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Serving Catholics in Western North Carolina in the Diocese of Charlotte
Volume 5 Number 43
Finding Parents For Children By JOANN
Who Need
•
August
23,
1996
Families
KEANE
Associate Editor
MOSCOW — Natasha and Galina cam-
burst into tears at the sight of the era-toting Americans.
No
disrespect in-
tended towards their visitors from the West, it's simply a gut reaction to the
unknown.
A
matron dries their
tears,
whispers soothing words and teary faces transform with beaming smiles. The Russian children hope the photo will be their ticket to a better life.
On this summer day, dozens of scrubbed and shiny faces offer their best smile for the camera. The photographer is really a Catholic Social Services Worker from the Diocese of Charlotte, snapping wildly to build a file of adoptable children. Cherub youngsters flash toothy smiles. The children
may
derstand the foreign words that
not un-
fill
their
something inherent tells them photo may reach just the right fam-
ears, but this ily.
Preschool Natasha and Galina are perplexed yet intrigued. Like children anywhere, they long for a loving parental
touch. But the orphanage and
served emotional environment
know. They've been
re-
they
told of a better
life,
but can't quite visualize what
be
its
is all
it
might Photo courtesy Catholic Social Services
like.
Last month, Elizabeth Thurbee, director of Catholic Social Services
boarded a Russia-bound plane with Carol Mererriecks,
CSS
coordinator for
Vadim Philipou and Svetlana Orekchovo, 6, residents of Zouevo Orphanage near Moscow seem enlightened by The two Russian orphans hope to be adopted. Catholic Social Services through an arrangement with the Moscow Region of Adoptions is one of seven international agencies working to place Russian orphans from this region of Five-year-old
a
visiting kitty.
the
New
—
—
Federation.
International Adoptions for their second
orphanages CSS has come to know over the past five years. Their misvisit to the
exposure to the children for whom they've been asked to find American homes. Thanks to an arrangement with the Moscow Region of Adoptions, CSS is one sion: first-hand
of seven agencies
residents are
the diocesan social services
agency holds a double-edged sword. The challenge of international adoption
im-
the faint of heart,"
is
1
6 years of age.
The babies are easy placements, the older children are more difficult, riskier. As orphans reach their preteen years, their fate is bleak.
Since the initial 1994 placement, CSS has entwined 21 Russian children with American families. This time
Thurbee returns with a larger mission: finding homes for 59 adoptable orphans,
MIKE KROKOS
is
hard work and there
many
risks.
Any
adoption beyond
in-
Name
Editor
SALISBURY the legacy of the
— Ed Murphy hopes
newly created endow-
ment that bears his name serves the faithful for generations to come. Further, he offers his efforts as a challenge for oth-
fancy brings a child with emotional is-
ers in the diocese to replicate.
sues that must be
At the same time, Thurbee
50 years as an active member of Sacred Heart Church. From serving on the origi-
bears witness to the unconditional love
nal parish council to singing in the choir,
between a parent and child. With that in mind, CSS encourages family counseling before placement and after the arrival of the newest family
Murphy and late wife Eleanor "were
member. As Thurbee and
collection,"
are immeasurable.
to
By
adoption isn't for
immense, but the rewards
region. Collectively, the
Sacred Heart Parishioner Creates Church Endowment
able. "International
are
Of
newborn
is
mense, but the rewards are immeasur-
international adoption
Thurbee believes CSS is the only United States agency with connections to place Russian orphans from this region of the New Federation. CSS works with four orphanages
Moscow
has been called to
says Thurbee. "It
the seven agencies,
in the
And
to
collaborate in international adoptions.
CSS
The challenge of
worldwide selected by these particular Russian officials
the tallest order fill.
dealt with."
a partner in the process,
provide counseling services and stay in contact with families for as long as needed. Many times, sheer logistics pose staff
Murphy has
spent the better part of
we were
all sorts
a
Murphy
little
said. "In those days,
church and you did ev-
Now, the parishioner is giving back to the Salisbury parish
has established the
in
and
his
home
New England as well. Murphy
church
attempt maneuvers through the red tape
Educational Trust
$428,000.
Grants to Sacred Heart will be as the Eleanor C. Murphy Educational Trust Scholarship, and grants to Holy Name will be known as the Yates-
known
Murphy Educational "The reason was
my
Edward M. Murphy Endowment Fund to
benefit both Sacred Heart and Holy
Trust Scholarship.
for the
endowment
desire to help people
assist directly,"
Murphy
I
couldn't
said.
Church was the vehicle I could use the things
erything."
the greatest challenge as families-to-be
See Children, page 6
in-
of ways." "We taught Sunday School for 20something odd years, and I took up the
volved in
Church, his childhood parish in Bedford, Mass. The endowment increases the number of diocesan endowments to 24 and the total assets of the Foundation of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Charlotte to a market value of $2,439,000 as of June 30. The current Murphy endowment totals more than
New
"It is
I
"The to
do
wanted."
hoped
that this little bit will
help the single parents of this world whose spouses run away. They are the people who need it," he added. "They
See Endowment, page 13
2 The Catholic
News
& Herald
August 23, 1996
Summer
Youth Group Spends Week Of By JIMMY
In
Appalachia
ROSTAR
Staff Writer
GREENVILLE, N.C.
— For some, —
was the tragedy of poverty and natural disaster. Others say it was the heartwarming sense of community. Whether it
a particular incident or an appreciative
many special encounters highweek in late July for 41 teenand adults who represented the
resident,
lighted a
agers
Greenville Catholic Youth Organization during a Passionist Volunteers ministry
program in West Virginia. The Passionist Volunteers program was founded to facilitate relief where environmental pressures often mar communities. Such pressures in West Virginia's Preston County poverty,
—
and, often, broken an indelible mark in the minds of many youth group memb e s r "My eyes are really open," says Stephanie Ragland, 18, who along with her younger sister, Jennifer, 16, learned much about a region in which family members once lived. "The kids that was the worst part," adds Courtney Burch, 15, of residents living in one poverty-stricken area. "Little kids walked around barefoot, even though they had already stepped on things like glass and pieces of metal." The youth group's visit to the region, its second in as many years, was financed and supported by Greenville's St. Peter and St. Gabriel parishes, local businesses, sponsors and the commu-
decay
spiritedness
—
left
—
a ravaged neighborhood. Flood-ru-
ined furniture, household items and carpeting littered front yards along
members of the
selves.
During their ministry, the youth group separated into small work crews. Many helped with flood relief in nearby Monongalia County, a region recently devastated by mudslides, washouts and rushing water. Other groups remained in Preston County, tending to those whose needs ranged from
the gravel streets.
mined youths piled the heaps into Army Corps of Engineers' frontloading tractors and made their
way through
borhood lay a home plagued by flooding for the third time in a decade. This time, the family living
simple conversation. LaCarrubba says the latter is as important a ser-
there finally acknowledged defeat.
vice as the physical labor.
residents in a
Work it that
was, but
was of
it
many
Youth group members joined
time
to,
unteers'
the best kind: that
which makes the lives of others a little brighter. With that realization,
tain in the street.
youth minister Joe Blick says the group answered the call of Christ. He hopes that the teens will con-
the destruction.
tinue to answer the call in their
is
CYO members
Greenville
basement
after flooding
me
home
materialistic
with us."
The GCYO' s youth ministers concur that the project was an especially
were ready
pull together,
One
to
move on
do
this
job quickly."
afternoon, several smaller
Passionist Volunteers build a porch onto in Preston County, W.Va.
Raftings for
tip toctk ai
Youth Organization
Sunday:
her compassion.
19-23
2 Thessalonians 1 1-5, 11-12 Matthew 23: 13-22
Tuesday:
2 Thessalonians 2: 3a, 14-17 Matthew 23: 23-26
Wednesday:
2 Thessalonians 3: 6-10, 16-18 Matthew 23: 27-32
Preston County for five years. She and her staff spend eight weeks each sum-
which typifies ApThose two months involve guiding volunteers from around the
Isaiah 22: 15,
Romans 11: 33-36 Matthew 16: 13-20 Monday:
there in an area
palachia.
country, although LaCarrubba visits the
Her
Pastoral Center in South River, N.J.,
is
a
year-round undertaking.
Both within the youth group and across the region in which the volunteers
worked, the bond of family and community yielded a spirit of optimism. By including themselves in that spirit and in helping to repair it when they could
—
In October of 1954,
Pope Pius XII
observance of the Queenship of Mary. The memorial instituted the universal
the high dignity of Mary as queen of heaven, angels and men. Mary is queen in that she excels all other saints and shares in a subordinate and analogous way
Thursday:
Jeremiah
Mark
6:
17-19 1 17-29 :
commemorates
Friday:
1
Corinthians
1
17-25
Matthew
23: 1-13
Christ's rule. In this role
she
is
described
in
terms
of mercy and grace. The memorial is Aug. 22.
MS]
^
SiUjlJ
© 1996 CNS Graphics
when they discovered
that the girl
and her family were taken in by friends. Some of the volunteers saw trie girl with her family the next day at a flood relief center. They watched in thanks a resilient,
laughing person, joyful with life. Indeed, perseverance is a necessary
Saturday:
life
—
meaning to what we were doing. were really helping people."
We
at the
^ugiwt 25-31
to
hope,
PUT YOUR GIFTS
a home
spent in the region has not desensitized
occupation as director of the program, based in the Passionist Eastern Province
to
groups working across the flood zone reunited to lead a cleanup force through
Queenship of Mary
—
this scene was most poignant. But they soon learned that out of despair can come
the week' s
"I saw, like with the floods, how can be unfair," says Jarratt Burch, 16. "I saw the people just try to go on; they didn't complain about anything. They still took the time to thank us. "It can be easy to forget what we saw once we get back ... in our normal lives. But like with the girl I saw I think I'll always remember that. It gave
"We
as well as helping at local care facilities
area regularly throughout the year.
—
For many volunteers who remained solemn, even prayerful,
quality in Appalachia.
new challenges," he says. "I think it made everybody more (enthusiastic) to see the fact that we could get together,
extensive. In addition
LaCarrubba has been going
of a friend.
unteers shared an appreciation for their
seek
of Greenville Catholic
and
positive one. Edwards, 22, says the vol-
they touched.
Photos courtesy
tractor
A young girl, over-
as this transpired
how
and petty we can be," says Mark Edwards, an assistant youth minister. "I hope that we don't just go to West Virginia and have that (awareness) while we're there. I hope that we take some of that back
realize
dozens of job sites, volunteers spend each summer assisting in vacation Bible schools, literacy and recreation programs, and a lunch program for children,
mer
clean a mud-covered devastated northern West
Virginia.
to
and outreach centers. "She always comes up with a way to get things done," says youth minister Randy Kukoly about Katie LaCarrubba, director of the Passionist Volunteers. "The nicest thing you could say about her is that she doesn't judge anybody. For us it's easy to judge. You have to have the whole picture, and she knows the whole story." He adds that her time
A
come with crying, fell into the arms
daily lives, truly see Christ in all
people and discover some things about themselves. The experience "really made
cause, sal-
dump trucks arrived to sweep away
the range of the Passionist Vol-
work
common
vaging what survived and assembling the rest into a rugged moun-
agree
purpose and for the people whose lives
Although pressing needs often dicwhich projects volunteers devote
the area.
In one corner of that neigh-
nity.
tate
With mindful re-
spect for the residents, the deter-
home repairs and improvements to
joblessness, ecological disaster, industrial
GCYO be-
Passionist Volunteers them-
the
came
Corinthians 26-31 1
Matthew
1
23: 14-30
Service of Others
Consider
PRIESTHOOD in
The Diocese of Charlotte Contact Father Frank O'Rourke Vocation Director
1621 Dilworth Road East
28203 334-2283 (704)
Charlotte, N.C.
& Herald 3
The Catholic News
August 23, 1996
Franciscan Sisters Celebrate 50th Anniversary Of Religious Profession
Charlotte Catholic
Athletes Garner
Academic Awards CHARLOTTE — Several
By PAUL FREDETTE Correspondent
MAGGIE VALLEY
— Even
athletic
teams
at
Charlotte Catholic
High School were honored by the Pepsi-Cola Scholar Athlete program
the
swirling mountain mists, brooding storm clouds and steady drizzle could not
for excellence in academics.
flection Center
The following teams received awards for high team Grade Point Average; Volleyball: 3.644;
Sisters Jean Linder
Cheerleading: 3.597; Girls' Track:
Francisan Sisters of Tiffin, Ohio, with
3.590; Girls' Basketball: 3.533; Boys' Tennis: 3.524; Girls' Tennis: 3.498;
dampen
the festive spirit of the
Golden
Jubilee at Living Waters Catholic Re-
on August 12. Franciscan and Francine Sartor celebrated their 50th anniversary as nearly 100 relatives and friends. the family lee
Mass
members at St.
Among
Boys' Swimming: 4.464; Girls' Cross Country: 3.461; Girls' Swimming: 3.453; Baseball: 3.360; Girls' Soccer:
attending the Jubi-
Margaret Church was
3.265; Boys' Cross Country: 3.199; Wrestling: 3.156; Boys' Basketball:
Sister Francine' s 96-year-old mother,
Loretta Sartor, who traveled from Sandusky, Ohio, for the occasion. Archbishop John F. Donoghue, a long-time friend of the jubilarians and former ordinary of the Diocese of Charlotte, presided at the jubilee liturgy. Bishop William G. Curlin concelebrated with clergy from around the diocese. Msgr. John T. McSweeney, rector of the Basilica of St. Lawrence, delivered the homily.
At the conclusion of the liturgy, Bishop Curlin thanked the sisters for all they do for the Diocese of Charlotte: "In your 50 years of religious life, your sacrifice has built a bridge to walk upon on our way to the Lord." Fifteen
In addition, 160 student athletes
received individual academic awards Photo by PAUL
Pictured left to right: Archbishop John F. Donoghue, Franciscan and Francine Sartor and Bishop William G. Curlin.
were there for the occasion, among whom were two blood of the jubilarians: Sister Jean's
older sister, Franciscan Sister Helen Linder, and Sister Francine' s younger Franciscan Sister Dionne Sartor. Franciscan Sister Jane Schmenk,
sister,
director of Living Waters, says she
is
delighted to have both Sister Jean and
on staff with her. "They are beautiful people to live with and work with," she says with relish, adding that she had prayed they would return to Living Waters once their duties elsewhere had been completed. For Sister Jean Linder, those duSister Francine
Sisters
RCIA At
diocese from 1987 to 1994. Then Bishop
John
F.
Donoghue
also recruited Sister
Jean to help implement the decrees of the diocesan synod. Of those years, she remembers most fondly her work with
from The College of St. Francis in Joliet, 111., and her M.A. in English from the University of Notre Dame.
"That was always so energizing," she says, her eyes gleaming, "and the people were wonderful to work with."
GPA..
St.
Therese Church
—
RCIA
meets Thursdays at 7 p.m. at St. Therese Church. Simply come, or call the Faith Formation Office, (704) 664-7762.
Franciscan Sister Francine Sartor is
the daughter of the late Carroll and
Loretta Sartor of Sandusky, Ohio. She is
one of nine children,
six of
whom were
present at the Jubilee celebration in ad-
Franciscan Sister Jean Linder
dition to her mother.
Franciscan Sister Jean Linder, daughter of John and Anna Linder of
community of Franciscan
Payne, Ohio, entered the Francisan Sisters of Tiffin, Ohio on Aug. 12, 1946. She is one of 1 1 children. A twin sister,
irony in recalling that her
Rosemary
my
Perrine, presently resides in
Payne, Ohio. Sister Jean has served her Franciscan community twice as president, first from 1970-74, and again from
From 1978-82, she served as a member and placement coordi-
Tiffin,
Ohio on Aug.
to religious life
She entered the Sisters of
12, 1946.
own
thoughts for a long time: "I prayed for older sister, telling
and prayerful she was, and what a good sister she would make." Her own strengths enabled her to in Tiffin for 12 years before
After completing her work as Di-
to
as a
rector of Living Waters Catholic Reflec-
ter staff,
1974-78, and Director of Planning for the
tion Center. Sister Jean received her
CalLedral
Ck UTCi
B.A.
member
Franciscan
HisWll
F.
"A valid Will stands as a continuing expression of our concern for loved ones, as
well as an ongoing commit-
ment to the Church and community in which we
In Yours.
the live."
Bishop William G. Curlin
ou can express your commitment to your Church by making a bequest to the Diocese of Charlotte or to your parish. Simply have the following
Rector: The Very Rev. Paul Gary Parochial Vicars: Rev. Eric Houseknecht
statement included in your Will:
Thomas Williamson
Confession: Saturday 4-5 p.m. or by appointment
at the
Remember
22'
Sunday Masses: Saturday Vigil 5:30 p.m. Sunday 8:15, 9:30, 10:45 a.m., 12:15 p.m. Weekday Masses: Monday-Friday 7:30 a.m., 12:10 p.m. Saturday: Rosary 8:45 a.m.; Mass 9 a.m.; Novena 9:30 a.m.
Reverend John 1993
of the Living Waters Cen-
she ministered
"/ leave to the
Charlotte (or (or
Roman
Catholic Diocese of
parish, city) the
sum of$
percent of the residue of my estate) for
religious, educational
Pattison,
August 28 Reverend Henry J. Becker, 1992
Sister's infirmary in Tiffin, Ohio.
St PalricL
1621 Dilworth Road East Charlotte, N.C. 28203 (704) 334-2283
Reverend Bertrand 1992
Maggie Valley to care for Father William Murphy, elderly pastor of St.
present responsibilities as assistant di-
ttje
July 17
Home
coming
btcmstb prints
mmttljs of 3M]J anh (August
God how good and how strong,
care for the elderly at St. Francis
tfye
fotjo passeit afaag bitrmg
was not the focus of her
1982-86.
rector of Planning for the Diocese of
fallnftring
vocation
council
nator of her community.
Please prag tav
She finds
involved being vicar for women religious for the Diocese of Charlotte,
Rev.
3.3
Franciscan Sister Francine Sartor
parish councils throughout the diocese.
Margaret's until his death in 1990. Before returning to Maggie Valley in 1992
I
minimum
Jean Linder
Charlotte in 1994, she assumed her
ties
for achieving a
FREDETTE
MOORESVILLE
members of the Franciscan
Sisters of Tiffin, Ohio,
sisters
3.132.
its
and charitable works!'
For more information on how to make a Will that works, contact Jim Kelley, Diocese of Charlotte, Office of Development, 1524 East Morehead St., Charlotte, NC 28207, (704) 331-1709 or 377-6871.
Parsons,
4 The Catholic News
& Herald
August 23, 1996
The Pope Speaks
Tro-Life Corner 1 £
Pope John Paul II
Hundreds Of Tourists Hear, But Don't See, Pope
m
VATICAN CITY
J^any thanks
to those who signed postcards urging Congress to override the President's veto of the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act. More than 30 million cards were ordered for
Catholic churches around the country. Congress is being flooded with cards! There is still time to join this important effort. Partial-birth abortions performed on children in the process of being born are more like infanticide. This brutal practice must stop. Please write a personal note to your Representative and two Senators (U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, D.C. 20515-0010; U.S. Senate, Washington, D.C. 20510-0001).
converging on
ists
they would get to his
'Kes^ect Life Office
'Diocese
of Charlotte
(704)331-1720
B
ing English. His re-
marks in Polish, however, were longer than his main talk in Ital-
Instead, they listened as Vatican
who showed up
at his
summer
residence south of
12 noon Knights of Columbus Fourth Degree Exemplification Embassy Suites Hotel
Castel Gandolfo.
greetings to the English-speak-
he
Aug. 15
feast of
in the square called
Mary's assumption, a could share
said, to all believers that they, too,
in Christ's victory
Tomorrow
the church will celebrate the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary into the glory of heaven.
Mary shared by
journey of she shares, body and soul, in the fullness of his eternal glory. From her place in heaven, may she guide us, amid the trials and difficulties of our earthly pilgrimage, toward the glorious desChrist her Son, so
The pope's voice booming attention to the
over death.
tiny
which
is
faith in the earthly
now
Upon you and your famiinvoke God's abundant blessings ofjoy
ours in Christ.
"Preserved from original sin in order to be the virginal temple of the incarnation of the Son of God,
lies I cordially
Mary became
Vatican Says Pope's Abdominal CAT Scan Results Were Normal VATICAN CITY (CNS) Pope John Paul
the great sign
Mary
human
which shines
he
was
light
on the
being," the pope said.
raised Jesus, stayed with
public ministry and
at the foot
him during
his
of the cross during
said.
—
left his
summer
II
residence Aug. 14 to go to a nearby
hospital for an abdominal
CAT
scan and "all results
almost total communion with the destiny of Jesus could not express itself except by also
were normal," a Vatican spokesman
including participation in his final glory," Pope John
press office, confirmed Aug. 15 that the pope went to
Paul said.
Regina Apostolorum Hospital in Albano, near the summer residence at Castel Gandolfo. "The situation is completely normal," the spokesman said. Officials at the hospital said the pope arrived about 5 p.m. and left less than an hour later after undergoing the test.
clearer
way
that this
That is why the Catholic Church proclaims that she was assumed, body and soul, into heaven, he said. As he does at his general audiences, the pope summarized his remarks in several languages, includ-
said. Passionist
Father Ciro Benedettini, vice director of the Vatican
Guest Column Father John C. Aurilia
Being and Doing: Keeping A Christian Perspective
Patrick Cathedral Charlotte St.
The reading of the Gospels makes us aware of our multiple identity. There is a Thomas, a Peter, a John, a Zacchaeus, a Nicodemus in each of us. Usually, they do not coexist at the same time, thank God! Martha and Mary, however, seem to coexist in us beautifully on our Christian journey. We all need to find a good balance between being and doing, acting and contemplating. Most Americans have the notion
The Cathouc
•
the truth
trol,
we find that we are surrounded by mystery. In our we attach
quest for answers and search for meaning,
be
ourselves to whatever promises to sat-
that being
Most Reverend William G. Curlin
Michael Krokos Associate Editor: Joann Keane Staff Writer: Jimmy Rostar Hispanic Editor: Luis Wolf Editor:
Advertising Manager: Gene Sullivan Production Associate: Sheree McDermott
1524 East Morehead St., Charlotte, NC 28207 PO Box 37267, Charlotte, NC 28237 Phone: (704) 331-1713 FAX: (704) 377-0842
The Catholic News & Herald, USPC 007-393, is published by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Charlotte, 1524 East Morehead St., Charlotte, NC 28207, 44 times a year, weekly except for Christmas week and Easter week and every two weeks during June, July and August for $15 per year for enrollees in parishes of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Charlotte and $18 per year for all other subscribers. Secondclass postage paid at Charlotte NC and other cities. POSTMASTER: Send address corrections to The Catholic 28237.
is
We all need a good
more im-
balance between being
and doing, acting and
Some changes may occur to make this bal-
contemplating.
yy
ance possible.
Our
action and contemplation should give prior-
A
good friend of mine once said to me, "My daily Lectio Divina was not really working until it became His Lectio Divina." Devotions also become expressions of our being. There
God.
is
an innate drive in
human
beings to worship.
We instinctively know that there is something or someone
who
is
ultimately responsible for the
way
things
awareness may be. It is an effect of our profound sense of incompleteness and
are,
however real or vague
vulnerability.
We feel
deep deThrough devices such as advertising media and political campaigns, our fears and anxieties are artificially stimulated. Then products or programs are offered to relieve them. But the relief doesn't last long. It is constantly replaced by new worries and ways to control them, as the cycle goes skilled in manipulating those sires
our "doing" should be a normal way of expressing our "being."
ity to
deep curiosity and hunger.
We live in a culture that is highly
portant than doing, as
Mail:
NC
isfy that
that our in-
is
ner self makes us aware
Number 43
37267, Charlotte,
to
our lives and have a great need to understand ourselves and the world around us ... and to control all of it. But, instead of con-
constantly active, but
August 23, 1996 5
have
that they
News & Herald
PO Box
warm
Just as
at
8:15 a.m.
Herald,
com-
gelus prayer with visitors in the courtyard of the villa
Mass
News &
the
extend
"I
1
Volume
is
ing pilgrims and visitors present at this Angelus prayer.
Greensboro
September
Here
plete Vatican text of the pope's remarks in English:
Because of a three-day holiday, the pope skipped his weekly helicopter trip back to the Vatican for the Wednesday audience. Instead, he led the midday An-
"The Christian people have understood in an ever
August 31
ian.
Rome.
his death,
Bishop William G. Curlin will take part in the following events:
Publisher:
Radio broad-
cast over loudspeakers the pope's short talk to those
destiny of every
piscopal Calendar
tour-
Square Aug. 14 thought see Pope John Paul II by attending
weekly general audience.
sign,
The
— Hundreds of
(CNS)
St. Peter's
that
a personal fragility in the pres-
ence of the unpredictability of the world in relation to
and
insecurities.
on and on. It is clear that our being and doing must be solbased on God as our priority and on the expressions of our being, which we call devotions. What makes these two aspects interlocking is the reality of faith. The Decree on the Apostolate of the Laity (Vatican II, 4) states, "Only the light of faith and by meditating on the Word of God can one always and everywhere recognize God in whom we live, and move,
idly
and have our being. (Acts 17, 28) Father John C. Aurilia is pastor of Immaculate Conception Church in Hendersonville.
Light
One Candle
Father Thomas
The Answer This let
Is
Now
the day the
is
it.
How many times have we heard or words from the ancient
psalmists? Not yesterday, not tomorrow,
but today. This
God,
to love
the day.
is
To know God,
to experience
His Presence
with your whole being, this ning of
life
Many
— and
it is
is
now.
dreaming like Barbra Streisand's sad song about "The Way We Were." Others get caught up in the future, dreaming about the way things will be past,
"when we retire" or "when the kids grow
Some even
The dying
man
said noth-
What does it look like, this present moment that the Lord has made? Roy
tightly to his
deeply and fully in the present
approached, the
in a hospital.
patient
A
nurse escorted a
tired,
anxious
young man to the bedside of an elderly man. "Your son is here," she whispered to the patient. She had to repeat the words
man waited. When she finished her task,
He was heavily
sedated because of
words of sym-
to offer
her. "Who was The startled nurse replied, "I thought he was your father." "No, he was not my father," he answered. "I never saw him before in my life." "Then why didn't you say something when I took you to him?" asked
chair next to the bedside. All through the
people of hope in what is yet to come. But nothing is more important for us than
began
pathy to the young man.
rooted in what has
It is
the nurse
the pain of his heart attack and he dimly
is
before.
died.
The young man
several times before the patient's eyes
important also to be a
It is
of our Christian heritage, knowing that
As dawn
opened.
come
miss the present life. important that we be conscious
son.
released the lifeless hand he had been holding. Then he went to notify the nurse. While the nurse did what was necessary, the young
what we are now
get so caught up in the
after-life that they
ing as he held
Popkins tells a story recounted in "The Caring Question" by Donald and Nancy Loving Tubesing. It happened one night
saw the young man standing outside the oxygen tent. He reached out his hand and the young man tightly wrapped his fingers around it, squeezing a message of encouragement. The nurse brought a
up."
McSweeney
hope.
the begin-
of us get caught up in the
J.
moment.
to live
Lord has made;
us rejoice and be glad in
recited these
& Herald 5
The Catholic News
August 23, 1996
night the
young man
sat
holding the old
man's hand, offering gentle words of
But he interrupted
that
man?" he
asked.
He replied, "He needed his son and his son just wasn't here. When I realized he was too sick to tell whether or not I was his son, I knew how much he needed me." That, my friend, is a scene from a day the Lord has made. On a graffiti-filled wall, someone wrote, "Christ is the answer!" Somebody else scribbled underneath,
"What
the question?"
is
On
this
day the Lord has made, the question is this: When will you welcome the Son of God into your life? If you can't rejoice in answering "Now!" maybe you can't really answer at all. For a free copy of the Christopher News Note, "Thoughts to Brighten Your Day, " send a stamped, self-addressed envelope to The Christophers, 12 East
—
48th Street, New York, N.Y. 10017. Father Thomas J. McSweeney is
di-
rector of The Christophers.
the nurse.
Family Matters Eileen
By The Seaside My family and
For one week each summer, we
were anchored in a small rented motor boat somewhere off the Jersey shore. With plenty of bait, a fish net, two crab lines and a white plastic bucket, we were ready for an afternoon of crabbing. and
I
I
return to the sea at
Cape May Point
to
Marx many blessings God has show-
dren listened to the news reports and,
although they didn't understand much of what was being reported,
be refreshed and restored. And it is "so cool" to follow a simpler way of life
ered
the years.
As my 4-year-old daughter, Teresa,
seems simpler until I see the beach bags, bicycles, beach chairs, coolers and boogie boards cascading from our minivan's rear door each time it's
gently lowered one of the crab lines
opened.
store for the
wonderful to retreat to a world where sand castles, sea shells and sailboats fill our days. The complex world we have left behind and all that it values seem insignificant against the backdrop
morning paper and coffee, we saw the photographs of grieving families on a Long Island beach whose lives would never be the same because they were personally touched by the horror and hate
of this majestic ocean.
of our world.
into the bay,
we
felt the delicate
pluck
of a crab's claw on our string, signaling
had taken the bait. Slowly we pulled up the line as my 6-year-old son, Bobby, readied his net to scoop up this feisty blue crustacean. "I got the crab, Dad!" he yelled at such a pitch that any sea creature within a mile of our boat must have it
taken cover.
As my husband,
Joe,
dropped the
crab into the bucket, Teresa turned to
me
with a look of genuine delight and said,
"This
is
so cool,
Mom."
—
at least
it
It is
Our time
at the
beach was special
year because two families whom we have known since our children were infants were also renting bungalows nearby. As the shrieks of seagulls and of our children at play became indistinguishable, it was easy to reflect on the this
on
our families over
their questions began.
black box?
But when we biked to the local general
people should
ing for sea shells, not for bodies and
black boxes.
We first learned of this terror in the sky and sea as we were watching an Olympic preview program two nights before we left for our vacation. My chil-
"What
is
a
are they checking
people's luggage?" Bobby asked. "What is luggage?" he continued. "Did it hurt when the people died?" Teresa asked. "I'm going to ask God to send the people back to earth as humans after he sees them in heaven," told me before bed that night. "I'm going to tell God to give the people a hug," Teresa said.
Bobby
Summer is
a season when come to the beach search-
Why
I
told
my
children that this plane
something that's very unusual; things like this almost never happen and that's why everyone is talking about it so much. I wanted to tell the families and Flight 800 friends of the victims of crash
is
TWA
See Marx, page
1
Family Reflections Andrew
Friendships
And Marriage
other relationships with people of the
our Pre Cana sessions the issue of friends of the opposite sex comes
Often
up.
The
in
egalitarian ideals of today's cul-
beyond the sensitive insecurities of love relationships. Having friends of the opposite sex can be a strain on a marriage. But, with honesty, understanding, trust and common sense, couples can establish for themselves
ture are often far
"rules of the road" that can help
problems
manage
that arise.
Marriage is a covenant in which we promise our fidelity. How that fidelity is lived out depends on the needs of the
However,
for either
of us to provide all the companionship of the opposite sex the other needs is a task that
we
cannot do well.
opposite sex to help us grow.
We
need
To do
this
Terri Lyke
struggle. esty
and
Hon-
may mean
boundaries.
ship must not continue or be
Analyze Your Intentions First we must be honest
— with
We
need to
ourselves and our spouse.
ask ourselves, really about?"
"What
is this
friendship
Do I receive residual ben-
need to withhold from my spouse? We may rationalize that our spouse is jealous and would misconstrue the "true nature" of the relationship. However, we must recognize that such I
feel a
feelings are clear signs that
ing
we
are go-
beyond the appropriate boundaries
of respect for our marriage. able thing about honesty
A is
remarkthat
it
toward growth and understanding, though not always without a stretches us
of our marriage. Finally,
fidelity
and remain faithful to our marriage, we need to establish and respect certain
efits that
Respect And Boundaries
individual couple.
&
we need
to
be sensi-
that
tive to the perceptions of others.
the other friend-
Marriage, though it may seem like a private arrangement, is a public
mm
vJ
office that speaks about us. Improper appearances, though having innocent intentions, also violate appropriate boundaries of respect for
km
limited to what
we can honestly share with our spouse. When it
the marriage.
comes to friendships of the opposite
sex,
there should be no secrets.
Secondly,
Relationships of the opposite sex that enrich us are those that
we need to know
the in-
tentions of our friends of the opposite sex. Our intentions may be honorable; however, we may find ourselves in the grip of an agenda that means no good for the marriage. Though it is not always
know
broader insights on our relationships with each other. Respecting the boundaries of our marriages does not neces-
necessary that friends of the opposite sex
sarily preclude loving friendships
befriend our spouse,
those of the opposite sex.
it
is
essential that
they honor the marriage and recognize that
our best interest
is
in the well-being
their
proper place. With honesty, good intentions and respectful appearances, friends of the opposite sex give us deeper and
It
with
just raises
the standard so that such friendships are rare indeed.
6 The Catholic
News
& Herald
August 23, 1996
Catholic Social Services Helps Find from page
Homes
1
of the former Communist stronghold. Though a March 1995 Russian law eased adoption restrictions, the process can a paper chase. Yet, CSS is there to lend a hand. For a family plagued by the constraints of conventional adoption, international adoption may be the route to parenthood. Older parents are often turned away from adoption agencies. Single parents make little progress in the adoption process. For those still clinging to the need to nurture,
become
the international route
is
gaining appeal.
Today a Russian orphan is declared free for adoption in a more expedient manner. This, coupled with the obligatory paper trail CSS homes studies and INH clearance means a potential parent could be nurturing their new child in six to nine months. A prospective parent with a com-
—
—
pleted
home
study could have their bundle of joy by Christ-
mas.
Formore information on international adoptions, Carol Meyerriecks, Catholic Social Services Coordinator of International Adoptions, (704) 255-0146. The
children, pictured clockwise, are: llona Kotchowlaev with brother Stas, Vidnoza Veronica,
baby Ivan Kouzin, Andrei Netchaev and Sergei Stabrouski, Alexander Milov.
Many
GiFrs:
One SpimT
The DiocESAN AfmcAN AmerIcan AffAiRs MiNisTRy iNviTEs
NO MATTER whAT youR or ET^Nic idENTiiy.
you TO A WEEkENcJ RETREAT RAciAl, cuIturaI
Sept.
15-14
N.C.
AshEville,
DiRECTEd by RevereincJ Mr. MarvIn TItreatt of Lemon Grove, Ca. Retreat hfoRMATioN:
Cost:
$20
hdividuAl or
$50
For
FAiviily
Fee iNcludES meaIs ANd materiaIs. LodqiNq
is
of 5 or
Contact: ThE HolidAy Inn, 201 TunneI Rd., AshEvillE,
(704) 252-4000
4
not iNcludEd.
NC 28805,
foR ACCOMiviodATioNS. SpEciAl Retreat Rate:
$60/Niqk.
Registration
Name:
Address:
Phone no.:
Amount enclosed:
For Retreat Registration and/or Information contact: African Affairs Ministry/Diocese of Charlotte P.O. Box 36776 • Charlotte, NC 28236 • (704) 377-6871 Or mail completedforms
with appropriate fees to address above by Sept.
7.
For Children
August 23, 1996
The Catholic News
& Herald 7
rLnterta in merit The following are home videocassette reviews from the U.S. Catholic Conference Office for Film and Broadcasting. Each videocassette is available on VHS format. Theatrical movies on video have a U.S. Catholic Conference classification and Motion Picture Association of America rating. All reviews indicate the appropriate age group for the
Vid OS (2
video audience.
to Heaven 2" (1996) Animated musical sequel in which
"All
Dogs Go
two canine angels (voices of Charlie Sheen and Dom DeLuise), in San Francisco to retrieve Gabriel's horn, help a
Catholic Conference classification is A-III adults. The Motion Picture Association of America rating is PG13 parents are strongly cautioned that some material may be inappropriate for children under 13.
—
—
runaway boy return home while outwitting a devilish duo. Directed by Paul Sabella and Larry Leker, the songs are
"Mulholland Falls" (1996)
sprightly but the animation often looks
washed out
in this
rescue
The U.S. Catholic Confer-
tale.
shallow search-and-
—
ence classification is A-I general patronage. The Motion Picture Association of America rating is G general audiences.
—
CNS photo from
"Cimarron" (1960) Big, sprawling and generally le-
Western from the Edna Ferber novel stretching from the 1889 Oklahoma land rush to World War I tells the story of a would-be rancher (Glenn Ford) who becomes a crusading newspaper editor but alienates his wife (Maria Schell) by fighting crime and bigotry instead of getting rich. Director Anthony thargic
—
The Fan
De
Niro "Absolutely Scary"
Of Deranged Fan
In Portrayal
NEW YORK (CNS) — A knife
salesman's descent into criminal insanity is tracked in the nasty thriller, "The
Fan"
(TriStar).
Fanatical San Francisco Giants
fan Gil Renard (Robert
psyched
De
Niro)
is
of a call
nocent victims with him. Director Tony Scott turns in a technically well-made film, but one more concerned with pulpy thrills than gleaning insights from a savage man's furious
Mann scores on the big action scenes but
ment conspiracy
is
A-I
— general patron-
Not rated by the Motion Picture Association of America.
age.
demise.
melodrama
"Mary
viewers will be offended by
Reilly" (1996) which the timorous
Lee Tamahori's
is
styl-
rich in period atmo-
sphere but the weak plot is derivative of 1974's "Chinatown" without the benefit of its intelligent screenplay. Recurring brutal violence, several bedroom scenes with nudity, frequent profanity and minimal rough language. The U.S. Catholic Conference clas-
—
A-IV adults, with resThe Motion Picture Assoof America rating is R re-
sification
is
ervations. ciation
—
stricted.
"Wagon Master"
(1950)
Lyric Western about a
Mormon
wagon train whose leader (Ward Bond) hires a pair of genial cowboys (Ben Johnson and Harry Carey
them
Many
a brief affair, a
to conceal the facts in
the case. Director
The U.S. Catholic Conference
classification
Connelly) with
1950s Los Angeles detective (Nick Nolte) runs up against a covert govern-
bores with the domestic soap operatics. Stylized frontier violence and marital rifts.
girl (Jennifer
whom he had once had
ish
Reuters
Thora Birch and Vincent Kartheiser star as bickering siblings searching for their dad in the wilderness of "Alaska." The U.S. Catholic Conference classification is A-ll adults and adolescents. The Motion Picture Association of America rating is PG parental guidance suggested.
—
Investigating the bizarre murder
Jr.) to
guide
to Utah, encountering along the
way
(Wesley Snipes), has been traded to the
well as the
little
victim of an abused childhood (Julia
a broken-down patent medicine show (Alan Mowbray and Joanne Dru), a band of Navaho Indians and some vi-
Giants for a cool $40 million. Having followed Bobby's career for over a decade while his own ca-
boy (Andrew J. Ferchland) and terrorizes his kidnap victim. However, the movie
Roberts) finds safety working as a cham-
cious killers on the run from a posse.
that his favorite baseball
player, star hitter
Bobby Rayburn
—
reer withered and divorce took his
boy from under
his roof
little
— Gil be-
comes increasingly agitated when Bobby goes into a batting slump and is upstaged by another Giants hitter, Juan Primo (Benecio Del Toro).
Knowing Bobby was Juan wears the number
upset that
on his uniform which was Bobby's lucky number with previous teams Gil corners Juan with a demand he surrender the number to Bobby. When rebuffed, he stabs Juan to death. Soon after, Bobby's hitting dramatically improves, and Gil, who has been secretly stalking Bobby and his young son Sean (Brandon Hammond), wants Bobby to thank him for suppos-
—
1 1
—
edly reviving the slugger's career. Instead, Gil discovers
Bobby
is
sorry
Juan died and only sees baseball as a game, nothing more. This sets the stage for Gil to take revenge on a player he now has only contempt for. By snatching Sean and insisting
Bobby
publicly acknowledge
him, Gil intends to go out in a blaze of glory even if it means taking more in-
the copious use of four-letter
way
words
Gil mistreats his
never presents Gil's behavior as remotely acceptable. The three violent scenes are intense but brief, conveying
how
de-
ranged Gil has become in severing all ties with reality. De Niro is absolutely scary in his portrayal, yet
manages
Dour
as
some of mind
to extract
sympathy for his crazed state when he can no longer cope with his personal and professional failures. Snipes plays well off of him, going from self-
bermaid for kindly Dr. Jekyll (John Malkovich in the dual role) until his murderous associate Mr. Hyde turns up, provoking in her both dread and an unwanted physical attraction. Directed by Stephen Frears, this version of the Stevenson classic presents a drawn-out and relentlessly gloomy picture of the duality of good and evil and Victorian sexual repression.
The
vio-
in life.
rating
is
A-
III
is
"Mr. reer
Wrong"
much rough language,
ex- girlfriend (Joan Cusack). Directed
the U.S. Catholic Conference classifica-
by Nick Castle, the contrived narra-
A-IV adults, with reservations. The Motion Picture Association of
tive serves primarily as a vehicle for
America
Brief slapstick violence, sexual innu-
—
rating
is
R — restricted.
and the courage required to withstand the perils of the trail. Frontier violence. The U.S. Catholic Conference classification is A-I general patronage. Not rated by the Motion Picture Association of America. to journey into the wilderness
—
(1996)
intense violence, spo-
tion is
natural grandeur of the terrain as well
Uneven comedy in which a cawoman (Ellen DeGeneres) is
Due to some
—
DeGeneres' low-key comic
talents.
endo and crude references. The U.S.
to
the
as an appreciation of the faith needed
R — restricted.
radic profanity and
movie
an unpleasantly disturbing experience.
homage
imbued with
— adults. The Mo-
swept into an affair by a handsome, wealthy stranger (Bill Pullman) only to discover he's a nut case obsessed with marrying her, despite all efforts to get rid of him and his jealous
is
is
tion Picture Association of America
its
into full-fledged psychopath, the
Director John Ford's poetic the pioneer spirit
U.S. Catholic Conference classi-
fication
Yet this bleak melodrama is marred narrow focus on Gil's escalating viciousness, even in front of his own son. Aside from capturing the atmosphere of ballpark excitement and credibly showing a spiteful guy degenerating
Some gruesome
lence and recurring sexual innuendo.
centered womanizer to a father who learns perhaps too late what is important
by
tale in
THE CATHOLIC COMMUNICATION
CAMPAIGN
8
The Catholic News
& Herald
August 23, 1996
The high
cost of unforgiveness All
contents copyright
©1 996 by
CNS
"We could not concentrate on mending our relationship, for cancer had invaded our mother's frail body. In six months she slipped out of this world, still seeing herself the victim of my father's sin against us. She never forgave him, and she let it destroy her. "Our mother had requested a private funeral but we thought we should at least put a death notice in the paper. We were pleased with the people who came: co-workers, her hairdresser, nurses from the hospital. We placed a sheath of yellow roses on her coffin. "When another bouquet of yellow roses arrived, we thought it had been directed to the wrong room. Bob and I were shocked when we read our
name on the card. And something within me burst like a volcano that had been smoldering for 12 years. "I picked up the vase with the impulse to smash it, but brought it to the funeral director's office with instructions to destroy it. He was' a kindly man who nodded and put his arm father's
around my shoulder. "He softly said, 'Some people try to make amends even if it is too late for it eases their conscience. Try to forgive, even if you can't forget.' "We buried our mother but I could not bury my memory of the sin that was eating my heart. I saw my mother destroyed. Would I go the same way? "Since the breakdown, I've tried.
some boys who hung out By Jane Wolford Hughes Catholic
hard
It is
News
Service
to write of a person
who
insulated herself from God and closed herself off from human relationships. I hope the story of Catherine will help others who find it difficult to forgive
someone. Perhaps Catherine's story will encourage them to reinterpret their lives and learn to trust God, and thus to escape from their fragile shell of anger or fear.
My
first
encounter with Catherine
was many years ago. She was a seamstress in a women's shop I visited. Most often my garments needed shortening, so Catherine would be summoned to put up the hem. Our casual
"When another bouquet of yellow roses arrived
...
Bob and were shocked when we read our father's name on the card.... I
I
picked up the vase with the impulse to smash it."
dogged will-power, managed to satisfy her children's physical needs. But she put tenderness and expressions of love away in the coffin of her broken dreams. Emotionally, their life was barren except for the mother's fierce bursts of anger against the father, coupled with long silences. So the children learned to live inside themselves. The mother, out of pride or shame, did not encourage contact with relatives or friends from the past. Catherine absorbed her mother's privacy. She said, "People thought I was shy and quiet, and neither Bob nor I were trouble-makers, so people kind of forgot about us. They had enough problems of their own." Catherine added, "Mrs. O'Leary, a neighbor lady, was my only adult friend. She seemed to understand without being nosy. But I was careful even with her." Catherine soon assumed the adult role at home: making decisions about school activities, recreation and parttime work. When the women's store Catherine worked in moved, I lost track of her. One day she called. After a breakdown, she was now cleaning houses. I invited her to do some work at our house. It took several visits before her sad story
was continued.
I
didn't encourtell
it.
Her father had abandoned her mother, her little brother, Bob, and Catherine when she was 14. He took their life savings and stole their mother's spirit. The family moved to another house and school district, and the mother, by
"One day Bob and
Bob
forgive.
Our
admitted to the hospital after she tempted suicide. May God be merciful to her.
IN
THE MARKETPLACE
Briefly, tell of
for
a time when forgiveness made a big difference
you or someone you know.
"When a young girl in a family got pregnant out of wedlock. It was a close, Catholic family and the first reaction was one of anger and disbelief. However ... through forgiveness they were able not only to accept her mistake, but to have more Sister of Charity Barbara empathy toward other families in similar situations." Boss, Pittsburgh, Pa.
—
my ex-husband
and mental abuse, and for leaving us achieved a bachelor's degree and have dedicated the rest of my life to helping single and battered women. But most of all ... was freed from bitterness, and my son has been able to see that through forgiveness you can achieve positive things instead of hanging on to hurt and anger." "Forgiving
when my son was
only
1
and
...
for physical
one-half....
I
decided to at-
tend the neighborhood picnic. Mrs. O'Leary suggested it and said: 'It pays to be friendly. You never know when you'll need a friend.' "We went, and the people were nice
Bob pitched the ball the farthest and won $5. He also was asked to join the softball team. It seemed like a good
to us.
I
—
I
anonymous, Nevada
"When my parents got divorced after 41 years and received an annulment. decided not to take sides.... It was upsetting for me, but by forgiving them was able Bernie Price, Indianapolis, Ind. to ... remain on good terms with both my parents."
idea at the time but he got in with
—
I
"When you find out that God forgives you and loves you, and when you go to confession to confess something that's bothering you, you have a sense of peace. Nancy Forgiveness allows you to let go of what's bothering you and go on."
—
Sampson, Colorado Springs, Colo. An upcoming
edition asks:
"religious vocation"
at-
(Hughes is a veteran adult religious educator in Farmington Hill, Mich.)
close-
ness was colored with tense wariness.
FAITH
it
maybe someday God will hear me. In the meantime ..." Her voice trailed off. That was the last time I saw Catherine. She was re-
ing that I was losing the only person I had in the world. I could have, because I could not reach out to him to even try
understand and
He says he's got relihelps. I've tied that, and
tries to help.
gion and
I
age her but she seemed to need to relationship deepened when we happened to eat in the same cafeteria. Slowly her story unfolded.
around the malls. "Bob was 15 but looked older. He became as changeable as the weather. It wasn't long before and he was lying to me, skipping school and was caught stealing a pair of Nike shoes. "It wasn't such a terribly unforgivable crime, but I had no bank of trust to draw upon, so my embarrassment, anger and fear were out of proportion. I had the hollow black feel-
to
—
How has your understanding of the term
grown over time?
If
you would
like to
respond for
possible publication, please write: Faith Alive! 3211 Fourth St. N.E., Washington, D.C. 20017-1100.
The Catholic News
August 23, 1996
& Herald 9
FOOD FOR THOUGHT taking forgiveness out of the "formula" for Christianity would produce a mutant religion. Forgiveness is basic. But that doesn't mean forgiving is always easy. To forgive, I may first need to what caused recognize what led to the problem I've had with someone else our conflict. And how many of us really enjoy handling conflict? It doesn't guarantee, either, that we'll be able to forget we were hurt, slighted or exploited. But here is where the mystery of forgiveness comes into view. As the catechism says: "It is not in our power not to feel or to forget an offense; but the heart that offers itself to the Holy Spirit turns injury into compassion" (No. 2843). To forgive, people often have to "let go" of something: past resentments, perhaps, or the determination to win out to conquer another's point of view. That may be a challenge. Remember that at least in part, forgiveness is an activity of the heart: a heart not "closed" or hardened (Catechism, No. 2840). I don't think in forgiving someone we agree to be exploited or hurt again and again. Still, I do think forgiveness is fundamental for Christians: It "bears witness that, in our world, love is stronger than sin" (Catechism, No. 2844).
How to
begin to forgive
—
—
David Gibson Editor, Faith Alive!
29
Forgiveness: Contrary to
conventional wisdom from attacking the vulnerable Saul. They were dumbfounded! But David
By Father John J. Castelot Catholic News Service
explained:
In biblical times two factors were of
paramount importance: honor and shame.
When someone was
offended, his
honor was at stake. Not to avenge the wrong was considered a shameful dereliction of duty. Jesus summed up the attitude
— and rejected
an eye and a tooth thew 5:38).
for
it:
"An eye
for
a tooth" (Mat-
Old Testament when he refused to kill King Saul. David had served the king faithfully, but was rewarded with almost insane cruelty. David's success and popularity were perceived as a threat to the king's honor. The poor neurotic reacted by making several attempts on David's life. David finally had to flee. But Saul was not content with being rid of him and set out to hunt him down. "Saul took 3,000 picked men from all Israel and went in search of David" (1 24:3).
David and his men holed up in a spacious cave. It happened that Saul
came
into the cave's forward section "to ease nature." Here was a golden opportunity for David to polish off his
tormentor. David's followers urged him to do so. If anyone had a reason to strike while the iron was hot, David did. Stealthily, he approached and cut off a piece of the king's cloak. Moreover, David restrained his eager men
—
FAITH
IN
Catholic
Service
The phone rang, and someone asked for his mother.
He
sat there listening number of
to her just saying "yes" a
times.
When she hung up, she said to him, "Your father died." He looked back and answered, "Oh, I see," and after a pause: "It really doesn't difference.
We
What is forgiveness not? It is not only a matter of dealing with something that has already occurred: the past. For it also is a matter of going on with life, having learned from our capacity to hurt others something of the human need for love and affirmation as well. And forgiveness is not a smug sense of righteousness leading the offended
make much
never had a relation"First,
ship anyway."
But
rage streaked up his spine. "He had no right to die without saying something to me," he cried inside. "He had no right! No one has any right to bring anyone into this world and then pretend that person doesn't exist! He had no right to die without recognizing me ever!" Sleep was gone. The years of waiting for some word, the disappointment of broken dates, the shards of broken hopes were roiling in a heart offended and enraged. And rage for days became the pattern of his existence. It took a long time for him to understand that it makes no sense to die twice that, as he said, "If you give your life to mourn-
—
fender and the offended. So it is not enough simply to go away and say nothing. Forgiveness, when it can, must include reaching out to the offender.
So forgiveness has asks not only (and perhaps not principally) "Where do I go from here?" but rather "Where do we go from here?" social content. It
That makes
scholar, author, teacher
and
lecturer.)
I
I
'I
—
Reflection: In asking forgiveness,
I
open up
to the possibility of
a renewed
someone hurt. Forgiveness, says Brakenhielm, is "a way to manage the more deep-rooted injuries that human beings often inflict on each other. " That makes forgiveness a creative force. Its power may work to reorder I
forgive-
ness creative. So forgiveness imitates the action of God the Cre-
Forgiveness works toward healing what is broken or damaged between people, or between God and us. ator.
.
will for-
a Scripture
is
feel so based on
person to believe that by forgiving, he or she becomes better than the offender. We caricature forgiveness when we don't bear in mind that we are all sinners and that "there but for the grace of God go I." Forgiveness ought to bring transformation to both the of-
It is
give you. But if you do not forgive others, neither will your Father forgive
(Father Castelot
it
try to I
I
When Matthew recorded the Our Father, he singled out just one of its phrases for further comment, writing: "If you forgive others their transgres-
your transgressions" (6:14-15). Jesus not only taught forgiveness, but practiced it impressively. When human hatred and cruelty had nailed him to the cross, he prayed: "Father, forgive them" (Luke 23:34).
why
something real or imagined? Next, can approach the person who offended me and say ..."
5:39).
your heavenly Father
would
violated. Is
conventional wisdom on its head. He didn't come to put the seal of approval on the accepted ethic, but to replace it with an ethic of nonviolent forgiveness: "But I say to you, offer no resistance to one who is evil" (Matthew
sions,
I
understand
later,
risky not to for-
The
of the a bit every time there is
give.
mind and
life
spirit dies
no forgiveness. We expend our energies obsessively replaying CNS
past offenses.
photo by The Crosiers/Gene Plaisted
But ing and to rage, your life is truly gone." What can a person do who experiences this kind of anger over being offended by someone else? First, I would try to understand why I feel so violated. Is
lives.
FMS
went contrary to the conventional wisdom of the day. Centuries later a descendant of David, Jesus of Nazareth, turned that
Asking forgiveness from someone we've harmed is a way to recognize that person's dignity, says Carl Reinhold Brakenhielm, theology professor at the University of Uppsala Sweden. In Forgiveness (Fortress Press, 426 S. Fifth St., Box 1209, Minneapolis, Minn. 55440. Paperback, $10), the Protestant theologian writes: "When do wrong toward another human being, am also saying, am way up here, and you are far down there.'" Asking forgiveness reverses things. "The person who seeks forgiveness" affirms the other's human rights and worth "the very things he or she earlier violated."
our personal
Rowe,
anointed" (2 Samuel 24:7). David subsequently showed the king the severed fragment of his cloak as proof of how close he had come to killing him. This story was treasured as an illustration of David's almost superhuman forgiveness, of his truly sterling character. It was a powerful story pre-
ACTION
relationship with
News
L.
cisely because such restraint
this attitude explains why David's friends were shocked in the
But
Samuel
"The Lord forbid that I should do such a thing to my master, the Lord's
By Brother Cyprian
it
based on something real
or imagined?
Next, I can approach the person offended me and say very simply:
who
what happened. I don't believe should have happened in this way, and I want you to know this so that if at all possible we can work through to a more fitting solution for you and for me." But sometimes my response to a situation that offends me cannot be immediate. There are occasions when I need time to reflect; otherwise my reaction might undercut any possibility
"Here's it
of reconciliation.
seize the
moment
to forgive is to
of grace
—
or, better,
be seized by grace. By allowing the dead to bury their dead, the world again knows redemption. to
(Marist Brother Rowe is a research associate in the Department of Psychiatry at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and a dean of students at the Graduate School of Social Work at the University of Maryland, Baltimore.)
The Catholic News
10
& Herald
August 23, 1996
People Conan O'Brien Turns Show
Into
Solid Letterman Rival
HOLLYWOOD (CNS) — Conan O'Brien says that when he succeeded David Letterman as host of NBC's "Late Night" talk and variety program three years ago, viewers saw "an Irish Catholic kid from Boston who's trying to do a good job." The critics were merciless. "Nobody wants to see a late-night talk-
show host
trying to please you. It's not
fun to watch a guy work," O'Brien said. After the first couple of months, he said he decided "I'm going to have a good time, I'm going to enjoy this, I'm going to do the show I think I should do, and I'm going to do my best every night." The turnaround has been obvious. O'Brien still has the same sidekick in Andy Richter, the same band led by Max Weinberg, and the same writers, but
some
TV
critics
late-night
now
say his
is
the best
show on TV.
Actress Ellen Burstyn Talks
About
'Spitfire,'
Filmmaking (CNS) Ac-
—
WASHINGTON tress Ellen
wanting
tionwide, put up $6.1 million to
make
the picture, then sold distribution rights
Rock Entertainment for $10 million within hours of the film's Sundance success. to Castle
Goodbye To Murdered Colorado Priests PUEBLO, Colo. More than
4,000 Say Last
—
Actress Likes Not-So-Happy Turn Of Events Of Her Character HOLLYWOOD (CNS) When Catholic actress Teri Austin lands a role on
—
television, she's glad she's able to use
it to teach a little lesson about moral values. married to actor-screenwriter Eric Anderson, who had a recurring role as Billy Sidell on "Thirtysomething." It's the first marriage for each. But for Austin's character on Showtime' s made-for-cable "Bedtime" series, the situation is somewhat different. Frustrated over her inability to conceive a child with her husband, her character falls into an affair. The affair, already taped, "is not romantic," Austin told Catholic News Service. When it comes to extramarital affairs on TV, she added, "I've never seen an affair where it turned out terrible, regretful. It's the repercussions they don't show."
In real
life,
Austin
is
4,000 people crowded into the Colorado state fairgrounds in Pueblo for a colorful funeral liturgy Aug. 12 to say their
goodbyes
two
to
priests
who were
stabbed to death in their rectory. Father
Thomas
Scheets, 65, pastor of St. Leander's Church for six years, and Father Louis Stovik, 77, a retired priest who lived at the rectory, were found dead of multiple puncture wounds Aug. 7. Thousands of people filled, then overflowed a section of the fairgrounds' Events Center designed to hold 3,500 people. About 60 Knights of Columbus flanked more than 100 white-robed priests and six bishops from three states.
Pope John Paul waves II
while speaking
from his
summer residence at Castel
to see better films will support
latest,
in Mississippi. "It's a film
about people
and about human emotions and ings," she told Catholic
News
feel-
Service
an interview Aug. 15. "If people agree with me that there needs to be more of in
that in
support schools, clinics and other proin northern Mississippi and na-
grams
The News
Burstyn hopes moviegoers
"The Spitfire Grill," which was financed by a Catholic organization
her
In
Hollywood, they should make an
effort to support the film, just to
send a
message." The actress was in Washington to promote the film, which
won
the
Audience Award at this year's Sundance Film Festival in Utah and was scheduled for national release during August. The Sacred Heart League, which helps
For the
most in uptown
PRE -GAME FOOD AND FUN
15.
— Friday, Sept. 20 Workshop — Saturday, Sept. 21 1694 Bird
St. •
Rock Hill,
David Haas brings
his
S.C.
unique
tal-
ent and gifts for liturgy to our area.
Friday evening's performance features the best of David's work for
prayer and worship. Saturday's workshop will explore the meaning, spirit and practice of liturgy. Both days are open to all and are cosponsored by St.. Anne parish and The Oratory. For more information and
Garden ^tf Eaten Enjoy barbecue Sr'hotdqgs prior to the
Panthers vs. Falcons game Sunday, September 1 at our parish grounds, just two blocks east of the stadium on 1st and Tryon Streets.
29731-1586, (803) 327-2097.
Workshop-$20 Both-$25
Enneagram:
A Beginning Look
Enneagram as a useful spiritual tool. Enneagram helps us examine our motives: why we do what we do. Father Maier
Director.
This overnight retreat will introduce participants to study and prayer with
is
a Catholic pastor in
no church parking. Serving
by
$45 $20 Commuters
& very tasty prices, tool
St. Peter Church 507 South Tryon Street Charlotte, NC 28202
Media Assistant The Diocesan Media Resource Center is seeking to hire a part-time (27.5 hours per week) Media Assistant. The qualified candidate should be a catechist and enjoy working with media and the public. Word processing skills necessary. Sent letter of interest, resume and references to: Office of Telecommunications, Gail Hunt Violette, Director, 1524 East Morehead St., Charlotte, NC 28207.
Sept. 13.
kickoff.
serve the poor.
Child Caregivers Child Care Aides needed for After School Program August 1996-June 1997 at St. Ann, All Saints, St. Patrick, St. Gabriel, Holy Trinity and Our Lady of Assumption Catholic Schools. Hours are 2:45-6 p.m. on regular school days. Salary: $7.00/hour. Send resume or call Ellen Buening for an application: Ms. Ellen Buening, 641 Neill Ridge Rd., Matthews, NC 28105, (704) 844-0277.
Cross-cultural and refugee resettlement experience, 4 years human service degree and two years experience or equivalent combination of education and experience. Must be organized, highly motivated and flexible. Must have excellent interpersonal skills, problem solving ability, computer knowledge, written and oral communications skills and a valid driver's license. Proficiency in Serbo-Croation, Spanish, Vietnamese and/or Somali preferred. Send resume to: Catholic Social Services Refugee Office, 2217 Eastway Dr., Charlotte, NC 28205, Attn:
Father Paul Maier
Preregister
All profits are given to
Employment Opportunities
Case Manager
Sept. 27-28
Lebanon, Va. and a veteran student and teacher with Enneagram.
Music
photo from Reuters
Sarah Morgan, P.O. Box 11566, Rock
Indoor/outdoor seating in a friendly, picnic setting. Sorry, food 2 Vz hours prior to
CNS
registration contact:
Concert-$10
St. Peter's
before. Doctors said the results were normal.
Anne Church
St.
He
underwent an abdominal CAT scan the day
Concert
Hill, S.C.
Visit
Gandolfo Aug.
David Haas Liturgist and Musician
TriEORTOKV
Director of Resource
Development
Bede Parish, Williamsburg, Va., seeks Director of Resource Development to lead campaign to construct and endow new church and related facilities. Following campaign, position will develop and coordinate parish stewardship of time, talent, treasure. BA and three years experience in non-profit fund raising St.
434 Charlotte Avenue P.O. Box 11586 Rock Hill, SC 29731 (803) 327-2097
J
required. Contact: Rev. William H. Carr,
23185.
10 Harrison Ave., Williamsburg, Va.
The Catholic News
August 23, 1996
A
church opens its doors to the struggles of laborers for more humane working conditions and better wages ... and becomes
FATHER JOHN S. RAUSCH MORGANTON — Large pots of
black beans cooking for hours and
food and
warmed in a microwave promised a meager lunch for the 300 poultry workers on strike against Case Farms, Inc. A dozen volunteers working in the kitchen of St. Charles Borromeo's parish hall formed an assembly line to make bean and cheese tacos for the strikers, 90 percent of whom are Latino. The kitchen buzzed with folks reporting from the picket line and transporting food and people.
Ken
Whittington, pastor, had opened the hall for the workers and wrote a letter to area people describing the workers' grievances and begging
I
"Oh
yes," he
wrote, "St. Charles will be their head-
The work stoppage occurred
llas
Father
spiritual support.
real.
quarters while they seek justice."
torti-
after
a series of unethical practices that in-
clude unsafe working conditions, disrespect of workers, refusal to bargain col-
low wages and a poor social environment. In late April an ecumenilectively,
cal delegation of seligious leaders vis-
Morganton, interviewed workers and documented the conditions in a fact
They
or face arrest for trespassing.
finding report.
fused and were arrested. On May 15, 1995, about 300 workers struck the plant
The
report highlights the
dangerous line speed as 90 chickens a minute pass by workers, resulting in repetitive motion injuries and cuts. Case
Farms requires workers, the report "to purchase
some of
their
own
says,
safety
love
encyclical
ing brutal repression. Pope John Paul
states,
must
Father Whittington offers a 5 p.m. Spanish Mass every Sunday for his Guatemalan parishioners. On Saturday nights between 75 and 100 Latino parishioners attend a charismatic prayer meeting. There is Bible study on Wednesdays, and music practice for three choirs, each in
re-
a different dialect.
Father Whittington
is
involved in
the labor struggle because
it's
assuming manner he says, "All I've ever done at this church is open the doors." But, in doing that, he made the church real.
Glenmary Father John
S.
Rausch
teaches at Appalachian Ministries Education Resource Center in Berea, Ky. He has a master's degree in economics and has worked in community ministries more
than 20 years.
seek justice in the work-
home game
Tickets are being offered at $5.00 per drawing per Panthers
Row
Section 538
24 Seats 4-3). This is a fund Catholic Church. Please do not gamble, but have fun!
Youth Ministry
(2)
seats
in
Please indicate the number of
704.523.2118
tickets to
be purchased
for the
(includes
raiser for St.
home games
James
listed
below:
Number
Opponent
Date
of Drawing Tickets
Raffle
Dates
PM) 26
(4:00
Aug. 3 Chicago Bears (pre-season game) Aug. 17 Buffalo Bills (pre-season game) Sept. 1 Atlanta Falcons Sept. 22
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20 Nov. 10
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Dec.
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Oct.
Golden Lyre Records Proudly Presents Keith Wells' Newest Recording
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Number of tickets number of tickets x $5.00 = Please send check or money order (for the price) and this form St. James Catholic Church
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MA 01720 Amount
6)
$ $ $ $ $ 2.95
7)
game
games game at 4:00 PM
9 days prior to respective
take place 9 days before the
will
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in
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notified
9 days prior to game, by phone,
to
be followed by
Money will be refunded should the maximum of 100 tickets be exceeded The Rules Committee can change the rules as appropriate
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the
people's most pressing need. In an un-
PANTHERS TICKET DRAWING two
of
"Emigration in search of work no way become an opportunity
in
for financial or social exploitation."
nized workers' rights to join a union, to
contact Paul Kotlowski
II
Laborem Exercens
in his encyclical
The Catholic Church has recogto
his
in 1891.
from Guatemala flee-
as immigrant labor
That strike lasted three days and ended when the company agreed to discuss an array of workers' grievances. Not satisfied with their treatment, Case Farms workers elected to join the Laborers' International Union of North America on July 12, 1995, by a vote of 237 to 183. Although the NLRB certified the election and ordered the company to negotiate with the union, Case Farms stalled with legal maneuvers.
and
Rerum Novarum
Many of the workers at Case Farms come
in solidarity.
strike
Leo XIII issued
place since Pope
equipment, including safety gloves and boots .... 50 cents for plastic gloves, $13.50 for a safety glove, and $12.75 for boots." Wages range between $6. 10 and $6.85 an hour. The crux of the strike focuses on Case Farms' refusal to negotiate a contract for more humane conditions and wages. A year ago a Guatemalan worker was denied a bathroom break, so coworkers complained to the plant manager about working conditions. The manager ordered the delegation back to work
ited
World Youth Day Paris August 1997 for more information, Office
1
Seek Justice For Poultry Workers
Striking Laborers By
& Herald
12
The Catholic News
& Herald
August 23, 1996
House Of Prayer Offers
Spiritual
Caring Hearts AIDS Ministry Receives Governor's Award
Haven
By PAUL FREDETTE Correspondent
"My house
shall be a house of prayer for all peoples, says the
Lord. " (Isaiah 56:7)
HOT SPRINGS
—
Since 1976 this prophetic word has found place to prosper at the Jesuit Residence and House of Prayer overlooking the town of Hot Springs. Over the years, the retreat
house has served a small but steady
number of pilgrims seeking the quiet simplicity of its modest accommodaAcross the spacious ground is the Hiker's Hostel, built in 1974 to serve the needs of hundreds of hikers regularly emerging from the Appalachian tions.
Trail alongside the Jesuit Residence.
The house and property were acquired by Jesuit Father Andrew Graves 1955 to serve as a parish residence and chapel for the fledgling Catholic community in the mountains of Madison County. It was not until 1968 that the present A-frame Chapel of the Redeemer was built to serve worshippers. The Maryland Province of the Society of Jesus decided to expand their minisin
try in this area at a
was
a
growing
time
when
"there
interest in 'small as
ASHEVILLE
good' and a renewed interest in nature," said Jesuit Father Vincent Alagia, director of the House of Prayer for the past seven years.
to fo-
mountain
make
lives," said Father Alagia, "cannot help but be opened to let God into their
lives."
In a relaxed tone that barely hov-
ered above a whisper, he spoke about the habits of prayer
among
those
who
among those HIV/AIDS.
care-giving activities
ally for private or
guided retreats lasting week. Lately, Christians of other denominations have grown more comfortable with this experience and often visit the retreat house. "We
ently," he said slowly as if to savor this
from a few days
simple truth. "At times, people don't even realize they're praying because
now
from non-Christians,"
ing in a particular way, they doubt they
"You can probably
are praying at all." Father Alagia un-
count them on one hand, but they are coming."
derscored the need to realize the essen-
Thefollowing is the last in a threepart series submitted by Maggi Nadol, Respect Life Coordinatorfor the Dio-
character of any prayer as being
cese of Charlotte, with text furnished
The
by the National Conference of Catho-
to a
get requests
said Father Alagia.
Father Alagia certain whether
spirituality,
but he's
quite sure the atmo-
sphere of the house
answers a strong need: "The hospital-
—
ity
—
the informality
small, homey and safe." His smile grew as he passed on a recent retreatant's remark that "the schedule didn't look like a schedule." is
Retreatants
work out
rhythm of their day individually to allow time to walk the the
"Everybody prays
affected with
differ-
Catholics: Act To
they identify prayer itself with a certain
tial
way of praying.
one's relationship with the Lord. vitality
of prayer, he said, can be mea-
sured by the consequences. "Prayer especially alive if
it
leads to action
no prayer is valid unless
it
lic
—
countercultural and to speak on behalf of all
One
reason for Father Alagia' atmosphere around the House of Prayer is the inevitability of meeting the poor. Anyone who makes a retreat there for any length of time will
charm and
and will come
attractive
in touch with
ing the poor," he said, "they can't help
but be touched by the poor."
The House of Prayer
the only
is
North Carolina. and board of direc-
Jesuit retreat center in
Currently, the staff
they can enjoy hot mineral baths. They
uled for remodeling to restore
themselves
time to read, rest and pray.
hard no? to pray in an environment of nature. Anybody with some experience of God in their "It's
respond pastorally, sensitively and individually to pregnant women on the receiving end of terrible advice about
tors are consulting with officials of the
as retreatants in recent years,
allow
some people claim that it is acceptable to kill some of the most helpless among us by means of a procedure called partial-birth abortion. Our obligations as Christians are clear: With every means available to us we must
from touch-
the poor. "If they don't run
Broad River where
trails or
human life, whether it provokes admiration or ridicule. The Good Samaritan is our model. We must follow the example of this parable and serve not only those we choose, but especially those who choose us, precisely because they need our help. Today, in the United States,
takes one out 1
partiality to the
location
is it
their' s
make
making
to year-
the facility
banned.
it
Attorneys At
Our Holy
Father's words leave
us in no doubt:
"We are the people of
life because God ... has given us the Gospel of life and by this same Gospel we have been transformed and saved ... [W]e are called to act accordingly. " (The Gospel of Life, 79)
FREDETTE
Kaplan, Gilpin
their children's future.
community, and for the benefit of the common good, we must appeal to our elected officials who decide whether partialbirth abortion will continue or be
sched-
any bigger. "The people have indicated their hopes that the chapel would receive attention first, but there are no grand plans for building or expanding, only improving and enhancing what we already have." better without
and
Publicly, as a Catholic
round use. The overall plan, according to Father Alagia, is to
Bishops.
Catholics are called to be
is
side oneself."
get past the initial
& Harris
The Fmnclscan Center
Law
COURT ARCADE
TRIANGLE BUSINESS PARK
725 East Trade
Charlotte, N.C. 28202
4200 - F South Blvd. Charlotte, N.C. 28202
(704) 375-3641
(704) 529-6170
Automobile Accidents
Worker's Compensation Social Security Federal Criminal Cases
Drug Offenses
End
Partial-Birth Abortion
If they aren't pray-
spa on the banks of the French visit the
Marlene and Steve Stowe spend quiet time together on the grounds of the Jesuit House of Prayer.
there.
Maryland Province about modest but much-needed renovations. The Chapel of the Redeemer, which has served parishioners as well
mountain
Personal Injury
others."
come
they are drawn to Catholic or Jesuit
St.
life better for
Since its founding two years ago, Caring Hearts AIDS Ministry has grown to involve the efforts of more than 50 parishioners in a variety of
cording to Father Alagia,
isn't
Photos by PAUL
Joan of Arc
a recipient of the 1996
of your community and state for your organization's exemplary efforts to
Most of them, accome individu-
spring of spirituality.
is
represents the pride and appreciation
than 500 people a year have this
parish
— Caring Hearts
St.
In a letter inviting Father C. Morris Boyd, pastor of St. Joan of Arc, to the awards ceremony in September, Governor Jim Hunt said, "This award
cus on Ignatian spirituality," added Father Alagia.
been finding their way to
Ministry of
Governor's Award for Outstanding Volunteer Service.
The residence had always been large enough to accommodate a few retreatants and, with some remodeling, was made adequate as a "small place in which
More
AIDS
L
~m
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The Catholic News
August 23, 1996
New Endowment To come
don't
and say
to the pastor
Provide For Educational Needs,
from page
& Herald
13
Marx, from page 5
1
Founup with endowments, and has the machinery for distributing the income and maximizing the yield of these funds." plained. "But the diocese has the
I
haven't got enough to send a child to
dation, an organization already set
school or what have you. This type of
how
deeply the rest of the country feels
their loss.
We
all
know how
easily
it
"My grandfather, Thomas Yates,
with the Foundation's work. "I think the Catholic community is becoming
could have been one of our loved ones. On a glorious Saturday morning following a week at the beach, my husband and I began packing up for the return trip home. I turned on the Olympics for Bobby and Teresa who were enjoying many of the Games' events. "What's happening?" Bobby asked. "What do they mean a pipe bomb?" A few minutes later our friends' nine-yearold son, Will, rode his bike to our beach house for a final good-bye. I listened to Bobby recount the tragedy to Will. "They put the pipe bomb in the luggage at the Olympics and then called 911."
and mother, Isabel Murphy, were
more and more aware of the Founda-
Bobby
people that realized it takes an education to bring people up from a com-
tion because of various articles in the
walked up our front porch steps and
Catholic newspaper," he said.
"Is this unusual?"
person that we're talking about doesn't
do that. They just quietly suffer or walk away and go to some other place. That's who we hope to reach."
The purpose of
— both
"It
endowment
the
Sacred Heart and the New England church is to provide scholarships for the benefit of students from each parish. Those include scholarships at
was
my
thinking that the di-
ocesan Foundation was in as good a position if not better than anyone to be able to handle the endowment," he added.
—
Attorney helped
Don Hodgens, who
Murphy with
the
endowment
for pupils attending the parish schools,
process, said one of his responsibili-
scholarships for parishioners in need
ties is to outline different
of vocational training
at
a local com-
munity college, or cost of
clients
As a
tuition for
students in a Catholic seminary.
mon
_
Ed Murphy
laborer, increase their ability to
making, specifically
in the textile busi-
ships.
Murphy explained. Once he decided to create an enHis grandfather left an active busidowment, Murphy said the next quesness career to establish a school teachtion was how to set it up. "I couldn't ing the textile trades, and his mother was possibly do it because I'm not going to one of the first be here too many teachers at the more years. And the diocese has the school. His late I didn't have the wife, Eleanor, organization to Foundation ... and has the ness,"
was
also
teacher for
machinery for distributing the
The bank could do it. Or a
income and maximizing the
private trust or
do
a
many
years; hence the
names of the two
it.
legal firm could
yield of these funds.
scholar-
trust
Catholic,
do
he ex-
it,"
avenues for
charitable interests.
Hodgens was
The endowment
improve the product they're
learn and
who have
is
familiar
administered
Foundation officials worked Hodgens and Murphy to make the endowment process as easy as
on the and miracles often included water, fish and nets because he understood all that these images could teach us about everyday life and eternal
closely with
possible. "Jim Kelley (executive director of the Foundation)
was very
helpful,
knowledgeable and cooperative in explaining how the Foundation is set up and used," Hodgens said. "Through his gift, Mr. Murphy is leaving a legacy that will help meet the at
both Sacred Heart
Kelley said individuals establishing
endowments take another step
in liv-
ing out the life of stewardship. "Just as
Conchita. She
is
house with
a tin roof, a
dirt floor ty.
Through CFCA, you can sponsor a
lives in
in
one-room
a
and no
Ordinarily
if
cooking
for
this
her
but finds
stiff
wooden bed
straw mattress.
month
leaders
children
child like
little
will
as you
child receive nourishing food,
change a
like.
write you - and you
where your
But most of
helping a child
medical care
all,
may
write
you have the
Please don't miss this opportunity to
I'll
them
I
will
Teenager
Girl
pledge
make
a difference.
Visit
our
new showroom
on the corner of Oak Broad Streets
Enclosed Bill
i
CFCA
I
Catholic
I
Child
I
Sponsorship
I
in
most need
Address
City/State/Zip
Other $
contribute:
monthly i
Boy/Girl
my
is
quarterly
my
first
JX
semi-annually
annually
Send to first
contribution of $
sponsorship payment to Credit Card No.
Children and Aging (CFCA)
credit card:
-
-
-_
One Elmwood Ave
/ P.O. Box
3910
Kansas City, KS 66103-0910 1-800-875-6564
cannot sponsor now, but
Please send
me more
I
enclose
ID g> co
Christian Foundation for
my
Exp Date I
in
Mooresville, N.C.
is:
Q$15 Q$20 Q$25
$10
It was in the Jordan River that Jesus chose to begin his public ministry following his baptism. And it was by the seaside that he called his first followers. Along the shore in the afternoon, he fed 5,000 people with five barley loaves and two dried fish. In the evening, He walked on water and calmed the sea and winds. Although at times it may seem that the world is adrift, if we fasten ourselves to a faith which is anchored in the teachings of the Gospel we will extinguish the hatred in our world. Near the lakeside city of Capernaum, Jesus spoke the words that I pray may bring some comfort to the families in anguish on the Long Island shore: "Let me firmly assure you, he who believes has eternal life. I am the bread of life. ..This is the bread that comes down from heaven for a man to eat and never die. I myself am the living bread come down from heaven. If anyone eats this bread he shall live forever; the bread I will give is my flesh for the life of the
WE HAVE MOVED!
satisfaction of
(please print)
Boy
life.
friend
as often
help one ehild at a Catholic mission site:
My monthly
crowd who had gathered
shore. His parables
child lives,
Sponsor a clMd today!
life!
my
gift
of $
information about sponsorship
FOUNDED AND DIRECTED BY CATHOLIC LAY PEOPLE
Member U
•
IT}usic2s Electron ics.lne.
X z o
(704)375-8108 (800)331-0768
S Catholic Mission Association, National Catholic
Development Conference, Catholic Network
ot Volunleer Servic
National Catholic Council tor Hispanic Ministry Financial report available
Some-
llllll[!lllllllflllllllll!lllf!lllllllllllfHllt!IIIHIIIHIHlll!llM!TB
need.
in
to fish.
a boat and teach
world."
&
Yes,
sit in
child,
and the CFCA newsletter. Your new
as $10 a month, only 33 cents a day, you
literally
Founda-
the
He knows how
Jesus has called us
the chance to go to school and hope for a brighter future.
You can
the
or establishing an endowment, contact Jim Kelley, Executive Director of the Foundation, 1524 East Morehead Street, Charlotte, N.C. 28207, or call (704) 331-1709 or (704) 377-6871.
rowboat.
is
their personal family history, a descrip-
Catholic mission sites around the world.
For as
For information about tion
Your
you become a sponsor
tion of the country
(CFCA), a Catholic
sponsorship program assisting needy children at
can help a poor
their families.
you receive a photo of your
You can help one very poor
and Aging
com-
tirelessly to
do
When
Conchita through Christian Foundation for Children
and
do the work
six.
hope!
is
their
said.
sponsorship dollars help them
to
But there
who know
improve conditions for needy
is
and
even basic necessities are a luxury to her family of
hand-in-hand
munities and labor
$25 per
for playthings,
Church of the Diocese of Charlotte," he
we
Catholic missionaries and lay
with a
as a day laborer, there
no money
But
with dedicated, trusted
Because her
father earns only
to
you to do what you can.
CFCA works
comfort on
little
afford
month
not possible for you,
is
invite
and bathing. She gets very tired
a
ing benefits of sponsorship.
old,
she must help her
mother carry water
$20
takes
it
we make gifts from our monthly income, we also have an opportunity to give from our accumulated assets to endow the
provide a child with the life-chang-
electrici-
Only four years
amount you can
with the
child
when we're
times Jesus would
lowing Mr. Murphy's example by remembering the Church in their current and future estate plans."
Guatemala
a time of year
perfect vehicle."
parishioners across the diocese are fol-
his
This
reminded how much Jesus enjoyed the sea. He spent a lot of time traveling by
and Holy Name parishes for generations to come," Kelley said. "More and more
month
said,
by Foundation staff, a board, and is professionally managed, Hodgens noted. "For Mr. Murphy and what he wanted to accomplish, the Foundation was a
needs of individuals
at a Catholic mission for just $10 a
said good-bye to his friend,
on request / Donations are U
$
tax deductible
3.,,
M
,
MUM.
MMMMMnMM.MMMM MM,
14 The Catholic
News
& Herald
August 23, 1996
Diocesan News Briefs Symposium On Aging HENDERSONVILLE — The
Sacred Heart Church. Leaders' School 1
1th
Annual National Symposium Ministry With the Aging, co-sponsored by the Diocese of Charlotte CRISM office, is Oct. 1 -4 at Kanuga Conference Center. For information, call (704) 251-0428.
Foster Families Needed
CHARLOTTE — Catholic Services needs foster families or willing to
become
follows.
CHARLOTTE longer meets
are
licensed in N.C. to
Hospital Volunteers
Needed
CHARLOTTE — Mercy and Pres-
South Charlotte Area Ultreya, which inSt. Gabriel and other parishes on the south end of Charlotte, meets at St. Matthew Church the fourth Sunday each month beginning in October. cludes
Marriage Encounter Weekend CHARLOTTE The next Marriage Encounter weekend is Sept. 20-22. To register, call Tom and Emilie Sandin,
—
5081.
Holy Angels Golf Tournament
byterian hospitals need volunteers to as-
hospitals' volunteer coordinators for in-
formation.
—
Women
in
treat for
men that explores the partnermen and women in marriage,
Ministry"
is
Church and public ministry directed by Peter McCord. "Christ With Me, Christ Before Me, Christ Above Me" is a Sept. 13-15
men of Irish descent to reflect
on the call to be Christ's companion on our journey to God directed by Jesuit Father Joseph McGovern. "Spirit Without the Spirits" is a Sept. 20-22 retreat for recovering alcoholic women in A.A. For information, contact Jesuit House of Prayer, P.O. Box 7, Hot Springs, N.C. 28743, (704) 622-7366.
Food For Fans
CHARLOTTE is
— Pre-game food
offered prior to the Caro-
lina Panthers' Sept.
1
Living Waters Retreats
MAGGIE VALLEY —
a Sept. 6-8 re-
the
and music
tournament to benefit Holy Angels is Monday, Sept. 23 at Cramer Mountain Country Club. For information, contact Josh at (704) 825-4161.
House Retreats "Men and
HOT SPRINGS
retreat for
CRAMER MOUNTAIN — A golf
the gift shop, and in the
intensive care waiting room. Contact the
ships of
Ultreya no
(910) 274-4424. For information, call Steven and Peggy Geiger, (704) 845-
(704) 343-9954.
Jesuit
—
Gabriel Church. The
Social
who
provide loving care for infants. For information, call Sandra Breakfield at
sist families, in
at St.
game beginning
10:30 a.m. at St. Peter Church two blocks east of Ericsson Stadium.
of the Creatures" retreat directed
Thomas
is
"Canticle
a Sept. 9-15 nature
by Franciscan Father Dominican Sister
Vigliotta and
Jeanette Stang. Cost
is $235. "Drink the Living Water" is a Sept. 19-26 active, interactive, inner-active
with nature directed by Blessed Sacrament Father Robert Rosseau and Sisters of Charity Sister Fran Grady. Cost is
$235.
"Francis, Go Repair My Church" an Oct. 4-6 weekend retreat celebrating the feast of St. Francis including a dramatization of the Transitus directed by Conventual Franciscan Father Alfred is
Cost is $85, "Songs are for Singing"
Sartor.
is an Oct. 11-13 weekend retreat in the colorful
surroundings of -the Smokies in autumn directed by
Burke. Cost
"The
Dominican Father Michael is
$85.
Stillness of the Forest" is
an
der Discalced Carmelites' Oct. 17-20 lent retreat to
si-
open the celebration for
the Centennial of St. Therese
is
directed
by Carmelite Father Keiran Kavannaugh at the Avila Retreat Center. Cost is $105 for three days, $ 1 50 for four days (Thursday is optional). To register, send a $15 check payable to OCDS to: Sandra Malkovsky, 2131 Eastridge Dr., Apex, N.C. 27502. For information, call (919) 772-2067.
and Brenda Petras. Cost is $235. "Make a Joyful Noise Unto the Lord" is an Oct. 25-3 1 retreat of exploration and prayer inspired by the beauty of the mountains in autumn directed by Sisters of Charity Sisters Gloria
and Fran Grady. Cost "Let 17 retreat
Golden Agers Meet
is
Solomon
$235.
Us Celebrate" is a Nov. 11for those who like to mingle
with spirituality, Eucharist and Thanksgiving directed by Conventual Father
John Quigley, Joanne Wheller and Gus Tamborello.
To
LINCOLNTON
register for these retreats, con-
Living Waters Reflection Center, 1420 Soco Rd., Maggie Valley, NC
tact
— The
Golden Agers group of St. Dorothy Church meets the fourth Wednesday each month and welcomes new members. For infor-
Institute
Rescheduled
Hibernians Meet The Ancient Order of Hibernians meet Thursday, Aug. 29 at 7:30 p.m. at the Columbus Swim and Tennis Club, 7523 Idlewild
CHARLOTTE
28751. For information, 3833.
call
Day
of Reflection
GREENSBORO
Neumann Church
St.
John
to
be
in-
cluded.
(704) 926-
Post-Abortion Support Group
—
H.E.A.R.T., GREENSBORO Encouragement for AbortionHealing Related Trauma, is the Greensboro Pregnancy Care Center post-abortion support group for women who have unresolved
at St. Vincent de Paul Church beginning with the sacrament of reconciliation at 6 p.m. Prayer director Capuchin Father Sylvester Catallo from St.
Aug. 30
Lawrence Brindisi Friary in Beacon, N.Y. will celebrate Mass at 7:30 p.m. Father Catallo has directed prayer cenacles throughout the nation, and recently returned from a cenacle in Italy. For information, call Marcia Ebner, (704) 849-0690.
Get Ready For The Glory
CHARLOTTE
— "The 3 R's
for
the 3rd Millennium: Repentance, Rec-
Renewal," a day of reflecon preparation for Christ presented by the charismatic renewal team at St. Thomas Aquinas Church is Sept. 21 from 9:30 a.m.-3 p.m. For information, call Joyce Brown, (704) 547-1836. onciliation,
tion
Eucharistic Adoration
ASHEVILLE
— The Basilica of
St. Lawrence, D.M. welcomes all to adoration of the Most Blessed Sacrament daily from 6 a.m.-9 p.m. For information, call the basilica office, (704) 252-
6042.
&
tion experiences.
jackpot will be given away every week.
confidential and
St.
—
will host the annual
Contact your parish office
Center. Cash prizes including a $500
at
—
(910)
Marian Movement Cenacle CHARLOTTE A Marian Movement of Priests and Faithful Cenacle is
diocesan celebration Sunday, Oct. 27 at 3 p.m. for couples married 25 or 50 years.
Salisbury and Albemarle areas meets the
7:30 p.m.
And Gold
Silver
at
Min-
day of reflection and friendship Greensboro Vicariate is Tuesday, Sept. 24 from 9:30 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. at St. Paul the Apostle Church. Franciscan Father David Hyman will conduct the program.
CHARLOTTE
Hodges
274-4901.
for the
by Knights of Columbus Council 770 is played Mondays at 7 p.m. beginning Sept. 9 at St. Ann Church in the Activity
at
A CRISM
according to participants' needs. For information, call Marilyn
istries)
And Leaders' Schools SALISBURY — Ultreya for the
Friday each month
—
(Catholic Retired Invited to Special
Ann Bingo CHARLOTTE — Bingo sponsored
last
—
Rd. All Catholic men of Irish ancestry are welcome. For information, call Tim Lawson, (704) 522-9728.
mation, call Christine Kiser, (704) 4354813.
Ultreya
eight weeks. Meetings will be scheduled
Focus on Initiation, 90 Days Institute has been rescheduled for Jan. 1729, 1997, just in time for the Lenten and Easter seasons. Early registration by Oct. 17 for special savings. Call Sheri Wilson, (910) 765-3499 for details.
Oct. 14-20 nature retreat directed by
Father Eric Pitre, John Boyles, and Frank
—
area.
retreat
at
Carmelite Retreat APEX The Secular (Third) Or-
—
GREENSBORO Piedmont Knights of Columbus Council 939 recently rededicated the .William Ries Memorial Playground at the Mclver Center. Originally donated in 1 981 with proceeds from Operation LAMB, the playground was dedicated to Past State Deputy William Ries, who was also Past Grand Knight of Council 939. Madelyn Ries and daughter Mary were on hand for the ceremony, along with the honor guard from Abbot V.G. Taylor Assembly. A granite plaque replaced the original memorial. The Mclver Education Center is an education facility which specializes in the education of physically and mentally challenged students. The principal, Tim Clifford, was on hand to accept the new memorial. Piedmont Council 939 is actively involved in community and charitable causes in the Greensboro
The Catholic News & Herald welcomes parish newsfor the diocesan news
feelings and needs regarding their abor-
Good photographs, preferably black and white, also are welcome. Please
Groups are free and meet once a week for
submit news releases and photos at least 10 days before the date of publication.
briefs.
August 23, 1996
The Catholic News
& Herald
15
World And National News Briefs Keep Pressuring Congress On Abortion, Senator Urges
SAN DIEGO
(CNS)
partial-birth abortion "the
— Calling
most
revolt-
a legitimate option for Catholics, al-
Catholic Relief Services, the overseas
the church that journeys through history,
though
relief
and development agency of the U.S. bishops, and Bishop Reilly is chairman of the U.S. Catholic Conference Committee on International Policy.
uniting
"not the only legitimate option," said an official of the U.S. Catholic Conference. Just as abortion is that it's
many people
ing issue I've ever had to deal with,"
single issue for
Republican Sen. Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania urged Catholics to keep pressure on Congress to override President Clinton's veto of legislation banning the procedure. "We're going to win the override in the House, but right now we're 12 votes short in the Senate," he said
the past single issues have included can-
Aug. 1 3 at a reception for Catholic members of Congress and Catholic delegates to the Republican National Convention in San Diego. Santorum, who is Catholic, said he had received at least 70,000 postcards urging the override as part of a
campaign
initiated
by the U.S. bish-
ops. "Partial-birth abortion has been put
on the back burner by the press and by everyone else except the Catholic Church," he
on civil rights, the Vietor labor unions, "and there is
didates' stands
nam War
nothing wrong with that," said John Carr.
Abortion,
a
is
it is
to be considered
by
issue
— Voting on
is
not
new
the basis of a single
in U.S. politics,
and
it is
Pope Says Young Catholics Must Become 'Living Icons' Of The Church VATICAN CITY (CNS) Young
—
Catholics must
become "living icons" of
to
be held in
Paris.
voters,
Hungary
beth in Convent Station.
Bishops
Call For
Peace
In
Oppose Sanctions
WASHINGTON
Single-Issue Voting Called 'Not
(CNS)
not the only issue"
he continued. "We have a culture that is not only antagonistic to the unborn child but to the poor child," added Carr, who is secretary of the USCC Department of Social Development and World Peace. Carr addressed participants in a workshop on political responsibility at Xavier Center on the campus of the College of St. Eliza-
Burundi,
The Only Option' For Catholics CONVENT STATION, N.J.
"fundamental human
rights issue, but
U.S.
said.
today, in
all men and women in Christ, Pope John Paul II said. The international World Youth Day gatherings, he said, are an opportunity for young people from different countries, races, languages and backgrounds to witness to the unity found in Christ. Pope John Paul announced the publication Aug. 15 of his message for the 1997 World Youth Day,
(CNS)
— The
people of Burundi "deserve a respite from terror" said a joint statement by Auxiliary Bishop John H. Ricard of Baltimore and Bishop Daniel P. Reilly of Worcester, Mass. They also opposed sanctions against the African nation. "All
FOUR GREAT NAMES to
wanton acts of violence against innocent lives must cease," their Aug. 14 statement said. Bishop Ricard is president of
PEWS —STEEPLES—
manufacturer offine church furniture TELEPHONE N.C.
I
DAY OF RENEWAL^
''.THE 3R S FOR THEf-| $k "iRO MILLENNIUM #4 7001 E.Endependence tg 0<-
„«•
535-4455
Speakers:
No
THE
Brown
St. Gabriel
Church
Hungary Sept. 6-7 with stops the Benedictine monastery at Pannonhalma. II
P.
is to visit
in
by Anthony De Feo
Budapest, Gyor and
O'Rourke
Accountant 4921 Albemarle Road, Suite 116
Will be provided.
547-1836.
at (704)
Direction: 1-85 1 )
Take 1-77 north
W.
2) Exit 45,
NC 28205
consultation, planning, and preparation for individuals and small businesses. Accounting services available.
Tax
FUNERAL HOME LLC 47 1 5 Margaret Wallace Road at
—
Carolina Catholic
U
Idlewild
704/545-3553 Personalized Burial & Cremation Services Locally owned: John DeBord/Dana Marie DeBord
Buy & Sell Now!
Be
in
your new home before school
starts!
John Wagner
BookShoppe
Realtor
Go
4)
Take the next left
exit,
toward
7)
Second Church
8)
Go to the
light,
will
results for you!
Parishioner of St.
Celebrating 15 years of serving the Carolinas
to 1-85 north
Monday
through three lights
5) Turn
Let the "Family Man" produce rewarding
4410-F Monroe Rd. Charlotte, NC 28205 (704) 342-2878
T. Harris Blvd., East
3)
6)
Charlotte,
to 3:00 p.m.
For additional information call Joyce
Frank LaPointe, President
Member of
CNS map
Pope John Paul
(704) 568-7886
Meals: Bring a sack lunch.
DEALERSHIPS SERVING CHARLOTTE WITH INTEGRITY FOR OVER 33 YEARS!
Almanac and CNS reports
Registration Fee
Child care:
^
65%
0
Michael Coyle Ron Steinkamp Dates: Saturday. September 21, 1996 Time: 9:30 a.m.
Q
Prevalent Religion: Catholic
^ «« %<*'V><4- ^-t'
Thomas Aquinas Joyce Brown
Place: St.
41 00 E.Independence
2,847
Certified Public
j£j
HYUnDOl
Priests
Joseph
Independence
5354444
2,152
Source: 1996 Catholic
MITSUBISHI 531-3131
6.7 million
Parishes
-800-446-0945
REFINISHING E.
Catholics
1-800-334-1 139 Clinton, tlorth Carolina
6951
10.7 million
KIVETT'S INC.
KNOW
MITSUBISHI
Population
(UNCC & Hwy.
UNCC
turn right onto Suther
be on the right
second entrance
49)
Friday 9:30-5:00 Saturday 9:30-1:30 -
&
Gift Items Books Special orders/Mail orders
Welcome
(704) (p) 515-8717 (o) 334-6677 (h) 847-7673
Luke Church
16
The Catholic News
& Herald
August 23, 1996
St. Michael Church GASTONIA — Over 90 have by 1922 congregation had grown church was dedicated in
the to 58. The church was administered to by from the Abbey. In 1925, St. Michael attained parish status and Benedictine Father Walter O'Brien became its first resident pastor. Through the years, the Belmont Abbey Benedictines assisted St. Michael's growth in many ways. From architecture to construction, ecclesiatical duties to teaching, Belmont Abbey's clergy proved instrumental in St. Michael's develop-
Michael Church 708 St. Michael's Lane
April 1903 as a
ment.
mission of Mary Help of
room house was converted
Gastonia, N.C. 28052 (704) 867-6212
Christians
years
passed since born.
St.
Founded
who were
at
Michael Church was the request of workers
in the area building a mill, the
St.
Vicariate:
Church in Belmont, which in 1910 became Belmont Abbey
Gastonia
George M. Kloster Masses: Sat.: 5:00 p.m.; Sun.: 7:00 a.m.; 8:30, 11 :15 a.m.; Spanish: 3rd Sunday each month, 3:30 p.m. Number of parishioners: 2,300 Number of households: 915 Pastor: Rev.
Cathedral.
Less than 15 churchgoers
attended Mass in the early years; although
priests
grew
enhance the lives of children in 1942, when a fiveBy mid-decade, while the parish comprised 165 people, land on Gravely Avenue (now St. Michael's Lane) was bought to accommodate a new, permanent school building, which was dedicated in February 1952. The school, staffed by Sisters of Mercy from Belmont's Sacred Heart Convent, hosted over 120 students in its first year. Parish membership continued to expand during the 1940s, '50s and beyond. By May 1958, a new church had been built, a granite-faced structure adjacent to the school. An ever-growing parish and storm damage to the old church had served as reminders of the need for a new building. Benedictine Father Michael Mclnerney, who during his lengthy career designed more than 500 buildings, was architect. The church project marked the third time Father Mclnerney 's talents were called upon by St. Michael parish: In 1903 he had drawn up plans for the first church and in 1944 designed the school building. Parishioners broke ground for the construction of a parish center in 1978, a time during which more than 1,400 people Parish
life
to further
into a Catholic school.
attended
St.
Michael. The addition was dedicated in late April
1979.
Because Belmont Abbey falls under no diocesan jurisdicMichael, too, was under its "nullius" that is, of no diocese status for decades. That changed in 1962, when the parish was merged into the Diocese of Raleigh, and again 10 tion, St.
—
—
years later with the formation of the Charlotte Diocese.
was
the parish
The
staffed with
parish
ating the school,
is it
council activities,
CCD,
Abbey Benedictines
Still,
until 1989.
indeed an energetic one. In additipn to operalso engages in community projects, parish Knights of Columbus, nocturnal adoration,
scouting and sports.
It successfully operates Experienced shop which generates money that through the St. Vincent de Paul Society is filtered back into the community. Project 2000, a fund drive to expand the church, school and parish center buildings, is in its initial stages. St. Michael actively participates with the area's Lutheran community and plays a role in ecumenical services and projects as well. In an area which honors one of North Carolina's earliest and most important Catholic laymen, Judge William P. Gaston, St. Michael Church remains a vital presence in this Charlotte
Articles, a thrift
suburb.
•epteiiilker 8-1. Parisk Mission Sto Pkilip flke Aposfle OLnrclh
Attenzione It's
Boun giorno
last call.
remain on our November Italian excursion with Father Mauricio West.
let
Him bless you.
Introducing our Spiritual Directors ... pastor of St. Mary Church in Father Bob Charlton, SSCC Fairhaven, Mass., worked in youth ministry and conducted retreats for
Quante per favore?
shrine of St. Francis to Florence the grand spendors of Florentine Art and our final destination, Venice with its
how much, you ask?
children and young adults as well as parish missions.
As Vocational Director
of the Office of Youth Ministry, he guided seminarians in their first year of discernment. He is also the councillor at the Provincial of the Sacred Heart
and has written articles on the founding chrisms of the Sacred Heart Congregation and reflections of the life and spirit of Father Damien. New York Regional Director of the Sacred Gloria Anson Apostolate and the Sacred Heart Center in Heart Enthronement Syracuse, N.Y., has promoted the primacy of Jesus as Lord in the homes, schools and the marketplace. She has conducted parish missions throughout the country and chaired the National Sacred Heart
—
$1,900. That's round trip air hotels, from Charlotte,
**
We depart November 3, re-
worship Jesus;
—
Our Italian adventure will take you from Rome and a papal audience to Assisi
romantic canals.
behold His heart; discoverJesus,
A few seats
breakfast daily, welcome and departure dinners, and all
turning November 12. Call today. Don't miss this grand opportunity to visit Italy with Father Mauricio West.
entrance fees.
Conference
The hours
at the Franciscan University in Steubenville,
Ohio
in 1993.
for the mission are: Sunday, Sept. 8 from 7-8:30 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 12 Monday, Sept. 9
Come, enrich your
—
life;
strengthen your faith. Come, receive His love and
from 9-10:30 a.m. and 7-8:30 p.m. St.
Philip the Apostle
Church
graces; rest your weary hearts.
525 Camden Dr., Statesyille, NC 28677
Come and
(704) 872-2579
See.