Statement of Cardinal Blase J. Cupich, archbishop of Chicago, on the July 4 mass shooting in Highland Park
Statement of Cardinal Blase J. Cupich, archbishop of Chicago, on the July 4 mass shooting in Highland Park
(posted on the website of the Archdiocese of Chicago, July 4, 2022)
I have been watching the news in horror as at least 6 are dead and many more were wounded after a gunman opened fire as families attended an Independence Day parade in Highland Park. What should have been a peaceful celebration of our nation’s founding ended in unspeakable tragedy.
Please join me in praying for the victims and their loved ones, who never imagined a July 4 celebration could become a killing ground. Pray too for the safety of first responders as they pursue the person responsible for this tragedy. They bravely rushed into the danger to treat victims and to protect others from harm.
The parade reportedly had a heavy presence of police and fire vehicles, yet this shooter was able to wound at least two dozen people before he stopped, or was stopped, and fled. Victims ranged in age from 8 to 85. Weapons designed to rapidly destroy human bodies have no place in civil society.
It is barely July, and this year the United States is already experiencing more than one mass shooting a day. Chicago Police reported at least 55 shot and 7 killed since Friday, and the holiday weekend is not yet over. Gun violence is now the leading cause of death for U.S. children.
Whatever one makes of the right to bear arms, there is plenty of room for prudential judgment in interpreting the Second Amendment so as to enact serious, broadly popular gun-safety measures. The Senate finally passed a significant, yet modest, gun-safety bill last month. But clearly more must be done.
The right to bear arms does not eclipse the right to life, or the right of all Americans to go about their lives free of the fear that they might be shredded by bullets at any moment. Gun violence is a life issue. We must continue to pray that all our officials, elected and unelected alike, will redouble their commitment to keeping safe the people they have sworn to serve.
Pope Francis wrote to the people of Chicagoland in 2016: “As Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. said, humanity ‘must evolve for all human conflict a method which rejects revenge, aggression and retaliation. The foundation of such a method is love.’ I urge all people, especially young men and women, to respond to Dr. King’s prophetic words and know that a culture of nonviolence is not an unattainable dream, but a path that has produced decisive results.”
May the Lord of mercy embrace in love those who have died, bring healing to the wounded, comfort to their loved ones, and courage to all of us, so that we may respond to this tragedy united as God’s children to build a path to safety and peace.
(Photo: CNS/Cheney Orr, Reuters)
4th of July Holiday Schedule
The friars and staff wish everyone a happy and safe Independence Day!
Holiday Schedule for Monday, July 4, 2022:
Mass: 12 Noon
There are no confessions; the church offices and the St. Francis Adult Education Center will be closed.
Our regular schedule will resume on Tuesday, July 5th.
Open Wide our Hearts – a four week series to discuss the US Bishops document on racism
Keeping the conversation going…
Whether or not you were able to attend our discussion: America’s Original Sin: A Conversation about Racism in America Today on Wednesday, June 8th, we invite you to join the conversation on race.
Fr. Steve Patti, and other friars will host four successive Thursday evenings to discuss the U.S. Bishops document “Open Wide Our Hearts: The Enduring Call to Love: A Pastoral Letter against Racism.
Thursdays June 16th, June 23rd, June 30, and July 7th.
Time: 6:30-7:30 PM
Clare Room at St. Francis
For more information or to sign up please email Fr. Steve at: [email protected]
The Document:
You can find the bishops document for free on the website of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops by clicking here: https://www.usccb.org/issues-and-action/human-life-and-dignity/racism/upload/open-wide-our-hearts.pdf
How St. Francis of Assisi’s RCIA Changed Me
5/28/22
How St. Francis of Assisi’s RCIA Program Changed Me
By Katherine Cullen, MFA, LMSW
If you had told me one or two years ago that I would convert to Catholicism, I would not have believed you. I was convinced I wasn’t “good enough” to set foot inside a church—let alone a Roman Catholic one.
My parents had me baptized and raised in the Protestant faith. But when their marriage ended in 2001 and two airplanes tore through the Twin Towers 80 blocks south of my home in Manhattan, my faith faltered. I drifted away from the church, from prayer, and ultimately from the moral and spiritual structure these practices gave me. It took me two decades to find my way back to a relationship with God. And that reunion would not have been possible without the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults (RCIA) program at St. Francis of Assisi Church.
I first came to St. Francis on November 27th, 2021 with the man who would later that year become my husband. He was a Catholic, and I had implored him to bring me to one of the Masses he spoke so fondly about and regularly attended. I was nervous as we ambled up the steps at the church’s entryway, fearful someone might tell me I wasn’t fit to be here. That I didn’t belong. Yet the sight of two smiling ushers assured me, and their greeting encapsulated how I instantly felt in this place of worship: Welcome. Further assurance arrived as my future husband pointed out that to the right of our pew was a statue of St. Andrew Kim—the saint whose feast day falls on my birthday.
I followed the lead of the parishioners around me, standing and sitting, kneeling, and praying as they did. As readers came and went from the lectern, as Father Barry delivered a homily on how the latest movie he’d seen applied to the Gospel, my concern that I would feel like an outsider given my ignorance of the Catholic liturgy melted away. Though I wasn’t familiar with every detail of the Mass, I was nevertheless so very moved by and inexplicably woven into it. As I watched a beautifully diverse line of people process towards the altar to receive the Eucharist, I wanted to know how I could become a part of this community.
Several days of Googling “how to become a Catholic” later, I reached out to Joe Nuzzi, Director of Evangelization at St. Francis of Assisi Church, to inquire about the parish’s RCIA program. He invited me to sit in on that evening’s class. The topics alone—salvation history, earthly versus mystical conceptions of time—were enough to sell me on officially enrolling. But what stuck out so profoundly to me was the warmth, wisdom, and down-to-earth-ness of the RCIA volunteer staff, other students, and most of all, of Joe himself.
Every Tuesday from that day until my confirmation on April 16, 2022 became a day I looked forward to all week, no matter how tired my day job left me. So too did each Sunday, when us catechumens (or RCIA students) were dismissed from the 5pm Mass to “Break Open The Word” and reflect on the context, meaning, and personal resonance of Jesus’s life and teachings.
The energy and enthusiasm sparked by our weekly sessions sustained me through even the hardest of days doing field based social work with severely mentally ill adults, coping with my father’s Alzheimer’s, and discerning what the next steps of my career were. Through them, I learned how to make more room for God in my heart. This might explain why I found myself becoming more loving, calmer, hopeful, and spiritually stronger as the RCIA program progressed.
I believe that the insight, sense of belonging, healing and growth I have experienced is a unique function of the community and staff at St. Francis of Assisi Church. I strongly encourage anyone curious to learn more about the Catholic faith to explore our parish’s RCIA program—and for already confirmed Catholics wishing to deepen their spirituality and sense of community, to sponsor a catechumen. If your experience is anything like mine it will be nothing short of life changing.
Fathers remembered during our Father’s Day Novena Prayers
Each year the friars at the Church of St. Francis remember fathers and father figures, living and deceased, in a week of prayer starting on Father’s Day. This year, Father’s Day cards were offered to remember the following:
(these are listed in the order in which they were received)
Anthony Cerchio, deceased
Gregory Paul Conyers
Tom Hopkins
Fr. Michel Francis Falce
Fr. Peter Poonoly
Rt. Rev. Paul Moore,Jr
President Joseph Biden
Francesco Nuzzi
Padre Santiago Mallen Temme, CSSR
Thomas Aquinas Gilbride
Charles Francis Gilbride
Joseph Fagan
Edward Cooper
John Sheridan
Joseph John Gilbride
Francisco Castro Astacio
Axel Molina
Gary Savage
Dave Conyers
Bruce M. Vigliotta
Kevin Romero
Enrique Tavarez, Adrian Hernandez
Anthony Hughes
Louis DiDio
Joseph Cialdella
Alvin Rico, Carlo Divinagracia, Butch, Jeff, Brian and Erwin Valenciano, Alfredo Diaz, Silvio Toro
Alfredo Ranola, Clemente Ranola, Robert Ranola, Henry Ranola, Edward Cohen, Daniel Cohen, Mario A. Regalado
Edward Jefferson Francisco, Mykel Allan Regalado, Myro Angelo Regalado, Tyrone Bernales
Fermin Candia
Ernesto Policarpio, Jr., Armando Hugo, Jr., Ernest J. Liguori, Dimalanta Ranola
Christian Hogarth
Jim Clancy, Stephen Williams
Sean Clancy, James Bell
Vinny Clancy, James Cavanagh, Larry O’Conner, Dean Chris Wagner
Phil Guarrosi, Vick Emanuel Felix
Bob Cosgrove, Vito Arena, Bernard Clancy
Anthony Zangla, Joseph Arena, Sal Macchione, Ralph Santiago, Joseph Zangla, Mark Weiner, Nick Bibbo, Vinny Puleo, Tony, Jim Conza, Terry Guinness, Michael O’Connor, Tim O’Connor, Stephen Mahi, John Massotti
Sean Bel-Fitzgerald
Luis Torres, Lee Turner, Leocadio Molina, John Joe Gilleece
Teofil, Francis, Paul, John Zaremski,
Joseph Rutkowski, Michael and James Rutkowski, Richard Burgess
Bobby Adlawan, Fernando A. Lacerona
Fermin Candia, Ernest J. Liguori, Dimalanta J. Liguori
Dieudonne Berthana, deceased
Thank you for Celebrating St. Anthony!
The Friars and Staff would like to thank the hundreds of people who came to pray with us yesterday for the Feast of St. Anthony. What a joy it was to have the church full— mass after mass and your voices ringing from the rafters. Mark your calendars for next year, June 13, 2023- the feast will fall on the 13th Tuesday.
It will be a grand celebration.
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