May 7, 2004
The Catholic News & Herald 1
www.charlottediocese.org
Roman Catholic Diocese of Charlotte
Precious cargo Week to appreciate school bus drivers | Page 6
Established Jan. 12, 1972 by Pope Paul VI May 7, 2004
fighting for life
Serving Catholics in Western North Carolina in the Diocese of Charlotte
Prayers rising like incense
by MARK PATTISON catholic news service
See ABORTION, page 4
no. 31
Catholics, Lutherans look back, forward as dialogue ends one phase
New poll shows growing shift toward pro-life position WASHINGTON — The results of a new poll indicate increasing support for a pro-life position, according to representatives of several pro-life organizations. The April 15-17 poll conducted by Zogby International showed that 56 percent of those responding said that abortion should never be legal or be legal only when the mother’s life is in danger or in cases of rape and incest. Forty-two percent of the respondents said abortion should be legal for any reason for the first, first and second, or
vOLUME 13
by CANDY CZERNICKI catholic news service
Photos by Kevin E. Murray
Bishop Peter J. Jugis incenses the altar of St. Joseph Vietnamese Church in Charlotte during the dedication Mass May 2.
New home, old traditions
Crossing the chasm
Vietnamese celebrate new church, freedom by
KEVIN E. MURRAY editor
CNS photo by Jason Lange
U.S. agents patrol the border as travelers migrating north make camp on the Mexican side April 9 near Tijuana. Some workers find an open door, meals and a bed at Casa del Migrante, where they can stay for up to two weeks in their search for work in Tijuana or the United States. See story page 8. coverage of diocesan Hispanic ministry and outreach, page 9.
CHARLOTTE — The Vietnamese Catholic population of Charlotte now has some more room to grow. Almost 2,000 people crowded the new St. Joseph See DEDICATION, page 5
A child regards the crowd that overflowed into the church’s vestibule during the Mass.
WAUWATOSA, Wis. — As Lutheran and Catholic scholars completed five years of work on a document about their churches’ structures and ministries, they looked back on the 10 rounds of dialogue that began in 1965 and ahead in anticipation of the 11th topic for discussion. “In working toward church unity, the challenge is to find a common lens that bypasses old differences,” Susan Wood, a dialogue participant and professor at St. John’s University in Collegeville, Minn., told the Catholic Herald, the Milwaukee archdiocesan newspaper. “In the past, things have been seen through juridical eyes — that didn’t get us very far,” said Wood. The end of the 10th round of dialogue between the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and the Roman Catholic Church was announced at Redemption Lutheran Church in Wauwatosa April 22. The dialogue is cochaired by Catholic Auxiliary Bishop Richard J. Sklba of Milwaukee and retired Lutheran Bishop Charles Maahs. The g roup’s ag reed document on “The Church as Koinonia of Salvation: Its Structures and Ministries” — See DIALOGUE, page 13
Culture Watch
Perspectives
Parish Profile
Spanish Benedictines’ ‘Chant’
‘Catholics for Dummies,’ strangers among us
St. Joseph Vietnamese Church
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