Ursuline Sisters at the heart of many parish ministries
2022 Issue No. 59 ursulinesmsj.org
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Laudato Si´ • Hope & Firm Faith Book • Archives Winter
Ursuline Sisters of Mount Saint Joseph Proclaiming Jesus through Education and Christian Formation
Dear Friends,
It is the height of Autumn as I write this. The trees are garbed in glowing colors as properly belong to their species – brilliant reds and oranges in maples, a hint of deep purple in the oaks, and shocking yellow ginkgos. But I do not ask you to marvel at nature’s display of awesome pigments.
Instead, I simply ask this question:"Have you ever walked in the woods in winter?" The trees in the winter woods are bare and stark. The literature of “winter” is filled with words like diminishment, death, barrenness. But I would encourage you to add new words and a different tone to the winter woods. Think instead – revelation, unity, promise, legacy.
When walking in the woods in winter, I do not see separately “maple,” “oak,” “ash,” “hickory”; I simply see a single family of “trees.” I hear the whisper and click of tree speaking to tree. I see the hidden hearts of the tree and notice the grace and flow and richness that I miss when the trees are clothed in their foliage uniforms. Winter woods have an indescribably simple, yet complex, richness which is present at no other time of year.
Why do I ask you to imagine winter woods at a time like this? Because in this issue, you will read of the Ursuline Sisters who, even though “diminished” in numbers, are serving in parish ministry with a grace and richness that reflects their inner core. Like winter trees, as our Sisters have shared for many years their calling through service, the source of that calling becomes clearer. Those with whom and to whom our Sisters minister in parishes see and appreciate the ways they model the hospitality and love that embodies Saint Angela’s teaching and the Ursuline charism.
May your winter season this year not be a time of barrenness or diminishment, but a time replete with the promise of new birth and a freer sharing of hope and faith.
Blessings for the coming seasons of Advent and Nativity. In peace, Sister Sharon Sullivan, OSU
COVER: (Top) Sister Vivian Bowles, right, visits with second-graders preparing for First Reconciliation and First Eucharist on Oct. 5 at St. Alphonsus Parish near Mount Saint Joseph. Their catechist is Imelda Cecil. (Center) Sister Mary Ellen Backes visits with Father Manny Cuizon, pastor of St. Joseph Parish in Springfield, Ill., on Oct. 20. (Bottom left) On Oct. 5, Sister Rosanne Spalding brought Communion to parishioner Libby Girten in her home near Precious Blood Parish, Owensboro, Ky. “She’s wonderful to do this,” Girten said.
Ursulines
EDITORS: Director of Mission Advancement/Communications Dan Heckel, OSUA Communications Specialist/Graphic Design ................... Jennifer Kaminski, OSUA
MISSION ADVANCEMENT STAFF:
Coordinator of Ursuline Partnerships
Director of Development
Development Assistant
Mission Advancement Assistant
Contributing Writer
Doreen Abbott, OSUA
Carol Braden-Clarke
Sister Amelia Stenger, OSU
Sister Mary McDermott, OSU
Sister Ruth Gehres, OSU
2 Ursulines ALIVE
our Congregational Leader
From
Alive is published by the Ursuline Sisters of Mount Saint Joseph, Maple Mount, Ky. Three issues are published each calendar year.
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INDEX
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Ursulines Serving in Parishes
3-9 Laudato Si’ 9-11 Sisters in Archives
10 Powerhouse of Prayer 11 Soli Deo Gloria 12 Sister Spotlight
13 Obituaries 13 Eucharistic Adoration
13 Donor Spotlight 14 Thank you, Donors............................... 15-19 Hope & Firm Faith 20 Christmas Blessing
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and
proclaim
and
in
OUR
• Prayer • Service • Empowerment • Justice • Contemplative Presence In the spirit of Saint Angela Merici
Ursuline Sisters
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OUR MISSION We, the Ursuline Sisters of Mount Saint Joseph, sustained by prayer
vowed life in community,
Jesus through education
Christian formation
the spirit of our founder, Saint Angela Merici.
CORE VALUES
CONTACT US
of Mount Saint Joseph 8001 Cummings Road Maple Mount, Kentucky 42356
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Sisters of MSJ
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By Dan Heckel,
Staff
It has been 58 years since the Ursuline Sisters of Mount Saint Joseph – predominantly a group of school educators – first ventured into parish ministry. Today, there are more Sisters serving at churches than there are in the classroom.
“I just find energy doing it. I’ve never been bored,” said Sister Mary Ellen Backes. She was an Ursuline of Belleville, Ill., in 1995 when she began serving as pastoral assistant at St. Joseph Parish in Springfield, Ill. Following the merger with Mount Saint Joseph in 2005, Sister Mary Ellen has continued serving at St. Joseph, just a few blocks from where Abraham Lincoln is buried. Her 27 years at the same church are the longest consecutive tenure of any Sister in parish ministry.
“I’ve always enjoyed the parishioners,” she said. “When I was working in the schools, I liked working with the kids. But I didn’t have much to do with the parents. I thought I would be more useful connecting with the parents and the
kids.”
Sister Rosanne Spalding has spent 36 years serving at two parishes. For the past 24 years she has served at Precious Blood Church in Owensboro, Ky., as pastoral associate and director of religious education.
“I love the kids. I make it fun,” Sister Rosanne said. “Father Bob Willett once told me, ‘If the kids have fun and learn one new thing, you have been a success.’”
Among today’s Sisters, no one started earlier in parish ministry than Sister Julia Head, who in 1979 became coordinator of religious education at Our Lady of Lourdes Church in Owensboro. Sister Julia was a teacher at the school for a year, but with most Catholics abiding by a decree that required them to send their children to Catholic school, there weren’t many Catholic students in the public schools.
“A small group of parish members at Our Lady of Lourdes were attempting some religious education for a few families,” Sister Julia said. The pastor, Father Victor
Boarman, asked Sister Julia if she would lead instruction on the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine in the parish.
“With a ton of encouragement from P.J. Hayden, then principal at Our Lady of Lourdes, and with Father Boarman’s support, the first paid position of parish minister in the city of Owensboro began,” Sister Julia said. “The parents whose children were attending public schools were pleased; this parish ministry position somewhat ‘gave permission’ for them to continue in the public schools.”
Since then, Sister Julia has served three different times at Immaculate Parish in Owensboro, where she currently serves as the coordinator of the RCIA process and prepares families for the baptism of their child.
Immaculate is the only parish in which two Ursuline Sisters are serving. Sister Margaret Ann Aull has spent 34 years in parish ministry, the past 12 at Immaculate as coordinator of pastoral care, which involves visiting the homebound and those in nursing homes or the hospital. She retired in June, but continues to volunteer at the parish visiting the same people she did while on the staff, other than those at the hospital.
“I’ve always liked to visit the sick people,” she said. “It helps me to live a better life to help people who can no longer come to Mass.”
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Sister Mary Ellen Backes stands by photos of the children at St. Joseph Parish in Springfield, Ill., who have received the sacraments the past two years.
Winter 2022
Mount Saint Joseph
Sister Rosanne Spalding, right, shares a laugh with Ursuline
Associate Susie Westerfield, as they divide up their Communion calls to the homebound on Oct. 5, 2022.
Westerfield is also a longtime member of the RCIA team.
Sister Joan Riedley is completing her 30th consecutive year in parish ministry, now at a Louisville parish that combined three churches. After a 25-year teaching career, she served as a parish minister at St. Matthias and then at her home parish of St. Denis. Both were closed and merged with the former St. Basil and St. Helen churches to form Mary Queen of Peace, where she curently ministers. She serves as a music minister, visits the homebound and helps with the parish craft ministry.
“I find satisfaction in being a friend to and relating to those around me,” Sister Joan said. “There is joy in connecting with others and in sharing music.”
Most people know Sister Vivian Bowles from her 34 years at Brescia College/University in Owensboro, including 12 of those years as president. But she’s now served in parish ministry at St. Alphonsus Parish in western Daviess County for 10 years, preparing catechists and designing the religious education program, as well as visiting the sick, even though she now fulfills some of that role as a volunteer.
“I especially enjoy assisting with the children who are in First Eucharist and Confirmation classes,
although I am not their specific catechist,” Sister Vivian said. Sister Alicia Coomes has served as a nurse at the Mount, along with other internal ministries, most recently as coordinator of pastoral care for the Sisters. But periodically she has stepped away to serve in parishes, and she took on a new role Oct. 31, 2022, as pastoral care associate at two Daviess County parishes, St. Peter of Alcantara and St. Augustine.
“I will be visiting the homebound, helping train ministers, working with a group called Martha’s Tears – walking with people who are grieving,” she said. “I’m excited about that.”
The two Sisters most new to parish ministry are Sister Laurita Spalding and Sister Pat Lynch. Sister Laurita was a full-time teacher for 50 years and a part-time teacher since 2018 at Holy Name of Jesus School in Henderson, Ky. In May 2021, she began visiting the parishioners who are in the hospital and one who is homebound.
“I love older people. There is such a need for people to come visit them,” Sister Laurita said. The woman she sees in her home is appreciative that someone brings her the Eucharist.
“They need someone to listen to them,” Sister Laurita said. “Her son died, I went to console her, that’s what she needs. It’s a privilege to take the Eucharist to people who can’t get out.”
Sister Pat has been a speech therapist and campus minister, and she served multiple terms in Ursuline leadership, both at Maple Mount and with the Ursulines of Paola, Kan. Following the end of her term in office this summer, she was contacted by Father Bill Porter, the pastor at St. Agnes Parish in Roeland Park, Kan. The two had served in campus ministry together 35 years earlier at the University of Kansas.
She agreed to become pastoral assistant at St. Agnes, helping train liturgical ministers, matching parishioners’ talents with appropriate groups, and visiting the sick, homebound and hospitalized. She meets with families to plan funerals, helps with the sacristy and other duties for Masses
and
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Several children in kindergarten and first grade greeted Sister Vivian Bowles in their religious education class on Oct. 5, 2022, at St. Alphonsus. Catechist Tina Gabbard is seated in the corner. The other catechist for the class is Breanna Dant. The Faith Formation classes are held on Wednesday evenings during the school year.
Sister Joan Riedley practices playing guitar in preparation for Mass at Mary Queen of Peace Parish in Louisville, Ky. The parish combined the former St. Helen, St. Denis and St. Basil parishes in Louisville. Saints Basil and Denis are depicted on the wall behind Sister Joan.
Parish Ministry
From page 3
is reorganizing groups for young singles, young marrieds and mothers of young children. St. Agnes is also celebrating its centennial in 2023, so she is helping with plans to celebrate.
“I really do like this ministry and enjoy meeting new people and seeing old friends,” Sister Pat said.
Three other Sisters serving in parish ministry came home to the Mount in the past year. Sister Suzanne Sims and Sister Martha Keller are serving in internal ministries, and Sister Karla Kaelin is retired.
An Ursuline parish?
With many Sisters serving in parish ministry, the question arose whether there were such a thing as an “Ursuline parish,” much the way there were Ursuline schools. Some of the Sisters thought their influence could help change the parishes in which they were serving.
Sister Mary Ellen said an Ursuline parish is one that is hospitable. Her soft heart for the stranger has earned her the name “Sister Mary Marshmallow” among parishioners.
“I think everyone is OK. Everyone is welcome, that’s what I strive for,” Sister Mary Ellen said. St. Joseph is in the northern, older part of Springfield, where homeless people stop by for assistance. On one occasion, Sister Mary Ellen left a gathering that included the bishop so she could give a ride to a man who had just left the hospital.
“I know I need to be safe,” she said. “But how do you respond like Jesus would?”
Ursuline Associate Karen Siciliano, a member of St. Joseph Parish, said that Sister Mary Ellen lives the Ursuline charism of hospitality.
“She lives that in every dimension of her life. It draws people to us,” Siciliano said. “All are truly welcome in her reality.”
Sister Vivian said St. Alphonsus could be considered an Ursuline parish.
“Many of the women are graduates of Mount Saint Joseph Academy. Ursulines taught at St. Alphonsus and St. Elizabeth Elementary in our sister parish, and St. Alphonsus High School. People are always quoting Sisters who taught them here,” Sister Vivian said. “I observe and experience many Ursuline Core Values in the parishioners and I’m always glad to recognize them. Our Ursuline community is proud of our rural roots, as are our parishioners.”
Sister Julia believes the pastor brands the parish, not members of
the staff or the Sisters. But Ursuline Sisters began a legacy serving at Immaculate in 1954 when they opened the school. Sister Julia learned that she is the 50th Ursuline Sister to serve at Immaculate.
“Ursuline Sisters have certainly placed a certain stamp of presence, caring and concern for all the parish members,” Sister Julia said.
Creating one set of sacraments
For veteran parish ministers, there were at times conflicts between sacraments for Catholic school children and public school children in the parish.
“When I became a Sister in 1965, no one had ever heard of CCD or religious education,” Sister Rosanne said. “The kids went to Catholic school.”
In her first experience as a director of religious education at Our Lady of Lourdes Parish in 1986, Sister Rosanne said she was told that the Catholic school children would line up first and then the rest of the children. Sister Rosanne put a stop to that.
“When we consolidated the schools (in 1988), Bishop (John) McRaith said we were to make the sacraments a parish celebration, not a school celebration,” Sister Rosanne said. “We get the kids together five times before the sacrament so they are all of one parish celebration.”
Sister Julia had a similar experience in the early 1980s, with a separate path for the sacraments for “CCD kids.”
“I am truly grateful for the current practice of a united parish celebration of sacraments,” she said.
Sister Mary Ellen has worked for five pastors, each of whom brought a different belief toward sacramental preparation. One former pastor wanted the children to earn service hours before they could be confirmed, she said.
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Sister Julia Head, left, tells the Hamilton family about the baptismal font at Immaculate Parish in Owensboro. From left are Paige, Reagan, Jason, Jennifer and Peyton Hamilton. The entire family is in the process of joining the Catholic Church.
Sister Mary Ellen gets ready to taste the chili prepared by John Chernis, right, and Terry Bernotas for the Helping Hands ministry on Oct. 19, 2022. Chernis prepares the food for the Wednesday night service at a homeless shelter.
“I’ve always taught about how the sacraments are God’s gift to us, we don’t earn them,” Sister Mary Ellen said. “When I changed that perception, it became more manageable.”
Sister Rosanne, who taught religion as part of her elementary teaching days, said that the amount of time devoted is the biggest difference in parish-based religious education.
“You don’t have as much time in religious education as you did in a school classroom, where we had religion every day,” she said. “We try to have 31 one-hour classes a year. In school, you could do that in six weeks. I tell the catechists if they can’t get all the lessons in, send the information home for the parents, who are their children’s first teachers.”
Sister Vivian said that in all of her ministries, she has tried to integrate religion as the basis for all learning and action.
“There was much more routine in teaching elementary school, and not nearly as many surprises as I now encounter in parish ministry,” Sister Vivian said. “At my age I
welcome most of the surprises as a new challenge and with more leisure to devote to them.”
A Sister who gives life
Sister Mary Ellen became the director of religious education at St. Stephen Parish in Caseyville, Ill., in 1982. If she hadn’t been elected general superior of the Ursuline Sisters of Belleville from 1989-1995, she likely would be serving in her 40th year of parish ministry.
Once she left office, she joined St. Joseph in Springfield, and she’s never wanted to leave. The parish has long had a reputation for social justice, and Sister Mary Ellen is immersed in that. Once a month, Sister Mary Ellen oversees the food preparation for members of the parish who serve at the Helping Hands shelter.
“I don’t serve (the meals) anymore because we have so many volunteers who want to help,” she said. St. Joseph is also the only Catholic parish among seven or eight churches that bring food to a Methodist-run soup kitchen nearby.
She leads Catholic faith formation on Monday nights for children kindergarten through eighth grade. She shares baptismal preparation with a deacon and helps with funeral liturgies.
Since 2006, on Thursday mornings Sister Mary Ellen leads “Soup and Scripture,” where participants gather for an early lunch, discuss the Scripture readings together,
and then watch a DVD. On Oct. 20, 2022, she gathered with 10 other people for a spirited discussion about Chapter 6 of John’s Gospel.
“Consistency is important. I’m not worried about numbers,” Sister Mary Ellen said. “I do what I love. I think if I love it, others will too.”
She and her late friend, Associate Larry Devocelle, began People Enjoying People, providing the main entrée for a meal and asking participants to bring a side dish. About 20 people come on the fourth Wednesday of the month, just to enjoy each other’s company. She and Karen Siciliano – whom she first met in 1998 – work together on RCIA and the liturgy committee. The two were among the first graduates of the Spiritual Direction Training Program at Mount Saint Joseph, which was a bonding experience for them.
“We minister more effectively together now, we’re more of a team,” Siciliano said. “I jokingly call myself her sidekick.”
Parish ministry has grown more family oriented over time, and a bit less structured, Sister Mary Ellen said.
“I’m much more of a maverick again,” she said, meaning she is able to adapt quickly to unforeseen needs. “I’ve been doing it so long, it’s in my blood. I can see mistakes we’ll make before we make them.”
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Ursulines ALIVE
Sister Alicia Coomes and Father Will Thompson stand before the altar and the handcarved reredos in St. Peter of Alcantara Catholic Church in the Daviess County community of Stanley. The reredos displays the seven sacraments.
Parish Ministry From page 5
Sister Margaret Ann Aull, right, prepares to give Carolyn Mulligan Communion at her home in Owensboro, Ky. She has been visiting Carolyn for three years through her ministry at Immaculate Parish.
Father Manny Cuizon, the pastor of St. Joseph, credits Sister Mary Ellen with overseeing all the charitable works. “She is the one who gives life to the parish,” he said.
Pam Johnson, the business office manager, has known Sister Mary Ellen for 26 years.
“She brings joy. Everybody loves her,” Johnson said. “She’s been a sister for more than 50 years, but she still dives into the Gospel. She comes over here just radiant because she’s opened some knowledge. She learns more and more, which helps all of us around here.”
Sister Mary Ellen never hesitates to drop what she’s doing to help whoever approaches her with a need, Johnson said. “She has a big, generous heart.”
Sister Doing Really Everything
Sister Rosanne served 21 years as an educator, with her last year as principal at Christ the King School in Madisonville, Ky. When the pastor, Father Delma Clemons, was transferred to Our Lady of Lourdes in Owensboro, he invited her to come teach faith formation. She served 12 years there until Father Brad Whistle asked her to come to Precious Blood.
For much of her time at Precious Blood, she handled religious education (K-8), RCIA, sacramental preparation, youth ministry and taking Communion to the sick. She took the youths of the parish to the National Catholic Youth Conference.
“I’m willing to do whatever I need to do to make people good Catholic Christians, by my word and example,” Sister Rosanne said.
Now in her 61st year as an Ursuline, she has cut back to part time. She still handles sacramental preparation for K-8 on Wednesday nights and takes Communion to the sick or homebound. There are 21 stops for Communion, including three nursing homes. Those calls are split between the pastor and four helpers. One of those helpers is Ursuline Associate Susie Westerfield, who is also a longtime member of the RCIA team.
“We couldn’t manage without her,” Westerfield said. “She brings her smiling face and all of her knowledge.”
On Oct. 5, 2022, Sister Rosanne took Communion to parishioner Libby Girten in her home near the church.
“She’s wonderful to do this,” Girten said.
Michelle Clancy has been the office manager at Precious Blood for a year. She says DRE stands not only for “director of religious education” but for “doing really everything.”
“Sister Rosanne brings laughter and she brings Jesus to our kids,” Clancy said. “She brings dependability because she helps with everything. We couldn’t do this without her.”
The Immaculate Sisters
Sister Julia’s first tenure at Immaculate Parish was in 1986, when she ministered to those in the RCIA process and in catechesis for children not in the Catholic school. After serving in another parish and with the diocese, she returned to Immaculate in 1999 to minister to the children, lead some adult Scripture study and coordinate RCIA. She left in 2010 when she
was elected assistant congregational leader for the Ursuline Sisters, but when her term ended in 2016, she returned part-time to Immaculate in her current role as coordinator of RCIA and preparing parents seeking baptism for their children.
“If parish life could be compared to a prism, there are many facets of ministry that are open for service,” Sister Julia said. “Parish ministry is not limited to one title, but offers opportunity for sharing concerns with the elders, with parents of young children, with parents of adult children. Catechetical ministry offers opportunities for learning/teaching, for faith sharing, for spiritual direction kinds of conversations, for visioning with the pastor and the parish staff,
for listening to happy hearts, for listening to broken hearts,” she said. “Sickness and death are everpresent realities. Study regarding the vision of Vatican II and reading the plethora of writings from Pope Francis fill the in-between times.”
The changes in parish ministry during Sister Julia’s tenure include more participation by lay people and more certification requirements for the volunteers. Technology is opening more opportunities, especially during Covid, Sister Julia said.
“In the late 1970s and into
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Michelle Clancy, left, who has been office manager at Precious Blood for a year, says Sister Rosanne’s DRE role stands for “Doing Really Everything.”
the 1980s … church members were hungry learning the meaning of their faith, and to learn how to pass on their faith to children and grandchildren,” Sister Julia said. “I would not say that the hunger is absent, but in some ways, uncertainty and skepticism have wormed in on the strong belief that all that the Catholic Church teaches has been revealed by God. More listening time is spent calming the uncertainties that plague some parish members.”
For all the changes, the mission of the Church continues to be the mission of Jesus Christ, Sister Julia said.
“Programs change. Presentation technologies change. The need for the presence of Christ’s light in our world does not change,” she said.
Sister Margaret Ann also had her ministry to the parishes interrupted by a term in elected office from 1996-2000. She was teaching at Owensboro Catholic High School in 1986 when the principal, Father Ed Bradley, was named pastor of St. Stephen Cathedral. He asked Sister Margaret Ann to join him as director of religious education, to lead RCIA and to visit the sick. After her term in leadership ended, Father Bradley was at Holy Name of Jesus in Henderson, Ky., and asked her to lead the same ministry there. She served another 10 years, but at 75, she decided to slow down to part time. That’s when she became coordinator of pastoral care at Immaculate in 2010.
Among the people she brings Communion to is Carolyn Mulligan, who has not been able to attend Mass since she had a stroke four years ago. All four of Carolyn’s daughters attended Mount Saint Joseph Academy.
“Oh, I’m so happy Sister Margaret Ann visits me,” Mulligan said on Oct. 26. “She is the sweetest thing.”
“When you are no longer able to go to church, that’s when the Church comes to you,” Sister Margaret Ann said. “I always look forward to bringing her Communion.”
Out of need comes fulfillment
Sister Vivian had been caring for her mother after departing Brescia, and following her mother’s death, she spent a year in Paducah, Ky. She then took a part-time position at St. Alphonsus Parish, which allowed her to be close to the Motherhouse.
“The pastor got ill, and I experienced a ‘baptism by fire’ by taking on more areas than directing/ teaching faith formation for the parish children who attended public schools,” Sister Vivian said. “I found I enjoyed visiting the sick, taking Eucharist to shutins, visiting the hospital, assisting families with funerals, volunteering for fundraisers, and using my counseling skills with families. I did
all of that for a few years and felt I was right where I needed to be.”
The current pastor cut back her hours of paid responsibilities, but by that time Sister Vivian knew and loved the parishioners as well as the children.
“After talking with community leadership and having my 78th birthday, I decided to stay and volunteer what additional hours I would need to fulfill my obligations to the program,” she said.
She recruits catechists for the children, one of whom is Imelda Cecil, who has volunteered to teach the second-graders at the parish for three years.
“I know all the experience Sister Vivian has in her life,” Cecil said. “She’s very enlightening, and she is instrumental in seeing that each class is given the proper instruction and that each catechist knows how they should teach.”
Hometown Sister
Sister Joan was teaching in Missouri in 1986 when she asked for a ministry in Louisville to be near her aging parents. She became the first Ursuline to teach at St. Matthias School, but after the school closed, the pastor of
8 Ursulines ALIVE
Parish Ministry From page 7
Sister Pat Lynch goes over some paperwork with Father Bill Porter, pastor of St. Agnes Parish in Roeland Park, Kan. Sister Pat is pastoral assistant at the parish. Out her window she can see Bishop Miege High School, which the Ursulines opened.
Sister Vivian, right, checks in on the religion class for grades 5-6, which includes student Kailey Hinton, left, and instructors Toni Thompson and Pete Freels. They were meeting at St. Alphonsus, where Sister Vivian is director of faith formation.
the church asked her to stay on as music director and parish minister. The parish closed in 2008 and eventually Sister Joan began serving at the merged parish of Mary Queen of Peace.
Sister Joan visits the homebound and nursing homes, plays guitar at two weekend Masses and attends the parish craft club on Wednesdays. The members are making and donating baby blankets, caps and booties to a local hospital. She has a unique experience serving in a parish so close to where she was raised.
“Since I have grown up with the people I serve, it is like one big family,” Sister Joan said. “The closeness and the welcoming spirit we experience as ‘family’ and parishioners are beneficial to all.”
Sister with a presence
Sister Alicia missed parish ministry and she knew that Father Will Thompson –whom she had known since his seminary days – had responsibility for two parishes and a diocesan position on the Marriage Tribunal. When she called him one day, he responded, “I’ve been praying for a Sister.”
This is her fifth parish ministry position in her 43 years as an Ursuline, but this will not be an office job, she said.
“I get energy from being with people,” Sister Alicia said. “At my goodbye party at the Mount, the Sisters talked about how compassionate I am. I said, ‘There are people out there who need that very same thing.’ Just someone to be there at their time of grief and loss.”
Father Thompson has been responsible for the two parishes since June 2022. He referred to Saint Catherine of Siena as a guide for Sister Alicia.
“She said, ‘Be who God meant you to be, and you will set the world on fire.’ I want Sister to be herself,” Father Thompson said. “Sister brings a presence, an almost motherlike care for the people.”
Thompson is a self-professed extrovert, and expects to work well with Sister Alicia.
“She has the gift of being able to slow down and be with people,” he said. “We need people to love the faith and live it out. We need to see those people living their faith. Sister brings a great joy.”n
Ursulines follow the pope’s call to put Laudato Si’ into action
The Ursuline Sisters are joining with other religious communities and Catholics around the globe in developing a longterm action plan to be better stewards of the Earth.
On May 25, 2021, Pope Francis asked all Catholics to take part in an initiative called the Laudato Si' Action Platform. The pope called it “a seven-year journey that will see our communities committed in different ways to becoming totally sustainable, in the spirit of integral ecology.” The move is the next stop following the pope’s 2015 encyclical, “Laudato Si'", on Care for Our Common Home.”
Mount Saint Joseph leadership asked for volunteers who felt called to work with the Laudato Si' Action Platform, and five Sisters stepped forward – Sisters Angela Fitzpatrick, Michele Morek, Suzanne Sims, Amelia Stenger and Sharon Sullivan. They began meeting in November 2021.
The first part of the project is devoted to planning, and is ongoing until May 24, 2023, Sister Sharon said. Years two through six are designed for living out the plans and the seventh year is for assessing and celebrating the good work completed.
In the 1990s, the Ursuline Sisters began an environmental audit to develop a 10-year plan for sustainability. “We reviewed that plan, because why plow the same ground?” Sister Sharon said. “We found that everything we sought had been implemented.”
The next step was to look at the seven Laudato Si' goals:
• Responding to the cry of the Earth and environmental degradation.
• Responding to the cry of the poor and vulnerable.
• Creating an ecological-sustainable economy.
• Adopting simple lifestyles.
• Supporting ecological education.
• Promoting ecological spirituality.
• Building community awareness, participation and action.
The committee members first asked themselves, “What part of Laudato Si', or Scripture or Saint Angela speaks to you when you consider each goal?”
In early spring 2022, the committee asked each Ursuline Sister to ask herself, “What can I personally do to work against climate change?” and “What can the community do to work against climate change?” The results were shared during Community Days in July, showing that the Sisters recognized the use of energy, water and natural resources as important places to begin.
Winter 2022 9
Continued on page 10
By Dan Heckel, Mount Saint Joseph Staff
When Sister Mary Timothy Bland completed 52 years of teaching elementary school in 2019, she began looking for where she could serve next. Sister Judith Nell Riney told her the Maple Mount Archives needed help, and a week later, Sister Mary Timothy began her duties.
“I love it,” she said. “I’ve always been interested in archeology. Instead of artifacts, I’m digging up history.”
She serves in the Archives with Sister Rebecca White, who joined the staff in 2011, after a ministry history that included serving as a nurse and leading the Contemporary Woman Program at Brescia College/ University. While the two Sisters had never served together before, they had their own unique history –Sister Mary Timothy was Sister Rebecca’s fourth-grade teacher in Glennonville, Mo.
“I love it since Sister Mary Timothy arrived, her staying focused keeps me focused,” Sister Rebecca said.
The 2022 publication of the book “Hope and Firm Faith: The Story of the Ursuline Sisters of Mount Saint Joseph,” has drawn new attention to the Archives. Edward Wilson, director of the Archives, said it’s important to have Sisters working in the department.
“They’re hard working because they’re Sisters,” Wilson said. “They are connected to the history, which makes them more passionate. They find out something about a Sister that makes them more compelling. It ties them to their history.”
Sister Mary Timothy serves five days a week until early afternoon, and Sister Rebecca works in the mornings four days a week. These days, the Sisters are doing a mass inventory of all the contents of the Archives, which Sister Rebecca joked, “will be ongoing after we’re gone.”
It’s been at least eight to 10 years since the Archive’s finding aid has been updated, Wilson said. New boxes have been added to the collection that aren’t listed on the finding aid. The Sisters are also going through the folders in each box to make sure what is inside is properly listed.
Many of the files contain original newspaper clippings, which the Sisters are photocopying. “They are acidic and they weren’t meant to last,” Wilson said. “The ink will bleed on everything around it.”
Sister Mary Timothy also handles writing
necrologies – a one-page synopsis of a Sister’s life in community, compiled after she dies.
“I learn things about them, that they were musicians or artists, which had never come up before,” she said.
Sister Rebecca keeps the photo files up to date for each Sister as well.
“Someone may turn in a photo of a Sister who died many years ago,” she said. “Several were Sisters I took care of in the infirmary.”
The Archives are important to chronicle the Sisters’ history, both Sisters said.
“More women are writing about religious communities for dissertations or books,” Sister Rebecca said. “If you want to work on a book, that information needs to be here. Relatives want to see pictures or what the Sister wrote.”
Sister Mary Timothy recalled that her first task in the Archives dealt with an abundance of postcards, which dated back to the beginning of the community.
“To be able to touch a postcard from Mother Aloysius or Mother Agnes (the first two mother superiors), I got cold chills. It was really special.”
The two Sisters have no intention of stopping any time soon. Sister Mary Timothy continues to live in Owensboro, with her current mission the first time she has served at the Mount.
“I look forward to coming out every day,” she said. “It’s good to be here with the Sisters.”n
The most common suggestions for where the Sisters could personally impact climate change involved conserving energy (electricity, gasoline) and water, and reducing, reusing and recycling materials, especially plastic and paper. Sisters were given several suggestions of individual areas of concentration that each could choose during the coming year. The committee is
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Ursulines ALIVE
Sister Rebecca White, left, and Sister Mary Timothy Bland in their office in the Archives, on the first floor of Lourdes Hall.
Laudato Si’ From page 9
Sister Pat Rhoten continues learning how to pray Powerhouse of Prayer
Sister Pat Rhoten will celebrate 60 years as an Ursuline next year. So, it may sound surprising to hear her say she only recently learned how to pray.
“In my younger days, I became the mother of multitasking,” Sister Pat said. “The more I worked, the less time I had to pray. I’d tell myself that my work was my prayer. But it wasn’t.”
Sister Pat is now retired at Maple Mount, where she is a member of the Powerhouse of Prayer. She prays for the Human Resources staff at the Mount and others who need her prayers.
A new spiritual director has helped her to “refocus my zeal,” she said. “Like Saint Paul, the Lord didn’t take his zeal, he refocused it on Jesus. My spiritual director helps me refocus on Jesus.”
“I have a master’s degree in religious studies with an emphasis on Scripture,” she said. ”My spiritual director cautions me not to approach prayer as a student. Just pray the Scriptures.”
The first Scripture passage the two discussed was the raising of Lazarus, from John 11:1-45. When Sister Pat asked why, she was instructed to look at the characters – Mary and her sister Martha, and their brother Lazarus, all friends of Jesus. But Sister Pat looked beyond
those three and focused on the line “So the sisters sent word to (Jesus), saying ‘Master, the one you love is ill.’”
“I thought of the little messenger guy,” Sister Pat said. “They probably gave a boy a few pennies to deliver the message to Jesus. The boy probably waited for a message to return with, or else waited for Jesus to leave, but Jesus didn’t leave immediately. I’m sure the boy returned to Mary and Martha and said, ‘I told him.’”
Sister Pat told her spiritual director that she had gone through severe pain recently, and had prayed for Jesus to rid her of the pain, but he didn’t come.
“My spiritual director urged me to pray to Martha and Mary, because Jesus didn’t come to them right away,” Sister Pat said. Just
By Dan Heckel, Mount Saint Joseph Staff
as Jesus brought their brother Lazarus back from the dead, he also was able to make Sister Pat more comfortable, she said.
Sister Pat’s favorite place to pray is in the recliner in her room at Saint Joseph Villa, with a soft afghan to help her relax. She starts with small prayers.
“A retreat master we had many years ago told me, ‘Find something in your life that you see frequently that reminds you that Jesus loves you.’ I couldn’t think of anything, but then I looked at my house shoe and it had glitter on it,” Sister Pat said. “I decorate a lot, so there’s always glitter around. Glitter is my reminder that Jesus loves me.”
The formal prayers at Mass are some of Sister Pat’s favorites.
“To read the words that Father says by himself – ‘Pour out your mercy upon us, to pardon what our conscience dreads, and to give what prayer does not dare to ask’ –Wow!”
Friends can write to Sister Pat at 8001 Cummings Road, Maple Mount, KY 42356. Cummings Road, Maple Mount, KY 42356.
sending an Advent challenge to the Sisters to ask how they are doing with their commitment, and urging them to choose one more action, and to get someone else to choose another, Sister Sharon said.
One of the earliest visible projects is a water-wasting experiment led by Sister Suzanne Sims, who asked the food service workers at the Mount to collect the waste water from meal times in a bucket. Sister Suzanne was
impressed with the Sisters and staff for wasting very little water with each meal.
Another possible project involves providing cloth bags for shopping trips, thus reducing the use of plastic bags from stores, Sister Sharon said.
“We’re trying to articulate over the next five years how we can have a positive impact on reducing climate change,” Sister Sharon said. “Every little bit helps.”n
11 Winter 2022
Jesus calls Lazarus from the tomb in this fresco painting at a church in San Gimignano, Italy. The story of Mary, Martha and Lazarus inspires Sister Pat.
Soli Deo Gloria We rejoice in the gifts of our
Sister Amelia honored as Distinguished Alumna
Ursuline Sister Amelia Stenger thanked her many Ursuline teachers – from grade school through college – as she accepted her honor as a Distinguished Alumna of Brescia University on Oct. 22, 2022.
“It is difficult to put into words the gratitude I feel as I stand here this evening,” she said during the celebration held at the C.E. Field Center for Professional Studies on the Brescia campus in Owensboro, Ky. “My whole educational experience has been blessed by the Ursuline Sisters. They came to a small town called Glennonville, Mo., and taught at St. Teresa School. Sisters Jean Gertrude, Monica, Amanda Rose, Cecilia Mary and Elizabeth Ann gave me a wonderful foundation.”
She next attended Mount Saint Joseph Academy and then Brescia, graduating in 1974. She said she was privileged to have Ursuline teachers during all 16 years of her education.
“My four years at Brescia started during my novitiate years at the Mount with Sisters Mary Edgar, Aloise, Consolata and Joseph Marian. We didn’t get to come to the Brescia campus for classes until our third year of novitiate,” Sister Amelia said. “It was quite an experience. Sisters Michele, Clarita, Marita, Vivian, Ruth, and so many others were there to help me. The classes were rigorous. I was prepared well for the years that followed. “
“Brescia gave me the foundation I needed to continue my degrees in education and administration. For that I am very grateful,” Sister Amelia said. She thanked the Ursuline Sisters who continue to serve at Brescia – Sisters Helena Fischer, Pam Mueller, Barbara Jean Head, Betsy Moyer, Judith Nell Riney and Sharon Sullivan – for serving so well.
Sister Amelia is the 11th Ursuline Sister to receive the Distinguished Alumni honor, joining current Sisters Cheryl Clemons, Sharon Sullivan, Mary
sisters, given for the kingdom of God. Matthias Ward, Larraine Lauter, Vivian Bowles, Ruth Gehres and Michele Morek. Three Ursulines who are now deceased also received the award – Sisters Joseph Angela Boone, Rose Marita O’Bryan and Dianna Ortiz. Ursuline Associate Mary Danhauer also received the honor.
Sister Amelia served as a classroom teacher and principal before she was named the first woman to be Superintendent of Catholic Schools for the Diocese of Owensboro, Ky., in 1984. Seven years later she was named Superintendent of Catholic Schools for the Archdiocese of Louisville – also the first woman in that role –which she filled until 1997. In that year she returned to Maple Mount to lead the newly renovated Mount Saint Joseph Conference and Retreat Center.
In 2010 she became Director of Development for the Ursuline Sisters. She served in that role until she was elected as Congregational Leader for her community in 2016. Sister Amelia completed her term in office in July 2022. She is now pursuing efforts for the future of the Mount Saint Joseph Archives and Museum, while assisting in the Development office and overseeing all quilting for the community.
Sister Elaine recognized by RiverPark
Sister Elaine Burke was honored on Sept. 16, 2022, by the RiverPark Center of Owensboro, Ky., for her 30 years of volunteer service to the performing arts center. The RiverPark Center is celebrating its 30th year this year, and Sister Elaine has been there since the beginning. She mentioned her first volunteer coordinator, Ruth Baird, and the current coordinator, Jaynan Day, as women who made a great impression on her.
“I think it’s important that we have ways to present a positive Ursuline image to the people we meet,” Sister Elaine said.
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Ursulines ALIVE
Sister Amelia Stenger receives her Distinguished Alumna Award from Brescia President Father Larry Hostetter on Oct. 22, 2022.
Sister Elaine Burke, center, poses with two more Ursulines who volunteer at the RiverPark Center – Sister Betsy Moyer, left, and Sister Barbara Jean Head – during the Sept. 16, 2022, volunteer program.
Sister Spotlight: Sister Catherine Kaufman
Meet Sister Catherine – An Illinois native who keeps God in mind
Z Favorite thing about living at Mount Saint Joseph: (Sister Catherine was an Ursuline Sister of Belleville, Illinois, until the merger with Mount Saint Joseph in 2005). “When I came here I was relieved of shopping. There was no need. It’s given me more time.” (She has spent some of that time quilting for the community and taking care of the dining room decor.)
Z Favorite place at Mount Saint Joseph: “The swing by the Guest House, weather permitting. It’s a quiet place to spend time with God’s nature.”
Z First job: “My first job was taking care of a toddler. When a Mom in the neighborhood (Piopolis, Illinois) would have a new baby and come home from the hospital, I would go and take care of the older child and do some light cooking. I was the oldest girl in my house – there were nine of us – and I was used to taking care of young ones.”
Z Morning person or night owl? “I used to be a morning person, but since I’ve gotten older, I can sleep until noon. I’ve switched to being a night owl. Staying on schedule for Mass and prayer gets me back on God’s time.”
Z Best gift she has received: “The realization that I am a daughter of God."
In the joy of eternal life
SISTER MICHAEL MARIE FRIEDMAN, 75, died Sept. 12, at Mount Saint Joseph, in her 57th year of religious life. She was a native of Glennonville, Mo. Sister Michael Marie followed in the footsteps of her Ursuline teachers from elementary school, devoting 45 years as an educator before serving in outreach ministry, all in Kentucky. She was a 1964 graduate of Mount Saint Joseph Academy, and in 2013, the alumnae presented her with its highest honor, the Maple Leaf Award. She served as a teacher or principal in Daviess County, Paducah, Princeton and Hardinsburg, with 25 years of her ministry as principal of St. James Catholic Regional School, Elizabethtown (1990-2015). She served in pastoral outreach in Livingston County from 2015-21. Survivors include the members of her religious community and nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her parents, Michael and Johanna Friedman, and her siblings Vincent Friedman, Patricia Howell and Richard Friedman. The funeral Mass was Sept. 16, with burial in the convent cemetery.
SISTER MARIE JULIE FECHER, 98, died Sept. 22 at Mount Saint Joseph, in her 80th year of religious life. She was a native of Hamilton, Ohio. Sister Marie Julie was a music instructor for 50 years in Kentucky – 32 years in elementary schools and 18 years at Brescia College in Owensboro – and loved to share her talents with others. Always with a smile on her face, Sister Marie Julie encouraged countless students to love music and use it as a tool to serve God. Survivors include the members of her religious community; siblings Roger Fecher of Indianapolis, Ind., and Julie Zink, of Kettering, Ohio; nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her parents, Constantine and Marie Fecher; and siblings Mark Patrick Fecher and Con J. Fecher Jr. The funeral Mass was Sept. 27, with burial in the convent cemetery.
13 Winter 2022
Memorials may take the form of donations to the Ursuline Sisters of Mount Saint Joseph, 8001 Cummings Road, Maple Mount, KY 42356
The Ursuline Sisters of Mount Saint Joseph invite the public to join them for Eucharistic Adoration and evening prayer every Friday from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. at the Motherhouse Chapel in Maple Mount, Ky. The second Friday of each month will be designated for praying for vocations.
Joan Horan gives back to community of Sisters who inspired her
JoanHoran was in the initial first-grade class at St. Agnes Catholic Elementary School in the Kansas City, Kan., suburb of Roeland Park. Later, she was a member of the first graduating class of nearby Bishop Miege High School. Both of these schools were led by the Ursuline Sisters of Paola, Kan. The influence the Sisters had on Joan led her to join the Ursuline Sisters in 1959.
As a member of the Ursulines, she earned a bachelor’s degree in English and taught two years at Holy Name Elementary in Kansas City. She then taught two years at Bishop Miege, at which time Sister Martina Rockers invited Joan to seek a master’s degree with her from Boston College. Joan completed her master’s in counseling psychology, then returned to Ursuline Academy in Paola to begin a counseling program for young adults with special needs, and to teach adult education and psychology.
Like some other women religious in the 1960s, Joan found that religious life was not where God was calling her. She left the Ursulines in 1970, but the Sisters were never far from her thoughts and her support.
Sister Martina Rockers, who inspired Joan Horan, stands next to a wooden statue of Saint Angela Merici in Bishop Miege High School in Shawnee Mission, Kan., where she taught and served for 60 years. Almost up until her death at age 92 in 2018, she was helping in their Spirit Shop.
In 1971, Joan became the first personnel director for DST Systems in Kansas City, a start-up company that was the first in the nation to serve as a mutual fund transfer agent. The company grew and Joan had the opportunity to grow with it, she said.
“When I started, there were 75 employees,” she said. “When I left in 2010, there were 14,000,” both in Kansas City and elsewhere. “I rose to become vice president of human resources for DST. It was quite an adventure.”
As the business began supporting more charities, Joan became the local contact in Kansas City among not-for-profit groups. She estimates that she has served on more than 20 not-for-profit boards. She is currently on the Lakemary Board, the center for people with developmental needs that was founded by the Ursulines of Paola. She is among the supporters of the Ursuline Legacy Park that is being created on the Lakemary property.
“The Ursuline Sisters had a long history of being great educators in the community, as well as with Lakemary,” Joan said. “They are certainly involved in their communities as great educators and volunteers. They are a very caring group of people.”
Joan has continued to support the Ursuline Sisters since they merged with Mount Saint Joseph in 2008, because of the great influence they’ve had on her life.
“The Ursuline Sisters are a great group of people who have a wonderful mission,” Joan said. “I’m so glad to know that our Paola Sisters could join with Mount Saint Joseph and continue their mission.”
Joan stays in contact with other former Ursuline Sisters through Peggy Neal, who was Sister Helen Marie when she conducted the St. Agnes choir in grade school. Joan was happy to learn that Sister Pat Lynch has returned to Kansas to minister at St. Agnes.
“I still keep in touch with people at Bishop Miege, and I see Sister Angela Fitzpatrick volunteering at the symphony,” Joan said. “The Ursulines are always on my mind.”n Have the Ursuline Sisters influenced your life? If you would like to learn more about ways you can support the Ursuline Sisters of Mount Saint Joseph, contact Carol Braden-Clarke, director of Development, at 270-229-2008, or carol.braden-clarke@maplemount.org.
Joan Horan
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Each year we recognize our donors in the Winter edition of Ursulines Alive. This is not just a list of names. Behind each name there is a story about how an Ursuline Sister touched someone’s life. As we compile this list, we are grateful for your generosity and that you chose to share so that others may experience the mission of the Ursuline Sisters.
My thanks to everyone who has supported us this year by making a gift, buying a Quilt Club or Raffle ticket or attending Quilt Bingo. The Annual Appeal this year is “Serve with Joy.” We are asking you to share your story of “Serving with Joy” or your prayer requests on the reply card we sent you. We will display your card in the chapel entrance. We are grateful for your support. I wish you peace and happiness in the New Year. Thank you.
Carol Braden-Clarke, Director of Development, Ursuline Sisters of Mount Saint Joseph Here are the names of our generous donors who gave gifts over the past fiscal year from July 1, 2021–June 30, 2022. We apologize in advance if our list is not complete. Please send corrections to carol.braden-clarke@maplemount.org or 270-229-2008.
FOUNDERS...............$25,000+
Sister Vivian Marie Bowles, OSU, A‘57
Rose Marita Eckhart Trust/EstateV
Jacinta C. Garinger A’47V
Betty Lee Lupfer A‘61
Rosemary Smith Dawood
Mary Rose StephensonV
BENEFACTORS...$10,000-24,999
Rev. Bernard Leo Craycroft
Sister Barbara Jean Head, OSU
Michael Horn
James and Joan Meyer
Maxine Ann Staley FundV Kevin and Cassie Stelmach
PATRONS..............$5,000-9,999
Rev. J Raymond Goetz
Juan Gomez Jr.
Msgr. George HancockV Steven Heidenreich
Margie Hill
Joan Horan
William and Ida Willhaus
David and Marilyn Zamierowski
INVESTORS..........$2,500-4,999
David and Maggie Bollone
John and Helen Cornell
Betty C. CulverV
Rev. John D. Deatrick
Thomas and Jo Anne Fiorini
Steven and Rita Patti A‘82
Ron and Pam Ziegler
PROVIDERS..........$1,000-2,499
Donald and Janice Arth
Robert and Laurie Bauer
Sister Susanne Bauer, OSU
Robert and Marilyn Beam
Dr. George and Barbara Beard
Richard Blond
Richard and Beverly Greenwell Boeckmann A’58
Charles and Katherine Brown
Thomas and Denise Buckman
Thomas Cecil
Sister Marie Carol Cecil, OSU
Tony and Carolyn Clark
Lillian Cloughley
Charles and Kathleen Daugherty Kevin A. Dunn
Dr.
Rosemary Emmick
George and Jayne Flynn
William and Jocelyn Foushee
Martha Bickett Frost A’67
Dolores Furtado
Joyce Lee Godfrey A‘60
Gerald and Deborah Gonsoski
Bernice M. Gregorio
Jerry and Teresa Griffith
Harry Groth II
Victor and Barbara Hagman
Joseph and Marie Hancock Mary Catherine Hannah A‘79
Dr. Christopher and Mary Havelda Meichele Foster and Rose Hayden Bernard and Catherine Thompson Hayden A‘62
Patrick Hayden Sr.
Joyce Janssen
Ernest Johnson
Sarah Jane Kranz A‘72
John and Christine Kurtz Gregory and Colleen Lang Carolyn Larocco
Debbie Lonie Sarah Jane Lynch
Sylvia Goetz McCauley A‘66
Bishop William F. Medley
Suzy Meinzenbach
Rebecca Collins Morris A‘71
Mount Saint Joseph Alumnae Benjamin and Sharon L. Peine
Sam and Christa Pennington Yvonne Plier
Daniel and Nancy Purdy
Anonymous
Brad Rives and Mary Klarer Rives
Saint Joseph Parish - Bardstown, Ky.
Dr. Gregory and Linda Schnose Eric and Susan A. Shrader Dr. Roberta Steinbacher
Mary Teder Mary Catherine Thompson A‘61
Frances Kay Tichenor A‘62
BertrandV and Barbara Trompeter
Florence and Carrie Wieder
John and Kathy Wright
Harold and Kathy Ford Young A‘70
David and Sue Zimmerman
SPONSORS................$500-999
JohnV and Therese Allen
James and Margaret Alvey
Col. (RET.) George and Sharon Barber
Catherine Imelda Beam James and Sheila Beaven
Donald Bittel
Ronald and Mary Briney
Alan and Linda Brugman
Ed and Gloria Cecil
Philip and Karie D. Cecil Central Kentucky Audiology
Winifred Riney Cohron A‘69
Marie Ann Collins A‘75
Gerald Dalton
Mary Dause
John and Lyndia Dew Joseph and Linda Donahue William and Joyce Dougherty Mike and Sharon Dowdall
James and Molly Egger
Janet Sue Evans
Jane Fulton Trust
Michael and Nancy Gavin Robert and Jennifer Grabill Dan and Pat Haake
Mary Jo Harmon
Joseph and Pam Riney Higdon A‘77
Dr. Carroll and Margie Howard Eloise Hughes Dennis and Regina Jacobs Kenneth and Michaelanne James Fred J. Klausing III
Frank and Jean Koehler
Linda Kreher
Anna Catherine Mattingly A‘66 Robert and Margy McGlynn Jeffrey and Madeline D. Meyer Alice Wondra and William Moyes Ann Mudd
Joseph and Jeanne Passantino Raymond and Laura Paul Michael and Dorothy Riggs A‘72 W. Riney
Dr. Michael and Janice Scherm Juergen Schindler
Robert L. Scully
Mick Seuferling
Pam Payne Shephard Marky Smith
Francis Steffen Annette K. Stoerman James Struna
Ernest and Shirley Taliaferro
Jason Thein
William and Betty Ulrich Jerry Weil
SUPPORTERS.............
Detlef and Martha Alle
Amazon Smile
Anonymous
Donald Kapa and Monica Armstrong
Cathy A. Audley
Rachel Ballard
Michael Bansley
Carolyn Graves Beam A’70
Mary Kay Bell
Liz Elizabeth Berger A‘55
Alice Ann Biscopink A‘68
Russell and Connie Brooks
Faye Carol Bruce A‘77
Mrs. William Bryan
Tommy Buford
Tom and Martha Bullock
Mildred Ann Carrico A‘61
James J. Casaert
Tim and Melody Cecil
Theresa Louise Mattingly Clark A‘72
Donald and Roscella Connelly
Michael and Doretha Corbett
Michael and Mary Dearing
Mary Margaret Drury A‘66
Jeffrey and Margaret Ebelhar
Richard and Isabelle Ebelhar
Environmental Compliance Source
Quentin and Patricia Fannin
Farmers House Real Estate
Frederic and Sally Floberg
Ricky and Patricia Fox
Gary and Judy Freeman
Barry and Stephanie Frey
Tom and Mary Garbach
Paul and Wilma Goebel
Ross and Dianne Gomez
Rev. Joseph T. Graffis
Philip and Kimberly Ann Haire A‘79
Jack D. Hamilton
Joseph and Kim Hartlauf
Donald A. Hayden
Dan and Sherri Heckel
William D. Heinzig
George and Lorna Horishny
Paul and Marie Joseph
Chris and Jennifer Kaminski
Carol E. Kane
Paul W. Keene
David Lechner
David and Kay McCall
John and Mary Medley
Chuck Medlock
Larry and Sue Menke
Rev. Joseph T. Merkt
Willard and Patty Miller
Michael and Mary Monaghan
Arnold and Bettye Moody
Clara Nall
Carol A. O’Keefe
Rev. Clive Otieno
Thuy V. Pham
Kenneth and Maria Pierson
Richard J. Piezuch
Gerald Plappert
Michael and Elizabeth L. Pontarolo A‘66 William and Joanne Powell
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Sister Pam Mueller, left, hands out bingo cards at Mount Saint Joseph on Sept. 11. Many attendees enjoyed Quilt Bingo.
$250-499
Merwin and Julieanne Ray
Joe Roop and Anne Federlein
Robert and Rosemary Runnebaum
Richard and Michelle Salazar
Michael and Mary Sallee
Edward and Connie Schickel
Stephen and Susan Schlicher
Edward Schnur
Debra Schultz
Thomas and Vicki Smith
Carolyn Suzanne Stumpf
Michael J. Sullivan
Ronald SullivanV
Stephen and Nancy Summers
Ellen Sweet
Robert and Peggy Tarver
LarryV and Carolyn Taylor
Thomas Taylor
Joan Teder
Gary and Joanne Thompson
Melanie Walsh
Rev. Gerald Waris
Theresa J. Warner
Tina Marie Weber Smith A‘74
Richard A. Wethington
Thomas and Karen Wheatley
Joseph and Mary Ann Payne Willett A‘72
John and Jackie Wilson
John and Alma Wimsatt
Gene and Pauline Wink
Lester and Barbara Wuertz
Mary E. Ziegler
CONTRIBUTORS........$100-249
Sam and Doreen Abbott
Richard and Rita Abernethy
Beth Akins
Betty B. Allard A’44
Berdette Anderson
Dan and Claudia Anderson Anonymous (6)
Cecilia Arbuckle
Patricia Arnett A’72
Robert and Ann Ballard
Ursula Barber
Dr. Joseph and Dorothy Barnthouse
Thomas Barrett
William and Judy Beaven
Stan and Mary Bechtold
Stephen and Jean Berry
Betty Joyce Bickett A’49
Ronald and Beverly Bisig A’62
Mary Rita and Lawrence Bland A’67
Blessed Mother Church - Owensboro
Michael and Gayle Bogard
Sharon Boone
Jan Booth
John and Mary Bouvier
William Collins and Sarah Bowling Rev. Edward Bradley
Rose Brandenburg A’64
John and Janet Brandon Rev. Albert Bremer
James and Mary Brey
George and Faye Briel
Alexandrina Brockwell
Joseph and Marilyn Brookman
James Brooks
Robert and Rebecca Brown
Margaret Knott Brown A’59
Sister Clarita Browning, OSU, A’47
Leda Brundage
Phil and Sarah Bryan
Bill and Sally Ann Buford A’64
Juanita Ann Burke A’50V
Diane Steffan and Pam Burris
Pete and Kaye Buser
Robert Gress and Mary Butel
Carole M. Cada
Gregory and Vicki Cash
Robert J. Caspar
Brenda Castiglione
Donald and Charlotte Cecil
Ramey Cecil
Mario and Emily Chavez
Jessica Cheatham
Robert and Sue Christian
Chaplain Linda Cirillo
David and Jane Clark
John and Beth Clements
Mark and Mary Clements
Dwayne Clemons
Matteo Coco
Lowell and Karen Collard
Michael and Nancy Collins
Ellen Mary CondryV
Monica Thomas Connelly A’69
Ray and Theresa Coomes
Council of Religious Carol A. Coyle
Janet Cress
Rev. Joseph Kenneth Criqui
Anna Flynn and Ava Crow
Cecilia Curtis
Anne and Regis Dansdill
Sandra Davis
Elizabeth Dawley
Melanie and James Deaderick Jim Sullivan and Emily DeMoor Wanda Despain
Frank and Molly Devocelle
Diane DiTucci
Donald and Judith Dobernic
Siebrand and Wanda Dooper
Rev. Robert Drury
Joan M. Dugan
William H. Dunn Sr.
Keith R. Durbin
Allison Eardley
Dr. James David Earnest
Bobbie Edds
Roger and Michelle Edelbrock
Shirley L. Egan
Maureen Elbert
Betty Ellis
Catherine J. Evans
Clara Mae Evrard
John and Lana T. Falke
John and Agnes Filburn
Barbara Fischer
John and Linda Fitzpatrick
Billy and Patty Folk
Rodney and Charlotte Ford Ronald E. Franzen
Margaret Frey
Vince and Joan Frey Mary Fries
John and Liz Froehlich Melissa Fry Mary Jane Fulkerson
Anne Gall
Robert and Maria Galles
Jerome and Maureen Gaughan Clara A. George
Robert George
Karen O’Daniel Gerstle A’69
Ann Elizabeth Gibbs A’55
Shirley Hayden Gililland A’55
Kathleen Gillen
Robert and Mildred Gilles
John and Margaret Gladbach Bobby Glenn
Gene and Elaine McCarty Glenn A’66 Suzanne Gochenouer
Greg Goebel
Mary Wethington Gordon A’69
Dale and Susie Gray Paula Chandler Gray A’73
Joyce Greenwell
Roger and Mary Jane Greenwell
Celeste Gros
Andrew And Kathleen Grosmaire
Thomas and Jane Hancock
Brigid Haragan
Hadley and Larry Harrington
Kimberly and Joseph Harris
Robert and Debra Harris
Arieyani Hartono
Marlene Hatfield
Karen Hayden Martin and Joan Hayden
PJ and Sarah Hayden
William Hayden Charlotte Hedges
Mary Heininger
Mark and Rita Heinz
Irene and Thomas Hemerling
Jerome and Marie Bernadette Henning A’62
Carl and Carleen Herde
Dale and Linda Hermreck
Raymond E. Hiersche Sr. Mona Higdon
Wendell and Shirley Hill
Judith M. Hinchey
Diane and Michael Hite
Joan Sherron Hofman A’51
Martha House
Michael and Vicki Howard Frank and Carolyn Howe Gerald and Mary Hubbs
John and Sally Hudnall
Jane Hummel
James Hundley
Philip and Mary Hurley
Janet Hyde
Agnes Intravia
Jerry L. Jackson
Paul and Monica Jarboe
Laurie and Anthony A. Jennewein
Charlotte Jones
Donna M. Jordan
Catherine Keene
Matthew Keiser
Herschel and Margaret Keitel Mary Cecelia Keith
Amy Keller
Thomas and Donna Kellerman Mark and Diane Kemper
Victor and Virginia Kerperien
Paul and Beverly Keyser Fred and Frances Kirchhoff Joe and Beth Kirsch
John C. Klein
Robert and Jeanne Kobler
Judith Ann Kranz-Donley A’65
Clifford and Jean Kreifels
John and Rebecca Kresovsky
Dr. Susan Effertz and Charles J. Kuether
Mary Ann Kurz
Bonnie Landry
Kenneth G. Lanter
Harry J. LavigneV
Therese Martin Lawson
Barbara Lechner
Mary Wempe Ligon
Rev. Daniel L. Lincoln
Raymond and Shirley Lindle Mark and Tonya Logsdon Larry and Gene Lyon
Richard and Mary Lyon Jeanean Malubay
Pedro and Martha Marin Scott and Charlotte Marksberry
Sally Martin
Donald and Barbara Marx Sid Mason
Dennis and Nora Massoth
Joseph Trapani and Paula Matrullo Allen and Sylvia Mattingly Alvin and Marcy Mauler
Joyce Mayeresky
Honorable Romano L. MazzoliV
David and Cecilia McCarty
Karen Jean McCarty A’74
John and Carolyn Drury McCarty A’71
Rosalee McEntyre
Eddy and Lorraine McFarland
Virginia R. McKeel
Daniel and Susan McQuillan
Kathryn McSorley
John McWilliams
Lynn Meeker
John and Cynthia Mesnier Mark and Cheryl Mesnier Rita A. Metzger
Charles and Mary Jane Metzmeier
Tammy Milbourn
Nora Jean Miles
Joseph Allen Millay
Lizzy Millay Mary Joan Miller Rosemary Milton-Miano Michael and Jacqueline Mize
Ervin and Mildred Coreen Moore
Iris Moreno-Brown
Betty Morgan
Martha Morris
Philip and Carol Morris
Ronald and Jo Mueller
Jeanette Muldowney
Mildred Mullican A’79
Jeffery and Edna Murphey
Alan and Linda Murphy
Larry and Deborah Murphy
Donna Jean Murphy A’79
Thomas and Lucy Neal
Joan Ruesewald Nelson A’85
Victor and Joyce Nettle
James T. Nixon
Donald and Joanna Norrenberns Ray and Jane Nugent
Mary Lou O’Brien
Larry and Connie O’Bryan
Paul and Marianne O’Connell
Edward O’Daniel
James and Linda O’Daniel
Doris Boone O’Daniel A’49
William and Phyllis O’Dea
Christopher and Della Oberst
Larry and Melanie Odom-Groh
Rev. Anthoni Ottagan
Mary Palmer A’64
Joseph H. Papst
Joseph and Rosemary Park
Joan Zink and Jim Parker
Caroline C. Parys
Stephen and Beverly Payne
Mary Lou Payne A’66
Greg and Glenda Peters
Margaret Posey
Precious Blood Conference/ St. Vincent DePaul
Troy Quinn
Maria Ransdell A’71
Rev. Robert E. Ray
Shirley Raymond A’65
Fred and Kaye Reichenbach
Lydia A. Reid
Greg and Lisa L. Reis
Rita and Gerald Reis
John and Debbie Reiss
Craig and Sandra Reynolds
Mike Reynolds
Jeff and Tammy Rice
Lynn Radovich and Richard Chenard Elaine Richards A’70
Fred and Mary Ridgley
Thomas and Mary Riney
Keith O. Rodolph
Rachel Roth A’68
Janice Russell
Joe and Celeste Russell
Edward Peter Rutledge
Barbara Jane Ryan
Steve and Susan Ryan
Susan F. Ryan
James and Elaine Sanders
Mary Jane Sattazahn
Gary and Patricia Satterwhite
Don and Elizabeth Scharfenberger
Joseph and Sandra Schmitt
Rev. John Schwartzlose
Bonnie R. Segers
Bryan and Katy Sei
Michael Sgro
Mark E. Shircliff
Rev. Anthony Shonis
Steve and Pam Shoulta
James and Camilla Shumaker
Rev. Martin J. Siebenaler
James and Sheila Sills
Lela Simpson
Paul and Julia Sims
Joseph and Ann Sipes
Sisters of Saint Benedict
Donald and Dianna Skeeters
Thomas and Linda Skeeters
Mary Paula Skrivan
John and Linda Slattery
Daniel and Debbie Smith
Mary Smith
Mary F. Smith
16
Richard E. Soenen
Southern Tire Service
John and Mary Spies
Loyd and Barbara St. John
Robert and Lyda Steiert
John Steinmetz
Andrew and Megan Stelmach
Mike and Charlotte Stelmach
Todd and Patricia Stelmach
Clara Beth Steward
Marcia Stoller
Lynn Stone
Laura Strange
Rose Sherron Strickland A’45
James P. Sullivan
Anne and William Swinford
Richard and Elizabeth Szucs
Rev. Thomas G. Tank
Paul and Carolyn Tapp
William and Marilyn Terry
Larry and Jorene Thoeming
Dan and Jane Thomas
Louis and Shirley Thomas
Danny J. Thompson
Mike and Cloa Thompson
Tom and Debbie Tinker
Michael and Andrea Townsend
Megan Trilk
Stephen J. Troutman
Phyllis Thomas Troutman A’63
Richard and Susan Ubert
Leslie and Patsy Van Meter
Sean and Amy Vaughn
James and Karen Verney
Owen and Veronica Vessels
William Vogrin
Donald and Laura Vohs
Robert and Judy Vohs
Karen Vossler
Mary Ford Vuncannon A’55
Gary and Linda Wahl
Elizabeth Walker
Darryl Wallace
Rose Mary Walsh
Dr. W. Dean and Nina Walton
Mark and Amanda Walz
Drew and Jeannette Ward
Thomas and Sharon Waris
Stephanie J. Warren A’73
Sister Marie Bosco Wathen, OSU
John Weaver
Mark Weidenbenner
Krisie Drury Weise A’84
Cynthia Welch
Frank and Sandra Wethington
Mary Alice Wethington
Sandra and Phillip Wiese
Sharon and Donald Will
James and Doris Wilson
Joseph and Diane Wilson
Rita Winkelmann
Lt. Col. Lyle and Rita Wobker
Martha T. Wolfe
John and Elaine Wood
Clarence A. Woodall III
Sarah A. Ye
Dr. Mary Rose J. Zink
Magdalene M. Zybko
Harry and Charlene Baumgarten
Nels and Grace Becker
Thomas and Valerie Neel Beckert
June Bell
Mary M. BenkeserV
Marian Bennett
Barbara Bickerstaff
Robert and Diane Black
Judy Bland
Joseph and Claudine Blandford
Monica Murphy Blandford A’61
David and Ann Blanford
Michael and Cynthia Bohaty
Mary Bonn
Claudette E. Borchers
John and Ann Bossing
Christel G. Bouldin
Diane Bowers A’79
Eileen M. Bowling
Mary Ann Bowling
Russell and Denise Bradford James M. Brennan
Edwin and Phyllis Ann Bresnik A’66
Beverly and Thomas Brown
Keri Brusven
Lawrence and Joan Buccero
Jerome L. Buckley
Douglas E. Buell
Ronald L. Bugg
Danny Bullock
Joan and Mark Burke
Lawrence Burns
Jesse and Brenda Busick
Helen Butler
Alice Cano
Mary Ann Clements Carr A’72
Christopher and Carol Cecil
Dale and Lisa Cecil
Ernest Cerino Jr.
David and Michaeline Chandler
Dolores G. Chavez
Martha H. Clark
Ruth Clark
Carol and Aubrey Clarke
Catherine T. Clements
Louis and Charlotte Clements Mike Coakley
Daniel E. Coleman
Anna Conn Ruth Connor
Mary M. Costello A’65
Catherine A. Cox Mary Ann Cox Kevin Cummins
Emmeline Dahlem
Mary T. Danhauer A’71
Jill Darcy
Clay and Nicole Daugherty
Joe and Kathleen Davis Marsha Davis
Delores E. Day Marilyn Day
Gerald and Mary Dickerson
Brother Craig A. Digmann
David and Charlene Diver
Lisa Marie Downs
Eddie J. Dugas Jr.
Jeanette Ebelhar
Rose Mary Edlin
Michael and Patricia Egan
Carol Egger Scofield
Pamela Eglinski
Judy Parker and Elaine Skoch
Donna Marie Goetz
H. and Sherleye Goff
Sue Ann Goode
Patrick and Barbara Gorman
David and Nora Grant
Fran Grauer
Jeff and Karen Greenstreet
Carl and Maureen Greenwell
Connie and Frank P. Greenwell
George and Barbara Greenwell
Joan Greenwell
Polly Gregory
Elizabeth Griner
Patrick and Oyamel Gronstal
Sister George Mary Hagan, OSU
Daniel and Sally Halbig
Joyce Halderman
Teresa Hancock-Haff
William and Jean Hardesty
Joan Hardin
Kingston and Doreen Harney
Barbara Harper
Arnie and Carol Hart
Gerry and Barbara Hasenstab
Bob and Fran Hawley
David and Emmalene Hayden
Lisa Haydon
Mary E. Hazzard
Diane Head
John and Joyce Heichelbech
David and Sara Hemingway
Nancy D. Hendricks
Denise Heying
Mary Louise Higdon A’55
Thomas and Millie Hines
Andrew and Brenda Hinton
Robert and Patricia Hinton
Richard Hite
Clora Hixon
Jane Hobbs
William W. Holtz
Holy Cross Church - Loretto, Ky. Marva Homrighausen
Peggy Honadle
Marilyn Horlander
Robert and Marylou Hoskins
John Johnston
Joey and Susan Jones
Rose Joyce
Barbara Kacer
Peter Kaminski
Bill and Nancy Keel
Mary Carmelita Kelly A’54
Eddie and Wendy Kenny
Edward and Virginia Klein
Michele Klein
William and Barbara Klump Marianne Knott
Ellen Koester
Joy Kopcha
Chris and Joyce Kormelink
Jodi Krahwinkel
Earl and Linda Kropp
Jim and Mary Kueny
Lorinda K. Lampe
Wanda Lanham
WaNell Stallings Lanham A’71
Hilda Lankard
William and Julie Lankford
Joseph and Bernadine Lawler
Maria Lee
Patricia Lewis
Darlene Livers
Patsy Logsdon
Charles Easley and Louise Clarke
John and Barbara Lynch
Elden and Florence Lyon
Cyndy Madi
Nace and Mary Magner
Michael J. Maher Jr.
Ann Maney
Joan Martin
M. Katherine Martinovich
Mary James Masden
Joseph and Kathy Mattingly
Mack and Dolores Mattingly
Mildred Mattingly
Joseph Hamilton Mattingly Jr.
Sam Mauro
Alma W. McBride
Peggy McCarthy A’56
Mary Fatima McDonough A’70
Luat
Emily Adler
Maureen T. Alexander
Jackie Allen
Jean Claire Allen A’55
George and Della Alleven
Thomas Allsopp
Anonymous (29)
Robert and Jennifer Atwell
Kenneth and Joan Aylor
Louis and Betty S Barber
Phyllis Barker
Bill Bassler
Craig and Carol Bauer
Keith and Martha Baughman
Alan and Becky Englehart
Helen Enright
Mary Frances Erdley
Alice Faulkner
Charles and Katherine Ferrara
Robert and Mary Flanagan
Rev. Robert B. Flannery
Bill and Norma Folz
John and Mary Fortino
Theodore V. Freese
David and Anita Frickey
Donald and Jane Gerbitz
Shirley A. Gibbons
Clara Gilles
Gerald and Margarita Gladbach
Jacqueline Addington Glover
Barbara House A’53
Kay Howa
Earl and Carolyn Howard
Janie Howard
Robert and Doris Howard
Henry and Jane Hurst
Joan Hutchins
Dee Dee Jackson
Steven Jackson
Ann Jacobs
Rebecca Jacobs Pollez
Raymond and Virginia Jarsulic
Lois Jirgal
Mary Ann Jobe
Mark and Joanne Johnson
Todd and Mary Johnson
Cecilia Robinette McEldowney A’66
Rachael McFadden
Ken and Edie McKay
Constance McVoy
Loretta K. Meisenbacher
Fred and Lois Mersmann
Beverly Merz
Anna Louise Miley
Ashley Miller
Mary Ellen Miller
Maureen Miller
Scott and Jennifer Miller
Beth and Mark Minotti
Marie Celine Miranda, OSU
Thomas and Susan Moloney William and Donna Montgomery
17
Sharon Snyder
FRIENDS.........................$1-99
529 Investment Partners
and Lan Nguyen
How do you “Serve with Joy?” If you did not receive a 2022 annual appeal letter and response card where you can answer this question, contact Carol
or carol.braden-clarke@maplemount.org Serve with Joy! Serve with Joy!
at 270-229-2008
By joining the Ursuline Sisters’ annual Quilt Club, you can be part of our mission AND get 12 chances to win a beautiful handmade quilt!
Drawings take place on the first Friday of each month. Tickets are $25. The first drawing for the 2023-24 Quilt Club will be April 7, 2023. Watch for a letter in the mail or get details online: www.ursulinesmsj.org/quilt-club
Douglas and Kathleen Moorman
Margaret Moorman
Betty Moorman A’58
Patrick and Nancy Moran
Dorothy Weaver Morrison A’55
Patricia Mountain
Leon J. Mueller
John and Barbara Muncy
Preston and Alma Nanninga
Lloyd and Mary Nash
John and Helen Necaise
Ernest Nelson
Shelby Newton
Sherry Newton
James and Frances Nichols
Joe and Maggie O’Bryan
Clarice O’Bryan A’52
Theresa O’Bryan A’63
Edward and Pat O’Connor
Raymond and Ann O’Daniel
Aloysius F. O’Dell
Gerald and Betty Oakes
Donna Oberhausen
Roger and Kathryn Ordal
Gail Otte
Linda Payne
Melody Payne
David and Connie Peake
Phil and Tama Pecoraro
Becky Pedley
George and Helen Peters
Virginia Peters
Larry and Linda Phillips
Mary Pikell
Issa and Mary Jean Pirouznia
James and Linda Pollock
Dorothy Powers
Keith and Genon Putnam
Irene L. Quigley
Sister Eileen Quinlan, SND
Shirlene Quinn
Rose Ann Radzelovage
Joseph and Patricia Raphael
Natalie and Brian Reagan
Helman and Darlene Reid
Joseph and Colleen Ressler
Joseph P. Rhinerson
Paul Rhinerson
Byron and Lucy Rhoades
David and Mary Lou Richardson
Mary Lynn Hoffman Ridgeway A’68
Chris Riedel
Robert and Michelle Rivers
John B. Roark Sr.
Bryce and Sue Roberts
Lawrence A. Rockers
Mike and Elizabeth M. Rogers A’70
Josephine Romang
Thomas and Terrence Rosner
Stephanie Ruanto
Vicky and Neil Rudy
Christopher and Barbara Ryan
Charles and Gail Saunders
Randall L. Sayre
James Schartung
Mary Hagman Schelling A’52
Paul and Mari Schieber
Elaine P. Schmidtberger
Ralph Schneider
Elizabeth A. Schoeberle
Susan J. Scott
Mary Ann Seeley A’63
Teva Shirley
Mary Kelly Sils A’69
Phyllis Simmons
Anthony and Lora Simning
Philip and Annette Skees
James and Louanne Smith
Ruth Smith
Rhonda Smith-Bentley
Donald R. Speaks
William and Margaret Stadtlander
Steve and Sandy Stahl
Ronald and Barbara Stallings
Pat Schmidt and Robert Steinberg
Bernard StengerV
Sister Amelia Stenger, OSU, A’67
Joseph and Joan Stith Mary Stoltz
Robert and Mary Lou Storm A’77
Shirley McIntyre Story A’68
Gary and Elaine Strain
Jean A. Stump
Sullivan Mountjoy PSC
Marilyn Swanson
Joe Tamme
Rita Tanner A’72
Texas Gas Transmission, LLC
Daniel and Sandra Thomas Jack and Michele Thomas Joanne Marie Thomas A’69
Rebecca Thomason
Cassidy Thompson
John and Joyce Thompson
Rick and Lizann Thompson
Steven G. Thompson
Thomas and Carolyn Thorpe
Thrivent Foundation
Rosemary Cecil Tills A’62
Michael and Joann Toler Mary Truitt A’48
Mary Tungate
Delores Turnage
John E. Underwood
Marie T. Underwood
Ursuline Sisters of Mount Saint Joseph Rev. Darrell Venters
Gayle Vermillion
Tammy Vernon
Sylvia Viglietti
James and Michele Vincent
Robert Vose
Mai P. Vu-Ha
Mary Wade
John Wagner
Terry and Jeanie Wahl
George and Nancy Clark Walz A’55
Michael and Martha Wathen
Mary Weathers
Hans and Mary Ann Weding
Vince and Janet Weiss
John and Zena Weist
John Russell Weitzel
Jeffrey Wernert
John and Kathy Wethington
Sister Marietta Wethington, OSU, A’55V
Marijo White
William and Margaret White JamesV and Rita Wilkus
Helen Willett
John and Judy Willett Mandy H. Willis
Richard
Christine Wolken
Timothy and Dawn Wollesen W. Michael Word
Michael and Susan Wright Agnes M. Yates
Stephen and Mary Ziller Debra L. Zuber
HONORS
In honor of All Sisters
William and Judy Beaven
Msgr. Bernard Powers
Gerald and Deborah Gonsoski
Diane Russellburg
John and Judy Willett
Jerry Birge
Ruth Smith Joe Hendricks
Nancy D. Hendricks
In honor of Raymond and Laura Paul’s 50th Anniversary
Raymond and Laura Paul Sister Barbara Jean Head, OSU Joe Tamme
Sister Catherine Therese Barber, OSU Fred and Frances Kirchhoff
Sister Clarita Browning, OSU, and Sister Marie Goretti Browning, OSU John and Janet Brandon Thomas and Karen Wheatley
Sister Elaine Burke, OSU
Catherine Imelda Beam
Sister Emma Anne Munsterman, OSU Philip and Annette Skees
Sister George Mary Hagan, OSU Margaret Posey
Sister Helena Fischer, OSU Barbara Fischer
Sister Judith Nell Riney, OSU Philip and Carol Morris Sister Julia Head, OSU, A‘60 Alan and Linda Murphy Larry and Melanie Odom-Groh Dorothy Powers
Sister Kathleen Kaelin, OSU Joe and Beth Kirsch
Sister Marie Carol Cecil, OSU Michael and Patricia Egan
Sister Marie Julie Fecher, OSUV Joyce Lee Godfrey A’60
Sister Marietta Wethington, OSU, A’55V
Paul and Wilma Goebel
Sister Marilyn Mueth, OSU Randall L. Sear
Sister Margaret Ann Aull, OSU Daniel and Debbie Smith
Sister Margaret Lillian Davenport Rev. John Schwartz
Sister Martha Angela Magdalene M. Zybko
Sister Mary Agnes Vonderhaar, OSU Environmental Compliance Source
Sister Mary Agnes Vonderhaar, OSU, and In memory of Sister Joan Walz, OSUV
Mildred Mattingly
Sister Maureen O’Neill, OSU, A’66 Marie T. Underwood
Sister Michael Marie Friedman, OSU, A’64V Anna Catherine Mattingly A’66
Sister Pat Lynch, OSU
Dr. Joseph and Dorothy Barnthouse
Sister Rose Jean Powers, OSU, and In memory of Sister Marian Powers, OSUV
Gregory and Vicki Cash
Sister Rose Karen Johnson, OSU James and Michele Vincent
Sister Ruth Gehres, OSU, A’51
John and Lyndia Dew
Juergen Schindler
Sister Susanne Bauer, OSU M. Katherine Martinovich Mick Seuferling
Sister Vivian Marie Bowles, OSU, A’57
Joseph and Marilyn Brookman
Joe F. Roop and Anne Federlein
In honor of Ursuline Sisters
Richard and Elizabeth Szucs
Sister Mary Mathias Ward, Sister Emma Ann Munsterman, Sister Amelia Stenger, Sister George Mary Hagan, Sister Eva Boone and In memory of Sister Marie Bernadette Blanford,V Sister Joseph Angela Boone,V Sister Margaret Joseph Aull,V Sister Ruth MattinglyV
Robert and Marilyn Beam
MEMORIALS
Alice PiezuchV
Richard J. Piezuch
Allyson Kirby and Margaret KochV Ellen Mary CondryV
Anita FayeV
William D. Heinzig
Ann Collins, Sister Jane Irvin Hancock, OSU, and Sister Jane Miriam Hancock, OSUV
Rebecca Collins Morris A’71
Ben StengerV
Florence and Carrie Wieder
Bertrand TrompeterV
Beverly and Thomas Brown Carl and Carleen Herde Michele Klein Jeanean Malubay
Gerald Plappert
Edward Peter Rutledge
Southern Tire Service
Cathy Riney McClishV Alice Ann Biscopink A’68
Christine BrooksV
Russell and Connie Brooks
Cindy Warren BickettV Stephanie J. Warren A’73
Deceased Members of Coyle and Reischman FamiliesV Carol A. Coyle
Deceased Peake Family MembersV David and Connie Peake
Denise Ann ThomasV Carol Egger Scofield
Eddie BallardV Rachel Ballard Eileen LockeV Gary and Joanne Thompson Ellen DahlkampV Lois Jirgal
Evelyn BowlesV Liz Elizabeth Berger A’55
Joseph and Marilyn Brookman Donald and Jane Gerbitz
Robert and Mildred Gilles
Jacqueline Addington Glover
Janie Howard
Arnold and Bettye Moody
Larry and Connie O’Bryan
Ronald and Barbara Stallings
Frances Lee StrangeV
Mary T. Danhauer A’71 and NonViolent Owensboro
Frank SchadlerV
Jeffrey Wernert
George FreyV
Margaret Frey
Gerald Leon ClarkV
Betty Joyce Bickett A‘49
Jodi Krahwinkel
Vicky and Neil Rudy
Troy Quinn
Sullivan Mountjoy PSC
Gerelyn WeilV Jerry Weil
Helen MilesV Margie Hill
Janet MoormanV
Douglas and Kathleen Moorman Jean Catherine SteffenV Francis Steffen
18
Mary Wimpsett
and Ruth Wiseman
Jackie
Therese Allen
Louis and Betty S. Barber
Mary Bonn
Jan Booth
Joan Greenwell
Joan Hardin
Lisa Haydon
Henry and Jane Hurst
Issa and Mary Jean Pirouznia
Stephanie Ruanto
Joy C. Schmitt and Joseph Schmitt Jr.V
Joseph and Sandra Schmitt
The Kansas GroupV
William H. Dunn Sr.
Kathleen KeiserV
Matthew Keiser
Kyra Sue SmithV
Gerald Dalton
Linda BrewerV
Agnes M. Yates
Linda PenningtonV
Lois Hoffman
Frank and Carolyn Howe
John Johnston
Edward and Pat O’Connor
Loretta O’Connor
Sam and Christa Pennington
Rachel Roth A‘68
Richard A. Wethington
Sandra and Phillip Wiese
Mariita RodriguezV
Anonymous
Leda Brundage
Keri Brusven
Anne And Regis Dansdill
Sandra Davis
Allison Eardley
Maureen Elbert
Anne Gall
Jerome and Maureen Gaughan
John and Margaret Gladbach
Barbara Harper
Irene and Thomas Hemerling
Karen Vossler
Daniel and Susan McQuillan
Debra Schultz
Mary Smith
Jason Thein
Gary and Joanne Thompson
Megan Trilk
Timothy and Dawn Wollesen
Mary GarciaV
Natalie and Brian Reagan
Marilyn Swanson
Mary Ingram and Clare KaelinV
Robert L. Scully
Mary Jo WathenV
Joan Zink and Jim Parker
Mary Lillian WethingtonV
Kevin Cummins
Mary McGee MonaghanV
Frederic and Sally Floberg
Mary Rose Habenstein
StephensonV
Sharon Snyder
Mary Ruth and Donald ElderV
Sean and Amy Vaughn
Mary Scully IngramV
Robert L. Scully
Mary ToonV
Mother Cecelia
Jerry and Teresa Griffith
Frank and Jean Koehler
Morris O’Daniel
James and Linda O’Daniel
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hayden Jr., Rev. Wilfrid Hayden, Sister Charles Irene, Sister Mary Wilfred, and Charles Hayden IIIV
Donald A. Hayden
In memory of Paola (Kansas)
SistersV
Gary and Judy Freeman
Sister Aloise Boone, Sister Regina Boone, Sister Joseph Angela Boone, OSUV
Catherine Keene
Paul W. Keene
Sister Ancilla Marie, Sister Frances Mary, and Sister Mary EdgarV John and Helen Necaise
Sister Anita Flaugher, OSUV Donna Oberhausen
Sister Carolyn Marie O’Harrow, OSUV
William and Marilyn Terry
Sister Charles Catherine Medley and Sister Miriam Medley, OSUV Charles and Kathleen Daugherty
Sister Charles Irene Hayden, OSUV Carol M. Cada Wanda DeSpain
Sister Christina EckmanV Helen Willett
Sister Clara Joseph Johnson, OSUV Helman and Darlene Reid
Sister Darlene Denton, OSUV Robert and Debra Harris
Christopher and Barbara Ryan
Sister Diane Marie Payne, OSUV Elizabeth Griner
Sister Dianna Ortiz, OSUV James Brooks
Lawrence Burns
Ernest Cerino Jr.
Sister Dorothy Helbling, OSUV Dan and Claudia Anderson Donald and Roscella Connelly Larry and Sue Menke
Sister Eileen Howard, OSU, and Ann WardV Thomas and Millie Hines
Sister Fran and Sister RosemaryV Joan E. Martin
Sister Francis and Sister Mary Patrick McDonagh, OSUV Rev. Robert B. Flanner
Sister Helen Marie Pfohl, OSUV Paul and Carolyn Tapp
Sister Helen WuckowitschV Carl Mulligan
Sister Jane Donahue, Sister Rose Catherine, Sister Mary Beatrice, Anna DonahueV Glenda Poe
Sister Jane Miriam and Sister Jane Irvin Hancock, OSUV Thomas and Jane Hancock
Sister Jane Miriam Hancock, OSUV Harry Groth II
Thomas and Linda Skeeters
Sister Jean Madeline Peake, OSUV John and Beth Clements
Sister Joan of Arc Walz, OSUV Mark and Amanda Walz
Sister Joseph Mark Hayden, OSUV Mildred Ann Carrico A’61
Sister Juliana and Sister PhilomenaV John C. Klein
Sister Kathleen Condry, OSUV Claudette E. Borchers
Robert and Rosemary Runnebaum David and Marilyn Zamierowski
Sister Kathleen Condry and Sister Helen Smith, OSUV
Tom and Mary Garbach Suzy Meinzenbach
Sister Lennora, Sister Mary Leon, Sister Philomena and Sister Mary RegisV
Ed and Gloria Cecil
Sister Teresita PionkeV
Joyce Mayeresky
Sister Magdalene SchammelV
Mary Ann Cox
Sister Marcella Schrant, OSUV
Marian Bennett
Emmeline Dahlem
Elizabeth Dawley
Clara A. George
Gerald and Margarita Gladbach
Joyce Halderman
Teresa Hancock-Haff
Arnie and Carol Hart Arieyani Hartono
Please go to www.smile.amazon.com and select the Ursuline Sisters of Mount Saint Joseph as your charity. We will receive 0.5 percent of every eligible purchase. Thank you!
Joan Horan
John and Sally Hudnall Bill and Nancy Keel Joy Kopcha
John and Barbara Lynch Elden and Florence Lyon Fred and Lois Mersmann Mary Joan Miller
Richard J. Piezuch
Mary Pikell
Irene L. Quigley
James and Elaine Sanders
Dr. Gregory and Linda Schnose Judy Parker and Elaine Skoch Rev. Thomas G. Tank
Gary and Joanne Thompson Michael and Andrea Townsend
Sharon and Donald Will
Sister Margaret Joseph Aull, Sister Mary Henry Russell, Sister Joseph Adrian Russell, OSUV
Daniel and Debbie Smith
Sister Marietta Wethington, OSUV Chaplain Linda Cirillo
Greg Goebel
Paul and Wilma Goebel
Brigid Haragan Rev. Daniel Lincoln Scott and Charlotte Marksberry William and Donna Montgomery Maria Ransdell A‘71
Fred and Kaye Reichenbach Delores Turnage
Frank and Sandra Wethington John and Kathy Wethington Richard A. Wethington
Sister Mary BertrandV Charles and Gail Saunders
Sister Mary Cecilia Payne, OSUV Mary Paula Skrivan
Sister Mary Diane Taylor, OSUV Therese Allen
Robert and Diane Black Mary Ann Bowling
Catherine T. Clements
Mark and Mary Clements Daniel and Sally Halbig Ann Mudd
Ernest and Shirley Taliaferro Thomas Taylor
Christine Wolken
Sister Mary Emily and Sister Dorothy AnnV George and Faye Briel
Sister Mary Esther Yates, OSUV Fred and Mary Ridgley
Sister Mary Ethel, Sister Bartholene, Sister Dorothy Marie Willett, and Saint Thomas MorePaducah KYV W. Michael Word
Sister Mary Evelyn Duvall, OSUV James and Frances Nichols
Sister Mary Jude Cecil, OSU, A’50V Sylvia Viglietti
Sister Mary LucilleV Rosalee McEntyre
Sister Mary Rudina (Rita) Klarer, OSUV
Tammy Milbourn
Brad Rives and Mary Klarer Rives Rev. Gerald Waris
Sister Mary Therese Brumlow, OSUV Rev. John Deatrick
Sister Mercedes Vohs, OSUV
Robert and Judy Vohs
Sister Merici Mattingly and Sister Gertrude Mattingly, OSUV Joseph Allen Millay
Sister Mildred BerdelleV
Joseph and Patricia Raphael
Sister Raymond Dieckman, OSUV Frank and Molly Devocelle
Stephen and Susan R. Schlicher
Sister Rita Lavigne, OSUV
Harry J. Lavigne
Sister Marcella Schrant, OSUV Mick Seuferling
Sister Vickie Cravens and Sister Renee Monaghan, OSUV Jim and Mary Kueny
Sister Wendelin MiltonV Rosemary Milton-Miano
Sisters Johanna and Joan Marie Lechner, OSUV David Lechner
Steve EvansV Ruth Clark
Sisters of Paola, KansasV John C. Klein
Theresa Wedding and Dorothy MurphyV
Ursuline Sisters of Mount Saint Joseph
Therese CaffeyV Patrick and Oyamel Gronstal
IN KIND GIFTS
Gary and Imelda Warren Cecil Donatos
Elizabeth and Sally Fitzgerald Wayne and Betty Hamilton Drew Hawley
Ann Jacobs
John and Mari Lynn Korte Betty Krapf
Mark and Tonya Logsdon Martha Maloney Bill and Kathy Reid Mary Teder Frank and Terrie Underwood
God Bless All of You!
Contact Carol Braden-Clarke at 270-229-2008 to discuss this today.
19
John AllenV
Allen
Would you like to leave a legacy and support the Ursuline Sisters? There are many ways to make a planned gift to ensure your resources can help the Ursuline Sisters continue their mission of serving God’s people.
8001 Cummings Road
Maple Mount, KY 42356-9998 270-229-4103 www.ursulinesmsj.org info.msj@maplemount.org
Everyone is enjoying reading Hope & Firm Faith!
Sales are going briskly for “Hope and Firm Faith: The Story of the Ursuline Sisters of Mount Saint Joseph.” It will make a wonderful Christmas gift for anyone who loves the Sisters or the history of the many places the Sisters have served.
In June, the author, Dan Heckel, gave a presentation on the book and the Ursuline Sisters at the Conference on the History of Women Religious at the University of Notre Dame. In early November, he and Sister Ruth Gehres, who edited the book, were featured on Two Main Street, the public radio/television station in Evansville, Ind. The audio recording will eventually be on the website www.news.wnin.org/two-main-street, with a television version scheduled for February.
Two upcoming talks and book signings are scheduled.
• For people in the central Kentucky area, a program will be offered from 2-4 p.m., Dec. 17, 2022, at City Hall in Raywick, Ky., 200 Main St. The Ursuline Sisters played a prominent role in educating thousands of students in Marion County for 100 years.
• People in the Owensboro area can join in a conversation on the history of the Ursuline Sisters at the Daviess County Public Library from 2-3 p.m. on Jan. 21, 2023.
If you belong to a group or parish which would like to schedule a presentation, contact Dan Heckel at dan.heckel@maplemount.org, or 270-229-2007.
To order a copy of “Hope and Firm Faith,” visit the Ursuline Sisters website at www.ursulinesmsj. org/hope-and-firm-faith-book.
Need a meeting space?
The Mount Saint Joseph Auditorium is available to rent for a half or a full day. It has a kitchen and is perfect for parties, reunions, etc. Email ap@maplemount.org or call 270-229-4103. Find out more at www.ursulinesmsj.org/ renting-the-auditorium
Sister Francis Louise Johnson
Sister George Mary Hagan
Sister Nancy Murphy
Let the angels sing! Christ is our King! Merry Christmas
from the
Ursuline Sisters of Mount Saint Joseph (Motherhouse Chapel Choir Loft)