Faith news

Wyandotte County is in Phase 3 under Kansas Ad Astra reopening plan. Local health officials said under Phase 3, people should keep a distance of 6 feet between themselves and others. They may sit closer to people who live in their households. Also, people should wear masks and should wash hands or use hand sanitizer. There is a mask order in effect in Wyandotte County, requiring masks to be worn inside any public space.

Some faith groups will continue holding online or video services. In Wyandotte County, those who are older than 60 or who have other medical conditions should continue being very cautious, according to the Wyandotte County health officials. Those who are sick should stay home, according to officials.

More details about Wyandotte County health guidelines for churches are at https://www.wycokck.org/WycoKCK/media/Health-Department/Documents/Communicable%20Disease/COVID19/COVID-19GuidelinesForChurches.pdf.

Residents are advised to visit the social media page of their church or faith organization, or to call them or email them, to see changes that have been made to regular schedules, or if there are video services planned on Sunday.


The Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas has information about churches reopening, Masses, and reflections, at https://www.facebook.com/archkck.

Blessed Sacrament, Christ the King and Our Lady and St. Rose Catholic churches have resumed in-person Masses. For more information, visit the churches’ websites or Facebook pages at https://www.facebook.com/Christ-the-King-Parish-KCKS-1392808997677579, https://www.facebook.com/BlessedSacramentkck and https://www.facebook.com/ourladyandsaintrose/. Christ the King will hold a Community Blood Center blood drive from 2 to 6 p.m. Monday, Sept. 21, in Davern Hall at the church, 3024 N. 53rd St., Kansas City, Kansas. To register for the blood drive, call 913-287-8823.
Mass is online at https://www.facebook.com/BlessedSacramentkck.

Open Door Baptist Church, 3033 N. 103rd Terrace, Kansas City, Kansas, will have services in person with social distancing at 10:30 a.m. Sunday, Sept. 20. There will be a livestream service at https://www.facebook.com/opendoorkc/ and https://www.opendoorkc.com/.

Stony Point Christian Church, 149 S. 78th St., Kansas City, Kansas, plans to livestream at 10:15 a.m. Sunday, Sept. 20, on its Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/StonyPointChristianChurch, and people are welcome to attend the service in person, using social distancing and other health measures.

St. Patrick Catholic Church, Kansas City, Kansas, has a Mass online for Sunday, Sept. 20, at https://www.facebook.com/StPatrickKCK. St. Patrick Church also has returned to in-person Masses.

St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Kansas City, Kansas, is planning livestream services on Facebook on Sunday, Sept. 27. See stpaulskck.org and https://www.facebook.com/StPaulsKCK/.


Sunset Hills Christian Church, 6347 Leavenworth Road, Kansas City, Kansas, plans to livestream at 9:30 a.m. each Sunday on the Facebook page of Pastor Mike Barnett, https://www.facebook.com/mike.barnett.528. Services are also provided through checkout of DVD or SD Card and can be sent by email upon request. People are welcome to attend the service in person using social distancing and other health measures. Masks are available or bring your own to wear.

Wyandotte United Methodist Church, 7901 Oakland Ave., will have a livestreamed service Sunday, Sept. 20, on Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/Wyandotteumc/ or online on the website at www.wyandotteumc.com.

Information about other church services in Wyandotte County may be available from the church’s social media page.
To send in items for the Faith News, email information to [email protected]. Please include your name and contact information.

Sporting KC falls to Dallas 3-2 on late error

Johnny Russell’s teammates ran to congratulate him after his second goal tied the match against FC Dallas. Dallas went on to win the game 3-2. (Photo copyright 2020 by Brian Turrel)
 

by Brian Turrel

A late giveaway by Sporting Kansas City defender Graham Zusi cost the team its opportunity to retake the top spot in the MLS Western Conference. The 82nd minute goal by FC Dallas put it ahead 3-2, overcoming a second-half brace by Johnny Russell.

Franco Jara scored Dallas’s first goal in the 42nd minute, diving to head in a cross from defender John Nelson. He scored again just after halftime by knocking in the rebound off a Dallas corner kick.

Kansas City battled back from the two-goal deficit, with its halftime tactical and personnel changes paying off in scoring opportunities. To create more offensive action, head coach Peter Vermes brought in center midfielder Ilie Sanchez. Sanchez, missing from game action since Sporting left the MLS Is Back tournament in late July, got a warm reception from the fans.

Russell scored his first goal in the 53rd minute by sending back an attempted clearance off a Sporting corner kick. The ball zipped low just inside the left goalpost and gave Dallas goalkeeper Jimmy Maurer little chance of a save.

Russell struck again in the 83rd minute, redirecting a free kick from Gianluca Busio into the upper right corner of the net. After the game, Russell commended Busio’s assist.

“Busio strikes it great,” he said, “and any touch from us, Dallas players, or even if it misses everyone, is on target. With that power, it can always go in.”.

Russell’s enthusiasm after his score fired up the limited-attendance crowd with visions of a come-from-behind victory, but those visions departed moments later when longtime defensive standout Graham Zusi hit a weak back pass to goalkeeper Tim Melia.

With the ball stranded between Zusi and Melia, diminutive Dallas forward Michael Barrios seized the opportunity. Melia blocked Barrios’s attempt, but the rebound fell to forward Ryan Hollingshead to put away the winner.

Dallas’s delaying tactics late in the game drew the wrath of its opponents, the crowd, and the officials, who handed out four yellow cards for time-wasting. Dallas midfielder Bryan Acosta was also sent off in the 90th minute for a foul that earned his second yellow card of the match.

Even with the man advantage and six minutes of stoppage, Sporting wasn’t able to earn the equalizer, and a direct kick opportunity in the closing seconds was stopped by Dallas.

The loss, combined with Seattle’s Friday night win, drops Sporting KC to second place, jostling for playoff position in a crowded field. Sporting will play at home against Orlando City FC on Sept. 23 at 7:30 p.m.

Defender Graham Zusi went high to win a header. (Photo copyright 2020 by Brian Turrel)
Midfielder Felipe Hernandez blocked an attempted clearance by Dallas defender Reto Ziegler. (Photo copyright 2020 by Brian Turrel)
Gerso Fernandes had an early one-on-one opportunity against the Dallas goalkeeper but his shot sailed over the bar. (Photo copyright 2020 by Brian Turrel)
Forward Johnny Russell made a move to get past Dallas defender John Nelson. (Photo copyright 2020 by Brian Turrel)
Goalkeeper Tim Melia dived for a save in the 4th minute. (Photo copyright 2020 by Brian Turrel)
Johnny Russell scored on a Kansas City corner kick. (Photo copyright 2020 by Brian Turrel)
Dallas forward Michael Barrios intercepted a pass near the Kansas City goal to set up the game winner. (Photo copyright 2020 by Brian Turrel)
Defender Roberto Puncec restrained Barrios to clear the ball with a header. (Photo copyright 2020 by Brian Turrel)
Graham Zusi won a header near midfield. (Photo copyright 2020 by Brian Turrel)

Senate candidates differ on handling Supreme Court vacancy

Not surprisingly, two very different ways of handling the vacancy on the U.S. Supreme Court were offered by Kansas candidates for the U.S. Senate in a debate today.

U.S. Rep. Roger Marshall, the Republican candidate, said they need to confirm conservative constitutionalist pro-life judges, and he is in favor of bringing forward a candidate early. He said the situation is different from 2016, when there was a Democratic president and a Republican Senate. Republicans in the Senate held up Obama’s candidate for the Supreme Court until after the election in 2016.

This is the Republicans’ time to move forward now and keep their promises, Marshall said in the debate.

Barbara Bollier, the Democratic candidate for Senate, said the nomination and confirmation process should not be politicized. She said the leaders who are elected to the Senate in November should be making the decision on it.

The Senate has plenty to do with pandemic relief in the meantime, she said.

Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg died on Friday, and the topic of her successor has already been discussed by the president and others.

Notably, the candidates seemed to go negative quite often in their remarks Saturday. They also are running negative campaign ads. According to the website FiveThirtyEight, polls in August have shown only two percentage points between the candidates, not enough for a definitive lead. However, the website said Marshall had an 80 percent chance of winning the seat, while Democrats were slightly favored to win the entire Senate.

Marshall frequently called attention to the fact that Bollier switched from the Republican to the Democratic Party, while Bollier countered with the statement that she is an independent thinker who can work across the aisle with others, saying Marshall is “a yes man for the president.” Marshall mentioned he had the endorsement of Sen. Pat Roberts, who is retiring, while Bollier mentioned she had the endorsement of former Republican Sen. Nancy Landon Kassebaum.

The debate, held by WIBW, the Kansas Radio Networks and Kansas Ag Network, was a virtual event that replaced the usual debate held at the Kansas State Fair, which is not in operation this year because of the pandemic.

Marshall and Bollier are doctors. In response to a question about the federal response to the coronavirus, Bollier said the challenges faced are historic, and nothing but historic actions would overcome them. She said there is a need to extend unemployment benefits, make sure people have the ability to pay rent and offer additional assistance in other areas.

She said she was very disappointed in the federal response to the vaccine, of politicizing it. She looks forward to an FDA-approved vaccine. She said the way to get through the pandemic was to follow science, wear a mask, follow public health advice, and when the vaccine is here, move forward and keep the economy going.

Marshall said the vice president was very optimistic a vaccine would be available by Thanksgiving, and for the rest of the public, by the new year. He said America has cut the mortality rate and is winning the war against an invisible enemy.

Bollier countered that she was disappointed to see a doctor more concerned about his own political health than the health of the people of Kansas. She mentioned he had been at events, where he had not been wearing a mask, and he had been at indoor events in large groups.

In answer to a question about to what extent wealthy white people like themselves would strive to understand the motivations of Black Lives Matter activists and represent their views in Washington, Marshall said, “I’m one of the luckiest, most privileged people in the world. I’m privileged because my parents worked their tails off. My dad worked 80-100 hours a week as a police officer. My mom worked 40 or 50 hours a week as a clerical clerk, and then came home and took care of her family as well.

“I don’t know what’s going on in the coasts but I know what’s going on in Kansas, that I was taught to value a person by their heart, and even more important, by their actions, and I think I taught my kids that same purpose,” Marshall said. “If you look at my record, I just don’t see skin color. I think there’s things we can do to improve everybody’s relationships and it all starts with good education and a good economy, and that’s what Republicans stand for, is raising people out of poverty, giving them a job that brings meaning and fulfillment in their lives, not keeping them buried down in the ghettos. So I’m all for lifting other people up.”

Bollier said, “This country has been in a crisis for many years, and we know we need to listen to all. We need to keep our communities safe in that time, and we need to look to things that actually make a difference for people. One of those is public education. I’m a long-time champion for public education in Kansas. I stood up to Sam Brownback when he tried to dismantle our early childhood education system, which is so needed for all people to be successful.

“I voted for some of the very largest funding increases to the classroom in Kansas history,” Bollier, who served as a state senator, said. “I worked across the aisle to do these things and end the Sam Brownback tax experiment, so that everyone had an opportunity for a world-class opportunity, no matter what their Zip Code, no matter where they live.”

She said Marshall had not voted for relief for schools during the coronavirus crisis, and Marshall responded that there was not one Democrat who voted in favor of a coronavirus bill in the Senate last week that would have helped schools. The candidates often said their opponent was not representing their views correctly.

On the topic of abortion, Bollier says she’s for a woman’s right to have access to reproductive health care, and Marshall is pro-life. The debate discussed many other issues, including the plight of rural hospitals, the Green New Deal (which Bollier said she did not support), legalized marijuana and the federal budget.

An advisory to those who want to watch the debate: there is a considerable amount of time spent on agricultural policy questions. The debate is on YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X7xBEwAdXwI.