Reminder -- Make Reservation for the Hotel for March for Life before January 12

Dear Brother Priests, Deacons, Subdeacons, Consecrated Men and Women, and Lay Faithful, Cir. 22.01

Wishing you a Blessed Epiphany.

Please join us as we gather with fellow Maronites from across the United States to march for the sanctity and dignity of human life from the moment of conception to natural death. The 2022 March for Life will take place on Friday January 21st in Washington, DC.

To encourage more of our people to attend we have reserved a block of rooms at a discounted rate at the Mayflower Hotel in Washington DC. The hotel has extended the deadline for us to January 12, 2022. Please see the information below. More details and a schedule for the weekend have been attached to this email along with a google sign-up sheet for those interested in attending with our Maronite group.

Please share this information in the next few days so that a good number of our youth and young adults, children and families can join us as we pray and walk together as “Maronites for Life.”

Hotel Details

The Mayflower Hotel
1127 Connecticut Ave NW
Washington DC 20036
202-347-3000

To reserve a room: $159 Standard King Bed/$169 Double Beds: https://book.passkey.com/e/50270086

If you prefer to call the Hotel, mention March for Life Block and you will get the discounted rate.

Please note:
Rooms need to be booked by January 12. The blocked room rates will no longer be available past this date. Each person booking a room is responsible for their own room fees and is responsible for canceling, if necessary, within the Hotel’s allowable time period to avoid charges.

Likewise, please sign up with the google form below, and we will contact everyone attending the Vigil and March, a few weeks before with any updates. Contact information is found below for any additional questions.

Click here to sign up: March for Life Sign Up

Contact Information:

Maya Khoury (MYA) 804-559-1454
Linda DiNardo George 540-520-1679
Email: familyandsanctityoflife777@gmail.com

Thank you for your support especially for the unborn.

+Gregory

St. Joseph’s displays Bethlehem-sized Nativity scene

From the Olean Time's Herald comes an article about Fr. Claude Franklin's extensive nativity set.

OLEAN — They say it takes a village to raise a child, and it looks like all of Bethlehem is present for the birth of Christ in the Nativity scene at St. Joseph’s Maronite Catholic Church.

What began as the personal collection of Father Claude Franklin, pastor at St. Joseph’s, with the primary manger figures has expanded to more than 40 humans, several dozen animals and a small town’s worth of buildings and structures.

Read more at https://www.oleantimesherald.com/news/st-joseph-s-displays-bethlehem-sized-nativity-scene/article_f6ac0af8-6dee-599c-a7d2-e78af523f2aa.html

Christian organizations support struggling Lebanese Catholic schools

The Catholic school managed by the Missionaries of the Most Blessed Sacrament at Beit Hebbak, Lebanon, is having a difficult time financing their ministry given the current crisis.

From the Vatican News web site: https://www.vaticannews.va/en/church/news/2021-12/christian-organizations-supporting-catholic-schools-in-lebanon.html

Without the financial support of generous benefactors and small donors, Catholic schools in Lebanon would be forced to close. The crisis has made it impossible for the majority of families to pay for their children's schooling. Vatican News has visited a school in Beit Hebbak, a small town in the center of the country.

To help the Missionary Sisters of the Most blessed sacrament go to their web site, https://www.stmaron.org/how-you-can-help

or mail a check payable to "The Eparchy of Saint Maron" to

109 Remsen street,
Brooklyn New York 11201

Lebanon Election

Dear Friends in Christ,

Please find attached a FAQ to share with our people regarding the 2022 Lebanese Election.

Below please find the link to a video I made to promote registration. Time is of the essence, the last day to register is November 20, 2021. Please remind those who can, to register to ensure their participation.

With sincere best wishes and prayers, I remain

Yours in Christ
+ Gregory

Pro-life, End of Life Resources

Circ. 21.46 Dear Brother Priests, Deacon/ Subdeacons, Consecrated Men and Women, Lay Faithful

Attached please find some Pro-Life helps for each of you.

First, is the flyer for the upcoming Pro-Life Vigil and March for January 21, 2022. Please post this on your social media. I hope as many as possible will join us for this important work to reverence life.

Second, is a video and accompanying booklet produced by the Diocese of Providence on end-of-life issues. I hope you will find this as helpful as I have. We face this challenge more and more these days.

May God give us the grace to hold sacred every human life from the moment of conception to natural death.

+ Gregory

United Nations Inter-Faith Ecumenical Prayer Service

Dear Friends in Christ:

Below is an excerpt from a Catholic News Service report on Bishop Gregory's reflection at the recent Inter-Faith and Ecumenical Prayer Service on the occasion of the opening of the United Nations General Assembly.

In the face of widespread evidence of humanity’s dark side, speakers a prayer service Sept. 13 — on the eve of the opening of the 76th session of the United Nations General Assembly — identified unmistakable signs of hope.

Bishop Gregory J. Mansour of the Maronite Diocese of St. Maron of Brooklyn said there is a “great and edifying effort” by the United Nations to counter “totalitarian forms of government that trample the rights of the people they are called to serve.”

He also highlighted the “global work to alleviate human trafficking, assist refugees and people on the move, work on nuclear disarmament, combat climate change and so much more.”

The bishop referred to remarks made at the International Religious Freedom Summit in Washington this summer, which stressed that the right to religious freedom “is not conceded to us by any nation or by governments but is innate by virtue of being human.”

“Our relationship to God defines who we are as persons and must be understood and respected as even more important than our allegiance to any worldly power or government,” he told the congregation gathered at the Church of the Holy Family near U.N. headquarters.

The leader of a Maronite Catholic Diocese in New York said that greater protection of religious freedom is a buttress against attacks on the dignity of the human person by overreaching governments, groups and individuals.

He also urged the assembled ambassadors and diplomats to support Lebanon as an ongoing “inspiring sign of interreligious and political harmony.”

Although he said the ongoing pandemic is a deep concern he said it also serves as an invitation from a loving God to greater solidarity among people and has demonstrated the generosity of international humanitarian aid agencies and some developed nations.

Similarly inspiring, he said, is the growing resolve to use international cooperation to remedy human-caused harm to the Earth.

Bishop Mansour said Pope Francis’ recent visit to Iraq, where he met with Shiite and Sunni leaders, holds great promise for the future.

There is increasing respect for the dignity of the human person and his or her inalienable rights in the world today, the bishop said. More people work to honor the truth that human life in “all its stages is a sacred gift.”

“If we do not treat each person as an unrepeatable gift, we risk becoming transactional beings, simply a means to an end for governments or anyone else to use or exploit,” he said.

Religious leaders offer prayers before start of U.N. General Assembly

Bishop Gregory's reflection can be found here.

Saint Vincent DePaul - Lebanon

Please join Bishop Gregory Mansour for the Eparchy of Saint Maron's Virtual Benefit Event on October 7, 2021.

The Event will raise needed funds for the Eparchy, so that it can continue to serve Maronites in the United States and help in Lebanon.

The Event will also honor those institutions and individuals who have been dedicating their time and resources to help the people of Lebanon during these difficult times.

And please enjoy the following video from the Saint Vincent De Paul Society in Lebanon.

virtual-benefit-quadrant.jpg

Friends of Lebanon: One Year Later

Christopher Hart-Moynihan, Director of the Unitas “Friends of Lebanon” Project, has written an article, "Friends of Lebanon: One Year Later", for the one year anniversary of the Beirut port explosion. The article includes an interview with Bishop Gregory.

Please see https://urbietorbicommunications.com/lebanon-update-2-2021-august-3-a-path-forward/ to read the article and learn how you can become a "Friend of Lebanon".

Lebanon’s Christian leaders around the Pope in prayer for the nation - Vatican News

Christian leaders of Lebanon gathered around Pope Francis in the Vatican on Thursday for a Day of Prayer and Reflection for Lebanon. Vatican News

Patriarch Raï: Day of Prayer for Lebanon is important step for unity

The Patriarch of the Maronite Church, Cardinal Béchara Boutros Raï says the day of Prayer and Reflection for Lebanon is an important step to help Lebanon remain the home of Islamic-Christian dialogue, and a country of democracy, progress and civilisation. Vatican News

Bishop Mansour on the Son Rise Morning Show ahead of Pope Francis's meeting with Lebanese leaders


Anna Mitchell: We are honored to welcome back to the Sunrise Morning Show, Bishop Gregory Mansour, bishop of the Eparchy of Saint Maron of Brooklyn. Bishop Mansour, welcome back to the show.

Bishop Gregory: Thank you very much.

Anna Mitchell: It's good to have you and we have been eagerly awaiting the meeting organized by Pope Francis to address the crisis in Lebanon and it is finally happening this week on July 1st. Who will be taking part in this meeting with the pope and what will they be doing?

Bishop Gregory: Of course the Pope will be there probably Cardinal Pietro Parolin, his Secretary of State; Cardinal Sandri, the head of the Congregation for Eastern Churches; the apostolic nuncio to Lebanon, Archbishop Joseph Spiteri; and of course the Maronite, the Melkite, the Syriac, the Armenian and the Coptic leaders. Maronite, Melkite, Syriac and Armenians would be the Patriarch and the Coptic would be local Latin local bishop as well as the Latin bishop as well as Evangelical and Orthodox leaders as well.

Anna Mitchell: And what is the purpose of this meeting? What do they hope to, I mean, are they hoping to accomplish something here?

Bishop Gregory: Yes, they are. It's for prayer, it's for sharing and it's for ecumenical encounter as the pope has said the other day. And the idea is that by the closer unity of the Christians perhaps that would inspire the political leaders who are right now torn between affinities towards Iran or affinities towards Saudi Arabia and hopefully to inspire the political leadership of the country to get their act together so that they can form a government.

Anna Mitchell: This is something that we've talked about a lot with the folks at in Defense of Christians about just the sheer incompetence that we are seeing from really what is the lack of a government in Lebanon these days. Can you give us the latest in terms of the state of affairs in Lebanon politically, socially, etc.?

Bishop Gregory: Yes. So there was a government that was formed about a year ago and then after the August 4th blast in Beirut harbor, that government all resigned. Another government was proposed but it was not received yet and we're still waiting to see if the members of that new government would be acceptable and on every side. And so the problem is, as I mentioned, Iran is pulling one way, Saudi Arabia is pulling another way and then you have the political leadership who have their own personal interests. That has created a real vacuum of governance in the country. So that's what we're praying for. That people would wake up to put their own interests aside, put Iran and Saudi Arabia's interests aside and focus on Lebanon.

Anna Mitchell: Because there is some major suffering happening right now. Correct bishop?

Bishop Gregory: Yes. For instance a family of four a year ago could live on a hundred dollars a month but with the drop of the currency of the Lira, that hundred dollars a month a year ago is now ten dollars a month.

Anna Mitchell: Wow ten dollars a month is what families have to live on?

Bishop Gregory: Well no; some of them but what to me is most amazing for you and the listeners is the outreach -- the humanitarian outreach of the Catholic Church. I mentioned the Melkite, Maronite, Syriac, Armenian, Coptic and Latin churches. They all have schools and hospitals and nursing cares, drug rehabilitation centers. These are all communities that work in their local parishes as well to work for the betterment of the poor. And that's the story of Lebanon. I hate, I can't stand the political ridiculousness of many countries, not just Lebanon. But, I love the passion and the service for the poor of the Catholic Church and that's what I'd love your listeners to take away. If they can help in any way they can go to our website. They can see ways in which we can help and that sustains the people of God on the ground.

Anna Mitchell: What is that website?

Bishop Gregory: “www”, “Saint Maron”, “s-t-m-a-r-o-n dot org”. That's “s-t-m-a-r-o-n dot org”.

Anna Mitchell: And we will have that linked at sunrisemorningshow.com for listeners so that they can find it that much easier. I did want to ask you, Bishop Mansour, I mean how important is the Christian community especially the leaders of the Christian community when it comes to rebuilding Lebanon?

Bishop Gregory: I cannot overstate the importance of the Christian communities in Lebanon. Their schools are open to Muslims and Christians alike. Their hospitals are open. I just went to a nursing home for special needs women and girls. Sixty percent of them are Muslim and the forty percent that Christian -- none of those families can pay for anything and it's the Sisters of the Cross who work for the poor and about fifteen staff members. Even in this most difficult time so the Christian community has taken up what the government has failed to do.

Anna Mitchell: How important is it for the people there to know that the pope is so invested in this?

Bishop Gregory: You know all of the popes have been -- Pope Paul, Pope John Paul ii, Pope Benedict, and now Pope Francis. They get Lebanon and what they get is that Lebanon is a country in which Christians deliberately work to include Muslims in a conviviality of common life. That's really big. That's really important for our world to see. Christians were not separated from them, from others. They worked with others to form a country and that's what the popes get and that's why the popes from John Paul ii on have said. “Lebanon is more than a country it's a mission”. It's a mission of East and West. An example for East and West and that's what we don't want to lose.

Anna Mitchell: So Bishop Mansour, what are your hopes for the results of this meeting that Pope Francis has organized?

Bishop Gregory: Well, I hope it'll bring attention of the world. Our pope, our patriarch in Lebanon wants two things: He wants to see Lebanon declared like a Switzerland of the Middle East, a neutral country so that every conflict of the Middle East doesn't engage Lebanon. That's first; second, he wants an international conference at the U. N. to help resolve some of the external issues that are that are blocking a formation of a government in Lebanon and we'll take care of the internal if we can, but the externals all need to be taken care of by the international community. So that's what our patriarch is hoping for and that's what the holy father by him bringing all of the Christian leaders to Rome will help to strengthen the vision of Lebanon, the mission of Lebanon, and hopefully the success of Lebanon.

Anna Mitchell: I'm sure that this is something that the Maronite community in the United States is praying fervently for alongside the Holy Father and the Christian leaders who will be meeting in Rome.

Bishop Gregory: Yes, we are. Bishop Elias Zaidan and myself penned a letter and sent it to all of our priests and our people and put it on our facebook pages. Just asking people to spend that day in a solidarity of prayer and fasting for Lebanon.

Anna Mitchell: Well we will join you in that as well. We've been talking to Bishop Gregory Mansour. He's the bishop of the Eparchy of Saint Maron of Brooklyn and again, it's “stmaron.org” “s-t-m-a-r-o-n-dot-org” is where you can get more information to support the Christian communities in Lebanon and Bishop Mansour, we're so grateful that you had the time to join us and tell us more about this meeting. Be assured of our prayers and we hope to have you back soon. Thank you so much.

Bishop Gregory: Thank you, I appreciate it very much.

Christians in the Middle East

November 19, 2020

Symposium: Act in Time

Protecting Imperiled Christians

In most conferences on Persecuted Christians, we speak about infractions against the God given right of freedom to worship as well as freedom of conscience, that is, to live openly and freely one’s faith. These unjust restrictions are unfortunately on the rise.

They exist in overly secular countries, where it is considered “discrimination”, and in some places, people are no longer allowed to express a principled and reasonable approach to moral issues.

It is also true in socialist countries, such as some places in South and Central America. It is also true in communist countries such as China and Southeast Asia. This is certainly and unfortunately true in Islamic countries such as Saudi Arabia, Iran, Turkey, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and others.

I would like to focus my brief remarks on the Islamic world, where Christians and Jews have left because they found no safe harbor, no protection, no respect for their “otherness”, and no respect of their status as citizens.

This sad story is old, and rather depressing. What happened over 100 years ago, namely the Armenian, Syriac, Assyrian, and Lebanese Christian genocide at the lands of those responsible in the Ottoman Empire, is even more distressing. In other words, Christians have suffered at the hands of Muslim rulers from the Mamluks to the Mongols, to the Ottomans, and recently at the hands of non-government militias such as, Al Qaeda, Al Shabab, ISIS, Boko Haram, and many others.

However, on a more positive note, I want to focus on what also happened around 100 years ago which could be seen as an antidote, a sign of hope in the Christian Muslim conflict. This was the establishment of Modern Day Lebanon. In 1920 the Maronite Patriarch, Elias Howayek, led a delegation to Versailles, France, along with the Muslim Mulfti, to urge the allied countries to recognize “Greater Lebanon”. The boundaries proposed for this modern state intentionally included Shiite, Sunni, Christian and Druze areas, and the nation would live a conviviality, which years later, Pope John Paul II would remark, even in the midst of civil war 1975-1990, that Lebanon is “more than a country, a message for the world”.

The 74-year-old Maronite Patriarch made that dangerous trek to Versailles saying he was not a political man; he was armed only with his love for his homeland and the Rosary. This hope for a different world still abides in the hearts of Christians and Muslims living today in Lebanon and throughout the Middle East. They are armed only with the love of their homeland, their faith in God, and their reliance (Christians and Muslims) on the Blessed Virgin Mary.

I thus ask my Muslim brothers who govern in Saudi Arabia and in Iran, you are engaged in a fratricidal rivalry over hegemony in the region, and all the people of the Middle East suffer from this. Will the Middle East continue to suffer because of your rivalry? I also ask my Muslim brothers who govern in Turkey, you are intent on reclaiming the triumphal memory of the Ottoman Empire. Do you not see how this affects the minority populations, especially Christians in your midst? And I ask all Muslims of good will everywhere, is this dream of Lebanon, common to Muslims and Christians alike, which is also the dream of Christians throughout the Middle East to remain in their homelands, is this a shared dream? Does it meet with compassion in your hearts or are you determined to govern only Muslim people and all others are not welcome?

Whatever the answers may be, we Christians will continue to stay in our homelands, whether we are wanted or not. It seems to be the story of our lives ever since Mary and Joseph were told in Bethlehem that there is no room at the inn. There seems to be no room for us today in the Islamic world.

Nonetheless, it will be to the great loss of the Islamic world if Christians are absent. The ancient Christian communities have offered to their societies, before the advent of Islam, hospitals, nursing care facilities, schools, and a variety of charitable efforts. Christians have been known for these great services not only intended for themselves, but for non-Christian as well. It will be a sad day if the Islamic world continues to support policies that tell Christians they are no longer welcome in their own homelands. We can only pray that the good example of Lebanon will somehow, with the help of the Virgin Mary, prevail in the Islamic world.

✝ Gregory John Mansour

Bishop of the Eparchy of Saint Maron of Brooklyn

The Election of Maronite Patriarch Bechara Peter Rai -- March 2011 -- A Personal Reflection

In a Middle East where leaders do not easily give up power, nor do people easily work out differences, something beautiful took place among the Maronite Bishops, which has also refreshed the Maronite Church and in fact all Christians.

The March 2011 Patriarchal Synod of the Maronite Church has been for us a watershed of many graces. Together, we Bishops, for six days in March felt the history of the Church transporting us back to the communion and love present in the first gathering of Christians for the election of Matthias to take the place of Judas. (Acts 1:21-26) In the Chapel, the Bishops prayed for the intercession of Matthias, along with that of Mary and all the Apostles. God met us in our need.

After three days of prayer and fasting, and three days of democratic election and consultation, we elected Bishop Bechara Rai of Byblos/Jbeil as Patriarch. His election has proven to be a real blessing for our Church. Bkerke, the monastic style residence of the Maronite Patriarch, had been flooded with visitors from all parts and all communities of Lebanon, the Middle East and in fact from throughout the world. On the fifth day of our synod a Bishop proposed that we spend an evening of prayer before the Blessed Sacrament. We did, and although there was more reflection and vocal prayer than the silence I was longing for, it was still beautiful and gave us the direction we needed. We were reminded that this is Christ's Church, not ours! We are stewards devoted to doing His work and His will. By a combination of prayer, conversation and much good will, each bishop was able to put the Church's needs first and their own needs second. The election process was one of the most respectful and beautiful acts a Church can witness; and by the grace of God, I had the privilege of participating and observing it firsthand.

Our Maronite Church, one of 21 Eastern Catholic Churches is governed by a Synod, which means by a "team" composed of a Patriarch and his Bishops. Our Maronite Church, since the acceptance by the Holy Father of Patriarch Nasrallah Peter Cardinal Sfeir's resignation letter has been governed by Bishop Roland Aboujaoude, the oldest by rank of ordination in the Patriarch's Curia. He governed the Church from the time of the Pope's acceptance of the Patriarch's resignation up to the enthronement of the new Patriarch. But he did not govern alone, for like the Patriarch, he governed with the "team" of 40 Maronite Bishops.

We voted twice in the morning and twice in the afternoon for three days, until the 13th vote when Patriarch Rai emerged with the required 2/3. No one knew from the beginning who would become Patriarch. Some Bishops came to the Synod having in mind their favorite candidate while others thought that they themselves may have a chance to become Patriarch. Still others were undecided and open to hearing what their brother Bishops had in mind. Slowly hearts and minds were changed until we were able to determine which one of us was the best choice to assume the helm of this holy ship and to lead her to safe harbor. During each of the 13 sessions of voting each Bishop was required by oath to vote his conscience before God. During the final vote, along with each of us, the new Patriarch wrote his secret ballot. He later admitted to us that he was the one who had written the words: "communion and love" (sharika wa mahabba), which he said, and I most heartily agree, described the entire election. These words will subsequently guide his service as Patriarch.

His Homily at the Enthronement was beautiful. While working to help translate it, I told one of the Bishops it was way too long. My brother bishop quickly informed the new Patriarch of what I said. It is a good thing he has a sense of humor! After the enthronement, I greeted the new Patriarch, with, "I was wrong, the homily was perfect." In fact, it was.

The Liturgy of the Enthronement was stunning with Shiite, Sunni, Druze, Orthodox, Catholic and Evangelical Christians, political leaders of Lebanon, including the President, the Prime Minister and the Speaker all in attendance. The most significant moment in the Ceremony, which unfortunately was not well seen or understood; was when all bishops, in groups of 7, went to place their hand on the staff of the new Patriarch. This was a sign of our support for him and for all the responsibilities entrusted to him. If this reflection has helped you feel the beauty of communion and love that were woven in this entire process, perhaps you too will extend your hand to support the new Patriarch in the common labor we have been entrusted with - to build up the Church and society.

✝ Bishop Gregory Mansour

reprinted with permission

"A Theology of the Body" by Pope John Paul II

Introduction to the Annual Priest Retreat
Given by Father Thomas Loya
January 2007, Entitled:
"A Theology of the Body" by Pope John Paul II

In the book by Luke Timothy Johnson entitled The Real Jesus, the author distinguishes the four real from the several and well known false gospels by the following criteria:

In the authentic gospels, the essence is clear: the Pascal Mystery, for example the suffering, bodily death and true resurrection of Jesus Christ is treated honestly and without back peddling. In the false gospels, or the inauthentic ones, all of the authors shied away from the Pascal Mystery. They seemed to be afraid of the truth that says: real love suffers, makes sacrifices, dies!

Pope John Paul II brought with him from Krakow the text of his next book, his next course, it was "a study in human love". His starting point was this:

  • a deep and abiding love and respect for the human person;

  • a love for human love, and the profound God-given meaning for sex;

  • a definition of love taken from the mystics, namely that love is a self-giving, a self- sacrifice for the good of the other. This gives meaning and joy both to the one who loves and to the one who is loved. This is made clear in Christ’s sacrificial love for us and in his "complete joy".

Thus “A Theology of the Body” was born. The Real Jesus is the One who teaches us about love, the One who lived and died for others. My brothers, this is true celibacy, this is true marriage: a way of being for others. I asked Father Tom Loya to give this retreat for several reasons:

  • First, I have my own personal experience of him in Rome, knowing how dedicated he was and is to Christ and to His Church.

  • Second, I know of his great love for John Paul II, and

  • Third, I appreciate his commitment to help us better understand Pope John Paul II’s important work on human love. This essential insight into human love is at the very heart of our priestly ministry. And so I welcome Father Tom to help us reflect this week on Pope John Paul II's "A Theology of the Body."

✝ Bishop Gregory J. Mansour

reprinted with permission

Address for Priests Retreat 2009

When God revealed His presence and made known His name to Moses at the burning bush, He began a new way of accompanying His people. During the years they wandered in the desert they were led by His presence in “cloud and a pillar of fire.” (Ex 13:22) He gave Moses the tablets of the law, and these, along with the blossomed rod of Aaron and the manna which appeared each day in the desert, were placed in the Ark of the Covenant, which the priests carried wherever His people went. On their way to the Promised Land as they carried the Ark, when the soles of their feet touched the water of the Jordan, it ceased to flow; “the water flowing down from upstream halted in a solid bank." (Jos 3:13)

When King Solomon built the Temple, even though God told his father, David, that He does not dwell in houses made by human hands, but would instead build a house for David, He was nonetheless, pleased, and as the Ark was brought to its resting place in the holy of holies “the cloud filled the temple of the Lord so that the priests could no longer minister because of the cloud, since the Lord’s glory had filled the temple.” (1 Kg 8:11)

In the fullness of time, shepherds had seen a star at its rising…which came to rest over the place where the child was…On entering the house they saw the child with Mary his mother…They prostrated themselves, did him homage and then opened their treasures to offer him gifts. (Mt 2:9-11) When Jesus came from Nazareth of Galilee and was baptized in the Jordan by John, upon coming out of the water the heavens were torn open and the Spirit, like a dove, descended upon Him. A voice came from the heavens, "You are my beloved Son; with you I am well pleased." (Mk: 1:9-11)

In a radically different way, on the day before He suffered, Jesus took bread into his hands, broke and gave it to His disciples and said: “take and eat, this is my body.” Likewise, He took the cup…and said “do this in memory of me.” (Lk 22) God’s way of accompanying His people, like the first time He spoke to Moses, would never be the same from this night forward. His self-giving love, manifest in Eucharist, would be a new manna, a bread of love, which priests offer each day throughout the world.

It is hard to imagine, brothers, that we who in the past were led by a “cloud and pillar of fire,” who carried the Ark, ministered in the Temple and beheld his glory, and who today, by privilege of ordination, hold Him in our very hands, could do anything less than honor this awesome presence. Do we realize this gift? Do we take His presence for granted? Can we spend an hour each night of our retreat in Eucharistic Adoration? Can we bear to consider our unworthiness? Has our share in His priesthood become routine? Do we possess within ourselves a spirit of awe and wonder at our lofty place between heaven and earth? Do we fulfill our priestly duties with love and devotion? Do we pray with reverence and “behind clouds of perfumed smoke cower, and dare not even glimpse the power that now descends over our altar?” (Liturgy of the Announcement to Mary)

Brothers, this week we break from routine, accuse ourselves before God, confess our sins, admit our faults, spend time with Christ in this chapel, make amends and start anew. But we need God’s grace, one another’s support, and the prayer of the Blessed Virgin.

Whether it was the inspiration of a priest, our parents’ encouragement, the support of a friend, or simply God’s grace working overtime in our soul that led us to this privilege place of priesthood, may we honor this gift by drawing ever nearer to the One who thundered from the heavens and said “this is my beloved Son, on whom my favor rests.”(Mk 1: 9-11) May He also be pleased with us, His priest sons, and accompany us in Eucharistic presence. May we enter once again into the mystery of God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit and may the prayer of the Virgin Mary and all the Church be with us. A blessed retreat to each of you.

✝Gregory J. Mansour

reprinted with permission

Address to Youth and the Young Adults

Once, in a time long ago, there was an artist. The artist put his whole heart and soul in his work. He found it hard to express what was in his soul. However, he worked hard and kept his eyes fixed on his goal. He heard comments like: “Stop shooting for the stars”, “quit dreaming” or “what you do doesn’t matter that much. This caused him much pain. His work suffered but he persevered.

People where he lived settled for what was average mediocre, they criticized innovation. After a while, he realized that for the sake of his God-given talent he had to leave that place. So he set out, hoping in his heart that his artistic vision could truly create beauty in the world. He settled in a barren place, on a river’s edge, and there he continued his work spending many hours of the day and night hammering out every detail. At first, those who looked at his work thought it a bit strange. He was again criticized and ridiculed. But, later, these same people came to know and love him and to see beauty and wisdom in his work.

Toward the end of his life, there arose in the people of the surrounding area much interest in his work. Friends became interested and actively involved in helping him create more beautiful works than he had ever imagined. Then, as the Divine Artist called him home, his faithful son entrusted his unfinished work to the hands of his friends.

The artist was St. Maron. His canvas was his very soul and character. Little did he suspect that his beautiful vision of Jesus Christ would one day become the interest for so many. In fact, we are blessed to share in his name and memory; we are Maronites!

The style of Christianity was becoming complex where Maron lived. The gospel of simplicity practiced since the time of St. Peter the Apostle, was quickly lost in the complexity of daily life. Maron left his home for the shores of the Orontes River in ancient Syria. There he sought solitude and prayer. The more he sought quiet, the more he found himself in the service of others, counseling and healing. By the time of his death in 410 A.D., monks gathered in his name to form the Monastery of St. Maron and they became the first Maronites.

The Monastery was soon a center of spiritual healing and prayer for the people of the surrounding villages who also became known as Maronites. They sought spiritual perfection in all they did. They not only “handed on”, but they enhanced the “Maron Mosaic” while calling upon poets, artists, spiritual guides, working men and women, families, elders and youth. Each of them, in their unique beauty, contributed to this unfinished work.

And so began a new way of life. The followers of St. Maron had no idea that their way of life would have such an impact on society. Maronites were to make their presence a positive one wherever they lived. By being faithful “monks”, they stood up against all that was shallow and artificial in society, for a monk leaves behind the busyness of a self-seeking society in order to start a new society, one born of justice, love, and good order.

The life-style that St. Maron inspired was not an escape from the world, but rather a bold re-entrance, a new engagement, almost a defiance, as if to say: “Christianity can truly be lived, come and see!”

According to the gospel precepts, a monk sold all that he had to follow Christ. He concerned himself only with the essentials, what was central to life itself. For the Maronite, prayer, which simply placed God on a pedestal and spoke in flowery words about His greatness was not prayer at all, but empty chatter. God is the God of silence. He is the God who is beyond our impressions of Him, yet very near to us in His Son, Jesus Christ, who became one of us.

The prayer of the Divine Liturgy reminds us:

“You have united, O Lord, Your divinity with our humanity, and our humanity with Your divinity”.

The Maronite addresses God not in distant and aloof terms, but rather as “Lover of Mankind”, “Ocean of Mercy” and “Fountain of Life”.

The best way for the Maronite to pray is in poetry and silence – the language of love. Poetry, because only by metaphors and analogy, which stretch words beyond their capacity, can people one express what is deepest in their hearts. Silence, because a contemplative life-style is a reminder that love of God and neighbor is what life is all about.

Maronite Art is deeply human yet touched by the divine. It depicts scenes from the Scriptures with full color and human faces.

Maronite Hymns make this point even clearer. The Latin Tradition has Gregorian Chant. The Byzantine Tradition has majestic hymns with multi-part harmonies. The Maronite Tradition uses music familiar to the people, simple and easy to remember. Sometimes the chant was festive, sometimes reflective, but always letting the words speak for themselves, assisting one to draw closer to God, touching both the senses and the heart.

The monks avoided mere habit when it came to art, music, poetry, or prayer. They prayed like the ancient Jews in the Temple and Synagogues. They used expressions, prayers and gestures like those of the earliest Christians. They were conservative and proud inheritors of Christ’s culture: His language and His customs, His Jewish ancestry.

By the seventh and eighth centuries the Maronites were forced to flee Syria because of persecutions, thus making the protective mountains of Lebanon home. They even helped to create the modern nation of Lebanon. In America we are the Maronites in a new culture planting ancient roots in a new soil. Today, we are living proof to an ever-greater migration from Lebanon and the Middle East through the centuries to the four corners of the earth.

Maronites are “old fashioned” when it comes to respecting themselves and others, believing that the body is a gift from God to be honored and respected. How we do this is very important. Maronites love chastity, not because they are prudish, but because they believe that sex has a noble purpose, and a lofty meaning. They believe that they can make a true gift of themselves in marriage, and they ought not give themselves to anything less. Thus, they believe that this gift of self is reserved either for consecrated service to God, for marriage, or for a generous single life. Everything else falls short of God’s love plan.

Maronites are down to earth, lovers of Scripture and nature, bold pilgrims and pioneers. They are a team of artists that dates back to the fifth century: artists specializing in the art of living. Maronites are future visionaries who must now complete the “Maron Mosaic” based on what they know of their past and what Christ and his Church teach about the present. Knowing who they are is important, not just for their own sakes, but to honor the blood, sweat and tears of those who labored before them.

Dear young brothers and sisters, no other time in the history of the Maronites is more important that right now. Maron’s artistic vision could very easily collapse. The Maronite Catholic Church, one of the twenty-two different Churches that make up the Catholic Church, united with the Pope in Rome could die of neglect! The Maronite Church is the only Church never to be divided, the only Eastern Church to have always maintained close ties with the Pope, the successor of the Apostle Peter in Rome.

We are more than an “ethnic” Church. We are a Church with a mission. We embrace almost every nation of the world. St. Maron, whom we believe, along with all the saints, is in the presence of God the Father, must be dancing with joy. How little did he know that God would use his life to establish an international way of following Jesus Christ and loving God and neighbor.

If today Maron could speak to you the Youth and Young adults, I believe he would speak in this way:

  • “Beloved brothers and sisters, you and your ancestors have made many sacrifices to keep your faith. Thank you for your interest in my vision of life with Jesus as Lord. Today I celebrate your faith.

  • Don’t worry about money or social status because this type of worry will blind you from seeing God’s face in the cedars of the mountain, the roar of the sea, and the eyes of your neighbor.

  • Be concerned with the lives of others, the goodness of the earth, your own desire to do God’s will and in doing this you will find Him. Avoid whatever is superficial, and seek out what is unfading and sure.

  • Listen to the voice of Pope Benedict and Patriarch Nasrallah Peter Cardinal Sfeir and their successors. In doing this you are listening to the voice of St. Peter, who was chosen by Jesus Himself, as the head of the apostles.

  • Complete the masterpiece that my friends and I labored over in past ages. You are young and you can see clearly the mistakes of the past. You can improve the present. You are the new team of artists in this yet unfinished work of art. The cost of living.

  • Let your voices be heard! I trust your judgment and the adults need to hear you! Dream your dreams and make a gift of your lives for what is good.

  • Open wide your hearts so that you may see clearly and hear our Lord’s call to you to rebuild His Church. Young people, you are my hope!”

Dear young people of today, put your whole heart and soul into the art of living. When you face adversity, as did Our Lord, persevere. Be wise, remain prayerful and never lose confidence that God walks with you. Don’t be afraid to be a little “old fashioned”. You are entrusted with a precious unfinished work of art – the Maronite Church! You can make all the difference in the world.

May the prayers of Saint Maron, father, hermit and friend to the youth, be with you.

Sincerely yours in Christ,
✝Gregory John Mansour

reprinted with permission

Artificial Contraception — Part I

Recently, on a visit to a parish I received two surprise compliments, the first from a young adult who thanked me for the articles I write in the Maronite Voice, the second from a father of a large family. The young adult asked that I keep in mind the young when I write, the father asked if I would write an article on artificial contraception since I “write with such a human touch”, as he put it.

To both of them I dedicate these few lines and refer to the popes who have written with a “human touch” on the sensitive issue of contraception.

The desire to regulate the size of our families has been on the mind of every parent from the beginning of time. It is only in the last 50 years or so that science has given us two effective ways to do it: artificial contraception and Natural Family Planning (NFP). Today, both ways have plenty of science behind them. Unfortunately, we know much about the artificial methods and little about the natural methods of family planning. NFP is based on the daily observation of the woman’s signs of fertility.

This natural means respects the God-given fertility of both the man and the woman, as well as calls forth the practice of virtue in both spouses. It imposes upon a man and a woman a brief period of abstinence from sexual relations if they would like to defer the possibility of conceiving a child. Unfortunately, for a variety of reasons, some professionals look with disdain on NPF. The most basic reason for this is that most physicians are not knowledgeable about NFP because they do not learn it in medical school. A lack of education is at the heart of this misinformation. Nonetheless, it is a spiritual and meaningful way to help a husband and wife bond with each other in a way that is truly life giving and personal as well as respectful of God’s plan for their family.

Pope John Paul II, in his groundbreaking work popularly called the Theology of the Body, said that God created man and woman as sexual beings who naturally yearn for union. We long to give ourselves as a gift and receive the other as a gift. This is so, says John Paul II, because men and women are made in God’s image. In the creation account in Sacred Scriptures, notes the Holy Father, “human beings are not compared to anything else in the world when they are created; but are compared to God Himself – this has profound meaning – for, as I John states, “God is love” (1 John 4:8).” Thus men and women are created in love for love. (Pope John Paul II’s Catechesis on Genesis)

God designed marital union to be both a sign of the couple’s “one flesh” union as well as to be procreative. The Church describes this as the “unitive and procreative” aspects of marital union. Thus in this union, so beautiful and profound, there should be nothing to obscure God’s image of men and women. Nothing should interfere with God’s design for married love. Every time marital intimacy is shared, the truth that this union is meant to give life should always be honored.

Married couples who have grown to appreciate Natural Family Planning often speak of the great joy they feel in developing a respect and appreciation for one another and the truth that their sexual union is always open to God’s will: the possibility of new life and the truth that their physical union is an image of communion with God Himself.

Pope Paul VI, writing in 1968, gives us a window into the beauty of chaste married life. Here below, with a very human touch, are his words in Humanae Vitae:

“Self-discipline is a shining witness to the chastity of husband and wife and, far from being a hindrance to their love of one another, transforms it by giving it a more truly human character. And if this self-discipline does demand that they preserve in their purpose and efforts, it has at the same time the salutary effect of enabling husband and wife to develop their personalities and to be enriched with spiritual blessings. For it brings to family life abundant fruits of tranquility and peace. It helps in solving difficulties of other kinds. It fosters in husband and wife thoughtfulness and loving consideration for one another. It helps them to repel inordinate self-love, which is the opposite of charity. It arouses in them a consciousness of their responsibilities. And finally, it confers upon parents a deeper and more effective influence in the education of their children. As their children grow up, they develop a right sense of values and achieve a serene and harmonious use of their mental and physical powers”.

To those who for years have practiced artificial contraception, I hope you will reconsider; to those young couples just beginning their married life, and to those young adults who are contemplating marriage, I hope you will consider the Church’s teaching a positive source of life and meaning so that your marriage will be happy and holy.

In the next part, with the help of the “human touch” of Pope John Paul II, I hope to explore the meaning of why the Church teaches against the use of artificial contraception.

✝Gregory John Mansour

reprinted with permission

Artificial Contraception — Part II

Before discussing in more depth artificial contraception, I have often been struck by Pope John Paul II’s often-made connection between certain moral issues and contraception. Kindly allow me to review the issues of abortion, assisted suicide and stem cell research, as outlined by the late Holy Father, before moving on to our topic.

Abortion is a choice. God made us free to choose as we see fit, and no one should limit our freedom. The argument sounds valid, but although God made us free, abortion is not a real choice. How can one morally choose to harm or kill others, whether they are embryo size, unborn and still in the womb, disabled, old or infirm? Life is a sacred gift in every way and at every moment, and always worthy of respect.

With regards to assisted suicide, although we have every right to say “enough” to suffering, the assisted suicide that is now legal in Oregon and Washington State, under the premise that we should have some control over our lives, is not a solution. The argument may sound valid to some, but the logic is not complete. For self-serving reasons of money, inheritance, or family or personal issues, the disabled, infirmed, terminally ill or depressed is placed in an even more vulnerable position if left to think that they ought to consider ending their lives for the good of others or themselves.

On the topic of stem cell research, there are now over seventy proven cures that are directly the result of stem cell research. Catholic hospitals, which make up one third of all hospitals in the United States, are in fact on the cutting edge of much of this scientific progress. The problem is that some scientists and bio-tech firms as well as the present Administration and Congress, have been promoting, with the help of certain ideological movements, another kind of stem cell research, one that has delivered nothing yet falsely claims to hold great promise: embryonic stem cell research. This research destroys embryos, clones human life and experiments on tiny conceived human beings, who if never touched would become you or me.

How are these moral issues related to artificial contraception? According to Pope John Paul II they are tied by one tiny but clear thread. In all of the above issues, we take what are God’s prerogatives and make them our own. In abortion, we play God and say that a certain unborn child who is wanted may live and another who is not wanted may die. In assisted suicide, we say that one person deserves to be loved and cared for until the time of natural death and another should end his life because he is a burden on himself and/or others. In embryonic stem cell research, we say that science, which has offered awesome wonders by reprogramming adult stem cells, should be able to tamper and destroy the embryo for medical benefits.

The same incomplete and mistaken logic has to do with artificial contraception. Natural Family Planning has scientifically proven itself, and its moral and ethical benefits are praised by many couples. Nonetheless, we want to do things our way, and no one, not even the Church, should tell us what to do with something so private and personal.

Even though the issue of artificial contraception is unlike the issues mentioned above, it is similar in how we relate to one another and whether or not we honor what God has written in our very nature. The late Pope John Paul II, from 1979 to 1984 in his Wednesday general audiences, dedicated these lessens to the beauty of our nature, gender, sexuality, love, need for friendship, and dignity of marriage and family life. These audiences were later edited and put in one volume, entitled The Theology of the Body.

The late Pontiff’s main point was that our masculinity or femininity is a gift from God. This is how we relate to others – in particular our spouse if we are married. How we see ourselves in relation to God is not a private matter that we determine all by ourselves, but also a personal and communal one that involves God and others. There is a language, certain wisdom, written in our natures, in our very bodies, and we are not just “on our own” to figure it out. Rather, we belong to God—indeed, we are made in His image! Like our Lord Jesus, we can give ourselves as a gift. This self-giving, the secret logic of love, ought not be taken lightly. In marriage, a man and a woman say a complete “yes” to God and to one another. By virtue of this “yes” they come to personally experience and know more about themselves and God.

The language that spouses speak, Pope John Paul II says, must be as honest as possible. They must not take each other for granted, nor use the other for their own gain, but rather share all things in common. The highest form of their personal sharing is prayer, the second highest is their sexual union, which is also, along with prayer a most honest communication. Sexual union says, “I give myself completely into your keeping; I want our union to be open to God; I love you no matter what.”

Artificial contraception confuses the clear logic and language of self-giving love and openness to God. It is like saying “I love you” but with “fingers crossed”. Pope John Paul II said that the union of spouses is so special that it is part human and part divine. Couples, therefore, ought to enter this union with respect and awe.

Two elements of divine wisdom are written into this marital union: first, it brings a couple to a deeper union with each other, and second, since this union is holy, couples have the privilege of co-creating with God a new person, a child, made in His image and likeness. Artificial contraception obscures the procreative element of this profound and sacred union, and thus places what is a divine, yet very human, completely into the hands of the couple alone.

In artificial contraception we take what is holy, what is God’s, what is given to us for our freedom to decide, and take too much of it to ourselves to control. Artificial contraception, unlike its alternative Natural Family Planning, does not encourage the couple to know and respect the fertility cycle of the woman, and thus the couple lives according to their own plans and emotions. This distances them from the woman’s fecundity cycle and the man’s power to create, which God alone has placed within their very own bodies. As Pope John Paul II has said, when we alone direct our path without the help of God, we easily become strangers to ourselves and to one another.

There is much more to say on this topic. For more information please log onto www.usccb.org/prolife/issues/nfp. and see especially the United States Catholic Bishops’ summary of Catholic teaching in Married Love and the Gift of Life, which can also be found on line at: www.usccb.org/laity/marriage/MarriedLove.pdf.

✝Gregory John Mansour

reprinted with permission