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Angelus News | May 17, 2024 | Vol. 9 No. 10

On the cover: Emma D. and Roberto M. read during a class session at San Miguel School in Watts, one of 24 schools in lower-income areas across the Archdiocese of Los Angeles participating in the new Solidarity Schools initiative. On Page 10, Theresa Cisneros examines the program’s ambitious goals and talks to participants who describe its early success in creating a ‘culture of literacy’ among disadvantaged students.

On the cover: Emma D. and Roberto M. read during a class session at San Miguel School in Watts, one of 24 schools in lower-income areas across the Archdiocese of Los Angeles participating in the new Solidarity Schools initiative. On Page 10, Theresa Cisneros examines the program’s ambitious goals and talks to participants who describe its early success in creating a ‘culture of literacy’ among disadvantaged students.

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A round-the-world conversion<br />

Michael Cardona, then known<br />

as Madhavananda das Babaji,<br />

was enjoying life as a Hindu<br />

guru in India in 2018, when he sensed<br />

Jesus calling him.<br />

Christ showed him the suffering he<br />

had caused by leading thousands of<br />

Christians to renounce their faith, he<br />

said.<br />

“He told me, you can come back to<br />

me if you go west, leave India as soon<br />

as possible, and help poor, sick, and<br />

homeless people with your own hands.”<br />

Today, Cardona, 66, lives and works in<br />

the Emmanuel Baptist Rescue Mission<br />

on Skid Row in Los Angeles. He entered<br />

the Catholic Church at the <strong>2024</strong><br />

Easter Vigil.<br />

At the Cathedral of Our Lady of the<br />

Angels, Caterina Krai, the director of<br />

sacramental life, had welcomed him.<br />

She has seen many dramatic journeys<br />

of conversion — from Islam, atheism,<br />

dark occultism, and even a homeless<br />

teenager who faithfully rode his<br />

bicycle to Order of Christian Initiation<br />

of Adults (OCIA) sessions. Cardona<br />

stood out as much for his humility and<br />

graciousness as for his radical change<br />

of faith.<br />

“He was a bright light even when he<br />

was suffering greatly,” she said. “He was<br />

a great example of perseverance, hope,<br />

and God’s merciful love.”<br />

Born near Philadelphia, he was<br />

baptized and raised Methodist. In the<br />

1970s he joined the Jesus Movement.<br />

Baptized again in the Delaware River,<br />

he became an assistant pastor in a<br />

Christian commune in New York City,<br />

where he slept on the floor in imitation<br />

of Jesus.<br />

FULL IMMERSION<br />

EXPERIENCE<br />

Stepladders, east vs. west, and a new pool: Why adult baptisms<br />

at San Francisco’s cathedral looked different this Easter.<br />

BY PABLO KAY<br />

Initiation into the Catholic faith as an adult involves a<br />

yearslong process of discernment and formation leading<br />

up to one life-changing moment: baptism.<br />

It’s a moment that Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone of San<br />

Francisco believes should be expressed more “forcefully and<br />

convincingly.” So this year, at his cathedral’s Easter Vigil<br />

liturgy, he incorporated some rarely used elements of the rite<br />

of baptism that date back to the first centuries of Christianity.<br />

In a phone interview, Cordileone explained the symbolism<br />

of the changes and shared his thoughts on what’s behind the<br />

apparent rise in adult conversions to Catholicism.<br />

Archbishop, you did baptisms at your Easter Vigil this<br />

year a little differently. What did you change, and why?<br />

The Church has always drawn spiritual lessons from space<br />

and time. The symbolism of east and west, for example, was<br />

part of an ancient practice when Christians being baptized<br />

renounced sin and professed their faith.<br />

First, the catechumens and I stood on the west side of the<br />

baptismal font, with them facing west (toward me) as they<br />

18 • ANGELUS • <strong>May</strong> <strong>17</strong>, <strong>2024</strong>

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