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Tuesday, July 7, 1998

Pope's call for worship welcomed

Pope John Paul II reminds Catholics that
Sunday is a day of worship.
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By Mark Puls and Charles Hurt / The Detroit News
Maryann Schreiber, a devout
Catholic, works the late, late shift Saturday night
and Sunday morning at a hotel.
She has to make a living, but the
Hamtramck woman does so at the cost of mounting
guilt over missing church Sunday mornings.
"I want to go back to the
old ways where Sunday was the Lord's day,"
Schreiber said. "I agree with the pope. I want
that life again."
In a day when computer modems are
never fast enough and no one seems to have enough
time for a full night's rest, Pope John Paul II is
issuing a stern warning to Catholics that they
should set aside Sunday for worship -- not errands
or their free time.
"This really is an
extraordinary move," said Jay McNally,
executive director of Call to Holiness, a Metro
Detroit lay group that promotes traditional Catholic
teachings. "This appears to be the strongest
words the pope has issued. Period."
The pontiff used his weekly
address Sunday from his window over St. Peter's
Square to urge church members to make time to keep
the Sabbath holy. And today, the Vatican is expected
to issue an Apostolic letter from the pope further
stressing the Third Commandment. Apostolic letters
are incorporated into church rules.
Sundays have come to be
"felt and lived only as a weekend," John
Paul lamented Sunday. "It (should be) the
weekly day in which the church celebrates the
resurrection of Christ. In obedience to the Third
Commandment, Sunday must be sanctified, above all,
by participation in Holy Mass."
In his letter, the pope goes on
to say a violator should be "punished as a
heretic," said McNally, who read an unofficial
English translation of the letter on a Vatican Web
site.
"A lot of families are
ruined by this Sunday stuff," McNally said,
referring to the loss of spirituality on that day.
"It really has fallen apart."
Family togetherness on Sundays,
more and more, is giving way to soccer practice,
globe trotting and going to the tanning salon.
"You have things you have to
do," said Tina Mueller of Hamtramck. "You
can't just set aside a day for prayer and
reflection."
And when folks show up for
church, they often forget to slow down enough to
commune with God.
"Some people now are coming
to church in shorts and can't wait to hit the pools
after the service," Lillian Swierczyski of
Hamtramck said. "That's wrong."
She supports a return to the days
of the Blue Laws that closed bars, stores and
amusement establishments Sundays.
"That would get people to
church in a hurry."
Torn between loyalties
Though the pope's letter is
directed at Catholics, his concerns reach beyond the
Vatican and into other religions.
"We're seeing that pull in
Sunday school," said Karen Hea, a member at
Grosse Pointe Woods Presbyterian Church. "Kids
today have to make a decision between Sunday school
and hockey practice."
The result, she said, is that
children are torn between two noble and honorable
commitments: church and team loyalty.
But more than just reflecting
upon God, attending church forges relationships with
others who share your beliefs, Hea said.
"If Sunday is hockey time,
how can you mold those relationships. I can't
imagine going through a difficult time without your
faith family to support you through it."
Rabbi Joe Klein of Temple Emanu-El
in Oak Park said the Jewish Sabbath -- Saturday --
has long conflicted with modern day's weekend
mentality.
"Anytime a religious
community finds itself within a greater secular
culture, there will be conflicts," he said.
As a reformed rabbi, he is
reluctant to condemn people for how they spend
Shabbot, but he's overall optimistic about the
Jewish faith surviving today's rushed world.
"Is it what I would like?
No," Klein said. "I think there is an
increasing spirituality in our community."
'Rampant confusion'
McNally of Call to Holiness said
local religious leaders could do a better job
outlining expectations for Catholics.
"There's rampant confusion
among ordinary Catholics. Even some of the schools
and colleges are doing a horrible job today,"
he said.
The concept of guilt, for
example, is foreign to many today.
"People used to say 'fallen
away Catholics' 30 years ago," McNally said.
"Now, people just think they can change the
church."
Whatever your religion, the
contemplative time worship sets aside is healthy,
said Linda Pieczynski, president of the
Chicago-based Call to Action, a Catholic reform
group which claims a membership of 18,000.
"We refresh ourselves
spiritually when we have time for reflection,"
she said. "When we can't find time for our
values, we have to ask what our real values
are."
St. Clair Shores resident Kathy
Lozen agreed.
"I wouldn't miss it. You
have to find it within yourself. Once you do, you
can't do without it. The world would be a better
place if everyone went to church."
Bouncing the Blue Laws
Laws that ensure moderate,
"decent" living on Sundays -- commonly
called "blue laws" as a synonym for rules
promoting gloom or lack of cheer -- have closed
businesses and limited drinking and hunting since
the 1920s and '30s. While still prevalent in parts
of the South and Canada, most Blue Laws have fallen
by the wayside. Here are some high points and low
points for Blue Laws around Michigan:
1969: Detroit lifted Sunday ban
on selling furniture (including televisions, radios
and appliances).
1969: Crowley's department store
began operating its suburban branches on Sundays,
but kept the downtown Detroit store closed for the
Christian Sabbath.
1970: Troy city commissioners
made the most recent -- and unsuccessful -- bid to
close all businesses on Sunday statewide.
1973: Hamtramck began allowing
businesses to open during the heavy shopping Sundays
before Christmas.
1973: Lawmakers considered
banning automobile travel on Sundays, though that
wasn't to keep the Sabbath holy, but to conserve
gasoline during the fuel shortage.
1976: Michigan bars began serving
liquor by the drink at noon on Sundays, instead of
the previous 2 p.m. start, though some cities kept
the restrictions in place. At the same time, ski
lodges won permission to serve hard liquor on
Sundays that fall on Christmas Day or Dec. 26.
1986: Canadian Supreme Court
upheld Toronto's 1976 law shutting most Ontario
stores on Sundays.
1995: Grosse Pointe allowed
stores to open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sundays,
instead of the previous 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. laws.
Copyright
1998, The Detroit News
Link: http://www.blessedhope.org:80/sunday/detroitnews7-7.htm
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