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kmaherali
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Re: Christianity

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Harrison Butker’s Very American Traditionalism

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Across almost two weeks of controversy over the commencement speech that Kansas City Chiefs kicker Harrison Butker gave at Benedictine College in Atchison, Kan., one of the most useful pieces of commentary came from Kevin Tierney, writing in Catholic World Report. Tierney neither defended nor attacked Butker’s sweeping condemnation of modern secular culture and lukewarm forms of Catholic faith. Instead he identified the kicker’s worldview as part of a distinctive tendency that Tierney calls “DIY traditionalism” — a form of Catholic piety that offers a “radical emphasis on personal accountability, is inherently populist, and has little direct connection to Church authorities.”

A little context: Butker is a Latin Mass Catholic as well as Travis Kelce’s teammate. Benedictine College is a conservative Catholic college that featured prominently in a recent Associated Press report on the rightward turn in American Catholic piety and practice. The most controversial portion of the kicker’s graduation speech, the part that zipped from social media to “The View,” urged the college’s female graduates to ignore the “diabolical lies” that emphasize “promotions and titles” over “your marriage and the children you will bring into this world.”

But the speech did more than just champion “one of the most important titles of all: homemaker” while denouncing “degenerate cultural values” in society at large. Butker also delivered a sweeping condemnation of the church’s bishops, whom he cast as weak-kneed bureaucrats and denounced especially for suspending Masses and disappearing from the lives of the faithful during the pandemic. He criticized priests for being “overly familiar” with their parishioners — “because as my teammate’s girlfriend says, familiarity breeds contempt.”

He appeared to throw some shade, not just on the use of artificial contraception, but on the use of Natural Family Planning, the church’s approved method of fertility regulation. (“No matter how you spin it, there is nothing natural about Catholic birth control.”) He urged Catholics to prioritize the traditional Latin Mass over other aspects of Catholic life — “even if the parish isn’t beautiful, the priest isn’t great, or the community isn’t amazing.” And he argued that while ordinary Catholics shouldn’t all be amateur theologians, they also shouldn’t hesitate to go in search of teachings they aren’t getting from the current hierarchy: “We have so many great resources at our fingertips that it doesn’t take long to find traditional and timeless teachings that haven’t been ambiguously reworded for our times.”

Just a couple of weeks ago, writing about the future of the Catholic Church and that Associated Press story, I mentioned a journalistic tendency to collapse different kinds of right-leaning Catholicism together, instead of recognizing the ways in which a conservative American Catholic who prays the rosary, votes pro-life and admires Pope John Paul II differs from the typical adherent of the traditional Latin Mass.

When discerning national trends, that collapse of categories is somewhat forgivable; I do it myself in imagining a broad “neo-traditionalism” in American religion. But Butker’s speech is a good example of what the difference looks like and why it matters.

When you think about conservative Catholics, even in the present age of disillusionment, you are thinking about a category of believers that’s comfortable with hierarchy and authority, that wants to trust its priests and bishops, that may have doubts about the current pope but still probably views him favorably (as nearly two-thirds of Republican-voting American Catholics do), that maybe parish-shops a bit but does so within the local options, that gives generously to the Archbishop’s Annual Appeal.

You’re thinking about a population that embraces old-school Catholic devotions like eucharistic adoration but in a way that’s largely integrated into post-Second Vatican Council liturgical life, with the Mass in English and just a few Latin flourishes here and there. And you’re thinking about a population that includes a lot of full-time mothers and home-schoolers, but also takes for granted the work-and-family juggle — with a figure like Amy Coney Barrett as much a model as any stay-at-home mom.

Traditionalism, by contrast, starts from a basic, primal form of alienation: A belief that in the 1960s the institutional church suppressed the “essential” form (Butker’s word) of the church’s liturgy, the form that represents how God himself wishes to be worshiped. This creates a relationship of mistrust that doesn’t exist for the conservative. After such knowledge, what forgiveness? How can you ever trust the pope or bishops fully if they made that kind of error?

As Tierney writes in his essay, the alienation from the institution also yields a practical difference in how this kind of Catholic culture works. Traditional Latin Mass adherents often cannot operate through the usual channels of Catholic life. They can’t just show up at a parish, participate in its programs, work with but also defer to the vision of its priest. Instead, the traditionalist laity often have to create a subculture that operates much more independently. Here’s Tierney’s description of a version of that process:

A TLM community takes root within a diocese, and it wants to spread the news about the TLM. Rather than just promote their own community, one individual takes a trip to a neighborhood parish and asks the priest if a single TLM could be celebrated there, as an act of solicitude for the flock. That priest does not even need to say the TLM, but it would be nice if they came to the social afterward. If the priest agrees, that individual then calls up a few local priests he knows who can come say the Mass. If someone needs to learn how, that individual is put in touch with lay associations/groups that train priests in saying the TLM. They then either provide the priest YouTube videos or do a private training session, many times absorbing the costs themselves.

To advertise that Mass, a few key individuals in the location are contacted, and they send out an email or post on social media. They spread the word in their own communities. In addition to individuals in the area attending, those communities send “delegations” from their community to be present in order to answer questions and show people what they have found to work best at their community. Maybe, by this point, the parish priest has advertised it in his parish bulletin, yet that bulletin is likely not to be read widely, and most of the people in that community who are attending aren’t from that parish. Once that Mass takes place, this cycle is set up for another parish, and people who want to help out are identified, and the cycle begins anew.

Two points are worth making about this description. First, this kind of church-within-a church dynamic is exactly the justification offered by church authorities for their attempts to suppress or limit access to the traditional liturgy (attempts that include restrictions on advertising in parish bulletins!). The fear is that the traditional Mass creates a sect of believers that operates without normal ecclesiastical supervision, which then recruits from among the much larger population of conservative Catholics — through, say, a traditionalist commencement speech at a conservative college — and draws them into its alienated ranks.

Even Tierney, broadly sympathetic to the traditionalists, describes their movement as “dynamic but also chaotic,” with the potential to “go off the rails without a lot of corrective mechanisms in place.” If you don’t sympathize at all with the desire to maintain the old liturgy, if you regard traditionalism as entirely retrograde, you’ll see it the way many of Pope Francis’s allies do: as a dangerously divisive force within the church.

But then here is the second point, and the great irony: The kind of lay-led organizing described above, in which ordinary Catholics get together and create culture and community without priestly leadership or hierarchical direction, is exactly what Vatican II was supposed to usher in. And if you just gave a general description of the TLM movement it could easily code as “progressive” — with the assumption being that if a bunch of lay Catholics are getting together to do something that cuts across the lines of parishes and dioceses and that the hierarchy regards with disapproval, they must be seeking a more liberalized and modern church.

In reality, traditionalism itself has turned out to be one of the most successful movements of the entire post-Vatican II era, using one manifestation of the spirit of the age (disputatious, populist, anti-authority) to organize against a different manifestation (the renovation of the liturgy). It’s thrived with the advance of the internet, which has made community-building easier and enabled immediate documentary access to the pre-1960s Catholic patrimony traditionalists are eager to restore. And it’s proven to be a very American movement — coming to you in this case from the place where the heartland meets the celebrity culture of the N.F.L. (Nor is it a coincidence that the other center of traditionalism is France, another revolutionary nation where the national Catholic Church has always had a complex relationship with Rome.)

I think you can see in Butker’s judgmental zeal the obvious ways in which traditionalism can be self-limiting. But the idea that it simply represents a kind of atavism, a medieval relic unaccountably preserved, misunderstands the nature of its strength. No less than any progressive form of Catholicism, Butker and his movement are the fruits of a weakened hierarchy, a disillusioned-but-empowered laity and a democratic age.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/24/opin ... 778d3e6de3
swamidada
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Re: Christianity

Post by swamidada »

Associated Press
Heads of churches say Israeli government is demanding they pay property tax, upsetting status quo
JULIA FRANKEL
Updated Sun, June 23, 2024 at 7:15 PM CDT·

Sunday, March 31, 2024. The heads of major Christian denominations in Israel say that local governments across the country are demanding they pay property tax, violating a longstanding arrangement in a manner they say reflects growing intolerance for Christians in the Holy Land. Leaders of major churches have accused Israeli authorities of launching a “coordinated attack” on the Christian presence in the Holy Land by initiating tax proceedings against them.

While Israeli officials have tried to dismiss the disagreement as a routine financial matter, the churches say the move upsets a centuries-old status quo and reflects mounting intolerance for the tiny Christian presence in the Holy Land.

In a letter to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu this week, the heads of the major Christian denominations alleged that four municipalities across Israel had recently submitted warning letters to church officials cautioning them of legal action if they did not pay taxes.

“We believe these efforts represent a coordinated attack on the Christian presence in the Holy Land,” wrote the heads of the Catholic, Greek Orthodox and Armenian Orthodox churches. “In this time, when the whole world, and the Christian world in particular, are constantly following the events in Israel, we find ourselves, once again, dealing with an attempt by authorities to drive the Christian presence out of the Holy Land.”

Christians are a tiny minority, making up less than 2% of the population of Israel and the Palestinian territories. There are 182,000 Christians in Israel, 50,000 in the West Bank and Jerusalem and 1,300 in Gaza, according to the U.S. State Department. The vast majority are Palestinians.

The churches, who are major landowners in the Holy Land, say they do not pay property taxes under longstanding tradition. They say their funds go to services that benefit the state, like schools, hospitals and homes for the elderly.

The letter said the municipalities of Tel Aviv, Ramla, Nazareth and Jerusalem in recent months have all either issued warning letters or commenced legal action for alleged tax debts.

The Jerusalem municipality told The Associated Press that the church had not submitted the necessary requests for tax exemptions over the last few years. It said that “a dialogue is taking place with the churches to collect debts for the commercial properties they own.”

The other municipalities did not immediately comment. It was unclear if the municipalities acted in a coordinated effort or whether the tax moves are coincidental.

In 2018, Christians closed the Church of the Holy Sepulchre — revered by Christians as the site of Jesus’ crucifixion and resurrection — to protest a move by Israeli officials to impose taxes on commercial properties in the holy city.

The Christian leaders argued that the sites — like pilgrim hostels and information centers — served important religious and cultural purposes, and that taxing them would infringe on Christian religious observance in the Holy Land. After the public backlash, Netanyahu quickly suspended the plan.

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kmaherali
Posts: 25705
Joined: Thu Mar 27, 2003 3:01 pm

Re: Christianity

Post by kmaherali »

Eight Decades Later, a Celebration of Faith Renewed

More than 50,000 American Catholics gathered at the first National Eucharistic Congress since the 1940s.

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Tens of thousands of Catholics gathered to celebrate the eucharist at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis.

Lucas Oil Stadium, the vast brick home to the Indianapolis Colts, is space custom-built for commotion and cacophony. On Wednesday night, the seats were mostly filled, families having shuffled into rows balancing paper trays of chicken fingers and pizza. But at 7 p.m., the lights went down, and the crowd sat poised in stillness and silence.

Then a voice on the loudspeaker instructed them to kneel, a spotlight beamed to a corner of the floor.

As tens of thousands of people watched, the stadium spotlight shone on a four-foot, elaborate star-shaped gold vessel that contained the simple wafer that Catholics believe becomes the true presence of Jesus Christ when it is consecrated.

At that instant, Camille Anigbogu, 22, from Houston, recalled later, “I profoundly knew that it was God.”

Ms. Anigbogu was among the American Catholics who gathered for an event designed to revive popular fervor for the sacrament of the Holy Communion and to be a “generational moment” for the Church more broadly. It was the first National Eucharistic Congress since the 1940s — brought back in response to American bishops’ dismay that Catholics have been drifting from the ritual at the core of each Mass, and from their faith altogether.

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A priest in yellow robes carrying a four-foot, elaborate star-shaped gold vessel
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Father Boniface Hicks of the Saint Vincent Archabbey in Pennsylvania carrying the holy vessel at the National Eucharistic Congress.

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Worshipers seen from the rear as lights beam out from the front of the room.
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Some women in the arena wore chapel veils during the worship service.

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Incense wafted through Lucas Oil Stadium.

In the stadium on Wednesday, Bishop Andrew Cozzens of Crookston, Minn., held the gold vessel, called a monstrance, aloft. Then he slowly proceeded to an altar on the stadium floor, where the receptacle stayed for an hour as the focus of prayer and singing, ranging from 13th-century Latin hymns to contemporary worship songs.

Later, attendees described a feeling of peace and euphoria, and a confirmation of the centrality of the sacrament to their faith. Catholic doctrine refers to the eucharist as “the source and summit of the Christian life.” Consuming bread and wine is the climax of every Mass; the church’s claim that the substances “transubstantiate” distinguishes Catholicism from other forms of Christianity. Many at the congress referred to the vessel’s contents not as “it” but as “him.”

“Jesus was telling me, ‘Look at all these people, 50,000 people are here and they love me and I love them all,’” said Joshua Paul Viola, 26, a photographer who traveled to the congress from Alabama.

The first Eucharistic Congress in the United States took place in the late 19th century, although early meetings were attended mostly by clergy. In 1930, leaders issued a national invitation to lay Catholics to attend a rally and procession in Omaha. In Cleveland five years later, more than 80,000 attended.

Shortly after the ninth congress in 1941, however, the United States entered World War II, disrupting future plans. A large International Eucharistic Congress was held in Philadelphia in the 1970s, but there were no other national gatherings devoted to the sacrament until this one, which stretches over five days.

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More than 80,000 people attended a Eucharistic Congress in Cleveland in 1935.

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Pope John Paul II celebrated Mass at Cherry Creek State Park in Aurora, Colo., when he was in the U.S. for World Youth Day in 1993.Credit...NewsBase, via Associated Press

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Alfred E. Smith, former New York governor and presidential nominee, prayed with a rosary during the Eucharistic Congress in Cleveland in 1935.Credit...The New York Times

The congress opened in what turned out to be a moment of extraordinary anxiety in the country outside the stadium walls, and within the church itself, as Mass attendance declines and Catholics bicker over differences in their politics and liturgical tastes. It arrived days after an assassination attempt on a former president, and as the current president’s health became the subject of mounting scrutiny.

In the stadium, Bishop Cozzens prayed that a “spirit of unity and peace would reign in our country.”

The gathering concludes on Sunday, after a packed schedule that has included morning liturgies, opportunities for confession, high-profile speakers like the popular podcaster and priest Mike Schmitz, a procession through downtown Indianapolis on Saturday afternoon, and an expo hall with wares including Lego priest sets and bottles for holy water reminiscent of high-end perfume.

The crowd reflected the diversity of Catholic life in America. Masses were offered in Vietnamese, Spanish and Latin, with liturgies drawn from different sources including the Syro-Malabar Church, based in India. Some wore their Sunday best, with women in long skirts and lace mantillas, while others sported jeans and T-shirts with slogans like “Got Mary?”

American bishops started planning the gathering years ago, spending $22 million for the project and initially aiming to attract 80,000 worshipers. A touchstone was World Youth Day in 1993, when Pope John Paul II received a rock star’s welcome from a teeming crowd of young Catholics in Denver’s Mile High Stadium.

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Nuns on a downtown street.
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More than 50,000 Catholics gathered in Indianapolis for the congress.

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A police officer on a bicycle in front of clergy in red robes.
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The clergy during a procession through downtown Indianapolis on Saturday afternoon.

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Worshiper sitting outside on the grass.
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An overflow area outside of Holy Rosary Church for those who would not fit inside for traditional Latin Mass.

The week in Indianapolis turned out to be more modest. Pope Francis did not attend, for one, although he sent his good wishes and blessed the large gold monstrance that was ferried into the stadium each night.

The Catholic Church itself is also a smaller presence in American life than it was in the last century. Waves of departures followed revelations in the early 2000s of widespread sexual abuse by clergy, and the broader culture has become more secular.

Then came a survey in 2019 that seemed to put the sprawling predicament of disaffiliations and disaffection into focus: Only one-third of Catholics in the United States believe that the bread and wine of the eucharist transform into the body and blood of Jesus during Mass, the Pew Research Center found. (A later survey commissioned by the McGrath Institute for Church Life at the University of Notre Dame questioned Pew’s approach and suggested the problem was not quite not as dire.)

The finding deeply alarmed American bishops, but it also presented an opportunity.

They launched a three-year “Eucharistic revival” in 2022, of which the congress serves as a centerpiece. The effort, chaired by Bishop Cozzens, also tapped into a revived interest in eucharistic adoration — a meditative practice of sitting in what adherents see as the presence of Jesus — among young traditionally minded Catholics.

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Worshipers with their hands clasped in prayer.
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The eucharist was administered at a morning liturgy designated for youth at the congress.

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A woman appears to wipe away tears in a crowded stadium
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Some attendees were emotional as they prayed during adoration.

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Priests listen to confession in a largely empty room
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Priests heard confessions at the Indiana Convention Center.

“Adoration is back,” said Marina Frattaroli, 26, one of a select group of young Catholics pilgrims (including Ms. Anigbogu) who spent the last two months walking and driving to Indianapolis across the country along four paths starting in Lake Itasca, Minn., at the headwaters of the Mississippi; New Haven, Conn.; Brownsville, Texas, and San Francisco.

Ms. Frattaroli was raised Presbyterian and converted to Catholicism in 2022, after reading about the revival prompted her to grapple with her theological beliefs. She recently graduated from Columbia Law School and said that a chapel near campus had a steady stream of students at its weekday adoration times.

She participated in the pilgrimage’s Eastern route. Pilgrims carried a vessel in public processions along the way, joined by local Catholics. In St. Paul, Minn., about 7,000 people joined the procession downtown. Along the Mississippi Gulf Coast, the pilgrims led a miles-long procession on the beach. In Atlanta, a largely Vietnamese parish treated them to a meal and a night of karaoke.

The congress in Indianapolis was billed as an occasion for spiritual unity and peace, even before the chaotic political season agitated the country’s already fraying mood.

“We’re here at this moment at a time where our country seems to be almost at the threads,” said Sister Josephine Garrett, a nun and podcaster who spoke on the main stage on Friday night. “I think that’s providential.”

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A figure with his back to the camera raises his arms in prayer at an arena religious service.
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Songs rang out throughout the arena on Wednesday.

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A nun reading from the Bible.
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Sister Josephine Garrett read passages from the Bible to the worshipers.

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A group of young people One young man rides on the shoulders of another.
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Young people stood and sang along to “Praise the Lord, Oh my Soul.”

Partisan politics was largely absent from the stadium, although speakers on the main stage included the anti-abortion activist Lila Rose and Sister Bethany Madonna of the Sisters of Life, an order devoted to “the protection of human life,” including discouraging abortion.

Still, many attendees could not disentangle their search for deeper faith and the uncertainties swirling around this tumultuous American summer.

Alex Trotter, 45, traveled to the event from Oakland, Calif., with the oldest three of his nine children, along with his wife and a few other family members. His oldest son, 20, is in the process of determining whether he wants to be a priest.

Mr. Trotter said he has been on a “journey” the last few years that included a crisis in his marriage, a rediscovery of his faith and a revisiting of his political instincts. He voted for Mr. Biden in 2020, and his wife voted for Mr. Trump. This year, he plans to let prayer guide him, and he may not vote at all.

Standing on the sidewalk outside the congress, he took in the crowds of his fellow Catholics streaming past him. He could feel his faith growing stronger even since his arrival, he said. His thoughts about his family and the state of the world were all connected, “and God is at the center of all of them,” he said.

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An image of Jesus Christ projected on a screen in a darkened arena.
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An image of Jesus Christ projected onstage at Lucas Oil Stadium.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/07/21/us/n ... 778d3e6de3
swamidada
Posts: 1614
Joined: Sun Aug 02, 2020 8:59 pm

Re: Christianity

Post by swamidada »

USA TODAY
Ohio woman claims she saw a Virgin Mary statue miracle, local reverend skeptical
James Powel and Charita M. Goshay, USA TODAY
Wed, August 7, 2024 at 8:39 PM CDT·

Bishop Henning on Newsmakers in December 2023Scroll back up to restore default view.
An Ohio woman claims to have witnessed a miracle but local church leaders are skeptical.

Connie Liptak told Cleveland FOX affiliate WJW that she photographed the International Pilgrim Virgin Statue of Our Lady of Fatima closing and opening its eyes during the inanimate statue's tour stop in Canton.

“I knew it was a miracle because I’d been looking at her all morning,” Liptak told the station. “They’re really closed. I mean, you can really see her lashes are down.”

The Rev. David Misbrener, the pastor at the Basilica of St. John the Baptist where Liptak claims the miracle happened, told the Canton Repository − part of the USA TODAY Network − that he has doubts about what happened.

"I'm a little bit skeptical of such things, and the church is very cautious with such things," Misbrener told the paper. "Anything can happen with a camera. My take is that if anyone benefited spiritually or physically, it did its job."

"We know that she’s wept 15 times,” said Larry Maginot, statue's custodian, told WJW.

In spite of the reverend's skepticism about the claims of a statue blinking, Misbrener did tell the Repository that a different kind of miracle occurred during the tour stop.

"I would say the miracle is people coming together at churches and praying," he said. "We do need a lot of hope in our society. We're in a lot of flux right now."

What is the International Pilgrim Virgin Statue of Our Lady of Fatima?
The statue was commissioned in 1947 in Fatima, Portugal, as a reminder of a series of reported appearances by the Virgin Mary to three peasant children, Lucia dos Santos, and her cousins Francisco and Jacinta Marto, between May 13, 1917, and Oct. 13, 1917.

The statue was crafted based on a description given by dos Santos, the oldest child and the only one who said she spoke to Mary, telling church authorities that Mary revealed to her three secret messages about the future. She became a Carmelite nun, dying in 2005 at 97.

The Vatican officially accepted the children's account in 1930. The Marto siblings, who died at 10 and 11, were canonized by Pope Francis in 2017. Sister dos Santos was canonized in 2023.

The statue has been displayed in over 100 countries and is currently on a tour of the United States that ends in late September.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Ohio woman claims to have seen Virgin Mary statue open, close eyes

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kmaherali
Posts: 25705
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Re: Christianity

Post by kmaherali »

Pope, 87, Embarks on ‘Physical Test’ in Grueling Asia Tour

The 11-day trip, a signal that Francis does not intend to slow down, requires nearly 45 hours of air travel and meetings in tropical climates.

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Pope Francis last week in St. Peter’s Square, Vatican City. His 11-day trip to Southeast Asia signals he has no intention of reducing his outreach to faraway Catholics.Credit...Riccardo Antimiani/EPA, via Shutterstock

Pope Francis leaves Monday on an 11-day trip to Southeast Asia and Oceania, the longest and among the most complicated of his tenure. It could be particularly challenging for Francis, 87, who has been using a wheelchair and battling health problems.

But the trip, which includes a stop in Indonesia — the world’s largest Muslim majority country — also signals he has no intention of slowing down his outreach to faraway Catholics.

Francis will visit four countries for a total of about 20,000 miles by plane. From Indonesia he goes to Papua New Guinea, then East Timor and Singapore, as he deepens his engagement with Asia, one of his priorities.

The trip will include more than 43 hours of air travel and meetings with local faithful, clergy and politicians in cities with tropical climates or high levels of pollution on the other side of the world from Rome.

“It’s a physical test,” said Massimo Faggioli, a professor of theology at Villanova University, “and a sign that this pontificate is far from being over.”

Why is he visiting these countries?

The pope chose four island nations as he extends his outreach to what he calls “the peripheries,” a term for overlooked, faraway places with small, minority or persecuted Catholic communities. The trip is also one of Francis’ boldest engagements with Asia, a fast-growing part of the world, which the pope has always regarded as a strategic objective.

Francis made a largely secretive deal with China in 2018 for the appointment of bishops, but not all issues have been resolved, as China’s government still exerts strong political control over religious life, said Gianni Criveller, dean of studies at the PIME International Missionary School of Theology in Milan.

While no pope has been able to visit China, Francis has taken trips, such as to Mongolia, that have basically put him on China’s doorstep. This time as well, Mr. Faggioli said, the trip is seen as an attempt to “talk to countries he can’t go to.”

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Pope Francis in a wheelchair greets a crowd of people behind metal barriers.
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The pope visited Mongolia, on China’s doorstep, last year. He has yet to visit China, which has a history of estranged ties with the Vatican.Credit...Louise Delmotte/Associated Press

He said the trip also showed Francis’ ambition to make the Roman Catholic Church truly global — drawing attention to areas not traditionally of Christian culture and where Catholicism coexists with other religions, relying on the communities’ devotion rather than on wealth, endowments or a historical hegemony.

Unlike in Europe, the Catholic church in Asia does not “rest on its laurels,” said Mr. Faggioli, and believing is in some cases still an act of resistance.

“He sends a message to all the Catholics,” Mr. Faggioli said. “That the future of the church looks more like these churches in which we are a minority than those in which we are a majority.”

The pope’s first stop, Indonesia, also reflects Francis’ commitment to promoting dialogue between Muslims and Christians. He was the first pope to visit the Arabian Peninsula, in 2019.

He is also likely to urge global action to protect the environment, in a part of the world that is particularly vulnerable to climate change, including rising sea levels and severe weather events like droughts and typhoons.

Is the pope too frail for such a trip?

The Vatican originally had considered the trip for 2020 but canceled it because of the pandemic. Despite being older now, the pope is committed to showing that despite his age and ailments he is “still alive though some wanted me dead,” as he once joked.

In recent years, Francis’ health has been a source of concern. Within three years, he underwent a hernia operation, had colon surgery and was hospitalized for a respiratory infection. Last year, he did not attend a summit in Dubai because of health problems.

Still, the pope has been seen walking in recent weeks, instead of using a wheelchair, as he has increasingly done.

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Pope Francis walks past a guard in a marble hall.
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Pope Francis at the Vatican last month, forgoing the wheelchair he has often used.Credit...Gregorio Borgia/Associated Press

In the 11-day trip, he will be accompanied by his medical team (two nurses and a doctor) and, in a first, by his secretaries. Matteo Bruni, the Vatican’s spokesman, said at a news briefing on Friday that no extra precautions were taken for this trip, as the measures they normally adopt were considered sufficient.

Still, the ambitious itinerary for the octogenarian leader of the world’s Roman Catholics inevitably has stirred questions about the impact on his health.

Reporters questioned Mr. Bruni about the 92 percent humidity that the pope would face in Vanimo, a town tucked between Papua New Guinea’s rainforest and the Pacific Ocean. Markus Solo, an Indonesian priest who focuses on interfaith dialogue at the Vatican, said he worried about the impact that Jakarta’s high pollution could have, partly because Francis lost part of a lung to infection as a teenager.

“Hopefully, the government will do something in order to reduce the pollution during the visit,” he said.

The head of the Environmental Service of Jakarta, Asep Kuswanto, said no specific plans for curbing air pollution had been made for the pope’s visit.

Still, it appeared that some measures had been taken to protect the pope’s health. Francis was not expected to visit Flores, a predominantly Catholic Indonesian island.

“His health condition doesn’t permit him to go all that way,” said Father Solo, originally from Flores. “We have to be very prudent.”

Ismail Cawidu, a senior official at Istiqlal Mosque in Jakarta, an important stop on the visit, said that the pope would not tour the inside of the mosque but instead meet other religious leaders at a plaza outside.

Mr. Ismail said they had asked the Vatican if the pope could cross the “tunnel of friendship” that connects the mosque, Southeast Asia’s largest, with a Catholic cathedral but were still awaiting a response.

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A woman sitting at a sewing machine with material depicting Pope Francis.
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A woman in Tangerang, Indonesia, sewed tote bags depicting Pope Francis last week in preparation for his visit.Credit...Adi Weda/EPA, via Shutterstock

What can we expect from the trip?

Indonesia has a large Christian population, with a lively Catholic community. The country has been considered an example of interfaith tolerance but is still facing challenges to its image, as extremist Islamic groups have exerted growing pressure on other religions.

The pope’s visit to the Istiqlal mosque will include a meeting with representatives of the country’s officially recognized religions — Islam, Buddhism, Confucianism, Hinduism and Catholic and Protestant Christianity. He will also celebrate Mass at a stadium in the city, where tens of thousands are likely to attend.

Papua New Guinea, where more than 800 languages are spoken, is one of the world’s poorest countries, and Pope Francis “wants to send a message that he can reach everyone, that nobody is too faraway,” Father Criveller said. After spending most of next weekend in Port Moresby, the capital, Francis will fly north to the coastal town of Vanimo, and he may address the issue of protecting nature from extractive businesses and the effects of climate change.

In East Timor, Asia’s newest nation and the only predominantly Catholic country on the trip, Francis is to follow in the footsteps of John Paul II, who also visited the conflict-scarred nation. Francis may face questions over the scandal involving Carlos Ximenes Belo, a Nobel-winning bishop and independence hero who the Vatican acknowledged had sexually abused young boys.

In Singapore, an economic powerhouse with a blend of Asian ethnicities and religions, Francis will witness one of the world’s most diverse societies up close, as well as a small but dynamic Catholic community, where the faithful still crowd pews.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/02/worl ... 778d3e6de3
kmaherali
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Re: Christianity

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Pope Francis’ Mass in East Timor draws 600,000 people, nearly half the population

Video: https://youtu.be/CUeJ6iGOsOI

Watch live as Pope Francis presides over a Mass in East Timor’s capital Dili with tens of thousands in attendance.

TASITOLU, East Timor (AP) — An estimated 600,000 people — nearly half of East Timor’s population —- packed a seaside park Tuesday for Pope Francis’ final Mass, held on the same field where St. John Paul II prayed 35 years ago during the nation’s fight for independence from Indonesia.

The remarkable turnout was a testament to the overwhelmingly Catholic Southeast Asian country and the esteem with which its people hold the church, which stood by the Timorese in their traumatic battle for freedom and helped draw international attention to their plight.

Francis delighted them on Tuesday, staying at Tasitolu park until well after nightfall to loop around the field in his open-topped popemobile, with the screens of the crowd’s cellphones lighting up the evening.

“I wish for you peace, that you keep having many children, and that your smile continues to be your children,” Francis said in his native Spanish.



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AP AUDIO: Pope Francis’ Mass in East Timor draws 600,000 people, nearly half the population
AP correspondent Charles de Ledesma reports hundreds of thousands of East Timor’s Catholic faithful attend Mass with Pope Francis.

Other papal Masses have drawn millions of people in more populous countries, such as the Philippines, and there were other nationalities represented at Tuesday’s Mass. But the crowd in East Timor, population 1.3 million, was believed to represent the biggest turnout for a papal event ever, in terms of the proportion of the national population.

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The Tasitolu park was a sea of yellow and white umbrellas — the colors of the Holy See flag — as Timorese shielded themselves from the afternoon sun awaiting Francis’ arrival. They got occasional spritzes of relief from water trucks that plied the field with hoses.

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East Timorese crowd Tacitolu park for Pope Francis’ Mass in Dili, East Timor, Tuesday, Sept. 10, 2024. (AP Photo/Firdia Lisnawati)

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A firefighter sprays water on Catholic faithful gathered for a Holy Mass with Pope Francis at the Esplanade of Taci Tolu in Dili, East Timor, Tuesday, Sept.10, 2024. (Willy Kurniawan/Pool Photo via AP)
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Faithful and priests use umbrellas with the colors of the Vatican flag to shield themselves from the sun as they wait for a mass presided over by Pope Francis to start in Tasitolu, some 8 kilometers west of Dili, East Timor, Tuesday, Sept. 10, 2024. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)

“We are very happy that the pope came to Timor because it gives a blessing to our land and our people,” said Dirce Maria Teresa Freitas, 44, who arrived at the field at 9 a.m. from Baucau, more than seven hours early.

Tasitolu is said to have been a site where Indonesian troops disposed of bodies killed during their 24-year rule of East Timor. As many as 200,000 people were killed over a quarter-century. Now it is known as the “Park of Peace” and features a larger-than-life-sized statue of John Paul to commemorate his Oct. 12, 1989 Mass, when the Polish pope shamed Indonesia for its human rights abuses and encouraged the overwhelmingly Catholic Timorese faithful.

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Pope Francis consoles a person during a visit at the ‘Irmas ALMA’ (Sisters of the Association of Lay Missionaries) School for Children with Disabilities in Dili, East Timor, Tuesday, Sept. 10, 2024. Pope Francis has indirectly acknowledged the abuse scandal in East Timor involving its Nobel Peace Prize-winning independence hero Bishop Carlos Filipe Ximenes Belo. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)

Francis was following in John Paul’s footsteps during his visit to cheer on the nation two decades after it became independent in 2002. East Timor, known also as Timor-Leste, remains one of the poorest countries, with some 42% living below the poverty line, according to the U.N. Development Program.

But the Timorese are deeply faithful — some 97% are Catholic ever since Portuguese explorers first arrived in the early 1500s.

Cardinal Carmo da Silva, the archbishop of Dili, told the crowd at the end of the Mass that John Paul’s visit “marked the decisive step in our process of self-determination,” and that Francis’ visit to the same place “marks a fundamental step in the process of building our country, its identity and its culture.”

In the days leading up to Francis’ trip, authorities said some 300,000 people had registered through their dioceses to attend the Mass, but President Jose Ramos-Horta said he expected 700,000 and the Vatican had predicted as many as 750,000.

Once the Mass got under way, Vatican spokesman Matteo Bruni cited crowd estimates by local organizers that 600,000 people were attending in the Tasitolu park and surrounding areas.

They lined up before dawn to enter the park, on the coast about 8 kilometers (nearly 5 miles) from downtown Dili. With hours to go until the service, the roads leading to it were jammed by cars, trucks and buses packed with people; others walked down the middle of the street, ignoring the sidewalks. Temperatures reached 31 degrees Celsius (88 degrees Fahrenheit), and felt even hotter with humidity over 50%.

“For us, the pope is a reflection of the Lord Jesus, as a shepherd who wants to see his sheep, so we come to him with all our hearts as our worship,” said Alfonso de Jesus, who also came from Baucau, the country’s second-largest city after Dili.

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People attend the holy mass lead by Pope Francis at Tacitolu park in Dili, East Timor, Tuesday, Sept. 10, 2024. (AP Photo/Dita Alangkara, Pool)
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Medical workers carry a person as Catholic faithful gather to attend a Holy Mass that will be presided by Pope Francis at the Esplanade of Taci Tolu in Dili, East Timor, Tuesday, Sept.10, 2024. (Willy Kurniawan/Pool Photo via AP)

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A faithful attends the holy mass lead by Pope Francis at Tasitolu park in Dili, East Timor, Tuesday, Sept. 10, 2024. (AP Photo/Dita Alangkara, Pool)

De Jesus, 56, was among the estimated 100,000 people who attended John Paul’s 1989 Mass, which made headlines around the world because of a riot that broke out just as it was ending. John Paul looked on as baton-wielding Indonesian plainclothes police clashed with some 20 young men who shouted “Viva a independência” and “Viva el Papa!”

According to Associated Press reporting at the time, the men unfurled a banner in front of the altar and hurled chairs at police. One banner read “Fretilin Welcomes You,” a reference to the independence movement that fought Indonesian rule since East Timor was annexed in 1976 after Portugal dismantled its centuries-old colonial empire.

Four women were reported hospitalized with injuries suffered after being crushed in the surging crowd. The pope wasn’t harmed. Amnesty International later expressed concern that some 40 people had been detained and tortured, though Indonesian authorities at the time denied any arrests or torture.

“The Mass was run very neat and orderly with very tight security,” De Jesus recalled more than three decades later. “But it was crushed by a brief riot at the end of the event.”

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Pope John Paul II shakes hands with flag-waving local students upon his arrival in Dili, East Timor, Oct. 12, 1989. (AP Photo/Staff/Marquez)

Many of the reports at the time quoted Dili Bishop Carlos Ximenes Belo in trying to draw attention to the plight of the Timorese people. Belo would go onto win the Nobel Peace Prize with Ramos-Horta for their efforts to peacefully resolve the Timorese conflict.

But Belo has since had his legacy tarnished, at least outside of East Timor, after the Vatican revealed in 2022 that he had been sanctioned for sexually abusing young boys. Now living in Portugal and blocked by the Vatican from having contact with East Timor, Belo’s historic role has been seemingly erased from any official mention during Francis’ visit, even while ordinary Timorese still revere him as a hero.

Sister Maria Josefa, a nun from Cape Verde who has lived in Dili for five years, said Francis was right to speak out generally about “abuse” when he arrived in Dili on Monday, saying his were words of compassion, even if he didn’t mention Belo by name.

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Pope Francis speaks during a visit at the ‘Irmas ALMA’ (Sisters of the Association of Lay Missionaries) School for Children with Disabilities in Dili, East Timor, Tuesday, Sept. 10, 2024. Pope Francis has indirectly acknowledged the abuse scandal in East Timor involving its Nobel Peace Prize-winning independence hero Bishop Carlos Filipe Ximenes Belo. At left is Archbishop of Dili Cardinal Virgilio do Carmo da Silva. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)

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Pope Francis arrives at the ‘Irmas ALMA’ (Sisters of the Association of Lay Missionaries) School for Children with Disabilities in Dili, East Timor, Tuesday, Sept. 10, 2024. Pope Francis has indirectly acknowledged the abuse scandal in East Timor involving its Nobel Peace Prize-winning independence hero Bishop Carlos Filipe Ximenes Belo. “Let us also not forget that these children and adolescents have their dignity violated,” Francis said. “In response, we are all called to do everything possible to prevent every kind of abuse and guarantee a healthy and peaceful childhood for all young people.” (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)

“Unfortunately, the church is made of saints and sinners, but the pope left it within the open that God does not allow for such practices,” she said. “We simply need to correct, to understand those who fell and also try to lift those who have endured such torture.”

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AP researcher Randy Herschaft contributed from New York.

___
Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

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kmaherali
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Re: Christianity

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Pope’s Grueling Asia Tour Points Toward a Less Western Church

The long trip by a frail, 87-year-old pope was seen as a bold endeavor and a muscular step for a global church looking East.

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Pope Francis waving to faithful in Dili, East Timor, on Tuesday.Credit...Ulet Ifansasti for The New York Times

Over the last couple of weeks, Pope Francis hoisted himself up on sore legs dozens of times. As he crisscrossed large swaths of the Asia Pacific region, he shuffled from cars to his wheelchair, from the wheelchair to makeshift papal thrones and on and off many planes as hot, tropical winds blew on the tarmac.

The trip amounted to the longest and farthest reaching yet for Francis, and at 87, some of his supporters fear it may be one of his last. But that he flew thousands of miles to Asian countries with relatively small Catholic populations, braving oppressive temperatures and high levels of humidity and pollution, underlined Francis’s commitment to building a church with a less Eurocentric future.

“The long distance, the fatigue, the challenges,” said Cardinal Michael Czerny, a close aide to Francis. “They are part of the message.”

Francis’ papacy has from the start been one of symbols: the small modest cars he’s used, kissing the feet of criminals, the Casio watch he wears. His destinations are as much a part of his teachings as his homilies, and this trip to Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, East Timor and Singapore was seen as part of how he has defined his papacy.

The purpose, he has long made clear, is to emphasize outreach and inclusivity. As he visited remote, tropical villages in Papua New Guinea, he put in practice his pledge to embrace what he calls the church’s “peripheries,” faraway, minority or poorer Catholics.

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The pope, being pushed in a wheelchair, visits a school. The ocean can be seen in the background.
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Pope Francis visited a school in Baro, Papua New Guinea, on Sunday.Credit...Guglielmo Mangiapane/Reuters

Asia, home to two thirds of the world’s population and an increasingly central player on the global stage, has long been a focus for Francis. He has been unable to go to China, where the church sees enormous potential but also faces great obstacles. China and the Vatican do not have official diplomatic relations even though Francis signed a groundbreaking and heavily criticized deal with the Chinese government on the appointment of bishops.

But with this trip he completed a tour of much of its surrounding region, visiting eleven countries around China. Francis departs his last stop, Singapore, on Friday, and then returns to the Vatican.

For his supporters, the fact that he did all of this at 87, after suffering a series of health issues, and saying that traveling had become harder, only made his endeavor more meaningful. As Pope Francis shook hands, and gleefully waved to the crowd, bishops held on to their purple skullcaps in the wind and looked on at him in admiration.

“I don’t know where he finds the energy,” said Bishop Jozef Roszynski of Wewak, in Papua New Guinea. “Yesterday he was on the trolley going all over the place.”

The map highlights the Asia Pacific countries and cities that the Pope visited on his tour, including Singapore; Jakarta, Indonesia; Dili, East Timor; and Vanimo, Wewak, Wabag, and Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea.

Pacific Ocean

MALAYSIA

SINGAPORE

Vanimo

INDONESIA

Wewak

PAPUA

NEW GUINEA

Dili

Jakarta

Wabag

Port

Moresby

EAST TIMOR

Indian Ocean

AUSTRALIA

750 MILES

By The New York Times
Pope Francis showed moments of great vitality during the trip. He spoke off the cuff, cracking jokes about crocodiles, cats, dogs and the Devil. In Papua New Guinea he flew over vast timber forests on an Australian Air Force plane to a remote Pacific town.

There, he put on a feathered headdress, then traveled by the sandy coastline to an even more remote school run by Argentine missionaries, where he drank mate tea. In the capital of a country that has seen bloody tribal violence, he sat in a scorching stadium and asked the thousands of people gathered if they preferred harmony or confusion. Then, like an entertainer, he said, “I can’t hear you,” to get a louder, more emphatic response.

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A crowd waits for the pope to arrive. A man in the foreground wears a traditional tribal headdress.
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Waiting for Pope Francis’s arrival at a stadium in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea, on Sunday.Credit...Guglielmo Mangiapane/Reuters

He also had times in which he appeared tired or less engaged. As he gave a speech to leaders in the capital, Port Moresby, and praised a land “so far from Rome but so close to the heart of the Catholic Church,” he stopped several times to cough.

In Jakarta, he did not lead the Mass at the stadium, which would involve lots of standing, and as he arrived in Port Moresby, he appeared to lose his balance for a moment.

But he went on, and locals appreciated the effort.

“Now I feel I am part of a universal church, and that we are not just somewhere remote,” said Justin Ain Soongie, the bishop of Wabag, a small town in the highlands of Papua New Guinea, as he exited a meeting with Francis at a local church with enormous fans slicing through the warm air.

Pope John Paul II visited Papua New Guinea in 1984, at age 63, but Francis, Bishop Ain Soongie pointed out, “took the risk to come especially at this age and on a wheelchair.” By traveling so far away, he added, “He is living what he is saying.”

In East Timor, about half of the country attended a Mass presided over by Francis, and people climbed on roofs to get a glimpse of him. Huge billboards with Francis’ face appeared among sheet metal shacks in impoverished suburbs and in the lush gardens of Singapore. Around the region, faithful wearing suits, dusty T-shirts or straw skirts waved Vatican flags. In Papua New Guinea, troubled by local rivalries, people came together to see the pope, some after walking across the forest for days.

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A cheering crowd smiles and waves.
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Waiting on the street to welcome Francis on Monday in Dili, East Timor.Credit...Ulet Ifansasti for The New York Times

Chris Anowan, 54, a school principal there, traveled to the city of Vanimo one week before Francis’ visit, because the dirt road connecting his village to the town had dried out from rains, and he did not know how long it would remain passable.

“For me, it’s like seeing Saint Peter,” said Mr. Anowan, as he waited for Pope Francis with rosaries and plastic bottles of water ready to be blessed. “It’s the first time a pope comes here,” he said, referring to Vanimo.

Some of those who traveled alongside the pope from Italy, a country where the number of practicing Catholics has steadily declined, were impressed by the local fervor.

While the number of Catholics in Asia is growing at a slower pace than that of Africa, the church is lively here. Countries like Indonesia, where for centuries Europeans went to evangelize, are now exporting missionaries.

“If the Catholic Church wants to have a place in the future it cannot be excluded from Asia,” said Andrea Riccardi, the founder of the Sant’Egidio Community, a Catholic group close to Francis.

Francis, who as a young priest in the Jesuit religious order had wanted to go as a missionary to Japan to follow the centuries-old pursuit of his predecessors, has acknowledged the region’s importance.

He has worked to improve the Catholic Church’s relations with Vietnam as well as China and named over a dozen Asian cardinals — including from countries like East Timor and Singapore, which had never had one.

But Asia, experts say, is also a testing ground for the church, as Catholics here often coexist with bigger religious groups.

“The Catholic Church and the papacy are learning to confront themselves with a world in which Christianity is a minority,” said Massimo Faggioli, a professor of theology at Villanova University, in Pennsylvania. Asia, he said, is “the most challenging continent.”

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Nasaruddin Umar and Pope Francis shake hands and embrace. Both men wear all white.
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Francis met with Nasaruddin Umar, the grand imam of Istiqlal Mosque, in Jakarta, Indonesia, on Thursday.Credit...Pool photo by Aditya Aji

Indonesia, the main stop of the trip, encapsulated this reality. It is the country with the world’s largest Muslim population, but also home to millions of Christians. Coexistence is at the heart of its identity, even though episodes of intolerance against Christians persist.

There, Pope Francis signed an agreement with Nasaruddin Umar, the leader of Southeast Asia’s biggest mosque, as the two men exchanged affectionate embraces.

“With the pope coming here, other countries will see how we live peacefully together,” Catur Rini, 63, a Muslim woman who had come to the event in Jakarta’s Istiqlal Mosque with her Catholic high school friend. “He will share it with the world.”

In the last stop of his trip in Singapore, a financial powerhouse with only a small Catholic population, Francis filled the city-state’s national stadium with worshipers for a Mass.

Kat Calimag, 32, a veterinarian, had gone there just a few months ago to watch Taylor Swift perform. This time, too, fans screamed and cried.

“Same energy,” she said.

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A stadium is filled with a large crowd. Smiling children can be seen in the foreground.
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In Singapore, Francis filled the city-state’s national stadium with worshipers for a Mass.Credit...Guglielmo Mangiapane/Reuters
Pope Francis in Asia

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kmaherali
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Pope Says Both Trump and Harris Are ‘Against Life’

He said American Catholic voters had to choose the “lesser of two evils” because of Donald Trump’s cruelty toward immigrants, and Kamala Harris’s support of abortion rights.

Video: https://nyti.ms/3XnXQgw
Pope Francis did not endorse Kamala Harris or Donald Trump for U.S. president when asked, citing that “both are against life.”CreditCredit...Pool photo by Guglielmo Mangiapane

Asked his advice to Catholic voters in the coming U.S. presidential election, Pope Francis said they must choose the “lesser of two evils” because “both are against life” — Kamala Harris for her support for abortion rights, and Donald Trump for closing the door to immigrants.

“Sending migrants away, not allowing them to grow, not letting them have life is something wrong; it is cruelty,” Francis said in a news conference on the plane as he returned to Rome after his long trip to Southeast Asia and Oceania. “Sending a child away from the womb of the mother is murder because there is life. And we must speak clearly about these things.”

The remarks came as Francis, 87, concluded a grueling 11-day tour of the Asia-Pacific region that included stops in Jakarta, East Timor and Singapore, showcasing his commitment to reach out to the faithful in what he calls “the peripheries” and to build a less Eurocentric church that looks to Asia.

His stance on the American presidential race reflects the divide among Catholic voters in the United States, who in previous elections have been just as split between the parties as the larger electorate. The American bishops’ conference similarly advises Catholics to take the array of church teaching into account in the voting booth and does not endorse candidates — although some bishops weigh in more explicitly.

Francis described the rejection of migrants as a “grave sin” and “cruelty,” and abortion as “murder.” He said that both “are against life” and clearly wrong.

But when asked whether it would be morally admissible to vote for someone who favored the right to abortion, he responded: “One must vote. And one must choose the lesser evil. Which is the lesser evil? That lady or that gentleman? I don’t know. Each person must think and decide according to his or her own conscience.”

Francis did not mention either candidate by name.

Francis was also asked about the situation in Gaza, where more than 40,000 Palestinians have been killed in 11 months of the war that began after Hamas terrorists attacked Israel on Oct. 7 last year.

“When you see the bodies of children killed, when you hear that schools are bombed because guerrillas might be inside, it’s horrifying. It’s horrible, it’s horrible,” Francis said.

“It’s sometimes said that this is a defensive war, but sometimes I believe that it’s a war, too much, too much,” the pope said, his words faltering. “I apologize for saying this, but I don’t see steps being taken toward peace.”

Francis added that he spoke every day to a parish in Gaza where both Christians and Muslims attend its schools. “They tell me horrible stories, difficult things,” he said, adding that the Holy See had been working to help mediate a cease-fire.

Francis’s views on abortion and migration were nothing new. But they became particularly relevant in the context of the coming elections in the United States, in which both are central issues.

“Both are against life: the one that throws out migrants and the one that kills children,” Francis said.

The Roman Catholic Church considers abortion a grave sin, and Francis has often referred to abortion as murder, even in the case of a fetus that is ill or has pathological disorders. In 2018, he compared abortion to contracting “a hit man to solve a problem,” and in his most recent papal document, issued this year, he firmly restated the church’s rejection of abortion, the death penalty and euthanasia.

At the same time, he has made the plight of migrants a centerpiece of his papacy, urging compassion and charity for the millions who have been forced to leave their homelands because of war, poverty or famine.

His first trip as pope, in 2013, was to Lampedusa, the island off Italy that in recent decades has become the entry point to Europe for countless migrants crossing the Mediterranean. There, he denounced the “globalization of indifference” to their plight.

He has since relentlessly denounced human trafficking and called for safe migration routes, and has said repeatedly that rejecting migrants is a grave sin. Last month, speaking to his last general audience before the trip to Asia and the Pacific, Francis told those present in St. Peter’s Square, “It needs to be said clearly: There are those who systematically work by all means to drive away migrants, and this, when done knowingly and deliberately, is a grave sin.”

Francis has put caring for migrants and opposing abortion on equal footing, saying in a 2018 document that both were holy pursuits.

It is also not the first time Francis inserted himself into a United States presidential race. In 2016, during the Republican primary, Pope Francis suggested that Mr. Trump was “not Christian” because of his campaign promises to deport more immigrants and to force Mexico to pay for a wall along the border.

“A person who thinks only about building walls, wherever they may be, and not building bridges, is not Christian,” Francis said at the time, returning to Rome from Mexico on the papal plane.

On another in-flight news conference, he weighed in on whether communion should be given to politicians like President Biden who support abortion rights, saying that he had never denied communion to anyone.

On Friday’s flight, Francis also talked about the Vatican’s relationship to China. He has sought to improve relations with the country but still has not visited it, despite reaching a groundbreaking and sharply criticized deal on the appointment of bishops that is set to be renewed in October. Francis has continued his outreach to Asia, completing on Friday his tour of about a dozen countries in the Asia-Pacific region.

“China is a promise and a hope for the church,” he said on Friday, adding that he was happy about the discussions they were having with the country. “I would love to visit China.”

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Catholics Meet to Chart Path Forward, but Women’s Roles Remain Unclear

The ordination of female deacons is no longer on the agenda during a global assembly at the Vatican, but will be discussed separately.

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Pope Francis during a meeting with bishops, priests, deacons and other pastoral workers in Brussels on Saturday. Credit...Pool photo by Nicolas Maeterlinck
By Elisabetta Povoledo

Pope Francis had the grandest of ambitions: to tackle some of the thorniest questions facing the Roman Catholic Church.

But when bishops and lay people convene Wednesday at the Vatican to talk about its future, one of the most contentious — whether women can be ordained as deacons — has already been taken off the agenda.

The decision, which came after four years of global consultations, has angered — but hasn’t discouraged — Catholics in some parts of the world.

“You can’t erase us, you can’t dismiss this,” said Miriam Duignan, a leader of Women’s Ordination Worldwide, one of several groups supporting female deacons that will be staging various events in Rome during the gathering. “You can’t deny the reality of what Catholics have asked for or dismiss a justice issue because some people objected to it.”

For many Catholics who are demanding a more egalitarian church, the synod — as meetings of bishops are known — was seen as an opening to address major issues considered taboo until recently, including the question of female deacons, the requirement that priests be celibate and the place of L.G.B.T.Q. people in the church. Expectations were heightened when, in a historic first, Francis had allowed 54 women to participate as voting members of the 368-member assembly, which mostly comprises bishops.

Deacons are ordained ministers who can preach and perform weddings, funerals and baptisms. But they can’t celebrate Mass, a role reserved for the all-male priesthood.

Opponents to allowing female deacons see it as a first step to making them priests, which they say would violate 2,000 years of church doctrine and undermine its authority. Conversely, some historians point to documents showing that women were deacons in the early church.

Enthusiasm over the prospect of change was dampened, however, when a meeting last year ended with a document that said it was “urgent” that women have more leadership roles in the church — but punted on the issue of female deacons.

Then in February, Francis announced that the issue would be handed to a study group, which will report its findings to the pope next summer.

This month’s meeting will instead focus on how the church can more fully engage the faithful and encourage greater dialogue at all levels, within the context of the diversity of the global church.

These are not moot points; fewer men are entering the priesthood in most of the world. And even as the number of Catholics has increased, especially in Africa and Asia, there are no trustworthy statistics on how many are attending Mass and participating in the life of the church.

Many Catholics say the church has to keep pace with the reality that women already manage parishes in some areas of the world where there is a shortage of priests, like the Amazon and even in the United States.

Some bishops felt they had been given a mandate to push for greater equality, so removing the question of female deacons would disappoint their faithful. “There are expectations on the part of many of our Swiss Catholics,” said the Rev. Felix Gmür, Bishop of Basel. “The involvement and engagement of women is crucial for Switzerland.”

During his 11-year papacy, Pope Francis has opened some doors to women, changing laws to formally allow women to give readings from the Bible during Mass, act as altar servers and distribute Communion. He also named several women to high-ranking positions in the Vatican, including appointing Sister Nathalie Becquart of France as one of the synod’s top officials. But he has ruled out ordaining women as priests, and in a recent CBS interview seemed to close the door on female deacons definitively as well.

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Pope Francis at a table with a woman and three other men.
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Pope Francis during the 16th general assembly of the synod at the Vatican last year. Sister Nathalie Becquart, left, was appointed one of the synod’s top officials.Credit...Alessandra Tarantino/Associated Press

Sister Linda Pocher, a theology professor in Rome, said that Francis had invited her to organize four seminars about women in the church — including a session with a female Anglican priest — for his group of closest advisers, evidence, she believed, that the “pope has the issue of women at heart.”

But she thought that the pope had decided to postpone a decision on female deacons because there was not enough consensus.

On Tuesday evening, Francis presided over a penitential liturgy in St. Peter’s Basilica and asked for forgiveness for a host of sins, including those against women. Speaking on behalf of the church, “especially us men,” Cardinal Kevin Farrell, the prefect of the Vatican’s department for laity, family and life, asked for forgiveness, “feeling shame for all the times that we have not recognized and defended the dignity of women.”

Though female deacons won’t be discussed, women’s leadership and ministry are still on the agenda.

Some delegates said it would have been unreasonable to expect that such a global assembly could have arrived at a consensus on a wide variety of topics in the space of a month.

“We’re dealing with everything from financial issues around transparency, to how pastoral councils work, to the role of the bishop in managing cases of abuse, to L.G.B.T.Q. welcome, to polygamy, the list of what we’re dealing with in the room is just is so immense,” said Prof. Anna Rowlands, who teaches Catholic social thought and practice at Durham University in England. “There’s this tension between the time it takes to build consensus in the room, and the pressing urgency of the clamor coming from, you know, outside of the walls of the synod office and how you live with both those things.”

The Rev. James Martin, a Jesuit father who is an outspoken advocate of greater L.G.B.T.Q. inclusiveness in the church and is a delegate, said some people would inevitably be disappointed. “But I would also say that there was progress made last year because things that had never been discussed before were discussed,” he said. “And so that itself was a step forward.”

Another liberal Jesuit, the Rev. Thomas Reese, who is not a delegate, pointed out that while some North American and European Catholics hoping to see major changes might see the synod as a “complete bust,” for other areas of the world the fact that the pope “wanted to get women seats at the table is revolutionary in parts of Africa, Latin America and Asia.”

Observers said they hoped that the process of listening that Francis has enacted would inspire the bishops to act courageously. “I am still very much excited about the synodal process,” said Ellie Hidalgo, co-director of Discerning Deacons, which advocates female deacons. That’s because having the discussion, she said, allows “synod members to highlight the leadership and the ministry of women that we’re already seeing all over the world.”

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kmaherali
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Re: Christianity

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Pope Names 21 New Cardinals, Reaching Far Beyond Europe

The appointments cement Francis’ imprint on the group that will choose his successor, and reflect his vision of a more truly global Roman Catholic Church.

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Pope Francis read the list of new cardinals during his Sunday prayer at the Vatican. The ceremony to elevate them will take place next month.Credit...Massimo Percossi/EPA, via Shutterstock

By Elisabetta Povoledo
Reported from Rome

Oct. 6, 2024
In announcing on Sunday that he would appoint 21 new cardinals, Pope Francis once again elevated clerics from far beyond Catholicism’s traditional centers of power, in line with his vision of a more global, less Eurocentric church. It also further cemented his imprint on the men who will one day choose his successor.

Four of those he selected were from South American countries: Brazil, Chile, Ecuador and Peru. Also on the list were archbishops and bishops from Japan, the Philippines, Indonesia, Iran and two from Africa: the archbishop of Algiers, Jean-Paul Vesco and Archbishop Ignace Bessi Dogbo of Abidjan, Ivory Coast. Only one North American was selected, Archbishop Francis Leo of Toronto.

Francis read the list of cardinals during his Sunday Angelus prayer in St. Peter’s Square.

The new cardinals will be installed at a ceremony known as a consistory on Dec. 8, a feast day on the Catholic calendar.

It will be the 10th such ceremony since Francis was elected in 2013. Before Sunday, he had already named 92 of the 122 cardinals under 80, the age cutoff for voting in the conclave to elect his successor. Of the others, 24 were named by Pope Benedict XVI and six by St. John Paul II.

Francis, the first pope from South America, has diversified the College of Cardinals more than any of his predecessors, installing cardinals from more than 20 countries that had never been represented before. He has shifted membership away from Europe, acknowledging the growth of the Roman Catholic church in Africa, Asia and Latin America, even as church attendance has gradually declined in parts of Europe.

The shift was perceptible in two almost back-to-back trips last month: a tour in the Asia-Pacific region where adoring crowds greeted Francis, in some cases after walking through jungle for days to see him, and a trip to Luxembourg and Belgium, where the reception was more fraught.

Experts said the trips reflected the reality of a changing church.

Referring to Africa and Asia, Alberto Melloni, a church historian, said that Francis “is convinced that down there, the church is coming to life,” while in Europe, “the church is dying.”

On the list announced Sunday were Vatican officials who have positions that have not traditionally carried the rank of cardinal, including an official who works with migrants, the Rev. Fabio Baggio and the official who organizes Francis’ foreign trips, Monsignor George Koovakad, who was born in India.

The Rev. Timothy Radcliffe, a British theologian who is one of the spiritual advisers for a meeting underway at the Vatican this month to chart the future of the church, will also be made a cardinal.

Acknowledging the ongoing war in Ukraine, Francis also appointed Bishop Mykola Bychok, the head of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church in Melbourne, Australia, who at 44 will be the youngest cardinal. Dominique Joseph Mathieu, the Belgian-born bishop of Teheran-Ispahan, Iran, was also named.

In the 1970s, Pope Paul VI set a limit capping the number of cardinals who could vote for a new pope at 120. Both John Paul II and Benedict exceeded that limit; Francis did so too with his previous set of appointments, last year.

He has considerably upped that total with Sunday’s appointments: 20 of the 21 new cardinals will be under 80, increasing the chances that his successor will share his vision of a more pastoral, inclusive church.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/06/worl ... 778d3e6de3
kmaherali
Posts: 25705
Joined: Thu Mar 27, 2003 3:01 pm

Re: Christianity

Post by kmaherali »

Memorize Nearly 1,000 Bible Verses? For These Young Christians, It’s Game On.

The National Bible Bee competition, which is fast rising in popularity, demands feats of memorization that make the National Spelling Bee look like a game of tic-tac-toe.

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Daniel Chew, 9, won the finals for his age group at the National Bible Bee Championships this week in Orlando, Fla.

Daniel Chew’s hobbies include baking cookies and “steel challenge,” a sport that involves shooting a series of steel discs as quickly and accurately as possible. But lately, the 9-year-old from Sugar Land, Texas, has been spending most of his free time memorizing Bible verses.

On Thursday morning under spotlights on a stage in Orlando, Fla., Daniel smoothly recited 19 verses from the New Testament book of Romans to win the finals for his age group at the 16th annual National Bible Bee.

“For I say, through the grace given to me, to everyone who is among you, not to think of himself more highly than he ought to think,” Daniel began, reciting the 350-word passage from Romans 12.

He was one of about 360 children and teenagers assembled this week for a competition whose slogan is “To know God’s Word and make Him known.”

The Bee has achieved a quiet kind of celebrity status in some Christian circles, and video clips of its young competitors sometimes circulate beyond those communities on social media. The competition demands astonishing feats of memorization that make the televised National Spelling Bee look like a game of tic-tac-toe. Competitors at Daniel’s level memorized more than 570 verses, which they were expected to be able to recite on command.

At the senior level, ages 15 to 18, participants memorize 938 Bible verses, adding up to more than 20,000 words. In some rounds of competition, making even a single error in a long passage — an errant plural or wrong verb tense — leads to elimination.

ImageOnstage, a huge signs says “Truth” with a cross underneath, and contestants stand with their hands clasped.
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About 360 contestants assembled for the competition this week.
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Daniel Chew, in a blue dress shirt and tie, is joyfully embraced by his siblings, as other contestants look on.
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Daniel Chew’s family rushed the stage to embrace him after his win. Cyan Urrego, right, looks on.

Parents and children devote considerable time and resources to the Bee, and find meaning and life lessons that go beyond the thrill of competition.

“This is a family commitment,” said Diego Urrego, 43, whose daughter, Cyan, 10, placed third in her age group this year.

Mr. Urrego and his wife, Claudia, maintain a spreadsheet with the competition’s hundreds of passages, sticking to a monthslong daily memorization plan for Cyan and her older brother. In the run-up to the Bee, the children paused soccer practices and games, studying several hours every night except Sundays. A family mantra: “No time to waste.”

(The Bee is not typically open to outsiders, but a reporter from The New York Times was allowed to attend on the condition that she spoke only with attendees who had given their approval to organizers in advance. The Bee’s executive director, Brian Mullins, said he did not want to distract or alarm families in a high-pressure atmosphere where they did not expect journalists to be present.)

The event’s official T-shirt this year read, “Truth over everything.”

And the Urregos, who live in Southern California, see the Bible Bee as an anchor for their children in a society where, they said, “truth” is contested by artificial intelligence and pluralism.

“This is the truth, especially in a culture where we don’t even know what the truth is anymore,” Mr. Urrego said. “Everybody wants to have their own truth.”


This Instagram post is from the 2023 Bible Bee.

Memorization of sacred texts is embedded in many religious traditions. For conservative Protestants in particular, memorizing Bible verses has long played a role in Sunday school classes and church youth clubs like Awana.

But memorization seems to be having a resurgence, through events like the Bible Bee and ScriptureFest, a series of regional performances. The rise coincides with a broader emphasis on recitation in many home-school and classical school curriculums, which have shaped many Bible Bee competitors.

Participation has grown significantly since its first gathering in 2009, and it has doubled since 2021, according to Mr. Mullins. This year, almost 13,000 young people took part in the summer training program that feeds into the competition, a record “by far,” he said.

“Memorization speaks not only to the mind but also to the soul,” said Michael P. Farris, the chair of the Shelby Kennedy Foundation, the producer of the Bible Bee. Mr. Farris, a high-profile conservative lawyer, recalled his childhood Sunday school teacher promising a reward of a hamburger, milkshake and fries for any child who could memorize and recite 1 Corinthians 13. (In his recollection, he was the only child who did so.)

The prizes at the Bible Bee are considerably more valuable. This year’s senior winner, Maret Haab of Jenison, Mich., 18, will take home $50,000. Daniel Chew earned $10,000 for winning the primary level, ages 7 to 10, and his older sister, Abby, 14, won $20,000 for winning at the junior level, ages 11 to 14.

The contest is particularly popular among home-schooling families like the Chews, who first heard about it a decade ago through the Home School Legal Defense Association, an advocacy group founded by Mr. Farris. The organization’s partners include prominent conservative Christian groups including the Family Research Council, Alliance Defending Freedom and Patrick Henry College.

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A teenage girl recites a Bible verse on stage, behind a podium.
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Hosanna Brown, like other contestants, earned points by recognizing Bible verses from descriptions read by judges. They recited the verses after identifying them.

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A young contestant stands on a black box in order to reach his podium.
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In the national competition, children as young as 7 can participate.

But word of mouth, and, as Mr. Mullins described it, an increasing interest in intense Bible study has expanded the Bee’s base in recent years.

With sweeping spotlights, dramatic music and celebrity hosts, the Bee’s production values resemble “The Voice” more than a church basement.

Yet the competitors themselves represent a kind of demure poise and wholesomeness for which many Americans are nostalgic. The contestants called adults “ma’am” and “sir.” The boys onstage had tucked in their shirts; almost every girl wore her hair and hemlines long. At one point in the final, Abby Chew raised her hand to inform the judges that she had been mistakenly awarded points for an incorrect answer. In the audience, rows of younger siblings sat still for hours in almost miraculous silence.

Boys and girls seem to excel equally at the competition. But it is otherwise a space that celebrates traditional gender roles.

“I desire to be a wife and mother and raise a godly home-schooling family,” one finalist in the junior level told the judges when asked about her goals.


This Instagram post is from the 2023 Bible Bee.

Competitors opt to memorize in one of five popular translations, including the King James Version and the English Standard Version. Many passages are complex, dense with the names of ancient kings and tribes.

Selections this year included verses like, “Then King Nebuchadnezzar sent to gather the satraps, the prefects, and the governors, the counselors, the treasurers, the justices, the magistrates, and all the officials of the provinces.”

In other parts of the competition, competitors also answer questions on general Bible knowledge, such as “According to Jeremiah 52, who was King Nebuchadnezzar’s captain/commander that set fire to Jerusalem?”

The answer was Nebuzaradan, which three of five contestants answered correctly.

Many families see Bible memorization as a path to instill discipline, organizational skills and comfort with public speaking. But it is more than just an intellectual or practical pursuit.

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A contestant stands on a darkened stage and looks at the judges, who face him from the audience.
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Almost 13,000 young people attended a summer training program that feeds into the competition.
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Jason Benham, in a dress shirt, is backstage, holding cue cards that say, Bible Bee.
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One of the hosts, Jason Benham, reviewed cue cards in the green room.

The children who compete are “going to go out into the culture and have a tremendous impact for the kingdom of God,” said Heidi St. John, a co-host, during the event’s final day. “Your kids are ready for this fight.”

In an interview backstage, Ms. St. John, a home-schooling advocate in Washington State who ran for Congress in 2022, and her co-hosts, David and Jason Benham, identical twin entrepreneurs, agreed that the Bee’s training would have an influence both in American culture and in the families who participate.

“Think about children today, right now, struggling with anxiety, suicide, depression at an all-time high, fentanyl abuse, all of this,” David Benham said. He quoted a verse in the gospel of John, in which Jesus promises his followers the gift of peace.

“This is a gift that social media is not going to give you,” he said. “This is a gift that money is not going to give you, or illicit sex is not going to give you, or switching your gender is not going to give you.”

On Thursday evening, after the competition was over, many competitors and their families gathered in a lobby outside the hotel ballroom for an informal social.

There was barely a cellphone to be seen. Younger children passed the time playing Uno, arm-wrestling and signing one another’s autograph books. Hundreds of teenagers, and a few parents, assembled in rows to dance the Virginia reel to music piped from a portable speaker. They looked relaxed and happy as they swung their partners, arm-in-arm and in unison.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/15/us/n ... 778d3e6de3
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