Archive for 2012

Be a Recruiter with Catholic Volunteer Network!


Catholic Volunteer Network is now accepting applications for Short-term Recruitment Associates. We are looking for recent volunteers who enjoy talking about their service experience and assisting others as they discern the call to service. Here is a more information about the position: 

Former volunteers who love to travel and talk about their service  experience are encouraged to apply for our Recruitment Associate positions. These positions involve visiting schools in major cities such as Los Angeles, Chicago, Boston, New York, Washington, D.C. and Philadelphia, among many others to promote volunteer opportunities to college students with Catholic Volunteer Network member programs. The positions will run from mid-August through mid-December. While not on the road, the Recruitment Associates are based in the Catholic Volunteer Network office in Takoma Park, Maryland. Catholic Volunteer Network will provide training, resources, $1200/month stipend, and health insurance coverage. Please see the attached job description for more details. 

To apply, please submit a cover letter and resume to Katie Mulembe at kmulembe@catholicvolunteernetwork.org. The deadline for applications is Wednesday, May 16, 2012. 


Volunteer in Alaska

It's an opportunity of a lifetime, at the top of the world!

Volunteer for KNOM Radio in Nome, Alaska, and receive invaluable experience at a nationally recognized radio station.

We have one position open on our volunteer team for 2012-2013. APPLY TODAY.  Join KNOM’s small team of volunteers and staff.  Take part in the mission to entertain, inspire, engage, and inform our listeners in Western Alaska.

Provide service to the region through your voice on KNOM’s airwaves. The volunteer program at KNOM Radio truly is an unique and rewarding
opportunity, at the top of the world.

*No experience required.* Commit to live and work at KNOM Radio in Nome, Alaska for a year, and we’ll provide the training! Live in a community house with other volunteers, and work full-time at the station next door.  Report on news in Nome and the rest of Western Alaska. DJ live, on-air.  Write, voice, and produce your own radio pieces. Travel across the region to cover stories and attend cultural events. Cover the end of the Iditarod Trail sled dog race. Gain invaluable experience in broadcasting at a  nationally award-winning radio station. We just ask that you have a bachelor’s degree, and are able to write and speak in clear, unaccented English.

*Where is Nome?* Nome is a community of 3500 located on the Bering Sea, an 1.5 hour flight northwest of Anchorage. It is a hub for smaller Alaska Native communities, to whom KNOM broadcasts, across 100,000 sq. miles. Nome has a fully equipped gym, a remote campus of the University of Alaska-Fairbanks, and a movie theater. It is a wonderful community offering a wide range of opportunities to become involved; from community theater to volunteer ambulance service, church activities to community sports tournaments. And there is plenty of wilderness to explore. Go hiking and salmon fishing in the summer. Throw on a parka in the winter, and go crabbing on the frozen sea or snowshoeing in the snow-covered country.

*How does it work? *KNOM pays travel expenses for you to and from Nome for your year of service. Receive room & board in a warm, comfy house, and a monthly stipend. Earn $5000 to cover past or future educational expenses. Health insurance is provided.

*Visit us online to find out more!* Check out our website www.knom.org to find out more about KNOM and our mission. Visit www.knom.org/volunteer for FAQ’s and links to download the application.

*More Questions? *Email belong@knom.org, and we’ll be happy to answer any
questions you have.


Your Adventure Awaits. 

Conflict Resolution: What Happens to You?

Nearly every community experiences conflict. As uncomfortable as it may be, it is a natural stage of community growth. If handled properly, conflicts are a healthy process of community living.


Some communities have trouble getting through conflicts for one reason or another. Use the following exercise to help you see how each person in the community reacts to and handles conflict situations.

1. Individually, circle the words below that best describe you and the way you deal with conflict. Take your time and be as honest with yourself as you can.


Aggressive, anxious, assertive, go off about other issues, angry, hint at the issue, spontaneous, external (bounce things off others), nervous, internal (try to figure out things alone), withdraw, confrontational, strategizing, patient, stick to the issue at hand, defensive, make big deal over "little things", gets off the subject

2. Now come together as a group and take turns sharing your styles. As you get to know each other's manners of handling conflict, begin discussing strategies for your community to use in dealing with the next conflict that arises.

Self-Care Activity

Are Things Balanced In Your Life? 


As a volunteer, you have a lot to juggle between work, community, family and your own needs. Use the exercise below to determine if things are in balance between work, community, prayer, family, and self. 


Activity:


Part 1: Each question is followed by a set of four possible answers. Rank each answer according to how you feel today, right now.

Where would you rather be?
 __ Alone at my work place
 __ Alone with my own space
 __ With my community
 __ At home with friends and family

What proves most spiritually fulfilling for you?
__ My work
__ My time alone
__ My time with community
__ My time outside of the program

What do you find most fulfilling?
__ My work
__ My time alone
__ My time with community
__ My time outside the program

What is most difficult for you?
__ Making extra time for work that needs to get done
__ Making time for the things I like to do on my own
__ Making time for my community
__ Making time for calls, letters, and contact with home

What is most important for you?
__ The needs of those I serve through my work
__ Myself and my personal needs
__ The needs of my community
__ The needs of my family and friends from home

Part 2: Did any one area seem to get high preference most often? If so, which area? Judging from your results, which areas of your current life need more attention? Are any consuming you more than they should be?

Come together as a community, share your results, and discuss tactics for balance.

http://pallotticenter.org/index.php?m=ca

Prayer for the Environment


From the Center of Concern:

Prayer for the Environmental Common Good

By: Jane Deren

As we breathe the very air which sustains us,
We remember your love, God,
which gives us life.

Fill us with your compassion for Creation.
Empty us of apathy, selfishness and fear,
of all pessimism and hesitation.

Breathe into us solidarity
with all who suffer now
and the future generations who will suffer
because of our environmental irresponsibility.

Move us into action
to save our earth
and to build your sustainable Kingdom.

Amen.

http://www.educationforjustice.org/node/2860

Upcoming Events with Catholic Volunteer Network


You are invited to two upcoming events hosted by Catholic Volunteer Network. If you have questions about either event, please call or email Alyssa Sickle at asickle@catholicvolunteernetwork.org or 301-270-0900 x10.

Catholic Volunteer Network Alumni Service Event – April 28

Former volunteers who served with any of Catholic Volunteer Network’s member programs, as well as current volunteers and friends, are invited to join us for a morning of service at SOME (So Others Might Eat), a Catholic Volunteer Network member program. We will prepare and serve breakfast to the guests and after serving, the volunteers will enjoy a simple meal and participate in a time of discussion and reflection. (Sorry, we cannot accommodate children at this event.)

Date:                     Saturday, April 28, 2012
Time:                    7:00am - 1:00pm
Location:             SOME (So Others Might Eat), 71 'O' Street, NW, Washington, DC 20001 - www.some.org
(SOME has a parking lot next to the dining room at 71 O Street. For public transportation, take Bus 93 to the North Capitol & P Street stop, and walk two blocks).
Register:              Please click here to register. Registration deadline is April 26th.

This is a great opportunity to connect with current volunteers and alumni in the area, while also nurturing the spirit of service!


World Fair Trade Day Celebration/Brown Bag Lunch Q&A with Fair Trade Resource Network’s Director – May 9

Catholic Volunteer Network will hold a Brown Bag Lunch Q&A in celebration of World Fair Trade Day. This celebration is one of 1,000 events in North America honoring the Best in Fair Trade. Get some free Fair Trade honey, sugar and dishtowels, as well as Fair Trade educational magazines and stickers. Hear the latest news in Fair Trade and ask questions to FTRN Executive Director, Jeff Goldman. Participants will support trade justice and celebrate the “Best in Fair Trade” Award winners! Bring your own lunch please. Current volunteers, program staff, and friends are all welcome.

Date:                    Wednesday, May 9,
Time:                    12:00-1:00pm – please bring a lunch! Drinks will be provided.
Location:             Catholic Volunteer Network office, 6930 Carroll Ave, Suite 820, Takoma Park, MD. Free two-hour parking is available behind our building, and some street parking is available.
Why:                     The purpose of World Fair Trade Day is to raise greater awareness of Fair Trade to consumers, so that all trade becomes fair. Supporters will gather around 100,000 North American citizens, businesspeople, faith advocates, students, consumers and activists at Fair Trade events to celebrate the people who grow our food and produce our goods, as well as the businesses and nonprofits winning “Best in Fair Trade” Awards.
Register:              Click here to let us know you’ll be attending.

More about World Fair Trade Day & Fair Trade Resource Network, at www.FTRN.org.

Care for Creation - Volunteer Community Activity

We are all called to intentionally participate in the care of creation.

Activity:

With your volunteer community (and your placement site, if appropriate), use the Easter season to appreciate the world around you and to consider ways to participate in the stewardship of our planet. Here are some suggestions:
  • Devote some time each week- half an hour, an hour, a weekend morning- to exploring the natural environment around you. If you live in an urban area, explore parks and urban gardens.
  • Consider taking up a project to beautify the space in your neighborhood. Look into joining trash pick-up efforts or planting a garden.
  • In your community, inventory your trash. What can you do to reduce what goes into the garbage? Consider making the switch to cloth napkins and towels instead of paper products, buying food items in bulk and storing in reusable containers, and challenging yourself to recycle more than you throw away (check with your local municipality or recycling authority for approved items).
  • What other suggestions can you come up with that are unique to your location and situation?
  • See www.usccb.org/sdwp/ejp for resources and statements on care of creation.

http://pallotticenter.org/index.php?m=ca

Upcoming Event with Charis Ministries

Spirit@Work Retreat
Friday, April 27 – Sunday, April 29
University of St. Mary of the Lake Conference Center (Mundelein, IL)
Where is the Spirit calling you? Charis Ministries invites you to reflect on your gifts and how you are called to use them.  Join other young adults in exploring the big questions about who you are and where you're going!
For more info or to register, visit www.charisministries.org!

Are you seeking a volunteer opportunity? 
Want to get involved with Charis Ministries and help inspire other young adults to grow in their faith? Do you enjoy writing and reflecting on the gospel? Charis Ministries is looking for young adults interested in volunteering to write spiritual reflections for various times throughout the year. If you are interested or would like more information, please contact Stephanie Scherra, at stephanie@charisministries.org or at 773-508-2843.

••••••••



Charis Ministries is a Jesuit ministry to those in their 20s & 30s. A ministry of the Chicago-Detroit Provinces of the Society of Jesus, Charis offers retreats, service, leadership, and speaker opportunities that bring the gifts of Ignatian Spirituality to the lives of young adults.

Catholic Volunteer Network Alumni Service Event

Former volunteers who served with any of Catholic Volunteer Network’s member programs are welcome to join us for a morning of service at SOME (So Others Might Eat), a Catholic Volunteer Network member program. We will prepare and serve breakfast to the guests and after serving, the volunteers will enjoy a simple meal and participate in a time of discussion and reflection. Current volunteers and friends and family are welcome also. (Sorry, we cannot accommodate children at this event.)


Date: Saturday, April 28, 2012
Time: 7:00am - 1:00pm
Location: SOME (So Others Might Eat), 71 'O' Street, NW, Washington, DC 20001 - www.some.org
                (SOME has a parking lot next to the dining room at 71 O Street. For public transportation, take Bus 93 to the North Capitol & P Street stop, and walk two blocks).
Registration: Please click here to register. <https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/viewform?formkey=dGpkeEVvVE40UmRENl90elNaMDBYNHc6MA#gid=0>  Deadline is April 24th.

This is a great opportunity to connect with other alumni in the area, while also nurturing the spirit of service!

Questions? Contact Alyssa Sickle at asickle@catholicvolunteernetwork.org.

Easter Tuesday Prayer

Daily Easter Prayer - Tuesday, April 10


“Lord, open my lips,
and my mouth shall declare your praise.”


Collect:
O God, Who have bestowed on us paschal remedies,
endow your people with heavenly gifts,
so that, possessed of perfect freedom, they may rejoice in heaven over what gladdens them now on earth. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever.

The Readings  Acts 2:36-41; Psalm 33; John 20:11-18

Daily Meditation:
You give us the freedom of the children of God.
The opportunity to recognize the healing power of love
that has been offered us really does fill these days with power. It is about recognizing Jesus alive, and Jesus with me now.
It is about freedom from fear, freedom for courageous love and service.
Mary turned around and saw Jesus standing there.
But she did not know who he was. Jesus asked her, “Why are you crying? Who are you looking for?” John 20:14-15

Intercessions:
By his own power Christ raised up the temple of his body  when it had been destroyed in death.  With joy let us ask him:   Lord, share with us the fruits of your victory. Christ our Savior, when you rose again  you brought to the holy women and the apostles  the joyful news of a world redeemed,  - make us witnesses to your risen life. You promised to all people  that we would rise up again to newness of life,  - make us heralds of your Gospel. You showed yourself to your apostles  and breathed the Holy Spirit on them,  - renew in us the presence of the same creator Spirit. You promised to be with your disciples  to the end of the world,   - stay with us today, and remain with us always.

Closing Prayer:
Loving God, I feel your healing touch deep in my soul. I sense the power of Easter in your love for me. It is the power of your love that frees me to rely on your gentle care. I am filled with joy at the many gifts you give me. Let me now feel free to celebrate your love and share it with others.
May the Lord bless us,
protect us from all evil and bring us to everlasting life. Amen.


http://onlineministries.creighton.edu/CollaborativeMinistry/Lent/6th-Easter-Week.html#tue

Prayer for Peace During the Holy Triduum

On Ash Wednesday and every day during Lent, we ask people everywhere to recite this prayer for world peace by Sr. Joan Chittister, OSB.




Great God, who has told us
"Vengeance is mine,"
save us from ourselves,
save us from the vengeance in our hearts
and the acid in our souls.

Save us from our desire to hurt as we have been hurt,
to punish as we have been punished,
to terrorize as we have been terrorized.
Give us the strength it takes
to listen rather than to judge,
to trust rather than to fear,
to try again and again
to make peace even when peace eludes us.

We ask, O God, for the grace
to be our best selves.

We ask for the vision
to be builders of the human community
rather than its destroyers.

We ask for the humility as a people
to understand the fears and hopes of other peoples.

We ask for the love it takes
to bequeath to the children of the world to come
more than the failures of our own making.

We ask for the heart it takes
to care for all the peoples
of Afghanistan and Iraq, of Palestine and Israel
as well as for ourselves.

Give us the depth of soul, O God,
to constrain our might,
to resist the
temptations of power,
to refuse to attack the attackable,
to understand
that vengeance begets violence,
and to bring peace – not war – wherever we go.

For You, O God, have been merciful to us.

For You, O God, have been patient with us.

For You, O God, have been gracious to us.

And so may we be merciful
and patient
and gracious
and trusting
with these others who you also love.

This we ask through, Jesus
the one without vengeance in his heart.

This we ask forever and ever. Amen.



Reprinted with permission from Pax Christi USA, www.paxchristiusa.org

http://pallotticenter.org/index.php?m=ca

Upcoming Events from the Sisters of Bon Secours

“Come and See” Religious Life Vocation Weekend for WomenJune 8-10, 2012 / Baltimore, Maryland area
Sisters of Bon Secours Provincial House

For information, call Sr. Pat toll-free 877-742-0277
Email:  CBSVocations@bshsi.org
Website:  http://www.BonSecoursVocations.org
Next scheduled weekend: October 19-21, 2012

DESCRIPTION: We invite single Catholic women (ages 19-45) to experience the life of the Sisters of Bon Secours and to learn more about religious life as a nun. You will have the opportunity to be with sisters as you learn about our life. You'll also meet and share with other women who are exploring religious life as a life option. This weekend offers time for discussions, prayer and reflection, Mass, relaxation, and conferences.  Registration deadline:  June 1, 2012. 



Project Good Help – Summer Service Program
July 2-8, 2012 / Baltimore, Maryland area
Sisters of Bon Secours Provincial House

For information, call Sr. Fran at 845-721-0980

DESCRIPTION: We invite single, Catholic women, ages 19 – 35, with a willingness to serve those in need, to join us for this exciting week of volunteering and faith sharing with the Sisters of Bon Secours in Baltimore.  Women can share their gifts and work as a team in a community garden, a drop-in center for women, a family support/learning center and senior housing.  Space is limited, please register early. 



“Come and See” Religious Life Vocation Weekend for Women
October 19-21, 2012 / Baltimore, Maryland area
Sisters of Bon Secours Provincial House

For information, call Sr. Pat toll-free 877-742-0277

DESCRIPTION: We invite single Catholic women (ages 19-45) to experience the life of the Sisters of Bon Secours and to learn more about religious life as a nun. You will have the opportunity to be with sisters as you learn about our life. You'll also meet and share with other women who are exploring religious life as a life option. This weekend offers time for discussions, prayer and reflection, Mass, relaxation, and conferences.  Registration deadline:  October 12, 2012. 

Leaders in Transition Certificate Program at the University of Notre Dame

Leaders in Transition Certificate Program
July 29–August 3, 2012

Qualities of leadership exhibited by postgraduate volunteers are increasingly recognized by employers. The goal of this week-long certificate program is to offer tools and resources to help leaders transition from volunteering to employment. The certificate program is open to anyone who has completed a year or more of full-time volunteer service. The certificate program will be held at the University of Notre Dame in Notre Dame, Indiana during the week of July 29–August 3, 2012. The program is free and includes a $150 stipend to help cover travel and food. Also, free lodging is available in an on-campus air-conditioned dormitory, double room occupancy.

The Leaders In Transition Certificate Program in Career Management is presented by the University of Notre Dame’s Mendoza College of Business Master of Nonprofit Administration Program in collaboration with the Center for Social Concerns and Career Center.

View information on the 2012 Leaders in Transition Certificate Program.

APPLY ONLINE

Community Activity for Lent

Letting Go and Living in the Hope of Easter

Brief Description: Many of the spiritual practices of Lent – fasting, doing penance, giving alms, prayer, and others – help us focus our attention on our relationship to God and the priorities in our lives.

The following activity is designed to help you as individuals and as a community of volunteers consider your priorities and reflect on your hopes for the future.


Directions: Gather as a community, and first reflect individually on the following thoughts.

“…you will see that there is one thing and only one thing that causes unhappiness. The name of that thing is Attachment. What is an attachment? An emotional state of clinging caused by the belief that without some particular thing or some person you cannot be happy… an attachment by its very nature makes you vulnerable to emotional turmoil and is always threatening to shatter your peace.”

- Anthony de Mello, SJ, The Way to Love


De Mello goes on to describe the way to drop attachments and the benefits of not being attached to things or people. He says,

“If you just enjoy things, refusing to let yourself be attached to them, that is, refusing to hold the false belief that you will not be happy without them, you are spared all the struggle and emotional strain of protecting them and guarding them for yourself.”

De Mello encourages us to simply enjoy people and things, rather than forming co-dependencies with them. He also suggests that by limiting ourselves through attachments to a few things, we are prevented “from developing a wider and more varied taste for things and people.”


Ask yourself:

Since beginning your volunteer service, have there been any attachments (people or things) that you’ve given up, or that now have diminished importance? If so, what are they? Why do these attachments now have less significance in your life?

With Easter comes new life in Christ. What are some of the newer priorities in your life?

What hopes do you have for the remainder of your volunteer service?

If you feel comfortable sharing your insights, do so, and then move on to examining your priorities as a community.


As a community, ask:

Since beginning your time as a community, have there been attachments that you have collectively given up? If so, what are they? Consider household arrangements, food preferences, and other common concerns. What has your community gained from losing some of these attachments?

As you look forward to Easter, are there any new priorities your community wants to set for itself? What efforts will each community member contribute to keeping these priorities?

As St. Augustine wrote, “We are an Easter people, and Alleluia is our song.” Among the many blessings of our lives is the ability to live in hope and to reevaluate our priorities and relationships. Use this season to consider how far you’ve come, what you’ve learned, and the numerous possibilities that are yet to come in your volunteer service.

http://www.pallotticenter.org/index.php?m=ca

Simple Living in Lent

Lent is a great time to take a step back and reflect on many different aspects of our lives as volunteers. One particular value we can focus on during Lent is simple living. No matter where you are in terms of your living experience as a volunteer, you can always reflect on how you are doing and challenge yourself to dig deeper and rededicate yourself to this value.

In keeping with the Pastoral Circle, it is important to reflect theologically on what we are doing. In Matthew 6: 19-21, Jesus says, “Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moths and vermin destroy, and where thieves break in and steal. But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven… For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” Jesus tells us to not focus on our worldly possessions because they are fleeting, but instead, to focus on what cannot go away: our relationships with ourself, with others, and with God. During Lent, as Catholics, we are challenged to pray, fast and give alms. This allows us an opportunity to grow closer to God.

As a volunteer in a Catholic program, you have a special opportunity to take these three tasks to a deeper level because you are in a position to examine praying, fasting and giving alms through the lens of your experience as a volunteer who is living simply for this year or more of service. Most people do not have the opportunity to accompany those most in need, create structural change, work for the Church, live in an intentional community, and develop their spirituality like you have the opportunity to do during this year or more of service.

These six weeks of Lent are an ideal time to refocus your energy around simple living.

- Don’t eat meat for the entire forty days not just on Fridays.
- Limit your use of technology.
- Spend time with a community member or neighbor you do not know that well.
- Pray the rosary or spend a part of every day in prayer or in reflection on your life and relationship with God.
- Take part in any Lenten reflection opportunities the church in your community offers.
- Start spiritual direction, if you have not done so already.
- Save $5 from your living stipend every week and donate that money to the organization where you work or some other cause that is dear to your heart.
- Learn about a new social justice issue.
- Raise money or resources for a local soup kitchen, domestic violence center, or homeless shelter.

No matter what you decide to do this Lent, be sure to take the time to reflect on what you are doing, why you are doing it and how this can make you a better person. If you live in community, work together with your community members to support and encourage each other’s work during Lent. Cherish these forty days of growth and challenge and look forward to the Resurrection and how much you will develop as a volunteer, an employee, a community member and a Christian.



http://www.pallotticenter.org/newsletters/sharedvision/Shared%20Visions%20Vol%2022%20No%203%20%20red.pdf

Catholic Volunteer Network Events in Los Angeles

Catholic Volunteer Network Service Event
You’re invited to join Catholic Volunteer Network for a morning of service at the Downtown Women’s Center. We will prepare and serve a meal to the Center’s guests and organize donations. After serving, the volunteers will enjoy a simple lunch and participate in a time of reflection.

Date: Saturday, March 17, 2012
Time: 9:30 a.m. – 2:00 p.m. PDT
Location: Downtown Women's Center, 442 S. San Pedro Street, Los Angeles, CA 90013
Registration: Please click here to register. (https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/viewform?formkey=dFJMc2RTbVR2RXh5VW12N3JfSjhQS2c6MQ)


AmeriCorps Week Reception and Dinner
AmeriCorps week is March 10-18, 2012 and Catholic Volunteer Network is getting ready to show our AmeriCorps spirit! We are hosting a reception in Los Angeles on March 16 to honor our current and former AmeriCorps members. We want to thank you for your commitment to volunteer service! Volunteer program staff, site supervisors, and prospective volunteers are also welcome. Dinner will be provided.

Date: Friday, March 16, 2012
Time: 6:00 – 8:00 p.m., PDT
Location: Basement of Sacred Heart Chapel at Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles, CA
Who’s invited: Current and former AmeriCorps members, program staff, prospective volunteers – and anyone interested in learning more about AmeriCorps!
Special guest speaker: Rey Barrera, former AmeriCorps member and volunteer with Catholic Volunteer Network member program Good Shepherd Volunteers. Rey currently works for the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles as a Campaign Coordinator.

RSVP by Wednesday, March 14: Please click here to RSVP. (https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/viewform?pli=1&formkey=dFBGaGRWWjJqQkYyU21ERVlqcGVkTWc6MQ#gid=0)



Questions about any of these events? Please contact Alyssa Sickle at asickle@catholicvolunteernetwork.org.

Second Week of Lent: Call to Maturity

From Catholics on Call:


Introduction:
In our reflection for Ash Wednesday, we talked about the fact that Lent is "the new beginning," a chance to re-imagine our relationship to God, ourselves, and our world. To go back to the beginning, according to a long-standing tradition in the church, also means that we are invited to revisit the meaning of our Baptism, that sacrament that made us children of God, gave us the gift of God's abundant love, and called us to be Jesus' presence in our world. As we reflect on our Baptism in these six weeks of Lent, we recall some thoughts that Bishop Morneau shared in his talk at the Young Adult Conference about the various ways we are called by our Baptism (1).

(1) see The Art of Discernment, In: Catholics on Call - Discerning a Life of Service in the Church, pg. 64


Reading: Mt 20:25-28
You know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them and the great ones make their authority over them felt. But it shall not be so among you. Rather, whoever wishes to be great among you shall be your servant; whoever wishes to be first among you shall be your slave. Just so, the Son of Man did not come to be served but to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many. (Gospel of Wednesday of the Second Week of Lent)


Reflection:
Through Baptism we are called to "maturity." Many times we think a mature person is someone who has "grown up" and "figured it all out." Most of us won't identify with this description. The truth is that we are "growing up," we are growing into who we are called to be, during our entire life. Bishop Morneau describes the call to maturity as "developing an ever deeper sense of our identity and destiny; ... nurturing our ability to care and love; and [being] good stewards of God's gifts." In the Scripture passage from the Gospel of Matthew, Jesus describes what it means to be a mature disciple: To be "grown up" in a Christian sense, means to remain "small" and imitate Jesus in his mission of radical service to others. As we discern God's call for us, the important questions to ask when we make our decisions are: "Does this help me to grow in my identity as a disciple of Jesus? Does it give me the opportunity to love? Can I use the gifts God has given me in service for others?"


Questions for Reflection:
What decisions have you made lately? Do they help you to grow and become a mature disciple of Jesus?


Prayer:
Lord Jesus, sometimes I don't make the best decisions. Many times I choose things because they give me an immediate satisfaction or make me live more comfortably. In this season of Lent help me to focus again on my baptismal call and to strive for spiritual growth. Thank you for your radical love for me and all of us, and give me the strength to serve you in my brothers and sisters. Amen.

The Pretzel: Brought to You by Lent

From Busted Halo:




By Elizabeth A. Elliott


Pretzels come in many flavors, shapes, and sizes — not unlike us. These treats are great with cheese or other dips or just by themselves. But have you stopped to consider they actually have an historical place in Lent?

If you take a moment to look at the typical twist pretzel, you can see that it is a model of the common prayer position from the early 600s of folding your arms over each other on your chest and putting your hands on your shoulders.


Pretzels were developed as an option to satisfy abstinence and fasting laws of the time. Eggs, fat, and milk were forbidden during Lent. So, the remaining ingredients that one could use included water, flour, and salt. A young monk baked the first pretzel — making a Lenten bread of water, flour, and salt, forming the dough into the prayer position of the day, and baking it as soft bread. These first pretzels would have been much like the soft pretzels we have today.

Greg Dues, in his book Catholic Customs and Traditions, explains more of the pretzel history:

“These little breads were shaped in the form of arms crossed in prayer and were called bracellae (Latin, ‘little arms’). Among the Germans the word became ‘bretzel’. These pretzels were a common Lenten food throughout the Middle Ages in Europe, and became an all year round snack, in its original shape only in the last (19th) century.
The suggestion of arms crossed in the form of prayer may have led to pretzels being given as a reward to young children when they could recite their prayers. Pretiola means little reward, which could also be a derivative of the term pretzel. The three holes in a pretzel are also said to represent the Holy Trinity.

After their invention, pretzels became a symbol of good luck, long life, and prosperity. They were commonly given to the poor and hungry. The legend of the hard pretzels that we snack on today tells of an apprentice baker who fell asleep while preparing pretzels and let the fire begin to die out. When he noticed, he restarted the fire, but the result was overcooked pretzels. The surprise was a tasty treat that was less perishable than the soft pretzels and easy to have available to give to those in need.


Food has long played a role in our faith, especially during Lent. We abstain from certain foods, such as meat, and spend time fasting. This practice can provide us with a deeper religious experience by joining us with people throughout the world who struggle to survive. Fasting is an opportunity to be in solidarity with those who experience physical and spiritual hunger.


Pretzel twist

When the monk first baked pretzels so long ago, I don’t think he could have imagined all of the different types and flavors that we have today. There are roasted garlic, Italian herb, parmesan, and butter pretzels. Beerzels are made from the favorite beverage that sometimes accompany the treat. Auntie Anne’s makes a seaweed-flavored pretzel in Singapore and a banana-flavored pretzel in the UK. Even a new flavor of M&M’s includes pretzels inside their candy-coated exteriors. The food even inspired furniture maker George Nelson to create a pretzel chair in 1952.

I had no idea that pretzels were a Lenten food. Through the years, I’ve spent time trying to understand the importance of Lent and trying to remember not to eat meat on Fridays. I admit, some years I’m more successful than others. Yet I can see how pretzels tie into Lent in a spiritual way. In the life of a faithful person, there are many times you may feel twisted up inside, struggling with your beliefs or dealing with frustrations. But if you take a look at a typical twist pretzel, remember its origins in Lent, and move into a position of prayer (spiritually or physically), you are exactly in the position you need to be in when you feel twisted up inside.


Make pretzels part of your Lenten tradition this year. Here’s a pretzel recipe to try. Bake them (or buy your favorite kind), grab a beer, and remember the faith-pretzel connection this Lent.


http://bustedhalo.com/blogs/pretzels-and-lent


Elizabeth A. Elliott is a freelance writer from Omaha, Nebraska. She has degrees in journalism and music from Creighton University and a certificate in paralegal studies from the College of Saint Mary. Elizabeth has written for several publications including America, B2B magazine, Catholic Voice and Omaha World-Herald. Elizabeth is also a flutist and has played for more than 20 years.

From Mission to Mission Workshop

WHAT: From Mission to Mission Re-entry Workshop
WHO: DOMESTIC and international volunteers and missioners
WHEN: April 12-15, 2012
WHERE: South Orange, New Jersey
WHAT WILL WE DO: Together with others who "get it" we will focus on...

• Telling the story of your experience

• Honoring the gifts of the experience

• Recognizing what needs healing from the experience

• Understanding and dealing with transition

• Integrating the experience

From Mission to Mission does not want finances to keep anyone from participating in our workshop. We are willing to work with each person to make it affordable.

Please see our website for more information: http://www.missiontomission.org/.

Be Kind.

Fr. James Martin, SJ from America Magazine shares his recommendation for what to do for Lent:




http://www.americamagazine.org/content/video/video-index.cfm?series_id=1322

Pope Benedict Encourages Faithful on Lenten 'Journey of Spiritual Renewal'


On Ash Wednesday, the Holy Father reflected: 'In these 40 days that will lead us to Easter, may we find new courage to accept with patience and with faith situations of difficulty, of affliction and trial, knowing that from the darkness the Lord will make a new day dawn.' He also commented on the meaning of ashes.

VATICAN CITY (EWTN NEWS)—As he observed Ash Wednesday, Pope Benedict XVI urged Christians to live the 40 days of Lent with faith and patience, aware that God will bring light, truth and joy into the darkness.

“In these 40 days that will lead us to Easter, may we find new courage to accept with patience and with faith situations of difficulty, of affliction and trial, knowing that from the darkness the Lord will make a new day dawn,” the Pope said Feb. 22, the first day of Lent.

“And if we are faithful to Jesus and follow him on the way of the cross, the bright world of God, the world of light, truth and joy will be gifted to us once more.”

The Pope delivered his comments at his weekly general audience, which was held in the Vatican’s Pope Paul VI hall and attended by more than 7,500 pilgrims.

He explained that in the early Church it was only those preparing to be baptized who would observe the 40 days of Lenten preparation. Subsequently, however, all Christians were invited “to experience this journey of spiritual renewal, to conform themselves and their lives to that of Christ,” including those who had fallen away from the Church.

The Pope said that the “participation of the whole community” emphasizes that “redemption is not available to only a few, but to all, through the death and resurrection of Christ.”

“The time leading up to Easter is a time of ‘metanoia,’ a time of change and penance, a time which identifies our human lives and our entire history as a process of conversion, which begins to move now in order to meet the Lord at the end of time,” he said.

Pope Benedict noted that the Church calls the 40 days leading up to  Easter “Quadragesima.” And it does so with a “clear reference to sacred Scripture,” where the number 40 is often symbolically used to express “a time of expectation, purification and return to the Lord,” he taught.

The Pope said that the “Christian liturgy of Lent” is meant to spur a “journey of spiritual renewal” and time more focused on learning how to imitate Jesus, who showed Christians “how to overcome temptation with the word of God.”

The Pope asked those at today’s audience to note how God sustained his people, even in the wilderness. After their exodus from Egypt, for example, God preceded the Jewish people “in a cloud or a pillar of fire, ensured their daily nourishment, showering manna upon them and bringing forth water from rock.” It was, in many ways, a “time of the special election of God,” or, added the Pope, “the time of first love,” of a people for their God.

But time spent in the desert can also be “the time of the greatest temptations and dangers,” Pope Benedict observed, pointing out that this happened to Jesus, but “without any compromise with sin.” Jesus always sought “moments of solitude to pray to his Father,” but it is in those moments he was most assailed by “temptation and the seduction of (the) devil.” It was there, for example, that he was offered “another messianic way, far from God’s plan.”

Just as this dynamic is found in the Old and New Testaments, the Pope said, it can also be found in the “condition of the pilgrim Church” as it makes its way through “the “wilderness’ of the world and history.”

This wilderness is made up of “the aridity and poverty of words, life and values, of secularism” and the “culture of materialism which encloses people within a worldly horizon and detaches them from any reference to the transcendent,” he said.

It is in such an atmosphere that “the sky above us is dark, because it is veiled with clouds of selfishness, misunderstanding and deceit.”

At the same time, “the wilderness can become a period of grace” for the Church, because “we have the certainty that even from the hardest rock God can cause the living water to gush forth, water which quenches  thirst and restores strength.”

Pope Benedict finished by saying that this hope in God’s power should sustain the Church and each Christian during the following 40 days.

Like millions of Catholics around the world, Pope Benedict XVI received ashes on Ash Wednesday. He said that they become a “sacred symbol” of austerity which reflects both the “curse” of sin and the promise of the Resurrection in a fallen world.

The Ash Wednesday words from Scripture (“Dust you are and unto dust you shall return”) are “an invitation to penance, humility and an awareness of our mortal state,” the Pope said.

“We are not to despair, but to welcome in this mortal state of ours the unthinkable nearness of God, who opens the way to resurrection, to paradise regained, beyond death. … The same spirit that resurrected Jesus from the dead can transform our hearts from hearts of stone to hearts of flesh,” he said in his homily at the fifth-century Basilica of Santa Sabina, where he received ashes.

Lent is thus a journey towards the “Easter of resurrection.”

The Pope spoke after leading the Ash Wednesday evening procession on Rome’s Aventine Hill, a tradition revived by Pope John Paul II in 1979.

The papal homily included a short reflection on the meaning of ashes in Scripture and in Christian thought.

While the ashes are not a sacramental sign, they are linked with “prayer and the sanctification of the Christian people,” he said.

In Genesis, God created man out of dust from the soil and breathed a “breath of life” into him. The Ash Wednesday ashes, therefore, recall the creation of mankind. 

Being human means uniting matter with the “Divine breath.” However, the symbol of dust takes on a negative connotation because of sin.

“Before the Fall, the soil is totally good,” the Pope said. But after the Fall, dust produces “only thorns and brambles.” Rather than recalling the “creative hand of God” that is open to life, dust becomes “a sign of death.”

Pope Benedict said that this change shows that the earth itself participates in man’s destiny. The cursing of the soil helps man recognize his limitations and his own human nature.

This curse comes from sin, not from God, he explained. Even within  this punishment, there is “a good intention that comes from God.”

When God says in Genesis, “Dust you are and unto dust you shall return,” he intends not only a just punishment, but also an announcement of the path to salvation, the Pope preached.

This salvation “will pass through the earth, through that same dust, that same flesh which will be assumed by the Word incarnate.”

http://www.ncregister.com/daily-news/pope-benedict-encourages-faithful-on-lenten-journey-of-spiritual-renewal/

Sainthood for Filipino catechist highlights evangelization, role of laity


Pope Benedict XVI announced Calungsod's canonization through Cardinal Angelo Amato, prefect of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints, at St. Peter's Basilica on Saturday after the ceremony in which 22 bishops from around the world became cardinals.

Palma said the Cebu archdiocese had formed preparatory committees in January for preparations in Cebu, for pilgrimages and ceremonies in Rome, and for a thanksgiving ceremony on the pilgrims' return to the country.

Vidal said expenses for Calungsod's canonization activities could surpass the cost of his beatification, which cost 25 million pesos [$587,000] 12 years ago.

In Cebu, Catholics have long been offering prayers for canonization and thanksgiving at the shrine dedicated to Calungsod. After the canonization date was announced, Catholics trooped to the shrine to pray and light candles.

For Palma, president of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of the Philippines (CBCP), the canonization is not just a jubilant celebration, but also an "opportunity for grace" for anyone who appreciates the life of saints.

"From the perspective of the fact that he was a catechist, it is a challenge to evangelization," the CBCP president said, noting that Calungsod would be canonized on World Mission Sunday.

"That's an added dimension to why he was canonized," Palma said. "He evangelized. He went out of the country to reach out to other people to proclaim about Christ. He is a layperson, a young boy who joined the  priest as a catechist, and of course at that time, because of various reasons, but primarily because of animosity towards the faith, he was martyred."

He said Calungsod's life story is relevant to Filipinos and other Catholics today.

"The work of evangelization is everybody's work," Palma said. "For many years, when we think of evangelizing, catechizing or teaching other people about Christ, we say that's the work of the nun or the priest. This is all our work, and that's what makes Pedro Calungsod's canonization at this time more meaningful."

The archbishop cited other parallels between missionary life and struggles people face today.

"When we are inclined to complain or withdraw, just think the martyrs have had to do much more with much less," he said. "That holds true not only with mission to other countries, but even with fulfilling our daily duties. Many of them are not enjoyable, not all is sweet and easy and light. But if they are valuable and good, can we not make sacrifices?"

Palma and the canonization committees hope to stress these values in the catechesis they will conduct through October. He said efforts include publishing a book containing key information on Blessed Pedro.

"We will be planning so we can make this an opportunity for renewal for all, not only those pilgrims going to Rome," Palma said.

Others to be canonized with Blessed Pedro include:
  • Jacques Berthieu, French martyr and priest of the Society of Jesus
  • Giovanni Battista Piamarta, Italian priest and founder of the Congregation of the Holy Family of Nazareth and of the Congregation of the Humble Sister Servants of the Lord
  • Maria del Carmen, Spanish founder of the Conceptionist Missionary Sisters of Teaching
  • Marianne Cope, German religious of the Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis in Syracuse, N.Y.
  • Kateri Tekakwitha, American laywoman
  • Anna Schäffer, German laywoman

http://ncronline.org/news/people/sainthood-filipino-catechist-highlights-evangelization-role-laity