Calendar of events

PARISH, FAMILY AND SCHOOL EVENTS
FLOWOOD St. Paul, Homecoming outdoor celebration, Saturday, June 4, Mass at 4:30 p.m., food and fellowship follow. Celebration will take place on the hill behind the church. Details: church office (601) 992-9547.

HERNANDO Holy Spirit, Memorial Day Boston Butt Sale, Last day to order is Monday, May 23. Pick-up day is Friday, May 27. Details: see a member of the men’s association after Mass or call Sal Galtelli 429-5071.

MADISON St. Francis, Parish Family Picnic, Sunday, May 22 after 10:30 a.m. Mass. Picnic is full of activities for children, along with food and fellowship for all. Details: church office (601) 856-5556.

MERIDIAN St. Patrick and St. Joseph communities, Pentecost Mass and picnic, June 5. Celebration will be held at the East Bank at Okatibbee Lake in Collinsville at 10 a.m. Details: church office (601) 693-1321.

OLIVE BRANCH Queen of Peace, Knights of Columbus Spaghetti Fundraiser, Sunday, May 22 after Mass. Dine in or carry out. $8 per plate; $25 per family; $2 smoked sausage ($1 half); $10 quart gravy and $5 quart slaw. Details: church office (662) 895-5007.

Queen of Peace, Knights of Columbus Indoor Yard Sale, Saturday, June 4 at 8 a.m. Details: Leonard Temple (901) 606-1959.

PONTOTOC St. Christopher Catholic Friendship Camp, ages 7-11, June 12-18; and ages 12-14, June 19-25. Details: Heidi Stephens campsm@juno.com or https://www.campfriendshipmississippi.com.
WEST POINT Immaculate Conception, Blood Drive, Wednesday, May 25 from 1-7 p.m. in Parish Hall. Details: Register at vitalant.org or call (877) 258-4825. Blood drive code: iccatholic.

VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL
CLARKSDALE St. Elizabeth, VBS 2022, Monumental: Celebrating God’s Greatness, June 20-24 at St. Elizabeth School. Details: Catelin Britt (662) 902-6478.

OLIVE BRANCH VBS for 6th-8th grades, Wednesday June 15 from 6-9 p.m. VBS for K-5th grade, June 20-24, 9 a.m. till 12 p.m., volunteers are needed. Details: Kelly Murguia (662) 216-9896.

HERNANDO Holy Spirit, VBS June 13-17 from 6:15-8 p.m. Look for table in the Narthex with registration forms. Details: church office (662) 429-7851.

NATCHEZ St. Mary Basilica, VBS, July 11-15, Evening hours. More information to be announced soon.

PEARL St. Jude, Family Style VBS Wednesday evenings, June 8, 15, 22 and 29 starts at 6:30 p.m. following Mass. Join us family style for a picnic supper, Bible story, Saint of the week and games. Crafts will be take home. All activities will be outdoors, weather permitting. Registration coming soon. Details: church office (601) 939-3181.

MADISON St. Francis, VBS 2022: The Jesus Expedition, June 20-24 for all children going into Pre-K4 through fourth grades. Registration will begin in May if enough volunteers sign up to assist with the camp. Details: Mary Catherine at mc.george@stfrancismadison.org.

MERIDIAN St. Patrick, Vacation Bible School, July 18-22. More information coming soon.

YOUTH
SEARCH RETREAT July 22-24 at Camp Wesley Pines in Gallman. Also accepting staff applications. This retreat is open to those who are just completing their sophomore, junior or senior year of high school. Graduating seniors will have priority registration. Registration deadline is June 12. Details: https://bit.ly/37wUAcA or abbey.schuhmann@jacksondiocese.org.

JOB OPENINGS
CATHOLIC SCHOOLS Catholic schools across the diocese have a variety of positions open from principals to substitutes. Please visit https://schools.jacksondiocese.org/education-overview/employment/ for an opportunity near you.

DIOCESE The Department of Faith Formation in the Diocese of Jackson is looking for a full-time Coordinator of the Office of Young Adults and Campus Ministry. The coordinator supervises and participates in the diocesan efforts for ministry to and with young adults, college students, youth and the various staff and volunteers who assist with these ministries from the parishes and schools. The successful candidate will be a collaborative member of a dynamic formation team. Please contact fran.lavelle@jacksondiocese.org if you have questions. Please send a cover letter and resume to by June 3 to be considered.

Leaked draft of Supreme Court opinion indicates overturn of Roe decision

By Carol Zimmermann
WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court appears set to overturn its Roe v. Wade decision, which legalized abortion for nearly 50 years, according to a leaked initial draft of a court opinion obtained by Politico and published online the evening of May 2.

Just minutes after the leak was published, reactions were fast and furious on social media, and barricades were erected around the Supreme Court. Many people gathered at the court in protest and some, including students from The Catholic University of America, were there to pray the rosary.

The draft opinion, written by Justice Samuel Alito, said Roe “was egregiously wrong from the start” and that “Roe and Casey must be overruled.” Casey v. Planned Parenthood is the 1992 decision that affirmed Roe.

Lights burn inside U.S. Supreme Court offices in Washington May 2, 2022, after the leak of a draft majority opinion written by Justice Samuel Alito preparing for a majority of the court to overturn the landmark Roe v. Wade abortion rights decision later this year. (CNS photo/Jonathan Ernst, Reuters)

Alito’s opinion said the court’s 1973 Roe decision had exceptionally weak reasoning “and the decision has had damaging consequences. And far from bringing about a national settlement of the abortion issue, Roe and Casey have enflamed debate and deepened division,” he wrote.

He also said abortion policies should be determined on the state level. 

Politico’s report says Alito’s opinion is supported by Justices Clarence Thomas, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett and that Justices Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan were working on dissents. It was not clear how Chief Justice John Roberts planned to vote.
The 98-page draft, which includes a 31-page appendix of historical state abortion laws, is an opinion in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization – a case about Mississippi’s ban on abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy with the potential to also overturn Roe.

The fact that the opinion was leaked also caused significant reaction, because this is unprecedented in the court’s recent history, especially with such a big case.

A May 3 statement by the Supreme Court verified that the draft opinion reported on “is authentic” but that it “does not represent a decision by the Court or the final position of any member on the issues in the case.”

Roberts, in his own statement, emphasized the significance of the leaked document, which he said was a “singular and egregious breach of that trust that is an affront to the Court and the community of public servants who work here.”

He also said that if this action was “intended to undermine the integrity of our operations, it will not succeed. The work of the Court will not be affected in any way.” He said he has directed the Marshal of the Court to launch an investigation into the source of the leak.

Politico acknowledged that “deliberations on controversial cases have in the past been fluid. Justices can and sometimes do change their votes as draft opinions circulate and major decisions can be subject to multiple drafts and vote-trading, sometimes until just days before a decision is unveiled.”

“The court’s holding will not be final until it is published, likely in the next two months,” it added.
But that does not stop the firestorm of speculation and discussion.

A tweet from scotusblog, which reports on the Supreme Court, said: “It’s impossible to overstate the earthquake this will cause inside the Court, in terms of the destruction of trust among the Justices and staff. This leak is the gravest, most unforgivable sin.”

Pro-life groups praised the court’s potential decision but some also questioned the motivation behind the leak and wondered if the court was being manipulated by this action.

A May 2 tweet by Jeanne Mancini, president of the March for Life Education and Defense Fund, said her organization would “not be providing comment on an official decision of #scotus possible leak until a decision is officially announced.”

Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito Jr., a Catholic, is seen during a group portrait session at the Supreme Court in Washington Nov. 30, 2018. (CNS photo/Jim Young, Reuters)

“We also believe that given the leak the court should issue a ruling as soon as possible. This leak was meant to corrupt the process. It is heartbreaking that some abortion advocates will stoop to any level to intimidate the court no matter what the consequences,” she added.
Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of the Susan B. Anthony List, also expressed some skepticism but also praise for the potential decision.

“If the draft opinion made public tonight is the final opinion of the court, we wholeheartedly applaud the decision,” she said in a statement adding: “If Roe is indeed overturned, our job will be to build consensus for the strongest protections possible for unborn children and women in every legislature.”

Those on the other side of the issue were similarly taken aback by the leak but also by the potential impact of the decision if it ultimately echoes the draft opinion.

American Civil Liberties Union tweeted: “If the Supreme Court does indeed issue a majority opinion along the lines of the leaked draft authored by Justice Alito, the shift in the tectonic plates of abortion rights will be as significant as any opinion the Court has ever issued.”

And Planned Parenthood said in a May 2 tweet: “Let’s be clear: This is a draft opinion. It’s outrageous, it’s unprecedented, but it is not final.”

During oral arguments in this case last December, a majority of the justices indicate that they would uphold Mississippi’s abortion ban after 15 weeks of pregnancy, which was struck down by a federal District Court in Mississippi in 2018 and upheld a year later by the New Orleans-based U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit.

A 15-week ban is not a “dramatic departure from viability,” Roberts said.

The point of viability – when a fetus is said to be able to survive on its own – was key to the discussion because the Supreme Court has consistently ruled that states cannot restrict abortion before 24 weeks or when a fetus is said to be able to survive on its own.

In the draft opinion, Alito said Roe’s viability distinction “makes no sense.”

If this draft is adopted by the court, it means a ruling in favor of the Mississippi abortion ban. If it goes further to overturn Roe, there would be stricter limits to abortion in parts of the U.S., particularly the South and Midwest, with several states set to immediately impose broad abortion bans.

(Contributing to this report was Kurt Jensen.)

Las asignaciones abren la puerta a una “nueva vida” para los pastores

Por Obispo Joseph R. Kopacz, D.D.
Con la imagen del Buen Pastor ante nosotros y con su voz resonando en nuestros corazones y mentes, al centro del tiempo Pascual, encomendemos los sacerdotes de nuestra diócesis a nuestro crucificado y resucitado Señor, aquellos que se esfuerzan por seguir sus pasos, especialmente aquellos que anticipan cambios en el tiempo que se avecina.

En particular, pedimos la bendición de Dios sobre el Diácono Andrew Bowden, a quien ordenare al sacerdocio de Jesucristo para la Diócesis de Jackson, este sábado 14 de mayo en nuestra Catedral de San Pedro Apóstol.

Obispo Joseph R. Kopacz

Durante el último fin de semana del cuarto domingo de Pascua, que siempre está dedicado al Buen Pastor, una cohorte de nuestros sacerdotes se dirigió a sus congregaciones para informarles que serían transferidos, para pastorear otros rebaños que necesitan un pastor ya sea por jubilaciones o salidas en la Diócesis de Jackson.
Algunos están empacando y mudándose físicamente en una variedad de períodos de tiempo, mientras que otros permanecen en su lugar pero se esfuerzan generosamente para pastorear comunidades parroquiales adicionales. Como muchos saben, los cambios significativos en la vida no son fáciles y requieren mucho tiempo y energía.

El fin de semana pasado, con la imagen del Buen Pastor ante mí, reflexioné sobre las transiciones, durante los últimos 45 años, en mi vida como sacerdote y pude recordar los sentimientos que me atravesaron durante los cambios de asignación, incluso después de muchos años.

Hay un morir que ocurre, con cada cambio de lo que era, también con un sacerdote cuando deja una parroquia, donde conoce a muchos por su nombre y cuyas voces resuenan con los recuerdos de las experiencias pastorales del nacimiento y la muerte, y cada etapa intermedia. Lo desconocido que aguarda puede evocar sentimientos de ansiedad e incertidumbre.

Recuerdo un cambio en una asignación en la que la gente me dio una gran despedida una noche y a la mañana siguiente, el monaguillo de la Misa en la nueva parroquia me miró con curiosidad y me preguntó: “¿Cuál es tu nombre, por favor?” Sonreí interiormente en ese momento y dije: “sí, es un nuevo día.”

Es el ciclo de morir y resucitar que experimentamos en la muerte y resurrección del Buen Pastor. Para el sacerdote trasladado puede haber duelo en la separación y sin embargo un cambio de destino parroquial abre la puerta a una nueva vida en el pastoreo de las personas, familias y comunidades de fe que el Señor nos confía.

Con cada “dejarse llevar” y partir, aguarda una nueva vida. Aún así, no es fácil y lleva tiempo que todos se adapten, el nuevo pastor y la gente, para establecer relaciones de confianza, respeto y amor.

Que nuestra oración se eleve al cielo por todos nuestros sacerdotes a quienes el Señor llama para ser buenos pastores.

San Pedro exhortaba a los líderes pastorales de su época con las siguientes palabras: “Cuiden de las ovejas de Dios que han sido puestas a su cargo; háganlo de buena voluntad, como Dios quiere, y no forzadamente ni por ambición de dinero, sino de buena gana.” (1 Pedro 5:2)

En cualquier parroquia y circunstancia que nuestros sacerdotes y líderes pastorales nos encontremos, que podamos servir con el corazón y la mente de Jesucristo.

La voz del Señor es para todos los bautizados.

Assignments open door to ‘new life’ for shepherds

May our prayer rise up to
heaven for all of our priests whom the Lord calls to serve as
good shepherds.

By Bishop Joseph R. Kopacz, D.D.
With the image of the Good Shepherd before us in the center of the Easter season, and with his voice resounding in our hearts and minds, let us commend to our crucified and risen Lord the priests of our diocese who strive to follow in his footsteps, especially those who are anticipating changes in the time ahead.

In particular, we ask God’s blessing upon Deacon Andrew Bowden whom I will be ordaining to the priesthood of Jesus Christ for the Diocese of Jackson this Saturday, May 14 at our Cathedral of Saint Peter the Apostle.

Bishop Joseph R. Kopacz

Over last weekend on the fourth Sunday of Easter which is always dedicated to the Good Shepherd, a cohort of our priests addressed their congregations to inform them that they would be transferred to shepherd other flocks in the Diocese of Jackson who are in need of a pastor due to retirements or departures.

Some are packing up and physically leaving after assorted lengths of time, while others are remaining in place but are generously stretching themselves to shepherd additional parish communities. As many know, significant changes in life are not easy and require considerable time and energy.

Last weekend with the image of the Good Shepherd before me I reflected upon the transitions in my life as a priest over the past 45 years and could recall the feelings that coursed through me during assignment changes, even after many years.

There is a dying that occurs with every change to what was, and so too with a priest when he leaves one parish where he knows many by name and whose voices echo with the memories of pastoral experiences of birth and death, and every stage in between. The unknown that awaits can evoke anxious feelings and uncertainty.

I remember one change in assignment where the people gave me a great send-off one evening, and on the next morning the altar server at Mass in the new parish looked at me curiously and asked, “and what’s your name again?” I smiled inwardly in that moment and said, “yes, it’s a new day.”

It is the cycle of dying and rising that we experience in the death and resurrection of the Good Shepherd. For the transferred priest there could be grieving in the separation, and yet a change in a parochial assignment opens the door to new life in the shepherding of individuals, families and communities of faith whom the Lord entrusts to us.

With each “letting-go” and departure new life awaits. Still, it is not easy, and it takes time for everyone to adjust, the new pastor and people, in order to establish relationships of trust, respect and love.
May our prayer rise up to heaven for all of our priests whom the Lord calls to serve as good shepherds.
St. Peter exhorted the pastoral leaders of his day with the following words: “Care for the flock that God has entrusted to you. Watch over it willingly, not grudgingly — not for what you will get out of it, but because you are eager to serve God.” (1Peter 5:2)

In whatever parish and circumstances our priests and pastoral leaders find ourselves, may we serve with the heart and mind of Jesus Christ.

The voice of the Lord is for all of the baptized.

Click here for list of pastoral assignments

Faith, fortitude, martyrdom, miracles: Pope will recognize 10 new saints

By Cindy Wooden
VATICAN CITY (CNS) – After a long pandemic pause, Pope Francis is scheduled to celebrate a Mass May 15 for the canonization of 10 men and women: five from Italy, three from France, one from India and one from the Netherlands.

The 10, listed in the order the Congregation for Saints’ Causes lists them, are:
– Blessed Devasahayam Pillai, an Indian layman and father who was born to an upper-caste Hindu family in 1712 and converted to Christianity in 1745. The Vatican said his refusal to participate in Hindu ceremonies and his preaching about “the equality of all people,” denying the Hindu caste system, led to his arrest, torture and his death in 1752.

– Blessed César de Bus, the France-born founder of the Fathers of Christian Doctrine, a religious congregation dedicated to education, pastoral ministry and catechesis. Born in 1544, he enjoyed life and parties until he had a conversion experience in his early 30s and began dedicating his life to prayer and helping the poor. Ordained to the priesthood in 1582, he was a pioneer in educating the laity in the faith, using illustrations he painted himself and songs and poetry he wrote. He died in 1607.

– Blessed Luigi Maria Palazzolo, an Italian priest and founder of the Congregation of the Sisters of the Poor. Born in 1827, he was ordained to the priesthood in 1850. The Vatican biography said, “At that time there was an abundance of clergy and, like the majority of priests from wealthy families who stayed at home and generously dedicated themselves to good works, Don Luigi chose to devote himself to young people” at an oratory in a poor neighborhood. He opened a school that offered evening classes in reading and writing to men and boys before opening a separate oratory for girls and founding the Sisters of the Poor to run it.

– Blessed Giustino Maria Russolillo, an Italian who, on the day of his ordination to the priesthood in 1913, vowed to establish a religious order dedicated to promoting vocations to the priesthood and religious life, but his first attempt was stopped by his bishop. Eventually, though, he founded the Society of Divine Vocations for men and the Vocationist Sisters.

– Blessed Charles de Foucauld was born in Strasbourg, France, in 1858. He strayed from the faith during his adolescence, but during a trip to Morocco, he saw how devoted Muslims were to their faith, which inspired him to return to the church and, eventually, to join the Trappists. After living in monasteries in France and in Syria, he sought an even more austere life as a hermit. Ordained to the priesthood in 1901, he lived among the poor and finally settled in Tamanrasset, Algeria. In 1916, he was killed by a band of marauders. His writings inspired the foundation, after his death, of the Little Brothers of Jesus and the Little Sisters of Jesus.

– Blessed Anna Maria Rubatto, founder of the order now known as the Capuchin Sisters of Mother Rubatto, was born in Carmagnola, Italy, in 1844 and died in Montevideo, Uruguay, in 1904.
The miracle accepted in her cause involved the healing in March 2000 in Colonia, Uruguay, of a young man suffering from “cranio-encephalic trauma with severe subarachnoid hemorrhage, severe coma, endocranial hypertension and diffuse axonal damage,” the Congregation for Saints’ Causes said.

– Blessed Maria Domenica Mantovani, co-founder and first superior general of the Little Sisters of the Holy Family. Born in 1862 in Castelletto di Brenzone, Italy, she dedicated her life to serving the poor and needy as well as assisting the sick and the elderly. She died in 1934.

The miracle in her case involved the healing in 2011 of a 12-year-old girl in Argentina who, during a medical procedure, suffered convulsions, cardiac arrest and respiratory failure. Touched with a relic of Blessed Mantovani and supported by the prayers of her family, the girl was extubated two days later and went on to recover, the Vatican said.

– Blessed Titus Brandsma was born in Oegeklooster, Netherlands, in 1881 and entered the Carmelites in 1898. Ordained in 1905, he was sent to Rome for further studies and, while there, became a correspondent for several Dutch newspapers and magazines. When he returned home, he founded the magazine Karmelrozen and, in 1935, was named chaplain to the Dutch Catholic journalists’ association. During World War II, he was arrested and sent to Dachau for treason after defending Jews and encouraging Catholic newspapers not to print Nazi propaganda. He was killed with a lethal injection in 1942 at the age of 61 and cremated at the camp.

The miracle in his cause involved Carmelite Father Michael Driscoll, former pastor of St. Jude Church in Boca Raton, Florida, who is now 80 years old. In 2004 he had been diagnosed with severe, stage 4, metastatic melanoma and began praying to Blessed Titus and putting a relic of the martyr’s clothing on his head and neck. When the medical board of the Congregation for Saints’ Causes looked at the case, the Vatican said, “of the disease, which was particularly malignant and invasive, there was no longer any trace, even after more than 15 years.”

– Blessed Marie Rivier, a Frenchwoman who founded the Sisters of the Presentation of Mary in 1796 during the time of the French Revolution, when many Catholic convents were closed and religious activities were outlawed. She was born in 1768 and died in 1838.

– Blessed Carolina Santocanale, also known as Blessed Mary of Jesus, an Italian nun born in 1852, who founded the Congregation of the Capuchin Sisters of the Immaculate of Lourdes. She died in Palermo in 1923.

Follow Wooden on Twitter: @Cindy_Wooden

“Todo estará bien …… y todo tipo de cosas estarán bien”.

Lady Julian de Norwich y la lección de la esperanza

Por Melvin Arrington

La aclamada mística inglesa conocida como Lady Julian o Dame Julian (o Juliana) de Norwich (c. 1342 – c. 1416) fue, con toda probabilidad, una monja benedictina cuyo nombre de nacimiento se ha perdido en la historia. Lady Julian vivió durante el siglo XIV, una época que la historiadora Barbara Tuchman en su estudio clásico A Distant Mirror caracterizó como “calamitosa”. Esos fueron en verdad tiempos oscuros y peligrosos asediados por plagas, guerras, pogromos, hambrunas y cismas. Sin embargo, a pesar de todos los trastornos sociales, así como de sus propias tribulaciones personales, Julian se mantuvo sorprendentemente optimista y esperanzada.

Melvin Arrington, Jr

En 1373 enfermó de muerte, una condición por la que realmente había orado en un esfuerzo por unirse a Cristo en el sufrimiento. El 8 de mayo de ese año, mientras estaba cerca de la muerte, Juliano recibió 16 visiones (o “apariciones”) de Nuestro Señor, comenzando con la Corona de Espinas. Aunque afirmaba ser una “simple criatura iletrada” (probablemente una referencia a no saber latín), escribió, poco después de su recuperación, un volumen de meditaciones basado en estas visiones. Esta obra, Revelations of Divine Love, ahora considerada un clásico de la espiritualidad occidental, también se destaca por ser el primer libro en inglés escrito por una mujer.

Julian produjo dos versiones de las Revelaciones, ambas escritas en inglés medio: el “Texto corto”, que contiene 25 capítulos, compuesto poco después de recibir las “proyecciones”, y el “Texto largo”, que consta de 86 capítulos, escrito durante un período de veinte años. Este último ofreció un relato más detallado como una forma de explicar y aclarar el significado de las visiones.

Después de su roce con la muerte, se retiró del mundo y vivió el resto de su vida como anacoreta o una reclusa urbana, confinada en una pequeña habitación parecida a una celda adjunta o “anclada” a el muro exterior de la Iglesia de San Julián en Norwich, Inglaterra, la misma iglesia por cuyo nombre la conocemos hoy. Pasó esos últimos años meditando en las 16 revelaciones y ofreciendo consejos espirituales a todos los que venían a buscar su consejo.

Me interesé por primera vez en la vida y los escritos de esta santa mujer el otoño pasado mientras me recuperaba de una enfermedad que amenazaba mi vida. A diferencia de la enfermedad de Julián, que ella le había pedido a Dios, la mía me fue impuesta. Recuerdo que el médico de la sala de emergencias me dijo: “Bueno, parece que vas a sobrevivir”. ¿Qué? ¡Espera un minuto! ¿Sobrevivir? ¡Mi situación no podía ser tan grave! Pero así fue, y como pronto supe, me enfrentaba a varios meses de terapia con medicamentos y tiempo de recuperación. Más adelante en esa conversación, el médico comentó que no podía entender cómo había llegado vivo al hospital. Aquí está mi explicación: Dios debe haber intervenido en mi nombre y realizó un milagro porque tenía algo más para mí. Los milagros ocurren, y cuando ocurren, es por una razón. Me hago eco de todo corazón del presidente Reagan, quien, después del atentado contra su vida, dijo: “Ahora sé que los días que me quedan le pertenecen a Él”.

Para el observador moderno, el hecho de que Julian orara por una enfermedad que le causaría un sufrimiento terrible y la llevaría a las puertas de la muerte es más que desconcertante. ¿Se hizo esta petición inusual en un esfuerzo por purgar algún pecado mortal? no lo sabemos, Pero claramente, ella creía que a través de su agonía podría acercarse más a Jesús y, por lo tanto, llegar a ser más como Él. En cuanto a mí, mi terrible experiencia me acercó a Nuestro Señor de una manera que nunca antes había conocido y me dio un renovado sentido de esperanza. Él verdaderamente puede sacar algo bueno de una mala situación. (Romanos 8:28)

Según el Catecismo, por la virtud teologal de la esperanza “queremos el reino de los cielos y la vida eterna como nuestra felicidad, confiando en las promesas de Cristo y confiando no en nuestras propias fuerzas, sino en la ayuda de la gracia del Espíritu Santo.” (CCC 1817) Además, esta virtud “guarda al hombre del desánimo; lo sostiene en los momentos de abandono; abre su corazón a la espera de la bienaventuranza eterna”. (CCC 1818) El Catecismo añade que la esperanza “nos da alegría incluso en la prueba”. (CCC 1820) Durante el encuentro cercano de Juliana con la muerte, ella pudo reclamar esta alegría por las palabras tranquilizadoras que Nuestro Señor le había dicho, las mismas palabras con las que la recordamos hoy: “Todo estará bien, y todo estará bien, y todo estará bien.”

Aunque a veces se le conoce con el título de “Santo” o “Bendito”, este notable místico inglés nunca fue canonizado ni beatificado oficialmente. Sin embargo, la iglesia la conmemora el 13 de mayo; además, el Catecismo (CCC 313) la cita como autoridad. Las lecciones importantes que ella nos puede enseñar se pueden resumir de la siguiente manera: todos tenemos una cruz que debemos llevar, y sin importar el peso de esa cruz, sin importar las pruebas y tribulaciones que enfrentemos, la gravedad de la aflicción o la intensidad del dolor que tenemos que soportar, en resumen, no importa lo malo que sea: “Todo estará bien”. Como dice el arzobispo Sheen, “Nunca debemos temer el resultado de la batalla de la vida; nunca necesitamos preguntarnos si ganaremos o perderemos. ¡Por qué ya hemos ganado, solo que la noticia aún no se ha filtrado!

Lady Julian de Norwich pudo proclamar “Todo estará bien” porque podía ver el panorama general. Su esperanza se basaba no sólo en esta vida, sino también en el anhelo de unión con Dios y el deseo de pasar toda la eternidad con Él en el mundo venidero. Si tenemos esta misma esperanza, podemos experimentar una alegría y una paz similares que nadie puede quitarnos.

Mundo en fotos

El Papa Francisco saluda a las parejas recién casadas durante su audiencia general en la Plaza de San Pedro en el Vaticano el 4 de mayo de 2022. La gran pancarta es de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe. (Foto del CNS/Vatican Media)
El padre Paul Obayi sostiene un cráneo humano recuperado de un santuario donde realizó un exorcismo, en esta foto del 19 de abril de 2022 en Nsukka, Nigeria. El padre Obayi, un exorcista designado, está conservando artefactos religiosos tradicionales en un museo para conservar el patrimonio cultural local. (Foto del CNS/Valentine Iwenwanne)
Una mujer sostiene una imagen de la Hermana del Buen Pastor María Agustina Rivas López durante la Misa de beatificación de la Beata Agustina el 7 de mayo de 2022 en La Florida, en la región amazónica central de Perú, en la misma plaza donde fue asesinada por terroristas en 1990. (Foto de CNS/Kurth Mendoza, Conferencia Episcopal Peruana)
Los reclutas de la Guardia Suiza llegan para la ceremonia de inducción de 36 nuevos guardias en la sala Pablo VI del Vaticano el 6 de mayo de 2022. La ceremonia se lleva a cabo el 6 de mayo para marcar la fecha en 1527 cuando 147 Guardias Suizos perdieron la vida defendiendo al Papa Clemente VII en el saqueo de Roma. (Foto del SNC/Paul Haring)

Dias de las Madres

Vardaman – El Padre Cesar Sanchez celebro una Misa dedicada en especial a las madres en su día, el domingo 8 de mayo. Cada una de ellas recibió una rosa y bendición especial. (Foto cortesía de Danna Johnson)