August 2019
Glenmary Home Missioners
Glenmary Volunteers
Photo by Cassie Magnotta
Cultivating His Harvest
Recent volunteer “Mountain Managers” Maria Pangori (left) and Maggie Sheehan directed groups serving in community outreach.
A
sk Glenmary volunteer director Joe Grosek why he does what he does and he’ll point in two directions: to the volunteers he directs, and to the people of East Tennessee whom they serve. Joe, a Glenmary lay co-worker, has directed Glenmary’s volunteer program for nearly 20 years, first in Lewis County, Kentucky (for 13 years) and now in Grainger and Union counties in Tennessee. There, on Joppa Mountain, is a house for short-term volunteers and a few “tiny houses” for the Mountain Managers who run the program alongside Joe. Those Mountain Managers, who come live at Joppa Mountain for up to 24 months, are key to the program. “They serve as a bridge between the community of people in Grainger and Union counties and the volunteers—high school, college and adults—who come to serve. They’re responsible not only for the service and mission work that Glenmary does in the community, but also for the growth of the volunteers,” he says. The volunteers are typically newcomers to the region, so education is a big part of their service project. What is it like to live in poverty, they might learn. How are the cards stacked against the powerless? How does a life of faith empower both these people and the volunteers who come to serve? How does their volunteer service fit into the missionary role of the entire Church? Those are some of the central questions that volunteers might consider and pray about during their visit to Joppa Mountain. It is the Mountain (continued on reverse side)
I love to garden. At Glenmary headquarters, we are blessed to be on a former farm, in Fairfield, Ohio, now surrounded by suburban development. Our property, with its simple buildings, is an oasis of green. For years I lived in the novitiate house, formerly the farmhouse, where I served as a novicemaster. This summer, after I was elected to lead our Society, I moved across the parking lot to our residence, where about 12 of us have single-room apartments. We eat together. We welcome guests to worship with us, we share common spaces. And, here and there on the grounds, some of us have small gardens. Among my favorites to grow are tomatoes and basil. I feed and till the soil, start my seeds in my homemade closet-sized greenhouse, then move my plants into the garden. An early riser, I get out and water them before the sun shines, most days, all summer. There’s nothing finer to me, now in August, than a fresh-grown tomato, served with a little mozzarella cheese and fresh basil. It reminds me of our Glenmary parishes. We gather community, we help to build a church, and, over time, the community flourishes as a new parish. Our Glenmarians are like farmers, cultivating seeds that the Holy Spirit has planted. As Jesus tells his disciples, “The harvest is plentiful!” Yours in Christ,
Father Dan Dorsey President
“I hope they find the good in others, and find Christ in all people.” --Joe Grosek, Glenmary Co-worker
Starting next month:
Maria Betanco and Santiago Soto
Glenmary file photo
Managers who help guide the volunteer groups on this journey of discovery. There may be as many as five Mountain Managers living at the Glenmary house on Joppa Mountain, but more typically it’s two or three. They can be men or women, young or old, explains Joe: “It’s more common to have mixed generations here at once.” Why come? “There are different draws for everybody. Some people love the ministry that we do from working with the Latinos, doing construction labor. Other people feel called to work with youth. Some managers take a year with us as a time of discernment. Some are just dedicated to the mission of the Catholic Church and Glenmary. There are lots of reasons.” Joe has a desire for the people, young and old, who come to live at Joppa Mountain with Glenmary. “My dream is they get the charism of Glenmary.” Charism is biblical talk from St. Paul, referring to the extraordinary power given by the Holy Spirit, a spiritual gift, to fulfill the mission of the Church. A charism of Glenmary, the “Glenmary spirit,” is hopefulness and joy, that you experience among Glenmarians. But it’s also a deeper spirit, the very grace of God, that animates Glenmary ministry. It’s that grace that Joe wishes for his Mountain Managers, Glenmary’s long-term volunteers, “I hope they find the good in others, and find Christ in all people,” says Joe. And he has a dream for those groups whom the Mountain Managers direct. “The idea behind the volunteer program is to give people a taste of mission, and a taste of the mission regions of the United States. I want them make a connection between service and faith. I want them to learn to build community.” —John Feister
(Above) Recent Mountain Managers work at Joppa Mountain with Glenmary lay co-worker Joe Grosek (far-right) building a tiny house for long-term volunteers. Some volunteers’ work “pays it forward” for those volunteers who will follow.
Special Thanks to This Year’s Country Raffle Sponsors!
Next month we unveil a new name and a look for the BAM newsletter. Watch for Cultivate, the newsletter for Glenmary’s Monthly Giving
newsletter will be renamed:
Cultivate
Program. You can count on more mission stories, and a message from Glenmary’s new first-vicepresident, Father Aaron Wessman. And there will be monthly inspiration to share the Glenmary spirit. Our goal is a richer experience for you!
This newsletter is published monthly by Glenmary Home Missioners, P.O. Box 465618, Cincinnati, OH 45246-5618 • www.glenmary.org For more information about the Boost-A-Month Club, contact Father Don Tranel, dtranel@glenmary.org, 800-935-0975