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Frank Dirks - Daughters of Saint Paul
Sister Margaret leads a discussion on the role of the laity in Church. She shared a quote from Saint John Paul II: “The laity should be conscious of their own standing in the Church: not as mere recipients of doctrine and the grace of the Sacraments, but as active and responsible agents of the Church’s mission to evangelize…”
Frank Dirks - CCP Event
Join Carolina Catholic Professionals for our First Friday Networking and Fellowship Lunch at the Diocese Chancery Meeting Hall on Friday, October 5, 2018 from 11:45am to 1:15pm. This event is open to both members and non-members. Lunch will be $15 for members and $25 for non-members.
Our speaker will be Tim Sinclair, Director of Business Development Webster Rogers, LLP and member of the finance council at Saint Clare of Assisi Parish.
Our theme for these lunches is how we engage the world in faith and bear witness to the Gospel in the way we live our lives. With one foot in the Church and one in the world we are all on the same journey. We ask our speakers to discuss their personal journey of faith and their work in the world and what they see to be meaningful trends and developments in our community, state, and nation.
Thank you to those who have already reserved a space! For those who have not, please RSVP online today!
Mary B - Charity Event - Daughters of Saint Paul - Fun Nun Bowl - Lucis Via Charities
The Fun Nun Bowl is an annual event held each year in Charleston, SC by Lucis Via Charities to help benefit the Daughters of St. Paul. This year’s event was rescheduled from September due to Hurricane Florence. Deadline for registration is November 1st. The event will take place on November 11, 2018. For more information, please visit: https://www.lucisvia.com/funnunbowl
Frank Dirks - Community Events
On Thursday, 20 September, Sister Margaret will host a Brown-Bag Lunch Discussion on the Role of the Laity in the Catholic Church at the Daughters of Saint Paul, John Paul II Room during the noon lunch hour. Sister Margaret will explore the history of the laity in the Church and discuss the duties of the laity in today’s Church.
Mary B
Fred McKay, Principal of Charleston Catholic School, kicks off the First Friday Lunch season with a talk on Catholic education in Charleston. Before lunch,Father Gabriel Cruz Rodriguez celebrated Mass in the Chancellery Chapel.
Gentrification in Our Community A Faith Community Response Community Report and Action Plan Working Document
Overview
In response to changes in our community related the process of gentrification, three faith-based organizations hosted communities meetings open to the public for the purpose of gathering information from residents. The meetings were held on Tuesday, 24 April at Our Lady of Mercy-Neighborhood House; Sunday, 29 April at Saint Patrick’s Church; and Wednesday, 2 May at Trinity Worldwide Outreach Ministries. We asked participants to complete surveys and participate in group discussions during which we took notes. More than sixty people attended the meetings and forty-seven people completed surveys.
Findings
Recommendations
Action Plan
Phase One
Phase Two
Phase Three (ongoing)
Download a copy of this Report and Action Plan (PDF).
Frank Dirks - Case Statement for Campus Ministry Location at the College of Charleston
The Case for a Permanent Catholic Campus Ministry Location At the College of Charleston
Bad company ruins good morals. 1 Corinthians 15:33
The Need
The college years are often seen and feared by parents and the public as a time during which the secular world erodes the Christian faith of students. In fact, Mass attendance is declining among all age groups. Yet longitudinal studies of young Catholics have found that eight out of ten students enter college with the spiritual desire to deepen their faith.
Perhaps more than previous generations, studies find that today’s college students resist structure. They seek a comfortable safe place, a home, among peers. As is well known, the current college generation is more bound than any prior to electronic devices linked to digital communities and social networks. They have grown up in homes gathered in living rooms with each family member intently involved with their personal devices. The paradox of communal isolation is a hallmark. Other interfaith studies have found that students with spiritual longing gain the most from shared experiences with peers through study, service, and one-on-one peer interaction.
Many traditional structures and processes of Catholic youth outreach are often not aligned with the needs of today’s college students. However, the longstanding Newman Center model stands out because it offers the home and faith community environment that students want and need. The key elements of the Newman Model include a permanent gathering place that is comfortably like home, large enough space for gatherings of forty or more people, close proximity to the college campus and a Catholic Church; and a kitchen available for large meals and off-hour and late-night snacks. In short, it is a loving Catholic family home away from home.
This conceptual and empirical depiction of what a Catholic campus ministry center should be is affirmed by the testimony of the former and current students involved in Campus Ministry at the College of Charleston. In what had been the temporary center called the Upper Room, one former student said that you would regularly find ten to fifteen students gathered in this “comfortable and safe space” to study at any time of the day or night. Because upperclassmen would naturally become peer mentors for underclassmen, students with demanding class and study schedules would retreat to the Upper Room for peaceful fellowship and quiet study rather than the library. According to the students, these one-on-one relationships were vital to deepening the students’ faith because they saw their peers living as quiet witnesses to the Gospel. As one said, “You become more like the people you spend time with.”
The students who spent their days in the Upper Room also regularly attended Mass at Saint Patrick’s, inviting Catholics and non-Catholics alike. Many non-Catholic friends became regular Mass attendees. The students who shared their experiences came from homes that were both very and not very devout. Yet they all found that their experience in campus ministry through the Upper Room deepened their faith and made them truer followers of Christ.
Today, Campus Ministry is without a home. Saint Patrick’s Parish continues to offer a student Mass and provides meeting space for a weekly community meal. Yet the program is without ongoing meeting space. With deep concern for the spiritual well-being of young people at the College of Charleston and interest in ensuring that the ministry finds appropriate permanent space to renew the program and feed the spiritual hunger of young people for the Truth found only in Christ, a group of lay Catholics have joined to provide support for the ministry and work with the parish and diocese to find an acceptable permanent solution.
Be demanding of the world around you; be demanding first of all with yourselves. Be children of God; take pride in it! Pope Saint John Paul II, World Youth Day, Czestochowa, Poland
The Solution
The “Newman Center” model continues to be the most effective and distinctive approach to Catholic college ministry on large and mid-size campuses. This model stands out because it offers the home and faith community environments that students want and need.
The key elements of the Newman Model dedicated center include:
Download a copy of this Case Statement (PDF).
Frank Dirks - CCP Event - CCP in the Community
Mark your calendar for a day of activities on February 14, 2019 to support the creation of a low-powered FM radio station at Bishop England High School. More details coming soon!
Frank Dirks - Call for Prayer
Dear Friends in Christ,
Please join in Fourth Friday Fasting and Prayer in Reparation for the sins of our clergy and the healing of our Church.
“You have been told, O mortal, what is good, and what the Lord requires of you: Only to do justice and to love goodness, and to walk humbly with your God.” Micah 6:8
This is a time to choose and come to the aid of our Church. “If one part suffers, all parts suffer with it… Now you are Christ’s body, and individually parts of it.” I Corinthians 12:26-27
Fast and Pray the Rosary
Visit our Lord in Adoration
Perpetual Adoration Chapel at Blessed Sacrament Church https://blsac.org/74
Perpetual Adoration Chapel at Saint Theresa the Little Flower Church https://www.sttheresachurch.com/108
Join in the already underway 54 Day Rosary Novena for our Nation (www.novenaforournation.com/54-day-novena).
Look to Saint Joseph. As Saint Thomas Aquinas teaches. “There are many saints to whom God has given the power to assist us in the necessities of life, but the power given to St. Joseph is unlimited: It extends to all our needs and all those who invoke him with confidence are sure to be heard.”
To thee, O blessed Saint Joseph, do we have recourse in our tribulation, and having implored the help of thy thrice holy Spouse, we confidently invoke thy patronage also. By that charity where with you are united to the Immaculate Virgin Mother of God, and by that fatherly affection with which thou didst embrace the Child Jesus, we beseech thee and we humbly pray, that you would look graciously upon the inheritance which Jesus Christ has purchased by His Blood, and assist us in our needs by thy power and strength.
Most watchful Guardian of the Holy Family, protect the chosen people of Jesus Christ; keep far from us, most loving father, all blight of error and corruption: mercifully assist us from heaven, most mighty defender, in this our conflict with the powers of darkness; and, even as of old you did rescue the Child Jesus from the supreme peril of his life, so now defend God’s Holy Church from the snares of the enemy and from all adversity; keep us one and all under thy continual protection, that we may be supported by thine example and thine assistance, may be enabled to lead a holy life, die a happy death and come at last to the possession of everlasting blessedness in heaven. Amen.
Look to the Psalms.
Psalm 43:1-5
Vindicate me, O God, and defend my cause against an ungodly people; from deceitful and unjust men deliver me!
For you are the God in whom I take refuge; why have you cast me off? Why do I go mourning because of the oppression of the enemy?
Oh, send out your light and your truth; let them lead me, let them bring me to your holy hill and to your dwelling!
Then I will go to the altar of God, to God my exceeding joy; and I will praise you with the lyre, O God, my God.
Why are you cast down, O my soul, and why are you disquieted within me? Hope in God; for I shall again praise him, my savior and my God.
Saint John Paul II calls on all of us to evangelize. Let this be one example of devotion to our Lord and His Church.
Please join in Fourth Friday Fasting and Prayer for Reparation and Healing.
God bless you and your families.
Like yours, my heart is sick and aches at the horrific news of abuse and complicity by members of the clergy of our Church. I despair that the darkness and evil of the world has infected our Church. I feel righteous anger and want to demand accountability and transparency from the temporal stewards of our one holy catholic and apostolic Church.
I want to do something, but that “something” must be positive. So what to do? Looking to Micah 6:8 I am reminded: “You have been told, O mortal, what is good, and what the Lord requires of you: Only to do justice and to love goodness, and to walk humbly with your God.”
Our Lady with incomprehensible patience reminds us that the way forward in every crisis of faith is prayer. As the Saints demonstrate emulating the example of our Lord on the Cross, prayer is always made better with sacrifice.
With that in mind, in reparation for the sins of our clergy, I plan to fast and offer a Rosary on the fourth Fridays of the month. There is, of course, more that you can do. You can join in the already underway 54 Day Rosary Novena for our Nation (www.novenaforournation.com/54-day-novena).
In prayer, we should always look to Saint Joseph. As Saint Thomas Aquinas teaches. “There are many saints to whom God has given the power to assist us in the necessities of life, but the power given to St. Joseph is unlimited: It extends to all our needs and all those who invoke him with confidence are sure to be heard.”
The Psalms too are always a powerful source of prayerful sustenance.
I urge you to join in Prayer and Fasting in Reparation for the sins of our clergy. Saint John Paull II calls on all of us to evangelize. Let this be one example our devotion to our Lord and His Church.
Please join me in The Fourth Friday Fast and Prayer for Reparation.
God bless,
Frank
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Call us Office: 843 670 1350
Email: frank.dirks@carolinacatholicprofessionals.com
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