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Author Topic: Bishops Resisting Evil  (Read 4214 times)

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Offline poche

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Bishops Resisting Evil
« Reply #15 on: October 31, 2013, 02:12:36 AM »
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  • The Chaldean archbishop of the Iraqi city of Mosul wrote in an open letter to Christians in the West that in the face of religious persecution, Catholics must continue steadfast in the virtue of faith.

    Archbishop Amel Shamon Nona of the Chaldean Archeparchy of Mosul arrived at his see in Jan., 2010, and the following day began a series of murders of Christians in the city.

    “The faithful left the city to seek refuge in the small towns and villages nearby, or in the monasteries. Since then almost half of the faithful have returned. What can we do for these people? What can one do for those who are living the difficult life of persecution,” Archbishop Nona asked in a letter published Oct. 26 in National Review Online.

    “These questions tormented me, forcing me to reflect on the right path to follow so I could fulfill my mission of service. I found the answer in the motto of my episcopate – namely, hope.”

    He came to the conclusion that “during a time of crisis and persecution, we must remain full of hope. And so I remained in the city, strengthened in hope, in order to give hope to the many persecuted faithful who likewise continued to live here.”

    Mosul's Chaldean archeparchy is supported by Aid to the Church in Need, a Catholic charity which assists suffering Churches in more than 140 countries. This assistance is necessary in Mosul, as facing extreme violence, many Iraqi Christians have fled their country.

    Archbishop Paulos Faraj Rahho, Archbishop Nona's predecessor, was murdered in 2008.

    In his letter, Archbishop Nona, who is only 45, reflected that even “to remain with the faithful in hope” is only “a crucial start” and by itself “it is not enough.”

    “I realized that, above all – in the face of suffering and persecution – a true knowledge of our own faith and the cause of our persecution is of fundamental importance.”

    A deepening sense of what it means to follow Christ will strengthen one in persecution, he said, and that the true challenge is “to know that we may be killed at any moment, at home, in the street, at work, and yet despite all this to retain a living and active faith.”

    “From the moment when we are waiting for death, under threat from someone who may shoot us at any time, we need to know how to live well. The greatest challenge in facing death because of our faith is to continue to know this faith in such a way as to live it constantly and fully.”

    Archbishop Nona emphasized that Christian faith is not a mere theory or abstraction, but the means to finding life's meaning, “its highest expression as revealed by the Incarnation.”

    The first thing that Western Christians can do for their Iraqi brethren, he said, is to “make an effort to live out his or her own faith in a more profound manner, embracing the life of faith in daily practice.”

    Persecuted Christians, he said “should be a warning – to you who live in freedom – to become better, stronger Christians, and a spur to demonstrating your own faith as you confront the difficulties of your own society.”

    The archbishop added that persecuted Christians can be helped by materially and spiritually, including bringing their plight to greater attention and promoting Christian unity.

    “The most powerful thing you can do in response to our situation is to rediscover and forge unity –  personally and as a community – and to work for the good of your own societies. They are in great need of the witness of Christians who live out their faith with a strength and joy that can give others the courage of faith.”

    Archbishop Nona said that persecuted Christians “are happy, because we have the opportunity to reflect on our choice to be Christians. We are happy because we have the opportunity to make our freedom concrete – by defending with love the one who attacks us with rancor and hatred.”

    The Chaldean Catholic Church is based in Baghdad and is in full communion with the Bishop of Rome, and is of the East Syrian rite.

    http://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/maintain-faith-during-persecutions-iraqi-bishop-advises/


    Offline poche

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    Bishops Resisting Evil
    « Reply #16 on: November 01, 2013, 03:06:41 AM »
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  • Here is an update on Bishop Ma Quin, a bishop who resists the evil of the Communism;

       Shanghai’s Bishop Thaddeus Ma Daqin, who has been under house arrest since July 2012, made a rare public appearance last week, the UCANews service reports.

    Bishop Ma attended a memorial service for Shen Baoyi who died on October 20. Shen had been the editor of Guanggi Press, the first Catholic publishing house to function in China when the Communist regime allowed some scope for religious activities in the 1970s. When Shen retired, he was succeeded by then-Father Ma.

    At the memorial service, Bishop Ma blessed the remains of his former colleague, gave his condolences to relatives, and then left.

    Bishop Ma has been confined to the grounds of the Shanghai seminary since shortly after his episcopal ordination in 2012. He angered Chinese officials at that ceremony by announcing his resignation from the government-supported Catholic Patriotic Association and refusing to share Communion with a government-appointed bishop who is not recognized by the Vatican.

    The bishop's brief public appearance could indicate that the government is relaxing its tight restrictions on his public ministry.




    Offline poche

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    Bishops Resisting Evil
    « Reply #17 on: November 01, 2013, 03:12:29 AM »
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  • Another bishop who resisted evil;

    The Servant of God Bishop Theodore Romzha was born on 14 April 1911, in the village of Veliky Bychkiv, Transcarpathia. From 1930-1933, he studied philosophy in Rome and completed his theological education also in Rome from 1933-1937, culminating in a Licentiate. Shortly thereafter, he became an administrator of the parish in Berezovo. Beginning in 1939, he was a professor of philosophy at the seminary in Uzhorod. On 24 September 1944, he was ordained to the episcopacy for the Mukachevo eparchy. During the Red Army presence in the Carpathian region of Ukraine, he was tireless in his defence of the rights of the Catholic Church there. On 27 October 1947, the Soviets attempted to kill Bishop Romzha. Heavily wounded, he was taken to the hospital in Mukachiv, where he was subsequently poisoned and died on 1 November 1947.

    http://www.catholic.org/saints/saint.php?saint_id=7685

    Offline poche

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    Bishops Resisting Evil
    « Reply #18 on: November 06, 2013, 03:28:12 AM »
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  •  According to Church sources in Yixian, Hebei province, the Vatican-approved bishop was interred in secret October 29 by priests and laypeople.

    One priest, speaking on the condition of anonymity said that Bishop Liu was "a key figure" in the establishment of the bishops' conference in 1989, which "contributed to the continual existence in China of a Church that is loyal to the Holy See."

    Bishop Liu was born in 1919. He entered the seminary in 1935 and was ordained a priest in 1945. He was arrested and imprisoned in 1955 for two years for opposing the independent Church movement.

    He was arrested again in 1958 and received a life sentence for opposing the Chinese Catholic Patriotic Association, which is a government-sanctioned body that promotes an independent Church. He was eventually released in 1981 and began to evangelize across China.

    Liu was consecrated coadjutor bishop of Yixian in 1982 and became the ordinary four years later. Suffering a stroke in 1994, he resigned from all his posts. He was then placed under house arrest in Weigezhuang, his hometown.

    Unable to take care of himself in 1997, several priests managed to sneak him past his guards and rescue him from house arrest. He spent his remaining years in hiding, the sources said.

    His successor Bishop Cosmas Shi Enxiang was detained by the authorities in 2001. He has not been seen since.

    http://catholic.org/international/international_story.php?id=53051

    He resisted evil in this life. May Jesus welcome him into his Kingdom.

    Offline poche

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    Bishops Resisting Evil
    « Reply #19 on: November 07, 2013, 03:37:52 AM »
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  • A bishop in the troubled southwestern Mexican state of Michoacán led several thousand Catholics in a march for peace, the Fides news agency reported.

    “We walked down the street to rekindle the hope of the entire population,” said Bishop Miguel Patiño Velázquez of Apatzingán, a city of 145,000. In an October letter, the bishop noted that “kidnappings, abductions, murders, and bribes have increased, to the point that entire families have been forced to emigrate due to the fear and insecurity in which we are living.”

    Following the march, 40 police cars arrived at the bishop's residence and escorted him to military barracks in order to prevent an imminent organized-crime attack. A source told Fides that the bishop does not desire police protection.

    http://www.catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=19589


    Offline Neil Obstat

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    Bishops Resisting Evil
    « Reply #20 on: November 12, 2013, 07:00:36 PM »
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  • .

    Being a bishop in China these days must be very difficult.


    .
    .--. .-.-.- ... .-.-.- ..-. --- .-. - .... . -.- .. -. --. -.. --- -- --..-- - .... . .--. --- .-- . .-. .- -. -.. -....- -....- .--- ..- ... - -.- .. -.. -.. .. -. --. .-.-.

    Offline poche

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    Bishops Resisting Evil
    « Reply #21 on: December 04, 2013, 02:42:25 AM »
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  • Bishop Miguel Patiño Velazquez of Apatzingan, Mexico, has launched a campaign to combat a vicious local drug-trafficking group that styles itself the Knights Templar.

    A group that combines the brutality of a drug gang with the beliefs and rituals of a religious cult, the Knights Templar have terrorized residents of the Apatzingan diocese and intimidated public officials. The bishop is calling citizens to resist the group’s influence.

    Named for the monastic military order that was suppressed in the early 14th century, the Knights Templar in Mexico were founded by Nazario Moreno, a charismatic figure who claimed to be a defender of the poor. His followers revere Moreno as a mystic. Law-enforcement officials say that he was killed in shootout in 2010; others insist that he is still alive.

    http://www.catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=19850

    Offline poche

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    Bishops Resisting Evil
    « Reply #22 on: December 07, 2013, 04:35:03 AM »
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  • Bells tolled from the red cathedral tower in the western Mexico town of Apatzingan, calling the faithful to hear a bishop who backs a growing vigilante movement against a cult-like drug cartel.

     
    As people headed to church, soldiers patrolled the main square, banks and a supermarket in this bastion of the fearsome Knights Templar gang, which has brought mayhem to the southwestern state of Michoacan.

    "We cannot deny that we are living through difficult times. Our towns are experiencing an atmosphere of uncertainty and suspicion," Bishop Miguel Patino Velazquez told his flock, reading a message signed by Michoacan's bishops.

    East of Apatzingan, troops check cars and scan luggage in X-ray machines to look for illegal weapons.

    On the western outskirts, the farmers who formed self-defense militia to combat the Templars earlier this year man their own checkpoints behind walls of sandbags.

    The vigilantes say they have "liberated" more towns near Apatzingan in recent weeks and vow to spread, ignoring federal government warnings that their expansion will not be tolerated.

    "Where there are kidnappings and executions, we will take all of them," said Jose Manuel Mireles, a tall 55-year-old doctor with a thick mustache who led one of the first revolts in Tepalcatepec on February 24.

    "If (authorities) say they won't allow us to advance but they do nothing, then they can't stop us. Our people are ready to die, including against the state government if necessary, because they are infested with criminals," Mireles said as he hunted doves in a remote ranch.

    The vigilantes appeared in a handful of towns on February 24, fed up with the municipal police's inability or unwillingness to stop the Templars, who have killed, kidnapped, fixed lime prices and extorted everyone from butchers to tortilla makers.
    Underscoring the complexity of Michoacan, officials and the Templars have accused the self-defense forces of being proxies of the Jalisco New Generation cartel, a charge they deny.

    President Enrique Pena Nieto, whose promise to curb violence in Mexico is challenged by Michoacan's troubles, deployed thousands of soldiers to the state in May to tame the situation.

    Troops and federal police patrol sunbaked roads and towns in Tierra Caliente, or Hot Country, an agricultural region that exports limes and avocados to the United States as well as methamphetamine produced in makeshift labs.

    Last week, unidentified gunmen hiding in the woods fired on four busloads of federal police on a road near Apatzingan, killing two and wounding nine officers.

    The chaos prompted Bishop Patino to send a missive in October accusing local officials of colluding with criminals, warning that Michoacan had "all the characteristics of a failed state."

    Last month, authorities hid the 75-year-old prelate in another town over an unspecified threat against him.

    But Patino, who is retiring, returned to preach in Apatzingan, using his pulpit to give support to the vigilantes.

    If I want to attack you, you have the obligation to defend yourself, no? It's the same with society," the diminutive clergyman with dark circles under his eyes told AFP after Sunday service, smiling to men, women and children who lined up to shake his hand.

    But the Templars, whose symbol is the red cross of the medieval Catholic crusaders and claim to be pious defenders of Michoacan, enjoy some support in Apatzingan.

    "They're the ones who bring in the money for the town to function," said Antonio, 19, a watch salesman in a street stand outside the cathedral who declined to give his last name.

    But some residents said they no longer venture out at night and stores close early out of fear.

    "People are fleeing town. You don't know who's good or bad anymore," said Eusebia Lopez Barbosa, 51, who prayed in the back of the cathedral. "The bishop simply tells the truth."


    The vigilantes say they are now in 19 towns and are eyeing other communities, including Apatzingan, which lies on a key transport route they can no longer use for their fruits.

    Hundreds of vigilantes tried to oust the Templars from Apatzingan in October, but the army barred them from entering with weapons and they were met with gunfire in the main square.

    "I admit that we are outside the law. But we had to do this," said Hipolito Mora, a bespectacled 58-year-old lime grower and vigilante leader in La Ruana, where his men drive cars emblazoned with the words "citizen self-defense."

    Few had weapons when AFP reporters visited the region though one was spotted with an AR-15 assault rifle and their leaders carried handguns in their belts.

    But they deny getting their weapons and bulletproof vests from the Jalisco cartel, saying they took them from fleeing Templars. One vigilante said they rejected an offer from suspected Jalisco cartel members.

    The self-defense units have critics within Michoacan.

    A group of 400 businessmen formed the Michoacan Peace and Dignity Association, organizing protests against the vigilantes and the state's militarization.

    But some were accused by a senator of being Templar emissaries when they visited the Senate in Mexico City in October, a charge they denied.

    "We are speaking out against all armed groups that are in Michoacan," said association president Tito Fernandez. "We see the (vigilantes) as an armed civilian group that is violating the rule of law."

    http://news.yahoo.com/bishop-vigilantes-lock-horns-mexican-cult-cartel-161631838.html


    Offline poche

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    Bishops Resisting Evil
    « Reply #23 on: January 16, 2014, 05:25:40 AM »
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  • In the early 1980s, in Iraq, a book was introduced in all schools (regardless of religious affiliation) to teach the Qu'ran. This book had certain deceitful prejudices against the Christian faith.

    It is rumoured that the Chaldean Patriarch at the time - Paul II Cheikho, requested a meeting with the deputy Prime Minister at the time, a Chaldean Catholic - Tariq Aziz. To ask that the teaching of this particular book to not be used for Christian students.

    Apparently Tariq Aziz was quite rude to the former Patriarch. Mr Aziz told the Patriarch that the book must be taught regardless of religious belief. The Patriarch then apparently beat Aziz's head, with his Episcopal-Shepards stick.

    The Patriarch then requested a meeting with the president at the time Saddam Hussien. Who ordered that the book should not only not be taught to Christian students, but Muslim students as well.

    Whether this story is true or not, I think it shows something. That the people at least believed that their Patriarch had courage, and if they believed he had courage, I have no reason to think that he did not. I think this type of zeal may be missing with our current leadership. But we hope that it will return.

    http://www.qadishat.com/2014/01/patriarch-cheikho-and-baathist-iraq.html