The Anchor Diocese of Fall River
F riday , June 1, 2012
Corpus Christi procession is a show of gratitude
Laying down the groundwork for diocesan families
NEW BEDFORD — Catholics worldwide know that the Blessed Sacrament is not just a symbol of Christ’s sacrifice, but the actual presence of His Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity. It is this sacred reality that moves faithful to adore and venerate the Blessed Sacrament in chapels and churches all over the world. It is also that sacredness that motivates faithful to accompany the Blessed Sacrament through public streets in a solemn procession in celebration of the feast of Corpus Christi. It is an outward display of the love and appreciation Catholics have for the Holy Redeemer. The custom started in the early 14th century when Catholic faithful would process through towns following Mass on Corpus Christi Sunday. Through the years popes encouraged this practice, some granting indulgences to those who participated. In the mid-1500s, the Council of Trent solemnly approved and recom-
FALL RIVER — A new initiative will be launched by the Fall River Diocese in June entitled “Strong Catholic Families: Strong Catholic Youth.” Hosted by St. Mary’s Parish in South Dartmouth, the three-part series was developed by the National Federation for Catholic Youth Ministry after NFCYM recognized the important roles parents play in forming their children’s faith. “Most of our catechetical leaders and pastors do a very good job when they bring the parents in for sacramental prep. They have the opportunity to meet with them and do an overview of the Sacraments and how important it is for them to be connected and part of the life of the parish and the Eucharist,” said Claire McManus, director of the Faith Formation Office in Fall River. “But what this initiative does is, it takes that moment of meeting with the parents and puts in the hands of the catechetical leaders the knowledge and information that has been
By Dave Jolivet, Editor
mended the Corpus Christi processions. In 2004, during the Year of the Eucharist, Blessed Pope John Paul II, in his apostolic letter, Mane nobiscum Domine, advocated the procession saying, “This year let us also celebrate with particular devotion the Solemnity of Corpus Christi, with its traditional procession. Our faith in the God Who took flesh in order to become our companion along the way needs to be everywhere proclaimed, especially in our streets and homes, as an expression of our grateful love and as an inexhaustible source of blessings.” To this day, the custom thrives in cities and towns across the globe, including in the city of New Bedford, where faithful have processed for 10 years. This year the Turn to page 13
By Becky Aubut Anchor Staff
support system — Bishop George W. Coleman, right, and Stonehill College President Father Mark Cregan, C.S.C. gathered with a group of Little Sisters of the Poor just prior to the Easton school’s recent commencement exercises. The Little Sisters came to the campus to support and bear witness to Mother Margaret Regina (between the bishop and Father Cregan) receiving an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree from the college. Dedicated to the care of the elderly poor for nearly 50 years, Sister Margaret entered the Little Sisters of the Poor in 1964. For the past 20 years, she has served her community as Provincial Superior, assuming responsibility for 12 homes for the elderly in the U.S. Eastern and Western Provinces at various times.
Doctors, medical staff pushing for contraceptives, sterilization By Kenneth J. Souza Anchor Staff
FALL RIVER — Even before the Obama Administration announced last year its intention to require all health insurance plans to cover contraceptives, abortion-pills, and sterilizations as basic care with no co-payment under the proposed new health care law, doctors and medical staff at many hospitals were pressuring women to have tubal ligations in an effort to stave off future pregnancies, something that has Catholic medical personnel and ethicists alarmed. “The most effective measures to prevent pregnancy are the IUD and tubal ligations, and ob-gyns want to provide the most effective family planning,” said a doctor currently working in a county hospital out west, who for professional reasons has asked to remain anonymous and to whom we will refer as Gianna. “Moreover, even if the patient says she is practicing Natural Family Planning,
the physicians do not trust that the patient is actually going to abstain from sex and, to be honest, they have reason to think this. Even though all women and husbands are advised to abstain for at least six weeks until the first post-partum visit, quite a few women get pregnant again in this interval even if they are breast-feeding.” “When a doctor informs a woman that she cannot become pregnant in the future without serious consequences to herself and her baby, having her tubes tied might seem to be the most appropriate response,” said Father Tad Pacholczyk, director of Education at the National Catholic Bioethics Center in Philadelphia, in a 2009 Anchor article. Father Pacholczyk noted this is a direct sterilization, which is “morally unacceptable because it involves the decision to directly mutilate a healthy system of the body, one that is functioning normally and properly, Turn to page 13
Father Daniel L. Freitas, long-time Somerset pastor, dies in Florida
By Dave Jolivet, Editor
MELBOURNE, Fla. — Retired Father Daniel L. Freitas, 87, a long-time pastor of St. John of God Parish in Somerset, died May 22. Before his retirement in June of 1996, Father Freitas had been pastor at St. John of God Parish for 22 years. While there he assessed the possibility of constructing a new church
for the parish. Ground was broken in March of 1977 and the new structure was dedicated in May of 1978. Upon his retirement he told a local newspaper, “I’d like to think that the best thing I’ve done is not to build this building, but build this community into one of more faith, with people who live a better Christian life.” Father John A. Raposo, chaplain at Catholic Memorial Home, in an Anchor column for the Year For Priests, expressed his gratitude to Father Freitas lending his Turn to page 19
gathered about the influence of parents on the faith life of the child. That’s what makes this a little bit different.” The initiative is relatively new and the Fall River Diocese is only the third diocese in New England to bring it to its diocesan members. The Diocese of Providence and the Diocese of Worcester presented the initiative, and McManus and Crystal Medeiros, assistant director of Youth and Young Adult Ministry of Fall River, attended the sessions in Worcester. The design of the initiative is broken into three parts; starting June 14, the “Sample Evening Parent Session” will take place. The session will offer catechetical leaders, youth ministers, Confirmation coordinators, school leaders, priests and deacons to Turn to page 14