CHARLOTTE — More than 100 people shrugged off the chilly rain and high winds Jan. 15 to march through uptown Charlotte for the 10th annual March for Life Charlotte.
The prayerful march, held each January to mark the anniversary of the Roe v. Wade decision legalizing abortion, calls attention to the more than 57 million lives lost and the need to end the tragedy of abortion. The march kicked off after a Mass for the Unborn offered by Father Casey Coleman, parochial vicar of St. Vincent de Paul Church in Charlotte. Father Coleman also served as guest preacher for the march.
Before the March for Life started off from the diocesan Pastoral Center, Bishop Peter Jugis and all those present offered a prayer to God.
"Our culture has drifted so far from Your ways and does not respect the absolute right to life of the child in the womb. Give our country the grace of repentance and conversion to turn away from the culture of death and embrace the culture of life," Bishop Jugis prayed.
More than 150 marchers then walked up to Independence Square at the corner of Trade and Tryon streets. Once there, Father Coleman delivered the keynote address in the midst of a heavy downpour.
"Our Holy Father Pope Francis has called this a Jubilee Year of Mercy... We have come here today, my brothers and sisters, because the Spirit of the Lord is upon each and every one of us. By our very baptism, we have been given this very Spirit and anointed by Him and are called to that same mission of mercy. Therefore, we must go forth and proclaim liberty to the captives," Father Coleman said.
He emphasized we must proclaim "liberty" to pregnant mothers in need, those who are duped into thinking they don't have any other options besides abortion. What they need instead, Father Coleman said, is to know the love of the Father.
"We must do this at all cost because to be truly filled with mercy and to love with mercy is to be compassionate. To love with true compassion. Which means to suffer with. We must find these women and fathers and all these people affected by the culture of lies and tell them that abortion is not the way," he continued.
Father Santiago Mariani, parochial vicar of Our Lady of Lourdes Church in Monroe, then addressed the crowd in Spanish.
Afterwards, attorney George Rouco, a parishioner of St. Thérèse Church in Mooresville who is running for Congress, gave an address that was briefly interrupted by the deluge and high winds which knocked out the public address system – prompting marchers to gather closer to hear his testimony about nearly being aborted.
"Both of my parents were Cuban exiles," he said. "They left Cuba in 1961 and 1962 after they were oppressed. They fought against the Castro regime and were forced out of their country and they moved to Florida where they started a family."
His family struggled as there were six children and two adults living in a gang-infested area of Miami. His mother was counseled by her doctor to abort him because of the family's difficult situation. His parents stood firm in their Catholic faith and refused.
"Fast forward 30 years, and my wife and I were expecting our first child. He was born with a congenital heart defect. Our doctor...said he would have a tough life. He said we could abort him so he would not have to go through with open heart surgery at 13 days of age.
"But my wife and I are staunch believers in the sanctity of life, believing that every child is a gift from God. We chose to have our child and today he is 5 years old. He's healthy. He's a wonderful child of God," Rouco said.
Due to technical difficulties with the sound system, testimonies of women from the Silent No More awareness campaign were cancelled and the march proceeded to the sidewalk in front of the Charles R. Jonas Federal Building and Courthouse on West Trade Street, where they were joined by Bishop Jugis to pray a rosary and the Chaplet of Divine Mercy for an end to abortion.
Andrea Hines, regional coordinator for Silent No More, believes it is important to hold a march in Charlotte because "it is a destination city for abortions, with three independent abortion facilities located here and also a Planned Parenthood office which, at that office, does abortion referrals to the local abortion facilities.
"Not only do local Charlotteans have abortions here, but people come for abortions from other areas of North Carolina and the other states of South Carolina, Georgia, Virginia, Tennessee and Florida. Mecklenburg County has the highest number of abortions in the state, with over 7,250 occurring each year," Hines said.
"It is important to bring visibility to the situation, light to the darkness, to let people know that abortion is wrong and it is opposed. Most media only promotes and glorifies the pro-death side of abortion. It is an opportunity to be voices to the voiceless. Lastly, it is an opportunity to bring grassroots effort of trying to save the unborn locally," she continued.
Deacon Jack Staub, who serves at St. Matthew Church in Charlotte, was among the marchers this year.
"Our culture seems to indicate that life is irrelevant. We have to make a statement to show that it is not irrelevant – that all life is precious and special," Deacon Staub said. "We do that by making visible signs that people can see. Some people will accept it and some won't and some will think about it. What we want to do is convert hearts."
Bob Loughlin, long-time co-coordinator of the March for Life Charlotte, was also among the marchers out in the rain and cold Jan. 15.
"I think as we keep putting the message of the value of human life and human dignity out there...gradually we are winning this battle. We go out there on a lunch hour and we see people passing us by, all kinds of people of all ages and all different backgrounds going about their business. I always wonder if just one time someone saw our message and a child was saved.
"I have a suspicion that it may be more than one. It makes our effort worthwhile. It doesn't matter if it's 15 degrees and the wind is blowing, or if it's 40 degrees and it's raining. If our effort allows one person to grow up to be the person God created, it's all worthwhile."
— SueAnn Howell and Kimberly Bender, Catholic News Herald
See more video highlights from the Mass for the Unborn at St. Vincent De Paul and from the March for Life Charlotte on our Facebook page.
Details about the March for Life in D.C. and Raleigh
'Pro-Life and Pro-Woman Go Hand in Hand'
WASHINGTON, D.C. — The March for Life Education and Defense Fund has announced the details for the 2016 March for Life to be held on Friday, Jan. 22. "Pro-Life and Pro-Woman Go Hand in Hand" will be the theme of the 43rd annual march, and seeks to draw attention to the pre-born populations that are at the greatest risk for abortion: those who receive a prenatal disability diagnosis.
The March for Life will begin with a rally at noon on the National Mall, followed at 1 p.m. by the march to the U.S. Supreme Court.
A Mass for pro-life advocates from North Carolina will be offered at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, starting at 11:30 a.m. Friday, Jan. 22.
Due to the predicted extreme winter weather, the North Carolina Bishops Peter Jugis and Michael Burbidge will not be attending the 2016 March for Life in D.C. on Jan. 22, according to a release. Other priests from North Carolina will still be on hand to celebrate the N.C. Mass for Life in teh Upper Church of the Basilica.
For more details and schedule changes: http://marchforlife.org/mfl-2016
Other D.C. march events
A Youth Rally and Mass for Life hosted by the Archdiocese of Washington will be held Jan. 22. The ticketed event will be held at the Verizon Center and the D.C. Armory, both in Washington. For details, go to www.youthrallyandmassforlife.org.
The Paulus Institute for the Propagation of Sacred Liturgy, Washington, D.C., will hold the Third Annual Nellie Gray Mass after the March for Life, at 4 p.m. in the Extraordinary Form (traditional Latin Mass) at St. Mary Mother of God Church at 5th and H Sts. N.W. in downtown Washington, D.C.
On Saturday, Jan. 23, Latinos Por La Vida will host its third Annual Pro-Life Conference in the College Park Marriott Hotel & Conference Center after the March for Life.
Events in Raleigh
The Diocese of Raleigh Mass and March for Life will be held starting at noon Saturday, Jan. 16, at Halifax Mall in downtown Raleigh. Bishop Michael F. Burbidge will celebrate the Mass under a tent at Halifax Mall for youth and adults. The Rally and March for Life with North Carolina Right to Life will follow the Mass at 1:15 p.m.
For details, go to www.dioceseofraleigh.com
— SueAnn Howell, senior reporter
Can't attend the national March for Life? Pray the online novena!
Join thousands of Catholics across the country in prayer for a Culture of Life from Saturday, Jan. 16, to Sunday, Jan. 24, through the U.S. bishops' novena "9 Days for Life."
Through this online novena, pray for the respect and protection of all human life with new intentions, brief reflections, and more each day. Download the novena online, or participate through Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, email, text message or the free mobile app (English and Spanish).
Join at www.9daysforlife.com.
ARDEN — Welcoming. Like a family. Home.
Those were some of the words parishioners including Klaus and Jean Jockwig, Frank and Madonna Moyer, Barbara Indelicato and Jack Le Beau used to describe St. Barnabas Parish in Arden. They were among hundreds who celebrated the parish's 50th anniversary Jan. 17 with a special Mass that featured several former pastors and other clergy, some of the founding families of the parish, and a special papal blessing from Pope Francis for the occasion.
The bilingual Mass was celebrated by Bishop Peter Jugis and concelebrated by Father Adrian Porras, pastor; Father Wilbur Thomas, rector and pastor of St. Lawrence Basilica in Asheville; and Father Dean Cesa, former pastor. Father Roger Arnsparger, former pastor, and Father Noah Carter, a former member of the parish, were also present for the celebration. Surviving family members of the parish's original 35 families were recognized, and fourth-degree Knights of Columbus of St. Barnabas Council served as honor guard.
"The celebration of the 50th anniversary is the perfect opportunity to rededicate ourselves to the mission of the parish, both on a personal basis and on a parish family basis," Bishop Jugis noted in his homily.
A parish exists for three reasons, he explained. "First of all, and most importantly, for the praise and glory of Almighty God. He, of course, is the reason that we are here. We owe Him everything – our gratitude, our praise, our worship."
Second, he continued, the parish's mission is to help each member grow in holiness. And third, he said, a parish "is to be a center for evangelization."
A parish's mission, he said, is "to be concerned not only for our own salvation, but to be concerned for the salvation of everyone else – to make sure that everyone else has the chance to know and love Jesus as we do, and to bring them into His presence, by sharing our love of Christ, our love of the Lord."
Bishop Jugis recalled the words of St. John Paul II in his 2001 apostolic letter "Novo Millennio Ineunte" ("At the Beginning of the New Millennium"): "Brothers and sisters, don't settle for a life of mediocrity. Don't settle for a shallow practice of the Catholic faith."
"Your love of Christ must be present in everything that you do," Bishop Jugis emphasized. "The relationship between husband and wife must reflect the love of Christ. The relationship of parents and children must reflect the love of Christ. The relationship with people outside the family home, the poor, to all who are neighbor – even those who don't like you – must reflect the love of Christ."
We must make personal holiness our priority, just as St. John Paul II preached, and the parish gives us the opportunity and the strength to do that, Bishop Jugis said. He added, we cannot be evangelizers if our faith is not strongly rooted in the love of Christ.
"If we have a shallow, weak or mediocre practice of our faith, and a lukewarm love for Jesus," he said, our sanctification and the evangelization of our culture will not be possible.
"On the 50th anniversary of this parish and as a plan for moving forward, make holiness your goal. Upon it is built everything else – both for yourself personally and for the parish family," he said.
St. Barnabas began in 1964 as a mission parish of St. Lawrence Church (now Basilica) in Asheville with 35 founding families. It was chartered as a parish on Dec. 20, 1965. By 1984, the congregation had grown to more than 300 families who worked with the Diocese of Charlotte to buy land for a church to be built at its present location on Crescent Hill Road. The parish has continued to buy adjacent land, now totaling approximately 12 acres, for future growth.
During the past 50 years, eight pastors have led the parish: Father Joseph Maule (deceased), Father Joseph Cutter (deceased), Father Frank Bourbon (deceased), Father Joe Newell (deceased), Father John Schneider, Father Roger Arnsparger, Father Dean Cesa and Father Adrian Porras.
Today St. Barnabas Church has grown to well over 1,000 families including a large Hispanic family membership, and the parish has become a vital part of the south Buncombe County community, providing financial and spiritual support to numerous Catholic as well as community organizations.
After the celebration, Father Porras noted, "It was very special for me to be pastor of a parish celebrating its 50th anniversary. St. Barnabas has been a blessing to many people's lives. Hopefully, for the next 50 years it will continue to be a place where people come to fulfill the two greatest commandments: to love God and to love neighbor."
— Patricia L. Guilfoyle, Editor. Photos by Paul Wojcik (Paul Vincent Photography) and Patricia L. Guilfoyle | Catholic News Herald