Knights plan annual gathering

Knights of Columbus Delegates representing 62 local councils from across Mississippi will gather in Biloxi April 24-26 for the 111th state convention of the Mississippi Jurisdiction. Supreme Representative Tommy Harger, CDR U.S. Navy Ret., will address the convention Saturday.

JACKSON –The Knights of Columbus honor guard leads the Mass procession at the 2014 convention in Jackson. The 2015 gathering is set for Biloxi the last weekend of the month. (Mississippi Catholic File Photo)

JACKSON –The Knights of Columbus honor guard leads the Mass procession at the 2014 convention in Jackson. The 2015 gathering is set for Biloxi the last weekend of the month. (Mississippi Catholic File Photo)


The convention, in keeping with the theme, “Developing Catholic Leaders, Strengthening Catholic Families”, is a time of fellowship among knights and ladies Auxiliaries and for recognizing outstanding service projects carried out by councils and auxiliaries over the past year.
Bishop Joseph Kopacz, bishop of the Diocese of Jackson, will be principal celebrant at a Mass for deceased members on Saturday, April 24, at 8 a.m. at Biloxi St. Michael Parish.

Children’s book to benefit African Mission schools

By Elsa Baughman
CHATAWA – Sister Dorothy Ann Balser, a retired School Sister of Notre Dame (SSND) living at St. Mary of the Pines, is busy selling her children’s book “Bitsy Bee with the Allergy” to raise funds for schools for girls in Ghana, West Africa, where she spent 11 years in ministry. She said many of the female population in that country has been deprived of education because of poverty or other inequalities.

Sister Dorothy Ann Balser signs a copy of her book, “Bitsy Bee with the Allergy” for Mary Parker (left) while Nancy McGee looks on. Sister Balser talked about her book to St. Therese parishioners during their annual retreat at St. Mary of the Pines. (Photo by Elsa Baughman)

Sister Dorothy Ann Balser signs a copy of her book, “Bitsy Bee with the Allergy” for Mary Parker (left) while Nancy McGee looks on. Sister Balser talked about her book to St. Therese parishioners during their annual retreat at St. Mary of the Pines. (Photo by Elsa Baughman)

In 1985, Sister Balser was one of four sisters who volunteered to begin a girls secondary school in Sunyani, Ghana, and later a primary school for boys and girls in Cape Coast. Now 87, and unable to actively teach, Sister Balser continues her ministry of helping girls in West Africa by selling her book and sending all the proceeds to the schools where more than 73 SSND sisters are working.
The 31-page book is about bees. She said she had been reading about the extreme importance of honeybees and learned that they are slowly disappearing in parts of our country.
“I was prompted to help young readers to learn about honeybees, their service to people by pollination, and to develop an appreciation for the bees and how they also serve us humans with their delicious honey,” she noted.
She explained that the bees’ lives as community members can teach children how we should work and take care of and help one another, be grateful for the gifts given, and the understanding that we all have our own individual gifts and talents.
“I had a lot of fun writing this story,” said Sister Balser. “It has a lot of useful information and is written in a delightful fairy tale manner that catches the attention of the young child. Hopefully, it will give them a deeper respect and love for the bees.”
The illustrations are the work of Sister Theresa Marie Dietz, SSND, who has a master’s in art from Notre Dame University. She taught art and math for 43 years in high schools in several different states. According to the credits in the book, “when asked to illustrate the book she said she was happy to help with the project knowing that the proceeds would go to very worthy causes.”
She has received encouraging and supportive notes from many people as far as Japan, telling her that, they, themselves, enjoyed reading the book and even learned several things that they didn’t know about the honeybees.
Another says, “I read a copy of your book at my mother’s house on Sunday and found it perfectly charming. I found it meaningful on so many different levels – facts about bees, overcoming handicaps and being yourself, and praying to God for help. I am ordering several copies to give to Vicksburg Catholic School, St Aloysius, and to our church library.”
She still has about eight or nine hundred books to sell and then she plans to write another book, perhaps about ants. “I do not know much about ants, but I know it is time to start my research soon. Some of us consider the little insects just pests and try to get rid of them.  They do have a value  in our world or otherwise God would not have made them,” she noted.
Sister Balser have had some generous donors who  have encouraged her to continue her project. One of her nephews ordered l00 books just a week before Christmas and gave many of them away to his friends as gifts, she said. The printer donated 100 copies too, to help with the expense of printing.
The cost of the book is $11 plus tax. All proceeds will benefit the “Educate a Girl in Africa” project.
This book is also available at the Carmelite Gift Shop in Jackson, 601-373-1460, and at the Our Lady’s Corner Gift Shop at Meridian St. Patrick Parish, 601-693-1321. Call to ask about availability.
To order a book or for information contact Sister Balser at St. Mary of the Pines Retreat Center, 3167 Old Highway 51 South, Osyka, MS, 39657, 601-783-3494, retreatcenter@ssnddallas.org.

Sister celebrates jubilee with recollection of initial struggle

By María Elena Méndez, MGSpS
I was born the seventh of 12 children in a little town named La Joya, Mich, in Mexico.
The question I hear most from people is: how did you  feel God’s call? How did you know you wanted to be a religious sister? The short answer is: “I felt loved by God and I loved him, so it was impossible not to follow Him.”
When I was between 13 and 14-years-old, the idea to be a nun came to me, even though I did not know any religious sisters. It was a disturbing thought, and I just wanted to avoid it. After a long time I believed the idea had gone away.
When I was sixteen, my vocation was something that I just couldn’t understand, it exceeded my capacity, but the idea just would not leave me. I was also afraid to say yes, because it meant that I would have to leave behind many precious things, like my parish, my friends, my community and above all, my lovely family. Everything looked impossible, but God was giving me everything I needed to be sure of his call.
On October 28, 1980, a new priest named Father Salvador arrived in my parish. He was someone that God used to guide me. He told me, “I want you to prepare yourself just in case God calls you to His service, so that you are ready to answer him.”
Then came a moment of uncertainty: my parents and my younger brothers decided to immigrate to the United States where my older siblings were living already. Only three of us stayed in Mexico with the hope of joining the others someday.
My plans to be a religious sister seemed to fall apart. Right away, I became a mother to my two brothers who stayed with me for only two months.
One month after my parents left Father Salvador told me: I was accepted in the convent, and would enter on August 25th. I was silent. “Are not you happy,” he asked me. “Yes, but I am going to leave my Joya (treasure or jewel,”
“Yes, he said, but you are going to gain a better one (Jesus).” This answer was so enlightening it sustains me even to this day.
The day finally arrived; my heart was broken to leave my brothers alone. I cried a lot and they did too. I rode in the priest’s car and without looking back, we advanced to my goal. He did not say anything; he started to pray the rosary until I could answer. He told me afterward that was the longest rosary of his life.
I entered the convent when I was 19. And I was sure that God called me to be a missionary anywhere he wanted.
When I finished my formation in Mexico, God called me to come to the United States. I did not know why, but now, I found my place in the world to be a bridge between people, cultures and communities. It is not easy because you have to go and leave wonderful people and many things, but God is my best treasure.
As a missionary, I have the opportunity to work with people from all over the world, to learn from everyone, and enrich our cultures. I worked seven years in Florida, three in Colorado, three in formation in California, four in Pennsylvania, and this is my fifth in Mississippi.
I am a member of the Guadalupan Missionaries of the Holy Spirit. Our mission is evangelization and catechesis among the neediest in collaboration with the priests.
I have been a religious sister for 25 years and I have discovered great things in my life such as: God’s personal call for me, the importance of my family in my vocation and in every vocation, and that my vocation is something beyond me. That is why I am still here, because I believe in God’s call. I have felt love in my vocation and I have discovered true happiness in Him.
I will celebrate my 25th anniversary on April 18, at the Hispanic Encuentro in Greenwood.
I am so grateful to God for my vocation and for God’s fidelity throughout my life.
(Sister Méndez  works in the Office of Hispanic Ministry. She welcomes questions and letters in her email: maria.mendez@jacksondiocese.org)
(Editor’s Note: Earlier this year, Mississippi Catholic requested reflections from the orders of consecrated people serving in the Diocese of Jackson. As those reflections come in, we will share them in the paper as part of the Year of Consecrated Life. Religious wishing to submit a reflection should send it to editor@mississippicatholic.com.)

Nurses earn prestigious credentials

JACKSON – St. Dominic’s employees Adrian Thompson (right), CFNP, and Andrea Sterling, CFNP, recently became part of a select group of 800 nurses from across the country who have earned the Stroke Certified Registered Nurse (SCRN) certification through the American Board of Neuroscience Nursing (ABNN).041715stdominicnurse1
The Stroke Certified Registered Nurse (SCRN) credential formally recognizes the attainment and demonstration of a unique body of knowledge necessary for the practice of stroke nursing beyond basic nursing preparation. Stroke nursing is the diagnosis and treatment of actual or potential patient responses to nervous system function and dysfunction across the healthcare continuum.
SCRN status is granted for five years and is renewed through validation of continuing education or re-examination.
ABNN is an independent, not-for-profit corporation established to design, implement and evaluate a certification program for professional nurses involved in the specialty practice of neuroscience nursing.

Votes needed for Lumen Christi Award

By Maureen Smith
The Redemptorist community serving the Hispanic population in the Mississippi Delta is asking for votes to help earn Catholic Extension’s Lumen Christi Award.
Every year, Catholic Extension honors an individual or group working in one of America’s mission dioceses who demonstrates how the power of faith can transform lives and communities. Lumen Christi recipients are the hidden heroes in our midst. They bring light and hope to the forgotten corners of the country and inspire those around them to be the “Light of Christ” as well. The award comes with a $50,000 grant to support the recipient’s ministry.

GREENWOOD – Bishop Joseph Kopacz commissioned the Redemptorist priests last year at the Chapel of Mercy located in the grounds of the Locus Benedictus Retreat Center. (Photo by Elsa Baughman)

GREENWOOD – Bishop Joseph Kopacz commissioned the Redemptorist priests last year at the Chapel of Mercy located in the grounds of the Locus Benedictus Retreat Center. (Photo by Elsa Baughman)

Extension uses several factors to determine who gets the award, but one of them is online votes. All nominees are posted on the Catholic Extension website. Anyone can go vote and then post their vote on social media to encourage others to vote.
The Redemptorist community came to the Diocese of Jackson in the fall of 2014. They live in Greenwood, but serve the Hispanic community throughout the Delta. The men who serve here say they have found a warm welcome and plenty of work to do in the communities where they serve. They go out into the Delta seeking Hispanic communities – offering a Good Friday service between shifts on the grounds of a catfish processing plant, celebrating Mass in a trailer park where many people don’t have transportation to get to a parish and speaking with local pastors about the needs in their communities.
If they get the award, “we will use it to train lay ministers and catechists,” said Father Scott Katzenberger, CSsR, a member of the community here. He said the community would also invest in catechism for the people. While much of their ministry so far has been the ministry of presence and teaching, a lot of it also involves driving. Father Patrick Keyes, said for every hour they spend with a community, the fathers may have spent three hours driving.
The Redemptorist order reformulated its national provinces in 1996. As part of that, they decided to create teams of people who can minister in dioceses in need for limited amounts of time. The community conducted a national search to find places where the need what greatest. Mississippi was one of the communities the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) recommended. The Redemptorists priests are from the Denver Province and have committed to five years in the Jackson diocese.
Past recipients of the Lumen Christi Award, Latin for “Light of Christ,” have included priests, women religious, and lay leaders from across the nation. This year there are almost 40 nominees from dioceses across the nation.
Those who wish to support the Redemptorists can vote online at: https://www.catholicextension.org/about-us/lumen-christi-award/2015-lumen-christi-award-nominees.

Carmelites invite diocese to celebrate founder’s 500th birthday

This statue stands inside the Carmelite monastery in Jackson.

This statue stands inside the Carmelite monastery in Jackson.

By Dorothy Davis Ashley, OCDS
March 28 marked St. Teresa of Avila’s 500th birthday. Members of the Carmelite order she founded will celebrate the milestone for an entire year beginning on her feast day, Oct. 16. The Diocese of Jackson has a Carmelite Monastery in South Jackson as well as a group of Secular Carmelites who embrace St. Teresa’s spiritual teachings and support the nuns.
“Let nothing disturb you; nothing frighten you. All things are passing. God never changes. Patience obtains all things. Nothing is wanting to Him who possesses God. God alone suffices.”
What type of advice can a 16th century Spanish nun who lived in with a few other cloistered nuns possibly give to me and you? She was born March 28, 1515, in Avila, Spain, and baptized, “Teresa de Cepeda y Ahumada.” We know her as Saint Teresa of Avila. She practiced in her life the tenants of the saying above as she faced seemingly insurmountable physical, emotional, financial and spiritual challenges.
Teresa of Avila, also known as “Teresa of Jesus” was a courageous, outspoken woman of God who lived in an era dominated by power-driven men who gave very little importance to the ideas and opinions of women. “Let nothing disturb you; nothing frighten you…”
Teresa knew that she alone could not effect change, but, with God, who was her friend and master, and with Jesus, her beloved, she could show others how to love one another and have a true friendship with him through prayer. “… All things are passing. God never changes…”
Through Teresa’s influence, small numbers of women and men banded together in 17 Carmelite monasteries and convents. She was their spiritual mother. The Carmelite friars received the benefit of her assistance in their reform as well. These were the beginnings of the Order of Discalced Carmelites. She endured many trials with the help of her beloved, Jesus, while growing in the virtues chastity, poverty, and, obedience, and of the Beatitudes. “… Patience obtains all things…”
Teresa was ordered by her spiritual directors and confessors to write. She produced books about her mystical experiences, the prayer of recollection – a particular type of contemplative prayer – founding the Carmelite communities and her vision for the spiritual life. “The Interior Castle” is perhaps her most famous book.

In 2013 the Carmelites hosted an art show and sale on the grounds of their monastery. (Mississippi Catholic file photo)

In 2013 the Carmelites hosted an art show and sale on the grounds of their monastery. (Mississippi Catholic file photo)

Her writings convey that she was a very empathetic, prayerful prioress who had a great sense of humor and wanted others to love Jesus as much as she did. Once when the horse-drawn cart she was riding in overturned and she fell off she commented: “Dear Lord, if this is how you treat your friends, it is no wonder you have so few!”
Teresa’s treasury of writings are still relevant for us today, particularly for anyone seeking to learn more about prayer – the Prayer of Recollection, a type of mental prayer called ‘recollection’ because in it “the soul collects its faculties together and enters within itself to be with its God.” Teresa died in 1582. In 1972, Pope Paul VI named her, along with St. Catherine of Siena, the first female Doctors of the Church, primarily because of her writings, especially on prayer.
(“… Nothing is wanting to Him who possesses God. God alone suffices.”) The Discalced Carmelite nuns and Carmelite Seculars of the Diocese of Jackson have planned a Mass to celebrate the 5th Centenary of her birth at the Cathedral of St. Peter the Apostle on Saturday, June 6, at 10:30 a.m. Bishop Joseph Kopacz will be the principal celebrant and Rev. Bonaventure Sauer, OCD, Provincial Delegate, will concelebrate. A reception will follow. All are welcome.
Prayers and donations toward the celebration and reception are welcomed and appreciated. Send them to the Carmelite Monastery, with “500th Birthday” on the memo line, 2155 Terry Road; Jackson, MS 39204. Carmelite Gift Shop: 601-373-3412. To learn more about the 5th Centenary in the U.S. visit, https://www.teresa-5th-centenary.org/index.html
(Dorothy Ashley leads the Secular Carmelites in Jackson.)

Advocates reflect on 2015 Legislative gains, losses

The 2015 session of the Mississippi Legislature closed on Thursday, April 2. Mississippi Catholic asked some Catholic advocates to reflect on some of the issues they were watching during this session.

Criminal Justice/Mental Health
(Submitted by Andre De Gruy, Capitol Defense Council and member of Jackson St. Richard)
The 2014 Legislature marked a sea change in how the legislature addressed criminal justice issues.  In passing sweeping reforms (HB 585) the legislature took an evidence-based approach to the problem of over-incarceration.
The 2015 Legislature stuck to this new approach for the most part. They rejected numerous attempts to roll back the law. The consensus of policy makers seemed to be that a commitment was made to the new evidence-based approach and until effects of the changes could be evaluated no significant changes would be made.  The first meeting of the Corrections and Criminal Justice Oversight Task Force, created by the law to monitor the reforms, will be next month.
Just as the 2015 Legislature recognized, it’s too early to draw conclusions on the reforms; but early indications are good. The Department of Corrections did not need to run a deficit this year; total number incarcerated
is down approximately 20 percent; and there are more violent offenders in custody than non-violent.  Each of these changes bucked recent trends.
The 2015 Legislature did take a small step backwards from the new evidence-based approach.  House Bill 1052 expanded the crimes eligible for the death penalty to include multiple killings, e.g., three or more killings in a single incident.  The bill’s sponsor in an op-ed in The Clarion-Ledger, wrote “with seemingly more mass shootings and serial murders nationwide” he supported the expansion.  He noted that a similar law in Texas was used to prosecute the killer of Chris Kyle (the soldier who was the subject of the book and movie “American Sniper).”
While high-profile tragedies such as this and the movie theater shooting in Aurora, Co., evoke strong emotions and apparently led to the passage of 1052, the evidence indicates that these type events are not increasing. USA Today did a comprehensive review of “mass” killings (using the FBI definition of “mass killing” as four or more people in a single incident).  The evidence indicates a decline in number of incidents across the country with none occurring in Mississippi.  From 2006-10 the national average per year was 32; from 2010-14 the average was 26.  Data from the Mississippi Department of Corrections on admissions for more than one homicide from 2008-14 indicate a similar decline.  From 2008-11 the average per year was 14; from 2011-14 the average was 9.
The 2015 Legislature took positive steps to improving our troubled mental health system. HB 545 was amended to include a provision that would allow a state funding match for community mental health centers to establish regional holding facilities to provide a place other than jail for people awaiting a bed at a hospital. HB 1563 funded a grant program at the Mississippi Home Corp. to establish an integrated supportive housing program to help people with serious, persistent mental illness move back into the community. Both of these bills will help people with mental health problems who all too often are inappropriately diverted to the criminal justice system.

Tax reform
Advocates for the poor applauded the failure of a series of tax cut proposals. House Speaker Phillip Gunn proposed eliminating the personal income tax in stages over the coming years. Republican supporters believed that letting people keep their money would generate more spending and help the economy grow. Other lawmakers proposed different cuts.
When Gunn released details of his bill, Sara Miller, senior policy analyst at the Mississippi Economic Policy Center, spoke to The Clarion Ledger, saying that eliminating the state’s income tax would likely result in a “tax shift” instead of a tax cut.
“If we eliminate the income tax, in order to avoid drastic cuts to vital state services like schools and universities, revenue would have to be raised in other ways like sales taxes and property taxes – taxes that hit lower and middle income Mississippians especially hard,” Miller said. “… Most other states that do not have an income tax have special circumstances that allow them to collect revenue in other ways, like royalties from natural resources — as in Alaska, South Dakota, Texas and Wyoming — or revenue from major tourism industries, as in Florida and Nevada.”
Ed Sivak, the founding director of the Mississippi Economic Policy Center – an initiative of the Hope Enterprise Corporation, and member of Jackson St. Richard Parish praised lawmakers for rejecting the extreme cuts. “When we fail to create the conditions for the most vulnerable to succeed, we limit the potential of the whole society.  Thankfully, for people in poverty and for our people served by Catholic Charities, the decision by the Mississippi Legislature to reject the large tax cut proposal was the best possible outcome,” he said in an email.

Special Education
Representative Carolyn Crawford of Pass Christian helped shepherd a special education voucher program through the legislature this year. Crawford, a member of Long Beach St. Thomas the Apostle Parish, has a child with special needs and her husband is a special education teacher. “I know that world, I know the need, I’ve been there,” she said.
Under the pilot program created by the bill, parents who have special needs children in public school will have the option to withdraw their children and apply for a $6,500 voucher to seek education in a non-public setting such as a private school, online curriculum or other resource. The children must have an Individual Education Plan (IEP) .
“I hope this will improve public education as well,” she said. She pointed out that the law gives parents a little more leverage when they build their IEP with their school. Crawford said she hopes the measure will help parents and schools work better together to find resources for children with special needs.
“Even if I didn’t have a child in special education, my calling as a social worker was always to help those who can’t help themselves and my faith calls me to do just that,” she said. “If we as a government are helping people we have an obligation to look out for the most vulnerable,” she added.

Vaccinations
Another failed proposal would have changed the requirements for childhood vaccinations in the state.
Some people do not want their children to receive vaccinations so they wanted a law that would allow more exemptions. Lawmakers disagreed and left requirements as they are. Dr. Sara Weisenberger, a pediatrician and instructor at the University of Mississippi Medical Center, said she and other health care advocates strongly opposed the vaccination bill. The current policy “allows us to protect the general population with strict rules, yet it allows medical professionals to recommend exemptions when they are medically indicated,” she said.
Weisenberger, a member of Gluckstadt St. Joseph Parish, said there are cases in which a child should not be immunized, but the cases are rare and those kids are generally protected because the other kids in the population have been immunized. This so-called herd immunity keeps easily preventable, but devastating illnesses from returning. The issue has gotten recent media attention after an outbreak of measles started with un-immunized children at a Disney theme park.
“This is the right thing to do for society. We (the medical community) can make good, ethical decisions about who should be exempt,” she said.

CSA helps care for retired caretakers

By Mary Woodward
Our Catholic Service Appeal is well into its annual drive for gifts and pledges from you and me and so many. This year’s goal of $1.15 million is getting close to becoming a reality but we still need your assistance in achieving this.
The Catholic Service Appeal funds important initiatives and ministries in our diocese such as seminarian education, evangelization, lay leadership development, campus ministry and mission parishes and schools. Another ministry it supports that is near and dear to all of us is the care of our retired priests.
For years these men have served us on so many levels. First of all, they have provided us with the holy sacrifice of the Mass where we are able to enter into the sacred mystery as bread and wine become for us the body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ. It is the priest through the power of the Holy Spirit acting “in persona Christi” (in the person of Christ) that we are able to partake of that heavenly banquet.
These men who have been called to serve as priests in the church make many sacrifices in order to bring us the heavenly food of the Eucharist. Many have left family and friends in faraway places to come and serve us.
Secondly, these men are there for us in the great celebrations of our lives. They baptize our babies, give us our first Holy Communion, and witness two becoming one in the sacrament of marriage. We invite them to bless our new homes. We even drag our cats, dogs, ferrets, snakes and whatever else we choose to have as a pet, out for a blessing by Father around the feast of St. Francis.
Thirdly, priests are there for us in sickness of soul and body. In the sacrament of penance, our priests are the vessels through which God offers his forgiveness for the sins we have committed against God and our neighbors. In this sacrament we have the opportunity to repair a rift and restore our relationship with God to its fullness by confessing that which has broken the relationship with the Lord and have that sin absolved through the sacrament administered by a priest who is not there to judge but to offer the healing, mercy and forgiveness that Christ promises.
When we are sick in the hospital or about to have a medical procedure, we can receive the sacrament of anointing of the sick. Most of us have either had a family member or close friend in the hospital or have ourselves been in the hospital at one time or another and have been a participant in the sacrament of the sick. This is a very comforting moment when prayers offered and the blessed oil is placed on our hands as a soothing ointment for peace of mind.
Lastly, priests are there for us in our saddest moments when we lose the love of our life, a parent, a spouse, a child, a friend. It is these dark moments that the priest brings quiet presence and hope. The ministry of presence is one of the most cherished. It is in this ministry that we take solace in the hope of resurrection and everlasting life.
And so, priests are an essential part of our entire human journey. Therefore, when you give to the Catholic Service Appeal your gift helps support priests who have served us for so many years and now have entered into retirement and no longer have a parish community to help support them financially. Your gift helps the diocese continue to provide these men with health care and living arrangements either in rectories as senior priests, retirement centers or assisted living environments and ultimately in nursing care and hospice.
We currently have 17 retired priests including two retired bishops supported by the diocese. However, priesthood does not end with retirement, it just takes on a new look. Retired priests may have a little more time for leisure, but they also generously make themselves available to assist in parishes.
Several of our retirees continue to serve the church by filling in when needed by celebrating Mass, anointing the sick, celebrating school Masses and hearing confessions for pastors on vacation.
The official retirement age for priests in our diocese is 70. At this time we have more than a dozen priests at or above that age still serving as pastors in our parishes and chaplains in hospitals.
In the next few years as more priests retire from active ministry and begin to face the  situations that later life has to offer, your Catholic Service Appeal gifts will help them take on these challenges with a sense of being supported and loved for the many years of support and love they have given to us and the church.
Your gifts let our retired priests know their lives of service have been greatly appreciated and abundantly blessed.