Saturday, October 31, 2015

St. Maria Goretti Pilgrimage


Please join us! We're leaving from St. Mary's of False River this afternoon at 5pm for a pilgrimage to Our Lady of Mercy Church in Baton Rouge to venerate the body of St. Maria Goretti. 

Here's a short biography of St. Maria Goretti from The Catholic Gentleman blog:


If you don’t know St. Maria’s story, she was a young Italian girl born in October of 1890. She lost her father at a young age and had to mature quickly to help take care of her siblings while her mother earned a living. Due to their extreme poverty, the Goretti family had to move in with another family, the Sarenelli’s.
While Maria was only 12 at the time, Alessandro Sarenelli, who was 22, began making sexual advances toward Maria, threatening her if she told anyone. On July 5, 1902, while the rest of the family was away, Alessandro approached Maria with a 10 inch knife, threatening to kill her if she did not do what he said. He intended to rape her, and it came out later that he had tried twice before. Maria refused and began to fight him off. In a rage, Alessandro stabbed her 14 times. Eventually, Maria died from her wounds, but not before completely forgiving her attacker and stating that she wanted him to be with her in heaven.

A REPENTANT KILLER

While Maria’s short life was a beautiful testimony to God’s grace, what struck me especially was the conversion of her killer, Alessandro Sarenelli. His story, too, is a witness to the power of conversion, and that no one is beyond hope.
Six years into his 30 year prison sentence, Alessandro was at the brink of despair. How he could he go on knowing what he had done, and knowing the best years of his life would be spent rotting in prison? Then, something extraordinary happened. Maria appeared to him holding a bouquet of lilies and lovingly handed them to Alessandro one by one. This gesture of forgiveness from the girl he murdered transformed Alessandro completely. For the first time since the crime, he was truly repentant. As he later said, “Maria’s forgiveness saved me.”
Once freed from prison, Alessandro began a life of penance. He met with Maria’s mother and begged her forgiveness. He also accompanied Mrs. Serenelli to Christmas Mass in the parish church where he spoke before the stunned congregation, acknowledging his sin and asking God’s forgiveness and the forgiveness of the community. He eventually joined the Capuchin Franciscans as a lay brother, working as a gardener and general laborer. In 1970, he died peacefully in Christ, loved by all who knew him.
After his death, the Franciscans found a spiritual testament among his belongings, written in the form of an open letter to the world. Here is what the one-time murderer and attempted rapist wanted to say to the world—and to you.
I’m nearly 80 years old. I’m about to depart.
Looking back at my past, I can see that in my early youth, I chose a bad path which led me to ruin myself.
My behavior was influenced by print, mass-media and bad examples which are followed by the majority of young people without even thinking. And I did the same. I was not worried.
There were a lot of generous and devoted people who surrounded me, but I paid no attention to them because a violent force blinded me and pushed me toward a wrong way of life.
When I was 20 years-old, I committed a crime of passion. Now, that memory represents something horrible for me. Maria Goretti, now a Saint, was my good Angel, sent to me through Providence to guide and save me. I still have impressed upon my heart her words of rebuke and of pardon. She prayed for me, she interceded for her murderer. Thirty years of prison followed.
If I had been of age, I would have spent all my life in prison. I accepted to be condemned because it was my own fault.
Little Maria was really my light, my protectress; with her help, I behaved well during the 27 years of prison and tried to live honestly when I was again accepted among the members of society. The Brothers of St. Francis, Capuchins from Marche, welcomed me with angelic charity into their monastery as a brother, not as a servant. I’ve been living with their community for 24 years, and now I am serenely waiting to witness the vision of God, to hug my loved ones again, and to be next to my Guardian Angel and her dear mother, Assunta.
I hope this letter that I wrote can teach others the happy lesson of avoiding evil and of always following the right path, like little children. I feel that religion with its precepts is not something we can live without, but rather it is the real comfort, the real strength in life and the only safe way in every circumstance, even the most painful ones of life.
Signature, Alessandro Serenelli

Saturday, October 10, 2015

Our Plan, Part Two

Long term, we want to build our various events into year-long programs, as well as add and beta-test other programming. Some of these will also require more recruitment, such as with the Mentor Couples, or long-term planning, like for mission trips.

Mission Trips & Pilgrimmages

Our parish recently hosted a trip to aid the Piarist Fathers' Appalachian Mission in Kentucky. The missionaries were able to quickly raise all the funds and supplies they needed and more, so there is obviously fertile ground for this apostolate in our parish!

It would be great to return to Kentucky and other domestic mission locations. As well, I'm sure there would be a lot of excitement for international missions and pilgrimages. For example, my wife and I went to Rome for our honeymoon and received a papal blessing on us and our marriage, which was all ... TOTALLY AMAZING!! Ashton and I would love for other young couples to have this kind of experience. Such a pilgrimage can't help but leave an indelible impression on the couple and their marriage. Maybe Ashton will write a post describing our honeymoon-pilgrimage in more detail [hint, hint] ;)

Speaking of pilgrimages, one amazing destination would be March for Life! I would love for a crew of young families to caravan together to March for Life in DC ... ROAD TRIP!!


Adult Catechesis: Year-Long Curriculum

So far, our Adult Catechesis program has been pretty spotty and decentralized. I teach 2-3 multi-week courses a year at St. Mary's. Past courses include "Hail, Holy Queen," a course based on Scott Hahn's book of the same title; "The Eucharist," based on Dr. Brant Pitre's Jesus and the Jewish Roots of the Eucharist; and "The Pentateuch" based on my class notes from Notre Dame Seminary.

We need a whole year's worth of programming for consistency sake. That means we need more teachers! And more teachers means more classes, more diversity, and more subjects! Here's an example of a year-round curriculum (actually a half-year), more or less fit to the liturgical calendar:
  • September - October (7 weekly classes): "The Eucharist"
  • November 3: Dr. Brant Pitre event, "Jesus and the Jewish Roots of Marriage"
  • November - January (10 weekly classes): Catholicism series by Father Robert Barron
    • Facilitated (hopefully) by Pat Witty
  • January - February (7-10 weekly classes): "Theology of the Body"
    • Facilitated (hopefully) by Jennifer Bollich
  • February - March: [class tailored to Lent]
Ongoing with all of this, Bible studies and book clubs are/will be ongoing.

Mentor Couples

This would be a great way to partner up the older and younger generations, to bring our parish community closer together. Marriage preparation in our Diocese (Baton Rouge) includes this. Ashton and I were partnered up with Deacon Tom and Ms. Patrice, and this was a great experience for us. It brought us a lot closer to the Robinsons -- they kind of feel like the godparents of our marriage. Anyway, I'm hoping the Holy Spirit will find us somebody interested in facilitating this program.

I envision this program as, basically, quarterly dinners. The mentor couples would host their "mentee" couples at their house for dinner 3-4 times a year -- or go out to dinner together -- -- maybe even at one of our Second Sunday lunches.

Softball League

Last, but not least! We need an inter-church, inter-denomination, co-ed, pan-generational softball league! That's ICIDCEPGSL for short! We had one tournament this year, which was actually more of a scrimmage between clabbered-together teams, but hey! it's a start. We used the "tournament" as a baby goods drive for the local pregnant women's shelter, too. Lots to build on! I'll probably be writing a separate post on this alone. There will be softball: we will not ...