Home » Archive by category 'Our Diocese' (Page 14)

Women called to witness as religious

By

Staff reporter

Vocations directors from two congregations of women religious with a significant presence in the Diocese of Wilmington know the numbers of women entering their orders will never approach what they were 50 years ago. They also know, however, that there are women for whom religious life is the direction they want to take.

“I think it’s an important witness in our world today. We’re called to be of service, to be that witness,” said Sister Mary Beth Antonelli, director of East Coast vocations for the Sisters of St. Francis of Philadelphia.

The Franciscans currently have three women in their novitiate, Sister Mary Beth said. One is in her late 20s, one in her 30s and another who is older.

More important than numbers is quality, said Sister John Marie, the vocation director for the Oblate Sisters of St. Francis de Sales in Childs, Md. The Oblate Sisters have initiated a few programs designed to help women discern whether this life is for them.

At De Sales University in Center Valley, Pa.,  an Oblate has started a discernment group,  and the congregation has partnered with the Diocese of Arlington, Va., to hold a weeklong program where women can ponder vocations, talk with each other and ask questions. Just recently, Sister John Marie said, the sisters opened a retreat house in Galena, Md., where groups of three or four women can rest, take a canoe ride, “spend time with the sisters, if you want to ask questions, if you want to talk. It’s a beautiful experience.”

The group at De Sales gives young women a chance to think seriously about their future, so the talk is not only about religious life, but married life and consecrated life as well, Sister John Marie said.

“We’re trying to help young girls who perhaps are confused or frightened,” she said. “It’s mostly, ‘I want to talk about my future.’ How do you know what is the true way for you? Your time is often spent reassuring them.”

The Oblates have 11 sisters in residence in Childs, where they operate Mount Aviat Academy. In the Diocese of Wilmington, the Franciscans minister primarily in parishes, at St. Francis Hospital and with the Ministry of Caring, but their motherhouse in Aston is next to Neumann University, which the congregation founded. Sister Mary Beth said the sisters have a good relationship with the students at Neumann.

Sister Mary Beth works on service projects with the students, and groups of young people visit the motherhouse for dinner and to get to know the sisters.

“They get to know our sisters,” she said, who inform the young people about their way of life.

“There aren’t as many religious in the schools now, so it allows them to meet religious and hear a little about our lives,” she said.

When Sister Mary Beth visits schools, she talks about religious life in general and how everyone is called to a vocation and has a baptismal call. For some, the way to live out their faith life is through religious life. Her goal for those visits is to cause people to think.

“It’s like planting the seeds, as far as visiting the high schools and the grade schools. It’s important for them to know that a vocation to religious life is an option for them down the line as they get older,” she said.

The Franciscans also hold gatherings with other congregations, where those who may have a vocation can hear about the differences between orders. Each has its own charism, which is its spiritual orientation and any unique characteristics specific to that order.

“We encourage young people to explore the possibilities of the different congregations so they can see what is a fit for them,” Sister Mary Beth said.

Upswing in some areas

Each congregation has its own specific timeline for new vocations, but in general a young woman will spend a year as a postulant, then another year or two as a novice, followed by annual temporary vows and, lastly, final vows.

“By that time, you surely know if you’re finding fulfillment in the life or not,” Sister John Marie said.

The Oblates have one sister who will be making final vows this June.

The Oblate novitiates in South America and Africa are doing well, Sister John Marie said, while the motherhouse in France has seen an upswing in vocations as well. The sisters in the United States are doing “whatever we can to help foster that movement.”

Sister Mary Beth finds her role with the Franciscans to be very rewarding because she has the opportunity to meet with young people who are serious about their relationship with God. And a vocation, to her, is about living out that relationship.

“I believe there are young people who are searching for that way that is the best way to live out their relationship with God,” she said.

Comments Off

Call to Prayer: Bishop announces monthly holy hours for life, marriage and religious liberty

By

Dialog Editor

Bishop Malooly has announced the diocese will conduct monthly Eucharistic Holy Hours beginning Jan. 27 through November as part of the U.S. bishops’ Call to Prayer movement during the Year of Faith.

The bishops initiated Call to Prayer at their November meeting in Baltimore to help build a culture in the United States that’s favorable to life, marriage and increased protections for religious liberty.

Bishop Malooly said the holy hours in the Diocese of Wilmington will be conducted in a different church each month. The first, which will be led by the bishop, is scheduled for Jan. 27, 4 p.m. at Immaculate Heart of Mary Church in Wilmington.

Additional dates and locations will be announced in coming weeks.

The Call to Prayer has been “prompted by the rapid social movements and policy changes currently underway, such as the mandate by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services that coerces employers, including heads of religious agencies, to pay for sterilizations, abortion-inducing drugs and contraceptives, as well as increased efforts to redefine marriage,” the U.S. bishops said in a December news release.

Three bishops who are U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ leaders in pro-life, pro-marriage and religious liberty efforts announced the Call to Prayer movement last month:

• Cardinal Sean O’Malley of Boston, chairman of the Committee on Pro-Life Activities;

• Archbishop Salvatore J. Cordileone of San Francisco, chairman of the Subcommittee for the Promotion and Defense of Marriage; and

• Archbishop William E. Lori of Baltimore, chairman of the Ad Hoc Committee for Religious Liberty.

For the good of society

The aim of Call to Prayer is to encourage Catholics to prayer and sacrifice; “it’s meant to be simple,” said Archbishop Cordileone. It’s part of a movement for “life, marriage, and religious liberty, which engages the New Evangelization and can be incorporated into the Year of Faith. Life, marriage, and religious liberty are not only foundational to Catholic social teaching but also fundamental to the good of society.”

Pope Benedict has called the Year of Faith, which began last Oct. 11 on the 50th anniversary of the opening of the Second Vatican Council and ends next November, “a year to acquire a more conscious and vigorous adherence to the Gospel, especially at a time of profound change such as humanity is currently experiencing.”

The Call to Prayer in the United States during the Year of Faith addresses the recent changes in American attitudes on life issues, traditional marriage and religious liberty that have arisen as a result of such issues as the HHS mandate for contraception and initiatives on same-sex marriage.

Five components

The Call to Prayer has five components, according to the U.S. bishops’ plan. They include:

• Establishing monthly holy hours for life, marriage and religious liberty.

• Encouraging Catholics to pray a daily rosary for the preservation of life, marriage and religious liberty in the nation.

The rosary, long a favorite devotion of pro-life activists, is an appropriate prayer for life, family and religious liberty because it invokes Mary, the mother of evangelization, to lead all to Christ. It’s also a prayer that strengthens family life and its Hail Marys recall Mary’s acceptance of God’s will in becoming the mother of God.

• Including specific intentions in Sunday and daily Prayers of the Faithful for respect for all human life from conception to natural death, the strengthening of marriage and family life, and the preservation of religious liberty at all levels of government, both at home and abroad.

• Encouraging abstinence from meat and fasting on Fridays for the intention of the protection of life, marriage, and religious liberty, thereby recognizing the importance of spiritual and bodily sacrifice in the life of the church.

Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan of New York, president of the U.S. bishops’ conference, said during the bishops’ November meeting that the task of evangelizing American culture should begin with bishops first recognizing their sins and experiencing “the grace of repentance.” The cardinal also called all Catholics to re-embrace Friday as a day of penance and consider abstaining from meat as a prayerful sacrifice.

• Observing a second Fortnight for Freedom at the end of June and beginning of July. The fortnight would emphasize faith and marriage in a particular way in the face of the potential Supreme Court rulings during this time. The Fortnight would also emphasize the need for conscience protection in light of the Aug.1 deadline for religious organizations to comply with the HHS mandate, as well as religious freedom concerns in other areas, such as immigration, adoption, and humanitarian services.

Stamina and courage

“With the challenges this country is facing, it is hoped that this call to prayer and penance will help build awareness among the faithful as well as spiritual stamina and courage for effective witness. We also hope that it will encourage solidarity with all people who are standing for the precious gifts of life, marriage, and religious liberty,” Archbishop Cordileone said.

Bishop Malooly has announced monthly eucharistic holy hours in the diocese for life, marriage and religious liberty.

A website with resources for the Call to Prayer from the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops is available at: www.usccb.org/life-marriage-liberty.

 

Comments Off

Sals build big lead, hold off late Hodgson rally for basketball win

By

WILMINGTON – Salesianum entered the fourth quarter of Saturday afternoon’s basketball game vs. Hodgson with a 37-26 lead, stretching it to 14 with under three minutes to play. But then things got interesting, as the Silver Eagles ran off 11 straight points before the Sals righted the ship and held on for a 47-42 win.

Donte DiVincenzo led the Sals with 19 points, although he spent nearly eight minutes of the third and fourth quarters on the bench in foul trouble. The sophomore hit a trio of three-pointers, two on back-to-back possessions in the third, giving Salesianum the cushion it would need to withstand the late Hodgson rally.

DiVincenzo picked up his third foul near midcourt with the Sals leading, 35-23. He collected his fourth on a charging call shortly thereafter, and fellow big man Brian O’Neill joined him on the bench as he was hit with his third foul. Hodgson closed the deficit to 39-31 before coach Brendan Haley put both DiVincenzo and O’Neill back in. The move paid immediate dividends as Sallies extended the lead to 45-31 before the Silver Eagles made their final comeback attempt.

Salesianum lost their shooting touch and feel for the ball during the run, committing several turnovers allowing Hodgson to trim the deficit without fouling. A steal and ensuing layup by Hodgson’s Nick Richards made the score 45-42, the closest the visitors would get. DiVincenzo hit two late free throws to seal the victory.

Two other Sals reached double figures. O’Neill scored 12 and Nick Perugino added 10, including three three-pointers.

Hodgson was led by Bilal Nichols with 20. Thirteen of those came in the first half, when the Sals had no answer for his inside presence. His point production diminished in the second half as the Silver Eagles took to the outside in an attempt to come back. It nearly worked. LaQwin Stewart scored nine for Hodgson, all on three-pointers, while Richards had eight.

The Sals will take their 6-1 record to the No. 1 team in the state on Friday as they meet Sanford at 7:30 p.m. Hodgson (4-2) is home vs. Delcastle on Thursday. Tipoff is at 6:45 p.m.

Comments Off

Seaford parish touched by Newtown tragedy

By

Two residents of the Diocese of Wilmington were affected by the Dec. 14 shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., in a most devastating way.

Josephine Grace Gay, one of the first-grade students killed at Sandy Hook, was the granddaughter of Robert and Louise Gay, members of Our Lady of Lourdes Parish in Seaford. Josephine, called “Joey” by her family, was baptized at Our Lady of Lourdes by Redemptorist Father Joseph Hurley on Dec. 27, 2006, according to the parish. Read more »

Comments Off

Bishop Malooly’s 2012 Christmas Message: Invite friends, family and neighbors to return to the church

By

Dear Friends:

As our pilgrimage through this Year of Faith continues, we are focused on our responsibility to grow in our own relationship with Christ and His Church. It is also a time to recommit ourselves to our Baptismal call to spread the Good News of Christ to those who do not know Him or have fallen away, for whatever reason, from the Church He instituted.

Christmas is a great time to invite those family members, friends and neighbors who no longer practice their faith, to come home to the Church. For a variety of reasons — be it a hunger for the Eucharist, a desire to raise children in the Church, a need for healing or forgiveness or because of childhood memories of a Church that they loved — many people want to return. They are awaiting our invitation; they need someone to open the door for them.

Mary, Joseph and the Child Jesus are depicted this detail from a Nativity painted by Benedictine nuns in Madrid. The Christmas season begins with the Dec. 24 evening vigil commemorating the birth of Christ and ends with the feast of the Baptism of the Lord, Jan. 13. (CNS/Art Resource/Album) (

I challenge you this Christmas to invite a member of your family who has fallen away from the Church to attend Christmas Mass with you, offer a neighbor a ride to church, use Christmas as a reason to discuss and share your faith with someone at work, model Christ’s love to others by your charitable works this Christmas, and mirror God’s joy when welcoming new and prospective members to your parish.  This Christmas season during our Year of Faith, let us help open the door of faith for others.

May God richly bless you and your family with health, happiness and joy this Christmas Season and always.

Sincerely in Our Lord,

Most Reverend W. Francis Malooly

Bishop of Wilmington

 

Mis queridos amigos:

Mientras proseguimos nuestro peregrinaje por este Año de Fe, enfoquémonos en nuestra responsabilidad de crecer en nuestra relación con Cristo y con su Iglesia. También es el momento de volver a dedicarnos al llamado del Bautismo de comunicarles la Buena Nueva de Cristo a los que no lo conocen, o a los que, por alguna razón, se han alejado de la Iglesia fundada por Él.

La temporada navideña es propicia para invitar a que vuelvan a la Iglesia familiares, amigos o vecinos que ya no practican la fe. En realidad, muchos quieren volver, ya sea por el deseo de criar a los hijos en la Iglesia, o bien por la necesidad de buscar la sanación o el perdón, o tal vez por los recuerdos de una niñez que pasaran al abrigo de una Iglesia amada. Éstos anhelan nuestra invitación; solamente esperan que les abramos la puerta.

Este año les propongo un reto. Podría ser invitarle a la misa de Navidad a algún miembro de la familia que se haya alejado de la Iglesia, u ofrecer a un vecino llevarle a misa, o hacer de la Navidad motivo de conversación para compartir la fe con un compañero del trabajo o demostrarles a los demás el amor de Cristo por medio de obras caritativas o reflejar la alegría de Dios acogiendo a los miembros nuevos y potenciales de su parroquia. En la temporada navideña de este Año de Fe, ayudemos a abrirles las puertas de esta fe.

Que el Señor les bendiga abundantemente a  ustedes y a todos sus familiares, y que les dé salud, felicidad y alegría esta Navidad y siempre.

 

Sinceramente en Nuestro Señor,

El Muy Reverendo W. Francis Malooly

Obispo de Wilmington

 

 

 

Comments Off

Archmere ignited his call to community service

By

Staff reporter

CLAYMONT — Archmere Academy and the Knollwood Community Center are situated barely a mile apart in Claymont, but they could hardly be more different.

Archmere’s well-appointed campus sits on the former estate of business executive and philanthropist John Raskob. Knollwood is a hilltop neighborhood originally built for workers at Worth Steel, but over the years it had fallen into disrepair.

Evan Turek is a senior at Archmere Academy in Claymont. (The Dialog/Mike Lang)

Now, as Knollwood residents have dedicated themselves to improving the quality of life in the community, Evan Turek is there to help.

The Archmere senior spends a significant amount of his free time in Knollwood, volunteering at the community center with other members of Archmere’s Community Service Leadership Group, of which he is vice president. He was one of the first three Archmere students to volunteer in Knollwood. The students tutor and play games with the young children and act as role models.

“Last year, we helped out at a cigarette-free and drug-free carnival that they did,” Turek said.

Knollwood is only one of the ventures to which he is dedicated. Each Thursday, he goes with other Archmere students to one of the Ministry of Caring’s  child daycare centers, and he also spends time with the elderly every two weeks, playing bingo or just talking with them. He especially enjoys teaching the children.

“Education is such an important aspect of developing each person,” he said. “I get to help them where their parents might not be able to help them, or they might not get the help that they need from the community. They might get looked over or something.”

Last summer he worked at Camp Dragonfly and Camp Dreamcatcher at the Westtown School in West Chester, Pa., not far from his home in Thornton, Pa. Dragonfly is for children with autism and mental and physical disabilities, while Dreamcatcher is for those with HIV/AIDS. He got involved with those after attending another camp at Westtown and becoming a leader.

This Christmas season, he also has spent time ringing the bell and collecting money for the Salvation Army.

Archmere, Turek says, planted the seed for his community service. His sister, Elise, graduated in 2009, and Turek said he helped at events at the school before he was a student. Archmere has a service requirement for its students that sparked Turek’s interest, but once he got a taste of it, he had no desire to stop.

“It really did start at Archmere. Our service teacher, Ms. (Denise) O’Meara, she’s very energetic and very into service. Her enthusiasm and enjoyment of it is very infectious,” he said.

Archmere really encourages its students to go above and beyond.

“We’ll be waiting for students to arrive to go do outreach, and there are freshmen who don’t need the hours. We have a lot of freshmen that do it. And there are juniors, they’ve already taken the class that requires hours, and they love it and they come back.”

“It’s great because that requirement helps people find, ‘I really like doing this and I want to keep doing this.’”

He wants other people to experience what he has, to love it like he does.

“I want other people to find the same joy that I have.”

O’Meara said Turek does his service for the right reasons.

“He doesn’t pander to get award recognition or seek only to pad his college resume, but truly understands his education and self-development to include action to improve the lives of others,” she said.

The youngsters he helps in Knollwood and elsewhere can’t wait to spend time with Turek, O’Meara added. Other students, through his example, “have caught his enthusiasm for helping to enrich these kids’ lives. It’s noteworthy that Evan’s dedication hasn’t faded into his senior year.”

He would like to continue this work when he enters college. His focus is on Colby College in Waterville, Maine, which he identified early as his desired destination.

“They’re very community-oriented,” Turek said.

“They have a requirement, but even if they didn’t, I’d still be doing it. They go out and do tutoring and pretty much everything we do here.”

Comments Off

Diocesan schools respond to shooting tragedy at Connecticut school

By

Staff reporter

Principals at two elementary schools in the Diocese of Wilmington did not address the murder of 27 people in Newtown, Conn., on Dec. 14 directly with their students when classes resumed three days later, but they did not ignore the tragedy, either.

“This morning (Dec. 17) I was very general about praying for the poor and the sick and those who need our prayers,” said Mercy Sister LaVerne King, principal of Christ the Teacher School in Glasgow.

Rain drops are seen on a figurine of an angel at a makeshift memorial to the victims of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shootings in Newtown, Conn., Dec. 17. The small Connecticut town shattered by an act President Barack Obama called “unconscionable evil,” was preparing for the first of 20 funerals for schoolchildren massacred in their classrooms last week. (CNS photo/Mike Segar, Reuters)

She said she received numerous emails and phone calls over the weekend following the shooting from parents saying they were trying to shelter their children from the news and asking that the school not address it directly. Therefore, there would likely be no discussion of the incident in the younger grades, although Sister LaVerne said some of the older students had talked to their teachers and others about it.

Her colleague at Most Blessed Sacrament in Berlin, Md., Mark Record, said the school’s “best guidance was not to address it directly.”

God is with us

The student body gathered Monday at St. John Neumann Church for a prayer service, where the pastor, Father Joseph Cocucci, provided them with guidance.

“In his reflection, he told us that God was always with us,” Record said.

During the service, Father Cocucci told the students how to be in touch with God.

Record said a guidance counselor was available to speak with students who wanted to discuss Sandy Hook, and faculty members were instructed to answer questions honestly and appropriately based on the ages of the students.

The diocesan Office of Catholic Schools was in action even as the news was unfolding in Newtown, said Louis De Angelo, the superintendent. He contacted the principals on Saturday with guidance on how to react. Most students, he said, went through their day Dec. 14 unaware of the carnage at Sandy Hook Elementary. If students came in the following Monday with questions, “we ask the teachers to respond appropriately based on (the students’) age.”

The diocese has asked schools to take four actions on behalf of students and their families:

n Pray for the families in Connecticut and “for the blessings that come our way.” Also, we should ask for grace and understanding in times of difficulty.

n Be attentive to the questions and concerns expressed by students. Teachers and administrators should be truthful and concise in answering questions but be respectful of parents as their children’s first teachers.

n Review crisis plans with faculty and staff, and assure students that these plans are in place for their safety. The diocese recommends monthly emergency drills to address the variety of circumstances in the crisis plans.

n Communicate to parents the actions taken by schools in light of the Newtown tragedy.

At the high school level, the students are much more aware of current events as they check news and social media sites throughout the day. St. Mark’s High School principal Carol Ripken said the school encouraged its students and teachers to pray, and students have been invited to stop by the school chapel at lunch.

Some students, she said, have sought out counselors and teachers.

“They keep asking what can we do to show signs of support to this community,” Ripken said.

St. Mark’s students will be signing a card or letter that will be sent to the Sandy Hook community. They also observed a moment of silence at 9:30 a.m. on Dec. 21, a week after the shootings. That was done at the suggestion of a St. Mark’s graduate who lives near Newtown and called the school asking that it participate, Ripken said.

Crisis response

Every school in the diocese has a crisis-management plan, De Angelo said, which is “updated annually, and then it’s practiced throughout the year.”

Locked doors and cameras are standard, he added, but in the case of Sandy Hook Elementary, that made no difference as the gunman shot out a window to gain entrance. Teachers in the diocese are trained to lock doors and move students away from the doors in case of a crisis.

Security measures are always under review at Most Blessed Sacrament, Record said. The school connected with the Maryland State Police a year ago to review its plan, then worked with a consultant who gave them advice on how to deal with crisis situations.

Emergency drills

At Christ the Teacher, besides locked doors and cameras, there are regular safety drills, Sister LaVerne said. In addition, there is an occasional police presence in the parking lot because some parents are state troopers, although they are not there on official duty. In light of the Connecticut shootings, however, the school will revisit everything.

“We’ll certainly go back and look at all that. We’ll be looking at all of our policies and be sure that everybody understands them,” Sister LaVerne said.

Crisis response will be getting more attention at St. Mark’s, according to Ripken, who has been principal only since the summer.

“We have not done a lockdown drill,” she said. “We do emergency procedure drills and have even gone through what happens in a power outage or a hurricane, but we have not practiced a lockdown drill. We need to be more vigilant than that.”

The school’s emergency procedure plan has been under review since August, and Ripken said the school will implement any necessary changes shortly.

The U.S. bishops’ education secretariat, the National Catholic Educational Association and the Council for American Private Education have posted guidelines on their websites about how to talk to children about violence.

The guidelines emphasized the need to assure children of their safety, keep explanations appropriate for children’s ages and limit exposure to television coverage of the event.

Karen Ristau, president of the National Catholic Educational Association, said the next step is to provide resources for schools to tap into available programs that help students find peaceful solutions and help teachers identify students who are isolated and without peers.

Comments Off

Student news

By

Ss. Peter and Paul names new girls’ lacrosse coach

EASTON, Md. – Dave Morrell, a former lacrosse standout at Ss. Peter and Paul High School, has returned to his alma mater as the girls’ lacrosse coach, the school announced earlier this month.

Morrell had previously coached the boys at Ss. Peter and Paul, winning the school’s first Maryland Interscholastic Athletic Association title in 2000. He also won a Maryland regional championship while coaching the boys at Easton High School. Read more »

Comments Off

Eastern Shore church Christmas tree is a winner

December 10th, 2012 Posted in Our Diocese Tags: , , ,

By

ROCK HALL, Md. – The Chrismon tree from St. John’s Church in Rock Hall, Md., took first place in the annual Soroptimists International of Kent County Festival of Trees, which was held recently in nearby Chestertown. Read more »

Comments Off

Parish Profile: St. Jude in Lewes has doubled its parishioners during a ‘miraculous decade’

By

Staff reporter

LEWES – In the last 10 years, St. Jude the Apostle Parish has undergone a transformation, going from mission church to its own parish with as many, perhaps more, ministries than any other in the diocese.

Father Jim Hreha, the founding pastor whose ministry at St. Jude’s began two years before it became its own parish, estimates that a thousand parishioners take part in the various ministerial outlets. The parish has all the usual activities, plus a few that might be unique. For example, St. Jude’s holds a Bible and Breakfast meeting every Tuesday, where a spiritual director goes over the Scripture readings for the upcoming Sunday. Read more »

Comments Off
Marquee Powered By Know How Media.