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November, 2017

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Built of living stones
By Cyprian Davis

The history of African American Catholicism began with the arrival of the Spanish settlers in the 16th century in Florida. In fact, on the first page of the 16th-century baptismal registers are the names of black infants who were baptized into the Body of Christ along with white infants in St. Augustine Church. Although the history of American Catholics is intertwined with the history of people of color, from the colonial period until today, African American Catholics have been too often the forgotten factor in the history of the American church.

Today, when the history of American Catholicism is often misinterpreted and misconstrued, it is important to look again at the contributions of those found in the overlooked pages of American church history. To paraphrase the breviary hymn for the apostles: "They learned to reach beyond their grasp . . . they were glad to witness more than they saw, prepared to speak more than they knew."

A witness to the Spirit
One evening in Paris in 1954, a renowned African American jazz pianist walked off the stage during a performance, cutting short her tour. Mary Lou Williams had reached a high point in her career as musician, composer, and jazz pianist before she returned to New York and went into seclusion. In a nearby Catholic church, she found a shelter, and she found God. In 1956, Mary Lou Williams entered the Catholic Church.
She had been born Mary Elfrieda Scruggs in Atlanta in 1910. Growing up in Pittsburgh, she was recognized as a child prodigy with remarkable musical gifts.
Encouraged by the priest who received her into the church, Williams began composing religious music in a jazz idiom: three Masses and a cantata in honor of Saint Martin de Porres. She began to work for the needy and to teach young students.
She was artist-in-residence at Duke University in North Carolina when she died in 1981. At the time of her death, she left a legacy of art and beauty. Even more, she left the example of how the artist's performance can be channeled into prayer and how music might become the witness of the spiritual.
At some point, everyone must call a halt and evaluate the meaning of one's life. The wisdom of Mary Lou Williams was to step back, to listen, and to evaluate. This is the turning point in one's life journey. This is when all of us can look back and see God's intervention in ourselves, in our community, and in our world.

Laying the foundation
About 40 miles southwest of Charleston, South Carolina stands a small church built in honor of Saint James the Greater. This church is a witness to the faith of black Catholics who persevered in their Catholic faith without priest or church for almost 40 years.
Before the Civil War, this small community known as Thomson's Crossroad and later Catholic Crossroad was the site of several plantations. The plantation owners and many of their slaves had converted to Catholicism in the 1830s, and a church was erected and dedicated to Saint James the Greater by John England, the bishop of Charleston, in 1833.

The church was burned down in 1856, and the plantation owners moved away after the Civil War. But the black Catholics remained and so did their faith, thanks to the fidelity and zeal of a former slave, Vincent de Paul Davis, who owned a general store where he taught children their prayers and acted as godfather to the many infants who were carried to Catholic churches, often at a distance, where they were baptized. The old baptismal register now located at St. Anthony Church in Walterboro reveals several pages of names of people who were baptized with Vincent de Paul Davis as their sponsor.

Around 1892 the community of some 60 black Catholics was "discovered" by a Pallotine priest from Charleston, Father Daniel Berberich, who celebrated Mass with them twice a month. By 1894 a new church was built. Three years later a parochial school was added with a local teacher, and by 1901 there were two lay teachers. The present church was constructed in 1935.

Catholic Hill, its unofficial name, is a reminder to us all that a church is built of living stones. In this instance, they were those whose faith had been able to withstand time and neglect. The history of black Catholics is an ongoing saga of how black laypeople built our church and made firm its foundation even when others had forgotten them. Today St. James the Greater is still a mission and still a spiritual home for the local black community.

Catholics, both white and black, are accustomed to thinking of African American Catholics as recent converts. In fact, any ministry in the African American community will reveal many blacks whose Catholicism goes back to the dark days of slavery. Many have left the church because of neglect or outright hostility. Others felt that they were unwelcome and undernourished. Today, being black and Catholic means shining the beacon of hope in the darkness of discouragement, the searchlight of faith in the darkness of misunderstanding. Daniel Rudd, the black Catholic leader of the 19th century, described the black Catholic community's task "to be a leaven for the race."

God's man of hope
There is no other way to describe Augustus Tolton than as a man of hope. He had learned to hope in the face of incredible odds. Born a slave in Missouri in 1854, the second of three children of Martha Chisley Tolton and Peter Paul Tolton, both slaves and both Catholics, he escaped from slavery with his mother, sister, and brother during the Civil War. His father had run away to join the Union Army in St. Louis, where he soon died.

Martha Tolton crossed the Mississippi River with her three children in a rowboat to Illinois where she joined many other blacks who had fled slavery to a free state. Growing up in poverty, Augustus soon developed a desire to become a priest.
With the support of two priests in Quincy, one of whom was a Franciscan, he looked for a seminary where he could study, but no American seminary was willing to accept an African American as a student.

Hoping against hope, with the help of the minister general of the Franciscans, Augustus Tolton found a place in Urban College in Rome, the seminary attached to the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith, where students from Africa were already enrolled. When the time came for Tolton to be ordained, the cardinal prefect of the congregation announced that if the Americans had never seen a black priest it was time for them to see one.

After his ordination in 1886, Father Tolton was sent home to Quincy, Illinois, where he had a triumphal return. Later, however, he suffered petty persecution by a fellow priest in a nearby parish.

In 1889 Tolton moved to Chicago, and with the support of the archbishop, began a black parish with the name of St. Monica.
That same year Saint Katharine Drexel began the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament, whose vocation was to evangelize blacks and Native Americans. Drexel used the enormous fortune left to her by her father for her work. In 1890 Tolton wrote to Drexel asking for financial help in the construction of his parish in Chicago.

His letters reveal the great simplicity of this very holy man and the sense that he had of the burden God had given him in the service of African Americans.

In an 1891 letter to Drexel, he wrote: "I for one cannot tell how to conduct myself when I see one person at last showing their love for the colored race. One thing I do know and that is it took the Catholic Church 100 years here in America to show up such a person as yourself."

In the whole history of the church in America we can't find one person that has sworn to lay out their treasury for the sole benefit of the colored and Indians. As I stand alone as the first Negro priest of America, so you Mother Catherine stand alone as the first one to make such a sacrifice for the cause of a downtrodden race. Hence the South is looking on with an angry eye, the North in many places is criticizing every act. Just as it is watching every move I make. I suppose that is the reason why we had no Negro priest before this day, they watch us just the same as the Pharisees did our Lord.

He went on to express his great hope for the future: I really feel that there will be a stir all over the United States when I begin my church. I shall work and pull at it as long as God gives me life, for I see that I have principalities to resist anywhere and everywhere I go.

Tolton did not know that the Healy brothers, former slaves from Georgia, were the first black priests in America. Still Tolton, whom everyone knew to be black, did leave a model of holiness and service that would inspire the many African American priests who would follow him. Tolton died suddenly in 1897. His life was a witness to one man's untiring hope; we are a witness to his undying faith.

The story of the first black priests in the United States is in many instances a tragic one. Still, it is also a story of courage and perseverance. In fact, this alternating experience of tragedy and courage, discouragement and achievement is the story of everyone who takes up the cross daily to follow Christ.

Evangelization in our church today for African Americans means recalling the story of the black saints in our country who blazed a trail before us.

In 1964, a small African American woman named Lena Edwards, already a living legend, was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Lyndon B. Johnson. She was an indefatigable worker in the cause of health and healing, especially for the poor and the forgotten.

Born in 1900 into a black, Catholic, middle-class family in Washington, D.C., she was still in high school when she developed a desire to become a physician. She attended Howard University in Washington, D.C., a traditionally black university, where her father was a professor in the dental school. In 1924 she graduated from the medical school at Howard and began her medical practice in Jersey City, N.J. with her husband, also a physician.

Dr. Lena Edwards became a specialist in obstetrics and gynecology, serving on the staff of the Margaret Hague Maternity Hospital for almost 30 years before accepting a teaching position back in Washington, D.C. at the Howard University Medical School.

Edwards was as fervent a Catholic as she was a physician. She raised six children, one of whom is an Atonement Friar, almost single-handedly. A Franciscan tertiary, she attended Mass daily and personally lived a life of voluntary poverty. Besides her participation in civic affairs, she worked for interracial justice as a member of the Catholic Interracial Council. She served just as faithfully in community affairs related to the welfare of the poor and to minorities. In her teaching she stressed the need for physicians to be as concerned about the social conditions of their patients as with their medical needs.

At 60, Edwards gave up her teaching and went to Texas to practice medicine among migrant workers. Using her own funds and money from other sources, she began a maternity hospital, trained a staff, and started a credit union.

Eventually forced to give up her work among the migrant laborers because of ill health, she returned to New Jersey where she continued her community work, her talks and conferences, as well as her financial support of many college students, including the establishment of a scholarship for women medical students at Howard University.

Edwards died in 1986 at the age of 86, leaving the memory of a courageous lay woman who lived out her mission to "exercise [Christ's] apostolate in the world as a kind of leaven," as stated in the Vatican II document on the laity. 

Walking with Christ on the streets of Washington In December of 1978, one of Washington's true men of God died. Llewellyn Scott was born in Washington, D.C. in 1892. As a boy he had been stricken with rickets, a bone disease caused by a deficiency in Vitamin D. It crippled him so badly that he could not walk.

Thanks to the interest of the wife of the Army surgeon general, the young boy was given medical treatment. Scott was finally able to walk for the first time at the age of 10. He was enrolled in a parochial school, became a Catholic, and was finally able to catch up on his schooling.

In time, he graduated from Howard University and served in the Army in World War I. He briefly taught school in North Carolina and in the District of Columbia, and then became a social worker.

Everything changed, however, at the beginning of the Great Depression in 1930. He acquired property in the heart of Washington and opened the Blessed Martin de Porres Hospice to provide shelter and food for homeless men, funded at first with a donation from Dorothy Day and his own life savings. The hospice was open to all but especially to black men who often were unable to find assistance elsewhere. Scott finally gave up his government job and devoted all of his time and effort to the service of homeless men.

Scott was a short, unprepossessing man, soft-spoken and nonthreatening. He was someone in whom men could confide and to whom one could talk. His hospice was openly Catholic and always had a chapel and a space for prayer. Scott, who like Edwards had great devotion to Saint Francis, was received by three popes and received annual donations from the archbishop of Washington, and in his own quiet way was active in the civil rights movement. He marched with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. shortly before King's murder in Memphis.

Scott died from leukemia in 1978 at the age of 86. For some he was simply an ordinary man; but for all he was a man who did extraordinary things. He touched the lives of many across the country, and he turned the lives of some completely around. All this was done without an imposing staff, without programs, without forms and paperwork, without fanfare-he simply walked with Christ on the streets of Washington.

More than 30 years ago on his visit to the shrine of the Ugandan martyrs, Pope Paul VI launched a challenge to the people of Africa to bring to the Catholic Church their precious and original gift of "blackness." The challenge has reached all the sons and daughters of Africa, even today.

Our spiritual gifts have been the lives and works of countless people who have walked, and walk still, in the sight of God. Despite the violence of chains, ropes, and whips; despite the pettiness and the rejection, they have built up the church and made her holy.

This article appeared in the August 2002 issue of U.S. Catholic (Vol. 67, No. 8; pages 28-33).

Timeline of Black Catholic history
By Cyprian Davis

1565-1899: St. Augustine, Florida
Blacks, both slave and free, help to found this oldest town in the United States. In 1693 Spain offers freedom in Florida to slaves who convert to Catholicism.

Until 1763, these freed slaves live in a community northeast of St. Augustine. Gracia Real de Santa Teresa de Mose, or Fort Mose, established in 1738, thus becomes the first free black town in the United States.

1781: Los Angeles
Governor Don Felipe de Neve recruits 11 families to settle on the Porciuncula River--now Los Angeles. The settlers are all Catholic, a mix of Africans, Spanish, and American Indians.
Meanwhile, Maryland's black Catholic population grows to 3,000 as a result of Jesuit evangelization in the region.

1829: Oblate Sisters of Providence
A handful of women from Baltimore's Haitian refugee colony begin to educate local children in their homes. With the support of the archbishop, in 1829 they create the Oblate Sisters of Providence. The first superior is Elizabeth Lange, born in Cuba of Haitian parents.

A later archbishop dismisses the need for an order of black religious, but the sisters find new advocates among the Redemptorists and in Saint John Neumann, then archbishop of Philadelphia. Their ministry spreads to Philadelphia and New Orleans.

1839: In Supremo Apostolatus
In this 1839 apostolic letter, Pope Gregory XVI condemns the slave trade as the "inhuman traffic in Negroes." Rome outshines the U.S. in race relations from the 17th to 20th centuries. Many U.S. bishops as well as men's and women's religious orders in this period own slaves, sometimes advocating for their proper treatment.

Bishop John England of Charleston, South Carolina defends the American domestic slave trade, arguing that Pope Gregory's apostolic letter refers only to slaves imported by the Spanish and Portuguese. Though claiming he is not personally in favor of slavery, he says it was a "question for the legislature and not for me."

1842: Sisters of the Holy Family
Founded by Henriette Delille and Juliette Gaudin in New Orleans, the Sisters of the Holy Family become the second religious order for black women. Biracial and of African descent, the founders are free people of color, at that time a separate class and culture above the slaves. The order ministers to poor blacks, educating and tending the sick.

This follows an earlier attempt by Frenchwoman Marie Aliquot to start the Sisters of the Presentation, soon dissolved for violating Louisiana's segregation laws because the white Aliquot sought black women to join her. Aliquot is not allowed to join the new Sisters of the Holy Family because she is white.
During an outbreak of yellow fever, the nuns heroically nurse the sick and are thus granted public recognition. But they are not allowed to wear their habit in public until 1872.

1766-1853: Pierre Toussaint
Arriving in New York from Haiti in 1787 with his owner, Jean Bªrard, Pierre Toussaint is apprenticed to a New York hairdresser. He becomes a friend to the city's aristocracy by dressing the hair of wealthy women.
When Bªrard dies penniless, Toussaint financially supports Bªrard's wife, nursing her through emotional and physical ailments. She grants him his freedom in 1807. His stable income allows him to buy freedom for his sister and his future wife, and to be generous with many individuals and charities, including an orphanage and school for black children. He cares for the ill when yellow fever sweeps the city and opens his home to homeless youth, teaching them violin and paying for their schooling.
A case for his beatification has since been opened in Rome. He would be the first black American saint.

1875: James Augustine Healy, First Black Bishop
Although James Healy and his nine siblings--all fathered by a Georgia plantation owner--are officially slaves, their father brings them north for education and freedom. Three of the Healy brothers--James, Patrick, and Alexander--become the first African American priests in the U.S., although they do not identify with being black and never speak out on behalf of blacks.

Bishop John Fitzpatrick of Boston, a friend of their father, encourages the boys to attend Holy Cross College in Worcester, Massachusetts. James studies for the priesthood in Paris and is ordained bishop of Portland, Maine in 1875.

His brother, Patrick Francis Healy, a Jesuit who conceals his African origins for much of his career, becomes president of George-town University in 1874 (ironic because Georgetown admitted no black students until the mid-1900s).

James would not ally himself with black Catholic leaders nor agree to address meetings of black Catholics, once citing Saint Paul's admonition that there shall be no Greek nor Jew in Christ.

1889: Daniel Rudd Calls Black Catholic Congress
In January 1889 almost 100 black Catholic men meet with President Grover Cleveland on the last day of the first black Catholic lay congress in U.S. history.

Daniel Rudd, a journalist from Ohio and founder of the American Catholic Tribune, becomes a leader of black laity. Fiercely proud of the Catholic Church, Rudd claims the church is the one place of hope for black people. Rudd recruits delegates to the first Black Catholic Congress, hoping to "let them exchange views on questions affecting their race; then uniting on a course of action, behind which would stand the majestic Church of Christ."

The delegates' statement calls for Catholic schools for black children, endorses temperance, appeals to labor unions to admit blacks, advocates better housing, and praises religious orders for aiding blacks.
Rudd also helps organize the first lay Catholic congress of the entire U.S. in 1889, where he insists that blacks be treated as part of the whole, not as a special category.

At the fourth Black Catholic Congress in 1893, Charles Butler decries prejudice and discrimination within the Catholic Church, asking, "How long, O Lord, are we to endure this hardship in the house of our friends?" The congress calls attention to the church's failure in its mission "to raise up the downtrodden and to rebuke the proud." Thus black Catholics made the social implications of Catholicism into a primary feature of the faith, a new and bold approach for the time.

1909: Knights of Peter Claver
The fraternity of the Knights of Peter Claver is established by the work of Josephite priests as a parallel to the Knights of Columbus. It soon develops chapters for women and young people.

1916: Committee for the Advancement of Colored Catholics
Led by Thomas Wyatt Turner, the Committee for the Advancement of Colored Catholics forms during World War I to care for black Catholic sevicemen, neglected by both the Knights of Columbus and the black YMCA. After the war, the group broadens its focus. Its advocacy gives birth to a new national forum for black Catholics. Its purpose: "Collection of data concerning colored Catholics, the protection of their interests, the promotion of their welfare, and the propagation of the faith among colored people."

The U.S. bishops, despite requests from Rome to act on behalf of blacks during the race riots and lynchings of 1919, avoid the topic at their first annual meeting. In response, the committee publicly urges the bishops to denounce discrimination and consult with black Catholics, saying, "at present we are neither a part of the colored world (Protestant), nor are we generally treated as full-fledged Catholics."

1916: Handmaids of Mary
The Georgia state legislature introduces a bill prohibiting whites from teaching black students. Although the law eventually fails, a community of black sisters is formed to teach. In 1922 the sisters relocate to New York where they start a soup kitchen and begin educating local children.

In 1929 they affiliate with the Franciscan Third Order, becoming the Franciscan Handmaids of the Most Pure Heart of Mary. Still active in Harlem, their ministries have spread elsewhere in the United States.

1920: First Seminary for Blacks
The Society of the Divine Word in Greenville, Mississippi, with the blessing of Pope Benedict XV, opens St. Augustine's, the first seminary for blacks. Some American bishops are still not convinced of the merit of a black priesthood.

1958: Denunciation of Racism
American bishops denounce racial prejudice as immoral for the first time.

1965: March in Selma
Many Catholic clergy and women religious join the march in Selma, Alabama, marking the church's foray into the civil rights struggle for racial equality.

1968: First Black Clergy Caucus
Prior to the meeting of the Catholic Clergy Conference on the Interracial Apostolate in 1968, Father Herman Porter of the Rockford, Illinois diocese invites all U.S. black Catholic clergy to a special caucus. More than 60 black clergy gather to discuss the racial crisis and decide to form a permanent organization. They send a statement to the bishops strongly criticizing the church but clear in its expression of their devotion and hope. It lists nine demands for the church to be faithful in its mission to blacks and to restore the church within the black community. The caucus remains active today.

1985: Today's Black Catholic Congresses
The National Black Catholic Congress is re-established in 1985 as a coalition of black Catholic organizations. In 1987, NBCC renews the tradition of gathering black Catholics from across the country. The first renewed congress, Congress VI (the first five took place in the 1800s), takes place in May of 1987 in Washington, D.C. NBCC holds a national congress every five years, and each event attracts growing numbers of attendees. Congress IX is August 29-September 1 in Chicago.

Source: The History of Black Catholics in the United States , by Cyprian Davis (Crossroad)

Copyright ©   2002 Claretian Publications.  Reprinted by permission from the August 2002 issue of U.S. Catholic   magazine,  www.uscatholic.org
2. FROM THE BISHOP

Matthew 21, 1-14

This is one of my favorite parables of the Gospel:

“A king gave a wedding feast for his son. He dispatched his servants to summon the invited guests to the wedding, but they refused to come…”

Have you ever had the experience of setting up everything for a party or a dinner or some event, sent out invitations and no one shows up, or very few if any, or someone you especially wanted to be there but they proved a no-show?  What a disappointment particularly after all the attention to detail. Jesus told a parable about a king who threw a wedding banquet for his son. The parable poignantly references God who arranged just such a party a long, long time ago but very few if any showed up.

Jesus invites us to his banquet at church each week on Sunday. Some never show up and never bother to say why. Jesus likes to see us show up for his banquet. Why would anyone refuse an invitation from the man called Jesus? Without doubt, what we need to be happy, healthy and holy is right here, if only we have eyes to see and are not so caught up with ourselves.

Coming to the altar to be in the presence of the body and blood of Christ is a weekly invitation to the Lord's feast, yet we too often refuse the invitation. To avoid doing so requires intentional effort to remind ourselves of who God is and who He is, in and for our lives. Like those special invitations to an event that surprise us in the mail box, Sunday Mass interrupts our daily routine and begs for us to rearrange our schedule in order to oblige the host and His good thoughts about us to include us on his invitation list. So, we may have to postpone a couple things, may have to bring out our good clothes with which to meet the Lord on his day, and take part in the sacred banquet he has prepared for us.

Our enthusiasm this way is put to the test often by family obligations, business affairs, the disappointments we encounter in life or lack of interest that has overtaken us, or our misplaced attitudes, and as a result, we put God’s invitation on hold or set it aside altogether. Too often we just don’t see God as playing any practical part in the complexities of our daily lives.

Faith, that vitamin pill of life, is the belief that God loves us despite ourselves and that we always have a place at his table. There is always a place-setting in church awaiting our arrival. But, faith means little until that invitation is accepted.


Bishop Joseph Perry

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4. CHICAGO PRIEST IN THE NEWS
Bishop George V. Murry of Youngstown, Ohio, speaks during a video news conference on Aug. 23 after being named chair of the U.S. bishops' new Ad Hoc Committee Against Racism. (CNS photo/Bob Roller)
Republished with permission from AMERICA: The Jesuit Review, August 2017


Will the bishops’ new anti-racism committee make a difference?

While he was growing up in Detroit, Michael Trail’s parish offered him many role models. His grandfather was a permanent deacon, and the parish where he worshiped, which was predominantly black and Hispanic, had other black people in leadership roles he could look up to. But later, when he left home, he encountered an attitude that said that to be Catholic in the United States means being white.

“It wasn’t until I got older that I realized my experience of church wasn’t universal, and it was a bit of a shock,” he recalled. “But at the same time, I knew that the Catholic Church was my home and that there was nowhere else I was ever going to go.”

When he left home, he encountered an attitude that said that to be Catholic in the United States means being white.
Father Trail, who is now a 27-year-old priest in the Archdiocese of Chicago , said he welcomes voices in the church who condemn racism in the wake of a gathering of white supremacists and members of the “alt-right” movement earlier this month in Charlottesville, Va.“It’s really important for the church to have a public voice and take a public stand,” he told America. “This affects all of us.”

Part of the church’s response came earlier this week when Catholic bishops announced the formation of a new ad hoc committee to deal with racism in society and in the church, which they said is the highest institutional response available to address current events. They also announced that the first pastoral letter on racism written by U.S. Bishops since 1979 will be released next year. (Just two days before the bishops’ announcement, a priest from the Diocese of Arlington, which covers Charlottesville, announced he had stepped down from ministry after a reporter’s inquiry led him to acknowledge publicly that he had been a member of the Ku Klux Klan before entering the priesthood.)

Of the 70 million or so Catholics living in the United States, about three million are black. Contemporary news stories about the church and race often include photos of white priests and nuns marching with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. But the truth, argues one historian, is that Catholics historically have responded to racism more or less like any other Americans.

“It’s hard to discern a specifically or exclusively Catholic response” to racism, said Andrew Moore , a history professor at Saint Anselm College and author of The South's Tolerable Alien: Roman Catholics in Alabama and Georgia, 1945-1970 .

The truth, argues one historian, is that Catholics historically have responded to racism more or less like any other Americans.
Mr. Moore, who is white, told America that Catholics, especially in the South, often mirrored the attitudes of their predominant cultures. This meant that while there were exceptions, Catholic schools and parishes were often just as segregated as public schools and Protestant churches—and that white Catholics often harbored racist attitudes.
“Sometimes bishops were saying truthfully that they were just following the law, that in states like Virginia, it would have been illegal to have integrated schools,” he said. “But overall, a lot of bishops were simply bowing to reality that if they tried to integrate their schools, their white parishioners or parents would send their kids to public school that was white only.”

As American attitudes toward race began evolving following the 1960s, Catholic leaders faced a challenge of what to do with separate black parishes and white parishes. Often, integration was the goal. But sometimes both communities resisted, wanting to preserve their own churches. And even when parishes were integrated, cordial relationships did not always follow. “I had people look at me when I reached out my hand in the predominantly white Catholic church I attended growing up who did not want to shake my hand,” recalled Anthea Butler , a professor of religious studies and Africana studies at the University of Pennsylvania. Ms. Butler, who is black, told America that she believes the church’s new anti-racism committee, along with a pastoral letter on racism expected to be published next year, shows that church leaders understand the gravity of the challenge—up to a point.

“There are too many priests who don’t talk about Charlottesville.”
“There are too many priests who don’t talk about Charlottesville, who talk about abortion, same-sex marriage, morality,” she said. “I’d like to see them talk about racism and what’s happening in our country right now with the same fervor they talk about [those] moral issues.” Clergy and people of faith were on hand in Charlottesville to protest the white supremacists who had marched through the town, but at least one report suggests that Catholic priests were largely absent .

Father Trail finds that troubling. “All clergy have a duty and obligation to stand up for equality, to stand up for the downtrodden,” he said. “We have to reclaim the moral authority to not be afraid to be in the public square and say we’re not going to stand for this. We’re not going to stand for bigotry and hatred and violence, that those go against God’s law.”

As for why there was not a strong Catholic presence in Charlottesville, Mr. Moore, the historian, said that the Catholic clergy marching for civil rights had “joined a movement that was already in progress,” whereas in Charlottesville, “that hasn’t happened yet.”

“We have to reclaim the moral authority to not be afraid to be in the public square and say we’re not going to stand for this."
But, he said, President Trump’s “response to the protests and the reaction to his response may be what is needed to convince many Catholics that there is something to be protested and there is a movement to join.”And that is where efforts from bishops could play a role in spurring Catholics to action. Ms. Butler said the coming pastoral letter on racism should be widely distributed, preached on at Masses and taught in Catholic schools. She praised the bishops for forming the committee, but she said the urgency of the moment could have been better highlighted by putting a cardinal in charge of the committee, which in a hierarchical church sends a strong message. “On the one hand, having a bishop up there is great, but boy, if we had a cardinal, it’d be even better,” she said.

The anti-racism committee is chaired by George Murry, S.J., one of just a handful of African-American bishops in the United States. Archbishop Wilton Gregory, whose name is sometimes floated by church observers as possibly becoming the first black cardinal from the United States, chaired a working group formed by bishops last year about police-involved shootings that also touched on issues of race. That group’s work wrapped up in November with little fanfare. At the time, Archbishop Gregory urged bishops to expedite its pastoral letter on racism, but it is not expected to be ready until next year.

But Ms. Butler cautioned that people of color cannot be expected to shoulder the entire burden when it comes to facilitating dialogue about racism. “It seems to be the default, not just with the bishops, that if there’s a problem with race, we should put the person of color, typically a black person, in charge,” she said. “But what they’re doing is exactly the thing that makes the problem in the first place, which is putting the burden on the people of color to do it.”

As for the practical effects following statements and letters, Father Trail said he has been encouraged by the response of some church leaders following Charlottesville, including the one from his own archbishop, Cardinal Blase Cupich. “For me as a priest to see my own bishop take a very public stand on this, it gives me courage as a priest to take a stand,” he said.

In turn, he hopes Catholics in the pews will consider what role racism plays in their lives.“Catholics can’t turn a blind eye and act like it’s something that happens over there but not in my small town,” he said. “Racism is an evil, it takes so many different forms. We must continue to be mindful that we’re all part of God’s family and not be afraid to engage and dialogue and enter into someone else’s experience.”

Author: Michael J. O'Loughlin is  America 's national correspondent.


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Deacon John Cook hosts this weekly half-hour program that explores a wide range of topics relevant to Chicago's Black and Catholic communities. Deacon Cook serves at St. Felicitas Parish in Chatham, and is very involved in overseeing youth programs in the Bronzeville neighborhood. 

Tune in and Call in
312.255.8408

Let's talk about

11/7 - (follow up) Andrae Goodnight Actor, Fr. Augustus Tolton 

11/14- Fr.  David Kelly, Precious Blood Ministries

11/21- Sherri Allen , Matthew's House, Services & Housing to Father's & Children

11/28- Christina Lamas -Executive Director for the National Federation of Catholic Youth Ministries for the Diocese of Los Angeles, California



Make Them Hear You! 
After the March
6. CATHOLIC EDUCATION


7. SOCIAL ACTION
Pope Francis is inaugurating a

Day of Observance for the Poor

the first one to take place Sunday November 19, 2017

Would you consider a donation to the Ministry of Zacchaeus House on

The Day of the Poor

Also, consider donating during November for Thanksgiving or anytime. 

Your support is appreciated!

Zacchaeus House (Luke 19) got started in 2002 as a ministry of Vicariate VI in an old convent in the Roseland section on the south side, 12242 S. Parnell Street, to give some small answer to the issue of homelessness among men. It was a brainstorm of Bishop Perry and the late Deacon Abrom Salley from the West Side. The House can take a maximum of nine residents who can stay with us for up to two years while they put their lives back together. We do not take the chronic street homeless, only adult men who have some minimum motivation to start over following misstep, misfortune, family crisis, loss of jobs and the like. We do not take those convicted of felonies. Each resident is assigned a Deacon as a mentor to make sure that they are following a plan and making progress. 

Over the years, we have had as many as 70 male residents. Men are recommended to us by parish priests, St. Vincent DePaul Society, Catholic Charities and word of mouth. Each man undergoes several interviews with the Director and background checks before acceptance. We operate an after-care program for residents who are again out on their own where we work with them to increase their stability as it relates to life, jobs, residence, etc.

Our board is composed of deacons and we do not receive any outside funding for this ministry, only private donations from individuals and churches. This is a ministry associated with the Office for the Diaconate, and is essentially a ministry of deacons in our Archdiocese. Deacon Alfred Coleman of St. James Parish, 29 th and Wabash, serves as Director, and Bishop Perry as President. We are not an agency of the Archdiocese. 

Visit our web page www.zacchaeushouse.org

Our annual budget is around $100K for housing, food, utilizes, supplies and maintenance. We do not usually meet this budgeted income, but residents are not charged for the services they receive. Once employed, they are encouraged to oversee their earnings responsibly, by savings and spending in a way that will help create a new chapter for them. 

Donations should be made payable to:  Zacchaeus House

Checks should be mailed to Archdiocese of Chicago,
Vicariate VI Office, 3525 S. Lake Park Avenue, Chicago, 60653



8. HEALING SOME MORE
9. PARISH LIFE AND FORMATION EVENTS
The BCI received the following announcements from parishes, schools and organizations for the purpose of sharing information and invitation.

Please seek permission to publish items in this newsletter from the pastor or person responsible for the sponsoring agent. Please take care not to violate copyrights.
In commemoration of November as National Black Catholic History Month

St. Catherine of Siena – St. Lucy Parish, 38 N. Austin Blvd., Oak Park, IL

welcomes everyone to hear

Dr. C. Vanessa White

speak about

African-American Catholics as
“Authentically Black and Truly Catholic.”

At Catholic Theological Union, Dr. White is Assistant Professor of Spirituality and Ministry, Director of the Master of Arts in Pastoral Studies and the Master of Arts in Specialized Ministries as well as the Director of the Certificate in Pastoral Studies. Dr. White is extensively published and a sought-after presenter.

St. Catherine of Siena – St. Lucy Praise Choir will open the evening with songs in the African-American tradition under the direction of Dr. Julius White.
Thursday, Nov. 9, 2017 at 7:30 p.m.

Advance registration is not required. 

The church is accessible by ramp, and assistive listening devices are available. 

Questions? Call the Rectory at 708-386-8077

10. THE BCI AND YOU
Thanks
Be to
GOD ! ! !

Someone asked the question…

RED is for the blood of the people
BLACK is for the community of the people
GREEN is for the growth of the people
All are welcome to bring ideas and gifts to this collective work of baptizing, matrimony and anointing, this effort of Kujichagulia, Umoja and Imani. This is a meeting of the seven sacraments of the church and the seven principles of Kwanzaa. This is a meeting of the church. That is what makes it and us truly Catholic. Stay tuned, stay close, get involved, walk together and don’t you get weary! There’s a great camp meeting in the Promised Land. Believe that you are in the camp.
About the Black Catholic Initiative

The Black Catholic Initiative (BCI) has as its focus the 66K African American Catholics served by 351 parishes, 38 of which are predominately African American. The BCI was created to prepare the church for the next generation of African American Catholics, charging them to be fully present and accountable. The goal of the BCI is to come together and work together in order to give and serve the Church. The BCI is an ethnic ministry that actively participates and offers its work as a gift to the local church of Chicago. Those involved in the BCI will practice Umoja, Kujichagulia and Ujima, (unity, self-determination, collective work and responsibility) in order to first give honor to God and to offer Catholicity with the whole church. The BCI will be one church, not many parishes. In this tried and true tradition, the BCI will plainly and clearly be Catholic.