas said that he welcomed the opportunity to return the warmth others had previously shown him during his stays at port.

“I always remember the kindness from the people in port when they met the ships to help us seafarers,” he said. “When they leave Honolulu, I want them to think, ‘Wow, those people in Hawaii know what they are doing.’”

In reference to Vargas’ Navy career, Coughlin said he had the bark of a “master chief, but behind that bark was really a kind and soft-hearted man who would give you the shirt off of his back.”

“I will miss our casual banter in the parking lot, our dinners together, the understanding ear after a particularly bad day, the partner in ministry and at the altar, the good friend,” Coughlin said.

Deacon Vargas is survived by wife Lana, daughters Lanita R.M. Vargas and Shannon N.M. Gates; brothers Jose, Noel, Samuel and Roberto; sisters Gladys, Maria, Milagros and Yvette; and four grandchildren.

His funeral was at St. Jude Church on March 21. He was buried at Hawaii State Veterans Cemetery in Kaneohe.

Manaolana | Lenten apps: It’s Friday. Drop the cheeseburger!

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Social media, smartphones give young people a new look at Lent

WASHINGTON — This is not your parents’ Lent.

That’s pretty clear when smartphone alarms — sounding like police whistles — ring at mealtimes on Fridays along with text messages from the “meat police” offering reminders such as: “Hey, it’s Friday, drop the cheeseburger!”

The Friday no-meat reminder comes through the Lentsanity app produced by the Fellowship of Catholic University Students. By the third day of Lent, the app — which also offers plenty of Lenten resources — already had more than 10,000 downloads.

Jonathan Teixeira and Kevin Cotter, the brains behind the program, work at the group’s headquarters just outside Denver. They told Catholic News Service March 7 that they began working on the project a few months ago.

“Lent is a great opportunity for people to get into their faith, to try something for 40 days, and we wanted to provide something for people and how to do it,” said Teixeira.

He said the app has “taken on life of its own from (promotion) online and word of mouth.”

Cotter likened the app’s appeal to the popularity of the pope alarm app they developed last year that sent more than 135,000 notifications after the Sistine Chapel released white smoke indicating that the cardinals had elected a new pope.

“People are proud to be Catholic,” Cotter said, and if technology can bring people together around their faith, “it’s even better” because people love to show their friends what’s on their phones, he added.

He said the app shows how the church is relevant in the modern world and has something to say, especially during Lent. As he points out, the whole idea of giving something up for Lent is hard in a culture that binge watches television shows and where people eat whatever they want.

“Part of our culture realizes we do too much,” he said, adding that “a physical fast helps people reflect on their spiritual interior. We can empty ourselves physically to spiritually prepare the way for Christ.”

Teixeira said even a simple reminder not to eat meat on Fridays is helpful. “We’ve all been there, where we’re halfway through a cheeseburger and think, ‘Oh no, it’s a Friday in Lent!’”

The idea of online spiritual support is something Christina Mead, web content editor with LifeTeen, also has witnessed.

Mead posted a list of creative things to give up during Lent on the LifeTeen blog — which was liked more than 50,000 times on Facebook a week after Lent began. The list includes suggestions such as cutting out screen time, baby-sitting for free on weekends, wearing the same four outfits during Lent and doing ab crunches while praying the Hail Mary.

Mead, who spoke to CNS March 12 from LifeTeen offices in Mesa, Ariz., said the whole concept of working together on Lenten sacrifice resonates with teens.

She said the modern world “celebrates mediocrity and self-centeredness” so to ask teenagers to step outside that and do something in bold ways — such as giving something up for 40 days — is very counter cultural yet also appealing. “They just really come alive with that idea and latch onto it.”

And for teens who don’t have a strong parish group they can turn to, she said they can get spiritual support through the online community formed by LifeTeen’s social media outreach.

Only one week into the 40 days, Mead said it’s been an exciting time. “I get to see the young church really come alive,” she said.

Young adult Catholics also are in the Lent-social media mix. The Paulists’ Busted Halo website features a fast, pray, give daily Lenten calendar. The calendar’s introduction urges those following it — about 30,000 according to Facebook likes March 12 — to think about Lenten practices in a broader context.

It suggests fasting from dependence on electronic devices, praying for the 1.6 billion people in the world who have no access to electricity and spending the extra time saved in giving some time to others.

But really you don’t have to be young to have fun with Lent or to use one’s phone or computer for spiritual help or direction in the 40 days. Online Lenten tools include virtual Stations of the Cross, apps that track spiritual activities, and tools to help one prepare for confession, pray the rosary or read the Bible.

The tools are really just that, though, as the long-standing practice of Lenten fasts is so that we can “hunger for God without being overstuffed with food and drink,” according to Msgr. Kevin Irwin, a professor of liturgical studies at The Catholic University of America in Washington.

In an email to CNS, he said “sobriety and eating less are meant to make us realize in our physical bodies that we are always meant to be empty and poor to allow Christ to fill us with his riches.”

Kathleen T. Choi: Is being rich a sin?

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We hear a lot lately about “income inequality.” The implication is that the rich are forcing everyone else to live in poverty.

Several Bible passages appear to support an anti-wealth bias. A closer reading, however, shows that it is the misuse of wealth that brings condemnation, not its possession. Indeed, other verses suggest that God wants us all to be rich. I believe this “prosperity gospel” is also a misreading of Scripture.

We say that God has blessed us with health, prosperity, talent or a loving family. Indeed, some Protestants see these blessings as proof of God’s approval. I have trouble with that view. I think worldly success is mostly luck. After all, if being rich were proof of God’s favor, the saints would all be wealthy. The sick and suffering would all be greater sinners than their happy, healthy brothers and sisters.

I believe that God blesses us in happy circumstances (not by them) just as he blesses us in hard times. I’m horrified by the suggestion that we can get what we want by “naming and claiming” it. Some sermons on tithing also make me nervous, especially the promise that, “You can’t out-give God.” Putting $100 in the collection plate doesn’t obligate God in any way. That’s why it’s called “sacrificial giving.”

The Bible appreciates wealth enough to use symbols like lavish banquets, gorgeous clothing and precious metals to describe our eternal life. Passages criticizing wealth express two concerns. How did you get this money, and what are you doing with it? Dishonesty and selfishness are what condemn the wealthy, not their bank balance.

For example, Jesus tells the story of two men in the afterlife (Luke 16). The poor man rests peacefully with the patriarch Abraham. The rich man is tormented, not because he was rich, but because he didn’t give even his leftovers to the homeless man outside his door.

In Luke 22, Jesus meets a rich young man who proudly claims that he keeps every commandment. Jesus tells him to give away all his money. I see no evidence, though, that Christ expected everyone to embrace poverty. The early church in Jerusalem pooled their resources (Acts 2:44). There’s no indication, though, that their sister churches copied that practice.

I usually picture early Christians as poor. However, Zebedee had enough money to hire help for his fishing business. Matthew and Zacchaeus had the despised, but lucrative, job of tax collector. Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus paid for Jesus’ burial. Several business and trades people gave St. Paul hospitality and financial assistance. The Letter of St. James mentions both rich and poor believers.

The church today has wealthy members and is grateful for them. While it’s true that every penny counts, you don’t get a parish hall built or a school renovated without major assistance from the well-to-do. Make a substantial donation to one Catholic charity and see how quickly that charity and a dozen others hopefully ask for more.

Wealth isn’t sinful; it’s just dangerous. So are intelligence, good looks and health. They tempt us to think we deserve our good fortune. They tempt us to rely on our own strength rather than God’s grace and mercy. All forms of worldly wealth eventually pass away. That’s why Christ urges us to focus our attention on the heavenly treasures we earn by serving God and others.

So, no, being rich is not a sin. Now go write a check to Catholic Charities.

Kathleen welcomes comments. Send them to Kathleen Choi, 1706 Waianuenue Ave., Hilo, HI 96720, or e-mail: kathchoi@hawaii.rr.com.

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