Brian R Corbin's Reflections on Religion and Life

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JUSTICE FOR IMMIGRANTS CAMPAIGN TO HOLD REGIONAL CONVENING IN OHIO, MARCH 26-28

WASHINGTON—The Justice For Immigrants (JFI) campaign of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) will hold a regional convening and training near Cincinnati, Ohio, on March 26-28. The convening, which will take place at the Kings Island Conference Center in Mason, will bring together immigration reform supporters from Ohio, Indiana, West Virginia, Kentucky and Michigan to provide them with coalition building skills, advocacy tools and other materials to strengthen and grow the support base for immigration reform. It will also seek to arm advocates with updated Catholic messages and educational pieces to continue to push for comprehensive immigration reform.

 “Comprehensive immigration reform remains a priority for the Catholic church. The convening in Cincinnati will provide the necessary training and educational tools for immigration reform and JFI supporters to continue to grow the grass roots base that seeks humane and compassionate changes to our nation’s immigration system,” said Johnny Young, executive director of the Migration and Refugee Services of the USCCB.

 “JFI is looking to draw attendees from Ohio and the surrounding states because of the region’s large population of Catholics,” said Antonio Cube, JFI manager. “We know that the majority of Catholics have heard the bishops’ call for immigration reform but have not felt compelled enough to act. By convening in Cincinnati, the JFI campaign is looking to seize upon the opportunity to educate the region’s many Catholics about the church’s position on immigration reform and urge them to act on it. We invite Catholics, other people of faith, and supporters of comprehensive immigration reform to attend the convening,” he said.

 To register or get more information about the Ohio regional convening, call 202-541-3165. 

Information can also be found on the following Web sites:

http://guest.cvent.com/i.aspx?1Q,M3,2f041b23-ed4b-4f43-9c78-63424b863ea2

www.justiceforimmigrants.org  and http://www.usccb.org/mrs/ .

Filed under: Migration, Social Justice

Pope says labor unions important in resolving financial crisis

By John Thavis
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Pope Benedict XVI said labor unions have an important role to play in finding a way out of the global financial crisis and establishing a new culture of solidarity and responsibility in the marketplace.

“The great challenge and the great opportunity posed by today’s worrisome economic crisis is to find a new synthesis between the common good and the market, between capital and labor. And in this regard, union organizations can make a significant contribution,” the pope told directors of the Confederation of Italian Labor Unions Jan. 31.

The pope emphasized that the inalienable dignity of the worker has been a cornerstone of the church’s social teaching in the modern age, and said this teaching has helped the movement toward fair wages, improvement of working conditions and protection of vulnerable categories of employees.

Workers are facing particular risks in the current economic crisis, and unions must be part of the solution, he said.

“In order to overcome the economic and social crisis we’re experiencing, we know that a free and responsible effort on the part of everyone is required,” the pope said.

“In other words, it is necessary to overcome the interests of particular groups and sectors, in order to face together and in a united way the problems that are affecting every area of society, especially the world of labor,” he said.

“Never has this need been felt so urgently. The problems tormenting the world of labor push toward an effective and closer arrangement between the many and diverse components of society,” he said.

He noted that his predecessor, Pope John Paul II, had underlined labor as the key component in social questions and had described the labor union as an indispensable element of social life in modern industrialized societies.

Pope Benedict has been working on his first social encyclical, tentatively titled “Caritas in Veritate” (“Love in Truth”), which is expected to be published sometime this year.

Filed under: Economic Policy, Market Place, Official Statements, Papal Teachings, Social Justice

Why I Support the Hatch SCHIP UNBORN CHILD AMENDMENT

The U.S. Senate is now considering a bill to reauthorize the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) (H.R. 2). SCHIP provides health insurance for low-income children. Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-UT) is prepared to offer an amendment to codify the unborn child rule. Since 2002, federal regulations have improved SCHIP by giving states the option to cover unborn children from conception to birth. See: Federal Register , Vol. 67, No. 191 (Oct. 2, 2002). This regulation allows states to provide prenatal care and other health services to the child and the child’s pregnant mother. Fourteen states have chosen this coverage option: AR, CA, IL, LA, MA, MI, MN, OK, OR, RI, TN, TX, WA, WI.

 

There are two ways pregnant women and their unborn children might benefit from the SCHIP program. One is to extend coverage specifically to pregnant women themselves. That is now an option for states under a waiver, and it is already codified in the SCHIP reauthorization. But it is odd to refer to an adult pregnant woman as a “child,” and more substantively the coverage has two negative features: it will be covered by the same restrictions regarding immigrants as other federal health programs, and in 17 states that have state-funded Medicaid abortions it will automatically expand coverage for abortion as well.

Here is what the unborn child option achieves that the “pregnant woman” coverage does not: Because the coverage is in the name of the soon-to-be-born child, who upon birth will be a citizen, it provides urgently needed care for both mother and child regardless of the mother’s immigrant status. This is no doubt why 14 states, including liberal states like California and Massachusetts, are using this option NOW to provide care for many pregnant women and mothers who would otherwise be denied any help because of restrictive rule on health care for immigrants.

It is, to say the least, a false and stupid “economy” to deny prenatal care in such cases, creating a situation in which the new citizen will be born sickly or premature and require an intensive care nursery or other corrective action, which of course the government will pay for because the child is now a citizen.

The “unborn child” rule will be supported by most Republicans because they respond to the idea of the child before birth receiving medical care; it should be supported by most Democrats because it helps the neediest women and children in our society who the SCHIP program will reach in no other way.

On January 28, Bishop William Murphy, Chairman of the USCCB’s Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development, sent to the Senate a letter with fact sheet in support of the Hatch Amendment.

Filed under: morals, Personal Reflections, Politics, Social Doctrine, Social Justice

Pope Benedict telegrams President Obama: work for peace and fight poverty

VATICAN CITY, Jan. 20 (UPI) — Pope Benedict XVI Tuesday sent U.S. President Barack Obama a telegram urging him to fight poverty and promote peace.  

“In our time, so many of our brothers and sisters around the world are longing to be freed from poverty, hunger and violence,'” the pope said in his telegram to the 44th U.S. president on his inauguration day.

The pope said he prayed that Obama would promote “cooperation and peace among nations,” reported ANSA, the Italian news agency.

The telegram also asked the United States to support a “free and fair society, marked by respect for the dignity, equality and rights of all its members, especially the poor, the marginalized and those without a voice.”

 

The Honorable Barack Obama

President of the United States of America

The White House

Washington, DC

On the occasion of your inauguration as the forty-fourth president of the United States of America I offer cordial good wishes, together with the assurance of my prayers that Almighty God will grant you unfailing wisdom and strength in the exercise of your high responsibilities. Under your leadership may the American people continue to find in their impressive religious and political heritage the spiritual values and ethical principles needed to cooperate in the building of a truly just and free society, marked by respect for the dignity, equality and rights of each of its members, especially the poor, the outcast and those who have no voice. At a time when so many of our brothers and sisters throughout the world yearn for liberation from the scourge of poverty, hunger and violence, I pray that you will be confirmed in your resolve to promote understanding, cooperation and peace among the nations, so that all may share in the banquet of life which God wills to set for the whole human family (Isaiah 25:6-7). Upon you and your family, and upon all the American people, I willingly invoke the Lord’s blessings of joy and peace.

Benedictus PP.XVI

 

Filed under: Church-State, Culture, Economic Policy, Market Place, morals, Papal Teachings, Politics, Social Doctrine, Social Justice

Martin Luther King Jr. Day event features bishop’s talk on poverty

From: Youngstown Vindicator

By Linda m. Linonis (Contact)

Saturday, January 17, 2009

 

By Linda m. Linonis

The speaker asked his audience to work toward reducing, then eliminating, poverty.

YOUNGSTOWN — Bishop George V. Murry of the Catholic Diocese of Youngstown offered six action points people can take to work toward eliminating poverty.

The bishop addressed about 150 people representing various faiths, social services and community activism during the annual Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. celebration sponsored by the North Side Interfaith Partnership at Congregation Rodef Sholom, 1119 Elm St.

Here’s what Bishop Murry challenged people to do in his talk, “Poverty Locally and Beyond.”

1. Pray. “Pray for the elimination of poverty,” he said. “Praying helps us remember what our community needs.”

2. Work together. “Providing social and health services to those in need,” he said, is a cooperative effort. The diocese is getting hundreds of calls from people seeking help with food, rent, housing and utilities, he said, adding, “There is a good working relationship among agencies in the city.”

3. Be advocates. “Ask politicians what they will do in the first 100 days in office to reduce poverty,” the bishop said. He urged people to hold them accountable and make sure that “the promises they made are implemented.”

4. Support community organizers. Bishop Murry said the Mahoning Valley Organizing Collaborative and the Catholic Campaign for Human Development are two endeavors. ACTION (Alliance for Congregational Transformation Influencing Our Neighborhoods) recently received a grant from the Catholic Campaign and hired a new organizer to continue its Crime and Safety Campaign. He also noted that the Presbyterian Church provides grants for community organizers.

5. Credit services. “Providing realistic credit services for the poor is necessary,” he said, noting that they have been “taken advantage of.” “They need asset-building and credit-enhancing services to bank smarter,” he said.

6. Educators, artists and cultural leaders must unite. “They must come together and talk about and study the effects of poverty,” he said. “They should use their educational and artistic skills to break the grip of poverty.”

Bishop Murry cited the speech that Dr. King gave when he received the Nobel Peace Prize in which he discussed poverty. The bishop noted that King said there was no deficit in human resources but a deficit in human will to accomplish this goal. King realized, the bishop said, that the poor were eliminated from the mainstream of life and invisible. The bishop said to the audience, as King also did, that the time has come for an all-out war on poverty.

And here’s why. Bishop Murry prefaced the six points by noting that the MLK observance Monday calls attention to the civil rights activist’s work that included the goal of “outlawing poverty in the United States and the world.”

The bishop cited statistics from the U.S. Census Bureau concerning poverty. He said nationally about 12.4 percent of all American households live in poverty. In 2007, statistics showed that 37.4 million people were impoverished, he said, and in 2006, the number was 36.4 million.

“In Ohio, 13.1 percent of the population is in poverty,” he said. “Ohio is 19th in the nation of people living in poverty.” Bishop Murry said. He also added that Youngstown has 37.6 percent of its households living in poverty.

Bishop Murry said poverty reveals “broken relationships with ourselves, our community and God.” He said it is the duty of for-profit and nonprofit organizations to reduce and eliminate poverty. “In the Catholic diocese, Catholic Charities wants to reduce poverty by half by 2020,” he said, adding that the National Jewish Federation and interfaith efforts also are working to reduce poverty.

Bishop Murry was introduced by Dr. Sherry Linkon of Rodef Sholom.

Before his talk, a Kabbalat Shabbat was led by Rabbi Franklin Muller of Rodef Sholom. Writings of Dr. King from the Birmingham, Ala. city jail were featured and read by the Rev. Solomon Hill of Centenary United Methodist Church, the Rev. Joseph Rudjak of Sts. Peter and Paul Catholic Church, Sister Isabel Rudge of St. Columba Cathedral, Monsignor Robert Siffrin of St. Edward Church, Pastor Dennis Garner of Tabernacle Baptist Church, Sister Patricia McNicholas of Beatitude House and Karen O’Malia of Rodef Sholom and First Unitarian Universalist Church. Pastor Greg Calko and Richard Brown United Methodist Church also are in the interfaith partnership. A potluck dinner also was held.

Filed under: Culture, Economic Policy, Market Place, morals, Politics, Social Doctrine, Social Justice, Spirituality