Pastoral Assignments:

Pastoral Assignments:
Mr. Joel Schultz is appointed Lay Ecclesial Minister for Ripley St. Matthew Mission effective June 1.
Father John Bohn is appointed pastor of Jackson St. Richard Parish effective July 1.
Father Mike O’Brien is appointed pastor of Canton Sacred Heart Parish effective July 1.
Father Kevin Slattery is appointed Sacramental Minister of Gluckstadt St. Joseph Parish effective July 1.
Abbot Tom DeWayne, OPraem, is appointed Sacramental Minister of McGee St. Stephen Parish effective July 1.

Native sister celebrates jubilee

Sister Mary Gianini, OP, also known as Sister Mary Mystica, a native of Cleveland, Miss., celebrated 60 years as a Dominican Sister on April 28 with her family. She will have a second private celebration with her fellow Sisters of the Springfield Province in August. Sister Gianini professed her vows August 5, 1955, in the Sacred Heart Convent, Springfield, Ill.
She holds a B.A. in education/English from St. Ambrose College in Davenport, Iowa.
Sister Gianini taught kindergarten, first and second grades in Catholic parish elementary schools in the Springfield, Peoria, San Diego dioceses and the Chicago Archdiocese. After retiring from teaching, Sister Mary Gianini assisted with retreat ministries at the Dominican Sisters of Springfield, IL Benincasa Ministries in Illinois.
Being from Mississippi, she is especially known for her “southern hospitality,” her generous spirit and her willingness to help wherever needed.
Currently, Sister Gianini takes very seriously her “prayer ministry” for the needs of individuals requesting prayers and the needs of all people. She lives at the Sacred Heart convent in Springfield.

Busquen en la Pascua el mensaje misionero

POR OBISPO Joseph Kopacz
Durante los 50 días del tiempo pascual la Iglesia Católica proclama en Palabra y Adoración la creación y el crecimiento de la iglesia en el primer siglo después de la crucifixión y la resurrección del Señor, entre los años 30 y 33 d.C. El sacrificio cruento de la muerte de Jesús el Nazareno fue transformado por el amor de Dios en la resurrección en el mayor movimiento desatado en la historia de la humanidad. Poniendo las tristes divisiones a un lado, la iglesia ha proclamado el Evangelio durante casi 2000 años, y en la actualidad hay cerca de dos billones de cristianos en todo el mundo, más de la mitad son católicos.
Reconocemos que muchos son cristianos sólo de nombre, pero hay innumerables millones que el Espíritu Santo ha transformado en el Cuerpo vivo de Cristo para la salvación de las almas y el bien de la humanidad.
Durante la octava de Pascua, o los ocho días siguiente al Domingo de Pascua, el Señor resucitado se le apareció a sus angustiados apóstoles y discípulos con el fin de sanarlos, reconciliarlos con Dios y a los unos con los otros con el fin de prepararlos para su peregrinación de  fe, esperanza y amor en su nombre.
El libro de los Hechos de los Apóstoles, sobre todo, es una narración de San Lucas sobre el crecimiento constante de la iglesia primitiva, desde sus humildes inicios en Jerusalén a la escena mundial en Roma, destinada a seguir el mandato del Señor de enseñar a todas las naciones hasta los confines de la tierra.
San Pedro, San Pablo y los otros 11 discípulos, con el apoyo fiel de muchos de los primeros discípulos, sentaron las bases para la primera iglesia evidente en las muchas comunidades que surgieron alrededor del mundo mediterráneo. En solidaridad con su Señor en la cruz, la sangre y el agua continuaron derramándose. Los judíos y los gentiles tuvieron su segundo nacimiento en las aguas fluyentes del bautismo y la sangre de los mártires se convirtió en la fuente de la vitalidad de la iglesia primitiva.
En las primeras etapas de los Hechos de los Apóstoles escuchamos hablar del agua con el bautismo de miles de personas el Domingo de Pentecostés y de la sangre, con el brutal asesinato a pedradas del diácono Esteban, el primer mártir de la iglesia. Siguió después la decapitación de Santiago, el hermano del Señor, y comenzó la persecución que se prolongó durante casi 300 años.
San Pedro es presentado en la primera mitad de los Hechos de los Apóstoles mientras que San Pablo aparece en la segunda mitad del libro. En el Capítulo 10, el Espíritu Santo pone el escenario a través de Pedro para un segundo día de Pentecostés en la casa de Cornelio al descender sobre todos los miembros de su familia con un estallido de lenguas y de alabanza. Pedro sólo podía estar de pie, y se maravilló de como Dios abrió la puerta de la fe a los primeros gentiles para que  se convirtieran en cristianos. Pedro procedió a bautizarlos, pero esa fue la parte fácil. Luego tuvo que regresar a Jerusalén con Pablo y Bernabé para convencer a los demás que los gentiles o paganos, o sea los no judíos, no tenían que convertirse en judíos primero antes de convertirse en cristianos.
Fue una lucha encarnizada pero al final Dios prevaleció y en el Concilio de Jerusalén sólo cuatro restricciones le fueron impuestas a los gentiles: “Se tienen que abstener de comer carne de animales ofrecidos en sacrificios a los ídolos, no coman sangre ni carne de animales estrangulados y eviten la inmoralidad sexual. Ustedes harán bien si evitan estas cosas.” (Hechos 15:29) Por supuesto los Diez Mandamientos siguen siendo fundamentales para nosotros, pero más de 600 leyes cambiaron cuando surgió la tradición cristiana. El mandato del Señor de enseñar a todas las naciones estaba ahora libre de obligaciones por parte de una exigente tradición judía.
Después del Capítulo 15 en los Hechos de los Apóstoles San Pablo tomó la antorcha de San Pedro y se convirtió en apóstol de los gentiles, facultado por el Concilio de Jerusalén para ser el misionero en el mundo griego y romano. Los tres viajes misioneros de Pablo están trazados en las páginas de los Hechos. Muchos le temían, recordando su feroz persecución contra los primeros cristianos antes de su conversión, y muchos lo odiaban porque él fue riguroso en su celo de desechar la Ley de Moisés a la luz de Jesucristo crucificado y resucitado de entre los muertos. En última instancia, esta animosidad lo llevó a su decapitación en Roma.
En nuestra época el Papa Francisco nos llama a ser misioneros que llevan la Buena Noticia, la alegría del Evangelio, a muchos de los que se están yendo a pique en el cieno del mundo.
Este es nuestro origen; esta es nuestra llamada constante. Cuando escuchamos y/o leemos sobre el crecimiento de la iglesia primitiva, es evidente que muchos tenían el espíritu misionero. San Pablo, en particular, fue el misionero por excelencia, que nunca se cansó de plantar la semilla de la fe, y alimentar a la planta joven a través de sus cartas y visitas pastorales. Como escribió en 1 Corintios: “Sembré la semilla en sus corazones, y Apolos la regó, pero es Dios quien la hizo crecer.” (1Cor 3:6)
Cuando reflexiono sobre mi nueva vida como el 11ª obispo de Jackson durante mis muchos viajes en todo el territorio de la diócesis en este tiempo de Pascua, bien sea para celebrar confirmaciones, graduaciones, aniversarios, etc., considero que esta es la vida y el ministerio de un obispo, puesto en marcha por los apóstoles y sus sucesores. Yo trabajo en la viña del Señor, sobre las bases establecidas por el Obispo Chanche y algunos otros a finales de 1830.
Bien sea que se trate de los sembradores originales, o las generaciones posteriores que siguieron, Dios la está haciendo crecer a través del poder del Espíritu Santo y en el nombre de Jesús, resucitado de entre los muertos.
Somos parte de una tradición de fe con raíces profundas, casi dos mil años. “Además, queridos hermanos, no olviden que para el Señor un día es como mil años, y mil años como un día”. (2 Pedro 3:8) Por lo que sólo estamos acercándonos el principio del tercer día de la era cristiana, y nuestro llamado es a plantar y construir siempre que tengamos vida y aliento. “Y estoy seguro de que Dios, que comenzó a hacer su buena obra en ustedes, la irá llevando a buen fin hasta el día en que   Cristo Jesús regrese”. (Filipenses 1:6 )

Look to Easter for missionary message

By Bishop Joseph Kopacz
Throughout the 50 days of the Easter Season the Catholic Church proclaims in Word and Worship the inception and growth of the Church in the first century after the crucifixion and resurrection of the Lord between 30 and 33 AD. The bloody sacrifice in death of Jesus the Nazorean was transformed by the loving power of God in resurrection into the greatest movement ever unleashed in human history. Sad divisions aside, the church has proclaimed the Gospel for nearly 2000 years, and presently there are around two billion Christians, more than half being Catholics, throughout the world. Granted many are Christian in name only, but there are countless millions whom the Holy Spirit has transformed into the living Body of Christ for the salvation of souls and the good of humanity.
Throughout the Easter Octave, or the eight days following Easter Sunday, the risen Lord appeared to his broken apostles and disciples in order to heal them, reconcile them to God and to one another in order to set them on their pilgrimage of faith, hope and love in His name. The Acts of the Apostles especially is a narration by Saint Luke of the persistent growth of the early Church from its humble beginnings in Jerusalem to the world stage in Rome, destined to follow the Lord’s command to teach all nations to the ends of the earth.
St. Peter and St. Paul, and the 11 other disciples, with the faithful support of many of the early disciples, laid the foundation for the early Church evident in the many communities that sprung up around the Mediterranean world. In solidarity with their Lord on the cross, the blood and the water continued to flow.
Jews and Gentiles alike experienced their second birth in the flowing waters of Baptism, and the blood of the martyrs became the spring of life for the early Church’s vitality. Early on in the Acts of the Apostles we hear of the water with the Baptism of thousands on Pentecost Sunday, and the blood, with the brutal killing by stoning of the deacon Stephen, the Church’s first martyr. The beheading of James, the brother of the Lord followed and the persecution began that went on for nearly 300 years.
St. Peter is featured in the first half of the Acts of the Apostles while St. Paul’s star rises in the second half of the book. In Chapter 10 the Holy Spirit set the stage through Peter for a second Pentecost day in the home of Cornelius by descending upon all the members of his household with an eruption of tongues and praise.
Peter could only stand by and marvel as God opened the door of faith to the first Gentiles to become Christians. Peter proceeded to baptize them, but that was the easy part. Afterwards, he had to return to Jerusalem with Paul and Barnabus to convince the others that the Gentiles, or pagans, that is non-Jews, did not have to become Jews first before becoming Christian. It was a fierce struggle but in the end God prevailed, and at the Council of Jerusalem only four restrictions laid upon the Gentiles: “You are to abstain from food sacrificed to idols, from blood, from the meat of strangled animals and from sexual immorality. You will do well to avoid these things.” (Acts 15,29)
Of course the Ten Commandments remain fundamental for us but more than 600 laws were shed as the Christian tradition emerged. The command of the Lord to teach all nations was now unencumbered by an exacting Jewish tradition.
After Chapter 15 in the Acts of the Apostles St. Paul took up the torch from Peter and became the Apostle to the Gentiles, further empowered by the Jerusalem Council to be the missionary to the Greek and Roman worlds. Paul’s three missionary journeys are traced upon the pages of the Acts.
Many feared him, remembering his fierce persecution of the early Christians prior to his conversion, and many hated him because he was unrelenting in his zeal to set aside the Law of Moses in the light of Jesus Christ crucified and risen from the dead. Ultimately, this animosity led to his beheading in Rome.
In our era Pope Francis is calling us to be missionaries who bring the Good News, the joy of the Gospel, to many who are foundering in the world’s mire. This is our origin; this is our constant calling. As we hear about and/or read about the growth of the early church it is readily apparent that many had the missionary spirit. Saint Paul in particular was the missionary par excellence, who never tired of planting the seed of faith, and nurturing the young plant through his letters and pastoral visits. As he wrote in 1Corinthians: “I planted the seed in your hearts, and Apollos watered it, but it was God who made it grow.” (1Cor 3, 6)
As I reflect upon my new life as the 11th Bishop of Jackson during my many journeys throughout the diocese during the Easter season, whether it be for confirmations, graduations, anniversaries, etc., I appreciate that this is the life and ministry of a bishop, set in motion by the apostles and their successors.
I labor in the vineyard of the Lord, building upon the foundation laid by Bishop Chanche and a few others in the late 1830’s. Whether it was the original planters, or the later generations who followed, God is making it grow through the power of the Holy Spirit and in the name of Jesus, raised from the dead.
We are part of a tradition of faith with deep roots, nearly two thousand years young. “But do not forget this one thing, dear friends: With the Lord a day is like a thousand years, and a thousand years are like a day.” (2Peter 3,8) So we are just approaching the beginning of the third day of the Christian era, and our call is to plant and build as long as we have life and breath. “And I am certain that God, who began the good work within you, will continue his work until it is finally finished on the day when Christ Jesus returns”. (Philippians 1,6)

Knights highlight projects, share ideas at convention

When the Knights of Columbus gathered in Biloxi the last weekend in April, they did a little showing off – with a twist of humility. Each council submits a write up of their projects from the past year. Service projects, family events, faith formation programs – the variety of endeavors is surprising. A committee reviews the submissions and votes on which ones to recognize in a special way.
While the knights do get awards for the efforts, the real point is to inspire other councils and share ideas. What worked for one council may work for another.
Some examples of projects honored include Flowood St. Paul’s ‘a year for life.’ The knights in that council stepped up to find little and big things they could do to oppose abortion. They raised $2,500 to purchase ultrasound machines – a hefty donation – but they also supplied the snacks for the students who traveled to Washington DC for the March for Life, a less visible, but still needed support.
St. Paul knights also received kudos for a Pentecost parish picnic. Pastor Father Gerard Hurley wanted to celebrate Pentecost outside with Mass and a picnic. The knights did everything from clearing underbrush and securing a tent to helping prepare and serve food the day of the event.
Meridian’s council earned honors for two family-oriented projects. The first was a series of family nights throughout the year. Each night has a theme such as Italian night with lasagna. A band provided entertainment and families enjoyed the evening together. The knights in Meridian also teamed up with their youth groups to prepare care packages which they delivered, with Santa, to children in the hospital on Christmas Eve.
The Hernando De Soto council in Southaven undertook a months-long faith and spiritual formation program. “This is very important to the knights and we wanted to promote it. Some councils are strong on the social side or in doing service. We didn’t want to forget the spiritual side of membership,” explained Ted Lander, grand knight. The program had three main components, monthly morning prayer breakfasts, a Lenten weekend retreat and study groups who used Pope Francis’ Joy of the Gospel as their guide.
“The Joy of the Gospel is profound. It really gets you centered and asking ‘are we doing what the Lord wants us to do?” That question is essential for us as knights, for us as men and for us as Christians,” said Lander.
Lonnie Treadway, who headed up the project, said more than 500 copies of the text were ordered. “It took communication, persistence and leading by example,” said Treadway about how the group got so many men involved. The knights offered a variety of times and places for the study groups to meet to make it easier for men to get involved. The retreat was at Subiaco Abbey in Arkansas.
Both men mentioned that the year spent praying and studying has already led to new ideas for new projects including a blood drive and possible work with the Special Olympics.
In Greenville, the knights handle the parish fair and famous meatball sale. The fair celebrated 100 years last year and was bigger than ever. Jack Duthu said he was glad to lead the effort, even if he joked about being glad when all the work was finished. Knights prepared and served literally thousands of meatballs for the day.
All the money goes to the schools in Greenville, St. Joseph High and Our Lady of Lourdes Elementary School. “This fair has more than 100 year history in this parish – which says something in itself,” said Paul Artman, principal at St. Joseph. “Anytime you have a group such as the knights who pour their heart and soul – and all that good cooking – into an event, it makes it all that much better,” he added. The parish fair raised $50,000 for each school, an amazing support for Catholic education in the Delta.
Other notable honorees include Jackson St. Richard Parish for the “Women and Spirit” event including a screening of the documentary of the same name and a luncheon honoring women religious in the diocese.
Oxford St. John’s knights submitted their fundraising projects which benefitted their building fund. Two councils, Southaven and Madison St. Francis of Assisi, were honored for social events which included the wives and widows of knights.
A full listing of the awards along with descriptions of the projects is posted on the convention section of the Knights of Columbus website, www.kofc-ms.org.

Christianity challenges evolutionary ethic

IN EXILE
By Father Ron Rolheiser, OMI
Evolution, Charles Darwin famously stated, works through the survival of the fittest. Christianity, on the other hand, is committed to the survival of the weakest. But how do we square our Christian ideal of making a preferential option for the weak with evolution?
Nature is evolutionary and, inside of that, we can perceive a wisdom that clearly manifests intelligence, intent, spirit and design. And perhaps nowhere is this more evident than how in the process of evolution we see nature becoming ever-more unified, complex, and conscious.
However, how God’s intelligence and intent are reflected inside of that is not always evident because nature can be so cruel and brutal. In order to survive, every element in nature has to be cannibalistic and eat other parts of nature. Only the fittest get to survive. There’s a harsh cruelty in that. In highlighting how cruel and unfair nature can be, commentators often cite the example of the second pelican born to white pelicans. Here’s how cruel and unfair is its situation:
Female white pelicans normally lay two eggs, but they lay them several days apart so that the first chick hatches several days before the second chick. This gives the first chick a head-start and by the time the second chick hatches, the first chick is bigger and stronger. It then acts aggressively towards the second chick, grabbing its food and pushing it out of the nest.
There, ignored by its mother, the second chick normal dies of starvation, despite its efforts to find its way back into the nest. Only one in ten second chicks survives. And here’s nature’s cruel logic in this: That second chick is hatched by nature as an insurance-policy, in case the first chick is weak or dies.
Barring that, it is doomed to die, ostracized, hungry, blindly grasping for food and its mother’s attention as it starves to death. But this cruelty works as an evolutionary strategy. White pelicans have survived for thirty million years, but at the cost of millions of its own species dying cruelly.
A certain intelligence is certainly evident in this, but where is the compassion? Did a compassionate God really design this? The intelligence in nature’s strategy of the survival of the fittest is clear. Each species, unless unnaturally interfered with from the outside, is forever producing healthier, more robust, more adaptable members. Such, it seems, is nature’s wisdom and design – up to a point.
Certain scientists such as Pierre Teilhard de Chardin suggest that physical evolution has reached its apex, its highest degree of unity, complexity and consciousness, inside the central nervous system and brain of the human person and that evolution has now taken a leap (just as it did when consciousness leapt out of raw biology and as it did when self-consciousness leapt out of simple consciousness) so that now meaningful evolution is no longer about gaining further physical strength and adaptability. Rather meaningful evolution is now concerned with the social and the spiritual, that is, with social and spiritual strength.
And in a Christian understanding of things, this means that meaningful evolution is now about human beings using their self-consciousness to turn back and help nature to protect and nurture its second pelicans. Meaningful evolution now is no longer about having the strong grow stronger, but about having the weak, that part of nature that nature herself, to this point, has not been able to nurture, grow strong.
Why? What’s nature’s interest in the weak? Why shouldn’t nature be happy to have the weak weeded out? Does God have an interest in the weak that nature does not?
No, nature too is very interested in the survival of the weak and is calling upon the help of human beings to bring this about. Nature is interested in the survival of the weak because vulnerability and weakness bring something to nature that is absent when it is only concerned with the survival of the fittest and with producing ever-stronger, more robust and more adaptable species and individuals. What the weak add to nature are character and compassion, which are the central ingredients needed to bring about unity, complexity, and consciousness at the social and spiritual level.
When God created human beings at the beginning of time, God charged them with the responsibility of “dominion,” of ruling over nature. What’s contained in that mandate is not an order or permission to dominate over nature and use nature in whatever fashion we desire. The mandate is rather that of “watching over,” of tending the garden, of being wise stewards, and of helping nature do things that, in its unconscious state, it cannot do, namely, protect and nurture the weak, the second pelicans.
The second-century theologian, Irenaeus, once famously said: The glory of God is the human being fully alive! In our own time, Gustavo Gutierrez, generally credited with being the father of Liberation Theology, recast that dictum to say: The glory of God is the poor person fully alive!” And that is as well the ultimate glory of nature.
(Oblate Father Ron Rolheiser, theologian, teacher and award-winning author, is President of the Oblate School of Theology in San Antonio, TX.)

Archbishop Romero: Symbol of church leaders’ efforts to protect flocks

By Cindy Wooden
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Salvadoran Archbishop Oscar Romero, who will be beatified in San Salvador May 23, has become a symbol of Latin American church leaders’ efforts to protect their flocks from the abuses of military dictatorships.
However, his life and the 35 years it took the Vatican to recognize him as a martyr also reflect decades of theological and pastoral discussion over the line dividing pastoral action from political activism under repressive regimes.
Archbishop Romero was assassinated March 24, 1980, while celebrating Mass in the chapel of Divine Providence Hospital in San Salvador, the city he served as archbishop for three years.
The intense turmoil in El Salvador coincided with a period of intense questioning within the church as pastors in countries under military dictatorships, civil war or communist oppression tried to find the best ways to be faithful to their mission of ministering to their flocks while defending their rights.
The Vatican made frequent calls in those years for priests and bishops, especially in Latin America and in Africa, to stay out of partisan politics. But repressive regimes easily decided churchmen who denounced widespread human rights abuses were meddling in politics.
Jesuit Father James R. Brockman, author of a biography of the archbishop, like many historians and supporters of Archbishop Romero’s beatification, said that when Bishop Romero was chosen as archbishop of San Salvador in 1977, he was known as a “conservative” and there was a widespread assumption that he would not directly challenge the country’s rulers. His background was not that of a political activist.
Oscar Romero was born Aug. 15, 1917, in Ciudad Barrios, the second of seven children. Although not considered poor, the family did not have electricity or running water in their home, and the children slept on the floor. Oscar began working as a carpenter’s apprentice when he was 12 years old, but then decided to enter the minor seminary and continue his formal education.
Once he finished his studies at the San Miguel minor seminary, he transferred to the major seminary in San Salvador and was sent to Rome where he studied at the Pontifical Gregorian University. He was ordained to the priesthood April 4, 1942, in the chapel of the Latin American College.
Returning to El Salvador in 1944, he worked as a parish priest in the Diocese of San Miguel, later becoming secretary of the diocese, a position he held for 23 years. During that time — long before becoming archbishop of San Salvador and famous for the radio broadcasts of his homilies – he convinced local radio stations to broadcast his Sunday Masses and sermons so that Catholics in more rural areas could listen and grow in their faith.
In 1970, when the priest was 52, Pope Paul VI named him an auxiliary bishop of San Salvador. Four years later, he became bishop of Santiago de Maria, the diocese that included his hometown of Ciudad Barrios. Social and political tensions in El Salvador were growing worse; when five farmworkers were hacked to death in June 1975 by members of the Salvadoran National Guard, then-Bishop Romero consoled the families and wrote a letter of protest to the government.
“Before Romero was archbishop for a month, his deeply admired friend, the Jesuit Rutilio Grande, was killed,” wrote Thomas Quigley, a former official at the U.S. bishops’ conference, in the foreword to the English translation of Archbishop Romero’s audio diary.
Father Grande’s strong advocacy for the poor as he ministered in rural communities in northern San Salvador strongly influenced Archbishop Romero, say many of those who knew him. The Jesuit used his pulpit to denounce actions of the government and of the death squads in his country, as well as the violence used by some opponents of the government.
After consultation with the priests’ council, Archbishop Romero “ordered only one public Mass celebrated in the archdiocese on the Sunday following Grande’s funeral,” Father Brockman wrote in the introduction to the diary. “It turned out to be the largest religious demonstration in the nation’s history and for many a profound religious experience.
But it also led to a serious clash with the Vatican’s ambassador, the papal nuncio, who had pressured Romero not to hold the single Mass lest the government think it provocative. It was the beginning of an enduring lack of understanding and support on the part of the nuncio.”
Archbishop Romero continued having his Sunday Masses and homilies broadcast by radio and, increasingly, he used them as opportunities to explain to Salvadoran citizens what was going on in their country and what their response as Christian should be. He always condemned violence and he urged conversion, particularly on the part of members of the government death squads.
Quigley wrote that Archbishop Romero’s homilies “rarely lasted less than an hour and a half” and included his account of “the events of the week,” both good and bad, “proclaiming the good news of the liberating Gospel and, with the prophets of old, denouncing the evils of the day.”
His homilies and his letters to government officials made him a frequent target of death threats and often put him at odds with several of the other Salvadoran bishops and even with Vatican officials who believed he had crossed the line into politics and was placing the church’s pastoral work in jeopardy.
He lived in a small residence on the grounds of the Divine Providence Hospital in San Salvador and frequently celebrated Mass, vespers and benediction there with the sisters who ran the hospital. He was shot and killed in the chapel, a day after he challenged army soldiers for killing their fellow citizens.

Encuentro – an encounter of cultures, ministries, communities joined by faith

By Elsa Baughman
GREENWOOD – Bishop Joseph Kopacz told Hispanics attending the Encuentro Hispano that their presence “is a living proof that there are many disciples and witnesses among us who have the mind and the heart to proclaim Christ crucified and risen and to evangelize, develop and strengthen the Body of Christ in our diocese.”
“This is a day of many blessings and I thank God for your presence here in our diocese,” said Bishop Kopacz during the Mass. “We are witnesses of the Hispanic presence that continues to grow as a living part of the Kingdom of God in Mississippi.” About 250 people from different communities of the Diocese of Jackson gathered at the Civic Center on Saturday April 18.
The guest speakers of the ‘encuentro,’ which means gathering or encounter, were Fabio Trujillo Lema, a psychologist with 30 years of experience, and Deacon Edgardo Farías, director of the pastoral prison ministry of the Archdiocese of Miami. Both are professors at the Southeast Pastoral Institute (SEPI) based in Miami, Fla.
This annual event, sponsored by the diocesan Office of Hispanic Ministry, offers participants a unique opportunity to come together to make new friends and to deepen their knowledge of God’s teachings.
Trujillo and Farías delved into the theme of the event, “Called to Be, Belong and Serve.”
Trujillo’s presentation centered on the ego. He used the title character from the movie “ET,” saying all people, like the alien, want “to go home” to God. An ET doll was one of many props he used.
He opened with St. Therese of Avila’s prayer to relax participants: “Let nothing disturb you; nothing frighten you. All things are passing. God never changes. Patience obtains all things. Nothing is wanting to Him who possesses God. God alone suffices.”
Jokingly, Trujillo said the reason to listen to the prayer was to “calm down the crazy one of the house,” meaning the mind. “If there is no peace in our mind, there is no way to get to God,” he said, adding that “we get depressed because we don’t know ourselves, because we don’t have the world we want.”
“Depression does not exist in the soul, it’s an affair of the ego,” he said. “When we feel depressed we should ask ourselves two questions, ‘what is happening with my life? And, how far am I from God?’ Because the closer I am to him, the less depressed I feel.”
He spoke of the need for Christians to transform themselves, as caterpillars transform into butterflies. He also emphasized the need to forgive and be forgiven. “Everything you have in your heart that you have not forgiven is an anchor with weight on the flight of your soul, and the more weight you have the less you fly,” he said.
Trujillo illustrated the need for a healthy self esteem with a Spanish song that says, “How beautiful I am, how nice I am, how nice I look and I feel, without me I would die, how much I love myself” (kisses).  And he advised, “my hands should be an extension of my heart.”  When that happens, he said, a person’s language will be of love and fire.
“Events like this (encuentro) are of great benefit because they help us to maintain our identity, to strengthen our roots and give us the elements necessary to go beyond the difficulties, in addition to gaining wisdom to not stagnate in the face of adversity,” said Trujillio.
Farias dedicated part of his presentation to the need to make our parish communities that project fraternity. He reminded participants that they are part of a diocese in which the bishop, the priests and religious, deacons and lay ministers are responsible for the care of its territory and its people.
He talked about the importance of belonging to a parish where all can participate and advised them to become friends with their pastor and to help the bishop to renew the diocese and to make ‘fire’ in Mississippi. “Ask yourselves,” he said, “Do I feel this way in my parish? This fire, this desire? Am I part of a healthy, lively, cheerful community?”
On the subject of ‘being’ he said we should be proud of who we are and where we come from, to feel as a family and be proud to be members of the church of Jesus. “So that God knows us and we know him and to get to be in an intimate relationship with God, we must know ourselves first,” he noted.
The second part of his talk was dedicated to the 15 ailments of the Vatican Curia that Pope Francis listed during his annual Christmas greeting to the cardinals, bishops and priests who run the central administration of the Catholic Church. But Farías applied them to personal situations and behavior in our lives and our parishes.
About 80 youth attended the event. Trujillo had a very lively presentation for them on the theme of the ego and how to be part of and belong to a loving community of faith.
Trujillo said that the youth need adults and the adults also need them. Adults bring maturity, responsibility and commitment, and they represent the hope, the dynamism, the freshness of the future.
“Young people and adults walking together can build a civilization of love, the dream of Jesus. “Love one another as I have loved you.”
The event ended with Mass celebrated by Bishop Kopacz along with several other priests and religious who attended the event. Readers can find more photos in this week’s Mississippi Catolico.

Redemptorists turn to Mary for Jubilee year

DENVER – The Redemptorists of the Denver Province are proclaiming the 2016 Jubilee Year of Our Mother of Perpetual Help on Sunday, April 26 – the exact date the ancient icon of the Mother of God that enjoyed ‘great veneration and fame for its miracles’ was first presented for public veneration a century and a half ago in the Redemptorist church of Sant’Alfonso in Rome.
The Jubilee Year of Our Mother of Perpetual Help is being ushered in with two special events: noted iconographer Brother Dan Korn will share the spirituality of the beloved icon with the hundreds of people expected to attend the Seelos Healing Mass in New Orleans; and a special replica of the original Icon of Our Mother of Perpetual Help, written by a Polish Redemptorist specifically for the Jubilee Year, will be presented to the Redemptoristine community in Liguori, Mo., for veneration. The Redemptorists plan a three-year celebration of the 150th anniversary of the date Pope Pius IX gave the congregation the beloved icon with the mandate, “Make her known throughout the world!”
Year I (2015) is a preparation year for renewed devotion to Mary as Our Mother of Perpetual Help.   The spirituality of the icon is being shared at presentations throughout the Denver Province. Earlier this year, Br. Korn presented a reflection on the icon at Locus Benedictus Retreat Center in Greenwood.
Year II (2016) will focus on the anniversary celebration for the entire worldwide congregation and those who have a special devotion to Mary as Our Mother of Perpetual Help. Highlights of this 150th Jubilee Year include a Denver Province celebration at the site of the first public Tuesday novenas to Our Mother of Perpetual Help – St. Alphonsus “Rock” Church in St. Louis – on Monday, June 27, 2016.  It was from this historic church that the world-wide practice of ‘weekly’ novena prayers spread throughout the entire country. The Most Rev. Joseph Tobin, C.Ss.R., Archbishop of Indianapolis, will preside at the celebration, which will be telecast to every ministerial site in the Denver Province. Each ministerial site plans a procession of the icon and a special viewing of the celebration in St. Louis. Pope Francis will be invited to participate in the worldwide celebration at the Shrine of Our Mother of Perpetual Help at Sant’Alfonso Church in Rome.
Year III (2017) will be a renewal the Redemptorist ministry to proclaim the Gospel, especially through the Icon of Our Mother of Perpetual Help as a tool of evangelization. The Jubilee Icon will be sent as a ‘missionary icon’ to each ministerial site in the Denver Province, as well as to other churches and arch/dioceses that request the presence of this miraculous icon.
For more information about events planned throughout the Denver Province, please contact local Redemptorist ministerial sites.
The Redemptorists are a religious congregation of Catholic priests and Brothers founded in 1732 by St. Alphonsus Liguori in Naples, Italy. Approximately 5,000 Redemptorists are currently working for the poor and most abandoned in nearly every part of the world. More than 400 Redemptorist priests, Brothers and students represent the Denver Province in much of the United States, as well as Brazil and Nigeria.

Sister’s medical mission boils down to love

Her picture is a prized possession to Paula Merrill, SCN, who has treated patients in rural Mississippi for nearly 30 years. The picture is of a woman, Willie Mae, and the memory of this gentle southern woman, spurs Sister Merrill on as she reaches out to families with little or no access to health care.
Sister Merrill went to Mississippi as a novice with the SCN Congregation in 1981, and has been there ever since. She grew up in Massachusetts, but says she has found a home in the deep South.
Sister Merrill and Sister Margaret Held, OSF, both nurse practitioners, rotate working, one week at a time, at the Lexington Medical Clinic and the Durant Primary Care Clinic, located in Holmes County, one of the poorest counties in the state.
Sister Merrill’s presence provides access to medical care that otherwise might not be available. The clinics serve all ages, regardless of income or access to health insurance.
When asked about her ministry, Sister Merrill is humble and reticent. Her philosophy is, “We simply do what we can wherever God places us.” It is that down-home manner that endeared her to a client, Willie Mae, who remains an inspiration to Sister Merrill today. Willie Mae is now deceased, but Sister Merrill keeps her photo next to her computer as a constant reminder of what is at the heart of her ministry.
While working in Holly Springs, Miss., Sister Merrill received a referral to visit Willie Mae, who was elderly, living alone, and in need of health services. She lived in a small, poorly built home with no insulation, a leaking roof, no running water and only a small wood stove for heat in the winter. Her failing eyesight made preparing meals almost impossible. Because of her failing memory, she would forget to take her medicine. So, Sister Merrill visited Willie Mae every day to remind her to take her medicine and encourage her to eat.
Sister Merrill explains that she worried about Willie Mae and realized the elderly woman needed more care than could be provided at home so she helped make arrangements for Willie Mae to receive care at a local nursing home. She went to visit Willie Mae at the nursing home one day to see how she was adjusting.
Willie Mae was in the dining room, so Sister Merrill waited in her room. When the nurse pushed Willie Mae in her wheelchair into her room, they saw Sister Merrill. The nurse asked Willie Mae, “Do you know who this is?” Willie Mae looked at Sister Merrill and her eyes lit up. She responded, “Oh, she’s the one who loves me.”
Indeed, Sister Merrill is the one who loves her clients. That’s evident when you meet her and when you hear her describe her ministry. She talks about her clients over the years as the “communion of saints.” Willie Paul, a man in his 50s, worked in cotton fields all his life and was diagnosed with diabetes. Otis is a four-year-old boy whom she treated for a burn on his foot after he fell against a wood stove used to heat his home. She remembers Tasha, a ten-year-old girl who came to the clinic with a fever, shortly after their family’s home was destroyed by a fire.
Sister Merrill enters into people’s lives at critical moments, and brings a loving presence matched with professional care that offers hope and comfort.
She recalls a quote, “People don’t care how much you know, until they know how much you care.” Willie Mae knew. So does Willie Paul, Otis, Tasha and the many others who come to Sister Paula for care. Sister Merrill intends to stay in Mississippi for as long as she can, doing what she can where God has placed her.
(EDITOR’S NOTE: This story originally appeared in The Journey, a publication of the Sisters of Charity of Nazareth, in 2010. Sister Merrill continues to serve in Holmes County. It is republished with permission in honor of the Year for Consecrated Life. Other religious are invited to submit reflections to editor@mississippicatholic.com.)