VOL. 36, NO. 45
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Friday, November 13, 1992
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FALL RIVER, MtSS.
Southeastern Massachusetts' Largest Weekly
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$11 Per Year
MEMORIAL MASS: Family members of the five New Bedfo~d crewmen of~he missing fishing vessel Atlantis bring up the offertory gifts and receive condolences from Bishop Sean O'Malley at a Mass Nov. 7 at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Church, where Atlan~is captain Francisco M. Barroqueiro, 32, and first mate Antonio de Pinho, 46, are parishioners. Also missing are engineer Edgar P. Lobo, 35, cook John B. Barros, 43, both of Our UadY of the Assumption parish, and deck hand Joaquim Caseiro, 59, of St. John the Baptist darish. Our Lady of Mt. Carmel pastor Msgr. Luiz G. Mendonca and Bishop O'Maliby spoke in English and Portuguese at the Mass, which was concelebrated by eight area pries~s. Msgr. Mendonca noted that one of the missing fishermen once told him, "When~ver I'm on shore I never miss church, but when we're out there we have to be at peace with God." "Our prayer, then, [for the missing men] is that they be at peace with God," kaid Msgr. Mendonca. I Atlantis was due back in port Oct. 29 and was last seen Oct. 27 45 miles southeast of Nantucket. (Hickey photos) , I d~.:..:,::i'~~:·<~··i ;:::.;~= : ;;:Y]f.{~~Cf.&;~J!jllEE£ffil1f"""""W'v . , •.. . "~".'>' ·r~iB-£:;W
US bishops provide background«~r on Catechism of Catholic ChJrch WASHIl'lG.T.ON(.CNS),~.The, :.,.:A:background paper distributed U.S. bishops' Subcommittee on 't~:the U.S. bishops discusses the the Implementation of the Cate- ::history Of catechisms in the church, chism of the Catholic Church has' the'history, purpose and structure' asked fellow bishops to provide of the new catechism, some of its Catholics with background infor- distinctive elements and the limits mation on the new catechism, which on a general, worldwide catechism is to be published Dec. 9. that must be taken into account in Pope John Paul II formally order to understand it correctly. approved the Catechism of the The text of the background paper Catholic Church June 25 but its follows. release was delayed because transTHE CATECHISM OF lations into major modern lanTHE CATHOLIC CHURCH guages were not complete. A French text is expected to be availThe Catechism in Church Hisable by Dec. 9 and it is hoped that tory: A catechism is a text which English, German, Italian and Span- contains the fundamental Chrisish translations will also be ready. tian truths formulated in a way
To Teach the Faith Number of Catholic children attending public schools who receive religious instruction:
PUBLIC . '.
HIGH SCHOOL'
S1UDEtm
754,261 . PUBLIC
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL STUDENTS,
.. 3.3 MILLION SOurce:.The ¢fficial catholic Directory; 1992
Cl992CNS~ii:S::
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that facilitates their I understanding. The first catechislm dates. from the end of the first century. St. Augustine and St. Tomas Aquinas wrote catechismk in the fifth and 13th centuries rekpectively. Catechisms often 1eSUited from church councils, thus the Councils ofTortosa (1429) and Trent (I! 566) produced catechism~. Individuals also published cate1lchisms. Sts. Peter Canisius and Robert Bellarmine are exampld. In other Christiap traditions, catechisms have also been developed. Both Lutherl and Calvin published catechisms. In the United States the Baltimore Catechism has been the principal instance ofla catechism. While the Baltimore ICatechism is organized in a question-and-answer format, this is neitherlthe exclusive nor necessarily mOist desirable format for catechisms. History of the NeJ, Catechism: The Catholic Chur~h orginated with a recommendation made at the extraordinary Synt>d of Bishops in 1985. In 1986 the iHoly Father appointed a commission of Cardinals and bishops t? develop a compendium of Catholic doctrine. In 1989 the commis~ion sent the text to the world's bis~ops for consultation. In 1990 the commission examined and evaluated over 24,000 amendments r.uggested by the bishops. In 1991 the commis-
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CHD offers annual chance to help
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WASHINGTON, D.C. - The Campaign for Human Development(CHD), the Catholic Church's domestic education/ action program, has awarded $7,000,000 in new grants to 205 communitybased projects, announced Bishop Joseph A. Fiorenza, chairman of the U.S. Catholic Conference (USCe) CHD Committee. CHD, sponsored by the U.S. Catholic bishops, supports selfhelp projects organized by poor and low-income communities to break the cycle of poverty. Since its founding in 1970, CHD has provided financial support to more than 3,000 grassroots projects. It is the largest such funding agency in the nation. , Commenting on this year's national CHD grants, Bishop Fiorenza noted: "These projects exemplify the goals of the Campaign and they represent the dreams and aspirations oflow-income communities to gain a voice in decisionmaking processes that affect their lives. Moreover, CHD funding symbolizes, in a very tangible way, our Church living out the Gospel in action, and standing in solidarity with the poor.
A project of the archdiocese of Los Angeles will receive a $1 00,000 grant (or creating a partnership between the corporate, banking, and low-income communities to generate locally based economic development enterprises, particularly in South Central Los Angeles, hard hit by riots this spring. A $75,000 grant was awarded to Esperanza Unida, a Milwaukeebased community economic development project focusing on job creation and training. CHD funding for such projects comes from an annual collection held in Catholic parishes throughout the country the weekend before Thanksgiving. Seventy-five percent of funds collected go to CH D for allocation at the national level. Dioceses retain 25 percent to support local self-help initiatives. Besides its funding activities, the Campaign serves as an educational resource for informing American Catholics about the Church's rich tradition of social teaching, producing justice education materials for parishes and schools, and offering training workshops for diocesan and parish personnel.
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