December 5, 2008
The Catholic News & Herald 1
www.charlottediocese.org
Roman Catholic Diocese of Charlotte
Perspectives Getting the most out of Mass; lives in the balance; benefits of confession
Established Jan. 12, 1972 by Pope Paul VI December 8, 2008
To watch and follow the Lord
| Pages 14-15 Serving Catholics in Western North Carolina in the Diocese of Charlotte
Huntersville cemetery opens Catholic section
SECOND OF ITS KIND IN DIOCESE; ADDS OPTION FOR TRADITIONAL BURIALS
by CINDY WOODEN catholic news service
by
VATICAN CITY — In their prayers and through their actions in Advent, Christians are called to be signs of hope for a world marked by holiness and justice, Pope Benedict XVI said. “Advent is the spiritual season of hope par excellence, when the whole church is called to become hope for itself and for the world,” the pope said Nov. 29 as he celebrated vespers on the eve of the first Sunday of Advent.
Photo by Katie Moore
Bishop Peter J. Jugis blesses the Catholic section at Northlake Memorial Gardens in Huntersville Dec. 2. Also pictured are (from left) Msgr. Richard Bellow, Father Patrick Hoare and Deacon Robert Murphy.
HUNTERSVILLE — Catholic sections in independentlyowned cemeteries have become a recent trend in the Diocese of Charlotte. Bishop Peter J. Jugis blessed a Catholic section at Northlake Memorial Gardens in Huntersville Dec. 2. Msgr. Richard Bellow, pastor of St. Mark Church in Huntersville; Father Patrick Hoare, parochial vicar; deacons; and parishioners gathered for the event. “It is meeting the needs of See CEMETERY, page 5
To triumph over terror
Vatican official says Galileo had ‘deep religious convictions’
Pope condemns terrorist attacks in India, prays for victims of violence
by CINDY WOODEN catholic news service
See GALILEO, page 7
KATIE MOORE staff writer
See ADVENT, page 6
ROME — Fourteen years after Pope John Paul II said the Catholic Church erred when it condemned the 17th-century astronomer Galileo Galilei, the Vatican secretary of state said the astronomer was “a man of faith” who recognized God as creator of the cosmos. Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone,
no. 6
An eternal resting place
Pope begins Advent by asking Christians to be signs of hope
‘A man of faith’
vOLUME 18
PAPAL TELEGRAM APPEALS FOR AN END TO ‘ALL ACTS OF TERRORISM’ by JOHN THAVIS catholic news service
CNS photo by Adnan Abidi, Reuters
Students from different countries hold candles during a peace march in New Delhi Nov. 30. Hundreds of students from 25 nations participated in the march in memory of the victims of the Mumbai attacks, in which nearly 200 people died and hundreds were injured.
VATICAN CITY — Pope Benedict XVI condemned the wave of terrorist attacks in India as acts of “cruel and senseless violence,” and led prayers for the more than 170 people who died and the hundreds injured in the bloodshed.
A Vatican spokesman, meanwhile, warned that if extremists continue to exploit the ethnic and religious tensions of southern Asia the results could be even more tragic. Speaking at his noon blessing Nov. 30, the pope asked for prayers for the victims of the attacks in Mumbai, the Indian financial capital, where See MUMBAI, page 7
Culture Watch
In Our Schools
Two-way street
Book on Marian apparitions; CD based on pope’s poetry
Sister parish update; prayer events in school
Archbishop asks for tolerance in same-sex debate
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