Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Homily for Wednesday, Week 4 of Easter

Homily for Wednesday
4th Week of Easter

April 24, 2024
Acts 12: 24—13: 5
Provincial House, New Rochelle

In the interval since yesterday’s 1st reading, there was a famine in Palestine, and Saul and Barnabas were sent from Antioch to Jerusalem with relief funds.  Herod Agrippa persecuted the Church, killing the apostle James and imprisoning Peter, who escaped miraculously.


So we come to the 2d half of Acts, in which the focus shifts from the apostles in Jerusalem to Paul, Barnabas, and Silas as missionaries from Antioch.  The principal actors, of course, remain the Lord Jesus and the Holy Spirit.

In Antioch, Barnabas and Saul are identified among the “prophets and teachers” in that Church.  Barnabas, originally sent there as a delegate of the Jerusalem Church—and extraordinary visitor—is still given the lead role and is observed as Saul’s mentor.  The Holy Spirit selects the 2 of them for a special work and sends them out to “proclaim the word of God.”  And Paul’s 1st missionary journey begins, in the company of Barnabas and John Mark.

The Holy Spirit continued the missionary work of the Lord thru Don Bosco, as the 1st article of our Constitutions tells us.  The Spirit “formed within him the heart of a father and teacher” and “inspired him to initiate various apostolic endeavors, 1st among them our Society.”  The Spirit remains active among us as we continue Christ’s mission.  We, today, are Paul, Barnabas, and John Mark if we allow the Spirit to lead us in our efforts to proclaim the word to the young, to families, to people as yet unevangelized, to bring to the whole world the light of Christ and eternal life (cf. John 12:44-50).


Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Homily for Tuesday, Week 4 of Easter

Homily for Tuesday
4th Week of Easter

April 23, 2024
Acts 11: 19-26
Christian Brothers, St. Joseph’s Residence, N.R.

“Those who had been scattered by the persecution … preached the Word to no one but the Jews” (Acts 11: 19).

We’ve already seen Deacon Philip preaching the Word in Samaria, and Peter preaching it to a Roman household.  The Holy Spirit is at work, beyond what the apostles and the earliest community in Jerusalem could imagine.  Even persecution becomes a means by which the Spirit acts.

St. Barnabas

“The hand of the Lord was with” some who—deliberately, it seems—began to speak to the pagans (11:21).  Those who did that were from far off Cyprus and Cyrene, evidently not as closed-minded as Jerusalem believers.  Barnabas, too, was from Cyprus; so it was natural for the mother Church to send him to look into this unusual, perhaps suspicious, activity in Antioch:  the 1st provincial visitation!

That the Spirit worked in Antioch is significant.  Antioch, modern Antakya, Turkey, scene of a destructive, deadly earthquake 14 months ago, was the 3d city of the Empire, after Rome and Alexandria.  For the Church to plant deep roots here meant far more than its start-up in Jerusalem and slow progress in Samaria and Phoenicia.  It was also, according to venerable tradition, Luke’s hometown.  That, too, was a work of the Spirit, to introduce this gifted writer, this future pen of the Holy Spirit, to the Lord Jesus.

Barnabas quickly perceives the workings of grace (11:23), which is to say the workings of the Spirit.  We’re not told how that grace revealed itself, except in a bold faith.  Faith becomes more important than Law.  The Law would have restricted the faith to Jews, kept the followers of Jesus confined to a very limited portion of humanity.  Greeks also can believe and be saved.  The faith is summarized in a simple confession:  “Jesus is Lord” (11:20).

Jesus is Lord:  Kurios in Greek, the word used in the Greek Scriptures for God’s personal name, YHWH.  These followers of Jesus are affirming his divinity even before they’ve been tagged as “Christians.”  “Jesus is Lord” also distinguishes Christians from pagans, who gave the title “Lord” to the emperor, according him divine status and burning incense before his image.  It was, in effect, an act of defiance as well as of faith:  “You shall not have other gods besides me” (Ex 20:3).

This faith, driven by the Holy Spirit, will seize the hearts of many of the pagans and change the world, as it had already changed Saul of Tarsus.  Yesterday’s 1st reading (Acts 11:1-18) concluded, “God has granted life-giving repentance to the Gentiles too.”  The question before you and me is whether we, as well, have repented and submitted to the Holy Spirit.

Monday, April 22, 2024

Two New Salesian Shepherds for the Church

Two New Salesian Shepherds for the Church

Card. Angel Fernandez Artime and Archbishop Giordano Piccinotti


(ANS – Rome – April 20, 2024)
 – The episcopal ordination of two eminent sons of Don Bosco, Cardinal Angel Fernandez Artime, titular archbishop of Ursona and rector major of the Salesians, and Archbishop Giordano Piccinotti, titular archbishop of Gradisca and president of the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See (APSA) took place in the basilica of St. Mary Major on Saturday afternoon.

Cardinal Emil Paul Tscherrig, former apostolic nuncio to Italy and San Marino, conferred the episcopal ordinations, alongside 2 co-consecrators: Cardinal Cristobal Lopez Romero, SDB, archbishop of Rabat, Morocco; and Bp. Luc Van Looy, SDB,  bishop emeritus of Ghent, Belgium.

Many prelates and important dignitaries participated in the  Eucharistic celebration along with the families of the newly consecrated Salesians, friends, benefactors, and members of the Salesian family, joined by special invitees from governments and the military.

In his simple and impactful homily, Cardinal Tscherrig, the principal consecrator, shared insights with the soon-to-be-ordained bishops, affirming, “We have gathered here to celebrate one of the greatest miracles of the Church: the apostolic succession. Since the time of the Apostles, this succession has been transmitted through the laying on of hands and the invocation of the Holy Spirit. The grace of the episcopal ministry has always been passed from one bishop to another, and this unbroken succession continues to this day.”

Quoting Pope Francis, Cardinal Tscherrig stated, “Becoming a bishop implies a missionary choice capable of transforming everything.” He emphasized that those who accept the role of shepherds in Christ’s flock should learn to see people through the eyes of Christ, think like him, and love like him. Quoting Pope Francis once more, he affirmed, “Life grows by being given away, and it weakens in isolation and comfort. Indeed, those who enjoy life the most are those who leave the security of the shore and become excited about the mission of communicating life to others.” He concluded by stating that the bishop’s inheritance is not honor or power, but God alone. A good shepherd offers his life for the flock, following the example of Jesus Christ, and the newly consecrated bishops are called to emulate him completely.


Soon after the homily, the consecration ceremony commenced with the interrogation of the candidates, followed by the invocation to the Holy Spirit and the solemn intercession of the litany of all Saints, accompanied by the choir’s prayerful singing. As the consecrators performed the apostolic tradition of the imposition of hands, a sacred silence penetrated the magnificently adorned walls and roof of St. Mary Major. After being anointed and receiving their respective miters, rings, and staffs, the two newly consecrated bishops were symbolically enthroned, greeted by thunderous applause. The faithful, religious, clergy, and choir erupted in thanksgiving and joy, solemnly singing the “Te Deum.” The two newly ordained bishops proceeded to impart their apostolic blessings to all those present.

After Communion, Cardinal Fernandez, representing the new bishops, expressed his heartfelt gratitude with great enthusiasm in a Salesian spirit. He affirmed the strong communion of the Salesians with the Church and the Holy Father, which stems from Don Bosco, and with great humility and conviction declared that they will continue to serve the Church, especially the poor. The final solemn blessing by the presider of the Mass concluded the entire celebration, accompanied by the resonating voices singing a traditional hymn to Don Bosco, “Raise your voices…Don Bosco be with us!”

The sacred rites of the ordination within the Holy Eucharist bore witness to the universality of the Catholic Church. Apart from the general councilors, several provincials, and superiors from the Salesian Family from around the world, the solemn Mass had the presence and blessing of 11 cardinals, including Card. Tarcisio Bertone, SDB, former Vatican Secretary of State; Card. Claudio Gugerotti, prefect of the Dicastery for Eastern Churches; Card. Lazarus You Heung-sik, prefect of the Dicastery for the Clergy; Card. Arthur Roche, prefect of the Dicastery for Divine Worship; Card. Domenico Calcagno, president emeritus of APSA; Card. Giuseppe Bertello, president emeritus of the Pontifical Commission for Vatican City State; Card Konrad Krajewski, prefect of the Dicastery for the Service of Charity; Card. Cristobal Lopez Romero, SDB, archbishop of Rabat; Card. Daniel Fernando Sturla Berhouet, SDB, archbishop of Montevideo, Uruguay; Card. Oscar Rodríguez Maradiaga, SDB, archbishop emeritus of Tegucigalpa, Honduras; and Card. Riccardo Ezzati Andrello, SDB, archbishop emeritus of Santiago, Chile.

Sunday, April 21, 2024

Homily for 4th Sunday of Easter

Homily for the
4th Sunday of Easter

April 21, 2024
John 10: 11-18
1 John 3: 1-2
Villa Maria, Bronx
St. Francis Xavier, Bronx
Our Lady of the Assumption, Bronx 

“Jesus said:  ‘I am the good shepherd’” (John 10: 11).

On Sept. 23, 2017, a priest from rural Oklahoma was beatified—declared by the Church to be Blessed, i.e., recognized as among the saints in heaven and as an intercessor for us at God’s throne.


The priest was Fr. Stanley Rother, a farm boy born in 1935, ordained for the archdiocese of Oklahoma City in 1963, who 5 years later volunteered for a rural mission among one of the native peoples of Guatemala.  He became part of a missionary team at St. James (Santiago) Parish in Atitlan, where there hadn’t been a resident priest in almost 100 years.  Besides celebrating Mass and the other sacraments for his impoverished people, he helped develop a written form of their language and translate the Bible.  He taught them agricultural skills and formed a farmers’ cooperative, built a school, hospital, and radio station, dug a well, did carpentry and plumbing and many other services to improve his people’s lives.  He hiked their dirt roads, ate their food, got his hands dirty.  That was long before Pope Francis told priests they should know the smell of their sheep.

Fr. Stanley also defended the people when their rights and livelihoods, and the Catholic Church itself, were threatened by an oppressive government amid a violent civil war.  People who spoke up were “disappeared,” tortured, and killed, including some of the parish’s catechists.  Fr. Stanley buried the victims when their families were afraid to claim them.  He spoke up.  Then his name went onto a death list.  By 1981 he was the last member of the missionary team left in Atitlan.

He said, “If I keep silent, what kind of a shepherd would I be?”  His archbishop in Oklahoma urged him to come back home.  He did for a couple of months.  But he said, “The shepherd cannot run at the 1st sign of danger.”  He returned to Atitlan, and days later, on July 28, 1981, was killed in his rectory.  He was 1 of 10 priests murdered in Guatemala that year.

Pope Francis declared Fr. Stanley Rother a martyr.  Now he’s Blessed Stanley, the shepherd who didn’t run, a shepherd who, like Jesus, knew his sheep, loved his sheep, and laid down his life for his sheep.

On Good Shepherd Sunday, we honor Christ because he died to save us from the wolves that want to devour us—Satan and his fiends from hell “who prowl about the world seeking the ruin of souls” (Prayer to St. Michael).  Christ, instead, leads us to safe, green pastures.

St. John teaches us that Christ, further, loves us so much that by association with him we become God’s children, not mere sheep; and we have a greater destiny, to be like God, “for we shall see him as he is” (1 John 3:1-2).  And so we shall “share in the joys of heaven,” as our collect today says.

Bl. Stanley Rother was a brave shepherd like Jesus, solicitous for his flock in the face of danger.  Besides honoring Christ and Bl. Stanley as good shepherds, we might ask whom Christ expects us to shepherd.  Parents, of course, shepherd their children.  So do grandparents and teachers.  It takes courage to protect the young from the dangers of the world around us—not only physical dangers such as we might meet in the neighborhood, but especially the moral dangers of sin and the hundreds of lies that our culture promotes on the Internet, in advertising, in the mass media, and even—regrettably—in public education and in government policies.

We also act as shepherds by encouraging men and women to serve the Church, the flock of our Lord Jesus, as priests, sisters, brothers, deacons, catechists, teachers, visitors to the sick, the imprisoned, and refugees—or we might do that ourselves.  We act as shepherds when we pray “that the humble flock may reach where the brave Shepherd has gone before” (Collect), i.e., that God’s entire flock may reach the well-watered meadows of heaven.

Finally, we pray that the shepherds of God’s flock—our bishops and priests—may be courageous protectors of the flock, speaking and acting to defend human life in all its forms and the human dignity of every person created in God’s image.

Wednesday, April 17, 2024

Anticipating Episcopal Ordination of Rector Major and of Bp. Piccinotti

 Anticipating the Episcopal Ordination of Card. Fernandez and Abp. Giordano Piccinotti

    RMG - Anticipation for the episcopal ordination of Card. Ángel Fernández Artime and Bishop Giordano Piccinotti

    (ANS - Rome - April 17, 2024) - There's an air of great expectation thruout the Salesian world for the celebration of the Mass of the episcopal ordination of Card. Angel Fernandez Artime, the Rector Major, as titular archbishop of Ursona; and that of Abp. Giordano Piccinotti, titular archbishop of Gradisca, who is president of the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See (APSA). Their ordinations will take place on Saturday, April 20, in the basilica of St. Mary Major. Both prelates will concelebrate their 1st Mass as bishops the following day, Sunday, April 21, in the Salesian basilica of the Sacred Heart in Rome at 11:30 a.m.

    Their episcopal ordination ceremony inevitably draws significant attention and the desire to participate from numerous people worldwide. Many other distinguished ecclesiastical personalities will take part in the liturgy, starting with the principal consecrator of the 2 Salesians, Cardinal Emil Paul Tscherrig, former apostolic nuncio to Italy and the Republic of San Marino, and the 2 co-consecrators, Cardinal Cristobal Lopez Romero, SDB, archbishop of Rabat, Morocco; and Bp. Luc Van Looy, SDB, bishop emeritus of Ghent, Belgium.

    In addition, Salesian Cardinals Daniel Sturla Berhouet, archbishop of Montevideo, Uruguay; Oscar Rodríguez Maradiaga, archbishop emeritus of Tegucigalpa, Honduras; and Riccardo Ezzati Andrello, archbishop emeritus of Santiago, Chile, have also confirmed their participation. There will also be members of the Salesian General Council and some of the major superiors and leaders of the different groups of the Salesian Family.

    All those who will not be able to attend the episcopal ordination in person will be able to watch it the live streamed, via  the Salesian Info Agency (ANS) YouTube channel with commentary in 5 languages: ItalianEnglishSpanishFrench and Portuguese.

    Sunday, April 14, 2024

    Homily for 3d Sunday of Easter

    Homily for the
    3d Sunday of Easter

    April 14, 2024
    Acts 3: 13-19
    1 John 2: 1-5
    Scouts NYLT, Putnam Valley (with slight adaptations)
    Our Lady of the Assumption, Bronx
    St. Francis Xavier, Bronx

    “The author of life you put to death, but God raised him from the dead; of this we are witnesses” (Acts 3: 15).

    Jesus appears to the Apostles
    (Duccio di Buoninsegna)

    St. Peter is addressing a crowd of people in the Temple right after he and St. John cured a crippled man.  He attributes the healing to the power of Jesus, risen from the dead.  But he speaks bluntly about not only Jesus’ resurrection but also about how Jesus died:  put to death by a decision of Pontius Pilate and the people of Jerusalem.  They chose to kill “the author of life,” the Son of God who shares with his Father in creating and sustaining the universe.  But God the Father raised him back to life and offers forgiveness to the sinful men and women responsible for his death.

    Not only to those immediately responsible for killing Jesus, but also to those remotely responsible for Christ’s death.  That means everyone who has sinned.  It means you and me.  All of us who are sinners have contributed to Christ’s suffering and death.

    But, St. John assures us, “He is expiation for our sins, and not only for our sins but for those of the whole world” (1 John 2:2).  Jesus Christ the righteous one (2:1) obtains forgiveness for repentant sinners:  “Repent, therefore, and be converted, that your sins may be wiped away,” Peter urges the crowd in the Temple (Acts 3:19).

    What does repentance mean?  1st, acknowledging our sinfulness; not only in a kind of general way, but in specifics.  How have I sinned against God and my brothers and sisters?  Perhaps by an arrogant attitude, by a controlling attitude, by lying, by cheating, by taking what isn’t mine, by lusting for someone, by resentment or vengeance, by gossip, by laziness, by greed.

    2d, repentance means changing that bad behavior:  “The way we may be sure that we know [Jesus Christ] is to keep his commandments.  Whoever keeps his word, the love of God is truly perfected in him” (1 John 2:3,5).

    When we keep the commandments we are witnesses to Jesus Christ, the risen one who forgives our sins and redeems the world.  St. Peter told the crowd that he and St. John were witnesses of the resurrection.  Jesus himself told all the apostles the same thing:  “It is written that the Christ would suffer and rise from the dead on the 3d day and that repentance, for the forgiveness of sins, would be preached in his name to all the nations, beginning from Jerusalem.  You are witnesses of these things” (Luke 24:46-49).

    They were witnesses that the same Jesus who died on the cross—“Look at my hands and my feet” (24:39) that were pierced by Roman nails; the same Jesus condemned by Pontius Pilate, the historical governor of Judea from 26 to 36 A.D.—this Jesus has been raised from the dead by the power of God; this Jesus now lives forever and saves us from our sins.  The Catholic Church continues to bear witness to this faith of the apostles, the eyewitnesses; this is the apostolic faith handed down to us.  You and I are charged, by the fact of our Baptism, to be witnesses that Jesus Christ lives, forgives our sins, and leads us “in confident hope to the rejoicing of the day of resurrection,” as we prayed in the collect—the day of our own resurrection.  “I look forward to the resurrection of the dead and the life of the world to come” (Creed).

    Friday, April 12, 2024

    Homily for Funeral of Eufronia Maranan

    Homily for the Funeral of Eufronia Maranan

    April 12, 2024
    Rev 21: 1-7
    Phil 3: 20-21
    St. Anthony, Nanuet, N.Y.

    “Behold, God’s dwelling is with the human race” (Rev 21: 3).

    The Annunciation
    (St. Catharine's Church, Spring Lake, N.J.)

    Last Monday, the Church celebrated the feast of the Annunciation of the Lord—the Son of God’s incarnation as a human being.  “The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us” (John 1:14).  God came to dwell with the human race in our flesh and blood.  “He shared our human nature in all things but sin” (Euch. Pr. IV).

    The feast of the Annunciation followed right after our celebration of Easter, the celebration of our Lord’s victory over death.  The Lord who dwells with the human race and makes us his people wants to remain with us always as our God still living in our flesh (Rev 21:3).

    Our Lord Jesus, risen, has defeated suffering and death for us.  “He will wipe every tear from their eyes, and there shall be no more death or mourning” (21:4), for he has defeated death for all who believe in him and follow him.  “He will change our lowly body to conform with his glorified body” (Phil 3:21), and so we shall live with Christ forever as citizens of heaven (3:20), his own people, his own sisters and brothers in fact.

    Lala believed all this, and so she served Jesus all her life in prayer, in love for her family, in teaching the young to be honest citizens here and faithful Christians, in raising [daughter’s name] and [granddaughter’s name] in the faith and in virtue.  Her heart burned within her when she heard God’s word (cf. Luke 24:32), when she conversed with our Lord and our Blessed Mother in prayer, and when she recognized Jesus in the Eucharist (24:35) every week.  Her union with the glorified body of our Lord in this Blessed Sacrament prepared her for resurrection with him on the Last Day.

    On that Last Day, all of us who have followed Jesus to “the holy city, a new Jerusalem” (Rev 21:2), will dwell with him, victors over death.  We’re filled with hope and with Easter joy for Lala and for our own destiny, thanks to Jesus Christ our Savior.

    Global Vision for Salesian Missionary Volunteer Ministry

    A Global Vision for Salesian Missionary Volunteer Ministry


    (ANS – Rome – April 10, 2024)
     – In an inspiring display of collaboration and shared vision, the Salesian Congregation’s Youth Ministry and Missions departments have united to foster a robust and dynamic Salesian missionary volunteer program. This groundbreaking initiative traces its origins to the innovative proposal by 3 dedicated lay individuals who envisioned a unified effort at the congregational level to promote the spirit of Salesian missionary work.

    The proposal resonated with the hearts and minds of both departments, leading to the formation of an official advisory team, a blend of laymen and women and of Salesians. The team was tasked with nurturing and expanding the reach of Salesian missionary volunteering. The team’s composition, with members from the USA, Australia, Zambia, Colombia, Italy, and Czechia, is a testament to the global nature of the Salesian mission.

    The team comprises four committed laypeople, including two provincial delegates for mission animation from the USA (J.C. Montenegro, 2d from right)and Australia, a volunteer coordinator from the U.S. mission office (Adam Rudin, far right), and another serving in Rome’s mission department. Their dedication is matched by 3 Salesians from Don Bosco’s family: one from the Youth Ministry Department, another from the Missions Department, and a 3d who is a provincial delegate for youth ministry in Zambia. This international team reflects the Salesian charism’s universal appeal, supported by the guidance and blessings of councilors from both departments.

    4 years have passed since the seed was planted, and the team’s first challenge was to develop a strong working relationship and gain a deep understanding of the state of Salesian missionary volunteer programs in the Congregation. Their dedication bore fruit 2 years into their journey by creating a strategic plan, setting the stage for a series of ambitious goals, including an international gathering of the Congregation’s main volunteer coordinators. This milestone was achieved in early March this year, marking a significant step forward in their collaborative efforts.

    This initiative’s success is a testament to the synergy between the Youth Ministry and the Missions departments and a shining example of the powerful collaboration between laity and religious within the Salesian Family. It underscores the vital role that laypeople play in advancing the Salesian mission and the unique contributions they make.

    As Salesian missionary volunteering continues to evolve, it stands as a hope and an exemplary partnership model that transcends borders, cultures, and vocations. This effort clearly reflects Don Bosco’s dream to mobilize a vast movement of individuals committed to serving youth, particularly those most in need, through the Gospel’s loving message.

    The collaboration between these 2 departments and the harmonious integration of lay and religious members are blueprints for other congregations and organizations. They demonstrate that remarkable outcomes are possible when diverse groups unite under a common goal, particularly in the service of the young and marginalized. As this team continues to pave the way for future Salesian missionary volunteers, their pioneering spirit will undoubtedly inspire many more to join this noble cause, perpetuating Don Bosco’s legacy through the transformative power of volunteer service.