CHARLOTTE — In a silent procession to begin the Good Friday liturgy, Bishop Jugis entered St. Patrick Cathedral and lay prostrate before the sanctuary steps, humbling himself before God and in the presence of the faithful. This annual service held at 3 p.m., the hour Jesus Christ died on the cross, recalled the sacrifice of God’s only begotten Son for the salvation of souls.
The liturgy began with the reading of the Passion narrated by transitional Deacon Christopher Bond, with Deacon Brian McNulty as the voice, Bishop Jugis as Jesus and the congregation responding as the crowd. They took those gathered on the tortuous journey Christ suffered from the Garden of Gethsemane through His crucifixion on Golgotha.
“Have you ever taken the time to take a good look at the crucifix that you have in your home? Especially if you are having a particularly difficult time or a rough day, to find strength or courage just by your union with the Lord crucified?” Bishop Jugis asked during his homily.
“The word ‘behold’ appears several times today in this celebration of the Passion of the Lord,” he noted. “The invitation to behold, or to take a good look at – just as you would take a good look at the crucifix. That word behold used in today’s liturgy receives many different responses from the various audiences to which it is addressed.”
Bishop Jugis elaborated by pointing out that Pontius Pilate, when he brings Jesus out and displays Him on the judge’s bench, says to the mob, “Behold your king.” And the crowd responds, “Take Him away, crucify Him!”
“Behold Him, look at Him, your king,” Pilate says. And the crowd answers back, “No!”
Jesus uses the same word “behold” later on, as He hangs on the cross. As He tells His disciple to “behold” his mother, the disciple responds: Yes! “Seeing His mother and His disciple there whom He loved, He says to His mother, ‘Woman, behold your son.’ And then to the disciple, ‘Behold, your mother.’ And from that hour the disciple took her into his home.”
In today’s secularized world, Bishop Jugis noted, society gives the same negative response when Christians say, “Behold your King. Behold Jesus. Behold His teachings and His Church’s teachings.”
“Just as in Pilate’s time, the mob responds, ‘Take Him away and crucify Him,’” Bishop Jugis said.
In contrast, when a believer is asked to “behold,” the response is very different, he continued.
“In this liturgy today, we are asked three times to behold: ‘Behold the Cross. Behold the wood of the Cross on which hung the Salvation of the World,’ ” Bishop Jugis said. “Later on, at Communion time, we will be asked: Now, behold the Lamb of God who is really present! and we respond with humility and love."
— SueAnn Howell, senior reporter
MIDLAND — Nearly 500 young people and adults from 21 parishes attended the Diocese of Charlotte’s annual Catholic Camporee March 31-April 2 at Belk Scout Camp.
At this year’s Camporee, a record number of five Boy Scouts – Nicolas Martinez, Christopher Day, Zeke Adams, Franklin Burgess and Nathan Russell – received the Pillars of Faith Award for having earned all four Catholic religious emblems (the Light of Christ, Parvuli Dei, Ad Altare Dei and the Pope Pius XII). All five are members of Troop 958 from St. Leo the Great Church in Winston-Salem.
— Patricia L. Guilfoyle | Catholic News Herald
BELMONT — House of Mercy, a nonprofit residence serving low-income persons living with AIDS, held its 24th Annual Walk for AIDS April 22. Approximately 300 people participated in the walk on a beautiful spring morning to raise AIDS awareness and funds to benefit House of Mercy.
Stan Patterson, House of Mercy’s president and CEO, welcomed participants and introduced guest speakers Maggie Baucom, House of Mercy’s board chair, and Sister of Mercy Jill Weber, also a member of the board. Both spoke about the impact House of Mercy has made with the help of community support. House of Mercy has been home to 327 men and women living with AIDS. Members of Our Lady of Guadalupe Church of Charlotte carried the Walk banner for the three-mile walk.
Following the walk through downtown Belmont, participants gathered on the House of Mercy grounds for a picnic lunch. DJ Buddy Love provided music and inspiration for dancing. Stan Patterson announced $47,717 was raised – surpassing the $41,500 goal and setting a Walk for AIDS record.
Pictured: Walk for AIDS Participants are led by members of Our Lady of Guadalupe Church carrying the Walk banner. (Photos provided by Marjorie Storch)
Prizes were awarded to Team Maggie (Board Chair Maggie Baucom) for top fundraising team, who raised $10,000; Our Lady of Guadalupe Church for second-place team, for raising $6,038; and Team Palmer (Board Secretary Ellen Palmer) for third-place team, for raising $1,740. Chantelle Hurst was the top individual fundraiser, Alonza Jones was the second-place individual fundraiser and Margaret Mayes was the third-place finisher.
This year’s Walk for AIDS sponsors were St. Matthew Church in Charlotte, Family of Doug Newton, Wells Fargo, RK T-Shirts, WSGE 91.7 FM, St. Gabriel Church of Charlotte, SmartWay, EMD Serono, Rodgers Builders, Gilead, CaroMont Health, BNC Bank, Our Lady of Guadalupe Church and St. Aloysius Church of Hickory.
Patterson also thanked all the community partners who have supported House of Mercy since it opened on May 18, 1991.
“With your generous support, we set a Walk for AIDS fundraising record of $47,717 raised,” he said. “These funds will help provide a home and care for low-income persons living with AIDS at House of Mercy. Together we have significantly changed the lives of hundreds of residents and their loved ones. Thank you!”
— Marjorie Storch
Approximately 300 people participated in House of Mercy’s 2017 Walk for AIDS.
CHARLOTTE — St. Patrick Cathedral was filled to capacity Thursday evening as Bishop Peter Jugis celebrated the Mass of the Lord’s Supper. The liturgy marked the start of the Triduum, the three holy days preceding the Resurrection of the Lord at Easter.
The Triduum "is like a retreat that the Church gives us now at the end of Lent to bring us into Easter to make sure that we are focused and ready for the great celebration that is about to come on Easter Sunday," Bishop Jugis said during his homily. "It is our love for Jesus that brings us here this evening to this Mass of the Lord's Supper, and … a desire to be close to Jesus in the special days that follow."
The Mass of the Lord's Supper recalls Jesus' institution of the Eucharist at the Last Supper, His washing the feet of His disciples, His agony in the Garden of Gethsemane, and His betrayal and arrest.
Through the Eucharist – "this beautiful sacrament of His Body and Blood," this "living bread come down from heaven" – Jesus fulfills His promise "that He would be with us to the end of time," Bishop Jugis noted.
He also reflected on Jesus' words from the day's Gospel (John 13:1-15), "Do you realize what I have done for you?"
Jesus said these words after He had washed His disciples' feet, showing by example the humility and charity He wants them to follow. But those words could also apply to the Eucharist, Bishop Jugis said, and it is a question we should all ask ourselves.
"Do you realize what He has done for you, in giving you His living Presence in the Eucharist? Have you ever taken a moment to reflect upon that?" he asked the congregation.
"Do you realize the strength and the grace that is available to you in your daily living because of His living Presence in the Eucharist?
"Do you realize what a gift you have in the living Body and Blood of Christ, so that you can have His life within you? The Eucharist is alive!"
He prayed in conclusion, "May the Lord Jesus fill us with His love as we draw close to Him this evening, and may we remain close to Him throughout these holy days that are upon us."
At the end of the Holy Thursday Mass, altars in every church were stripped bare, candles and lights were extinguished, and the Blessed Sacrament was transferred to a temporary altar of repose until Easter – outwardly demonstrating the sense of the Church's bereavement during the time of Christ's Passion and burial.
Catholics then spent time in Eucharistic Adoration, recalling Jesus' words to His sleepy disciples in the Garden of Gethsemane, "Could you not keep watch with Me for one hour?"
On Good Friday, no Mass is celebrated.
— Patricia L. Guilfoyle, editor
CHARLOTTE — Mya McKenzie Nguyen, who has been battling leukemia for nearly six years, is hopeful she makes her first Holy Communion this month. Her parents credit their faith in God and his many blessings for the successes they’ve had in her treatment over the past few years.
Diagnosed when she was 3 years old, now 8-year-old Mya McKenzie has relapsed five times, trying experimental and other options to treat the cancer as it returns.
“Every time when we have our backs against the wall, God has always led us to a path for treatment,” her father Thanh Nguyen says. “Through all our hardships, our faith and trust in our Lord has seen us through, no matter how desperate it may have appeared at times.”
Thanh and Mya Nguyen are parishioners of St. Thomas Aquinas Church in Charlotte and their only child, Mya McKenzie, has attended St. Gabriel School when her health allowed. Other times, she’s been homeschooled. She has enrolled to start fourth grade at St. Gabriel in the fall, her father says.
“One prayer I had when she was first diagnosed, I actually asked God, ‘Please let me see the day my daughter would receive You for her First Communion.’ That year, that month, I ordered a First Communion kit that I recently gave to her,” Thanh says.
“With all the trials and relapses, I’m hopeful I’ll be able to see that first Communion five years later.”
Mya McKenzie was a healthy baby and young girl, until she developed a cough and was very weak, her father recounts. After repeated trips to the pediatrician and cough medicines that didn’t alleviate the issue, a blood test led their family to be referred to a specialist.
“She was diagnosed with precursor B-cell lymphoblastic leukemia,” Thanh says. “That was very devastating for our family.”
The diagnosis came in the spring. That Easter, a couple weeks later, Thanh recalls attending Mass without his wife and daughter, who were at the hospital for treatment.
“We rotated going to church. When I was at church on Easter Sunday, I really believe I received a special message from God that she would be OK and would be cured,” he says. “It’s a faith I’ve carried with me the next few years.”
Mya McKenzie’s first relapse was met with treatment options. She was fine for almost a year before her second relapse, her father says.
“After the second, we didn’t know what to do,” Thanh says. “The first thing we did was go to the Adoration Chapel at St. Gabriel Church, and we went there and prayed. It was really serious because it seemed to be aggressive this time. When we had our backs against the wall, all of a sudden we found this brand new treatment.”
Mya McKenzie was the first patient at Duke University Medical Center to participate in a then-new clinical trial which consisted of an adoptive transfer of T cells expressing chimeric antigen receptors. It’s a promising anti-cancer therapy, as the modified cells can be engineered to target virtually any tumor-associated antigen.
“It’s programmed to recognize a certain target. They grow enough of the cells, then re-energize the cells and re-fuse it back into your body,” her father explains. “We really felt it was a blessing for us to have this treatment option.”
Six months later, though, the leukemia returned.
“The first thing we did was turn to God, again. We went back to the chapel and prayed about it. Every time we do that, we get really inspired. We got a sense of peace to be able to fight again to do whatever we need to do help our child,” Thanh says.
The doctors recommended a course of light chemotherapy while they explored other clinical trial treatments. From just the chemo, Mya McKenzie was quickly judged cancer-free again. Their family learned of this during Holy Week 2016.
“The next day, Holy Thursday, we found out my wife is a perfect match for a bone marrow transplant, which is rare,” Thanh says. “All of a sudden, she was cancer free and we had a perfect donor.”
Mya McKenzie received that transplant and all was going well again until last October, when the disease returned. This time, her family turned to the National Institute of Health in Bethesda, Md., for another successful round of treatment.
“Even though it is a federal hospital, there was a stand-alone Blessed Sacrament chapel,” Thanh says. “I spent a lot of time there, praying for our child and giving thanks to God for this opportunity.
“My daughter has had more than four relapses, and every time we’ve felt there was nothing to do. There’s always something that’s come into our direction. Usually around Easter is when we get blessed.”
Mya McKenzie’s leukemia returned last month, and her family is back at the National Institutes of Health for treatment and they remain hopeful for positive results.
Mya McKenzie received her first sacrament of penance with her classmates and while she was in remission earlier this year, she attended classes to prepare to receive her first Communion. While she missed out on receiving the sacrament with classmates, her father says she is still expected to receive her first Communion later this month.
One the greatest assets through this whole ordeal, her father says, is that Mya McKenzie has been blessed with a special grace to handle the news as it comes and remain positive. She’s been known to even console her parents, he says.
“She loves to play doctor and is very observant. She helps the nurses. She’s very courageous and not scared of those things by any means. If it hurts, she cries, but she’s right back up smiling soon. It’s really amazing.”
Mya McKenzie says she hasn’t been scared because she has faith.
“God helped me – I felt Him with me when I was in pain,” she says. “I trust in God. I wasn’t afraid. I felt God was helping me. I’m never really scared.”
Her father hopes by sharing his family’s story they can inspire others dealing with hardships to put their faith in God.
“I want to convey all the times we were down and low, it was our faith and prayers and those praying for us,” he says.
“I really believe all the prayers from our families, friends and schoolmates and saints in heaven help. I think that’s how we’re doing so well.”
— Kimberly Bender, Online reporter