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January 19, 2010  #83     858-490-8323
 
 
 
Dear e-link Subscriber,

Human life is so fragile.  This January, please hold in your thoughts, prayers, and actions, all those whose very lives hang in the balance: the unborn, those injured in Haiti, those with incurable diseases, the destitute living without basic goods, and yes, even those on death row.  With confidence in Divine Providence, we believe that if death touches those for whom we pray, the Lord has a special place ready for each and every one of them.  May our concern for them be real.  May Christ be with them in their trials.

Health Care Reform Alert:
Please remember to stay involved in the federal health care reform debate.  Sign up (see just above) and become a member of the California Catholic Legislative Network

Also, find up-to-date information on the U.S. Catholic Bishops' position on health care reform on the USCCB web site: www.usccb.org/healthcare.

As always, we remind current members and inform new members that past e-link bulletins and this current bulletin can be viewed at www.osmelink.org.

Have a blessed 2010!

 

Tuesday, January 19, 2010  e-link Bulletin #83

Table of Contents 


Remarks from Deacon Jim Walsh - "The Manger is not Far from the Cross"

 

Key Upcoming Culture-of-Life Gatherings/Projects (please join us)

    1. (Second Notice)
         Two local January Respect-life Events in 2010 - Mass for the Protection 
        of Human Life on the vigil of the Anniversary of Roe v. Wade with Bishop
        Brom on Thursday, January 21, 7:00 p.m. at Our Lady of the Rosary and
        A Public Prayer Rally on the Anniversary of Roe v. Wade, on Friday, 
        January 22, 4:30 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. at the corner of Grape St. and Pacific
        Highway, Downtown San Diego - Please join us for these two important
          events


    2. A second "40 Days for Life" is coming to North San Diego County - In San
       Marcos, from February 17 through March 28, join hundreds of prayerful
       citizens in public witness in front of the North County Women's Medical
         Clinic
on 120 Craven Road

    3. You are invited to the 2010 "Open House” meeting of the Thomas More
        Society - Meet others in the legal community and learn about serving
        the marginalized in our midst - Friday, February 5, 2010 at Noon - Our
          Lady of the Rosary Parish


    4. Please join the Ignatian Volunteer Corps for an inspiring and transformative
       afternoon on the topic of “Lay and Jesuit Colleagues: A Spirituality that
       Transforms the World.”  Special guest and speaker Rev. Howard Gray, S.J. -
        Sunday, January 24, 2:00 p.m. at USD's Founders Chapel
 

Short Reports on Office for Social Ministry Related Issues/Events

    1. St. Gianna Physician’s Guild Promotes Catholic Values in Medical Profession -
        a Southern Cross interview with Thomas McKenna, founder and director
        of the Guild

    2. National Knights of Columbus Make a Life Saving Contribution to Culture 
       of Life Family Services in San Diego


Web and e-mail-based Resources

     - Every now and then caring people hit on a manner of presenting the truth
      that surpasses the truth itself - The Bioethics Defense Fund has
      done just that - You will appreciate this two-minute message of hope
        from the Bioethics Defense Fund

 

Local and Regional Events/Gatherings/Projects

     1. Attend the San Diego Friends of Fair Trade monthly meeting on Wednesday, 
         February 10, at 6:30 p.m. at the Open Door Book Store in Pacific Beach

     2.  "Get Acquainted with Detention Ministry" monthly information/training
          session offered by Deacon Walsh at the Pastoral Center - Call for the 
          February training sessions' dates and times

     3.  North County prayer witness at the Carlsbad Planned Parenthood Clinic
          scheduled for every third Monday of the month from 10:00 a.m. to
          10:30 a.m.

     4. Prayerful witness for life at two locations in San Diego County - every
         Saturday and Wednesday at 7340 Miramar Road, just east of the Pyramid
         Building, adjacent to Carroll Road, and the second Saturday of every 
         month at 15546 Pomerado Road in Poway

     5. St. Dismas Guild sponsors two weekly hours of prayer for the unborn
         in front of the North County Women's Medical Clinic on Craven Way

     6. St. Elizabeth Seton Parish in Carlsbad also supports the St. Dismas 
         Guild prayer ministry in front of the North County Women's Medical 
         Clinic on Craven Way

     7. St. John the Evangelist Parish in Encinitas Pro-Life Mass and Rosary held
         on the first Monday of each month

     8. Prayer Vigil at Planned Parenthood - First and Grape Street, San Diego –
         Saturdays from 7:30 a.m. to 9:30 a.m.

     9. Most Precious Blood Parish in Chula Vista Rosary Prayer Vigils held every
         Wednesday at 8:45 a.m.

    10. Prayer partners are needed at 1079 Third Ave., suite 3, in Chula
         Vista - abortions are performed at this facility - Meet each Wednesday
         from 8:45 a.m. to 10:45 a.m.

    11. Join neighbors and friends to pray in front of the new Planned
            Parenthood
facility in El Cajon on Fridays and Saturdays

    12. The Goretti Group is offering a chastity prayer gathering and a speaker
            training monthly along with a Mass to celebrate chastity
 

Article/Statement for January 19, 2010

     - Do you remember Proposition 71, the multi-billion dollar scam in California
        that funded embryonic stem cell research at taxpayers' expense?  It has
        failed miserably.  Read a brief examination of this failure by the Investor's
        Business Daily

 

Remarks from Deacon Jim Walsh 


The Manger is not Far from the Cross



by Deacon Jim Walsh

Can we find Christ in crime victims and in offenders?  Victims usually evoke images of the innocent, suffering Christ who was injured and ultimately murdered.  But isn’t that image of Christ also similar to an offender, an inmate who is imprisoned, treated inhumanely and executed?

And how about the families of the crime victim, and those of the offender, and the communities harmed?  They are usually victimized more than financially as a result of a crime.  Often they are left physically, emotionally, and spiritually harmed.  They may inexpressibly suffer, seeking unfound answers and needing assistance for years or for a lifetime. 

Consider Mary, the Mother of Jesus -- crime victim and family member of accused offender, the King of the Jews.  As Jesus is dying, He commends Mary to the care of a young St. John and to us!  Then consider the Christian community that felt abandoned and afraid after believing that they “lost” their leader, their teacher, their savior - to an execution.

Are we to care for those whom the “system” ignores or is incapable of dealing with?  If our “system” doesn’t provide a justice that heals, are we called to help bring healing to crime victims and their families and the families of offenders?

Consider this:  Jesus was on “Israel’s Most Wanted” list from the moment of his birth.  Herod was jealous and insecure enough to try to trick the Magi into telling him where the newborn King was located.  Herod ordered the execution of innocent babies for the sake of his convenience, his “security.”

Jesus’ ingenious stepfather and mother, inspired by the Holy Spirit, protected the young Jesus from the “system.”

Thirty years later the system failed, and Jesus, the accused offender/victim, was executed.  As a result of the redemptive freedom His death and resurrection bought for us, we are called to respond!  To be “responsible” to those victims and offenders in the system who are:
 
- hungry for answers,
- thirsty for justice,
- naked and vulnerable to abuse and neglect,
- unwelcomed strangers in a world of unresolved ongoing residual victimization,
- sick and needing healing, answers, reconciliation,
- imprisoned and needing recognition, visitation and forgiveness.

The Restorative Justice Program in the diocese is grateful to those who say “yes” to the above questions – to prison ministry volunteers, support teams for families of victims and offenders, people who send Christmas cards for inmates, and victim/offender volunteer mediators. 

If you feel called to say “yes” and want to get acquainted with the variety of ways to respond, please call 858-490-8375 or visit www.diocese-sdiego-org/restore.
 

 

 

Key Upcoming Culture-of-Life Gatherings/Projects


Number 1: (Second Notice)  Since 1973, those of us who value human life from conception to natural death have gathered to remember the pre-born children that have been lost since Roe vs. Wade, the U.S. Supreme Court decision that legalized unrestricted abortion in all 50 States - Join Bishop Brom and fellow Christians on Thursday, January 21, at 7:00 p.m., and join hundreds of fellow pro-life activists on Friday, January 22, at 4:30 p.m. to remember the unborn and pray for all those who have been harmed by abortion





Love Life - We Do!



Join Us for Two Roe vs. Wade Anniversary Events


 



On Thursday, January 21, 2010 - at 7:00 p.m.

Mass for the Protection of Human Life on the vigil of the Anniversary of Roe v. Wade with Bishop Robert Brom on Thursday, January 21, at 7:00 p.m. at Our Lady of the Rosary Catholic Church, 1629 Columbia St. in San Diego (Little Italy) - A reception will follow Mass in the parish social hall with displays from local pro-life service organizations

 

 

Friday, January 22nd, 2010 - at 4:30 p.m.

  

A Public Prayer Rally/Candle-Light Vigil on the Anniversary of Roe v. Wade, on Friday, January 22, from 4:30 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. at the corner of Grape St. and Pacific  Highway, Downtown San Diego


 


For information or questions contact Kent Peters at 858-490-8324


 

 

Number 2: 

A second "40 Days for Life" is coming to North San Diego County - In San Marcos -  From February 17 through March 28, 2010, join hundreds of prayerful citizens in public witness in front of the North County Women's Medical Clinic on 120 Craven Road








This Spring, from Ash Wednesday, February 17, through Sunday, March 28, San Marcos will be one of the over 200 cities joining together for the largest and longest coordinated pro-life mobilization in history - the 40 Days for Life campaign.
 

40 Days for Life is a focused pro-life effort that consists of:

- 40 days of prayer and fasting
- 40 days of peaceful vigil
- 40 days of community outreach


We are praying that, with God's help, this groundbreaking effort will mark the beginning of the end of abortion in our city -- and throughout America.

Please join the 40 Days for Life Campaign Kick-Off celebration.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010, at 5:30 p.m., "Mass for Life" at St. Mark's Catholic Church, followed by a Candlelight Vigil in front of the abortion clinic at 120 Craven Rd., San Marcos, starting at 6:30 p.m.

Looking ahead: Mid-way Celebration.

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010, at 5:30 p.m., "Mass for Life" at St. Mark's Catholic Church,
followed by a time of prayer and meditation: "The way to Calvary, a memorial to the unborn" in front of the abortion clinic at 120 Craven Rd. San Marcos starting at 6:30 p.m.

Take a stand for life!

While all aspects of 40 Days for Life are crucial in our effort to end abortion, the most visible component is the peaceful prayer vigil outside a local abortion facility.

You can help make a life-saving impact by joining our North San Diego County vigil at:


San Marcos Care Center, 120 Craven Road, San Marcos CA in the
Palomar Pomerado Health Building - corner of Twin Oaks Valley & Craven Roads

Sign up to participate in our local 40 Days for Life vigil:   Yes, I want to Help!

http://vigilcalendar.com/sanmarcos/login/login_page
 
To learn more, sign up for specific vigil hours, or let us know how you feel called to serve God in this effort, please contact the local 40 Days for Life leadership team:

sanmarcos40daysforlife@gmail.com

760.438.2860

40 Days for Life takes a determined, peaceful approach to showing local communities the consequences of abortion in their own neighborhoods, for their own friends and families.  It puts into action a desire to cooperate with God in the carrying out of His plan for the end of abortion in America.

The 40-day campaign tracks Biblical history, where God used 40-day periods to transform individuals, communities ... and the entire world.  From Noah in the flood to Moses on the mountain to the disciples after Christ's resurrection, it is clear that God sees the transformative value of His people accepting and meeting a 40-day challenge.

Vision and mission

40 Days for Life is a focused pro-life campaign with a vision to access God’s power through prayer, fasting, and peaceful vigil to end abortion in America.

The mission of the campaign is to bring together the body of Christ in a spirit of unity during a focused 40 day campaign of prayer, fasting, and peaceful activism, with the purpose of repentance, to seek God’s favor to turn hearts and minds from a culture of death to a culture of life, thus bringing an end to abortion in America.






 


 

 

 


 

Number 3: You are invited to the 2010 "Open House” meeting of the Thomas More Society - Meet others in the legal community and learn about serving the marginalized in our midst - Friday, February 5, 2010 at Noon

Attention all attorneys, judges, paralegals, law librarians, law office administrators, and law students:  You – including newcomers, regulars, & hardly-seen members – are kindly invited to attend the 2010 "Open House” Meeting of the Thomas More Society on Friday, February 5, 2010, starting with Noon Mass and followed by a Luncheon Meeting at Our Lady of the Rosary Parish, located on the corner of Columbia & Date in Little Italy, near downtown San Diego.  










Visit TMS' web site for its mission & profile at:  www.stthomasmoresociety.com (update pending:  ignore sites’ dated contacts & calendar).  Attend and play a vital role in making the Society bigger and better, as we will explore:  options for CLE programs, improved networking, publishing a directory for wide circulation, and forming a “TMS Volunteer Service League,” in which members can offer to provide volunteer services to existing legal clinics (such as Casa Cornelia and St. Vincent de Paul Village/Fr. Joe’s Villages) or to provide non-legal service to other programs, from soup kitchens to orphanages.  $12, law students $6.  Feel free to copy this notice to others.  Bring a guest!  Kindly RSVP: 619-595-4294.  

 






Number 4: Please join the Ignatian Volunteer Corps for an inspiring and transformative afternoon on the topic of “Lay and Jesuit Colleagues: A Spirituality that Transforms the World.”  













 

Rev. Howard Gray, S.J., a nationally recognized expert on Ignatian spirituality and current Special Assistant to the President of Georgetown University, will be with us for Mass and a special presentation on Sunday, January 24, 2010, starting at 2:00 p.m.





Fr. Gray’s presentation will address the questions: How can we work together with others to bring about God’s dream of love and service for our world?  How can we find spiritual direction in our lives and discern the path God has for each of us?  How can we find God in all things?

Sunday, January 24, 2010

2:00 p.m.
Eucharist, Founders Chapel
Howard Gray, S.J., Presider
University of San Diego
5998 Alcalá Park
San Diego, CA 92110

3:00 p.m.
Presentation: “Lay and Jesuit Colleagues:
A Spirituality that Transforms the World” - Founders Chapel
followed by reception with refreshments (wine, cheese, fruit, etc.)



To register and/or for more information please contact:

Ignatian Volunteer Corps of San Diego
Margie Carroll
mcarroll@ivcusa.org
619-881-9509
 

 





Short Reports on OSM Related Issues/Events


Number 1:   St. Gianna Physician’s Guild Promotes Catholic Values in the Medical Profession - An Interview with Thomas McKenna, Executive Director and Creator of the St. Gianna Physician's Guild

From The Southern Cross Catholic Newspaper

By Denis Grasska


SAN DIEGO – For more than a decade, Thomas J. McKenna dreamed of creating an organization for Catholic physicians.

In 2006, that dream became a reality when he founded the St. Gianna Physician’s Guild, a not-for-profit organization that assists physicians and health care workers in giving public witness to the sanctity of human life and the value of faith.

The guild is named after St. Gianna Beretta Molla, an Italian physician who was canonized in 2004 by Pope John Paul II and is beloved by the pro-life community for a selfless decision that cost her life but saved that of her unborn child.

McKenna, who has devoted 28 years to various Catholic lay organizations, has come to understand that arguments based on scientific fact or the natural law can be more effective than direct appeals to religion when it comes to building support for the Church’s teachings.

(Thomas J. McKenna with photo and relic of St. Gianna)

“I also realized that … the opinion of a physician, someone who had a scientific degree recognized by society in general, could have more of an impact and get the attention of people who otherwise would not listen,” McKenna said, explaining his reasons for founding the guild.

Though not a physician himself, McKenna is married to a gynecologic oncologist. Their relationship has given him “a greater insight into the demanding and rigorous lifestyle of physicians,” he said, and his wife has been a constant source of encouragement and support. Also supportive of his efforts is the family of the guild’s namesake, St. Gianna; he now proudly counts members of the Molla family among his close friends.

McKenna recently spoke with The Southern Cross about St. Gianna Molla and the St. Gianna Physician’s Guild.

The Southern Cross: When and how did you first learn about St. Gianna Molla? Why did you find her story so inspiring?

Thomas J. McKenna: I first learned about St. Gianna back in the late 1990s after her beatification. She especially caught my attention because she was a Catholic who took an active role in promoting and defending her faith. She is well-known for declining to have a hysterectomy to remove a tumor from her uterus while pregnant with her fourth child. The surgery would have resulted in the death of her unborn child. 

SC: What makes her such a positive example for Catholic physicians?

McKenna: She is a positive example for physicians because she was not only an accomplished physician herself, but also cared for the souls of her patients. In her writings, she referred to the practice of medicine as a “priestly mission.” She said that many times physicians have opportunities that a priest does not have; that the mission of a physician does not end when medicine is no longer of help; that there still remains the soul that must be brought to God. She used to say that, “Just as the priest can touch Jesus, so we doctors touch Jesus in the bodies of our patients: in the poor, the young, the old and children.”

SC: What is the St. Gianna Physician’s Guild? What is the organization’s mission?

McKenna: The mission of the St. Gianna Physician’s Guild is to unite and encourage Catholic physicians, as well as others in the health care profession, to promote and defend Catholic principles in a public way, by word and example, and to inspire sanctification in their lives. It seeks to use the influence and expertise of the medical profession to clarify and support sound ethics and morality in the practice of medicine and proclaim them in the public forum. To promote these values, the guild teaches about St. Gianna’s life and virtues.

SC: What are members of the guild expected to do?

McKenna: Guild members are encouraged to use the materials and activities of the guild to reach out to others and promote Catholic principles. One of the main features of our outreach is an enshrinement ceremony I developed, during which a beautifully framed picture of St. Gianna, accompanied by a relic, is enshrined in a church, hospital, clinic or physician's office. The picture of this saintly mother, holding one of her children in her arms, is a convenient way to spark interest in her life and bring up topics of the faith. The goal of this program is to spread devotion to St. Gianna and promote her as an example, most especially for physicians. We also have a pin that physicians can wear on their white coats. People will see the pin and ask what it is, providing the physicians with a convenient way to bring up the subject of faith without seeming like they are preaching.

SC: What else must a physician do to become a member of the guild?

McKenna: We have also created an oath they must sign. It is an adaptation of the original Hippocratic Oath, which we call the St. Gianna Physician’s Guild Catholic Hippocratic Oath. It is usually signed during the enshrinement program. Many of the doctors now ask for an extra copy, so they can frame it and hang it alongside the picture, where their patients can read it. The oath is our security that the doctor is faithful to Church teachings.

SC: Is the guild only for doctors?

McKenna: No, the guild is open to anyone. The only requirement is to be faithful to the teachings of the Catholic Church. Though it is focused on physicians and others in the health care profession, we also have associate members who assist in introducing doctors to the goals and programs of the guild and who spread devotion to St. Gianna. These can be nurses, priests, pro-life advocates, housewives, students and others.
Many times someone who is not a physician has more time to dedicate to organizing events. We have produced a 30-minute video of St. Gianna’s life, with more than 100 photos obtained from her family, which volunteers and associates can screen at churches, schools, pro-life groups and other places where her story can inspire people. We also have retired doctors with many contacts in the medical field.

SC: How large are the guild’s membership rolls? How much interest is there on the national and international scale?

McKenna: Up until now, we have been focused on establishing the programs and now we are launching a membership drive. We currently have about 150 members across the country. I have also been contacted by people in Australia, the Philippines and the Ukraine asking for assistance. There is a group of clergy and health care professionals in the Ukraine who have invited me to go there in May for an eight-day speaking tour to introduce the guild and explain its activities to clergy, physicians, hospital administrators and medical students. They said there is an urgent need to introduce good moral ethics in health care and feel the guild can do just that.

SC: Why should a person join the guild? What spiritual benefits will they receive? How will their membership help them?

McKenna: By becoming a member, people will be part of a growing network and can use the resources of the organization to evangelize. Uniting with other guild members increases the impact and influence of the organization in defending and promoting Catholic principles.

We have already seen the results. Physicians have told us of the interest their patients and staff have in St. Gianna and the guild. 

We recently received a call from a woman in Houston who has suffered for years with a brain tumor. Her neurologist had recommended she contact the guild to learn more about St. Gianna and the spiritual consolation of praying to her. In a case like this, the doctors are consoled to have something spiritual to offer their patients that give them hope and confidence in their faith.

SC: You have met the family of St. Gianna. How did you meet them? What are they like?

McKenna: I met the family members through friends of mine in Italy who are active in pro-life work. Since then, I have developed a very close relationship with St. Gianna’s three children – Pierluigi, Laura and Gianna Emanuela – as well as with her brother, Father Giuseppe Beretta, and her sister, Mother Virginia Beretta. They are all like any other people. But they are honored that their mother and sister was canonized a saint, and they realize an obligation and responsibility to respond to that by attending requests and engagements to speak about her.

SC: What does the Molla family think about the St. Gianna Physician’s Guild? Did the family have any involvement in its creation or any recommendations for its future?

McKenna: Before founding the organization, I traveled to Italy to meet with the family. They were extremely enthusiastic and supportive of the idea from the beginning and have given a lot of assistance. Since then, we have become very close friends and I consult with them regularly. I keep them informed of our programs and they are working with me on future plans with the guild. I have invited St. Gianna’s son, Pierluigi, to visit California to speak about his mother and we hope to host him here next fall.

SC: Recent efforts to reform the U.S. health care system have generated heated debate; critics have warned that the proposed reforms will result in the federal funding of abortion, the promotion of euthanasia and the rationing of health care services, with the elderly and those with special-needs most in danger of being denied treatment. What direction can the example – and intercession – of St. Gianna provide at this critical moment?

McKenna: I would say that St. Gianna’s witness and principles she followed reflect the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church and are the basic guidelines that should be followed when addressing any issue related to health care. St. Gianna’s husband, Pietro, once said that St. Gianna lived her life like any other person of her time. She cared for her family, drove a car, went to the opera and attended dinner parties and many other activities that someone of her age would do. However, he said that St. Gianna’s compass in life was her Catholic faith. She judged her actions and opinions always in light of her Catholic faith.

SC: For those who want to learn more about the guild or who are considering joining, where can they turn for more information?

McKenna: They can write to us at P.O. Box 910308, San Diego, CA 92191; visit us on the Web at www.stgianna.net; or call (858) 461-0777. Also, I should mention that we are organizing a pilgrimage to the shrines of St. Gianna and the Holy Shroud of Turin next April. Those on the pilgrimage will have the opportunity to meet St. Gianna’s children and sister, as well as to hear them talk about her. More information can be found on our Web site under “pilgrimage.”

The Southern Cross



 

 

Number 2:   National Knights of Columbus Make a Life Saving Contribution   to Culture of Life Family Services in San Diego 

The Knight of Columbus National Supreme Council awarded Culture of Life Family Services (COLFS) a $25,000 grant to purchase an ultrasound machine for their Escondido location (211 S Grape St).  An anonymous Catholic donor matched the KOC grant to provide the balance needed for the life-saving machine.

COLFS provides Christ-centered family medical care for all ages and crisis pregnancy support. Over the past four years, the San Diego COLFS office (550 Washington St.) has given hundreds of abortion-intent women an opportunity to witness the life they are called to protect. According to Director Dot Harms, “The ultrasound machine is the most valuable tool we have for awakening an abortion-intent woman’s maternal love for her unborn baby -- it is a powerful moment when she sees the baby and hears his or her heartbeat. The odds of that baby being born go up about 70 percent.”

(Photo - from left: Ed Scheer, Color Corps Commander and District Deputy 109, Sir Knight Jim McAllister, Sir Knight Jim Healey, Sir Knight Dr. George Delgado, Faithful Navigator Manny Perez, Sir Knight John Herrera)

With two abortion clinics operating in North County, an ultrasound machine was needed in the COLFS practice in Escondido. The sidewalk counselors and prayer warriors needed a facility nearby to send the women they were reaching, a haven to provide loving, Christian medical care and guidance in a non-threatening and supportive environment -- a place that would offer these women a true choice -- a choice of life.

Until now another ultrasound machine was a prayer and a dream. North County Knight Manny Perez was the facilitator working with COLFS and the National Supreme Council to make this dream a reality. COLFS medical Director, Dr. George Delgado and associate physician, Dr. Karen Saroki, look forward to celebrating the many lives sure to be saved by this generous, life-saving donation.

Visit COLFS on the Web: www.colfs.org

 

 

Web and e-mail-based Resources


The Bioethics Defense Fund works tirelessly to provide innovative and practical legal and educational solutions on the issues of abortion, euthanasia, human cloning, and embryonic stem cell research.  They have just given us a valuable tool.

"Thinking of Abortion: Fear or Trust?"

From a viewer's comments... "This the perfect example of how less is more.  This video is both simple and powerful simultaneously.  Truth is simple and powerful simultaneously."

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=39dK237zac8




 

 

 

 

 

 

 




 

Abortion is a reaction to fear.  It takes courage to embrace unexpected love.  Do not fear.  You are not alone.  A message of hope from Bioethics Defense Fund.  This video is part of BDF's BioDebate project.  BDF encourage comments and respectful debate.

You are welcome to post this video on your website, blog, social networking page, or email. Spread the word.
  





http://www.bdfund.org/

 

 

New Local/Regional Events and Gatherings 


If you are planning an event that falls within the mission of social ministry, send the particulars four to five weeks in advance to the Office for Social Ministry via e-mail, osmelink@diocese-sdiego.org.  The OSM reserves the right to publish or not to publish any proposed event information.  We hope this will assist your local efforts to rebuild a culture of life.
 

1. Attend the San Diego "Friends of Fair Trade" monthly meeting

San Diego Friends of Fair Trade is a coalition of non-profit organizations and congregations attempting to advance the cause of fair trade.  They work to insure that all individuals who toil, both at home and around the world, to provide consumers with commodities are paid a living wage, one that can sustain a life with dignity. 

The next SD Friends of Fair Trade meeting will be on Wednesday, February 10, 2010, at 6:30 p.m. at the Open Door Book Store on 4761 Cass St., Pacific Beach - For more information, please contact Carolyn Lief at fairtradesandiego@gmail.com 

 

2. Get Acquainted with Detention Ministry in the Diocese of San Diego

Join Deacon Jim Walsh each month for an Information and Training Seminar on detention ministry and restorative justice at the Diocesan Pastoral Center, 3888 Paducah Drive, San Diego, 92117

Visit the OSM Restorative Justice Web site: www.diocese-sdiego.org/restore

For the month of February...

The next Information and Training Seminar will be scheduled soon.  Please check with Deacon Jim (see below) to receive training dates and times for February.

Sorry, no walk-ins.  Contact Deacon Jim Walsh for reservations or questions: 858-490-8375 or e-mail Deacon Jim at jwalsh@diocese-sdiego.org

 

3. North-County prayer witness at the Carlsbad Planned Parenthood Clinic

North County parishioners meet the third Monday of every month from 10:00 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. to peacefully pray the rosary in front of the Carlsbad Planned Parenthood Clinic.  The clinic is located at 1820 Marron Rd. (in the shopping center just west of Plaza Camino Real Mall).  For more information, contact Jahna White of St. Margaret Parish at 760-586-6356.
 

4. Prayerful witness for life at two locations (7340 Miramar Road in San Diego and 15546 Pomerado Road in Poway) in San Diego County

Helpers of God’s Precious Infants weekly rosary prayer vigil from 8:00 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. every Saturday and Wednesday at 7340 Miramar Road, directly above Metro Flooring in the complex with the Pyramid Building, adjacent to Carroll Road.  Prayer warriors also needed as early as 7:30 a.m.

Call Roger Lopez at 619-276-7525 for more information.
 
Second Saturday of the month:  20 decades of the Rosary are prayed in procession past 4 clinics following the 7:30 a.m. Mass, 15546 Pomerado Road, Poway.  For more information, call 858-748-2109. 


5. St. Dismas Guild sponsors two weekly hours of prayer for the unborn in North County

Join members of St. Dismas Guild for a rosary picket at North County Women's Medical Clinic, 120 S. Craven Way, San Marcos, (across from Cal State San Marcos), Tuesdays, 9:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m.

The Guild also sponsors prayer (the rosary) in front of PayLess at Mission Avenue and Escondido Blvd., 347 W. Mission, on Thursdays, 10:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.  For information on these prayer vigils, call 760-751-8541. 


6. St. Elizabeth Seton Parish in Carlsbad has a tri-weekly prayer ministry in front of the North County Women's Medical Clinic on Craven Way - San Marcos on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays

Please join the St. Elizabeth Seton "Life Matters" Culture of Life prayer vigils at 10:00 a.m. to Noon every Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday morning at "North County Women's Medical Clinic": 120 Craven Road, San Marcos - http://www.womensmedicalclinic.com/.  Those interested can carpool from St. Elizabeth Seton's upper parking lot at 9:30 a.m.  Those who do not want to carpool, please feel free to meet us at the Abortion Center at 10:00 a.m. or at any time between 10:00 a.m. and Noon.  These vigils are not confrontational.  We give witness by being present in prayer and entrust our message to the Blessed Mother.  Contact Gene: ejzoval@yahoo.com or 760-804-9656 for more information.


7. St. John the Evangelist Parish in Encinitas Pro-Life Mass and Rosary held on the first Monday of each month

The first Monday of every month is designated Pro-Life Monday at St. John the Evangelist Church, 1001 Encinitas Blvd, Encinitas.  The 8:00 a.m. Mass will be followed by a Rosary for Life.


8. Prayer Vigil at Planned Parenthood - First and Grape Street, San Diego – Saturdays from 7:30 a.m. to 9:30 a.m.

Prayer vigil contacts: Luis Mendoza 619-259-3906 or Roger Lopez 619-276-7525.   Rosary processions the first Saturday of every month from Our Lady of the Rosary, Date & State St., after the 7:30 a.m. Mass.             


9. Most Precious Blood Parish Rosary Prayer Vigils held on Wednesdays each week 

The Pro-Life Prayer Group from Most Precious Blood sponsors a Rosary Prayer Vigil in front of "A Woman's Choice" Clinic abortion facility at 1550 Broadway, Chula Vista, every Wednesday at 8:45 a.m.  For more information, please call Shirley Henry at 619-420-7096 or Luis Mendoza at 619-259-3906.
 

10. Prayer partners are needed at the office of Feliciano Rios M.D., 1079 Third Ave., suite 3, in Chula Vista - Dr. Rios performs abortions at his medical facility - Meet each Wednesday from 8:45 a.m. to 10:45 a.m.

Please contact Luis Mendoza, a Missionary of The Gospel of Life Lay Associate, at 619-259-3906, with questions or to share interest in this prayer ministry.


11. Pray in front of the Planned Parenthood facility located at 1685 East Main, just off the Greenfield Drive exit in El Cajon - join friends and neighbors

According to the PP website, chemical (RU-486) abortions only are done at this location - not surgical abortions.  They do refer women for abortions to their surgical center on First Ave.  Join the group each Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. and Saturday from 9:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. Contact: mfowler@nethere.com


12.   The Goretti Group offers chastity prayer and speaker training monthly

Every First Friday of the month, the Goretti Group will celebrate a St. Maria Goretti Mass at Our Lady of the Rosary, 1654 State Street, at 6:15 p.m.

Every Second Monday of the month: ChasteMasters Meeting at Our Lady of the Rosary, Giovanni Room, 7:00 p.m.  Please join us in prayer, a roundtable discussion, and providing feedback as chastity speakers refine their talks.

For more info please visit: www.thegorettigroup.org or call David at: 619-733-8439

 

Watch for OSM e-link bulletin #84 around Friday, February 19, 2010    

 

Article/Statement for January 19, 2010


California's Proposition 71 Failure

From the Investor's Business Daily web site: www.investors.com

EDITORIAL

Posted 01/12/2010 06:36 PM ET

http://www.investors.com/NewsAndAnalysis/Article.aspx?id=517870

Bioethics: Five years after a budget-busting $3 billion was allocated to embryonic stem cell research, there have been no cures, no therapies and little progress. So supporters are embracing research they once opposed.

California's Proposition 71 was intended to create a $3 billion West Coast counterpart to the National Institutes of Health, empowered to go where the NIH could not - either because of federal policy or funding restraints on biomedical research centered on human embryonic stem cells.

Supporters of the California Stem Cell Research and Cures Initiative, passed in 2004, held out hopes of imminent medical miracles that were being held up only by President Bush's policy of not allowing federal funding of embryonic stem cell research (ESCR) beyond existing stem cell lines and which involved the destruction of embryos created for that purpose.

Five years later, ESCR has failed to deliver and backers of Prop 71 are admitting failure. The California Institute for Regenerative Medicine, the state agency created to, as some have put it, restore science to its rightful place, is diverting funds from ESCR to research that has produced actual therapies and treatments: adult stem cell research. It not only has treated real people with real results; it also does not come with the moral baggage ESCR does.

To us, this is a classic bait-and-switch, an attempt to snatch success from the jaws of failure and take credit for discoveries and advances achieved by research Prop. 71 supporters once cavalierly dismissed. We have noted how over the years that when funding was needed, the phrase "embryonic stem cells" was used. When actual progress was discussed, the word "embryonic" was dropped because ESCR never got out of the lab.

Prop 71 had a 10-year mandate and by 2008, as miracle cures looked increasingly unlikely, a director was hired for the agency with a track record of bringing discoveries from the lab to the clinic. "If we went 10 years and had no clinical treatments, it would be a failure," says the institute's director, Alan Trounson, a stem cell pioneer from Australia. "We need to demonstrate that we are starting a whole new medical revolution."

The institute is attempting to do that by funding adult stem cell research. Nearly $230 million was handed out this past October to 14 research teams. Notably, only four of those projects involve embryonic stem cells.

Among the recipients, the Los Angeles Times reports, is a group from UCLA and Children's Hospital in Los Angeles that hopes to cure patients with sickle cell disease by genetically modifying their own blood-forming stem cells to produce healthy red blood cells. Researchers at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center will use their grant to research injecting heart-attack patients with concentrated amounts of their own cardiac stem cells that naturally repair heart tissue.

Dr. Bernadine Healy, director of the National Institutes of Health under Bush 41, wrote in her U.S. News & World Report column recently that "embryonic stem cells, once thought to hold the cure for Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and diabetes, are obsolete."

Even worse, they can be dangerous. They are difficult to control, to coax into the specific type of tissue desired. Unlike adult stem cells taken from a patient's own body, ES cells require the heavy use of immunosuppressive drugs. Their use can lead to a form of tumor called a teratoma.

Real promise is held in what are called induced pluripotent stem cells. In 2006, researchers led by Dr. Shinya Yamanaka of Japan's Kyoto University were first able to "reprogram" human skin cells to behave like embryonic stem cells. They can do everything stem cells from destroyed embryos can do.

The National Institutes of Health has said that this type of stem cell offers the prospect of having a renewable source of replacement cells and tissues to treat diseases like Parkinson's and Alzheimer’s, spinal cord injury, stroke, burns, heart disease, diabetes, osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis, to name a few.

It is ESCR researchers who have politicized science and stood in the way of real progress. We are pleased to see California researchers beginning to put science in its rightful place.