Festival season continues Cathedral School offers weekend event

NATCHEZ – As in past years, Cathedral School Fall Festival is packed with lots of fun activities for the whole family. This year the event, which is a fund-raiser to support the school, is set for Saturday and Sunday, Oct. 4-5.
On Saturday, games, rides, concessions and a silent auction will be held from 11 a.m. – 2 p.m. That night adults only can enjoy a rib and gumbo dinner planned from 5 – 7 p.m. followed by a paddle wheel. Dinners are $7 and gumbo $5.
The family fun on Sunday continues from 11 a.m. – 2 p.m. Volunteers will serve turkey dinner from 11:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m. for $8 for adults and $5 for children. Bingo runs from 2 – 4 p.m.
New this year, is a golf ball drop. Golf balls are $25 each. Balls will be dropped over a target on the football field during halftime of the Oct. 17 game. Details: Adam Probst, cathedralfallfest@gmail.com.
Also new this year, as part of the festival, is a tennis tournament at Duncan Park on Saturday and Sunday, Oct. 11-12. Organizers said this tournament is for all, whether you are a tennis “pro” or a “backyard player.” Details: Mark and Jessica Carter, 601-431-0516.
Several items will be raffled, including $5,000 in cash, tickets are $20 each, a 40-inch Vizio Razor LED flat screen TV, an adult bicycle, accent chest, $200 for gasoline, headphones, luggage, etc.

Court interpreter seminar set

TUPELO – The Mississippi Administrative Office of Courts (AOC) is seeking bilingual speakers to act as interpreters in state court proceedings.
AOC will conduct an ethics and skill-building seminar for individuals interested in becoming court interpreters on Thursday and Friday, Oct. 9-10, at the Community Development Foundation in Tupelo. Advance registration is required by Sept. 26. The fee to attend is $75. A seminar registration form is available at  http://courts.ms.gov/aoc/courtinterpreter/forms/Application%20for%20Seminar%20%20OCTOBER%202014.pdf.
Court interpreters must understand court proceedings as well as be fluent in English and a second language. The seminar will introduce prospective foreign language interpreters to interpreting in legal settings including the courtroom, depositions and other legal proceedings.
Administrative Office of Courts Deputy Director Ta’Shia Gordon will give an overview of Mississippi’s Court Interpreter Credentialing Program. Seminar presenters are certified Spanish court interpreters Georgina Barvie’ and Arlin Lang of Gulfport, who have 20 years of combined experience in the field of interpreting and translating
The AOC developed the Mississippi Court Interpreter Credentialing Program to assist the courts in Mississippi in their endeavor to provide equal access to justice for limited English proficiency individuals.
“Language access in the courts is vital to preserving the integrity of our legal system. Individuals with limited English proficiency must have access to an interpreter to understand court proceedings and their legal rights,” said Gordon.
The seminar is the first step in the program which will train, certify and test individuals who wish to serve as interpreters in the courtrooms of Mississippi.
The seminar will outline the requirements to achieve credentialing as a registered or certified courtroom interpreter. AOC officials hope to train and issue credentials to interpreters in many languages. The biggest need is for those who speak Spanish or Vietnamese. For additional information, contact Gordon at 601-576-4632.

Bishop’s cup sports new format

091914bishopcuplogoJACKSON – The 2014 Bishop’s Cup will feature a new scoring format for golfers and a new location. The tournament, sponsored by the Catholic Foundation of the Diocese of Jackson, was held for the past several years at Colonial Country Club in Jackson. This past spring Colonial closed so tournament organizers looked for a new location.
The newly refurbished Lake Caroline Golf Course in Madison will be the new site and with the new location comes the new format of a “scramble” instead of individual stroke play when the tournament kicks off Thursday, Nov. 6. Previously golfers played their own ball the entire 18 holes and the four lowest scores from parish players would be tallied. The parish with the four lowest scores would win the Bishop’s Cup and take home the trophy until the next year.
Now golfers will be put in foursomes representing one parish and will scramble for the trophy. A scramble is basically playing from the best shot. All four players tee off. The team then chooses the best tee shot and then all play the next shot from that spot. This cycle occurs until the ball is putted into the hole.
The scramble format is faster than stroke play and is more relaxing to play because one depends on teammates to help get the best result.
Parishes can field more than one team. Individual golfers are welcome to play and will be placed in a foursome. That team will have to declare a parish prior to teeing off or they can just enjoy a day of golf without competing. Either way they will be raising funds     for the Catholic Foundation, which supports necessary projects of diocesan parishes, missions and schools through grants.
“We are very excited about the new format and location,” said Rebecca Harris, executive director of the Catholic Foundation. “Golfers will experience a great day being on the links and raising funds to help many of our parishes and missions,” Harris added.
The day concludes with a silent auction and dinner at the Mermaid Restaurant, which is just down the road from the course.
Bishop Joseph Brunini and 23 visionary Catholic leaders from throughout the Diocese of Jackson established the Catholic Foundation in 1973. Their enthusiasm was focused on creating a way to encourage and assist the people of the diocese to provide for the future financial security of their parishes, schools, and other organizations under the auspices of the diocese.
Since then, the Foundation has grown both monetarily and in the number of endowments under its management. In 1973, the managed assets were $173,691 with four endowments, and by 1992 assets were $2,463,356 with 115 endowments.
Today, the Catholic Foundation manages 390 trust funds and insurance policies with more than $20 million in assets. Most parishes and schools in the diocese now have at least one trust to provide for future financial stability. For more information or to sign up for the tournament contact Harris at (601) 969-1880.

Hispanic community joins St. Therese, celebrates new home

By Elsa Baughman
JACKSON – Carrying two statues and a painting of the Virgin of Guadalupe, the Hispanic community of St. Mary Parish processed to St. Therese Sunday, Aug. 31. After the 12:30 p.m. liturgy, they all got in their vehicles and followed Father Ricardo Phipps’ car for the 3.6 mile caravan to the church where they marked the beginning of a new community of faith with a prayer service.

Father Ricardo Phipps, (right) pastor of St. Mary and St. Therese parishes, welcomes the Hispanic community of St. Mary to St. Therese Sunday, Aug. 31. Both communities participated in a prayer service and afterward light refreshments were served. On Sundays the English Mass was changed to 10:30 a.m. and the Spanish is celebrated at 12:30 p.m. (Photos by Sister María Elena Méndez)

Father Ricardo Phipps, (right) pastor of St. Mary and St. Therese parishes, welcomes the Hispanic community of St. Mary to St. Therese Sunday, Aug. 31. Both communities participated in a prayer service and afterward light refreshments were served. On Sundays the English Mass was changed to 10:30 a.m. and the Spanish is celebrated at 12:30 p.m. (Photos by Sister María Elena Méndez)

St. Therese parishioners were waiting to welcome them.
Singing “We are the body of Christ,” both communities, led by two guitarists and singers, entered the church and placed the statues and the painting on the altar.
Father Phipps, pastor of both St. Mary and St. Therese, told the congregation it was a day of great joy. “Every church is God’s house and today is a day when we form a new community,” he said. “We want to welcome our new parishioners from St. Mary. Now we are all parishioners of St. Therese.”
Father Phipps noted that all come with their own traditions and history but “most importantly we all come as children of God.”
After the brief prayer service the St. Therese community hosted a reception for its new parishioners.
Joel Montoya, catechist and Eucharistic minister, believes any change for the good of the people is welcomed. “We are only changing the building where we worship,” he said. Montoya noted all the programs and classes offered at St. Mary will continue with several added benefits and space.
According to Karina Solano, catechist, there are about 100 children registered for religious education classes.

Guadalupan Sisters Lourdes González (center) and María Josefa Garcia (back row) pray with the community at St. Therese Church on Aug. 31. Sister González is serving as pastoral assistant to the Hispanic community.

Guadalupan Sisters Lourdes González (center) and María Josefa Garcia (back row) pray with the community at St. Therese Church on Aug. 31. Sister González is serving as pastoral assistant to the Hispanic community.

“The space at St. Therese is great for all the classes we are offering so we can accommodate between 20 and 30 children in each classroom,” she said.
Solano is very excited about all the new classrooms, the gymnasium, and the  football field at her new parish. “This change comes to us as the ring to the finger,” she said, using a Spanish phrase meaning ‘a perfect fit.’ “We will be able to grow and offer more activities to our families and their children.”
St. Therese parishioners, Phyllis and Ben Mokry, attended the Mass and procession. “When the Hispanic parishioners brought in their statues of Our Lady of Guadalupe, I was humbled by their devotion to both her and St. Mary Church,” said Phyllis. “It must be very difficult for St. Mary parishioners to be faced with such a challenge as leaving their spiritual home. I’ve felt challenged as well with all the changes happening so quickly.
“But the changes have made a connection with St. Mary, St. Therese and Christ the King parishes that would not have happened normally. I remember reading that St. Therese of Lisieux wanted to be a missionary, but couldn’t. I see this as her opportunity to make her dream come true in our parish.”

After 47 years, Francis to retire from Xavier University of Louisiana

By Peter Finney Jr.
NEW ORLEANS (CNS) – Fittingly, the announcement came inside Xavier University of Louisiana’s sleek convocation center, the newest of many green-roofed monuments that Norman C. Francis, the longest-serving university president in the United States, had built through charisma, prayer and personal witness.

Norman Francis, 83, president of Xavier University of Louisiana since 1968, is pictured being honored in 2006 by President George W. Bush with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor. (CNS photo/Shealah Craighead, White House)

Norman Francis, 83, president of Xavier University of Louisiana since 1968, is pictured being honored in 2006 by President George W. Bush with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor. (CNS photo/Shealah Craighead, White House)

Francis, 83, the patriarch of the Xavier family since 1968, told thousands of students, faculty and staff Sept. 4 that he would step down in June 2015 as president of the only historically black Catholic university in the Western Hemisphere.
“After nearly 47 years, I know the time has come to take the brightly burning torch turned over to me by the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament and pass it on to new leadership,” Francis said. “I do this with a passionate confidence and absolute certainty that Xavier is better prepared than ever to continue its educational and spiritual mission and to build on its tradition of excellence.”
Francis’ tenure spanned generations and overcame many obstacles, not the least of which was restoring a campus inundated by the floodwaters of Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
When Francis came to Xavier as a 17-year-old freshman on a work scholarship in 1948, the campus consisted of just a few permanent buildings, several small houses and Army surplus trailers in one city block. Xavier’s burgeoning campus today is dotted with 16 buildings on 63 acres, and the endowment has grown from $2 million to more than $160 million.
More importantly, 20,000 students have earned degrees, and Xavier annually places more African-Americans in medical school than any other college in the country. The school also leads the nation in the number of African-Americans earning degrees in biology, chemistry, physics and the physical sciences.
Francis, the son of a Lafayette barber and homemaker, graduated from Xavier in 1952 and became the first African-American to graduate from Loyola University New Orleans’ Law School. His older brother Joseph was the fourth black Catholic bishop in the U.S., serving as auxiliary bishop of Newark, New Jersey.
After serving in the Army, Francis worked with the U.S. attorney to help desegregate federal agencies in the South. He returned to Xavier in 1957 as dean of men and became the first lay president of the university in 1968, getting the appointment from the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament on the same day civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated in Memphis.
“His assassination was like blowing up the dream,” Francis said. “I think it dulled our senses. We were in shock.”
Francis often reflected on the many “miracles” produced by Xavier, but the biggest miracle of all, he said, is that it existed in the first place.
Xavier was founded by St. Katharine Drexel, a Philadelphia heiress who entered religious life, formed the Blessed Sacrament Sisters and then used her family inheritance to educate blacks and native Americans throughout the U.S.
St. Katharine opened the university in 1925, building an impressive administration and classroom building out of Indiana limestone. Xavier’s initial focus was to prepare African-Americans, who could not get a private school education in Louisiana, for future careers as teachers.
Francis said he was motivated by the example and discipline imparted by his parents, neither of whom graduated from high school.
“But they were as smart as anyone who had completed college,” Francis said. “I was full of dreams and more than a little bit of fear. Quickly, my fears were allayed and my dreams began to be nurtured by the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament, the rest of the caring faculty and staff, as well as my fellow students, who shared many of the same dreams and fears.
“My experience as a student shaped my personal ambitions and ideas for what my role could be in changing the world. My faith guided me to apply the gifts that God had blessed me with to serve others.”
Francis said he had fleeting thoughts about retiring after Katrina devastated the Xavier campus and flooded 80 percent of New Orleans. But those notions quickly vanished as he pulled together a small core of administrators, faculty and staff in temporary headquarters in Grand Coteau, Louisiana.
“I thought about it, but not for long,” Francis said. “I couldn’t leave, not just because of who I was, but because I knew that Xavier wasn’t ready to give up to a hurricane. We had 80 people who brought us back in four and a half months, and 75 percent of them had lost their homes. That was not easy. There’s something about adrenaline. There’s something about knowing when it’s time to make a decision.”
Francis had lost his home as well, but even in the midst of the recovery efforts he agreed to a plea from Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco to chair the Louisiana Recovery Authority, the state panel that provided guidelines for how the region would use federal funds to rebuild. In 2006, Francis received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President George W. Bush.
Michael Rue, chairman of the university’s board of trustees, said there is no true way to measure Francis’ impact on thousands of students and on the New Orleans community.
“There’s not a lot of servant leaders in this world,” Rue said. “This man could have been a politician, a successful businessman, a very successful lawyer. A lot of doors would have opened for him. But Xavier needed him and the nuns needed him.” Rue said board members hope to have a new president in place by July 1.
(Copyright © 2014 Catholic News Service/United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. The CNS news services may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed, including but not limited to, such means as framing or any other digital copying or distribution method in whole or in part, without prior written authority of Catholic News Service.)

Volunteers enjoy hearty ‘thank you’ from SHSM

By Laura Grisham
HOLLY SPRINGS – People from 19 area churches and civic groups came to the Garden Cafe Monday, Sept. 8, for a celebration in honor of their service to Sacred Heart Southern Mission (SHSM), Holly Springs Social Services and the Garden Cafe.
The annual dinner is a small token of thanks for the many hours of hard work these dedicated people do to make sure the needy in Holly Springs get a healthy, hearty, hot meal twice a week.
The Garden Cafe was started in 2009 as a way to better use food donations received by Holly Springs Social services. When it first opened it drew only 30 or 40 clients for its once-a-week seating. Once word got out, the numbers doubled. Now it offers meals twice a week, on Tuesdays and Thursdays, and recently averaged 121 guests at each service.

Volunteers from 19 churches and civic groups enjoy an appreciation dinner at the Garden Cafe run by Sacred Heart Southern Missions (Photo by Laura Grisham)

Volunteers from 19 churches and civic groups enjoy an appreciation dinner at the Garden Cafe run by Sacred Heart Southern Missions (Photo by Laura Grisham)

Volunteer coordinator Kelly Tartt thanked all of the attendees, saying, “Time is the one gift you give that you can never get back. It is the greatest gift of all.”
After giving thanks, the guests were treated to a meal prepared by cafe coordinator Ralph Howard and volunteer Alan Stanford from the American Red Cross.
When asked how he managed a steak dinner for everyone, Ralph grinned with excitement. “Wal-Mart,” he explained. “I get a call most everyday for pickup. They give me everything a man could ask for to make all this possible – meat, oil dry milk, you name it.”
During dinner, Lois Harrison gave the Protection of Children presentation. This is a requirement for all volunteers and employees who work with children.
Ralph was pleasantly surprised when a longtime volunteer and Cadet/St. Mary’s alumni presented him with a $500 donation to go toward a new freezer for the Holly Springs Social Service food pantry. Vincent Smith and his family decided to make the donation in honor of the 10th anniversary of the death of his father, James Smith. “We know he would really like that,” said Vincent. “That would really make him proud.”
After dinner, Lois, Ralph and Kelly recognized each of the volunteer organizations with a certificate of appreciation. Volunteers were also given individual tokens from the mission.”We wanted everyone to know how very much their time and effort is appreciated,” said Lois.
Ralph commented at the recent social service meeting that he had never seen such giving from an entire community. “It’s amazing! I am blessed to be in this position,” he said.
Without volunteers from all of the churches and groups; without donors like Vincent and his family; without corporate sponsors like Wal-Mart, the Garden Cafe would not be able to serve thousands of people each year. Many people simply would not eat.
(Laura Grisham is the public relations coordinator for Sacred Heart Southern Missions)

Fall retreats promise stillness, joyful renewal

St. Mary of the Pines
Eight-day retreats –  $640
Five-day retreats –  $400
Weekend directed retreats – $160
Directed Retreats: The resident retreat director is Sister Dorez Mehrtens, SSND. During 2014, she is available for directed retreats on the following dates:  Sept. 24-Oct. 3, Oct. 6-13, Nov. 10-18, and Dec. 1-10. To schedule a retreat contact Sister Dorez, 601-783-0411 or 601-810-7758 (cell).
Private Retreats: A private retreat is a retreat without a director and may be scheduled any time space is available. The individual chooses his/her own resources and rhythm of prayer and reflection throughout the day. Suggested donation: $65 per night. Financial assistance for any retreat is available upon request.
Contact: St. Mary of the Pines Retreat Center, 3167 Old Highway 51 South, Osyka, MS, 39657, 601-783-3494, retreatcenter@ssnddallas.org.

The Dwelling Place
“Be Still and Know that I am God,” Sept. 26-28, Oct. 3-5. Two, three or five day retreat, extended as desired. Come, get away, be still and sort out your life under the Holy Spirit’s guidance. Experience God’s presence in the quiet and a personally guided prayer experience adapted to your needs.
It is a time of quiet and prayerful reflection primarily using scripture. Meet daily with the director, Clare Van Lent, for guidance and mutual discernment. Retreat begins with dinner at 6:30 p.m. Cost is $80 per day.
Contact: The Dwelling Place, 2824 Dwelling Place Road, Brooksville, MS, 39739, 662-738-5348, www.dwellingplace.com.

Sister Therese Jacobs
“Contemplative Outreach Day of Renewal,” Saturday, Oct. 4, from 9 a.m. – noon at Jackson St. Richard Church in Chichester Room. Focus of the day is the Welcoming Prayer, a practice of “letting go” in routines of daily life. Presenters will be Sister Therese Jacobs and Kris Mink, St. Columb Church, Ridgeland.
Contact: Sister Therese Jacobs, 601 366 2335, jacobs@saintrichard.org.
“Centering Prayer workshop retreat,” Saturday, Oct. 11, from 9 a.m. – 3 p.m. at St. Alban’s Episcopal Church,  5930 Warrior’s Trail, Bovina Miss. Presenters will be Kris Mink, St. Columb Church, Ridgeland, and Sister Therese Jacobs. A freewill offering will be taken.
Contact: Marci Turner, 601-634 6027, marci_t@hotmail.com or Rev. Billie Abraham, 601-594-0016, bilabraham@aol.com.

Benedictine Center
“Woman Spirit Rising,” (WSR) Sept. 26-28. On this retreat participants will hear stories of the Black Madonna of various countries and explore their own spiritual longings for the Divine Mother. Retreat Directors: Sister Mary McGehee and and the WSR Team. Cost is $210 for private rooms and $185 per person for shared room.
Contact: Benedictine Sisters, 916 Convent Road, Cullman, AL 35055, (256) 734-4622, shmon@shmon.org.

Jesuit Spirituality Center
Directed Retreats: The Jesuit Spirituality Center specializes in personally directed retreats based on the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius Loyola. Solitude and silence are important aspects of these retreats. Retreats may range from three, five, or eight days, to a full month. Eight-day retreats are scheduled for Sept. 29-Oct. 8, Oct. 13-22, Oct. 27-Nov. 5, Nov. 10-19 and Dec. 8-17. Three-day and five-day retreats start on the same dates as the eight-day periods. Costs vary according to the length of the retreat.
“Consider It Pure Joy: Persevering Through Life’s Trials – A Day of Renewal for Women,” Saturday, Sept. 27, from 9 a.m, – 4 p.m. In this day of reflection, participants will look at the trials of life in the context of their walk with Christ and explore the contemplative prayer forms of lectio divina and art as prayer. Retreat Director: Andrea “Ani” Vidrine, licensed clinical social worker in private practice and teacher of yoga. Cost is $50, includes lunch.
Contact: Jesuit Spirituality Center,  313 Martin Luther King Dr., Grand Coteau, La 70541, 337-662-5251.

Feast days set for new saints JPII, John XXIII

By Carol Glatz
VATICAN CITY (CNS) – In light of “countless requests from every part of the world,” Pope Francis has approved putting Sts. John Paul II and John XXIII on the church’s universal calendar of feast days.
Called the General Roman Calendar, it is the universal schedule of holy days and feast days for the Latin rite of the Catholic Church.
The two saints’ feast days, both of which have the ranking of an optional – not obligatory – memorial, are Oct. 11 for St. John XXIII and Oct. 22 for St. John Paul II. The Vatican newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano, published the decree Sept. 11 from the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Sacraments. The pope determines who makes the universal calendar based on recommendations from the congregation for worship.
In 2007, Pope Benedict approved stricter guidelines for determining which saints will be remembered with mandatory feast days. The new norms were necessary, the congregation had said, because the year does not have enough days to include all the saints in the universal calendar, particularly when Sundays and holy days are subtracted.
Pope Francis, who canonized the two saints in April, approved the optional memorials “given the extraordinary nature of these pontiffs in offering the clergy and the faithful a unique model of virtue and in promoting the life of Christ,” the decree said.
“Taking into consideration the countless requests from every part of the world,” the pope took “as his own the unanimous wishes of the people of God,” it said.
(Copyright © 2014 Catholic News Service/United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. The CNS news services may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed, including but not limited to, such means as framing or any other digital copying or distribution method in whole or in part, without prior written authority of Catholic News Service.)

Embrace abundance of God

IN EXILE
By Father Ron Rolheiser, OMI
My youth had both its strengths and its weaknesses. I grew up on a farm in heart of the Canadian prairies, a second-generation immigrant. Our family was a large one and the small farm we lived on gave us enough to live on, though just enough. There were never any extras. We were never hungry or genuinely poor, but we lived in a conscriptive frugality. You were given what you needed, but rarely anything extra.
You got just one portion of the main course at a meal and one dessert because these had to be measured out in a way that left enough for everyone. And I lived happily inside that, taking for granted that this was the way life was meant to be, assuming that all resources are limited and you shouldn’t ever be asking for or taking more than what’s necessary.
And such a background has its strengths: You grow into adulthood with the sense that there’s no free lunch, you need to earn what you eat. You know too that you shouldn’t be taking more than your share because the goods of this world are limited and meant to be shared with everyone. If you take more than your share, than there won’t be enough for everyone. Resources are limited, so if anyone gets too much, someone gets too little.
But such an upbringing also has its downside: When everything has to be measured out to ensure that there’s enough for everyone and you live with the underlying fear that there might not be enough, you can easily end-up with a sense of scarcity rather than of abundance and an inclination towards stinginess rather than generosity.
A mindset of scarcity rather than of abundance debilitates us in several ways: First, it tends to leave us standing before life’s abundance too timid to celebrate life with any exuberance. Life is too equated with frugality and you are forever haunted by guilt in the face of life’s goodness and especially before any experience of luxury, not unlike the discomfort felt by Jesus’ disciples when they are face to face with a prodigal woman lavishly anointing Jesus’ feet with expensive perfume.
Inside a mindset of scarcity there’s the perennial temptation to falsely idealize suffering and poverty and have them replace grace and abundance as God’s real gift to us. More crippling still is the fact that a sense of scarcity too often gives us a concept of a God who is limited and who is frugal rather than prodigal. But that isn’t the God of Jesus.
Allow me just one, rather pointed, illustration: a seminary professor whom I know shares this story. He’s been teaching seminarians for many years and in recent years, when teaching about the sacrament of penance, is frequently asked this question, often as the first question in the class: “When can I refuse absolution? When do I not grant forgiveness?” The anxiety expressed here is not, I believe, triggered by a need for power but by a very sincere fear that we have to be rather scrupulous in handing out God’s mercy, that we shouldn’t be handing out cheap grace. And, undergirding that fear, I believe, is the unconscious notion that God too works out of a sense of scarcity rather than of abundance, and that God’s mercies, like our own resources, are limited and need to be measured out very sparingly.
But that’s not the God whom Jesus incarnated and revealed. The Gospels rather reveal a God who is prodigal beyond all our standards and beyond our imagination. The God of the Gospels is the Sower who, because he has unlimited seeds, scatters those seeds everywhere without discrimination: on the road, in the ditches, in the thorn bushes, in bad soil, and in good soil.
Moreover that prodigal Sower is also the God of creation, that is, the God who has created and continues to create hundreds of billions of galaxies and billions and billions of human beings. And this prodigal God gives us this perennial invitation: Come to the waters, come without money, come without merit because God’s gift is as plentiful, available, and as free as the air we breathe.
The Gospel of Luke recounts an incident where Peter, just after he had spent an entire night fishing and had caught nothing, is told to cast out his net one more time and, this time, Peter’s net catches so many fish that the weight of the catch threatens to sink two boats. Peter reacts by falling on his knees and confessing his sinfulness.
But, as the text makes clear, that’s not the proper reaction in the face of over-abundance. Peter is wrongly fearful, in effect, wanting that over-abundance to go away; when what Jesus wants from him in the face of that over-abundance is to go out to the world and share with others that unimaginable grace.
What God’s over-abundance is meant to teach us is that, in the face of limitless grace, we may never refuse anyone absolution.
(Oblate Father Ron Rolheiser, theologian, teacher and award-winning author, is President of the Oblate School of Theology in San Antonio, TX.)

Linda Raff named interim director of Catholic Charities

By Maureen Smith
JACKSON – Former director Linda Raff has taken over as interim director of Catholic Charities of Jackson while the organization seeks a new executive director. Raff previously acted as director from 1994-2008.
A search committee will formulate requirements and begin advertising for the spot in the coming weeks.
Catholic Charities celebrated 50 years of faith and service in 2013, having started as a service to care for orphans in Natchez. Today, Catholic Charities offers a number of services through the parishes and through direct aid to those in need including substance abuse services, domestic violence and runaway shelters, rape crisis services, family counseling, child and adult mental health services, care for unwed mothers, foster care, adoption services, legal aid for immigrants and low-income housing assistance for veterans, the elderly and families.
Catholic Charities is funded through the annual Catholic Service Appeal, direct donations and through federal and state funding and grants. The mission of Catholic Charities is to be a visible sign of Christ’s love and concern for all people. The services are offered to anyone in need, not just Catholics.