NB - very interesting mention regarding Vitamin D...
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Popular Preacher Returns

Father Corapi Ready to Hit the Road Again
http://www.ncregister.com/site/article/17969
BY Anthony Flott

May 3-9, 2009 Issue | Posted 4/24/09 at 7:09 AM

Father Corapi Ready To Hit the Road Again

Father John Corapi gets on a phone in his Montana 
office and asks someone to boost the volume. The 
assistant who helped arrange an interview with 
him had warned about this. “Speak loudly,” she said, “he’s hard of hearing.”

Father Corapi himself has never been hard to 
hear. For nearly two decades, his thundering 
voice has preached the Gospel with a forceful, 
meat-and-potatoes theology that’s made him among 
the most recognizable priests in the world.

But since August 2007, that voice has been 
relatively silent. At first, that was by choice ­ 
having traveled more than 2 million miles 
spreading the good news, Father Corapi quit 
public speaking to focus on writings and 
recordings. But just one week into that hiatus, a 
mysterious sickness began to ravage his body and left him mostly bedridden.

He’s recovering now and has headed 
<http://www.frcorapilive.com>back to the speaking circuit.

On Aug. 15, Father Corapi, a member of the 
Society of Our Lady of the Most Holy Trinity, 
will preach publicly for the first time in nearly 
two years, speaking on “The Lord and Giver of 
Life!” at a conference at HSBC Arena in Buffalo, N.Y.

Register correspondent Anthony Flott spoke with Father Corapi.

Though you’re a pro at communications, you don’t 
seem to give too many interviews. Is there a reason for that?

It is true; I haven’t given a lot of interviews 
over the years. But I haven’t turned down a lot, 
either. I’ve never looked for interviews, but if 
a reputable Catholic media outlet like the 
National Catholic Register asks me, I’m happy to do it.

At about this time last year, you revealed that 
you had a parathyroid tumor. How was that treated, and how is your health now?

I probably went to physicians in my area 11 times 
for different physicals. They did all kinds of 
tests. They kept diagnosing pneumonia, virus this 
and that, and I just didn’t get better. So I went 
to the Mayo Clinic and had exhaustive testing, 
and they did diagnose a parathyroid tumor.

As it turns out, it seems that was false. What it 
ended up being, of all things … [was] two things: 
chronic sleep deprivation and acute vitamin D 
deficiency ­ which, by the way, is an epidemic in 
northern climates. Most physicians still don’t 
know about it and still don’t routinely test for 
it. You wouldn’t believe how sick it can make 
you. The normal way to get it is sunlight. UVB 
rays stimulate your skin to synthesize what they call vitamin D.

Living in a northern climate, we have hardly any 
sun for six months. I have to take supplements, 
which they gave me in massive doses, and got my 
levels up. I’ve got the sleep deprivation pretty 
well under control, which made me feel incredibly better within about a month.

Did you learn anything new about suffering through this sickness?

Yes. I can still hear my grandmother’s voice 
saying, “Offer it up, Johnny.” And that was kind 
of standard teaching in those days.

The teaching hasn’t changed, but I think in many 
cases it hasn’t been presented to succeeding 
generations, and it really is at the very heart of the faith. …

One of the things I learned was my incredible 
weakness. I’ve always told people this: Don’t 
think I’m any better at this than you are. I may 
know the theology and I desire to be pleasing to 
God … but it’s not easy. It’s much easier to talk 
about it, but when you’re in the midst of it ­ 
when your spouse dies, when a child dies, when 
you get cancer, when you lose your job in the 
worst economy in memory, when financial 
difficulties close in on you ­ it’s easy for 
preachers to talk, but it’s another thing to live 
through the pain of the moment.

In August you will be preaching in Buffalo with 
what you say is one of your most powerful 
presentations ever on the person and power of the 
Holy Spirit. What makes it so powerful?

Especially in these times, I felt that people not 
only need education in the faith ­ we’ve always 
tried to do that ­ but they also need inspiration.

I find that there is a lot of ­ I don’t want to 
call it quite hopelessness ­ but there’s a lot of 
distress out there around our country and around the world.

The remedy is the Holy Spirit.

The Spirit we have been given is no cowardly 
Spirit. He’s the Lord and giver of life. What I 
want to do is take a synthesis of the Church 
teaching on the third person of the blessed 
Trinity, the Holy Spirit; I want to incorporate that into the present moment.

It’s going to be very, very relevant. It’s going 
to concern things that are going on today in our 
country. I’m going to incorporate some of the 
Church’s social teachings into this conference, 
especially components of it that deal with 
economic things, the danger of socialism. … I’m 
really looking forward to being with the people again. I’ve missed them.

I’ve heard you say that when you first were 
ordained many fellow priests told you that you 
couldn’t preach the way you do, “hitting people 
between the eyes with the word of God.” Yet, you 
pack auditoriums and receive mailbags full of 
letters. Why has your bare-bones, hard-hitting way been so successful?

 From before I was ordained, I knew I was called 
to preach. My superiors confirmed that. It’s 
basically the only thing I’ve ever done. … If I 
wanted to tone it down, dull the edge of the sword, I couldn’t if I wanted to.

 From the very beginning, in general, I’ve had a 
great, great reception and response from the good 
Catholic people. I know there are some who, of 
course, are on the other side of things, and they 
hate me as much as the good folks love me. I’ve 
never been so conscious of being loved or hated as since I’ve been a priest.

You know, I think that’s what the truth does. If 
you present the truth clearly, unambiguously, it 
will elicit radical responses one way or the other.

A great passage from the Gospels is where Jesus 
said, “You think I’ve come to bring peace? I have 
not come to bring peace, but division that will 
separate a house of five, three against two and 
two against three.” People will probably scratch 
their heads reading that, but it’s the truth. 
What does it mean? What brings division? Truth. …

Those who are ill disposed, those who are 
confirmed in sin, they react negatively. They’ll 
behave violently. Those who are well-disposed 
will react positively. And so that’s why it 
elicits such strong emotions. I’ve had death 
threats multiple times over the years ­ many times.

People can’t understand: “Why do you have 
security at events?” Well, the FBI told me I 
better take it seriously, because they do. And it’s because of the truth.

How does Catholicism in the United States compare 
to when you first became a priest almost 20 years ago?

When I began, I think there were more problems 
internally. I see the Catholic Church in the 
United States, and other places, too, as having 
learned from its existential errors. We’ve made 
some mistakes; I think we know it.

I think the bishops have done a good job. They’ve 
really tried to correct a lot of things. … I 
think we’re doing better in my time. It’s not 
fashionable to go against Church teaching 
anymore. We went through a phase, I think, where 
some people thought it was fashionable or cool or 
de rigueur to rebel against Church teaching, 
especially the morals of the Church. There was a 
large-scale rebellion against the Church teaching on life.

I’m one of those people who firmly believes that 
in the United States and Western Europe until 
this absolute travesty and holocaust of abortion 
is removed we will be able to do nothing right.

Wisdom has been removed from secular leadership, 
and they will not make good decisions on anything 
until that’s corrected. Catholic teaching is that 
a single abortion is homicide, and in the United 
States, in Europe, we have had 50 million and 
counting, and I would hold that’s tantamount to genocide. …

I fear for my country because of all the economic 
chaos we’re going through. I hate to say it, but 
you ain’t seen nothing until we repent and we 
remove that scourge from this country and from 
all the world. Abortion is at the root of all the 
hellish things that are going on.

What can we say to those Catholics who voted for Barack Obama?

Well, at this point, I’m not sure; the deed is 
done. I said what I could before the election.

I personally don’t believe that any Catholic in 
good conscience could vote for a radically 
pro-abortion candidate, whether for the office of 
president of the United States, Congress, 
whatever. You just can’t do it. Why? Because you 
become a participant in a horrible crime, and … 
the Church considers abortion a terrible crime against humanity.

I heard all the arguments: “Well, we can’t have a 
one-issue agenda.” Well, when the issue is a 
matter of life and death … all other issues taken 
as a whole ­ put them in the balance, and nothing 
adds up to the weight of sin involved in 
abortion. And the world is weighted down under 
the weight of this horrible sin, and it’s sinking 
into hell under the weight of its own iniquity.

Anthony Flott writes

from Papillion, Nebraska.
Information: <http://www.frcorapilive.com>http://www.frcorapilive.com

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