Cardinal
sees Archdiocese 'privileged' by Opus Dei Presence
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Some
1,000 members and supporters of Opus Dei heard Cardinal
O'Connor denounce as "bordering on calumny"
the notion that "Opus Dei is concerned only with
the wealthy and the well educated."
The archdiocese is "privileged" by the presence
of Opus Dei members the cardinal said in his homily at
a Mass in St. Patrick's Cathedral June 26 commemorating
the 23rd anniversary of the death of the movement's founder,
Blessed Josemaria Escriva de Balaguer.
"I
wish the myth about Opus Dei would be dispelled forever,"
he said.
Blessed
Josemaria Escriva founded Opus Dei, or Work of God, in
Madrid in 1928. Compared to a religious order by many,
Opus Dei is a prelature, a diocese without geographical
boundaries. (Its members retain their participation in
their local parishes and dioceses.) Nearly 80,000 people
from around the world belong to Opus Dei, which was designated
a personal prelature by Pope John Paul II in 1982. The
Rome-based prelature is now headed by Madrid-born Bishop
Javier Echevarria, 66, who was appointed by Pope John
Paul II in 1994.
Its
80,000 members pursue a call to holiness in their professional
lives and everyday circumstances. They include priests
and married and single lay people. In the tristate area,
there are 300 members. Some single members, including
priests, live in Opus Dei's five houses in the archdiocese,
three in New Rochelle and two in Manhattan.
Opus Dei conducts evenings of recollection and other spiritual
activities in the New York area and sponsors two South
Bronx tutoring programs staffed by volunteer college students
and young professionals.
At the Mass, Cardinal O'Connor called on the insights
of Blessed Josemaria Escriva in his homily on St. Luke's
Gospel in which Jesus instructed Simon Peter and the other
Apostles to be fishers of men. He emphasized the last
line of the reading, which called for the Apostles to
leave everything behind and follow Jesus.
"If
we don't give ourselves generously, we will find it difficult
to follow Jesus," the cardinal said. "We can't
fight adequately, victoriously with the devil if we have
clung to anything.
"Unless
we carry out a fruitful apostolate, our faith will prove
barren," he added. "The kind of life Opus Dei
offers as an ideal is the life of holiness to which everyone
is called."
Among
20 concelebrantsts of the Mass were Auxiliary Bishop Nicholas
A. DiMarzio of Newark N.J., and Msgr. James A. Kelly,
regional vicar of Opus Dei for the United States, who
is based in New Rochelle.
Cardinal
O'Connor said that Blessed Josemaria Escriva was "totally
dedicated" to the Eucharistic sacrifice offered at
Mass.
"There
was no question in his mind about what happens on this
altar," the cardinal said. "Christ is truly
born again on the altar... This is not some mere symbol.
This is Christ, the Son of God. coming among us once again."
After
Mass, many Opus Dei members gathered informally in the
back of the cathedral. Sim Johnston told CNY that belonging
to Opus Dei for the last 10 years has helped to make him
a better Catholic.
"It
gives me spiritual direction," said Johnston, a writer
who is on the executive board of Crisis magazine, a Catholic
publication. A parishioner of St. Thomas More parish in
Manhattan, he is married and the father of four children.
"We've
got to be like the early Christians," he said. "We
are meant to re-evangelize the world."
Another
married member, Andrea Barbuto of St. Augustine's parish
in Ossining, said she was introduced to Blessed Josemaria
Escriva's best known published work, "The Way,"
long before she joined Opus Dei three years ago.
A
mother of five and a nurse with the Dominican Sisters
Family Health Service, Mrs. Barbuto said that her membership
in Opus Dei "gave me a way to understand the Gospel
more and apply it to my own life."