Monday, July 30, 2012

Grand Rapids Serra Club Newsletter, August 2012


Calendar of Events.  
August 13, 2012.  Luncheon Meeting and Campus Tour, 12:00 Noon at St. John's Home, 2355 Knapp Street NE.   We will begin with luncheon in one of the cabins, followed by the campus tour.  We have sent an e-mail from Tim Hile with a map attached.
August 14, 2012.  This date is outside our regular pattern, so please read carefully.
Serra Internatinal representatives John Woodward and President Tomi Asuenga will be in Grand Rapids on August 14 to meet with our club and members from several of the other clubs in our region, including Saginaw, Muskegon, and South Bend.  They will appear at the University Club from 5:00-7:00 p.m. to address the members and to receive questions.  Heavy hors d'oeuvres will be served, along with beer, wine, and soft drinks.  President Tim Hile has asked that as many of you  as possible will try to attend.  R. S. V. P. to Nancy at njking50@gmail.com or to Tim Hile at thile@okins.com or 616 437-1404.
 Also, Serra International has asked the membership from all clubs to pray a 54-day Novena for the Unity of the Club.  We did not receive the information in time to start the novena in unison with the other clubs, but we may still pray for that cause and for priestly and religious  vocations.  If one starts a 54-day Novena, the prayers must be said every day, wtih the proper sequence of the Joyful, Sorrowful, and Glorious Mysteries.  The Luminous Mysteries ar not included in the 54-day Novena.
Note:  Information about this special devotion to Our Lady can be found on  the internet, and you may order special booklets on the subject as well, if you are not already familiar with the special devotion.
August 20, 2012.  Serra Board Meeting and Luncheon, 12:00 Noon at Sacred Heart.
August 27, 2012.  Luncheon Meeting, 12:00 Noon at the University Club.
September 28-30.  Great Lakes Regional Conference, Cleveland, Ohio.  Reservation informatin should be coming available soon.  We highly recommend attending these regional meetings, especially for those who are serving on our 2013 Conference Committee.  Getting together with other Serrans for a weekend of meetings, prayer, and masses is always an inspiring experience.
Opportunities for confession and adoration will also be available.  We will post the full information next month.

Priests' Anniversaries for August.
Reverend Donn Tufts, August 20, 1980.
Reverend George Darling, August 11, 1984.
Reverend Stephen Dudek, August 11, 1984.
Reverend Dennis Morrow, August 24, 1985.
Reverend Dennis O'Donnell, August 20, 1983.
Reverend James Wyse, August 29, 1987.

Annual Financial Report.  Pat Leikert distributed copies of our annual financial report at the last Serra Board meeting.  If you would like to receive one, let Nancy know at njking50@gmail.com or leave a message at 616-662-4569 and we will mail you one.


2013 Regional Conference.  The committee continues to meet every other Monday at St. Stephen's.  Check with Tim Hile if you'd like to join in.  ExperienceGR.com is assisting with a website so that we can post information about the conference and receive registrations and payments.  Margaret Leiber is helping with the artwork and the design of the brochure.  The committee is still seeking a keynote speaker.

Holy Family Radio.  Holy Family Radio will conduct a fall pledge drive.  Also, there is a radio station license coming up for sale in Battle Creek.  Holy Family Radio might assist in the purchase of that station.
The July 29 edition of the National Catholic Register  reinforces the message that Catholic Radio fosters conversions (and vocations):
     "When Christie Martin was growing up, her family belonged to the Church of Christ.  When she first converted, she didn't tell anyone; she knew she would face disapproval from her family.  As David Bacheresse, general manager of the EWTN Global Network says, 'The unique aspect of Catholic radio is it gives  a person the opportunity to learn about the Catholic faith without others knowing about it.'
Martin enrolled in the Rite of Christian Initiation for Adults program a week after her first Mass.  One evening after class, she saw a bumper sticker: Catholic Radio 1230 AM.  'I got into my car, found the station--Immaculate Heart Radio out of Stockton, Calif. (an EWTN Radio affiliate) and began to find answers to all of my questions.  I even began generating new ones.'
Today, Martin listens to St. Valentine Radio in Amarillo, Texas, also an EWTN affiliate, with her husband, who grew up Catholic but had fallen away from the Church.  He began his journey back once Christie began RCIA.  ...'any time that I can be busy with my hands and and free with my ears and mind, I am listening.'
David Morris came across Catholic radio by accident.  'I was scanning and came across a discussion on the Scripture,' he recalls.  'I was surprised when I heard them say it was a Catholic radio station.'
Morris was an elder at the Centerburg Church of Christ in Centerburg, Ohio, at the time.  'I had been told Catholics were not Christian, but I was learning differently now.  The programs on Catholic radio answered several questions about the Catholic Church and corrected some of the things I had been told about it.'
One day Morris told his wife he was drawn to the Catholic Church.  'After we went to RCIA to get some questions cleared up, we--my wife and I--started discussing things we learned at RCIA and on Catholic Radio,' recalls Morris.  They were comfirmed in 2007.
Today St. Gabriel Radio, another EWTN affliliate, in the Columbus area is their local station.  'If I....hadn't started listening to that particular discussion on Scripture that day, I would still be mistaken about the Catholic Church,' Morris says.  'Both my wife and I have fallen in love with the Catholic faith.'
Charles Johnson, who lives near Buffalo, N. Y., found Catholic ration when he stopped watching and listening to secular media.  'I wasn't looking to convert when I started listening to Catholic radio,' says Johnson.  'But the Catholic message--that of love--was far more attractive to me than the messages on secular or even Protestant radio.'
Listening to WLOF, the Station of the Cross in Buffalo, helped Johnson make his decision.  'Having listened to and prayed with the radio station over a number of years kept bringing me closer to the Church.  RCIA abrought me the rest of the way.'
Thom Price, director of programming for EWTN Radio and co-host of Register Radio with the Register's Tim Drake--which features Register topics and writers--'heard a great story just the other day.
About 10 years ago, a guy who was far from this faith tuned into a local Catholic station--the station here in Birmingham.  He sent a check of support to the manager and said he would keep listening.  The checks kept arriving every month for several years.  Then the station got a letter from him saying he was going into the seminary.  Today he is a priest in the Diocese of Birmingham.'
By Christine Smyczynski, writing from Getzville, New York.

Family's three sons called to priesthood.
Fellow Serran Nate McKenzie forwarded the following article which appeared in The Freeman on March 27, 2008.  While we were pondering whether a 2008 story is still of interest to our readership, we found that the same three brothers were being featured on Holy Family Radio's Vocation Boom this past weekend.
Luke, Jacob and Vincent Strand, sons of Jerry and Bernadette Strand of Dousman, Wisconsin, "followed distinct paths to the same destination in the Catholic Church."  Growing up as Catholics in Dousman, the three brothers considered themselves religious but never seriously considered becoming priests.
Luke Strand, the oldest of the three, was the first brother to consider becoming a priest.  As a college student at the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh, he wanted a degree in marketing, to have a large Catholic family, and to make money.  During that time he started to frequent the Newman Center chapel and to help at a homeless shelter, Father Carr's Place 2B.
"As I continued this journey, priesthood began to seem like something God was calling me to--something God was putting in the front of my mind," he said.  He studied at St. Francis Seminary and was ordained as a priest in May 2009.
Father Jacob Strand said he started to think about  becoming a priest while a senior at Kettle Moraine High School.  After completing two years at the University of Wisconsin-LaCrosse, the desire became stronger.
"This began to occupy a larger area of my life," he recalls.  "When I began to look into this more closely, there was a strong sense of peace and that I was fulfilling what God wanted for me."  After completing his studies at St. Joseph College Seminary in Chicago, he was the second Strand brother to be ordained.
Vincent Strand was a student at Marquette University studying biological sciences and theology when he began to feel that God was calling him.  He said he began to spend time with people from the Society of Jesus.
"I really became convinced that God was calling me to be a Jesuit.  I really thought he was asking me to do it personally...The call was not vague or abstract, it felt very concrete to me and that Jesus was speaking directly to my heart."  In December 2004 he began applying for admittance to start the novitiate process with the Jesuits.  Having completed a master's degree in philosophy as part of his education in the Society of Jesus, he is still in formation.
It hasn't always been easy for the friends and family of the Strand brothers to understand their decisions.
"It's always surprising.  It's something parents don't expect," Luke Strand said, adding, "They've been very encouraging in the process."
Jerry Strand admits it's been difficult to accept their decisions at times...But he and his wife Bernadette have realized how happy their sons' chosen vocations have made them.
"You get behind them and you give up the personal selfishness," Jerry Strand said.  "We're just happy that our boys are able to make tough decisions."
The brothers have also received support from their younger sister, Theresa Strand.
Throughout the process, the brothers have been there for each other as well.  "It's a great support to have my brothers in many ways walking a similar path.  We can understand one another--the struggles, as well as the joys, that our vocations offer us," said Vincent."I think there is a great wave of young people who are zealous for the Catholic Church."
Lucas Strand agreed.  "People are searching for truth, and I think that search for the truth has led a lot of young people to the church, to priesthood, and the religious life.
Lucas Strand feels optimistic.  "I think there's something really happening in the church and it's exciting to be a part of it," he said.
Thank you, Nate, for calling our attention to this inspiring vocation story.
Editor's Note:  Nate is making a good recovery from his second knee replacement surgery.  Let us keep him in our prayers.

Note from a Notre Dame Vision Alumnus.  Tim Hile forwarded the following note from Tony Oleck, a former Notre Dame Vision participant whom we sponsored.
Dear Tim:  I am e-mailing you because I just wanted to say thank you again for that opportunity, as it was a very formative part of my life.  I am actually e-mailing you as I prepare to head back to meet my small group at the very same ND Vision, where I am working this summer (now as a mentor)!
I am also a current ND student and I will be starting my third year in the seminary here with the Congregation of the Holy Cross this fall.  I thought you and the Serra Club might be interested to know that the Lord has truly blessed me through your generosity and support, which has offered me such great opportunities to discern God's will in my life.  This discernment has led me to enter the seminary and, I hope, to the Holy Cross priesthood in a few years.  I will be a junior at ND, and I am studying history and philosophy in order to prepare myself for a life in the Church, whether the Lord leads me to the priesthood or not.
So, thank you so much for your generosity and support, as I would never have been able to attend the ND vision without the help of the Serra Club.  I now hope that I am doing my small part to try to repay that a little bit by giving my love and attention to other high schoolers who are seeking to do the same thing as I was doing when I was in high school.  Please give my best to all of the Serra Club members.  Know of my prayers!  Please remember me in yours as well as I continue to discern God's will and as I continue on in the formation with the Holy Cross.  It has been a truly blessed ride so far!
Yours in Christ,
Tony Oleck

A Message from our President. 
Please pay particular attention to the special announcement regarding the visit of Serra International President Tomi Asuenga.  This is a great honor as well as an opportunity for us to see and hear the direction of Serra International.
As we begin to plan for this fall and beyond, what would you like to see us do?  What can we do to help you in your faith walk?  Whom would you like to suggest as speakers for our club?
Will you promote another Member-Guest function this fall?  Do you like the evening format for these meetings?  Please send your respons to me via e-mail to thile@okins.com or 616-437-1404.  Your feedback is essential for us in growing our club and meeting Serra's mission as the global lay apostolate for vocations in the Catholic Church.  We welcome your comments.
Continue to pray for vocations.  You have already seen the letter from Tony Oleck above and read how his Notre Dame experience continued to ignite his passion for the priesthood.  We do good work, but the results are not always seen quickly or in plain sight.  But we will continue to persevere to ask young people to consider vocations and pursue our faith as brothers and sisters united by Serra.
Mary, Mother of Vocations, Pray for Us.

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Grand Rapids Serra Club Newsletter, July 2012

Calendar of Events.
July 1, 2012.  Feast Day of Blessed Junipero Serra.
July 4, 2012.  Independence Day and Conclusion of U. S. Bishops' Freedom of Conscience Initiative.

July 9, 2012.  Luncheon Meeting and Speaker, 12:00 Noon at the University Club.
July 16, 2012.  Board Meeting, 12:00 Noon at Sacred Heart.
July 23, 2012.  Prayer Service and Luncheon. 12:00 Noon at Sacred Heart.
August 13, 2012.  Luncheon Meeting and Campus Tour, 12:00 Noon at D. A. Blodgett/St. John's Home.  We will have lunch in one of the designated cabins, followed by the tour.  See below for a history of the home, which, according to its motto, has offered home and hope for children since 1887.
June 20-23, 2013.  Serra International Convention, Mallorca, Spain, or perhaps Barcelona, with side trip to Mallorca.  Grand Rapids Serrans Msgr. Ed Hankiewicz, our moderator,  Dan Grady, and Dennis and Margaret Lieber attended the 2012 Serra International Convention in Providence.

July Speaker.  At the invitation of Serran Larry Mulligan, our July speaker will be Mr. Edward L. Twohey, a member of the Catholic Lawyers' Association and founder of the Twohey Maggini law firm.  Mr. Twohey is the nephew of Boys Town founder Fr. Flanagan.  He was the mayor of Boys Town in 1943 during his senior year and last month was inducted into the Boys Town Sports Hall of Fame.  Tom Rademacher featured Mr. Twohey in his April 13 column in the Grand Rapids Press (the article can be found at mlive.com.  See biographical information about Father Flanagan elsewhere in this newsletter.

Priests's Anniversaries for July.  We extend our special thanks to Lee Sullivan for completing the monumental task of sending out all of the June cards and for her part in this ministry throughout the year.  We received a recent note from Lee, who writes that at a recent dinner with Fr. John Kenney, he mentioned that he had received our card and two others from parishioners;  he also reaffirmed that the priests appreciate these cards very much.
Fr. Ray Bruck, July 20, 1958.
Fr. Larry King, July 8, 1989.
Fr. Lam Le, July 10, 2004.

A Special Thanks.  President Tim Hile expresses our thanks to Msgr. Ancona, who served as guest chaplain/moderator at our June 25 meeting at Sacred Heart at Msgr. Ed's request.  As President Hile says, Msgr. Ancona is welcome at any time at any Serra event.

The St. Lazare Golf Outing.  Serrans Dan Laville and Larry Mulligan attended.  70 golfers participated, as opposed to 60 last year, the first annual outing.  Our club sponsored Fr. Joachim Lalley.  Fr. Gainey couldn't be there because he was returning from Ireland that day but wants to be kept in mind for next year.  A number of priests were interested but couldn't respond to our invitation because of their busy Saturday schedules during June.  All in all, the event was very successful, and we especially thank those who represented our club at the outing.

Holy Hour.  At our last meeting, Frank Lake mentioned IHM's Holy Hour cards, which are to be sent to a person of one's choosing announcing that a Holy Hour has been offered.  We will include a copy of this card either in this newsletter or in a separate e-mail.  The Holy Hour cards would be a great way to send our special support to our priests and seminarians and a wonderful way to remind us of the importance of adoration in our prayers for vocations.  Thank you, Frank, for telling us about the Holy Hour cards.  Code for the chapel at IHM is 5412. 

Holy Family Radio.  Tim Hile received a letter dated June 1, 2012 addressed to him and our club from Larry Nienhaus thanking us for our participation in the Spring Sharathon.  According to anyone's standards, the event was even more successful than anticipated:
"It has taken us a couple of weeks to tally our  results in the aftermath of such an outpouring of support during our first on-air pledge drive.  We can now excitedly report to you that we surpassed our $100,000 goal in a very big way.  With your help, we received pledges of financial support totaling more than $178,000!  It's funding that is being made available to us either immediately or over the next three years, depending on the wishes of individual donors.  Know that the generous gift of funding, time, products or services helps us to build a solid foundation of financial support that typically takes at least two years, according to the Catholic Radio Association.  As we are just entering our second year, we will confidently continue that "climb" to financial stability.  Our annual operating costs exceed $250,000, and that does not include the costs of extending our broadcast day to (24/7) and expanding our broadcast coverage to parts of West Michigan that do not yet have Catholic radio.  We still have much work to do!
Serrans Dan Grady, Mark Kubik, Tim Hile, and Weldon Schwartz participated in our hour of broadcasting, and Beverly Shields and Nancy Mulvihill worked the phones.  We thank all who helped with this opportunity to provide some very positive publicity for our Club.
Editor's Note:  I know about the journalistic we, and I realize I could be writing, "We apologize for neglecting to include this information in our June newsletter."  However, I can't blame another person for the error, not even a fictitious one!  But the news is so good that we must tell you about it!

About Father Flanagan.  Father Edward Joseph Flanagan, Born July 13, 1886 in Ballymoe, County Roscommon, Ireland; died May 15, 1948 in Berlin, Germany, was a Catholic priest in the United states.  He was founder of what is arguably the most famous orphanzge--Boys Town.  The campus is not just an orphanage, but now a center for troubled youth.

Father Flanagan's parents were John (a herdsman) and Honoria Flanagan.  He attended Summerhill College, Sligo, Ireland.  He emigrated to the USA in 1904 and became a citizen in 1919.  He attended Mount St. Mary's University in Emmitsburg, Maryland, where in 1906 he received a bachelor of arts degree in 1908.  He studied at St. Joseph's Seminary in Dunwoodie, New York.  He cotinued his studies in Italy and at the University of Innsbruck in Austria, where he was ordained in 1912.  His first parish was O'Neill, Nebraska, where from 1912 he served as assistant pastor at St. Patrick's Catholic Church and later at St. Philomena's Church.

In 1917 he founded a home for homeless boys in Omaha.  Bishop Jeremiah James Harty of the Diocese of Omaha had misgivings, but endorsed Father Flanagan's experiment.  Because the downtown facilities were inadequate, Flanagan established Boys Town, ten miles west of Omaha, in 1921.  Under Father Flanagan's direction, Boys Town grew to be a large community with its own boy-mayor, schools, chapel, post office, cottages, gymnasium, and other facilities where boys tetween the ages of 10 and 16 could receive an education and learn a trade...

Father Flanagan received many awards for his work with delinquent and homeless boys.  He served on several committees and boards dealing with the welfare of children and was the author of articles on child welfare.  Internationally known, Father Flanagan traeled to Japan and Korea in 1947 to study child welfare problems.  He made a similar trip to Austria and Germany and, while in Germany, he died on May 15, 1948, of a heart attack.  He was buried in the Dowd Chapel at Boys Town.


Legacy: 
In 1986, the United States Postal Service issued a 4-cent Great Americans series postage stamp honoring him. 
Father Flanagan is a member of the Nebraska Hall of Fame.
On February 25, 2012, Reuters reported that Archbishop George J. Lucas of the Archdiocese of Omaha, Nebraska, would formally open the canonization process of Father Flanagan with a March 17, 2012 prayer service at Boys Town's Immaculate Conception Church.  Upon completion of that ceremony, he was given the title, "Servant of God", the first of three titles bestowed before canonization as a Catholic saint.
Source:  Wikipedia
About D. A. Blodgett/St. John's Home.  
In the 1880s Grand Rapids was a bustling commercial center fueled by the lumber industry.  But left out of the city's prosperity was an alarming number of children made homeless as epidemics of typhus, diphtheria, scarlet fever, and cholera swept through West Michigan.

Children begged in the streets of the city, malnourished and very sick.  Leading citizens organized to rescue them.  As early as 1882 Bishop Henry Richter was exhorting the Catholic community to build an orphanage.  With a $60,000 bequest from a wealthy lumberman named John Clancy in 1884, plans were soon underway,  Meanwhile, Jennie Blodgett and Emily Clark were planning the Children's Aid Society, with the blessing (and funds) from Jennie's husband, Delos Abiel (D. A.) Blodgett.  In 1887, the Blodgett-Clark project commenced at 42 Lafayette.  Before long, it would be called the D. A. Blodgett Home for Children.

Up the street, on the corner of Lafayette and Leonard, the Bishop's "St. John's Orphan Asylum" was under construction.  The four-story "castle" opened in 1889.  Over the next thirty years, both ventures expanded to accommodate wave after wave of orphans.  In 1908, the Blodgetts built a stately building on Cherry Street where children of all faiths and backgrounds received expert physical care and schooling.  But both the Blodgetts and the Dominican Sisters of St. John's soon realized the limitations of custodial care.  The Blodgetts spoke for both agencies when they observed, "(Our children) have everything they need, except a family."

A Need for Homes.  By the early 1920s, foster programs were established at both agencies.  For the rest of the century, advancements in medicine and greater acceptance of foster care and adoption brought an end to traditional orphanages.  By 1946, more than 60 percent of children served by St. John's Home were in foster care.  The program would become the Catholic Service Bureau, and later, Catholic Social Services.  In the years following World War II, ominous societal changes created difficult new challenges for home placement programs.  The modern "orphan" was now likely to be a victim of family violence, abuse, and neglect fueled by a rise in alcoholism and drug use.  Some children needed much more than a new family could provide.

An Expansion of Services.  D. A. Blodgett  for Children began offering new prevention services to vulnerable families.  Mentoring programs, in particular Big Brothers and Big Sisters, were added starting in 1965.  Since then, more than a dozen specialized foster and adoption programs, community based programs, have been added.  St. John's Home began focusing exclusively on treating young victims of abuse in its residential program.  After relocating to a new campus on Knapp Street in 1992, the KidsFirst program was added to provide emergency shelter to abused children.  At some point, (no one knows the exact date) the two agencies began collaborating.  A St. John's orphan became a D. A. Blodgett for Children adopted child, and a D. A. Blodgett for Children foster child came to St. John's Home for treatment.

A Merger Meant to Be.  In early 2009, leaders at St. John's Home and D. A. Blodgett for Children began discussing the merits of a merger.  When this unification became official on January 1, 2010, eighteen different programs and services were brought together.  Out of respect for the founding fathers and mothers and thousands of donors and volunteers, the historic names were  preserved as the agency was renamed "D. A. Blodgett-St. John's."...and has become one of Michigan's largest children's welfare agencies.
Source:  D. A. Blodgett/St. John's Home website.
In August we will continue with a tribute to the agency's founders.
D. A. Blodgett/St. John's Home is located at 2355 Knapp Street NE, 49505, or some of you will be able to get Google Maps on your phone by texting the word "Gmaps" to 466453.  Knapp Street is located off of Fuller Avenue NE.  We will provide maps as needed as August 13 draws near.

A Message from our President.
Sent Sunday, July 1, 1012.
Dear Serrans,
Please continue to pray for Father Godfrey and all who belonged to St. Mary Magdalene, which was totally destroyed in a fire earlier this morning.  We pray for the community in their time of need and for the parish to pull together under Father Godfrey.  The building is not what makes the community.

I've had the opportunity to enjoy some quiet time already this summer, reading in the early morning and late evening and have found myself at the Adoration Chapel at IHM.  Love the slower and less formal pace of summer.  Hope you are all finding some quiet time with the Lord.

Have not heard a full account from the Serra International Convention in Providence, but the preliminary indication was that there was some progress made, and not a lot of the amendments were passed.  We look forward to more from those who attended Providence.

As Catholics and Serrans we face many challenges on many fronts on a daily basis.  Faith carries us forward and through all this!  Thank you for all you do in keeping the faith.

Tim Hile