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teanc 0 VOL. 29, NO. 45
FALL RIVER DIOCESAN NEWSPAPER FOR SOUTHEAST MASSACHUSETTS CAPE COD & THE ISLANDS
FALL RIVE.R, MASS., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1985
$8 Per Year
Camp'aign for Human Development/Seniors
Working for justice
MADELINE THERRIEN, left, Bristol County ~enior Action Council secretary, and Vincent H. Eagles of the Diocesan Department of Social Services review details of the grant the cOl.\ncil is receiving from the Campaign for Human Development. (daude~te photo) -~.
The Campaign for Human In order to obtain CHD's sup Development's Appeal Sunday is port, projects must benefit the this Sunday, November 17. When poor, be self-help projects of poor you're asked to give, you might and oppressed people, and aim to wonder where your money is bring about social change by going. What follows is informa attacking the root causes of pov tion about CHD and one local erty: unjust institutions, laws or organization that is benefiting by policies that keep people poor. it. CH D is an expression of the The Bristol County Senior Ac Church's social teaching with an tion Council (BCSAC) is one of emphasis on human dignity and CUD's beneficiaries this year, with self-determination. From 'its in- . a grant of $25,000. ception in .1970, CHD has sup The overall goal of BCSAC is .ported projects that strike at the the empowerment of the elderly root causes of poverty-striving to poor and development of an change hardened attitudes and aggressive multi-ethnic grassroots unjust structures in order to break senior organization which will what Pope Paul VI called "the hel make a significant contribution lish cycle of poverty." towards progressive change. It funds progr~ms that enable Madeline Therrien, BCSAC people of all races, creeds, geogra secretary, recently met with The phical regions and backgrounds to Anchor at the Diocesan Depart work together for long-range solu ment of Social Services office, tions to poverty in the areas of Slade Street, Fall River, along social and economic development, with Sue Martin, BCSAC coordi J housing, health, legal aid, educa Turn to Page Six tion and communications.
NCCB/USSC meets in Washington
Bishops hear praise for collegiality WASHINGTON. (NC) - The nation's bishops heard praise for the collegiality that makes their unified actions possible and then began. to apply that principle to issues as diverse as the farm crisis. and campus ministry as they opened their Nov. 11-15 meeting in Washington. On the first days of the meeting they began reviewing a revised pro-life pastoral plan, proposed pastoral letters on campus minis try and the economy, statements on farm problems and immigra tion issues, and various other top ics related to the church and its activity in the world.
As The Anchor went to press, the bishops were scheduled to debate and vote' on plans for next June's assembly in Collegeville, Minn; to debate and vote an NCCB-USSC budget, priorities and programs; and to conduct general Ooor discussion on the second draft of their pastoral on the U.S. economy. Among other scheduled plans, the bishops will report on reloca tion plans for NCCB-USCC headquarters in Washington and continue to hear various speeches by their colleagues. Early' Qn, they chose a new secretary for the National Confer-
ence of Catholic Bishops and. the U.S. Catholic Conference: Auxil iary Bishop Eugene A. Marino of Washington. Collegiality was. discussed by both Bishop James W. Malone of Youngstown, Ohio, NCCB-USCC president, and Archbishop Pio Laghi, papal pronuncio, or ambas sador, to the United States, in speeches the first day of the meet ing. Bishop Malone said at the church's Nov. 24-Dec. 8extraor dinary Synod Bishops should ad dress collegiality, ecumenism and social justice. The synod has been called by
Pope John Paul II to review impli cations of the Second Vatican Council 20 years later. As presi dent of the NCCB, Bishop Malone is the U. S. delegate to the synod. The NCCB president said that at the synod, Vatican II's "impetus to collegiality, and especially to episcopal conferences, should be reinforced and developed." He also said that Issues of social min istry or social justice should be explored. Among the latter are the church'S treatment of women, he added. While not all issues of the church and women can be dis-
cussed as questions of justice, "some must be," he said. As he spoke, women upset with their place within the church demon strated outside. In a later report on the extraor dinary synod, Bishop Malone said that his presynod report submitted to the Vatican earlier in the year had been optimistic, but "I am by nature an optimist." In his remarks Nov. II, Arch bishop Laghi warmly supported strong bishops' conferences and called the bishops' 1983 war and peace pastoral and the pending economic pastoral "important Turn to Page Six
Bishops speak out
Opinions on Extraordinary Synod By NC News Service Should the upcoming extraor dinary Synod of Bishops in Rome apply "surgery" to problems in the post- Vatican II church or should the' bishops examine how best to se collegiality, their shared uthority with the pope? As the Nov. 24-Dec.·8 synod pproaches' church leaders have ifferent views of what it should
accomplish and what it should emphasize. A Brazilian bishop said "~urgi cal measures" were needed to solve some doctrinal and disciplinary problems resulting from misinter pretations of council documents. Dissident French Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre said the meeting would take the church closer to "self-destruction... An extraordinary assembly of ..
the world Synod of Bishops has fewer members than the regular synods which meet every three years. Participants will include top Vatican officials, presidents of bishops' conferences and special papal delegates. Canon 346 of the Code of Canon Law says an extraordinary synod is "for the purpose of dealing with matters which require speedy resolution."
Two U.S. church leaders, com menting on the upcoming meet ing, said they disagree with nega tive views of the post-Vatican II church. The teachings of Vatican II were "a blessing" to the church in the United States, said Bishop James W. Malone of Youngstown, Ohio, president of the National Confer ence of Catholic Bishops. Speaking at the U.S. bishops'
general meeting in Washington Nov. II, Bishop Malone also said it is "dismaying" that some people are apprehensive about the synod. --The previous week, Cardinal Joseph Bernardin of Chicago told an audience at The Catholic Uni versity of America, Washington, that he had a positive view of the church since Vatican II. The car dinal attended the lastXour regular Turn tQ Page Six I
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