‘Punishing the most vulnerable’: Bishops, Catholic agencies react to Supreme Court’s homelessness decision

(NCR. KATIE COLLINS SCOTT).

In Portland, one of the West Coast cities grappling with a large and growing homeless population, Catholic Charities of Oregon runs a tiny home village for formerly homeless women — where they can live communally, receive case management, decorate their own walls with art and photographs, and lock the door at night.  Recently, a group of homeless campers began living near that community, known as Kenton Women’s Village, with some individuals bothering residents, said Rose Bak, chief program officer at Catholic Charities. “We’ve been trying to get them to move on because they are causing a safety hazard,” Bak said. “But it’s really tricky to navigate because they have nowhere to go.” Shelters in the city are often full and have a long waitlist, according to a recent city audit.  Yet both agency and church leaders told NCR the answer to the complexities of homelessness is not fines or jail time, an approach many cities could adopt following a major ruling on homelessness by the Supreme Court.

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New York Priest Celebrates ‘Pride Mass’ Outside of Gay Monument — on LGBT Flag

(NCR. Joe Bukuras ).

A New York City Catholic church, previously caught up in LGBT controversy, hosted a “Pride Mass” Thursday evening using an altar shrouded with a gay and transgender “pride” flag at a local federal monument with sculptures of two same-sex couples and decorated by dozens of LGBT rainbow flags. The federal monument enshrining a gay bar, The Stonewall Inn, and its surroundings, memorializes the location of a June 28, 1969, LGBT uprising. “When you think about it, the altar servers during the summer go to the amusement park or Yankee Stadium, the senior group will go to the shrine or they’ll go to the slots in Atlantic City. Where is Out at St. Paul supposed to go for their summer pilgrimage?” Father Eric Andrews, pastor of the Church of St. Paul the Apostle, said in a homily at the Stonewall National onument in the city.  “Out at St. Paul” is St. Paul the Apostle church’s ministry “to the Gay, Lesbian, Bi, Trans and Queer community,” which is made up of “mostly gay men,” Paul Snatchko, a spokesman for the Paulist Fathers, told CNA, the Register’s sister news outlet, last year.

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