Passing of Reverend Monsignor Eugene A. Feldhaus

OFFICE OF THE CHANCELLOR
DIOCESE OF BROOKLYN
310 Prospect Park West, Brooklyn, New York 11215 ● 718.399.5990 ● FAX: 718.399.5934 E-mail: curia@diobrook.org

Most Reverend Nicholas DiMarzio, Bishop of Brooklyn, regrets to inform you of the death of Reverend Monsignor Eugene A. Feldhaus, a retired priest of the Diocese of Brooklyn. Monsignor Feldhaus was born on July 13, 1920 in College Point, was ordained to the Priesthood on June 15, 1946, and died Tuesday, August 21, 2018 at the Bishop Mugavero Residence, Douglaston. Monsignor Feldhaus served the Diocese of Brooklyn as Pastor of the Parish of Saint Gregory the Great (Bellerose), as well as Parochial Vicar of the Parishes of SS. Peter & Paul (Brooklyn) and Saint Hugh (Huntington Station). He also served as faculty of Cathedral College, in Douglaston. The arrangements are as follows:

WAKE
Saturday, August 25, 2018
7:00 PM – 9:00 PM
Saint Gregory the Great R.C. Church 242-20 88th Avenue
Bellerose, New York 11426
Tel: (718) 347-3707

Sunday, August 26, 2018
1:00 PM – 6:00 PM
Immaculate Conception Center 7200 Douglaston Parkway Douglaston, New York 11362
Tel: (718) 229-8001

VIGIL
Sunday, August 26, 2018
7:30 PM
Immaculate Conception Center 7200 Douglaston Parkway Douglaston, New York 11362
Tel: (718) 229-8001

FUNERAL
Monday, August 27, 2018
10:30 AM
Immaculate Conception Center 7200 Douglaston Parkway Douglaston, New York 11362
Tel: (718) 229-8001

BURIAL
Saint John Cemetery
Middle Village, New York

Monsignor Feldhaus was a member of the Priests’ Purgatorial Society. All priests are invited to concelebrate the Liturgy. Please bring your diocesan vestments. If you wish to send condolences, please mail to his niece, Ms. Carol Palmer, 709 Roma Road, Venice, Florida 34285. Please pray for the repose of his soul and for the consolation of his family and friends. May he rest in the peace of Christ, the Risen Lord.

Reverend Monsignor Anthony Hernandez, J.C.L.
Chancellor and Moderator of the Curia

PUT OUT INTO THE DEEP – Our Commitment to Catholic Education by: Bishop Nicholas Dimarzio

Put Out into the Deep

Our Commitment to Catholic Education

My dear brothers and sisters in the Lord,

The summer months are coming to a close and the new academic year is about to begin. While these months bring rest and relaxation, we in the Diocese of Brooklyn, our pastors, principals, and directors of the academies, continue to make plans for a great beginning to the academic year.

Pope Francis noted that Catholic education is our greatest and best inheritance, and together we must make every effort to sustain the Catholic school presence in our world. The U.S. Conference of Bishops has stated: “Catholic education is essential to the future of our country and we must continue to ensure that Catholic education is prominent in every archdiocese and diocese within the United States.”

In Brooklyn and Queens, we are continuously looking at ways to implement new academic programs, increase enrollment, identify new sources of funding and prepare our students for the future.

Our Catholic academies and parish schools impact our children in a living faith in Jesus. Furthermore, our effort to provide a quality Catholic education, which challenges students, is a benchmark that we strive for. There is a balance between our Catholic faith and academic excellence. Both strongly connect to the mission of Catholic education.

We are proud standard-bearers of the rich Catholic tradition and mission set forth by those who have walked before us. It is our obligation to nurture, foster, safeguard, and grow this grand responsibility. Our Catholic Identity to the greater community is one of “welcoming evangelization.” Through pastoral assistance plans, we work with our pastors, priests, deacons, and principals to develop liturgical celebrations and service projects that engage faculty, staff, students, and parents in their faith.

Spiritually, our Catholic education is one of the greatest conduits for bringing the Good News to our children, the future disciples of our Church. Our pastors and priests play a vital role in creating a partnership among parents, academies/parish schools and the parish community. Building a community of faith is essential to Catholic education. Our pastors and parish priests are regularly present in our academies and parishes as living models of faith. They embody the directive of Christ to offer hope instead of despair, love where there is hatred and tolerance where there is prejudice. Their welcoming pastoral presence provides a playbook for acceptance that we are all children of God. They are the mentors of teachers.

Intellectually, our academies and parish schools are called to educate to the highest standards of academic excellence and rigor, and we deliver. Our benchmarks of excellence call for us to develop the unique God-given talents of each and every student placed before us. We are able to keep current with the educational needs of our students through the ongoing generosity of the St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Trust, which provides unique programs for the students.

This year, there will be 30 state-of-the-art STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) Labs throughout the Diocese in Brooklyn and Queens. Through the support of our pastors and parishes, we are able to provide this unique opportunity for the students entrusted to us. In partnership with DeSales Media Group, students in over 35 academies and parish schools have received iPads for daily classroom instruction.

In addition, DeSales Media has developed and implemented the Diocesan Technology Institute, through which 35 teachers have been trained as technology coaches and will be working with their colleagues to further integrate technology within the classroom.

Efforts will continue to secure grants from Fidelis Care, and in the future the Mother Cabrini Health Foundation, as well as the Achilles and the Kramer Foundations that provide opportunities for students. Through the leadership of our principals and the dedication of our teachers, we are able to provide all students with a well-rounded Catholic education based on academic excellence.
Great education is taking place in the academies and parish schools.

In June 2018, the eighth grade graduating class generated over $4,416,291 in scholarships. In addition, students continue to be accepted at our Catholic high schools and the public specialized high schools including The Bronx High School of Science. We are on the right track and our students are well prepared for high school and beyond.

While our pastors and parish priests are the spiritual moderators, the principals, the instructional leaders, and the boards of directors in the academies bring their expertise to further enhance Catholic education in Brooklyn and Queens. Through their untiring efforts, the boards work diligently in the areas of finance, marketing, development and recruitment of new students.

This Spring, I once again engaged the boards of directors in recruiting students through our religious education programs. This process known as the Evangelization Scholarship has yielded 415 new students. While a work in process, we are committed to continuing to support the boards in recruiting students. As we begin the academic year, I remain concerned about enrollment trends, changing demographics, the number of families leaving the boroughs and the inability of some to pay tuition. That is why we continue to look for new ways of funding. The ongoing need for advocacy at the state and federal levels is essential to the success of Catholic education.

Our parents are the primary educators of their children. As parents, they are making great sacrifices to enroll their children in our schools. Covering tuition is not easy for many of our families. Through Futures in Education, eligible families receive financial assistance. The financial needs of our families are great and we continue to raise much-needed funds to assist all families.

Through the promulgation of the Preserving the Vision Strategic Plan in January 2018, we are planning for the future. Preserving the Vision Strategic Plan is the roadmap for the next three years as we continue to focus on the following:

• The Mission of Catholic Identity and the role Catholic education plays

• Academic Excellence and Providing All Students with a Quality Catholic Education that prepares them for their future

• Identifying new funding sources to further assist with financial assistance for our families

• Increasing enrollment given the challenges with we face in the Diocese

• Ensuring that Catholic education remains viable and accessible for all

We are reminded by the National Catholic Education Association (NCEA) in their Catholic Schools Week Theme: “Catholic Schools: Learn, Serve, Lead and Succeed.”

We have much to be proud of in Catholic education. We must all collectively continue to promote the great benefits of Catholic education, publicize our ongoing success stories and market our great educational programs.

All of those involved in Catholic education put out into the deep every day. As we begin this new academic year, we continue our commitment to Catholic education and to the flame of God’s love burning brightly here in Brooklyn and Queens.

Follow Bishop DiMarzio

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CURRENTS NEWS AND CRUX JOIN FORCES TO BRING AUDIENCES COMPREHENSIVE NEWS COVERAGE  OF THE WORLD MEETING OF FAMILIES IN IRELAND 

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEAugust 20, 2018

MEDIA CONTACTS:

Carolyn Erstad
323-384-7098
cerstad@desalesmedia.org

Adriana Rodriguez
516-238-7565
arodriguez@desalesmedia.org


CURRENTS NEWS
 AND CRUX JOIN FORCES TO BRING AUDIENCES COMPREHENSIVE NEWS COVERAGE
OF THE WORLD MEETING OF FAMILIES IN IRELAND 

Currents News and Crux are partnering up to provide in-depth coverage of the World Meeting of Families in Dublin, Ireland.

Held every three years, the celebration hosts hundreds of thousands of people and is the world’s largest Catholic gathering of families. From August 21 through the 26, the World Meeting of Families will feature a three-day congress, international keynote speakers, workshops, talks, testimonies and an open-air mass with Pope Francis.

The meeting comes in the wake of a vote to reform abortion laws and nearly a decade after Ireland’s clerical sex abuse scandal first broke. Once deemed the most “Catholic country,” the Church in Ireland is in the midst of advocating a new chapter and mission for the family in the context of the 21st century.

Currents News’ Liz Faublas will anchor coverage from New York, along with Ed Wilkinson, the Editor of The Tablet, and Jorge Domínguez, the Editor of Nuestra Voz. Currents’Correspondents Michelle Powers and Tim Harfmann report from Ireland. To lend analysis and expertise, Crux’s John Allen, Christopher White, Inés San Martín, Claire Giangravè, and Elise Harris will appear on the news program. Concurrently, Currents News’ reports will appear on Crux’s website.

During the week-long event, Crux and Currents News will explore theology, doctrine, liturgy, practices, and traditions of Catholicism in the context of the life of modern-day Catholics, giving full voice to disagreements and challenges facing the Church and believers.

Television coverage will take place on Monday, August 20 through Friday, August 24 on NET-TV’s Currents News at 7:30 pm EST.  Extended live coverage will begin with Pope Francis’ arrival in Dublin on Saturday, August 25 at 5:30 am EST, and then again on Sunday, August 26 at 4:15 am EST.

Currents News airs on NET-TV in the New York City area on Spectrum, channel 97; Optimum, channel 30; and Verizon Fios, channel 48. Live streaming is available at netny.tv.

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Message from Bishop DiMarzio: Pennsylvania Grand Jury Report

It is with great sorrow that I address the horrific stories in the Pennsylvania Grand Jury report detailing the sexual abuse of minors by members of the clergy. It is shameful to think that some bishops and others in positions of authority would have failed to recognize the gravity of child abuse and not taken greater steps to stop it. I know this has been hurtful and confusing to the faithful. It is even more painful to the survivors of clergy abuse who are forced to relive their trauma when they hear additional accounts of evil perpetrated against more than a thousand innocent children. The wounds of betrayal continue to be reopened. I know that words alone cannot express the anger and pain that many are feeling. Only Jesus can bring about healing in the midst of such darkness and brokenness.

Many people have lost trust in the Catholic Church, and words are empty without action. Here in the Diocese of Brooklyn, we continue to urge anyone who is a victim of sexual abuse, or is aware of sexual abuse committed by a member of the clergy, a diocesan employee, or volunteer to report it. Allegations called into the diocesan reporting line at 1-888-634-4499 will be immediately turned over to law enforcement and callers will be met with compassion, support, and concern. We are committed to ensuring that children and the most vulnerable are protected, that victim-survivors are heard, and that protocols to immediately and directly report allegations to law enforcement are strictly followed. Our Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program (IRCP) has allowed hundreds of victims to seek some sense of closure and compensation. The Church has come a long way over the past 15 years, but we must never become complacent. We must never stop working to understand and protect against the evil that has hurt and even destroyed so many within our Church. And we must remain committed to regaining the trust of the faithful.

Currents News and Crux join forces for coverage of the World Meeting of Families in Ireland

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEAugust 14, 2018

MEDIA CONTACTS:

Carolyn Erstad
323-384-7098
cerstad@desalesmedia.org

Adriana Rodriguez
516-238-7565
arodriguez@desalesmedia.org


CURRENTS NEWS
 AND CRUX JOIN FORCES TO BRING AUDIENCES COMPREHENSIVE NEWS COVERAGE
OF THE WORLD MEETING OF FAMILIES IN IRELAND 

Currents News and Crux are partnering up to provide in-depth coverage of the World Meeting of Families in Dublin, Ireland.

Held every three years, the celebration hosts hundreds of thousands of people and is the world’s largest Catholic gathering of families. From August 21 through the 26, the World Meeting of Families will feature a three-day congress, international keynote speakers, workshops, talks, testimonies and an open-air mass with Pope Francis.

The meeting comes in the wake of a vote to reform abortion laws and nearly a decade after Ireland’s clerical sex abuse scandal first broke. Once deemed the most “Catholic country,” the Church in Ireland is in the midst of advocating a new chapter and mission for the family in the context of the 21st century.

Currents News’ Liz Faublas will anchor coverage from New York, while Correspondents Michelle Powers and Tim Harfmann report from Ireland. To lend analysis and expertise, Crux’s John Allen, Christopher White, Inés San Martín, Claire Giangravè, and Elise Harris will appear on the news program. Concurrently, Currents News’ reports will appear on Crux’s website.

During the week-long event, Crux and Currents News will explore theology, doctrine, liturgy, practices, and traditions of Catholicism in the context of the life of modern-day Catholics, giving full voice to disagreements and challenges facing the Church and believers.

Television coverage will take place on Monday, August 20 through Friday, August 24 on NET-TV’s Currents News at 7:30 pm EST.  Extended live coverage will begin with Pope Francis’ arrival in Dublin on Saturday, August 25 at 5:30 am EST, and then again on Sunday, August 26 at 4:15 am EST.

Currents News airs on NET-TV in the New York City area on Spectrum, channel 97; Optimum, channel 30; and Verizon Fios, channel 48. Live streaming is available at netny.tv.

###

BISHOP DIMARZIO ISSUES STATEMENT ON DEATH PENALTY

Today, I commend Pope Francis for his clarification on Catholic Church teaching on the death penalty, declaring it inadmissible in all cases. In 1995 Pope John Paul II said that execution is only appropriate “when it would not be possible to defend society,” but he pointed out that such cases were “very rare, if not nonexistent.” Today Pope Francis has made even clearer the Church’s consistent life ethic.

While it has become popular for people to accept capital punishment as a just consequence for heinous crimes, the death penalty is an act of revenge. Taking someone’s life, regardless of the reason, is an attack, as the Holy Father said, “on the dignity of a person.” Capital punishment destroys the sanctity of life and diminishes us as a society.