El Señor de la vida ha resucitado

EL VATICANO (CNS) – ¡Jesucristo ha resucitado! Ahora la iglesia se concentra en celebrar con alegría y júbilo los 50 días del tiempo pascual que abarca desde el domingo de Resurrección hasta el domingo de Pentecostés. La iglesia nos invita a celebrar estos días de Pascua con profundidad y nos anima a aprovechar las gracias que Dios nos ha dado para crecer en nuestra fe y ser mejores cristianos.
En la Misa de la Pascua de Resurrección en la Plaza de San Pedro en Roma, el Papa Francisco reconoció que “con su muerte y resurrección, Jesús muestra a todos la vía de la vida y la felicidad: esta vía es la humildad, que comparte la humillación”. Igualmente aseguró que los cristianos “tratamos de vivir al servicio de los demás, de no ser altivos, sino disponibles y respetuosos. Esto no es debilidad, sino auténtica fuerza”, dijo.
En su mensaje, el pontífice le pidió a las miles de personas reunidas en la plaza que imploraran al Señor resucitado la gracia de no ceder al orgullo que fomenta la violencia y las guerras. “Pedimos a Jesús victorioso que alivie el sufrimiento de tantos hermanos nuestros perseguidos a causa de su nombre, así como de todos los que padecen injustamente las consecuencias de los conflictos y la violencia que se está produciendo. Son muchas.

Este crucifijo de Jesucristo resucitado está en el altar de la Parroquia Santa María en Jackson. En 1994, cuando la nueva iglesia fue construida, el comité que se encargó del proyecto decidió que se colocara un Cristo resucitado en el centro del altar.

Este crucifijo de Jesucristo resucitado está en el altar de la Parroquia Santa María en Jackson. En 1994, cuando la nueva iglesia fue construida, el comité que se encargó del proyecto decidió que se colocara un Cristo resucitado en el centro del altar.

El Papa Francisco oró ese domingo de Resurrección por que Jesucristo alivie el sufrimiento de tantos hermanos nuestros perseguidos a causa de su nombre”, en especial en Irak y Siria. Pidió la paz también para palestinos e israelíes y el fin de los conflictos en Libia, Yemen, Nigeria, Sudán del Sur y diversas regiones del Sudán y la República Democrática del Congo. Se acordó en especial de los 147 estudiantes universitarios asesinados el miércoles anterior por terroristas yihadistas en Kenia y pidió también el fin del conflicto en Ucrania.
Al final de su discurso, imploró porque la voz consoladora y sanadora del Señor Jesús llegue a los marginados, los presos, los pobres y los emigrantes, tan a menudo rechazados, maltratados y desechados; a los enfermos y a los que sufren; a los niños, especialmente aquellos sometidos a la violencia; a cuantos hoy están de luto; y a todos los hombres y mujeres de buena voluntad.
El 1 de abril, Miercoles Santo, el El Papa Francisco dedicó la catequesis de la Audiencia General a explicar el significado del Triduo Pascual, para invitar a los fieles a no limitarse sólo a conmemorar la Pasión del Señor sino entrar en el misterio, haciendo propios los sentimientos y actitudes de Jesús, “como nos invita a hacer el apóstol Pablo”.
Sobre el domingo de Resurrección dijo, “Nuestra vida no termina delante de la piedra de un sepulcro, nuestra vida va más allá, con la esperanza del Cristo que ha resucitado, precisamente de aquel sepulcro. Como cristianos estamos llamados a ser centinelas de la mañana para que sepamos advertir los signos del resucitado, como han hecho las mujeres y los discípulos que fueron al sepulcro en el alba del primer día de la semana”.
“Lleven a sus casas y a quienes encuentran el alegre anuncio que ha resucitado el Señor de la vida, llevando consigo amor, justicia, respeto y perdón”.
(Derechos de autor © 2014 Servicio de Noticias Católicas (CNS)/ Conferencia de Obispos Católicos de los Estados Unidos. Los servicio de noticias de CNS no pueden ser publicados, transmitidos, reescritos o de ninguna otra forma distribuidos, incluyendo pero no limitado a, medios tales como formación o  copia digital o método de distribución en su totalidad o en parte, sin autorización previa y por escrito del Servicio de Noticias Católicas)

In memoriam: Bishop William Friend

Bishop William Benedict Friend, the founding Bishop of the Diocese of Shreveport, died at his home in Coral Springs, Florida, Thursday, April 2.  Born Oct. 22, 1931, in Miami, Bishop Friend was ordained to the Catholic priesthood in Mobile, Ala., on May 7, 1959. He and retired Bishop William Houck of the Diocese of Jackson, were good friends.
After lengthy service as a parish priest and pastoral research specialist, Father Friend was named as Auxiliary Bishop of Alexandria, La., in 1979, becoming bishop of Alexandria in 1983. Under the direction of St. John Paul II, Bishop Friend founded the Diocese of Shreveport in July 1986 and remained bishop of that diocese until his retirement in 2006 after 47 years of active priesthood, 36 of those years serving as a bishop. He leaves behind a remarkable legacy of public speaking, pastoral experience, teaching and educational administration as well as published works on both professional and research levels.
Bishop Houck remembers a joyful man who “lived up to his name,” befriending all who knew him. “He was a capable and dedicated leader. He had a joyful and generous manner of using his values, talents and abilities in service to others,” said Bishop Houck. He added that Bishop Friend was a great supporter of Catholic schools. “He contributed greatly in research and planning, which he used to help the church and society at large,” added Bishop Houck.
“He left me a diocese in wonderful shape,” commented current Shreveport Bishop Michael Duca.  “His many years of work to create an active and dedicated community of priests and lay faithful is a tribute to his enormous skill and pastoral leadership.  All of us within our worship community remain grateful for his ministry to us.”
The Funeral Mass was Tuesday, April 14, at the Cathedral of St. John Berchmans located in Shreveport. The diocese has asked that in lieu of flowers, donations be made to Catholic Charities.

Children’s book to benefit African Mission schools

By Elsa Baughman
CHATAWA – Sister Dorothy Ann Balser, a retired School Sister of Notre Dame (SSND) living at St. Mary of the Pines, is busy selling her children’s book “Bitsy Bee with the Allergy” to raise funds for schools for girls in Ghana, West Africa, where she spent 11 years in ministry. She said many of the female population in that country has been deprived of education because of poverty or other inequalities.

Sister Dorothy Ann Balser signs a copy of her book, “Bitsy Bee with the Allergy” for Mary Parker (left) while Nancy McGee looks on. Sister Balser talked about her book to St. Therese parishioners during their annual retreat at St. Mary of the Pines. (Photo by Elsa Baughman)

Sister Dorothy Ann Balser signs a copy of her book, “Bitsy Bee with the Allergy” for Mary Parker (left) while Nancy McGee looks on. Sister Balser talked about her book to St. Therese parishioners during their annual retreat at St. Mary of the Pines. (Photo by Elsa Baughman)

In 1985, Sister Balser was one of four sisters who volunteered to begin a girls secondary school in Sunyani, Ghana, and later a primary school for boys and girls in Cape Coast. Now 87, and unable to actively teach, Sister Balser continues her ministry of helping girls in West Africa by selling her book and sending all the proceeds to the schools where more than 73 SSND sisters are working.
The 31-page book is about bees. She said she had been reading about the extreme importance of honeybees and learned that they are slowly disappearing in parts of our country.
“I was prompted to help young readers to learn about honeybees, their service to people by pollination, and to develop an appreciation for the bees and how they also serve us humans with their delicious honey,” she noted.
She explained that the bees’ lives as community members can teach children how we should work and take care of and help one another, be grateful for the gifts given, and the understanding that we all have our own individual gifts and talents.
“I had a lot of fun writing this story,” said Sister Balser. “It has a lot of useful information and is written in a delightful fairy tale manner that catches the attention of the young child. Hopefully, it will give them a deeper respect and love for the bees.”
The illustrations are the work of Sister Theresa Marie Dietz, SSND, who has a master’s in art from Notre Dame University. She taught art and math for 43 years in high schools in several different states. According to the credits in the book, “when asked to illustrate the book she said she was happy to help with the project knowing that the proceeds would go to very worthy causes.”
She has received encouraging and supportive notes from many people as far as Japan, telling her that, they, themselves, enjoyed reading the book and even learned several things that they didn’t know about the honeybees.
Another says, “I read a copy of your book at my mother’s house on Sunday and found it perfectly charming. I found it meaningful on so many different levels – facts about bees, overcoming handicaps and being yourself, and praying to God for help. I am ordering several copies to give to Vicksburg Catholic School, St Aloysius, and to our church library.”
She still has about eight or nine hundred books to sell and then she plans to write another book, perhaps about ants. “I do not know much about ants, but I know it is time to start my research soon. Some of us consider the little insects just pests and try to get rid of them.  They do have a value  in our world or otherwise God would not have made them,” she noted.
Sister Balser have had some generous donors who  have encouraged her to continue her project. One of her nephews ordered l00 books just a week before Christmas and gave many of them away to his friends as gifts, she said. The printer donated 100 copies too, to help with the expense of printing.
The cost of the book is $11 plus tax. All proceeds will benefit the “Educate a Girl in Africa” project.
This book is also available at the Carmelite Gift Shop in Jackson, 601-373-1460, and at the Our Lady’s Corner Gift Shop at Meridian St. Patrick Parish, 601-693-1321. Call to ask about availability.
To order a book or for information contact Sister Balser at St. Mary of the Pines Retreat Center, 3167 Old Highway 51 South, Osyka, MS, 39657, 601-783-3494, retreatcenter@ssnddallas.org.

Recibiendo nuevo crecimiento en Semana Santa

Por Obispo Joseph Kopacz
Desde el sepulcro vacío hasta cada círculo ilimitado del amor de Dios vivo en el corazón de los creyentes, es el milagro de la resurrección del Señor a nuestro alrededor. Este es el Cuerpo de Cristo, la iglesia, dos billones en un mundo de siete billones de personas. De una fascinante manera, el cuerpo del Señor en este mundo se compara al universo en el que nuestro planeta es una minúscula mota. La creación y la iglesia continúan creciendo a un ritmo acelerado.
La proclamación del evangelio se ha expandido y acelerado en los últimos decenios debido al repentino impacto de los medios sociales y del internet (www). Es más, la migración de decenas de millones de personas del campo a la ciudad en muchos países permite que el evangelio llegue a muchos más de ellos.
Sin embargo, el crecimiento en el Cuerpo de Cristo se produce constantemente en las comunidades cristianas de todo el mundo como la buena usanza antigua, de persona a persona y de familia a familia.
Durante la celebración de la Vigilia Pascual  muchas de nuestras parroquias locales y en las parroquias de toda la Iglesia Católica universal, le dieron la bienvenida a los elegidos y a los candidatos a la plena comunión a través de los sacramentos de iniciación, el bautismo, la confirmación y la Comunión.
Cada una de las personas que se acercó y afirmó, “Creo en Jesucristo, crucificado y resucitado de entre los muertos”, se convirtió en una parte del creciente círculo de amor de Dios. En la liturgia de la Vigilia Pascual del Sábado Santo en la catedral, participamos en la alegría del Señor con tres nuevos bautizados y en general, 14 fueron iniciados plenamente en la comunidad parroquial.
Para muchos de los catecúmenos, los candidatos, sus padrinos y patrocinadores, estos son momentos de cambio en sus vida. Su respuesta a la llamada del Señor, la mayoría de las veces mediante el ejemplo y la invitación de amigos y familiares, es una fuente de renovación para nosotros, la tradicional familia católica. Su fervor y alegría pueden ser contagiosas para nosotros, renovando nuestro entusiasmo para vivir las Buenas Noticias.
Sin embargo, también sabemos por experiencia que la expansión de la iglesia también experimenta la pérdida de sus miembros. No es necesario mirar más allá de nuestros familiares, vecinos y amigos para ver que en muchos de los cuales la semilla y el don de la fe se plantaron se han marchitado por la falta de participación activa. Racionalmente, sabemos que esto es inevitable, sobre todo entre los católicos de cuna, pero cuando es alguien cercano a nosotros puede ser una inquietante y triste realidad.
Las tentaciones y los obstáculos que pueden destruir o frenar la semilla de la fe fueron identificados por Jesús en su parábola del sembrador y la semilla en los Evangelios de Mateo, Marcos y Lucas. La semilla que cae en el camino y es pisoteada representa el espíritu del mundo, con todos sus negocios y distracciones que agarran la semilla de la vida. O lo que es peor, como dice Jesús, es el espíritu del Maligno, que sin cesar está tratando de destruir el don de la fe.
La semilla que cae en suelo rocoso no es capaz de penetrar profundamente en la tierra y vive en precariedad, y cuando el sufrimiento o la persecución por causa del nombre de Jesús viene a llamar, el discípulo tambaleante a menudo se aleja. El sufrimiento o la persecución pueden fortalecer nuestra fe y nuestro amor por el Señor, especialmente en su cruz, pero esto requiere raíces profundas.
Además, la semilla que cae entre espinos tiene un gran riesgo porque a medida que el crecimiento ocurre el hostil entorno sofoca la planta. Jesús habló de estos obstáculos o amenazas como la ansiedad o el miedo, o la seducción de las riquezas y el placer que abundan en nuestro mundo material. Aparte de la fe y su compañero la moral, muchas personas se van a la deriva.
Sin embargo, la semilla cae en buena tierra, y podemos ver la cosecha de 30, o 60, o el ciento por uno. Esta es una gran retribución por el tiempo que invertimos porque es la obra del Señor que no puede ser superada en generosidad. Esta es la sangre y el agua que brotó de su costado en la cruz, representados en la imagen de la Divina Misericordia fluyendo del lado de Cristo, que nosotros conocemos como la visión comunicada a la Hermana Faustina.
En la víspera del Domingo de la Divina Misericordia, el Papa Francisco declaró el Año Santo de la Misericordia que comenzará a finales de este año, un año de gracia del Señor, que abre la puerta al perdón y a la reconciliación en nuestras vidas. A medida que avanzamos en el 2015, como una iglesia ésta será nuestra oración, y esta será nuestra esperanza en preparación para el Año Santo de la Misericordia.
La sabiduría detrás del anuncio del papa es transparente. Él no está solamente rogando ardientemente por la renovación de la iglesia en todo el mundo a la luz de la muerte y resurrección del Señor, sino que también nos está inspirando a ser instrumentos de la Divina Misericordia de Dios por los perdidos y alejados.
Jesucristo no tiene otro cuerpo ahora pero el de nosotros, y cuando el Señor sopló el don del Espíritu Santo sobre los Apóstoles en la primera Pascua y los envió al mundo en su nombre, él hace lo mismo por nosotros. “Como el Padre me ha enviado, así también los envío yo”. Recuerden que en la Última Cena, Jesús reveló el contenido de su mandato con la Eucaristía y el lavado de los pies: “Haced esto en memoria mía”, y “como yo lo he hecho, así lo deben hacer”.
Estas imágenes han sido marcadas en nuestra conciencia como cristianos católicos, y cada vez que las ponemos en práctica abrimos las puertas a lo sagrado, y a la misericordia divina. La evangelización fluye de la misericordia de Dios buscando a todas las personas.
El mensaje del Evangelio se está expandiendo y acelerando en todo el mundo, pero no está en piloto automático. La iglesia y sus miembros están envueltos en el plan de salvación de Dios, y es un constante trabajo de amor a fin de que el Reino de Dios, reino de la vida, de la justicia y la paz puedan ser una mayor realidad para todas las personas. Jesús dijo que fuéramos a todas las naciones, y el Papa Francisco, el sucesor de San Pedro, nos inspira a ir hacia aquellos que están en los márgenes de la sociedad, o que hemos marginado, con el fin de bendecir a cada persona con la misericordia y la paz de Dios. El mundo nunca puede aplastar, quemar o ahogar el don de la Misericordia Divina.
En efecto, el Señor ha resucitado del sepulcro, regocijémonos y alegrémonos, Aleluya.

Welcoming new growth at Easter

By Bishop Joseph Kopacz
From the empty tomb to the ever widening circle of God’s love alive in the hearts of believers, the miracle of the Lord’s resurrection is all around us. This is the Body of Christ, the Church, two billion in a world of 7 billion people. In a spellbinding way the Lord’s body in this world parallels the universe in which our planet is a miniscule speck. Creation and the church continue to expand at an accelerating pace.
The proclamation of the gospel has expanded and accelerated in recent decades due to the sudden far reaching impact of social media and the World Wide Web.  Moreover, the migration of tens of millions of people from the countryside to the city in many countries allows the gospel to reach so many more.
Yet, growth in the Body of Christ steadily occurs the good old fashioned way, person-by-person, family-by-family, in Christian communities throughout the world. Many of our local parishes, and parishes everywhere in the universal Catholic Church, welcomed the elect and the candidates into full communion through the sacraments of initiation, Baptism, Confirmation, and Communion during the Easter Vigil celebration.
Every person who stepped forward to say, I believe in Jesus Christ, crucified and risen from the dead, became a part of the ever widening circle of God’s love. At the Holy Saturday Easter Vigil liturgy at the Cathedral, we shared in the joy of the Lord with three newly baptized, and overall, 14 were fully initiated into the parish community.
These are life-changing moments for many of the catechumens and candidates, and their godparents and sponsors. Their response to the Lord’s call, most often through the example and invitation of friends and family, is a source of renewal for us, the traditional Catholic family. Their zeal and joy can be infectious for us, renewing our enthusiasm for living the Good News.
However, we also know from experience that the ever-expanding church also experiences the attrition of its members. It is not necessary to look beyond our family, neighbors and friends to see that many in whom the seed and gift of faith were planted have withered for lack of active participation.
Rationally, we know that this is inevitable, especially among cradle Catholics, but when it is someone close to us it can be a troubling and sad reality.
The temptations and obstacles that can destroy or stunt the seeds of faith were identified by Jesus in his parable of the Sower and the Seed in the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke.
The seed that falls on the path and gets trampled represents the spirit of the world with all of its business and distractions that snatch the seed of life away. Or worse, as Jesus says, it is the spirit of the Evil One who relentlessly is seeking to destroy the gift of faith. The seed that falls on rocky ground is not capable of penetrating deeply into the soil and lives in precariousness so that when suffering or persecution for the sake of the name of Jesus comes knocking, the shaky disciple often falls away. Suffering or persecution can strengthen our faith and love for the Lord, especially in his Cross, but this requires deep roots.
In addition, the seed that falls among thorns is at great risk because as the growth occurs the hostile environment chokes the plant.  Jesus spoke of these obstacles or threats as anxiety or fear, or the lure of riches and pleasure that abound in our material world. Apart from faith and its companion morality, many people are set adrift.
Yet, the seed does fall upon good ground, and we see the harvest of 30, or 60, or a hundredfold. This is a great return for the time we invest because it is the work of the Lord who cannot be outdone in generosity. This is the blood and water that flowed from his side on the Cross, portrayed in the image of Divine Mercy flowing from the side of Christ which we know as the vision communicated to Sister Faustina.
On the eve of Divine Mercy Sunday, Pope Francis declared a Holy Year of Mercy to begin later this year, a year of favor from the Lord which opens the door to forgiveness and reconciliation in our lives. As we move deeper into 2015, as a Church this will be our prayer, and this will be our hope in preparation for the Holy Year of Mercy.
The wisdom behind the Pope’s announcement is transparent. He is not only ardently praying for the renewal of the Church throughout the world in light of the Lord’s death and resurrection, but he is also inspiring us to be instruments of God’s Divine Mercy for the lost and fallen away.
Jesus Christ has no body now but ours, and as the Lord bequeathed the gift of the Holy Spirit to his Apostles on the first Easter and sent them into the world in His name, he does the same for us. “As the Father has sent me, so I send you.”
Recall at the Last Supper, Jesus revealed the substance of his mandate with the Eucharist and the washing of feet: “Do this in memory of me,” and “as I have done, so you must do.” These images have been branded into our consciousness as Catholic Christians, and whenever we put them into practice we open the doors to the sacred, and to divine mercy. Evangelization flows out of the mercy of God seeking all people.
The Gospel message is expanding and accelerating throughout the world, but it is not on automatic pilot. The Church and her members are caught up in God’s plan of salvation, and it is a steady labor of love in order that the Kingdom of God, a realm of life, justice, and peace can be a greater reality for all people.
Jesus said to go out to all the nations, and Pope Francis, the successor of Saint Peter, inspires us to go to those who are on the margins, or whom we have marginalized, in order to bless every person with God’s mercy and peace. The world can never trample, scorch or choke the gift of Divine Mercy.
Indeed, the Lord is risen from the tomb, let us rejoice and be glad, Alleluia.

CALENDAR OF EVENTS

SPIRITUAL ENRICHMENT
AMORY St. Helen Parish, Scripture class on Parables on Wednesdays, from 6 – 7 p.m.
CLEVELAND Our Lady of Victories Parish, series on the Acts of the Apostles on Wednesdays beginning on May 29 at 6:30 p.m.
CORINTH St. James Parish, new adult education classes on Sundays at 10:45 a.m. and Tuesdays at 10:30 a.m. Details: Linda Gunther, 662-284-9300.
BROOKSVILLE The Dwelling Place, “Spiritual Doors,” Saturday, April 25, from 9 a.m. – 3 p.m. Cost is $45 and includes lunch. Led by Karen Hodges and Lee Oswalt from Tupelo. Details: 662-738-5348.
MADISON St. Francis of Assisi Parish, eight-week study on “The Image of the Catholic Church after Vatican II,” Wednesdays from 9:15 – 11 15 a.m. in the Family Life Center room 106. Led by Sister Michele Doyle. Details: Jan Evans, 601-946-6606.
JACKSON St. Richard Parish, book study, “Mercy – The Essence of the Gospel and the Key of Christian Life,” by Cardinal Walter Kasper, on Wednesdays, at 6:30 p.m. in Mercy Room. Details: George Evans, 601-366-2335.
NATCHEZ Bishop Gerow Knights of Columbus annual 24-hour Day of Adoration at St. Mary Basilica from 12 noon Friday, May 8, to 12 noon on Saturday, May 9. The church will be open for all adorers for the 24 hour period. Details: Kevin Friloux, 504-487-9545
SHAW St. Francis of Assisi Parish mission, Sunday-Tuesday, April 19-21, beginning at 6 p.m. Led by the Redemptorist priests.

PARISH & FAMILY EVENTS
CLARKSDALE St. Elizabeth Parish, “Adapting to Change: Grief and Loss Training,” Wednesday, May 13,  from 8:15 a.m. – 12:15 p.m. For nurses, social workers, educators and health ministry advocates. Led by Bob Willis, bereavement coordinator for Hospice of Oklahoma County, OK.  Cost is $20 per person. Details: Ann Elizabeth Kaiser, 601-213-6378, annelizabeth.kaiser@catholiccharitiesjackson.org.
– Self Care During Times of Loss,” a sculpting presentation by Rev. Bob Willis, Wednesday, May 13, from 6:30 – 7:30 p.m. in the school gym. Open to the community. Light refreshments will be served.
CLEVELAND Our Lady of Victories Parish, training for liturgical ministers on Sunday, April 26, at 6:30 p.m.
GREENVILLE “The Paul and Wadel Abide Memorial Golf Classic,” Friday, May 1, at 1 p.m. at the Greenville Golf & Country Club. Cost is $150 for the tournament and $60 for the social. Benefits St. Joseph Scholarship Fund.
– Sponsor a teen for the 10-mile walk-a-thon on Sunday, April 26. Details: Therese Seghers, 662-335-5251.
HERNANDO Holy Spirit Parish, indoor yard sale, Friday, April 17, from 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. and Saturday, April 18, from 8 a.m. – 1 p.m. Details: LaRae Walgenbach, 901-486-0225.
– Dinner theater, “Dead Air,” Sunday, April 26, at 5 p.m. in the Family Life Center. Cost is $10 per person and includes dinner and show. Childcare will be provided for $5 (includes pizza and movie). Details: Dana Bradley-Hoover, 901-692-0859.
JACKSON St. Therese Parish, garage sale, Saturday, May 2, beginning at 7 a.m. in the gym. Details: Mary Parker, 601-927-4333.
JACKSON St. Richard Parish Cardinal Men’s Club, “Flight to the Finish VII,” 5K or 1 mile run, Saturday, May 2, begins with registration at 7:30 a.m. in the gym.
JACKSON Mass celebration of the 500th year of the birth of St. Teresa of Avila, foundress of the Carmelites, Saturday, June 6, at 10:30 a.m. at the Cathedral of St. Peter the Apostle. Donations to cover expenses for the reception and printing may be sent to: Carmelite Monastery; 2155 Terry Road; Jackson, MS 39204. Details: 601-373-3412 (Gift Shop) (See story on page 13)
JACKSON Sister Thea Bowman School drawdown, Saturday, April 25, at 6:30 p.m. Grand prize is $10,000. The event includes a silent auction, food and entertainment. Tickets are $100 with the option to add $20 second-chance insurance. Tickets can be split. Details: 601-352-5441.
MADISON St. Francis of Assisi Parish, Canjun Fest, Sunday, May 17, after the  10:30 a.m. Mass. The Toy & General Store needs new or gently used items.
MEMPHIS free presentation by Archbishop Augutine Di Noia, OP, adjunct secretary for the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith in the Vatican, Tuesday, April 28, at 5:30 p.m. at Christian Brothers University. Register at www.lumencivitatis.com.

NATCHEZ St. Mary Basilica youth bake sale fund-raiser after all Masses Saturday and Sunday, April 25-26.
OLIVE BRANCH Queen of Peace Parish 13th annual fund-raising tournament, Sunday, May 3, at Wedgewood Golfers Club. The four-person scramble begins at 1 p.m.; dinner is included. Details: QOPCC.com, 662-895-5007.
OXFORD St. John Parish drawdown, Friday, May 1,   at the Oxford Convention center. Tickets are $125  for two people, with a chance to win 10,000 Details: Josh Whelan, 662-299-7171.
SOUTHAVEN Sacred Heart School “Robot ReCycle Event,” for used electronics and computer equipment Saturday, April 18, from 9 a.m. – 1 p.m.  At the school, 5150 Tchulahoma.
TUPELO St. James Parish bunco tournament, Friday, April 24, at 7 p.m. in the Life Center. Cost is $20 per person. Proceeds benefit the Jamaica mission trip. Details: Dawn, 662-871-5651.
– Ladies’ Club meeting, Sunday, April 26, after the 10:30 am Mass in Shelton Hall. A light lunch will be served. All ladies of the parish are invited.
VICKSBURG St. Paul Parish, “Adapting to Change: Grief and Loss Training,” Monday, May 11, from 8:15 a.m. – 12:15 p.m. For nurses, social workers, educators and health ministry advocates. Led by Bob Willis, bereavement coordinator for Hospice of Oklahoma County, OK. Details: Ann Elizabeth Kaiser, 601-213-6378, annelizabeth.kaiser@catholiccharitiesjackson.org.

IN MEMORIAM
GREENFIELD, Wis. – School Sister of St. Francis Marianelle Lies, who lived her religious vocation in music and education, died March 15 at Our Lady of the Angels Convent in Greenfield. She was 93. Beginning in 1942, Sister Lies ministered in Mississippi, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Nevada for more than 70 years.  In the Diocese of Jackson, she taught at St. Francis School in Yazoo City (1946-1953), at St. Mary/St. Joseph School in Holly Springs (1955-1969), at Sacred Heart School in Walls (1969-1975), and at CADET School in Holly Springs (1978-1981).
A wake and funeral were held March 15, at St. Joseph Convent, Milwaukee. Interment was at Mount Olivet Cemetery in Milwaukee, Wis.

STAR student, teacher honored

GREENVILLE – St. Joseph School senior Katherine Anne Terracina has been named as a STAR Student for the 2014-2015 school year by the Mississippi Economic Council’s M. B. Swayze Educational Foundation, sponsor of the STAR program.

Terracina

Terracina

Terracina, a member of the National Honor Society and Mu Alpha Theta, will be honored during the annual Education Celebration on April 30, at the Jackson Convention Center in downtown Jackson.
In addition, she has been a member of the school’s tennis team, where she holds the 2014 1A State Championship Girls Doubles Title and Team Championship Title, awarded All-American Cheerleader and serves as Captain of the Cheerleading Squad and Co-Captain of the Soccer Team.
Terracina is a member of St. Joseph Parish where she volunteers as a lector.

DeAngelo

DeAngelo

Each Star student can honor one teacher who has had an impact on his or her school experience. Terracina designated Celeste DeAngelo as her STAR teacher. DeAngelo has a masters in math from Delta State University. She has taught for 32 years, 14 of those at St. Joseph in the discipline of math, including AP calculus and college algebra.
DeAngelo is the sponsor of Mu Alpha Theta and the winning Math Competition Team. She is the former sponsor of National Honor Society.

St. Joseph students honored

MADISON –St. Joseph High School took home a record 61 awards from the 2015 Mississippi Scholastic Press Association Convention on the campus of the University of Mississippi – including four statewide honors and 22 first-place awards – for student work on the newspaper and yearbook. Last year, St. Joseph took home 33 awards.
Journalism teacher Terry Cassreino, a longtime Mississippi journalist, was named yearbook adviser of the year. The Bear Facts, the student newspaper, was named best high school newspaper for the third straight year. And The Shield, the school’s yearbook, took third place among high school yearbooks.
“These awards show what hard work and dedication can produce,” St. Joe principal Keith Barnes said. “Our talented students have worked hard on the newspaper, the yearbook and our streaming Internet sports radio station – and their efforts show.
“Our journalism students and our student media program are examples of what we do best at St. Joe,” Barnes said. “Mr. Cassreino is a dedicated, experienced teacher who has guided a group of talented, hardworking, determined students – helping them perform to their maximum ability.”
Junior Jack Hall received the Orley Hood Sports Writer of the Year award for the second straight year. Hall is serving as a U.S. Senate page this semester.
Junior Joseph “JoJo” Katool Jr. was named Broadcast Staffer of the Year for his work calling varsity football games live on Bruin Sports Radio, St. Joe’s streaming Internet radio station.
Junior Noah Greene was named Newspaper Staffer of the Year for his leadership role in guiding the publication of The Bear Facts. Greene serves as managing editor of the newspaper; he also is a member of the St. Joseph Speech and Debate Team and will serve this year as lieutenant governor at Mississippi Youth & Government Youth Legislature.
The journalism awards capped a full day Thursday, March 26, for more than 500 high school students from 32 schools across the state who attended the MSPA annual convention. St. Joseph took a delegation of 12 students to this year’s event.
Cassreino, in his fourth year at St. Joseph and third leading the journalism program, was named Yearbook Adviser of the Year – one year after being named Newspaper Adviser of the Year. Cassreino began teaching in 2011 after more than 27 years as a media consultant and an award-winning political reporter, political columnist and editor at Mississippi newspapers. See the full list of winners on www.mississippicatholic.com.
At the annual Mississippi Junior Classical League convention, 33 of St. Joe’s finest Latin scholars journeyed to Millsaps College in Jackson on Friday, March 20, to attend the annual Mississippi Junior Classical League convention for a day of classical competition, academic tests, triumphal processions, and Latin cheers.
There they joined over 250 Latin students from ten different schools. St. Joseph students earned 23 awards in mythology, vocabulary, Latin mottoes, phrases and abbreviations, grammar and reading, history, classical omnibus, videos, maps and charts.

Youth Briefs & Photo Gallery

041715 youth



 

BATESVILLE – St. Mary Parish youth will gather for dinner on Wednesday, May 6, from 6 – 7 p.m.

GLUCKSTADT – St. Joseph Parish youth are advise about a summer mission trip, “Alive in You” in Mobile, Ala, on July 7-12. Details: Patti, 601-540-7635, patti@stjosephgluckstadt.com.

PEARL – St. Jude Parish children three years through sixth grade are invited to sing in the choir for First Communion on May 17, at the 8:30 a.m. Mass. Practices will be held on Wednesdays, May 6 and 13, at 5:30 p.m. in the choir room.

SEARCH Retreat has been postponed until November 2015.

Prisoners suffer when prisons profit

Millennial Reflections
By Father Jeremy Tobin, OPraem
On Friday, March 20, Governor Phil Bryant’s Task Force on Prison Procurement held a hearing at the Woolfolk Building in Jackson. Among its members was Constance Slaughter Harvey, the first African-American woman to get a law degree from Ole Miss. She is a member of Forest St. Michael Parish.
She filed the suit against the Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC) demanding reform at Parchman in July 1971, when it was notorious for inhumane conditions. She sees the same conditions at Walnut Grove. Since the hearing at the Woolfolk Building she visited Walnut Grove and said, “The conditions have changed but there remains a long way to go to humanize this institution.”
The Chris Epps scandal, in which former prison commissioner Chris Epps admitted to benefitting from a wide-ranging bribery scheme, caused a group of concerned clergy, across denominational lines to come together as Clergy for Prison Reform (CPR). The recent column by Rev. C. J. Rhodes, representing CPR and Bishop Joseph Kopacz’ column stating the Catholic bishops position around private for profit prisons, and the full page piece in the following issue of Mississippi Catholic by editor Maureen Smith, tell us that this is a “front burner issue.”
The issue of private for profit prisons making money and dividends for shareholders from the misfortune of a segment of the population is being contested. To make a profit these companies sign agreements with state and federal governments to efficiently run prisons, and save the governing entities money, with the promise to fill 90 percent or better bed space. Further, these companies have powerful state and national lobbies pushing for new laws that create more crimes in order to lock up more people in their prisons. The private prison lobby is behind the harshest anti-immigrant legislation being pushed in several state houses.
We, of CPR, say that this is immoral.
Private prisons are run on the cheap. Their goal is profit, period. This puts staff and inmates at serious risk. Any way they can cut corners, they do. Insufficient, or no programs, poor quality of food, low pay for staff and long hours are recipes for corruption, unrest and rioting.
MDOC is seeking to terminate the consent decree to reform Walnut Grove. I represented CPR during the hearings before Judge Carleton Reeves on April 1-2. A senior vice-president of MTC, Management and Training Corp, the Utah based company that runs Walnut Grove and East Mississippi Correctional Facility, Marjorie Brown, when asked by SPLC attorney Jody Owens if she has stock in MTC, replied “Yes.” When further asked if more inmates are housed do her dividends go up based on increased profit, she agreed.
As the testimony proceeded, Brown, with more than 30 years in corrections, still maintained that Walnut Grove could safely handle an increased population, despite their number going down to 900 plus as a result of two major riots in less than a year. From a pure profit driven business sense her reply is expected, despite the egregious mismanagement that now involves the court.
These hearings illustrate all that is bad with private for profit prisons. Reduction in crime is bad for business. Conditions in these prisons create a black market for contraband of every kind. Steve Martin, the court appointed monitor at Walnut Grove said, “It can take years to institutionalize the systemic changes needed to show long term success.”
Those of us who oppose private for profit prisons on moral grounds say this is a systemic evil impacting the poor and marginalized on several levels. To list a few: legislation to invent more crimes, anti-immigrant legislation that targets and discriminates largely Hispanics, targeting and over-policing in African-American communities, and the mass incarceration of black men, that creates a “new Jim Crow.”
The number of disenfranchised ex-offenders are rivaling conditions from years past. If 40 percent of a community are disenfranchised ex-offenders, that is 40 percent of a community unable to exercise the right to vote. For profit prisons make money out of poverty and discrimination.
(Father Jeremy Tobin, O.Praem, lives at the Priory of St. Moses the Black, Jackson.)