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A theme Blessed Pope John XXIII began, and was picked up by numerous other popes including Blessed John Paul II and now Benedict XVI was the idea of a New Pentecost.

As we enter this Easter season with such hope and joy in the face of a deeply troubled nation and world, I can only imagine those first disciples facing much the same thing. The joy of their risen Lord among them must have been the most exciting, hopeful and joyful of times. Yet, they found themselves surrounded by a religious community and a foreign occupation that would attempt to thwart them at every turn.
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I wanted to apologize for the HUB being down this past couple weeks. We had some major issues with our servers and just got it all resolved. Hopefully, we are all good to go beginning today.

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This is, of course, a most important day in our liturgical calendar. Ash Wednesday represents not only the beginning of a new penitential season in that calendar but a proper reflective moment in our annual lives where we stop and think.  This idea of stopping and contemplating is, for us, a calling we have received from Christ and the Church. Of course this is the very sense of Sabbath rest. A practice far too few of us enter into, and so a day of "ashes" is particularly well suited to this. [more]

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As I listened to all of Pope Benedict's many wonderful messages this past month, the thought came to me that his instruction and encouragement is wonderful. What is lacking is the courage to follow through by too many of us. We are like running backs to whom the quarterback is holding the ball out for us to take and run with it, but we are hesitant, not quite ready to hit the "wall" of the culture we find ourselves in today. [more]

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While American society often exalts individualism, the Catholic tradition teaches that human beings grow and achieve fulfillment in community. The reality of the Church as Communion is, then, the integrating aspect, indeed the central content of the “mystery,” or rather, the divine plan for the salvation of humanity. People are called to joy. Nevertheless, each day they experience many forms of suffering and pain.
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This is the message of Pope Benedict XVI this year for World Peace. “We cannot ignore the fact that some currents of modern culture, built upon rationalist and individualist economic principles, have cut off the concept of justice from its transcendent roots, detaching it from charity and solidarity,” writes the pontiff, echoing an earlier Vatican Committee’s statement in support of the Occupy Wall Street movements around the world that protest laissez-faire Capitalism, the concentration of wealth and the economic philosophy of Ayn Rand. In place of these unfair social principles, the pope calls for “adequate mechanisms for the redistribution of wealth." If Benedict XVI were a candidate for the presidency of the United States, his call for “redistribution of wealth” would be controversial. Can it be dismissed as left-wing socialism? No doubt enemies of Catholic social justice will tar the pontiff in this way. But the ideal “from each according to his ability; to each according to his need,” doesn’t originate with Marx. It comes from the Acts of the Apostles (4:34-35; 1:44-45).
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