Diocese of Fall River, Mass.
F riday , May 2, 2014
Diocesan priests share recollections of SS. John XXIII and John Paul II By Dave Jolivet Anchor Editor
By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff
FALL RIVER — St. John XXIII will forever be best known for calling together the Second Vatican Council that he opened on Oct. 11, 1962 and that closed more than two years after his June 3, 1963 death. Many in the diocese have few remembrances of him, but there was much more to the man born Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli, the fourth of 13 children in a family of sharecroppers in Sotto il Monte, Italy. Like Pope Francis today, St. John XXIII was a pope who cared a great deal for the poor and marginalized, and advocated peace in a period in history when relations between the East and West were tenuous. Prior to becoming the 260th Successor of St. Peter in 1958, this humble priest was already recognized for his compassion for his fellow man and his love for the Church. According to a timeline of his life issued by Catholic News Service, he served as a medic and chap-
FALL RIVER — Elected by his brother cardinals on Oct. 16, 1978, he became the 263rd Successor of St. Peter. His pontificate — one of the longest in the history of the Church — lasted nearly 27 years. And for many of the younger priests now serving in the Fall River Diocese, he was the first — and for a long time the only — pope they knew as they grew up in the Church and began to discern a calling to the priesthood. Now that the former Karol Józef Wojtyla has been canonized and will forever be known as St. John Paul II, some of those same priests took time recently to share with The Anchor how the Polish pontiff affected their faith. “It is true that Pope John Paul II was the first and only pope that I knew as I was growing up,” said Father Jeff Cabral, judicial vicar of the diocesan Tribunal. “His papacy was important to my own faith life in terms of his commitment to youth. He challenged
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St. John XXIII and St. John Paul II were canonized on Divine Mercy Sunday. St. John XXIII is depicted in a painting from a museum in his Italian birthplace. St. John Paul II is shown in a composite featuring an image of him by Polish photographer Grzegorz Galazka. (CNS)
A priest raises the chalice as he celebrates Mass in honor of SS. John Paul II and John XXIII in the ski resort Kasprowy Wierch in Poland’s Tatra Mountains April 27. That day at the Vatican, Pope Francis canonized the two former popes. (CNS photo/Agencja Gazeta/Marek Podmokly, Reuters)
Pope Francis, with retired pope, canonizes SS. John and John Paul
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Canonizing two recent popes in the presence of his immediate predecessor, Pope Francis praised the new SS. John XXIII and John Paul II as men of courage and mercy, who responded to challenges of their time by modernizing the Catholic Church in fidelity to its ancient traditions. “They were priests, bishops and popes of the 20th century,” the pope said April 27, in his homily during Mass in St. Peter’s Square. “They lived through the tragic events of that century, but they were not overwhelmed by them. For them, God was more powerful.” “John XXIII and John Paul cooperated with the Holy Spirit in renewing and updating the
Church in keeping with her original features, those features which the saints have given her throughout the centuries,” he said. Speaking before a crowd of half a million that included retired Pope Benedict XVI, Pope Francis praised St. John for his best-known accomplishment, calling the Second Vatican Council, which he said “showed an exquisite openness to the Holy Spirit.” “He let himself be led, and he was for the Church a pastor, a servant-leader,” the pope said of St. John. “This was his great service to the Church. I like to think of him as the pope of openness to the Spirit.” Turn to page 14
Pro-Life organization calls on Mass. to close abortion clinics for ‘patently illegal’ activities By Christine M. Willams Anchor Correspondent
ATTLEBORO — Five abortion clinics in Massachusetts, including Four Women Health Services in Attleboro, are violating state law — or, at least, advertising their willingness to do so. While Commonwealth law states that abortions after 18 weeks must be performed in hospitals, each of the five clinics’ websites advertise abortions up to 20 weeks or later. Massachusetts law 130 CMR 433.455 (C)(2) states, “A second-
trimester abortion must be performed by a licensed and qualified physician only in a hospital licensed by the Department of Public Health to perform medical and surgical services; provided, however, that up to and including the 18th week of pregnancy, a second-trimester abortion may be performed in a clinic that meets the requirements of 130 CMR 433.455(C)(1) where the attending physician certifies in the medical record that, in his or her professional judgment, a non-
hospital setting is medically appropriate in the specific case.” The websites of four clinics — Four Women, Merrimack Valley Women’s Health Services in Haverhill, Metro West Women’s Health Services in Natick and North Shore Women’s Center in Lynn — all say abortions will be performed up to 20 weeks. Women’s Health Services in Brookline advertises abortions up to 23 weeks. Anne Fox, president of Massachusetts Citizens for Life, sent
a letter to the state executive office of Health and Human Services Secretary John Polanowicz on March 31 to alert him to the “patently illegal” conduct. Fox urged Polanowicz to order the abortion providers to cease abortion services until they demonstrate that they are not performing abortions beyond the 18th week of pregnancy. “Consider the outcry which would occur if a store advertised that it sells cigarettes to 10-yearolds,” she wrote. “These providers’
flagrant violations of MassHealth regulations pose an imminent threat to the safety and proper health care of their patients because the later in pregnancy an abortion occurs, the greater the patient’s medical risk.” In an interview with The Anchor, Fox said that hospitals are better-equipped to care for those women who are at a greater risk for complications during the procedure. She added that no one from Turn to page 18