FALL RIVER DIOCIESAN NEWSPAPER FOR SOUTHEAST MASSACHUSETTS CAPE COD & THE ~SLANDS
t eanc 0 VOL. 28, No. 28
fALL RIVER, MASS., FRIDAY, JULY 20, 1984
$8 Per Year
Boston bishop
to Florida
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DC
WASHINGTON~NC) - Pope John Paul II established two new dioce~es in Florida July 17 -.;. the Diocese of Palm Beach and the Diocese of Venice-and named auxHiary bishops from Boston and Miami to head them. Auxiliary Bishop Thomas V. Daily, 56, of Boston was named the first bishop of ,Palm Beach, which was formed from 4,515 square 'miles taken from the existing archdiocese of Miami and the Orlando diocese. Auxiliary Bishop John J. Nev ins of Miami, 52, was named first 1?ishop of Venice, formed from 8,460 square miles taken from the Miami archdiocese and the dioceses of Orlando and St. Petersburg. .Archbishop Edward A. Mc
Carthy of Miami said at a July 17 press conference that the new dioceses "reflect the dynamic growth of the state of Florida and of the Catholic Church within the state. "Only 26 years ago there was but one diocese in 'JF'lorida," ithe archbishop said, :referring to the Diocese of St. Augustine. "We are 'pleased that through the new dioceses and under the leader ship of two outstanding bishc.ps the church will now be able to respond even more effectively to the distinctive needs of the faith fU,1 in :their particu1ar areas." The announcement brings the numbE!l' of F,lorida dioceses to seven. Bishop Daily, a' native of BelTurn to Page Six
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ASSISTED BY Sister Irene Therese, OP, St. Anne's Hospital treasurer, and Msgr. John J. Oliveira, Bishop Daniel A. Cronin blesses the Fall River institution's new com puted tomography whole body ,scanner. The diagnostic device gives physicians a tool of ~~:)ede~ted accuracy, often eliminating the necessity for exploratory surgery (Torchia
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VERY REV. JOHN P. DRISCOLL, pastor of St. Lawrence parish, New Bedford, studies an 1882 issue of The Pilot, newspaper of the Boston archdiocese, as the cornerstone of the former ·St. Joseph School, predecessor of today's Holy Family High School, is opened in connection with Holy Family's centennial. (Rosa Ph~to)
No artifici'al birth control
B.an r·estate d
VATICAN CITY (NC) - Re affirming Pope Paul VI's teach ing that "each marriage act must remain open to transmitting life," Pope John Paul II last week told his weekly general audience that the statement is a basic tenet of his predecessor's 1968 'encyclical, "Humanae Vitae." The teaching, he said, is cen tral to, the encyclical and is based on "the inseparable con nection, which God desired and which man cannot break on his own initiative, Ibetween the two aspects of the cO}Jjugal act: the unitive aspect and the procreative aspect." Pope John Paul said the con nection in marriage between pro creation ,and the union of the couple "is founded on the inti mate structure of the conjugal act itself, which enables husband and wife to generate new Hie, according to !Jaws inscribed in the very being of man and woman." "By safeguarding both of these essential aspects, the conjugal act preserves in its fullness the sense of true mutual aove," the pope said. "At the same time it remains faithful to God's design for the purposes of marriage in directing husband and wife to ward their high calling of parent hood." A Vatican official said the
pope's remarks were part of a series of talks aimed at counter acting "confusion and dou1>t" caused by' some Catholic theo logians on the issue of birth con trol. At a press conference after the audience, Msgr. Carlo Caf farra, president of the Pontifical Institute for Studies' on Marri age and the Family, named Father Charles· Curran o~ 'The Catholic University of America in Washington as one of a group of theologians whose opposition to the "clear teaching of the church" on marriage and pro creation "can have caused con fusion and doubts in the minds of the faithful." Msgr. Caffarra also named Father Hans Kung of Tubingen University in West Germany,' Father Franz Bockle of the Uni versity of Bonn, West Germany, and the late Father Marc Orai son of France. Msgr. Caffarra said the theo \logians "have contested 'Hu-· manae Vitae' from the time dt came oilt." Father Curran was a leader in the dissent against the encyclical in 1968. In 1979, he told the Italian magazine Expresso that the teaching that "contraception is always and everywhere wrong was to be rethought." Turn to Page Six