Youth Briefs & Gallery

 

 

CAMDEN Sacred Heart Parish, after school program, Spanish classes for children six-12- years-old on Mondays until May 16, 2018, from 4:20 – 5:10 p.m. Cost is $10.
– Music classes on Tuesdays until May 17 from – 4:20 – 5:10 p.m. Led by Ed Hightower, music minister. Details: 662-468-2354.
– Basketball youth program for boys and girls ages 6-14 on Saturdays from Feb-20-April 16. Cost is $25.
GRENADA St. Peter Parish, LifeNight, Sundays, beginning with a meal at 5:30 p.m.  Discussion of the theme “dignity” during the next five weeks. Bring a baby picture of yourself to the meeting.
GLUCKSTADT St. Joseph Parish, four-day summer youth trip to Ocoee in July for all participating high school teens (current ninth-12th grades). Registration and details coming soon.
JACKSON St. Richard Parish, Knights of Columbus youth free throw championship Saturday, Feb. 27, from 10 a.m. – noon in the gym for boys and girls ages nine-14. Details: Rusty Haydel, 601-953-9711.
NATCHEZ Multi-parish fun day at St. Mary Basilica, for ages six-eight (JCYO) and ninth-12th grades (CYO), Saturday, Feb. 27, from 10 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. The guest speaker is Nicole Marquez. There will be games, college mentors, banner making, adoration/prayer time, snacks, lunch, praise and worship music. Vigil Mass and a pizza party clost the day. Cost is $10 per person. Details: 601-445-5616, stmaryyouth@cableone.net.

TUPELO St. James Parish youth in eighth grade and above are invited to help make and/or serve soup and desserts during the Lenten soup supper on Friday, Feb. 26, from 5 – 8 p.m in Shelton Hall. Parents are asked to call Jessica at the office to confirm participation.
– Hispanic young adult retreat, Feb. 26-28.

CATHOLIC HEART
WORK SUMMER CAMP
Catholic Heart Work Camp summer mission trip in Nashville, June 19-24, for those currently in eighth grade and older (including college) Cost is $345.

Lenten mission means to link sacraments, faith renewal

CLINTON – Holy Savior Parish is inviting and welcoming the community to attend “The Joy of the Gospel,” a celebratory mission set for Monday-Wednesday, Feb. 15-17.
The mission will focus on renewal of faith and exploration of the sacraments. It will be conducted at 7 p.m. by Father Michael McAndrew and Father Scott Katzenberger, both Redemptorist priests based in Greenwood. Catholic residents of the Clinton area who wish to re-acquaint themselves with the church after an absence, as well as those who wish to explore the Catholic faith, are especially invited. A social with light refreshments will follow the Feb. 15 and Feb. 17 talks.
“The Joy of the Gospel” will have a nightly theme. On Feb. 15, a service of the Word will explore the sacraments of baptism and confirmation with the symbol of water. The focus on Feb. 16 will be on the symbol of the crucifix and the sacrament of reconciliation, with the opportunity for participants to take part in that sacrament.
On Feb. 17, Mass will be said in a celebration of commitment to the faith and the Eucharist.
Father Thomas McGing is pastor of Holy Savior, which this year celebrates its 50th anniversary. For information call the church, 601-924-6344. The church is located on corner of Lindale and Old Vicksburg roads.

Jubilee Year of Mercy

Corporal works of mercy: caring for God’s temple

By Celeste Zepponi
I’m so excited about this Year of Mercy! I am confidently seeking God’s mercy and joyfully expecting to receive mercy big time during this year dedicated by Pope Francis as the Extraordinary Jubilee of Mercy. While I am planning to enjoy mercy abundantly, the Holy Spirit keeps reminding me that I am also called to give mercy abundantly.
Our Mother Church offers us a great starting point by defining the Corporal and Spiritual Works of Mercy. This post, Part 1, takes a close look at the Corporal Works of Mercy; Part 2 will examine the Spiritual Works of Mercy.
Reading through the list of Corporal Works of Mercy, I got a little restless. Self-accusations flooded my thoughts and all I could think was, “I am not doing this at all. I haven’t even thought about doing that.” I felt my actions barely approached any of these Corporal Works of Mercy. But, as I thoughtfully projected each suggested act of mercy into my daily life, comfort began filtering back in. I realized I can actually be very merciful by doing “small things with great love!”
To fully embrace this Year of Mercy, the need to recognize mercy is paramount! Recognizing that we have many opportunities to perform acts of mercy can help us develop a perspective and attitude of merciful gift giving that flows freely into the lives of others. Corporal, defined as an adjective, means affecting or characteristic of the body as opposed to the mind or spirit. So let’s take a closer look into the habits, responsibilities, and circumstances of our daily lives to see where our personal experiences serve the characteristics of human body.
The Corporal Works of Mercy
1. Feed the hungry. We are called to satisfy the hunger of those around us. Everyone needs and enjoys food. Gatherings that include food build families and communities. A simple meal at the end of a long day, helping the elderly or sick obtain food, donating time and/or money to soup kitchens or missions, washing dishes, serving; these are all acts of mercy.
2. Give drink to the thirsty. Thirst is a vital physical need. A person can only live a few days without water. Seeing that people and communities have clean water to drink and maintain good health is an act of mercy. Simple daily acts of kindness such as filling water glasses for the dinner table, bringing cold water to workers in the heat, or bottled water to children at the ball field or playground, running water for baths. All these acts of love nourish, refresh, sooth and comfort the body.
3. Clothe the naked. Sharing clothing with the poor and homeless, providing aid, support and warmth for those affected by natural disaster, war, or poverty. Volunteering, organizing, assisting charitable organizations and churches. Washing clothes and linens for your  family, especially children, the sick and elderly. Working to provide the needs of your own family is an act of love and mercy.
4. Visit the imprisoned. Whether circumstances bring you into actual prison ministry, or into the awareness of a child imprisoned by bullying or impoverished circumstances, the desired action of mercy is to bring Jesus Christ to every human person. Every person is made in the image of God and is worthy of absolute dignity as a child of God. Every person is worthy of love, forgiveness, healing and hope.
5. Shelter the homeless. Working with groups that provide shelter, showers, meals and a safe place to sleep is an act of mercy. Offering time and/or financial support to help others learn to provide for their own needs through education and training is a great act of mercy.
6. Visit the sick. Driving someone to the doctor or the grocery store, visiting people in hospitals or nursing homes, making phone calls to check on the elderly and sick. Taking care of children or running errands for a friend who has had surgery or a new baby. Bringing meals to those who are not able to cook for themselves.
7. Bury the dead. Our bodies are the temple of the Holy Spirit. To bury the body is an act of mercy, honoring a person’s life and body created by God. Attending a funeral also reminds us of our own mortality, the gift of our own lives, and the promises that await us in Heaven.
(Celeste Zepponi is a member of Clarksdale St. Elizabeth Parish and a blogger for catholicmom.com. This is reprinted with permission.)

On bowing and raising our heads

IN EXILE
By Father Ron Rolheiser, OMI
At end of every Roman Catholic liturgy, there is an invitation given to the people to receive a blessing. That invitation is worded this way: Bow your heads and pray for God’s blessing. The idea behind that, obviously, is that a blessing can only truly be received in reverence, in humility, with head bowed, with pride and arrogance subjugated and silent.
A bowed head is a sign of humility and is understood, almost universally, as our proper spiritual posture. Spiritual writers have rarely questioned or felt the need to nuance the notion that spiritual health means a head bowed in humility. But is it really that simple?
Admittedly there is a lot of wisdom in that. A head bowed in reverence is a sign of humility. Moreover pride heads the list of deadly sins. Human pride is congenital, deep, and impossible to uproot. It can be redeemed and it can be crushed, but it always remains in us, necessarily so. There is no health without pride, but pride can also derail health. There is something inside of human nature, inherent in our very individuality and freedom, which does not like to bend the knee before what is higher and superior. We guard our pride fiercely and it is no accident that the archetypal image of resistance to God is expressed in Lucifer’s inflexible, pride-anchored statement: I will not serve!
Moreover we do not like to admit weakness, finitude, dependence and interdependence. Thus all of us have to grow and mature to a place where we are no longer naive and arrogant enough to believe that we do not need God’s blessing. All spirituality is predicated on humility. Maturity, human and spiritual, is most evident in someone whom you see on his or her knees praying.
But, while pride can be bad, sometimes pride and arrogance are not the problem. Rather our struggle is with a wounded and broken spirit that no longer knows how to stand upright. It is one thing to be young, healthy, strong, arrogant, and unaware of how fragile and finite we are (and that illusion can survive and stay with us into old age); but it is quite another thing to have one’s heart broken, one’s spirit crushed and one’s pride taken away. When that happens, and it happens to all of us if we are half-sensitive and live long enough, wounded pride does some very negative things in us, it cripples us so that we can no longer truly get off our knees, stand upright, raise our heads and receive love and blessing.
I remember as a child, growing up on a farm, watching something that was then called “breaking a horse.” The men would catch a young colt which had until then run completely free and they would, through a rather brutal process, force the young colt to submit to halter, saddle and human commands. When the process was finished, the colt was now compliant to human commands. But the process of breaking the horse’s freedom and spirit was far from gentle, and thus yielded a mixed result. The horse was now compliant, but part of its spirit was broken.
That’s an apt image for the journey, both human and spiritual. Life, in ways that are far from gentle, eventually breaks our spirit, for good and for bad, and we end up humble, but we also end up somewhat wounded and unable to (metaphorically) stand upright. Conscripted humility has a double effect: On the one hand, we find that we more-naturally genuflect before what is higher; but, on the other hand, because the pain of our brokenness, as is so often the case with pain, we focus more upon ourselves than on others and we end up handicapped. Bruised and fragile, we are unable to properly give and receive and are stuttering and reticent in sharing the goodness and depth of our own persons.
Spirituality and religion have, for the most part, been too one-sided on this. They have perennially been vigilant about pride and arrogance (and, admittedly, these are real and are forever the deadly sins). But spirituality and religion have been too slow to lift up the fallen. We all know the dictum that the task of spirituality is to afflict the comforted and comfort the afflicted. Historically, religion and spirituality, while not always being very successful with the former, have been too-negligent of the latter.
Pride and arrogance are the deadliest of all vices. However wounded pride and a broken spirit can equally derail us.
So, perhaps when the church blesses its congregation at the end of a liturgy, it might, instead of saying: Bow your heads and pray for God’s blessing, say instead: Those of you who think you are not in need of this blessing: Please bow your heads and pray for God’s blessing. Meanwhile those of you who feel beaten, broken and unworthy of this blessing: Raise your heads to receive a love and gift that you have long despaired of ever again receiving.
(Oblate Father Ron Rolheiser, theologian, teacher and award-winning author, is President of the Oblate School of Theology in San Antonio, TX.)

Catholic Day organizers hope to start conversations, foster relationships

By Maureen Smith
JACKSON – Catholic Day at the Capitol, set for Thursday, Feb. 11, has two goals “to expose legislative issues as they relate to social mission of the Catholic Church and to provide an opportunity for every Catholic to put their faith into action through legislative advocacy,” said Dorothy Balser, director of parish based social ministry for Catholic Charities Jackson.
“Our focus for advocacy is for the most vulnerable among us – and for this year in particular – on behalf of people served by the mental health system, children’s services and the foster care system,” said Balser.
Guest speakers include Warren Yoder of the Public Policy Center of Mississippi, who will speak about the state of the lawsuit against the foster care system in Mississippi; Amy Turner, head of children’s services for Catholic Charities, who can speak about the work her staff is doing with kids who need help and Valerie McClellan, who heads up counseling services for Catholic Charities, who will offer perspective on the need for mental health care services in the state.
Once people have heard about the issues, they will get some tools to use to take action on them. Matthew Burkhart of Catholic Relief Services is coming to talk about public advocacy. “Legislative advocacy is one way we can be in solidarity with our brothers and sisters and to work for justice,” he said. Burkhart said a one-to-one approach works best. “We have found that visits and building relationships is the most effective type of advocacy you can do,” said Burkhart.
Bishop Joseph Kopacz and a delegation from Catholic Charities engaged in this kind of advocacy Thursday, Jan. 28, at Mission Mississippi’s Legislative Prayer Breakfast at First Baptist Church in Jackson. At this event, leaders from different denominations pray for the governor, speaker of the house and other state leaders. Gatherings such as this can augment events like Catholic Day at the Capitol by allowing lawmakers and their constituents to get to know one another and find common ground.
“Hopefully people won’t see this as a one-off event, but an opportunity to start a long-term conversaion,” said Burkhart. He said while it is good for attendees to engage their lawmakers at events such as Catholic Day at the Capitol, the real work is in building a relationship with the representatives both on the grounds of the capitol and in their home districts. If people take the lessons home, they can get to know their senators and representatives and engage in more meaningful dialogue with them throughout the years.
The day starts with check in at 9 a.m. Father Ricardo Phipps, executive director of Catholic Charities, will offer a welcome and Bishop Kopacz will give opening remarks. After him, participants will hear from the speakers and adjourn for Mass at 12:05 p.m. in the Cathedral of St. Peter the Apostle followed by lunch.
At 1:30 p.m. the group will depart for the capitol where Bishop Roger Morin of the Diocese of Biloxi will lead a press conference on the south steps of the capitol. People can then join a guided tour, engage their lawmakers or observe the legislative session. A new offering this year is an afternoon break out session on advocacy or discussion with a facilitator about issues of concern.

Preview event aims to inspire youth
Catholic Day at the Capitol organizers have added a preview event this year, for youth and families set for Ash Wednesday, Feb. 10, at 5:30 p.m. at Jackson Christ the King Parish. A representative from Catholic Relief Services is coming to talk about ways to live in solidarity with the poor during Lent.
“We will be using the format of Catholic Relief Services Rice Bowl program – sharing about experiences of the poor in other countries as well in the U.S.,” said Dorothy Balser, director of parish based ministries for Catholic Charities Jackson.
The evening event, open to anyone, will start with a simple meatless meal at 5:30 p.m. The presentation starts at 6 p.m. followed by Ash Wednesday Mass. Let Balser know if you are attending so organizers can make sure they have enough food.
Register by calling 601-326-3725 or emailing dorothy.balser@ccjackson.org.
Our hope is that the CDAC participants leave with a stronger sense that their participation in legislative advocacy is linked to the core social teachings of our faith,” said Balser.
“We hope that each participant will be energized with the belief that their voice is important, thereby mobilizing them to continue to advocate with their legislators in their local communities as well as on the state and national level,” she added.
Anyone is welcome to attend the whole day or only one part, but organizers need people to register so they can provide food and space. Register online at www.catholiccharitiesjackson.org.

 

Families flee war and violence to start over in Tennessee

Theresa Laurence
Tennessee Register
When visitors enter the home of Iraqi refugees Yassir Khattab and Mays Alsaman, they are welcomed with a spread of snacks and hot tea. As the couple shares their story of leaving war-torn Iraq and settling in the United States, it quickly becomes clear that theirs was an emotionally wrenching journey.
“It was very difficult to leave Iraq,” said Khattab, who resettled in Nashville in 2014 with the help of Catholic Charities of Tennessee. Leaving his parents and other family members behind, as well as his homeland and culture, was tough but necessary.
“There is no safety for anyone” in Iraq, Khattab said. “You can’t move freely, it is too dangerous.”
Khattab, who comes from a Shiite family, and Alsaman, who comes from a Sunni family, could not cross into each other’s Baghdad neighborhoods without fear. With no strong central government or criminal justice system in Iraq, extremist militant groups have taken control of many areas.
“If they catch me they will kill me,” Khattab said. “Sometimes people will kidnap you for the ransom money,” he added, which happened to his brother-in-law twice. “There is no safety place in Iraq,” he repeats.
Khattab and his family are just one example of the millions of people, Muslims and Christians alike, who have been forced to flee their homes in the Middle East to escape civil war or personal threats of violence in recent years. They were among the fraction of a percent of refugees worldwide chosen to resettle in the United States in 2014. Like many refugees in their situation, Khattab and Aslsaman, resilient and strong-willed, have adjusted quickly to their new life.
“I feel sad when I hear talk about no Muslims, no refugees,” said Khattab, referring to the current rhetoric from local and national politicians seeking to ban refugees from entering the U.S. While he has not personally felt any backlash because of his ethnicity, he knows some Americans are wary of refugees like him. “I’ve never held a gun in my life,” he said. “I’m just here to find a good future for my family.”
Khattab, 33, was raised Muslim, but attended Catholic and Christian schools in Baghdad. He is angry that the terrorist group ISIS aligns itself with Islam. “ISIS doesn’t belong to a religion. It’s a business. It’s a mafia,” he said. It is groups like ISIS, and al-Queda before them, that forced Khattab and his family to flee, he said.
Khattab and Alsaman left Iraq in 2005, passing through Jordan, Libya and Syria before settling in Malaysia, where he eventually got a job in the Iraqi embassy there. He applied as a refugee with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in 2007 and began the long process to come to the United States. It wasn’t until 2014 that Khattab, Alsaman, and their two young children were approved to resettle in the U.S. “I’m very happy when I get a chance to come to the United States,” he said.
While in Malaysia, Khattab lived a comfortable life, learned English and met people from a wide range of nationalities and religions, so adjusting to life in Middle Tennessee has not been too difficult, he said. After initially moving into a Nashville apartment complex with the help of Catholic Charities’ Refugee Resettlement Office, Khattab and his family wanted to move to a quieter and safer neighborhood.
They settled in Murfreesboro because of the highly rated public schools in the area and access to Khattab’s job at the Nissan manufacturing plant. In the future he hopes to utilize his background in computer science; Alsaman, who is a software engineer, wants to work once her 3-year-old son starts school.
If there was any doubt about refugees assimilating quickly to American life, Khattab said his 6-year-old daughter “enjoys every single moment in school,” and has decided she wants to be a dentist and get a dog. She is already losing the ability to understand and speak Arabic, her parents’ first language, even though they still speak it at home.
Many Iraqi nationals, who account for the fourth largest group of refugees worldwide, according to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, are fleeing indiscriminate violence at the hands of extremist and terrorist groups like ISIS. Others have faced more direct threats.
Ahmed, who worked as a translator for the U.S. Army, was targeted as a traitor by al-Queda and his family was threatened. “It was dangerous for him to drive place to place. Many interpreters covered their faces, but he didn’t. He didn’t want to be a coward,” his wife Raya said. “He was proud of what he was doing even though the enemy knew his name and face.”
“It was very common at that time” for interpreters to face death threats, said Raya, and their family took the threat very seriously. “We had to pack small bags and leave without anyone knowing,” said Raya, who asked that their last names not be used.
Ahmed also had two sisters who worked as translators for the Army. They escaped to Jordan and were not in touch with the rest of their family for two years. “We were terrified, we didn’t know what happened,” Raya said.
Ahmed and Raya fled Iraq in 2008 for Turkey, where they applied for refugee status. They were quickly approved for resettlement and in 2010 arrived in Nashville. They came with few material possessions, but did bring with them a fierce work ethic. “If you’re a hard worker and don’t mind working you can find a job,” said Raya, whose family was also resettled by Catholic Charities.
When they first arrived, “we qualified for food stamps, but we didn’t like the idea. We’re young and we can work and do something,” she said.
Within three months of their arrival, Raya and Ahmed were both working at a printing company, where they proved themselves and gained several promotions. However, the company closed last April and they both lost their jobs.
Since then, Ahmed worked for Uber, and at a driving instruction school. Raya is currently staying home to care for their 2-year-old son. She has a law degree from Iraq, but wants to return to school in the new year to study computer science. “We are hard workers,” she said.
As refugees like Khattab, Alsaman, Ahmed and Raya continue to find their place in America, and forge ahead making a better path for their children, the hardest thing may be the powerlessness they feel as they watch the news unfold in the Middle East. While both families hope to be reunited with separated family members one day, they know it may not be for many years.
(Editor’s note. This story, reprinted with permission from The Tennessee Register, and the stories on page 9 are part two of a two part series on refugee resettlement in the South. )

Mission dioceses minister to Catholics scattered across great distances

By Chaz Muth
WASHINGTON (CNS) – Catholic missionaries played a large role in bringing European values and religion to North America in the 18th century. The role of the Franciscans, Jesuits, Dominicans and other Catholic religious orders was to set up missions that became economic, political and religious centers.
The mission church hasn’t gone away. It’s a vibrant part of the U.S. Catholic fabric. It’s just evolved during the course of the past few centuries. The primary function of the 21st-century mission church no longer includes proselytizing the indigenous people, but is aimed at bringing Catholicism to populations throughout the land, regardless of the challenges to do so.
Catholics living in most of the territory of the U.S. are actually shepherded by a Catholic home mission diocese.
So, what is a Catholic home mission? The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops defines a home mission as a “diocese or parish that can’t provide the basic pastoral services to Catholics without outside help.”
Those basic pastoral services include Mass, the sacraments, religious education, and ministry training for lay ministers, deacons, religious sisters and priests.
“Most of the mission dioceses, if you look at the map it will tell you that they are very rural, very large usually, do not have the resources that our more urban … dioceses like New York or Los Angeles would have, so we make ends meet with very little,” said Bishop Peter F. Christensen, who heads the Diocese of Boise, Idaho, which is a mission diocese.
“That ‘little’ is subsidized by the work of Catholic Home Missions, which is subsidized by the generosity of our people throughout the country,” added the bishop, who is the former chairman of the U.S. bishops’ Subcommittee on Catholic Home Missions.
The U.S. bishops established the Catholic Home Missions Appeal in 1998. It’s a national collection taken up in parishes throughout the country, usually in April, to help fund the pastoral outreach in the mission dioceses in places such as Alaska, New Mexico, Idaho, the Marshall Islands, Puerto Rico and parts of Texas.
The U.S. Catholic Church has a long history of sending missionaries to serve people in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Oceania, Bishop Christensen said.
Home mission dioceses in the U.S. are in need of the same kind of care, which is why the grants that come from the annual appeal are so vital to Catholics in the mission dioceses, which also include Gallup, New Mexico, and Little Rock, Arkansas, he said.
Salt Lake City, another U.S. mission diocese, consists of 85,000 square miles, which is the entire state of Utah, and some of the Eastern Catholic eparchies, which also are considered Catholic home missions, cover the entire U.S. and consist of millions of square miles.
Bishops, priests, deacons, religious sisters and dedicated lay ministers can put 50,000 miles a year on their cars just to reach the Catholics they are charged with providing pastoral care to, Bishop Christensen told Catholic News Service during an interview in Boise.
The ministry of Father Adrian Vazquez, a priest in his diocese, illustrates the situation. He is charged with the pastoral care of four Catholic communities in eastern Idaho, a parish in St. Anthony and three mission stations located in Rexburg, Driggs and Island Park.
He divides his time between all those locations, driving hundreds of miles a week.
“The travel can be a real challenge, especially in the winter when there is a lot of snow,” said Father Vazquez, a native of Mexico. “My parishioners have to be patient with me sometimes if I’m running behind and we just start when I arrive.”
The U.S. mission church of the 21st century faces some of the same challenges 18th-century missionaries encountered in that the faith remains poorly established in several parts of the country, including the Rocky Mountain states, the South, areas along the Mexican border and in the Pacific islands, Bishop Christensen said.
In 2014, the national Catholic Home Missions Appeal raised more than $9.3 million and gave out more than $9.1 million in grants and donations to fund programs in the mission dioceses, according to the subcommittee’s annual report.
The dioceses received money for programs involving faith formation, cultural diversity, strengthening marriage, repairs to churches, evangelization, prison outreach, as well as priestly and religious vocations.
In recent years, the mission dioceses have seen an increase in religious vocations, which is desperately needed, but that too brings its own set of challenges for financially strapped institutions in those areas.
“To educate a seminarian today costs an average of $37,000,” Bishop Christensen said. “That’s not small change for a diocese that can’t support that.
“There’s a (mission) diocese in Texas that has 23 seminarians,” he said. “Multiply that out by $37,000 and that gets into some pretty amazing figures.”
The Diocese of Juneau, Alaska, has a total of 10 priests who serve a geographic region that is about the size of the state of Florida, said Juneau Bishop Edward J. Burns.
“The communities are small,” Bishop Burns told CNS during an interview in Juneau. “We can have just a handful of people who gather for Mass at the kitchen table, because we don’t have a chapel or church in some of our villages.”
The priests, deacons, religious sisters and lay ministers say it’s important to get into the small communities in the far reaches of these mission dioceses, not only to bring them the sacraments, but to help them prepare for marriage, strengthen their relationships, sometimes cope with poverty, morn the dead and become positive models for their children, he said.
Like the missionaries of the 18th century, Bishop Christensen said much of the work in a mission diocese is evangelization.
When he was first appointed bishop of Juneau in 2009, Bishop Burns learned that 10 percent of the mission diocese’s population was Catholic and 60 percent didn’t identify with any religion.
“I thought to myself, ‘What a wonderful challenge this is going to be,'” he said. “It’s an opportunity for us to engage in the new evangelization, because it’s not like these people have never heard of Jesus Christ, or the Gospel message, or that they’ve never been in contact with the church. It’s just that they choose to be secularists. They have chosen to step aside from their religion or faith.
“For us, it’s a wonderful challenge,” Bishop Burns said, “to awaken in them a relationship with Jesus Christ.”
(Editor’s note: The Diocese of Jackson is a Home Mission diocese which receives grant money from this collection.)
(Copyright © 2016 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.)

Self knowledge a life-long lesson

Reflections on Life
Father Jerome LeDoux
Letting go of anyone, anything at any level, in any relationship, under any circumstances and at any time can be one of the most difficult of all things to learn and, finally, to do. It is also one of the most necessary things that we have to do in life, for, unless we let go at those times when it behooves us to, we can never be free of anxiety, at peace, relaxed, or enabled to be all we can be. This takes a lifetime.
Above all, there is that “Let go, let God” mandate that is so crucial to our life both material and spiritual. I first heard “Let go, let God” regularly in 1965 at Alcoholics Anonymous and Al-Anon meetings where the desperate of the desperate found the answer to a mystery disorder that had taken over their mind and body.
There are simply some things that we cannot do on our own. So we admit this to ourselves and to the rest of the world, we recognize and profess that there is a Higher Power who created everyone, and we allow God to take over our lives. We spend a lifetime learning this, making room for God to operate freely in our lives.
At that point, something wonderful happens. Out of our weakness, the power of God breaks through, just as we read in the epic life struggle of St. Paul sharply described to us in 2 Corinthians 12. In order that Paul might not be tempted to pride because of his mystical experiences, “whether in the body or out of the body,” “a thorn in the flesh was given to me, an angel of Satan… Three times I begged the Lord about this, that it might leave me, but he said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for power is made perfect in weakness.’
“Therefore, I am content with weaknesses, insults, hardships, persecutions and constraints, for the sake of Christ; for when I am weak, then I am strong.”
Paul was slipping into early middle age by the time he learned this. “Let go, let God” is basically allowing God to supply whatever is lacking in our weaknesses. It consists in doing what hardly any of us cares to do: relinquish control and step aside, get out of God’s way, letting God work the magic Jesus always did.
And Jesus worked those wonders because he was all about doing his Father’s will for his Father’s glory, always declaring, as in John 14:13, “Whatever you ask in my name, I will do, so that the Father may be glorified in the Son.”
We definitely spend our whole life acquiring the most intimate and most important knowledge of life: self-knowledge. Over the decades, this is a topic that I have revisited in writing a half dozen times or more because it is so indispensable, so seminal and so critical in the rooting and formation of who and what we are and hope to become someday in our bodies, minds, emotions and souls.
But will-o’-the-wisp that it is, self-knowledge is as slippery as an eel, as elusive as a wild goose and as untouchable as a phantom. Just when we think we are getting to know ourselves, we are startled by some new surprise or wrinkle within. And, while no one can know us from without, we do well to listen to their criticisms.
Unless we are very careful and vigilant, much of our life can be an illusion because at times we so willingly allow, maybe even invite illusion into our personal, private world. The greatest illusion is that it is easier to deal with illusion than with reality. That is the last step before insanity, crippling our ability to discern fantasy from reality by denying the good, the bad and the ugly in our everyday living. Step by step, living in denial will cost us peace, joy and, at some juncture, our sanity.
Today’s savants give great discourses and write books about self-knowledge, treading and retreading the same ground trod by the ancients such as the Greeks who had much to say about self-knowledge as the most basic thing in life. They thumbnailed it in γνῶθι σαὐτόν (Temet nosce in Latin): Know yourself!
Γ Ν Ω Θ Ι   Σ Α Υ Τ Ο Ν (Greek in caps) is the same precept set in gold letters over the portico of the temple at Delphi. So powerful is it that its authorship has been ascribed to Pythagoras, to several of the wise men of Greece, and to Phemonoe, a mythical Greek poetess. According to Juvenal, this precept descended from heaven.
We can safely say that this is a precept that has heavenly overtones. It is akin to the poet Alexander Pope’s famous line: “To err is human; to forgive, divine.” Pope improved the dictum of Seneca the younger: “To err is human; to persist, diabolical.” So difficult are both of these that, when the discussion comes down to the degree of difficulty, self-knowledge and true forgiveness run a mighty tight race. Yes, it takes a hard-fought lifetime to come to know ourselves fully as God alone knows us.
“God is love, and all who abide in love abide in God and God in them.”   (1 John 4:16)
(Father Jerome LeDoux, SVD, lives in retirement at the Sacred Heart Residence in Bay St. Louis. He has written “Reflections on Life since 1969).

Pilgrimage, holy door represent spiritual journey

Guest Column
By Carol Glatz
VATICAN CITY (CNS) – For a spiritual leader who denounces a world divided by walls, a church shuttered by cliques and hearts hardened to compassion, opening wide the Holy Door for the Year of Mercy is a significant and symbolic moment for Pope Francis.
In Catholic tradition, the Holy Door represents the passage to salvation – the path to a new and eternal life, which was opened to humanity by Jesus.
It also symbolizes an entryway to God’s mercy – the ultimate and supreme act by which he comes to meet people. Mercy is “the bridge that connects God and humanity, opening our hearts to the hope of being loved forever despite our sinfulness,” the pope wrote in “Misericordiae Vultus” (“The Face of Mercy”), instituting the Holy Year of Mercy.
Doors have always had a special meaning for the Catholic Church, according to the late-Cardinal Virgilio Noe, the former archpriest of St. Peter’s Basilica.
“The door of a church marks the divide between the sacred and profane, separating the church’s interior from the outside world. It is the boundary defining welcome and exclusion,” he wrote in the book, “The Holy Door in St. Peter’s” in 1999.
The door is also a symbol of Mary – the mother, the dwelling of the Lord – and she, too, always has open arms and is ready to welcome the children of God home. Pope Francis opened the door Dec. 8, the feast of Mary’s Immaculate Conception.
But the door especially represents Christ himself – the one and only way to eternal life. As Jesus said, according to the Gospel of John (10:9), “I am the gate. Whoever enters through me will be saved, and will come in and go out and find pasture.”
The Holy Year traditionally begins with the opening of the Holy Door to represent a renewed opportunity to encounter or grow closer to Jesus, who calls everyone to redemption.
Jesus knocks on everyone’s door; he yearns to accompany and nourish everyone. “If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, then I will enter his house and dine with him, and he with me,” the Book of Revelation quotes him as saying.
But doors are also narrow, Cardinal Noe wrote, and people must stoop with humility and “be brought down to size by conversion” in order to be “fit” for eternal life.
That is why passing through a Holy Door is part of a longer process of sacrifice and conversion required for receiving an indulgence granted during a Holy Year. A plenary indulgence, the remission of temporal punishment due to sin, is offered for pilgrims who also fulfill certain other conditions: reception of the sacraments of penance and the Eucharist, visits and prayers for the intention of the pope and performing simple acts such as visiting the sick.
This spiritual process of encounter and conversion is made tangible in the elaborate rituals developed over time for the opening of the Holy Door.
The symbolic ceremony of opening a Holy Door came more than a century after the first Holy Year was proclaimed in 1300.
Pope Martin V, in 1423, opened the Holy Door in the Basilica of St. John Lateran for the first time for a jubilee. Next, Pope Alexander VI called for all four Holy Doors in Rome to be opened at Christmas in 1499 for the Jubilee of 1500.
Starting in the 16th century, the ceremony to open the door in St. Peter’s Basilica included the pope reciting verses from the Psalms and striking the wall covering the Holy Door with a silver hammer three times.
Masons completed the task of dismantling the brick and mortared wall, which represented the difficulty and great effort required to overcome the barrier of sin and to open the path to holiness.
Some have found meaning in the fact that Jesus had five wounds and St. Peter’s Basilica has five doors. Opening the Holy Door recalls the piercing of Jesus’ side from which poured forth blood and water, the source of regeneration for humanity. The Holy Door of St. Peter’s, in fact, is decorated with 16 bronze panels depicting the story of Jesus, in his mercy, seeking his lost sheep.
The symbolism of the hammer in the hands of the pope represents the power and jurisdiction God gives him to cast away the stones of sin, chink open hardened hearts and break down walls separating humanity from God.
The removal of the wall also conjures up pulling away the stone that sealed the tomb of Lazarus, whom Jesus resurrected from the dead.
For the closing of the door at the end of the Holy Year, the traditional rite included the pope blessing and spreading the mortar with a special trowel and setting three bricks for the start of a new wall – a symbol of the spiritual rebuilding of the Lord’s house as well as the ever-present human temptation to put up new barriers against God with sin.
While there have been some changes to those ceremonies over time, the Holy Door is always a reminder that because of God’s mercy, any obstacles can always be removed, and the door to hope and forgiveness is always there waiting.
(Carol Glatz is a reporter for Catholic News Service.)

Jubilee Year of Mercy offers pilgrimage opportunities

By Maureen Smith
Vicksburg celebrated the first pilgrimage day for the Jubilee Year of Mercy on Monday, Jan. 25, the Feast of the Conversion of St. Paul. All three parishes offered a Mass and were open to pilgrims for the whole day.
Most of the action on pilgrimage day was based out of St. Paul Parish. The community celebrated its feast day with rosaries throughout the day, adoration and benediction in addition to Mass. Home schooled students as well as students from Vicksburg Catholic School joined in the prayers that day. In the evening, the parish hosted a movie and a meal.
In St. Michael Parish, artist Brandy Lee hand painted the Year of Mercy logo in the parish center and on a canvas to display in the church. “When Father Curley and I began talking about the Year of Mercy, we knew we wanted something depicting the Year of Mercy hanging in both the church and the education building, explained Helene Benson, director of religious education for St. Michael Parish. “However, I knew I wanted something different than just taking the artwork down to the local print shop. I wanted something original and done by someone we knew personally. That’s when our thoughts turned to Brandy Lee, the daughter of our rectory housekeeper Adell. At St. Michael we consider both Adell and Brandy to be part of our church family,” Benson continued. Lee is studying art at Hinds Community college. “Her response was an overwhelming and enthusiastic yes! We are so proud of Brandy and her accomplishments and hope in some small way this can help her as continues to develop and use the talents that God has so graciously given her,” said Benson.

Remaining pilgrimage days:
– Monday, Feb. 22, feast of the Chair of St. Peter, Cathedral of St. Peter the Apostle, Jackson.
– Friday March 4 – Saturday March 5, “24 hours for the Lord” adoration and pilgrimages, all sites.
– Sunday, April 24, Fifth Sunday of Easter, Jubilee for Young people, all sites.
– Tuesday, July 26-Sunday, July 31, World Youth Day and anniversary of the founding of diocese, all sites.
– Sunday, Sept. 4, 23rd Sunday in Ordinary Time, observed memorial of Blessed Teresa of Calcutta, all sites.
– Thursday, Sept. 15, Our Mother of Sorrows, original diocesan patroness, Natchez sites.
– Sunday, Nov. 6, jubilee for prisoners and those in prison ministry, Cathedral of St. Peter the Apostle.
– Sunday, Nov. 13, closing of Holy Doors, all sites
(EDITOR’S NOTE: Pilgrims should visit all the churches at each pilgrimage site on a pilgrimage day. See the site list at www.jacksondiocese.org. For more background on pilgrimages and Holy Doors, see column on page 12)