Youth Briefs

Search Retreat
JACKSON – Youth in 11th and 12th grades are encouraged to register for the fall SEARCH Retreat to be held Nov. 11-13 at Camp Wesley Pines in Gallman. Spaces are limited.
SEARCH Retreat is a unique retreat experience designed for youth who have a strong desire to deepen their faith and relationship with Christ. It’s a retreat “for teens, led by teens” with a strong focus on vocations.
SEARCH engages youth in a special way and calls them to live out their Catholic faith in a bold, real, active and healthy way. This retreat is intended for youth who are looking to “go deeper” in their faith.
Register by visiting www.jacksonsearch.com. The registration deadline is Oct. 11. The cost is $120. In addition to registering online, youth need to present a copy of Diocesan Forms A, B, and E.

BROOKHAVEN St. Francis Parish, LifeTeen gathering, “Prepare”: Unleash: Personal Prayer, Wednesday, Sept. 7, from 5:45 – 6:30 p.m.
– 6:30 – 7:15 p.m. Immaculate Mary’s role in salvation history.
– Saturday, Sept. 10, beginning at 8:30 a.m., youth room work day.
– Sunday, Sept. 11, 10:45 a.m. – noon, “Lip Sinc.”
– Wednesday, Sept. 14, 5:45 p.m. personal prayer. 6:30 – 7:15 p.m. “Sin and Salvation.”

JACKSON – The Office of Youth Ministry invites all ninth through 12th graders to the high school fall retreat, “Fully Alive, experiencing true happiness.” The two-day event is set for Oct. 15-16 at Lake Forest Ranch in Macon. The cost is $60 per person.
The weekend starts at 10:30 a.m. Saturday and ends at 2 p.m. Sunday. It will include games, small group activity, skits, community building, witness talks, music, sacraments and time for reflection.
National Evangelization Team (NET) will lead the retreat. Registration is due by Friday, Sept. 23. Call or email Abbey Schuhmann at 601-949-6934.

MADISON – St. Joseph School will host its annual sixth grade deck party Friday, Sept. 16, at 6 p.m. Participants will receive a ticket to the St. Joseph vs. St Joe Greenville game. Details: Kristi Garrard, 601-898-4812.

St. John parishioners ‘adopt’ students

OXFORD – New and current University of Mississippi students at times need a local contact or friend who can help them connect with the Oxford, University or church communities. At times these young people may need someone to just talk to, attend Mass and church functions with someone familiar, contact local professionals, share a good home-cooked meal, or even celebrate holidays or birthdays when they can’t travel home.
To meet this need, Mille Smith of Oxford St. John Parish, is recruiting volunteer parish families willing to adopt Ole Miss students and provide information, activity and mentoring services. The families would be available to students as a friend and local contact.
Both students and parishioners complete a questionnaire asking for information such as contact phone number and email address, birthplace, Alma-mater, scholastic major and degrees, occupation and hobbies and interests. Mille will match students with families based on commonalities in the questionnaire.
Approximately 40 St. John families have already volunteered to serve as student families. Ole Miss students, parents of students or St. John parishioners with questions may email Millie Smith at millesmith@yahoo.com or call her at 901-848-1335.

Washington auxiliary named successor to retiring Bishop Steib in Memphis

By Catholic News Service
WASHINGTON (CNS) – Pope Francis has accepted the resignation of Bishop J. Terry Steib of Memphis, Tennessee, and has appointed as his successor Auxiliary Bishop Martin D. Holley of Washington.
Bishop Steib has headed the Memphis Diocese since 1993. He is 76. Canon law requires all bishops to turn in their resignation at age 75. Bishop Holley, 61, has been a Washington auxiliary since 2004.
The changes were announced Aug. 23 in Washington by Msgr. Walter Erbi, charge d’affaires of the Vatican nunciature.
Bishop Holley will be installed as the fifth bishop of Memphis Oct. 19 at the Cook Convention Center.
He said in a statement he was “deeply humbled” by the appointment and grateful to the pope for expressing confidence “through this new assignment at this time in my life.”
Washington Cardinal Donald W. Wuerl said the appointment was “a blessing for that diocesan church” and “also a joy for all of us in Washington.”
“Bishop Holley has demonstrated both pastoral sensitivity and administrative ability that should serve him well as he now undertakes his new ministry in western Tennessee,” he said in a statement. “We rejoice that the Church of Memphis is receiving such a talented and caring pastor of souls.”
Bishops Steib and Holley are two of the nation’s 15 black Catholic bishops. With Bishop Steib’s retirement, eight of them remain active, according to the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Secretariat of Cultural Diversity in the Church.
Bishop Holley was appointed auxiliary bishop of Washington May 18, 2004, and was ordained a bishop July 2, 2004. He is vicar general for the Archdiocese of Washington and is a member of the archdiocesan college of consultors, priests’ council, seminarian review board, administrative board and chairman of the College of Deans.
He is former moderator of the archdiocese’s ethnic ministries. In an interview last year with the Catholic Standard newspaper of the archdiocese, Bishop Holley spoke of the blessings of that work, saying, “You get a glimpse of the face of God, the beauty of God, a glimpse of what it must be like to be in heaven.”
Bishop Holley joined pilgrims from the Archdiocese of Washington at World Youth Day in Cologne, Germany, in 2005; in Madrid in 2011; and this summer in Krakow, Poland. In an interview before joining pilgrims from the archdiocese in Krakow, the bishop described how inspiring it is to see young people from different cultures and countries united in their faith.
“The one, holy, catholic, apostolic faith… We say those words in the Creed, and we see it at Mass; we see it at our local events… but when you magnify that hundreds and thousands of times, wow!” Bishop Holley told the Catholic Standard. “That is just incredible.”
As a bishop, he has made visits to other countries, including a 2010 trip to Ghana and Nigeria, where he said he witnessed firsthand the work of Catholic Relief Services (CRS), the U.S. bishops’ overseas relief and development agency. “It reminds me of Jesus’ offering of the loaves and fishes, blessed, broken and shared,” said Bishop Holley, who has served on the CRS board of directors. “That’s what CRS reminds me of, how they’re able to take whatever resources (they have) to bless and share it with others.”
Martin D. Holley was born in Florida. While his mother was pregnant with the future bishop, she, along with her husband and their seven older children, joined the Catholic Church. When Martin was born Dec. 31, 1954, he was named after the pastor of Our Lady of Fatima Parish in Cantonment, Florida, the family’s new parish priest.
Bishop Holley is the eighth of 14 children of Sylvester and Mary Holley, both of whom are deceased.
Young Martin attended Catholic elementary schools and was captain of the basketball team at Tate High School, where he is a member of the school’s Hall of Fame, and then attended Faulkner State Junior College in Bay Minette, Alabama. He played basketball and earned a degree in management at Alabama State University in Montgomery, where he was named the university’s outstanding collegian.
After working from 1977 to 1982 in the Pensacola-Tallahassee diocesan chancery, he studied theology at The Catholic University of America in Washington and at St. Vincent de Paul Regional Seminary in Boynton Beach, Florida.
He was ordained a priest of the Pensacola-Tallahassee Diocese May 8, 1987.
In addition to parish assignments after his ordination, he was spiritual director of the Serra Club of West Florida, director of the diocesan Department of Ethnic Concerns, a member of the diocesan education commission and spiritual director and instructor of the permanent diaconate formation program. He also was adjunct director of vocations and president of the priests’ council.
When he was named a bishop, then-Father Holley had been pastor of Little Flower Parish in Pensacola for two years. Before that, he was administrator there for two years.
James Terry Steib was born May 17, 1940, the eldest of five children of a sugar cane worker. He grew up on a farm in Vacherie, Louisiana. He entered the Society of the Divine Word order at a high school seminary in Bay St. Louis, Mississippi.
After studies at three Divine Word collegiate seminaries, he was ordained a priest Jan. 6, 1967. Then-Father Steib served his order first at seminaries and then as provincial of the Divine Word’s Southern province until he appointed an auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of St. Louis Dec. 6, 1983. He was ordained a bishop Feb. 10, 1984. He also served as vicar general of the St. Louis Archdiocese.
He was appointed fourth bishop of Memphis in March 23, 1993, and when he was ordained a bishop and installed to head the diocese in May of that year, he was one of only two black bishops heading the U.S. dioceses at that time. The other was the now-retired Bishop Joseph L. Howze of Biloxi, Mississippi.
On the national level, he is a former executive director of the National Black Catholic Clergy Caucus and a former vice president of the Conference of Major Superiors of Men Congregation.
Bishop Steib is a former chairman of the U.S. bishops’ Committee on Missions and its Committee on Black Catholics and has been a member of a number of other committees, including the Administrative Committee.
The Diocese of Memphis comprises 10,682 square miles in the state of Tennessee. It has a total population of 1.57 million; just over 65,000, or about four percent, are Catholic.
(Mark Zimmermann contributed to this story).

Sisters Held, Merrill remembered, honored, sent home with love

By Maureen Smith
“I truly believe with all my heart that Margaret and Paula would tell us that we need to keep loving. Justice for a heinous crime demands punishment. It does not demand revenge.” Father Greg Plata, OFM, echoed the sentiments of the School Sisters of St. Francis, the Sisters of Charity of Nazareth and the families of Sister Margaret Held, OSF, and Sister Paula Merrill, SCN, in his homily at their memorial Mass at the Cathedral of St. Peter the Apostle on Monday, Aug. 29.
On Thursday, Aug. 25, the pair did not show up at work so a coworker asked police to check on them. They had been murdered in their home in Durant. Local police teamed up with the Mississippi Bureau of Investigations and by Friday authorities announced the arrest of 46-year-old Rodney Earl Sanders of Kosciusko. He faces charges of capital murder, larceny and burglary. Members of Sister Merrill’s family as well as representatives from the Sisters of Charity of Nazareth (SCN) were at his arraignment Monday afternoon.
“In the courtroom, the family of Rodney Earl Sanders apologized to the four members of the SCN family that were present and to the family of Sister Paula Merrill. As Marie Sanders broke down in tears, the son went to Sister Susan and apologized. Sister Susan came to Mrs. Sanders’ side and the two embraced and cried. It was a powerful grace-filled moment. We continue to hold all in prayer,” said Diane Curtis, director of communications for the Sisters of Charity of Nazareth.
Holmes County District Attorney Akillie Malone-Oliver told the Associated Press she will take the families’ wishes into account when deciding how to prosecute the case.
The day before the Mass and hearing, representatives of the religious communities and families issued a statement opposing the death penalty for the suspect charged in their murders.
“Many people will be dismayed, even angered at the joint statement the School Sisters of St. Francis and the Sisters of Charity made stating that they are opposed to the death penalty that could be imposed on the person who committed this terrible crime. But think of the powerful statement that makes. At the heart of Christianity is forgiveness. ‘Father forgive them for they know not what they do.’ Forgiveness isn’t something we do on our own. It is something we choose to do with God’s grace,” continued Father Plata.
Rosemarie Merrill, older sister of Sister Paula Merrill, said she forgives whoever did it, but she does want to know why.
Sisters Held and Merrill, both nurse practitioners, started their ministry in 1983 in Holly Springs with Sacred Heart Southern Missions. Sister Julene Stromberg, who still works with a group of lay associates in Holly Springs, and Sister Ramona Schmidtknecht, who volunteers at Holy Family School, offered these words together. “We are simply heartbroken. Sisters Paula and Margaret were so very caring. It was their mission to reach out and take care of the poorest of the poor. They did so much here in Holly Springs, but also in Oxford, Marks and Durant – not simply tending to a person’s physical ailments, but ministering to the ‘whole person.’”
Sisters Held and Merrill went on to serve in Tupelo and at a University of Mississippi medical clinic in Lexington. In 2009, that clinic downsized.
When the Lexington Medical Clinic opened in 2010, the sisters told Fabvienen Taylor of Mississippi Catholic they would stay “forever, or as long as the Lord wills it.”
Sister Susan Gatz, president of the Sisters of Charity of Nazareth and Sister Rosemarie Rombalski, of the School Sisters of St. Francis, went into the house Sunday for prayer, closure and reflection. In the kitchen, they discovered a loaf of bread in a bread maker. The simple act – typical of the Sisters who were known for being generous with their good food – turned into a life-giving symbol for the communities.
“Marge and Paula really had that sense of offering bread to each other. The bread of life, the bread of energy, the bread of hope,” said Sister Rombalski. She said the pair always wanted to fulfill Jesus’ will for their lives. “Jesus said to us clearly, ‘I am no longer with you with my hands and feet so you, Marge and Paula, and all those you touch and all those who believe, you become my hands and feet you become my eyes, you become my love and my energy that reaches out to others.’” she said. “So Marge and Paula’s life did not stop here, that love and energy that was given to each one of us is now in each of us and gets extended to more and more so their life continues in us,” she went on to say.
The Sisters broke the loaf in half to share with their respective communities in Milwaukee and Nazareth, Kentucky.
The bread was not the only comfort the Sisters sent, according to Sisters Gatz and Rombalski. Earlier in the week, Sister Gatz was speaking to a reporter in a conference room at her congregation’s headquarters when butterfly somehow got inside and landed on her shirt. Later the same day, she saw a butterfly on her windowsill in her office.
Sister Rombalski said she was outside praying about the murders when a whole group of butterflies appeared and fluttered around her for quite some time.
When the women compared stories they knew the experiences contained a message. “Butterflies are a symbol of the resurrection,” said Sister Gatz. “Marge and Paula were telling us they are OK,” added Sister Rombalski.
Sunday evening, almost 300 people gathered at Lexington St. Thomas for a vigil. In addition to the more than 100 people packed inside the tiny sanctuary, another 200 watched a video feed from a tent on the lawn, set up by mostly non-Catholic teenagers from the local Christian academy. Bishop Joseph Kopacz presided over the service, but Father Plata, the pastor of the usually tiny congregation, offered a homily. He remembered the Sisters as great cooks, gardeners, generous souls and hopeful women of the gospel. “As Christians, we only have one choice, to move on in hope,” he said.
As the families cope with the loss of their loved ones, they also worry about the people of Durant and Lexington. “A big hole in the universe and in our hearts,” is how Annette Held described losing her older sister. “Sister Margaret was a wonderful and gracious person, always a concerned about others and certainly the spiritual leader of the family. This tragedy is leaving a big hole for us. We are also worried because there is no one to carry their ministry now and that has been very important for so long for the community they lived in and for our family too. We keep wishing we knew what will happen next at the clinic,” she added.
Rosemarie Merrill expressed a similar concern. “Her (Sr. Paula’s) faith was very strong. And she was a wonderful nurse,” Rosemarie Merrill said of her sister. “I feel so bad for the people of Holmes County because they’ve lost so much. The care they provided leaves a huge void. They would do anything for their patients.”
The Sisters’ bodies have returned to their motherhouses for funerals and burials. The Sisters of Charity have started a fund to continue their work. Learn more on their website, www.scnfamily.org.
(Elsa Baughman of Mississippi Catholic and Marnie McAllister of the Record, the paper for the Archdiocese of Louisville, contrubuted to this article)