All hope is not lost: Easter in America's newspapers
That New York Timesdoozie-of-a-correction notwithstanding, many American journalists understand exactly what Easter means for Christians.
That fact was evident in some of the exceptional enterprise stories that graced leading front pages on Sunday.
Eight of my favorites (in random order):
1. Tim Townsend of the St. Louis Post-Dispatchwrote about a parish's ministry to the poor resonating on Easter:
Easter is the oldest and most important Christian celebration. It marks the resurrection of Jesus Christ on the third day after his crucifixion. But more symbolically, Easter represents for Christians a procession — through Christ’s crucifixion and resurrection — from death to new life.
“When we celebrate the resurrection of Jesus Christ, we are also celebrating our own resurrection,” said the Rev. Bruce Forman, Sts. Peter and Paul’s pastor since 1990. “In our lives, we have smaller deaths and resurrections. We die to selfishness, anger and resentment. And when we overcome those things, we discover that something new happens.”
2. Tim Funk of the Charlotte Observer shared the emotional story of a liver transplant bringing new life:
DAVIDSON — On this Sunday morning, when more than a billion Christians celebrate Jesus’ resurrection from the dead, Easter’s promise of new life will have special meaning for the Rev. Lib McGregor Simmons and her 1,400-member congregation as they march into the sanctuary singing “Jesus Christ is Risen Today.”
For Simmons, the bleakest moment of the year came on Jan. 20, as she conducted the funeral for a 97-year-old member of her flock at Davidson College Presbyterian Church.
“It’s very likely,” she told herself during the service, “that my husband’s funeral will be the next one.”
Gary Simmons was only 63. But unless he got a new liver soon, he had only months, maybe weeks, to live.
3. Renee Elder of the Raleigh News and Observerfocused on the rebirth of faith and hope for one family:
CLAYTON — As Christians gather to observe Easter and the resurrection of Christ, the Blackmon family of Clayton has another rebirth to celebrate: their baby daughter Sofie’s second chance at life.
During Sunday morning services, parents Melissa and Brent Blackmon will speak at the Church at Clayton Crossings, giving thanks for the congregation’s many prayers and gestures of support through Sofie’s ordeal. They also will tell their own story of faith and how it grew – even as hope seemed dim for the life of their youngest child.
4. Mary Niederberger of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazettehighlighted an agreement between Episcopalians and Anglicans to allow a homeless ministry to continue:
When Leonard Williams attends the Easter service today at Shepherd's Heart Fellowship, an Anglican church for the homeless in Uptown, like Christians everywhere he will be celebrating the resurrection of Christ from the tomb.
But Mr. Williams, 53, and others who attend Shepherd's Heart also will be celebrating the new life that has been breathed into their church after a recent significant agreement between Pittsburgh's Episcopal and Anglican dioceses. A long-running conflict in the Episcopal Diocese of Pittsburgh resulted in a 2008 split, with many of the churches leaving and creating the Anglican Diocese of Pittsburgh,linked to the theologically conservative Anglican Church in North America.
5. Jonathan Pitts of the Baltimore Sunreported on a born-again Baltimore basilica:
On Aug, 24, 2011, the earthquake that jolted the East Coast from Georgia to Quebec rattled through the bricks, plaster and paint of one of Baltimore's architectural jewels, the Basilica of the Assumption, sending nearly 1,000 linear feet of cracks through its ceilings and walls.
On Sunday, as Christians worldwide commemorate the resurrection of Christ on Easter, the 207-year-old cathedral, too, will enjoy a rebirth.
Construction workers have put the finishing touches on a seven-month, $3 million restoration job, and Sunday morning's Mass will mark the formal reopening.
6. Mike Kilen of the Des Moines Register produced a special feature headlined "After Ezra: An Easter story." A snippet from that story:
The whole reason for our faith, Ryan Galloway said, is that Jesus Christ died for our sins and rose from the dead. Now, he could hold his son and smile because of that faith. It meant he could see his son again someday.
They could tell Ezra then that he gave them so much, which they were about to learn.
7. Robert King of the Indianapolis Starendeavored to explore what church buildings themselves say about their worshipers:
Today, in churches across Central Indiana, the story of the Christian faith will be retold, with crowds filling them like no other day of the year.
For many, the Church, with a capital C, is not a building but the body of believers. But it’s also clear that the space the Church inhabits reflects its members, their history and their audience. And in many cases, the space helps teach the lesson.
From the storefront to the megachurch, the Gothic-influenced to the modernists, Indianapolis holds it own with larger American cities when it comes to styles and varieties of churches, said James Divita, a retired Marian University professor who has studied local churches.
8. Manya A. Brachear of the Chicago Tribune went all the way to Italy to tell the story of a priest whose faith in church was resurrected (OK, maybe there was that other story there too):
ASSISI, Italy — One day last September, the Rev. Frank Latzko, pastor of St. Teresa of Avila Roman Catholic Church in Chicago, decided to take a walk and rediscover why he became a priest.
His feet carried him from the Lincoln Park neighborhood to France, across the Pyrenees mountains, into Spain and eventually to Italy, where he stood in St. Peter's Square to witness the historic debut of Pope Francis — the first pope to take that name.
But Latzko's journey still wasn't complete. Last week, he ambled through Assisi, Italy, the medieval mountain village that eight centuries ago was home to the namesake of both Latzko and the pope. There, Latzko breathlessly climbed the same steep hills and meditated along the same wooded and walled paths where St. Francis once strolled.
This Easter, he will celebrate one last Sunday Mass in Rome before heading home to Chicago with his love for Jesus strengthened, his passion for the priesthood renewed and his faith in the church resurrected. This week, he returns to Chicago to transform his contemplation into action. As Pope Francis calls on all Catholics to remember those on the margins, Latzko and his congregation at St. Teresa intend to answer.
See that? All hope is not lost in the nation's newspapers. But by all means, feel free to nitpick any of the above stories.