Solemn Act of Consecration of humanity, and Russia and Ukraine in particular, to the Immaculate Heart of Mary

Dear Priests, Deacons and Subdeacons, Consecrated Men and Women, Lay Faithful:

Pope Francis asks us to join in a solemn Act of Consecration of humanity, and Russia and Ukraine in particular, to the Immaculate Heart of Mary. The Holy Father himself will pray his solemn Act of Consecration in Rome at approximately 6:30pm (Rome), 12:30pm (Eastern time), March 25, 2022.

He asks us to join him in prayer in our churches, homes and places of prayer that day, Friday, March 25.

Click here for the text of the act. Other translations, including Arabic, can be found at the Vatican News Site.

Bishop Gregory's message on the eve of the Feast of Saint Joseph

Brothers and sisters in Christ, Bishop Gregory, last week I was with the Armenian Orthodox Clergy, what a beautiful retreat we had. I had a change to know first hand the beauty and glory and the suffering of their church. This week I will ordain a priest, tomorrow, in fact, tomorrow is the Feast of Saint Joseph and so we dedicate all our prayers to our priests and to all of our fathers. And lastly, I ask everyone, to follow the news in Ukraine -- especially the consecration of our Holy Father of Ukraine and Russia to the Immaculate Virgin Mary and let's pray. Let's pray for a better world, for the beauty of priests and fatherhood and for the church throughout the world.

Welcome Remarks for the 2022 Priest Retreat

Brother Priests,

Christ Jesus asks us to "come away to a quiet place and rest a while", and this we do, grateful to be with him and to rest our souls. In another place our Lord said, "Come to me all you who are weary and find life burdensome and I will give you rest".

Yes, it is the Lord himself who has invited us - disguised under the form of Bread and Wine, he bids us to come. This is the King of Kings, who was crucified, yet raised up, who calls us to live according to the logic of his Kingdom, where "being" and "loving" are just as important as "doing" and "working", where "who we are" is just as important as "what we do".

Although true pastoral care includes doing and serving, there is also a place for just being, for taking stock in our priestly life, for standing before the only true judge in Eucharistic adoration, and making time for fellowship with Christ's brothers, our fellow priests.

Today, with joy I welcome a few new brothers: Father Samir Chebli, Father Peter Frangie, Father Elias Adwan and Father Fadi El Khawand, and their wife and family, and I ask your prayers for them. Likewise, Father Adib Salemeh, Father George Arrouk, Father Gary George, Father Andrawos El Tabchi and Father Boutros El Hachem. Soon we will also welcome Deacon Michael Charchaflian, who will be ordained a priest March 19, 2022, in Lawrence.

I also ask your prayers for our retired priests: Joseph Amar, Dominic Ashkar, Assad Awad, William Bartoul, Kevin Beaton, Leonard Basinow, Seely Beggiani, Paul Boackle, David George, Larry Jensen, Joseph Kaddo, Joseph Lahoud, Francis Marini, Lawrence Michael, Jack Morrison, Paul Mouawad, Samuel Najjar and Edward Nedder. May God bless them with good health and continued priestly service.

I thank Father Sam Najjar, Chorbishop Michael Thomas and Father Fadi Rouhana who helped to organize this priestly gathering. I am grateful to Father Gerry Blaszczak who graciously accepted to preach this retreat.

Lastly, I ask your prayers for the priests and bishops who have served before us: Archbishop Zayek, Bishops Doueihi, Chedid and Shaheen, and all the priests who have died. May they rest in peace and may they inherit the reward of the good and faithful servant. I ask your prayers for our Deacons, Subdeacons, Monks and Nuns, Catechists, Choir members, and all our lay faithful in the service of our parishes, and all who lovingly volunteer and serve. I also ask your prayers for our seminarians, Christian, Vincent Michael, Vincent Paul, Pierre, Nadim and Jakob, along with the Rector and Vice Rector who serve them. I ask you to pray for vocations to priestly, diaconate and religious life.

Lastly, I ask you brothers to overlook one another's faults, at least for this week, to forgive one another from the heart, to welcome and build new and better friendships with one another. If there is something bothering you, don't keep it to yourself. In charity, tell this to a confessor, to a brother priest or to me.

Let your burden be light and your yoke be easy, as Christ invites us. Use this time wisely, dear brothers, to pray before Christ, and to do God's will as best as you can.

May the prayer of the Mother of God, Saint Maron and all the Saints be with us.

+ Gregory

The International Day of Human Fraternity

Dear Friends in Christ,

Today is the third anniversary of the signing of the document on human fraternity by Pope Francis and the Grand Imam Al Tayyeb. See the Vatican News web pages for Human Fraternity to learn more.

I have written a few articles that may contribute to Muslim Christian dialogue.

Reflections on the Islamic tradition

and

+ Gregory

Natural Family Planning

Cir. 22.09Dear Brother Priests, Deacons/ Subdeacons, Consecrated Men and Women, Lay Faithful,

In order to provide a foundational knowledge of Natural Family Planning (NFP) for our couples, we want to promote this healthy and faithful practice any way possible. In fact, our Eparchial Statutes (no. 71) lists NFP as one of four requirements for marriage preparation. This requirement can be fulfilled in one of the three following ways:

  • Couples can attend an on-line session on Natural Family Planning with Father Peter and Marise Frangie and place the certificate in their file. To initiate this, the Pastor need only to send an email, like the one drafted below, to the couple and cc Marise Frangie at sanctityoflife@live.com. Marise will reach out to the couple and schedule an online meeting with them and give them a certificate afterwards for the file.

Dear Engaged Couple:

Our marriage preparation program in the Eparchy requires you to learn the basics about Natural Family Planning. To do that you need to sign up for one online session with Father Peter and his wife Marise Frangie. They will walk you through an overview and the science behind different morally acceptable methods to help you plan you family. Marise is copied on this email to get in touch with you.

  • Another way to fulfil this important requirement is to ask engaged couples to attend a Marriage Preparation program in the Latin Diocese, which offers Natural Family Planning, and to request the certificate for their file.

  • A third way is to ask the couple to view some good videos related to Natural Family Planning. For a selection, please click here. These videos, viewed with some input from a person of their choice trained in NFP, can also be a good way to fulfil this requirement.

Thank you for promoting this important practice for the couples entrusted to your care.

+ Gregory

2022 Pro-Life Vigil March and Mass at Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception

Archbishop Lori’s Homily: A Salute to Pro-Life Ministries

More than a few times in my nearly 45 years of priesthood, I have met with women and couples who were contemplating an abortion. Almost without exception, these women and couples were deeply conflicted. Most experienced a very deep and real anguish. With the help of God’s grace, I tried to walk with them, to connect them with helpful pro-life medical services and ministries, and never to assume that I fully understood what they were going through. Some couples with whom I met received troubling pre-natal diagnoses. Others, especially unmarried women, were often victims of poverty and abuse. In almost every case, family members, friends, and medical professionals urged them to get an abortion as the “solution” to a “problem” child … a child who was likely to be born with an abnormality, or conversely, a perfectly healthy child who would be born into poverty and lack of equity. To many of them, it seemed that their only option was to have an abortion, but deep within, they knew it was a tragic choice with lasting consequences. What is needed so badly in all such situations is a witness to love and to life! ...

Catholic intellectual Alice von Hildebrand 'defended all that is worth defending'

Funeral Mass homily by Fr. Gerald Murray

Catholic intellectual Alice von Hildebrand, whose husband was the late Catholic philosopher Dietrich von Hildebrand, died Jan. 14 at the age of 98. Revered as a "tigress" in defense of objective Truth and the Catholic Church, von Hildebrand appeared more than 80 times on EWTN and contributed many outstanding essays over the years to Catholic News Agency.

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.