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Entries Tagged as 'Justice & Service'

Help out at Urban Camp!

Catholic Social Teaching , Evangilization , Family , Justice & Service , Mission , Prison Ministry No Comments »

 

Hey Everyone,

Dianne Anderson is looking for more volunteers to do prison ministry at Urban Camp. She's currently doing visits for our church on the 2nd and 4th Tuesdays of the month. 

We would need to give her full name and birth dates to get clearance, and it would be in teams of minimum 2 with Dianne until we felt comfortable to do it ourselves for an hour or 2. 

If we can get a handful more young adults we would be every couple months or so to go, and its not you alone in a cell, but praying as a group the rosary, reading scripture, leading alpha or a faith study - basically whatever you feel comfortable doing. Men and women welcome to help!

Urban Camp is men almost ready to re-enter community, some are even already working. They are good men who made mistakes, and are eager to grow in their faith. Our Lord asked us to visit the emprisoned, please consider helping out in this powerful ministry. Dianne and those involved in Restorative Justice are witnessing Christ in amazing ways, but Christ asked us all to show mercy and compassion to all.

Contact Dianne Anderson below if you're interested!

restorativeministry@saskatoonrcdiocese.com
Ph: (306) 659-584

Peace

 

-Colm Leyne


 

The Great ADVENTure

Advent , Chalice Revolution , Christmas , Faith , Family , Justice & Service , Online Ministry , Parents , Prayer , Resource , Social Media , Video , Youth Ministry No Comments »

Sometimes in life we get all caught up with presents, baking, parties, and decorating we forget what we're preparing to celebrate. So as a litle help to reflect, here's some neat videos to get your back to the reason for the season. It is very easy and with good intentions to get swept up and feel overwhelmed this season. I encourage you all as families to take a moment each day to be still and know the peace, hope, love and joy found in Christ, Emmanuel- God with us.

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There's gonna be a revolution...

Chalice Revolution , Faith , Family , High School , Justice & Service , Mission , Momentum , News , Steps in Faith , Youth Ministry No Comments »

Ok, I do love that Beatle's song... but that's not quite the revolution I'm talking about. We're talking about the Chalice Revolution kicking off this winter in the hopes of raising money to buy some goats and other practical stuff for families in need in developing countries.

For a refresher read this.

Some of you may just be getting on board, some of you may be hitting a slump or need some inspiration. So below is a list of a lot of the great ideas our young people came up with at Inception on Oct. 22nd. Be inspired; but then don't let it become expired - go do something! Make a difference in someone's life this Christmas. Get a little less, give a little more.

A wii game or a goat for a family in need? A family night at the movies, or a goat to provide income to a family sruggling to survive. We are so blessed and should be grateful for all that the Lord has given us. Show that gratefulness, by sharing the gifts and blessings you have received.

Let's be the revolution of love this world needs. Here's some ideas how to do it:

-Bakes sales at church and school

-Dance

-Bottle Drive

-School/Church Presentations - also to Knights of Columbus, CWL, Parish council, Finance etc.

-Jelly Bean Guess

-Games Night

-Help neighbours do little chores for money

-Car wash

-Penny race

-Annoucement after mass

-Garage sale

-Sell hot chocolate at skating rink

-Girls club connection

-Create personal goat to donate

-Talent Show

-Share idea door to door, offer to rake leaves (now shovel I guess!)

-Appeal to family and friends over phone, letters, email

-Ask principal to announce at school on intercom annoucements

-Chores at home for some money.

-Walk dogs

-Help with Pancake breakfast, profits go to Chalice Revolution?

-Advertizing campaign explaining what, and how to donate directly

-% of Babysitting money.

-Appeal to your friends to pitch in  - buy a goat as a crew!

-Ask family and friends to give money to it instead of one more christmas gift

-Youth speak after masses

-Youth group do service or social night for parish to raise money

-Get school justice groups involved

-Ask CE classroom to try to buy a couple goats as a class.

-Work with challenge/conquest groups.

-Speak to mother's groups, men's groups to see if their families want to participate.

-Give portion of work money or allowance to goat fund.

 

These and many more are just the beginning of small ways you can make a difference!

 

 

Finding God in the Ghetto

Justice & Service , Mission , News , Theology on Tap , Vocation , Young Adult No Comments »

By Anne-Marie Hughes

“It helps, now and then, to step back and take a long view.”  

Theology on Tap speaker Brittney White chose to spiritually open her presentation in Saskatoon Oct. 19 with that opening line from martyred Archbishop Oscar Romero’s reflection “Creating the Church of Tomorrow.” 

“Taking the long view back” is how White led participants through her life, demonstrating how the ordinary brought extraordinary moments of grace and blessings in her ministry, both in Edmonton’s inner city neighbourhood and in the poverty of Guatemala.

“I am just a very ordinary person in ministry who has been blessed extraordinarily,” says White who in addition to coordinating projects in Guatemala and Edmonton’s core, also works counseling high-risk youth.

In her talk “Extraordinarily Ordinary: Finding Christ in the Ghetto,” White recounted turning points on her life journey. Being inspired to work with youth in crisis, getting a theology degree, seeing the Pope in Germany and undertaking ministry in a foreign country did not come out of inspired moments but often from her own brokenness, she described. 

“I had a pretty average life as a kid growing up in St. Albert. My dad was a police officer and I had a stay-at-home mom. But I found myself in trouble as a teen. I got into some bad stuff,” said White. “But it was my experience in that life that brought me into ministry. Ministry is born of struggle. Paul was blinded, Mary Magdalene had shame she needed to feel, Martin Luther King had Rosa Parks on the bus and Jesus sacrificed himself for our brokenness. We gather because we are broken and our brokenness is a gift.”

“I got myself into a lot of trouble, but in the end it motivated me to get into ministry,” recounted White. This early experience also taught White the importance of one person “stepping out of the circle” and taking the time to reach out and to confront teens who are getting into trouble. 

“In Grade 11 I had a volleyball coach who gave me a slap on the wrist,”' recalled White, who was heavily involved in the sport at the time. “She told me ‘if you don't quit the stuff your into, you are off the team.’ She stepped out of the circle.”

A change in attitude led White to attend university and to study psychology, as well as to her search for something deeper. “I found the theories didn't make sense to me. The one consistent thing I found in my life was God, so I incorporated that into my work, and of course my marks went down.” 

She fell into theology quite by accident. “ I heard from a friend on the bus that Christian theology courses at St. Joe’s were an easy way to boost our GPA so I went, and met the most amazing woman professor. This was a class at the U of A and she knew everybody's name. We learned a lot about each other and what it's really all about: living the gospel faith,” said White. “I could see Christ in her and learned what it is to witness. The world could use less teachers and more witnesses.”

White's search for a higher average eventually lead to her pursuing her masters of divinity from Newman College which she hopes to complete by June 2012. Sometimes extraordinary things come out of ordinary experiences: like a suggestion on a bus.

On another bus, a friend casually suggested another experience that turned out to be life-changing. “She asked me ‘do you want to go to Germany to see the Pope?’” recounted White. “I said yes, because I thought it would be a fun trip.” A wrong turn looking for lunch at World Youth Day and the ordinary pilgrim found herself in the midst of the extraordinary experience of being 40 feet from Pope Benedict XVI in a secure area, using her newly-acquired university German to listen to him speak.

White’s missionary service in Guatemala could have easily been missed, through the toss of a letter into the recycling box. “I was working in youth ministry for someone's maternity leave when through my priest a letter came from the Oblates in Guatemala.  When I first got it I thought it was something we could never do, and I was just going to recycle it.  Then my priest and I talked and prayed about it and made it happen. I could have recycled it but we decided to respond to it."

A few months later, White found herself in a van with eight others in Guatemala, not knowing exactly what they were going to do there, but trusting in God. “It was kind of crazy looking back on it. But I really learned how to pray down there.”

Since that trip. many more volunteers from the same Edmonton parish have gone down to work with an orphanage for children with HIV. Mutual exchanges have meant volunteers from Canada go to Guatemala and youth from that country come back to Edmonton. 

“Approximately 6 million Canadians have been on missions. Many go once and they don't go back. In our missions we have volunteers who have one back a few times.” 

The mission effort has become a big source of support for the small community in Guatemala. One program helps 2,000 kids attend school. Recently a volunteer in the United States secured a deal with a major retailer for 40,000 pounds of food to be shipped there every month. “That volunteer is just 21 years old,” noted White.

The Guatemala experience often impacts parishioners when they come back to North America. “They realize the distractions that keep people from each other and the busy-ness that’s used against us. We take so much for granted.”

She described how one young man named Santos who came to Canada from Guatemala was surprised by the lack of joy during Mass here and the rush to leave when the celebration was over.    When Santos was very quiet after mass White asked him if everything was okay and Santos responded to her saying,“I used to get so mad when Mother Teresa said being poor in spirit was worse than physical poverty. Now I wouldn't give up my family and poverty for anything you have here.” 

After many trips, Guatemala has become a big part of White's life. “On one trip I was in a truck driven by a priest when all these strangers just piled in with us for a ride and we had to stop to let all these chickens cross the road. It was crazy. I just started to laugh with joy and couldn't stop. I just realized that six years ago I would never have dreamed I would be doing this.”

Held regularly throughout the year at a Lydia’s on Broadway pub in Saskatoon, Theology on Tap is offered to young adults ages 19 to 35 years. Theology on Tap is coordinated by the youth ministry offices of the Ukrainian Catholic Eparchy and the Roman Catholic Diocese of Saskatoon, and the St. Thomas More College campus ministry team.

 

 

Speaker Brittney White (front row, third from the right) of Edmonton joined participants at Theology on Tap Oct. 19 in Saskatoon, speaking about how ordinary moments in her life have led to extraordinary experiences in faith and ministry.


 

 

 

Inception Point: The Chalice Revolution!

Chalice Revolution , Faith , High School , Justice & Service , Mission , Momentum , Prayer , Steps in Faith , Young Adult , Youth Ministry No Comments »

Last night the Youth Ministry Office of the Diocese of Saskatoon hosted an event called Inception. There we challenged young people to start living and working for Christ everyday - to take up the challenge of what it means to be the hands and feet of Christ. In the spirit of Blessed John Paul II, to be not afraid to be change agents in the world through simple acts of love! 

So the Chalice Revolution was born. 

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