Catholic News Around Indiana
            Compiled by  Brandon A. Evans
            Diocese of Evansville
            No news  briefs are available this week
             
            (For news from the  Diocese of Evansville,  log on to the website of The Message at www.themessageonline.org)
 
            Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend
            The Notre Dame Evangelium Vitae Award goes to  Little Sisters of the Poor
            
By Ann Carey
              NOTRE  DAME — A standing ovation in a packed Basilica of the Sacred Heart greeted the  Little Sisters of the Poor who were on campus April 9 to receive the Evangelium  Vitae Award for outstanding service to human life. The Little Sisters operate  30 homes in the United States that offer health care and assisted living for  more than 13,000 low-income seniors.
              The award  has been presented annually since 2011 by the University of Notre Dame’s Center  for Ethics and Culture. Awardees are announced on Respect Life Sunday in  October, with the honor being conferred the following spring.
              The 2016  award event took place about two weeks after the Little Sisters had appeared  before the United States Supreme Court, where they are challenging a government  mandate that requires employers to offer employee health insurance that  includes contraceptives, sterilizations and abortion-inducing drugs.
              The  unusual standing ovation erupted early in the homily of Fort Wayne-South Bend  Bishop Kevin C. Rhoades at the Mass preceding the award banquet. He alluded to  the First Reading from the Acts of the Apostles, comparing the witness of the  sisters to the witness of the apostles who were called before the Sanhedrin and  told to stop teaching in the name of Jesus:
  “At this  Mass, there is a community of sisters with us who, in the face of a terribly  unjust mandate of our federal government, have stood up, and by their actions  have said what Saint Peter and the apostles said to their government in the  earliest years of the Church: ‘We must obey God rather than men,’” the bishop  observed.
  “I wish  to say to the Little Sisters of the Poor who will receive the Evangelium Vitae  medal this evening, thank you for your courageous witness!”
              The  enthusiastic ovation then erupted in the congregation heavy with Notre Dame  students.
              Bishop  Rhoades went on to encourage the rest of those in attendance, “When human laws  contradict God’s laws, believers are called to obey God even if disobeying  human authority will cost them social advancement, their livelihood, or their  lives.” Bishop Rhoades drew connections between the words in the Acts of the  Apostles to life today. “St. Peter’s words in today’s reading are a rallying  cry in many situations in which people are pressured to violate their  consciences by human laws or commands.” He continued, “It is good to ask  ourselves: where did the first disciples find the strength to bear witness to  Christ?  What was the source of their joy and courage to preach and live  the Gospel in the midst of so many obstacles and even violent persecution? We  learn from Acts that the only explanation is the presence of the Risen Lord with  them and the action of the Holy Spirit in their lives. They were enabled to  follow in the footsteps of Jesus, to witness to Him with their lives, and to  share in His sufferings with joy.”
  Photo caption: The Evangelium Vitae Medal was presented to the Little Sisters of the  Poor for their ministry to the elderly and poor and their courage in standing  for religious freedom in the face of the federal government’s contraception  mandate. Bishop Kevin Rhoades greets the Little Sisters of the Poor after Mass  in the Basilica of the Sacred Heart, Notre Dame.
               
            (For news from the  Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend, log on to the website of Today’s Catholic at www.todayscatholicnews.org)
 
Diocese of Gary
Pope’s  challenge to protect “our common home” is keynote topic
By Marlene A. Zloza
  HAMMOND—Noting that “All we do is in service  for the greater glory of God,” keynote speaker Father Kevin M. Scalf, C.PP.S.  opened the fifth annual Humanities Festival at Calumet College of St. Joseph on  April 4 by calling on students to answer “a summons to become better, to become  more, and to become the young men and women that God wants you to become.”
  Special  Assistant to the President for Mission and Ministry and a board member at the  college, Father Scalf kicked off the six-day celebration of the humanities with  “Can You Hear the Eco? Relationships: A Good Planet is Hard to Find,” a study  of Pope Francis’ encyclical “Laudato Si’ on Care for Our Common Home,” issued  last May. Reflecting the festival theme “Creation,” the address offered an  outline for “a new lifestyle” that leads to a “New Covenant between Humanity  and the Environment.”
  In “Laudato  Si’,” said Father Scalf, “the pope urges an ecological spirituality that will  ‘motivate us to a more passionate concern for the protection of the world’ and  calls for a ‘profound interior conversion.’”
  Addressing  practical issues that threaten the health of planet Earth, Father Scalf listed  among the pope’s concerns: climate change and pollution, the loss of  biodiversity, the depletion of natural resources, a decline in the quality of  life, a breakdown of society, and global inequality.
  “The pope  challenges all persons to take stock of the way they treat all things,” Father  Scalf said of the encyclical. “The way we treat the environment and animals has  something to say about the way we treat other humans.”
  Photo  caption: Students and staff  listen to the keynote speech, "Can you Hear The Eco? Relationships: A Good  Planet is Hard to Find," by Precious Blood Father Kevin Scalf based upon  Pope Francis' encyclical "Laudato Si'," as the Humanities Festival  opened April 4 at Calumet College of St. Joseph. (Marlene A. Zloza photo)
   
(For news from the  Diocese of Gary, log on to the website of the Northwest Indiana Catholic at www.nwicatholic.com)
 
Diocese of Lafayette
Major  projects outlined at four Franciscan Alliance hospitals
By  Kevin Cullen
  LAFAYETTE — To address high patient demand  and modernize educational facilities, Franciscan Alliance will spend more than  $80 million at hospitals in Lafayette, Crawfordsville and Rensselaer between  now and 2019.
  The projects, announced at an April 6 press  conference, include: 
  - A $60 million       investment at Franciscan St. Elizabeth Health - Lafayette East, including       construction of another patient care tower at the six-year-old facility; 
 
  - An $11       million investment in Franciscan St. Elizabeth Health - Lafayette Central,       the former St. Elizabeth Hospital, including a $6 million relocation of       the St. Elizabeth School of Nursing; 
 
  - A new, $10       million emergency department at Franciscan St. Elizabeth Health -       Crawfordsville; 
 
  - A $4 million       technology and imaging upgrade at Franciscan Health - Rensselaer. 
 
Parts of Franciscan St. Elizabeth Health -  Lafayette East, which opened on Creasy Lane in February 2010, are “essentially  run at capacity most of the time. We’re excited about the opportunity to  expand,” said Terry Wilson, president and CEO of Franciscan St. Elizabeth  Health. The new tower is scheduled to open in January 2018.
  “Whenever you build a new hospital, you make  educated guesses about the market and the services you will provide ... about  how medicine will change, and about who will end up in larger markets like  Indianapolis or Chicago,” he said.
  “We projected this hospital would be big  enough,” he said, and in some areas, it still is. But overall, it operates at  80-85 percent capacity, and that makes it “more difficult to provide  outstanding service ... there are days when we’re 90-100 percent full in the  medical-surgical parts of the hospital.”
  The need to expand became evident two years  ago. Plans have been developed over the past 18 months, said James Siemers,  executive vice president and chief operating officer for Franciscan St.  Elizabeth Health.
  As evidence of the space shortage, he said,  the size of the surgical waiting room will be doubled, to seat up to 80  patients.
  By adding 52 new patient beds to the existing  187, the hospital hopes to operate at 70 percent capacity. That will make it  “much more competitive for patients and physicians,” Wilson said.
  Photo  caption: Terry Wilson, president  and CEO of Franciscan St. Elizabeth Health, discusses projects at hospitals in  Lafayette, Crawfordsville and Rensselaer. (Photo by Kevin Cullen)
   
(For  news from the Diocese of Lafayette, log on to the website of The  Catholic Moment at www.thecatholicmoment.org)