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/* Beware: It can remove the padding / margin and add a background
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padding: 0 !important;
height: 100% !important;
width: 100% !important;
text-align: center;
}
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* {
-ms-text-size-adjust: 100%;
-webkit-text-size-adjust: 100%;
}
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div[style*="margin: 16px 0"] {
margin:0 !important;
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for anything nested deeper. */
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table table table {
table-layout: auto;
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in IE. */
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-ms-interpolation-mode:bicubic;
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/* What it does: Overrides styles added when Yahoo's auto-senses a
link. */
.yshortcuts a {
border-bottom: none !important;
}
/* What it does: A work-around for iOS meddling in triggered links.
*/
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a[x-apple-data-detectors] {
color:inherit !important;
text-decoration: underline !important;
}
-->
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/* What it does: Hover styles for buttons */
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@media screen and (max-width: 600px) {
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width: 100% !important;
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container. Useful for resizing images beyond their max-width. */
.fluid,
.fluid-centered {
max-width: 100% !important;
height: auto !important;
Margin-left: auto !important;
Margin-right: auto !important;
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Margin-left: auto !important;
Margin-right: auto !important;
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/* What it does: Forces table cells into full-width rows. */
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max-width: 100% !important;
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background-color: #fff;
width: 100%;
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color:#7A9534;
}
.signup a {font-family: Roboto Condensed, sans-serif; font-size: 14pt;
color: #4F4293; padding-bottom:0px; padding-top: 15px;
font-weight:600; margin-bottom: 0px; text-decoration: none}
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Catholic Charities USA
Wednesday of the Second Week in Lent
Readings of the Day
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Yikes! Today's readings are really tough ones.
In the first reading, Jeremiah has warned the leaders and the people
of impending doom if they don't repent. They don't want to
hear it (fake news!) and so plot against him. Jeremiah, very much
aware of their plots, shows how ironic it is that they want to condemn
him, when he pleaded on their behalf to God to save them. Following
this text, he then curses the leaders and the people with terrible
disasters.
And in Matthew's Gospel, James' and John's mom tries
to get Jesus to promote her boys in Jesus' kingdom, setting off
a conflict in the team of apostles. Jesus adroitly defuses it by
shifting the focus to the counter-cultural mission of servant
leadership and to the reality of suffering that it will entail,
getting James and John to commit to the mission even though it means
suffering with Jesus.
As I reflect on these two stories, I am conscious of the courageous
suffering of servant leaders today, and I am challenged to consider
how I use my own authority.
Two years ago today, Dr. Sara H. Cody, MD, Public Health Director of
Santa Clara County, led the nation in declaring an immediate
"shelter-in-place" order to protect the community from the
COVID-19 pandemic. While her initial order and subsequent masking,
social distancing and vaccination orders saved thousands of lives in
our county, she received death threats and condemnation for doing her
job.
Who do you know who are courageous servant leaders who have faced
ridicule, condemnation, and resistance? How do they inspire you and
challenge you? When have you had to take a risky and potentially
unpopular stance? Where is God in the midst of that?
May God give us the gift of courage to be servant leaders even in the
midst of suffering.
Gregory Kepferle is CEO of Catholic Charities of Santa Clara County,
California.
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