Brian R Corbin's Reflections on Religion and Life

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

Catholic Charities Men Who Cook

Catholic Charities Regional Agency will host their annual MEN WHO COOK fundraiser on Friday May 15, 2009 at 6 pm at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Parish in Youngstown, OH.

Proceeds from this event will support the agencies’ work in case management and material assistance to young families living  in Mahoning, Columbiana and Trumbull counties.

Cost: $35.00 per ticket

Contact:  330-744-3320

ask for Carolyn or NanciLynn

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Ash Wednesday

Today’s Ash Wednesday reflection suggests that our hearts can extend our reach throughout the world as compassionate ambassadors of Christ.

Pray
Lent begins in irony. The Ash Wednesday Gospel entreats us to be subtle about our prayer and fasting. These spiritual practices should be done in solitude, in a locked room. No showy appearances or long faces allowed. But instead we head for church, get in line and receive a black, sooty imprint of the cross upon our foreheads. Then we walk out into the world for all to see. It’s a sign that raises the stakes on the whole season, so the Gospel suggests that we start by checking our motives. If people are staring, they better be seeing Jesus and not us. A cross on my forehead means I’m marked as a Christian, an ambassador of Christ, as Paul puts it in his second letter to the Corinthians.

Looking for Christ’s ambassador this Lent? She’s right over there, with the cross on her head. You can tell by the way she loves the poor. You can tell by the way he speaks out against injustice. You can tell by the way she welcomes and listens. You can tell by his joy. Even after the ashes come off at sundown, the sign should remain.

In your prayer this week, consider, who is watching you this Lent? Who is urgently seeking to meet Christ’s ambassador? How might you extend Jesus’ welcome?

Fast
But you may still go to your inner room to fast and pray. Lent is about an interior journey as well as an outward one. As Lent begins, ask Jesus to gently reveal to you what you must give up in order to be the disciple he seeks. What is getting in the way, causing you to stumble? What is taking up too much time and space, leaving less room for the work of the Gospel? These are the things to give up this Lent.

Learn
An ambassador lives in a foreign place, offering a piece of home to the compatriot, extending welcome in the name of a distant host. Through Operation Rice Bowl you will have the chance to visit several countries this Lent, with an eye toward how Christ is inviting you to be his ambassador, the representative of his love, his solidarity and his compassion. In Egypt the owner of a small business will invite you to explore the dignity of work and the rights of workers. A Filipino farmer will help you to experience the call to opt for the poor. In Tanzania, a young woman orphaned by AIDS will teach you about the dignity of the human person. A Honduran dairyman amplifies the call to tend God’s creation. A teacher in Ghana will illustrate the give and take of building community through participation. And finally, a family in Colorado Springs will bring home the idea that solidarity can occur both nearby and far away.

Give
By now you may have managed to assemble your Rice Bowl and place it in a spot where it will catch your eye throughout Lent. Six weeks stretch before you. How will you fill the little cardboard box? How will you ensure that it isn’t overlooked? Now’s a great time to strategize with family or friends, perhaps setting a goal for how much each would like to contribute by Easter. Visit Operation Rice Bowl’s Interactive Map to learn about CRS programming supported by your contributions. Create a list of incentives and ideas for making contributions. A great start might be giving the house a thorough sorting and cleaning. Put all the loose change you find in your Rice Bowl. Haul off unneeded items and extra shoes and clothing to the local St. Vincent de Paul Society. Meanwhile, we’ll give you more ideas for ways to contribute with each weekly e-mail or refer to your Home Calendar Guide. And remember, by the end of Lent, 25 percent of your Operation Rice Bowl contributions will stay in your own diocese to meet needs close to home, while the rest will travel the world addressing hunger across the globe.

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Check out Interview of Corbin by Tyler Clark

http://blog.tylersclark.com/2008/12/interview-with-brian-corbin.html#links

Filed under: Personal Reflections, Uncategorized

10 Shopping Days: Buy Fair Traded Gifts

Fair Trade: What Happens When You Buy from Catholic Relief Services
by John Lindner
Fair Trade is a easy way to give gifts to loved ones and help working poor families around the world. If you’re looking for gifts you won’t find on department store shelves, check out the CRS Fair Trade web site and blog.

When you buy Fair Trade, you:

– Celebrate the human dignity of the farmers who grew it;
– Demonstrate a special concern for the poor;
– Act in solidarity with our brothers and sisters in need overseas;
– Ensure that farmers earn a just wage;
– Contribute to a more just distribution of wealth;
– Practice responsible stewardship of Creation; and
– Promote the principle of subsidiarity.

But buying Fair Trade is not entirely selfless. After all, you get great products that are unique and received a lot of care in their production.

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The “Catholic” Vote: What do you think? (2) another take….

BELIEFS

Catholics and Choice (in the Voting Booth)

Published: November 7, 2008

Anyone constructing a list of the big losers on Tuesday would probably include the nation’s Roman Catholic bishops. Will that fact be candidly addressed when the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops meets next week in Baltimore?

 

see his article in the NYTIMES:  http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/08/us/politics/08beliefs.html

Filed under: Politics, Uncategorized