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FRANK MARTIN HULL, SSJ, Dec. 20, 1923 – May 26, 2020

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Father Frank M. Hull, SSJ, was born in Philadelphia in 1923 and is a graduate of St. Thomas More High School there.

He served with the Army Air Corps during World War II and in 1948 began his preparations to be a Josephite priest at Epiphany Apostolic College in Newburgh, NY. He was ordained in Washington, D.C. in 1957 and after a year of studies at Catholic University of America, he was assigned to teach at St. Augustine High School in New Orleans, LA.

In 1960, Father Hull began a history of internal Josephite assignments: forming future Josephites for ministry, as editor of The Josephite Harvest and on the Josephite General Council as an Area Director, and finally directing the Josephite Archives. Those many years of service were broken periodically by parish ministry.

In Josephite formation, he served three years on the faculty of Epiphany Apostolic College, six years as spiritual director and one year as vice rector at St. Joseph Seminary.

While pastoring at St. David parish in New Orleans, he served six years as spiritual director and on the board of admissions at the Josephite House of Studies which had replaced Epiphany Apostolic College.

In 1963 he became the editor of The Josephite Harvest, a position he would hold for the next 14 years while carrying out seminarian formation and parish ministry in three parishes in Washington, D.C., Houston and New Orleans and returning to St. Augustine High School as rector of the faculty house.

The Josephites in Louisiana called him to serve on the Josephite General Council as Area Director from 1987-91 and the Baltimore-Washington, D.C. Josephites called him to serve again as Area Director from 1999-2003.

His parish ministry began in 1977 at Our Lady Star of the Sea Parish in Houston, followed by 17 years of pastorates of St. Raymond, St. Joan of Arc and St. David parishes in New Orleans.

From there he moved to Washington, D.C., where after a one-year assignment to St. Joseph Seminary, he served as pastor of St. Benedict the Moor and St. Vincent de Paul in Washington, D.C., and then ten years as pastor of St. Joseph parish in Alexandria, VA.

He retired briefly in 2012 only to step up in his late 80’s to do the last of his parish ministry at Our Lady of Perpetual Help church in Washington, D.C., for one year and then moved on to be the director of the Josephite Archives in Baltimore until it moved in 2016 to St. Joseph Seminary in Washington, D.C., where he served well into his 90’s.

The following is a link to the Facebook event for “LIVE-Funeral for Fr. Francis Hull SSJ + Fr. Joseph McKinley, SSJ” on June 3rd from 10:00am – 12:00pm: https://www.facebook.com/events/245421196742374/


Our Lady of Grace responds to call to feed hungry

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Story and photos by Beth Donze, Clarion Herald

Two Thursdays a month – come rain or shine – a tenacious group of parishioners from Our Lady of Grace Church in Reserve performs what is arguably the most fundamental corporal work of mercy: feeding the hungry.

“If I can help somebody less fortunate than me, then why not? I figure if somebody needs help, it’s my duty to help them,” said parishioner Michael Arceneaux, as he and his fellow volunteers loaded boxes bursting with canned goods, fresh produce and other food staples into cars that formed a double line in front of the church.

Arceneaux, a member of Our Lady of Grace’s eight-year-old food ministry, said helping to box and dispense food twice a month is the least he can do for the food-insecure of his community. He said the provisions often constitute the only food some households will have that month.

“They’re just so appreciative when you give it to them,” Arceneaux said, observing that outreach work is a prerequisite of Christian life. “In the Bible, the good Lord says that as long as you did it for one of mine, you did it for me.”

Dedicated crew

The volunteers, who pack the boxes with items delivered monthly to their parish hall by Second Harvest Food Bank, dispense the vital assistance from 5 to 7 p.m. on second and fourth Thursdays.

At a recent drive-thru line, with rain creating ankle-deep flooding and forcing the volunteers to juggle umbrellas and dollies of food, raincoats were added to the customary “pandemic uniform” of masks and gloves.

Before the pandemic-forced lockdown, those in need would enter the parish hall to pick up their boxes and personally carry them to their vehicles. The volunteers have since shifted to a curbside set-up, with client visits and paperwork now being discreetly handled through car windows.

“The food comes in on the second Tuesday of the month. We have volunteers who come in to take the food out, stock it and make the boxes,” explained Martha Creecy, the parish secretary who has led Our Lady of Grace’s Second Harvest Ministry with her pastor, Josephite Father Christopher Amadi, since its 2012 debut. The ministry currently counts a core membership of about 20.

Creecy said the boxes’ contents vary according to availability but always include a variety of canned goods; starches such as rice, pasta and beans; fresh vegetables and fruit; and proteins such as meat, poultry and eggs.

The second Thursday of the month sees an average of 70 visitors, while the fourth Thursday serves about 40 to 50 households, Creecy said. Recipients, who must meet Second Harvest’s eligibility requirements, may only access food from the parish site once a month.

“But everybody who comes here leaves with something – even those people who turn out to be ineligible will get something the first time,” Creecy said.

Paying it forward

Parishioner Juana Royal has volunteered for the ministry alongside her husband Kevin since its founding. She said new volunteers are always welcome and can step right in, whether it involves working directly with recipients, loading food into cars or working behind the scenes, as Royal does, to build boxes out of flat stretches of cardboard, keep the pantry’s shelves sorted and stocked, and pack the boxes themselves. Each container always includes a printout informing recipients of the distribution schedule for the coming month.

“I’ve been in predicaments where I didn’t have much and other people helped me. I really appreciated what they did for me, so I feel I need to give back,” Royal said. “God wants you to give and help and be charitable.”

Faith in action

Creecy said the ministry saw a surge of new applicants in April, followed by a leveling off of new numbers in May, possibly due to the opening of additional food pick-up sites in St. John the Baptist civil parish in response to the pandemic.

Creecy, a social worker who assisted neglected and abused children for 30 years, says it is her “calling and passion” ­to be of service to anyone in need. She said it is especially touching when ministry members see recipients showing up as early as 10:30 a.m. – more than six hours before the food line opens – to have some fellowship. Many bring chairs to visit with their friends under the oaks as they await the 5 p.m. start-up time, she said.

“(Feeding the hungry) is what Jesus would want us to do. He wants us to be of service, loving our sisters and our brothers,” Creecy said. “That’s what it’s all about!”

To learn more about the Second Harvest Ministry at Our Lady of Grace Church, contact Martha Creecy at the parish office at (985) 536-2613. Donations to Second Harvest Food Bank, which serves 23 civil parishes in South Louisiana, can be made at www.no-hunger.org.

Beth Donze can be reached at bdonze@clarionherald.org.

For more photos read this article here.

St. Augustine High School in New Orleans receives largest single gift in school history from Jack Dorsey’s #startsmall initiative

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Jack Dorsey, co-founder and CEO of Twitter and Square, has awarded St. Augustine High School in New Orleans a $1.5 million gift through Dorsey’s #StartSmall initiative. Dorsey’s gift marks the largest one-time donation ever made to the school. The gift highlights a series of initiatives and programs geared toward building transformative academic experiences for students.

“We cannot overstate the power and reach of this transformational and game-changing gift from Mr. Jack Dorsey and #StartSmall,” said St. Augustine High School President and CEO, Dr. Kenneth St. Charles. “This gift allows our school and students to continue to have a tremendous impact not only on our local and regional communities but on our entire nation. We are honored that Jack Dorsey, an international leader, chose to invest in St. Augustine High School. His support reaffirms the impact that our school has had in the past, and the unlimited potential we will continue to have not only in the African American community but in society at large. Future generations will benefit from this inspiring gift as St. Augustine works to prepare young men in ways that provide bold, transformative educational experiences grounded in our Catholic traditions.”

The gift will serve as a catalyst for new academic programs and will include several capital improvement initiatives. Upgrades to classrooms, science labs, and other critical facilities will provide innovative technological advancements that will transform the curriculum, preparing students to meet the challenges of today’s world.

“Upon entering the halls of St. Augustine High School, I was immediately inspired by the confidence, ambition and passion exhibited by each of the young men. I knew then, that the opportunity to support these students and future students was much larger than a classroom visit, said TJ Adeshola, head of sports partnerships at Twitter. “While I routinely find myself in awe of Jack, the #StartSmall team and the work they do, I’m especially proud to see St. Augustine and my good friend Aulston Taylor, Chief Development Officer at the school, benefit from this wonderful, generous gift.”

The broad funding provided by Mr. Dorsey and #StartSmall will guarantee the school’s strength, while the operational funds included in the gift will provide for immediate impact. In addition to transforming the academic offerings, the school will also dedicate a portion of the funding to assist families who recently experienced financial difficulties resulting from the recent COVID-19 pandemic.

About St. Augustine High School:
St. Augustine High School is a college preparatory school for young men founded in 1951 by the Josephite priests and brothers, an order dedicated to providing missions and schools for African-Americans in their dioceses. Over the years, St. Augustine High School has built a legacy serving as the training ground for leadership through academic excellence, moral values, Christian responsibility, and reasonable, consistent discipline. Today, the school welcomes young men of all backgrounds and remains a leading secondary school for African-American males in Louisiana.

About #STARTSMALL
#startsmall is Jack Dorsey’s philanthropic initiative to fund global COVID-19 relief, girls health and education, and efforts towards Universal Basic Income. Dorsey transferred $1 billion (28% of his wealth) to #startsmall in 2020.

Amanda Gorman, Josephite Parishioner, Shines Bright on Inauguration Day

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Poet Amanda Gorman is a light to us all, parishioner says
By Carol Zimmermann Catholic News Service

WASHINGTON (CNS) — Long before she burst into the public spotlight delivering her inauguration poem, Amanda Gorman got a standing ovation from fellow parishioners of St. Brigid Church in Los Angeles for reciting a poem she wrote about the parish.

And on Jan. 20, at the inauguration ceremony of President Joe Biden, parishioners watching this young woman on their TV screens — addressing political leaders and the nation at large about courageously rebuilding the country — applauded her all the more.

Floy Hawkins, former director of religious education at the parish for over 20 years, said her phone did not stop ringing after the inauguration, with friends asking if she saw, heard or knew about Gorman’s role.

“You see her? Look at that little girl!” fellow parishioners were saying because as Hawkins put it: “We still see her in a very endearing way.”

There also were plenty of Facebook and Instagram posts about this, but Hawkins said her generation doesn’t use social media as much, though they’re fine with texting.

And even though they were thrilled for Gorman, parishioners of the historically Black church didn’t see her performance as a “solo act,” because Gorman has always been at the parish with her twin sister, Gabrielle, and her mom. Hawkins felt that sense of family when cameras followed Gorman joining her mother when she finished her delivery.

St. Brigid’s pastor, Josephite Father Kenneth Keke, also didn’t just see Gorman in that moment but felt she represented the entire parish in South Central Los Angeles — which is predominantly African American but now also has a growing number of Latinos, Filipinos and white parishioners too.

“We are a community; everyone here is important,” the priest said. “Whatever belongs to the parish belongs to everyone; in our parish, the success of anyone is the success of all.”

It’s also the pride of all.

“Parishioners are very much proud of her,” the priest, from Nigeria, told Catholic News Service Jan. 22, adding that he personally knew she would go far. “She is a very, very intelligent young lady. The first time I saw her, I knew that one day she was going to be very important.”

This pride is displayed on the parish website with photos of Gorman and the words: “We celebrate and congratulate Amanda Gorman: 2021 inauguration poet. Youngest in history.” Similarly, the parish Facebook and Instagram accounts posted a single photo of Gorman at the inauguration with the words: “Our very own Amanda Gorman.”

Hawkins recorded that part of the inauguration and plans to watch it again. She told CNS that when she saw Gorman approach the podium and begin speaking, she was “in awe … to see such a young African American female be at such a pinnacle point of the world.” She also said it humbled her “from a spiritual perspective of God’s graces and mercies,” since she knew the national youth poet laureate from Gorman’s middle school days.

As adolescents, Gorman and her sister, went through a two-year training program at the parish and then received the sacraments of baptism, first Communion and confirmation on the same day.

When she graduated from high school to attend Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Gorman received a scholarship donation from the parish. The pastor said she always returned to the church when she visited home.

In recent months, he hasn’t seen Gorman, who graduated last year, but he also hasn’t seen many of his parishioners due to coronavirus Mass restrictions.

Hawkins, in her role at the parish which numbered 750 families prior to the pandemic, was impressed by the Gorman sisters from the start, saying they were brilliant intellectually and socially with quiet but confident personalities.

She also remembered Amanda’s speech impairment that caused difficulty in saying certain letters, which the poet has overcome and spoken about. Hawkins once overhead a student asking Amanda why she talked the way she did, and Amanda replied that it was just her East Coast accent.

“I was so happy when I learned she had acknowledged publicly that she had a speech impediment, what a release for her,” Hawkins said.

Gorman, who had been writing and developing her own style since she was a young girl, was named the Youth Poet Laureate of Los Angeles at 16, and it was around that time she wrote the St. Brigid’s poem that she recited at the end of a Mass commemorating the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. The parish assistant choir director, knowing of Gorman’s work, had asked her to consider doing it.

That Gorman stepped up to the plate, then and now, is something Hawkins admires. When she saw her on the Capitol stage in her yellow coat and red headband, she knew Gorman had taken “ownership of the opportunity.”

“Sometimes people ask you to do something and you say: ‘Oh, I don’t know if I could do it,'” she said.

“I don’t get the sense that was her response when the first lady invited her to speak at the inauguration,” Hawkins added. “I believe she immediately said yes, as we are encouraged to say: ‘Yes Lord.'”

Hawkins prayed for Gorman before the poet introduced herself to the country as the “skinny Black girl, descended from slaves and raised by a single mother” who can “dream of becoming president only to find herself reciting for one.”

But as she listened to the 22-year-old’s strong, clear voice she said to herself: “Glory be to God. … Look what you have done in the world!” And she felt the strong connection too — that the poet’s description of finding light in dark times was something the people of St. Brigid’s knew all too well.

What a time for our Catholic faith and our African American culture, she thought.

She also was pleased that Gorman, named the National Youth Poet Laureate in 2017, “didn’t minimize or dismiss” the insurrection at the Capitol just two weeks before but spoke of not losing hope when terrible things happen.

Her poem, “The Hill We Climb,” speaks in part of a country “bruised but whole, benevolent but bold, fierce and free” and adds: “We will not be turned around or interrupted by intimidation.”

It ends with the promise of rebirth and reconciliation, saying: “Our people diverse and beautiful will emerge, battered and beautiful … For there is always light, if only we’re brave enough to see it. If only we’re brave enough to be it.”

Father Keke said the poem reflected “what we preach here at St. Brigid’s” about liberation and redemption, which he said also is emphasized in the parish’s music and art. Her words on unity had a strong spiritual connection, the priest added.

The parish is planning to celebrate Gorman’s achievement in some small way soon and in a bigger way once COVID-19 restrictions are lifted.

And the country at large is already celebrating her. Just hours after the inauguration, Gorman’s books jumped to the top of best-seller lists.

“She is definitely a light, an inspiration to us all,” said Hawkins, who said the current buzz around Gorman simply validates who she is and will take her further than she ever imagined. She also has no doubt Gorman will continue to courageously move forward, but not alone.

“She takes God with her,” she said.

 

Baltimore-based Josephites, elated by year dedicated to St. Joseph

Perpetual Profession of Joseph Kikanda, SSJ, and Feast of St. Joseph 2021

Easter Message from Bishop Ricard

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Dear Friends,

The Easter Gospel reports, “Mary of Magdala came to the tomb early in the morning, while it was still dark, and saw the stone removed from the tomb.” Quickly, she ran to find Peter and the other disciples to report that “the stone had been removed from the tomb.” This is how the Good News of Salvation began to spread.

As we celebrate this Easter, we are looking forward to removing the stones in our own communities and in our own lives.

The stone of the pandemic has weighed heavily on us all, claiming the lives of more than half a million of our fellow citizens in less than one year. It has disrupted our activities, our work, our schools and our places of worship. But as the vaccines reach more and more people, there is light breaking through that this stone of the pandemic will be removed.

Because of the pandemic, we have been deprived of opportunities to worship together in prayer and song. Soon this heavy stone will be rolled back and we will once again come together in faith to celebrate the sacraments and to serve one another.

In our communities this year, the heavy stone of racism has been lifted, and while not removed, that lifting has shed light on the pervasive ugly sin of racism. For centuries, the African American community has been an object of racist laws, practices and behaviors. We are now learning more about how Asian Americans are also suffering by a systemic racism that is a heavy stone weighing down on our society.

The stone of racism must be lifted and rolled back. We are hopeful that during this year as that stone has been moved – ever so slightly – that the light of the truth that we are all made in the image and likeness of God will prevail.

When Mary Magdala went looking for Jesus, the Gospel says, “it was still dark.” This Easter, as we make our own journey, it may still be dark in our communities, too. But we know with confidence that the path to Salvation has been opened to everyone and the light that poured out of the empty tomb long ago in Jerusalem is a light that beckons to us today.

The Resurrection shows us that God is up to something greater. That there is more to come than the fear, drudgery and pain of our present days. Know it, believe it and share it. Jesus Christ is risen, Alleluia.

On behalf of myself and all of the Josephites, I wish you a joyous Easter and a Blessed Easter Season.

Bishop John H. Ricard, SSJ

Superior General

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RADIO INTERVIEW: Importance of fatherhood/New book by Tony Pagnotti

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RADIO INTERVIEW: Importance of fatherhood/New book by Tony Pagnotti

 

 

On the June 20 episode of Catholic Review Radio, George Matysek spoke with Josephite Father Kingsley Ogbuji about the priest’s experiences ministering to Maryland prisoners and what that has taught him about the importance of fatherhood. Also, Paul McMullen catches up with Tony Pagnotti, a much-loved Baltimore broadcaster, about his new book, “My Scripted and Unscripted Life: A Memoir of a TV Newsman.”

To listen to the interview, please click here.

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Father Joseph Doyle, SSJ

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It is with great sadness The Josephites announce the passing of Father Joseph Doyle, SSJ.  Mass of Christian Burial will be held at Corpus Christi/Epiphany Catholic Church, New Orleans on Friday, November 5, 2021 at 10a.m. Visitation begins at 8:30a.m.  Interment will be at St. Louis #3.  Please pray for Father Doyle.

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Father John Alfred Carroll, SSJ, longtime pastor of Church of the Incarnation, dies at 84

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Josephite Father John Alfred Carroll, pastor of Church of the Incarnation in Washington, D.C., for 21 years, died Nov. 20 at the Josephite Senior Residence in Washington.

A Josephite for more than half a century, Father Carroll was 84.

“Father Carroll was a very good priest and he was very dedicated to the parishes he served,” said Bishop John Ricard, Josephite superior general, who knew Father Carroll since his days in the seminary. “He quietly went about doing his work. He was always reliable and faithful.”

Born in South Boston in 1937, Father Carroll attended Gate of Heaven Grammar School and High School. He went on to Epiphany Apostolic College in Newburgh, New York, and St. Joseph’s Seminary in Washington, D.C.

He was ordained June 4, 1966. He later attended New York University.

Father Carroll’s first assignment was at Epiphany Apostolic College and then St. Vincent De Paul Seminary in Beaumont, Texas.

His first parish was Our Mother of Mercy Church in Beaumont. He also served in parishes in Houston; Alexandria, Va.; New Orleans; and Mobile, Ala., before settling into the Church of the Incarnation in Washington, D.C. in 2000. He served as pastor for two decades and retired to the Josephite Senior in Residence in 2021.

“He loved being a priest,” said Deacon Joseph Bell of Church of the Incarnation, who was a dear friend for 21 years. “He loved Incarnation church and its parishioners and he shepherded in a manner that encompassed all. He did what he thought was best for both the church and the parishioners – all the parishioners.”

Deacon Bell said Father Carroll called and visited sick parishioners and took Communion to them at homes, hospitals and nursing homes.

Father Carroll believed his guardian angel, whom he nicknamed “Snookie,” led him to those who needed the sacraments before they died.

“He truly cared about people and accepted them for who they were,” Deacon Bell said. “I think if you didn’t take the time to know him as a person – a friend and not just a priest – you missed out on a very special friendship.”

Father Carroll was the last of the Tracfone users and he refused to get a smart phone until he had no other choice because they stopped making the flip phones.

Wednesdays were his day off and he liked to go sightseeing in Southern Maryland and Harpers Ferry, West Va.

He liked flowers and had a green thumb, according to his friends. He was thrifty but had very good taste.

One of his favorite sayings was, “Oh, you don’t say.” 

“Father Carroll spent many years at Incarnation and he left a strong legacy,” Bishop Ricard said. “He quietly did his work and he gloried in the ordinary things of the ministry. Every place he went, he was well loved.”

Bishop Ricard said Father Carroll was always available for extra liturgies when needed and served for a time as the spiritual director at St. Joseph’s Seminary.

“It was Father Carroll’s desire to stay at Incarnation. He did not want to be sent anywhere else and had hoped to retire from here and God saw fit to give him his heart’s desire,” Deacon Bell said. “I guess the best way to sum up knowing him for 21 years is that he really was a good and faithful servant, a gentle man, who was genuine and not just a great priest, but a true friend.”

Bishop Ricard said Father Carroll grew up in a “very staunch Irish Catholic family” in Boston, and he was laid to rest there.

After a Nov. 24 funeral Mass at Church of the Incarnation, Father Carroll’s body was flown back to South Boston for a second funeral Mass at his family’s parish, Gate of Heaven, and interment at Cedar Grove Cemetery.

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St. Joseph’s of Alexandria hosts a Winter Coat Drive

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St. Joseph’s of Alexandria hosts a Winter Coat Drive

On October 11, 2021, St. Joseph of Alexandria, VA hosted a winter coat give-away.  The event offered more including vaccinations, voter registration, and senior services for Alexandria.

Please click here to watch the video.

The event was sponsored by Knights of Columbus, Knights of Peter Claver – Men and Ladies’ Auxiliary, Senior Services of Alexandria, Alexandria Health Department and Concerned Citizens Network of Alexandria…”CCNA”.

 

 

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Christmas Message from Bishop Ricard

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Christmas 2021

Dear Friends,

During Advent, we prepared for the coming of Christ. For four weeks, the Sunday readings
invited us to prepare, to watch, to wait and to anticipate.

Then, what happens.

The heavens explode in a starry night over Bethlehem. Choirs of angels sing to the glory of God in the highest and lowly shepherds are called to a special place near the savior. Rather than wrath and thunder, God comes to his people in soft steps of a journey home to Bethlehem and the quiet sounds around a new born baby.

I recently reflected on these soft steps and human sounds that God used to come into our lives.  How can we connect with that blessed moment in Bethlehem? Can we help a neighbor in need, encourage a child, smile to a shopper or say a quiet prayer?

In these unusual, challenging times, we can get caught up in all the noise of the moment that sometimes feels overwhelming. However, these things are temporary and fleeting.
Reality is the love that our God came into the world as a baby so that we could be redeemed and live with him in eternity.

In this Christmas season, we all, including the Josephites, are busy with many things preparing to celebrate the holy days and holidays. One gift that we can give to each other is the gift that came that first Christmas night, a welcome embrace, a visit to friend, a family huddled close and a prayer of praise to God.

This Christmas, we Josephites will pray for all of you, giving thanks for your support and
encouragement. You are a gift to us each day and we are blessed by your presence in our lives.

May the true spirit of the season be in your hearts – as we celebrate that first Christmas night when heaven came close to humankind.

Wishing you a Blessed Christmas and a New Year filled with hope.

Bishop John H. Ricard
Superior General

Superior General Christmas 2021

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REQUIESCAT IN PACE Father Paul Williams, OFM

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REQUIESCAT IN PACE

Father Paul Williams, OFM

Father Paul Williams, OFM, died of a massive heart attack Jan. 3. This occurred while he was leading evening prayer with his fellow friars who were celebrating the Feast of the Holy Name of Jesus.
During the reading of the Magnificat, Father Paul gasped with shortness of breath and fell to the floor. EMT’s were summoned and were unsuccessful in reviving Father Paul.

Following are plans for the funeral:

1. On Thursday morning, January 6 (the traditional date of the Feast of the Epiphany) there will be a viewing of Father Paul’s body at  St. Camillus Church, 1600 St. Camillus Dr., Silver Spring, MD, from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Father Paul’s family and friends from Alexandria, Virginia will be in attendance.

2. The Mass of Christian Burial will immediately follow at 11 a.m.  Father Kevin Mullen, OFM, Provincial Minister, will preside and be the homilist. All parishioners are welcome to participate in this Mass whether in person or by spiritual Communion through the live streaming Mass.

Father Paul was previously pastor of a former Josephite parish, St. Joseph’s, in Wilmington,  DE.

Rather than send flowers, the friars request that donations be given to our St. Francis Emergency Fund–which helps people who are struggling with their rent or utility bills. Father Paul had great affection and empathy for those who were struggling with these issues during the pandemic.

Thank you for your prayers! May Father Paul rest in peace!

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Josephites mourn the loss of Reverend Peter C. Weiss, SSJ

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MAY HE REST IN PEACE

Reverend Peter C. Weiss, S.S.J. passed away on Wednesday, January 12, 2022 passed away on Wednesday, January 12, 2022.

Visitation
7:30 A.M. TO 9:30 A.M.

***

The Mass of Christian Burial
Wednesday, January 19, 2022 at 10:00 A.M.

All Saints Church
1343 Teche Street
New Orleans, LA  70114

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Burial

Louis III Cemetery
New Orleans, LA 

***

Please keep in your prayers
The Josephites, The Weiss Family, The Parishioners at All Saints Catholic Church & The Students at St. Augustine High School

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30 Days Prayer to St. Joseph Begins on Friday, February 18

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“A blameless life,
St. Joseph,
may we lead,
by your kind patronage
from danger freed.”

Thirty Day Prayer to St. Joseph begins on Friday, February 18th.

For Any Special Intention

Ever blessed and glorious Joseph, kind and loving father, and helpful friend of all in sorrow! You are the good father and protector of orphans, the defender of the defenseless, the patron of those in need and sorrow. Look kindly on my request. My sins have drawn down on me the just displeasure of my God, and so I am surrounded with unhappiness. To you, loving guardian of the Family of Nazareth, do I go for help and protection.

Listen, then, I beg you, with fatherly concern, to my earnest prayers, and obtain for me the favors I ask.

I ask it by the infinite mercy of the eternal Son of God, which moved Him to take our nature and to be born into this world of sorrow.

I ask it by the weariness and suffering you endured when you found no shelter at the inn of Bethlehem for the holy Virgin, nor a house where the Son of God could be born. Then, being everywhere refused, you had to allow the Queen of Heaven to give birth to the world’s Redeemer in a cave.

I ask it by the loveliness and power of that sacred Name, Jesus, which you conferred on the adorable Infant.

 I ask it by that painful torture you felt at the prophecy of holy Simeon, which declared the Child Jesus and His holy Mother future victims of our sins and of their great love for us.

I ask it through your sorrow and pain of soul when the angel declared to you that the life of the Child Jesus was sought by His enemies. From their evil plan you had to flee with Him and His Blessed Mother to Egypt. I ask it by all the suffering, weariness, and labors of that long and dangerous journey.

I ask it by all your care to protect the Sacred Child and His Immaculate Mother during your second journey, when you were ordered to return to your own country. I ask it by your peaceful life in Nazareth where you met with so many joys and sorrows.

 I ask it by your great distress when the adorable Child was lost to you and His Mother for three days. I ask it by your joy at finding Him in the Temple, and by the comfort you found at Nazareth, while living in the company of the Child Jesus. I ask it by the wonderful submission He showed in His obedience to you.

 I ask it by the perfect love and conformity you showed in accepting the Divine order to depart from this life, and from the company of Jesus and Mary. I ask it by the joy which filled your soul, when the Redeemer of the world, triumphant over death and hell, entered into the possession of His kingdom and led you into it with special honors.

I ask it through Mary’s glorious Assumption, and through that endless happiness you have with her in the presence of God.

O good father! I beg you, by all your sufferings, sorrows, and joys, to hear me and obtain for me what I ask. (Here name your petitions or think of them.)

Obtain for all those who have asked my prayers everything that is useful to them in the plan of God. Finally, my dear patron and father, be with me and all who are dear to me in our last moments, that we may eternally sing the praises of Jesus, Mary and Joseph.

With permission of: Bishop Emeritus John Ricard, SSJ Superior General
“The Carpenter” by Frances Hook © Roman, Inc. 1981

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Father Joseph Rodney, SSJ, beloved parish priest, dies at 84

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Father Joseph Conway Rodney, SSJ, remembered by Josephite Superior General Bishop John H. Ricard as a “parish priest to the core,” died March 23 at Our Lady of the Lake Medical Center in Baton Rouge, La. He was 84.

Born in Darrow, La., Feb. 7, 1938, Father Rodney was raised in the Josephite parish of St. Augustine in New Roads, La. Father Rodney was one of the first young men to be recruited when the Josephite missionaries started their recruitment efforts in African-American parishes, Bishop Ricard said.

“He was always on duty, always ready to serve the needs of the people,” Bishop Ricard said. “He was not concerned about advancements, he was more about the heart of the parish – the people – and they were appreciative of this.”

Throughout his ministry, Father Rodney served as a Josephite priest in seven different parishes in Washington, D.C., Alabama, Texas and Louisiana. He was also a member of the Josephite General Council. His longest tenure was his 13 years as pastor of Our Lady of Grace Parish in Reserve, La.

Bishop Ricard was a classmate of Father Rodney’s at St. Joseph Seminary in Washington. They were ordained Josephite priests by Bishop Robert Tracy in St. Joseph Cathedral in Baton Rouge May 25, 1968.

While Father Rodney was pastor of Prince of Peace Church in Mobile, Al. and Our Lady of Grace, he suffered from the effects of kidney cancer. He spent six years on dialysis until a kidney transplant was available in 2007.

“While he was taking dialysis, he was very sick, but when he would come back he would still perform his duties as a priest,” said Mona Nicholas, who worked alongside Father Rodney as a secretary in the parish office at Our Lady of Grace for 13 years. “I told him he shouldn’t take on more and that he needed rest, but he did it anyway.”

Ms. Nicholas said everyone in the community loved Father Rodney, even those who were not members of the church, and they were very sad when Father Rodney retired.

“He was a very kind person,” Ms. Nicholas said. “I had to attend training for one of the ministries and they asked us who we knew who was like Jesus and I said Father Rodney. He was open to everyone, he was kind to everyone and he had time for everyone. That is the kind of impression he left.”

After his retirement, Father Rodney lived in New Roads with his sister, Mary, and brother-in-law, William. He was in part-time residence at St. Francis Xavier in Baton Rouge, and he helped out with Masses on the weekends.

“He loved being a priest, and he loved being with people,” said Father Edward Chiffriller, SSJ, pastor of St. Francis Xavier. “He was a very good priest. He suffered a lot of over the years with kidney cancer and dialysis, and he had a lot of pain due to arthritis.”

Father Chiffriller said that despite his friend’s kidney issues and being in his 80s, Father Rodney stayed very active and would call every Saturday to tell him if he was coming that weekend. “He had a successful and happy life as a priest,” Father Chiffriller said.

The last time they spoke, Father Rodney’s breathing was labored and he ended up going to the emergency room, where he was diagnosed with COVID-19. Father Rodney was in the hospital for four weeks before he died.

“We thank God for his long life,” Bishop Ricard said. “He lived a very productive life that was quite fulfilling, and he deserves a rest from all his labors to be with his Lord whom he served so well.”

Father Rodney’s funeral Mass was offered March 31 at St. Augustine Church in New Roads. Bishop Ricard was celebrant and homilist.

 

May He Rest in Peace

Written by: Lisa Harlow

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Fr. Lowell David Case, SSJ, Josephite priest for more than 40 years, dies at 80

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Josephite Father Lowell David Case, who served at more than a dozen parishes in four states, died April 5 at Serenity Rehabilitation and Health Center in Washington, D.C.

A Josephite for more than four decades, he was 80.

“Father Case was a very good priest who served well,” said Bishop John H. Ricard, Josephite superior general. “Prior to joining the Josephites, he had a very lucrative career in Baltimore, and he gave that up to be with the Josephites.”

One of 13 siblings, Father Case was born December 3, 1941, in Baltimore. He earned a bachelor’s degree from Coppin State College and after college worked as an elementary school teacher and then as a personnel specialist with the Civil Service Commission.

In a 2020 interview with The Josephite Harvest, Father Case said Auxiliary Bishop William C. Newman of Baltimore helped him consider the priesthood when the future bishop was serving as superintendent of Catholic schools for the Archdiocese of Baltimore. It was in the mid-1970s, and Father Case was working as an investigator at the U.S. Custom House in Baltimore, performing background checks and fulfilling other security-related responsibilities, according to The Harvest article.

Father Case was very active at his home parish of St. Pius V in Baltimore, where he served on the parish school board. That’s how he met Bishop Newman. He would later become active in the Archdiocese of Baltimore’s Office of Urban Affairs – experiences that all drew him to the priesthood.

Father Case entered the Josephite novitiate later in life in 1977 and was ordained in May 1980. Throughout his ministry as a Josephite, Father Case served parishes in Texas, Louisiana, Washington, D.C. and Baltimore.

Father Rodney Armstrong, SSJ, pastor at Our Mother of Mercy in Houston, met Father Case 39 years ago at a Josephite gathering in New Orleans. At the time, he was a young attorney who was contemplating priesthood and Father Case invited him to speak to the graduating seniors at his parish high school.

Father Armstrong eventually chose to enter the priesthood, and their paths crossed over the years.

“Father Case was an enigma,” Father Armstrong said. “He was a strong pastor with definite views. He was a pastor who did not bite his tongue or mince words.”

“I would always tell him that he would have to learn to put his brain in gear before he put his mouth in motion,” Father Armstrong joked. “He said I was too diplomatic.”

Father Armstrong said Father Case loved to cook, and he was an excellent cook. Cakes were his specialty. He enjoyed watching cooking shows.

“He would try all kinds of recipes,” Father Armstrong said. “But he would leave the kitchen as if a storm had arrived there.”

Although Father Armstrong and Father Case were never assigned to the same parish, they were both in parishes in Washington, D.C. and Beaumont, Texas at the same time. Father Case was once pastor at Our Mother of Mercy in Houston, where Father Armstrong is currently pastor.

Father Case was diagnosed with lung cancer seven years ago, and he lived with Father Armstrong at Our Lady Star of the Sea in Houston while getting his radiation treatments at MD Anderson Cancer Center.

He returned to the Baltimore-Washington area in 2017 and was in residence at St. Peter Claver/St. Pius V Church in Baltimore. Father Case retired and moved into the Josephite Senior Residence in Washington in 2020.

According to Father Armstrong, Father Case had a number of health issues and entered the Serenity Rehabilitation and Health Center in February. He was in hospice care.

“Many of his parishioners adored him for his candidness and his directness,” Father Armstrong said. “I remember him as a strong pastor – stern, direct and to the point. He was a dear friend.”

Funeral Arrangements for Father Case are scheduled for Tuesday, April 12, 2022, at the Church of the Incarnation in Washington, D.C. The viewing will be held from 9 to 11a.m. The Mass of Christian Burial will be held 11 a.m. with Father Armstrong as homilist. Internment follows at New Cathedral Cemetery in Baltimore.

Written by: Lisa Harlow

 

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Easter Letter from Bishop Ricard, SSJ

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During the Josephites’ retreat and convocation in Bay St. Louis, Mississippi, May 30 to June 3, the ordination class of 2013 gathered for a photo to mark their 9th anniversary of priestly service. They are (from left) Fathers Cornelius Ejiogu, SSJ; Bura Aloysius, SSJ; Emmanuel Awe, SSJ; Hyginus Boboh, SSJ; and Stephen Sohe SSJ.

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