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PAGE 2—The Georgia Bulletin, August 3,1978
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CASTELGANDOLFO, ITALY - Pope Paul VI has
expressed his support for those seeking to relieve the suffering
of the people of Ethiopia. The pope said that recent
humanitarian appeals, “have highlighted the hard trials certain
parts of that land, especially Eritrea, are undergoing.”
WASHINGTON (NC) - One day after 1,000 American
Indians marched on Capitol Hill demanding justice for their
people, the House of Representatives passed a resolution calling
on the U.S. government to “protect and preserve” Indian
religious freedom.
STEUBENVILLE, OHIO (NC) - Only if priests give away
power can the church be built up, the keynote speaker at the
fourth annual National Catholic Charismatic Conference for
Priests and Deacons told nearly 1,000 clergymen attending the
five-day gathering in Steubenville. “It takes strong leadership to
decentralize,” Carmelite Father Francis Martin said, but “it’s
either decentralize or disintergrate.”
TAIPEI, TAIWAN - Cardinal Paul Yu-Pin has resigned as
president of Fujen Catholic University in Taiwan. The
77-year-old cardinal, who is archbishop-in-exile of Nanking,
China, dted age and health as reasons for his resignation.
MILWAUKEE (NC) - Jesuit Father Karl Rahner will
receive the second Pere Marquette Discovery Award ever given
by Marquette University during ceremonies at the university in
March, 1979.
WINOOSKI PARK, VT. (NC) - John D. Donoghue, former
editor of THE VERMONT CATHOLIC TRIBUNE and former
public relations director at St. Michael’s College in Winooski
Park, Vt., has received the first Presidential Citation awarded by
the college trustees.
LA PAZ, BOLIVIA - A democratization trend spurred by a
hunger strike and supported by church leaders came to a halt
when a general whose election was voided installed himself as
president of Bolivia. Gen. Juan Pereda Asbun took over July 21,
saying he was preventing communists from seizing power.
WASHINGTON - The House has passed what U.S. Catholic
Conference official John McCarthy calls a “cleaning up” piece
of legislation affecting immigration, by a 396-20 vote.
McCarthy, director of the USCC Migration and Refugee
Services, said the USCC had supported the bill.
NEW YORK (NC) - Auxiliary Bishop John J. Boardman of
Brooklyn, 82, widely known for his work on behalf of the
missions, died July 17 shortly after undergoing abdominal
surgery in a Brooklyn hospital. The first Brooklyn native to
serve as a bishop of the diocese, he was ordained a priest in
1921 and raised to the episcopate in 1952.
Elect Arch Gary
To The State Senate
44th District
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WORLD WIDE MEE TING
Marriage Encounter Draws Thousands
EAGLE SCOUT AWARD ~ David
Woods of Troop 21, St. Lawrence,
Lawrenceville, receives his award from
Assistant District Commissioner J.
Northcutt at Father Gerry Gill’s last
public Mass before leaving to return to
his native Ireland. David’s parents were
on hand for the big event.
Parishes Host Visiting Glenmary
The story of the
Glenmary Home Missioners
will be told in two parishes of
the Atlanta archdiocese
during August.
On the weekend of
August 12-13, Father
George Mathis will be
welcomed at Corpus Christi
Church, Stone Mountain, by
the pastor, Father Thomas
Kenny.
The following weekend,
August 19-20, Father Mathis
will speak at St. Anna’s
Church in Monroe, at the
invitation of the pastor,
Father Edward A. J.
Danneker.
At the time Glenmary
was founded, in 1939,
approximately one-quarter of
the United States was
without Catholic ministry.
Most of the 1,022 priestless
counties lay in Appalachia
and the rural South.
Although the number of
counties without a resident
priest has been reduced to
599, most of “No Priest
Land” still lies in that region
where 32 million citizens
have no Church relationship
and less than one-half of one
percent are Catholic.
Since the founder of
Glenmary, Father William
Howard Bishop, researched a
map showing counties
without Catholic ministry,
which he called “No Priest
Land,” the work of Glenmary
has always been based on
research. The missioners go
where they are needed the
most, to work among the
poor and needy and those
who live outside any church.
The priests and Brothers
settle in a small town or rural
community at the invitation
Fr. George Mathis
of the bishop. They remain
until a parish is established
and able to function, then
they relocate in answer to
another challenge and need.
Today more than 100
Glenmary missioners work in
88 counties in 12 states:
Alabama, Georgia, North
Carolina, Virginia, West
Virginia, Ohio, Kentucky,
Tennessee, Mississippi,
Oklahoma, Texas and
Arkansas.
■6®
r* Milton Farris
Commissioner
Milton Farris is a man
who has earned the
people’s respect
during his eight years
on the Fulton
County Commission.
During that time,
there has not been a
single increase in the
tax rate.
Re-Elect
Milton Farris
Fulton County Commissioner
County-wide, District 1
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The missioners live in
small towns, laboring among
the poor and the unchurched,
trying their best to bring the
Good News of Christ as they
travel the mountain hollows
and along back roads.
The road of rural
ministry lengthens day by
day. It is built with love,
which is shown in meeting
practical and physical needs
as well as in bringing hope
and inspiration from the
spiritual message and the
Sacraments of the Church.
Houses of the poor are
repaired, chapels and
churches are built, job
training and tutoring for the
illiterate are provided,
medical attention for the sick
is obtained, schools are
supported and any program
of benefit to the community
is promoted. Centers for good
used clothing flourish in the
missions, without use of price
tags. Customers pay what
they can afford, perhaps 75
cents for a pair of shoes or
$1.50 for a coat, depending
on ability to pay. The dignity
of the customer is thus served
with a purchase instead of a
handout.
Father Mathis, a native
of Euclid Village, Ohio, has
filled mission assignments in
Kentucky and Georgia. He
was director of the Mission
Office for four years and in
1971 was appointed director
of Glenmary theologians who
are trained for the priesthood
at Washington Theological
Union, Washington, D. C.
Clothes Bin,
AMHERST, Mass. (NC) -
“We are not second class. We
do not choose the lesser of
two goods. We have been
called by God to be great
saints in our marriages and in
our family lives,” David M.
Thomas told an audience of
some 400 married couples.
The admonition came
during one of the 20 talks
presented during the Fourth
International Worldwide
Marriage Encounter
convention. The event drew
some 18,000 to the sprawling
campus of the University of
Massachusetts.
Thomas, a theologian
and a consulting editor to the
publication Marriage and
Family Living, defined
spirituality as “a recognition
of the deep presence of God,
which is here in our midst.”
The theologian told
participants that family
spirituality is based “on the
things we do in everyday
life,” and that it is also linked
to an acceptance of ourselves
and others.
His ideas on family
spirituality were among the
many tie-ins to the
convention theme “Focus on
Family.” In addition to the
20 invited speakers the
convention featured the
exchange of views on
evangelization, parents as
educators, family rights, the
impact of change and family
values.
Among those who
offered advice to couples was
Archbishop Raymond G.
Hunthauen of Seattle, Wash.,
who urged the participants to
“let go all the props, let go all
the security; let yourself fall
totally, heartily in the spirit
of Jesus.”
The Seattle prelate was
homilist at the concluding
ceremony - a coneelebrated
Mass in the university
football stadium. He told the
international assembly that
“Christian marriage stands at
the center of the Christian
mystery. It is not isolated,
not closed in.”
“Christian married love
does not end with itself,”
Bishop Hunthauser noted,
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“but is at the service of the
people of the church,” and
“is integrally a part of the
mission of the church in the
whole world.”
The concluding Mass had
several hundred
concelebrants. Scriptural
readings were given in
English, French and Spanish.
The three languages were
used extensively in various
presentations throughout the
meeting.
Participants from 34
foreign countries and from
throughout the United States
attended. A delegation of
French-speaking Canadians,
headed by Bishop Adolph E.
Prouix of Hull, Quebec, filled
37 buses to travel to the
convention site in rural
Amherst, a small college town
in western Massachusetts.
Other participants
chartered planes to the two
closest airports in Boston and
Hartford. Included among
foreign guests were couples
from Ireland, Australia, the
Philippines, Korea, Puerto
Rico and several South
American countries.
Convention participants
were united by one common
element - they all
experienced a Marriage
Encounter weekend.
The program is a
technique for helping couples
to increase their ability to
communicate and share deep
feelings with one another.
Worldwide Marriage
Encounter, which sponsored
the Amherst meeting, is one
of the principal branches of
the movement. It is described
as “a movement devoted to
the renewal of the sacrament
of matrimony in and for the
Catholic Church.”
Other faiths have
adapted their own theology
of marriage and the church to
the Marriage Encounter
movement. Nine different
faiths were registered at the
convention. Simultaneously,
Episcopalians held a similar
Marriage Encounter session in
South Hadley, Mass., while a
Lutheran session was held in
Long Beach, Calif.
O’Connor Honored Again
Thomas J. O’Connor, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Francis J.
O’Connor of Oak Lane, N.E.,
Atlanta and a junior of St.
Pius X High School, President
of the National Honor
Societies of the State of
Georgia and recipient of the
Harvard Book Award
presented by Mrs. Mary Moss
of the Harvard Club of
Atlanta to the “Outstanding
Junior who combines
excellence in scholarship with
achievement in other fields”
was selected as one of 150
students in the United States
to attend the National
Leadership Training Center at
Indiana University in July.
The National Leadership
Training Centers are five-day
workshops for student leaders
designed to: increase their
self-understanding and
confidence; foster
development of a sound
philosophy of leadership and
increase their skills in
communication, problem
solving, group process and
organization.
The National Leadership
Training Centers are
sponsored by the National
Association of Secondary
School Principals, Office of
Student Activities for
members of the National
Association of Student
Councils and the National
Honor Society. NASSP is a
36,000 member professional
association of school
administrators, headquartered
in Reston, Virginia, a suburb
of the nation’s capital.
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