“Solidarity in the Workplace” by Bishop DiMarzio

September 3, 2014 – Excerpted from “Put Out Into the Deep”, Bishop DiMarzio’s column in The Tablet:

Each year, prior to Labor Day, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development, of which Archbishop Thomas Wenski of Miami is the Chair and I am a member, issues a statement that comments on the present situation of labor in our Nation. Catholic social teaching is rich in a tradition of understanding the proper place of work in the human family.

Our Holy Father, Pope Francis, has added to this long tradition by stating that work “Is fundamental to the dignity of a person…. [it] ‘anoints’ us with dignity, fills us with dignity, makes us similar to God … gives one the ability to maintain oneself, one’s family, (and) to contribute to the growth of one’s own nation.”

Although the worst of the recession seems to be behind us here in the U.S., there are many countries where the work situation seems only to get worse. In our own society, unemployment is too high, especially among African-American males, Hispanics and other minority groups. Catholic social teaching tells us that work is the key to the social question, the social question being, “How can the common good can be achieved in any society?”

Without every member of a society contributing to the common good by their own labor, societies find themselves in terrible circumstances where wage inequality and opportunity inequality discourage human growth and development.

Read the full text of the Bishop’s column on The Tablet website.

Father Robert Lauder’s 48th Friday Film Festival

Father Robert Lauder, a regular on the NET TV’s Reel Faith with his “Movie with a Message” segment and his weekly column in The Tablet newspaper, along with the Office of Faith Formation and the School of Evangelization, will put on a movie for everyone to enjoy on six Friday nights this fall. The films begin at 8 pm at the Immaculate Conception Center in Douglaston. There is a suggested donation of $25 for the entire series or $6 for a single film. All tickets may be obtained at the door or by mailing a check payable to RC Diocese of Brooklyn, Attention School of Evangelization, 310 Prospect Park West, Brooklyn, NY 11215 together with a stamped self-address envelope to the Friday Film Festival. Don’t miss a single moment of these amazing pieces of cinema.

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Below is a list of films and the dates of the showing:

September 5: The Green Years (1946)
– Directed by Victor Saville and starring Hume Cronyn, Jessica Tandy, and Charles Coburn

September 12: Tomorrow is Forever (1946)
– Directed by Irving Pichel and starring Claudette Colbert, Orson Welles, and George Brent

September 19: Strange Cargo (1940)
– Directed by Frank Borzage and starring Paul Lukas, Joan Crawford, and Clark Gable

September 26: The Lives of Others (2006) (with subtitles)
– Directed by Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck and starring Martina Gedeck, Ulrich Mühe, and Sebastian Koch

THELIVESOFOTHERSOctober 3: White Elephant (2012)
– Directed by Pablo Trapero and starring Ricardo Darín, Jérémie Renier, and Martina Guzman

October 17: Rudy (1993)
– Directed by David Anspaugh and starring Sean Astin, Jon Favreau, and Ned Beatty

 

Brooklyn Parish Holds Interfaith Service for Peace and Reconciliation

On Saturday, September 6th, the parish of St. Martin de Porres will hold an Interfaith Service for Peace and Reconciliation following the tragic events of the last several weeks in Staten Island and Missouri. The initiative, lead by Monsignor Paul Jervis, aims to bring the Holy Father’s message for Peace and Reconciliation to our local communities. It will take place at 3 p.m. at St. Peter Claver Church, 29 Claver Place, in Bedford-Stuyvesant.

The service comes during the Feast of Saint Peter Claver, who dedicated his life to work in defending the rights of the African people and sought for the abolition of the slave trade.

“We have to stand up against violence and yet at the same time be for the brotherhood and the solidarity of all people. We have to be proactive for interracial love and understanding. That was what Saint Peter Claver was all about,” said Father Jervis, pastor of St. Martin de Porres.

The Interfaith Service is an open invitation for people of all religions and races to denounce violence. “It is a call for peace and brotherhood,” he said.

Founded in 1922, St. Peter Claver Church was the first African American Roman Catholic Church in the Diocese of Brooklyn. It was established by Monsignor Bernard Quinn, a champion of racial equality, at a time when discrimination against Africans was ubiquitous in America.