Newspaper Page Text
PRAY FOR
CHRISTIAN
UNITY
diocese of Atlanta
SERVING GEORGIA’S 71 NORTHERN COUNTIES
VOL. 1 NO. 35
DAILY MASS, to which his devout mother often took him,
•owed the seeds of the future holiness of young John Neu
mann in his native village of Prachatitz, in Bohemia. She
also let him accompany her on her many errands of charity
among the poor. The artist has portrayed the scene here.
The youngster decided to come to the "wilds of America”
and be a missionery. Ordained a Redemptorist priest in
1836 in New York at the age of 25, he bacame, in 1852 the
fourth Bishop of Philadelphia. His beatification ceremony
is scheduled for October 13.
IN CONVENTION
Family Life Expert
To Address ACCW
Monsignor John C. Knott, di
rector of the Family Life Bur
eau of the National Catholic
Welfare Conference, will be the
guest speaker at the Seventh
Annual Meeting of the Arch
diocesan Council of Catholic
Women to be held at the Din
kier Plaza Hotel on Saturday,
Sept. 7.
▼ j
■
Msgr. Knott will speak on
“Woman’s Greatest Challenge-
m
Herself”, in which he will dis
cuss the Christian nature of
women.
THE DIRECTOR of the Fam
ily Life Bureau since October
of 1961, Msgr. Knott was ele
vated to the rank of Domes
tic Prelate with the title, Right
Reverend Monsignor, in De
cember of 1962.
MONSIGNOR KNOTT
A native of Connecticut, he
was ordained in 1939. He was
engaged in parish work, as as
sistant and administrator and
served as a U. S. Navy chap
lain. He did graduate work at
the Catholic University of
America in Washington, D. C.
in the field of marriage and the
family.
ON A WUYM CARD. This
copyrighted illustration of
Pope Paul VI, by artist Paul
Sullivan, appear* on a pray
er card included in a kit of
material* to promote the
13th annual observance of
National Catholic Youth
Week, October 27 to Novem
ber 3, 1963. The theme for
the week is "The Young
Catholic in the Lay Apoato-
late.”
Msgr. Knott worked exten
sively in the promotion of the
Cana Conference movement in
Connecticut for 14 years and
was full-time director of the
Marriage and Family Aposto-
late of the Archdiocese of Hart
ford for 11 years. He is the
author of numerous articles,
among them the weekly syndi
cated column, "Everyman’s
Family”. His speech will be
the featured event of the con
vention dinner at 6 pjn.
PRECEEDING convention
activities include the celebra
tion of a dialogue mass by Arch
bishop Paul J. Hallinan at Sa
cred Heart Church at 11 a.m.
Installation of AOCW officers
will follow with Mrs. Edward
P. Faust assuming the duties
of president.
WITH "Priest and Layman—
Inseparable Partners” as the
central theme of the day’s ac
tivities, the program has been
arranged under the general
chairmanship of Mrs. Lewis
Chapman. It will include 1:00
p.m. registration at the Dink
ier Plaza Hotel, committee
workshops beginning at 2:00
p.m. , and the business meet
ing which opens at 4:00 p.m.
Dinner will be served from
6:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m.
Spiritual Moderator for the
Archdiocesan Council is Rev.
Michael Manning, Pastor, St.
Peter and Paul Church, De
catur.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1963
$5.00 PER YEAR
NEWMAN CONVENTION
• SEE ALSO PAGE 2
LAFAYETTE, La (NC) —
More than 800 students, chap
lains, faculty, staff and alumni,
participated in sessions hereof
the 48th national convention of
the Newman Club Federation,
which concluded August 31.
Host club was the University
of Southwestern Louisiana with
convention meetings held at the
Lafayette Municipal Auditorium
and on the USL campus. The
sessions convened August 26.
JOHN MENG, president of
Hunter College, New York, set
the pace with his keynote ad
dress on the convention theme,
“Newman Apostolate, Incarnat
ion in the University.”
“A dynamic Newman aposto
late demands from each one of
us full and integral participat
ion in the life of the univer
sity,” Meng emphasized. "Too
often, I fear, the so-called New
man apostolate in our univer
sities has little effect beyond
the closed circle of those who
are already members of the
Mystical Body of Christ.
“Too often we seem to feel
that Newmanism consists ex
clusively in erecting barriers
of defense against attacks upon
our Faith,” he added. "Too of
ten are we concerned simply
with saving what we have and
give little heed to sharing this
gift with others. An apostolate
which confines itself to the
preservation of the Faith and
ingores the propagation of the
Faith is an apostolate in name
only.”
MANY VOLUNTEERS
thy Dyer, Ypsilanti, Mich., NCE
national president, and John
Bernard, Lafayette, convention
chairman.
Talks at the August 27 ses
sions continued the considera
tion of the convention theme.
Auxiliary Bishop Warren L.
Boudreaux of Lafayette stress
ed: “Christ was born once, but
He wills to be bom again, in
the hearts of men. He died once,
but that death is renewed daily
on our altars. It is your duty
and mine to be missionaries of
His coming, to be witnesses
to the furthermost parts of
the earth.”
"WHEREVER you go, what
ever you do, whatever you wear,
whatever you think, you are the
Church,” the bishop told the
delegates.
James Oliver, dean of the
USL graduateschool, discussing
the incarnation of the apostolate
in the university, reminded:
’’The university, in its quest
for knowledge, must allow and
even encourage and stimulate
studies related to the existence
of God and to an understanding
of His nature.
“In addition to studying about
the existence of God, the uni
versity must be concerned about
the existence of man,” he con
tinued.
BACK TO SCHOOL for children of Archdiocese resulted in
Sister Mary Edmund, of St. Thomas More, Decatur, Parochial
School getting to know Cathy Duprie and Sherry Pirhalla.
Dynamic Apostles
Needed For Full
University Life
U.S. Church Responding
To Latin America Tasks
“WELL - INFORMED Catho
lics secure in their faith, need
have no fear of ideas at
variance with their own. They
should welcome the opportunity
to enter fully into all phases
of the intellectual life oi the
university. This indeed they
must do as living instruments
of the Incarnation,” Meng de
clared.
Bishop Maurice Schexnayder
of Lafayette, host for the con
vention, in welcoming the dele
gates, quoted from die recent
coronation address of His Holi
ness Pope Paul VI— “We sal
ute our sons in Christ, among
whom We wish to mention esp
ecially the bold and generous
young people, in whom rests
sure hope for a better future.”
“The priest, Religious, lay
leader must, whether he likes
it or not,” Bishop Schednayder
continued, “fulfill in the world
the role of a prophet. Not the
prophet who foretells the future,
but one who speaks for God, is
the mouthpiece of God.
“How vast and ready for the
harvest are the fields in which
it is your privilege to live and
how challenging— the campus
of the secular college or univ
ersity, ” he said.
Bishop Schexnayder, who
spent 17 years as a Newman
chaplain at Louisiana State Uni
versity, Baton Rouge, challen
ged his listeners to prepare
themselves for their role.
“PROVIDENCE AND GRACE
never die .. On these you must
depend. Keep your eyes on high
and fear nothing, be loyal to the
truth, Christ's truth,” he ad
vised.
Also on the opening program
were: Lafayette Mayor J. Ray
burn Bertrand: T. J. Arce-
neaux, dean of the USL Coll
ege of Agriculture, represent
ing university officials; Timo
DAVENPORT, Iowa —
The Catholic Church in the Uni
ted States will have Sbme 5,000
priests, Brothers and nuns plus
more that 1,000 volunteers from
the laitv working in the miss
ion fields of Latin America be
fore the close of the 1960’s.
This estimate came from
Father John J. Considine, M.
M., director of the Latin Ameri
ca Bureau, National Catholic
Welfare Conference, in an ad
dress (Aug. 21) at the annual
Study Week of the Apostolate
sponsored by the Davenport dio
cese.
• SEE ALSO PAGE 7
Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan
will bless the new convent at
St. Jude the Apostle Parish,
Atlanta, on Sunday, September
8, at 3:00 P.M. Following the
ceremony, there will be an open
house until 6:00 P.M. A recep
tion for the parishioners will
be held in the school cafeteria.
The Convent will house mem
bers of the Grey Nuns of the
Sacred Heart whose staff St.
Jude’s Parochial School. Su
perior is Sister Francis Mau-
rine, G.N.S.H. Other members
of the Order on the teaching
staff are: Sister Gabriel Marie,
FATHER Considine’s topic
was "North America’s Res
ponse to Latin America’s
Needs." He said the Church
in Canada now has some 1,500
priests, Brothers, nuns and lay
volunteers working in Latin
America.
"It has assumed responsib
ility for two special projects,
the national major seminary at
Tegucigalpa, Honduras, and the
minor seminary in the Diocese
of Marilia In Brazil,” the NCWC
official continued. "Its public
pledges in financial assistance
for 1962 surpassed $2,500,000,
to which should be added from
nise, G.N.S.H. Sr. Brigid Ann
G. N. S. H.
DESIGNED by Albert Ossow-
ski Ordwav, A.LA., the build
ing consists of a chapel-altar
and tabernacle of marble in me
mory of the late Father James
P. Boyce (a gift of his mother)
the former Chancellor of the
Archdiocese and Pastor of St.
Joseph’s in Athens. There are
also eleven bedrooms, Com
munity' Room, guest bedroom,
guest dining room, two parlors,
and a refectory. The building
is of weathered side of stone
mountain granite and wood shin
gles.
three to four million dollars
more which have followed the
Canadian personnel into the
field.”
DETAILING the U. S. effort,
Father Considine said: “By
present prospects the Church in
the United States will supply
approximately 5,000 priests,
America during the 1960s.
“In addition, the Papal Volun
teers for Latin America will
represent a body of apostolic
short-term lay workers in Lat
in America who by the end of the
current decade will have totaled
over a thousand volunteers,”
he continued.
Father Considine estimated
that Catholic sources in the U.
S. are sending in excess of $10
million a year into Latin Ameri
ca.
“THE GREAT bulk of this
goes toward the personal sup
port and apostolate of the Unit
ed States personnel in the
field,” he said.
CONTINUED ON PAGE 8
OH, NO!
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (NC)—
“Oh, no” was the reaction of
Msgr. James E. O’Connell, rec
tor of St. John’s Home Missions
Seminary here, when he select
ed the winning ticket in a draw
ing for $100 during the annual
two-day reunion of the semi
nary’s alumni association. The
winning ticketcarriedhis name.
ARCHBISHOP TO OFFICIATE
St. Jude Convent
Dedication Sunday
G.N.S.H., and Sister Marie De-
HELP LS’
Pope Makes
Direct Plea
For Laymen
FRASCATI, Italy, (NC)—
“Come help us now !” His Ho
liness Pope Paul VI said in a
direct appeal to the laity of the
world to enter actively into the
work of the Church.
The Pontiff's strong and sim
ple appeal was made in his Ser
mon during Mass at the cathe
dral of Frascati on Sunday.
THIS ALSO — the Mass and
sermon — began to appear as
something new in the modern
pontificates. It was the third
successive Sunday thatthePope
had left his summer residence
at Castelgandolfo to go to a
nearby church in the hill coun
try south of Rome to celebrate
the Eucharist and deliver a ser
mon after the Gospel, just as
Catholic pastors everywhere
were doing.
The Pope himself had made
this apparently developing pat
tern something to watch, for he
had made the three sermons of
the three Sundays vehicles for
important pronouncements: Au
gust 18, was an appeal to the
Eastern Christian Churches for
reunion; August 25, a general
appeal for a stronger living
Faith; September 1, an invita
tion to the laity to go to work in
the apostolate “today — imme
diately.”
THE OCCASION of the Pope’s
visit was a solemn ceremony to
venerate the remains of St.
Vincent Pallotti — who a cen
tury and a half ago had offered
his first Mass, at Frascati,
and who was canonized by Pope
John last January.
Pope Paul hailed the newly
sainted founder of the Society of
Catholic Apostolate as “a pio
neer in his discovery of the lai
ty’s capacity for good,” and he
said that Pallotti had given a
lesson to the Church to enable
it to “foresee and prepare for
this hour when the Catholic lai
ty has come of age.”
THE LAYMAN, said the Pope,
“is now one of the major hopes
of the Church.” Recalling how
Father Pallotti had worked in
the aftermath of the French Re
volution, Paul VI remarked:
“The motives for the social
transformation wrought by the
French Revolution, though clo
thed in laicism and protest
against the Church, were, how
ever, deeply Christian.
“The ideals of liberty, equa
lity and fraternity are altogeth
er Christian, just as are today’s
deep social aspirations for jus
tice and freedom.
“ALL OF US are responsible
for our times and for our bro
thers. Responsibility is a tre
mendous word which only the
saints with their intuitive opti
mism conceived with energetic
force. St. Vincent Pallotti was
a pioneer of that perception.”
Then, phrasing his words in a
direct and universal appeal, the
Pope said to lay people:
“The day is growing late.
Become convinced that it is
necessary to work today —
immediately, that not an hour
can be lost! The needs are im
mense and most urgent.
“COME AND help us to tell
the world where is truth and
where is error — this world
which is so distracted and al
most overcome by centrifugal
movements. There is need to go
to work today, immediateh. To
morrow could be too late. Now
is the hour of the laity...
“It is now that the lay peo
pie must knowledgeably join the
hierarchy in carrying the cross
on the road of salvation and im
merse themselves with the
hierarchy in the diffusion of
grace. The laity, awakened by
modern culture, already feels
this vocation.”
In the course of his sermon,
the Pope also said:
“THE FIRST responsibilities
belong naturally to the priest.
But St. Vincent Pallotti saw that
the layman himself could be
come an active element, thus
anticipating by a century the
modern forms of the lay apos
tolate. This truth is not yet re
cognized sufficiently.
“The layman should arrive at
a knowledge of this fact, which
is true not only by reason of the
need for lengthening the arms of
the priest, which do not reach
everywhere and are not suffi
cient for all his labors. It is
true also because of something
deeper and more essential: by
CONTINUED ON PAGE 8
\\H.\T MAY well be a uni
que representation of St. Joseph
the Worker, is this statue of the
saint in the lobb\ of St. Joseph
Parochial School in Mishawaka,
St. Joseph County, Indiana.
Sculptured in Italian white mar
ble from a plan formulated
b;. the pastor, Msgr. Curt A.
Suelzer, its most noticeable
break with tradition is his
youthful appearance.