September 9, 2005
The Catholic News & Herald 1
www.charlottediocese.org
Roman Catholic Diocese of Charlotte
Year of the Eucharist
Special four-page pullout guide to the Eucharistic Congress Established Jan. 12, 1972 by Pope Paul VI SEPTEMBER 9, 2005
| PageS 7 - 10 Serving Catholics in Western North Carolina in the Diocese of Charlotte
From hurricane to hope
Eucharistic Congress offers prayer, reflection, stewardship
KAREN A. EVANS staff writer
CHARLOTTE — Hurricane Katrina left in her Category 4 wake as many as 1 million people without homes, jobs or schools. As great as the need is, Americans, including many in the Diocese of Charlotte, have responded with overwhelming swiftness and generosity. As of Sept. 6, more than 145,000 evacuees were being housed by the American Red Cross in 580 shelters in 17 states. Hundreds of evacuees have arrived over the past several days in North Carolina.
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Staff Photo
Many gather for anniversary of St. Mary by
JOANITA M. NELLENBACH correspondent
SYLVA — As Bishop Peter J. Jugis spoke about Christ as the light of the world, St. Mary Church brightened as sunlight flooded in, like a blessing on the church’s 50th-anniversary celebration. Just 50 years ago to the day, on Aug. 30, 1955, and 16 years before the Diocese of Charlotte was established, Bishop Vincent S. Waters of Raleigh dedicated St. Mary Church. See ANNIVERSARY, page
DAVID HAINS
special to the catholic news & herald
See KATRINA, page 5
Shining forth
no. 41
Something for everyone
N.C. Catholics aid Hurricane Katrina victims near and far by
vOLUME 14
Trey Katner-Grass, whose family took refuge in Charlotte last week, gets acquainted with his new classmates at Holy Trinity Catholic Middle School. The New Orleans home that the Katner-Grasses had moved into less than a month ago was under water.
CHARLOTTE — The first Eucharistic Congress of the Diocese of Charlotte will be a time of prayer, contemplation and stewardship. Thousands of Catholics from throughout the Carolinas and as far away as Florida and Maryland are expected to attend the events in and around the Charlotte Convention Center Sept. 23-24. A highlight of the congress will be the eucharistic procession through uptown Charlotte. The monstrance to be carried by Bishop Peter J. Jugis was See CONGRESS, page 6
‘Many hands make Mercy’ New Our Lady of Mercy Church dedicated by
ments were donated or made by its parishioners. “This is a parish where people like to get involved ... not sitting back and letting others do things,” said Conventual Franciscan Father William Robinson, pastor. When Bishop Peter J. Jugis led a procession of nearly 1,000 parishioners into the new 750-seat church Aug. 28, the work of Our Lady of Mercy’s devoted parishioners could be seen throughout the church. The hardwood floor of the sanctuary was donated and laid
KAREN A. EVANS staff writer
WINSTON-SALEM — There’s a saying that is often heard around Our Lady of Mercy Church: “Many hands make mercy.” With the unveiling of the parish’s new church, that phrase is certainly true. Not only did the parish commit to raising the $9.7 million needed for construction of a new church and renovation of Our Lady of Mercy School, much of the church’s adorn-
Photo by Karen A. Evans
See MERCY, page 11
Parishioners of Our Lady of Mercy Church exchange the sign of peace during the dedication Mass Aug. 28.
Vocations
Culture Watch
Perspectives
Five new seminarians; priests/ seminarians gather for cookout
Scripture readings; nun protests ‘Da Vinci Code’ movie
End-of-life issues, part 2; unborn pain; Question Corner
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