The Anchor Diocese of Fall River
F riday , May 20, 2011
The alpha, beta and gammas of the New Evangelization
Legislature closes lewd e-message loophole
By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff
By Christine M. Williams Anchor Correspondent
EAST SANDWICH — According to Dick Kiernan, Field Ministries Director for Alpha New England, the Alpha for Catholics program is an integral part of the Church’s new evangelization outreach. “The Alpha for Catholics course has been offered around the world,” Kiernan said. “Sixteen million people have gone through it and it’s been translated into more than 70 languages.” Having grown steadily in New England over the past decade, Kiernan said an estimated 5,000 Catholics in the area have already experienced the 10-week course which concludes with a retreat weekend, and Alpha teams have recently formed at parishes within the Fall River Diocese including Our Lady of the Cape in Brewster and St. Mary’s in Mansfield. In an effort to reach even more parishes on Cape Cod and beyond, two introductory sessions titled “Alpha and the New Catholic Evangelization” will be held at Corpus Christi Parish in East Sandwich on May 25 — one beginning at 11:45 a.m. tailored for priests, deacons and parish leaders (which includes a luncheon) and another at 7 p.m. for lay people. “The luncheon is essentially for priests, deacons and staff who can’t make the session at night,” Kiernan said. “The evening session is basically for lay people because most of them are working during the day, but both sessions have the same content and focus. These are open to all parishes in the area.” Likening the Alpha experience to the once-popular Cursillo retreat movement, Kiernan said it tends to have similar components such as witness talks, video presentations and group discussions. “But the Cursillo movement tends to be a little more intense, where you go away for a three-day weekend and it’s really for people who are already somewhat involved in the Church and it calls them further,” Kiernan said. “The Alpha course is aimed at people with no Church background at all, those who may be lapsed Catholics or even cradle Catholics. They may have beliefs, but for whatever reason they’ve fallen away or drifted from the Church.” “It contains some good, solid teaching — but we don’t get into doctrine,” Turn to page 18
It takes a steady hand — Mariangeli “Angie” Vargas, supported by a friend, holds onto the railing and watches her step as she leaves the Catholic Social Services office in New Bedford. Vargas said she continues to suffer from a permanent disability when surgery for a burst gall bladder left her in a coma for five days, causing brain damage that inhibited her speech and walking.
Catholic Social Services helps put the ‘able’ back in disabled By Becky Aubut Anchor Staff
NEW BEDFORD — He has pulled people off the streets when they were homeless, guided young children through the challenging world of academics, and reached to help the elderly when other service providers struggled to find a place for them. As coordinator for the Office for Persons with Disabilities, Matt Dansereau has literally had individuals dropped off on his doorstep, all while battling the misconceptions that some people may have towards those with disabilities, especially those suffering from the most common of disabilities — mental illness. “A lot of people fear being hurt by someone with a disability. That’s not common at all,” said Dansereau, adding the media tends to spotlight the negative. “It’s like anything, you only hear the bad. I like to talk about welfare. You only hear the bad about welfare, about the person who was fooling around with the system, but you don’t hear about the 99.9 percent of people who are on welfare who actually need it.” And Dansereau works hard for those who reach out to his office at the New Bedford branch of Catholic Social Ser-
vices. A self-described “problem solver to other programs,” Dansereau has clients who range from six months old to 97 years old. “A lot of other programs are limited to who they can service by their funding” restrictions, explained Dansereau. “A lot of times I will get clients who are already in other programs and with other state services, but because they can’t work on that particular issue with that client — and because of what Catholic Charities makes possible — I can. I end up dealing with those clients with some of their other issues.” Dansereau recalls a particularly moving story of a woman who was receiving support from an elder service program. “She was floating around in different houses, and she ended up being dropped off here at our doorstep,” said Dansereau, who happened to be on vacation at the time. “I immediately got a call because she had a very, very severe speech impediment. We took her and put her in a homeless shelter in Taunton, the Samaritan House.” Dansereau and another co-worker scoured area housing and two weeks Turn to page 11
Holy Cross Family Ministries to host Family Rosary Retreat June 4 - Page 20
BOSTON — Sending lewd emails and text messages to minors became illegal in the Commonwealth as of April 11. On February 5 last year the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court unanimously ruled that existing law did not prohibit sending sexually-explicit electronic material to minors. That ruling overturned the conviction of a man who had been found guilty of sending sexually-explicit online messages to an undercover police officer posing as a 13-year-old girl. It also left concerned legislators scrambling to close the loophole. State lawmakers voted to amend the statute on March 4, 2010, and Gov. Deval Patrick signed the bill on April 13. However, the law was challenged in court and federal district judge Rya Zobel granted a preliminary injunction, ruling that the new language was overbroad and violated the First Amendment. Gov. Patrick scaled back the scope of the statute on April 11, 2011. The legislation he signed clarifies that an offender must intend to disseminate sexually explicit matter to a minor. The measure was attached to the supplemental fiscal year 2011 budget. Enacted in 1982, Massachusetts General Law Chapter 272, Section 28 laid out the penalties for those who distribute “any matter harmful to minors, as defined in Section 31.” Matter is then defined in Section 31 as “any handwritten or printed material, visual representation, live performance or sound recording including but not limited to books, magazines, motion picture films, pamphlets, phonographic records, pictures, photographs, figures, statues, plays, dances.” The statute did not specifically mention electronically-transmitted text or online conversations. In what Philip D. Moran, president of the Pro-Life Legal Defense Fund, called at the time a “very strict” interpretation of the law, the SJC ruled that the absence of a definitive prohibition meant that Turn to page 18