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Featured Article: A Brief History of African American Catholics - "Slavery was a cruel social institution that corrupted the entire history of the United States. It divided the nation. It divided religion. It touched every part of the Catholic Church. In 1839, Pope Gregory XVI condemned slavery in the document Supremo Apostolatus Fastigio, but this made little impact. Catholic slaveholders did not consider slavery immoral, since the Bible did not forbid it. Many priests and religious sisters owned slaves. So did some bishops. Even some African American Catholics had slaves. A black person might purchase a slave in order to be able to marry him or her and the spouse remained, legally, a slave." | Read Full Story

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Black Catholic Young Adults

Why I Sing
What It Means, To Me, Being Catholic

"Why I Sing" by Ms. Glenda A. BrownI am Catholic because it was chosen for me to be baptized (in this life) into this denomination of my family's Christian faith. Before I was even a glistening star in my mother's eye, she converted from Baptist to Catholic. When I was an infant, and it came time for my faith to be professed, my mother chose that I join her in her newfound faith. And so it has been, for the past 25 years from cradle to present day, that I have been a Roman-Catholic Christian. I spent 12 years in Catholic school. I went to church at a local Catholic church, every Sunday with my devout mother. I have even been grilled by the notion, most recently, that nothing would make my mother prouder than for me to one day give her Catholic grandchildren, in a holy matrimonial union between me and her future Catholic son-in-law. And of course, with God always steady behind the wheel of my life's vehicle, it would happen that my first full-time job out of college would be for a Catholic university.

However, though my life is so well versed and coated in Catholicism, I am at a point now where I am revealing the real me to the world. Yet, in the midst of this revelation, I am curiously tempted but brave enough to face the consequences in asking the very important but very tricky question in my life: Why is it I am Catholic? Why do I continue to follow in this way of faith and of a life filled with beliefs and laws that continue to shape my faith life and help guide my physical one? Is it I am Catholic because my mom wanted me to be or I choose to be? Whether it is someone else's choice or mine, what does it really mean, to me, being Catholic?

I am Catholic, first and foremost, because I need and love the spiritual stability of the faith that comes with the traditions and universal practices of the Church. Everyone needs something to believe; and, the Catholic Church has provided me with years of strong faith built upon a solid faith community and academic foundation. Catholic weekly/weekend Masses and school have given me purpose and prepared me to know how my place in the world is so much influenced by this faith in God.

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It is this influence that is the reason I know whose I am as well as who I am. The down-to-earth feel of the Catholic community strengthens me wholeheartedly, in every aspect of my very being. The Church has had many a battle over the past two millennia that have given shape and character to it through its followers. In studying these battles, and the history behind them, I take on that shape and grow by living out my life in the fashion of that same character.

The Catholic Church stands for what it believes in as the teachings of our Savior. It teaches that no matter the struggles of the battles in life, I still can stand strong in my beliefs. Just as in Mark 2: 1- 5, four strong men's faith helped one paralytic to be lowered down through a roof of disbelief and into his strong faith before the presence of our Lord. One in the same, it is the determined and strong faith of being Catholic, a billion-strong community of faith around the world, that affords me help to faithfully reach and come before the Lord for myself. Being Catholic, for me, just feels comfortable. I am at home and loved - the essence of God for me. There is this sense of fulfillment that stays with me, for being a Catholic. For it is that people do not care bout how much you know, until they know how much you care.

The Church, in many ways over the years, has shown it cares about its people and me. It gives new meaning to the phrase "commitment to excellence," because it has used its followers and leaders to be the best disciples the world has seen. It provides a haven to build family in faith, in a world that prepares a place rejecting the idea of every human being as being family and one in the same to another as kin eternally in God. Being Catholic reminds me that we are all one family. For I am because we are and since we are therefore I am. We are all one family under the same tradition of seeking God's love that has and will sustain us until the end of time.

We all have different stories, some where we were born "cradle" Catholics, baptized in our infancy and reared in the faith as part of our families' generations-old tradition. Some, in school, learned about Catholicism and were so academically and spiritually impressed in celebrating its practices. Others, after years of exposure and having fallen in love with the church through years of mass attendances as a non-Catholic, have decided to join R.C.I.A. and officially join the Church. Catholics, either by life involuntary circumstances or voluntary choice, have joined and been immersed profoundly in God through the practices of the Catholic faith. God's plan for their life laid out that destiny to reign true and come to life, sustained strong.

Simply or not simply, it all boils down to what you feel and what you believe in your heart and soul to be true. I believe in all the reasons that have led me to stay a Catholic. I believe in the woman behind her holy black habit and white vestments to be a sign of authority and resilience, influenced in a life nourished by her commitment to service in the name of her faith. I believe in the priest, whose plans are wonderfully grandiose and whose life is led sharply by its point of strong conviction. I believe in the godparents who kept it real and kept me focused with loving arms and open understanding. Most of all, I will always believe in the mother of all conservative and unconditionally loving Catholic mothers that molded my faith strong, despite the challenges of single motherhood, keeping me firmly standing in the glistening light of faith in God. Catholic, I am a part of something that is more than a huge number of followers in lots of church buildings worldwide. We are family with Christ serving and worship God! We are Catholic! We are Christian! We Are Love!

Ms. Glenda A. Brown hails from her home state of Georgia, in the city of Atlanta, by way of Birmingham, AL and Pawleys Island, SC. By day and during the week, she works as Program Assistant for the Institute for Black Catholic Studies at Xavier University of Louisiana, in New Orleans, LA. By night and on weekends, she focuses on her love of short filmmaking, cooking, and what else…writing. She wishes only to fulfill God's purpose for her life, living each day surrounded by the people who love her and being happy in the knowledge that she made a difference in making time to be there for, listen to, or help out someone else. God's Blessings!!!

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