Vestments are an important part of any liturgical celebration in the church. Since con-celebration became a practice of the church, there has been an effort to coordinate the vesture of priests in the sanctuary.
Most dioceses have a set of official con-celebration vestments for diocesan Masses where many priests gather such as the annual Mass of Chrism during Holy Week, ordinations, anniversaries and funerals of priests. The Diocese of Jackson has just acquired a new set of vestments which were debuted at the ordination of three new priests on May 31.
According to Mary Woodward, director of the bishop’s liturgy office, “the previous set of vestments served the diocese very well for more than 15 years. But because of so many years of travelling around the diocese in bags and trunks, the set began to show a lot of wear and tear. Therefore in the fall of 2013, the priests’ council began a search for a new vestment set.
“During the preparations for the ordination of Bishop Joseph Kopacz, we ordered several vestments to compliment an existing set used mainly for visiting bishops. The new ones coordinated well with the existing set and the decor of the cathedral,” Woodward added.
Made by Chagall Designs in this country, the priests’ council chose to order a vestment for each priest in the diocese, including retired clergy and to have extras for visiting clergy and future ordinations.
Parishes will cover the cost of the vestment for their pastor or sacramental minister. The diocese is providing a vestment for the retired priests and for vestments set aside for visiting clergy and future priests.
“Chagall has two main sizes, but also custom makes sizes. Each priest was contacted and asked for his height so the proper size could be ordered for him,” Woodward stated. “After hearing from most every priest, the diocese ordered a mixture of sizes for the extra set,” she continued. A total of 101 vestments were ordered.
Instead of keeping the entire set at the diocesan offices, now each priest is responsible for caring for and transporting his own vestment. To assist in this the diocese provided a bag and hanger for each vestment set to help maintain its life.
Diocesan staff and Cathedral altar guild members prepared each vestment with a name and bag for the ordination. “It took about eight total hours of steaming the vestments as part of the preparation for the ordination,” said Woodward. “They were shipped across the country packed 12 to a box so when unpacked there were some definite creases in them.
“Overall our priests were very pleased with the new vestment, and many in the congregation at the ordination offered nice compliments. We hope this new set will last as long as the previous set,” Woodward concluded.
For clergy unable to make the ordination Mass, vestments were being transported to them at the various anniversary celebrations. If anyone would like to assist in providing a vestment to a retired priest, please contact Woodward at (601) 960-8475.
Category Archives: Diocesan News
Profile: Father Binh Chau Nguyen
Editor’s note: in the weeks leading up to ordination, Mississippi Catholic asked each ordinand to fill out a personality profile so the faithful could have some insight into their new priests.
Home Parish: Saint Michael Parish in Forest
Favorite Saints: Blessed Virgin Mary, Saint Joseph, and Saint Louis de Montfort
(he is my baptismal name).
Favorite Scripture: “He loved them to the end” (Jn. 13:1)
Favorite prayer or devotion and why?
My favorite devotional prayer is the rosary because my mother, first of all, is the first person who taught me how to pray this wonderful prayer. In addition, I always believe that my spiritual life as a deacon or a priest will not be pleasing to God unless it includes devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary. Moreover a seminarian, a deacon or a priest needs the help and protection of the Blessed Virgin Mary more than anyone else. So, mindful of the important role of our Blessed Virgin Mary, I always ask for her help through saying this awesome prayer every day.
Who will “vest” you at your ordination and why?
Archbishop Alfred Hughes, Archbishop Emeritus of Archdiocese of New Orleans will vest me at my priestly ordination. The reason why I choose him because he is my spiritual Director during the time I have studied at Notre Dame Seminary, New Orleans. He has been my closest person to my priestly vocation since 2009. He always gives me spiritual support and shares with me a lot of wonderful guidance and insight for my spiritual journey toward the priesthood. He has been teaching me how to become a good and holy priest by passing his great and valuable spiritual experience on me.
Do you have any family attending the ordination? If so, who?
My Aunt, Sister Mary Martin Tran Thi Tue, O.P., from Vietnam. She is my mother’s sister. My brother and sister from Texas and California will come as well.
What are you most looking forward to as a priest?
I am looking forwarding to SERVING everybody in the diocese of Jackson as a priest
Hobbies:
Collecting Stamps (Vietnamese and Vatican Stamps); Reading theological books.
Something about you that people may not know:
I have black belt of Taekwondo.
Do you have any advice for those discerning
a vocation?
From my experience as a seminarian, I would say that keeping faithful to daily prayer is very important point for those discerning a vocation. I think that a vocation to the priesthood or to a religious life can only survive with our personal relationship with God through our daily prayers.
Parishes where you served as a deacon/seminarian:
Jackson St. Therese; Meridian Saint Patrick and Saint Joseph; Forest Saint Michael; Newuton Saint Anne; Paulding Saint Michael.
Profile: Father José de Jesús Sánchez
Hometown: Zapote de Peralta,
Abasolo, Gto. Mexico.
Home parish: Our Lord of Esquipulitas
Elementary/High School: Ignacio Aldama, Telesecundaria 55, and Video bachillerato.
Favorite Saint: Saint Joseph
Favorite Scripture: John 10:11, “I am the good shepherd; the good shepherd lays down His life for the sheep.”
Favorite prayer or devotion and why:
The Divine Mercy Chaplet is my favorite devotion because it helps me to keep in mind that I need to pray for all the souls as a good shepherd.
Who will “vest” you at your ordination and why?
My spiritual director, Father Joe Palermo, will vest me because he knows me very well and he has been a good model for me during my discernment toward the priesthood.
Do you have any family attending the ordination? If so, who?
Yes, my parents Celia Quiroz and Jesús Sánchez, and two siblings Maribel Sánchez and Juan de Dios Sánchez.
What are you most looking forward to as a priest?
I am looking forward to administering the sacraments to my future parishioners and to grow in holiness with them.
Favorite Book:
Father Benedict Groeschel, The Mystery of Joseph.
Favorite Movie:
Gifted Hands—The Benjamin Carson Story.
Hobbies:
I like to read, to run, to walk, and to play basketball.
Do you have any advice for those discerning a vocation?
God calls every day to each of us, but we need to learn how to listen to his voice. We should spend some time in prayer with the Lord and ask Him to strengthen us to do his will in our lives. Then we should celebrate the sacraments more often because through them God helps us to come closer to him, and finally, we should have a spiritual director, who will be able to guide us in our discernment. Let us not be afraid to say “Yes” to the Lord, let us walk together the way toward holiness!
Parishes where you served
as a deacon/seminarian:
Jackson St. Therese; Canton Sacred Heart; Catholic Community of West Jackson Christ the King and St. Mary
Profile: Father Rusty Vincent
Hometown: Brandon
Home Parish: St. Jude, Pearl
Elementary/High School: Brandon High School
Favorite Saints: St. Augustine and St. Therese of Lisieux
Favorite Scripture: Luke 15:11-32 (Parable of the Prodigal Son)
Favorite prayer or devotion and why:
Rosary, for it helps me meditate on the life of Christ through the eyes of his mother.
Who will “vest” you at your ordination and why?
Fr. Patrick Mascarella, because he is my uncle who is a priest from the diocese of Baton Rouge.
Do you have any family attending the ordination? If so, who?
I have my parents, siblings with their spouses, nephews, grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins, and many more in my extended family. It will be quite a celebration in my family.
What are you most looking forward to as a priest?
I am looking forward to celebrating Mass. It is the center of our faith and worship, and it will be a humbling experience to be given the opportunity to celebrate Mass.
Favorite Book:
“The Return of the Prodigal Son” by Henri Nouwen.
Hobbies:
Chess, Golf, Building Legos and models, watching or playing football and basketball.
Something about you people may not know:
I never thought about becoming a priest when I was growing up. It was not until college. It shows that God can call us at any moment in our lives.
Do you have any advice for those discerning a vocation?
Patience and fortitude. I learned over the years that a vocation does not reach maturity overnight. In fact, it takes a great deal of time and patience in prayer for it to be realized. Also discernment is never easy. Through the difficult times it took a great deal of strength and trust in God to reach this point in my pilgrimage.
Benedictines form first steps in seminary
Most seminarians studying for the Diocese of Jackson start their studies and formation at St. Joseph Seminary College in St. Benedict, La. The Diocese of Jackson does not have a seminary of its own so they have to go out of state to begin their education.
“We count 10 seminarians right now with another man in the application process,” said Father Matthew Simmons, director of the Office of Vocations. “Two new seminarians, Colby Mitchell and Andrew Bowden, will be pursuing their undergraduate degrees at St. Joseph Seminary College in St. Benedict, La.
“An undergraduate seminarian is required to complete so many philosophy courses as a prerequisite to his graduate studies in theology that he will almost invariably finish with an undergraduate degree in philosophy. Two seminarians will be primarily studying English at St. Joseph Seminary. The others will be studying theology at Notre Dame Seminary in New Orleans,” he explained.
Students refer to St. Joseph Seminary College as St. Ben’s. It is part of a Benedictine Monastery and is marking its 125th anniversary this year.
The Abbey and Seminary College began it’s rich history in 1889 with the arrival of four Benedictine monks from St. Meinrad, Indiana. It was their humble task to repeat the ancient task of establishing a monastery and “a school for the Lord’s service,” in southern Louisiana. During the past 125 years, the college has educated many of the Gulf South’s civic and religious leaders.
It has founded and staffed numerous parishes in the New Orleans and Baton Rouge areas. By sponsoring and promoting programs in both liturgical and secular arts, the Abbey and Seminary College has had a significant impact on the area’s culture. An abiding spiritual presence which is manifested in its daily rhythms of prayer, has also been maintained in the community. This year the seminary broke enrollment records just in time for a new dorm to open to house all the students.
“Today, we continue to educate young men for the Catholic priesthood, and our reach has widened. We are home to seminarians from Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Texas, Arkansas, Georgia and Tennessee,” said Vanessa Courere, development director for the Abbey. “We have seminarians ranging in age from 18 to 38 who have received their call to serve. This year we graduated 27 fine young men, including three from the Diocese of Jackson, Nicholas Adam, Mark Shoffner and Aaron Williams,” she added.
The Abbey serves more than just future priests. St. Joseph sponsors an art atelier to teach drawing and painting to anyone who wants to learn. Brothers bake thousands of loaves of bread to distribute to the poor using donations to fund the program, called Pennies for Bread. It offers a retreat center and hosts one of the region’s largest youth gatherings, Abbey Youth Fest, a long weekend of worship, song, fun and exposure to vocation opportunities for high school and college students from across the South.
For years the Abbey has been making caskets for their Benedictine community members. Following Hurricane Katrina, which left many downed trees on the property, the abbey started crafting caskets to sell to the broader community. After some legal issues with funeral directors and state law, the courts granted the Abbey the rights to make and sell caskets to anyone wishing to have one.
The Abbey is offering a series of public lectures and concerts as part of its 125th anniversary celebration. On Friday, Sept. 26, at 7 p.m. in Benet Hall Biblical scholar Luke Timothy Johnson will present “The Prophetic Role of Monasticism Today.” Robert LeBlanc will play an organ concert on Sunday, Oct. 5, at 3 p.m. in the Abbey Church and on Sunday, Nov. 9, at 3 p.m. three men will present a concert and choral performance in the Abbey Church demonstrating Saint Joseph Abbey’s contribution to liturgical music.
See more about all the offerings at St. Ben’s on the Abbey website, https://www.saintjosephabbey.com.
Notre Dame provides graduate studies
Since the Diocese of Jackson does not have a seminary of its own, diocesan seminarians complete their formation and graduate studies at Notre Dame Seminary in New Orleans, which is celebrating its 90th anniversary this year. The original seminary was founded in 1838 in Plattville, Louisiana and moved several times before settling in its current location. All three of the diocese’s new priests graduated from there, as did Bishop Emeritus Joseph Latino. The following is an excerpt from the seminary’s history, written in part to celebrate the anniversary year:
Archbishop John W. Shaw (1918-1934) called a meeting of laymen at his Esplanade Avenue residence for the purpose of discussing with them the ways and means of erecting a substantial building on a site acquired in 1910.
An outcome of the August 20, 1920, meeting was the launch of a capital campaign. By the following January the campaign netted close to $1 million from some 50,000 subscribers. Encouraged by this broad-based display of interest and generosity towards a permanent major seminary, the archbishop commissioned the architect, General Allison Owen, to draw plans for Notre Dame Seminary.
The corner stone was laid for the handsome chateau-like building on May 7, 1922. The seminary began functioning on September 18, 1923, with 25 students from the three Louisiana dioceses registering for philosophical and theological courses. In 1925, the present Archbishop’s residence was built next to the seminary.
From the beginning of the seminary until 1967, the Marist Fathers of the Washington Province were in charge. The first rector was Father Charles Dubray, S.M. The number of students remained small through the formative years, not exceeding 60 until September 1932.
During his relatively short tenure, the Most Reverend John P. Cody (1962-1965) laid the groundwork for the emergence of Notre Dame Seminary into a provincial seminary exclusively for theological students.
Prior to the establishment in 1964 of the St. John Vianney Preparatory School, also located in the Carrollton section, diocesan seminarians normally spent six years at St. Joseph Preparatory Seminary (established by the Benedictines at Gessen, Louisiana in 1891) and then six more years at Notre Dame Seminary. St. Joseph Seminary College (in Covington, Louisiana since 1902) became a four-year college seminary in 1968, serving principally the province of New Orleans.
In addition to the Marist Fathers, diocesan priests and others of specialized competence have been professors and lecturers at Notre Dame Seminary since the arrival of Archbishop Philip M. Hannan in 1965.
Notre Dame Seminary observed its 90th anniversary during the 2013-2014 academic year.
As a graduate school and a seminary, Notre Dame Seminary continues to be an apostolic community of faith forming future priests for the church as well as a center of theological studies preparing the laity for ministry and leadership positions in the church. Take a virtual tour at www.nds.edu.
Editor’s note: to support seminarian education contact Father Matthew Simmons in the Office of Vocations, 601-960-8484.
New Saltillo structure blessed
By Maureen Smith
SALTILLO – Bishop Joseph Kopacz blessed the newly finished St. Thomas Aquinas chapel building on a rainy Sunday evening, June 1. Almost 100 people packed into the small concrete-block structure for the celebration and pot luck dinner following.
St. Thomas Aquinas mission falls under the care of Tupelo St. James Parish. The original mission church was built in 1921. It sits near the only Catholic cemetery in that part of the state.
The community it serves is mostly descended from one large Irish Catholic family, the Barretts. The parish hall still has a family photo history posted on a bulletin board. Bishop Kopacz visited with some of the Barrett descendants during the blessing and dinner.
Marco López, an immigrant from Mexico, presented the parish with an image of Our Lady of Guadalupe from Mexico, which the bishop also blessed.
The original mission church building burned in 2009 at the hands of an arsonist.
The community raised their own money and put in their own labor to rebuild a structure that can serve as a chapel or multipurpose building.
Bishop’s ball tickets going fast
JACKSON – Tickets are still available for the ninth annual Catholic Charities Bishop’s Ball set for Friday, June 27, beginning with cocktails at 6:30 p.m. at the Country Club of Jackson.
“Please join us as we welcome Bishop Joseph Kopacz in his first year in the Jackson diocese,” said Jennifer Kelemen, a development assistant at Catholic Charities.
Pat and Alexander Malouf of Greenwood and Carol and James Cooper of Madison will be honored with the Samaritan Award for their relentless support of the Catholic Charities’ mission.
“Guests will enjoy a delectable dinner and will be entertained by sounds of The Red Hots,” said Kelemen.
A live auction will feature a trip to Europe donated by Proximo Travel, a beautiful cabinet by John Richard Furniture, a five night stay at the Orange Beach Resort, and a Greg Harkins chair. The silent auction will feature many pieces of art, decorative items from John Richard Furniture, jewelry and gift cards.
“Don’t forget the fabulous raffle packages including ‘All About Me,’ ‘Made in Mississippi’ and ‘Family Fun Time’ to name a few. You can check out our facebook page to see a preview of some of the items we are offering,” said Kelemen.
The Bishop’s Ball is Catholic Charities’ premier fundraising event, raising much-needed funds for programs including adoption, therapeutic crisis centers, foster care and domestic violence programs. Purchase tickets online at www.ccjackson.org or call Jennifer Kelemen, 601-326-3758.
Freedom Summer exhibits display people behind struggle
Summer 2014 marks the 50th anniversary of the period known as Freedom Summer, a campaign to register black voters in many parts of Mississippi. Volunteers with the Council of Federated Organizations (COFO), including many college students from around the country, came to Mississippi to help with these and other interrelated efforts.
The hope was to bring national and international attention to the state. While non-Mississippians contributed enormously to the movement, it remains clear that local people were the key in bringing about change in their communities.
Three weeks into the process, on June 21, one native son, James Chaney, a graduate of Meridian St. Joseph Catholic School, and two young men from New York – Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner, were brutally murdered after being detained in jail and then released.
The three were buried in a dam near Philadelphia and were found six weeks later in August. Chaney had been beaten to death; Goodman and Schwerner had been shot in the chest. This horrific event changed the entire nation and left an indelible mark on the local community and those young people who came from all over the country to struggle for the rights of all Mississippians.
Fifty years later the state of Mississippi is commemorating this summer with exhibits and activities in several locations. These events may be found on the Freedom Summer web site – freedom50.org as well as the Winter Institute at Ole Miss – winterinstitute.org.
The Mississippi Museum of Art in Jackson is hosting several exhibits to commemorate Freedom Summer.
The first of these exhibits is This Light of Ours: Activist Photographers of the Civil Rights Movement, which is now showing through Aug. 17.
Four years in the making, this exhibit is a paradigm-shifting exhibition that presents the Civil Rights Movement through the work and voices of nine activist photographers—men and women who chose to document the national struggle against segregation and other forms of race-based disenfranchisement from within the movement.
The core of the exhibition is a selection of 157 black-and-white photographs, representing the work of photographers Bob Adelman, George Ballis, Bob Fitch, Bob Fletcher, Matt Herron, David Prince, Herbert Randall, Maria Varela, and Tamio Wakayama.
As part of This Light of Ours, community members are invited to submit their own mementos to “A Wall To Tell Our Stories,” an in-gallery component that helps commemorate our shared history through family photos, news clippings, objects, and ephemera.
Email scans or photos, items, or memories for addition to the Wall to Carol Peaster at cpeaster@msmuseumart.org, or bring them by the Museum and add them yourself.
Norman Rockwell: Murder in Mississippi will be on display through Aug. 31. In 1964, LOOK Magazine commissioned an investigative article about the three civil rights workers murder entitled “Southern Justice,” and painter Norman Rockwell was asked to provide an illustration for the magazine’s cover.
Over the course of five weeks, Rockwell intensively studied the circumstances of the murders, made many preliminary drawings, photographs, a preparatory oil sketch, and the finished painting entitled Murder in Mississippi.
This exhibition presents the iconic masterpiece in the context of many related works and thus illuminates the artist’s creative process. Admission: $10 adults, $8 seniors, $5 students (includes admission to This Light of Ours.
A third exhibit at the museum is Icons of Freedom, which features the faces of the Civil Rights Movement.
The faces belong to unrecognized volunteers as well as to the visible leaders of the movement. Artworks in this exhibition portray some of the most celebrated leaders, foot soldiers, and innocent casualties of the fight for freedom in America during the 1950s and 1960s.
Three lithographs by Ben Shahn (1898-1969) are lent by David Goodman of The Andrew Goodman Foundation and depict Civil Rights workers James Chaney, Michael Schwerner, and Andrew Goodman, who were murdered in Philadelphia, Mississippi, in June 1964.
Also on view are an etching by John Wilson (born 1922) of Martin Luther King, Jr., portraits of Medgar and Myrlie Evers by Jason Bouldin (born 1965), and an unfinished quilt by Gwendolyn A. Magee (1943-2011) that honors the participants of the historic 1961 Freedom Rides.
Icons of Freedom is on display until Aug. 3. Visit the museum’s website at msmuseumart.org for information on these exhibits, costs and hours of operation.
Solemnity of Corpus Christi: spend time in adoration
The Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ – Corpus Christi – is traditionally a time for Eucharistic Adoration and Processions.
Bishop Joseph Kopacz has invited all deaneries and parishes to participate in this tradition by coordinating local celebrations of adoration.
In his letter inviting parishes to schedule adoration and Benediction the bishop pointed out that this kind of prayer is appropriate at all times, but especially in June as the church celebrates so many ordination anniversaries.
The letter reads: During the month of June we will honor several of our priests who are celebrating significant anniversaries of ordination. Devoting time for the faithful to gather in our churches for adoration of the Blessed Sacrament is an excellent way to honor these men and another opportunity for the faithful to gather and increase reverence for the Holy Eucharist.
Parishes and deaneries were asked to coordinate at the very least two hours of adoration on Saturday, June 21.
It is most fitting to devote time to our Lord in this great gift to His Church: his Body and Blood in the Blessed Sacrament.
Here are some opportunities to join in adoration around Corpus Christi.
- Clarksdale – St. Elizabeth, adoration, Saturday, June 21, 10 a.m. – noon closing with Benediction.
- Cleveland – Our Lady of Victories, adoration, Saturday, June 21, 10 a.m. – noon.
- Grenada – St. Peter, adoration Sunday, June 22, 6 – 7 p.m.
- Greenville – St. Joseph, adoration Thursday, June 19, 7 p.m. – Saturday, June 21, 11 a.m., closing with Benediction.
- Greenwood – St. Francis, adoration, Saturday, June 21, 9 a.m. – 1 p.m. with reposition of the Blessed Sacrament.
- Greenwood – Immaculate Heart of Mary, adoration Friday, June 20, 1 – 6 p.m., closing with Benediction.
- Hernando – Holy Spirit, adoration, Saturday, June 21, 10 a.m. – noon.
- Jackson – Cathedral of St. Peter, adoration Saturday, June 21, 10 a.m. – noon and 3 – 4 p.m.
- Jackson – Christ the King, adoration, Sunday, June 22, 10 a.m. – noon.
- Jackson – St. Richard, adoration Saturday, June 21, 8:30 – 10:30 a.m.
- Jackson – St. Therese, adoration Saturday, June 21, 9 a.m. – 3 p.m. closing with Benediction.
- Natchez – Basilica of St. Mary, adoration with Benediction Sunday, June 22, 11 a.m. – 2 p.m.
- Olive Branch – Queen of Peace, adoration Saturday, June 21, 10 a.m. – noon.
- OXFORD – St. John, adoration Sunday, June 22, 3 – 5 p.m. (Confession during adoration) followed by evening Mass.
- Southaven – Christ the King, Saturday, June 21, 10 a.m. – noon.
- Tupelo – St. James, adoration Sunday, June 22, 6 p.m. – Monday, June 23, 6 p.m.