Parish News

SPIRITUAL ENRICHMENT
AMORY St. Helen Parish, book discussion group will read “Miss Jane” by Brad Watson for discussion on Monday, Dec. 12. All are invited to read the book and participate in the discussion.
BOONEVILLE St. Francis of Assisi Parish, Advent day of reflection, Sunday, Dec. 4, beginning at 8:30 a.m. with Mass. There will be prayers, discussions, including a viewing of a film about the newly canonized St. Teresa of Calcutta.
IUKA St. Mary Parish, “With Great Love,” a day-long retreat, Saturday, Dec. 3, beginning at 9 a.m. with coffee. A film and discussion about the newly canonized St. Teresa of Calcutta will be part of the retreat.
JACKSON St. Peter Cathedral Parish, Advent retreat, “Christ is Christmas,” anointing Mass and lunch, Saturday, Dec. 3, from 9 a.m. – noon.
JACKSON St. Richard Parish, Lectio Divina during Advent, Tuesdays from 10 – 11:30 a.m. in the Mercy Room – facilitated by Mary Louise Jones and Claudia Addison. Details: claudiaaddison@mac.com.

PARISH, SCHOOL & FAMILY EVENTS
AMORY St. Helen Parish, adult Christmas dinner, Saturday, Dec. 3, beginning with appetizers and auction from 6 – 7 p.m. followed by dinner. Special guest for the dinner and Mass on Sunday will be Bishop Joseph Kopacz.
– Grandparents’ Day play, Sunday, Dec. 11, after Mass.
BROOKHAVEN St. Francis Parish, family Advent wreath, Sunday, Nov. 27, after the 9:30 a.m. Mass in the parish center, Materials will be supplied. Extra greenery is needed.
COLUMBUS Annunciation School community, ringing the Salvation Army bell, Saturday, Nov. 26, at Wal-Mart and Saturday, Dec. 10, at Kroger. To sign up for an hour call the school office, 662-328-4479.
GLUCKSTADT St. Joseph Parish, “The ABC’s of Christmas,” Saturday, Dec. 3. All children (K–12) are invited to participate. Details: Karen Worrell, kworrellcre@hotmail.com.
GRENADA St. Peter Parish Jubilee History Committee is putting together a slide show for its jubilee. Pictures are needed of weddings, VBS, baptisms, senior class, First Communion, etc.. The older the better. Note the event and year. Names too if desired. Email pictures to: Livingstonclan@cableone.net.
HERNANDO Holy Spirit Parish, “A Christmas Remembered,” Sunday, Dec. 11, at 6 p.m. Children and youth are invited to participate. Details: Barbara Smith, 662-233-4833 or 901-413-8102.
JACKSON Holy Family Parish is collecting caps, gloves, scarves, socks, toothbrushes, toothpaste, individually wrapped snacks, cookies, and crackers for the Christmas bags which will be distributed Sunday, Dec. 17.
JACKSON St. Therese Parish, all children, ages seven and older, are encouraged to participate in the church choir on Saturday, Dec. 24, at the 4 p.m. Christmas Mass and posadas. Practices are on Wednesdays at 4:30 p.m.
JACKSON St. Richard Parish, special Christmas remembrance for deceased loved ones, Thursday, Dec. 8, at 7 p.m. in Foley Hall. Please RSVP. Details: Linda Lalor 601-853-8840, or Nancy McGhee, 601-942-2078.
NATCHEZ St. Mary Basilica, Advent wreath workshop, Wednesday, Nov. 30, after the dinner.
– Alcorn State University choir Christmas concert, Sunday, Dec. 4, at 7 p.m.
SOUTHAVEN Christ the King Parish, Advent/Christmas concert, Sunday, Dec. 4, at 4 p.m. followed by a chili supper. Everyone is invited.
YAZOO CITY St. Mary Parish, holiday bonfire, Sunday, Dec. 11, at 4:30 p.m. at Janet Whittington’s home in Bentonia. Hot dogs, hamburgers, sodas, beer, and all the fixings will be served.

GLUCKSTADT – St. Joseph parishioner Rene Bodin gives Communion to Ken Pribyla during the Knights of Columbus Council 9543 annual rosary, Mass and supper on the grounds of parishioners Chris and Mary Manning’s home in Gluckstadt. (Photo by Sheri Krause)

GLUCKSTADT – St. Joseph parishioner Rene Bodin gives Communion to Ken Pribyla during the Knights of Columbus Council 9543 annual rosary, Mass and supper on the grounds of parishioners Chris and Mary Manning’s home in Gluckstadt. (Photo by Sheri Krause)

Advent reconciliation services
– Amory St. Helen, Thursday, Dec. 15, after 6 p.m. Mass.
– Columbus Annunciation, Tuesday, Nov. 29, at 6:30 p.m.
– Corinth St. James, Wednesday, Nov. 30, at 6 p.m.
– Greenville Sacred Heart, Thursday, Dec. 15 at 6 p.m.
– Hernando Holy Spirit, Wednesday, Dec. 7, at 7 p.m.
– Holly Springs St. Joseph, Tuesday, Dec. 13, at 7 p.m.
– Senatobia St. Gregory, Dec. 13, at 7 p.m.
– Olive Branch Queen of Peace, Dec. 14, at 7 p.m.
– Robinsoville Good Shepherd, Dec. 13 at 7 p.m.
– Southaven Christ the King, Nov. 30 at 7 p.m.
– Tupelo St. James, Tuesday, Dec 13, at 6:30 p.m.
– Yazoo City St. Mary, Monday, Dec. 12, at 6 p.m.

Guadalupe celebrations
Amory St. Helen, Monday., Dec. 12, Mass at 7 p.m.
Carthage St. Anne, Saturday, Dec. 10, mañanitas at 9 a.m. followed by a procession, Mass and fiesta. The Aztec dancing group from Jackson St. Peter Parish will perform during the celebration.
Cleveland Our Lady of Victories Parish, Monday, Dec. 12, procession at 6 p.m., followed by Mass and dinner.
Corinth St. James Parish, Monday, Dec. 12, rosary at 5 a.m. followed by mañanitas and breakfast. At 6 p.m. procession followed by Mass and dinner.
Forest St. Michael Parish, Saturday, Dec. 10, mañanitas from 7 – 10 p.m. On Sunday, Dec. 11, parishioners will gather at the Court House at 10 a.m. and process to the Crudup Activity Center where Mass will be celebrated at 11 a.m. A light meal will be served after Mass.
Hazlehurst St. Martin Parish, Monday, Dec. 12, Mass at 6 p.m. followed by a fiesta.
Greenville Sacred Heart Parish, Sunday, Dec. 11, Mass at 6 p.m. followed by dinner. A mariachi band from Memphis will provide the music for Mass and dinner.
Holly Springs St. Joseph Parish, Monday, Dec. 12, Mass at 7 p.m. followed by a reception.
Jackson Cathedral of St. Peter, Sunday, Dec. 11, procession at noon followed by Mass and dinner.
Kosciusco St. Teresa, Saturday, Dec. 10, bilingual Mass at 2 p.m. followed by a fiesta. The Hispanic Aztec dancing group from Jackson St. Therese Parish will perform during the celebration.
Morton St. Martin Center, Saturday, Dec. 10, mañanitas from 7 a 9 p.m. (See Forest for Mass details)
New Albany St. Francis of Assisi Parish, novena from Dec. 4-11at 7 p.m.
– Monday, Dec. 12, rosary (last day of novena) at 5 a.m. followed by mañanitas, breakfast, procession, Mass and community meal.
Senatobia St. Gregory Parish, Monday, Dec. 12, Mass at 7 p.m. followed by a reception.
Southaven Christ the King Parish, Monday, Dec. 12, mañanitas a las 5:30 a.m. Mass at 7 p.m. followed by a reception.
Olive Branch Queen of Peace Parish, Monday, Dec. 12, Mass at 7 p.m. followed by a reception.

Tome Nota

CARTHAGE – La Parroquia Santa Ana ofrecerá un evento para celebrar el aniversario de las vigilias de oración el 21 de enero del 2017 de 10:20 a.m. a 7 p.m. en el salón ubicado en 105 Dona Dr. El costo de entrada es de $10 e incluirá la comida.

GREENWOOD – Los Padre Redentoristas ofrecerán una presentación en español el sábado 3 de diciembre en el Centro de Retiros Locus Benedictus sobre el significado de los símbolos del icono oriental de la Nuestra Señora del Perpetuo Socorro. Este icono fue comisionado en honor del 150 jubileo del original.
El icono, junto con una exhibición histórica, estará en Greenwood durante dos semanas, del 21 de noviembre al 3 de diciembre. Ella es la patrona de los Padres Redentoristas y de Haití.

SOUTHAVEN – La Posada serán celebrada en la Parroquia Cristo Rey el lunes 19 de diciembre a las 7 p.m. Se ofrecerá chocolate y pan dulce al final de la posada.

TUPELO – . El próximo Domingo 4 de Diciembre comenzaremos nuestra novena de rosarios a nuestra Virgen de Guadalupe por lo que se está pidiendo la participación de nueve personas para rezar los rosarios. Interesados por favor de hablar conmigo a la salida.
– Servicio de reconciliación, lunes 28 de noviembre a las 6 p.m.

Jubilee Year of Mercy Ends, Holy Door Closed

By Cindy Wooden

Pope Francis closes the Holy Door of St. Peter's Basilica to mark the closing of the jubilee Year of Mercy at the Vatican Nov. 20. (CNS photo/Tiziana Fabi, pool via Reuters) See POPE-MERCY-CLOSE Nov. 20, 2016.

Pope Francis closes the Holy Door of St. Peter’s Basilica to mark the closing of the jubilee Year of Mercy at the Vatican Nov. 20. (CNS photo/Tiziana Fabi, pool via Reuters) See POPE-MERCY-CLOSE Nov. 20, 2016.

VATICAN CITY (CNS) – Acknowledging and sharing God’s mercy is a permanent part of the Christian life, so initiatives undertaken during the special Year of Mercy must continue, Pope Francis said.
“Mercy cannot become a mere parenthesis in the life of the church,” the pope wrote in an apostolic letter, “Misericordia et Misera,” (“Mercy and Misery”), which he signed Nov. 20 at the end of the Year of Mercy. The Vatican released the text the next day.
The Catholic Church’s focus on God’s mercy must continue with individual acts of kindness, assistance to the poor and, particularly, with encouraging Catholics to participate in the sacrament of reconciliation and making it easier for them to do so, the pope wrote.

Faithful from across the diocese came for the Mass to close the Holy Door at the Cathedral of St. Peter the Apostle.

Faithful from across the diocese came for the Mass to close the Holy Door at the Cathedral of St. Peter the Apostle.

In his letter, Pope Francis said he formally was giving all priests permanent permission to grant absolution to those who confess to having procured an abortion. Priests in the Diocese of Jackson have had this faculty for many years. While many bishops around the world, and almost all bishops in the United States, routinely grant that faculty to all their priests, Pope Francis had made it universal during the Holy Year.
According to canon law, procuring an abortion brings automatic excommunication to those who know of the penalty, but procure the abortion anyway. Without formal permission, priests had been required to refer the case to their bishops before the excommunication could be lifted and sacramental absolution could be granted to a woman who had an abortion or those directly involved in the procedure.
“I wish to restate as firmly as I can that abortion is a grave sin, since it puts an end to an innocent life,” the pope wrote. “In the same way, however, I can and must state that there is no sin that God’s mercy cannot reach and wipe away when it finds a repentant heart seeking to be reconciled with the Father.”
Speaking to reporters during a Vatican news conference Nov. 21, Archbishop Rino Fisichella said procuring an abortion still results in automatic excommunication the very moment the procedure is carried out.
Sacramental absolution, therefore, is not just forgiving the sin of abortion, but also means “the excommunication is removed,” he said.
Now that all priests have been given the faculty to lift the excommunication and grant absolution, the Code of Canon Law will have to be updated, said the archbishop, who is president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting New Evangelization, the office that organized events for the Year of Mercy.
The pope also formally extended the provision he made during the Year of Mercy of recognizing as valid the sacramental absolution received by “those faithful who, for various reasons, attend churches officiated by the priests of the Priestly Fraternity of St. Pius X,” the traditionalist society founded by the late Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre.
Although the Vatican and the society continue talks aimed at formally restoring the society’s full communion with the church, Pope Francis said he was extending the pastoral provision “lest anyone ever be deprived of the sacramental sign of reconciliation through the church’s pardon.”
The title of the document is taken from a sermon by St. Augustine about Jesus’ encounter with the woman caught in adultery. After those who wanted to stone her slinked away, only Jesus and the woman — mercy and misery — remained.
In the Gospel story, the pope wrote, and in the sacraments of the church, particularly confession and the anointing of the sick, “references to mercy, far from being merely exhortative, are highly performative, which is to say that as we invoke mercy with faith, it is granted to us, and as we confess it to be vital and real, it transforms us,” as it did with the woman caught in adultery.
“This is a fundamental element of our faith,” Pope Francis wrote.
“Even before the revelation of sin, there is the revelation of the love by which God created the world and human beings,” he wrote. “His love always precedes us, accompanies us and remains with us, despite our sin.”
In celebrating and welcoming God’s love and mercy, he said, a special place in the church must be given to families, especially at a time when the very meaning of family is in crisis.
“The beauty of the family endures unchanged, despite so many problems and alternative proposals,” he said. “The grace of the sacrament of marriage not only strengthens the family to be a privileged place for practicing mercy, but also commits the Christian community and all its pastoral activity to uphold the great positive value of the family.”
Still, he wrote, “the experience of mercy enables us to regard all human problems from the standpoint of God’s love, which never tires of welcoming and accompanying,” even in situations marked by failure or sin.
“Our life, with its joys and sorrows, is something unique and unrepeatable that takes place under the merciful gaze of God,” he said. In counseling couples priests must use “a careful, profound and far-sighted spiritual discernment, so that everyone, none excluded, can feel accepted by God, participate actively in the life of the community and be part of that People of God which journeys tirelessly toward the fullness of his kingdom of justice, love, forgiveness and mercy.”
“Nothing of what a repentant sinner places before God’s mercy can be excluded from the embrace of his forgiveness,” the pope wrote. “For this reason, none of us has the right to make forgiveness conditional.”
In the letter, Pope Francis also asked dioceses that have not yet done so to consider joining the “24 Hours for the Lord” initiative. Near the fourth Sunday of Lent, dioceses choose a church or churches to stay open for 24 hours to offer the sacrament of reconciliation and eucharistic adoration. The pope opens the Rome celebration with a penance service in St. Peter’s Basilica.
After his Year of Mercy celebration Nov. 13 with the homeless and other people who are “socially excluded,” the pope wrote that he would like a similar celebration to be held annually in every diocese.
“The entire church might celebrate, on the 33rd Sunday of Ordinary Time, the World Day of the Poor,” he said. The celebration, a week before the feast of Christ the King, would be “the worthiest way to prepare” to acknowledge the kingship of Christ, “who identified with the little ones and the poor and who will judge us on our works of mercy.”
“It would be a day to help communities and each of the baptized to reflect on how poverty is at the very heart of the Gospel and that, as long as Lazarus lies at the door of our homes, there can be no justice or social peace,” he said.
Calling the Bible “the great story of the marvels of God’s mercy,” Pope Francis also asked every Catholic parish in the world to set aside at least one Sunday a year to promote reading, studying and praying with the Scriptures.
Teaching people “lectio divina,” the prayerful reading of the Bible, especially when focused on texts that speak of God’s mercy and love, will help “give rise to concrete gestures and works of charity,” he wrote.
In another continuation of a Year of Mercy project, Pope Francis asked the more than 1,100 priests he commissioned as “missionaries of mercy” to continue leading retreats, missions, prayer services and offering confession in dioceses around the world.
“Their pastoral activity sought to emphasize that God places no roadblocks in the way of those who seek him with a contrite heart, because he goes out to meet everyone like a father,” the pope said.
While he said he did not have specifics about how the missionaries’ work should continue, Pope Francis said the Pontifical Council for the Promotion of the New Evangelization “will supervise them and find the most suitable forms for the exercise of this valuable ministry.”
(Contributing to this story was Carol Glatz at the Vatican.)

Bishop emeritus Joseph Latino and Bishop Joseph Kopacz enter the Holy Door at the Cathedral of St. Peter the Apostle to start the Mass that would end the Jubilee Year of Mercy. Mary Woodward, Chancellor, assisted at the Mass.

Bishop emeritus Joseph Latino and Bishop Joseph Kopacz enter the Holy Door at the Cathedral of St. Peter the Apostle to start the Mass that would end the Jubilee Year of Mercy. Mary Woodward, Chancellor, assisted at the Mass.

JACKSON – Miembros de la Catedral de San Pedro pasan por la puerta santa de la catedral el domingo 13 de noviembre antes de que el Obispo Joseph Kopacz la cerrara como símbolo del fin del Año de la Misericordia que oficialmente terminó el 20 de noviembre. Esta conmemoración anual, anunciada y proclamada por el Papa Francisco comenzó el 8 de diciembre de 2015. (Foto de Maureen Smith) JACKSON – Faithful process into the Holy Door at the Cathedral of St. Peter the Apostle at the start of the Mass to close the Jubilee Year of Mercy on Sunday, Nov. 13. Holy Doors across the world, including the ones in Rome, will be closed by Sunday, Nov. 27 in preparation for a new liturgical year to begin. (Photo by Maureen Smith)

JACKSON – Miembros de la Catedral de San Pedro pasan por la puerta santa de la catedral el domingo 13 de noviembre antes de que el Obispo Joseph Kopacz la cerrara como símbolo del fin del Año de la Misericordia que oficialmente terminó el 20 de noviembre. Esta conmemoración anual, anunciada y proclamada por el Papa Francisco comenzó el 8 de diciembre de 2015. (Foto de Maureen Smith)
JACKSON – Faithful process into the Holy Door at the Cathedral of St. Peter the Apostle at the start of the Mass to close the Jubilee Year of Mercy on Sunday, Nov. 13. Holy Doors across the world, including the ones in Rome, will be closed by Sunday, Nov. 27 in preparation for a new liturgical year to begin. (Photo by Maureen Smith)

Holy Family sponsors ecumenical ministry

JACKSON – Since July, Holy Family Parish has been involving parishioners, especially the youth, in an ecumenical outreach ministry to the senior citizens and the elementary-aged children from nearby churches. There are eight churches within three miles of the parish.
In October, residents of NCBA Estates, an independent living residence for senior citizens, attended a “Meet and greet our neighbors” activity at which 35 of the 40 plus residents were present. Residents filled out a survey of preferred activities and Holy Family worked to arrange those things, such as rides to Mass Sundays and to the polls on election day.
The Nov. 11 fish fry and bingo night activity was also well-attended. Father Xavier

Jackson Holy Family hosted a fish fry and bingo night for local seniors as part of an ecumenical outreach ministry.

Jackson Holy Family hosted a fish fry and bingo night for local seniors as part of an ecumenical outreach ministry.

Amirtham, pastor, and the pastoral council prepared and served more than 50 meals. The next opportunity to fellowship, at the residents’ request, is a Christmas celebration. (Submitted by Corinne W. Anderson)

Jackson Holy Family hosted a fish fry and bingo night for local seniors as part of an ecumenical outreach ministry.

Jackson Holy Family hosted a fish fry and bingo night for local seniors as part of an ecumenical outreach ministry.

Jackson Holy Family hosted a fish fry and bingo night for local seniors as part of an ecumenical outreach ministry.

Jackson Holy Family hosted a fish fry and bingo night for local seniors as part of an ecumenical outreach ministry.

Jackson Holy Family hosted a fish fry and bingo night for local seniors as part of an ecumenical outreach ministry.

Jackson Holy Family hosted a fish fry and bingo night for local seniors as part of an ecumenical outreach ministry.

Diversity theme for USCCB meeting with encuentro news, VP choice

(Editor’s note: Bishop Joseph Kopacz attended the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ (USCCB) fall assembly. He was not able to write a column this week because of travel so news from the assembly takes the place of his column this week.)
BALTIMORE (CNS) – A groundbreaking new study commissioned by the bishops that finds diversity abounds in the U.S. Catholic Church is a clarion call to Catholic institutions and ministries to adapt and prepare for growing diversity, said Archbishop Gustavo Garcia-Siller of San Antonio.
On Nov. 15, the second day of the bishops’ annual fall assembly in Baltimore, the archbishop shared results of a report by the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate at Georgetown University showing the church is one of the most culturally diverse institutions in the United States.

Bishops and alter servers process out after Mass at St. Peter Claver Church in Baltimore Nov. 14 during the annual fall general assembly of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. (CNS photo/Bob Roller) See BISHOPS-PETER-CLAVER-MASS Nov. 15, 2016.

Bishops and alter servers process out after Mass at St. Peter Claver Church in Baltimore Nov. 14 during the annual fall general assembly of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. (CNS photo/Bob Roller) See BISHOPS-PETER-CLAVER-MASS Nov. 15, 2016.

It was commissioned by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Committee on Cultural Diversity in the Church, chaired by Archbishop Garcia-Siller, to help identify the size and distribution of ethnic communities in the country — Hispanic and Latino, African-American, Asian-American and Native American.
He asked his brother bishops to look at the data and see how it speaks to their regions to help dioceses plan, set priorities and allocate resources.
The study’s finding that there are close to 30 million Hispanics in the U.S. church resonated in the election earlier that day of Archbishop Jose Gómez of Los Angeles to a three-year term as USCCB vice president, bringing a Latino voice to the leadership role for the first time.
Cardinal Daniel DiNardo of Galveston-Houston was elected to a three-year term as USCCB president, succeeding Archbishop Joseph Kurtz of Louisville, Kentucky, whose term ended with the close of the meeting.
The bishops also heard about the church’s preparations for the fifth National Encuentro of Hispanic/Latino Ministry, from Auxiliary Bishop Nelson Perez of Rockville Centre, New York, chairman of the bishops’ Subcommittee on Hispanic Affairs.
The V Encuentro, as it is being called, is to be held in September 2018 in Fort Worth, Texas. It will be the culmination of parish, diocesan and regional encuentros, in which the bishops anticipate more than one million Catholics participating over the next two years.
“It is a great opportunity for the church to reach out to our Hispanic brothers and sisters with Christ’s message of hope and love,” Bishop Perez said. “It is a time to listen, a time to develop meaningful relationships, a time to learn and bear abundant fruits, and a time to rejoice in God’s love.”
The effort got a personal endorsement from Pope Francis during a Nov. 15 video message to the U.S. bishops at their fall general assembly in Baltimore.
In other action Nov. 15, the bishops approved making permanent their Subcommittee on the Church in Africa and the hiring of two people to assist the subcommittee in carrying out its work. They also approved another 10-year extension for the Retirement Fund for Religious national collection; before the vote, the collection had been authorized through 2017.
They approved a strategic plan that will govern the work of the conference and its committees from 2017 through 2020, incorporating the theme “Encountering the Mercy of Christ and Accompanying His People With Joy.” It sets five priorities: evangelization, marriage and family life, human life and dignity, vocations, and religious freedom.
Maronite Bishop Gregory Mansour gave a presentation on the persecution of Christians in the Middle East, urging the U.S. bishops to bring wider attention to the situation to their parishes and political leaders.
A theme of outreach and inclusion ran through many sessions of the two days of public sessions of the bishops’ meeting. Sessions on the last day of the assembly, Nov. 16, were held in executive session, except for a brief address by Cardinal Marc Ouellet, prefect of the Vatican Congregation for Bishops, that was live-streamed. Echoing Pope Francis, he told the U.S. bishops that their ministry is to be “witnesses to the Risen One.”
As the meeting opened Nov. 14, the bishops affirmed as a body a Nov. 11 letter from Auxiliary Bishop Eusebio Elizondo of Seattle, as outgoing chairman of the Committee on Migration, calling on President-elect Donald Trump “to continue to protect the inherent dignity of refugees and migrants.”
The bishops’ group action followed by a day a TV interview in which Trump said one of his first actions would be to deport two million to three million people he described as “criminal and have criminal records” and entered the country without government permission.
In the letter, Bishop Elizondo offered “a special word to migrant and refugee families living in the United States: Be assured of our solidarity and continued accompaniment as you work for a better life.”
That first day the bishops heard a plea from Archbishop Christophe Pierre, the new nuncio to the United States, that the U.S. bishops and the U.S. church as a whole reach out to young Catholics, meeting them where they are and engaging them in their faith.
In his last presidential address, Archbishop Kurtz discussed the need to move beyond the acrimony of the now-completed presidential elections, but the main focus of his speech were the encounters he had in his three-year term in which he found that small and often intimate gestures provide big lessons for bishops to learn as they exercise their ministry.
The people he encountered in all his travels were concerned about something beyond themselves — the common good, he said Nov. 14. Seeking the common good would serve the nation well as it moves forward from the “unprecedented lack of civility and even rancor” of the national elections, Archbishop Kurtz said.
In other business the first day, the bishops heard a report on the 2017 Convocation of Catholic Leaders to be held in Orlando, Florida, next July to exploring the Gospel in American life. More than 3,000 people reflecting the diversity of the church are expected to participate. Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan of New York, who gave an update on the planning, urged bishops in each diocese to send a delegation to the event.
Cardinal Dolan also shared details of a simple celebration next year to mark the 100th anniversary of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, founded originally as the National Catholic War Council.
Events will take place Nov. 12 as the bishops convene for their 2017 fall assembly. Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Vatican secretary of state, will be principal celebrant of an anniversary Mass at Baltimore’s Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary; Cardinal Ouellet will deliver the homily.
In his report as chairman of the bishops’ Ad Hoc Committee for Religious Liberty, Archbishop William E. Lori of Baltimore said all U.S. bishops are required to speak out for religious freedom for all people of faith whose beliefs are compromised.
Bishops must equip laypeople to speak in the public arena about the necessity to protect religious liberty when interventions by government officials at any level infringe on the free practice of religion, he stressed.
In a final afternoon session and later at a news conference that concluded the first meeting day, Archbishop Wilton D. Gregory of Atlanta returned to the tensions of the election year.
He is chairman of the new Task Force to Promote Peace in Our Communities, created in July by Archbishop Kurtz in response to the wave of violence in a number of communities following shootings by and of police. Archbishop Gregory urged the bishops to issue, sooner rather than later, a document on racism, given “postelection uncertainty” and that some of the tensions have only gotten worse following the presidential election.
Most questions during news conference that followed focused on the postelection climate. Archbishop Gregory stressed that the church should play a role in helping restore peace in the current climate that is so inflamed.
He also pointed out that no political parties fully embrace all life issues, something that had been stressed by Chicago Cardinal Joseph Bernardin, who died 20 years to the day of Archbishop Gregory’s remarks.
On the issue of healing racial divides, he said the Catholic response should start at the parish level. “Words are cheap, actions stronger,” he added.
Archbishop Gomez spoke of the fear many immigrants have of possible deportation since Trump’s election as president. When asked if churches could possibly provide sanctuaries for this group, he said that was impossible to answer at this point.
The day ended with the bishops celebrating their annual fall assembly Mass at a West Baltimore church known as the “mother church” of black Catholics, rather than in their traditional venue of Baltimore’s historic basilica.
In his homily, Archbishop Kurtz said the bishops came to the church “to be present, to see with our own eyes, so that we might humbly take a step and lead others to do so.”
(Contributing to this story were Mark Pattison, Rhina Guidos, Carol Zimmermann and Dennis Sadowski).

Heart of Belgian saint travels to Diocese of Shreveport

by Jessica Rinaudo
SHREVEPORT, LA – On Thursday, Dec. 8, the Cathedral of St. John Berchmans will host a rare Catholic relic – the literal heart of its patron. This special event coincides with the 150th anniversary of the apparition and miracle of St. John Berchmans that occurred in Louisiana.
sjb-holy-cardThis is the first time the heart has ever traveled outside of its homeland, modern day Belgium. Accompanied by the pastor of the church where Saint John Berchmans was baptized, the heart will make its way to the only cathedral in the world named for this saint.
Once it arrives, it will stay at the Cathedral from Dec. 8-18, except for one day, Dec. 14, when it will travel to Grand Coteau, La, the site of the apparition and miracle. During the heart’s stay at the cathedral, there are scheduled times for veneration and for Mass, as well as a series of events and talks related to the saint and relics that are free and open to the public.
John Berchmans was born in 1599 in Diest, which is modern day Belgium. In 1615, at age 16, John enrolled in a newly opened Jesuit college. There he felt called to join the Society of Jesus despite his father’s wishes to the contrary. In 1616, he entered the Jesuit novitiate.
After making his first vows in Antwerp, he was sent to Rome to study philosophy. He penned the Chaplet of the Immaculate Conception, which is still prayed today.
In 1621, he succumbed to “Roman fever,” and on Aug. 13, 1621, at the age of 22, he died.
Many stories of miracles have arisen since his death, but the one that led to his canonization took place in Grand Coteau, La. At the convent of the Sacred Heart, novice Mary Wilson had fallen gravely ill. She and a group of sisters prayed a novena for healing through the intercession of the recently beatified Blessed John Berchmans. On the ninth and final day of the novena, he appeared to her in her sickness and she was immediately and completely healed.
Before Berchmans died, he was already well known for his spirituality and sanctity. Father Peter Mangum, rector of the Cathedral of St. John Berchmans, likened him to the modern day Mother Teresa. People knew they were seeing a living, walking saint. They would go to Mass to see him serve.

The reliquary containing the heart of St. John Berchman is set to visit the Diocese of Shreveport.

The reliquary containing the heart of St. John Berchman is set to visit the Diocese of Shreveport.

Relics are an integral part of our rich faith tradition. “The veneration of relics is a communion with the heroes of our Christian faith, asking for their powerful intercession,” said Father Mangum. “Many people have reported outstanding blessings and conversions through this ministry, and many have reported healings.”
“The earliest of churches were built over cemeteries because that’s where the body was,” he continued. “These are the people without whom the faith would not be passed down to the next generation.” “Even to this day, a little tiny relic is placed into each altar where we place the Body and Blood of Christ. We no longer build churches over cemeteries, so in a sense we bring the cemetery, or we bring part of the relic to the church,” he added.
There will also be extra parish Masses in the evenings and on Saturday morning in addition to their regularly scheduled ones, during which the heart will be present and parishioners and pilgrims alike will have the opportunity to come forward, as individuals or as a family, to venerate the heart and honor the saint, praising the holiness of God.
The schedule of events, including Masses, speakers and veneration times, is available at www.sjbdevotion.org. Individuals are welcome to all events, but groups should call the cathedral’s office, 318-221-5296, before coming.

Miraculous Icon to visit Greenwood

By Maureen Smith
GREENWOOD – A special icon of Our Lady of Perpetual Help, commissioned in honor of the Jubilee of the original, will spend two weeks with the Redemptorists in Greenwood along with a companion historical exhibit.
Redemptorist missionaries are celebrating 150 years of spreading devotion to Our Mother of Perpetual Help, one of the most beloved images of the Mother of God in the worldwide Catholic Church. Ever since Pope Pius IX entrusted the Redemptorists with the Perpetual Help Icon with the mandate to “Make her Known” in 1866, this ancient image of the Mother of God has enjoyed “great veneration and fame for its miracles.”
“I want people to know that Our Lady of Perpetual Help is a powerful intercessor for us and we have a privileged time with her in Greenwood and in the diocese,” said Father Scott Katzenberger, CSsR, leader of the Redemptorist community in Greenwood.
While the faithful gathered in Rome and major centers of Redemptorist ministry throughout the world on June 27, the feast day of Our Mother of Perpetual Help, the Redemptorists of the Denver Province hosted a capacity crowd at the historic St. Alphonsus “Rock” Church in St. Louis, MO, where the seed of the perpetual novena was planted in the western USA on July 11, 1922. omph-original-copy-c
Most importantly, the jubilee celebration launched a renewal of the Redemptorists’ commitment to preach the Gospel, especially using the Icon of Our Mother of Perpetual Help to illustrate the mystery of redemption: the incarnation, passion, death and resurrection of Jesus.
A special Jubilee Missionary Icon touched to the original in Rome has been traveling to Redemptorist ministry sites in the Denver Province with portions of the historical exhibit, and will visit the Mississippi Delta Monday, Nov. 21 through Saturday, Dec. 3.
The Redemptorist community at Locus Benedictus Retreat Center in Greenwood is offering two presentations about the meaning of the symbols contained within the icon. The first, in English, is set for 3 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 26. A Spanish presentation will be offered at 3 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 3.
People are also welcome to walk through the exhibit and venerate the icon daily from 9 a.m. until 1 p.m. and in the evenings from 5-7 p.m. except on Thanksgiving.
“We will arrange the items in such a way as to create a space for people to venerate the icon in an appropriate space and be able to enjoy the exhibit,” said Father Katzenberger.
The historical exhibit highlighting the 150-year history of the Redemptorists and Our Mother of Perpetual Help in the western United States includes images and articles about Our Lady of Perpetual Help as well as the history of devotion beginning in the early 20th century.
Part of the exhibit showcases the powerful intercessions of Our Mother with a sampling of the many miracles attributed to Our Mother of Perpetual Help.
(Kristine Stremel, public and community affairs director for the Redemptorists of the Denver Province, contributed to this report.)

Jubilee Year of Mercy: Meridian’s Merciful Mufflers fills need

Members of the Merciful Mufflers knitting and crocheting ministry created hats, mufflers and even bags as a work of mercy this year.

Members of the Merciful Mufflers knitting and crocheting ministry created hats, mufflers and even bags as a work of mercy this year.

By Mary Billups
MERIDIAN – Inspired by the Jubilee Year of Mercy declared by Pope Francis, this spring the Catholic Community of Meridian launched a new faith-sharing opportunity called Merciful Mufflers. This ministry seeks to respond to the corporal work of mercy “Clothe the Naked” in a meaningful way through prayer, fellowship and service to others.
Many parishes embraced the Year of Mercy with projects such as this one, finding personal ways to incorporate the works of mercy into their ministries.
Several dedicated ladies meet each Monday at the St. Patrick Parish Center to share their time and talents by creating handmade scarves, hats, ear warmers and hand warmers for those in need.
Since May, the group has knitted or crocheted more than 150 items which the ladies will distribute to agencies in Meridian that provide relief to the poor, the homeless and victims of domestic violence.
For more information or to join this ministry, contact Mary Billups, 601-693-1321, marybillups@bellsouth.net.

(Mary Billups is director of Adult Faith Formation for the Catholic Community of Meridian.
Editor’s note: if your parish embraced a project or new ministry for the Jubilee Year of Mercy, send it to editor@mississippicatholic.com.)

In Exile: Understanding Real Presence

By Father Ron Rolheiser, OMI
When I was a graduate student in Belgium, I was privileged one day to sit in on a conference given by Cardinal Godfried Danneels of Brussels. He was commenting on the Eucharist and our lack of understanding of it full richness when he highlighted this contrast: If you stood outside of a Roman Catholic church today as people were coming out of the church and asked them: “Was that a good Eucharist,?” most everyone would answer on the basis of the homily and the music. If the homily was interesting and the music lively, most people would answer that it had been a good Eucharist.
Now, he continued, if you had stood outside a Roman Catholic church 60 or 70 years ago and asked: “Was that a good Mass today?” nobody would have even understood the question. They would have answered something to the effect of: “Aren’t they all the same!”
Today our understanding of the Eucharist, in Roman Catholic circles and indeed in most Protestant and Anglican circles, is very much concentrated on three things: the liturgy of the Word, the music and Communion. Moreover, in Roman Catholic churches, we speak of the real presence only in reference to the last element, the presence of Christ in the bread and wine.
While none of this is wrong, the liturgy of the word, the music and Communion are important, something is missing in this understanding. It misses the fact that the real presence is not just in the bread and wine, it is also in the liturgy of the Word and in the salvific event that is recalled in the Eucharistic prayer, namely, the death and resurrection of Jesus.
Most churchgoers already recognize that when the scriptures are celebrated in a liturgical service God’s presence is made special, more physically tangible, than God’s normal presence everywhere or God’s presence inside our private prayer. The Word of God, when celebrated in a church is, like Christ’s presence in the consecrated bread and wine, also the real presence.
But there’s a further element that’s less understood: The Eucharist doesn’t just make a person present; it also makes an event present. We participate in the Eucharist not just to receive Christ in Communion, but also to participate in the major salvific event of his life, his death and resurrection.
What’s at issue here?
At the Last Supper, Jesus invited his followers to continue to meet and celebrate the Eucharist “in memory of me.” But his use of the word “memory” and our use of that word are very different. For us “memory” is a weaker word. It simply means calling something to mind, remembering an event like the birth of your child, your wedding day, or the game when your favorite sports team finally won the championship. That’s a simple remembering, a passing recollection. It can stir deep feelings but it does nothing more. Whereas in the Hebrew concept out of which Jesus was speaking, memory, making ritual remembrance of something, implied much more than simply recalling something. To remember something was not simply to nostalgically recall it. Rather it meant to recall and ritually re-enact it so as to make it present again in a real way.
For example, that’s how the Passover Supper is understood within Judaism. The Passover meal recalls the Exodus from Egypt and the miraculous passing through the Red Sea into freedom. The idea is that one generation, led by Moses, did this historically, but that by re-enacting that event ritually, in the Passover Meal, the event is made present again, in a real way, for those at the table to experience.
The Eucharist is the same, except that the saving event we re-enact so as to remake it present through ritual is the death and resurrection of Jesus, the new Exodus. Our Christian belief here is exactly the same as that of our Jewish brothers and sisters, namely, that we are not just remembering an event, we are actually making it present to participate in. The Eucharist, parallel to a Jewish Passover meal, remakes present the central saving event in Christian history, namely, Jesus’ Passover from death to life in the Paschal mystery. And just as the consecrated bread and wine give us the real presence of Christ, the Eucharist also gives us the real presence of the central saving event in our history, Jesus’ passage from death to life.
Thus at a Eucharist, there are, in effect, three real presences: Christ is really present in the Word, namely, the scriptures, the preaching and the music. Christ is really present in the consecrated bread and wine; they are his body and blood. And Christ is really present in a saving event: Jesus’ sacrificial passing from death to life.
And so we go to the Eucharist not just to be brought into community by Jesus’ word and to receive Jesus in communion, we go there too to enter into the saving event of his death and resurrection. The real presence is in both a person and in an event.
(Oblate Father Ron Rolheiser, theologian, teacher and award-winning author, is President of the Oblate School of Theology in San Antonio, TX.

Diócesis celebra fiesta de la Virgen de Guadalupe

patroness-of-americas-cLas siguientes parroquias ofrecerán Misas, procesiones, rosarios y fiestas en honor de la Virgen de Guadalupe en su día festivo:
Amory St. Helen, Misa el lunes 12 de diciembre a las 7 p.m.
Carthage Santa Ana, sábado 10 de diciembre, mañanitas a las 9 a.m. seguida de una procesión, Misa y fiesta. El grupo de danzas aztecas de la Catedral de San Pedro en Jackson presentará sus danzas.
Cleveland Nuestra Señora de las Victorias, lunes 12 de diciembre, procesión a las 6 p.m., Misa a las 6:30 p.m. seguida de una cena.
Corinth St. James, lunes 12 de diciembre, 5 a.m. rosario seguido de mañanitas, y desayuno. A las 6 p.m. procesión, despues misa y cena.
Forest San Miguel, sábado 10 de diciembre serenata a la virgen de 7 a 10 p.m.
– Domingo 11 de diciembre, procesión con cantos y danzas comenzando a las 10 a.m. en el edificio de la corte hacia el Centro Crudup donde se celebrará la misa a las 11 a.m. seguida de un convivio.
Hazlehurst San Martín, lunes 12 de diciembre, Misa a las 6 p.m. seguida de una fiesta.
Holly Springs St. Joseph, sábado 10 de diciembre, lunes 12 de diciembre, misa a las 7 p.m. y recepción.
Greenville Sagrado Corazón, domingo 11 de diciembre. Misa a las 6 p.m. seguida de una cena. Un mariachi de Memphis animará la misa y la cena.
Holly Springs St. Joseph, lunes 12 de diciembre, Misa a las 7 p.m. seguida de una recepción.
Kosciusko Santa Teresa, sábado 10 de diciembre, misa bilingüe a las 2 p.m. seguido de una fiesta. El grupo de danza azteca de la Parroquia Santa Teresa en Jackson presentará sus danzas.
Jackson Catedral de San Pedro, domingo 11 de diciembre, misa a la 1 p.m. seguida de un convivio con música.
Morton Centro San Martín, serenata a la virgen el sábado 10 de diciembre de 7 a 9 p.m.
New Albany sSan Francisco, novena del 4 al 11 de diciembre a las 7 p.m. – Lunes 12 de diciembre, rosary a las 5 a.m. mañanitas, desayuno, procesión, Misa y almuerzo.
Southaven Cristo Rey, lunes 12 de diciembre, mañanitas a las 5:30 a.m. Misa a las 7 p.m. seguido de una recepción.
Senatobia St. Gregory, lunes 12 de diciembre, Misa a las 7 p.m. y recepción.
Olive Branch Queen of Peace, lunes 12 de diciembre, Misa a las 7 p.m. seguida de una recepción.