The Spirit - Knights of Columbus 893kofcknights.org/Councils/2017-10 OCT.pdf · ministry and...
-
Upload
vuongthien -
Category
Documents
-
view
218 -
download
2
Transcript of The Spirit - Knights of Columbus 893kofcknights.org/Councils/2017-10 OCT.pdf · ministry and...
Grand Knight’s Message
My Brother Knights,
Well September has been the month of HELP! We saw many people in need with the devastation from the hurricanes in Texas and Florida. And we saw the best of mankind in the outpouring of assistance to those areas, as well as the island of Puerto Rico and other Caribbean islands that were almost wiped off the face of this world. As an organization, the Knights have responded and are continuing to provide assistance to the victims of these natural dis-asters. But lots of effort went into preparing for an eventuality through the efforts of brother Knights and the field agents who have guided many of them to the best options for as quick a recovery as possible. Let us not for-get that, living in the DFW metroplex, we are also susceptible to other forms of devastating weather and threats. Perhaps you have been putting it off, but contact your Council’s field agent to discuss your coverage and make sure you have the best protection for you and your family for the inevitable.
Our Council will also need your help as we have been planning for the annual Fall Fest. Mark your calendar for October 4-7. We will need assistance with setting up the many tents, tables and carnival attractions October 4 & 5. Then on October 6 & 7 the real fun begins as we gather as a parish to serve, volunteer and share the variety of foods and fun activities at the Fall Fest. Please remember to wear one of your KC shirts whether you are helping at one of the booths or bringing the family out to check out the many fun activ-ities.
The church office is asking for help in the form of catechists for the youth ministry and religious education classes. Also, there is a need for wedding and funeral coordinators to work with families wanting to use the church. There continues to be a need at each Mass for ushers, eucharistic ministers and service ministers to assist. This is a great way to give back in service to the church and the many families that help make our family at St. John the Apostle truly a family.
The global Catholic Church also needs help this Oc-tober. Many events will be taking place around the diocese. The 40 Days For Life began on September 27 and will continue through the month. October 11, 2017 will mark the 100th Anniversary of Our La-dy’s appearance to the three shepherd children at Fatima, Portugal. Many activities will be occurring on October 10 and 11, so please watch for further announcements.
(Continued on Page 5)
The Spirit
S E P T E M B E R 2 0 1 7 V O L U M E 3 4 I S S U E 9 COUNCIL OFFICERS
Chaplain ................... Fr. Hoa Nguyen (817) 284-4811
Grand Knight ............. Bobby Donahoo (817) 498-9628
Deputy Grand Knight ...... Dave Tyrone (817) 656-2529
Chancellor ..................... Ray Schueler (972) 834-4137
Recorder .......................... John Giglio (817) 281-4617
Treasurer .................... Gary Yanowski (817) 656-1142
Financial Secretary ........ Mark Krueger (817) 939-1192
Advocate .................... Terry Barnhard (817) 707-6135
Warden ..................... Gary Obudzinski (817) 656-3274
Lecturer .......................... Juan Valdez (817) 966-8925
Guard ........................... Matt Costello
(682) 582-4104
Guard ............................... Paul Corbo (847) 707-5108
Trustee (1-Year) ....... Ken Kenvin, PGK (817) 595-4104
Trustee (2-Year) ...... Mike Dellies, PGK (817) 656-1492
Trustee (3-Year) ....... Jerry Dews, PGK (817) 932-0551
INSURANCE
Field Agent ............ Terry Peffers, PGK (817) 690-7924
FOURTH DEGREE
District 3 Master ................... Bill Elliot
San Juan Diego Assembly 2857
Faithful Navigator ....... SK Ron Weldon
Comptroller ............. SK Dick Norgaard (817) 656-2529
DIOCESE
Diocesan Rep. ............... Bruce Mallory (817) 807-2982
District Deputy ................ Matt Haines (817) 586-5858
Knights of Columbus
Scott A. MacDonald Council 8512
Beatification 2
Pro-Life Corner 3
Calendar 4
Birthday Dinner News 5
New You Can Use 6
Orans Posture 7
Inside this issue:
P A G E 2 T H E S P I R I T
[Editor’s Note: Several Council 8512 members travelled to Oklahoma City on Saturday, September 23rd to witness
firsthand the beatification of the first US-born martyr. Fr. Stanley Rother was a priest in Guatemala, not far from our
sister parish of Patzun. The following articles provide a brief summary of Fr. Stanley’s story. For more information,
refer to www.stanleyrother.org.]
Oklahoma Priest Honored With Beatification Ceremony
OKLAHOMA CITY — Fr. Stanley Francis Rother was killed in 1981 while
in Guatemala.
On Saturday, September 23, 2017, thousands of people from around
the world gathered in downtown Oklahoma City for the beatification
of Rother. Crowds lined up around the Cox Convention Center, excited
to attend Rother’s Beatification.
“This is the first time an American priest has been beatified,” said
Paul Coakley, archbishop of Oklahoma City. “He is the first American
martyr the Catholic Church has recognized.”
The ceremony included traditional songs and Catholic leaders came
from across the globe -- all to honor Rother, who spent his time as a
priest serving in Guatemala. In 1981, the Okarche native was killed in
his church in Guatemala.
His sister, Marita Rother, said it’s great to see her brother get this recognition.
“It’s gratifying to know my brother was that well known and that well accepted by the people,” she
said.
The next step for Rother is to become a saint. “We will need to have
a miracle verified. That has to come through his intercession,” Coak-
ley said.
From now on, Rother will be known as blessed.
~ KOCO 5, Oklahoma City
What it's like to gather relics of Fr. Stanley Rother
By Mary Rezac
Oklahoma City, Okla., Sep 20, 2017 / 03:23 am (CNA/EWTN News).- When Fr. Stanley Rother, a mis-
sionary priest from Okarche, Oklahoma, was killed by rebels in Guatemala, his body was transferred
back to the United States to be buried by his family.
But his heart remained in Guatemala.
Literally.
(Continued on Page 8)
Catholic Church has to verify miracle in order for priest to
become saint
P A G E 3 T H E S P I R I T
President Donald Trump Will Sign Pro-Life Bill Banning Late-Term Abortions After 20 Weeks By: Katie Yoder | Sep 27, 2017 | Washington, DC | LifeNews.com
A bill proposing to ban late-term abortions is a “high
priority” for President Donald Trump, according to one
pro-life leader who met with him recently. It’s a bill
she’s hoping the media will cover.
On Tuesday, House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-
CA) held a press conference with pro-life leaders and pol-
iticians to announce an Oct. 3 vote on the Pain-Capable
Unborn Child Protection Act in the U.S. House of Repre-
sentatives. Speakers at the Washington, D.C. event included Rep. Trent Franks (R-AZ), Susan
B. Anthony List President Marjorie Dannenfelser and the Pickering family.
In July 2012, Micah Pickering was born prematurely at twenty weeks (22 weeks gestation) to
Clayton and Danielle. This piece of legislation aims to protect unborn babies after five
months, or Micah’s age at birth, when SBA List reports babies can feel pain. Today, Micah is a
healthy 5-year-old.
Following the press conference, Marjorie Dannenfelser spoke with MRC Culture. While the
House passed (and the Senate blocked) a previous version of the bill in 2015, she stressed
that the Oct. 3 vote would be different.
She first pointed to election pressure. “This will be a big issue in the 2018 Senate elections,”
she said, where constituents can hold politicians accountable.
Not only that, she added, but the bill boasts the support of the president.
“The other thing that is different this time is that the president of the United States, who I
talked with last night at the White House about this, considers it a high priority,” she contin-
ued. “So this has become now a national conversation, not just a conversation that you have
off on the sidelines.”
According to Dannenfelser, 5-year-old Micah embodied the legislation.
(Continued on Page 12)
Calendar of Events
October 2017 Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 31 1 2 3 4
2nd PNS Sandwich Making
5th Business Meeting
6th-7th Fall Fest
8th Blood Drive
10th Birthday Dinner
12th First Degree
19th Officers’ Meeting
25th Chapter Meeting
31st Halloween
NOVEMBER 2017
2nd Business Meeting
6th PNS Sandwich Making
11th Veteran’s Day
14th Memorial Mass
16th Officers’ Meeting
22th Chapter Meeting
23rd Thanksgiving Day
25th Tootsie Roll Drive
DECEMBER 2017
4th PNS Sandwich Making
7th Business Meeting
12th Birthday Dinner
20th Chapter Meeting
21st Officers’ Meeting
25th Christmas Day
UPCOMING EVENTS
P A G E 4 T H E S P I R I T
THIS MONTH’S EVENTS
ST. JOHN’S FALL FEST—HELP NEEDED
St. John’s will be hosting its annual Fall Fest event on October 6th and 7th. If you can spare an hour or two, your help with any of the numerous activities the Knights will be doing this weekend will be greatly appreciated. Contact Chuck Seefeldt or just show up with a willingness to help and a smile. We’ll make sure you have fun, and we might even feed you!
P A G E 5 T H E S P I R I T
OCTOBER BIRTHDAYS
1 Joe Soto 15 Kevin Garrett
3 Melecio Malfabon 17 Angel Rubio
4 Michael Castillo 19 Dillon Bachemin
4 Robert Martinez, Jr. 19 Gary Paris
4 Brian Wethington 21 Gus Robicheaux
5 Patrick Ramirez 22 William Bird
5 Bradley Wagner 25 Linwood Arcement
7 Rafael Lodrigueza 25 Arthur Eddy
7 Emmanuel Ortiz 25 Cory Harris
7 Shawn Schroeder 26 Danny Frausto
10 Scott Burk 29 Charles Baker
12 Alfred Kercho 29 Nicholas Fernandez
13 Richard Buswold 29 Thomas Gonzales, Jr.
13 Magnus Obi 30 Chris Dellies
14 John Tittor 30 Oscar Sanchez
15 Terry Barnhard
BIRTHDAY DINNER
Come celebrate this month’s birthdays at our monthly dinner on Tuesday, October 10th, at Chan’s Mongolian Grill, 9147 Highway 26, North Richland Hills, 76180. Dinner will begin at 6:30pm. Contact Sam Moon at (817) 485-0166 to RSVP.
Council 8512 proudly supports the following seminarians:
Randolph (Ed) Hopkins
Joseph Hoffschwelle
Please keep them in your prayers.
PRAYER LIST
Pope Francis I
Pope Benedict XVI
Bishop Michael Olsen
Fr. Jack McKone
Fr. Nghia Nguyen
Fr Hoa Nguyen
Fr. John Martin
Unborn children
Middle Eastern Christians
Victim of Domestic Violence
Victims of the hurricanes and earthquakes
George Knowles
Clif Simon
Bette Dellies
Katie Petit
Pauline Mockabee
Tommie Moon
“Message” from Page 1
In case you haven’t heard, your church and your council can really use your help. And if you are already helping out, please accept my sincere ‘Thank You’. If you know of someone in need, please let us know. While you are getting to know them, ask them if they happen to be a member of the Knights of Columbus, and if not, offer them a Form 100 application. Our efforts do not go unnoticed or unappreciated. Recently, while attend-ing a meeting in another city, the speaker talked about how much she ap-preciated all of the help she received from the Knights of Columbus at her previous parish. She talked about how so much that happened at her church could not have happened were it not for the many Knights she came to rely on . . . at her previous parish of Saint John the Apostle. She closed with how much she loves and misses the Knights at Saint John’s but has found the Knights at her new parish also very helpful.
In conclusion, let us not let our guard down and continue to serve as best we can whenever we can. It is always very much appreciated and noticed.
Vivat Jesus!
Bobby Donahoo
Grand Knight
P A G E 6 T H E S P I R I T
UN resolution to investigate ISIS crimes praised as step toward recognizing genocide
New York City, N.Y., Sep 24, 2017 / 04:56 pm (CNA/EWTN News). - As the U.N. Security Council adopted a resolution on Thursday to help investigate ISIS crimes in Iraq, one human rights group hailed the development as a step to-wards U.N. recognition of genocide.
“It is incredibly encouraging to see the Security Council take such a significant step towards ensuring justice for the countless victims and their families,” Kel-sey Zorsi, the U.N. Counsel for Alliance Defending Freedom In-ternational, stated in response.
The resolution came as the 72nd Regular Session of the U.N. General Assembly is meeting in New York City from Sept. 12-25. It passed by unanimous vote in the U.N. Security Council on Thursday.
The resolution establishes an investigative team, led by a Spe-cial Adviser, to help the government of Iraq gather and preserve evidence of crimes committed by ISIS against religious minori-ties there.
The human rights group ADF International hailed it as a significant development in possibly bringing ISIS criminals to justice, as well as aiding the victims of those crimes.
“We hope that the passage of this resolution reminds Christians in the Middle East that they have not been forgotten, that there is hope, that we will continue fighting for them, and that accountability is on its way,” Zorsi said.
The investigative team must work with the Iraqi government, but also with non-governmental organi-zations (NGOs), ADF International said.
For instance, aid and advocacy groups like the Knights of Columbus and In Defense of Christians were critical in preparing a report documenting ISIS atrocities committed against ethnic and religious mi-norities, which led then Secretary of State John Kerry to declare ISIS actions a genocide.
Also, they said, “the Special Adviser should have a firm background in international law to ensure the right categories are being used for the atrocities committed.”
Nikki Haley, the U.S. Ambassador to the U.N., called the resolution “a landmark” and “a major first step towards addressing the death, suffering, and injury of the victims of crimes committed by ISIS in Iraq – crimes that include genocide.”
“These victims have been Yazidis, Christians, Shia and Sunni Muslims, and many, many more,” she said.
ADF International pointed out that the Security Council “for the first time” did not discount the possi-bility of using the term “genocide” to describe the atrocities committed by ISIS. Human rights advo-cates have argued that ISIS crimes constitute a genocide according to the U.N.’s definition.
According to the 1948 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Genocide, the intent to com-mit genocide means the “intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or reli-gious group.” Genocide can be committed through killing, torture, forced sterilization, moving the children of one group elsewhere, or “deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part.”
In 2014, ISIS militants conquered large swathes of territory in Syria and Iraq in an attempt to establish a caliphate based upon an extremist interpretation of Islam.
(continued on page 10)
SAVE THE DATE
The Knights of Columbus Christmas Social is sched-uled for Saturday, December 9th. Make plans to attend the social for an evening of fellowship and Christmas cheer.
Tootsie Roll Fundraiser
Our annual Tootsie Roll Drive will be Saturday, November 25th. Wake up from your turkey coma and come out and help us raise funds to support our Council’s many activi-ties. Contact Dave Garrett for more information.
Sponsors Needed for 2018 15K/5K Run
Sponsors are needed for the 2018 4th Annual KofC 15k/5k run our Council hosts Memorial Day weekend. A successful event depends on a successful sponsorship drive. We need your help in soliciting local businesses to be-come sponsors. If you or someone you know can help, please contact Chuck Seefeldt or Bobby Donahoo for more information. Proceeds benefit St. Jude’s Children Hospital. Our Council has donated over $10,000 for child cancer reseach. Please help!
The Faithful Are NOT To Use the Orans Posture During the Our Father
A discussion that is common in Catholic parishes between the more orthodox members of the parish and the more “progressive” members is whether or not the faithful should use the Orans Posture during the Our Father. When such a question comes up, the obvious solution is to go to the rubrics. Unfortunately, in this case, the General Instruction on the Roman Missal (GIRM) is relatively silent on the topic. Because of the GIRM’s silence, many people have taken this to mean that the faithful may do whatever they want. However, this is not the case. In the document, Instruc-tion On Certain Questions Regarding the Collaboration of the Non-Ordained Faithful in the Sacred Min-istry of Priests, put out by the Vatican on August 15, 1997, we read,
"In eucharistic celebrations deacons and non-ordained members of the faithful may not pronounce prayers — e.g. especially the eucharistic prayer, with its concluding doxology — or any other parts of the liturgy reserved to the celebrant priest. Neither may deacons or non-ordained members of the faithful use gestures or actions which are proper to the same priest celebrant. It is a grave abuse for any member of the non-ordained faithful to "quasi preside" at the Mass while leaving only that minimal participation to the priest which is necessary to secure validity" (ICP Practical Provisions 6 §2).
What the above statement means is that we may not say the Eucharistic prayers along with the priest — believe it or not, I see people mouthing the words along with the priest every week. More im-portantly to this topic, this also means the faithful may not use the same gestures that are reserved for the priest celebrant.
(continued on page 11)
P A G E 7 T H E S P I R I T
P A G E 8 T H E S P I R I T
(“Relics” from Page 2)
The native Guatemalans loved their pastor so much that they enshrined his
heart at the mission parish in Santiago Atitlan.
On Sept. 23, that heart will go from being a disembodied remain to a first-
class relic, a sacred artifact of someone who has been beatified by the
Catholic Church.
The keeping and venerating of relics is perhaps one of the more bizarre
Catholic practices, but it’s a scripturally-backed practice of the Church
since its beginning.
There are three classes of relics recognized by the Church. First-class relics
are bodily remains of a saint, such as bones or flesh or hair. Second-class
relics are belongings of the saint, such as clothes or other personal items.
Third-class relics are items that have been touched to a first- or second-
class relic of that saint.
When Archbishop Paul Coakley was installed as head of the Oklahoma City
Archdiocese in 2011, he inherited the task of the cause of canonization for
Fr. Stanley Rother. As part of this undertaking, he also inherited the task of
his gathering relics, a process that officially commenced once it was clear that the martyred priest’s
beatification was imminent.
The second-class relics were easy. Over the years, the archdiocese had collected a handful of person-
al items of Fr. Stanley, donated by friends and family, including some of his clothes, and a pipe that
he smoked. Once he is beatified, these things become second-class relics.
But when it came to exhuming the body to collect first-class relics, Archbishop Coakley admits he was
a little lost.
“We had to do a lot of research,” the archbishop told CNA. “This happens so rarely, we didn’t know
how to go about preparing for this.”
First, he obtained permission and rights to Fr. Stanley Rother’s remains from the priest’s two surviv-
ing siblings.
Then, according to Vatican protocol, he gathered the proscribed team of witnesses and medical ex-
perts who would help with the canonical exhumation and examination of Fr. Stanley’s body.
The medical team consisted of a pathologist and an orthopedic surgeon, both local Catholics. They
helped examine and describe the remains, and compile a report sent to the Holy See. Among other
things, the Church looks for signs of incorruptibility, when a body does not decompose. The condition
has been found among some saints, although by itself, it is not enough to prove sanctity.
(continued on page 9)
Fr. Stanley Rother’s heart is
interred inside in the Church
of Santiago Atitlan.
P A G E 9 T H E S P I R I T
(“Relics” from Page 8)
“They had expertise that would be helpful in describing what would be found when his tomb was
opened, because we didn’t know what we could find,” Archbishop Coakley said.
Both the exhumation and examination are done “with great dignity and reverence, and there is a pro-
cess by which we exhumed his body from the family plot at the parish cemetery in Okarche,” the
archbishop added.
“And in that process we took one of his ribs, and that’s what we used for preparing first class relics,”
he said.
His body was then transferred to a temporary resting place in Resurrection Cemetery, a Catholic cem-
etery next to the pastoral center in Oklahoma City, while his rib was sent to Rome.
“There is an Augustinian monastery of St. Lucia in Rome, and they are custodians of relics and have
experience in preparing relics, so we sent our relic of Fr. Rother to them,” Archbishop Coakley said.
The sisters there will divide the rib into many tiny fragments, which will be encased in reliquaries,
available to bishops who wish to obtain relics of Fr. Rother for public veneration. First-class relics are
no longer distributed to lay persons, in order to protect the relics from negligence or abuse.
Meanwhile, the task of preparing the third-class relics (sometimes referred to as “touched relics”) of
Fr. Stanley fell to the Carmelite Monastery of Rochester, New York, a congregation of 11 discalced,
cloistered Carmelite nuns.
Mother Therese, the prioress of the convent, told CNA that while the sisters had done smaller
“touched relic” projects for Carmelite saints, this was the first major relic project the convent has
undertaken.
“A sister from Oklahoma City mentioned to me that the archdiocese was looking for someone to put
together relic cards for Fr. Stanley’s beatification,” she said. “I said, ‘Well we’ve not done this on a
huge scale but we are familiar with this process’...so that’s how it came about, a simple question
from one of our Carmelite nuns.”
Often, third-class relics distributed at beatifications come in the form of a little piece of cloth em-
bedded in a holy card.
“When the body was exhumed, the bones were wrapped in a very large and special cloth,” Mother
Therese said.
This cloth was signed and dated by Archbishop
Coakley during the exhumation in May and then
sent to the nuns, who are punching small holes in
the holy cards of Fr. Stanley and affixing the
pieces of cloth – which will become relics once
Fr. Stanley is beatified – to the cards.
The holy cards also have a picture of Fr. Stanley
on the front, and a prayer for his canonization on
the back – some in English and some in Spanish.
The sisters have already made 10,000 and are ex-
pecting to make several thousand more.
(continued on page 10) Fr. Rother with a young child. Credit: Frankie Williams. Cour-
tesy of the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City Archives .
P A G E 1 0 T H E S P I R I T
(“Relics” from Page 9)
“It’s a very great privilege for us,” Mother Therese said. “It has brought us very close to Fr. Stan-
ley...we feel that he will intercede for us and that he will bless our community and the Church in the
U.S. as well, because he’s the first American-born martyr.”
Archbishop Coakley said working on Father Stanley’s cause has been an honor, especially as someone
who graduated from the same seminary as Fr. Stanley (though years later) and has been interested in
his story for quite some time.
“I took that as a great privilege to be coming into the Oklahoma City Archdiocese at such a time,” he
said.
“I...entrusted my ministry to him and prayed for his assistance and intercession as I undertook this
ministry, I’ve felt a very near kinship with him since I was a seminarian and a priest and as the arch-
bishop now.”
(“News” from Page 6)
As they took over cities and towns in Syria and in Northern Iraq, ISIS killed and displaced many reli-
gious and ethnic minorities in the region, including Christians, Yezidis, Shia and Sunni Muslims, Turk-
men, and Shabak. There were countless reports of murders, torture, the kidnapping and enslavement
of Yezidi and Christian women and girls, evidence of mass graves, and the forced displacement of
hundreds of thousands.
Pope Francis used the term “genocide” to describe what was occurring in 2015. In February of 2016,
the European Parliament declared that ISIS was indeed committing genocide against Christians,
Yazidis, and other ethnic and religious minorities in the region.
“In March of 2016, the U.S. Congress issued a genocide resolution, and on March 17 Secretary of State
John Kerry stated that “in my judgment, Daesh [ISIS] is responsible for genocide against groups in are-
as under its control, including Yazidis, Christians, and Shia Muslims.
“Daesh is genocidal by self-proclamation, by ideology, and by actions – in what it says, what it be-
lieves, and what it does,” he said, charging that the group “is also responsible for crimes against hu-
manity and ethnic cleansing directed at these same groups and in some cases also against Sunni Mus-
lims, Kurds, and other minorities.”
P A G E 1 1 T H E S P I R I T
(“Orans Posture ” from Page 7)
Father, however, the Sacramentary (the book of prayers for Mass used by the priest) states that the
celebrant is to pray the Our Father with hands extended. Looking back at ICP, the faithful are NOT to
use gestures or actions proper to the priest celebrant. Using this argument, one would think that the
rubrics could be used to appeal to the faithful. Unfortunately, many of the faithful view the rubrics
as another set of rules and those of us who wish to enforce the rubrics are no better than the Phari-
sees.
In that regard, let us look instead to another reason why the Orans Posture (and subsequently, hold-
ing hands) is not an appropriate gesture for the faithful during the Our Father. The Our Father takes
place during the Liturgy of the Eucharist. This time of prayer and offering is directed to God (as is the
entire Mass, but more specifically during the Liturgy of the Eucharist). As it is directed toward God,
the extending and/or holding of hands creates a horizontal emphasis on the prayer, as opposed to the
vertical emphasis that it demands. Many people who prefer hand holding or the Orans Posture argue
that the Our Father is a community prayer, and as such holding and/or extending hands is a visible
sign of that community. However, the Our Father is a community prayer, not because we hold or ex-
tend our hands, but because we pray it together as the Body of Christ.
On September 3, 1958 the Sacred Congregation for Rites issued a document titled De musica sacra et
sacra liturgia (Instruction on Sacred Music and Sacred Liturgy). This document stated, “Since the Pa-
ter Noster is a fitting, and ancient prayer of preparation for Communion, the entire congregation may
recite this prayer in unison with the priest in low Masses; the Amen at the end is to be said by
all” (DM Prayers and Hymns § 32).
It was at this time that the faithful were given permission to pray the Our Father with the priest.
However, the faithful maintained the same posture as before - standing, with their hands folded in
prayer. Prior to this Instruction, the priest prayed the Our Father on behalf of the faithful. The Orans
Posture is representative of praying on behalf of others. The next time you are at Mass, watch the
priest’s gestures closely. Anytime he offers prayers on behalf of the faithful, he uses the Orans Pos-
ture. Anytime he is offering other prayers, his hands are folded together. Having a better understand-
ing of what particular gestures mean will lead to a better understanding of the Liturgy.
American journalist Hunter S. Thompson was dead on when he said, “Anything worth doing, is worth
doing right.” We are talking about the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass here. The Eucharist, “the source and
summit of the Christian Life” (LG 11) is consecrated here. Jesus Christ, the King of Kings and the Lord
of Lords makes Himself present during the Mass. It is of the utmost importance that we treat the Mass
with the respect it deserves. This is not the time nor the place to get creative and inject one’s own
style and preferences.
P A G E 1 2 T H E S P I R I T
(Pro Life from Page 3)
“Micah really is the real face of this issue,” she urged. “Because it’s really easy to talk about it, the
abortion issue, in abstract theoretical terms. But when you really have come across … and see a
young man running around full of energy and love, you realize this is not any other political issue.”
While her organization learns “continually that there are other boys and girls like Micah,” Dannen-
felser highlighted that there was a more important discussion than the number of babies who survived
premature births.
“However, even if there were – there are really only a handful, there’s something that’s really im-
portant about it. It’s not about the fact that they lived, that they defied all odds and they lived,
though that’s really important,” she began. “The 20-week bill actually is generally pre-viability, be-
fore children are able to live outside the womb.”
Instead, she argued for the importance of every unborn life, viable or not.
“So viability as an argument is lacking in compassion, when you see that just like a week before Mi-
cah’s birth he could have been legally aborted at many many places,” she added. “You see that this
is about a human being whose life deserves to be protected.”
Dannenfelser also expressed optimism on media coverage of the bill.
“I have really found that over the last several years, of dealing especially with this 20-week bill that
the media in general are listening,” she said. “I mean, there are obviously exceptions.”
But this legislation was something that media could comprehend.
“But because this really appeals to the basic humanity of people, I’m not saying that they’re on our
side, or they’re agreeing, but I think when the – that when they’re faced with this issue, they at least
get it,” she added. “Sometimes they don’t even get our issues.”
For the media to hurt the bill, reporters would have to censor it, she concluded.
“The only way that media bias could really kill this is by not reporting it at all, which is, of course,
one tactic that happens a lot. That would be something of concern,” Dannenfelser concluded. “But
I’m finding mainstream outlets with reporters that they understand why it resonates. They basically
get most of the arguments out and frankly, without the pressure of really good outlets, I don’t think
that would have happened.”
LifeNews Note: Katie Yoder writes for Newsbusters, where this originally appeared.
[Note from Council 8512 Respect Life Committee Chair:
LifeNews.com is sponsoring a petition to congress urging them to pass this important piece of legisla-
tion. If you have been following political news in our country since the election, or at least since
the presidential inauguration in January, you are well aware that many of the people we elected
specifically for purposes of carrying out important work, like defunding Planned Parenthood, have by
and large failed us miserably. This is unacceptable, and we must inform them that we are paying
attention and insisting that they do what they said they would do while on the campaign trail.
Please consider signing on to the LifeNews.com petition by going here: https://
www.gopetition.com/petitions/congress-must-ban-late-term-abortions.html or, contact your mem-
ber of congress directly.]
P A G E 1 3 T H E S P I R I T
• A TV can insult your intelligence, but nothing rubs it in like a computer.
• Does this rag smell like chloroform to you?
• With sufficient thrust, pigs fly just fine.
• If at first you don't succeed, skydiving is not for you!
• We have enough gun control. What we need is idiot control.
• A bus is a vehicle that runs twice as fast when you are after it as when you are in it.
• Some cause happiness wherever they go. Others whenever they go.
• Why does someone believe you when you say there are four billion stars, but check when you say the paint is wet?
• Women will never be equal to men until they can walk down the street with a bald head and a beer gut, and still think they are sexy.
• Crowded elevators smell different to midgets.
Scott A. MacDonald
KofC Council 8512
www.kofc8512.org
Texas Knight The Journal of the Knights of Columbus in Texas
S I N C E 1 9 0 2
www.texasknight-news.net
WE NEED YOUR INPUT
In an effort to keep the monthly newsletter pertinent and fresh, we are
looking for news, articles, upcoming events, and other items of interest
to our membership. If you have something you would like to see in the
newsletter, pass that information along to the Spirit editor. Pictures of
brother Knights in action will be greatly appreciated, so please send them
in. Also, every article submitted will be evaluated for possible submission
to the Texas Knight to be included in the next edition. Remember, the
monthly newsletter can be an effective recruiting tool, so we need to
make sure it has up-to-date and useful information.
DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION:
OCTOBER 24TH
VOLUNTEER HOURS
Please be sure to "Post Your Volunteer Hours and Visits" on the UKnight website, or "Record Volunteer Hours" on
your smartphone at www.kofcmobile.org, as soon as you complete them so that UKnight can accumulate your
volunteer hours for you throughout the year. The more we are able to show the impact Knights have on their
communities by accurately tracking and reporting our hours, the more powerful our example will be.
To log your volunteer hours, visit the Council website and navigate to the ‘Members Only’ section.
P A G E 1 4 T H E S P I R I T
VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES
There are many ways to become active in your Council. Contact one of the committee chairs below to get started. They would love to have you aboard.
COMMITTEE CHAIRS
Birthday Dinner ................ Sam Moon ................ (817) 485-0166
Ceremonial ..................... Rick Martinez .............. (817) 545-9194
Church ....................... Terry Peffers, PGK ........... (817) 690-7924
Community ..................... Paul Franko ............... (817) 721-3947
Council ........................... Dave Tyrone ............... (817) 656-2529
Fall Fest ........................ Chuck Seefeldt ............. (817) 422-4949
Family ...................................... ...............................................
Night Shelter .................... John Mokry ................ (817) 897-3342
Public Relations ............. Terry Barnhard ............. (817) 707-6135
Recruitment ..................... Chris Stark .......................................
Retention ............................. open ...........................................
Right to Life ................... Rick Martinez .............. (817) 545-9194
Spirit Editor ................. Mike Dellies, PGK ........... (817) 656-1492
Sunshine Lady ............. Donnika Knowles............ (817) 485-4663
Webmaster ...................... John Giglio ................ (817) 281-4617
BREAKFAST CREWS
DAVE DESKEERE .......... (817) 284-3288
Terry Peffers ...................... (817) 690-7924
Bill Stolowski ...................... (817) 281-9325
John Mokry ........................ (817) 284-4537
Rick Cardona ...................... (682) 999-9195
Doug Simmons ................... (817) 412-1148
Dan Weed .......................... (817) 808-1080
Ed McGinley ....................... (817) 319-8921
Paul Corbo ......................... (847) 707-5108
Edward Hernandez ............. (817) 614-8728
MIKE DELLIES ............. (817) 656-1492
Emmanuel Egenti ............... (817) 428-1249
Steve Hoyer ....................... (817) 428-6446
Mark Krueger ..................... (817) 939-1192
Jay Rogers ......................... (682) 221-9157
Mike Walsh......................... (469) 212-6406
Jeff Keifer .......................... (817) 223-9429
Ray Workman ..................... (817) 268-0306
Gus Robicheaux .................. (817) 281-5752
Mike Pollack ....................... (817) 282-5621
MATT COSTELLO ......... (682)-202-1892
Eric Hogentogler ................. (817) 284-2217
Nacho Gonzalez .................. (817) 723-5206
Chris Green ........................ (214) 282-7143
Bill Fettig ...................................................
Council Office is located at:
4101 Frawley Dr., North Richland Hills, TX 76180
Diocese: Fort Worth Caucus: 8 District: 21
MEETINGS ARE THE 1ST & 3RD THURSDAY OF EVERY MONTH
Meetings begin at 7:00pm in the Formation Center dinning room
Dinner and Fellowship Following
Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak. ~ Unknown