Thursday, September 29, 2011
Grand Rapids Serra Club Newsletter October 2010
Calendar of Events.
October 1-31, 2011. Month of the Most Holy Rosary.
October 2, 2011. Respect Life Sunday.
Sunday, October 9, 2011. Good Night, Desdemona, Good Morning, Juliet, presented by Aquinas College Drama Department at the Circle Theater, 2:00 p.m. This is a great way to support both our club and Aquinas College. Get in touch with Aggie Kempker-Cloyd if you'd like to join our club for a little outing outside our normal meeting dates and times. Reserve tickets with Aggie by sending an e-mail to aggcloyd@aol.com or call 453-4181. Tickets are $10, and you may pay for them by adding the cost to the next quarterly dues. Reserve as many as you like, as friends and family members are welcome to attend as well. The play will take the place of our usual second Monday meeting.
Sunday, October 9, 2011. Spaghetti dinner at Our Lady of Sorrows, 11:00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m. Tickets are $8 for adults or $3 for children. Call 243-0222 or buy tickets at the door. If you're planning to attend both the play and the Spaghetti Dinner, we recommend that you arrive early at Our Lady of Sorrows so that you can be finished with your dinner in plenty of time for the play. This is ordinarily a very popular event, and the lines can get long. Also, parking can be a problem if one arrives late. The 10:00 Mass dismisses at 11:00 and there is a well-attended noon Mass.
October 12, 2011. Columbus Day
October 17, 2011. Board Meeting, 12:00 Noon at Sacred Heart.
October 23, 2011. World Mission Sunday
October 24, 2011. Fourth Monday Prayer Service and Luncheon Meeting, 12:00 Noon
at Sacred Heart.
October 30, 2011. Priesthood Sunday. Download parish promotional materials from serraus.org.
October Saints' Days. Two very significant October feast days are Tuesday, October 4 (St. Francis of Assisi) and Friday, October 7 (Our Lady of the Rosary).
Welcome to our Club. We welcome our newest member, Marcia Carbines.
About 2013. We are in the earliest stages of planning our late summer or fall 2013 Regional Convention. The first steps are to set dates and locations. At this point, Joseph Scoville has agreed to serve as chairman, provided he gets plenty of help. That should be no problem, given the variety of talents to be found among our membership. The preliminary committee will reach out to other clubs in Michigan, as well as in other Great Lakes states and perhaps even West Virginia. They will seek the involvement of the Muskegon club in hosting the event. The preliminary committee is also receiving quotes from the various hotels we are considering.
Our Grand Haven 31 Club Visit. Nancy Mulvihill noted that 12-15 young men and several young women from the Grand Haven parishes our club visited on August 28 have expressed interest in discerning vocations.
An Unexpected Consequence. Our evening meeting at the University Club on September 12, with Ralph Hauenstein in attendance, was a success by anybody's standards. Our guests from the Catholic Lawyers' Association and the West Michigan Catholic Physicians have indicated to President Tim Hile that they especially enjoyed the talk by Msgr. Ancona and the fellowship with our Serans. Anyone who has heard Msgr. as a speaker would likely agree that while his comments are always thoughtful and masterfully worded, they fall easily on the ear. Focusing on the topic of the history of the diocese, Msgr. more than anything else spoke of his literary journey from start to finish in undertaking, at the invitation of Bishop Rose, the formidable project, Where the Star Came to Rest. Changing assignments from rector of the Cathedral of St. Andrew to pastor of the then, in his own words, idyllic St. Sebastian, Msgr. began his task of researching and writing this book and serving as an able leader of all those who assisted with the work. He worked on the book work while at the same time performing his regular duties as pastor over the next several years.
I, your editor, have a confession to make. I had bought the book some time ago at Our Lady of Sorrows, and then, alas! it found a nice home on the coffee table of our family room. Now and then I would take a few minutes to glance at it as I did my dusting. As a result of Msgr.'s talk, I have taken it from its resting place and started reading it, and have been well rewarded for my efforts. I have found new respect for Msgr.'s meticulous research and eloquent writing and for the efforts of the many talented people in our community who contributed to the undertaking. If Msgr. set out to produce a reader friendly history of our diocese, he certainly accomplished his mission.
Two Serra wives, each in her own way, contributed significantly to the work: Margie Scoville, according to Msgr., "did some excellent research, found elusive photos, and was very reliable for her help." Also, the book would not have been the same without Margaret Leiber's charming illustrations, among them Midnight Mass in the Michigan forest, December 25, 1675, Father Andreas Viszocky with children, and several maps.
One of the greatest lessons, one takes away from the book is that the Church has survived and even flourished in our diocese and throughout its history despite unimaginable hardships and fierce human conflicts, and I, for one, derive great comfort from that lesson. Once again, thank you, Msgr Ancona and your team of experts, for Where the Star Came to Rest. Fr. Ed tells us that copies of the book are still available at Sacred Heart.
A Rich Source of Priestly Vocations. From Salute, the Magazine of the Archdiocese for the Military Services, USA, Joan Frawley Desmond, Retister Senior Editor NRC, writes in an article reprinted from the National Catholic Register, "From Battlefield to Altar, Armed Services are Fertile Ground for Priestly Vocations:
In 1981, Stuart Swetland graduated with top honors from the U. S. Naval Academy, earning a Rhodes Scholarship to Oxford University. His long-term dream to serve his country was realized when he was commissioned as a Navy officer. He went on to serve on frigates and destroyers. Today, he's Monsignor Stuart Swetland, a Catholic priest and the Flynn Professor of Ethics at Mount St., Mary's University in Emmitsburt, MD. Though Monsignor Swetland's trajectory from military warrior to spiritual warrior might raise some eyebrows, it's a well-worn path to the priesthood. Annually, about 10 % of priestly vocations are men drawn from the ranks of active-duty military, with another sizable portion of recruits raised in military families.
Now that number is getting a boost as the Archdiocese for the Military Services completes the first three years of its new vocations initiative specifically designed to encourage and foster priestly vocations in all the services.
The AMS not only aspires to increase the shockingly low number of military chaplains, but also to draw these recruits into dioceses throughout the United States. The brainchild of Archbishop Edwin O'Brien of Baltimore, who previously led the Archdiocese for the Military Services, the program received seed money from members of the Order of Malta and has graduallyl gained traction under the leadership of Archbishop Timothy Broglio, who succeeded Archbishop O'Brien in 2008. Since the AMS's first vocations director, Father John McLaughlin, a late vocation on loan from Boston, hit the road in the summer of 2008, about 40 young men have signed up. Some participate in the "co-sponsorship program, in which the AMS and the recruit's home diocese share seminary formation and educational expenses and then establish a period of service at home and as a military chaplain. Others enter religious orders or apply as regular diocesan vocations program...
Father McLaughlin did not serve in the military, though his father was a Marine. A graduate of Boston College and a top wrestler, he worked in real estate and coached high school wrestling on the side, winning state championships. Over time, he began to reassess his own career plans and entered the seminary.
Over the past three years. Father McLaughlin has signed up recruits from every military service but the Coast Guard and landed graduates from West Point, the U. S. Naval Academy and the Air Force Academy. He has met young men whose faith was ignited or solidified as they fought on the battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan and grappled with the enduring questions of human existence: Why am I here? What is my mission on earth? Why was I saved when others were taken?...Father Brett Brannan, who is author of To Save a Thousand Souls: A Guide for Discerning a Vocation to Diocesan Priesthood and is serving his sixth year as vice rector of Mount St. Mary's Seminary--where a number of seminarians in the AMS co-sponsorship program are enrolled--recalls (stories) from his seminary days.
"Men see and experience terrible things in war, and one fellow seminarian told he he was in a foxhole between two friends," he said. "They were killed, and he survived. For a long time he wondered why he had been saved."
Father Brannen underscored the point that young men who grew up in military families are prepared to accept the sacrifices that come with priestly vocation.
"A military family has to pick up and move where they are needed. That's the priesthood: It requires a willingness to lay down your life," said Father Brannen, who noted that the student body of the U. S. Naval Academy is more than 50% Catholic.
"It's an ordered life," he observed. "Many priests do not obey their bishop, and then they wonder why they aren't flourishing. Military families understand this. They realize that the whole is more important than the parts, and that's the priesthood. When I say, 'I have plans,' Jesus has his plans and I have to change mine."...
Msgr. Swetland contends that the Church will reap a great harvest by increasing support for the military chaplain program and notes that his own vocation was fostered by gifted chaplains who nurtured the mutually compatible values that inspire both military service in military service and a priestly vocation...
"Men who enter the military do so out of a sense of service--a willingness to lay down their life for others and to give the gift of self," he said, "and that's what you need for the priesthood."
The Archdiocese for the Military Services, USA publishes SALUTE for the nation's Bishops, active and retired military chaplains, and financial supporters of the Archdiocese. Salute, Summer 2011.
Let us Pray. A prayer service for Dale Hollern and several members of his family was held yesterday afternoon at St. Stephen.
Also, John Osterhart sends us this note: Conor Dugan is one of Steve's good friends and an EGR classmate who has long discerned the possibility of a priestly vocation. His parents are St. Stephen parishioners and Conor is now married and the father of three. His wife is a GR. Catholic Central graduate from IHM parish. He graduated from Dartmouth and Notre Dame Law School. He now lives in the Washington, D. C. area and had open heart surgery about a year ago. I used to send him our GR Serra newsletters when he was in college.
I am sure he would be delighted to receive support for his "vocation run" from any Grand Rapids Serrans, any St. Stephen or IHM parishioners or others who hear about his run for vocations in the Archdiocese of Washington, D. C. John O.
Finally, Lee Sullivan has sent a message informing us of the passing of Franciscan Sister of the
Eucharist Valerie Nehl on September 30 at the Franciscan Life Process Center in Lowell.
A Mass of Christian Burial will take place on Tuesday, October 4 at 9:00 a.m. at the Franciscan Life Process Center. Her obituary appeared in the Grand Rapids Press on Sunday, October 2.
October 2011 Promise XIII. "I have obtained from my Divine Son that all the advocates of the rosary shall have for intercessors the entire celestial court during their life and at the hour of death.
Thursday, September 1, 2011
Grand Rapids Serra Club Newsletter September, 2011
Calendar of Events.
September 8, 2011. Serra Unites! day of prayer, a new Serra International program created in Singapore and introduced to the clubs at the Ottawa 2011 Convention. All Serrans are encouraged to pray together on September 8, the Feast of the Birth of Mary, Mother of Vocations. The Day of Prayer was announced in the Serra International Bellringer. Information about the program, including specific prayers, is now available at http://www.serra.org/ by clicking on Serra Unites! Serra clubs are invited to make this an annual event to "gather their relatives and friends around them in humble prayer to the Lord of the Harvest that He send out more laborers into the harvest."
September 11, 2011. Going away party honoring Fr. Ed, 2-5 p.m. at Sacred Heart. As most of you know, Fr. Ed has been appointed pastor of St. Mary's in Lowell beginning September 14. Fr. Aaron Ferris has been appointed Parish Administrator at Sacred Heart until the first of the year. At least until then, we will continue to meet on our fourth Mondays at 12:00 noon at Sacred Heart.
September 12, 2011. Evening meeting at the University Club, 5:30 p.m. Our club will gather together with the Catholic Lawyers Association and the West Michigan Catholic Physicians for an evening of fellowship. Monsignor Ancona will speak about the history of our diocese. Mark Kubik is preparing invitations to those guests our members wish to invite. Along with beer, wine, and soft drinks, light hors d'oeuvres will be served.
September 19, 2011. Serra Board Meeting, 12:00 Noon at Sacred Heart.
Looking Ahead...
Sunday, October 9, 2011. Good Night, Desdemona will be presented at Aquinas College at 2:00 p.m. at the Circle Theater. More details TBA. This gathering will take the place of our regular Second Monday meeting.
October 30, 2011. Priesthood Sunday.
June 21-23, 2012. Serra International Convention, Providence, Rhode Island. The theme will be, "The good work begun in you will be perfected unto the day of Christ Jesus." Phil1:6.
Priests' Anniversaries for September.
The September anniversaries are as follows:
Fr. Loc Trinh, 9-19-92 and Fr. Ron Hutchinson, 9-24-94. Once again, thanks to Lee Sullivan for her ministry of keeping records and sending anniversary cards.
Congratulations to Fr. Ed, our Moderator. Congratulations are in order to Fr. Ed Hankiewica, who received the 2011 William E. Cousins Award for Chaplain (Moderator) of the Year at the Ottawa Convention. We thank you, Fr. Ed, for your excellent service to our club.
Reflection Dinner. Mark Kubik received an invitation from Katey Davis, co-director of the Aquinas Fund, for our club's participation in the Reflection Dinner, September 19, 2011, beginning at 6:00 p.m. in the Sturrus Sports and Fitness Center. The dinner will honor Sister M. Aquinas Weber, O. P., Ralph Hauenstein, and Peter Wege. The cost per person is $150. At our August board meeting, our club passed a motion for us to purchase two tickets to the event. All proceeds to the Reflection Fund go toward student scholarships.
Thank-you-notes. We believe we have received all of the thank-you notes from the July 25 evening with the Sisters at 5/3 Ball Park. Nancy King has compiled the notes into a booklet and will distribute them soon. We would simply copy the notes for this newsletter, but the visual effects of the notes would be lost. However, we can pass along excerpts from a letter sent by Sharon L. Loughridge, Executive Director of D. A. Blodgett-St. John's Homes:
July 25, 2011. To the Grand Rapids Council of Serra International, c/o Dan LaVille: Dear Members of the Grand Rapids Council of Serra International: Thank you so much for your recent gift to the children of D. A. Blodgett-St. John's. We truly appreciate your donation of 25 Whitecaps tickets and parking passes...What we never forget, however, is that all of these great experiences for your kids are made available because of generous donors such as you! It is wonderful to be part of such a caring and thoughtful community. Sincerely, Sharon L. Loughridge. Mark Thomson added this handwritten note: Thank you so much for thinking of our kids!"
Notes from the Ottawa Convention Summary:
Credentials for 250 clubs were approved to vote either as delegate or proxy. Quite a few club proxies were disallowed by the Credentials Committee for being incorrectly filled out, not originals, or other infractions of the Bylaws...
7. The District 6 Bylaw Amendment regarding transparency, requiring open SI Board and Executive Committee meetings, passed by near unanimous voice vote...
8. The following Resolution, not on the original Delegate Meeting Agenda, was moved, seconded and passed with hear unanimous vote. "Be it resolved..."
As of now, Serra International did not withdraw the lawsuit. However, Kurt T. Metyko, President of USAC of SI, sends this update:
I would like to bring USA Serrans up to date on wht's happening on the SI lawsuit. The parties met with the judge on July 20 for a status report. As we expected, the meeting was very brief and did not address any of the substantive issues. The judge granted SI a time extension until August 8 to answer USAC's interrogatories and she set another status hearing for August 29. Our attorneys informed us on August 12 that they had received SI's answers to USAC's interrogatories and SI presented a list of its own interrogatories. We are working on answering these now. Our attorneys tell us that the case could go on for several more months or even years.
It was brought to my attention by a club recently that they had received the letter from SI in February saying that "the USA Council's oversight was terminated," but little if anything in response from USAC. In fact, there were several USAC letters responding to the suit that were published in March. They are all on our website under the heading, "USA Council Continues to be Ready to Serve You." The March letter has an attachment with the responses that our attorney felt we would offer publicly to the vague and unspecific allegations offered by Serra International. On April 6 the Court heard Serra International's request for an injunction to stop USAC from operating, and the judge denied it. In fact, the USA Council is till very much open to serve you and needs your dues to cover office salaries and expenses...
President Metyko goes on to announce the introduction of the Serra Unites! program...(as explained in the September 8 calendar announcement of this newsletter)...
As frustrating as these times are, please work even harder on our vocation ministry. I appreciate your concern for Serra. Please keep all Serra leaders in your prayers and remember Blessed Junipero Serra's words, "always forward, never back!"
Kurt F. Metyko, President, USA Council of Serra International
31 Club Weekend. Regarding the August 27 and 28 31 Club visits to St. Patrick's and St. Anthony's in Grand Haven, on Saturday evening Len Gross and Bob Gabridge, along with their wives Robbie and Maria, gave the 31 Club presentation and assisted with sign-ups. On Sunday morning at the 8:00 Mass at St. Anthony's, Nancy Mulvihill and Sara VanderWerff presided.
Of the Sunday morning masses at St. Patrick's, Joseph Scoville writes, "On another front, Beverly Shields, Nancy Mulvihill, Weldon Schwartz and wife Karen, and Joe Scoville were at St. Patrick's in Grand Haven for a presentation at the Masses last weekend. The pastor is Fr. William Langlois. He could not have been more welcoming for supportive. He said something about our presence before Mass, prayed for vocations and for Serra during the Prayers of the Faithful, and gave a little talk after Mass about his experience with Serra. It turns out that his father was a Serran in Muskegon. Also, when he was Vocations Director as a young priest in the 60s, both clubs apparently supported him. I get the impression he is extremely proactive in getting young people to think about vocations. So, he's a big fan and was very generous with his comments. He also wanted to give his regards to "everybody." So, it might be good to mention this at the next meeting. The deacon was Joe Finnegan, who apparently is a Muskegon Serran and knows a lot of people in Grand Rapids, especially at St. Stephen's. He was as nice as you can imagine as well. All in all, a very positive experience. If we ever need help for anything in that area, we can probably call on both of them." Joseph Scoville, U. S. District Court, WD Michigan.
Thanks to all who participated in the 31 Club presentations on that weekend.
Our President's Message.
Fall is fast approaching and we have had a beautiful Michigan summer. Our first fall event is on Monday, September 12 at 5:30 at the University Club, replacing the normal event that day. Monsignor Ancona will be leading us back on a journey of the history of the diocese of Grand Rapids and how our Serra Club intertwines with that history. Along with the Catholic Lawyers,
we have invited the West Michigan Catholic Physicians to join us at this event. Please bring a guest and join us in the networking and fellowship. We will have a special member of the Serra Club in attendance that evening, Ralph Hauenstein.
We have received some more bad news regarding the health of Deacon Dale Hollern. Please continue to pray for him, his doctors, his wonderful wife Isabel and their family.
We are planning on a fun event for Serrans and their spouses at the Circle Theater at Aquinas on October 9 and are looking at a December event as well.
Priesthood Sunday is approaching on Sunday, October 30. This is a day set aside to reflect upon and affirm the role of the priesthood in the life of the Church as a central one. Please get in touch with your Liturgy Committee at your home parish to get an announcement made or some other note to call attention to this event. Here is a link to Priesthood Sunday Planning Guide:
http://www.priestsunday.org/pdfs/sundayplanner2011(english).pdf
There are many great ideas and even lesson plans for CCD classes.
Thank you to each of you for all you do for Serra! Your individual efforts are much appreciated. Mary, Mother of Vocations, Pray for us! Tim Hile, CIC, CWCA
Rosary Promises for September: XI. "you shall obtain all you ask of me by the recitation of the rosary." XII. "All those who propagate the holy rosary shall be aided by me in their necessities."
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