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Volume 6 Number 22
Serving Catholics in Western North Carolina in the Diocese of Charlotte
•
February
1997
7,
Bishop's Call To Catholics: Support Sanctity Of Life MIKE KROKOS
By
Editor
GREENSBORO
— Despite a
society
which condones many evils including abortion, Catholics must stand firm and continue to support the sanctity of human life, Bishop William G. Curlin said at a Mass for the Unborn Jan. 29 at St. Pius X Church. "During my 40 years as a priest, there have been many changes in the world, both good and bad," Bishop Curlin told the more than 125 people in attendance. "But I never thought we would reach the point where laws actually sanction the killing of innocent,
unborn children." Society has evolved from an "age of innocence" where lives centered on church, school and family in the 1940s and '50s, to a time where many people believe there is no evil in the world, Bishop Curlin said. Evil does exist, but faith can always overcome it, he added. "We must believe in the power of prayer.
No
matter
how
discouraging things get,
we
God
holds us in the palm of His hand," Bishop Curlin added. "We can
must
realize that
change the world
— Dozens
Photo courtesy
CCHS
young people from across the Charlotte Diocese participated in the March for Life Jan. 22 in Washington, D.C. Pictured above are members of Charlotte Catholic High School's Voices for Life Club who traveled to the nation's capital on the "Youth for Life" bus with youngsters and teens from Charlotte, Denver, Hickory and Belmont. More than 1 25,000 people of all ages gathered for this year's march. Faith In Action
if
we
believe
God
is
with
us."
The bishop's comments came
of
a
week
Bernard F. Law of Boston reasserted Catholics' need to be unconditionally pro-life at the annual Mass in Thanksgiving for the Gift of Life celebrated after Cardinal
Jan. 21 at the Basilica of the National Shrine
Scott By
Hahn
Staff Writer
CHARLOTTE — "Hold on to your Live
an enthusiastic Dr. Scott Hahn told his audience of 1,100 on Feb. 1 at St. Matthew Church. His plea, delivered near the end of his three-session series, "A Faith Journey with Jesus," culminated two days of faith.
it,
love
it,
share
bearing witness to what
it,"
Hahn
called the
divine heritage of the Catholic Church.
"We
the
Message Of Faith
Delivers
JIMMY ROSTAR
Church are the bride of
"I would say that the Catholic Church has one of the most exciting futures anywhere in the world here in the South," he told The Catholic News &
Herald, "and especially in the Carolinas, not just because of transplants (moving here), but because
you have so many
non-Catholic Christians
who
are having
friendships form with Catholics." "It is
isn't
pronounced the words of consecration and elevated the host, I felt the last drop of doubt draining out of my mind and heart. I heard myself saying, 'My Lord and my God, it's really you.'" Hahn was received into the Church at Easter in 1986. Kimberly entered in 1990. "Entering the Catho-
Church for me was like coming home," Hahn said. "Ten years later, I'm more grateful than ever that this abiding truth is so permanent and unilic
so exciting to see people dis-
covering that Catholicism
what they
thought," he added.
own
of the Immaculate Conception in Washington. More than 5,000 people, including 25 bishops and 200 priests, attended the Mass.
and Christ will do whatever it takes beauty and to rescue and render spotless those for whom he bled and died and those for whom he intercedes right now," Hahn said during one
years to achieve. In his Jan. 31 "Conver-
after
sion Story," Hahn admitted to an audience of 1 ,600 people that his evangelical, academic, Presbyterian background led
concentrated on living the Catholic
presentation.
to his being "steeped in anti-Catholic con-
Christ,
to vindicate the
—
The
series
was sponsored by the Commission of
Catholic Evangelization Charlotte.
An
associate professor of theology
also travels extensively to discuss a
wide
range of subjects pertaining to Catholicism. His visit to Charlotte reinforced his gion.
view of the Church
life,
that discovery took
victions" as early as his high school years.
Troubled at finding inherently Catholic tenets of faith in later studies,
and Scripture and director of the Institute of Applied Biblical Studies at Franciscan University of Steubenville, Ohio, the former Presbyterian minister
positive
In his
in this re-
Hahn dove
deeper into his investigations. Struggling with his own distrust and objections from friends
and
his wife, Kimberly, he real-
ized his views of the Catholic Church
were
littered
with misconceptions.
In the mid-1980s, he attended
"When the shift occurred from the Liturgy of the Word to the Liturgy of the Eucharist ... I felt some"When
the priest
your soul
being storm-tossed for so long."
In
all
three presentations,
Hahn
Bishops' Committee for Pro-Life Activities, has since written President Clinton and asked him to reconsider his position on the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act, Bishop Curlin said. In his letter, the cardinal asked the president to meet with
him and knowledge-
able physicians to discuss the partial-birth
abortion procedure. Part of Bishop Curlin's homily centered on the act, which if implemented would outlaw the killing of partially delivered infants. The bill passed both Houses of Congress last spring but was vetoed by the president.
An
attempt to override the president's veto
faith with the realization that
failed in the U.S. Senate last September.
through the a flesh-and-blood family relationship with his people. Drawing scriptural
week before
God, "new covenant," formed
and the bond between Jesus and His Church in his talk "The Fourth Cup," and focusing on Lent and the Beatitudes in relation to God's mercy in his "Alive in Jesus"
Hahn offered ways
to
more
pro-
foundly understand and participate the covenant.
Edward Hood,
in
a parishioner of
See Hahn, page 2
the Senate vote, the
A
House of
Representatives had voted to override the veto.
no justification for an act that Bishop Curlin said. Christians must unite in one voice to "There
parallels to Passover
story,
Mass
for the first time.
thing new," he said.
versal. It's like a harbor for
Bishop Curlin was among the concelebrants. Cardinal Law, chairman of the Catholic
is
is
clearly infanticide,"
protect the sacredness of
life,
the bishop
added.
"Let us pray for those who know the anguish of abortion, that God in His mercy will forgive and help them," Bishop Curlin said. "Let us pray for our nation, that we will all believe in the sanctity of human terrible
life."