07-02-10 Vol. 32 No. 1

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www.theleaven.com | Newspaper of the Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas | Vol. 32, No. 1 July 2, 2010

The wit and witness of an Irish sage

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Stories by Joe Bollig

OPEKA — In the era that Father John Francis Rossiter grew up in, it wasn’t unusual for boys to consider a vocation to the priesthood at a very young age and enter the seminary after high school. Not Father Rossiter. After graduating from Hayden High School in 1951, he headed off to Marquette University in Milwaukee. After his first year at Marquette, he surprised nearly everyone in his family by entering St. Thomas Seminary in Denver. He hadn’t expressed an interest in the priesthood while growing up. But one person wasn’t surprised. “We had an aunt, Sister Agnes Eugenia Finn, a Sister of Charity of Leavenworth,” said his younger sister, Jeanne Renfro, a member of St. Francis of Assisi Parish in Wichita. “She prayed every day since he was born that he would have a vocation to the priesthood.” Father Rossiter is remembered for exercising his 51 years of priestly ministry with wit, charm, humor, intelligence, generosity, compassion and faithfulness. He died from cancer on June 27.

Teacher and pastor “He was a great teacher, a great philosopher, and a great theologian,” said Msgr. Raymond Burger, archdiocesan vice chancellor. “He was very knowledgeable in all areas that he spoke of, and he was an avid reader. He was humble in that he underestimated his effect on his people.” He was considered an intellectual, possessing possibly the finest mind of all the priests in the archdiocese. Nevertheless, he had the common touch. “He was a people person,” said Father Thomas Kearns, a retired priest. “People liked John. I think he was able to put them at ease.” Sister Corita Conlan, SCL, had known Father Rossiter since he came to Assumption Parish; she was principal of the parish school. Turn to “Compassion” on page 6

Father John Rossiter: 1933-2010

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OPEKA — Father John Francis Rossiter, 77, pastor of Assumption Parish here for 20 years, died on June 27 at Midland Hospice House. He was diagnosed with cancer in 2002, but it had gone into remission until last year, when he experienced a relapse.

Do you know this man?

Tell us your favorite story about Father Thomas Aduri. But keep it short (100 words) and send it to: anita@theleaven.com.

Father Rossiter was born on June 26, 1933, in Topeka. He was the only son of the four children of George Joseph and Estelle (Finn) Rossiter. The family belonged to Holy Name Parish and the four Rossiter children attended the parish school. Father Rossiter graduated from

Hayden High School in 1951. After high school, Father Rossiter studied at Marquette University in Milwaukee for one year. He then surprised his family by leaving Marquette to seek a priestly vocation. He studied at St. Thomas Seminary in Denver from 1952 to 1955, and then at the Gregorian University in Rome while a student at the

Remembering Father Phil Father Philip Kendall, the judicial vicar of the archdiocesan tribunal for 33 years, died on June 20. He is remembered for his compassion and pastoral heart.

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Pontifical North American College from 1955 to 1958. He graduated with a licentiate in sacred theology from the Gregorian. Father Rossiter was ordained on Dec. 20, 1958, in the chapel of the North American College by the rector, the Most Rev. Martin J. O’Connor, titular bishop of Thespiae. Turn to “Father” on page 6

Changing times

For more than 50 years, the sandwich ministry in Topeka has helped feed the city’s hungry. Recently, the ministry has seen an upswing in business.

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2 Local News

THE LEAVEN • JULY 2, 2010

THE LEAVEN • july 2, 2010

Archbishop Naumann’s weekly calendar

July 1 Mass for Life Teen leaders conference — Benedictine College, Atchison July 4-10 Vacation July 11 Mass — Cathedral of St. Peter, Kansas City, Kan. July 13 Vespers and dinner with priests ordained five years or less — Archbishop’s house July 14 Lunch at Catholic Principals Faith Leadership Conference Dinner at Kansas City, Kan., Serra/Priests Golf Day July 16 “The Catholic Way” radio taping Photo courtesy of CFCA

Bob Hentzen, CFCA president and co-founder, gives the thumbs up as he walks through Guatemala. He is joined by hundreds of CFCA staff and community members on day two of the 8,000-mile Walk2gether trek. Hentzen has walked with thousands of people since the start of Walk2gether on Dec. 29, 2009.

74-year-old CFCA founder on 8,000-mile walk By Bob Hart

Special to The Leaven KANSAS CITY, Kan. — He talks the talk — and he walks the walk. Bob Hentzen is living his faith these days on the back roads and rocky paths of the developing nations it has been his life’s mission to serve. Hentzen, 74, who with two of his brothers and a friend co-founded the Kansas City-based Christian Foundation for Children and Aging in 1981, set out from his home in Guatemala last Dec. 29 for an on-foot journey that will take him through El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Brazil and Chile over a period of 16 months. He is accompanied at all times by his wife, Cristina, and at various times by CFCA project coordinators and other staff. “I walk in gratitude for all the poor have taught me,” Hentzen said on a recent visit to CFCA headquarters. “By walking with those living in poverty, we are saying, ‘You are not alone. We are listening to you and learning from you.’” Hentzen undertook a previous “Pilgrimage of Faith” in 1996, completing a walk of more than 4,000 miles from CFCA’s offices on Elmwood Ave. in Kansas City, Kan., to Guatemala. Serving children and elderly through sponsorship in 23 countries, CFCA is “a lay Catholic organization working with persons of all faith traditions to create a worldwide community of compassion and service,” according to its Web site. It currently has nearly 270,000 sponsors, most of them in the United States. Hentzen is visiting multiple CFCA mission sites along the way and ad-

July 17 8 a.m. Pro-Life Mass and procession/ rosary to abortion clinic — Sts. Cyril and Methodius Church, Kansas City, Kan.

Archbishop to celebrate pro-life Mass on July 17 KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Archbishop Joseph F. Naumann will celebrate the archdiocesan monthly pro-life Mass at 8 a.m. on July 17 at Sts. Cyril and Methodius Church here, at 44 N. Mill. Following Mass will be a rosary procession to an abortion clinic approximately four blocks away. Eucharistic adoration is available for those not processing. Benediction concludes services by 9:45 a.m. Join in this prayerful, peaceful witness to life.

Publication No. (ISSN0194-9799)

Bob sings to the children in Guanagazapa, Guatemala, on Jan. 1 during a stop on his 8,000mile walk. heres to a strict schedule that usually involves rising at 2:30 a.m. and taking his first step before 4 a.m. He sleeps in seminaries, parish buildings, individual homes and the occasional small roadside hotel. “Lightning,” he said with a laugh, “that’s about the only thing that stops us.” Trailed by support vehicles including a 1983 camper purchased on eBay, the walkers have long since learned to do without such luxuries as hot water. Hentzen said he relies on a special concoction created by his wife to provide energy for the long days. “I call it ‘Popeye juice,’” he said. “It’s got beets, carrots, apples, papaya — I’m not sure what all. Very high in vitamins.” Most items lugged along serve multiple purposes. For instance, an all-important fan is used not only to keep cool while sleeping, but also to

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dry hair and clothes and keep the mosquitoes at bay. Hentzen said he often thinks of CFCA sponsors, as well as the poor they serve, when he’s on the road. “Our sponsors are salt-of-theearth people of good heart,” he said. “They recognize that CFCA is lowkey, calm and good at what we do. We’re not on TV; we’re not taking up collections in the parishes where our preachers speak. Instead, we’ve really identified a way to help the poor in all these communities and to do it in a sustainable way. “I know this [walk] is sort of a radical act — going on foot for what most people would consider a very long trip in an airplane,” he said. “But it’s our way of declaring that we care about the people. We mean it.” For more information about CFCA or to become a sponsor, call (913) 384-6500 or visit its Web site at: www.cfcausa.org.

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President Most Reverend Joseph F. Naumann Editor Reverend Mark Goldasich, stl frmark@theleaven.com Managing Editor Anita McSorley anita@theleaven.com Senior Reporter Joe Bollig joe@theleaven.com Production Manager Todd Habiger todd@theleaven.com Advertising Representative Jennifer Siebes jennifer@theleaven.com Reporter KARA HANSEN kara@theleaven.com Published weekly September through May, excepting the Friday the week after Thanksgiving, and the Friday after Christmas; biweekly June through August. Address communications to: The Leaven, 12615 Parallel Pkwy., Kansas City, KS 66109. Phone: (913) 721-1570; fax: (913) 721-5276; or e-mail at: sub@theleaven.com. Postmaster : Send address changes to The Leaven, 12615 Parallel Pkwy., Kansas City, KS 66109. For change of address, provide old and new address and parish. Subscriptions $18/ year. Periodicals postage paid at Kansas City, KS 66109.

SECOND FRONT PAGE

A pastor’s heart and pastor’s touch By Joe Bollig

Father Philip E. Kendall 1932-2010

Leaven staff

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — According to official records, Father Philip E. Kendall, CSV, was a priest without a parish — although that’s not quite true. In all his 48 years as a priest, Father Philip never officially served as a pastor or associate pastor. His primary role was judicial vicar of the archdiocesan tribunal, a post he held for 33 years. But don’t tell that to parishioners at St. Peter Cathedral in Kansas City, Kan., where he lived for many years and often celebrated Mass. They considered him part of the parish. And don’t tell that to parishioners at Sts. Cyril and Methodius Church, now part of All Saints Parish in Kansas City, Kan. He regularly celebrated Sunday Mass there, and the other sacraments as well. “They loved him, and he loved them,” said Joan DeBauge, a member of Queen of the Holy Rosary Parish in Overland Park, and retired archdiocesan tribunal secretary. In his last years, Father Philip would celebrate Mass on Sundays and feast days for the residents of Victory Hills Senior Living Community. The very appreciate residents considered him pastor and dubbed their little quasi-parish “Our Lady of Victory Hills.” He could have chosen to bury himself in the church bureaucracy, but he didn’t. Father Philip had a pastor’s heart and a pastor’s touch. He cared, he was involved, and the people responded. “I saw him . . . when he was very weak [before he died] at Providence Place,” said Msgr. Michael Mullen, pastor of St. Patrick Parish in Kansas City, Kan. “When I told a few people that Father Philip was very sick, their response was, ‘Oh, Father Phil who helped in the tribunal? Father Phil the teacher? Father Phil the chaplain to the Sisters? Father Phil the counselor?’” Msgr. Mullen continued. “It was amazing how quickly each person would talk about a different relationship they had with him, which spoke a lot about how widespread was his priestly influence.” Father Philip often lent a hand to busy pastors who needed a substitute. He taught courses, especially in church history, all over the archdiocese for the Benedictine Institute for Religious Studies. He gave talks. He counseled the troubled and struggling who sought him out. He was a spiritual advisor. He was a teacher and chaplain to the Sisters, Servants of Mary. If celebrating the sacraments, touching lives and helping people grow in the faith are what define a pastor, then Father Philip was a pastor. Father Philip wanted to be a priest since he was a student at St. Philip Neri School on the South Side of Chicago. One day, a priest from the Order of Mary Immaculate came to the house with the papers and a train ticket to a high school seminary in San Antonio. Father Philip’s mother literally chased the visitor out of the house, saying, “He’s too young! I’m not finished with him!” The Christian Brothers of Ireland, who taught at his high school, wanted him, too. Eventually, however, he joined another teaching order, the Clerics of St. Viator. Father Philip considered himself a teacher, even in his tribunal work, as he wrote in a short, undated biography for his file. He was being groomed to teach science at a Viatorian high school when he was sent to The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., to study

canon law. This sent him down the path that led to the archdiocesan tribunal. It just so happened that Father Philip was spending the summer in Topeka with his aging parents when the need for a judicial vicar arose. The Second Vatican Council had brought in a host of reforms to meet the challenge of a rapidly changing world. Before the council, the American canon law society was more of a “chowder and drinking society,” Father Philip said in a 2005 interview. In 1970, younger priests like himself remade it into a serious, professional society. When Father Philip took charge in 1972, he took the sleepy, one-horse archdiocesan tribunal into the modern age under the new American Procedural Norms. In 1995, he computerized the office and shortened the time people had to wait for marriage annulments from two years to nine months. “There were very few functioning tribunals in the whole state of Kansas when I got here,” Father Philip said in a 2005 Leaven article. “Since this is the metropolitan tribunal, it was really important that we had a functioning tribunal.” Lucia Davis, a member of St. Casimir Parish in Leavenworth, worked with Father Philip in the tribunal from 2002 to 2005. “He was very, very kind to everyone,” said Davis. “He always treated everyone with compassion, both the petitioners and their former spouses. He insisted that his tribunal be run that way.” To Father Philip, the tribunal was a place of mercy, a forum of reconciliation, and an instrument of healing, he said in a 2005 Leaven article. He also insisted on competence and following the law. “It’s like I told them many times over the phone, ‘Hey, I didn’t make up these laws personally to attack you,’” said Father Philip in the article. “These are the laws I am required to administer by the laws of the church; otherwise, it’s just a game.” Father Philip had many sayings about tribunal work, one of them being: Compassion without competence is a cruel

hoax; competence without compassion is a bitter seed. Father Philip was a compassionate counselor and advisor, too. “He was very accepting of everyone,” said longtime friend Cece Muder, a member of Holy Angels Parish in Basehor. “He didn’t care what you wore to church or what social class you were from. He didn’t care. You were a person, and he treated you with respect. I saw him treat everyone with respect.” As the son of a railroading father, Father Philip had a great love of trains. He built a great big train set with all sorts of miniature buildings and countryside, and with multiple tracks. When he retired and could no longer keep them, he broke it up into smaller “dioramas” and gave them to a doctor friend, so they could be given to sick children. Father Philip also loved to teach. He taught laypeople as well as women religious. “Phil was very much a teacher,” said Msgr. Gary Applegate, current archdiocesan judicial vicar. “He taught at a Viatorian high school. He liked it very much, and continued with that [educational] model through his entire life. When he retired, he had boxes and boxes of outlines and notes for different courses.” Father Philip had a special affection for the Sisters, Servants of Mary, a nursing order. “He was our chaplain for many years,” said Mother Claudia Rodriguez, SM. “He was a holy priest, a perfect chaplain. He was also very faithful. And he really showed he loved the Sisters very much. He taught the junior Sisters in formation: church history, canon law, and many subjects for many years.” And the Sisters reciprocated their love and took care of him over the years as he faced various chronic illnesses. He always said that he wanted to die surrounded by the Sisters, and they gathered around his bed near the end to pray the rosary and sing hymns, said Mother Claudia. Most of the Sisters had to leave, but one Sister was there to care and pray for him when he entered eternity.

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Father Philip E. Kendall, CSV, who served as a chaplain, teacher and judicial vicar of the tribunal office of the Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas for 33 years, died on June 20 at Providence Place Care Center here. Father Philip, 77, a member of the Clerics of St. Viator, died due to injuries sustained during a fall on March 18, aggravated by underlying long-term illnesses. Father Philip was born on Sept. 9, 1932, in Topeka. He was the only son of Guy and Ethel (Fleisch) Kendall. He always considered Topeka his home, but grew up on the South Side of Chicago after his father was transferred by his employer, the Santa Fe Railroad. While he was in grammar school, he developed an interest in the priesthood; during high school, he wanted to be a teacher. He went to St. Leo’s High School on the South Side, which was operated by the Christian Brothers of Ireland. After he graduated from high school in 1950, he began taking night classes at Loyola University. At this time he won a full scholarship to the Fournier Institute of Technology, where he studied for a bachelor’s of science in electrical engineering. It was at Fournier that Father Philip met members of the Viatorian Order. After his junior year in 1954, he entered the Viatorian novitiate in Arlington Heights, Ill. He completed his course work at Loyola, earning a bachelor’s of science in physics in 1956. The next year, the future priest made his final vows as a Viatorian. Father Philip taught at the Spalding Institute in Peoria, Ill., from 1956 to 1957. Father Philip next went to the Viatorian Seminary in Evanston, Ill. He also attended Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill., and graduated with a master’s of science in physics in 1961. At the beginning of his fourth year of theological studies, he was diagnosed with cancer in his left leg, which had to be amputated. He was ordained to the priesthood on Feb. 10, 1962, at the Basilica of the Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, D.C. Father Philip taught at St. Viator High School in Arlington Heights from 1962 to 1963 and was also was a professor of canon law at the Viatorian Seminary in Washington, D.C., from 1963 to 1972. He also helped found the Washington Theological Union in 1967. Father Phillip studied at The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., and earned his licentiate in canon law in 1970. With the encouragement of Archbishop Ignatius J. Strecker, Father Phillip became judicial vicar of the archdiocese in 1972. He would serve in this capacity until October 2005. After he retired from the archdiocesan tribunal in 2005, he moved to Chicago for a little more than two years, and then returned to the archdiocese and resided at the Victory Hills Senior Living Community in Kansas City, Kan.


4 LOCAL NEWS

THE LEAVEN • July 2, 2010

THE LEAVEN • july 2, 2010

LOCAL NEWS 5

Deacons stand ready to serve poor who manifest their poverty in different ways. Service is a hallmark of the Christian faith, which is symbolized by the deacon. “Any service at the Mass [the deacons] render is the culmination of all that service they have done,” said Msgr. Applegate. “At the parish, he should be in charge of some social and service programs a parish operates. He represents those poor who assistance is given to, and he brings their hopes, dreams, wants, needs and desires prayerfully to the Mass.”

The archdiocese’s first permanent deacons will be ordained next year By Joe Bollig Leaven staff

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Keith Geary will — God willing, of course — be ordained a permanent deacon in about a year’s time. But already, people sometimes call him “Father.” “People who come for a funeral or a rosary at a wake sometimes call me ‘Father,’” said Geary, a deacon candidate and member of Our Lady of Unity Parish in Kansas City, Kan. “I say, ‘No, I’m studying to be a deacon.’” The confusion is understandable. Geary and the 19 other archdiocesan deacon candidates sometimes assist their pastors at the altar or on other occasions. If parishioners see another man alongside their pastor, they assume that the other man must be a priest, too. The Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas is one of the last American dioceses to introduce the permanent diaconate. Currently, there are only four permanent deacons in the archdiocese, and they’ve all moved here from other places. The first archdiocesan permanent diaconate class, after a period of discernment, began formal classes almost five years ago. In January, members of the class began their final year of discernment, study and preparation. The class of 20 men will be ordained to the permanent diaconate on April 9, 2011, at St. Michael the Archangel Parish in Leawood. They will be called “permanent deacons” because they will not — like our archdiocesan seminarians — continue on their road to the priesthood. The seminarians are, instead, ordained “transitional deacons,” since their diaconate is just a step toward holy orders. The permanent diaconate is the third order of clergy in the Catholic Church. Every priest and bishop retains the powers of a deacon. During some liturgies, like ordinations, parishioners will see a priest of the archdiocese vested and acting in the role of deacon while his brother priests concelebrate the Mass. This is very significant, because it demonstrates the importance of the permanent diaconate, which was revived after the Second Vatican Council, said Msgr. Gary Applegate, administrator of the archdiocesan permanent diaconate program. The role of the permanent deacon at Mass, he said, also demonstrates the substance of the diaconate and the vital role and connection between the liturgical role of the permanent deacon and his ministries outside of liturgical functions.

The deacon: sign and instrument The deacon has been describes as a “bridge” between the clergy and laity. Like clergy, they have liturgical roles and perform works of service, but they also can be married and work nineto-five, just like Joe and Jane Average Catholic. Most of our permanent deacons will not be engaged in full-time, paid ministry in the church. Some will, but most will continue to raise their families and work at their jobs. As they do so, however, they will also fulfill their purpose of being role models, providing a moral and ethical voice in the workplace and other venues of everyday life. Thus, a deacon is not only a sort of “bridge,” but also an efficacious sign and symbol. “The deacons, even though they may be a paid employee of a parish, should have a parish or religious institution where they volunteer service time,” said Msgr. Applegate. CNS photo/Gregory A. Shemitz, Long Island Catholic

Deacons can do many of the liturgical functions priests do. They can baptize, bring the Eucharist to the sick and dying, witness marriages, officiate at funerals and burial services, proclaim the Gospel, preach, voice the needs of the people in the general intercessions at Mass, assist in the preparation of the gifts, and distribute the Eucharist.

The liturgy: An apex moment

The liturgical functions of all deacons — permanent or transitional — are the same. They can baptize, bring the Eucharist to the sick and dying, witness marriages, officiate at funerals and burial services, proclaim the Gospel, preach, voice the needs of the people in the general intercessions at Mass, assist in the preparation of the gifts, and distribute the Eucharist. The key to understanding the permanent diaconate is understanding how his ministry grows out of the Eucharist. “The liturgy is the culmination point — an apex moment where we have a meeting with God, where we are praying through that moment in time,” said Msgr. Applegate. The Mass is where we bring what

we’ve done and what we have neglected to do, he said, and we receive the grace to go back out into the world to live our Christian way of life and be an example. The deacon’s role is to symbolically emphasize these things . . . and more. During the Mass, the deacon represents the poor — the assistance they must receive, as well as the poor’s goals and dreams. The core of the answer to the question “What is a deacon and what does he do?” can be found in the sixth chapter of the Acts of the Apostles. There, we read how some widows and orphans were being neglected in the distribution of charity. To address the issue, the apostles created the office of deacon. Thus, the first seven deacons were chosen and commissioned. This, in a nutshell, is what today’s permanent deacons are all about: assisting pastors and serving the poor — the

Where to go, what to do The deacon candidates are facing their final year with a lot of hope and unanswered questions. Some of the most important to them personally will probably be: Where will I go? What will I do? None of them have been assigned parishes or ministries yet, except for those who already serve. “I’m like the other guys in the program,” said Geary. “I’d like to be assigned to my home parish, but we will be servants of the archdiocese. We will go wherever we are sent.” Despite the unknowns, they’ve reached a comfort level with that. “[Our knowledge and faith] is at that level now where we know what we don’t know, but we’re much more comfortable with that,” said Mark Stukel, permanent deacon candidate and a member of St. Michael the Archangel Parish in Leawood. The archdiocese will take into account the job and family obligations of deacons when they are assigned. In urban areas, for example, the deacons will Turn to “We will” on page 15

Leaven photo by Don Wolf

Naomi McGrath (left), Sister Antonella Bayer, CSJ, and Keirra Demby join hands in prayer during an interfaith prayer service June 21 at Christ the King Church in Kansas City, Kan. During the service, various faith communities discussed ways to make their neighborhoods safer.

Faith communities work together for safer neighborhoods By Kara Hansen Leaven staff

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Catholics and members of other faiths from the urban core are countering the fog of fear with the light of faith. Members of three Catholic parishes, a Jewish congregation, and four Protestant churches gathered to lift up the issues of crime and safety to God during an interfaith prayer service on June 21 at Christ the King Parish in Kansas City, Kan. “The purpose of the prayer service was to call people from several different faith traditions into action,” said Monica Tyrrell, a Christ the King parishioner. “We also wanted to bring an awareness of personal safety into the neighborhoods. We all believe in the same God, and we want to help keep our people safe.” The event drew Catholics from Blessed Sacrament, Our Lady and St. Rose, and Christ the King parishes. Protestant churches that participated were Lutheran, Zionist, African Methodist Episcopal, and Baptist. The prayer service was organized by

members of Communities Creating Opportunity (CCO), a faith-based group that empowers citizens to improve the quality of life in their community. “Through the organizing we have done with CCO and conversations we have had with people across Wyandotte and Johnson County, it’s been clear people are fearful about home invasions and personal safety in general when they are out and about,” said Tyrrell. It is particularly timely to be addressing issues of safety during summer. “Kids are out of school during the summer, and crime rates go up, especially when employment issues are dire like they are right now,” she said. The prayer service included a reading from the Old Testament Book of Habakkuk, music, communal prayer, a reading from Mother Teresa, a reading from the Jewish Talmud, and a reading from Martin Luther King Jr. “In situations of crime we can forget who our Source is,” said Tyrrell. “This was a coming together and letting God work through us.” The prayer service emphasized the common bond of faith linking all participants, regardless of religious tradition.

“We’re all looking to make things better. And when we pray together, we can accomplish great things. We are proud to be Catholic, but also proud to embrace other people who worship the same God.”

Monica Tyrrell, Christ the King parishioner

“The Holy Spirit was obviously present in this place because no one discussed what we were each going to speak about prior to the event, and yet it flowed together perfectly,” she said. Tyrrell said despite the differences in faiths, all present shared the same goal: to make their community and neighborhoods safer. “We’re all looking to make things better. And when we pray together, we can accomplish great things,” she said.

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“We are proud to be Catholic, but also proud to embrace other people who worship the same God.” In addition to prayer and spiritual reflection, a police officer came to speak to the gathering of about 100 people, providing information about how to increase awareness and safety. He also provided information on a citizens training academy that provides further education on safety, should anyone be interested in pursuing it. Though safety is a concern for all ages, Tyrrell said she has found many elderly feel particularly vulnerable, both in their homes as well as when they are out and about. She hoped the prayer service and safety information provided was just the start of improving communities and neighborhoods. “We have a vision of a better, safer community for all God’s people, and we have to consider what everyone’s going through,” she said. “I felt people were energized and called to action, and I came away with feeling I know I can do more to reduce crime in the community.” The next gathering will be held at 5:30 p.m. on July 14 at Christ the King Parish.

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6 LOCAL NEWS

THE LEAVEN • july 2, 2010

THE LEAVEN • july 2, 2010

Photo by John Caulfield

Blast from the past

Church of the Nativity Parish in Leawood held a special Mass of thanksgiving on June 10 to honor all the priests who have served the parish and to celebrate the closing of the Year of the Priest. Joining Archbishop Joseph F. Naumann at the altar are: Father Sylvester D’Souza, Father William McEvoy, Father Gary Pennings, Father Michael Hermes, Father Craig Maxim, Father Francis Hund, Msgr. Thomas Tank, Father Jim Hart, Father Bill Porter, Father Robert Pflumm, Father Gerald Waris Father Thomas Cawley, CM, Father John Toepfer, OFM Cap., Father Thomas Kearns, and Father Gilbert Aranaha. Msgr. Gary Applegate served as the master of ceremonies.

Compassion was a hallmark of Father Rossiter’s ministry Continued from page 1 “He was wonderful,” said Sister Corita, who now runs a ministry to the poor. “He let me run the school. He believed in what I could do, and he was a man of integrity. He always supported me well in many kinds of situations.” He was generous and he was kind, she said. After the weekly Friday Mass for the kindergartners and first-graders, he’d give every child a hug. “The kids loved him,” she said, “and the faculty admired and respected him, too.”

Compassion and caring Father Rossiter had great compassion for alcoholics and was very open about being a recovering alcoholic himself. He gave space at the rectory for three separate Alcoholics Anonymous groups to meet. He was very approachable, and a troubled person could always get a pastoral hearing from him, said Jean Smith, a Matter Dei parishioner and former secretary. “He tried to help everyone out,” said Smith. “If you had problems, you could go to him, and he would listen and try to help out.” His understanding matched his very considerable wit and intellect, said Father Jon Hullinger, pastor of Mater Dei Parish. “A number of people mentioned to me how he helped them at a particularly difficult point in their lives and brought them back into the church,”

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Father Rossiter served at Assumption for 20 years Continued from page 1 After his ordination, Father Rossiter continued his postgraduate studies. He spent summers at Catholic University in Washington, D.C., from 1963 to 1967, and earned a master’s in theology from Webster University in St. Louis in 1971. Father Rossiter’s first assignment was as an associate pastor at Blessed Sacrament Parish in Kansas City, Kan., from 1959 to 1960. He also taught at Bishop Ward High School. His other assignments include: • Associate pastor at Immaculate Conception Cathedral in Leavenworth and part-time teacher at Immaculata said Father Hullinger. Fellow Topeka native Father Frank Krische, now retired, remembered that he and Father Rossiter were the first native Topekans to be ordained and return as pastors. Father Rossiter was charitable and supported his staff, Father Krische said. He was generous with his assistance, and wholeheartedly supported the sandwich/sack lunch ministry of the parish. He was an intellectual who could talk over “your, my and everybody’s head,” said Father Krische, but he was good with people — especially people who were hurting — and could preach a great homily.

High School from 1960 to 1962. • Associate pastor at St. John the Evangelist Parish in Kansas City, Kan., and part-time theology teacher at Donnelly College from 1962 to 1972. • Part-time teacher at St. Joseph High School in Shawnee from 1962 to 1963. • Chaplain at the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center in Lawrence from 1973 to 1977. • Pastor of St. Pius X Parish in Mission from 1977 to 1986. In 1986, Father Rossiter began his longest assignment as pastor of Assumption Parish in Topeka, where he served until his retirement in July 2006.

Fun and leisure He loved watching sports; his favorite college teams were the University of Kansas and Notre Dame, and his favorite pros were the Chiefs, the Royals, and the Boston Celtics. He was proud of his Irish heritage and was a fixture at the annual St. Patrick’s Day celebrations in Topeka. Indeed, he kicked off the yearly celebration by tapping his genuine Irish shillelagh on the altar at the start of the annual Celtic Mass. According to his last wishes, he was buried with this shillelagh. Father Rossiter was famous for his sense of humor, and his parish bulletins became well-known and widely read be-

cause of the entertaining items he posted in them. He loved to travel and loved musical theater. He would even head to New York or London to see performances. “He saw ‘Les Miserables’ 13 times, and I don’t know how many times [he saw] ‘The Phantom of the Opera,’” said Sister Corita. “He would quote them in his homilies.”

Last gift of love Father Rossiter was pastor at Assumption for 20 years, retiring in 2006. Just before his retirement, he led his parish through the regional pastoral planning process. Although Assumption and Holy Name parishes merged to form Mater Dei Parish after his retirement, his continued presence helped bring the two communities together and ease the transition. He stayed in residence at Assumption after he retired because he loved the people. His last gift was a witness of a peaceful death, said Sister Corita. Sister Corita and Sister Marjorie Cushing, SCL, prayed with him at the end. They chose Scriptures that he liked, among them: “Let not your hearts be troubled, neither let them be afraid” (Jn 14:27); “In my Father’s house are many mansions” (Jn 14:2); and “The Lord is my light and my salvation” (Ps 27). “Those seemed to be what he wanted to hear,” said Sister Corita. “It was a beautiful, peaceful death. It was a privilege to be there.”

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Duane and Jeanette Schmidt, members of Sacred Heart Parish, Emporia, celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary on April 30 with a dinner anniversaries for the family in the Knights of Columbus Hall in Olpe. An open house and reception, hosted by their children, followed the dinner. Their children and their spouses are: Bob and Janel Burenheide, Jerry and Jeanine Guthrie, and Dave and Jelinda Watts, all of Emporia; and Christopher and Jenny Schmidt of Olpe. They also have five grandchildren. The couple was married April 30, 1960, at Sacred Heart Church, Emporia. Robert and MaryAnn (Osuch) Liveley, members of Holy Trinity Parish, Lenexa, celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary on June 30. The couple was married in Rogers, Ark., on June 30, 1950. A celebration party with family and friends will be held on July 11 at Meadowbrook Country Club. Their children and their spouses are: Judy and Mike Schaefer; Janet and Ron Popek; and Jean McClure. The couple also has three grandchildren.

Remember your recently deceased loved one by attending a Memorial Mass Saturday, July 10, 2010 9 a.m. Holy Redeemer Chapel, Gate of Heaven Cemetery, 126th & Parallel Parkway Kansas City, KS

CATHOLIC CEMETERIES 913-371-4040 Wyandotte County Mt. Calvary, Kansas City, Kan. St. John, Kansas City, Kan. Gate of Heaven, Kansas City, Kan. Johnson County Resurrection, Lenexa, Kan. St. Joseph, Shawnee, Kan. St. John, Lenexa, Kan. Mt. Calvary, Olathe, Kan.

Jim and Sandra (Culver) Vader, members of Queen of the Holy Rosary Parish in Overland Park and St. Ann Parish in Prairie Village, will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary on July 9. The couple was married at the Cathedral of St. Peter, Kansas City, Kan. The couple will be joined by their children — Jane, Petaluma, Calif.; Jim Jr., Austin, Texas; and Joan, Minneapolis, Minn. — for a celebratory Mass at St. Louis Cathedral in New Orleans, where the couple honeymooned 50 years ago. Eleanor and James Neighbors, members of Church of the Nativity, Leawood, celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary on June 10 with a family dinner. The couple was married on June 12, 1950, at Holy Name Church, Kansas City, Kan. Their children and their spouses are: Barbara and Joe Weatherford; Beverly and Don Gieszelmann; Mike and Melissa Neighbors; Mark and Shelly Neighbors; and David Neighbors. They also have nine grandchildren and six great-grandchildren.

MT CALVARY – KC KS Joseph M. Anzek Dorothy Baltuska Carolyn A. Budd Helen Bradish Frances Burkle Rose A. Brumley Robert F. Brunsky Frank Dercher Harry J. Desko Sophia M. Druten Francisco Esteban Sr. Richard O. Gray Mildred L. Gottesburen Alonzo E. Jamison Sr. Peter J. Jancich Jr. Ivan Jarmek Lorena M. Jaster Larry G. Johnson Gwendolyn Butler Jones Larry F. Kaminski Lucille L. Kemp Alexis C. Martinez Irene R. McBratney San Juana Mendoza Rosemary E. Mogusar Francis Mulich Frances C. Piper Mary L. Pluta Julian H. Ramirez Elizabeth M. Regan Patrick Rowe Mary M. Sanchez Jay D. Sigman Jessie Smith III Mary Suljak Joanna L. Tannehill William M. Verbeck Elsa L. Vuich Mary A. Worley Helen V. Yadrich Genevieve J. Yeamans Rosefrances C. Zeanah RESURRECTION Frances L. Addington Carolyn S. Allen Michael L. Bills Sr. Helen F. Carmody Teah Kassuen Collor Margaret A. Conaghan Esther E. Cunningham Louis C. Darpel Dr. Joseph C. DeBlase Steven J. DeGraeve Sr. Georgia Derricott Marjorie C. Derstler Morgan L. DeWitt Phyllis J. Di Maio Thomas M. Finholm Mary A. Fleming Emma L. Gaddis James J. Galvin Edna B. Garrett Andy C. Gensch Jr. Margaret A. Germaine

Gerry G. Grovenburg Norma J. Growe Charles J. Haas Charles A. Hanna Gail E. Hartgrove Donald B. Hatch Phyllis A. Hutchins Dorothy Jilka William Paul Johnson Thomas G. Judge Dr. John B. Justus Paul E. Keating Ann E. Kirby Morgan Iris Knoblock Thomas K. Lodigensky Joseph H. Mallon Janet J. McNabb Vernon L. McQuerry Wanda S. Muzquiz Timothy M. North Sr. Marie F. O’Connor Joseph E. Orrick Ann M. Peters Leo C. Ray Jr. Mireille L. Remer Donald M. Rodak Anthony M. Scholler Stella Seamands Joan Sellers Carolyn I. Smith Mary L. Smith Helen E. Sturdivan Jerri D. Sum Mary Ann Swartz Paul C. VanLerberg Melba J. Tobin Herman F. Volk Lynne M. Wenner Doris S. Winger Richard A. Willman ST JOSEPH Robert A. Gadwood Billie G. Gasser Robert L. DeCaney Leona E. Evans Bernard F. Miller Daniel P. Miller James R. Sands Loma R. Severino Frank R. VanDerhagen MT CALVARY – OLATHE Ruth M. Block Jorge M. Bulan Edward J. Dougherty Ralph A. Fasching GATE OF HEAVEN Veronica Brady Sharon L. Conaway Robert J. Dorian May S. Poole Joanna L. Tannehill John R. Smalley

Russ and Ginny Mueller, members of Curé of Ars Parish, Leawood, celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary on June 10. The couple was married at St. Peter Cathedral in Belleville, Ill. To celebrate, the couple will visit their three daughters and their spouses: Diane and Dan Fouraker, Camdenton, Mo.; Linda and Ed Slagle, Marietta, Ga.; and Beth and Jeff Eppler, Olathe. The couple also has six grandchildren. Carolyn (Hayes) and Tom Brady, members of St. Joseph Parish, Lillis, will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary on July 2. The couple was married at St. Joseph Church, Lillis. Their children and their spouses are: Tom Brady Jr.; Terri and Troy Bird; Troy Brady; and Tracy and Jim Hand. They also have 10 grandchildren. The Leaven only prints 50, 60, 65 and 70th anniversary notices. Announcements are due by 5 p.m. eight days (Thursday) before the desired publication date. Send notices to: The Leaven, 12615 Parallel Pkwy., Kansas City, KS 66109, attn: anniversaries; or send an e-mail to: Todd@theleaven.com.

LOCAL NEWS 7 Sister Christelle Conway, OSB ATCHISON — Sister Christelle Conway, 78, a Benedictine Sister of Mount St. Scholastica here,died June 21 at the monastery. Born to Francis Michael and Clara Elizabeth Boschert obituary Conway on Sept. 14, 1931, Sister Christelle grew up in a family of eight children in Chillicothe, Mo. She attended St. Columban School and St. Joseph Academy in Chillicothe. After graduation, she entered the Benedictine Sisters in June 1949 and made monastic profession Jan. 1, 1951. At Mount St. Scholastica College she earned a bachelor’s degree in education with a minor in mathematics. Sister Christelle taught in Panama, Iowa; in Corning, Wamego, and Horton; in Omaha, Neb.; and in Clyde and Kansas City, Mo. For more than 35 years, she taught math either at Bishop LeBlond High School in St. Joseph, Mo., or at Mount St. Scholastica Academy, Atchison. As dean of students at both high schools and assistant to the principal, she was known for her sense of humor and her sense of justice.

Correction

In the June 18 story on iconography the contact e-mail for Lisa Cummings was misprinted. For information about the Prosopon School of Iconography workshop in Kansas City, Cummings can be contacted at: lrckc@sbcglobal.net.

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window of opportunity

Jean Smith, who has served the sandwich ministry for 27 years, hands out the lunches from a northwest office window a half-floor up from the pavement, where those in need ring the doorbell.

‘Jesus coming to the window’ After more than half a century, Topeka sandwich ministry busier than ever in tough times

Changing times

Sister Mary Corita Conlan, SCL, who administers the sandwich ministry, has seen a change in recent years in those who come to the window. Now it’s not just the homeless, but even families and middle-class people who frequent the ministry, trying to make ends meet.

Story By Bob Hart | Photos by Susan McSpadden

T

here’s nothing fancy about it. The simple brown paper bag contains a sandwich (two slices of bread with one slice of bologna and one slice of American cheese), a small bag of chips and two cookies. It is gratefully received. For some who accept it, there will be nothing else to eat that day. For others, it provides a much-needed supplement to a monthly food budget stretched well past its limit.

TOPEKA — The numbers tell the story quickly. Last year in May, the sandwich ministry that began at Assumption Parish in the 1950s handed out just over a thousand sandwich/chip/cookie combos. This year’s May total was up by more than 600 — 1,632 lunches in all. “It’s no longer just the homeless, the street people,” said Sister Mary Corita Conlan, SCL, who administers the ministry at the now unified Mater Dei Parish. “We’re seeing low- and middle-class people, sometimes entire families.” A troubled economy and local job layoffs are the clear culprits. The sandwich ministry strives to ease some of the pain. “Now that school is out and children are not receiving free breakfast or lunch, the demand will only grow,” Sister Corita

said. “I think this is going to be a very long summer for a lot of people.” Jean Smith, who in her parish office support role has served the ministry for 27 years, hands out the lunches from a northwest office window a half-floor up from the pavement, where those in need ring the doorbell. In extreme cold or heat, the mini-blinds stay down to give Smith a little protection from the elements. But the window is opened regularly, and the faithful know the lunches, as always, are available Monday through Friday. “At the beginning of the month, we don’t hand out as many,” Smith said. “On June 1 this year, we handed out 73. But the last two weeks of the month, we’ll push 100 every day, and go over 100 on a lot of those days.” It’s strictly an honor system, as those requesting extra lunches for children or aging family members unable to make the trip are never denied. Smith, who now knows most of her daily visitors by name, recalled the day more than a quarter century ago when then-associate pastor, Father Mark Goldasich, spoke in his homily of the ministry and those who occasionally try to abuse it. “We may be tempted now and then to turn someone away,” he said. “But we have to remember — that’s Jesus coming to the window.”

Making the money count Bologna, cheese and bread are purchased, usually weekly, from Dillons.

Young volunteers

Gemma Werth, 8 months, Annie Werth, 9, and their cousin Joe Hasty, 7, help make sandwiches in the former Assumption rectory kitchen. Kathy Werth regularly brings her eight children, as well as nieces and nephews, to help with sandwich assembly.

help from above

Smith hands a sack lunch to Daniel Chege. In May, the sandwich ministry distributed 1,632 lunches. Twenty boxes of chips (50 sacks to a box) are purchased each month from Sam’s Club. Frito Lay donates an additional five boxes of chips per month, eight to nine months of the year. The cookies, two to a bag and of the sandwich variety, are also purchased in bulk. Beyond the lunches, the parish also provides bus passes (370 of them in May of this year) and $15 grocery vouchers to those in need. Who’s footing the bill for all this? That’s where things get a little complicated, although much of the support comes from the parish itself, and Sister Corita

seems to have the additional money juggling down to a science. “We have an agreement with a grocery store in the Oakland area for the vouchers,” Sister Corita said. “The Topeka priests send $850 monthly to the store, and $250 to me. I usually use that for the bus passes. I also have a Sisters of Charity account that I use to supplement the grocery store toward the end of the month. I’ll usually write a check for $300 or so later in the month so we can keep on providing that assistance.” In June of this year, Sister Corita had to write that check earlier in the month than ever before — on the 17th — due to increased demand. She said she knows the vouchers only go so far, but they’re still important. “What can you get for $15? Not much,” she said. “But you can get bread,

some peanut butter, milk and eggs. It helps.” Private donations, sometimes made anonymously, help fund some of the extras, like assistance with prescription medications or emergency travel costs. The ministry can’t do everything, of course. “We don’t do rent or utility payments,” Sister Corita said. “Our funds would be depleted immediately if we were to do so.” Instead, the ministry makes referrals to other Topeka agencies, including Doorstep, the Salvation Army, Community Action and Let’s Help.

Hands on Kathy Werth, a parishioner of Topeka’s Christ the King Church, is a regular

sandwich ministry volunteer. She brings her eight children (ages 8 months to 14 years) and sometimes a niece and nephew along to help in assembling the sandwiches. “We home school, and we’d been looking for a daily, hands-on service project,” Werth said. “We come to daily Mass here often and we had noticed more and more people ringing the bell.” The family began volunteering during Lent earlier this year and continues to come back. “If the kids argue about anything here, it’s who gets to answer the doorbell,” Werth said. “They really like to talk to the people. The parish ladies have been great; they’ll let them hand out a bus pass or take a little responsibility.” “I think my kids are realizing how tough things are right now,” Werth con-

Care to help? Donations to the sandwich ministry made be made to: Assumption Sandwich Ministry c/o Sister Mary Corita Conlan, SCL 1114 S.W. 10th Ave. Topeka KS 66604 To inquire about volunteering your time, contact the parish office at (785) 232-2907. tinued, “when people are willing to walk a significant distance for a sandwich that maybe [the kids] wouldn’t eat if I gave it to them at home.” Sister Corita pointed out that she taught Werth’s husband in grade school, to which a bystander commented, “You

probably taught half of Topeka, Sister.” Prior to her involvement with the sandwich ministry, Sister Corita was principal of Assumption School for nearly 30 years. The connections she formed during that time continue to serve her well in her current work, but it is the efforts of volunteers like the Werths, she said, that keep things running smoothly. “Mary Kirk and her daughter, Janie Hendrickson, Arlene Beuerline-Stringer, Nan Cookus and Joe Fritton, and three of my fellow Sisters of Charity — Marie, Marjorie and Angela Rose — are core volunteers who really make a difference,” said Sister Corita. “Of course, Jean is the head honcho. She keeps such wonderful, accurate records. We couldn’t do this without her.” As if on cue, the bell rings, the window opens, and Jean Smith’s voice can be heard echoing from down the hall. “Here you go,” she says, as she passes the first sack lunch out the window. Followed quickly by, “Have a good one!”


10 NATION

THE LEAVEN • July 2, 2010

Catholic Charities head: Spill could be ‘worse than hurricanes’ WASHINGTON (CNS) — The ultimate tally of the devastation wrought by the Deepwater Horizon oil rig explosion in April could be “worse than hurricanes,” said the director of Catholic Charities for the Diocese of HoumaThibodaux, La. “The level of anxiety is incredibly high,” said Rob Gorman, who has been with Catholic Charities since 1982 and married the daughter of a French-speaking bayou fisherman. “If you’re a trawler, you don’t know if you’re going to be able to trawl this year, or if you’re going to be able to trawl next year, or the year after that, or the year after that.” The same, Gorman said, applies to fishermen, crabbers and shrimpers. While “we all get very anxious at the start of hurricane season,” he said, “folk here are adept at recovering from hurricane damage” since they know what to expect should a hurricane come. If hit, “we start rebuilding and recovering,” he added. “It’s all very predictable.” It’s not knowing the extent of the continuing crisis in the Gulf of Mexico that is ratcheting up anxiety in southern Louisiana, Gorman said. The millions of gallons spilled into the Gulf linger in the water as “not one solid blob [but], hundreds of thousands of little, smaller blobs [which] when gathered together can go in any direction,” he added.

Smartphone apps integrate prayer life with technology ARLINGTON, Va. (CNS) — Praying is now so 21st century. Instead of a paperback missalette, there’s iMissal. Instead of prayer cards, there’s a touch-screen Saint A Day. Instead of randomly jotting down prayer requests, there’s a digitally organized list in PrayerSteward. These three applications — better known as apps — only scratch the surface of faith-related digital materials available in Apple’s App Store and, to a lesser extent, in the Android Market and Palm Pre App Catalog. With these digital Catholic resources comes the undeniable convenience of modern-day prayer. “I know people who before they even get out of bed they have their iPod Touch or their iPhone in their hand,” said Sister Kathryn James Hermes, a Daughter of St. Paul and director of digital publishing for Pauline Books and Media. “You could be looking at the psalms or the morning meditation,” she added. In March, Parks Associates, a market research and consulting company specializing in digital technologies, reported that smartphone (i.e. iPhone, Android, Palm Pre) users are expected to quadruple by 2014, resulting in 1 billion users worldwide. That’s a market that everyone, even the Vatican, can get behind.

THE LEAVEN • July 2, 2010

Police raid on Belgian archdiocese spurs surprise

Religion and science are not ‘incompatible opposites’

By Sarah Delaney

By Felix Rivera

Catholic News Service

Catholic News Service

WASHINGTON (CNS) — Participants in dialogue between religion and science must work to dispel the notion that the two disciplines stand in total opposition to each other, said a theologian with the Woodstock Theological Center at Georgetown University here. “Just like I have been trying to do my entire life, the dialogue should attempt to remove the false obstacles in the way of discussion, namely that religion and science are incompatible opposites,” John Haught told Catholic News Service June 18. The interview was prompted by a panel discussion hosted two days earlier by the Dialogue on Science, Ethics and Religion, which is part of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. One crucial viewpoint was missing on the panel: the Catholic perspective. Haught has written 18 books on the subject, including “Responses to 101 Questions on God and Evolution.” He has been involved with religion and science dialogue for many years, teaching a course on the dialogue at Georgetown University. “Many people still do not have a very deep understanding of the relationship between science and faith,” he said. “Look at the numbers: 50 to 60 percent of Christians consider evolution and Christian faith incompatible.” To Haught, most who believe in the conflict model of religion-science dialogue cannot explain why they think the two are irreconcilable. Catholics who hold this view need “to get over it,” he said. “There isn’t any controversy about the reality of the evolution in the scientific community, so why in the church?” As Pope John Paul II said in a message to the Pontifical Academy of Sciences on Oct. 22, 1996, Catholics need to construct a theology that shows how divine knowledge, providence and wisdom can be affirmed because of evolution.

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — In a strongly worded statement, the Vatican expressed surprise and indignation at the way Belgian police carried out a raid on the headquarters of the Belgian Catholic Church in connection with an investigation into alleged priestly sex abuse. The statement June 25 from the Vatican Secretariat of State expressed “true surprise” for the nine-hour-long police blitz and “indignation” for what it said was the violation of tombs of two late cardinals during the search June 24. News reports said that in the raid, police had sealed off the headquarters of the Archdiocese of Mechelen-Brussels, including the residence of Archbishop AndreJoseph Leonard. They also searched the home of Cardinal Godfried Danneels, the retired archbishop for the archdiocese. The Vatican statement included the description of the raid provided by a spokesman for the Belgian bishops’ conference, detailing how bishops gathered for a scheduled meeting at the headquarters had been surprised by police who then confiscated documents and cell phones of all present. It said that everyone had been questioned, and that while the interrogations had taken place in “a correct manner,” that it had not been “a pleasant experience.” Neither bishops nor personnel were allowed to leave the building from 10:30 a.m. until 7:30 p.m. The statement also said the Vatican “reiterates the firm condemnation of every sinful and criminal act of abuse of minors on the part of members of the church, as well as the need to remedy and face such acts in a way that conforms to the requirements of justice and teachings of the Gospel.” The statement said the authorities had violated the confidentiality of victims by seizing material under scrutiny by a special commission established by the archdiocese to examine alleged cases of priestly abuse.

CNS photo/Karen Callaway, Catholic New World

PARTICIPANTS CHEER DURING RALLY — Participants cheer during a rally and march to kick off the beginning of summer and put an end to violence in their community June 18 in front of St. Sabina Church in Chicago.

Chicago parishes urged to promote anti-violence initiatives By Michelle Martin Catholic News Service

CHICAGO (CNS) — As temperatures climbed and most schools closed for the summer, church leaders called on their congregations to step forward and protect young people from the violence that often seems pervasive in Chicago. In a letter sent to parishes for their June 26-27 bulletins, Cardinal Francis E. George wrote: “Gunshots and gang violence, rooted often in verbal and physical abuse at home, can scar children and youth. The sad reality of daily life is that our youth and their families often live under a veil of fear. Such an environment hinders the normal development of children, youth and their families. “The daily threat of violence is greater in inner-city neighborhoods,” the cardinal added. “A number of our Catholic parishes in these communities are already providing secure spaces in churches, gymnasiums and other parish buildings for play, exercise and prayer.” He thanked those pastors and parishioners but said, “There is a need for more of our parishes to provide safe haven as well, and I ask our pastors and their congregations to work toward offering this.”

St. Sabina Parish on Chicago’s South Side offers many opportunities for children and young people to stay safe and keep growing in faith and leadership, as well as offering all members of the community an opportunity to speak out against violence. On June 18, the last day of classes for Chicago public schools, Father Michael Pfleger, St. Sabina’s pastor, led a rally and march to “Silence the Violence.” Among the more than 300 participants were Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley, Police Superintendent Jody Weis, public schools chief executive officer Ron Huberman, U.S. Sen. Roland Burris, D-Ill., and the newly named director of Chicago’s community policing initiative, Ron Holt, whose son, Blair, was shot and killed on a city bus in May 2007 while trying to shield a friend from bullets. The group walked from the church down 79th Street to Halstead, making a loop of about a mile and a half, chanting slogans such as, “Stop the violence,” while waving at children in windows and passers-by. Father Pfleger, who lost a foster son to gunfire in 1998, compared the blood shed by gun violence to the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, calling it an “urban spill.”

CNS photo/Paul Haring

PEOPLE LOOK AT STATUE IN ROME — People look at a statue of Mary known as “Salus Populi Romani” (“Our Lady, Health of the Roman People”) after it was blessed by Pope Benedict XVI in Rome June 24. The 30-foot statue was restored after it fell from its pedestal during a storm in October.

Pope blesses famous statue of Mary in Rome after restoration By Sarah Delaney

Catholic News Service VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Pope Benedict XVI blessed a 30-foot-high statue of Mary to celebrate its restoration eight months after a gust of wind knocked it off its perch on a hillside overlooking Rome. In a ceremony June 24 on the Monte Mario hill, Rome’s tallest, the pope praised the city’s residents for their particular devotion to the gigantic statue and noted the “dramatic and providential events” that surrounded its creation and installation in postwar Rome. The copper and gold leaf statue, known as the “Madoninna,” was swept off its base during a storm in October 2009 and was broken into three pieces. The pope remembered how Pope Pius XII had prayed to Mary to protect the war-weary population from an imminent battle between German occupiers and allied forces June 4, 1944. Shortly after, word came that the Germans were retreating and that Rome had been spared. The popular Roman priest and saint, Don Luigi Orione, and his followers subsequently arranged for the creation of a work of art to thank Mary for her intercession. The finished statue of Mary with outstretched arms to welcome and

protect the people of the Eternal City was installed in 1953. “How could I not renew with you, dear friends of Rome, that gesture of devotion to Mary by blessing this lovely statue?” Pope Benedict said. The pope praised the works of St. Luigi Orione and the order of Orionine Fathers that he founded to perform works of charity, especially for the benefit of orphans and disadvantaged children and young people. Remembering the life and work of Don Orione, as he was known, the pope said that work in the service of others should be carried out through “an authentic and holy spiritual life” in order to be truly charitable. The priest was canonized by Pope John Paul II in 2004, and the order, sometimes known as Little Works of Divine Providence, operates in many parts of the world. Pope Benedict also visited an order of cloistered nuns at the nearby Dominican convent of Santa Maria del Rosario, where he said the daytime prayer of the Liturgy of the Hours. He told the nuns that their contemplative life “places you, as living and vital members, in the heart of the mystic body of the Lord, that is the church” and that their “hidden existence with Christ” served as strong support for the church.

World 11

BP oil leak offers ‘lesson in humility,’ Vatican says VATICAN CITY (CNS) — The “sense of powerlessness and delay” in resolving the worst offshore oil spill in U.S. history offers a lesson about the limits of technology, a Vatican official said. Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi, the Vatican spokesman, said in a commentary June 19 that the leaking BP oil well in the Gulf of Mexico was a disaster “of enormous proportions, and getting worse.” He compared it to the 1984 chemical factory explosion in Bhopal, India, or the 1986 meltdown of the nuclear power plant in Chernobyl, Ukraine. “What is striking in this case is the sense of powerlessness and delay in finding a solution to this disaster faced by one of the largest and most technologically advanced oil multinationals in the world, but also by the most powerful country on earth,” Father Lombardi said. “It seems incredible, but it is a fact. This is not the eruption of a volcano, but a relatively small man-made hole in the seabed. Yet, in two months, expert scientists and technicians, leaders in their field, have failed to plug it,” he said. The Vatican spokesman said he hoped people would draw from the disaster a lesson of prudence and care in the use of the earth’s resources. “Perhaps we can also draw a lesson in humility,” he said.

General tells religious leaders child soldiers are new weapon WINNIPEG, Manitoba (CNS) — Child soldiers have become the “new lowtechnology weapon” of today’s wars, said the retired Canadian general who led U.N. peacekeeping forces during the Rwandan genocide. Retired Gen. Romeo Dallaire, now a Canadian senator from Quebec, told more than 70 delegates and 130 observers at the opening session of the June 21-23 World Religions Summit that child soldiers “can be very effective. There are more than 300,000 of them at any one time involved in 30 conflicts. This is not just a crime against humanity. It is a sin.” He also told the gathering at the University of Winnipeg that the old world order of the Cold War has been replaced by a “new world disorder.” He lamented the shortterm thinking that he said drives today’s political decision-makers. “They are swimming in the complexity and ambiguity of our times. They are thinking of tomorrow’s headlines, not of what will still be significant five years from now,” he said. They need “the depth that faith provides,” he said, adding that the world is begging for visionary, not reactive, leadership.

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Villa St. Francis

16600 W. 126th Street • Olathe, Kansas 66062 Phone: (913) 829-5201 Fax: (913) 829-5399 Daily Mass in the Chapel at 10 a.m.

M-F 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. | Summer Months: Sat. 10 a.m to 3 p.m.

• Medicare and Kansas Medicaid certified • 24 - hour nursing care • Dementia/Alzheimer’s unit • Physical, occupational and speech therapist on staff/ Rapid recovery • Nutritious Home cooked meals • Private and Semi Private rooms • Beauty and Barber Shop • 24 hour snacks Affiliated with the Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas

800 SW Sixth Avenue | 785.354.7706 | www.brennanmathenafh.com


12 CLASSIFIEDS Employment Director of communications and planning The Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas is seeking a superior Catholic communicator. The director manages and facilitates all official communications and serves as public information officer. Responsibilities include: developing and implementing a communications plan across all mediums, including the Web; serving as public information officer; establishing relationships with media outlets; and providing public relations services to the parishes of the archdiocese. The director also coordinates regional and archdiocesan pastoral planning efforts and assists parishes and institutions with their pastoral plans. Requires exceptional communication skills, including a firm grasp of electronic media; direct or related experience in data analysis for planning purposes; and demonstrated successful relationship management. Prefer candidates with experience in pastoral planning for Catholic parishes and dioceses. A complete job description, application and benefits information are available on the Web site at: www.archkck.org (click on the human resources tab). Interested individuals should mail cover letter, resume, and application by July 23 to: Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas, Office of Human Resources, Communications Search, 12615 Parallel Pkwy., Kansas City, KS 66109, or send, via e-mail, to: kthomas@archkck.org. Ascension Catholic School - Is looking for an enthusiastic, caring individual to run the after school care program from 3 - 6 p.m.; Mon. - Fri., and occasional full days. Duties include: overseeing employees; coordinating activities; purchasing snacks and craft materials; communicating with parents, fellow staff, and administration; and keeping attendance records for billing. For information, call (913) 851-2531, ext. 106. Send resume, via e-mail, to: bwright@acseagles.org. Development director - Hayden High School, Topeka, is accepting applications for the position of development director. Candidates must possess training and experience in all aspects of development, including relationships with alumni, identification of potential donors, and coordination of fundraising activities. Applicants should have personal and professional characteristics consistent with the teachings of the Catholic Church. To submit a letter of interest and resume, contact Rick Strecker at (785) 272-5210 or send, via e-mail, to: strecker@haydenhigh.org. Sales counselor - Don’t just get a job, start a rewarding career! Chapel-Hill Butler Funeral Home and Memorial Gardens currently has career opportunities for motivated sales professionals who are service minded, energetic and ambitious. Experience in the funeral home or cemetery industry is helpful but not necessary. We provide an excellent structured training program and we offer a full benefits package, flexible hours and advancement opportunities. For additional information or to submit your resume, send an e-mail to Shelly at: shelly.weatherford@sci-us.com. Judicial vicar - The Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph seeks a degreed priest (JCD or JCL) to work full time as judicial vicar of the diocese. Duties include: administration of the marriage tribunal; assisting the bishop on canonical matters; advising the bishop on personnel issues; preparing and managing the budget for the tribunal; representing the bishop as appropriate; and working collaboratively with other diocesan offices. Serving as a judge in first instance is also expected. Applicant must be in good standing and must have the endorsement of his ordinary or major religious superior. Experience in church leadership, as pastor or other leadership role, as well as familiarity with tribunal procedure is expected. Proficiency in Spanish is helpful. Applicants may contact Msgr. Robert Murphy, vicar general, at (816) 756-1850 or via e-mail at: murphy@ diocesekcsj.org; or Msgr. Bradley Offutt, chancellor, at (816) 756-1850 or via e-mail at: offutt@diocesekcsj.org. Executive director of the diocesan education fund - The Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph is currently accepting applications for a new position of executive director of the diocesan Catholic school education fund. This position will be responsible for formulating strategy and objectives; developing sound plans for fundraising activities; overseeing the implementation of a development plan; and evaluating performance toward goals. The executive director will build a new program utilizing major gifts, annual fund development, grant making, special events, capital funding initiatives and endowments. Qualifications for this position include a bachelor’s degree in development/fundraising, nonprofit administration, business, marketing/public relations, or related fields or equivalent experience. Minimum five or more years experience in fund development. For a complete job description, visit our Web site at: www. diocese-kcsj.org. Submit resume, via e-mail, to: moss@ diocesekcsj.org. Office assistant - Full-time position available. Customer service preferred. Must have good working knowledge of Microsoft Word and Excel. Good computer skills a must. Starting pay is $9 per hour. Call Nikki at (913) 438-7767.

THE LEAVEN • JULY 2, 2010 Director of religious education – Corpus Christi Parish, Lawrence, seeks a dynamic and gifted person for the part-time position DRE for our parish community of 1,200 families. Those seeking this position should be self-starters with experience and an ability to work with a team for RCIA and a parish staff. Salary is commensurate with education and experience. Submit resume, via e-mail, to: pats@corpuschristilks.org. Assistant volleyball coaches - Bishop Ward High School is seeking freshman and junior varsity volleyball assistant coaches. For information, contact Greg Duggins, athletic director, at (913) 371-1201. Child care director – St. Joseph Church, Shawnee, is seeking a director for its early education center, serving children from infants through 8th grade. St. Joseph is a faith-filled environment that includes Catholic teachings in its curriculum. Qualified candidates will be licensed for more than 100 children, have a minimum of two years experience as a program director, curriculum building and state compliance experience, as well as experience in marketing early education programs. Send resume to: St. Joseph Church, attn: VC, 5901 Flint, Shawnee, KS 66203. Half-time youth minister - We are seeking an enthusiastic youth minister to plan, enhance and support youth activities for our Jr. and Sr. high youth ministry programs. The youth minister would also help coordinate our confirmation program for grades 7 - 8. Applicants must truly love working with youth and enjoy practicing and sharing our faith. Computer, organizational and interpersonal skills are required. Salary commensurate with education and experience. Send resume, via e-mail, to Pat Shultz at: pats@corpuschristilks.org. Financial representative - Due to the success and growth of the Knights of Columbus, we are adding financial representatives in the Kansas City and Emporia areas. This position is ideal for a determined, high-energy, highexpectation, professional, self-disciplined, independent individual desiring to serve others, yet earn a better-thanaverage income. We provide top-rated financial products to our members and their families and will provide excellent benefits and training. For information or an interview, contact John A. Mahon, 307 Dakota, Holton KS 66436; or call (785) 364-5450. Part-time bowling machine mechanic - St. John’s Catholic Club, Kansas City, Kan., is looking for someone to maintain a six-lane house in the church’s men’s club. All late model 1960s Brunswick equipment. Call Kenny at (913) 788-9758.

Services Have you considered starting a donor-advised fund or family foundation? The Catholic Foundation of Northeast Kansas can help. We assist people with giving plans from trusts to gift annuities. If you are trying to stretch your philanthropy dollars further, contact the Catholic Foundation for ideas and guidance. For a confidential meeting, call (913) 647-0365 or visit the Web site at: www.cfnek.org. Need a ride? Where to? I am available to take you to your doctor’s appointment, hairdresser or shopping. Maybe you aren’t driving anymore or just prefer a chauffeur; I’ll get you there. I can also run errands for you or do the grocery shopping. Just give me a call to discuss your needs. Johnson County only. Call (913) 469-6211 or (816) 806-0564. Husband and wife cleaning team - Reasonable rates; references provided. Call (913) 940-2959. Machine quilting by Lyn - I also do T-shirt, photo, and memorial quilts. Official Hobbs distributor. Located in Overland Park. Call Lyn at (913) 492-8877. Faith-based counseling to cope with life concerns - Kansas City area. Call Mary Vorsten, Licensed Clinical Professional Counselor, at (913) 909-2002. Counseling - Topeka area. Child and adolescent, individual, marriage and family therapy. Ken Zweig, LSCSW, Shunga Creek Mental Health. Call (785) 969-5308. Tree service - Pruning trees for optimal growth and beauty and removal of hazardous limbs or problem trees. Free consultation and bid. Safe, insured, professional. Brad Grabs, Green Solutions of KC, (913) 244-5838. www. GreenSolutionsKC.com. Lawn Mowing Senior and referral discounts. Insured and bonded. Local parishioner. Free estimates. Call (913) 620-6063. My Accountant LLC - My Accountant will assist with all of your bookkeeping, payroll and tax needs. For a list of services, visit the Web site at: myaccountant-cb.com or call Charles at (913) 948-9535. Member of St. Agnes Parish, Roeland Park.

THE LEAVEN • JULY 2, 2010 Computer repair/virus and spyware removal/PC upgrades - Microsoft certified; 10 yrs. experience. Member of Sacred Heart Parish. Call Matt at (816) 876-6619 or send an e-mail to: mattcomputerfix@gmail.com.

Caregiving Do you need a caregiver or companion for your loved one? I am reliable, flexible and have fourteen years of experieince. I am looking for employment in the south KC metro area. References available. Call (913) 944-8305. Caregiver - Everyone deserves the BesCare for their loved ones at n affordable price. We provide hourly, daily, weekly, or around-the-clock care including weekends and holidays. You can count on BesCare. Call (913) 638-5385. Caregiver - Mature Catholic woman with over 25 years experience is available part time to care for your loved one in their home. I have spent the past four years exclusively caring for one client. Call (913) 579-8914. Do you or your parents need help at home? - For as little as $60 per week, Benefits of Home-Senior Care can provide assistance with personal care, shopping and many other daily needs. For details, visit our Web site at: benefitsofhome.com or call (913) 422-1591. Caregiving - We provide personal assistance, companionship, care management, and transportation to the elderly and disabled in home, assisted living and nursing facilities. We also provide respite care for main caregivers needing some personal time. Call Daughters & Company at (913) 341-2500 and speak with Laurie, Sara or Gary.

Home Improvement Masonry work – Quality, new or repair work. Brick, block, and chimney/fireplace repair. Insured; second generation bricklayer. Call (913) 829-4336. Interior and exterior painting and wallpaper removal - 30-plus years experience. Quality work; excellent references; reasonable rates. Senior discount. Member of St. Ann Parish, Prairie Village. Call Joe at (913) 620-5776. Painting, exterior and interior, drywall projects, powerwashing, rotted window sills repaired - Quality products. 20 years experience. References. Call (913) 341-7584. Tile and painting - Complete tile and paint repairs and renovation. Ceramic, porcelain, certified limestone tile master. Complete interior paint services and drywall texture finishes. Over 20 years experience. Fully licensed. Service 7 days a week. Contact Mike at (913) 488-4930. Member of Church of the Ascension Parish, Overland Park. Carpet direct – We cut out the middle man and bring the showroom to you! The best place to see your flooring is in your own home or office. Save 40 - 80% on carpet and hard surfaces. Residential and commercial. For a free estimate, call Amanda at (913) 742-4003. Father-and-son team - These guys can do it all — exterior painting, decks, fences, retaining walls, metal buildings, patios, porches, and driveways, We can do your job for a reasonable price! Call Josh at (913) 709-7230. The Drywall Doctor, Inc. - A unique solution to your drywall problems! We fix all types of ceiling and wall damage — from water stains and stress cracks to texture repairs and skim coating. We provide professional, timely repairs and leave the job site clean! Lead-certified and insured! Serving the metro since 1997. Call (913) 768-6655. STA (Sure Thing Always) Home Repair - Basement finish, bathrooms and kitchens; interior & exterior repairs: painting, roofing, siding, wood replacement and window glazing. Call for free estimates. Cell: (913) 5791835; phone: (913) 491-5837; e-mail: smokeycabin@hotmail.com. Member of Holy Trinity Church, Lenexa. Custom countertops - Laminates installed within 5 days. Cambria, granite, and solid surface. Competitive prices, dependable work. Call the Top Shop, Inc., at (913) 962-5058. Members of St. Joseph Parish, Shawnee. Tim the Handyman - Insured; free estimates. Carpentry: new and repair deck, doors, windows, siding, screens. Plumbing: faucet, garbage disposals, toilets. Electrical: switches, outlets, ceiling fans, light fixtures. Light landscape: fill dirt, trimming, planting, garden tilling and mulching. Serving Johnson County. Call Tim at (913) 859-0471. Woodbright - A very affordable alternative to refinishing, refacing or replacing stained cabinets and woodwork. The average kitchen only costs $500. 18 years experience. Call Woodbright at (913) 940-3020. Electrician - Free estimates; reasonable rates. JoCo and southern KC metro area. Call Pat at (913) 963-9896.

EL SOL Y LA TIERRA *Commercial & residential * Lawn renovation * Mowing * Clean-up and hauling * Dirt grading/installation * Landscape design * Free estimates Hablamos y escribimos Ingles!! Call Lupe at (816) 252-3376 Let me help you get organized! Attic, basement, garage, any room. Items sorted and boxed; areas cleaned when finished. Great references and insured. 20 years experience! To view before and after pictures, visit the Web site: www.swalms.com. Call Tillar Swalm at (913) 375-9115. Clutter Getting You Down?- Let Us Help You Get Organized! For a free consultation, contact Kevin, your professional organizer/handyman, at (913) 271-5055. Insured/ references. www.KOATindustries.com.

For Rent For rent – 1 BR, 1 BA apartment in Shawnee near Nieman Rd. and Johnson Dr. $500/month; utilities included. 10911 W. 59th Terr. For a virtual tour, visit the Web site at: www.shawnee-rentals.com. Call (913) 6497596. Cute house for rent - 4411 Francis St., Kansas City, Kan. 2 BR, 1 BA; only a five-minute walk to KU Med Center. Owned and managed by St. Agnes family. Rent is $750 per month. Call Ken Decker for details, (913) 4320820. Living at its best on a budget! - 1 BR apt., with rent based on income; all utilities paid; no voucher needed. Section 8 assistance. Great location, only 5-10 minutes from The Legends in Kansas City, Kan. Edwardsville Court Apartments Highrise, 531 S. 4th St., Edwardsville. Call (913) 441-6007. EHO. Handicap accessible.

Real Estate Commercial building for sale or lease - 8500 sq. ft. office and warehouse. West Shawnee location with great highway access. Large fenced-in storage lot. Ideal for contractor, repair facility or manufacturer. For information, call (816) 536-3059. Maintenance provided townhomes! New construction and resale properties. Peaceful, laid-back living in Basehor. $135,400 - $169,800. Low HOA dues. Call Scott at ERA Manning at (913) 269-4269. Take a virtual tour at: www.postlets.com/ res/3957640. Super ranch home - 316 W. 116th St., KCMO. Wonderful Verona Hills subdivision. Everything on one level. 3 BR, 2 BA, formal living and dining rooms, eat-in kitchen with new granite countertops, slate tile backsplash, cooktop, sink and faucet. Family room with beautiful wood floors. New carpet. Full, dry basement. Nice-sized lot. Call Cathy Schmidt, KW Realty, at (913) 322-5101 or send an e-mail to: cathyschmidt@kw.com. Overland Park - 5 BR, 3-1/2 BA family home with pool. One block from St. Thomas Aquinas High School. Huge house for a great price; must see! Call Rosemary at Real Living, (913) 661-9744. Tomahawk Creek Condominiums at Town Center Square, Leawood - Luxury living at a bargain price! 1 BR, 1 BA; cheaper than rent, plus all the amenities of condo living. $100,000; 3-1/2% down. Call Rosemary at Real Living, (913) 661-9744.

Vacation Lake of the Ozarks rental - Osage Beach, milliondollar view, fully furnished; 2 BR, 2 BA; sleeps six. No smoking, no pets. For special rates or pictures, call Steve or Sheryl Roederer at (913) 244-2022. Family fun in South Dakota - Summer special on day guide rate! Three people for the price of two from July 1 - Sept. 30. Enjoy a family or group fishing vacation in Pierre, S.D., with former KC Royals pitcher, Tom Bruno. Tom’s guide service, Major League Adventures, will provide your party with a world-class fishing experience and memories to last a lifetime. For information, call (970) 214-2891 or visit the Web site at: www.major leagueadventures.com. Summer vacation - Winter Park, Colo. 2 BR, 1 BA, sleeps 6. Fully furnished, fireplace, rec center w/pool, fishing, golf, hiking, rafting, close to nat’l park. $100/night; $600/week. Call Joe Frederick at (913) 385-5589. Vacation condo for rent - Marco Island, Fla. 2 BR, 2 BA; perfect weather. View pictures at: www.marco condoforrent.com or call (913) 544-1288.

July

Mountain cabin in Winter Park, Colo. – 2 BR, 1 BA. View of continental divide from deck. Close to points of interest and activities. $95/night. Call (913) 642-3027. For pictures, visit the Web site at: cabin. forcadeassociates. com.

Misc. Unique French and African products - Antiques, crucifixes, soap, and art. Marché Français offers products from southwestern France and from refugees in Morocco. The sale of batik wall hangings from the Ivory Coast, handcrafted in beautiful rich colors, supports a single mother who sells her art to provide for her family. Items are located in Overland Park. Shop online at: www.marchefrancaisonline.com. Donate a vehicle. Make a difference. Donate your vehicle to Catholic Charities to support those in need. Your tax-deductible donation of a vehicle helps children and families served by Catholic Charities and is an environmentally responsible way to recycle your vehicle. Cars for KC Kids is a partnership between Catholic Charities of Northeast Kansas and Catholic Charities of Kansas City St. Joseph. Call 1 (866) 430-9499 or visit the Web site at: www.cars4kckids.com. Ma’s Country Antique Mall, Basehor - Booth space available. In business for over 15 years. We buy antiques. Call (913) 724-3799.

For sale Residential lifts - Buy/sell/trade. Stair lifts, porch lifts, ceiling lifts and elevators. Recycled and new equipment. Member of St. Michael the Archangel Parish, Leawood. Call Silver Cross KC at (913) 393-2042.

Childcare Nanny/summer tutor- I’m a substitute teacher during the school year. I’m looking for full- or part-time hours watching your children or tutoring them with their homework. I have many years of experience with children! I’m certified in CPR and first aid. Call Gina at (913) 669-3448 or send an e-mail to: ginamarie30@hotmail. com. Sitter needed - For highly functioning specialneeds 20-year-old young lady. From 3 - 5 p.m.; two days per week. $25/day. She just needs safe company; capable of totally caring for herself. Call Nancy at (913) 422-3711 or (913) 522-2592. El Centro’s Academy for Children - A duallanguage (English/Spanish), all day, early education program for children 2 ½ - 5 years. Your child will develop social, emotional, language and motor skills in a safe, nurturing environment. Nationally accredited and licensed facility. Centrally located between 18th St. Expressway and I-635 in Kansas City, Kan. For information, call (913) 677-1115 or visit the Web site at: www.el centroinc.com.

Wanted to buy ***WANTED*** I buy coins, older watches, silverware, slot machines, old rifles and shotguns, stoneware crocks and jugs, old furniture from basement or attic. Call Chris at (913) 593-7507 or (913) 642-8269 Will buy firearms and related accessories - One or a whole collection. Honest evaluation and top prices paid. Contact Tom at (913) 238-2473. Member of Sacred Heart Parish, Shawnee. Antique/Vintage Costume Jewelry ***Wanted to Buy*** * Member St. Joseph Parish Renee Maderak (913) 631-7179

Roommate Looking for roommate - Looking for a female roommate. House is located one block from 43rd and Rainbow, Kansas City, Kan., within walking distance of KU Medical Center. Charming 2 BR, 1 BA on a quiet street with great neighbors. $400/mo., plus half the utilities. No smoking or pets. Call Janelle at (913) 4813751 or send an e-mail to: janelledecker@excite.com.

Entertainment DJ Irishman - Colm Delahunt is available for parties, weddings, graduations, and any other function. Playing all your favorite hits from the Village People to U2. Call (913) 548-6765 or visit the Web site at: www. djirishman.com.

5

A loss support group will meet from 3:30 - 5 p.m. on July 5 and on the first Monday of the month at the Keeler Women’s Center, 2220 Central Ave., Kansas City, Kan. Both men and women are welcome. For information or to register, call (913) 906-8990 or visit the Web site at: www.mountosb.org/kwc.

6

A 12-week series with education and support for women dealing with addictions and sexual abuse will be held from 10 a.m. - noon on Tuesdays, beginning July 6, at the Keeler Women’s Center, 2220 Central Ave., Kansas City, Kan. For information or to register, call (913) 906-8990 or visit the Web site at: www.mountosb.org/kwc.

7

“What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick,” a parenting program presented by Nancy Neilan of Children’s Mercy Hospital, will be held from 10 - 11 a.m. on July 7 at the Keeler Women’s Center, 2220 Central Ave., Kansas City, Kan. For information or to register, call (913) 906-8990 or visit the Web site at: www. mountosb.org/kwc.

7 & 14

“Couples Talk,” a two-part program for junior and senior high school girls, will be offered from 1 - 2:30 p.m. on July 7 and 14 at the Keeler Women’s Center, 2220 Central Ave., Kansas City, Kan. Learn helpful and healthy ways to communicate with your friends, your parents, your boyfriend, or anyone. For information or to register, call (913) 906-8990 or visit the Web site at: www.mountosb.org/kwc.

9 & 10

A garage sale to benefit the St. Joan of Arc Primary School in Uganda will be held from 8 a.m. - 3 p.m. on July 9 and 10 at 16340 Dearborn Dr., Stilwell. The school was started by Father Simon Peter Kyambadde, a Ugandan priest. Donations for the garage sale will be accepted from 8 a.m. - 9 p.m. on July 8. Volunteers are needed to set up and work the sale. For information or to volunteer, call (913) 681-1466 or send an e-mail to: joyce@federmail.com. All remaining donated items will be given to local charities.

10

A Kansas City metro Christian singles picnic will be held from 4 9 p.m. on July 10 at Quivira Park, 11901 Quivira, Overland Park. A $10 donation is requested. Hamburgers, hot dogs and soft drinks will be provided. Bring a side dish to share. There will be drawings, games and dancing to Zepster the DJ. For information or to RSVP, call Pam at (816) 229-2805.

11 Sacred Heart Church, Baileyville, will host its annual picnic on July 11. A roast beef and ham dinner will be served at 5 p.m. The cost is $7 for adults; $4 for children. There will be fun and games for all ages. A live auction will begin at 9 p.m. St. Joseph Church, 3rd and Van Buren, Topeka, will offer exposition of the Blessed Sacrament, Benediction and a Divine Mercy Holy Hour on July 11 at 3 p.m. Fellowship will follow. For information, call (785) 246-1338.

13 “Knowing the Signs Your Parents Need Help,” a program for fami-

lies with aging parents, will be offered at 6:30 p.m. on July 13 at The Plaza at Santa Marta, 13875 W. 115th Terr., Olathe. Refreshments will be served. Take time to learn the warning signs and what you can do to help at this free, educational seminar. For information or to RSVP, call (913) 323-7107.

15

A healing Mass, sponsored by archdiocesan charismatic prayer groups, will be held at 7:30 p.m. on July 15 at Curé of Ars Church, 9401 Mission Rd., Leawood. Father Terry Bruce, pastor of St. Elizabeth Parish in Kansas City, Mo., will preside; fellowship follows. For information call (913) 649-2026.

17

The Kansas City Catholic charismatic renewal groups of Kansas and Missouri will sponsor a praise and teaching rally from 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. on July 17 at Sanctuary of Hope Center, 2601 Ridge Ave., Kansas City, Kan. The day will include praise and worship, teaching, sharing, Mass and lunch. The cost is $25 per person (lunch included); $20 per person if you provide your own lunch. The registration deadline is July 7 for lunch orders. For information or to register, call Carol at (816) 229-7924. A memorial liturgy for deceased loved ones will be held at 8 a.m. on July 17 at Curé of Ars Church, 9401 Mission Rd., Leawood. The bereavement ministry will have its monthly meeting following Mass in the Father Burak Room. The topic will be: “This Thing Called Grief.” For information, call (913) 649-2026. “Designing a Balanced Life,” an interactive workshop to enhance your career,

relationships and spiritual path, will be offered from 9 a.m. - noon on July 17 in the Kelleher Room at St. Joseph Medical Center, I-435 and State Line Rd., Kansas City, Mo. Preregistration is required. The cost is $50. For information or to register, call John at (816) 931-9972 or send an e-mail to: john@gordonandgordon law.com.

18

St. Augustine Church, Fidelity, will host its annual picnic on July 18 in the church hall. A family-style chicken and ham dinner will be served at 4:30 p.m. The cost is $8 for adults; $4 for children 10 and under. There will be a cakewalk, bingo, a quilt raffle and more. The pro-life committee of St. Agnes Parish, Roeland Park, will host the Kansas City area premiere showing of “Blood Money, the Business of Abortion,” a documentary movie that exposes the dark side of the abortion industry, at 2 p.m. on July 18 in the Bishop Miege High School auditorium, 5041 Reinhardt Dr., Roeland Park. The cost is $10 for adults; $5 for students. All proceeds will benefit the Wyandotte Pregnancy Clinic’s mobile sonogram unit. The Knights of Columbus, Unity Council No. 709, will host an International breakfast from 8 - 11 a.m. on July 18 in the parish hall of St. John the Evangelist Church, 2910 Strong Ave., Kansas City, Kan. The cost is $7 per person; children under five eat free.

25 “Managing, Navigating and Surviving the Emotions of Grief,” a workshop sponsored by the bereavement ministry of St. Joseph Parish, Shawnee, and presented by Mary Vorsten, MA, LCPC, will be held from 1 - 3 p.m. on July

CALENDAR 13

25 in the Knights of Columbus Hall, located at Johnson Dr. and King, Shawnee. For information, call Ruth Barter at (913) 631-6528.

26-30

Catholic soccer camps for children ages 7 - 17 will be offered from July 26 - 30 at the at the Overland Park Soccer Complex. For information or to register, visit the Web site at: www.CatholicSoccerCamps.com or call (913) 549-4871.

30

Sacred Heart, Gardner, will sponsor a children’s sale to raise funds for the new parish center from 9 a.m. 7 p.m. on July 30; from 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. on July 31; and from 9 a.m. - 1 p.m. on Aug. 1. The sale will be held in the current parish center, located at 130 E. Warren St. For information or to consign or donate items, send an e-mail to Melissa McGill at: mmcgill@kc.rr.com.

Misc. Sophia Center, 751 S. 8th St., Atchison, will host a centering prayer retreat, presented by Sister Michaela Randolph, OSB, from 10 a.m. on Aug. 3 until 2 p.m. on Aug. 4. Centering prayer is a deep prayer of trust and surrender involving place, posture, word and silence. The cost is $100. Registration deadline is July 25. For information or to register, call (913) 360-6151 or visit the Web site at: www.mountosb.org (click on the Sophia Center link). Sophia Center, 751 S. 8th St., Atchison, will host a silent directed retreat from 7 p.m. on Aug. 10 to 1 p.m. on Aug. 15. Come away to the quiet of a monastic setting and experience the sacred through personal prayer and daily meetings with a spiritual director. The cost is $350; advance deposit of $50 is due with registration forms by Aug. 3. For information, or to register, call (913) 360-6151 or visit the Web site at: www. mountosb.org (click on the Sophia Center link). Do you or your loved one need support to break free from pornography, infidelity, or lust? The My House Men’s Group provides prayer and accountability for sexual integrity. Sam Meier, MA, LPC, is available for men’s groups and counseling; call him at (913) 647-0378, or send an e-mail to him at: smeier@ archkck.org. The My House Women’s Group provides hope and healing for women who are dealing with their loved one’s struggles. Contact Beth Meier at (913) 647-0379, or send an e-mail to her at: bmeier@archkck.org. El Centro, Inc., will offer classes in home improvements, including electrical, HVAC maintenance, windows and doors, siding and gutters, insulation and airflow, drywall and painting. The classes are free and open to the public. All classes are held at 650 Minnesota Ave., Kansas City, Kan. Participants are asked to preregister. For dates and times of classes, call (913) 677-0100. Calendar items must be received nine days before the publication date. E-mail submissions are preferred; send to: jennifer@theleaven.com. Submissions may be mailed to: 12615 Parallel Pkwy., Kansas City, KS 66109.


14 COMMENTARY

THE LEAVEN • july 2, 2010

THE LEAVEN • july 2, 2010

‘We will be serving in the world’

Mark my words

Catholic Press Association Award Winner 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010

Archbishop Edward O’Meara Award Winner 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2003

Scripture Readings fourteenth WEEK IN ordinary time July 4 FOURTEENTH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME Is 66: 10-14c; Ps 66: 1-7, 16, 20; Gal 6: 14-18; Lk 10: 1-12, 17-20 July 5 Anthony Mary Zaccaria, priest Hos 2: 16, 17c-18, 21-22; Ps 145: 2-9; Mt 9: 18-26 July 6 Maria Goretti, virgin, martyr Hos 8: 4-7, 11-13; Ps 115: 3-6, 7ab-8, 9-10; Mt 9: 32-38 July 7 Wednesday Hos 10: 1-3, 7-8, 12; Ps 105: 2-7; Mt 10: 1-7 July 8 Thursday Hos 11: 1-4, 8c-9; Ps 80: 2ac, 3b, 15-16; Mt 10: 7-15 July 9 Augustine Zhao Rong, priest, martyr, and his companions, martyrs Hos 14: 2-10; Ps 51: 3-4, 8-9, 12-14, 17; Mt 10: 16-23 July 10 Saturday Is 6: 1-8; Ps 93: 1-2, 5; Mt 10: 24-33 fifteenth WEEK IN ordinary time July 11 Fifteenth Sunday in ordinary time Dt 30: 10-14; Ps 69: 14, 17, 30-31, 33-34, 36, 37; Col 1: 15-20; Lk 10: 25-37 July 12 Monday Is 1: 10-17; Ps 50: 8-9, 16bc-17, 21, 23; Mt 10:34 — 11:1 July 13 Henry Is 7: 1-9; Ps 48: 2-8; Mt 11: 20-24 July 14 Blessed Kateri Tekakwitha, virgin Is 10: 5-7, 13b-16; Ps 94: 5-10, 14-15; Mt 11: 25-27 July 15 Bonaventure, bishop, doctor of the church Is 26: 7-9, 12, 16-19; Ps 102: 13-14ab, 15-21; Mt 11: 28-30 July 16 Our Lady of Mount Carmel Is 38: 1-6, 21-22, 7-8; (Ps) Is 38: 10-12, 16; Mt 12: 1-8 July 17 Saturday Mi 2: 1-5; Ps 10: 1-4, 7-8, 14; Mt 12: 14-21

M

Have a blast in the second half

y parishioners sure take good care of me. A few weeks ago, one sent me an e-mail that, in a single page, explained why we human beings are the way we are. Curious? Well, here’s the story: On the first day, God created the dog and said, “Sit all day by the door of your house and bark at anyone who comes in or walks past. For this, I will give you a life span of 20 years.” “Whoa,” snapped the dog. “Twenty years is a long time to be barking. How about only 10 years and I give you back the other 10?” And God agreed. On the second day, God created the monkey and said, “Entertain people, do tricks, and make them laugh. For this, I will give you a 20-year life span.” Raising his hands, the monkey cheeped, “Did you say monkey tricks for 20 years? That’s a pretty long time to perform. How about if I give you back 10 like the dog did?” And God agreed. On the third day, God created the cow and said, “You must go into the field with the farmer all day long and suffer under the blistering sun, have calves and give milk to support the farmer’s family. For this, I will give you a life span of 60 years.” The cow “mooved” to object: “Wow, that’s kind of a tough life you want me to live for 60 years! How about just 20 and I give you back the other 40?” And God agreed. On the fourth day, God created human beings and said, “Eat, sleep, play, marry and enjoy your life. For this, I’ll

give you 20 years!” “Pardon me,” whined the man and woman. “Only 20 years? Could you possibly give us our 20, the 40 the cow gave back, the 10 the monkey returned, and the 10 the dog didn’t want? That makes 80. OK?” “OK,” said God, “you asked for it.” So that is why for our first 20 years we eat, sleep, play and enjoy ourselves. For the next 40 years, we slave in the sun to support our families. For the next 10 years, we do monkey tricks to entertain the grandchildren. And for the last 10 years, we sit on the front porch and bark at everyone. (This version was attributed to the prolific writer, “Anonymous.”) As much as I hate to admit it, there’s a lot of truth in that silly little story. It really does explain things. We’re now at the midpoint of 2010. Are you ready to do some thinking and evaluating? Gather several pieces of paper, grab a pen, fix yourself a refreshing drink, find a comfortable chair, and . . . prepare to ponder. By the way, make sure that you have with you your list of new year’s resolutions and the list of fun activities to do during the summer months. (Now, you did take my advice in previous columns and actually write out these lists, right? Right?) How well are you doing with those items? If you’ve not adopted your resolutions, why not? What are some obstacles that you’ve encountered that you didn’t anticipate? If your goals are still valid and valuable, how can you get around

those roadblocks in the second half of the year? For those resolutions that aren’t attractive now, what new ones can you come up with to still make this year a time of growth? And how about that list of fun summer activities? Have you done any of them yet? With the Fourth of July weekend here, summer is rapidly passing by. Peek at that list again and double up on the fun stuff, if necessary, to make sure that you get it all in. A few weeks ago, I went over in the late evening to sit by the large fountain outside the Legends 14 Theatres at Village West in Kansas City, Kan. I let those dancing waters occupy my attention. It was incredibly relaxing. Often we are so absorbed in chatting on the phone, texting or just hurrying in general, that we fail to notice all the life around us. When do we actually take the time to feel a gentle breeze on our face, listen to the playful yelps of kids having fun, breathe in a lungful of refreshing fresh air, savor a juicy slice of watermelon or watch the unpredictable fluttering of lightning bugs? These are God’s simple gifts that surround us in these summer days. Do we ever take the time to notice and appreciate them? Going back to that opening story, I’d say that most of us have the “toiling constantly” and the “relentless barking” down pat. In fact, we probably go way over the allotted time for those activities. Maybe in these dog days of summer, we need to relearn the gifts of play, sleep and enjoyment. And, as the monkey would advise, don’t forget to throw in a healthy dose of silliness and laughter. And if you find yourself exceeding the allotted number of years for these activities, congratulations! I’m sure that God the Creator won’t mind at all.

the gospel truth

Hospitality shows the disciples message has been accepted

W

hen traveling abroad, it is always good to be able to greet people according to local custom, even if it is not possible to master the entire language.

absence of conflict. It includes wellbeing, the fullness of life. It dovetails It is easy to learn a few words, neatly with the message that the diswhether it is “bonjour,” “ciao,” “guten ciples wish to bring to each household tag,” “buenos días.” It makes a big difthat they visit. The peace that they ference on how people receive you. offer is the peace of God, When Jesus sends the 72 which comes from believing disciples off on a mission FOURTEENTH SUNDAY the words of Christ. to evangelize in Sunday’s IN ORDINARY TIME It may appear strange Gospel reading — Lk 10:1Lk 10: 1-12, 17-20 that, while the Gospel 12, 17-20 — he instructs reading provides detailed them very specifically on instructions on how the how to greet the people they encoundisciples should greet the households ter. He advises a greeting which to our they enter, it warns them, on the ears carries a great deal of theological other hand, against greeting people baggage: “Peace to this household.” It on the road: “Greet no one along the echoes the greeting of the risen Christ way.” on Easter. It reminds us of the sign of At first glance, this may look like peace which we exchange at Mass. a contradiction, or even a lapse into To be sure, the word “peace” conunfriendliness. The route that the tinues as the standard greeting in the disciples are traveling will take them Mideast, in an area of the world too through Samaria — hostile territory. often lacking in that precious item. That in itself could explain this cau“Peace” means more than merely the

tion. Another explanation suggests that unnecessary chitchat along the way would delay the disciples on the journey. The prohibition against stopping to greet people on the way reflects the urgency of their mission. The disciples can expect room and board from those whom they visit: “Stay in the same house and eat and drink what is offered to you.” At the same time, the hospitality given to the disciples means more than merely fulfilling the requirements of etiquette. The hospitality shown to the disciples also reflects how their message has been accepted. As the town receives the disciples, in the same manner it receives the Gospel. And if the town rejects the disciples, it also rejects the Gospel. When that happens, the disciples are to shake the dust off their feet as they leave the town. In either case, though, the disciples are still to proclaim the coming of the kingdom: “The kingdom of God is at hand.” Spreading the Gospel is paramount. Peace be with you. Father Mike Stubbs is pastor of St. Francis de Sales Parish in Lansing and has a degree in Scripture from Harvard University.

Continued from page 4 serve at a parish for a while and then be transferred — just like pastors — to another parish within a reasonable driving distance. This will have little to no impact on their family life or employment. In rural areas, on the other hand, a permanent deacon might serve in a rural parish for one weekend a month, perhaps to do some administrative work or do sacramental preparation, and thus lighten the pastor’s workload. “We [deacon candidates] each had a 30-minute private conversation with the archbishop, and he talked with us about what kind of assignments we’d like,” said Geary. “So, the archbishop is very aware of our needs as family men trying to do the best we can to [integrate] our lives and ministry as a deacon,” he continued. “He’s very understanding and knowledgeable about how important the family aspect is for the deacon.” The archbishop has made it very clear that it’s not his intention to uproot families to reassign permanent deacons, said Stukel. “He has asked us many times, ‘What is your desire?’ and [told us] that he would accommodate it the best he could,” said Stukel. Their service to the poor will take them in a lot of directions — literally and metaphorically — that they never anticipated, said Stukel. “That’s what the diaconate was designed for,” he said. “We will be serving in the world.”

“At the parish, [a deacon] should be in charge of some social and service programs a parish operates. He represents those poor who assistance is given to, and he brings their hopes, dreams, wants, needs and desires prayerfully to the Mass.”

Msgr. Gary Applegate One of the challenges that awaits them will be educating laypersons and pastors about what is the role of the permanent deacon. Some people, when they explain that they aren’t and will never be priests, simply say, “Oh.” Sometimes, they want to know more. “It will just take time,” said Stukel. “Our actions and our presence will, hopefully, be the best educational tool.” So far, the permanent deacon candidates have gotten tremendous support from pastors and parishioners alike. Often, they will be told that others are praying for them. This is what the deacons want. “I’d like to ask the people of the archdiocese to continue to pray for us as a group still in formation and ask the Holy Spirit to guide us in our decisions and ministry as we near ordination,” said Geary.

local news 15 Brother Martin Burkhard, OSB

A profile of the permanent diaconate • Deacons currently minister in all but one diocese in the United States. There are approximately 17,000 permanent deacons in the United States, of whom more than 16,000 are active. • 92 percent of permanent deacons are married, four percent are widowed, and two percent have never been married. (Permanent deacons may be married, but in most circumstances are not allowed to remarry after the death of their spouse.) • More than six in 10 permanent deacons are at least 60 years old. About 81 percent of active deacons are non-Hispanic whites, and more than onequarter of active deacons (28 percent) have graduate degrees. • Fever than one in five (18 percent) of permanent deacons are financially compensated for their ministry. (Source: “A Portrait of the Permanent Diaconate 2010,” a study commissioned by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Secretariat of Clergy and Consecrated Life and Vocations, conducted by the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate (CARA) at Georgetown University)

atchison — Brother Martin Burkhard, OSB, 94, the oldest monk of St. Benedict’s Abbey here, died June 20, after suffering a series of heart attacks. He was born May 7, 1916, in Anaheim, Calif., the son of John and Clara Depweg Burkhard. Brother Martin attended Anaheim Union High School in the early 1930s. He first tried the monastic life with the Trappist monks in Pecos, N.M., and in 1949 he came to St. Benedict’s Abbey as a claustural oblate. During his early years, he worked in maintenance around the abbey and college grounds. In 1970-1971 he worked in the St. Benedict’s College offices. In 1973, Brother Martin decided to become a vowed member of the abbey community and entered the novitiate. He professed his vows as a monk on July 11, 1974. Following novitiate, Brother Martin worked in the art department at Maur Hill until 1978. From 1978-1989 he was the prefect of junior class students in their dorm. After retiring from Maur Hill, Brother Martin helped around the abbey in various roles. In recent years he made a contribution to community life by placing works of art that highlighted the liturgical season and feasts of the day in the abbey refectory and the main hallway. He recently made a wood and ceramic cross that is placed in the abbey’s north courtyard. He also volunteered at the Sacred Heart Thrift Store in Atchison.

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16 LOCAL NEWS

THE LEAVEN • July 2, 2010

Good Gold as

Couples across the Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas joined Archbishop Joseph F. Naumann on June 27 at the Cathedral of St. Peter to celebrate 50 years of marriage Photos by Susan McSpadden

Gifted

John and Kathy Bins, members of Church of the Ascension in Overland Park, were greeted by Archbishop Joseph F. Naumann and presented with a gift during the golden wedding anniversary Mass on June 27.

Renewal

Martha and Paul Bryant (foreground), members of St. Ann Parish in Prairie Village, and Audrey and Stephen Savner, members of Holy Angels Parish, Basehor, renewed their vows during the Mass at the cathedral.

Join together

James and Sandra Vader, members of Queen of the Holy Rosary Parish in Overland Park, joined nearly 100 other couples from the archdiocese in celebrating their 50th wedding anniversary at the Cathedral of St. Peter in Kansas City, Kan.

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St. Augustine Parish, Fidelity,

is celebrating its 150th anniversary on Aug. 29, 2010, with a 9 a.m. Mass followed by a dinner. All are invited to attend by RSVP ONLY by July 14, by contacting Lois Bindel at (785) 467-3817 or bindelseed@carsoncomm.com St. Augustine history books can be purchased for $35 by order only.

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Read The Leaven online at www.theleaven.com


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