Features Fri, 24 Jan 2025 13:44:38 -0500 Website design by Concerto Designs concertodesigns.ca en-gb Faith must be passed on in face of secular pressure /features/catholic-education/item/13045-faith-must-be-passed-on-in-face-of-secular-pressure /features/catholic-education/item/13045-faith-must-be-passed-on-in-face-of-secular-pressure

OTTAWA - Toronto Archbishop Thomas Collins urged Catholic school trustees not to compromise fidelity to the Catholic faith as they face government pressure to adopt policies contrary to Church teaching.

Speaking to the annual conference of the Canadian Catholic School Trustees’ Association in Ottawa Sept. 23, Collins exhorted everyone involved in Catholic education to become disciples of Christ and to fully participate in the New Evangelization, which he described as proclaiming the Word in places where the Gospel has been forgotten and God has been squeezed out.

“We are marinated in secularism,” he said, urging those present to take a look at the working document for the upcoming Synod on the New Evangelization called by Pope Benedict XVI.

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ccn-ottawa@rogers.com (Deborah Gyapong, Canadian Catholic News) Education Wed, 28 Sep 2011 09:00:00 -0400
The Vaniers valued family values /item/13006-the-vaniers-valued-family-values /item/13006-the-vaniers-valued-family-values

The year 1959 is a couple of generations ago — hardly a blink of an eye in the gaze of history. But on Sept. 15, 1959, Georges Vanier took office as Governor General of Canada with words few leaders would speak in public today.

“My first words are a prayer,” said the old soldier. “May almighty God in His infinite wisdom and mercy bless the sacred mission which has been entrusted to me by Her Majesty the Queen and help me to fulfill it in all humility. In exchange for His strength, I offer Him my weakness. May He give peace to this beloved land of ours and, to those who live in it, the grace of mutual understanding, respect and love.”

A new biography of Georges and Pauline Vanier by Mary Frances Coady tells the story of their lives lived in tandem, driven by high ideals and understood as a spiritual enterprise. Georges and Pauline Vanier: Portrait of a Couple covers a century of history in which Canada emerged from a semi-colonial backwater to become a modern nation. But rather than a march through two world wars and into the Cold War, Coady presents this history through the intimate lens of a marriage.

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mikes@catholicregister.org (Michael Swan, The Catholic Register) Features Sun, 25 Sep 2011 09:23:00 -0400
Dufferin-Peel board launches book on history of Catholic education /features/catholic-education/item/12999-dufferin-peel-board-launches-book-on-history-of-catholic-education /features/catholic-education/item/12999-dufferin-peel-board-launches-book-on-history-of-catholic-education

MISSISSAUGA, ONT. - Grade 7 and 10 students in Dufferin-Peel west of Toronto are about to welcome 400 years of history on 252 glossy pages into their classrooms, and they have a couple of former students to thank for it.

Our Story. Our Tradition. Our Journey: Celebrating the Church-School Connection in Dufferin-Peel is the first book published in more than 30 years by the Catholic school board that covers Mississauga and Brampton. ItƵapp a history of Catholic education in Ontario and the region. The timeline stretches back as far as the Jesuit martyrs of the 17th century.

Former students Daniel Francavilla and Jennifer Paul were asked to work on the book by their media studies teacher, Peter Fujiwara. What began as a little design and layout project ended up stretching out for a year. The pair graduated from St. Marguerite d'Youville Secondary School in Brampton, Francavilla in 2008 and Paul in 2009.

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mikes@catholicregister.org (Michael Swan, The Catholic Register) Education Wed, 21 Sep 2011 12:23:03 -0400
Adoration brings Scripture alive /item/12998-adoration-brings-scripture-alive /item/12998-adoration-brings-scripture-alive

OTTAWA - Many people find that getting away for a retreat is impossible due to time, money or family reasons. Even finding a free weekend can be difficult in our busy lives.

Aside from a day at my church during Advent and Lent, where parishioners gather for lectures, quiet time and a silent meal, I haven’t attended a formal retreat in more than a decade.

Instead, I have discovered the simplest, most flexible way for me to make a retreat is to find my way to the nearest adoration chapel and stay there for an hour or two. Over the past year, I have done this frequently. I have also been blessed with the grace to pray three novenas that included a minimum of an hour of adoration for every one of the nine days.

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ccn-ottawa@rogers.com (Deborah Gyapong, Canadian Catholic News) Features Wed, 21 Sep 2011 12:23:02 -0400
Community building and vulnerability /item/12997-community-building-and-vulnerability /item/12997-community-building-and-vulnerability

VANCOUVER - Every May, the graduating class of St. Thomas Aquinas Regional Secondary School in North Vancouver, B.C., attends a three-day retreat organized and facilitated by school staff and alumni. My Grade 12 retreat four years ago is one of my fondest memories of high school. So it was a blessing this past May to be invited to help lead the 2011 class in this spiritual exercise.

The objective of the retreat, held at Camp Stillwood (about a two-hour drive from Vancouver), is to help students open up to God and to each other. Students begin from varying levels of spirituality; we had to ensure they understood that.

The retreat had all the activities that a large-scale retreat should have: a morning of team building exercises and games, a campfire, free time and an evening devoted to hilarious skits (making fun of teachers is encouraged). As a leader, I was responsible for leading some of these games, leading small group discussions and helping lead worship.

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Features Wed, 21 Sep 2011 12:23:01 -0400
Retreats program sets young adults’ ‘Hearts on Fire’ /item/12996-retreats-program-sets-young-adults%E2%80%99-%E2%80%98hearts-on-fire%E2%80%99 /item/12996-retreats-program-sets-young-adults%E2%80%99-%E2%80%98hearts-on-fire%E2%80%99

The first thing Fr. Phil Hurley makes clear is that when he is speaking about Hearts on Fire he is not referring to a popular line of engagement rings.

“This is not the worldƵapp most perfectly cut diamond,” he jokes.

The priest is the national youth and young adult director of the Apostleship of Prayer, a Jesuit association leading the Hearts on Fire retreats. The retreats are for young adults ages 18-39, married or single, based on the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius and the spirituality of the Apostleship of Prayer.

“ItƵapp a crucial time for people in their lives,” Hurley told Catholic News Service. “They are at a place in their life that they can make decisions soon and take action on it right away and make a big difference.”

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Features Wed, 21 Sep 2011 12:22:57 -0400
Does Super Mario go to Mass? Catholic gamers and the video game industry /item/12983-does-super-mario-go-to-mass?-catholic-gamers-and-the-video-game-industry /item/12983-does-super-mario-go-to-mass?-catholic-gamers-and-the-video-game-industry

NEW YORK - Is it possible to be a faithful Catholic and a video gamer?

That's a question all Catholic gaming enthusiasts -- including the young adults at whom many of the industry's offerings are primarily targeted -- must ask themselves as this medium continues to develop and expand its influence over contemporary society.

Once upon a time, back in the 1980s and early 1990s, classic games such as "Pac-Man" and "Super Mario Bros." raised few if any moral issues. So youthful Catholics could casually -- and comfortably -- pick up whatever new release was available at the local store. There was no need for them to worry that the sensitivities of their faith would be assaulted or that troublesome opinions would be aggressively foisted on them by game developers.

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Features Mon, 19 Sep 2011 10:50:01 -0400
Church and state: Why can't they be friends? /item/12981-church-and-state-why-cant-they-be-friends? /item/12981-church-and-state-why-cant-they-be-friends?

VATICAN CITY - Pope Benedict XVI has made the dangers of secularism a major theme of his pontificate.

And it's a battle both sides take seriously.

On the one hand, the pope warns that societies without the moorings of Christian values will be lost at sea, unaware of or indifferent to the truth that anchors humanity to justice, peace, respect and solidarity.

On the other side are groups and individuals that hold so tightly to the democratic tenet of church-state separation, they don't want any voice tied to religion to be let loose onto the public square.

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Features Fri, 16 Sep 2011 12:25:31 -0400
Jesuits are a key part of our history /jesuits-in-canada-list-sp-985240070/item/12979-jesuits-are-a-key-part-of-our-history /jesuits-in-canada-list-sp-985240070/item/12979-jesuits-are-a-key-part-of-our-history

Four hundred years ago a pair of brave, but no doubt anxious, French Jesuit missionaries landed at Port Royal in Acadia on the shores of the Bay of Fundy. In 1611 the small fort was a gateway to the vast, unexplored territory called New France.

Over the decades that followed, the Jesuits moved steadily inland and, while fulfilling their mission as evangelists, they also became explorers, cartographers, educators, chroniclers and pastors. More so than any other religious order, the Jesuits not only witnessed the birth of Canada, they shaped significant parts of its history.

To commemorate the 400th anniversary of their arrival to the “New World” and to celebrate their many spiritual and temporal contributions to Canada, The Catholic Register has published this 36-page homage to the Jesuit priests and brothers whose courage brought them to our shores in 1611 and whose faith and commitment to service has entwined them in the fabric of Canadian life to this day.

We originally envisioned this tribute as a 12-page section. But it tripled in size over the summer due to an outpouring of support from the many organizations on these pages that wanted to extend their own congratulations in an advertisement. As a result, when the special section is combined with our weekly 20-page paper, the 56-page Catholic Register you are holding is probably the largest we’ve ever published.


The story of the Jesuit martyrs is an important part of the Canadian education curriculum. Therefore, in addition to being delivered to subscriber homes, an additional 14,000 copies of the Jesuit section have been printed for distribution to more than 1,000 Catholic elementary and high schools in Ontario at the expense of The Register.

This 400-year milestone is worthy of celebration. We hope you enjoy it.

Jim O’Leary
Publisher and Editor



Catholic Register

Jesuits in Canada - 400 years of Service - Catholic Register special front cover

Jesuits in Canada
400 Years of Service

Browse print edition

Jesuits are a key part of our history

400 years of giving

Wherever they went, Jesuits embraced local ways

Jean de Brébeuf's rules on interacting with the Hurons

Loyola's Spiritual Exercises still at Jesuits' core

A developed mind takes us on a path to God

Setting the world 'on fire with the love of God'

Social justice Jesuit-style is for God's greater glory

Martin Royackers was first English Canadian Jesuit killed in service

Three martyred at China mission

Arts are a tool towards the Jesuit mission goal

The Jesuit Relations opened up the New World to Europe

Finding Jesus through Loyola's Spiritual Exercises

Exhibit unearths gems from Jesuits' history

The formation process for a Jesuit is laborious, lengthy

Experiencing God in ecology

A chronology of the Jesuits in Canada

Jesuit heroes through the years

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editor@catholicregister.org (Catholic Register Editorial) Jesuits in Canada Fri, 16 Sep 2011 09:00:12 -0400
Jesuits in Canada - Browse print version /jesuits /jesuits

Jesuits in Canada - 400 Years of Service

Friday, 16 September 2011

The Catholic Register is proud to honour the 400th anniversary of the Jesuits arrival in Canada with this 18 part special feature.

There are two ways to read the articles.

You can view the articles in the embedded reader below as they were printed in the newspaper . Click the "Expand" button in the centre of the player to go full-screen for the best reader experience. You can then zoom in on specific pages with the magnifying glass button or by using the scroll wheel on your mouse. Click to the side to navigate through the pages and press the ESC key on your keyboard to exit.

You can also enjoy the articles on . Just use the 18 links below the reader to browse through the stories.

Ƶapp

Catholic Register

Jesuits in Canada - 400 years of Service - Catholic Register special front cover

Jesuits in Canada
400 Years of Service


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crstaff@catholicregister.org (Catholic Register Staff) Jesuits in Canada Thu, 15 Sep 2011 14:32:30 -0400