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Edited on Sun Jul-22-07 12:50 AM by DemBones DemBones
bulletin about it and perhaps allow you to organize some sort of fund raiser to contribute to Caritas, or to start a group to do this. If you're not used to being a leader or organizer, ask someone else if s/he will do it or help you.
What else is it you want your priest to do? AFAIK, he can't stand up and call for impeachment or say * is a liar without risking trouble with the IRS. He can talk about what the pope and the bishops have said against the war and he may be able to suggest parishioners write to their senators and representative to urge that the war be ended. Maybe you could start a petition drive with his permission. It's a lot easier to get people to sign a petition at a card table outside the sanctuary than it is to get them to write letters, though you might not get many to sign in one week. Edit: If you do this, try to get 10 or more people to sign before you set up outside the sanctuary. Nobody wants to be the first or second to sign but if they see 10-20 people have already signed, they're more willing to sign, too.
Don't just wait on your priest to do things, take action on your own, and make suggestions. Tell him that you wish he'd preach about helping Iraqi orphans and what the pope and bishops have said about this unjust war. Give him copies of good articles.
As low as *'s ratings are now, I doubt there are many people who would be offended by a call for the end of this war, especially if it's only approached as the war has failed and things will never improve until our troops leave.
Get the pastor's permission to organize a chapter of Pax Christi in the parish. Ask the Knights of Columbus or another parish group to help with the campaign to help Iraqi orphans. Nobody can be against helping orphans, even if they support the war. (The Knights are a good group in most parishes because they have a lot of members and money. If there are other large groups in your parish, talk to them, too.) If your parish is like most, you don't have enough priests (we have one for more than 700 registered families and of course some people never register.) There are a lot of things a priest has to do besides say Mass and a lot of good causes that need help so we can't really expect the priest (or priests, if you're lucky enough to have more than one) to do everything. And the 80/20 rule usually applies: 20% of the people do 80% of the volunteer work in the parish and 20% of the people give 80% of the money in Sunday collections, building drives, you name it. Obviously, you need to target that 20%.
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