Tome Nota

Virgenes y Santos

Dia del Trabajo. Labor Day. Sep. 7
Santa Teresa de Calcuta. Sep. 5
Natividad de la Santísima Virgen María – Virgen de la Caridad del Cobre, Patrona Cuba. Sep 8
San Pedro Claver. Sep. 9
Virgen de Coromoto, Patrona de Venezuela. Sep. 11
San Genaro. Sep. 19
San Pio de Pietrelcina. Sep 23
San Gerónimo. Sep. 30
Convocatoria

Campamento Virtual, para familias, auspiciado por SEPI y Extensión Católica.
Todos los viernes de septiembre y primer viernes de octubre
De 5 pm a 7 p.m.
Mas información, llamar a
Edgar Morales, 601-826-8594 o Johana Mollinedo 601-778-0678

Sacraments

Mississippi Catholic will publish Sacrament pages in upcoming editions.
This means we need 2020 First Communion and Confirmation photos.
Due to COVID-19, we understand there may not be group shots,
so individual pictures are accepted.
email to: editor@jacksondiocese.org
Please include full names, parish, date, name of sacrament celebration and
name of photographer, if possible.

GREENVILLE – St. Joseph Parish, First Communion, Aug. 9, First row (l-r): Father Aaron Williams, Ann Archer Brown, Sandy Dominguez, Caroline Barham and Mary McClain Morlino. Back row: Matthew Lipscomb, Campbell Hooker, Brayden Hillman, Walt Milam and Noah Signa. (Photo by Mary Lynn Powers)
MERIDIAN – St. Patrick Parish, First Communion, Aug. 1, First row (l-r): Manning Miles, Matthew Heggie and Lauren Massey. Second row (l-r): Father Andrew Nguyen and Father Augustine Palimattam. (Photo by John Harwell)
FLOWOOD – St. Paul Parish, First Communion, Aug. 9. Nicholas Mangialardi celebrated his First Communion with his parents Sam and Ashley Mangialardi. (Photo by Anthony Mangialardi)
FLOWOOD – Father Gerry Hurley distributes first communion to Piper Pollard on Aug. 9. (Photo by Monica Walton)
MERIDIAN – (Above) St. Patrick Parish, First Communion, Sunday, Aug. 9, 2020. L-r: Ava Cayer, Blakely Purdy, Father Augustine Palimattam, Jeremiah Mari and Kyler Williams.
St. Joseph Parish, First Communion, Aug. 9, L-r: Geraldine Medrano and Josselyn Reyes with Father Augustine Palimattam. (Photos by John Harwell)
NATCHEZ – St. Mary Basilica, First Communion, Aug. 2, Front row (l-r): Frances Daniel, Mary Virginia Waycaster, Vivienne Gibson, Camille Anderson, Laura Verucchi, Grace Anne Biglane and Macy Carter. Second row (l-r): Audrey Janette, Brooklyn Rayborn, James Brown, Rivers Atkins, Grayson Tosspon, Tyler Orr and Alex Rojo. Back row: Father Mark Shoffner and Father Scott Thomas. (Photo by Shannon Rojo)
CARTHAGE – St. Anne Parish, First Communion, July 25, Front row (l-r): Edward Lopez,
Amber Salvador, Alan Modesto, Casandra Lopez, JaDavis L. Rayveon and Lou Joyner (catechist). Back row (l-r): Poedro Lopez, Father Odel Medina S.T., Enmanuel Modesto and Yens Snyder Lopez. (Photo courtesy of Father Odel Medina)
MERIDIAN – St. Patrick Parish, First Communion, Aug. 15, First row (l-r): Beckett Ethridge, Mariana Mora Cordova and Guadalupe Garcia. Second row (l-r): Father Andrew Nguyen, Xofia Rose Joyner, Isaac Rigdon and Father Augustine Palimattam. (Photo by John Harwell)
GREENVILLE – St. Joseph Parish, Confirmation, Aug. 16, Front row (l-r): Anna Grace McGaugh, Mecklyn Claire Vaught, Haylee Elizabeth Trussell, Lauren Elizabeth Shelley and Ella Synclaire Millwood. Back row (l-r): Madison Claire Cain, Christopher George Tonos II, Bishop Joseph Kopacz and Father Aaron Williams. (Photo by Mary Lynn Powers)
MERIDIAN – St. Patrick, First Communion, Aug. 8, Front row (l-r): Jude Saylor, Christopher Hall, Avery Matthews, Ruben Hernandez and Richard Hernandez. Second row (l-r): Father Andrew Nguyen and Father Augustine Palimattam. (Photo by John Harwell)

Back 2 School

NATCHEZ – Cathedral PreK-4 assistant Debra Colston, helps PreK-4 student Neil Willard out of the car in the drop off line, making sure he adjusts his mask to start the day. (Photo by Cara Serio)
SOUTHAVEN – Sister Margaret Sue Broker, OSF, administers beginning of the year assessments for PreK through second grade students at Sacred Heart School. (Photo by Laura Grisham)
VICKSBURG – St. Francis first grade student, Mercy Moore, enters the school and uses the hand sanitation station before she begins the first day of school on Aug. 17. (Photo by Lindsey Bradley)
MADISON – Teacher Susie Odom instructs Senior English class. Pictured with Odom are students Erin Dorsey, Jackson Evans, Harper Evers, Clifton Goodloe, Seth Hall, Christian Sanders, Chase Taylor, Connor Westfall and Tyler Wiggins. (Photo by Caitlin Burkes)
VICKSBURG – (Below) Father PJ Curley visits with St. Francis Montessori students. (Photo by Lindsey Bradley)
HOLLY SPRINGS – Holy Family School’s D’Mari Faulkner completes a worksheet on his first day of first grade. (Photo by Laura Grisham)
COLUMBUS – Armando Leyva, Allison Kreiger and Maria Keith get to work on their first day of eighth grade at Annunciation School. (Photo by Katie Fenstermacher)
SOUTHAVEN – The seventh grade religion class at Sacred Heart School learned about the Assumption of Mary. Junno Pullan proudly displays his art work in honor of the Blessed Virgin. (Photo by Laura Grisham)
MADISON – St. Anthony School PreK teacher Amanda Jones demonstrates the proper handwashing technique on the first day of school to PreK student, Anna Devassy. (Photo by Kati Loyacono)
COLUMBUS – Annunciation fourth grade student, Isabella Ratliff carefully stacks paper for a project. (Photo by Katie Fenstermacher)
JACKSON – On Aug. 11, St. Richard third grade student Christopher King got a thumbs up from principal Jennifer David and Jessica Skipper to enter school on first day. (Photo by Tereza Ma)

Sacraments

CANTON – Lylnee Runnels, George Holifield and Libby Kraft received their First Holy Communion at Sacred Heart Canton on Tuesday, July 14, 2020. (Photo by Sarah Runnels)
JACKSON – Left to right: Sebastian Louis, Mary Catherine Vanderloo, Hudson Louis, Lachlan Louis and Ian Burkes gathered to celebrate their First Communion at St. Richard on Sunday, June 21, 2020. (Photo by Caitlin Burkes)
MADISON – Nicholas Allen Horne celebrated his First Holy Communion at St. Francis of Assisi parish on Saturday, July 25, 2020. (Photo by Allison Herrington)
MADISON – Blaise Allen Rodrigue celebrated his First Holy Communion at St. Francis of Assisi parish on July 18, 2020 (Photo by Sommer Rodrigue)
FLOWOOD – Jordan Parker received a certificate at his First Communion at St. Paul parish from Father Gerry Hurley on Sunday, Aug. 9. (Photo by Cassie Parker)
MADISON – (Right) Madeline Vanderloo joyfully made her First Holy Communion on Aug. 9, 2020, at St. Francis of Assisi parish. (Photo by Christina Butler Vanderloo)
JACKSON – Joseph Piers Hoffman of St. Richard parish, celebrated his First Communion on June 21, 2020. He is pictured with Father Nick Adam, on left, and Father John Bohn, on right. (Photo by Mike Hoffman)
SOUTHAVEN – Hunter Wong of Queen of Peace parish in Olive Branch, son of Carolyn and Garrett Wong, celebrated his First Holy Communion on Aug. 1 at Christ the King parish. He is pictured with Deacon Ted Schreck, on left, and Father David Szatkowski, SCJ, on right. (Photo courtesy of Cheryl Gardner)

Youth news

Sports are back at Catholic Schools

NATCHEZ – On Monday, Aug. 3 the Lady Wave softball team of Cathedral School and the Lady Flashes of St. Aloysius Vicksburg square off for the first game of the season. (Photo by Cara Moody Serio)
GREENVILLE – Fighting Irish football is back at St. Joseph School Greenville. The team works on stretching exercises on Aug. 3. (Photos by Father Aaron Williams)

Meet the teacher/Meet the student

JACKSON – New student, Christopher King and new teacher, Caroline Harris visit at St. Richard’s School “Meet the Teacher” day on Thursday, Aug. 6. King is entering the third grade. Six students will be learning in class with Harris and others virtually.
(Photo by Joanna Puddister King)

Teachers get ready for the school year

VICKSBURG – Vicksburg Catholic Schools faculty and staff began the 2020-2021 school year with a retreat celebrating “HUMANITY!” on Aug. 3. (Photo by Lindsey Bradley)

Buddies at church and school

MADISON – (Right) Blaise Rodrigue and Luca Picarella celebrated their First Holy Communion together at St. Francis of Assisi on July 18. Both attend St. Anthony School in Madison. (Photo by Sommer Rodrigue)

St. Mary Natchez youth find love of service at home

By Joanna Puddister King
NATCHEZ – In past summers you could find youth from around the country taking part in the annual Catholic Heart WorkCamp, but this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic many youth were sidelined from the service projects that brought them to much needed communities near and far that need help. But the St. Mary Basilica Natchez CYO group did not let it get them down, they found projects in their own hometown to tackle.
Between July 20 and July 31, 2020, groups of CYO members and adult sponsors worked to beautify the outdoor areas of Cathedral School and the yards of six elderly and homebound parishioners as well as help with a local Habitat for Humanity project.
Youth director, Carrie Lambert said, “This felt like it had more of a spiritual impact on the teens than going out of town to a work camp because the youth knew the people they were working for, asked questions about Habitat, and really felt like they had accomplished something and were appreciated when they were done.”

“They feel this way at Catholic Heart as well, but when the smiles looking back at you are from people you know – you’re touched in a different way.”
Bonding is a big part of mission trips, like those taken through Catholic Heart WorkCamp. Last year, the youth spent time in St. Croix in the Virgin Islands, working to beautify schools and churches damaged by Category 5 Hurricane Maria in Sept. 2017. After working, the youth enjoyed the beach and the sights of island life.
This year, the youth bonding experience was still special even though work was only completed in their own hometown.
“I loved watching the team work, the leadership and the hard work my teens put into this camp. I am so very proud of what they did and their attitudes while they were doing it.,” said Lambert.
“We at St. Mary are so blessed by the number of adults and parents who volunteer their time and energy to work alongside our teens throughout the year. The overall experience ended up feeling a bit like traveling on the Road to Emmaeus – feeling like we were accompanying one another and finding Christ in what we were doing and He was working there alongside us.”
Going forward the CYO will pair up with the Knights of Columbus for work days during the year.
“The main theme of our youth programs is ‘Faith in Action,’” said Lambert.
“Doing work for people simply because you want to help someone out is a wonderful way to put your ‘faith in action.’”

Faith in the face of fear

By Bishop Joseph R. Kopacz, D.D.
JACKSON – In the midst of the pandemic and other harsh realities, we recognize that all of us are in the same storm, but not in the same boat. There are significant differences in everyone’s life that require unique responses of all. At the center of last Sunday’s Scripture is the good news that no matter what boat we are in, or cave, as we heard of Elijah on Mount Horeb (1Kings 19), the living God desires to pass by and enter into the boats and caves of our lives.

Bishop Joseph R. Kopacz

Can we see him, feel his presence, and hear him? Do we want to encounter him?
After the multiplication of the loaves and fishes it was compelling to realize that Jesus himself dismissed the crowds after sending his apostles ahead of him on the Sea of Galilee. Here we have the Word of life, the Bread of life, serving as a minister of hospitality. Dismissing 5,000 people not counting women and children, nearly ranks as another miracle. This is the God who calls us by name and holds us in the palms of his hands. (Isaiah 41:13) But it is the storm on the sea of Galilee that assures us that Jesus Christ is present to us in the sudden squalls that strike without warning. (Matthew 14:22-33) As Jesus walks across the water to his storm-tossed apostles the unfolding drama reveals the contrast between the fear that paralyzes and the fear that saves. Without the Lord even the hard-boiled fishermen were going down in panic. With a hand clasp (Matthew 14:31) to save Peter from drowning, the Lord and he settled into the boat, and immediately the peace that only God can give ruled the wind and waves.

This was not the first time that Jesus accompanied Peter through his fears. On the shores of this same lake, Jesus invited himself into his fishing boat to better preach the word to the assembled throng. (Luke 5:1-11) He then directed him back into the deep to cast his nets for a catch that brought Peter to his knees. “Leave me Lord, for I am a sinful man.”(Luke 5:8) Actually the preaching of Jesus of Nazareth had softened his heart to be receptive to the gift of holy fear and the ensuing life-giving words. “Follow me and I will make you fishers of men.” Like Peter in both encounters with the Lord, we too must take a step toward Jesus and follow his lead through the fog and gloom of uncertainty and anxiety that confronts us.
In the letter to the Romans, last Sunday’s second reading, the Lord is near to St. Paul in his grief over the painful realization that most of his fellow Israelites are rejecting his beloved Savior as the long-awaited Messiah. It was a heavy cross for St. Paul because he loves the Lord and his people and is deeply torn. “I have an infinite sadness and an incessant grief that torments my heart.” (Romans 9:1-5)

The pandemic hit like a sudden squall and now it has settled in like a thick gloom that will not lift. Like St. Paul, currently, a growing number of people are feeling a similar pain with the loss of life, means, in some cases the work of a lifetime, along with the rhythms of daily life. This is a daunting reality that can push us to the margins of our internal and external resources. Yet, it is also an invitation to deepen our faith in the Lord’s nearness in the face of fear. Can we hear his loving words that dispelled the distress of his apostles?

“Calm yourselves. Do not fear. It is I.” When we are feeling most vulnerable and fragile, our faith by the grace of God motivates us not to allow ourselves not to sink into fear. The amazing grace that allays our fears, also gives us the peace of Christ which allows us to walk by faith, and not by sight (2Corinthians 5:7), that shines on us who live in darkness and in the shadow of death. With our options narrowed and our movements restricted, cannot God penetrate this cloud of unknowing to help us nurture our faith and enter more deeply into intentional concern for others, and so give witness to the living Lord.

With the difficult decisions facing many educators, parents and students for the fall semester, allowing the Lord to clasp our hand is a far better state of being than sinking into our own emotional sludge. This is the difference between fear and holy fear, the capacity to hear the Lord’s words that He is near, and to act upon this faith-filled knowledge.

Fe ante el miedo

Por Obispo Joseph R. Kopacz, D.D.
En medio de la pandemia y otras duras realidades, reconocemos que todos estamos en la misma tormenta, pero no en el mismo barco. Hay diferencias significativas en la vida de todos, que requieren respuestas únicas de todos. En el centro de las Escrituras del domingo pasado está la buena noticia en que no importa en qué barco estemos o en qué cueva, como oímos de Elías en el monte Horeb (1 Reyes 19), el Dios viviente desea pasar y entrar en los barcos y las cuevas de nuestras vidas.
¿Podemos verlo, sentir su presencia y escucharlo? ¿Queremos encontrarnos con él?

Obispo Joseph R. Kopacz

Después de la multiplicación de los panes y los peces, fue convincente darse cuenta de que Jesús mismo despidió a las multitudes después de enviar a sus apóstoles delante de él en el mar de Galilea. Aquí tenemos la Palabra de Vida, el Pan de Vida, sirviendo como ministro de hospitalidad. Al despedir a 5,000 personas sin contar a las mujeres y los niños, casi es otro milagro. Este es el Dios que nos llama por nuestro nombre y nos sostiene en las palmas de sus manos. (Isaías 41:13)
Pero es la tormenta en el mar de Galilea lo que nos asegura que Jesucristo está presente para nosotros en las repentinas tormentas que golpean sin previo aviso. (Mateo 14:22-33). Mientras Jesús camina sobre el agua hacia sus apóstoles azotados por la tormenta, el drama que se desarrolla revela el contraste entre el miedo que paraliza y el miedo que salva. Sin el Señor, incluso los pescadores duros caían presa del pánico. Con un apretón de manos (Mateo 14:31) para salvar a Pedro de ahogarse, el Señor y él se acomodaron en la barca, e inmediatamente, la paz que solo Dios puede dar dominó el viento y las olas.
Esta no fue la primera vez que Jesús acompañó a Pedro a través de sus temores. En las orillas de este mismo lago, Jesús se invitó a sí mismo a subir a su barco de pesca para predicar mejor la palabra a la multitud reunida. (Lucas 5:1-11) Luego lo dirigió de regreso al abismo para que echara sus redes en busca de una pesca que puso a Pedro de rodillas. “¡Apártate de mí, Señor, ¡porque soy un pecador!” (Lucas 5:8). En realidad, la predicación de Jesús de Nazaret había ablandado su corazón para que fuera receptivo al don del temor santo y las subsiguientes palabras vivificantes. “Síganme y yo los haré pescadores de hombres”. Como Pedro en ambos encuentros con el Señor, nosotros también debemos dar un paso hacia Jesús y seguir su ejemplo a través de la niebla y la penumbra de la incertidumbre y la ansiedad que nos enfrenta.
En la carta a los Romanos, la segunda lectura del domingo pasado, el Señor está cerca de San Pablo en su dolor por la dolorosa comprensión de que la mayoría de sus compañeros israelitas están rechazando a su amado Salvador como el Mesías tan esperado. Fue una cruz pesada para San Pablo porque ama al Señor y a su pueblo y está profundamente desgarrado. “tengo una gran tristeza y en mi corazón hay un dolor continuo”. (Romanos 9:1-5).
La pandemia golpeó como una ráfaga repentina y ahora se ha asentado como una densa oscuridad que no se disipa. Como San Pablo, en la actualidad, un número creciente de personas sienten un dolor similar con la pérdida de la vida, significa, en algunos casos, el trabajo de toda una vida, junto con los ritmos de la vida diaria. Esta es una realidad abrumadora que puede llevarnos al margen de nuestros recursos internos y externos. Sin embargo, también es una invitación a profundizar nuestra fe en la cercanía del Señor frente al miedo. ¿Podemos escuchar sus amorosas palabras que disiparon la angustia de sus apóstoles?
“¡Calma! ¡Soy yo: no tengan miedo!”; Cuando nos sentimos más vulnerables y frágiles, nuestra fe por la gracia de Dios nos motiva a no permitirnos no hundirnos en el miedo. La gracia asombrosa que apaga nuestros temores, también nos da la paz de Cristo que nos permite caminar por fe, y no por vista (2Corintios 5:7), que brilla sobre nosotros que vivimos en tinieblas y en la sombra de la muerte. Con nuestras opciones reducidas y nuestros movimientos restringidos, ¿no puede Dios penetrar esta nube de desconocimiento para ayudarnos a nutrir nuestra fe y entrar más profundamente en la preocupación intencional por los demás, y así dar testimonio del Señor vivo?
Con las difíciles decisiones que enfrentan muchos educadores, padres y estudiantes para el semestre de otoño, permitir que el Señor nos estreche la mano es un estado mucho mejor que hundirnos en nuestro propio fango emocional. Ésta es la diferencia entre el temor y el temor santo, la capacidad de escuchar las palabras del Señor de que Él está cerca y de actuar de acuerdo con este conocimiento lleno de fe.