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Pope Leo says everyone can be a good Samaritan

Diocesan News “To love one’s neighbor whom Jesus identifies as anyone who has need of us is within everyone’s reach,” he wrote in his message for the 34th World Day of the Sick, observed by the church Feb. 11, the feast of Our Lady of Lourdes.”The pain that moves us to compassion is not the pain of a stranger; it is the pain of a member of our own body, to whom Christ, our head, commands us attend, for the good of all,” the pope wrote in the message released Jan. 20. The theme chosen for the 2026 observance is inspired by the parable of the good Samaritan and Pope Francis’ encyclical on human fraternity, “Fratelli Tutti.”Titled, “The compassion of the Samaritan: Loving by bearing the pain of the other,” the message focuses on the importance of: encountering and listening to others; being moved by compassion; and loving God through concrete action in solidarity with others. While traditionally addressed to Catholic health care and pastoral workers, this year’s message is offered to everyone, Cardinal Michael Czerny, prefect of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, said at a Vatican news conference to present the message Jan. 20. The message is offered to everyone because “we’re one body, one humanity of brothers and sisters, and when someone’s sick and suffering, all the other categories which tend to divide fade away into insignificance,” the cardinal said. Asked to comment about how people in the United States should best respond when witnessing violence toward immigrants, Cardinal Czerny said, “I don’t know what to say about the larger picture,” but he said it would be helpful to focus on “the underview” or what should or is happening on the ground.”There are many situations in which the individual Christian, the individual citizen, can extend their hand or lend their support. And that’s extremely important,” he said. “I suppose we could all hope that those many gestures, many Samaritan gestures, can also translate into better politics.”The Catholic “struggle for justice,” he told Catholic News Service, gets “its real depth and its real meaning” from daily lived experience helping real people. Advocacy work, for example, should “evolve out of real experience,” he said. “When, let’s say, your visits to the sick reveal, for example, the injustice of inaccessibility to health care, well then you take it up as an issue, but on the basis of your lived and indeed pastoral and Christian experience.”The good Samaritan shows that “we are all in a position to respond” to anyone in need, he said. “And the mystery, which you can discover whether you are a Christian or not, is that by responding, in a sense, your own suffering is also addressed. Since the major suffering for so many today, young and not so young, is loneliness and hopelessness, by worrying about it less and reaching out to someone who needs you, you will discover that there’s more life than you imagined,” he added. In his message, Pope Leo said, “To serve one’s neighbor is to love God through deeds.”In fact, the “true meaning of loving ourselves,” he wrote, involves “setting aside any attempt to base our self-esteem or sense of dignity on worldly stereotypes such as success, career, status or family background and recovering our proper place before God and neighbor. I genuinely hope that our Christian lifestyle will always reflect this fraternal, ‘Samaritan’ spirit one that is welcoming, courageous, committed and supportive, rooted in our union with God and our faith in Jesus Christ,” Pope Leo wrote.”Enkindled by this divine love, we will surely be able to give of ourselves for the good of all who suffer, especially our brothers and sisters who are sick, elderly or afflicted,” he wrote. The full text of the pope’s message in English can be found at www. vatican. va/content/leo-xiv/en/messages/sick/documents/20260113-messaggio-giornata-malato. html.

educationpoverty

Former graduates lead program that seeks to break cycles of poverty

Ten people graduated from Catholic Charities of South Carolina’s (CCSC) Getting Ahead program in December 2025. Ten people graduated from Catholic Charities of South Carolina’s (CCSC) Getting Ahead program in December 2025. The courses are designed to help individuals experiencing poverty to understand why they are “just getting by” and to build concrete plans toward long-term stability. Graduates Brandon Anderson, Martha Cobb, Willa Dorsey, Kashonda Grant, Bernard Hazel, David Hazel, Jacqueline Hazel, Rosa Hazel, Chanda Sanders and Tammie Scott completed this financial literacy and life-skills course just before Christmas. This was a milestone celebration, too. It was the first class facilitated by two former graduates, David and Kendra Blango. The program, based on “Getting Ahead in a Just-Gettin’-By World” and the “Bridges Out of Poverty” framework, has been offered at CCSC’s Georgetown office twice yearly since 2018. The program is now expanding to Charleston and other field offices as part of the Catholic outreach’s services that assist more than 50, 000 individuals annually. Building pathways out of povertyParticipants attended group sessions over 16 weeks, exploring the realities of poverty, local community barriers and the “hidden rules” of economic class. They completed a personal “future story,” where they built budgets, identified local resources and set practical goals around employment, education, housing and family stability. Crystal Geathers is the grants specialist for CCSC and helped initiate the Getting Ahead program in 2017, working with Sister Mary Francis Bassick, a Daughter of Charity. Geathers said the program is important because it gives participants needed support and tools to see their own potential with new clarity.“We walk alongside individuals who are working hard to build stability for themselves and their families. Getting Ahead helps them not only understand the challenges they face, but also discover their strengths, set meaningful goals and create a path toward lasting change. It empowers people to realize that their future can be different, and that they already have what it takes to get there,” she said. The program boasts a 97% success rate. At least 35 individuals completed the program in Georgetown in its early years, with many achieving significant life changes. Stability means everythingGraduates have moved from unsafe, unstable housing into safe, subsidized apartments after learning to navigate housing systems and expunge records. Others have launched small businesses, including a lawn-care company, using the financial planning, resource-building and confidence gained in this workshop. Rhett Young, executive director of CCSC, said “mission” is what drives this statewide nonprofit. He said their work is inspired by St. John Paul II’s Redemptoris Missio (Mission of the Redeemer).“The missionary is urged on by ‘zeal for souls,’ a zeal inspired by Christ’s own charity, which takes the form of concern, tenderness, compassion, openness, availability and interest in people’s problems. Jesus’ love is very deep: he who knew what was in man (Jn 2: 25) loved everyone by offering them redemption and suffered when it was rejected” (RM 89).“This is the bedrock of all of our programs,” Young said, “to serve with the heart of Jesus with a zeal for souls inspired by Christian charity caritas.”Kendra Blango added that “learning in love always helps when trying to get ahead.”.

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