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Abbatial blessing, elevation of monastery to abbey

Abbatial Blessing of Sister Benedict McLaughlin, OSB

Immaculate Heart of Mary Abbey in Westfield, Vermont

Holy Mass to be celebrated at Mater Dei Parish (191 Clermont Terrace, Newport)

10 a.m., Saturday, Nov. 11

Hidden in the heart of rural Vermont, in the heart of the Church, the nuns of the Immaculate Heart of Mary Abbey dedicate their lives to seeking God in His infinite beauty. Remaining close to His Word by a rich tradition of liturgical prayer and Gregorian chant, we contemplate, praise, and thank Him, giving voice to the needs of all humanity and creation. Our community life is lived in simplicity, obedience and joy under the Rule of St. Benedict.

On Nov. 11, the faithful of the Diocese of Burlington will join the Benedictine nuns of Immaculate Heart of Mary Abbey in Westfield as they celebrate the elevation of their monastery to an abbey and the election and blessing of their first abbess, Sister Benedict McLaughlin, OSB.

This recognition makes this a momentous day for not only the Benedictine Community but for the entire Diocese of Burlington. The abbey is a part of the congregation of monks and nuns originally founded in Solesmes, France, and present in 11 countries of Europe, Africa, North American, and Central America. The abbey in Westfield was founded as a monastery in 1981, connected with the Abbaye Sainte-Marie de Deux-Montagnes, near Montreal. This year, due to the community’s stability and growth, the monastery was elevated to the rank of an abbey.    On Sept. 21, Sister Benedict was elected as the first abbess of the Immaculate Heart of Mary Abbey.

There will be a special Mass that includes the Rite of Blessing of an Abbess on Nov. 11, presided over by the Abbot of Solesmes. Joining him will be the abbots and abbesses from the various Benedictine religious communities that make up the Congregation of Solesmes throughout the world, as well as other priests and members of consecrated life.

This is a unique, once-in-a-lifetime blessing for both the new abbey and Diocese of Burlington, and we are grateful to invite as many as possible to experience this event.

Women’s Retreat Date Change

The Fall Women’s Retreat that was originally scheduled for Nov. 11 has been moved to Oct. 28. All other information and details will remain the same, including the time and location, 8:30am3:30pm at Immaculate Heart of Mary Parish in Williston, and keynote speaker Sr. Paul Mary Dreger, FSE. To register: Fall Women’s Retreat. If you have already registered, you should have received an email explaining the change. We are asking that all those who registered contact Nicole Hamilton as soon as possible with whether you can still attend on Oct 28. Her contact information is in your confirmation email. The date change is due to the Mass of Blessing that has been scheduled to take place on Nov. 11 for the installation of the new abbess at the Benedictine Abbey in Westfield. Josh Perry, the director of worship for the Diocese of Burlington, has provided the following statement:

On Nov. 11, the faithful of the Diocese of Burlington will join the Benedictine nuns of Immaculate Heart of Mary Abbey in Westfield as they celebrate the elevation of their monastery to an abbey and the election and blessing of their first Abbess, Sister Benedict McLaughlin, OSB. 

This recognition makes this a momentous day for not only the Benedictine Community but for the entire Diocese of Burlington. The abbey is a part of the congregation of monks and nuns originally founded in Solesmes, France, and present in 11 countries of Europe, Africa, North America and Central America. The abbey in Westfield was founded as a monastery in 1981, connected with the Abbaye Sainte-Marie de Deux-Montagnes, near Montreal. This year, due to the community’s stability and growth, the monastery was elevated to the rank of an abbey. On Sept. 21, 2023, Sister Benedict was elected as the first abbess of the Immaculate Heart of Mary Abbey. There will be a special Mass that includes the Rite of Blessing of an Abbess taking place on Nov, 11, presided over by the Abbot of Solesmes. Joining him will be the abbots and abbesses from the various Benedictine religious communities that make up the Congregation of Solesmes throughout the world, as well as other priests and members of consecrated life. This is a unique, once-in-a-lifetime blessing for both the new abbey and our Diocese, and we are grateful to invite as many as possible to experience this event.

CARA study shows positive signs of Catholic belief in Eucharist, but underscores need for revival

Almost two-thirds of Catholics believe in the real presence of Jesus in the Eucharist, but only 17 percent of adult Catholics physically attend Mass at least once per week, according to a newly published survey from Georgetown University’s Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate. The survey also revealed a high correlation between belief in the Eucharist and weekly or even monthly Mass attendance.

The 2022 survey of self-identified Catholics published Sept. 26 and titled “Eucharist Beliefs: A National Survey of Adult Catholics” found 64 percent of respondents provided responses that indicate they believe in the Real Presence, that the Lord Jesus Christ is truly present under the appearance of bread and wine in the Eucharist.

That conclusion was drawn from both open-ended and closed-ended questions respondents were asked about their understanding of church teaching about the Eucharist and additional questions to clarify their beliefs.

According to the CARA study, 49 percent of respondents correctly identified that the church teaches that “Jesus Christ is truly present under the appearance of bread and wine.” The other 51 percent incorrectly identified the church’s teaching as “Bread and wine are symbols of Jesus’ actions at the Last Supper, meaning that Jesus is only symbolically present in the consecrated bread and wine.”

“Results of this question indicate that there is substantial confusion about what the church teaches about the Eucharist with slightly more adult Catholics not knowing this correctly than those correctly identifying the teachings,” the report stated.

The survey report noted the data from the responses to the questions indicated “most who do not believe in the Real Presence are not rejecting the teaching, as they do not know this is what the church teaches.”

The survey aimed to test or clarify the findings of a 2019 Pew Research Center survey that found one-third of U.S. Catholics agree with the church that the Eucharist is the body and blood of Christ. According to Pew’s analysis published in August 2019, “nearly seven-in-ten Catholics (69 percent) say they personally believe that during Catholic Mass, the bread and wine used in Communion ‘are symbols of the body and blood of Jesus Christ.’ Just one-third of U.S. Catholics (31 percent) say they believe that ‘during Catholic Mass, the bread and wine actually become the body and blood of Jesus.'”

The 2019 Pew survey was part of the impetus for the National Eucharistic Revival that the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops launched last year, and which will include a National Eucharistic Congress in Indianapolis in July. The initiative aims “to inspire a movement of Catholics across the United States who are healed, converted, formed, and unified by an encounter with Jesus in the Eucharist — and who are then sent out on mission ‘for the life of the world,'” its website states.

In a review of previous surveys asking Catholics about their belief in the Real Presence beginning with a 2008 American National Election Study, CARA indicated that the Pew Research Center’s phrasing for its question on the topic may have been confusing to respondents. CARA aimed to be as clear as possible with its survey’s approach, which is why it opened with an “unaided and open-ended question”: “In your own words, what do you believe happens to the gifts of bread and wine after Consecration during Mass?”

The new CARA study, while showing more Catholics believe in the Real Presence than in the Pew study, still underscores the need for the Eucharistic Revival, said Bishop Andrew H. Cozzens of Crookston, Minnesota, chairman of the USCCB’s Committee on Evangelization and Catechesis, which is supporting the revival.

“It’s still not good news,” Bishop Cozzens, who also serves as board chairman of the National Eucharistic Congress nonprofit formed in 2022 to plan the national event, told OSV News. “What it reveals is that there’s … people who say they believe in the Eucharist, but they don’t go to Mass. In that sense, they obviously haven’t had a real encounter with Jesus in the Eucharist.”

“This is what we’re about with the Eucharistic Revival, this encounter with Jesus in the Eucharist that lets me realize he’s a living person and that changes the way I live,” he continued. “That’s what we really need.”

The survey, however, “might actually show us we have more low-hanging fruit than we thought we did,” he said. “In other words, there are people who say they believe in the Eucharist, but they don’t go to Mass every week. … How do we invite them into an encounter with Jesus in the Eucharist so that their lives can be changed?”

The survey found that knowledge of the church’s teaching on the Eucharist and belief that teaching is true is highest among Catholics who attend Mass at least once per week, at 95 percent. Among Catholics who attend less than weekly but at least once per month, it was 80 percent.

It also found that weekly Mass attendance has dropped seven percentage points during the Covid-19 pandemic from 24 percent in 2019 to 17 percent in 2022 — around 5 percent watch Mass on television or online due to the pandemic. An additional 18% attend less than weekly but at least once per month. Twenty-six percent attend Mass a few times per year and 35 percent rarely or never attend Mass.

“What we need is not just good catechesis — we do need that — but we also need to invite people to a relationship,” Bishop Cozzens said. “Helping people understand that it (lack of belief in the Real Presence) is not just an intellectual problem, it’s a problem of the heart in that sense of relationship with Jesus. What we’re really seeking is inviting people to an encounter with Jesus in the Eucharist, because that’s what will have the biggest impact.”

The national study was commissioned by the McGrath Institute for Church Life at the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana, “to better understand what the current Catholic population (self-identified) believes about the Catholic Church’s teaching on the Eucharist,” the report stated. The survey included 1,031 respondents ages 18 or older with a margin of error of 4.45 percentage points. It was offered in both English and Spanish, and administered through an online form or via telephone with a live interviewer from July 11 to Aug. 2, 2022.

The McGrath Institute commissioned the CARA study because of its collaboration with the National Eucharistic Revival and the importance of having clearer data on Catholics’ beliefs regarding the Real Presence, Bishop Cozzens said.

Affiliated with Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., CARA is a national, nonprofit, research center that conducts social scientific studies about the Catholic Church.

—Maria Wiering, OSV News

A simple request turned into a productive career

When I was rector of the Cathedral of St. Joseph in Burlington, Spectrum Youth and Family Services approached me about the possibility of opening a warming shelter for youth ages 18-24, which did open in the parish hall. With the permission of the bishop, the shelter was open for four winters.

Spectrum provided the staffing and all the materials. Cathedral donors, other volunteers, and I provided food.

During that time, I had the opportunity to meet many young men and women and provide pastoral care for them.

One of them, Caleb Copley, who had been a resident at the shelter, asked me if I could teach him how to drive. He had his driver’s permit but didn’t have his license.

And so, driving lessons began in downtown Burlington and the surrounding area. Caleb finished his summer lessons with me, passed his driving test and obtained his license. He took a job for several months with FedEx out of South Burlington and continued on to graduate from the ProDriver Training School in Milton where he learned how to drive trucks. He then successfully passed another test to obtain his commercial driver’s license for operating large vehicles and trucks.

Caleb moved out west where he was hired by a Washington-based trucking company.  Currently he is a long-distance truck driver. He has driven all over California, Texas, Washington State, the Dakotas, Tennessee and elsewhere. Asked about his experience as a truck driver, he said, “I love it. I can live in my truck, see the country and make lots of money.” And he does.

Caleb calls me every few weeks to check in. I am always happy to hear from him, and I am very proud of him. Sometimes the time difference can be an issue, but I always make myself available to him — even if it’s late at night. Truck driving can be a lonely profession with so many long hours on the road, but Caleb is enjoying it and has seen more of the U.S. than I ever have.

What began as a simple request to teach a young man how to drive has turned into a successful career for him. While this experience with Caleb has shown many tangible fruits, I pray every day that the seeds planted in the hearts of the youth at the St. Joseph-Spectrum Warming Shelter, may continue to blossom.

In the meantime, let’s keep on truckin’.

—Father Harlow is pastor of Corpus Christi Parish based in St. Johnsbury.

Editor’s note: Caleb was featured in a Vermont Catholic article on Dec. 30, 2019.

—Originally published in the Fall 2023 issue of Vermont Catholic magazine.

 

 

Knights of Columbus Council #297 celebrates 125th anniversary

On Sept. 23, The Knights of Columbus #297 that represents the St. Albans area and has round tables in Fairfield and East Fairfield celebrated their 125th anniversary at The American Legion in St. Albans.

The council’s leader, Grand Knight Valdemar Garibay, acted as the master of ceremonies. The successful event was attended by many Brother Knights including the state deputy from Burlington and district deputy from Swanton.

The 125th anniversary committee displayed awards, photos of previous grand knights, and history.

Dinner was provided by the Dairy Center Catering, and the music was provided by the band “She Was Right.”

The Knights of Columbus #297 began on Jan. 30, 1898, with 41 members. Today, it has 107 members.

It focuses on lifting the faith community through action and prayer by supporting families, parishes, and the community.

Some examples of good works in the community are hosting blood drives, partnering with Northwestern Counseling and Support Services for the Camp Rainbow summer camp, and helping the University of Vermont Medical Center’s Children’s Hospital with the Big Change Round Up for Kids.

The council also participates in food, clothing, and toys drives and has supported and helped with the various playgrounds in the St. Albans and Fairfield community.

 

Archbishop Coyne farewell events

A Solemn Mass of Farewell was celebrated Sept. 24 as Archbishop Christopher Coyne said farewell at the Cathedral of St. Joseph in Burlington.

Before Mass, the Congolese, Vietnamese, and Shemeza choirs performed, and at the end of Mass George Commo gave a farewell speech on behalf of the cathedral parish, offering thanks to Archbishop Coyne, who was the 10th bishop of the Diocese of Burlington and will leave in October to serve as archbishop of the Archdiocese of Hartford, Connecticut.

In Archbishop Coyne’s homily, he reflected on his eight years leading the Diocese of Burlington, including priests and deacons he ordained, visiting parishes and schools throughout the state, convening a synod and creating new evangelization efforts, and the creation of the Vermont Catholic Community Foundation. Archbishop Coyne’s full homily can be watched here:

After the Mass, a reception took place at the DoubleTree Hilton in South Burlington. More than 200 people from throughout the Diocese came to wish Archbishop Coyne farewell. Hearty hors d’oeuvres were served and farewell remarks were given by Msgr. John McDermott and Archbishop Coyne. The Rice Memorial High School Choir directed by Kevin Ginter performed.

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