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Catholic News Herald

Serving Christ and Connecting Catholics in Western North Carolina

033018 online radioFOREST CITY — There’s a new online Catholic radio station based in the Diocese of Charlotte and broadcasting in two languages.

The station www.chirhoradio.org streams local and national Catholic radio in English and Spanish, said Jim Brooks, parishioner of Immaculate Conception Church in Forest City and the station’s community programmer. The station launched in December, and it went live in Spanish earlier this month.

Born from the identified need for Catholic radio in the diocese, the station strives to educate, evangelize and provide entertainment, Brooks said.

The online radio station is a separate initiative from the Catholic Carolina Radio Network, which is in the process of developing a string of broadcast radio stations along the Interstate 85 corridor through the diocese.

After evaluating the costs involved with owning and broadcasting an over-the-air radio station, Brooks said he turned instead to streaming.

The online station is an affiliate of Light House Catholic Media and Ave Maria Radio. On Sundays, the station airs the “Swinging, Singing Deacon” with Deacon Andy Cilone of Immaculate Conception Church.

Sunday is the station’s most popular day, with up to 500 listeners an hour, Brook said. Currently, 80 percent of the audience is outside the diocese.

“Our goal is to celebrate and promote the faith. Our editorial guidelines is real simple: ‘Would Bishop (Fulton) Sheen play this?’ If it doesn’t fall under that category, it doesn’t get aired. It’s worked very, very well so far,” Brooks said.

Brooks said he would like to add full Latin Masses and homeschooling programs.

“We’re trying to find our footing on what programming works and what doesn’t,” he said. “It’s still trial and error. Audience feedback helps to decide what to run and when.”

The station is run by volunteers and funded by online subscriptions and advertising.

Brooks said he hopes as the station grows, it will be able to add additional language stations such as Korean and Vietnamese.

— Kimberly Bender, Online reporter

Listen online

At www.chirhoradio.org  : Stream the station or download the app to stream it on your mobile device. You can also “subscribe” by donating $7 to help cover the station’s costs. For details, contact Jim Brooks at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

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‘How blessed we are to be in the presence of this Blessed Sacrament’

BELMONT — Rain and gray skies could not dampen the spirits of more than 1,100 young people, seminarians, religious and chaperones who attended the 14th annual Bishop’s Youth Pilgrimage April 7 at Belmont Abbey College.

The Bishop’s Youth Pilgrimage – a component of the annual Eucharistic Congress – shares the annual Eucharistic Congress theme which for 2018 is based on the words of the Gospel of John 6:51: “I am the Living Bread.” This verse is a part of the discourse on the bread of life in which Christ repeatedly explains to His followers that they must eat His Body and drink His Blood to have eternal life.

The youth pilgrimage, held each spring, is designed to provide young people of the Diocese of Charlotte with a day of reflection, prayer, formation, vocation awareness and fellowship.

Benedictine Abbot Placid Solari of Belmont Abbey welcomed the youth and visitors as the day’s events began and served as main celebrant at Mass. Father Benjamin Roberts, pastor of Our Lady of Lourdes Church in Monroe, brought 13 youth from his parish and concelebrated the Mass. They were assisted by Deacon Ruben Tamayo, youth minister at St. Vincent de Paul Church in Charlotte.

During his homily, Abbot Placid told the youth, “If it (the faith) is going to be passed on for however many thousands of years until the Lord comes again, it is because of you. (To) Jesus’ words today, ‘Go out into the world and proclaim the Good News’ – you’ll say ‘yes.’

“You’ll do it by what you say. What you say has to be backed up by the way you live, by the way you treat others, by the way that you give witness to the Truth.”

Confession, midday prayer led by Benedictine Brother Edward Mancuso, talks, Eucharistic Adoration and a Eucharistic Procession inside the Wheeler Center were also highlights of the annual pilgrimage.

In his address to the youth during the period of Adoration, Bishop Peter Jugis touched on the theme of this year’s Eucharistic Congress and the youth pilgrimage.

“How blessed we are to be in the presence of this Blessed Sacrament which He left for us as the perpetual continuation of the gift of Himself at the Last Supper, and the gift of Himself in His passion, His death and His resurrection – the gift of Himself for our salvation,” Bishop Jugis said.

“He wanted to make sure that was perpetually remembered and celebrated, so He left His living presence with us in the Holy Eucharist.”

Bishop Jugis recalled that Jesus came, stood amid His apostles and said, “Peace be with you.” He reminded those gathered that in His passion, death and resurrection, Jesus conquered sin.

“If He conquers death, then He also conquers what causes death, which is sin. (Jesus is) Conqueror, victor over death and sin; in other words, giving us freedom, the freedom of the children of God to live in His grace.

“It’s beautiful what the Lord does for us during this whole Easter season."

"The Lord is the greatest friend that any of us can have. He is always faithful, always wise, and He is always there for you." – Bishop Peter Jugis

Rainy weather prevented an outdoor Eucharistic Procession on the grounds of Belmont Abbey College, but Bishop Jugis encouraged the young people to come to the Eucharistic Congress to participate in that outdoor procession through the streets of Charlotte Sept. 8.

“That Eucharistic Procession is another sign of the Church’s love for the Eucharist,” he said. “It is really inspiring to see tens of thousands of people walking peacefully, prayerfully through the streets of Charlotte in Adoration of Jesus.

“It really imitates what the people of God do in their procession throughout human history – the people of God on a journey to our promised land. That procession imitates the people of God walking with Jesus, He as our Good Shepherd, leading us to the Promised Land.”

Bishop Jugis spoke to the youth about the gifts that Our Lord gives to His people. He enumerated on the gift of peace, given by Jesus, and the gift of charity, praying for others while in Adoration.

“The Eucharist is a living gift of Jesus giving His life to you in love,” he said.

The Eucharist is living bread, he explained. “That is not said of any other bread on the face of the earth. Living bread? You can’t say that of any bread that you buy from the grocery store.”

“It (the Eucharist) is alive. It’s a life that never dies because Jesus’ life is forever. When you see the Living Bread, even in Adoration when we receive the Living Bread spiritually, we are receiving the Living Bread and we are receiving eternal life. We are on the way to heaven with Him,” he said.

Bishop Jugis also spoke of the gift of friendship with Christ, which all of us can cultivate by spending time in the presence of the Eucharist.

“The Lord is the greatest friend that any of us can have,” he said. “He is always faithful, always wise, and He is always there for you.”

He paraphrased: “(Jesus) says, ‘Come to me all of you who labor or who are heavily burdened, and I will refresh you. Take my yoke upon your shoulders and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble of heart and your soul will find rest. My yoke is easy and my burden is light.’

“He is here to listen and to respond.”

Stephanie Lugo, a Belmont Abbey College senior, is a Hintemeyer Scholar who served as the college event organizer and rallied more than 85 Belmont Abbey students to host the youth pilgrimage on campus.

“Even as a high school participant attending the pilgrimage, I hoped to eventually help run the event as a student at Belmont Abbey. The event has been very meaningful to me in my life because of its central focus on the Eucharist, and I want to share this opportunity to encounter Christ with others.

“My hope is that students who attend the pilgrimage from across the diocese (today) will benefit from an afternoon which invites them to listen attentively to the voice of Christ and experience His deeply personal love for each of us individually.”

A group of 17 young people and chaperones from St. Thomas Aquinas Church in Charlotte came with Dominican Sisters Zeny Mofada and Edeva Jover. “It’s good for our youth to have an encounter with Bishop Jugis himself,” Sister Zeny said. “Our youth who are preparing for confirmation, we ask them to write a letter to the bishop. I was reflecting that being here, they will realize the value of the bishop. That sacrament is very important. Being with the bishop and being guided properly to the power of the Catholic faith, (the Eucharist) is important.”

Bernard Malloy, a junior at Christ the King High School in Huntersville, attended the youth pilgrimage for the sixth time. “I really enjoy the experience with Adoration, having reflection time with the priests. It’s a blast being with everyone,” he said.

Second-timer Nicole Sanchez, a ninth-grader from St. Vincent de Paul Church in Charlotte, added, “It’s nice to come here, to separate from most of the world. I like to learn more about my faith. It enlightens you, makes you feel better, gives you peace about your faith.”

— SueAnn Howell, senior reporter

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