El papa habló con acciones y con palabras

Por Obispo Joseph Kopacz
La visita pastoral del Papa Francisco a los Estados Unidos fue un torbellino de visitas a los más poderosos en sus respectivos ámbitos y a los débiles en su realidad diaria. El Cardenal Jorge Mario Bergoglio de Buenos Aires, Argentina, estaba acostumbrado a encontrarse casi a diario con los pobres y los de influencia en su arquidiócesis, y se encontraba como en su casa en las villas o en  los barrios de Argentina, donde por lo regular caminaba, oraba y alentaba a las personas que vivían en los márgenes de la París de América Latina.
Por lo tanto, cuando escogió servir una cena en un comedor cercano en la ciudad de Washington, D.C., en vez de almorzar con los miembros del Congreso de los Estados Unidos – no era una oportunidad para que le tomaran fotografías–  como sería el caso de muchos funcionarios públicos, sino más bien una gracia de espontaneidad que es parte de su carácter y de su Evangelio ADN. Es una extensión del de abrazo de San Francisco de Asís al leproso cuando no había nadie por allí con una cámara.
Los gestos y las palabras del Papa Francisco arderán en nuestros corazones, mentes e imaginación en los próximos años. Para el resto de esta columna quiero ofrecer una selección de su sabiduría que trasciende la política y la ideología.

Inmigración
“Como hijo de una familia de inmigrantes, estoy feliz de ser un huésped en este país, el cual fue construido en gran parte por estas familias. Espero con interés que estos días de encuentro y de diálogo, en los cuales espero escuchar y compartir muchas de las esperanzas y los sueños del pueblo americano”. La inmigración fue un tema que se repitió a lo largo de todos sus discursos y homilías durante sus cinco días completos en nuestro país. Al final de su discurso a los obispos de Estados Unidos en la Catedral San Mateo, el Papa Francisco concluyó su homilía con un pedido a un encuentro y acompañamiento al inmigrante con dignidad y respeto.

LIBERTAD RELIGIOSA
“Señor  Presidente, junto con sus compatriotas, los católicos estadounidenses están comprometidos a  construir una sociedad que sea verdaderamente tolerante e inclusiva de salvaguardar los derechos de los individuos y las comunidades y de rechazar toda forma de discriminación injusta. Con muchas otras personas de buena voluntad, están igualmente preocupados de que los esfuerzos para construir una sociedad justa, ordenada y prudente que respeten sus preocupaciones profundas y sus derechos a la libertad religiosa. Esa libertad sigue siendo una de las más preciadas posesiones en América. Y como mis hermanos, los obispos de Estados Unidos, nos han recordado, todos están llamados a ser vigilantes, precisamente como buenos ciudadanos, a fin de preservar y defender esa libertad de todo lo que la amenace o la comprometa”.
El Papa Francisco empezó su discurso en el Jardín de las Rosas con este tema fundamental de la libertad religiosa, y está claro que él ha esta al tanto de la lucha de la Iglesia en los últimos tiempos. El podría haber añadido también que la libertad religiosa está consagrada en la Primera Enmienda de nuestra querida constitución, la piedra angular de nuestra sociedad.

El camino al encuentro y al diálogo
Homilía en la Catedral San Mateo a los obispos.
“El camino que tenemos por delante es el diálogo entre ustedes, el diálogo en su presbiterio, el diálogo con los laicos, el diálogo con las familias, el diálogo con la sociedad…De lo contrario, fallamos en comprender la forma de pensar de los demás, o de realizar profundamente que el hermano o hermana que deseamos alcanzar y rescatar, con el poder y la cercanía del amor, cuentan más de sus posiciones, distantes como pueden ser de lo que entendemos como verdadero y cierto.
“Un lenguaje cruel y divisivo no es propio de la lengua de un pastor, no tiene lugar en su corazón. A pesar de que momentáneamente pareciera ganar el día, sólo el perdurable encanto de la bondad y el amor sigue siendo verdaderamente convincente”. El Papa Francisco ens estas palabras ofrece una excelente catequesis de 1Pedro 3:15, para hablar con humildad y respeto, y en Efesios 4:15 para hablar la verdad en el amor.

La responsabilidad de los miembros del Congreso
“Cada hijo o hija de un país tiene una misión, una responsabilidad personal y social. Su responsabilidad, como miembros del Congreso, es permitir que este país, por su actividad legislativa, crezca como una nación. Ustedes son la cara de su gente, sus representantes. Ustedes están llamados a defender y preservar la dignidad de los conciudadanos en la incansable y exigente búsqueda del bien común ya que es el objetivo principal de todos los políticos. Una sociedad política perdura cuando busca, como una vocación, satisfacer necesidades comunes, estimulando el crecimiento de todos sus miembros, especialmente los que están en situación de mayor vulnerabilidad o riesgo. La actividad legislativa se basa siempre en el cuidado de las personas. A esto ustedes han sido invitados, llamados y convocados por aquellos que los eligieron.”
El Papa Francisco habló como el Jefe de Estado del Vaticano, pero aun más como una voz moral y espiritual en la plaza pública a nuestros funcionarios electos. Imagínense si todos los responsables del bien común en virtud de su cargo caminan el noble camino de la vocación y el servicio.

En la familia
La fe abre una “ventana” a la presencia y acción del espíritu. Nos muestra que, como la felicidad, la santidad está siempre ligada a pequeños gestos. “Quien da un vaso de agua en mi nombre – un pequeño gesto – no dejará de recibir recompensa”, dice Jesús (cf.  Marcos 9:41). Estos pequeños gestos son los que aprendemos en el hogar, en la familia; se pierden en medio de todas las otras cosas que hacemos y hacen cada día diferente.
Son las cosas tranquilas que hacen las madres y las abuelas, los padres y los abuelos, los niños, los hermanos. Son pequeños signos de ternura, afecto y compasión. Como la cena caliente que esperamos por la noche, el almuerzo temprano que espera alguien que se levanta temprano para ir a trabajar. Gestos hogareños. Como una bendición antes de ir a la cama, o un abrazo después de regreso tras un duro día de trabajo.
Cosas pequeñas muestran su amor, la atención a los pequeños signos diarios que nos hacen sentir como en casa. La fe crece cuando es vivida y formada por el amor. Es por ello que nuestras familias, nuestros hogares, son verdaderas iglesias domésticas. Son el lugar adecuado para que la fe se convierta en vida, y la vida crece en la fe.
En conclusión, el Papa Francisco exhorta a que la sabiduría de la vida de familia bien vivida es vital para nuestro mundo de hoy. “El Evangelio de la familia es verdaderamente ‘buenas noticias’ en un mundo donde el interés por sí mismo parece reinar”.

Pope spoke in actions as well as words

By Bishop Joseph Kopacz
Pope Francis’ pastoral visit to the United States was a whirlwind of visits to the most powerful in their respective domains, and to the powerless in their everyday circumstances. Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio of Buenos Aires, Argentina was accustomed on a daily basis to encountering the poor and the influential in his Archdiocese, and he was most at home in Las Villas, or slums, of Argentina where he regularly walked with, prayed with and encouraged those who lived on the margins of the Paris of Latin America.
So when he chose to serve a meal at a nearby soup kitchen in Washington, D.C. rather than have lunch with members of the United States Congress, it was not a photo-op as would be the case with many public officials, but rather a graced spontaneity that is part of his character and his Gospel DNA.  It is an extension of Saint Francis of Assisi’s embrace of the leper when there was no one around with a camera.
The gestures and words of Pope Francis will burn in our hearts, minds, and imaginations for years to come and for the remainder of this column I want to offer a selection of his wisdom that transcends politics and ideology.

Immigration
“As the son of an immigrant family, I am happy to be a guest in this country, which was largely built by such families.  I look forward to these days of encounter and dialogue, in which I hope to listen to, and share, many of the hopes and dreams of the American people.”  Immigration was a theme that resonated throughout his speeches and homilies during his five full days in our country.
At the end of his address to the United States Bishops at Saint Matthew’s Cathedral Pope Francis concluded his homily with a plea to encounter and accompany the immigrant with dignity and respect.
Religious Liberty
“Mr. President, together with their fellow citizens, American Catholics are committed to building a society which is truly tolerant and inclusive, to safeguarding the rights of individuals and communities, and to rejecting every form of unjust discrimination. With countless other people of goodwill, they are likewise concerned that efforts to build a just and wisely ordered society respect their deepest concerns and their rights to religious liberty.
That freedom remains one of America’s most precious possessions. And as my brothers the United States Bishops have reminded us, all are called to be vigilant, precisely as good citizens, to preserve and defend that freedom from everything that would threaten or compromise it.”
Pope Francis began his address in the Rose Garden at the outset of his public appearances with this fundamental theme of Religious Liberty, and it is clear that he has been tuned into the struggle of the Church in recent times. He could have also added that Religious Liberty is enshrined in the First Amendment of our cherished Constitution, the bedrock of our society.

The Path of Encounter and Dialogue
Homily at Saint Matthew’s Cathedral to the bishops
“The path ahead, then, is dialogue among yourselves, dialogue in your presbyterate, dialogue with lay persons, dialogue with families, dialogue with society…Otherwise, we fail to understand the thinking of others, or to realize deep down that the brother or sister we wish to reach and redeem, with the power and the closeness of love, counts more than their positions, distant as they may be from what we hold as true and certain.  Harsh and divisive language does not befit the tongue of a pastor; it has no place in his heart.  Although it may momentarily seem to win the day, only the enduring allure of goodness and love remains truly convincing.” Pope Francis in these words offers an excellent catechesis of 1Peter 3, 15, to speak with meekness and respect, and Ephesians 4, 15 to speak the truth in love.

The Responsibility of Members of Congress
“Each son or daughter of a given country has a mission, a personal and social responsibility.  Your own responsibility as members of Congress is to enable this country, by your legislative activity, to grow as a nation. You are the face of its people, their representatives. You are called to defend and preserve the dignity of your fellow citizens in the tireless and demanding pursuit of the common good, for this is the chief aim of all politics.
A political society endures when it seeks, as a vocation, to satisfy common needs by stimulating the growth of all its members, especially those in situations of greater vulnerability or risk. Legislative activity is always based on care for the people.  To this you have been invited, called and convened by those who elected you.”
Pope Francis spoke as a Vatican Head of State, but far more as a moral and spiritual voice in the public square to our elected officials.  Imagine if all responsible for the common good by virtue of their elected office walked the noble path of vocation and service.

On the Family
Faith opens a “window” to the presence and working of the Spirit. It shows us that, like happiness, holiness is always tied to little gestures. “Whoever gives you a cup of water in my name — a small gesture — will not go unrewarded”, says Jesus (cf. Mk 9:41). These little gestures are those we learn at home, in the family; they get lost amid all the other things we do, yet they do make each day different. They are the quiet things done by mothers and grandmothers, by fathers and grandfathers, by children, by brothers. They are little signs of tenderness, affection and compassion.
Like the warm supper we look forward to at night, the early lunch awaiting someone who gets up early to go to work. Homely gestures. Like a blessing before we go to bed, or a hug after we return from a hard day’s work. Little things show love, by attention to small daily signs, which make us feel at home. Faith grows when it is lived and shaped by love. That is why our families, our homes, are true domestic churches. They are the right place for faith to become life, and life grows in faith.
In conclusion, Pope Francis exhorts that the wisdom of family life well lived is vital for our world today.  “The Gospel of the family is truly ‘good news’ in a world where self-concern seems to reign supreme.”

Bishop’s cup supports Catholic Foundation

By Rebecca Harris
MADISON – The Catholic Foundation hosted the 33rd annual Bishop’s Cup Golf Tournament on Thursday, Sept. 17, at Lake Caroline Golf Course. Proceeds from the tournament benefited the Catholic Foundation office and the Rev. Martin Ruane Memorial Trust established by the Bishop’s Cup committee in memory of the Irish priest who died earlier this year.
Father Ruane was a big supporter of The Catholic Foundation and he played in the Bishop’s Cup every year. There were 94 golfers representing parishes across the diocese. After a day of golf, 100 guests gathered for dinner and the live and silent auction at The Mermaid Café. The golf awards were presented to the winners after a silent auction.
The scores were very close. A team for Madison St. Francis Parish sponsored by Bank Plus received first place and Natchez St. Mary Basilica received second place. The Bishop Cup committee would like to thank all the golfers, dinner guests and all who donated to the Rev. Martin Ruane Memorial trust. A special thank you goes out to all of our sponsors, listed below.

Plutonium Level:
St. Dominic Health Services, Inc.
The John Richards Collection

Uranium Sponsors:
Ergon

Titanium Sponsors:
Brunini, Grantham, Grower & Hewes, PLLC
Capital Glass Company
Rusty’s Boat, Grand Isle, LA

Gold Sponsors:
Acme
Insurance Consulting Group
Bank Plus
Insurance & Risk Managers
Boon Chapman
Lefoldt & Co., PA
Brown Bottling Co.
Peter and Miriam Koury
Capital City Beverages
Raymond James
Citizens National Bank
Southland Management
Coker & Palmer Inc.
Tico’s Steak House

Hole Sponsors:
Allstate, Ameritas
Kim and Gary Taylor
Knights of Columbus Council #9543
Mike and Diane Pumphrey
Old Rivers Company Inc.
State Farm
St. Anthony Catholic School

USCCB representative Bishop Manz visits

CANTON – Bishop John Manz, Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of Chicago, arrived in Jackson Sunday, Oct. 11, for a five-day pastoral visit to the Diocese of Jackson, specifically to areas where Hispanics work.
Bishop Manz, who is chairman of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops’ (USCCB) Subcommittee on Pastoral Care of Migrants, Refugees and Travelers; and a member of the Committee on Cultural Diversity in the Church and Subcommittee on the Church in Latin America, came accompanied by Sister Joanna Okereke and David Corrales of USCCB and Sister Miriam Bannon of the Catholic Migrant Farmworkers Association.
His first visit was in Canton where he met with about 50 Hispanic members of Sacred Heart Parish to listen to their concerns as immigrants and about work and safety related issues.
He plans to visit Vardaman, Houston, Greenwood, Bruce, Leland and Cleveland where he will meet with Hispanics, tour some of the farms where they work and celebrate Masses in several of these places.
The Oct. 30 edition will include a story and photos of his pastoral visit to the diocese.

Pastors can get help with conference

Will Jemison, coordinator of the Black Catholic Office, has some funds to a help pastor, lay ecclesial minister, or religious that is interested in The Josephite Pastoral Center and the National Black Catholic Congress Presentation – “Pastoring in Black Parishes.”
Pastoring in Black Parishes is a series of development and enrichment conferences for priests, deacons, seminarians and brothers who serve in the Black Apostolate. We will focus on the development of pastoral skills necessary to effectively serve the African American community.
Dates: Nov. 9 – Nov. 12, 2015
Cost: $ 200 per person which includes: registration and materials, welcome dinner, daily continental breakfast and lunch.
Where: Hilton Crystal City Hotel 2399 Jefferson Davis Hwy Arlington, VA 22202. Details: Will Jemison, wjemison@gmail.com, 601-949-6935 or 601-291-2462. To register visit at: www.josephitepastoralcenter.org. Participants also need to reserve a room.

Pope: learn from family bonds

By Cindy Wooden
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Society and the church have much to learn from the family and, in fact, the bond between the church and the family is “indissoluble,” Pope Francis said.
Families bring needed values and a humanizing spirit to society and, when they mirror God’s love for all, they teach the church how it should relate to all people, including the “imperfect,” the pope said Oct. 7 during his weekly general audience.
While members of the Synod of Bishops on the family were meeting in small groups, Pope Francis held his audience with an estimated 30,000 people in St. Peter’s Square. He asked them to accompany the synod with their prayers.
While the Catholic Church insists that governments and the economy need families and have an obligation to give them greater support, Pope Francis said, the church itself recognizes that it, too, must have a “family spirit.”
Using the Gospel story of Jesus telling the disciples he would make them “fishers of men,” Pope Francis said, “a new kind of net is needed for this. We can say that today families are the most important net for the mission of Peter and the church.”
“It is not a net that imprisons,” he said. “On the contrary, it frees people from the polluted waters of abandonment and indifference that drown many human beings in the sea of solitude.”
Families are the place where individuals learn that they are “sons and daughters, not slaves or foreigners or just a number on an identity card,” the pope said. “The church must be the family of God.”
Pope Francis asked people to join him in praying that “the enthusiasm of the synod fathers, animated by the Holy Spirit, would energize the impulse of the church to abandon its old nets and start fishing again, trusting in the word of its Lord. Let us pray intensely for this!”
“Christ promised — and this comforts us — that even bad fathers do not refuse to give bread to their hungry children, so it is impossible that God would not give the Spirit to those who — even imperfect as they are — ask with passionate insistence,” he said.
The world itself needs “a robust injection of family spirit,” he said. Even the best organized economic, juridical and professional relationships are “dehydrated” and anonymous without concern for people, especially for the weakest members of society.
Family ties, the pope said, teach individuals and society the value of “bonds of fidelity, sincerity, trust, cooperation, respect; they encourage people to work toward a world that is livable and to believe in relationships even in difficult situations; they teach people to honor their word.”
A video to accompany this story can be found at https://youtu.be/4-9sQIGCi3w

Seeking new innocence

IN EXILE
By Father Ron Rolheiser, OMI
Some years ago, I officiated at a wedding. As the officiating priest, I was invited to the reception and dance that followed upon the church service. Not knowing the family well and having church services the next morning, I left right after the banquet and the toasts, just as the dancing was about to start. When I was seemingly out of earshot, I heard the bride’s father say to someone: “I’m glad that Father has gone; now we can celebrate with some rock music!”
I didn’t take the remark personally since the man meant well, but the remark stung nevertheless because it betrayed an attitude that painted me, and others like me, as religious but naïve, as good to sit at the head table and be specially introduced, but as being best out of sight when real life begins; as if being religious means that you are unable to handle the earthiness and beat of rock music, as if church and earthy celebration are in opposition to each other, as if sanctity demands an elemental innocence the precludes human complexity, and as if full-blood and religion are best kept separate.
But that’s an attitude within most people, however unexpressed. The idea is that God and human complexity do not go together. Ironically that attitude is particularly prevalent among the over-pious and those most negative towards religion. For the both the over-pious and the militant-impious, God and robust life cannot go together.
And that’s also basically true for the rest of us as is evident in our inability to attribute complexity, earthiness, and temptation to Jesus, to the Virgin Mary, to the saints, and to other publicly-recognized religious figures such as Mother Teresa. It seems that we can only picture holiness as linked to a certain naiveté. For us, holiness needs to be sheltered and protected like a young child.
As a result we then project such an over-idealization of innocence and simplicity onto Jesus, Mary, and our religious exemplars that it becomes impossible for us to ever really identify with them. We can give them admiration, but very little else.
For example, the Virgin Mary of our piety could not have written the Magnificat. She lacks the complexity to write such a prayer because we have projected on to her such an innocence, delicacy, and childlikeness so as to leave her less than fully adult and fully intelligent.
Ultimately this has a negative effect religiously. To identify an unrealistic innocence and simplicity with holiness sets out an unattainable ideal that has too many people believe that their own red blood, with its restless stirrings, makes them bad candidates for the church and sanctity.
In the Roman Catholic Rite of baptism, at a point, the priest or deacon pronounces these words: See in this white garment the outward sign of your Christian dignity. With your family and friends to help you by word and example, bring that dignity unstained into the everlasting life of heaven. That’s a wonderful statement celebrating the beauty and virtue of innocence. But it celebrates an innocence that has yet to meet adult life.
The innocence of a child is stunning in its beauty and holds up for us a mirror within which to see our moral and psychological scars and the missteps we have taken as adults, not unlike the humbling we can feel when we look at bodies in a mirror when we get older. The beauty of youth is gone. But the disquiet and judgment we feel in the presence of a child’s innocence is more a neurosis and misconception than a genuine judgment on our sanctity and moral goodness.
Children are innocent because they have not yet had to deal with life, its infinite complexities, and its inevitable wounds. Young children are so beautifully innocent because they are still naïve and pre-sophisticated. To move to adulthood they will have to pass through inevitable initiations which will leave more than a few smudges on the childlike purity of their baptismal robes.
A friend of mine is fond of saying this about innocence: As an adult, I wouldn’t give a penny for the naïve purity of a child, but I would give everything to find true childlike innocence inside the complexity of my adult life. I think that what he means is this: Jesus went into the singles’ bars of his time, except he didn’t sin. The task in spirituality is not to try to emulate the naive innocence and non-complexity of our childhood.
That’s an exercise in denial and a formula for rationalization. The task is rather to move towards a second-naiveté, a post-sophistication which has already taken into account the full complexity of our lives. Only then will we have again the innocent joy of children, even as we are able to stand steady inside the rawness of rock music, the power and complexity of human sexuality, the concupiscent tendencies of the human heart, and the uncanny and wily maneuverings innate inside the human spirit. From there we can write the Magnificat.
(Oblate Father Ron Rolheiser, theologian, teacher and award-winning author, is President of the Oblate School of Theology in San Antonio, Texas.)

Hispanic Heritage Month celebrates contributions of many cultures

By Elsa Baughman
JACKSON – The celebration of the Hispanic Heritage Month in the United States just ended.  It’s observed each year from Sept. 15 to Oct. 15 to recognize the contributions of the Hispanic presence in the United States and celebrate their heritage and culture.
For Tito Echiburu, from Chile, who has lived in this country for 54 years, this celebration has a special meaning. “My wife, also from Chile, and I, are very proud of our heritage and what it means,” he said. “We have tried to install Hispanic values to our children, like family, hard work, a good education, etc.
Echiburu, who is a member of Morton St. Martin Center, said they will never forget where they came from, “but at the same time, we are so proud to be part, and citizens of the United States. We are extremely grateful for the opportunities we have received in this country.”
According to the 2010 Census, there are 50.5 million Hispanics living in the United States, representing 16 percent of the population. This figure shows a significant increase compared to the 2000 census which register the Hispanic population at 35.3 million, representing 13 percent of the American population.
Alejandro Banda, president of the Mississippi Hispanic Association and member of Madison St. Francis Parish, noted Hispanics have participated in the history of this nation. “They have excelled in several fields or art and culture, science, technology, politics, entertainment, sports and even in business. It’s evident that Hispanics have had a remarkable and very positive influence in our nation, especially because our solid family values, our deep attachment to our faith, our loyalty and our sense of citizenship and service,” He said.
Banda indicated this month is not exclusively a celebration for Hispanics. “This is a national celebration and everybody is invited. Together, let us enjoy a “margarita” or maybe a “mojito.” Together, we can fill our ears, and delight our senses with the sweet words of Gabriel Garcia Marquez, and Pablo Neruda. Let us enjoy the spicy rhythms of Salsa, Cumbia and Bachata.
“It is a fortunate coincidence that Pope Francis is visiting our country now. Our first pope from Latin America, let us follow his example of love and brotherhood and let us enjoy this time together,” he added.
The circumstances by which Hispanics have come to this new land vary greatly from person to person. Some came to visit or to study and then decide to stay while others have come through the border without legal papers.
Their achievements are reached little by little, day by day. A minority start their own business, others work as professionals in their field of study, and the vast majority work in a wide variety of occupations, all very honorable because as the saying goes, all jobs have dignity.
Several parishes in the Diocese of Jackson, those with a Hispanic community, usually have festival, dinners and dances to celebrate their heritage in September or October. Hispanic members of three communities gathered in Tupelo recently to celebrate together as a family: New Albany St. Francis, Pontotoc St. Christopher and St. James parishes.
Jackson State University  (JSU) invited officers of the Mississippi Hispanic Association to make a presentation about the Hispanic culture and their contributions to the U.S. at its Welcome Center Tuesday, Sept. 21. Esperanza Velásquez, a board member, was the presenter.
Shirley Pandolfy, an attorney from Peru, attended the event at JSU. Her comments echoes Echiburu’s beliefs that Hispanics provide a positive influence on American culture “with our strong commitment to family, faith, and service,” she said. For all this reasons, she added, “we celebrate this month with pride and renew our commitment to continue strengthening our nation.”
Also in September, several Latin American countries celebrated the anniversary of their independence: Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Mexico, Chile and Belize. Before the end of the celebration, Columbus Day was observed on Oct. 12 which is also a big day in the Hispanic world.
Hispanic Heritage Month started in 1968 when President Lyndon Johnson declared a week-long observance. In ensuing years it was expanded to a month-long celebration.
On Sept. 23, Pope Francis during his speech at the welcome ceremony at the White House in Washington said that as the son of an immigrant family he was happy to be a guest in a country built largely by immigrants.

Lopez family represents region, brings home hope for young people

Veronica López and her family represented Hispanic families in Region V of the United States in the First Hispanic/Latin American Encounter of Families. She is an associate for the Office of Hispanic Ministry.
The pope’s visit was truly a blessing and a great lesson, because the joy and love with which the pope encouraged us to be courageous, to form united families generous in Christ, and to be merciful, left a large inspiration in our lives.
My mom was happy to know that the presence of Hispanics is increasing, that our voice is being heard and that we can be part of the processes (V Meeting, Pastoral of the CELAM, etc.) that are marking history to form and grow families well-grounded, in culture within our Catholic faith that we can pass down from generation to generation.”
The presence of the pope also left an important footprint on my dad, because for him this experience is unforgettable and unique. The most important thing for him was to share it with his wife, daughter and his grandson, and also to share it with a group of brothers in Christ, which made this experience something that can be very difficult to live it again.
For me, personally, to have listened to speeches from people so humble and filled with the love of God, to have shared with other families from the southeast, making new friends and above all to see Pope Francisco so close twice, left me a footprint that will change the history of my life.
I have always known that God had an important mission for me when he gave me a second chance to live, and seeing Pope Francis, I felt the presence of God, telling me, “Here I am.”
Despite my son’s young age, I am sure he will never forget this. He shares with everybody what he felt when he saw the pope: “the Pope saw me, greeted me and blessed me. He gave me his blessing and smiled at me, it was amazing.”

Sister sees renewal of missionary zeal in trip

SISTER MARIA ELENA MENDEZ,
Our first encounter with the Pope was at the Independence Hall, where he spoke from the podium where President Abraham Lincoln gave one of the most famous speeches in the history of the United States: the Gettysburg Address. I knew about Gettysburg because I lived there for four years before coming to Mississippi. There Pope Francis spoke on the importance of human dignity, religious freedom, about immigrants, presenting himself as the son of immigrants. He said, “Please, don’t ever feel ashamed of your traditions. Don’t forget the lessons you learned from your elders which can enrich the life of this American land.”
The Hispanic people were shouting “Viva el papa.” “Francisco, friend, the church is with you.” Something very significant was to hear Spanish, both by the people and the pope, to see so many flags flying, among them the Argentinian that fluttered with pride like so many others. Hispanics, in the midst of so many policemen felt safe because the “father,” the pope was present and he was the focal point of all the attention. The atmosphere was of joy, happiness, surprise of what the pope would do or what he would say spontaneously and simply that would make us laugh. He although tired, drew energy from the people that were in the thousands.
To see him closer from first row, both Saturday and Sunday I had to get up early, walk for miles and spend many hours standing or sitting on the floor waiting for those two minutes he passed in front of me. At the Independence Mall, as in the Festival of  Families, in the Cathedral of St. Peter and St. Paul, and in the closing Mass of families, the pope valued and reaffirmed the importance of the family and the need to work to keep it united.
There is a lot to say, but I will conclude by saying that this was a great family celebration in which all or the majority savored a word, a phrase, a sign, a gesture, a moving attitude of the pope and, I dare say, that some people who are not catholic were impact in some way.
I hope it is God’s will that this missionary spirit renew our hearts and inspire us to “come out” of ourselves to embrace what he calls “the culture of the encounter.” The messages are here to continue deepening on them now and then put them into practice.