FATIMA, Portugal — Sixty-four pilgrims from the Diocese of Charlotte and other dioceses around the country traveled to Portugal on the annual Te Deum Foundation Peace Pilgrimage. This year marks the 100th anniversary of the apparitions of Our Lady of Fatima to the three shepherd children.
Two of the children, Jacinta and Francisco Marto, were canonized May 13 by Pope Francis during the centennial year celebrations. Their cousin Lucía became a Carmelite nun and lived to be 97. She died in 2005.
Experience the pilgrimage on our live blog.
The Te Deum Foundation brought 17 seminarians on the pilgrimage this year. The nonprofit organization supports seminarians in their spiritual and temporal needs, and brings seminarians to the Shrine of Our Lady of Fatima every summer so the men can develop or deepen their devotion to Mary as part of their preparation for the priesthood.
The seminarians and six priests participated in the liturgical events at the shrine during the pilgrimage July 19-Aug. 1. They processed in the evening rosary processions and the Eucharistic processions as well. The priests on the pilgrimage had the opportunity to concelebrate Mass at the Chapel of the Apparitions at the Shrine of Our Lady of Fatima, as well as both Sunday Masses celebrated in the square in front of the Basilica of Our Lady of the Rosary.
Pilgrims toured the little village of Aljustrel where the shepherd children lived. They also traveled by motorcoach to the cities of Coimbra, Balasar, Braga, Porto, Tomar, Santarem and Lisbon.
Newly ordained Father Christian Cook, parochial vicar of Our Lady of Grace Church in Greensboro, was the main celebrant at the Church of the Clergy in Porto. He said that this brought home the fact that clergy, he and all priests, are under the Blessed Virgin Mary’s protection.
“When a priest tries to grow in holiness, the devil intensifies his attacks,” Father Cook said. “So to be celebrating Mass in the Chapel of the Clergy, to let that idea of her protection of me as a priest come into focus during that Mass, it gives me confidence that I am wrapped in her mantle as a priest, as an ‘alter Christus.’”
He remarked that he observed many people walking into the church while Mass was going on, taking pictures and looking around as if they were touring a museum.
“I glanced up a few times and I would see in the faces of the visitors confusion, curiosity … and that brought into focus that so much of the world has lost sight of Mass and of the Eucharist. It was almost to where they were looking at us as part of the museum exhibition.
“That reminded me of how important my brand new priesthood is, that men are still coming to the priesthood, because the world needs that example more than it ever has.”
— SueAnn Howell. Senior reporter
More online
At www.fatimapeacepilgrimage.tumblr.com: See lots more photos and video highlights from the 2017 Te Deum Fatima Peace Pilgrimage
CHARLOTTE — Priests of the Diocese of Charlotte attended the annual Priests’ Convocation Aug. 16-18 at the Crowne Plaza-Charlotte Executive Park. The three-day event featured a presentation by Father Stephen Dudek of the Diocese of Grand Rapids, Mich., entitled, “Missionary Discipleship: The Art and Spirituality of Pastoring in a Culturally Diverse Diocese.”
Father Dudek has served as a pastor in culturally diverse parishes for more than 30 years. Over the years he has ministered to English-, Spanish- and Vietnamese-speaking parishioners.
Father Dudek completed his theological training in Denver, Colo., earned his licentiate degree in Mexico City and did his doctorate work in Chicago, Ill. He earned his doctoral reflection on the topic he discussed.
Father Dudek is pastor of Holy Name of Jesus Parish in Wyoming, Colo., and director of the Grand Rapids diocese’s Society for the Propagation of the Faith office, the largest Catholic organization for promoting awareness and generating and distributing funds for the Church’s missions around the world.
At the convocation, Father Dudek covered topics such as: how to develop intercultural competency; the joys and challenges of pastoring a diverse parish; ministry in a diverse Catholic Church; understanding culture; understanding the different cultural groups that make up the U.S.; development stages that culturally diverse parishes go through; what it means to be interculturally sensitive; what it means to respond to the call to be missionary disciples in the culturally diverse U.S.; and what it means to be missionaries as diocesan priests.
Father Pat Hoare, the new pastor of St. Matthew Church in south Charlotte, helps to organize the annual priests’ convocation.
“The convocation serves a two-fold purpose,” Father Hoare said. “Our priests are given the opportunity to learn about, and discuss together, a topic or an issue that is important to our priestly ministry. Simply, it helps us to be better priests for all those we serve.
“Secondly, it is a time that we gather from our many parishes to share a time of fraternity, which is rare due to our busy calendars and the geographic expanse of our diocese. And this year, we have the added joy of using our time together to celebrate our priests celebrating special anniversaries or retirement, together with the bishop.”
Bishop Jugis celebrated Mass Aug. 17 at St. Patrick Cathedral for this year’s priest jubilarians and recently retired priests.
Said Father Dudek, “I want to support them on their spiritual journey in ministry and learn from them as well. We have a lot to learn from each other when it comes to this important ministry of ours. They’ll bring the richness of their own experience as pastors and as priests in the context of ministry.
“The goal is to learn from each other and to grow spiritually as we pastor God’s holy people.”
— SueAnn Howell, Senior reporter