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Offline cosmas

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OPUS DEI WATCH !
« on: November 02, 2019, 11:49:10 PM »
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    John Allen Jr. and Opus Dei: A sordid affair

    John Allen Jr. and Opus Dei: A sordid affair
     Guest Contributor  November 1, 2019  8 Comments
     

    “The things of Opus Dei – Where is the power of Opus today,

    how does it exercise it, who is channeling it, in what media does

    it influence or where does its pressure flow, how does it regulate

    the credits and to whom does it grant, if it does or can it do so?”

    Quote from Jordi Garcia   –  Opus Libros

     ____________________________________
    [color][size][font][size][font]
    For years I couldn’t fathom how Opus Dei got its hooks into the former leftist National Catholic Reporter John L. Allen, Jr. [now Editor of CRUX which was bailed out and funded by the Knights of Columbus.]
    The following tweet from George Neumayr helped me to understand a few things. Thanks George!
    George Neumayr‏ @george_neumayr Oct 23 2019
    More Francis-friendly blather from John Allen. Many have been fooled into thinking he is an “objective” Vatican reporter. In truth, he is mainly a stenographer for the bad guys. He is also openly heterodox – a divorcee who is shacked up with Crux ‘s Elise hαɾɾιs.
    The Importance and Significance of George Neumayr’s Tweet
    Elise hαɾɾιs is Senior Correspondent for CRUX. She also worked for Opus Dei’s Catholic News Agency. How did she get to Rome?  Did OD or Allen bring her there?
    More importantly, is she [hαɾɾιs] a member or former member of Opus Dei? The two pro-OD articles reprinted below suggest that she is. Note that CRUX and CNA both have strong OD ties.
    So, let’s begin to tally up the Opus Dei scorecard ….
    First, we have Opus Dei Carl Anderson, head of the Knights of Columbus, who bailed out CRUX and let Allen stay on as Editor of CRUX.
    Next, we have Opus Dei former-numerary Archbishop Gomez of the Los Angeles Archdiocese promoting John Allen in the Angelus, the Archdiocese’s “multimedia news platform.”
    And we have the Opus Dei Prelature proudly promoting Allen for years after he wrote his book “Opus Dei” (2005) which comes out pretty much in favor of the Prelature.
    I’d say there is a story here.
    QUESTIONS: WHAT DOES THE KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS AND ARCHBISHOP GOMEZ AND OPUS DEI KNOW ABOUT THE hαɾɾιs/ALLEN AFFAIR IN ROME? WHEN DID THEY KNOW IT? AND WHAT ARE THEY GOING TO DO ABOUT IT?
    AND THE ANSWERS ARE?????
    Below is additional Information on hαɾɾιs and the Angelus:
    Elise hαɾɾιs – Crux Biographical DATA
    Elise hαɾɾιs is a Denver native who currently works as a Senior Correspondent for Cruxin Rome, covering the Vatican and the global Church. Before joining Crux, Elise worked with Catholic News Agency, first as a multi-media and content management assistant in Denver, and then as Senior Rome Correspondent covering the Vatican. She graduated from the University of Northern Colorado in 2010 and holds degrees in philosophy and communications.
    [Source: Angelus News]
    Below, from the website of Angelus News, Archbishop Gomez’s OD media outlet, is a listing of the outlet’s writers and contributors:
    o          Archbishop José H. Gomez
    o          Father Ronald Rolheiser, OMI
    o          Bishop Robert Barron
    o          Ruben Navarrette
    o          Heather King
    o          Grazie Pozo Christie
    o          John L. Allen, Jr.
    o          Greg Erlandson
    o          Robert Brennan
    o          Russell Shaw
    To give readers a sense for the pro-OD slant that characterizes Elise hαɾɾιs’ “reporting,” consider the following articles published by Crux:
    ROME CONFERENCE PONDERS THE RISE OF ‘EVERYDAY’ LAY SAINTS
    By: Elise hαɾɾιs | Crux Now | May 01, 2019 • 4 Min Read

    DIOCESE OF ROME FORMALLY OPENED THE SAINTHOOD PROCESS FOR CHIARA CORBELLA PETRILLO
    Since the beginning of his pontificate, one of the things Pope Francis has advocated most vocally is a less clerical church with a greater involvement of laypeople at every level, including the Roman Curia.
    At a time when the push for lay leadership is growing in the wake of further scandals related to Catholicism’s global sɛҳuąƖ abuse crisis, with many arguing lay intervention would help break a systemic cycle of cover-up among bishops and priests, a Rome conference has highlighted the lives of seven lay individuals whose causes for sainthood are underway and who’ve been recognized as sterling examples of how to transform one’s daily life and activities into the service of God.
    The conference, dedicated to lay holiness, took place April 30 at Rome’s Pontifical University of the Holy Cross, and focused on the lives of six laypeople, mostly young Italians, who died in their 20s after battling illnesses or rejecting unwanted sɛҳuąƖ advances.
    Speaking to a packed auditorium, Monsignor Fernando Ocáriz, leader for the personal prelature of Opus Dei, said that “every new saint and blessed is a source of hope and a living witness of the Gospel,” but the lives of laypeople offer a concrete example of people who “have sought to radically live Christianity in the world.”
    Calling the individuals a “bright example of Christian holiness,” Ocáriz said their lives are “an occasion of grace not only for those who remember them in intercession, but for all faithful” who work toward “the sanctification of man and the glorification of Christ in men.”
    The conference took place just weeks before the beatification of Guadalupe Ortiz de Landazuri, one of the first women to join Opus Dei and the first layperson from the group to be so honored, is set to take place in Spain May 18, the day commemorating her First Communion.
    Ortiz de Landazuri was a standout chemist at a time when the scientific field was dominated by men, but deeply devout and widely recognized as someone whose faith shone as bright as her intellect.
    Born in Madrid in 1916, Ortiz de Landazuri was raised in a pious household and was the only daughter among the family’s four children. After a brief time living in South Africa due to her father’s military career, the family returned to Madrid, where Ortiz de Landazuri graduated high school and enrolled in a chemistry class at Spain’s Universidad Central in 1933, becoming one of just five women in a class of 70 students.
    She became one of the first women to join Opus Dei in 1944 after meeting its founder, Spanish Father Josemaria Escriva, who emphasized the pursuit of personal holiness in one’s concrete daily circuмstances.
    After their first meeting, Ortiz de Landazuri decided to dedicate her life to pursuing God in her professional life as a teacher at Madrid’s school of the Blessed Virgin Mary. In 1950 she moved to Mexico at Escriva’s invitation and helped establish Opus Dei in the country.
    She set up a student residence for university women while continuing to pursue her own doctorate in chemistry. After obtaining the degree and winning a prize for her scientific research, she took on leadership roles at the Ramiro de Maeztu Institute and the Women’s School for Industrial Sciences, and later helped establish the Center of Studies and Research of Domestic Sciences.
    Though her own life was not reflected on during the conference, the event was held in honor of her beatification to highlight the growing number of laypeople getting halos.
    Those who were commemorated included Blessed Chiara Luce Badano, a member of the Italian Focolare Movement who died at 18 after battling cancer; Venerable Carlo Acutis, a young computer-lover who passed away at 15 after losing his fight with fulminant leukemia; Servant of God Enrique Shaw, who died from cancer at 41 and was known for promoting the social doctrine of the Church in business growth by founding the Christian Association of Business Executives; and Servant of God Chiara Corbella Petrillo, who was diagnosed with cancer while pregnant and died in 2012 after refusing treatment in order to save her baby.
    Also highlighted were Servant of God Marta Obregon Rodriguez, a young journalist who was involved with both Opus Dei and the Neocatechumenal Way, and who was murdered in 1992 after being abducted from her home by a man who attempted to rape her; and Angelica Tiraboschi, who also died at 19 after battling cancer, and who was known for her joy and deep faith.
    Professor Maria Pilar del Rio, who teaches liturgical ecclesiology at Santa Croce, spoke at the conference on the “theology of the laity” that came out of the 1962-65 Second Vatican Council.
    This new emphasis on holiness as something attainable and which should be pursued by all members of the Church, not just priests and consecrated people, wasn’t developed “at the table,” she said, but was drawn from the “lives, work and numerous apostolic activities that the laity have brought forward.”
    Because of this, the topic of laity has been “welcomed and developed” since Vatican II in post-conciliar theological reflection, del Rio said, noting that the defining characteristics of lay saints are that they come from all backgrounds: Men and women, young and old, married and single, students and professionals, from all countries and backgrounds.
    Each of the people highlighted, del Rio said, had encountered Jesus at some pivotal point, “and this encounter changed their lives. Then they immediately fell in love…with him who loved them first,” and then spent the rest of their lives in service to God and others.
    She emphasized that holiness is “a task for all baptized without question,” and that all Catholic faithful, “of whatever state and status, are called to Christian life and perfection in charity.”
    Laity, she said, are called to carry our mission in a secular world, and as such, they are invited “to continue the sanctifying work of God…not only for the salvation of men, but also of the reconciliation of the world with God.”
    “Laity are called by God into the world from the world,” in a family and in society, and as a consequence, “the world for the laity is a place of call and mission.”
    Also from Crux, see the following article glorifying the prelature, which also included an ad for John Allen’s Opus Dei whitewash:
    THERE’S A NEW LEADER OF OPUS DEI. HERE’S WHAT HE WANTS TO DO.
    By Elise hαɾɾιs and Kevin J. Jones

    MONS. FERNANDO OCARIZ. CREDIT: OPUS DEI COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE VIA FLICKR
    Vatican City, Jan 24, 2017 / 04:13 pm – The new head of Opus Dei has been confirmed by Pope Francis, and his plan for the prelature is simple.
    “I have the desire that the prelature of Opus Dei continues to do the good it has done and is increasingly doing in service of the world, which is really the only thing that interests us: the good of the person. The good of the person which, in the final moment, is the encounter with Jesus Christ,” Monsignor Fernando Ocariz Braña told reporters Tuesday.
    Msgr. Ocariz voiced gratitude to Pope Francis, who formally accepted the nomination Jan. 23.
    The Pope acted “with great affection…the affection he has for us, the hope for the work the prelature does in the world,” the monsignor told journalists Jan. 24.
    Msgr. Ocariz said the Pope also sent a gift: “a beautiful medal of the Madonna.”
    The monsignor served as vicar general of Opus Dei from 1994 to 2014, when he became auxiliary vicar. The prelature’s elective congress began on Jan. 23 and quickly chose him as their nominee.
    The new prelate did not visit Pope Francis for the nomination. Rather, Msgr. Mario Fazio, the prelature’s vicar general, was received by the pontiff, who approved the nomination right away.
    Msgr. Fazio recounted: “He told me many beautiful things, but in particular that Opus Dei today finds itself in a very important, very historic moment, because we have the first prelate who didn’t work directly with the founder, so we have to be very faithful to the spirit of the founder and at the same time have a great apostolic rush toward the future, and give thanks for the work the prelature is doing throughout the world.”
    The fact that the date of Msgr. Ocariz’s nomination fell during the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity prompted the new prelate to reflect on Pope Francis’ comments about “the need to build bridges” and “to never be people of conflict.”
    “Conflicts usually are occasions to lack charity,” he said. “To build bridges doesn’t mean being on good terms is the supreme good, each one can have different ideas but can be friends treat each other well even with different ideas.”
    He told reporters he felt inadequate to succeed his predecessors as Prelate of Opus Dei, St. Josemaria Escriva and Blessed Alvaro del Portillo. He also felt inadequate to succeed his immediate predecessor Bishop Javier Echevarria, who passed away Dec. 12 at the age of 84.
    He questioned how he could be the successor of St. Josemaria and Bl. Don Alvaro, who were “two great personalities with a very high spiritual and human stature.” He asked how he could succeed Bishop Echevarria, who also had a notable humanity and spirituality.
    “But at the same time, before God’s providence, I am calm, because if God wanted this he will give me the help needed,” he said. He said he felt “everything together, gratitude and inadequacy, and inside of this, a serenity. Thank God I am so serene, even if I shouldn’t be!”
    He credited the many prayers of people who prayed for the prelature.
    Msgr. Ocariz briefly outlined his goals for the programs of Opus Dei. He said there needed to be many programs directed to the great challenges facing Christians and civil society. In many places young people feel “crushed, without ideals” and many times lack hope. Families too need pastoral care, as so many recent Popes have said.
    “Thanks to God the prelature is working a lot to help families in different ways,” he commented.
    He recognized the feeling that sometimes it seems like one’s work isn’t accomplishing anything:
    “When things are done out of love for God, to serve others, which are inseparable, nothing is lost, even if at times it seems like something is lost. Nothing is lost. We have faith that the love of God is behind every moment, every event in our lives.”
    He also recounted the challenges facing those in poverty or sickness.
    He recounted the first time he met Pope Francis, when he was Auxiliary Bishop Jorge Bergoglio of Buenos Aires, and four years later after he was Archbishop of Buenos Aires.
    “On both of these occasions he seemed like a very serious person, not like now, always smiling. He seemed serious, very caring, simple, educated, you could clearly see a positive interest for the people, a pastoral interest,” he recounted. The Pope seemed like “a serious person who at the same time showed a big heart for the people. You could see this in just 10 minutes of being with him.”
    The Prelature of Opus Dei was founded in 1928 by St. Josemaria Escriva. Its spirituality emphasizes that holiness can be achieved by anyone.
    Conclusion
    The questions remain:
    WHAT DOES THE KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS AND ARCHBISHOP GOMEZ AND OPUS DEI KNOW ABOUT THE hαɾɾιs/ALLEN AFFAIR IN ROME? WHEN DID THEY KNOW IT? AND WHAT ARE THEY GOING TO DO ABOUT IT?[/font][/size][/font][/size][/color]


    Offline Nadir

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    Re: OPUS DEI WATCH !
    « Reply #1 on: November 15, 2019, 02:07:36 PM »
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  • November 2019

     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
    Bishop Nicholas Anthony DiMarzio
    Bishop of Brooklyn, New York, USA


    FOR YOUR OD Files - Randy
    Opus Dei Members include four bishops in the United States: Archbishop John J. Myers of Newark, N.J.; Bishop Robert W. Finn of Kansas City-St. Joseph, Mo.; Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio of Brooklyn, N.Y.; and Bishop John O. Barres of Allentown, Pa., said Marc Carroggio, an Opus Dei spokesman.
    AP: Attorney preparing lawsuit against Brooklyn’s Bishop DiMarzio
    November 13, 2019 by Deacon Greg Kandra
    The story: 
    A Roman Catholic bishop named by Pope Francis to investigate the church’s response to clergy sɛҳuąƖ abuse in Buffalo, New York, has himself been accused of sɛҳuąƖ abuse of a child, an attorney for the alleged victim notified the church this week.
    The attorney informed Catholic officials in New Jersey that he is preparing a lawsuit on behalf of a client who says he was molested by Brooklyn Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio in the mid-1970s, when DiMarzio was a parish priest in Jersey City.
    DiMarzio said there is no truth to the accusation.
    “I am just learning about this allegation,” he said in a statement Tuesday to The Associated Press. “In my nearly 50-year ministry as a priest, I have never engaged in unlawful or inappropriate behavior and I emphatically deny this allegation. I am confident I will be fully vindicated.”
     
    Bishop Nicholas Anthony DiMarzio
    Bishop of Brooklyn, New York, USA
    Principal Consecrator:



    Events
    Date
    Age
    Event
    Title
    75.4175.2Born
    25.9Ordained PriestPriest of Newark, New Jersey, USA
    52.2AppointedAuxiliary Bishop of Newark, New Jersey, USA
    52.2AppointedTitular Bishop of Mauriana
    52.3Ordained BishopTitular Bishop of Mauriana
    54.9AppointedBishop of Camden, New Jersey, USA
    55.0InstalledBishop of Camden, New Jersey, USA
    59.1AppointedBishop of Brooklyn, New York, USA
    59.2InstalledBishop of Brooklyn, New York, USA
     
    At least three ɧoɱosɛҳųαƖ prelates in a row below.
     
     
     
    Episcopal Lineage / Apostolic Succession:

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    New coadjutor of Los Angeles one of 24 Opus Dei bishops
    By Cindy Wooden Catholic News Service
    4.9.2010 12:00 AM ET
     
    ·          Share
    ·         CNS Permissions
    VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- The new coadjutor archbishop of Los Angeles, Archbishop Jose H. Gomez, is the only U.S. bishop who was ordained for or incardinated in the Prelature of Opus Dei.
    With a Catholic population of 4.6 million, the Archdiocese of Los Angeles is one of the largest dioceses in the world, and when Archbishop Gomez succeeds Cardinal Roger M. Mahony it will be the most populous diocese headed by an Opus Dei member.
    Archbishop Gomez is one of 24 Opus Dei bishops around the world, although like any priest, once a member becomes a bishop, he answers directly to the pope and no longer to his bishop or religious superior.
    An additional 22 bishops belong to the Priestly Society of the Holy Cross, an association of diocesan clergy associated with Opus Dei. Members include four bishops in the United States: Archbishop John J. Myers of Newark, N.J.; Bishop Robert W. Finn of Kansas City-St. Joseph, Mo.; Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio of Brooklyn, N.Y.; and Bishop John O. Barres of Allentown, Pa., said Marc Carroggio, an Opus Dei spokesman.
    St. Josemaria Escriva de Balaguer founded Opus Dei, Latin for "work of God," in Spain in 1928 to promote holiness of life and the transformation of society through the professional work of its members, the vast majority of whom are lay people. He founded the Priestly Society of the Holy Cross in 1943 to share his message with diocesan clergy and provide them with spiritual assistance in their personal lives, Carroggio said.
    According to the Vatican's 2010 yearbook, the Prelature of Opus Dei has more than 87,500 lay members, almost 2,000 priests and 337 seminarians.
    In February Archbishop Gomez issued a 21-page pastoral letter, "You Will Be My Witnesses," on the Christian mission to evangelize. Most of the 78 footnotes were references to Bible passages or to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, but one was to a homily by St. Josemaria Escriva.
    Archbishop Gomez wrote, "My approach and understanding of these matters owes a great deal to my appreciation of the spirituality of St. Josemaria Escriva. I continue to find St. Josemaria's teachings on sanctity and apostolate to be both profound and practical."
    The archbishop quoted the saint as saying, "Whoever said that to speak about Christ and to spread his doctrine, you need to do anything unusual or remarkable? Just live your ordinary life; work at your job, trying to fulfill the duties of your state in life, doing your job, your professional work properly, improving, getting better each day. Be loyal; be understanding with others and demanding on yourself."
    Cardinal Juan Cipriani Thorne of Lima, Peru, and Cardinal Julian Herranz, the retired president of the Pontifical Council for the Interpretation of Legislative Texts, are among the bishops who belong to the prelature, which is headed by Bishop Javier Echevarria Rodriguez.
    Of the 24 Opus Dei bishops, three of whom are retired, 19 were born in Spain or Latin America. The other three are a Frenchman, an Austrian and a Kenyan.
    END
     
    1.   Masses for Feast of Saint Josemaria (2019) - Opus Dei
    https://opusdei.org/en-us/article/masses-for-feast-of-saint-josemaria-2019
    Among the many bishops celebrating Masses for the feast of Saint Josemaría this year in the United States are Archbishops Joseph Edward Kurtz of Louisville and Jose H. Gomez of Los Angeles; Bishops Nicholas DiMarzio of Brooklyn, Richard J. Malone of Buffalo, and Michael Francis Burbidge of Arlington.
     
    Abuse scandal[edit]
    DiMarzio visits with victims of clergy sɛҳuąƖ abuse. In May 2009, he published a presentation to the people of the Diocese of Brooklyn entitled "From Shadow To Light And From Scandal To Healing: The Experience of the Diocese of Brooklyn with the Sex Abuse Scandal".[13] The presentation was given so that the people of the diocese would have first-hand knowledge of what was being done in the diocese to assure protection of the youth and young adults from the scandal of abuse. It discussed investigating, reporting, responsibility of the Church, the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People, accountability and reconciliation, prevention, victim assistance, the Safe Environment Office, effect on the laity, and youth in the Church. It also established a hotline, 1-888-634-4499, for anyone reporting suspected abuse.
    In October 2019, Pope Francis appointed DiMarzio to lead an investigation into the handling of sɛҳuąƖ abuse claims in the Diocese of Buffalo, where Bishop Richard Joseph Malone was accused of mishandling allegations.[12]
    One Opus Dei devotee helping another?
    [/size]
    WE HAVE THE PULSE ON ALL THINGS PAPAL.

    FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2005

    American Opus Dei Bishops Outed!

    With John Allen's new book[/url] on Opus Dei coming out November 1st, vaticanisti cannot let Allen have all the fun reporting on The Work's "secrets." Something that hasn't been widely reported are the number and identity of Opus Dei bishops in the United States. There are currently 4 American Opus Dei bishops. The only numerary priest who is a bishop is Archbishop José Gomez of San Antonio. His affiliation with The Prelature of Opus Dei is well-known. The other 3 bishops are what's known as supernumerary priests because of their status as diocesan priests. They are members of The Work through the Priestly Society of the Holy Cross -- an association of clergy intrinsically united to Opus Dei made up of the clergy of the Prelature, who are automatically members, and other diocesan priests and transitional deacons. Archbishop John Myers of Newark, New Jersey is counted among this group and his affiliation is fairly public. However, two other bishops have kept their connection very private: Bishop Robert Finn of Kansas City-St. Joseph in Missouri and Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio of Brooklyn, New York.

    According to the Opus Dei communications office, the diocesan clergy who belong to the Priestly Society seek exclusively spiritual help and strive for holiness in the exercise of their ministry, according to the spirit of Opus Dei. Their membership in the Priestly Society of the Holy Cross does not involve incorporation into the presbyterate of the Prelature. Each one continues to be incardinated in his own diocese and depends solely on his own bishop (or if bishop, to himself), to whom alone he gives an account of his pastoral work.
    [/size][/color][/font]

    POSTED BY VATICANISTI AT 10:58 AM

     According to the Opus Dei communications office, the diocesan clergy who belong to the Priestly Society seek exclusively spiritual help and strive for holiness in the exercise of their ministry, according to the spirit of Opus Dei. Their membership in the Priestly Society of the Holy Cross does not involve incorporation into the presbyterate of the Prelature. Each one continues to be incardinated in his own diocese and depends solely on his own bishop (or if bishop, to himself), to whom alone he gives an account of his pastoral work.

    POSTED BY VATICANISTI AT 10:58 AM
    [size]
    Promoting Opus Dei and Escriva
    Put Out into the Deep
    ‘Father’ – A Title Like No Other
    June 17, 2015
    By Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio *** Tribute to Escriva

    My dear brothers and sisters in the Lord,
    Father’s Day is a secular holiday that draws our attention to the role of paternity in our own lives and in our society. It is said to have originated in 1908 in Fairmont, W.Va. Grace Golden Clayton is believed to have been inspired to celebrate fathers after a deadly mine explosion in nearby Monongah killed 360 men, many of them fathers and recent immigrants to the United States from Italy.
    Another driving force behind the establishment of Father’s Day in this country was Mrs. Sonora Smart Dodd of Creston, Wash. Her father, a cινιℓ ωαr veteran, was forced to raise six children by himself on a rural farm in Eastern Washington State. It was only after Mrs. Dodd became an adult that she realized the strength and selflessness her father had shown in raising children on his own.
    Perhaps we must take a deeper look at what fatherhood means in a theological sense. Divine Filiation is a theological way of describing how God makes us His children. The origin of speaking in this way about God’s paternity can be traced back to the work of Nicholas of Cusa, who wrote a treatise on Divine Filiation in the 15th century. He uses language somewhat alien to our age, but he forms a clear foundation of understanding how our relationship to God as Father brings us into relationship with the Blessed Trinity. In more modern times, St. Josemaria Escriva, founder of Opus Dei, used this doctrine of Divine Filiation to explain how we become related to one another and to God as a family in the Church.
    It is the Gospel of John and his letters that give us the scriptural foundation for understanding what the Divine Filiation is all about when we hear: “To all who received Him (the Word made flesh) He gave the power to become sons of God” (Jn 1:12). We are truly His children, as John’s Gospel also tells us, when we dare to call God our Father. We repeat these words in the Eucharist each time we begin the Communion Rite and the recitation of the Our Father.
    Daring to call God our Father is certainly a part of Christian revelation. If we look back to our Jєωιѕн origins as Christians, we recognize that in the Hebrew mind, calling God by any name was avoided. They preferred using the term “Yahweh” in order not to offend God by taking His name in vain.
    Jesus teaches us the true meaning of God’s paternity for us. He gives us the deeper understanding of the nature of God by recognizing His relationship to His Father. How many times in the Gospel does He tell that “the Father and I are one.” We, as the baptized, are invited into this union with Jesus and His Father, and we have the ability to cry out, “Abba Father,” because we are indeed His adopted sons and daughters.
    Truly, Divine Filiation, or the ability to call God our Father and recognize our relationship to God, is a wonderful gift. I think this is why we recognize the great debt of gratitude we have to our earthly fathers and why the celebration of Father’s Day truly is an act of filial piety. The commandments tell us we must honor our fathers and mothers.
    Perhaps before I speak more about our human fathers, I might speak about our priests as our fathers. Many times the phrase from the Gospel of Matthew, “call no man your father on earth, for you have one Father, who is in heaven,” has been misinterpreted to mean that priests should not be given the title “Father.” Of all the titles that are given to priests, Father is the one that has the most meaning. Many times people feel they make a mistake when they call me Father and not Bishop. I immediately correct them and tell them that the best term that could ever be used in addressing a priest is Father.
    Jesus, in giving this teaching, was really speaking about the hypocrisy of Pharisees and teachers of the law. He said that they sought the places of honor and titles of honor and loved to be called Rabbi. Jesus speaks in this way in order to expose their desire for position and not their willingness to become true fathers. In other places in the Gospel, Jesus refers to our earthly fathers as well as our heavenly Father. If the command to call no one on earth “father” was taken in the strict literal sense, similarly we would not be able to follow the commandment in Exodus, “Honor your father and mother.” Misuse of this text is unfortunate, but a close reading of the Scripture tells us otherwise.
    As we come to Father’s Day, we recognize the challenge of fatherhood today in a world that does not recognize the true responsibilities of paternity. Several years ago in a Father’s Day article, I quoted from a book called “Fatherless America.” It was a sociological attempt to recognize that families in America are living without fathers in many different ways, with outright abandonment or the absence of a father, given the heavy responsibilities of work and other things that divert the father’s attention from his family. On Father’s Day, we have an opportunity to remember our fathers, be they living or dead, and to pray for them.
    All fatherhood is an exercise of “putting out into the deep” since the demands of fatherhood are never clear and simple. They involve a total giving of self so that children become the motivating force in a father’s life.
    Pray with me on this Father’s Day for our priests who are our spiritual fathers and for all fathers and father-figures in our lives. May they meet the challenges of life today and enjoy the fruits of their labors.
    Follow Bishop DiMarzio
     
     
     [/size]
    Help of Christians, guard our land from assault or inward stain,
    Let it be what God has planned, His new Eden where You reign.


    Offline Viva Cristo Rey

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    Offline Viva Cristo Rey

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    Re: OPUS DEI WATCH !
    « Reply #3 on: November 15, 2019, 06:59:34 PM »
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  • In 1939, Escrivá published The Way, a collection of 999 maxims concerning spirituality for people involved in secular affairs.[22] In the 1940s, Opus Dei found an early critic in the Jesuit Superior GeneralWlodimir Ledóchowski, who told the Vatican that he considered Opus Dei "very dangerous for the Church in Spain," citing its "secretive character" and calling it "a form of Christian Masonry."[23]
    In 1947, a year after Escrivá moved the organization's headquarters to Rome, Opus Dei received a decree of praise and approval from Pope Pius XII, making it an institute of "pontifical right", i.e. under the direct governance of the Pope.[7] In 1950, Pius XII granted definitive approval to Opus Dei, thereby allowing married people to join the organization, and secular clergy to be admitted to the Priestly Society of the Holy Cross.[7]

    If you are Catholic you are called to Catholic in work, play etc. 
    May God bless you and keep you

    Offline Viva Cristo Rey

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    Re: OPUS DEI WATCH !
    « Reply #4 on: November 15, 2019, 07:10:49 PM »
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  • More like OPUS gαy
    May God bless you and keep you


    Offline Viva Cristo Rey

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    Re: OPUS DEI WATCH !
    « Reply #5 on: November 15, 2019, 07:24:11 PM »
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  • May God bless you and keep you

    Offline Viva Cristo Rey

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    Re: OPUS DEI WATCH !
    « Reply #6 on: November 15, 2019, 09:05:50 PM »
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  • I think Gomez was elected President of the US conference of bishops. 
    May God bless you and keep you