Ordenaciones de los Diáconos Cesar y Andrew

Por Maureen Smith
CANTON/MCCOMB – La Diócesis de Jackson concluyó la temporada de ordenación el 25 y 26 de mayo con las ordenaciones de César Sánchez Fermín y Andrew Nguyen al diaconado de transición.
En la Diócesis de Jackson los seminaristas son ordenados en el diaconado en sus parroquias de origen. Como ambos hombres son extranjeros se seleccionaron las parroquias donde encontraron un segundo hogar, para el diácono Sánchez, la parroquia del Sagrado Corazón de Cantón y para el diácono Nguyen, la de St. Alphonsus en McComb.
Durante su homilía, en ambos ritos de ordenación, el obispo Kopacz recitó todas las obligaciones de un diácono centrándose en servir a un solo Señor. Luego el obispo Kopacz preguntó a César y Andrew si estaban dispuestos a seguir el ejemplo de Cristo para servir al pueblo de Dios.
El sábado y domingo 25 y 26 de mayo, el Sagrado Corazón y St. Alphonsus, respectivamente, estuvieron llenas de feligreses de todas las edades y nacionalidades, docenas de sacerdotes y diáconos, incluido el Padre Joseph Krafft del Seminario de Notre Dame en Nueva Orleans, donde los seminaristas de la diócesis completan sus estudios.
El diácono Sánchez es de San Andrés, México, donde “aprendió a leer, orar y reflexionar con la Biblia,”dice. Solía tocar la batería en una banda con sus amigos. Todavía le gusta tocar la guitarra y cantar. Encontró su llamado a la vida sacerdotal a los 17 años, en un retiro vocacional que tocó su corazón.
El diácono Cesar comparó su viaje de discernimiento con un músico en el escenario. “…En otras palabras, no estaba tocando la canción de la vida con el instrumento que Dios quería, debido a mi introversión y poca iniciativa. Fue una etapa en la que me contenté con lo mínimo, pero mi corazón, hecho para lo grande y trascendente, no fue engañado.”
La familia de César está principalmente en México, su padre Feliciano García López, su madre María Graciela Sánchez Fermín y sus hermanos Lizet, Alan, Jonathan, Fabián y Joel no pudieron estar físicamente presentes, y siguieron la ceremonia en línea. Su hermano, Diego, acompañó a César durante su fin de semana de ordenación y ceremonia. “Mi familia está feliz, él nos hace sentir orgullosos. Este es un sueño hecho realidad.”, dijo Diego.
El diácono Nguyen es de Vietnam. Su madre, Truong thi Mink, hizo el viaje desde Vietnam para la ordenación con ayuda de la comunidad católica en general para llegar a la misa. Fue la primera vez que vio a su hijo desde que se fue de casa.
El diácono Andrew pasó varios veranos en McComb donde la comunidad lo acogió. “Lo tomé como un honor especial porque él es tan dulce. En días festivos y algunos veranos, estuvo con nosotros, ayudando al padre Brian (Kaskie),” dijo Nita Pounds, quien cantó para la misa.
A principios de mayo, el padre Adolfo Suárez Pasillas y Mark Shoffner fueron ordenados al sacerdocio.
Los diáconos Cesar y Andrew esperan ser ordenados en el sacerdocio en el próximo año. Hasta entonces, a partir del 14 de junio., el diácono Sanchez está asignado a Madison St. Francisco de Asís y el diácono Nguyen está asignado para las parroquias de St. Patrick y St. Joseph en Meridian

(Tereza Ma y Berta Mexidor contribuyeron con esta historia)

CANTON – Como parte del Rito de Ordenación, el diácono Cesar jura obediencia al obispo de la diocese de Jackson, al presente y a los obispos futuros, en un gesto de redención ante el obispo Kopacz, el 25 de mayo. (Fotos por Berta Mexidor)

MCCOMB – El diácono Andrew se prepara para servir en su primera Eucaristia como diácono, el 26 de mayo. (Fotos por Tereza Ma)

Sister Nancy Schreck Celebrates golden jubilee

Sister Nancy Schreck

Sister Nancy Schreck, OSF, a member of the Sisters of St. Francis, of Dubuque, Iowa, celebrated her golden jubilee (50 years) on Saturday, June 22, at Mount St. Francis Center in Dubuque.
Sister Nancy is the daughter of Elmer and Marie Eischeid Schreck from Templeton, Iowa. She has a master’s degree in theology from Boston College (M.A.), and a doctor of ministry degree from the Pacific School of Religion in Berkeley, California.
Sister Nancy has served in several ministries including high school education, formation and integration of new members in the congregation, pastoral church leadership, congregational leadership, and in the foundation and development of Excel, Inc., a nonprofit service agency in Okolona, Mississippi, which has held Nancy’s deep commitment for many years, and where she is currently serves as program director.
In addition to having served as both vice-president (1992-2000) and president (2008-2014) of the community, Sister Nancy has served in presidency of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (1994-97) and as the U.S. Delegate to the International Union of Superior General (2008-2011).
As well as her current ministry with Excel, Inc., Sister Nancy serves on the leadership council of the Franciscan Handmaids of Mary, Harlem, New York, and as a national and international presenter on topics of religious life and scripture.
“Living a Franciscan way of life has been a deep joy and a wonderful vocation,” said Sister Nancy of her Jubilee.

(Story submitted by the School Sisters of St. Francis.)

Bishop’s Ball honors law partners

By Maureen Smith
JACKSON – This year, the Catholic Charities’ Bishop’s Ball had a bonus special guest, Wanda Thomas, the new executive director for the agency. Thomas has hired just in time to attend the event to greet many of the core supporters. Brunini, Grantham, Grower and Hewes Law first was honored at the event with the Good Samaritan Award for service to Catholic Charities and the diocese.
The Bishop’s Ball is an annual event, traditionally held at the Jackson Country Club to raise money for Catholic Charities and allow the organization to thank donors and supporters face-to-face. The evening started with a silent auction followed by dinner and a live auction as well as the presentation of awards. Auction items included a Walter Anderson print, dinner with Bishop Kopacz and Sister Dorothea Sondgeroth as well as trips and artwork. The ballroom at the Jackson Country Club was packed with supporters who enjoyed an evening of fellowship and fund-raising.
The Good Samaritan Award goes to an individual or entity who has supported the mission of Catholic Charities in a special way. John B. Brunini, a devout Catholic, founded the law firm Brunini, Grantham, Grower & Hewes more than a century ago. Since its founding in the 1890’s, the firm has grown into one of Mississippi’s largest and most respected law firms. The firm serves primarily business clients, including a number of Fortune 500 companies, and other significant Mississippi companies, including the nation’s largest privately held wireless company, Mississippi’s largest health insurer, one of the state’s largest banks, a number of the nation’s top poultry producers, and one of the state’s largest private health care systems. In addition to these entities, the firm provides legal counsel to many industry leaders in the agribusiness, automotive, timber, energy, construction, transportation and manufacturing sectors.
For more than fifty years, the firm has proudly represented the Diocese of Jackson. During this longstanding relationship, the firm has provided legal counsel to Bishops Gerow, Brunini, Houck, Latino and now Joseph Kopacz. The firm has also been instrumental in providing legal guidance and to other Catholic institutions like St. Dominic’s Hospital, the Catholic Foundation, the diocesan school system, Catholic Charities and many other diocesan incorporated and juridical entities.
Save the date for the next Catholic Charities event, the Journey of Hope luncheon in Jackson on Tuesday, Oct. 8 featuring former Pittsburg Steelers great Rocky Bleier. Bleier wrote a book about how he returned to the NFL after being wounded in Vietnam.

(Photos by Berta Mexidor)

Parish calendar of events

SPIRITUAL ENRICHMENT
ANTIOCH, Tenn., 36th Mid-South Regional Catholic Charismatic Conference “Christ is the Victor over the Darkness of this Age” July 19-20 at St. Ignatius of Antioch Church. Speakers: Bishop Sam Jacobs, Bishop Mark Spalding and Mr. Matt Lozano. Cost: $40 single; $60 Married couples and $70 family. Lunch is included. After July 10, add $10 to all registrations. Details: Teresa Seibert at (615) 430-9343 or tseibert@bellsouth.net or register online at www.msrcc.org.
PEARL St. Jude, Iconography Retreat, July 11-14 with Iconographer Brenda Fox. Thursday: 6-9:30 p.m.; Friday, 9:30-5:30 p.m.; Saturday: 9:30-5:30 p.m. and Sunday: 10:30-6 p.m. Come learn the ancient art of writing an icon. No former art experience necessary. All students will be writing the icon of Our Lady of Guadalupe. Cost: $280 which includes all art supplies. A non-refundable deposit of $125 due by July 4. Final payment due on or before retreat. Details: Jennifer Diez at (601) 750-9943 or Brenda Fox at (602) 574-4016 or brendajfox7@gmail.com or www.iconsbybrenda.com to see Brenda’s work.
St. Jude, Life in the Spirit and Healing Prayer Seminar, Saturday, August 17, 9-4 p.m. in the parish hall. Do you desire a deeper experience of the Holy Spirit in your life? Are you interested in an opportunity to receive new gifts of the Holy Spirit and a greater outpouring of God’s healing and love? Come for a day of preaching, prayer and praise sponsored by the Marian Servants of Jesus the Lamb of God. Guest speakers include; Father Bill Henry, Pastor of Greenville St. Joseph, retreat master and spiritual director; Celeste Zepponi; painter/singer/songwriter, retreat presenter and spiritual director, Mark Davis, formerly ordained Assemblies of God pastor currently serving on St. Dominic’s Hospital pastoral care team and ethics committee and is an active member of Clinton Holy Savior. Free admission, $10 suggested donation for lunch. Details: Contact Maureen Roberts (601) 278-0423 or mmjroberts@gmail.com.
PARISH, SCHOOL AND FAMILY EVENTS
CLARKSDALE Catholic Community of St. Elizabeth, Charismatic Prayer Group meets on Tuesdays at 3 p.m. in the St. Elizabeth meeting room. Details: church office (662) 624-4301.
GREENWOOD St. Francis, weekly Bible study with Father Camillus Janas, OFM, on Mondays at 6 p.m. in the Friary Library. All are welcome. Revised New American Bible is preferred. Details: church office (662) 453-0623.
GRENADA St. Peter, Life Line a leading provider of community-based preventive health screenings, will offer their affordable, non-invasive and painless health screenings Monday, August 12. Five screenings will be offered that scan for potential health problems related to: blocked arteries which is a leading cause of stroke; abdominal aortic aneurysms which can lead to a ruptured aorta; hardening of the arteries in the legs which is a strong predictor of heart disease; atrial fibrillation or irregular heart beat which is closely tied to stroke risk; and a bone density screening, for men and women, used to assess the risk of osteoporosis. All five screenings take 60-90 minutes to complete. Details: call (888) 653-6441 or visit www.lifelinescreening.com/communitycircle, text the word circle to 797979 or call the church office (662) 226-2490.
HERNANDO Holy Spirit, Annual Bazaar, Saturday, September 21, This is our biggest fund raiser of the year. Volunteers will be needed for lots of jobs. Everyone is encouraged to help in any way you can. We plan to have the usual booths, including silent auction, country kitchen, Taste of Desoto, Shop-a-Lot Grocery and many other activities. We will have a meeting in the near future, so watch the bulletin for dates and times. Details: Lorna Skelton (cell) (662) 379-0199 or e-mail t lornaskeltonrealton@gmail.com.
NATCHEZ St. Mary Basilica, Book Club resumes Tuesday, July 23 at 6 p.m., in the Family Life Center. The new book is entitled Francis: The Journey and the Dream. It is a series of meditations on the life of St. Francis of Assisi. For the first meeting, discussion will be on the foreword, the preface and the first 40 pages. Details: church office (601) 445-5616.
YOUTH BRIEFS
GREENWOOD St. Francis, Mini-camp for kids, July 8-11 for children six – 11 years old (those entering first to sixth grades). The camp will include sports activities, cheerleading and other events. Parishioners from St. Aloysius Gonzaga in Baton Rouge will be leading the program. Details: church office (662) 453-0623.
JACKSON St. Richard, discipleship groups, next series meets Sundays, July 21, July 28 and August 4 from 6-7 p.m. in the Youth Center for youth going to grades 11 and 12. Afterwards, they will go to a local restaurant for food and fellowship. Details: church office (601) 366-2335.
MERIDIAN Catholic Community of St. Joseph and St. Patrick, Neshoba County Fair, Wednesday, July 31, 3-9 p.m. for upcoming fifth -12th graders. Any youth younger than fifth grade are welcome with parental escort. Details: John at the church office (601) 693-1321, ext. 9 or email john@catholicmeridian.org.
VACATION BIBLE SCHOOLS
AMORY St. Helen, Team Jesus July 14-16, 5 – 7:30 p.m. for grades K-6 in conjunction with First Presbyterian Church at St. Helen. Details: church office (662) 256-8392.
BROOKHAVEN St. Francis, “Cathletics,” July 21-24, 6-8 p.m. Snack provided. Details: Erin Womack at the church office (601) 833-1799.
MERIDIAN Catholic community of St. Joseph and St. Patrick, July 22-25, 5:30 – 7 p.m. for grades K – five Details: (601) 693-1321.
NATCHEZ St. Mary Basilica, ROAR! Totally Catholic, July 15-19, 5:30 – 8:30 p.m. for children PreK3 (potty trained) – fifth grade at the Family Life Center. Deadline for turning in application form for attendance is July 9. Details: Melissa Johnson mjohnsonfnp17@gmail.com or the church office (601) 445-5616.
YAZOO CITY St. Mary, Friday, July 19, 5:30 – 7:15 p.m. and Saturday, July 20, 9 a.m. – 1 p.m. Details: church office (662) 746-1680.

Deacons from Mexico, Vietnam ordained for Jackson

CANTON/MCCOMB – The Diocese of Jackson wrapped up ordination season May 25 and 26 with the ordinations of Cesar Sanchez Fermin and Andrew Nguyen to the transitional diaconate. In the Diocese of Jackson, seminarians are ordained into the diaconate in their home parishes. Since both men are from abroad, they selected the parishes where they have found a second home for their celebrations. For Deacon Sanchez, that was Canton Sacred Heart Parish and for Deacon Nguyen, it was McComb St. Alphonsus.
Sacred Heart was crowded with parishioners of all ages and nationalities on Saturday, May 25. Dozens of priests and deacons including Father Joseph Krafft from Notre Dame Seminary in New Orleans, where seminarians from the diocese complete their studies, and Father Aaron Williams as master of ceremonies.
During his homily, Bishop Kopacz recited all the deacon’s obligations focusing mainly on serving only one Lord. After, Bishop Kopacz asked Cesar about his willingness to follow Christ’s example to serve God’s people.
Deacon Sanchez is from San Andrés, Mexico, where he said he “learned to read, pray and reflect with the Bible.” He used to play drums, performing in a band with his friends. He still likes to play the guitar and sing. He found his calling to priestly life at 17, after a vocational retreat that touched his heart.
Cesar compared his journey of discernment with a musician on stage. “In other words, I was not playing the song of life with the instrument that God wanted due to my introversion and little initiative to life. It was a stage where I was content with the minimum, but my heart, made for the great and transcendent, was not fooled.
“There was something that led me to find Jesus Christ, the one who truly fills the deepest aspirations of our being. Although I did not understand very well what I was missing, or what I should do, I felt in the scene of my life the protagonist was missing; the one who gives meaning and direction to a new story in which prayer, sacramental life, service, generosity, joy and discipline will give shape to something new and exciting – called priestly vocation,” he explained.
Cesar’s family is mainly in Mexico, his father Feliciano García López, his mother Maria Graciela Sanchez Fermin and his siblings Lizet, Alan, Jonathan, Fabian and Joel. They couldn’t be physically present, so they followed the ceremony online. His brother, Diego, accompanied Cesar during his ordination weekend and ceremony. “My family is happy, he makes us feel proud. Cesar is my oldest brother, we are eight siblings, but we are close, we spend time together. This is a dream come true. I feel like the luckiest brother in the world” Diego said.
Deacon Nguyen is from Vietnam. His mother, Truong thi Mink, made the trip from Vietnam for the ordination and got a little help from the Catholic Community at large to get to the Mass. She had to fly into Chicago, where Deacon Peter Quan Tong of the Diocese of Des Moines, Iowa, picked her up and brought her to McComb. It was the first time she has seen her son since he left home. The deacon spent several summers in McComb and the community embraced him.
“I took it as a special honor because he is such a sweet guy. On holidays and some summers, he was with us, helping out Father Brian (Kaskie). I just felt like he was part of our family so we were all honored to do this,” said Nita Pounds, who sang for the Mass.
Fellow choir member Susan Bellipanni agreed. “I have seen him the past couple of years here at the parish and he is a joy to be around. I just feel happy for him,” she said.
Earlier in May, Father Adolfo Suarez Pasillas and Mark Shoffer were ordained into the priesthood. Father Mark said he takes joy in all of the ordinations. “Mississippi gained another minister – somebody new to bring the gospel to another community in a state that is ripe for hearing the gospel,” he said of Deacon Nguyen’s ordination.
The pair are set to be ordained into the priesthood next year. For this year, Deacon Sanchez is assigned to Madison St. Francis of Assisi and Deacon Nguyen is assigned to Meridian St. Patrick and St. Joseph Parishes, effective June 14.
(Tereza Ma, Berta Mexidor and Maureen Smith contributed to this story.)

CANTON – Cesar Sanchez Fermin

McCOMB – Andrew Nguyen

Wanda Thomas to lead Catholic Charities of Jackson

By Maureen Smith
JACKSON – Wanda Thomas, the new CEO for Catholic Charities of Jackson, is no stranger to the agency or the good work being done there. She is set to start Monday, June 17. Thomas worked as a therapist at Charities in the early 2000s and has gone on to earn more credentials and more experience both in social work and the supervision of that work at other agencies in the state.
Thomas spent many years at Canopy Children’s Services, formerly known as Mississippi Children’s Home Services, as a regional director, director of intensive in-home services and program director of their therapeutic foster care services. Catholic Charities has similar programs.
“I have a passion and drive for change. I like to see change over time. I like to look at where we have come from. I like to build things. The services and programs (at Catholic Charities) are there, but as the new person I can come in with new thoughts and new ideas and think outside the box,” said Thomas. “I am looking forward to adding to what is already in place and having a positive impact,” she added.

Wanda Thomas

Msgr. Elvin Sunds, former executive director for Catholic Charities, was on the search committee for a new leader. “She has 20-some years of experience in social work. She is a licensed master social worker, which is important to the agency. She has supervised programs similar to the ones offered at Catholic Charities. She is certainly qualified,” said Msgr. Sunds. “The committee was impressed with her enthusiasm, her communication skills and her commitment to the mission of Catholic Charities,” he explained.
Thomas describes herself as very mission driven. The mission of Charities, she said, is one of the reasons she felt called to apply for the position. She believes her experience will help her in her new role because she has faced many of the challenges facing the staff already in place. “That’s going to give me a great opportunity and window into what we may need to improve on, what we are missing, but I have also been in their shoes. I have had to come up with solutions to many of these challenges,” she said.
“I want to strengthen what we already have in place – highlight what we are doing well. (I want to focus on) retention. You can only be as successful as your staff, so I want to retain talented individuals, to recruit, to provide them with development to do their best jobs. I want them to teach me how to work alongside them. To me, I am building a whole new team,” she said.
Thomas said when therapists and staff members work with people in crisis or people who have experienced trauma, they can carry part of those burdens with them. “I want to restore hope, in a way. What they are doing is having an impact. I want them to see that impact. When you can show how they are being beneficial, that can be a motivator,” said Thomas. “The health of an agency and its culture carries out into the community,” she added.
For the past three years, Bishop Joseph Kopacz has acted as CEO for the agency in collaboration with John Lunardini, the Agency’s COO for the past year and a half. “I am most grateful to John Lunardini for his invaluable contribution to the wellbeing of the agency through the strengthening of our financial base, our relationships with our funding sources and the advancement of our marketing and development. For sure, he will bring his skills and added experience from the social service world to any future employment,” Bishop Kopacz said.
Thomas will be the first non-Catholic at the helm of the agency. The bishop plans to remain present to direct the Catholic identity efforts at the office, and to further strengthen the vital role that Catholic Charities has for the diocesan mission and vision, but will hand the day-to-day operations over to Thomas. “Wanda Thomas has a great sense of what our mission needs to be, and we will move forward with a great team,” said the bishop.
Charities was formally chartered in 1963, but has its roots in the founding of a pair of orphanages in Natchez in the 1850s. It currently operates a number of social service programs including therapeutic foster care, adoption, the Solomon Counseling Center, services for the survivors of domestic violence, refugee and migrant support services and services for families experiencing mental health crises.

St. Dominic Health Services’ President Announces Plans to Retire

JACKSON – Claude W. Harbarger, FACHE, has informed St. Dominic’s leadership, medical staff and employees of his intention to retire as the President of St. Dominic Health Services, Inc. (SDHS or St. Dominic’s) effective June 30, after having served the St. Dominic’s organization for the past 32 years.

Harbarger

Harbarger’s decision corresponds with St. Dominic’s transition of sponsorship to the Franciscan Calais Ministries and the Franciscan Missionaries of Our Lady Health System (FMOLHS) on July 1.
“After thoughtful deliberation, I believe the timing of this decision will best facilitate St. Dominic’s positioning into the FMOLHS organizational structure,” Harbarger said. “The decision has been made in full and cordial collaboration with the Dominican Sisters, the SDHS Board of Directors and the leadership of FMOLHS.”
Lester K. Diamond, who serves as President of St. Dominic Hospital, will also begin serving as President of St. Dominic Health Services on July 1. In this expanded role Diamond will participate as a member of the executive and operating leadership team for FMOLHS. He joins CEOs from each of the FMOLHS ministry markets who are likewise supported by the system in implementing the health system’s strategic plan, prioritizing operational excellence and leading integration and growth.
“I have personally enjoyed getting to know both Claude and Lester in their experiences with FMOLHS over the past years, including as members of our Board,” Richard R. Vath, MD, Interim President and CEO of FMOLHS, said. “I want to add my thanks to Claude for his selfless service to Catholic health care and the many contributions he has made at St. Dominic’s. He is a tremendous leader. We are looking forward to Lester’s new role as he brings insights and experiences to our Franciscan ministry and continues the important legacy of St. Dominic’s for families in Mississippi.”
Harbarger joined St. Dominic’s in 1987 as Senior Vice President–Professional Services. He was named President of St. Dominic Hospital in 1991 – a position he held 20 years. He was named President of St. Dominic Health Services on January 1, 2012, following Dominican Sister M. Dorothea Sondgeroth’s retirement from the position.

Diamond

Harbarger began his administrative career in 1978 at Humana Hospital Augusta, Georgia. His professional activities include fellowship in the American College of Healthcare Executives. He currently serves as a member of the Greater Jackson Chamber Partnership Board of Directors, the Mississippi True Board of Directors and on multiple committees of the Mississippi Hospital Association.
Harbarger is a member of First Presbyterian Church where he serves as an Elder. He and his wife Karis reside in the Jackson area and have three married children and seven grandchildren.
Diamond, who was born in Jackson at St. Dominic Hospital, pursued his undergraduate studies at Memphis State University in Business Administration, and his graduate studies at the University of Mississippi in Health Care Administration. He completed his administrative residency at Eastwood Hospital in Memphis, Tenn. in 1984.
Diamond began his administrative career in 1985 with Charter Medical Corporation as an Assistant Administrator and ultimately served in this position at Charter Peachford Hospital in Atlanta, Georgia and Charter Plains Hospital in Lubbock, Texas, where he also served as the Human Resource Director.
In 1988, Diamond accepted the position of Chief Operating Officer at Laurelwood where he was responsible for directing the daily operations of all clinical programs and ancillary services.
Diamond joined St. Dominic Hospital in 1992 as Vice President for the North Campus. Diamond was then named Vice President of Behavioral Health Services and also held administrative responsibilities for the Jackson Mental Health Center.
In 1996, Diamond transitioned to the position of Vice President of Professional Services, with responsibility for many of the hospital’s ancillary departments. In 1997, he was promoted to Senior Vice President of Professional Services and was then promoted to Executive Vice President of Operations in 2007. He succeeded Claude W. Harbarger as President of St. Dominic Hospital on January 1, 2012, when Harbarger was promoted to president of St. Dominic Health Services.
Diamond serves on the board of the Mississippi Hospital Association, where he is the current Chairman. In addition, he serves on executive boards for the Mississippi Housing Partnership, Mississippi Health Partners and Vizient Southern States.
The Diamond family attends St. Richard Catholic Church. Diamond and his wife Gina live in Jackson, Mississippi and have two sons, Andrew and Eric.

Bishop appoints new vocations team: Fathers Nick Adam, Aaron Williams

By Maureen Smith
Bishop Joseph Kopacz has appointed Father Nick Adam Director of Vocations and Father Aaron Williams Director of Seminarians effective June 13. The men were ordained together in 2018. Father Adam is the parochial vicar at Jackson St. Richard Parish and Father Williams is the parochial vicar at Greenville St. Joseph Parish.
Fathers Adam and Williams have come up with a plan and structure for their team-effort at increasing vocations to both the priesthood for men and consecrated religious life for men and women. Father Adam will take the lead on recruitment and early discernment. His plan includes regular visits to colleges across the state as well as diocesan high schools, regular maintenance and updates to social media and diocesan websites and collaboration with their fellow priests and lay ministers to foster a culture of vocations.

Father Nick Adam

Father Williams will work with seminarians once they enroll to keep an eye on their formation and provide support when needed. He will act as an intermediary between all the people involved in formation including Bishop Kopacz, seminary faculty and pastors overseeing summer assignments. He will also assist in the upkeep of the office’s online presence.
Bishop Kopacz noted that both men were already working in vocations prior to this appointment by their living witness as young, vibrant priests. “Their love for their vocations comes through in their interactions with their parishioners and students. They are a natural fit for this work,” said the bishop.
They also represent two ends of a vocational spectrum. Father Williams knew he wanted to be a priest at a young age. He was serving at the altar long before most children and went straight from high school into the seminary. Father Adam, on the other hand, did not consider the priesthood until after he completed college and started a career in broadcast journalism. This diversity of experience will be an asset to their work.
Earlier this year, Fathers Adam and Williams organized a seminary visit for a group of young men from the Jackson area. Visits like these can help a young man see what day-to-day life is like in the seminary setting and help him decide to take the next step in his discernment.

Father Aaron Williams


“One of the greatest joys of my first year of priesthood has been working with young Catholics and witnessing the joy of the Gospel through their example,” said Father Adam. “It reminds me of the great experience that I had in the seminary, studying with so many other young men who shared a love for the faith and for the priesthood. My goal as vocation director is simply to offer our young people an opportunity to come and see what the call to religious life is all about, and help them discern whether they are called to love and serve the Lord in this way,” he added.
For Father Williams, the appointment is an extention of the work he was already doing. “This past year I have served as an intermediary between the bishop and the seminary formation staff and seminarians. This appointment formalizes that relationship and will allow me to continue to assist in the same way this upcoming year,” he explained. “The seminaries which serve our diocese are remarkable institutions, and I look forward to the opportunity to stay involved with their programs and to assist Father Nick Adam in his great ministry to the diocese as vocation director,” he added.
Father Adam publishes a weekly podcast, the Positive Priest Podcast available on several podcast platforms. Both men post audio of their homilies on Soundcloud. Those interested in learning more about vocations can contact Father Nick Adam at (601) 366-2335 or by email at frnick@saintrichard.com.

Audit report released; bishops urged to renew vigilance ‘each day’

By Julie Asher (CNS)
WASHINGTON – The 16th annual report on diocesan compliance with the U.S. bishops’ “Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People” shows a significant increase in the number of abuse allegations over last year’s report because of additional claims received in five New York dioceses after implementation of their Independent Reconciliation and Compensation programs in the last year.
Released May 31, the report for audit year July 1, 2017, to June 30, 2018, states that 1,385 survivors of child sex abuse, including 26 minors, came forward with 1,455 allegations. In last year’s report, charges were raised by more than 650 adults and 24 minors.
Twenty-six of the new allegations reported by dioceses and eparchies involved current minors – 12 males and 14 females – and came from three different dioceses, the report said.
Of the other new allegations reported by dioceses and eparchies, 47 percent were said to have occurred or began before 1975; 43 percent between 1975 and 1999; and 5 percent since 2000. The most common time period for when these reported allegations occurred was 1975 to 1979, followed by 1970-1974.
More than half of new allegations reported by religious institutions in the latest audit year, or 55 percent, are alleged to have occurred or begun before 1975; 41 percent occurred or began between 1975 and 1999; and 1 percent (two allegations) occurred or began after 2000.
Regarding the 26 allegations involving current minors, the report said that as of June 30, 2018, three claims were substantiated and the clergy were removed from ministry; seven were unsubstantiated; three were categorized as “unable to be proven;” investigations were still in process for six of these allegations; two were referred to a religious order; two were reported as unknown clerics; and three were not claims of sexual abuse, but were boundary violations.
The report was issued by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Secretariat of Child and Youth Protection and is based on the audit findings of StoneBridge Business Partners.
“These current allegations point to the reality that sexual abuse of minors by the clergy should not be considered by bishops as a thing of the past or a distant memory,” said Francesco Cesareo, chairman of the all-lay National Review Board, which oversees the audits. He called the 26 new allegations by current minors in dioceses and eparchies “concerning.”
“Any allegation involving a current minor should remind the bishops that they must rededicate themselves each day to maintaining a level of vigilance that will not permit complacency to set in or result in a less precise and less thorough implementation of the charter,” he said in introductory remarks to the report.
Cesareo pointed to areas of concern that he said must be addressed, such as “poor recordkeeping of background checks; failure to train or background check clergy, employees or volunteers who have contact with children; a high percentage of children not trained, especially in religious education programs; and lack of cooperation by parishes in the implementation of safe environment requirements.”
If parishes are unable to implement the charter “as fully as possible” because of a lack of resources, he said, parishes – and dioceses – should find ways to collaborate with one another, including sharing resources.
In some dioceses, he said, there is a “lack of diligence” and a “laxity” that is putting children’s safety at risk. He was dismayed that “we have still not achieved 100 percent participation” in the auditing process. He also called for a “more in-depth” audit process and a revision of the charter that “will incorporate new practices, such as parish audits,’ which he said the National Review Board has been recommending for some time.
“It should be pointed out that, given the current climate within the church, StoneBridge noticed a heightened sense of urgency and focus in many of the dioceses that were visited during this cycle,” Cesareo said. “This was evident in the active review of priest files, the release or updating of lists of alleged abusers, and greater emphasis on discussion and transparency with parishioners in individual dioceses/eparchies.
“This is a welcome change which must be sustained going forward rather than a one-time response to the heightened sense of scrutiny if a lasting cultural change is to take place,” he said.
The “current climate” relates to several events of the last year, including allegations of sexual misconduct with minors and seminarians, some decades old, against former Cardinal Theodore E. McCarrick, which led to his church trial last fall and the Vatican dismissing him from the clerical state in February.
Also, last August a Pennsylvania grand jury issued a report on the state attorney general’s monthslong investigation into six of the state’s Catholic dioceses. The probe covered a 70-year period starting in 1947 and linked more than 300 priests and other church workers to more than 1,000 abuse claims during that timeframe. However in the months since that report’s release many have criticized the methodology of investigators.
“While much has been done to ensure survivor ministry and the protection of the vulnerable are core values of the church, improvements still must be made. When it comes to the protection of young people, the question must always be ‘what more can be done?'” Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo of Galveston-Houston, USCCB president, said in the report’s preface.
“We must continually rededicate ourselves to keeping our promise to protect and pledge to heal. Not once, not twice, but every single day,” he said. “With every action we take, let us all remember to keep the survivor, the child, the vulnerable person, at the center of everything we do.”
The Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate, based at Georgetown University in Washington, gathers data for the annual audit report. StoneBridge Business Partners, based in Rochester, New York, provides the compliance report based visits to dioceses and eparchies and reviews of diocesan documentation.
During 2018, StoneBridge conducted on-site audits of 72 dioceses and eparchies, and collected data from 122 others. All dioceses/eparchies were found compliant except for the Diocese of Lincoln, Nebraska, which, the report said, had not complied with article 7 of the charter requiring dioceses “to be open and transparent” in communications regarding allegations of sexual abuse of minors by clergy, “especially those parishes that may have been affected.”
The Lincoln Diocese, in a June 2 statement sent to Catholic News Service in response to the audit report, said it announced the promulgation of new safe environment policies April 2 of this year and at the time time “acknowledged that in November 2018, it was audited on-site by the USCCB to ensure that its safe environment policies and procedures are in compliance with the charter.”
“Citing a 2017 example of allegations against Father James Benton,” the diocese said, “the auditors concluded that the diocese must be more transparent in informing parishes and other church communities who are directly affected by an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor. While the diocese changed its practices in this regard in August 2018, the April 2, 2019, revised policies formally adopt this change.”
In 2017, Father Benton, now retired, resigned as pastor following allegations that more than 25 years ago, he abused two family members. The Diocesan Review Board addressed the claims and referred them the case to the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, which then asked Lincoln Bishop James D. Conley “to take appropriate action,” according to the bishop’s open letter published Aug. 10, 2018, in the Lincoln Star Journal daily newspaper. He prohibited the priest from exercising public ministry and restricted him from being with minors.
Earlier claims that surfaced in 2002 that the priest had inappropriately touched a minor on a camping trip in the early 1980s “was fully investigated by the Lincoln Diocese,” the bishop said, but the “allegations could not be substantiated.”
In the new audit report, the CARA data shows that more than nine in 10 alleged offenders, or 92 percent, identified during the 2017-2018 survey year were already deceased, already removed from ministry, already laicized or missing. Most abuse reported occurred between 1960 and 1990, peaking in the 1970s.
Dioceses, eparchies and religious institutes reported paying out $262,619,537 for costs related to allegations between July 1, 2017, and June 30, 2018. This includes payments for allegations reported in previous years. That payout figure is just under the amount reported the previous year.
Outreach and support was provided to 472 victims/survivors and their families who reported abuse during this audit period. Continued support was provided to 1,542 victims/survivors and their families who reported abuse in prior audit periods. Support may include counseling, spiritual assistance, support groups, and other social services.
The report also notes the ongoing work of the church in continuing the call to ensure the safety of children and vulnerable adults. In 2018, more than 2.6 million background checks were conducted on church clerics, employees, and volunteers. In addition, in 2018 more than 2.6 million adults and 3.9 million children and youth also have been trained on how to identify the warning signs of abuse and how to report those signs.

(Editor’s Note: The Diocese of Jackson passed its onsite audit. The full annual report on compliance with the “Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People” of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops can be found at https://bit.ly/2HPjXqz.)