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Paul Dillon's painting of Father
Mychal Judge, the fire chaplain who died in the collapse of the
World Trade Center on Sept. 11.
CNS photo
by Phillip Jacobs, The Anthonian |
At prayer
breakfast Bush cites efforts
of Pennsylvania Catholic teen
By
Catholic News Service
WASHINGTON (CNS) -- At the
National Prayer Breakfast Feb. 1, President George W. Bush cited a Pennsylvania
Catholic teenager who started an outreach to poor and homeless people
in memory of her favorite priest, the late Franciscan Father Mychal Judge.
In remarks Bush said that prayer "makes us a more compassionate and
giving people" willing to listen to God's call "to love our
neighbors as we would like to be loved."
"We answer that call by reaching out to feed the hungry and clothe
the poor and aid the widow and the orphan," he said, and by helping
people in need "we find our own faith strengthened and we receive
the grace to lead lives of dignity and purpose."
That grace, he said, can be seen in the life of Shannon Hickey, a 16-year-old
junior at Lancaster (Pa.) Catholic High School who founded a nonprofit
organization called Mychal's Message in 2002.
She named it in honor of a longtime family friend, Father Judge, the New
York fire chaplain who died ministering to victims in the rubble of the
World Trade Center's twin towers Sept. 11, 2001.
Bush said that Father Judge helped Hickey and her family through her struggles
with liver disease. She was born with a defective liver, and at seven
months, on Jan. 29, 1991, received part of her mother's liver. Father
Judge had been a family friend for 40 years.
"Over the last five years, Mychal's Message has collected and distributed
more than 100,000 needed items to the poor and the homeless," Bush
said. "With each gift to the needy, Shannon encloses a card with
Father Mychal's personal prayer.
"It reads: 'Lord, take me where you want me to go, let me meet who
you want me to meet, tell me what you want me to say, and keep me out
of your way,'" he added.
Bush said that Father Judge's "humble prayer reminds us of an eternal
truth: In the quiet of prayer, we leave behind our own cares and we take
up the cares of the Almighty. And in answering his call to service we
find that, in the words of Isaiah, 'We will gain new strength. We will
run and not get tired. We will walk and not become weary.'"
Hickey also was among the 24 guests sharing first lady Laura Bush's box
during the State of the Union address Jan. 23.
"We are a nation of prayer," Bush said at the breakfast.
"Each day millions of our citizens bow their heads in silence and
solitude, or they offer up prayers in fellowship with others," he
said. "They pray for themselves; they pray for their families; they
pray for their neighbors and their communities."
| Americans pray for their nation and their elected leaders, he said,
and millions of citizens also lift up the troops in prayer.
"We pray for their (the troops) safety; we pray for their families
they have left at home; we pray for those who have been wounded for their
comfort and recovery. We remember those who have been lost, and we pray
that their loved ones feel the healing touch of the Almighty," he
said.
"During this time of war, we thank God that we are part of a nation
that produces courageous men and women who volunteer to defend us,"
he added.
The National Prayer Breakfast, held at the Washington Hilton, draws nearly
4,000 guests from around the world and is privately funded every year
by the Fellowship Foundation.
It dates back to the war years of the early 1940s, with the first official
event taking place in 1953 when President Dwight D. Eisenhower accepted
an invitation by House and Senate prayer groups to join them in praying
for the nation and its leaders.
Besides the president and first lady Laura Bush, this year's breakfast
was attended by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., House Majority Leader
Steny Hoyer, D-Md., Rep. Roy Blount, R-Mo., Cabinet members, military
officials, members of the House and Senate and diplomats, as well as governors
and other state officials and local Washington officials.
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