Calendar of Events

SPIRITUAL ENRICHMENT
JACKSON St. Richard Parish, Fatima rosary, in celebration of the 98th anniversary of the Miracle of the Sun at Fatima, Saturday, Oct. 10, at noon. The special intention for this year’s prayer will be for the healing and conversion of America. Bring your lawn chairs and picnic blankets! Details: John Dorsa, 601-790-2600 or 601-790-9425.
JACKSON St. Peter Parish, men’s retreat, “Gifted and called: To be agents for the Kingdom here & now,” Saturday, Oct. 17, from 8:30 a.m. – 1 p.m. in the Cathedral Center. Details: Charlie Sims, 601-624-9966.
MADISON St. Francis of Assisi Parish, two spirituality trainings, “Rights and obligations of permanent deacons,” Tuesday, Oct. 13 and Thursday, Oct. 22.
“The Francis miracle,” Thursday, Oct. 15, and Tuesday, Oct. 20. Both presentations are at 6:30 p.m. in St. Clare Hall.
NATCHEZ St. Mary Basilica, eight-week study of church Creed, Thursdays from 6:30 – 7:45 p.m. Babysitting is available. A light supper will be served at 6 p.m. at the O’Connor Family Life Center.
TUPELO St. James Parish book club, meets the second Wednesday of each month (Oct. 14), at noon in the library. The selection for this month is “Dear and Glorious Physician” by Taylor Caldwell.

PARISH, SCHOOLS & FAMILY EVENTS
BATESVILLE St. Mary Parish, blessing of pets, Saturday, Oct. 10, at 10 a.m.
– Friday, Oct. 9, noon Mass and the Stations of the Cross with lunch and talk with Sister Marta Gladys.
BOONEVILLE St. Francis of Assisi Parish, beginning Sunday, Oct. 4, Mass will be celebrated at 8:30 a.m. and on Tuesdays at 10 a.m. Sunday school will begin at 9:45 a.m.
CLEVELAND Our Lady of Victories, annual Parish feast day celebration, Wednesday, Oct. 7. Praying of the rosary and a meal at 6 p.m.
– Visit and Mass in Spanish with Bishop John Manz from the Archdiocese of Chicago, Thursday, Oct. 15, at 6 p.m. Potluck reception immediately following in the parish center.
COLUMBUS Annunciation School, art auction, Friday, Oct. 30, at 7 p.m. in the Trotter Convention Center. Advance tickets are $25, at the door, $30.
GRENADA St. Peter Parish, fund-raiser festival for the youth, “Peter’s Pumpkin Party,” Thursday, Oct. 29, from 6:30 – 8:30 p.m. at the Family Life Center with a chili cook-off. Families are asked to donate a bag of candy.
GREENVILLE St. Vincent de Paul open house, Sunday, Oct. 11, at 2 p.m.
INDIANOLA Immaculate Conception Parish, annual spaghetti dinner, Monday, Oct. 12, from 5 – 7 p.m. Dinners are $10 each, eat-in or take-out.
JACKSON Christ the King Parish, 70th anniversary prayer service, (Liturgy of the Hours) Friday, Oct. 16, at 6 p.m. followed by the rosary.
– 70th anniversary Mass, Sunday, Oct. 18, at 3 p.m. followed by a reception.
JACKSON St. Richard Parish, bereavement support group meeting, Thursday, Oct. 15, at 6:30 p.m. “No One Understands What I Am Going Through” led by parishioner, Dot-T Dehmer. Details: Suzie Cranston 601-982-5464, ncmcghee@bellsouth.net.
JACKSON St. Peter Parish, jambalaya dinner, Saturday, Oct. 10, after the 5:15 p.m. Mass. Free. Donations will be accepted for Council 848 of the Knights of Columbus, sponsor of the event.
– Baptismal preparation class, Oct. 13, at 6 p.m.
MADISON St. Anthony School’s Starry Night Gala, “Embrace the Moment,” Saturday, Dec. 5.
MADISON St. Francis of Assisi Parish mission, “Joy of the Gospels,” Oct. 3-7. Presented by Fathers Patrick Keyes and Mike McAndrew after the morning Masses and at 6 p.m. during the evening service.
MERIDIAN St. Patrick Parish, Hispanic community’s rummage sale, Saturday, Oct. 10, from 7 a.m. – 3 p.m. Tables are available for $10 to sell goods. Donations are welcome (no clothes). Bring them to Kehrer Hall Friday, Oct. 9, at 5 p.m.
MOUND BAYOU – St. Gabriel Mercy Center, Harvest Festival, Saturday, Nov. 7, from 10 a.m.- 2 p.m. Raffle tickets are on sale now, $1 each or $10 per book.
NATCHEZ St. Mary Basilica Healing Hands is collecting baby blankets for distribution in a hospital in Haiti run by Franciscan Missionaries of Our Lady. Place donations in the box in the O’Connor Family Life Center by Dec. 1.
PEARL St. Jude Parish, Young Apostles “Trunk or Treat,” Saturday, Oct. 24, from 6:30 – 8:30 p.m. Volunteers needed to decorate their trunk or tailgates and provide them as stopping points for candy distribution. Council 8038 of the Knights of Columbus will provide a trophy for “Best Decorated” Trunk. Details: Mara, 601-421-3849, or Betsy, 601-214-7378.
ROSEDALE Sacred Heart Parish, chili supper,  Thursday, Oct. 8, from 11 a.m. – 7 p.m. Plates are $8. Details: Jim Tomek, 662-846-7136, tomekj@bellsouth.net.
SALTILLO St. Thomas Chapel, Mass and blessing of the graves during the Month of Remembrance on Sunday, Nov. 8, at 5 p.m.
TUPELO St. James Parish, “Christian persecutions,” Sunday, Oct. 25, from 2:30 – 3:30 p.m. Dr. Salwa Gendi will share her personal story and the plight of Christians in Egypt and Syria, including her family and friends. The Guadalupan dancers will lead participants to the grotto to pray the rosary.
– Festival of Saints, Sunday, Nov. 1, from 5 – 8 p.m. Trunk or treat for the children at 5 p.m.
YAZOO CITY St. Mary Parish, anointing of the sick,   Thursday, Oct. 15, during the noon Mass in the parish hall followed by a potluck lunch. Sign up sheets are in the back of the church.

UPCOMING CURSILLOS
The men’s Cursillo weekend is set for Oct. 8-11, at the Duncan Gray Campground in Canton. Cost is $200. The ladies’ weekend is Oct. 15-18 at the Duncan Gray Conference Center. Cost is $300. Details: Sue Anne Booth, 601-960-8474, sueanne.booth@jacksondiocese.org.

SQUAT & GOBBLE
JACKSON Catholic Charities annual Squat & Gobble, Thursday, Nov. 13, at Old Capitol Inn (new location). Benefits Catholic Charities Domestic Violence Office. Details: Tommy, 601-955-1677.

‘MANY SAINTS, ONE CHURCH’
GREENWOOD – Diocese of Jackson Black Catholic Day of Reflection, Nov. 6-7, at St. Francis of Assisi Parish. Sessions with Dr. Timone Davis, retreat minister, youth sessions, prayer, Liturgy, vendors. Cost is $15 for pre-registration and $20 at the door.

‘PURPLE DRESS RUN’
JACKSON – Catholic Charities “Purple Dress Run,” 5K Run Walk, Thursday, Oct. 22, beginning and ending at The Iron Horse Grill. Benefits Domestic Violence Services Center. Details: Michael Thomas, 601-326-3714.

FALL GALA
JACKSON – The Cathedral of St. Peter the Apostle, Fall Gala, Saturday, Nov. 7, at 6:30 p.m. at the Old Capitol Inn. Tickets are $60 per person and $100 per couple and includes food, cocktails, 50/50 split pot raflle, silent auction and live entertainment. Proceeds benefit the renovation of the cathedral. Details: 601-969-3125.

Encuentro con el Papa Francisco fue vigorizador

Por Obispo Joseph Kopacz
La visita pastoral del Papa Francisco a los Estados Unidos, después de unos días en Cuba, dominaron las noticias por mucho más de los seis días que estuvo en territorio americano. La preparación de la visita absorbió más de un año completo. El efecto durará por muchos años. Sin duda su presencia en nuestra nación fue cautivadora.
El Papa Pablo VI fue el primero en llegar a nuestras costas en octubre de 1965 para hablar en las Naciones Unidas en el momento en que la guerra de Vietnam se estaba intensificando. Sus palabras están consagradas para la posteridad. “No más guerra, nunca más guerra. Paz, es la paz la que debe guiar el destino de las personas y de toda la humanidad”. San Juan Pablo II hizo varias visitas pastorales a los Estados Unidos, una de las cuales incluyó un circuito similar a la que el Papa Francisco acaba de terminar.
También recorrió el Sureste y el Sur con su preciada visita a Nueva Orleans en 1987. Muchos en nuestra región recuerdan con cariño la experiencia. San Juan Pablo II presidió el Día Mundial de la Juventud en Denver, Co., en 1993 inspirando a generaciones de jóvenes y a otros no tan jóvenes. Juan Pablo había lanzado el  tradicional bianual Día Mundial de la Juventud en Roma en 1984 debido a su profundo amor por los jóvenes durante todo su sacerdocio.
Ahora hemos celebrado el momento del Papa Francisco, un momento en la historia cuando los corazones de muchos dentro de la Iglesia y en el mundo tienen hambre y sed por una mayor justicia y paz y por solidaridad y esperanza para la familia humana. Experimenté personalmente este anhelo en la ciudad de Washington, D.C. la semana pasada durante el servicio de oración en la Catedral San Mateo y durante la Misa de Canonización de Junípero Serra en el Santuario de la Inmaculada Concepción. Estos fueron reuniones pequeñas en comparación con las de Nueva York y Filadelfia, pero el Espíritu del Señor no estuvo menos presente.
En esta columna intento reflejar sobre mi propia experiencia y la esencia de las homilías del Papa Francisco en la Catedral de San Mateo y en la Misa de canonización. Cada vez que un jefe de estado extranjero visita tierras extranjeras la seguridad es arrolladora. Para todos de los casi 300 ó 400 obispos presentes, el movimiento de un lugar a otro fue como glaciar, incluso con la escolta de policía para nuestros siete autobuses. A veces volamos por las calles de Washington y luego tuvimos que esperar. Pero la espera valió la pena. Mientras estábamos sentados en la Catedral San Mateo, orando en silencio por lo anticipado, el primer sonido que nos alertaba de la llegada del papa era el helicoptero de  seguridad que dirigía su caravana como jefe de estado. Después de un ratito, la puerta de la catedral se abría y el Papa Francisco entraba con una sonrisa tan grande como la Argentina.
Mientras caminaba por el pasillo central en medio de los entusiastas aplausos, me di cuenta de que toda su conducta encarnaba la alegría del Evangelio, el título de su Carta Apostólica, Evangelii Guadium. Su amor por el Señor supura de su ser y su deseo de celebrar este amor con todos los que él se reúne es lo que lo hace apreciar al espíritu humano.
Al final del servicio de oración en la Catedral de San Mateo el Papa Francisco le habló específicamente a los obispos presentes rodeado de muchos católicos de la Arquidiócesis de Washington que llenaron la Catedral. Su mensaje fue uno de aliento y ardientemente habló del ministerio del obispo como uno de unidad, caridad y celo en el servicio del Buen Pastor que da su vida por las ovejas. Tenemos que caminar con nuestro pueblo, fortalecer a nuestros sacerdotes y dar la bienvenida al extraño en nuestro medio. Su amor por nosotros fue palpable durante todo su apasionado discurso.
A la salida de la Catedral de San Mateo hicimos una pausa en el Centro San Juan Pablo II para almorzar antes de dirigirnos al Santuario de la Inmaculada Concepción para la Misa de Canonización de Junípero Serra. Esta fue una festiva celebración en la cual participaron    fieles de todo el país. Muchos vinieron de la Costa Oeste, entre ellos representantes de los nativos Americanos  de las misiones en California. Mientras entrabamos antes de la llegada del Papa Francisco la congregación de unos 25,000 estaban parados bajo un sol ardiente y nos saludaron con palabras y gestos cordiales. Fue agradable ver su amor por el Señor y por la Iglesia.
Más de 220 años atrás, los indios de California evangelizados por el Padre Junípero Serra lo declararon un santo. En esta histórica canonización en la capital de la nación, el Papa Francisco ratificó esa declaración, declarándolo un santo para la veneración de la Iglesia universal. Añadiendo a la naturaleza histórica del evento fue que el Papa Francisco, el primer papa de las Américas, estaba declarando al primer hispano santo para los Estados Unidos en su primera Misa aquí. Estrella Roja, un representante de los Chumash de la Misión Ventura, le dijo al Registro que él y otros siete jefes indios de California estuvieron presentes en la Misa y que también tuvo la oportunidad de reunirse personalmente con el Papa Francisco. Ellos agradecieron el reconocimiento de su gente y su cultura durante toda la Misa.
El ritual de la canonización tuvo lugar inmediatamente después del saludo de apertura del Papa Francisco. Después de la celebración de las Letanías de los Santos, el Papa Francisco declaró: “declaramos y definimos al Bendito Junípero Serra a ser santo, y lo incluimos entre los santos, decretando que se le venere como tal por toda la Iglesia. En el nombre del Padre y del Hijo y del Espíritu Santo”.
A pesar de la sencillez en su composición, la jubilosa congregación quedó atrapada en el esplendor del momento. Oportunamente el Papa Francisco comenzó su homilía con las palabras de San Pablo en su carta a los Filipenses (4:4 ) “Estad siempre alegres en el Señor, otra vez digo, regocijaos”. La alegría y agradecimiento resonó en toda la congregación. Al final de su homilía el Papa Francisco refirió las palabras que fueron el lema en la vida de San Junípero Serra. Siempre, adelante, siempre adelante. “Él era la encarnación de la ‘una Iglesia que va hacia adelante’, una Iglesia que lleva a todas partes la reconciliadora ternura de Dios”, dijo el Papa. Este es el tema que el Papa Francisco ha abordado en repetidas ocasiones y es el llamado para todos nosotros de ser discípulos misioneros.
El Santo Padre continuó dando grandes discursos al Congreso, a los delegados de las Naciones Unidas y a la multitud de los fieles en la misa de clausura del Encuentro Mundial de las Familias en Filadelfia. Hubo otras importantes homilías y discursos que revelan el corazón de este siervo de los Siervos de Dios, y es mi objetivo el sintetizar esta fuente de sabiduría en mi próxima columna. Mientras tanto, que el Señor Jesús, el Buen Pastor, y Sumo y Eterno Sacerdote continúe concediéndonos una temporada de refrescamiento a través del testimonio, las palabras y alegre sonrisa de Francisco de Roma, Sucesor de Pedro, y el Vicario de Cristo.

Encounter with Pope Francis invigorating

By Bishop Joseph Kopacz
The pastoral visit of Pope Francis to the United States, after a few days in Cuba, dominated the news outlets for far more than the six days that he was on American soil.  Preparation for the visit absorbed most of a full year.  The impact will endure for years to come. Without a doubt his presence in our nation was captivating.
Pope Paul V1 was the first to come to our shores in October 1965 to speak to the United Nations at the time when the Vietnam War was escalating. His words are enshrined for posterity. “No more war, never again war. Peace, it is peace that must guide the destinies of people and of all mankind.” St. John Paul II made several pastoral visits to the United States one of which included a similar circuit that Pope Francis just completed.
He also toured the Southeast and the Deep South with his cherished visit to New Orleans in 1987. Many in our region fondly recall the experience. St. John Paul presided over The World Youth Day in Denver, Colorado in 1993 inspiring generations of the young and not so young. John Paul had launched the biannual tradition of World Youth Day in Rome in 1984 because of the his profound love for young people throughout his entire priesthood.
Now we have celebrated the Pope Francis moment, a time in history when the hearts of many within the Church and throughout the world are hungering and thirsting for greater justice and peace, solidarity and hope for the human family. I directly experienced this longing in Washington, D.C. last week at the prayer service at St. Matthew’s Cathedral, and during the Mass of Canonization of Junipero Serra at the Shrine of the Immaculate Conception.  These were smaller gatherings in comparison to New York and Philadelphia, but the Spirit of the Lord was no less present.
In this column I intend to reflect upon my personal experiences, and the gist of Pope Francis’ homilies in the Cathedral of Saint Matthews, and at the Canonization Mass. Whenever a Head of State lands upon foreign shores the security is sweeping. For all of the nearly 300-400 bishops in attendance, the movement from place to place was glacier-like, even with a police escort for our seven buses. At times we flew along the streets of Washington, and then we waited. But it was all worth the wait. As we sat in Saint Matthew’s Cathedral, quietly praying in anticipation, the first sound that alerted us to the Pope’s arrival was the security Chopper leading his convoy as a Head of State. In short order, the Cathedral doors opened and Pope Francis entered with a smile as big as Argentina.  As he walked down the center aisle to enthusiastic applause, it hit me that his entire demeanor embodied the joy of the Gospel, the title of his Apostolic Letter, Evangelii Guadium. His love for the Lord oozes from his being, and his desire to celebrate this love with all whom he meets, is what endears him to the human spirit.
At the end of the prayer service at St. Matthew’s Pope Francis spoke specifically to the bishops in attendance surrounded by many Catholics of the Archdiocese of Washington who packed the Cathedral. His message was one of encouragement, and he ardently spoke of the bishop’s ministry as one of unity, charity, and zeal in service of the Good Shepherd who laid down his life for the flock. We are to walk with our people, strengthen our priests, and welcome the stranger in our midst. His love for us was palpable throughout his passionate address.
Upon leaving St. Matthew’s Cathedral we paused at the St. John Paul II Center for lunch before heading to the Shrine of the Immaculate Conception for the Mass of Canonization of Junipero Serra. This was a festive celebration with the faithful participating from all over the country. Many journeyed from the West Coast including representatives of the Native American lineage from the California Missions. As we processed in before the arrival of Pope Francis the congregation of 25,000 was basking in the sun and greeting us with heartfelt words and gestures.  It was humbling to see their love for the Lord and for the Church.
More than 220 years ago, the California Indians evangelized by Father Junípero Serra declared him a saint. In this historic canonization in the nation’s capital, Pope Francis ratified that declaration, declaring him a saint for the veneration of the universal church. Adding to the historic nature of the event was that Pope Francis, the first pope from the Americas, was declaring the first Hispanic saint for the United States in his first Mass in the U.S. Red Star, a representative of the Chumash of the Ventura Mission, told the Register that he and seven other California Indian chiefs were in attendance at the Mass and also had the opportunity to meet personally with Pope Francis. They appreciated the acknowledgement of their people and culture throughout the Mass.
The ritual of canonization occurred immediately after the opening greeting from Pope Francis. After the celebration of the Litany of the Saints Pope Francis declared “We declare and define Blessed Junípero Serra to be a saint, and we enroll him among the saints, decreeing that he is to be venerated as such by the whole Church. In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.”
Although simple in its makeup the joyful congregation was caught up in the splendor of the moment. Pope Francis fittingly began his homily with the words of Saint Paul from his letter to the Philippians (4,4) “Rejoice in the Lord always, again I say rejoice.” Joy and thanksgiving resounded through the congregation. At the close of his homily Pope Francis referred to the words that were the motto for Saint Junipero Serra’s life. Siempre, adelante, siempre adelante. “He was the embodiment of ‘a church which goes forth,’ a church which sets out to bring everywhere the reconciling tenderness of God,” the pope said. This is the theme that Pope Francis has repeatedly addressed and it is the call to all of us to be missionary disciples.
The Pope went on to give major addresses to Congress, to delegates at the United Nations, and to a throng of the faithful at the closing mass to the World Meeting of Families in Philadelphia. There were other important homilies and speeches that reveal the heart of this Servant of the Servants of God, and it is my goal to synthesize this font of wisdom for my next column. Meanwhile, may the Lord Jesus, the Good Shepherd and Eternal High Priest continue to grant us a season of refreshment through the witness, words, and joyful smile of Francis of Rome, the Successor of Peter, and the Vicar of Christ.

In Memoriam

EVANSVILLE, Ind. – A Mass of Christian Burial for Sister Dolores Coleman, D.C., was celebrated Aug. 28 at Seton Residence Chapel in Evansville. Burial followed at followed at St. Joseph Cemetery in Evansville.

Sister Dolores Coleman, D.C.

Sister Dolores Coleman, D.C.

Sister Coleman, a native of Meridian, died Aug. 25, at Seton Residence. She was 94 years of age and had 74 years of vocation as a Daughter of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul. She earned her Bachelor of Arts degree in education and French from Fontbonne University (then College) in St. Louis in 1947; she earned her Master of Arts in English at DePaul University in Chicago, Ill, in 1954.
She served at Natchez Cathedral Schools (1942- 1948 and 1965-1969) and at schools in Chicago, Ill.,   Keokuk, Iowa St. Louis. She also served in social work in Chicago and Milwaukee, Wis.
In 1972, Sister Coleman was appointed director of the Apostolate of Deaf in Jackson, and served there until 1977. For the next 20 years (1977-1997), she ministered as the program director for the diocesan Office for the Deaf and Disabled in the Diocese of Biloxi, she founded and directed the de l’Epee Deaf Center. She then ministered as a pastoral care associate in Mobile  until 2003.
In 2004, Sister Coleman joined the Ministry of Prayer at Seton Residence in Evansville, Ind., where she served until the time of her death. She was an inductee in the Gulfport Hall of Honor and she was a published poet.
She was preceded in death by her parents, and by her sister, Sister Mary Andrea Coleman, R.S.M. Donations in Sister’s memory may be made to the Daughters of Charity, 4330 Olive Street, St. Louis, Mo., 63108.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Sister Yvonne Moran, OSU, 90, died Sept. 8 at Mercy Sacred Heart Home in Louisville.
Born in Louisville, she entered the Ursuline Sisters in 1942 after she graduated from Sacred Heart Academy high school. She received her B.A. in elementary education from the former Ursuline College, Louisville.
In the Diocese of Jackson, Sister Moran taught at Camden Sacred Heart Mission School from 1948 to 1954 and from 1956 to 1960. Her teaching ministry also included schools in Indiana and Kentucky.
In later years, Sister Moran was a housemother and childcare worker at St. Joseph Children’s Home and a cook at Angela Merici High School Convent, followed by a ministry of service at the Ursuline Motherhouse, Nazareth Home, and the former Marian Home, all in Louisville. In 2001, she became a resident of the former Marian Home until she moved to Mercy Sacred Heart Home in 2010.
Known for her love of writing for children, she had several plays and poems published in Catholic journals and magazines. She also wrote and designed primary grade activity books for the Daughters of St. Paul Books & Media, Boston.

Parish celebration for Philadelphia Holy Cross includes birthday, blessing

Philadephia – Bishop Joseph Kopacz visited Holy Cross Parish Sunday, Sept. 20. Brian and Rachel Dunn present the gifts to Bishop Kopacz during Mass while altar server Sam Knight, Father Augustine Palimattam, pastor, and altar server Eli Moran wait to assist.

Philadephia – Bishop Joseph Kopacz visited Holy Cross Parish Sunday, Sept. 20. Brian and Rachel Dunn present the gifts to Bishop Kopacz during Mass while altar server Sam Knight, Father Augustine Palimattam, pastor, and altar server Eli Moran wait to assist.

Mafalda Barraco recieves a cake for her 100th birthday at a reception after Mass.

Philadephia –Mafalda Barraco recieves a cake for her 100th birthday at a reception after Mass.

While there, he consecrated a cemetery expansion, celebrated Mass. (Photos courtesy of John Keith)

While there, he consecrated a cemetery expansion, celebrated Mass. (Photos courtesy of John Keith)

Pope pays unexpected visit to Little Sisters of the Poor

WASHINGTON (CNS) – Pope Francis made a previously unannounced 15-minute stop Sept. 23 at a Washington residence operated by the Little Sisters of the Poor, where he met with about 45 sisters.
Sister Constance Veit, communications director for the Little Sisters, said the pope talked individually with each sister, ranging in age from novices to 102-year-old Sister Marie Mathilde, who is Colombian and spoke to the pope in Spanish.
Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi, the Vatican spokesman, told reporters in Washington that evening that the papal visit was intended as a sign of support for the Little Sisters’ lawsuit against the Obama administration’s mandate that all employers offer contraceptive coverage in their health plans or participate in a religious “accommodation” that the sisters have refused.
But Sister Constance said Pope Francis made no mention of the lawsuit during his visit. Rather, his message to the group was about the Little Sisters’ “mission to the elderly” and “how important it is in a society that tends to marginalize the elderly and the poor,” she told Catholic News Service Sept. 24.

Pope Francis talks with Sister Marie Mathilde, 102, during his unannounced visit to the Little Sisters of the Poor residence in Washington Sept. 23. (CNS photo/courtesy of the Little Sisters of the Poor)

Pope Francis talks with Sister Marie Mathilde, 102, during his unannounced visit to the Little Sisters of the Poor residence in Washington Sept. 23. (CNS photo/courtesy of the Little Sisters of the Poor)

“We were deeply moved by his encouraging words,” she added.
The Little Sisters did not know about the visit until after the pope’s morning meeting at the White House with President Barack Obama, Sister Constance said. Three Little Sisters of the Poor, including Sister Constance, had been invited to attend the ceremony on the South Lawn.
Sister Maria del Monte Auxiliadora, the mother general, was told after the ceremony that Pope Francis wanted to make a five-minute visit to the Jeanne Jugan Residence, located across the street from the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception and not too far from the St. John Paul II Seminary.
Pope Francis made the stop between the canonization of St. Junipero Serra at the basilica and a visit to the seminary, run by the Archdiocese of Washington.
Because his visit was so brief, the pope was not able to meet any of the home’s residents, Sister Constance said. The visit ended up lasting about 15 minutes, she said.
In addition to the 12 nuns who live and work at the Jeanne Jugan Residence, sisters from other homes operated by the Little Sisters of the Poor and the order’s postulants were invited to the meeting, Sister Constance said.
The Jeanne Jugan Residence provides independent living, assisted living and nursing home care to low-income seniors. Although it currently has 80 to 90 residents, it is undergoing renovations and will upon completion reach full capacity of 100 residents, Sister Constance said.
(Copyright © 2015 Catholic News Service/United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. The CNS news services may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed, including but not limited to, such means as framing or any other digital copying or distribution method in whole or in part, without prior written authority of Catholic News Service.)

God’s love beyond imagination

IN EXILE
By Father Ron Rolheiser, OMI
Recently, at an academic dinner, I was sitting across the table from a nuclear scientist. At one point, I asked him this question: Do you believe that there’s human life on other planets? His answer surprised me: “As a scientist, no, I don’t believe there’s human life on another planet. Scientifically, the odds are strongly against it. But, as a Christian, I believe there’s human life on other planets. Why? My logic is this: Why would God chose to have only one child?”
Why would God choose to have only one child? Good logic. Why indeed would an infinite God, capable of creating and loving beyond all imagination, want to do this only once? Why would an infinite God, at a certain point, say: “That’s enough. That’s my limit. These are all the people I can handle and love! Anything beyond this is too much for me! Now is the time to stop creating and enjoy what I’ve done.”
Put this way, my scientist friend’s hunch makes a lot of sense. Given that God is infinite, why would God ever stop doing what God is doing? Why would God favor just us, who have been already been given life, and not give that same gift endlessly to others?  By what logic, other than the limits of our own mind, might we posit an end to creation?
We struggle with this because what God has already created, both in terms of the immensity of the universe and the number of people who have been born in history, is already too much for our imagination to grasp. There are billions and billions of planets, with trillions of processes happening on each of these every second. Just on our planet, earth, there are now more than seven billion people living, millions more have lived before us, and many more are being born every second. And inside of each of these persons there is a unique heart and mind caught-up in an infinite and complex array of joys, heartaches, and moral choices.
Moreover, all of these trillions of human and cosmic processes have been going on for millions and billions of years. How can we imagine a heart and a mind somewhere that knows and loves and cares intimately about every individual person, every individual joy, every individual heartache, every individual moral choice, and every individual planet, star, and grain of sand, as if it were an only child?
The answer is clear: It cannot be imagined! To try to imagine this is to end up either in atheism or nursing a false concept of God. Any God worth believing in has to be able to know and love beyond human imagination, otherwise the immensity of our universe and the uniqueness of our lives are not being held inside the loving care of anyone’s hand and heart.
But how can God know, love, and care for all of this immensity and complexity? Moreover, how will all these billions and billions of people go to heaven, so that all of us end up in one body of love within which we will be in intimate community with each other?
That’s beyond all imagination, at least in terms of human capacity, but my hunch is that heaven cannot be imagined not because it is too complex but because it is too simple, namely, simple in the way Scholastic philosophy affirms that God is simple: God so embodies and encompasses all complexity so as to constitute a reality too simple to be imagined.
It seems too that the origins of our universe are also too simple to be imagined: Our universe, in so far as we know it, had a beginning and scientists believe (The Big Bang Theory) that everything originated from a single cell of energy too tiny to measure or imagine. This single cell exploded with a force and an energy that is still going on today, still expanding outward and creating billions and billions of planets in its wake. And scientists believe that all of this will come back together again, involute, sometime in a future which will take billions of more years to unfold.
So here’s my hunch: Maybe the billions and billions of people, living and dead and still to be born, in both their origins and in their eventual destiny, parallel what has happened and is happening in the origin, expansion, and eventual involution of our universe, that is, just as God is creating billions and billions of planets, God is creating billions and billions of people. And, just as our physical universe will one day come back together again into a single unity, so too will all people come together again in a single community within which God’s intimate love for each of us will bring us together and hold us together in a unity too simple to be imagined, except that now that union with God and each other will not be unconscious but will be known and felt in a very heightened, self-conscious gratitude and ecstasy.
(Oblate Father Ron Rolheiser, theologian, teacher and award-winning author, is President of the Oblate School of Theology in San Antonio, TX.)

Pontiff prays with bishops, calls on them to embrace role as pastors

By Mark Pattison
WASHINGTON (CNS) — Pope Francis had much to say to the U.S. bishops during his remarks at a midday prayer service at St. Matthew Cathedral in Washington Sept. 23, the first full day of his U.S. apostolic journey.
Because of that, different bishops could take away different things. Bishop Joseph Kopacz put his reaction to the prayer and the Canonization Mass in his column this week, found on page 3.

The Pope arrives at St. Matthew Cathedral for Midday prayer with members of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops Sept. 23 in Washington. Bishop Kopacz was on hand for the service. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

The Pope arrives at St. Matthew Cathedral for Midday prayer with members of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops Sept. 23 in Washington. Bishop Kopacz was on hand for the service. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

What resonated most for Bishop Daniel E. Flores of Brownsville, Texas, was the pope’s remarks about immigration.
“It’s a historical legacy but also something very, very real” today, Bishop Flores told Catholic News Service after the prayer service had ended.
“I liked how Pope Francis saw the immigrant as a gift, and how we are called to love one another,” Bishop Flores added. “In the Rio Grande Valley, that means a lot. It was beautiful, beautiful.”
Archbishop William E. Lori of Baltimore took heart in what Pope Francis said to bishops about “the encouragement he gave to the episcopacy. He cares to see us express discipleship in our roles as pastors. That, and the care of the poor and the immigrants. It was a beautiful address.”
Retired Bishop William K. Weigand of Sacramento, California, echoed the points made by Archbishop Lori and Bishop Flores.
Pope Francis “wants us to be pastors, shepherds for other people,” Bishop Weigand said. “I worked 10 years in Latin America with the poor. In my experience, that’s exactly what a priest needs to do. And bishops more so.”
Bishop Weigand also liked how Pope Francis told the U.S. bishops to “not fear what we love to do, and to stay close to his people. Ask God to give his light and his strength. He has a very simple way of focusing on what to do: Feed the people, give them Jesus. He takes a complex example and boils it down.”
For others in attendance at the cathedral, the takeaway may have come just in being there.
Margarida Alves, a Brazilian immigrant who came to the United States 31 years ago, got her ticket, she said, because as a member of the cathedral parish she has been volunteering at St. Matthew since she retired two years ago.
“I help them to clean and polish and wash for the service. Everything they need me to do.” Now that she is retired, “I have time for my church now,” Alves added.
Sabrina Gallego, another cathedral parishioner, was there with her mother. “Just being here, I feel blessed,” she said. “My mother was worried we wouldn’t make it in time. So she woke up at six-thirty in the morning. I woke up at seven” for a service that started at 11:30 a.m. (EDT)
Gallego added, “We’re just lucky the Metro didn’t have any problems.” Even before the sun was up, Metro, Washington’s subway system, was reporting delays on five of its six lines, including the Red Line closest to the cathedral. They got lucky in another way: “We won the holy lottery” for tickets, Gallego said.
One attendee who didn’t have to worry about the commute was Father Rafael Barbieri. Although he hails from Brazil, he is parochial vicar at St, Matthew.
“We are all really excited about him coming here to the cathedral,” Father Barbieri said. “This pope has said and done many, many good things. He’s a definite inspiration to all of us priests.”
His position at the cathedral, though, was no guarantee that Father Barbieri would get to shake Pope Francis’ hand. “Only when he goes down the aisle will I have a chance to say hi,” he said.
Father Barbieri’s boss – Msgr. W. Ronald Jameson, the cathedral rector – was busy greeting parishioners who were filtering into St. Matthew well before the 300 or so bishops arrived.
Asked if he were fairly bursting with excitement, Msgr. Jameson pointed to his combination belt and sash tied around his cassock. “I have to be careful about that,” he said. “If I get too excited I might pop my Velcro.”
(Copyright © 2015 Catholic News Service/United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. The CNS news services may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed, including but not limited to, such means as framing or any other digital copying or distribution method in whole or in part, without prior written authority of Catholic News Service.)

Spring Hill College inaugurates first lay president

MOBILE, Ala. – Dr. Christopher P. Puto was formally inaugurated as the 37th president of Spring Hill College on Thursday, Sept. 17.  Puto officially began his term on June 1 at the oldest Jesuit college in the South and the third oldest in the country.
Father Ronald Mercier SJ, provincial for the Jesuits, commissioned Puto and gave him what the Jesuits call a “vow cross” at the ceremony. A vow cross is a

Chairman of the Board Michael Coghlan presents Dr. Puto with the SHC presidential medallion. Archbishop Rodi is in the background. (Photos courtesy of Spring Hill College)

Chairman of the Board Michael Coghlan presents Dr. Puto with the SHC presidential medallion. Archbishop Rodi is in the background. (Photos courtesy of Spring Hill College)

crucifix usually given to Jesuits when they take their first vows. Others on hand to congratulate Puto included Archbishop Thomas Rodi of the Archdiocese of Mobile; Sandy Stimpson, mayor of Mobile and representatives of the Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities and representatives of the academic community of Spring Hill.
Puto graduated from Spring Hill College in 1964 with a degree in economics. He earned a master’s degree in business administration from the University of Miami and a Ph.D. in business administration with a concentration in marketing from Duke University. He served Spring Hill College as a member of the Board of Trustees from 2003-2012.
Puto’s extensive and diverse background includes numerous accomplishments in academia most notably serving as the former dean of business schools at Georgetown University and St. Thomas University. He has also consulted and worked with numerous large corporations such as Bank of America, Eastman Kodak Company, General Electric Company and Burger King Corporation as well as served in the Vietnam War for which he was awarded a Bronze Star.
“I am honored to be taking my place among the many distinguished leaders of this 185-year-old institution,” Puto said. “I’ve prepared my entire life for this and didn’t even know it. My vision for Spring Hill College is to retain the values and history while laying the foundation to move the college to its bicentennial forward to 2064.”
Puto is the first permanently appointed layperson to serve as Spring Hill College’s president.
The Diocese of Jackson has been connected to the college for more than 25 years through an extension program offering masters degrees in theology and pastoral studies. More information on the program is available online at shc.edu.

Catholic Build, Pope House anchor Habitat block revitalization plan

JACKSON – Bishop Joseph Kopacz blessed the foundations for two homes set to go up on Greenview Drive in Jackson on Wednesday, Sept. 16, as part of a Habitat for Humanity plan to revitalize

Sister Lourdes González, (left) from Jackson St. Therese Parish, Father John Bohn, pastor of Jackson St. Richard and Father Thomas McGing, pastor of Clinton Holy Savior listen at the Habitat Catholic Build and Pope Francis House dedication.

Sister Lourdes González, (left) from Jackson St. Therese Parish, Father John Bohn, pastor of Jackson St. Richard and Father Thomas McGing, pastor of Clinton Holy Savior listen at the Habitat Catholic Build and Pope Francis House dedication.

an entire street and hopefully kick off a community renaissance. The choir from Madison St. Joseph School provided music for the event that featured community leaders, neighbors, representatives from supporting parishes and Habitat homeowners.
The homes, the annual Catholic Build and the Pope Francis House, are just the beginning. Later this year the inaugural bankers’ build and the Episcopal build will start projects. Nissan and the ever-popular Womens’ build are planning to participate in 2016.

Foundations for both houses were ready for construction at the Sept. 16 event.

Foundations for both houses were ready for construction at the Sept. 16 event.

The Catholic Build is in its 30th year. Parishes all across the metro area join together annually to raise the $80,000 and provide work teams and food for the project. The Pope House is an addition. An anonymous donor provided half the funds, the community raised the other $40,000 to build a home dedicated to Pope Francis.
Bishop Kopacz spoke of his hope that the community would become a place where families could thrive. He pointed out a nearby charter school was working to improve education for the community and personally thanked the many police officers who attended the event, saying he knows they are on the front lines of any community improvement effort.

Bishop Joseph Kopacz blesses the site as the choir from Madison St. Joseph School sings at the event. (Photos and text by Maureen Smith)

Bishop Joseph Kopacz blesses the site as the choir from Madison St. Joseph School sings at the event. (Photos and text by Maureen Smith)

Greenview Drive is a half-mile of mostly abandoned or derelict properties. On the day of the Habitat event, a tree long dead still rested on a roof of one home, and another home, once boarded up, showed signs that the door had been kicked in.
Habitat has taken on projects similar to this one, turning blocks of run-down rental properties in to family-owned, well-maintained homes. Christopher Coleman, who owns a house renovated by Greenview a few years ago, spoke at the kickoff event, saying how grateful he was for the opportunity to give his family a home of their own. “Welcome to the new Greenview,” he said, to much applause.
Mississippi Catholic will check on the progress of the construction throughout the fall.