Por Obispo Joseph Kopacz
L Al volar de Mumbai a Delhi, y el posterior viaje al Taj Mahal, nos permitió reflexionar sobre 10 días increíbles en la India.
El padre Albeen Vatti, pastor de la parroquia Saint Francis en Madison y sacerdote de Warangal, y yo llegamos a las 2:30 a.m. del viernes 8 de febrero. Inmediatamente las imágenes, sonidos, sabores y olores se activaron y, a veces, abrumaron mis sentidos y las categorías familiares de la realidad física. Pero, superando con creces, el gran volumen de la humanidad, fueron las bendiciones de la hospitalidad india en cada curva del camino.
Nuestra primera parada en esta peregrinación pastoral fue la casa del obispo de Warangal, Udumala Bala donde él y su personal nos dieron una cálida bienvenida a la que se convirtió en nuestra base de operaciones para los próximos cinco días.
Aunque estábamos arrastrando los efectos del jet lag, después de 31 horas de viaje, nos lanzamos al flujo de la vida india con algunas visitas a las aldeas. Allí conocí a las familias de los padres Pradeep Thirumalreddy de Saint Mary en Batesville y Raju Macherla, capellán del Hospital Saint Dominic, Jackson. Estos fueron encuentros alegres con oportunidades para orar por la sanación del padre del sacerdote Pradeep, quien lucha contra el cáncer, y por bendiciones para la hermana del Padre Raju, que está a punto de casarse.
En una de nuestras salidas pastorales visitamos al padre Basani Channappareddy, ex pastor de Inmaculada Concepción en West Point, a quien le está yendo bien en su nueva asignación.
Las visitas requirieron varias horas de viaje de ida y vuelta, e inmediatamente la densidad, el ritmo y el remolino del tráfico y vehículos de transporte en la India atrajeron mi atención. Automóviles, motor -triciclo (rickshaws), motocicletas, bicicletas, personas y animales (cabras, búfalos, perros, ovejas, vacas, etc.), todos con corneta y / o destinados a una posición ventajosa en la implacable ráfaga de un caos organizado.
A menudo, nos acercábamos a pulgadas de vehículos o personas adyacentes sin incidentes hasta que chocamos a dos cabras en el campo. Una gran multitud de pobladores vinieron a pelear por su compensación por las cabras, pero sostengo que fue un incidente sin culpa ya que las cabras comían hojas felizmente mientras todos discutían.
Dentro de la segunda nación más poblada de la tierra, la Iglesia Católica, pequeña en número, pero con raíces que se remontan a Santo Tomás Apóstol y San Francisco Javier en la era moderna, lleva la Buena Nueva de Jesucristo al centro de la sociedad india.
El compromiso con la educación católica en toda la Diócesis de Warangal es asombroso, donde aproximadamente 50 mil niños hasta el grado 10 están matriculados en escuelas católicas.
Para ponerlo en contexto, 15 millones de personas residen en el territorio de la diócesis, pero solo hay 70 mil católicos. Al obispo Bala le gusta decir que dondequiera que la Iglesia asume la comisión del Señor para hacer discípulos de todas las naciones, la educación casi siempre está en el centro de la misión. “Donde hay una Iglesia, hay una escuela”.
La mayoría de los estudiantes en las escuelas católicas altamente respetadas, en áreas urbanas y rurales, son hindúes seguidos en número por musulmanes y católicos. Las escuelas proclaman la Buena Nueva de Jesucristo y la tradición católica de manera fiel y creativa, y en el centro de esta tradición intelectual está la elevación de la dignidad de la persona de todas las tradiciones y culturas de fe. La formación en sabiduría, conocimiento y gracia educa a toda la persona hecha a imagen y semejanza de Dios
Del mismo modo, con una población de mil 400 millones, hay innumerables personas sumidas en la indigencia y el abandono y, como Santa Madre Teresa, la Iglesia está allí para servir.
La Diócesis de Warangal atiende a personas vulnerables a través de servicios residenciales y de salud para personas sin hogar, enfermos mentales, infectados o afectados por el VIH / SIDA, escuelas para personas problemas del habla, sordos y ancianos.
Hermanos y hermanas religiosos, viviendo en comunidad, dedican sus vidas a estos huéspedes.
Dado que muchos en la India hablan inglés, pude celebrar misa regularmente, tanto en la catedral como en las celebraciones parroquiales en toda la diócesis. En cada reunión de adoración, los colores vibrantes del sari, el atuendo tradicional de las mujeres indias, y las abundantes flores crearon un ambiente festivo para la oración.
Lo más destacado de la experiencia de Warangal fue la visita a la granja del Padre Albeen, donde su familia y toda la aldea colocaron una alfombra de bienvenida. Bajé por la calle principal en un carro tirado por bueyes con dos niños señalando el camino. Los padres del padre Albeen, que celebraron 60 años de matrimonio en mayo pasado, estaban radiantes por dar la bienvenida a casa a su hijo y al obispo de Mississippi.
Después de cinco días en Warangal, fuimos a Hyderabad para permanecer dos noches en el seminario donde muchos sacerdotes de Warangal recibieron su formación. Los padres y la hermana del padre Suresh Thirumalareddy, el pastor de Saint James en Magnolia y el capellán de la Escuela Hermanas de Notre Dame en Chatawa viajaron desde lejos para poder saludarme en el seminario y ofrecer de regalo flores y el tradicional pañuelo indio.
Después de disfrutar la hospitalidad de la hermana y la familia del padre Albeen, María, Vincent y su hija Teju, volamos a Cochin, en el estado de Kerala, en el suroeste de la India. El padre Sajii Sebastian, Provincial de los Heraldos de la Buena Nueva, de la Provincia de Saint Paul nos acompañó durante la visita de dos días. En ruta a la Casa Provincial, visitamos a las familias de los padres Agustín Palimattam, de Saint Patrick y Saint Joseph en Meridian, y Antony Chakkalakkal pastor de Saint Francis en Aberdeen y ministro sacramental de Saint Helen en Amory, ambos sacerdotes, Heraldos de los Buena Nueva sirviendo en Jackson. Como he señalado, la hospitalidad india es una bendición a la vista y experimentarla es aún más alegre cuando es en el hogar familiar de un sacerdote que sirve como misionero.
Los Heraldos de los Buena Nueva es una comunidad religiosa recientemente establecida (1984) de más de 90 sacerdotes. Su lema, Amor en Acción es evidente en ministerios cruciales. Celebramos misa y visitamos a los residentes de un hogar adyacente a la Casa Provincial. También nos abrimos paso por la ladera de una montaña donde almorzamos en una casa para enfermos mentales, que domina una cadena montañosa que supera los 2.400 metros.
A continuación, en el peregrinaje pastoral, fue un vuelo a Mumbai, el centro económico de la India con una población de 25 millones de habitantes, de los cuales 8 a 10 millones viven en los barrios marginales. Pasamos un día en el Priorato de Saint Norbet donde el Padre Xavier Amirtham, pastor de la Sagrada Familia de Jackson, fue el Prior durante ocho años.
Después de celebrar la misa dominical en su parroquia de San José Obrero, visitamos el barrio bajo donde viven muchos de los niños de su escuela parroquial. De este ambiente increíblemente empobrecido, cada día, personas jóvenes y mayores, emergen con gran dignidad para estudiar y trabajar.
Mumbai es una ciudad de la costa oeste de la India en el mar Arábigo y la brisa constante del agua atempera el intenso calor de la región. Mientras nos dirigimos hacia el Taj Mahal, doy gracias al Señor por las muchas bendiciones de esta peregrinación pastoral.
En India lo notable es la forma de expresar múltiples culturas e idiomas donde la Iglesia Católica es un sacramento vivo de la presencia de Dios.
Author Archives: Tereza Ma
Blessings abound on visit to India
By Bishop Joseph Kopacz
Flying from Mumbai to Delhi, and the subsequent drive to the Taj mahal, afforded the time to reflect upon an amazing 10 of 14 days in India. Father Albeen Vatti, the pastor of Madison Saint Francis Parish, and a priest of Warangal, and I arrived at 2:30 a.m. on Friday, February 8, and immediately the sights, sounds, tastes and smells engaged and, at times, overwhelmed my senses and familiar categories of physical reality. But far surpassing the sheer volume of humanity, were the blessings of Indian hospitality around every bend in the road.
Our first stop on this pastoral pilgrimage was the bishop’s house in Warangal where Bishop Udumala Bala and staff warmly welcomed us to what became our base of operations for the next five days. Although we were dragging from the effects of jet lag after 31 hours of travel, we jumped into the flow of Indian life with a few visits out to the villages where I met the families of Father Pradeep Thirumalreddy, the pastor of Batesville Saint Mary, and Father Raju Macherla, the chaplain of Saint Dominic Hospital, Jackson. These were joyful encounters with opportunities for prayers for healing for Father Pradeep’s father, struggling with cancer, and for blessings for the sister of Father Raju, who is about to be married.
On one of our pastoral outings we visited with Father Basani Channappareddy, the former pastor of West Point Immaculate Conception, who is doing well in his new assignment. The visits required several hours of driving out and back, and immediately the density, pace and swirl of traffic in India riveted my attention. Cars, auto-rickshaws, transport vehicles, motorcycles and motor bikes, bicycles, people and animals (goats, buffalos, dogs, sheep, cows, etc.) all honked and/or aimed for an advantageous position in the unrelenting flurry of organized chaos. Often, we came within inches of adjacent vehicles or people without incident until we hit two goats out in the countryside.
A large throng of townspeople came to quarrel for their position and compensation for the goats, but I maintain it was a no fault incident since the goats were happily munching leaves as everyone argued.
Within the second most populous nation on earth, the Catholic Church, small in number, but with roots going back to Saint Thomas the Apostle and to Saint Francis Xavier in the modern era, brings the Good News of Jesus Christ into the center of Indian society. The commitment to Catholic education throughout the Diocese of Warangal is astounding where approximately 50,000 children up to grade 10 are enrolled in Catholic Schools. To put it in context, 15 million people reside within the territory of the diocese, but there are only 70,000 Catholics.
Bishop Bala is fond of saying that wherever the Church takes up the Lord’s commission to make disciples of all the nations, education nearly always is at the heart of the mission. “Where there is a Church, there is a school.”
Most of the students in the highly-respected Catholic schools in urban and rural areas are Hindu, followed in number by Muslims and Catholics. The schools proclaim the Good News of Jesus Christ and the Catholic tradition in faithful and creative ways, and at the core of this intellectual tradition is the upliftment of the dignity of the person from all faith traditions and cultures. Formation in wisdom, knowledge and grace educates the whole person made in the image and likeness of God.
Likewise, with a population of 1.4 billion people there are countless people mired in destitution and abandonment, and like Saint Mother Theresa, the Church is there to serve. The Diocese of Warangal serves the vulnerable through health care and residential facilities for the homeless, mentally ill, the infected and affected by HIV/AIDS, schools for the deaf and speech impaired, and the elderly, to name those we visited. Religious brothers and sisters, living in community, dedicate their lives to their guests.
Since many in India speak English, I was able to celebrate Mass regularly, both at the Cathedral and for parish celebrations throughout the diocese. In every gathering for worship, the vibrant colors of the Saree, the traditional attire of the Indian women, and abundant flowers created a festive environment for prayer. A highlight of the Warangal experience was a visit to the homestead of Father Albeen where the whole village, along with Father Albeen’s family, put out the welcome mat. I rode down main street on an oxen-pulled cart with two children pointing the way. Father Albeen’s parents, who celebrated 60 years of marriage last May, were beaming to welcome home their son and the bishop from Mississippi.
After five days in Warangal, we drove to Hyderabad to stay two nights at the seminary where many priests from Warangal received their formation. The parents and sister of Father Suresh Thirumalareddy, the pastor of Magnolia Saint James and chaplain to School Sisters of Notre Dame in Chatawa, drove no small distance to greeting me at the seminary to offer gifts of flowers and the traditional Indian scarf.
After enjoying the hospitality of Father Albeen’s sister and family, Maria, Vincent and their daughter, Teju, we flew to Cochin, in the state of Kerala in Southwest India. Father Sajii Sebastian, the Provincial of the Healds of the Good News of the Saint Paul Province, greeted us and accompanied us for the two-day visit.
In route to the Provincial House we visited the families of Father Augustine Palimattam, the Pastor of Meridian Saint Patrick and Saint Joseph, and Father Antony Chakkalakkal, the pastor of Aberdeen Saint Francis, and the sacramental minister of Amory Saint Helen, who are the Heralds of the Good News Priests serving in Jackson.
As noted, Indian hospitality is a blessing to behold and to experience, and it is even more joyful when the dwelling is the family home of a priest serving as missionaries. The Heralds of the Good News is a recently established (1984) religious community of more than 90 priests but their motto Love in Action is evident in crucial ministries. A home for the abandoned stands adjacent to the Provincial House where we celebrated Mass and visited with the residents. We also snaked our way up a mountain side where we lunched at their home for the mentally ill which overlooks a mountain range exceeding 2,400 meters.
Next on the pastoral pilgrimage was a flight to Mumbai, the economic hub of India with a population of 25 million people, 8 to 10 million of whom live in the slums. We spent a day at Saint Norbet Priory where Father Xavier Amirtham, pastor of Jackson Holy Family, was the Prior for eight years. After celebrating Sunday Mass at their parish of Saint Joseph the Worker, we visited the nearby slum where many of the children in their parish school live.
Out of this incredibly impoverished environment each day people, young and older, emerge with great dignity to study and work. Mumbai is a west coast city of India on the Arabian sea and the steady breeze off the water tempers the otherwise intense heat of the region. As we motor on toward the Taj mahal I give thanks to the Lord for the many blessings of this pastoral pilgrimage. India the remarkable is one way of expressing this nation of multiple cultures and languages where the Catholic Church is a living sacrament of God’s presence.
Inspiration on ministry to those with disabilities

These are the covers of “Salt and Light: Church, Disability and the Blessing of Welcome for All” by Maureen Pratt and “A Cry Is Heard: My Path to Peace” by Jean Vanier with Francois-Xavier Maigre. The books are reviewed by Brian T. Olszewski. (CNS)
By Brian T. Olszewski (CNS)”Salt and Light: Church, Disability and the Blessing of Welcome for All” by Maureen Pratt. Twenty Third Publications (New London, Connecticut, 2018). 114 pp, $16.95.
“A Cry Is Heard: My Path to Peace” by Jean Vanier with Francois-Xavier Maigre. Twenty Third Publications (New London, Connecticut, 2018). 144 pp, $16.95.
One might be surprised that in a book of 114 pages, 16 of them are devoted to the introduction. Yet those are critical pages for Maureen Pratt’s “Salt and Light” as they explain why parishes need to examine how they welcome members with disabilities, how they minister to and with them, and how they invite them to minister within the faith community.
Pratt, a journalist who has lupus erythematosus, which she describes as “a chronic autoimmune condition that has no cure and can sometimes be life-threatening,” praises the church in general for its willingness to address the needs, particularly catechetical needs, of people with disabilities, and to make accommodations, e.g., ramps, elevators, enhanced listening devices, etc.
But she notes it is about more than that; the necessary ingredient in welcoming those with disabilities is “the right attitude.”
Pratt helps readers form that attitude through chapters that define disability; explain welcome and how it is to be extended; address catechetical formation; and delve into outreach, vocations, social life, etc. Each chapter begins with a question, e.g., “How do you welcome others into your life?” and concludes with “food for thought” and a prayer.
Those who serve parishes as ordained ministers, catechists, liturgical ministers, members of various councils and committees, and in any manner will benefit from “Salt and Light.” However, this is not a book for a shelf in the parish office.
Anyone familiar with Catholic outreach to those with developmental disabilities is aware of Jean Vanier, founder of L’Arche and co-founder of Faith and Light. In that awareness one knows of the call he accepted and the commitment he made to serve the other-abled. That commitment has inspired others throughout the world to do the same.
“A Cry Is Heard” is autobiographical, but in a manner and style one would expect from a 90-year-old faithful servant to the developmentally challenged who has something to say about people he’s met, experiences he’s had, and having a deep and loving relationship with God.
Readers will receive Vanier’s thoughts on St. Teresa of Kolkata, St. John Paul II, Dorothy Day and others whose names they might not recognize but who are important to the author. They’ll read about his experiences, e.g., L’Arche’s roots and growth, how it was received by the Pontifical Council for the Laity in the 1970s and the international impact the ministry has had.
(Olszewski is the editor of The Catholic Virginian, newspaper of the Diocese of Richmond, Virginia.)
Apologists outline helpful responses to criticisms of Catholic faith
By Brian Welter (CNS)
“Forty Reasons I Am a Catholic” by Peter Kreeft. Sophia Institute Press (Manchester, New Hampshire, 2018). 132 pp., $14.95.
“Forty Anti-Catholic Lies: A Myth-Busting Apologist Sets the Record Straight” by Gerard Verschuuren. Sophia Institute Press (Manchester, New Hampshire, 2018). 341 pp., $19.95.
Well-known philosopher and author Peter Kreeft and apologist Gerard Verschuuren both adopt simple yet at times challenging approaches to the truth of the faith. The short chapters and simple language make their books accessible to a variety of readers, from recent converts to those wanting to better present their beliefs to the perplexed.
As apologists, both authors directly address contemporary post-Christian culture and the frequent biases and accusations against the church. Yet they do so without maligning anti-Catholics. They thus model a powerful way to carry out St. John Paul II’s new evangelization.
Kreeft’s “Forty Reasons I Am a Catholic,” more personal than “Forty Anti-Catholic Lies,” given Kreeft’s reference to his own Catholic journey, addresses a wide range of issues, including secular society, infallibility, purgatory and Catholic community.
Though it surveys a wide range of topics, “40 Reasons I’m a Catholic” does address the essential issue of Scripture and tradition in some depth. The author argues convincingly that certain Protestant views of scriptural primacy are not only historically untrue but also illogical, concluding: “The church was both the efficient cause (the author) and the formal cause (the definer) of the New Testament.”
This historical fact leads to an even greater point: “No effect can be greater than its cause … and the infallible is greater than the fallible; therefore, the infallible cannot be caused by the fallible.” Thus, when Protestants claim that the church is fallible, they are undermining their own understanding of the Bible.
His confidence in the church never wavers. If the church’s claim about Jesus is wrong or untrue, “how to account for her wisdom, her holiness (her saints), her survival, and her fidelity to Christ’s teachings through 2,000 years of history?” This book adds a welcome dimension to Kreeft’s scholarly output.
Verschuuren’s wide-ranging “Forty Anti-Catholic Lies” presents a more scholarly and challenging argument. Despite the variety of topics covered, like Kreeft’s book, it never confuses or veers off topic. The chapters are assembled into seven broad themes including “Catholicism and the Bible” and “Catholicism and Science.”
The author addresses Protestant concerns more than those of non-Christians, such as pointing out the “biblical” nature of Catholic spirituality.
Other areas of contention addressed include historical events or realities often turned against the Catholic faith, including the Galileo affair, the Crusades, and the Inquisition. Regarding the latter, the author reminds readers of how attacks on the church often depend on erroneous argumentative techniques, such as the fallacy of judging the past by today’s standards: “What methods did the Inquisitors use? They basically used methods that civil courts would also use at the time.”
Verschuuren also addresses the exaggerated claims often made against the church: “Modern researchers have discovered that the Spanish Inquisition applied torture in 2 percent of its cases. Each instance of torture was limited to a maximum of 15 minutes. In only 1 percent of the cases was torture applied twice, and never for a third time.”
The author says the “gruesome lists of instruments of torture” that we have all heard of were post-Reformation fabrications.
Readers will come to see that many of our Christian brothers and sisters have abused the truth in a centuries-long anti-Catholic campaign. Perhaps “40 Anti-Catholic Lies” can therefore be seen as an attempt at a painfully necessary aspect of ecumenism, where Catholics need to address biased Protestant perspectives with robust correctives.
Some topics are fun to read, such as the chapter on apparitions. The prudent and even meticulous way ecclesiastical authorities deal with these reflects the church’s important protective function. The church prevents its members from getting caught up in harmful and even evil movements yet tolerates a wide range of practices, beliefs and communities. Apparitions can help Catholics “to enrich, deepen, or strengthen their faith.”
Perhaps surprising to some, the author observes that “the Catholic Church does not easily give in to what some consider a spiritual need of Catholics for ‘special’ visions, revelations, and apparitions.”
Both books would add greatly to the Catholic’s arsenal. The wide-ranging discussion of course comes at the price of in-depth discussion on any one topic, but the titles never promise anything but a survey. What they both do is whet readers’ appetites for greater in-depth discussion of widespread falsehoods regarding the church and its teachings.
(Welter has degrees in history and theology and teaches English in Taiwan.)
Persistence, determination needed in making abortion unthinkable
Guest Column
March for Life president Jeanne Mancini calls abortion “the greatest human rights abuse of our time.”
She’s right. More than 60 million human lives snuffed out by abortion since the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision – broken down, that’s one child killed every 23 seconds. No other mass killing is as large as this.
Mancini asked the crowd attending the 46th annual March for Life Jan. 18 if they will keep marching to fight abortion, to march for the “poorest of the poor” and those who cannot march for themselves until “we no longer need to march” and abortion “is unthinkable.” She received a resounding “yes” to each question.
Speaking to more than 2,400 teens from St. Louis attending the Generation Life pilgrimage, Archbishop Robert J. Carlson stressed importance of remaining determined and persistent in our efforts to make abortion unthinkable.
“Each abortion is more than just a number,” he said. “It’s a tiny baby whose life was snuffed out and a mother injured in the process. … There are always alternatives, right? Always alternatives.”
He’s also right. Just days before the March for Life, Missouri Gov. Mike Parson in his State of the State address told the Missouri Legislature that his administration will be “promoting a culture of life.” He also recommended almost $6.5 million for Missouri’s Alternatives to Abortion program in the next fiscal budget. Funding goes toward resources, including food, clothing and supplies related to pregnancy and parenting, housing, prenatal care, transportation and utilities and more.
That’s just one piece of the support. Pregnancy centers across Missouri are introducing mothers to their babies through ultrasounds made possible by the Knights of Columbus Meet Life campaign. But the help doesn’t stop there. These same centers are connecting their clients to resources that will support them as they raise their children.
That conveys a message that pregnancy centers support both the parent and child – not just at the moment of pregnancy and birth, but well beyond, said Karen Ludwig, executive director of My Life Medical and Resource Center in High Ridge.
“You can’t say ‘choose life,’ and then – ‘oh, good luck,’” Ludwig said. “It’s wonderful to be able to walk alongside them.”
The pilgrims who traveled to Washington have been charged with the call to bring back a pro-life message to their local communities. This cannot be a simple message of saying that we’re pro-life. It must become a way of life – in our everyday actions and attitudes toward others.
Forty-six years after Roe v. Wade, we still have a lot of work in front of us. But it’s important to trust in God’s timing, and to keep a steady hand in the work of helping women to choose life over abortion.
“It’s all in God’s hands, and we have to trust that,” said Respect Life Apostolate executive director Karen Nolkemper. “We have to realize that prayer united to sacrifice is the most powerful force on earth. We have to stay focused on the truth. We don’t always see the fruits of our prayers, but stories of hope keep us going.”
(This unsigned editorial was published online Jan. 24 on the website of the St. Louis Review, the newspaper of the Archdiocese of St. Louis. It is reprinted courtesy of Catholic News Service)
What makes for wisdom?

Sister alies therese
FROM THE HERMITAGE
By Sister alies therese
“It has been said that ‘a person is enlightened,’ not ‘when they get an idea’, but ‘when someone looks at them.’ For God, to gaze is to love, and to work favors.’ These eyes are effective: ‘God’s gaze works four blessings in the soul: it cleanses the person, makes her beautiful, enriches and enlightens her.’” (The Impact of God, Father Iain Matthew, OCD)
If anyone has ever looked at you with eyes of love you know how disarming and how beautiful it is. Others have scorned you or ‘looked right through you’ and somehow you have been demeaned or rejected. Sometimes, though, it gets all mixed up!
“On their golden wedding a couple were busy all day with celebrations. They were grateful when evening came and they were alone on the porch watching the sunset. The old man gazed fondly at his wife and said, ‘Agatha, I’m proud of you!’ ‘What did you say? asked the old woman. ‘You know I’m hard of hearing,.. say it louder.’ ‘I said, I’m proud of you.’ ‘That’s all right,’ she replied a bit dejected, ‘I’m tired of you too!’ (deMello,1997)
Oops…
If we have learned to love, to share that love with others, and have learned to receive what others offer us, we have moved deeply into the mystery of the universe: unconditional love. Sometimes we jump at what we know or what we think we know, very conditional. Sometimes we offer ourselves to a kind of quick wisdom that lasts but a moment and then flits away. Clearly, whatever it is we need to learn to gaze at takes a lifetime. Perhaps it will be through art or writing, reading or hugging, trusting or praying that we will discover this gaze. It is this gaze that we want to desire to share with others.
“Some people will never learn anything because they grasp everything too soon. Wisdom, after all, is not a station you arrive at but a manner of traveling. If you travel too fast, you will miss the scenery. To know exactly where you’re headed may be the best way to go astray. Not all those who loiter are lost.” (deMello,1997)
Wisdom comes from various places. Like this five-year-old who, when asked, reported: “Solomon had 300 wives and 700 porcupines.” Really? Things can get very mixed up. Another child, a six-year-old, reported: “The first Book of the Bible is Guinessis in which Adam and Eve were created from an apple tree.” OK? Really? Where do we get our wisdom information? We know when we stare blankly at the 24-hour news cycles we will get information or alternate facts, but will we be any the wiser?
The gaze of love is a theme frequented in mystical literature. In the 14th Century, Julian of Norwich explored this notion in her book Revelations of Divine Love. There are many examples in her writings but let’s consider this one in Chapter 50:
“But I still marveled … Good Lord, I see You, who are truth itself, and I know that we sin grievously all the time, yet You show us no blame … between these two contraries my reason was greatly belabored by my blindness … my longing endured as I continued to gaze at Him.”
In her book of 1993, Sister Wendy (d.2018) The Gaze of Love, Meditations on Art, she asks us to learn to look with love, not only at things, but at art, one another, and certainly in prayer. She says this: “Prayer is God’s taking possession of us. We expose to Him what we are, and He gazes on us with the creative eye of Holy Love. His gaze is transforming: He does not leave us in our poverty but draws into being all we are meant to become. How God gazes is not our business. We are only asked to let Him take possession. If we want God to be our all, then we shall want to do whatever pleases Him … holiness means seeing the world through God’s eyes.” This would be true wisdom, not just information or facts. These, as we’ve seen, can easily get us confused.
On the announcement board outside the Church we find: Morning Sermon: Jesus Walks on Water. Evening Sermon: Searching for Jesus. Oops. Gaze upon someone with love and as Valentine’s Day is just a day, make it when you can risk coming out from behind your barriers. Let yourself be loved into freedom!
BLESSINGS.
(Sister alies therese is a vowed Catholic solitary who lives an eremitical life. Her days are formed around prayer, art and writing. She is author of six books of spiritual fiction and is a columnist. She lives and writes in Mississippi.)
New view for South Jackson’s Greenview Drive
By Tereza Ma and Maureen Smith
JACKSON – Habitat for Humanity Mississippi Capital Area (HHMCA) celebrated a six-year transformation on Greenview Drive next to St. Therese Parish on Wednesday, February 6. The transformation started with “Catholic Build,” an annual partnership between Habitat and Jackson-area parishes. Habitat started quietly purchasing lots and dilapidated homes on Greenview in 2012. They partnered with St. Therese and other Catholic parishes, Episcopal churches, a local bankers’ association, teams of women, the City of Jackson and corporate sponsors such as Nissan, to rehabilitate or knock down and rebuild homes for Habitat-sponsored families.

JACKSON – (l-r), Dr. Johnny Anthony, Episcopal Father Ron Pogue, Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba, Natasha Thomas, Rev. Ronnie Crudup, Merrill McKewen and narator Harrison Young. (Photos by Tereza Ma)
According to Habitat, in 2015, 48 of the 69 residences on the street were vacant, abandoned or classified as substandard housing. Only four homes were owner-occupied. At the time of the celebration, Habitat had acquired 36 properties, demolished 23 and built 22 new homes. Five more derelict homes are set to be demolished through the city’s Blight Elimination Project. Fourteen lots will remain open for development. In short, Greenview is a street reborn.
At the celebration, held at St. Therese, Harrison Young, the president of the local Habitat board of directors, delivered a short history of the project and thanked the many groups who stepped up to participate in the project, giving special praise to the late mayor Chokwe Lumumba, who was mayor when the project started. Lumumba’s son Chokwe Antar Lumumba, who is the current mayor, was on hand for the celebration.
Rev. Ronnie Crudup, pastor at New Horizons Church International, offered the opening prayer. His congregation has been involved in a number of South Jackson revitalization projects. Dr. Johnny Anthony, who represented community stakeholders called Greenview the answer to many prayers from many people – not just families who live in neighborhood, but business owners, developers and community leaders.
Merrill McKewen, HFHMCA executive director, fondly remembered the late mayor and honored the amazing volunteers who worked to fulfill what she called “God’s will” for the street and surrounding community.

Homeowner Natasha Thomas, whose dream of owning house came true.
Homeowner Natasha Thomas became emotional when she spoke about what this project has meant to her. The 29-year old mother said she very proud that her dream of owning a house came true.
Episcopal Father Ron Pogue, dean at St. Andrew’s Episcopal Cathedral, said all God’s children should have a decent home and related the story of the street to the logo of St. Andrew cathedral. It contains a cross for St. Andrew and a phoenix representing rebirth because their church burned down three times, but rose from ashes each time. Greenview, he said, has been reborn from ashes to new life. He invited all gathered to raise their hands to bless the street before the celebration closed.
Catholic Day at the Capitol: restorative justice should drive reform
By Sue Allen
JACKSON – There is renewed hope that progress in the area of criminal justice reform will be made during this legislative session. Governor Phil Bryant’s stated commitment to reform and signs of bipartisan support for some bills are strong indicators that important bills dealing with various aspects of reform may pass and be signed into law.
The Faith In Action Team (FIAT) and Catholic Charities felt this would be a good time to focus Catholic Day at the Capitol on the human and societal costs of the current system and the complexities involved in bringing about reform as well as the ways people can support the effort.
Catholic Day at the Capitol is set for Wednesday, Feb. 27, from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. The day includes Mass, lunch and a rally at the capitol steps. “Experience tells us that enhancing and enforcing penalties often fails to resolve social problems, nor do they result in reducing the crime rate. Moreover, this method can create serious problems for the community, such as overcrowded prisons and people held without [valid] convictions…In many cases the offender fulfills his punishment objectively, serving his sentence but without changing inside or healing his wounded heart,” stated Pope Francis on May 30, 2014.
Keynote speaker John Koufos has his own powerful redemption story that led him from a career as a high-profile New Jersey defense attorney representing gang members and violent offenders, to his own imprisonment for a hit-and-run DUI which nearly killed a young man. His story continues into his newest role as the National Director of Reentry Initiatives and the Executive Director of the Safe Streets and Second Chances initiative. John’s personal experience of the challenges facing men and women trying to return to life in society after imprisonment lend an authenticity to his presentations.
John’s presentation will be followed by a panel of speakers, moderated by André de Gruy, Mississippi Public Defender and member of the Faith In Action Team. In addition to de Gruy himself, the panel will consist of Marvin Edwards, prison ministry coordinator and promoter of the re-entry program Getting Ahead While Getting Out; James Robertson, Director of Employability and Criminal Justice Reform from Empower Mississippi; Christina Dent, a columnist and community organizer whose passion is promoting the de-criminalization of drugs with discussion groups around the book, Chasing the Scream; and Amelia McGowan, Senior Attorney at the Mississippi Center for Justice.
The capstone speaker is Haley M. Brown, a prosecuting attorney in Oktibbeha County, who brings yet another perspective of restorative justice as a more humane and effective means of helping individuals and society recover from criminal behavior in ways that bring about both justice and true healing.
Not everyone can make the trip to Jackson to attend the Catholic Day at the Capitol, but everyone can pay attention to the many aspects of this vital issue. Everyone can be better informed about the Catholic teaching on Restorative Justice, which is rooted in Scripture. Those who cannot attend can find more information and resources through the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ “Responsibility, Rehabilitation, and Restoration: A Catholic Perspective on Crime and Criminal Justice;” “Criminal Justice-Restorative Justice,” both available on their website, usccb.org; or by visiting the Catholic Mobilizing Network (https://catholicsmobilizing.org/restorative-justice)
Those planning to attend should register online at the Catholic Charities Jackson website: https://catholiccharitiesjackson.org/events/catholic-day-at-the-capitol-2019/
(Sue Allen is the coordinator for Parish Social Justice Ministry for Catholic Charities of Jackson.)
In memoriam: Sister Deanna (Mariel) Randall, BVM

Sister Deanna (Mariel) Randall, BVM
DUBUQUE, Iowa – Sister Deanna (Mariel) Randall, BVM died Friday, Feb. 1, at Caritas Center, Dubuque, Iowa.
She was buried in the Mount Carmel Cemetery.
She was born on July 6, 1937, in Denver to Lesley and Margery Pavela Randall. She entered the BVM congregation Sept. 8, 1956, from St. Charles Borromeo Parish, Oklahoma City, Okla.
In the Diocese of Jackson, sister served as Montessori administrator, director, and/or teacher at Jackson Christ the King and Jonestown Learning Center near Clarksdale. She also ministered at schools in Oak Park, Grayslake, and Chicago, Ill.; Denver, and Bellerose, N.Y.
She was preceded in death by her parents. She is survived by a sister Juanita (Ray) Johnson, Pine, Colo.; a niece; a nephew; and the Sisters of Charity, BVM, with whom she shared life for 62 years.
Memorials may be given to the Sisters of Charity, BVM Support Fund, 1100 Carmel Drive, Dubuque, Iowa 52003, or online at www.bvmsisters.org/donate
In memoriam: Sister Marise Barry, OP

Sister Marise Barry, OP
SINSINAWA, Wis – Sister Marise Barry, OP, died Feb. 6. The funeral Mass was held at the Dominican motherhouse,
Feb. 15, followed by burial in the Motherhouse Cemetery.
Sister Marise made her first religious profession as a Sinsinawa Dominican Aug, 5, 1951, and her perpetual profession Aug. 5, 1954. She taught for 19 years and served as principal for five years and in congregation leadership for six years. Sister Marise worked in the social service field for 21 years as social worker, therapist, and counselor. She served in Illinois, Wisconsin, Indiana, New York, Alabama, the District of Columbia, Mississippi and Massachusetts.
In the Diocese of Jackson, Sister Marise served as a social worker at DePorres Health Center in Marks, 1981-1987.
Sister Marise was born May 25, 1931, in Chicago, the daughter of Willard and Catherine (Garrity) Barry. Her parents and a brother, John Barry, preceded her in death. She is survived by nephews and her Dominican Sisters with whom she shared 67 years of religious life.
Memorials may be made to the Sinsinawa Dominicans, 585 County Road Z, Sinsinawa, WI, 53824-9701 or online at www.sinsinawa.org/donate