Brian R Corbin's Reflections on Religion and Life

Living Your Faith as Citizens and Leaders in Politics, Culture, Society and Business

Catholic Charities USA VP Writes Op-Ed on EFSP

Catholic Charities USA Sr. Vice President for Social Policy and Government Affairs Candy Hill signed an editorial with leaders of other national non-profit organizations calling on government leaders to preserve funding for the Emergency Food and Shelter Program. The 2011 budget passed by Congress eliminates funding to programs in more than 500 counties and cities and significantly cuts funding for the program in 1,600 communities.

“The most recent recession and the years afterward have been far tougher on America’s middle class than any other since the creation of this program, with more than 26 million Americans unemployed or underemployed and one-in-five children living below the poverty line,” the op-ed reads. “As Congress considers the 2012 budget and potential cuts in the debt ceiling debate, we urge our leaders to step up, as they have commendably done in years past, to support the Emergency Food and Shelter Program. Americans on the brink of poverty are already struggling to stay above water, and we have the opportunity and obligation to help them get back on firm financial ground before it is too late.”

Click on the following link to read the entire editorial: http://www.kansascity.com/2011/07/28/3042106/the-reality-of-cuts-to-anti-poverty.html#ixzz1TsUjqEr9

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HHS Makes In-Your-Face Effort to Undermine Constitution’s Religious Freedom

By Sister Mary Ann Walsh
Health and Human Services must think Catholics and other religious groups are fools.
That’s all you can think when you read HHS’s recent announcement that it may exempt the church from having to pay for contraceptive services, counseling to use them and sterilizations under the new health reform in certain circumstances. As planned now, HHS would limit the right of the church not to pay for such services in limited instances, such as when the employees involved are teaching religion and in cases where the people served are primarily Catholic.
HHS’s reg conveniently ignores the underlying principle of Catholic charitable actions: we help people because we are Catholic, not because our clients are. There’s no need to show your baptismal certificate in the hospital emergency room, the parish food pantry, or the diocesan drug rehab program. Or any place else the church offers help, either.
With its new regulation, HHS seeks to force church institutions to buy contraceptives, including drugs that can disrupt an existing pregnancy, through insurance they offer their own employees. This is part of HHS’s anticipated list of preventive services for women that private insurance programs must provide under the new health reform law.
The exemption is limited, to say the least. The pastor in the Catholic parish doesn’t have to buy the Pill for his employees, but the religious order that runs a Catholic hospital has to foot the bill for surgical sterilizations. And diocesan Catholic Charities agencies have to use money that would be better spent on feeding the poor to underwrite services that violate church teachings.
Whatever you think of artificial birth control, HHS’s command that everyone, including churches, must pay for it exalts ideology over conscience and common sense.
Perhaps HHS is unduly influenced by lobbyists. No surprise there. Certainly a major lobbyist is Planned Parenthood, the nation’s chief proponent of contraceptive services. Contraceptive services make a lot of money for Planned Parenthood clinics, which (again no surprise) provide the “services” HHS has mandated.
HHS and Planned Parenthood are narrow in focus. Respect for religious rights isn’t likely a key concern for them. However, it ought to be a key concern for President Obama, who last year promised to respect religious rights as he garnered support from the church community to pass the health care reform act. To assuage concerns, President Obama went so far as to issue an executive order promising that the health care reform act would not fund abortion or force people and institutions to violate their consciences. HHS is on its way to violating that promise. For the sake of basic integrity – the President’s keeping his word and for the protection of the right to religious freedom – President Obama needs to speak up now.

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Day of my baptism

Today, July 29th, marks the 49th year of my baptism in the Catholic Community. On this day, about 11 days after my birth, my god parents took me to my parish Church, St. John’s Parish in Winslow Maine. I am grateful for that moment of grace.

Today the Church celebrates the Feast of St. Martha — disciple of Jesus, sister to Mary and Lazarus. We hear the story in the Gospel of Luke how Jesus visits Martha, Mary and Lazarus’ home. Martha is quite upset. She has been serving the meal, cleaning, getting things in order while her sister and brother listen to Jesus.

Jesus calms Martha down: Mary has chosen to listen to the Word . Come, join us.

Hmmm..Is this a slap on activists?

I don’t think so….this powerful story appears right after the parable of Jesus about the Good Samaritan. There, this outsider, a religious person, stops, heals, carries, and cares for a broken man. The priest and levite — certainly religious men — are in a hurry to go do their religious obligations but do not even “see” the half dead man….or are even in fear that if they touch this half dead man, then they will be ritually impure. The Good Samaritan stops. Connects his deeply held religious beliefs and acts on them: to heal the broken man in his path. He becomes his neighbor as he lives out the two fold commandments: Love God and Love Neighbor.

So too Jesus tells Martha…come listen as we break bread to share the good news. Hospitality is important, but come listen to the Good News of God’s love. Come connect ones love of neighbor with love of God.

In the reading for the Liturgy today, we proclaim from the First Letter of St. John that God is love, and we can only see and know God by the love we share with each other. God loved us first. We are called to continue that love….with each and every person in our path. Like the Good Samaritan. Like the love of Martha and Mary and Lazarus. Like the Love that IS God.

How does your baptismal call and experience form your understanding of the connection between love of God and love of Neighbor

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Catholic Relief Services responds to hel

Catholic Relief Services responds to help Somalians struggling with famine http://ow.ly/5KWOX

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thank you so much for all your wonderful

thank you so much for all your wonderful birthday wishes. Much appreciate it. Your words provided much joy, Thanks

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