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Catholic News Herald

Serving Christ and Connecting Catholics in Western North Carolina

Bishop Martin 300CHARLOTTE — As the Diocese of Charlotte’s Helene response efforts shift from emergency aid to long-term rebuilding, Bishop Michael Martin is calling on parishes to form “sister” partnerships for at least the next six months.

Even if their church buildings suffered only minor damage, western North Carolina parishes will face continued “fallout,” Bishop Martin noted in an Oct. 10 email to the diocese’s 160 priests.

“While some of the immediate needs have been cared for, our longer-term walking with the people affected … remains an important ministry of our local Church,” the bishop said.

The key, he said, is for the diocese to band together to provide long-term material and spiritual support to the affected parishes and communities – accompanying them through the challenges of disaster recovery, “making a difference in that process in the months to come.”

In the program announced by the bishop, partnered parishes can hold second collections to help offset lost operating revenue in their sister parish, offer monthly Holy Hours to pray for their sister parish, check in with the parish regularly about the need for pastoral help or volunteers, and more.

Parishes are asked to sign up for the program, with the chancery pairing up parishes based on resources and level of need. The hope, Bishop Martin said, is for multiple parishes to help each of the impacted communities.

Monsignor Patrick Winslow, who has piloted much of the diocese’s storm response, recently consulted with Church leaders in Louisiana who went through Hurricane Katrina. In a recent letter to priests, he shared sobering news that people’s emotional recovery from the storm will likely take a year. Survivors of Katrina, the most catastrophic storm on record in the U.S., described three phases of recovery after the storm as

“Respond, Reopen, Recover,” focusing first on immediate needs, then on short-term and long-term needs.

“As priests and deacons who have served in these regions, we have observed with shock and sadness the images that are now being shared,” said Monsignor Winslow, the diocese’s vicar general and chancellor who previously served mountain parishes in Tryon and Sparta. “There are a number of pastoral challenges that lie ahead … since the relief efforts will be going on for some time and the human toll will take even longer to address.”

— Catholic News Herald

HENDERSONVILLE — Tropical Storm Helene forced more than 2,100 men and women who are incarcerated in western North Carolina to be moved to institutions in the center and eastern regions of the state because their facilities lost electricity and water. As a result, people involved with prison ministry in the Diocese of Charlotte are working to continue outreach to them in the wake of the storm.

Inmates were moved from Avery-Mitchell Correctional Institution in Spruce Pine, Craggy Correctional Center in Asheville, Mountain View Correctional Institution in Spruce Pine, the Black Mountain Substance Abuse Treatment Center for Women and the Western Correctional Center for Women in Swannanoa.

Many of the men served by the diocesan prison ministry have been moved to Alexander Correctional Institution in Taylorsville, according to David Coe, temporary coordinator of prison ministry and council chair of the Residents Encounter Christ program in the diocese, a Catholic-based program designed to bring hope and the knowledge of Christ to inmates.

Coe said prison ministry volunteers were in the middle of preparations for a retreat at Mount View when Helene hit, and they learned the prison had been evacuated.

“The inmates have been distributed throughout the state, and we understand most of them will stay at their present locations until their respective institutions are back up and running,” Coe said. “As a result, we’re trying to locate as many of the people we’ve been working with as possible. It will be difficult at best to find all of them simply because of the extent of the damage both the institutions and our team members have experienced, especially in the Spruce Pine area.”

One group of inmates studying the faith at Craggy Correctional recently had been introduced to the liturgy, reconciliation and the Eucharist through the leadership of Father Patrick Cahill at St. Eugene Church in Asheville. Coe is trying to reach out to the Residents Encounter Christ program at Alexander Correctional to contact those inmates and others from western North Carolina.
Coe also has been going to Craggy every Wednesday to lead a Christ-centered 12-step program and wants to continue that outreach to help the men through their recovery.

“We want to see if the chaplain at Alexander can re-organize that group of about 26 men so they can continue their efforts to be set free from drug and alcohol addiction,” he said. “They’re wonderful men who are sincere about being set free.”

Coe said it is a blessing that the core volunteer group in the prison ministry program came through the storm safely.

Family members who are trying to get in touch with loved ones who have been moved can search contact information through the North Carolina Department of Adult Correction.

— Christina Lee Knauss

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World Mission Sunday 2024

100424 WMSCHARLOTTE — Catholics in the Diocese of Charlotte are encouraged to support the Church’s outreach around the world on World Mission Sunday, observed this year on the weekend of Oct. 19-20.

This special second collection supports the Pontifical Mission Societies in mission efforts and evangelization around the world. Funds go toward medical care, food and education – especially in areas facing poverty and violence – and help build the Church in Asia, Africa, the Pacific Islands and parts of Latin America and Europe.

World Mission Sunday was started by Pope Pius XI in 1927 and always falls on the next to last Sunday of October.

This year’s theme, chosen by Pope Francis, is “Go And Invite Everyone to the Banquet,” centered around Christ’s parable (Mt. 22:9) in which guests refuse a king’s invitation to a wedding feast, so he tells servants to go to the roads and invite those they find to the banquet instead.

Pope Francis said in a message for World Mission Sunday that the parable tells the faithful to seek out those from all corners of the world to share the message of Christ’s love, even if it means going to places that are far flung and dangerous.

“I take this opportunity to thank all those missionaries who, in response to Christ’s call, have left everything behind to go far from their homeland and bring the Good News to places where people have not yet received it,” he wrote. “We continue to pray, and we thank God for the new and numerous missionary vocations for the task of evangelization to the ends of the earth.”

Father Patrick Cahill has served as mission office director for the Diocese of Charlotte since 2014. He is also pastor of St. Eugene Parish in Asheville.

He said he thinks of the “hardships of the mission Church” with the aim of World Mission Sunday. “I reflect on the countless letters and requests that come to the Diocese of Charlotte, and I see the children and the nuns and the priests that are helped despite tragic, unjust and even horrific circumstances.”

Over the past year, Father Cahill visited Congo and El Salvador to see that funds sent from the diocese honor the intention of donors, and he said churches in these mission territories offer important lessons.

“After returning from the visits, I said to a friend that the people there cling to the Church and to their faith,” he said. “…Let us recognize the call Jesus gives us to remember the poor and those on the margins. We have so much to give and so much to receive by participating in this critical and essential work of the Church.”

— Christina Lee Knauss

More online

At www.onefamilyinmission.org: Learn more about the mission work of the Church worldwide and how your support impacts thousands of people