The Catholic Light DIOCESE OF SCRANTON WWW.DIOCESEOFSCRANTON.ORG VOLUME 115 NUMBER 5 ISSN-0164-9418 BISHOP BAMBERA’S MESSAGE FOR EASTER Pope Francis carries palm fronds in procession at the start of Palm Sunday Mass in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican March 29. At the Mass the Holy Father remembered all those who “sacrifice themselves daily,” following Jesus in serving others and giving witness to the Gospel. He also cited “our brothers and sisters who are persecuted because they are Christians – the martyrs of our own time.” Dear friends, “Do not be amazed! You seek Jesus of Nazareth, the crucified. He has been raised; he is not here.” These words from Saint Mark’s gospel confronted the first followers of Jesus on the day of his resurrection and boldly affirmed God’s promise to save his people. Yet, despite the hope that such words imparted, the followers of Jesus were still amazed and fearful. They didn’t understand. They would come to faith in the resurrection – but not immediately. It would take some time for them to comprehend the wonder and power of God at work in their world and, more importantly, in their lives. But we also know from accounts recorded in the Acts of the Apostles that the early Christian community eventually grew to understand the impact of the risen Jesus in their lives. We know too that, because of their relationship with Jesus, the believers were of one mind and heart, they worked together to respond to the needs of each member of the community, and they gave powerful witness to their conviction that through the Resurrection, God continues to live and work in our world, to touch the lives of his people and to bring them peace. Life for us can be just as challenging as it was for the first followers of Jesus. Despite the powerful words of faith that we read in the scriptures and proclaim whenever we gather for the celebration of the Eucharist, at times the reality of life can consume us with grief, pain and fear as we face war and terrorism in our world and disappointments and loss in our towns and neighborhoods. As a local and universal Church, we constantly confront change and are challenged by many voices in our lives and society to set aside values and beliefs that lie at the core of who we are as followers of Jesus. Like all people, we personally face disappointments in life and grieve when loved ones are separated from us in death. Yet in all of these seasons of life, we too are called to move forward in hope. Through the power of the Risen Christ who lives in us through Baptism, we are provided with the source of strength that we need to remain faithful. A few weeks ago, I had the opportunity to celebrate Mass with nine young men discerning the possibility of a priestly vocation. I was so impressed by their maturity of faith and their selfless desire to serve the Church. During the course of some conversation, one of the young men asked me what gives me hope in my ministry as Bishop of Scranton. My response to that question was the same as it was five years ago when I was ordained a bishop. The People of God – the wonderful parishioners of our 120 parishes – give me hope. As we celebrate Holy Week and prepare to commemorate the resurrection of Jesus that defines who we are as Christians, you are constant reminders to me of the presence of the living God in our lives. As I reflect upon the past five years since you worked with me to establish our vision for the Church of THURSDAY, APRIL 2, 2015 (CNS photo/Paul Haring) Bishop Bambera blesses palms in the Cathedral Prayer Garden to begin the Palm Sunday Mass. The Catholic Light Photo/Paula Lynn Connors “In the midst of all that unfolds around us, signs of the Resurrection continue to abound in our lives and throughout the Church of Scranton! Jesus is raised from the dead and has been living within the lives and hearts of his faithful people from the moment of his resurrection, guiding his Church and giving it life.” Scranton at the beginning of my tenure as bishop, it is clearer to me than ever that you have opened your lives and hearts to the risen Jesus. You have worked to heal and stabilize our parishes from the “right-sizing” of Called to Holiness and Mission. Ministry formation initiatives have been launched and are gaining incredible responses as you, our faithful people, seek to take your rightful place within the Church as the baptized – identifying, nurturing and seeking to share the gifts that God has given to you. Pastors and members of Parish Pastoral Councils – over 600 strong – are actively involved in pastoral planning. And faithful from around our eleven counties have and continue to respond to the gospel imperative to live the example of Jesus and to serve the neediest in our midst. The power of the risen Jesus to heal hearts and change lives will be most evident on Holy Saturday night during the great Vigil of Easter when 70 catechumens from throughout the Diocese of Scranton will be baptized into the life, death and resurrection of Jesus and 72 candidates will present themselves for full initiation into the Catholic Church. In so doing, they will offer a powerful witness to our Church and especially to our world. Their very presence affirms that for many, it is not enough to simply place our trust in the passing things of this life. Rather, for them and us, life only makes sense when we hand ourselves over to the power of God manifested in the resurrection of Jesus and the gospel for which he gave his life. As bishop of this great local church, I am profoundly touched by the example of your lives. In the midst of all that unfolds around us, signs of the Resurrection continue to abound in our lives and throughout the Church of Scranton! Jesus is raised from the dead and has been living within the lives and hearts of his faithful people from the moment of his resurrection, guiding his Church and giving it life. May we be renewed during this Easter season to continually embrace our mission as a Church to make evident, in tangible and convincing ways, the life and love of the risen Jesus. In so doing, may we take consolation from the words of Jesus that we will soon hear on Ascension Thursday, “I am with you always, until the end of the age.” Faithfully yours in the Risen Christ, Most Reverend Joseph C. Bambera, D.D., J.C.L. Bishop of Scranton APRIL 2, 2015 • THE CATHOLIC LIGHT 2 Sacred Paschal Triduum Begins on Holy Thursday The three most sacred days of the Church’s liturgical year, known as the Sacred Paschal Triduum, begin on Holy Thursday, April 2, with the evening Mass of the Lord’s Supper. During the Triduum (Latin for “three days”), the Church solemnly celebrates the greatest mysteries of our redemption, keeping by means of special celebrations the memorial of the Lord, crucified, buried and risen. Holy Thursday marks the day on which Christ instituted the Holy Eucharist and the priestly Order and gave us the commandment concerning fraternal charity. At the Cathedral of Saint Peter, Morning Prayer will be at 8 a.m. The Pontifical Evening Mass of the Lord’s Supper will begin at 5:30 p.m. Bishop Joseph C. Bambera will be the principal celebrant and homilist. During the Mass, there will be the rite of the Washing The Good Friday collection, which is taken up in Catholic parishes’ worldwide each year, is used to support a variety of Christian ministries in the Holy Land. These ministries are as diverse as running homes for the elderly poor in Bethlehem, leading parishes in war-ravaged Syria, welcoming millions of pilgrims to shrines or conducting archaeological research. In these times of heightened tension, those who participate in the Good Friday collection are standing up for peace and reconciliation in a troubled land. Pope Francis has taken to heart the plight of Christians in this corner of the world. “Their suffering, aggravated because of the continuing hostilities in the region…cries out to God and it calls for our commitment to prayer and concrete efforts to help in any way possible,” he said in a Letter to the Christians in the Middle East. This collection, which has been requested by Pope Francis and his predecessors, is the primary way that Catholics can support the holy places that still commemorate the time that Jesus spent on earth. The massive basilica in Nazareth stands over the cave where the Annunciation of the angel proclaimed the Good News that Mary was Priests serving throughout the Diocese gathered at the Cathedral of Saint Peter on Tuesday, March 31, for the Solemn Pontifical Mass of Chrism, at which the Holy Oils used during the conferral of sacraments throughout the Church year were blessed. During this Mass, priests and deacons, along with lay representatives from diocesan parishes, acknowledge the Bishop’s role as the unifying symbol for The Catholic Light Photos/Paula Lynn Connors Church governance and pastoral guidance, and priests renew their ordination promises. of Feet, which re-enacts Christ’s washing of the feet of his apostles at the Last Supper. Following this Mass there will be the transfer of the Most Blessed Sacrament to the place of repose. Adoration will continue until 9 p.m., when Night Prayer will be celebrated. Good Friday A Pontifical Collection Support Christians in the Holy Land Please give generously on Good Friday as urged by the Holy Father. Commissaries of the Holy Land in the United States 1400 Quincy Street NE, Washington, DC 20017 • MyFranciscan.org 3140 Meramec Street, St. Louis, MO 63118 | PO Box 69, San Miguel, CA 93451 with child receives funds from the collection. Outside the church in Nazareth is the boundary of the small town that was home to Mary and Joseph before the birth of the Savior. Nearby, the Franciscans, with the funds from the collection, support a church where tradition holds that Jesus worked his first miracle in Cana. Not far are shrines and holy places that commemorate the Sermon on the Mount that welcome pilgrims and those on spiritual retreat. Of course, the Good Friday collection supports the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, originally built by the Emperor Constantine, in Jerusalem which encapsulates what tradition holds is the place of Cal- vary and the tomb where Jesus was laid before his Resurrection. The Good Friday collection supports these sacred places and much more including 29 active parishes, scholarly research and archaeological investigations from a Christian perspective, and assistance such as housing, health care and pastoral ministry for the people living in the area. “So many of our brothers and sisters are carrying their own crosses daily in the Holy Land, and the Christian population in this sacred land is dwindling. Through our prayers and generous support, we can walk in solidarity with them and help them in their time of need,” said Bishop Joseph C. Bambera. On Good Friday, April 3, and the following day (up to the Easter Vigil Mass), by a most ancient tradition, the Church does not celebrate the sacraments at all, except for Penance and Anointing of the Sick. At the Cathedral, Morning Prayer for Good Friday will be at 8 a.m. The Commemoration of the Passion and Death of the Lord celebrated by Bishop Bambera will begin at 12:10 p.m. This solemn liturgy consists of three parts: the Liturgy of the Word, the Adoration of the Cross, and Holy Communion. Monsignor Dale R. Rupert, pastor of the Cathedral of Saint Peter Parish, will serve as homilist. In addition, the Stations of the Cross will be prayed at 5:30 p.m. Good Friday is a day of fast and abstinence. Holy Saturday, April 4, is the day that the Church waits at the Lord’s tomb in prayer, meditating on his passion and death and on his descent into hell, and awaiting his resurrection. Morning Prayer will be at 8 a.m. at the Cathedral, followed by a retreat for those preparing to receive the Easter Sacraments and to be brought into full communion with the Catholic Church. The blessing of Easter Baskets will take place at 1 p.m. in the Cathedral. The Vigil in the Holy Night of Easter is the night of keeping vigil for the Lord (Exodus 12:42), in which following the Gospel admonition (Luke 12:35-37), the faithful, carrying lighted lamps in their hands, should be like those looking for the Lord when he returns, so that at his coming he may find them awake and have them at his table. This night’s vigil is the greatest and most noble of all solemnities in the Church. Although celebrated entirely at night, this Mass of the Vigil is the first Mass of the Sunday of the Resurrection, and it is the center of the Sacred Paschal Triduum. Bishop Bambera will be the principal celebrant and homilist of the Easter Vigil Mass at the Cathedral, beginning at 8 p.m. on Saturday, April 4. This liturgy is arranged in four parts: 1) the Lucernarium (a service of light) and Easter Proclamation; 2) the Liturgy of the Word; 3) the Liturgy of Baptism and Confirmation in which new members of the Church are reborn; and 4) the Liturgy of the Eucharist. On the Holy Night of Easter, 142 people, who have participated in the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults (RCIA), will become fully initiated Catholics by the celebration of their Baptism, Confirmation, and reception of the Eucharist for the first time. This will take place during Easter Vigil Masses celebrated in parishes throughout the Diocese. They join tens of thousands of other individuals throughout the world who will become members of the Church that night. Easter Sunday of the Resurrection of the Lord is the most joyous day in the Church year. This joy overflows into the 50 days of the Easter season, which concludes on Pentecost Sunday. On Easter Day, April 5, Bishop Bambera will celebrate a Pontifical Mass at 10 a.m. at the Cathedral. Additional Masses during the day will be at 6:30 a.m., 12:15 p.m., and 5 p.m. One-Third at Goal with Three Months Remaining 3 The Gospel mandate, and a focal point of Pope Francis’s papacy, is that our love of God be reflected in love and service for one another, especially the poor and vulnerable. As explained by Most Reverend Joseph C. Bambera, D.D., J.C.L, Bishop of Scranton, “When we work together and share our blessings for the sake of our sisters and brothers, lives are transformed, our world is enriched and the love and goodness of the Lord Jesus is given life in our midst.” The Diocesan Annual Appeal joins parishes and parishioners in almsgiving to support Catholic ministries and programs serving people in northeast and north central Pennsylvania. With three months remaining in the 2014 Diocesan Appeal, the campaign stands at nearly $4.6 million or 84% of the $5.5 million goal. Of our 120 Diocesan parishes, 38 have surpassed their parish goal. An additional 14 parishes are at or above 90%. “I am very grateful to our wonderful pastors and parishioners who are making a tremendous effort to support the good work that we all do together in our Diocese,” said Bishop Bambera. “Gifts to the Diocesan Annual Appeal help all of us share in the mercy and love of Jesus Christ.” Exaltation of the Holy Cross Parish, Hanover Township, a small parish of 450 families, is celebrating this Appeal as the first time it has ever reached its parish goal, and has done so with the help of the Parish Youth Group and the Parish Men’s Club. Last year, the parish concluded the campaign at 80%. Pastor Father Kevin Mulhern explains: “Each year during the campaign, I try to educate parishioners that this is a major fund-raising effort and that they should support it as we are part of the Diocesan Family which provides these vital ministries and services. But it’s more difficult for smaller parishes which sometimes lose track of that connection to the larger picture. They’re busy within their own areas. “This year we reached 80% early enough that I felt we were finally in range. I appealed to parishioners’ generosity and their pride, saying ‘You can do this.’ Exaltation of the Holy Cross Parish, Hanover Township, reached its Annual Appeal goal this year for the first time, thanks in part to gifts from the Youth Group and Men’s Club. Youth Group leaders and the Men’s Club president are pictured with pastor Father Kevin Mulhern after Palm Sunday Mass. Standing from left are Barry Kaminski, Men’s Club president, Christine Kratz, Kaitlin Bradford, and Father Mulhern. Second row: Dominick Costantino, Jr., director of Music Ministry and Youth Ministry, Destiny Castrignano and Kaelee Kane. We had a little healthy competition with other parishes of our size. We sent out letters to new parishioners and to past donors who hadn’t yet given. We also reached out to the Youth Group and educated the kids about exactly where the money goes – to the elderly, the needy, retired priests, etc. – to help them decide if they wanted to make an Appeal donation.” “After the Youth Group understood the Appeal and were aware of what it means to so many people, they were happy to share the money they raised through their hard work,” said Dominick Costantino Jr., Exaltation director of Youth Ministry and Music Ministry. The youth donated $500 from their Christmas Cookie Walk, for which they baked 5,000 cookies. Mr. Costantino also assisted parish secretary Diane Bogarowski in preparing the Appeal letters. “We’re fostering the next generation of Appeal donors,” said Mr. Costantino. “When the Appeal comes around next year, they will give and encourage their families “I am very grateful to our wonderful pastors and parishioners who are making a tremendous effort to support the good work that we all do together in our Diocese. Gifts to the Diocesan Annual Appeal help all of us share in the mercy and love of Jesus Christ.” – Bishop Bambera to give. It will stay with them as they get older and have families of their own. “We are also grateful to our very active and generous Men’s Club, because when they realized our deficit they stepped in and made a gift of $1,375,” said Father Mulhern. “Making goal was a matter of everyone coming together to support the Appeal, parents and kids.” Exaltation achieved 108% of goal and will receive a rebate of 75% of the gifts the Diocese receives over the parish goal. St. Mary’s Parish, Waymart, has the distinction of being the first parish to reach goal in this Appeal campaign, achieving 100% in November. It is also the parish with the highest percentage of goal with 130% to date. Said Father John Sitko, pastor, “We showed the video to kick-off the campaign, we used the thermometer poster to show our progress, and then we made goal! God moved their hearts to give – that’s the only explanation I can give.” Among all parishes at goal, Our Lady of Perpetual Help Parish, Wyalusing, has the highest participation of parishioner support with 55% giving to the Appeal to reach 104% of their parish goal. Father Joseph Manarchuck, pastor, said he was “surprised we did so well! Though I really encourage our parishioners to fulfill their Diocesan duties, and I give them an update each weekend. I emphasize the in-pew solicitation weekend is a very important opportunity to achieve or exceed our goal for people who haven’t yet given.” Mary Ann Suszko, parish secretary, recalls that in addition to promoting the Appeal in the bulletin, using thermometer posters and Appeal intercessions at every Mass, Father Manarchuck also made Appeal reminders from the ambo, one which was very fruitful. “During one Mass, Father remarked that the parish was just $300 below goal,” said Mrs. Suszko. “After Mass, a ‘wonderful stranger’ went up to Father Manarchuck with a cash gift and said, ‘I have an extra $300.’” SS. Peter and Paul Parish, Towanda, has the second highest participation with 54% of parishioners contributing to make 101% of the goal. “I explain how the money will be used and I ask as many people to give as possible,” said Father Edward Michelini, pastor. “A gift in any amount is welcome.” The parish has achieved its goal for the past three years.” “People are generous and they feel a responsibility to give as long as they understand the money will be used,” said the pastor. “During the presentation kick-off, I explain that my own seminary training leading to the priesthood was supported by gifts to the Annual Appeal. I also remind parishioners that their money is distributed throughout the Diocese and a portion of it comes back here as emergency assistance – heat, food, shelter vouchers for people in need locally,” said Father Michelini. “Through the Annual Appeal, SS. Peter and Paul applied for and received Social Justice grants which help social service programs in the Northern Tier region.” Continued on page 11 THE CATHOLIC LIGHT • APRIL 2, 2015 Parishes Embrace Annual Appeal Journey as Members of the Diocesan Family APRIL 2, 2015 • THE CATHOLIC LIGHT 4 Sisters of Saints Cyril and Methodius A Vocation Journey By Sister Pamela Smith, SS.C.M. A Look Back For several consecutive Lenten Sundays, I’ve been at the Mass in Spanish in our parish. I’ve also attended Mass in English with the five other sisters who are part of our local community, but I have some personal reasons for wanting, periodically, to sing from Flor y Canto and to respond “Y con tu espiritu” when the priest says, “The Lord be with you.” One reason is simply to remember that the Church is catholic, with a small “c.” Another is to encounter once again a worshiping community in which language, culture, and faith seem to be so smoothly blended, something which is not always apparent in Anglo environs. A third reason is to witness evident zeal for the gospel, which appears in vigorous preaching, spirited music (accompanied by piano, guitar, percussion, and saxophone), an expanse of multi-generational families stretched across pew after pew, and gestures of devotion like the praying of the man who kneels in the middle aisle before Mass with his arms extended cruciform. But the most profound reason for my wanting to participate once again in the Spanish Mass has to do with nostalgia and a reclaiming of roots. In 1971-1972 I lived in Bethlehem, Pa., in a neighborhood which was rapidly becoming Puerto Rican. I was amid one of those late 1960s/ early 1970s searches for self, soul, meaning, and a modicum of sense. The U.S. was in upheaval, and it was the heyday of flower children, wildly painted Volkswagen buses, and war protests. Anything that smacked of “the Establishment”— government, Church, educational systems, business, industry — seemed suspect. To give a very abbreviated version of what happened that year, I would have to say that some key events propelled me into a major change of lifestyle: challenges from my Baptist and Mennonite friends which led me to read Sacred Scripture deeply and extensively; an experience of Church at its best among the Puerto Rican people who attended Holy Infancy; the impact of living in an impoverished neighborhood where family meant more than achievement; a realization that helping the world become a better place was not so much about what to do but Who to follow. I realized that the one and Sister Pamela Smith (left) and Rev. Gwendolyn Green at a Conference on Intercultural Understanding hosted by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. The Motherhouse of the Sisters of Saints Cyril and Methodius in Danville, Pa. Pope Francis has proclaimed 2015 a Year of Consecrated Life, asking the Church’s religious sisters, brothers and priests to “wake up the world” with their testimony of faith, holiness and hope. The Diocese of Scranton is blessed by the congregations of religious women and men who serve in our schools, colleges and universities, in our hospitals and nursing facilities, in our parishes and in agencies that serve the poor and neediest in our midst. During this special year The Catholic Light is publishing a series of articles highlighting these religious congregations. only one who had the secret to transforming a planet which seemed bent on destruction was Jesus Christ. Once that struck home I experienced the revival of a sneaky feeling that I might be called to religious life. It was a thought that the friends who had seen me through college, graduate school, four years of a teaching career, Friday nights at the Red Garter in Philadelphia, Saturday nights at the Main Point in Bryn Mawr, and attire purchases of kaftans, dashikis, tie-dyed T-shirts, and bell-bottoms found either laughable or unthinkable. The only ones who thought I might be a tad serious about convent life were the ones who had detected my undercurrents and outbursts of idealism. In any case, attending Spanish Masses 43 to 44 years after I moved from South Bethlehem and 40 years since I professed vows also serves as a reminder of how I arrived at where I have been and where I am. And Then There’s a Community The Sisters of Saints Cyril and Methodius were a community I had encountered twice, first in the second half of grade school when we moved from New York to Berwick, Pa., and then, one summer, in graduate school at Villanova. I was an educator, and I knew that they were too, but not in the mode of stuffy academics (part of the Establishment that I wanted to eschew). They were devout and companionable and down-to-earth. The SSCM’s I had met in both settings were good-hearted types with a notable sense of humor. Once I entered, I also learned that the sisters’ Slovak ethnic roots in many ways mirrored what I had treasured in my Puerto Rican neighborhood: an integration of faith and culture and everyday expressions which praised God in greetings, invoked God’s will when future possibilities were discussed and mentioned God in farewells without contracting “God be with you” to “Goodbye.” There was poetry, art, music, and stitchery that bespoke both native land and native religion. As I’ve lived with the sisters now for more than four decades, I’ve found that the community’s core mission has as much relevance and urgency as ever. Over the years we have developed a shorthand which gives contemporary expression to the purpose articulated at our founding in 1909 — the 4 E-s: evangelization, education, elder care, and ecumenism. We’ve also internalized, as well as written into our Constitutions, the reminder that, as consecrated women, our primary mission is the witness of our lives. We’re about prayer, community life, and service. The whole impetus is what the Church calls sequela Christi, the following of Christ. Continued on next page In response to the influx of immigrants from Slovakia to the United States in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Rev. Matthew Jankola, a Slovak priest of the Diocese of Scranton, founded the Sisters of Saints Cyril and Methodius for the purpose of educating the children of Slovak immigrants in parish schools. The Congregation of the Sisters of Saints Cyril and Methodius began existence in 1903 when five young Slovak women were accepted by the Sisters, Servants of the Immaculate Heart of Mary of Scranton to begin their initial formation in religious life. The first members were prepared in the academy and novitiate of the IHMs and guided by Mother M. Cyril, then the General Superior of the Sisters, Servants of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. Canonical approbation was granted by Pope St. Pius X in June 1909, and on September 11, 1909, the first three Sisters of Saints Cyril and Methodius – Sisters Mary, Joseph and Emmanuel – pronounced the vows of chastity, poverty and obedience before Scranton Bishop Michael J. Hoban. As stated in the petition to the Holy Father for approbation, the threefold purpose of the new congregation was: 1) the religious education of Slovak Catholic school children, 2) the care of the sick and destitute aged in homes and hospitals to be founded for this purpose, and 3) the cooperation in the conversion of Slavs separated from the Catholic Church. Reverend Matthew Jankola, founder of the Sisters of Saints Cyril and Methodius Mother Mary Mihalik, the first General Superior of the order The first (temporary) Motherhouse of the Sisters was St. John the Baptist Convent in Pittston, across from the IHM Convent of St. John the Evangelist. In 1919, the Sisters purchased the Grove Estate in Danville and named it Villa Sacred Heart. While remaining primarily a teaching Congregation throughout most of its history, the Sisters also cared for orphans at Jednota Home and senior adults at St. Ann’s Home in Middletown, Pa., Villa St. Cyril in Highland Park, Ill., and currently at Maria Joseph Manor, Emmanuel Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, Nazareth, The Meadows, and Maria Hall in Danville. From early on, the Sisters also worked in parish catechetical programs. Current ministries as pastoral associates, pastoral ministers, chaplains, directors of religious education, social workers, visitors to the elderly and homebound in parishes and nursing homes, and related parish activities carry forward the intention of the founder whose commitment to the life of the people of the parish addressed a full spectrum of both spiritual and social needs. Special interest in ecumenical endeavors has also characterized all of the Congregation’s service. Today there are Sisters serving in these varied ministries in Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, New York, Pennsylvania, South Carolina and Texas. The charism of the Sisters of Saints Cyril and Methodius is witnessing to, proclaiming and building God’s kingdom. The Sisters have before them always a vision of the Kingdom that has been revealed in Jesus in our midst and a vision of the Kingdom yet to come. Early Sisters travel to provide parish catechetical instruction. The Basilica of Saints Cyril and Methodius at Villa Sacred Heart in Danville Pa. A VOCATION JOURNEY Continued from page 4 That has led us many places since our founding in the Diocese of Scranton. We’ve traversed to Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, across Pennsylvania, into Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, and down into Delaware, South Carolina, and Texas. We had a brief stint in Slovakia, after the collapse of Soviet Communism. We are in seven states to this day. Our neighborhoods are and have been urban, suburban, coal town, and rural. We’ve been in long-established insti- tutional settings and start-up schools and missions. The South Carolina six, among whom I serve right now, have helped birth two new schools and have taken on an outreach center which touches the lives of the elderly poor, the resident Gullah population, and Spanish-speaking immigrants and migrant workers. In many ways, our lives as women religious has replicated the more than 100-year history of our SS.C.M. community and the history of sisters in the United States. We’ve moved, we’ve changed, we’ve prayed, we’ve celebrated, we’ve improvised, we’ve retreated, we’ve renewed, and we’ve surprised ourselves with what we have done and where we have gone. Faith, initiative, and resilience have marked our collective journey. In mysterious and mystifying ways, it has been all about a strident line in the Lord’s Prayer that is our motto: Thy Kingdom Come! Sometimes we learn that the Kingdom manifests itself and Christ appears on back streets in the midst of people who speak a language other than our own. It turns out to be a remarkable life lesson. THE CATHOLIC LIGHT • APRIL 2, 2015 SSCM Order Founded in Diocese of Scranton 5 APRIL 2, 2015 • THE CATHOLIC LIGHT 6 CLERGY APPOINTMENTS His Excellency, Bishop Joseph C. Bambera, announces the following appointments, effective as indicated. Bishop Bambera poses for a photo Leave of Absence with this group of Reverend Thomas D. McLaughlin, from Pastor, Saint Luke Parish, Stroudsburg, to Leave of Absence for Reasons of Health, effective March 30, 2015. young people after the celebration of the Saint Patrick’s Feast Day Mass at Administrator the Cathedral of Reverend Carmen J. Perry, from Assistant Pastor, Saint Luke Parish, Stroudsburg, to Administrator, pro tem, Saint Luke Parish, Stroudsburg, effective March 30, 2015. Saint Peter. Pictured at the Friends of the Poor Saint Patrick Day dinner are, from left: Attorney Brian Price, Bishop Bambera, Sister Ann Walsh, IHM, Sister Chris Koellhoffer, IHM, and Father Thomas Muldowney, Vicar General. Bishop Bambera Appointed to Several National Bishops’ Conference Committees Bishop Joseph C. Bambera has been appointed and elected to serve on several committees of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB). The work of the Conference is rooted in three general mission goals and organized into three key areas of responsibility: • To act collaboratively and consistently on vital issues confronting the Church and society. • To foster communion with the Church in other nations, within the Church universal, under the leadership of its supreme pastor, the Roman Pontiff. • To offer appropriate assistance to each bishop in fulfilling his particular ministry in the local Church. Bishop Bambera was elected as the regional (Pennsylvania and New Jersey) representative to the Administrative Committee. This body, which meets three times a year, is responsible for setting the agenda for the Conference and conducting the work of the Conference between plenary sessions. In conjunction with that committee, he was also appointed to the Committee for Priorities and Plans, which develops strategic plans and recommendations for USCCB and nominates the bishops for the various committees for election by the general assembly. Bishop Bambera was also elected by the Administrative Committee as one of the bishops on the National Advisory Council, which is made up of lay faithful, priests, deacons and religious who represent the Catholic Church of the U.S. This group offers perspective and counsel to the USCCB, reviews the agendas of the USCCB meetings and advises the general assembly of bishops on issues to come before it. The Bishop also was asked to co-chair, with the chairman for the Polish National Catholic Church, the meeting for the Roman Catholic-Polish National Catholic dialogue for the designated members from the Roman Catholic and Polish National Catholic clergy. This continuing dialogue, sponsored by the Ecumenical Committee of the USCCB, was established in 1984. The dialogue discusses a range of matters, including doctrine and the relationship between the churches. BISHOP BAMBERA’S SCHEDULE April 2 – Mass of the Lord’s Supper, St. Peter’s Cathedral, Scranton, 5:30 p.m. April 3 – Commemoration of the Lord’s Passion, St. Peter’s Cathedral, Scranton, 12:10 p.m. April 4 – Easter Vigil Mass, St. Peter’s Cathedral, Scranton, 8:00 p.m. April 5 – Easter Sunday Mass, St. Peter’s Cathedral, Scranton, 10:00 a.m. April 7 – Bishop’s Youth Awards, St. Peter’s Cathedral, Scranton, 7:00 p.m. April 8 – Confirmation, Nativity of the BVM Parish, Tunkhannock, 5:00 p.m. April 9 – Bishop’s Youth Awards, St. Peter’s Cathedral, Scranton, 7:00 p.m. April 12 – 25th Anniversary Mass, St. John’s Parish, East Stroudsburg, 3:00 p.m. April 13 – Confirmation, St. Catherine of Siena Parish, Moscow, 5:00 p.m. April 14 – Regional Dialogue on Pastoral Leadership, St. Maria Goretti Parish Hall, Laflin, 6:30 p.m. April 15 – Monsignor McHugh School Mass, Cresco, 9:30 a.m. April 16 – Confirmation, St. Luke’s Parish, Jersey Shore, 5:00 p.m. April 20-23 – Priests’ Convocation 7 THE CATHOLIC LIGHT • APRIL 2, 2015 PATH TO PRIESTHOOD Three Seminarians Receive Ministries On March 14, 2015 at St. Mary’s Seminary in Baltimore, three Diocese of Scranton seminarians – Bill Beechko, Ryan Glenn, and Shawn Simchock – received the Ministry of Lector, and Ryan also received the Ministry of Acolyte. Bishop Denis Madden, Auxiliary Bishop of Baltimore, presided. Following the ceremony, family and friends joined the seminarians for a reception. Bill is from SS. Anthony and Rocco Parish, Dunmore; Ryan is from St. Jude’s Parish, Mountain Top; and Shawn is from Queen of Heaven Parish, Hazleton. Please keep them in prayer as they continue in their formation for Diocesan Priesthood! The Ministry of Lector calls men to be servants of the Living Word of God. In proclaiming the readings at liturgy, the reader does more than simply read. Those who exercise the ministry of lector must be truly suited and carefully prepared, so that the faithful may develop a warm and living love for Sacred Scripture from listening to the sacred readings. Acolytes are appointed to aid the deacon and to minister to the priest. It is his duty to attend to the service of the altar and to assist the deacon and the priest in liturgical celebrations, especially in the celebration of Mass. He may also distribute communion as an extraordinary minister of Holy Communion when appropriate. The church emphasizes the stages of the journey to Holy Orders through these ministries. Diocese of Scranton seminarians in formation at St. Mary’s Seminary in Baltimore are pictured with principals at the recent family and friends day. Front row from left: Rev. Thomas R. Hurst, P.S.S., S.T.L., Ph.D., PresidentRector and Vice Chancellor of St. Mary’s Seminary; Most Rev. Denis Madden, Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of Baltimore; seminarian Ryan Glenn; Rev. Don Williams, Diocesan Director of Vocations. Back Row: seminarians Michael Drevitch, William Beechko II, Joseph Mosley, and Shawn Simchock. Left: Ryan Glenn and Shawn Simchock as they are receiving Ministry of Lector. Right: Bill Beechko as he is receiving the Ministry of Lector. Michael Drevitch (right) and Ryan Glenn (below) with family members and friends at the reception. World Day of Prayer for Vocations Diocesan Celebration Sunday, April 26, 2015 12:15 PM Liturgy Cathedral of Saint Peter 315 Wyoming Avenue Scranton, PA 18503 Most Reverend Joseph C. Bambera, D.D., J.C.L. Bishop of Scranton Principal Celebrant All are welcome! Also broadcast live on CTV: Catholic Television Followed by light reception at the Diocesan Pastoral Center. Vocation Directors from Women and Men’s religious communities serving in the Diocese will also be with us providing materials and available to answer questions. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ On the web: www.ScrantonVocations.com www.facebook.com/Diocese.of.Scranton.Vocations http://scrantonvocations.blogspot.com/ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ APRIL 2, 2015 • THE CATHOLIC LIGHT 8 Guest Editorial National Catholic Journals Unite: ‘Capital Punishment Must End’ This month, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments in Glossip v. Gross, a case out of Oklahoma that challenges the most widely used lethal injection protocol as being cruel and unusual punishment. The court took up the case in January after a year of three high-profile, problematic executions in three states. The court will likely issue a ruling by June. Our hope is that it will hasten the end of the death penalty in the United States. Archbishop Thomas G. Wenski, of Miami, and chairman of the U.S. bishops’ Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development, praised the decision saying, “The use of the death penalty devalues human life and diminishes respect for human dignity. We bishops continue to say, we cannot teach killing is wrong by killing.” The chair of the pro-life activities committee, Boston Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley, also praised the court’s decision to hear the case. “Society can protect itself in ways other than the use of the death penalty,” Cardinal O’Malley said. “We pray that the court’s review of these protocols will lead to the recognition that institutionalized practices of violence against any person erode reverence for the sanctity of every human life. Capital punishment must end.” The Catholic Church in this country has fought against the death penalty for decades. St. John Paul II amended the universal Catechism of the Catholic Church to include a de facto prohibition against capital punishment. Last year, Pope Francis called on all Catholics “to fight ... for the abolition of the death penalty.” The practice is abhorrent and unnecessary. It is also insanely expensive as court battles soak up resources better deployed in preventing crime in the first place and working toward restorative justice for those who commit less heinous crimes. Admirably, Florida has halted executions until the Supreme Court rules, and Ohio Gov. John Kasich has postponed all seven executions in the state scheduled for 2015 pending further study. Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf declared a moratorium on the death penalty until he has received and reviewed a task force’s report on capital punishment, which he called “a flawed system ... ineffective, unjust, and expensive.” Both governors also cited the growing number of death-row inmates who have been exonerated nationwide in recent years. In a statement thanking Wolf, Philadelphia Archbishop Charles J. Chaput said: “Turning away from capital punishment does not diminish our support for the families of murder victims. ... But killing the guilty does not honor the dead nor does it ennoble the living. When we take a guilty person’s life we only add to the violence in an already violent culture and we demean our own dignity in the process.” Archbishop Chaput reminds us that when considering the death penalty, we cannot forget that it is we, acting through our government, who are the moral agents in an execution. The prisoner has committed his crime and has answered for it in this life just as he shall answer for it before God. But, it is the government, acting in our name, that orders and perpetrates lethal injection. It is we who add to, instead of heal, the violence. Advocates of the death penalty often claim that it brings closure to a victim’s family. But advocates who walk with the families of victims, like Mercy Sister Camille D’Arienzo, tell a different story. “I think of mothers who attend our annual service for Families and Friends of Murder Victims,” a program the Mercy sisters have sponsored for 18 years. “Asked what they want for their children’s killers, no one asks for the death penalty,” she Easter Triduum said. “Their reason: ‘I wouldn’t want another mother to suffer what I have suffered.’ Their hearts, though broken, are undivided in their humanity.” The facts of the case in Oklahoma — which echo reports from Ohio and Arizona — were especially egregious. Last April, the drug protocol failed in the execution of Clayton Lockett. Lockett moaned in pain before authorities suspended the execution; he would die of a heart attack later that night. Archbishop Paul S. Coakley of Oklahoma City said at the time, “The execution of Clayton Lockett really highlights the brutality of the death penalty, and I hope it leads us to consider whether we should adopt a moratorium on the death penalty or even abolish it altogether.” The Supreme Court has agreed with Archbishop Coakley and will consider the issue. We join our bishops in hoping the court will reach the conclusion that it is time for our nation to embody its commitment to the right to life by abolishing the death penalty once and for all. This editorial was issued jointly by the Catholic journals America, National Catholic Register, National Catholic Reporter and Our Sunday Visitor. It appeared in the printed versions of each journal and was provided by Catholic News Service. The Catholic Light (ISSN 0164-9418) Official newspaper of the Diocese of Scranton. Published every third Thursday by the Catholic Light Publishing Co., 300 Wyoming Ave., Scranton, PA 18503-1287. Offices: 300 Wyoming Ave., Scranton, PA 18503. Phone: (570) 207-2229. Periodicals postage paid at Scranton, Pa., and additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Catholic Light, 300 Wyoming Ave., Scranton, PA 18503-1287. Subscription rates: $10.00 per year; $12.00 foreign. Member of the Catholic Press Association, Subscriber to the Catholic News Service. William R. Genello, Editor-in-Chief. The Catholic Light is our official diocesan journal. The publication of notices, regulations and extra-synodical decrees in said paper constitute legal promulgation for all the faithful of the Diocese of Scranton, Clergy and Laity. Volume 115 Number 5 — Thursday, April 2, 2015 Right Reverend Anthony M. Rysz, Bishop Emeritus of the Central Diocese of the Polish National Catholic Church, died on March 20. Bishop Rysz, 90, was a key figure in the early stages of the Polish National Catholic-Roman Catholic Dialogue, which formally began in 1984 to provide a regular forum for discussion on the sacramental life and mission of the churches, with the hope of one day restoring full ecclesial unity. Bishop Rysz was chairman of the Commission on Dialogue with the Roman Catholic Church. He co-edited Journeying Together in Christ: The Report of the Polish National Catholic-Roman Catholic Dialogue (19841989). He was a participant in ecumenical endeavors over the ensuing years. A native of Old Forge and a World War II veteran, he was ordained in 1950 and assigned as assistant to Saint Stanislaus Polish National Catholic Cathedral in Scranton. In 1954, he be- Right Reverend Anthony M. Rysz, Bishop of the Central Diocese of the Polish National Catholic Church, exchanges the sign of peace with Scranton Bishop James C. Timlin during the Christian Unity Week ecumenical prayer service held at the Cathedral of Saint Peter in 1993. Bishop Rysz, far right, was among the clergy from the Roman Catholic and Polish National Catholic Churches who joined in praying the Stations of the Cross during Lent of 1993. Also participating in the first-ever event were, from left: Father Charles Csirip, assistant pastor of Saint Stanislaus Polish National Catholic Cathedral; Father Joseph Quinn, rector of Saint Peter’s Cathedral; and Father Joseph Bambera, director of ecumenism for the Diocese of Scranton. came pastor of Holy Mother of Sorrows Parish, Dupont, and was elevated to the rank of senior priest on Nov. 11, 1964, by the Prime Bishop, the Most Reverend Leon Grochowski. In 1968, he was named tirement at age 75. In recent years, he served as pastor of Holy Name of Jesus Parish in Nanticoke. Bishop Rysz was the personal secretary to the first bishop of the Polish National Catholic Church, pastor of Saint Stanislaus Cathedral and received Episcopal consecration on June 26 of the same year. He was installed as fourth Ordinary of the Central Diocese in 1970 and served for 30 years until his mandatory re- Francis Hodur, and his successor, Leon Grochowski. He served on various commissions of the church, and many other church organizations and programs. A funeral Mass for Bishop Rysz was celebrated March 25 in Saint Stanislaus Polish National Catholic Cathedral, Scranton, by the Most Reverend Dr. Anthony A. Mikovsky, Prime Bishop of the Polish National Catholic Church. Interment was in the parish cemetery. I.H.M. Sisters Host Open House for Year of Consecrated Life The Sisters, Servants of the Immaculate Heart of Mary of Scranton, Pa. (better known as the IHMs) opened their celebration of the Year of Consecrated Life on Sunday, March 22, 2015 with an Open House at the IHM Center on the campus of Marywood University. Many joined the IHMs for this celebration of their 170 years of consecrated life. Sisters are delighted by the arrival of Mother Theresa Maxis Duchemin, founder of the IHM Congregation! (aka: Sr. Leonette Bower,IHM). Alejandra Marroquin, IHM Associate, and family. The Yarrish family with Mother Theresa. Sister Ann Marie Lynott and family enjoy the day. Friends from St. John Nuemann Parish at Nativity Church. 9 THE CATHOLIC LIGHT • APRIL 2, 2015 Bishop Rysz Dies; Key Participant in Polish National Catholic-Roman Catholic Dialogue APRIL 2, 2015 • THE CATHOLIC LIGHT 10 St. Jude Youth Marchers for Life Dunmore Communion Breakfast High school students from St. Jude Parish in Mountaintop took part in the annual Vigil for Life and March for Life held in Washington, D.C., in January. Prior to participating in this year’s March for Life in support of the sanctity of all human life and in opposition to abortion-on-demand, the youth group joined thousands of other students from across the nation for an evening of prayer and reflection, followed the next morning by the Rally for Life and Mass held at the Verizon Center and DC Armory in Washington. Members of the March for Life contingent from St. Jude’s are, pictured first row from left: Maria Strish, Mike Mohutsky, George Strish, David Pirolli, Renee Brown, Amy Loveless, Maria Pirolli, Julia Foust, Gigi Alberti, Kaylee Kotsko, Paige Petlock and Molly McAndrew. Second row, Pam Urbanski, Karen Hayden, Matthew Hayden, Reed Corimer, Jimmy Saroka, Jillian Hayden, Erica Stuccio, Jenny Katulka, Mady Savner and Gabby Mohutsky. ‘Super’ Fundraiser at St. Paul’s The Holy Name Society of SS. Anthony and Rocco Parish in Dunmore recently hosted its 58th Annual Communion Breakfast at the La Buona Vita banquet hall in the borough. The event followed the 8:30 a.m. Mass at St. Anthony of Padua Church, celebrated by Father David Cappelloni, pastor of the parish. Music was provided by the parish choir under the direction of Joseph Moffitt. Principal speaker for the breakfast program was Dominick Keating, president emeritus of Avanti Cigar, and Alfredo Pisa served as toastmaster. Father Cappelloni offered invocation and benediction, and Lou Naro, Holy Name Society president, gave welcoming remarks. Breakfast speakers and committee members pictured are, seated from left, Mr. Naro, Mr. Keating and Rick Sabato, co-chairman. Standing, Jared Shoemaker, chairman; Father Cappelloni and Mr. Pisa. Also serving as breakfast committee co-chairman was Dennis Lalley. ‘Rhythm & Wine’ Event Benefits CSS Members of St. Paul Parish in the Green Ridge section of Scranton conducted a fundraiser on Super Bowl Sunday to benefit the Working Boys Center in Ecuador, South America. Shown is St. Paul parishioner Joe Stella accepting a check for $2,700 — representing the proceeds from the effort — from members of the parish’s 8th grade Confirmation Class who organized the event. Also pictured is Monsignor William Feldcamp, pastor of St. Paul’s, with other parishioners who donated their time to charitable cause. Those who raised the most funds were Taylor Jenkins, Amanda Priorelli and Felicia Sompel-Welk. A fundraising event, dubbed “Rhythm & Wine,” was held recently to benefit Catholic Social Services in the Scranton Diocese — resulting in $11,700 for the agency. The event was held at Bartolai Winery in Harding and several members of the WBRE-TV on-air staff served as honorary chairs. Shown, from left, are Vince Splendido, board member, Catholic Social Services; Jasmine Brooks, WBRETV; Alan Stout, Catholic Social Services; Alison Splendido, Rhythm & Wine coordinator; Monica Madeja and Dave Kuharchik, both of WBRE-TV. For more information about Catholic Social Services, visit: www.cssdioceseofscranton.com. Parish Support Vital to Success of Annual Appeal THE CATHOLIC LIGHT • APRIL 2, 2015 Continued from page 3 “The Office of Parish Life is bringing more regional programs out to us,” Father Michelini noted. “Our parish and nine others in this region (Bradford, Sullivan, Susquehanna and Wyoming counties) are an hour-and-a-half to two hours away from Scranton. We appreciate these programs that are supported by the Appeal.” Parishes also achieving goal with 50 percent of participation among parishioners include St. Peter’s, Wellsboro, and Our Lady of Lourdes, Montoursville. Most Precious Blood Parish, Hazleton, was one of the first parishes to reach its goal and currently has reached 124% of goal. “Our parishioners love the Catholic Church and they’re generous people,” said Father Louis Grippe, pastor. “I don’t ask them to do anything I wouldn’t do. I tell them I’m giving $1,000. Most of our families are middle income, so I ask each family to consider if they can afford a pledge of $100 which amounts to $20 a month over five months. Many of us spend more than that on our morning coffee.” “Thank you to everyone who has made a gift to this year’s Appeal. I ask those who have not yet contributed to the Appeal to join us with a gift before the campaign ends on June 30, 2015. There is still some time for parishioners to help their parish reach its Annual Appeal goal,” said Jim Bebla, Diocesan Secretary for Development. If you wish to make a gift to the 2014 Diocesan Annual Appeal, kindly donate online at www.AnnualAppeal.org , call the Diocesan Development Office at 570-207-2250 or fill out the form below and send it along with your gift to Development Office, Diocese of Scranton, 300 Wyoming Avenue, Scranton, PA 18503. 11 This architect’s rendering illustrates the new mausoleum to be constructed this spring at the Diocese’s Cathedral Cemetery, 1708 Oram Street, Scranton. The new building of granite, marble and brick, the fifth to be constructed at the cemetery, will offer additional space for above-ground entombment and consist of 290 crypts. Mausoleum interment costs are comparable or less than traditional burials. Individuals of all faiths are welcome to be interred at Diocesan cemeteries. For more information call the Diocesan Cemeteries Office at 570-347-9251, or visit the website at www.DioceseofScranton.org. Your name:___________________________________________________ Spouse______________________________________________________ Address: ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________ Parish Name_________________________________________________ Total Amount of Pledge: $________Amount Enclosed $________ o I would like to make a gift by Credit Card Please select (a) o o o Single Payment o Four Payments of $_______Monthly Print Name on Credit Card ________________________________ Credit Card # ___________________________________________ Exp. Date______________________________________________ Signature______________________________________________ Kindly send form with your gift to Development Office, Diocese of Scranton, 300 Wyoming Ave., Scranton, PA 18503. Permanent deacons and their wives gathered for a Lenten Day of Reflection at Our Lady of Fatima Parish in Wilkes-Barre. During the day, which included prayer and discussion, Bishop Bambera talked about the vision of Pope Francis and the The Catholic Light Photo/John Levandoski ministry of servant leadership. APRIL 2, 2015 • THE CATHOLIC LIGHT 12 University of Scranton Conference To Observe 50th Anniversary of Vatican II SCRANTON — The University of Scranton announces it will host a twoday conference next month to commemorate the 50 th anniversary of the Second Vatican Council. The conference, “Word, Church, World — Vatican II 50 Years On,” will be offered May 1 & 2 on campus and is being sponsored by the university’s Office of the President, Jesuit Center, Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, and Department of Theology/Religious Studies. The two-day event is open to the public free of charge; however, registration for the Saturday luncheon is required by April 20. Most Reverend Joseph C. Bambera, D.D., J.C.L., Bishop of Scranton, will offer invocation to open the conference on Friday, May 1, at 7:30 p.m. in the U of S DeNaples Center (room 407). The conference’s keynote address, “The Event of Vatican II,” will follow, presented by Father Joseph A. of Scranton, and Bernadette Rudolph, M.A., Director of Family & Community Development in the Diocesan Office for Parish Life. 3:45 p.m. — Prayer and Celebration. For further information or to register, contact the Department of Theology/ Religious Studies (570-9416309) or visit the conference website: http://www.scranton.edu/academics/cas/ theology/VaticanII.shtml NPM Clergy/Musicians Dinner Komonchak, Ph.D., noted historian of the Council and professor emeritus at Catholic University of America. On Saturday, May 2, the anniversary conference continues with a full day of presentations and events from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in the Loyola Science Center (room 133) on the Scranton campus. The day’s schedule is as follows: 9 a.m. — Gaudium et Spes (“Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World”); presenters: Notre Dame Sister Mary Ann Zimmer, Ph.D., Marywood University, and Bernard Prusak, Ph.D., King’s College. 10:45 a.m. — Nostra Aetate (“On Non-Christian Religions”); presenters: Anna Moreland, Ph.D., Vi l l a n o v a U n i v e r s i t y, and Jesuit Father James Redington, Ph.D., University of Scranton. 12 noon — Lunch. 1 p.m. — Dei Verbum (“Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Revelation”); presenters: Holy Cross Father Brent Kruger, Ph.D., King’s College, and Mahri Leonard-Fleckman, Ph.D., University of Scranton. 2:30 p.m. — Scranton After the Council: Shared Experiences; presenters: Monsignor John Louis, retired priest of the Diocese Communication Skills Series for Lay Ministry The candidates for the Diocesan Certificate in Lay Ministry will be participating in the Communication Skills series described below. These workshops are also open to all pastors and parish leaders, Council and committee members, Catholic school faculty and staff members, deacons in ongoing formation, and all interested parishioners. Each workshop is $30. To register, call Jennifer in the Office for Parish Life, (570) 207-2213. On Monday, May 11, 2015 the Diocese of Scranton Chapter of the National Association of Pastoral Musicians will present a Clergy/Musician Dinner, featuring guest speaker Rev. Paul Turner. The focus of the evening will be on our participation at Mass, based on Father Turner’s booklet My Sacrifice and Yours (published by Liturgy Training Publications). It looks at many of the little things we do during the Eucharistic Liturgy that may inhibit participation. All parish clergy, musicians, liturgical ministers, catechists, RCIA team members and anyone else who may be interested are encouraged to attend. “As priestly ministers of Christ, we all share in his sacrifice and unite our sufferings and burdens with his each time we gather.” Rev. Paul Turner Paul Turner is pastor of St. Anthony Parish in Kansas City, Missouri. A priest of the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph, he holds a doctorate in sacred theology from Sant’ Anselmo in Rome. His publications include At the Supper of the Lamb (Chicago: Liturgy Training Publications, 2011); Glory in the Cross (Collegeville: Liturgical Press, 2011); ML Bulletin Inserts (San Jose: Resource Publications, 2012); and Celebrating Initiation: A Guide for Priests (Chicago: World Library Publications, 2008). He is a former President of the North American Academy of Liturgy, a member of Societas Liturgica and the Catholic Academy of Liturgy. He is the 2013 recipient of the Jubilate Deo Award (National Association of Pastoral Musicians) and the Frederick McManus Award (Federation of Diocesan Liturgical Commissions). He serves as a facilitator for the International Commission on English in the Liturgy. The event will take place in the Diocesan Pastoral Center (former Holy Cross High School) located at 330 Wyoming Avenue, Scranton. Dinner begins at 6:00 p.m., with Father Turner’s presentation beginning at 7:00 p.m., and the evening will conclude with Night Prayer. Cost for the evening is $25 or $20 for NPM Scranton Chapter Members. Paid reservations should be sent to NPM Scranton Chapter c/o Liz Powell 1360 Mount Cobb Road Jefferson Township, PA 18436 Deadline for reservations is May 6, 2015. Please contact Mark Ignatovich at 570-823-4168 x130 or [email protected] to be put on the NPM Scranton Chapter email list. • In Front of a Group: April 25, 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Our Lady of Fatima Parish, Wilkes-Barre o o o o o o o o Public Speaking/Presentation Skills - Dr. Maria Poggi-Johnson, University of Scranton Theology Department, will introduce basic public speaking techniques and practice. Designing and Leading Prayer - Sr. Madonna Figuera, SSCM, Pastoral Associate, St. André Bessette Parish, Wilkes-Barre, will provide guidelines for planning and leading community prayer experiences. • Within a Group: September 12, 9 a.m.-4 p.m., St. Ignatius Parish, Kingston Group Dynamics & Personality Types - Dr. LeeAnn Eschbach, Ph.D., LPC, & Dr. Julie Cerrito, University of Scranton, Counseling and Human Services Department, will explore communication within groups as it is enhanced by knowledge of personality styles. Facilitation Skills - Bernadette Rudolph, Office for Parish Life, will provide practical ways to make group discussion happen smoothly. Consensus & Collaboration, Appreciative Inquiry, Pastoral Planning Process - Catherine Butel, Office for Parish Life, will explore these key elements of parish group work. • As a Parish Leader: November 7, 9 a.m.-4 p.m., St. Barbara Parish, Exeter Working with Paid Staff, Ministerial Relationships - Father Mike Quinnan, Pastor of Our Lady Queen of Peace Parish, Brodheadsville, will discuss best practices for establishing and nurturing effective staff relationships in a ministerial context. Working with Volunteers - Marie Caffrey, Director of Volunteers, St. Vincent Parish, Milford, will talk about how to nurture and get the best from parish volunteers. Liability & Risk Management - Kathy Bolinski, Safe Environment Coordinator, Diocese of Scranton, will present policies and guidelines for all parish leaders to ensure a safe environment and reduce risk. Parish Music Ministry David Baloga, Director for Worship for the Diocesan Office of Parish Life, discusses the tools and resources available for preparing music for the liturgy during the recent meeting of the Scranton Chapter of the National Association of Pastoral Musicians held at St. Jude Parish in Mountain Top. The topic for the evening was “The Director of Music: Qualities that Make The Catholic Light Photo/John Levandoski for a Successful Parish Music Ministry.” The first annual diocesan Catholic Men’s Conference to be held at King’s College on April 25 will feature a lineup of speakers who will inspire the hearts of the men in attendance, challenge them to accept the call to authentic Catholic manhood, and motivate them to decisive action. Father Larry Richards, from Erie, believes that the greatest gift a father can give his family is to be a man, but a man after God’s own heart, loving and sacrificing in imitation of Jesus Christ. Father Richards passion- Bishop Bambera Father Larry Richards Damon Owens Mike Guman ately exhorts Catholic men to embrace their call as leaders, protectors, and providers by living a life of sacrifice, and being willing to seek and do God’s will, not their own. He candidly points out that it’s not easy, but it’s for a higher purpose. He proposes a very simple two-step approach for building the foundation necessary for Catholic manhood: daily prayer and the reading of Sacred Scripture. In this year in which Catholics will witness the World Meeting of Families and a Bishops’ Synod on the Family, we’ll be blessed to hear from Damon Owens, a husband and father from the Philadelphia area, and director of the Theology of the Body Institute. Mr. Owens regularly speaks to conferences on the true meaning of marriage. Catholic husband and father, Mike Guman, is best known as a former standout football running back, first for the Penn State Nittany Lions, and then professionally for the Los Angeles Rams from 1980 to 1989. His Catholic faith has provided a foundation for the positive attitude that has enabled him to be successful in many aspects of his life. Building upon the business degree he earned from Penn State, Mr. Guman has cultivated a successful career as a financial executive in Pennsylvania. He and his family are members of St. Thomas More Parish in Allentown. Captain Donald B. Campbell, Jr., U.S. Navy (Ret.), a Catholic husband and father from southeastern Pennsylvania, retired from the Navy in 2012 after 32 years of service, and is a member of the governing board of “The Father Capodanno Guild.” Capt. Campbell will offer a presentation on Father Vincent R. Capodanno, MM, a U.S. Navy chaplain, who was killed in action on Sept. 4, 1967 during the Vietnam War while anointing and aiding U.S. Marines in combat with the North Vietnamese army. In 2005, the Catholic Church formally declared Father Capodanno a “Servant of God,” formally initiating the process by which the Vatican’s Congregation for CTV Airing Sacred Triduum Services Catholic Television of the Diocese of Scranton (CTV) will provide live coverage of the following Holy Week services at St. Peter’s Cathedral: Mass of the Lord’s Supper on Holy Thursday, April 2, at 5:30 p.m. Good Friday service commemorating the Lord’s Passion on April 3 at 12:10 p.m. Easter Vigil Mass on Holy Saturday, April 4, at 8:00 p.m. CTV will also carry EWTN’s coverage of the following Holy Week services from Rome: SOLEMN MASS OF THE LORD’S SUPPER FROM ROME with Pope Francis, Thursday, April 2, 11:30 a.m., live; 9:30 p.m., encore The WAY OF THE CROSS FROM ROME Pope Francis presides over The Stations of the Cross, from the Coliseum in Rome. Friday, April 3, 8:00 p.m.; encore Saturday, April 4, 3:00 a.m. Father Vincent R. Capodanno, MM the Causes of Saints considers candidates. The Men’s Conference begins at 7 a.m. and will conclude with a closing Mass at 1:45 p.m. celebrated by the Most Reverend Joseph C. Bambera, D.D., J.C.L., Bishop of the Diocese of Scranton. Men can register for the conference online at http://www.dioceseofscranton.org (from the top menu choose “Parish Life and Mass Times” and then “Catholic Men’s Conference”). For questions and to register by mail, use the form below or contact the Diocesan Office for Parish Life at 570-207-2213. MAIL-IN REGISTRATION FORM NAME_______________________________________________________________________________________ ADDRESS____________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________ CELEBRATION OF THE LORD’S PASSION FROM ROME with Pope Francis, Saturday, April 4, at 12:00 a.m. PHONE______________________________________________________________________________________ EASTER VIGIL MASS FROM ROME with Pope Francis, Saturday, April 4, 2:30 p.m.; encore Sunday, April 5, 12:00 a.m. PARISH NAME_______________________________________________________________________________ SOLEMN MASS OF EASTER FROM ROME with Pope Francis, Sunday, April 5, 4:00 a.m.; encore at 7:00 p.m. URBI ET ORBI: MESSAGE AND BLESSING From St. Peter’s Square in Vatican City, Pope Francis gives the traditional Easter message and blessing, Urbi et Orbi, to the city of Rome and to the world. Sunday, April 5, 6:00 a.m. (Encores Sunday 6 p.m. and Monday 3:30 a.m.) EMAIL______________________________________________________________________________________ PARISH TOWN/CITY_________________________________________________________________________ REGISTRATION OPTIONS: (CHECK ALL THAT APPLY) REGISTRATION FEE -- $35.00 (INCLUDES LUNCH, COFFEE) EARLY BIRD REGISTRATION – $30.00 (IF PAID BY MARCH 31ST) STUDENTS – $15 PRIESTS AND DEACONS – FREE To register by mail, complete this form and send with check or money order (payable to “Diocese of Scranton”) to: Office for Parish Life 330 Wyoming Ave Scranton PA 18503 If registering more than one person, please provide the additional information on a separate page. If you have any questions about registration, please call 570-207-2213. 13 THE CATHOLIC LIGHT • APRIL 2, 2015 Inspiring Roster of Speakers Set for Catholic Men’s Conference APRIL 2, 2015 • THE CATHOLIC LIGHT 14 Child Abuse Prevention Month Highlights Continued Focus on Protecting Children Each year the month of April is designated as National Child Abuse Prevention Month, presenting us with another opportunity to reflect on a serious issue that affects all levels of society. The observance also affirms our commitment to ensure the well-being of all children and to continue our efforts to keep them safe from any type of abuse. These endeavors include creating safe environments for children through education and prevention programs, establishing policies that clearly set standards of behavior regarding contact with minors, and offering support to those who have suffered abuse so that they and their families can experience healing. For more than a decade, the Catholic Church –– perhaps to a greater extent than any other organization or institution –– has taken major steps to address and respond to the serious issue of sexual abuse of minors. In June of 2002, the bishops of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) approved and promulgated the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People, and subsequently the Essential Norms for Diocesan/ Eparchial Policies Dealing with the Allegations of Sexual Abuse of Minors by Priests or Deacons. These documents constitute a comprehensive set of procedures established by the USCCB for addressing allegations of sexual abuse of minors by Catholic clergy, including guidelines for reconciliation, healing, accountability and prevention of further acts of abuse. Also in 2002, the bishops of the USCCB issued a statement, called the Statement of Episcopal Commitment, which outlines how allegations of sexual misconduct against bishops would be handled. The bishops of the USCCB first revised the Charter and the Essential Norms in 2005. A second revision was approved by the bishops of the USCCB at their June 2011 general meeting. These revisions reflected changes made to the Church’s penal code, including making provisions for reporting the possession of child pornography and adding child pornography to the definition of sex abuse; and holding that abuse of an individual who habitually lacks reason, for example, a person with a developmental disability, is equivalent to child abuse. “The Church has taken many steps to address this issue, and extensive policies and programs are in place,” said the Most Reverend Joseph C. Bambera, D.D., J.C.L., Bishop of Scranton. “We remain firmly committed to doing everything we can to prevent abuse within our Church, parish and school communities.” The Bishop added that if the Diocese learns of an incidence of abuse, it responds swiftly through the provisions of church and civil law, and full cooperation with civil authorities so that justice is served. “Most importantly, we are resolved to supporting victims with our compassion and assistance to help them achieve healing,” he said. Diocesan Policy Designed to Ensure Safe Environments for Children The Diocese of Scranton first formally established a “Policy Concerning Clerics Accused of Sexual Abuse of Minors” in March 1993. When the bishops of the USCCB adopted a comprehensive plan to deal with this important issue by promulgating the Charter, the Essential Norms and the Statement of Episcopal Commitment, many of the provisions of the Charter were already contained in the Diocesan policy. Notwithstanding, the Diocese took the opportuni- also provides standards for the ministerial behavior of pastoral counselors and spiritual directors. The Diocese also continues to retain a Victim Assistance Coordinator (VAC), who coordinates assistance for the immediate pastoral care of persons who claim to have been sexually abused as a minor by a member of the clergy. Bishop Bambera appointed Joseph DeVizia to this position. He can be contacted by calling 570862-7551. If you have been abused or victimized by someone representing the Catholic Church… ty to refine and expand its procedures accordingly, and in April 2003, the Diocesan policy was revised. While the Diocese had previously implemented an appropriate policy, Bishop Bambera initiated a review of that policy to ensure that the local Church of Scranton continues to address this serious issue with vigilance and fidelity, transparency and accountability. The revised Policy for Response to Allegations of Sexual Abuse of Minors was approved for implementation in the Diocese of Scranton on April 15, 2013. The intention of this revised policy is to conform with all provisions contained in the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People, the Essential Norms for Dealing with Allegations of Sexual Abuse of Minors and the Statement of Episcopal Commitment. The revised policy specifies appropriate responses to accusations of sexual abuse of minors and vulnerable adults by clergy, religious, employees and volunteers. It also addresses preventing sexual abuse through education and screening; reporting abuse allegations to civil authorities; providing pastoral assistance and promoting healing and reconciliation to persons affected by abuse; disciplining offenders; and the processing of accusations. A copy of this policy was given to all clergy, seminarians, employees and volunteers who signed an acknowledgement of its receipt. A copy was also provided to each Pennsylvania State Senator and Representative, District Attorney, and Children and Youth Director serving in the 11 counties that comprise the Diocese of Scranton. The revised Diocesan policy continues the protocol of maintaining a Diocesan Review Board that functions as a confidential consultative body to the Bishop in his assessment of accusations of sexual abuse of minors and in his determination of a cleric’s suitability for ministry. Also remaining in effect is a Code of Pastoral Conduct that specifies the expectations for proper behavior whenever children and all members of the faithful gather for spiritual, educational or social activities conducted under the auspices of the Church. It Please believe in the possibility for hope and help and healing. We encourage you to come forward and speak out. Every arch/diocese/eparchy in the United States now has a victim assistance coordinator who is available to obtain support for your needs, to help you make a formal complaint of abuse to the arch/diocese/eparchy, and to arrange a personal meeting with the bishop or his representative, if you desire. The victim assistance coordinator for your arch/diocese/eparchy is: 7-071 Copyright © 2004, United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. All rights reserved. Awareness and Prevention Training Continues The Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People mandates that all employees and volunteers receive training on the nature of child sexual abuse and addresses how a parish/school community can work together proactively to prevent it. The Diocese of Scranton utilizes the VIRTUS sexual abuse awareness and prevention program “Protecting God’s Children” to fulfill this requirement. The program was introduced in 2003. It is an ongoing effort to train priests, deacons, candidates for ordination, Diocesan and parish staff members, teachers, coaches and volunteers on the recognition and reporting of child sexual abuse. Volunteers are trained to facilitate the program. Recently, facilitators attended an information session regarding updates to the “Protecting God’s Children” curriculum. The total number of people trained by the Diocese now stands at 24,478. The Diocese has also implemented a safe environment program for students in grades K-12 to teach them how to recognize and avoid situations that could lead to sexual abuse. It also encourages communication between children and their parents so that potentially dangerous situations and incidents are reported promptly. This program, designed specifically for children, has been offered to students in Diocesan Catholic schools since the spring of 2005. In the fall of 2008 the Diocese began introducing safe environment lessons in its parish religious education programs to complement the safe environment programs used by public schools. In 2013-2014, a total of 18,790 children participated in the programs offered by the Diocese. Background Checks and Child Abuse Clearances Another provision of the Charter is that all employees in parishes and schools, as well as volunteers, including coaches, who spend 20 or more hours per year with children, must have up-to-date criminal background and child abuse clearances. The Diocese uses a comprehensive background screening process that provides a national criminal search, social security verification, and a sex offender registry search. The Diocesan Safe Environment Coordinator is Kathy Bolinski, LSW, who works with pastors and school administrators to ensure Diocesan compliance with this requirement. Every parish in the Diocese is required to maintain a binder listing its employees and volunteers, along with their clearances, background checks and verification of their participation in the VIRTUS safe environment program. For more information about VIRTUS training, background checks and clearances, contact Ms. Bolinski at 570-207-1453, ext. 1078, or Kathleen-bolins [email protected] Every diocese in the U.S. undergoes an annual audit to determine if it is complying with the provisions of the Charter for the Protection of Children and Continued on Page 15 Deacon Casey Retires from CSS 15 &DWKHGUDO&HPHWHU\2IIHULQJ 1HZ*DUGHQ0DXVROHXP Deacon Ed Casey was honored recently by Catholic Social Services in the Scranton Diocese upon his retirement from the agency after 40 years of service. A well-known counselor with the CSS staff in Scranton, Deacon Casey also provided services for the Carbondale and Milford offices. “He will be deeply missed,” Monsignor Joseph Kelly, Diocesan Secretary for Catholic Human Services, said of the longtime Diocesan employee, who ministers as a permanent deacon at St. Rose of Lima Parish in Carbondale. Pictured at his recent retirement party is Deacon Casey along with Monsignor Kelly and Immaculate Heart of Mary Sister Janet Jeffers, executive director of Lackawanna/Wayne CSS. Child Abuse Prevention Month Highlights Continued Focus on Protecting Children Continued from Page 14 Young People. The Diocese of Scranton has been in compliance with all audits conducted since inception of the audit process. Diocese Supports Pennsylvania’s Child Protection Legislation While the Catholic Church has been addressing this issue for many years, awareness has been growing in the private and public sectors. For example, in Pennsylvania a Task Force on Child Protection was formed to evaluate existing laws in the Commonwealth. The Task Force gathered information from a variety of sources, including testimony from experts in the child welfare field as well as victims of child abuse. Legislators reviewed the recommendations of the Task Force to create significant revisions in child protection legislation. Several noteworthy changes include lowering the threshold for severity of injury in the definition of “child abuse,” increasing penalties for offenders, and improving the process for reporting abuse. The Diocese of Scranton fully supports the renewed efforts of the Commonwealth to strengthen the child protection system. The Safe Environment Office is reviewing current practices to ensure that our protocols meet the requirements of the new legislation. To report child abuse or neglect, the Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare offers an around-the-clock, toll free hotline: ChildLine at 1-800-932-0313. Editor’s Note: Complete information on the Diocesan policy and programs can be viewed on the Diocesan website at www. dioceseofscranton.org. Click on the Diocesan Offices menu tab and then “Child Protection/Safe Environment.” $ODVWLQJPHPRULDOIRU\RXUORYHGRQHVZLWKRXWPDQ\RIWKHWUDGLWLRQDOH[SHQVHV 7 KHEHDXWLIXO&DWKHGUDO&HPHWHU\RI WKH'LRFHVHRI6FUDQWRQZLOOEHJLQ FRQVWUXFWLRQRQDQHZ0DXVROHXPWKLV VSULQJWRRIIHUDGGLWLRQDOVSDFHIRUWKRVH ZKRZLVKWREHHQWRPEHGLQDQDERYH JURXQGVHWWLQJ7KHQHZEXLOGLQJRI JUDQLWHPDUEOHDQGEULFNFRQVWUXFWLRQZLOO SURYLGHD¿QDOUHVWLQJSODFHLQSOHDVDQW ODQGVFDSHGVXUURXQGLQJVHDVLO\DFFHVVLEOH WRIDPLO\DQGIULHQGV 0DXVROHXPHQWRPEPHQW HOLPLQDWHVPDQ\H[SHQVHV DVVRFLDWHGZLWKWUDGLWLRQDO LQJURXQGEXULDOV 2SWLRQVPD\EHDYDLODEOH WRH[FKDQJHH[LVWLQJSORWV IRUFU\SWV ,QGLYLGXDOVRIDOOIDLWKV DUHZHOFRPHWREHLQWHUUHG DW'LRFHVDQFHPHWHULHV 7 %XULDOSORWVDQGFUHPDLQQLFKHV 2 3UH&RQVWUXFWLRQ'LVFRXQWV RIXQWLO-XO\ KLVODWHVW0DXVROHXPLVWKH¿IWKWREH FRQVWUXFWHGDW&DWKHGUDO&HPHWHU\ ZKLFKDOVRLQFOXGHVDQHDUE\&KDSHO QHRIOLIH¶VPRVWGLI¿FXOWGHFLVLRQV VKRXOGEHPDGHLQDGYDQFH±EHIRUH WKHWLPHRIQHHG±ZKLOHWKHIDPLOLHV DUHDEOHWRFRQVXOWDQGGLVFXVVRSWLRQV WRJHWKHU7KH0DXVROHXPDW&DWKHGUDO &HPHWHU\PD\SURYLGHDQDSSURSULDWH DWWUDFWLYHDQGDIIRUGDEOHPHPRULDOIRU \RXUIDPLO\¶VQHHGV DUHDOVRDYDLODEOH )RUPRUHLQIRUPDWLRQ 'LRFHVDQ&HPHWHULHV2I¿FH 2UDP6WUHHW 6FUDQWRQ3$ 'LRFHVDQ&HPHWHULHVDOVRLQFOXGH &DOYDU\&HPHWHU\'UXPV 0W2OLYHW&HPHWHU\&DUYHUWRQ +RO\&URVV&HPHWHU\2OG)RUJH 6W&DWKHULQH¶V&HPHWHU\0RVFRZ 5HVXUUHFWLRQ&HPHWHU\0RQWRXUVYLOOH 9LVLWZZZ'LRFHVHRI6FUDQWRQRUJRUSKRQHWRGLVFXVV\RXUQHHGV THE CATHOLIC LIGHT • APRIL 2, 2015 &RQVWUXFWLRQ%HJLQV7KLV6SULQJ 16 APRIL 2, 2015 • THE CATHOLIC LIGHT The Diocese of Scranton is committed to educating our students in an environment that is academically excellent and facilitates the development of moral judgment and Christian decision-making. We are proud to share the following successes of our students in the classroom and in their service to others. Each day, our schools are fulfilling their mission of preparing today’s youth and young adults to become tomorrow’s faith-filled leaders. Upperclassmen reading to the underclassmen was the norm as Holy Family Academy in Hazleton celebrated “Read Across America” day as shown here when Kelisa Hysenbegasi and Lauren Gombeda share a Dr. Seuss classic with Pre-Kindergartner Jacob Heidecker. Students at Wyoming Area Catholic School in Exeter celebrated Read Across America day by dressing as their favorite literary character. Fifth grade students Julian LaPorte, Sofia Tyler Thompson, Riley Henderson, Jeremy Torres, and John Melchiori from Notre Dame Elementary School in East Stroudsburg proudly display their Talent Show Awards, given after their March event. Pre-Kindergarten students Connor Colangelo and Clara Simrell from All Saints Academy in Scranton are preparing for the school’s Spring Camping Adventure, which will be held on Sunday, April 26, from 1 – 3 p.m. All children from 3 to 5 years old who attend will experience ASA’s “Learning is S’More Fun” planned activities involving music, art, gym, and use of the school’s iPads® and SMART Tables. Kaitlyn Bozinko and Caden Sparich, 4th grade students at St. Jude School in Mountain Top, proudly display their faux stained glass sailboat artwork. This piece, as well as others created by the students, will be sold at the school’s Kentucky Derby Gala Art Auction on Saturday, April 11, with proceeds benefitting the school’s Artist in Residence program. 17 Students at Our Lady of Peace School in Clarks Green held a pep rally to support and cheer on the boys 8th grade basketball team before they headed to the State Playoffs, where they placed 5th. Students at Epiphany School in Sayre created their own Stations of the Cross artwork. Third graders Norah Reid and Elizabeth Shaw did the Readings, Joseph Tomasso and Tyler Roe carried the candles, and Noemi Marrero carried the cross. They are pictured with Father Andrew Hvozdovic, pastor of Epiphany Parish in Sayre. Monsignor David L. Tressler, Diocesan Secretary for Catholic Schools/Superintendent of Schools, celebrated Mass with students and faculty from Notre Dame Elementary School and Notre Dame Jr./Sr. High School in East Stroudsburg on the Solemnity of the Annunciation of the Lord. Pictured here with High School Principal Jeffrey N. Lyons and Student Council President Arron Rustici, Monsignor Tressler’s homily focused on God’s wish for people is not to be perfect, but rather to try to be a better person each day. Irish eyes are smiling…and so are these 2nd grade students from St. Mary of Mount Carmel School in Dunmore who dressed up their uniforms with custom-made ties to celebrate St. Patrick’s Day. THE CATHOLIC LIGHT • APRIL 2, 2015 The Division I Odyssey of the Mind team from St. John Neumann Elementary School in Williamsport placed 7th in their region by solving the “Silent Movie” problem; the team is comprised of students in 3rd, 4th, and 5th grades. Good Shepherd Academy in Kingston recently presented Award Certificates to the Holy Redeemer Scholars for the 2014-2015 school year. The award is presented to those students ranking in the top 10% on the Holy Redeemer Placement Test. Pictured are the Redeemer Scholars Peter Maria, Isabel Maria and Jacob Rokocz with GSA Principal James Jones, Father James Paisley, Father Joseph Elston, Monsignor Neil Van Loon, Father John Polednak, Father Dan Toomey, Monsignor Joseph Kelly, Father Michael Zipay and GSA Vice Principal Stan Pavlick. APRIL 2, 2015 • THE CATHOLIC LIGHT 18 Students from Holy Redeemer High School in Wilkes-Barre recently participated in district and regional festivals in chorus and orchestra sponsored by the Pennsylvania Music Educators Association (PMEA). Ben Nause (Tenor 1), Maria Khoudary (Soprano 2), Michael Peggarella (Bass 2), Ciaran Burke (Bass 2), Abigail Truschel (Alto 2), Justin Prenga (Bass 2), and Jarret Gabriel (Tenor 1) were selected to District Chorus at Tunkhannock Area High School; some of those HRHS participants were then chosen to perform in the Region IV Chorus. Nause also earned a spot in the National Music Educators Association’s All Eastern Chorus. The school also was represented in District Orchestra on violin by Theo Seasock and John Seasock at the festival held at Lackawanna Trail High School. Students from the East Stroudsburg University Chemistry Club performed experiments with 3rd and 4th grade students from Monsignor McHugh School in Cresco. Chemistry Club member Preston Robinson shows Aniyah Farrow-Williams (wearing goggles) the first steps in a chemical reaction while Conor Fitzsimons and other students observe. Bishop Bambera celebrated Mass with the students, faculty, and families of St. Nicholas/St. Mary School in WilkesBarre. The Bishop’s homily message – serving one another makes Jesus present in our lives – was echoed by the students’ monetary donation in the Bishop’s name to the Saint Vincent De Paul Soup Kitchen, as well as a gift of 575 pounds of nonperishable food items to the St. Nicholas Church Food Pantry. Here Pre-Kindergarten student Braeden Mullery begins the intercessions during the Liturgy of the Word. Juniors Olivia Pierce and Baylie Gerrity from St. John Neumann High School in Williamsport were honored as “LEOs of the Quarter” at the Williamsport Lions Club dinner meeting. The 1st and 7th grade classes of Holy Rosary School in Duryea “Buddied Up” to create a St. Patrick’s Day art project. Students in the seventh grade spend time with their first grade buddies reading stories and making monthly projects; shown are Jaelynn Kovac, Emma Kratz, Lilly Russin, Brady Martin, Owen Kresge, Evan McCoy, Claire Ledoux, Theresa Rudloff, Lilliana Paglianite, Olivea Scalese, Maddie Miller, Giuliana Latona, Ariana Cabelly, Maryn Cosgrove, Maci Bulzoni, James Marsh, Jake Terrana, Katie Nealon, Sarah Mies, Avery Becker, Lana Baron, Amanda Yanul, Jessica Bressman, Julia LaClair, Mary Elizabeth Kishbaugh, Margaret Breznay, Lauren Mazzarella, Belle Vermac, Sarah Armitage, Louis Galli, Eric Dixon, Evan Gedrich, Zac Sulima, Kenny Francis, and Mark Ranieli. The Pre-Kindergarten 4 students from St. Agnes School in Towanda celebrated St. Patrick’s Day by wearing their favorite green clothes and by sharing green-colored snacks and drinks. St. Maria Goretti Church in Laflin St. Maria Goretti Parish in Laflin will once again host the Feast of Divine Mercy celebration in the Greater Pittston area, to be held on this year’s Divine Mercy Sunday — the Second Sunday of Easter –– April 12. Monsignor Neil Van Loon, host pastor, will serve as principal celebrant and be joined by guest concelebrant and homilist Father Richard Cirba, assistant pastor of St. Robert Bellarmine Parish in Wilkes-Barre. The theme for the 2015 Divine Mercy Sunday celebration focuses on St. Faustina as the holy messenger of the Lord’s Divine Mercy, which was poured out for all mankind on Jesus’ cross. This Year of Consecrated Life, as proclaimed by Pope Francis, marks the 15th anniversary of St. Faustina’s canonization. The Divine Mercy devotion will include prayers for all religious men and women who have dedicated their lives to Christ and his Church. Cathy Mack serves as coordinator and cenacle leader of Divine Mercy in the Pittston area. She will offer remarks prior to the service. Itinerary for the celebration on April 12 is as follows: 1 p.m., Sacrament of Reconciliation; 2 p.m., veneration of the Jesus, I Trust in You! Divine Mercy Image, followed by celebration of Divine Mercy Sunday Mass; and 3 p.m., exposition of the Blessed Sacrament, sung Divine Mercy Chaplet, recitation of the Holy Rosary, benediction, and individual blessing with the first-class relic of St. Faustina. St. Lucy Church in Scranton Father Sam Ferretti, past o r, a n d D e a c o n C a r m i n e Mendicino announce the west Scranton parishes of St. Lucy and SS. Peter and Paul will celebrate Divine Mercy Sunday on April 12. St. Pio Group to Observe Divine Mercy Sunday HONESDALE — St. Padre Pio Prayer Group will gather to celebrate the Feast of the Divine Mercy on Divine Mercy Sunday, April 12, at St. Mary Magdalen Church, 414 Church St. The annual devotion on the Second Sunday of Easter will begin at 2 p.m. with the blessing of the Divine Mercy image by Father William Langan, host pastor and group spiritual director. Special Marian devotions, including recitation of the Glorious Mysteries of the Rosary, will precede exposition of the Blessed Sacrament/Eucharistic Adoration, and an offering of prayers for all priests. The Chaplet of Divine Mercy will be chanted at 3 p.m., followed by a Scripture reading and spiritual reflection by Father Langan. The book of special intentions will be presented and prayers invoking the intercession of St. Padre Pio will be offered. Litany of Divine Mercy will be followed by Eucharistic procession, closing with benediction and blessing with the relic of St. Faustina Kowalska –– the Divine Mercy saint. All faithful are invited to attend and receive the special blessings attached to the observance of Divine Mercy Sunday, as recorded in the diary of St. Faustina. SOME THINGS GET BETTER WITH AGE! The Feast of Divine Mercy celebration will be held at St. Lucy Church, 949 Scranton St., beginning at 12 noon with recitation of the Rosary and Sacrament of Reconciliation. Mass for Divine Mercy Sunday will be celebrated at 2 p.m., followed by exposition of the Blessed Sacrament at 3 p.m., at which time the Divine Mercy Chaplet will be recited. Serving as guest celebrant will be Father Marek Wasilewski, a member of the Idente Missionaries religious order. A native of Poland, he currently serves as assistant pastor of the Fr. Marek C a r b o n d a l e Wasilewski, M.Id. parishes of St. Rose of Lima and Our Lady of Mount Carmel. The devotion will conclude with solemn benediction and blessing with the relic of St. Faustina. Refreshments will also be available. The Divine Mercy Sunday celebration at St. Lucy’s will conclude the nine-day Divine Mercy Novena being hosted at the parish. The Novena will continue on Friday, April 10, at 7 p.m. and Saturday, April 11, following the 4 p.m. Mass. Continued on Page 21 "We Do It All" ...For your home ...For your car ...For your workplace DOING IT ALL FOR SEVENTY FIVE YEARS! MESKO GLASS 1-800-982-4055 • AUTO • COMMERCIAL SCRANTON • WILKES-BARRE • HONESDALE • ALLENTOWN HOME MULDOON WINDOW, DOOR & AWNING CO. 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Our fulltime Chaplin Father Peter Menghini and Mission Director Addie Rocco work together to ensure our residents spiritual needs are assessed and met. PLEASE CALL FOR YOUR PERSONALIZED TOUR! ◆ The Nursing Home (570) 842-7621 ◆ The Residence (570) 842-5274 Voted Best Personal Care Home 2014 in the Scranton Times Tribune Readers Choice Awards 19 THE CATHOLIC LIGHT • APRIL 2, 2015 Divine Mercy Celebrations April 12 APRIL 2, 2015 • THE CATHOLIC LIGHT 20 +($5,1*$,'5(3$,56 $//0$.(6 We Accept Geisinger Gold • Save Hundreds 3URIHVVLRQDO+HDULQJ$LGQHW :LOOLDP6W3LWWVWRQ VOLKSWAGENS SALES - SERVICE - PARTS KELLY MOTOR CO. Mission Message PONTIFICAL MISSION SOCIETIES IN THE UNITED STATES ‘Come Out’ The Society for the Propagation of the Faith HolySociety Childhood The forAssociation the Propagation of the Faith The Society of St. Peter the Apostle Missionary Childhood Association Missionary Union of Priests and Religious The Society of St. Peter the Apostle Missionary Union of Priests and Religious www.worldmissions-catholicchurch.org www.onefamilyinmission.org By Deacon Edward T. Kelly Diocesan Director, Pontifical Mission Societies AUTHORIZED VOLKSWAGEN DEALER S. Main at Elm, Scranton 570-347-5656 318 East Drinker St., Dunmore, PA • 570-343-6013 www.NEPAFuneralHome.com /LYH:HOO/HDYH:HOO3ODQ:LWK8V Easter is a celebration of life and a promise of eternal life. Given this Easter assurance, you would think we could quit worrying about death and get on with our lives. But to celebrate Easter as somehow guaranteeing that we will survive death surely misses the point. No one gets to Jesus’ empty tomb except by the way of the cross. Death is the prerequisite of Resurrection. We know this, since we are already tomb-dwellers. We dwell in the tombs of our mortality. But is this our only tomb? In what other tombs do we currently live? How about the tomb of excessive shopping, excessive drinking, or drug ad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diction? It may be the tomb of a dead dream. How about the tomb of a goal that really mattered but never materialized? The tomb of a relationship that promised to give us life but has taken more life from us than we thought was possible? The tomb of some other foiled expectation? Maybe grief is your tomb, because of the loss of a loved one? Maybe you are in the dark tomb of guilt, or the immobilizing tomb of fear, or the silent tomb of loneliness. Maybe you aren’t where you want to be by now. Worse, maybe you’re not who you thought you were meant to be. We may not like the tomb we find ourselves in, but we might not want to exercise the option of leaving it. Tombs can represent a subtle form of security. A tomb can be a hiding place, an excuse for not risking, or loving, or living, or reaching out to others. The Resurrection is about stones being rolled away from all kinds of tombs. Jesus’ invitation to you and me is “come out!” Come out from the darkness of where we are to the light of where He is. But Jesus can’t do everything for us. A little cooperation on our part is necessary. What will we do? Pope Francis urges us to come out of our comfort zones and go forth and make some noise. He also asks us to reach out to the poorest of the poor — and learn from them. In my visits to mission dioceses, I have learned three valuable lessons from the poor who live in places where there is no running water, no paved roads, no electricity and no garbage pick-up. The first lesson is to be content with living more simply. In one of my visits, I met a woman named Julia whom I noticed was always smiling. The lady was dirt poor. At the end of my visit, I asked her why she was so happy. She answered, “Try to understand that most of my family members and friends are both poor and sick at the same time. I’m just poor, so I thank God everyday for my good health.” Here is a woman who came out of the tomb of poverty to thank God for the blessing of health. In doing so, she is a blessing to others. Her example tells us that our happiness or self-esteem does not depend on our outer circumstances, but rather comes from deep inside. It prompts all of us to ask a question: What do I really need as opposed to what I think I want? Continued on Page 24 Mark Your Calendar –– Around the Diocese Weekly Devotions Fridays Tuesdays Eucharistic Adorations Holy Hour for Vocations –– hosted by St. Monica Parish at Our Lady of Sorrows Church, 363 W. 8th St., West Wyoming; exposition & adoration of the Blessed Sacrament following the celebration of Mass at 7 a.m.; adoration continues until 11 a.m. For more information, call the parish office (570-693-1991). –– hosted by the Little Sisters of the Poor at Holy Family Residence, 2500 Adams Ave., Scranton; begins at 4:30 p.m. in the residence chapel. Holy Hour includes recitation of the Rosary, evening prayer (vespers), and benediction. –– hosted by Immaculate Conception Church in the Hill section of Scranton; exposition of the Blessed Sacrament held from 8:30 a.m. to 5:15 p.m. in the church’s adoration chapel. Divine Mercy Novena –– hosted at the Basilica of the National Shrine of St. Ann in west Scranton; begins at 6:30 p.m., prior to the 7 p.m. Mass at St. Ann’s Basilica, 1239 St. Ann St. Saturdays Eucharistic Adoration –– hosted at Queen of Angels Parish in Jessup; exposition & adoration of the Blessed Sacrament held from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. in the Grunick Chapel, located adjacent to the parish worship site of St. Michael Church, 322 First Ave., Jessup. Divine Mercy Sunday Celebrations April 12 Continued from Page 19 St. Faustina’s in Nanticoke The faith community of St. Faustina Kowalska Parish in Nanticoke will honor their patroness and her message of Jesus’ infinite Mercy by hosting a Divine Mercy celebration on Sunday, April 12. The Feast of Divine Mercy devotion will begin at St. Faustina’s with the Sacrament of Reconciliation being offered at 1 p.m. Feast day prayers will be recited at 2 p.m., and the sung Divine Mercy Chaplet commences at 3 p.m. Eucharistic Adoration/ Holy Hour SEND a GIFT of food extending your deepest sympathy and warm thoughts from: –– hosted at Gate of Heaven Parish, Dallas; devotions held in Gate of Heaven Church, 40 Machell Ave. Silent adoration held from 5 to 6 p.m., followed by music meditation from 6 to 7 p.m. Call the parish office (570675-2121) for more information. KETTEL’S KITCHEN at BRIER’S MARKET Call 570 575 0135 Major credit cards accepted. Complimentary sympathy card. –– hosted at SS. Peter & Paul Church, 1309 W. Locust St., west Scranton; devotion held from 7 to 8 p.m. Eucharistic adoration of the Blessed Sacrament includes prayers for priests and recitation of the Rosary and Divine Mercy Chaplet. –– hosted by Queen of the Apostles Parish, Avoca; adoration held from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. at St. Mary Church, 715 Hawthorne St., Avoca. For more information, call the parish rectory (570-457-3412). Continued on Page 22 Our Lady of the Snows in Clarks Summit Our Lady of the Snows Parish in Clarks Summit invites all area faithful to avail themselves of Jesus’ infinite mercy as Divine Mercy devotions will be held at Our Lady of the Snows Church, located on South State Street, on Sunday, April 12, from 3 to 4 p.m. The feast day celebration, to be presided over by Father Jeffrey Tudgay, assistant pastor of the parish, will include the Sacrament of Reconciliation, Eucharistic adoration, recitation of the Chaplet of Divine Mercy and benediction. ROBERT RITTERBECK Church Painting and Decorating (570) 343-2899 Please visit our website at www.Ritterbeck.com STATUES ) STENCILS GOLD LEAF ) ) MURAL RESTORATION 21 THE CATHOLIC LIGHT • APRIL 2, 2015 If there is nothing you can do to repair someone’s loss, Perhaps there’s something you can do to ease it. APRIL 2, 2015 • THE CATHOLIC LIGHT 22 :,//,$0673,776721 Mark Your Calendar –– Around the Diocese MADAME ALEXANDER DOLLS • HANSA TOYS Weekly & Holy Week/Easter Devotions DuchessOutlet.com &RDWVÑ6XLWVÑ5DLQFRDWV Tuesdays Continued from Page 21 Devotions to the Holy Face of Our Lord –– hosted at St. Elizabeth of Hungary Church, Bear Creek; following the 8:30 a.m. Mass at St. Elizabeth’s. &RPH6HH8V Wednesdays Divine Mercy Devotion NJC –– hosted at St. Lawrence Church, 380 Franklin St., Great Bend; devotions held at 3 p.m. Service includes exposition of the Blessed Sacrament; sung Divine Mercy Chaplet and praises to the Divine Mercy, Rosary recitation, silent meditation, Divine Praises and veneration of the relic of St. Faustina. INVESTMENTS Helping to take the mystery out of your financial future Nicholas J. Colarossi, CRC® College Planning Retirement Planning www.njcinvestments.com 570-586-5030 Securities offered through Leigh Baldwin & Co., LLC. Member FINRA/SIPC Eucharistic Adoration –– hosted by Holy Family Parish, 828 Main St., Sugar Notch; exposition of the Blessed Sacrament is held following the celebration of the 7:30 a.m. Mass. Exposition/adoration of the Holy Eucharist continues throughout the day until 7 p.m. Sundays Bible Study Program “The Great Adventure — A Journey Through the Bible,” hosted by St. Monica Parish at Our Lady of Sorrows Church, 363 West 8th St., West Wyoming; program offered at 9:45 a.m. in the parish’s lower chapel. Presentations include the history of Biblical stories as part of God’s plan of salvation; God’s six covenants with humanity; 12 major time periods of the Bible; and a practical plan for reading the 14 narrative books of the Bible. Outdoor Rosary Devotion –– sponsored by the Lay Servants of the Immaculate Heart of Mary; begins at 7 p.m. at the Fatima Grotto, North Main St., Wilkes-Barre (across from the Holy Cross Retirement Center). Devotion includes recitation of 15 decades of the Holy Rosary. Weekdays Eucharistic Adoration –– hosted by St. Matthew Parish, 200 Brodhead Ave., East Stroudsburg; daily exposition & adoration of the Holy Eucharist held Tuesday thru Friday from 12 noon to 6:30 p.m. Chaplet of the Divine Mercy is recited every Friday at 3 p.m. Holy Week & Easter Devotions Good Friday Pro-Life Devotion: “Way of the Cross for Victims of Abortion” — APRIL 3, offered by the Catholics Defending Life Prayer Team; devotion begins at 11 a.m. at the Planned Parenthood Clinic, 316 Penn Ave., Scranton. All are welcome to participate. Divine Mercy Novena — APRIL 10-12, hosted at St. Lucy Church, 949 Scranton St., west Scranton; services include Divine Mercy Novena and benediction of the Blessed Sacrament. Friday, April 10, 7 p.m.; Saturday, April 11, following the 4 p.m. Mass; and Divine Mercy Sunday, April 12, from 12 noon to 3 p.m. LOOKINGFORACDALTERNATIVE? 6 Year Fixed Annuity 6 Year Term 3.10% Park 2 Annuity 2 Year Term $5000 Minimum Tax Deferred Surrender Charge (Yr1-6%, Yr2-5%, Yr3-4%, Yr4-3%, Yr5-2%, Yr6-1%) Form Nos. AA-09, ASQ-1 “FOR GOD & NATION” FIRST CATHOLIC SLOVAK UNION 2.15% $1000 Minimum Tax Deferred Surrender Charges (Yr1-6%, Yr2-5%) 10% Free Withdrawal per Year Form Nos. AA-09, ASQ-1, 12012010 Plans provide full withdrawal at the end of the stated term. Rates are subject to change. Annuity contracts issued by First Catholic Slovak Union, a fraternal benefit society founded in Cleveland, OH in 1890. Not available in all states. Not FDIC or NCUSIF Insured. Michael J. Ricci, CRPC 711 Dunmore St., Throop, PA 18512 800-324-2890 Diocesan Council to Host ‘Women’s Gathering’ SCRANTON — The Scranton Diocesan Council of Catholic Women will sponsor a “Women’s Gathering” on Saturday, April 11, at the Oblates of St. Joseph Seminary, 1880 Highway 315, Laflin (Pittston). Mass will be celebrated in the seminary chapel at 10 a.m. by Father John Albosta. Installation of officers will be conducted following the liturgy. Featured guest speaker for the day’s gathering will be Catherine Butel, Diocesan Secretary for Parish Life. Her topic will be: “Women of Faith, Families of Faith.” A luncheon will follow. All Catholic women of the Diocese are invited to attend, and there is no fee for the luncheon. For more information, contact Mary Lloyd at (570-5786720) or Nancy Addley at (570-357-1790). Mark Your Calendar Monthly Gatherings Pro-Life Rosary –– led by Father John McHale; held on the first Wednesday of every month at 1 p.m. on the corner of Chestnut & South Wyoming streets in Hazleton. Public recitation of the Rosary is offered for an end to abortion. For more information, call Annette at (570636-1353). Filipino Community Mass –– hosted at the Cathedral of St. Peter, Scranton; Mass celebrated on April 11 for the Filipino community at 6 p.m. in the Cathedral church, 315 Wyoming Ave. Fellowship and social follow in the lower level of the Cathedral rectory. For more information, call Michael Fajardo (570-876-4736). Pro-Life Rosary Vigil –– sponsored by the Knights of Columbus; held on First Saturdays of the month outside the offices of Planned Parenthood, located at 316 Penn Ave., Scranton. Rosary offered to end abortion, beginning at 10:30 a.m. $11281&(6&$7+2/,&72856)25 Diocese of Scranton Presents 'D\6KULQHVRI)UDQFH3LOJULPDJH Gathering of ‘Helpers of God’s Precious Infants’ –– pro-life Rosary apostolate; meets from 9 to 10 a.m. to pray for an end to abortion on the second Saturday of every month at the Allentown Women’s Center, 31 South Commerce Way, Bethlehem. Local transportation provided; rides available at 7:30 a.m. from Arby’s restaurant, Route 315, Pittston Township. For more information, contact Passionist Father Ed Buchheit at (570-347-5691). Meeting of the St. Joseph Secular Franciscan Fraternity –– hosted at St. Joseph’s Oblate Seminary, Route 315, Laflin. Liturgy of the Hours recited at 1:30 p.m. in the seminary chapel. Fraternity meets regularly on the third Sunday of every month; all professed members of the Secular Franciscans and interested men and women are welcome. Anyone interested in attending may contact Jim Gaffney at (570823-7660). AUGUST 23 THRU SEPTEMBER 1, 2015 Visiting: Caen - Normandy - Paris - Lourdes MASS CELEBRATED DAILY BY BISHOP BAMBERA at various Shrines, Churches and Normandy American Cemetery & Memorial MOST REVEREND JOSEPH C. BAMBERA, D.D., J.C.L Tour Leader WILKES-BARRE — The Ladies of Charity of the Diocese of Scranton will host their Annual Day of Enrollment on Saturday, April 25, at St. Robert Bellarmine Parish in Wilkes-Barre. Mass will be celebrated in the parish’s St. Aloysius Church, 143 W. Division St., at 10:30 a.m. by Monsignor Joseph P. Kelly, V.E., Diocesan Executive Director of Catholic Social Services, who serves as spiritual moderator for the Ladies of Charity. Doors open at 9:30 a.m. and the Rosary will be recited prior to the liturgy at 10 a.m. Following the liturgy, a luncheon reception will be held in the cafeteria next door to the church. During the day, a collection basket for pro-life donations will be available. Cost for the luncheon is $17, and reservations are required by Saturday, April 18. New members are always welcome. Checks made payable to “Ladies of Charity” may be forwarded to Evelyn Raitter, 33 Oak Drive, Mountaintop, PA 18707. For more information, contact her at (570-474-5192). 'D\-HZHORI7XVFDQ\,WDO\7RXU JUNE 22 THRU JUNE 30, 2015 Visit: Florence -Rome -Venice -Siena -Assisi -Pisa & Milan (Stay in Tuscany) 6 6($7)7 Rev. Joseph Sica Immaculate Conception (570) 342-5790 • (570) 288-9311 TOLL FREE 1-800-828-6029 /( Scranton $3195.00 price per person/double occupancy Tour Leader 'D\%HUPXGD&UXLVH JULY 5 THRU JULY 12, 2015 Perfect Summer Get-A-Way, Spend 3 Full Days in Bermuda. Sail from New York, Bus Included to Pier, NO FLYING!! Msgr. David Tressler Superindendent of Catholic Schools Tour Leader From $1275.00 Price per person/double occupancy 4/6 Book bpyecial for s tive! incen 'D\,ULVK+HULWDJH7RXU JULY 12-20, 2015 Continued on Page 25 Ladies of Charity Enrollment Day $3995.00price per person/double occupancy Visit: Dublin -Galway -Killarney -Bunratty -Knock Shrine -Dingle Peninsula -Cruise on River Corrib Rev.Brian Clarke St. Peter’s Cathedral Scranton Tour Leader $2795.00 Price per person/double occupancy 'D\5RPDQWLF*HUPDQ\$XVWULD5KLQH&UXLVH October 12-21, 2015 Visit: Rothenburg -Rhine Cruise -Wurzburg -Romantic Road -Innsbruck -Salzburg & Munich Rev. Thomas Muldowney St. Peter’s Cathedral Scranton $3195.00 Price per person/double occupancy FOR RESERVATIONS & INFORMATION CALL: ZZZDVNWUDYHOZRUOGFRP ZZZDVNWUDYHOZRUOGFRP Att: John Madden, C.T.C., 435 Green Ridge Street, Scranton PA 18508 (570) 342-5790 • (570) 288-9311 TOLL FREE 1-800-828-6029 THE CATHOLIC LIGHT • APRIL 2, 2015 Regularly Scheduled Devotions 23 APRIL 2, 2015 • THE CATHOLIC LIGHT 24 KE/dz͕DͲDĂLJϭϴͲϮϭͻΨϯϵϵƉƉͬĚďů͘ŽĐĐ /ŶĐůƵĚĞƐ͗ϯŶŝŐŚƚƐĂĐĐŽŵŵŽĚĂƟŽŶƐ͕ϯďƌĞĂŬĨĂƐƚƐ͕ϮĚŝŶŶĞƌƐ͕ĂŶĞǀĞŶŝŶŐŽĨ ĞŶƚĞƌƚĂŝŶŵĞŶƚĂƚƚŚĞKĐĞĂŶŝƚLJ:ĂŵďŽƌĞĞ͕ƐƐĂƚĞĂŐƵĞ/ƐůĂŶĚdŽƵƌƐ͕ ǀŝƐŝƚƚŽdŚĞĂƐŝŶŽĂƚKĐĞĂŶŽǁŶƐ E/'Z&>>^͕EͲ^ĞƉƚ͘ϮϬͲϮϯͻΨϰϳϵƉƉͬĚďů͘ŽĐĐ /ŶĐůƵĚĞƐ͗ϯŶŝŐŚƚƐŽŶƚŚĞĐĂŶĂĚŝĂŶƐŝĚĞ͕ϯďƌĞĂŬĨĂƐƚƐ͕ϯĚŝŶŶĞƌƐ͕ ǀŝƐŝƚƚŽZŽƐƐŝ'ůĂƐƐ͕EŝĂŐĂƌĂ&ĂůůƐ͕&ĂůůƐǀŝĞǁĂƐŝŶŽ͕ĂŶĚŵŽƌĞ͊ &KZDKZ/E&KZDd/KE>>DZzΝϱϳϬͳϲϳϲͳϯϳϭϭ ǻNjɚsĶǢÌŸɠŷƼsŘËŸȖǣs˒ǢȖŘʳʰƼNjÞĶˠˡǼÌˎNJǢəƻ d>Ed//dzKsZE/dϱͬϯϭ͕>>z͛^ͻΨϭϭϵͲΨϰϱ^>KdW>zΘΨϭϬ&KK tKK>K,W/E^Η/d>/EzΗϱͬϱͻΨϴϵ ^W/Z/dK&W,/>>W,/Θ^E^^/EKΨϮϬ^>KdW>zϲͬϮϬͻΨϭϮϰ <hddKtE&K><&^d/s>ϳͬϯͻ;ΨϰϵĐŚŝůĚͿͻΨϲϱ ϵϭϭDh^hDE>/dd>/d>zͲEzϳͬϭϭͻΨϵϵ >d/DKZ/EEZ,ZKZΘYhZ/hDϳͬϮϱͻΨϵϵ sZDKEdͬEt,DW^,/ZϳͬϭϵͲϮϮͻΨϲϵϵ ^Khd,<Kdͬz>>Kt^dKEϴͬϵͲϮϭͻΨϭϵϵϵ CALL FOR 5 WKͬ&KytKKϴͬϯϬͲϵͬϮͻΨϰϵϵ A 201 RE HU BROC t/>tKK:DKZϵͬϳͲϭϬͻΨϯϵϵ DzZd>,ͬ,Z>^dKEϵͬϭϵͲϮϱͻΨϳϵϵ D</E/^>EϭϬͬϰͲϭϬͻΨϳϵϵ Mission Message: ‘Come Out’ The second lesson is to to roll away stones from all lift high the cross. Why? Out kinds of tombs. of the cross comes great love. If we really want what And the cross is never the end of the story — Resurrection is. The third lesson is the power of prayer. I have never witnessed people praying more fervently and often as in mission territories. They depend on God and take refuge in God which gives them great faith and allows them Easter offers, we must “come out” of our tombs and stand in awe of the hope and new life we have been given through Jesus’ Resurrection. When we go forth and make some noise, as Pope Francis says, we have something to offer the world we live in — announcing the “Good News” that the tomb is empty! “He is not here. He is risen.” :KhZEzdKd,,K>z>E STUCKER TOURS 570-655-8458 www.stuckertours.com :ŽŝŶ&ĂƚŚĞƌ^ĞĂŶĂƌƉĞŶƚĞƌŽŶƚŚĞƚƌŝƉŽĨĂůŝĨĞƚŝŵĞ͘EŽǀĞŵďĞƌϱƚŚϮϬϭϱ 6 % 6SHFLDOL]LQJLQ 7ULSVWR,WDO\ RXUV ,1&/8'(6 $LUIDUH7D[HV )LUVW&ODVV+RWHO *XLGHG7RXUVSOXV0HDOV 'DLO\LQFOXGLQJ:LQHZLWKDOO /XQFKHV'LQQHUV 3UHVHQWV 7DRUPLQD6LFLO\ One of our most popular trips! Featuring: Taormina, Siracusa, Catania, Mt. Etna, Agrigento - Valley of the Temples and so much more! 9 Days/7 Nights - Nov. 1st - 9th, 2015 2QO\ WƌĞƐĞŶƚĂƚŝŽŶǁŝůůďĞŚĞůĚ͗ DŽŶĚĂLJ͕ƉƌŝůϭϯƚŚĂƚϳ͗ϬϬWD ^ƚ͘DĂdžŝŵŝůŝĂŶ<ŽůďĞWĂƌŝƐŚ͕ WŽĐŽŶŽWŝŶĞƐ͕W * 3HU3HUVRQ 5DWHVDUHSHUSHUVRQEDVHGRQGRXEOHRFFXSDQF\ZLWKSD\PHQWE\FDVKRUFKHFN )RU,QIRUPDWLRQ&RQWDFW6DO&RPHWDDW ^ƉĂĐĞŝƐ>ŝŵŝƚĞĚ͘WůĞĂƐĞĂůůϱϳϬͲϰϴϲͲϰϮϯϭƚŽZ^sW W/>'Z/D'dK/^Z> A FABULOUS BRANSON CHRISTMAS! November 12-16, 2015 MARTZ TOURS NEWPORT FLOWER SHOW JUNE 17-19 Rosecliff Mansion, Blithewold Mansion, Newport Harbor Cruise, Bristol Tour, 4 Meals Roundtrip air from Avoca to Springfield! 4101 Birney Ave, Suite A, Moosic, PA 18507 August 30-September 7, 2015 MACKINAW ISLAND TOUR Featuring the Grand Hotel, Ford Museum, Notre Dame Campus and much more! $2499 pp dbl August 11-20, 2015 CANADIAN ROCKIES TOUR Now you can purchase Martz Tours online! CALL 570-821-3855 or 1-800-432-8069 Visit us online at www.martztours.com The Banff Springs Hotel, Grand Tetons, Yellowstone, Glacier National Park and Columbis Icefields, ride an icecat and walk on a glacier! $3499 pp HILTON PROMENADE AT BRANSON LANDING Several Christmas Shows! Andy Williams show featuring the Osmonds and the Lennon Sisters, The Lettermen, The Johnny Mathis Christmas Show, Dixie Stampede Family Christmas with a live Nativity! 9 meals, transfers, taxes, fully escorted by our own Thompson Tours agent, ONLY $1289.00 Watch for our new Fall Weekend Tours! Regular Devotions & Spiritual Offerings Monthly Gatherings Continued from Page 23 Gathering of the Secular Discalced Carmelites –– canonically established group of the Diocese of Scranton; group meets on the third Sunday of every month at Holy Annunciation Monastery in Sugarloaf, Luzerne County. All are welcome, especially those who feel called to a deeper consecration in life and wish to experience Carmelite spirituality and community. Call Carol Wojewodski (570-342-7448) for more information. Bereavement Support Group –– hosted at Our Lady of the Snows Church, 301 S. State St., Clarks Summit; group gathers Reginas of King’s Spring Festival Set WILKES-BARRE — The Reginas of King’s College announces its annual Spring Festival will be held Sunday, April 12, at 2 p.m. in the Sheehy Farmers Center on the King’s campus. The afternoon event featuring games and prizes is the group’s largest fundraiser, which benefits the Rev. Clement J. Podskoch Scholarship Fund aiding local students attending the college in Wilkes-Barre. Admission to the festival is $2 per person and includes light refreshments. The Reginas is a group of women who have or had family members attend King’s College. Active for more than 65 years, the Reginas always welcomes new members. For more information about the spring festival or becoming a member of Reginas, call Eileen Eustice at (570-283-0846) or Maureen Finnerty at (570-288-8706). on third Sunday of every month at 2 p.m. in the parish center. No registration required. For more information, call Nettie at (570586-1741). Spiritual Offerings We e k l y N o v e n a t o S t . Anthony of Padua — APRIL 7-JUNE 9, hosted by Our Lady of Hope Parish, 40 Park Ave., Wilkes-Barre; St. Anthony Novena devotion offered on 13 consecutive Tuesday evenings, beginning each week at 5:30 p.m. in the parish church. Novena theme: “The Life and Legacy of Pope Saint John XXIII.” All faithful are welcome to attend; for more information, call (570-824-7832). Catholic Charismatic Regional Prayer Meeting — APRIL 13, sponsored by local Charismatic prayer groups; begins at 7:30 p.m. in the auditorium of the St. Mary’s School building in Avoca. Gathering includes songs, praise, spiritual gifts, personal witness and a teaching; fellowship with refreshments will conclude the meeting. All faithful are welcome to participate. Evening of Prayer with the Sisters of IHM — APRIL 16, sponsored by the Congregation of the Sisters, Servants of the Immaculate Heart of Mary; prayer service held at 7 p.m. in the IHM Center Chapel, 2300 Adams Ave., Scranton (top of University Ave., beyond Marywood University). For more information, call (570346-5404). Catholic Underground Gathering — APRIL 18, hosted monthly at the John Paul II Center at Gate of Heaven Church, 40 Machell Ave., Dallas; begins with Eucharistic Adoration at 7 p.m., followed by coffee-house gathering and entertainment. Month’s special guest: Chris Bray. Catholic Underground was founded as an apostolate of the Franciscan Friars of the Renewal in response to St. John Paul II’s call for evangelization through the media and the sharing of talents in the arts and music. For more information, call (570-675-2121). 25 For All Your Printing & Copying Needs 3ULQW6ROXWLRQVWKDWDeliver 27 Stauffer Industrial Park • Taylor, PA 18517 570-343-0414 or 570-562-2738 1-888-4-ALL-PRINT www.pdqprint.com Discover the Blessings of Faith-Based Care As the only senior care facilities owned and operated by the Diocese of Scranton, Little Flower Manor, Saint Therese Residence and St. Luke’s Villa provide compassionate and expert care to improve the quality of life for our short and long-term residents. Continued on Page 27 Offering a Full Continuum of Care 3ULFHVVWDUWLQJDWaZLWK$LUIDUH,QFOXGHGLQWKLVSULFH 3ULFHVDUH$//,1&/86,9(Z$LUIDUH IURPDQ\ZKHUHLQWKHFRQWLQHQWDO86$ 6HYHUDOWULSVWRGLIIHUHQWGHVWLQDWLRQVWKH+RO\ /DQG,WDO\)UDQFH3RUWXJDO6SDLQ3RODQG 0HGMXJRUMH/RXUGHV)DWLPD,UHODQG6FRW ODQG$XVWULD*HUPDQ\6ZLW]HUODQG*UHHFH 7XUNH\&DPLQRGH6DQWLDJR9LNLQJ&UXLVHV %XGDSHVW3UDJXHHWF Our professional caregivers offer a full range of services, from independent living, personal care and skilled nursing to physical, occupational and speech therapy plus a secure memory impairment program. A Healing Plan for Individual Needs We apply a multi-disciplinary approach that helps create a care plan that matches the individual needs of our residents. Our goal is always to provide an exceptional resident experience that promotes healing and recovery in a caring and compassionate environment. :HDOVRVSHFLDOL]HLQFXVWRPWULSVIRU%LVKRSV 3ULHVWVDQG'HDFRQV &DOOXV ZZZSUR[LPRWUDYHOFRP DQWKRQ\#SUR[LPRWUDYHOFRP&DUPHOD0DQDJR FDUPHOD#SUR[LPRWUDYHOFRP([HFXWLYH'LUHFWRU 200 South Meade St. Wilkes-Barre Ph: 570-832-6131 www.LittleFlowerManorWB.com 80 E Northampton St. Wilkes-Barre Ph: 570-826-1031 www.StLukesVilla.org THE CATHOLIC LIGHT • APRIL 2, 2015 Mark Your Calendar –– Around the Diocese APRIL 2, 2015 • THE CATHOLIC LIGHT 26 ANTIQUES & COLLECTABLES WANTED 1 ITEM OR COMPLETE ESTATES 3RVW&DUGV %RRNV 0LOLWDU\ 0LQLQJ,WHPV 7RROV *XQV 6SRUWLQJ,WHPV *ODVVZDUH 7R\V &ORFNV 6HZLQJ 0DFKLQHV /LJKW )L[WXUHV 0DJD]LQHV 570-430-2370 AAA BUYERS Buying Antiques and Estates, Furniture, Wicker, Toys, Linens, Quilts, Old Sewing Machines, Old Light Fixtures and Lamps, Railroad and Mining Items, Bookcases, Bedroom and Dining Rooms, French Doors, Radios, Books, Cedar Chests, Anything Old OUR 35th YEAR • 570-343-5628 “Over 40 Years of Know How” +$57/(<(6*52:$7(53522),1*&2,1& 66KHUPDQ$YHQXH6FUDQWRQ3$ “Complete Exterior Masonry & Concrete Restoration” BUILDING CLEANING • CAULKING AND SEALANTS • REPOINTING • EXTERIOR COATINGS. Notice Regarding Reporting Sexual Abuse of a Minor It is the policy of the Diocese of Scranton to report any allegation of sexual abuse of a minor to law enforcement. If you are a victim of sexual abuse committed by a priest, deacon, religious or lay employee or volunteer of the Diocese of Scranton, you are encouraged to immediately report the matter to law enforcement. If any priest, deacon, religious, lay employee or volunteer of the Diocese of Scranton has cause or reason to suspect that a minor has been subjected to any form of abuse, including child sexual abuse, the matter will be reported to law enforcement. It is also the policy of the Diocese to adhere to all civil and state regulations. To this end, the Diocese is equally committed to adhering to the norms of the Code of Canon Law and to upholding the tenets of the USCCB Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People, which includes supporting victims of sexual abuse in their pursuit of emotional and spiritual well-being. As such, information regarding an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor should also be reported to the Victim Assistance Coordinator, Joseph DeVizia at (570-862-7551) or to Diocesan officials, including the Vicar General, Reverend Thomas M. Muldowney, V.G., at (570-207-2269). Aviso al Respecto de Reportar el Abuso Sexual de Un Menor de Edad Es la norma de la Diócesis de Scranton reportar cualquier alegación de abuso sexual de un menor de edad a las autoridades. Si usted es una víctima de abuso sexual cometido por un sacerdote, diácono, religioso o empleado laico, o voluntario de la Diócesis de Scranton, usted está obligado a reportar el asunto inmediatamente a las autoridades de la ley. Si algún sacerdote, diácono, religioso, empleado laico o voluntario de la Diócesis de Scranton tiene sospecha de que un menor de edad ha sido sujeto a cualquier forma de abuso, incluyendo abuso sexual de menor de edad, el asunto será reportado a las autoridades de la ley. Es la norma de la Diócesis defender todas las regulaciones civiles y del estado. Al fin de que la Diócesis esté comprometida igualmente a defender las normas del Código de Derecho Canónico y defender los principios de la Carta Para la Protección de Niños y Jóvenes (Conferencia de los Obispos Católicos de los Estados Unidos), lo cual incluye apoyar a las víctimas de abuso sexual en pos del bienestar emocional y espiritual. Por eso, información respecto a una alegación del asunto sexual de un menor de edad, debe ser reportada a la Coordinadora Diocesana de Asistencia para Las Víctimas, Joseph DeVizia, a (570-8627551) o a los oficiales diocesanos incluyendo El Vicario General de la Diócesis y Director de Los Clérigos, El Reverendo Thomas M. Muldowney, a (570-207-2269). All Work Guaranteed. Fully Insured! ph (570) 344-6820 • Free Estimates • (570) 344-7165 fax 0HUF\ &HQWHU $VVLVWHG/LYLQJ6NLOOHG1XUVLQJ 3HUVRQDO&DUH6NLOOHG1XUVLQJ /DNH 6WUHHW 'DOODV3$ tzKD/E's>>z͛^ ͞^ŵĂůůWƌŽũĞĐƚ^ƉĞĐŝĂůŝƐƚ͟ J Q L N R R 1RZ% RMHFWV )5(((67,0$7(6 6SULQJ3U >ŝĐĞŶƐĞĚΘ/ŶƐƵƌĞĚHIC PA093851 Allan Valunas, Owner'5,9(5 'ULYHUDYDLODEOHIRUDOOORFDORUORQJGLVWDQFH WULSV,Q\RXURZQFDURUPLQH&DOO%HUQLH ;ϱϳϬͿϳϵϰͲϰϬϬϳ DW ǁǁǁ͘EWͲ,EzDE͘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ò EDWK JLYHXVDFDOO:HKDYHEHHQLQWKHHVWDWH *DWHG &RPPXQLW\ 6XUIVLGH %HDFK 6 WRZQKRXVH-DQ)HE0DUFKPRUHLIQHHG IXUQLWXUH EXVLQHVV VLQFH QRRWKHU &DUROLQD %5%WK (DVLO\ VOHHSV SSO HGPWK,QFDOOXWLOV ,QGRXWGRRUSRROPLOHIURPSULYEHDFK DQWLTXHGHDOHULQWKLVYDOOH\KDVEHHQLQ :HHNO\RUPRQWKO\UHQWDOV EXVLQHVV ORQJHU DQG ZH GR LW IXOO WLPH &RPSOHWH(VWDWH&OHDQRXW6HUYLFH.H\ :$17('72%8< VWRQH$QWLTXHV3DXO/&LFRQ 6(59,&(62))(5(' Classifi eds • Classifieds • Classifieds • Classifi eds • Classifieds tours to *877(56&OHDQUHSDLUOHDIJXDUGVFKLP QH\SURWHFWRUVSLSLQJXQGHUJURXQGKDXOLQJ 6(59,&(62))(5(' WUHH VWULPPHG FXW&OHDQLQJKDXOLQJEDVH *877(56&OHDQUHSDLUOHDIJXDUGVFKLP '5,9(5IRUDOO\RXUORQJGLVWDQFHGULYLQJ PHQWVDWWLFVJDUDJH+DQG\PDQ6HUYLFHDQG QH\SURWHFWRUVSLSLQJXQGHUJURXQGKDXOLQJ QHHGV7UDYHO LQ WKH FRPIRUW RI \RXU RZQ JHQHUDOKRXVHUHSDLUV)UHH(VWLPDWH YHKLFOH , DPUHOLDEOH FRXUWHRXV GH WUHH V WULPPHG FXW&OHDQLQJ KDXOLQJ EDVH /HDYH0HVV:\RPLQJ9DOOH\DUHDV SHQGDEOH&DOO6WX$EUDPV PHQWVDWWLFVJDUDJH+DQG\PDQ6HUYLFHDQG '5,9(5 '5,9(5 IRU DOO \RXU ORQJ GLVWDQFH GULY JHQHUDOKRXVHUHSDLUV)UHH(VWLPDWH 'ULYHUDYDLODEOHIRUDOO\RXUORFDODQGORQJ LQJ QHHGV7UDYHO LQ WKH FRPIRUW RI \RXU /HDYH0HVV:\RPLQJ9DOOH\DUHDV GLVWDQFHWULSV,QP\RZQFDU&DOO%HUQLH RZQ YHKLFOH , DP UHOLDEOH FRXUWHRXV DW '5,9(5 IRU DOO \RXU ORQJ GLVWDQFH GULY GHSHQGDEOH&DOO6WX$EUDPV LQJ QHHGV7UDYHO LQ WKH FRPIRUW RI \RXU %$*3,3(5)RU:HGGLQJV)XQHUDOVRU RZQ YHKLFOH , DP UHOLDEOH FRXUWHRXV 6SHFLDO2FFDVLRQV&DOO GHSHQGDEOH&DOO6WX$EUDPV RUSDEDJSLSHU#\DKRRFRP 9$&$7,215(17$/6 9$&$7,215(17$/6 612:%,5'6-XSLWDU )/ %5 ò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italy -XQH6HSWHPEHU6HHWKHEHVWRI,WDO\ LQFOXGLQJ$EUX]]R&DODEULDDQG6LFLO\ &XVWRPL]HGWRXUVIRUFKXUFKHVFOXEV VHQLRUVIDPLO\JURXSVLVRXUVSHFLDOW\ &DOO ZZZLWDOLDQKHULWDJHWRXUVFRP HPDLOLWDOLDQWRXUV#DROFRP \HDUVRIH[SHULHQFH )256$/( ADVERTISERS! &DEOH1HOVRQ8SULJKW3LDQRXSKROVWHUHG EHQFKLQF*RRGFRQGQHHGVWXQLQJ Reach out to our$VN J &DOO0RG faithful readers! Advertise in The Catholic Light 570-207-2229 [email protected] AUDIOLOGY & HEARING CENTERS OF NEPA, LLC Spiritual Offerings & Regional Events Continued from Page 25 Our Lady of Guadalupe Rosary Crusade — APRIL 19, hosted by St. Lucy Church, 949 Scranton St., west Scranton; devotion held every Sunday, from 6:30 to 8 p.m., in the church or at the outdoor grotto (weather permitting). Prayers offered for the special intentions of an end to abortion and for world peace, especially in the Middle East and Afghanistan. Devotion also includes recitation of the Divine Mercy Chaplet and prayer to St. Gertrude, piously believed to release 1,000 souls from purgatory. Parish/Regional Happenings Fifth Annual Conference on Aging: “Perspectives on Aging and the Brain: Restorative-MedicalSpiritual-Caregiving” — APRIL 9, sponsored by the University of Scranton; held from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the DeNaples Center on the U of S campus. Keynote speaker: Dr. Steven Trent DeKosky, director of the Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center at the University of Virginia School of Medicine; topic: “Advances in Alzheimer’s Disease.” Conference also features additional presentations and workshops. For more information & registration, contact Herbert Hauser, Ph.D., conference founder and research scientist at the University of Scranton, at (570941-5860) or herbert.hauser@ scranton.edu. Free Community Sunday Suppers — APRIL 12 & 26, sponsored by Our Lady Queen of Peace Church, Route 209, Gilbert (Brodheadsville), and offered to those in need in Monroe, Carbon, Lehigh and Northampton counties; meal is provided free of charge from 3 to 4 p.m. in the church’s McCawley Hall. Reservations are requested in advance; call the parish office at (610-681-6137). Gathering of Theresians International of Scranton — APRIL 14, led by Mary Kay Jordan, president; group meets at Immaculate Conception Church, located in the Hill section of Scranton. Begins with recitation of the Rosary at 11:30 a.m. in the church’s adoration chapel; followed by Mass celebrated at 12:10 p.m. Following the Eucharistic liturgy, the Theresians will gather for a luncheon at 12:45 p.m. at Cooper’s restaurant, North Washington Ave., Scranton. Guest speaker: Immaculate Heart of Mary Sister Jan Marie Kalyan. Women’s Entrepreneurship Center Presentation: “Coffee & Confidence” — APRIL 17, sponsored by the Arthur J. Kania Parish to Host Estate Planning Seminar THROOP — The Social Concerns Committee of Blessed Sacrament/Holy Cross parishes in Lackawanna County’s Mid Valley will host a free Estate Planning Basics Seminar on Sunday, April 19, at 2 p.m. at Blessed Sacrament Parish, Rebecca St., Throop. Serving as guest legal speaker and analyst will be Nancy Barrasse, a Scranton attorney specializing in elder & family law. Estate planning allows individuals to ensure their final wishes regarding property and health care are honored, and that their loved ones are provided for in their absence. Atty. Barrasse’s law practice is dedicated to helping seniors and their families for life-care planning, Medicare and Medicaid planning, asset-protection planning in the context of an estate; elder care law, nursing home law, and veterans’ benefits. The seminar will provide an overview of wills; the inheritance and estate tax system; gifting and the impact on qualifying for Medicaid; the importance of Beneficiary Designation Forms; and the new Power of Attorney Act enacted in January 2015. The seminar is open to the public free of charge. School of Management at the University of Scranton; held from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. in Brennan Hall (Room 502) on the U of S campus, 320 Madison Ave. Program designed for low-income women and those in transition. Guest mentor: Mary Tellie, local entrepreneur and coffee specialist, from Electric City Roasting Co. For reservations, contact (570-941-4168) or [email protected]. Parish Fundraiser: DesignerPurse Bingo — APRIL 18, sponsored by Gate of Heaven Parish in Dallas; begins 12 noon in the church hall. Games party includes designer-purse prizes, basket and cash raffle drawings, instant bingo, bake sale, and food and beverage items for purchase. Admission cost: $20 per person, includes 20 regular games and five specials. Basket donations may be delivered to the parish office; monetary donations will help defray the cost of the designer bags. For more information, call the parish office (570-675-2121). Dr. David A. Wadas An Experienced, Dedicated, Professional guiding you every step of the way. 3$,5 2) 35(0,80 2II $',*,7$/+($5,1*$,'6 Dr. Denise Prislupski, Au.D. Dr. Cara Makuta, Au.D. www.audiologyhearing.com SCRANTON (570) 343-7710 WILKES-BARRE PECKVILLE (570) 822-6122 (570) 383-0500 A Mem Memory Care Community Comm Since 1996 1 Awareness. Acceptance. Assistance. • • • • • 24/7 Alzheimer’s/Dementia care by our professionally trained staff CareTracker® and ALMSA® state-of-the-art documentation systems Secured, safe environment with 24/7 emergency call monitoring Respite & adult day care services also available Over 19 years of doing what we do best! Stop by or call 570.451.3171 to learn more about an affordable, more personal alternative to a nursing home. 400 Gleason Dr, Moosic, PA 18507 • OakwoodTerraceInc.com • Continued on Page 28 Commercial Space for Lease Evanish Realty, LLC is offering Class A Commercial Space for lease. The 4 story complex, formerly the Guild Studio Building, is a premier landmark in downtown Scranton, Pa. Located on the corner of Mulberry and Wyoming the property offers prime exposure to anyone entering the city from the North Scranton Expressway which is just minutes off interstate 81. Evanish Realty, LLC is proud to offer two floors of space each over 9000 sq. ft. The space is available for immediate occupancy and can be remodeled to suite any tenants needs. The property offers on-site property management, fully sprinklered fire suppression system and adjacent off-street parking able to hold upwards of 50 cars, for either tenant or clients. For more information concerning this property contact MEP Designs at 570-344-1211 for an appointment to see the property. THE CATHOLIC LIGHT • APRIL 2, 2015 Mark Your Calendar –– Around the Diocese 27 APRIL 2, 2015 • THE CATHOLIC LIGHT 28 Diocese of Scranton Employment Opportunities The Office for Parish Life of the Diocese of Scranton is an interdisciplinary team of pastoral ministers who serve Pastors and parish leaders of 120 parishes across 11 counties of Northeastern and North Central Pennsylvania. The team plans for and supports all aspects of vibrant parish life: Word, Worship, Service and Community. The team provides programming and resources in such areas as: Lay Ministry Formation; Parish Pastoral Council development and pastoral planning facilitation; leadership development and networking for parish directors/coordinators of faith formation; youth, campus and young adult ministry; liturgical and music ministries; service and social concerns partnerships; marriage and family enrichment ministries, community-building and evangelization outreach endeavors, along with a variety of ongoing adult faith development opportunities. The Office for Parish Life is seeking additional team members to extend the reach of our services and begin to expand into areas we are not yet addressing. Appropriate applicants would bring an affinity for the ecclesial vision expressed for the Diocese of Scranton in the Pastoral Letter, Wounded and Loved, Re-gathering the Scattered, along with five or more years of successful experience in pastoral ministry at the parish and/or Diocesan level. For a more comprehensive description and list of qualifications, individuals are encouraged to visit the diocesan website at www.dioceseofscranton.org. Position(s) would start July 1, 2015, or sooner, by mutual agreement. Interested applicants are asked to send a cover letter and complete resume with references to: James Burke Diocesan Secretary for Human Resources 300 Wyoming Avenue Scranton, Pennsylvania 18503 or email to [email protected] Mark Your Calendar –– Around the Diocese Parish & Regional Happenings Continued from Page 27 Free Community Lunch — APRIL 18, sponsored by Our Lady Queen of Peace Church, Route 209, Gilbert (Brodheadsville), and offered to those in need in Monroe, Carbon, Lehigh and Northampton counties; meal is provided free of charge at 12:30 p.m. in the church’s McCawley Hall. Reservations are requested in advance; call the parish office at (610-681-6137). Cash Bingo — APRIL 19, sponsored by the Confraternity of Christian Women of Holy Family Parish in Sugar Notch; held in the church hall, 828 Main St. Doors open at 12 noon; games begin at 1 p.m. Homemade food and refreshments available. Admission cost: $5. Tickets may be purchased at the door. “Designer” Bingo — APRIL 19, sponsored by the parish community of St. Leo/Holy Rosary, Ashley; doors open at 1 p.m. in the church hall, 33 Manhattan St. Prizes feature designer name-brand items. Event also includes chance auction Michael J. Bendick — Attorney at Law –— ²(/'(5/$: • Guardianships • Asset Protection Planning • Medicaid Application Assistance ²(67$7(3/$11,1* • Powers of Attorney • Living Wills • Wills • Trusts • Guardianships ²(67$7($'0,1,675$7,21 • Probate - Settle all estate matter and distribute inheritances. • Inheritance Tax - Utilize all discounts and proper deductions. - Meet all requirements and deadlines. Home and Evening Appointments Available 6FKRRO6WUHHW6KDYHUWRZQ &RUQHURI5RXVKQH\6FKRRO6WUHHWV ZZZEHQGLFNODZFRP and cash raffle; food items available for purchase. Tickets at the door: $25, including all regular games. Advance reservations include free specials; call Tammy at (570-4793414). Annual St. Joseph Breakfast — APRIL 19, hosted by the Women’s Society of St. Joseph Melkite Greek-Catholic Church, 130 North St. Frances Cabrini Ave., west Scranton; serving from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the church hall. Breakfast menu includes ham & eggs, pancakes, olives, potatoes and beverage; traditional St. Joseph Bread also available for purchase. Cost: adults, $7.50; children (age 6 to 10), $4. Tickets sold at the door; call the church office (570-3436092) for more information. 20th Annual Talent Show — APRIL 19, presented by St. Maria Goretti Parish in Laflin; begins at 7 p.m. in the parish center. Night of talent and entertainment features special guest Father James Paisley, former pastor of St. Maria Goretti and the show’s founder, and prizes. Free admission and refreshments. Second Annual 5K Run/Walk — APRIL 19, sponsored by the National Stuttering Association (NSA): Northeast Pennsylvania Chapter at Misericordia University in Dallas; held in support of the NSA and the nationally recognized student-run stuttering support group on campus. Event begins at 10:30 a.m.; also includes “virtual run” component. Annual walk/ run increases stuttering awareness and raises funds for NSA and the student support group. For more information, call (570-674-6724). 38th Annual Spaghetti Dinner — APRIL 22 & 23, sponsored by St. Lucy Church, 949 Scranton St., west Scranton; sit-down dinners served from 5 to 8 p.m. in the church hall (basement). Take-out orders available from 3 to 5 p.m. (containers provided). Cost: adults, $10; children (under age 12), $5. To purchase tickets, contact Jack at (570-344-1672), Joe at (570-3469126), or St. Lucy Church rectory at (570-247-9421). Spaghetti sauce will also be sold for $14 per gallon. Continued on Page 29 Honesdale Parish Marking 25 Years of Perpetual Eucharistic Adoration HONESDALE — Father William Langan, pastor of St. John the Evangelist Parish, announces Bishop Joseph C. Bambera will preside at the 25th anniversary celebration of the parish’s Perpetual Eucharistic Adoration Chapel scheduled for next month. Bishop Bambera will serve as principal celebrant of the anniversary Mass on Sunday, May 3, at 10:30 a.m. in St. John the Evangelist Church, 150 Terrace St., Honesdale. Following the liturgy, a grand procession of representatives of all parish groups and ministries will be held from St. John Church to the parish’s Eucharistic Adoration Chapel located at St. Mary Magdalen Church, 416 Church St., Honesdale. To commemorate the milestone anniversary of Perpetual Eucharistic Adoration in the par- ish, a dinner reception will follow at 1 p.m. at Lukan’s Farm Resort. In preparation for the 25th anniversary celebration of the adoration chapel, St. John’s will host a Parish Mission to be conducted by Dominican Father Bill Garrott. A wellknown mission preacher, Father Garrott will preside at the mission offerings Father Bill beginning on Garrott, OP Sunday, April 26, and concluding on Wednesday, April 29, at 7 p.m. at St. Mary Magdalen Church. Cost to attend the anniversary dinner on May 3 is $32 per person; seating is limited. For reservations, call the St. John Parish office at (570-253-4561). Stop by to see why we are the preferred memorial provider. SELECTION Parish & Regional Happenings Red Cross Blood Drive –– APRIL 23, sponsored by the Valley Blood Council of the Lackawanna Chapter of the American Red Cross; held from 12 noon to 5 p.m. at Sacred Heart of Jesus Church Hall, Willow St., Peckville. Co-sponsored by Sacred Heart Church and the Knights of Columbus of Jessup/ Peckville; drive being held in memory of deceased members of Sacred Heart of Jesus Parish, Peckville. Annual Turkey Dinner — APRIL 25, sponsored by Nativity of the BVM Parish, Tunkhannock; serving begins at 4:30 p.m. in Father Nallin Hall (take-out orders available from 4 p.m.). Featuring family-style turkey dinner with all the trimmings, including homemade desserts and beverages. Cost: adults, $9; children (age 12 & under), $4. For tickets, contact the parish office at (570-8363275). Variety Bingo — APRIL 26, sponsored by the Social Concerns Committee at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Parish, 116 Hughes St., Swoyersville; held in the school gymnasium. Doors open at 1 p.m.; games begin at 2 p.m. Event also includes lunch menu, bake sale, games and Chinese Auction. Admission cost: $5. Traditional Spaghetti Dinner — APRIL 26, sponsored by Our Lady’s Guild at Our Lady of Victory Church, Cherry Lane Road (off Route 611), Tannersville; serving from 12 noon to 5 p.m. in the church hall. (take-out orders available). Dinner includes spaghetti & meatballs, salad, dessert and beverage; raffle prizes awarded. Cost: adults, $7; children (age 5 & older), $4. Tickets at the door. For more information, call (570-629-4572). Parish Casino Excursion Fundraiser — APRIL 26, to The Sands Casino in Bethlehem; sponsored by the Altar & Rosary Society of St. Lucy Parish in west Scranton. Bus departs church parking lot at 10:15 a.m. and makes return trip home at 5:30 p.m. Cost: $25 per person, includes $20 slot refund and $5 food voucher. Trip also offers opportunity for shopping at adjacent First Friday Devotions Suspended for April Due to the First Friday in April falling on Good Friday this year (April 3), the regularly scheduled First Friday spiritual devotions and services held throughout the Scranton Diocese have been suspended for this week. The First Friday schedule will resume on May 1. outlet mall. For more information & reservations, call Edie at (570347-8867). Soup Kitchen Fundraiser: “Tuesday at Tuesday’s” — APRIL 28, benefitting St. Francis of Assisi Kitchen in Scranton; held throughout the day from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. at Ruby Tuesday Restaurant on Montage Mountain in Moosic. Patrons presenting coupons will have a portion of their purchase donated to St. Francis Kitchen by the restaurant (includes take-out orders). For more information and to obtain coupons, contact Terry at St. Francis of Assisi Kitchen (570342-5556). Monthly Bingo — MAY 3, hosted by St. Faustina Kowalska Parish in Nanticoke; held in St. Mary’s School Hall, 1010 S. Hanover St., Nanticoke (parking and entrance at rear of the building). Doors open at 12:30 p.m.; early bird games begin at 1:45 p.m., followed by regular games at 2 p.m. Includes door and cash prizes; refreshments available for purchase. Eighth Annual Parish Golf Tournament: St. Mary’s Classic — MAY 3, sponsored by Queen of the Apostles Parish in Avoca; % VWHU OHVVLQJ V Fourth Annual “Baby Shower” — APRIL 26, to benefit St. Joseph’s Center Baby Pantry in Scranton; hosted by the Social Concerns Committee of the parish communities of Blessed Sacrament, Throop, and Holy Cross, Olyphant. Begins at 2 p.m. in Blessed Sacrament Parish Hall, 216 Rebecca St., Throop. Seeking donations of unwrapped clothing for newborns, baby care items, blankets, and gently used or new cribs, car seats and other baby accessories. Admission cost: $15 or comparable gift; includes food & refreshments, party games & prizes, basket and cash raffles. Reservations requested by April 20; call (570-489-5125 or 570489-1963). Donations may be made from April 6-26; for more information, contact the parish office (570-489-0752) Monday thru Friday, 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. (D Continued from Page 28 • Tri-state area’s largest • Over 400 memorials on display • More than 25 color choices held at Pine Hills Country Club, 140 South Keyser Ave., Taylor. This year’s tournament honors the memory of Dr. Terrence “Doc” McMahon, longtime Avoca dentist and Scranton native. Registration begins at 12 noon, with 1 p.m. shotgun start (captain & crew format). Cost: $80 per golfer, include prizes and post-tourney dinner at Queen of the Apostles Parish Hall, 742 Spring St., Avoca. Sponsorships available. For more information, contact the parish office (570-457-3412), Jim McMahon at [email protected] or John Soy at johnsoy@ comcast.net. QUALIFICATION • Family owned and operated for over 130 years • Recommended by more than 15 funeral homes • Superior workmanship PRICE • Buy direct from the manufacturer • NO MIDDLEMAN! Serving All Catholic Cemeteries in NE PA ) The clear choice for all your memorial needs Martin Caufield Memorial Works 249 Sunrise Ave., Honesdale, PA 18431 1-800-824-5293 • 570-253-3300 • FAX: 570-253-3360 www.martincaueldmemorialworks.com [email protected] Full Service Granite Company Since 1877 Martin Caufield Memorial Works Home Hospiceand and Home Health, Health, Hospice Outpatient Therapy Outpatient Therapy 9 Skilled Nursing 9 Nursing Aides 9 Social Work 249 Sunrise Ave., Honesdale, PA 18431 9 Pastoral Care 9 Registered Dietary 9 Physical Therapy 9 Occupational Therapy 9 Speech Therapy 32%R[ 6WDWH5RXWH 6\EHUWVYLOOH3D TTTT%%4'&+6'& ǁǁǁ͘ŵĂLJůĂƚŚŚĞĂůƚŚ͘ĐŽŵ Training Provided in: CPR, First Aid and AED SKRQH ID[ WROOIUHH [email protected] email Outpatient Therapy in Two Locations: Sybertsville and The Laurels, Hazleton Thirteen Olives BdW_[WdA[^eS`VH[`WYSde Northeast Pa’s only tasting room and exclusive purveyor of ULTRA Premium certified Extra Virgin Olive Oils from around the world, and barrel aged balsamic vinegars from Modena, Italy. Now available, ULTRA Premium certified White Balsamics — the best. Come in and taste the difference from dozens of select varietal and flavored oils & aged vinegars. -XVWDUULYHG 1HZ([WUD9LUJLQ2OLYH2LOVIURP6SDLQ3RUWXJDODQG&DOLIRUQLD ,&'E>/d:Z͕/'Zhd [email protected] • thirteenolives.com 570-587-1300 • 222 Northern Blvd, Clarks Summit, Pa 18407 5 Next door to the Pa Wine Superstore 29 THE CATHOLIC LIGHT • APRIL 2, 2015 Mark Your Calendar –– Events Around the Diocese Looking for the Perfect Monument? APRIL 2, 2015 • THE CATHOLIC LIGHT 30 CTV: CATHOLIC TELEVISION Diocese of Scranton, 400 Wyoming Ave., Scranton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postleship of Prayer Papal Intentions for April 2015 UNIVERSAL INTENTION Creation –– That people may learn to respect creation and care for it as a gift of God. EVANGELIZATION INTENTION Persecuted Christians –– That persecuted Christians may feel the consoling presence of the Risen Lord and the solidarity of all the Church. &$7+2/,&,60 683(56$,176 67$7,2162)7+( &5266 7+('$,/<0$66)520673(7(5 6&$7+('5$/(QFRUH 30 30 &7963(&,$/6 ',2&(6$1'$7(%22.DLUVEHIRUHDQGDIWHU0DVV 30 30 '21870$1 7+(&+$3/(72)',9,1(0(5&<,1621* ),(/'6$1')$,7+ 30 &$7+2/,&9,(:)25 :20(1 7+(+2/<526$5<,1 67$,1('*/$66 30 30 )2&86 7+('$,/<0$66)520673(7(5 6&$7+('5$//,9($7SP 30 30 30 129(1$ 7267$11 Esseff; April 11, Father Joseph Evanko; April 12, Monsignor William Feldcamp; April 13, Father Samuel Ferretti; April 14, Father Edward Finn. April 15, St. Joseph Oblate Father Gregory Finn; April 16, Father Michael Finn; April 17, St. Peter Priestly Fraternity Father Eric Flood; April 18, Father Paul Fontanella; April 19, Father Richard Fox; April 20, Father Richard Gabuzda; April 21, Father Martin Gaiardo; April 22, Father Andrew Gallia. :20(12)*5$&( 30 92<$*(2))$,7+ &7963(&,$/ 35(6(17$7,21 :(%(/,(9( 92&$7,21%220 +2/<526$5< )520/285'(6 7587+,17+( +($57 0<7,0(:,7+-(686 /,9(:,7+3$66,21 $0 30 :25')25$ :281'(':25/' $32672/$7()25 )$0,/< &216(&5$7,21 $0 $0 3$5$%/(62) &+5,67 +2/</$1'526$5< /,7$1<2)/25(72 The Daily Prayer Request for Priests schedule for the next three weeks is as follows: April 2, Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI; April 3, Bishop Joseph C. Bambera; April 4, Auxiliary Bishop Emeritus John M. Dougherty; April 5, Passionist Father Brice Edwards; April 6, Father Cyril Edwards; April 7, Father Fidelis Ekemgba; April 8, Father Joseph Elston; April 9, St. Joseph Oblate Father Carlos Esquivel; April 10, Monsignor John 6<0%2/21 7+(&+$3/(72)670,&+$(/ +2/<526$5< )520/285'(6 $0 $0 $0 $0 &219(56$7,216 7+(:25/'29(5 (:7125,*,1$/352'8&7,216 +('$5(' 63($.7+(7587+ 921+,/'(%5$1' $0 $0 :+(5(*2':((36 )5(('20 $87+25,7< /,7$1<2)7+( 6$&5('+($57 $1*(/86:,7+323( )5$1&,6 $0 *(1(6,672-(686 (:71*$//(5< $0 $0 '()(1',1*/,)( 670$77+(: (9$1*(/,672)7+( &+85&+ $0 $0 (:711(:61,*+7/<(QFRUH 681'$<1,*+7 35,0((QFRUH Prayer Requests for Priests 7+5(6+2/'2)+23( (QFRUH *5$%<285 &$7(&+,60:,7+)5 &21125 )2&86 /,9( :,7+3$66,21 :(%(/,(9( (:715(/,*,286 &$7$/2*8( &$7+2/,&6&20( +20( 7+(&+85&+ 81,9(56$/ 9$7,&$12 &5266,1*7+(*2$/ *(1(6,672-(686 &$7+2/,&9,(:)25 :20(1 '()(1',1*/,)( 92,&(2)7+( %5,'(*5220 :20(12)*5$&( /,9,1*5,*+7:,7+ '55$< (:7163(&,$/6 ȱǰȱȱĴȱ ȱȱȱȱ¢ȱȱ ȱǰȱȱ¢ȱ ȱȱȱ ȱ ȱȱ 2# 2SHQWRWKHSXEOLF 7LFNHWV&DOO 6DWXUGD\$SULO )DWKHU1DOOLQ+DOO7XQNKDQQRFN 7DNHRXWVEHJLQQLQJDW30 6HDWLQJEHJLQQLQJDW30XQWLOVROGRXW % 1# Our menu: Sliced Turkey, Stuffing, Mashed Potatoes, Gravy, Buttered Corn, Cranberry Sauce, Cabbage Salad, Rolls/Butter, Homemade Pie/Cake, Coffee, Tea, Water, Lemonade. DZȱȱǞşȱȊȱȱǞŚȱǻȱŗŘȱȱ¢Ǽ Ad Sponsored by: Sheldon Kukuchka Funeral Home Inc, Tunkhannock, PA Karpentry by Keiper Specializing in windows, doors, decks, kitchens, bathrooms, siding, gutters, all phases of carpentry Licensed General Contractor - Call 570-563-2766 Quality over volume, one job at a time ) License #PA002543 ST. LUCY’S Church 949 Scranton St., Scranton, PA W L W ' H K L Q J QH D S U 6 WK$118$/ WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22 & THURSDAY, APRIL 23 SIT DOWN SERVING: 5:00–8:00 P.M. TAKE-OUTS: 3:00–5:00 P.M. (CONTAINERS PROVIDED) Adults: $10.00 • Children (under 12): $5.00 FOR TICKETS CALL: Jack (570 344-1672) Joe (570 346-9126) or St. Lucy’s Rectory (570 347-9421) The Music Ministry of Exaltation of the Holy Cross Parish in Hanover Township performed their annual “A Celebration of Christmas” concert for the church’s congregation on Epiphany Sunday. The parish’s youth choir presented their program, “On Our Way to Bethlehem,” while the adult choir sang special arrangements and Polish Christmas carols. The performances, which were followed by a parish social, included a free-will offering totaling $540 that was donated to the ALS Foundation in honor of one of the adult choir members. Pictured in the top photo are the adult choir members. First row, from left: Susan Dule, Rosemarie Kaminski, Brenda Tippins, Christine Skiro, Linda Shypulefski and Alice Kwiatkowski. Second row, Dominick Costantino Jr., music ministry director; Jerry Tippins, Barbara Pencak, Mary Werda, Dorothy Dubick, Ann Williams, John Gurzynski, Jane Mizerak, Clem Krasa and Gloria Phillips. Third row, Theda Rynkiewicz, Angela Doss, Sabine Thomas, Michael Maday, Stephen Dule Sr., Mary Hastings, Todd Hastings, Tommy Rudnitskas and Robert Osborne. Other members include Marrissa Fedor, Frank Krasnavage, Courtney Prozeralik and Shari Urbaniak. Shown at bottom are the participants in the youth choir. First row, from left: C.J. Kruszka, Nathan Kerlavage, Luke Sullivan, Kylie Williams and Aiden Wiedlich. Second row, Hailey Karpovich, Alyssa Kruszka, Shaun Gurnari, Aidan Fitzgibbon, Logan Fitzgibbon, Ava Woodruff and Zoe Pecuch. Third row, Mason Bagusky, Destiny Castrignano, Cole Mayhue, Kevin Caffrey, Emily Wiedlich, Emalee Woychio, Christina Kratz, Tina Adameck, Mr.Costantino and Emily Makar. Fourth row, Maia Bagusky, Lauren Blazaskie, Kaitlin Bradford, Kaelee Kane, Shannon Boyle, Georgia Karpovich, Taylor Josefowicz, Sarah Dule and Riley Williams. Other members include Kailey Wilson and Kortney Wilson. UI"OOJWFSTBSZPG1FSQFUVBM&VDIBSJTUJD"EPSBUJPO ST. JOHN THE EVANGELIST PARISH, HONESDALE, PA Mass and Grand Procession with MOST REVEREND JOSEPH C. BAMBERA, D.D., J.C.L Sunday, May 3rd • 10:30 AM Mass at St. John the Evangelist Church, 150 Terrace St., Honesdale, PA Parish Mission with Fr. Bill Garrott, O.P. “God, Are You Online?” Sunday April 26th to Wednesday April 29th 7:00 - 8:00 PM each night at St. Mary Magdalen Church, 416 Church St., Honesdale, PA The last talk by Fr. Garrott on Wednesday April 29th will take place within the context of Mass, along with our choir. ) Recitation of the Rosary will begin at 6:45 PM, and confessions will be heard after each talk. Talks are family oriented and appropriate for children grades 2 and above. $OODUHLQYLWHGWRRXUVSHFLDOSDULVKHYHQWV 31 THE CATHOLIC LIGHT • APRIL 2, 2015 Hanover Township Choir Performances APRIL 2, 2015 • THE CATHOLIC LIGHT 32 MAILING LABEL - Please be sure to enclose this label with any address changes and mail to The Catholic Light, 300 Wyoming Avenue, Scranton, PA 18503 Catch Our Spirit... Become an Academic Angel :$17(' ::,, Paying &$6+ on the spot for U.S./German/Japanese: Medals, Uniforms, Helmets, Hats, Armbands, Flags, Daggers, Swords, Bayonets, Knives, Pistols, Rifles, Equipment, Pictures, Letters, Currency, Coins, etc… Contact Sam at (570) 814-8287 Please leave a message if I’m unavailable . (I am a private collector not a dealer and would be honored to purchase your military souvenirs to display in my collection.) ŽŶƚƌŝďƵƟŽŶƐĨŽƌƚŚĞ^ĐŚŽůĂƌƐŚŝƉ&ŽƵŶĚĂƟŽŶĂƌĞĂŶŝŶǀĞƐƚŵĞŶƚŝŶ ĂĐŚŝůĚ͛ƐĨƵƚƵƌĞ͘zŽƵƌŐŝŌǁŝůůĂůůŽǁĨĂŵŝůŝĞƐƚŽĐŚŽŽƐĞĂĂƚŚŽůŝĐ ĚƵĐĂƟŽŶƚŚĂƚĐŚĂůůĞŶŐĞƐƚŚĞŵŝŶĚǁŚŝůĞƐƚƌĞŶŐƚŚĞŶŝŶŐƚŚĞƐƉŝƌŝƚ͘ All gifts are tax deductible. dŚĂŶŬLJŽƵŽŶďĞŚĂůĨŽĨŽƵƌĐŚŝůĚƌĞŶ͊ ͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺ EĂŵĞ _________________________________________________________ ĚĚƌĞƐƐ _________________________________________________________ ŝƚLJ^ƚĂƚĞŝƉ _________________________________________________________ ͲŵĂŝůĚĚƌĞƐƐWŚŽŶĞ ŵŽƵŶƚŶĐůŽƐĞĚΨͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺ ͺͺͺWůĞĂƐĞƵƐĞŵLJŐŝŌĨŽƌͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺ /ŶĚŝĐĂƚĞ^ĐŚŽŽůŽƌŽƵŶƚLJ ͺͺͺhƐĞŵLJŐŝŌǁŚĞƌĞŵŽƐƚŶĞĞĚĞĚ ͺͺͺDLJŐŝŌŝƐ;ŝŶŚŽŶŽƌͿŽƌ;ŝŶŵĞŵŽƌLJͿŽĨ ͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺͺ WůĞĂƐĞƌĞƚƵƌŶƚŚŝƐĨŽƌŵǁŝƚŚLJŽƵƌĐŚĞĐŬƉĂLJĂďůĞƚŽ͗ Diocese of Scranton Scholarship Foundation 300 W yoming Avenue Scranton, PA 18503 570-207-2250 www.DioceseOfScranton.org
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