Wednesday, February 29, 2012

CSC in 1-2-3: RCIA

1. What is RCIA and who is it for? RCIA stands for the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults. It is a process of conversion for adults who seek to be baptized or who want to join the Catholic Church from another tradition or who want to be confirmed.

2. Is RCIA a new process? Actually, RCIA is not new. In the earliest centuries of the Church, Christians invited adults to join the community of faith. Those who accepted the invitation became candidates for the Sacraments of initiation (Baptism, Confirmation and Eucharist) and entered into a step by step process toward full membership in the church. This process, called the catechumenate, included a lengthy period of formation, instruction and testing, lasting one to three years or more.

3. What happens during RCIA? Each week we look at the Sunday readings and a particular topic of faith. The catechists open up the Word and the lesson through their own faith stories, explanation, discussion and prayer. One of the most important elements of the process is the welcoming, prayer and witness of the community. This happens through the RCIA team members and the community gathered for Eucharist on Sunday and informally in between sessions.

Written by Sr. Linda Straub, Campus Minister

Congratulations to our 2011-2012 RCIA Candidates! Our thoughts are prayers are with you as you prepare for Baptism and Confirmation this Easter.

Sunday, February 26, 2012

February Secret Staff-er Revealed: Mark Zaegel

     Congratulations to Kayla Piorkowski, whose name was drawn from our raffle after she correctly identified Feburary's secret staff-er as Mark Zaegel, one of our campus ministers.

     Mark Zaegel is a 2008 Wash U graduate and has worked at the CSC for one year. He majored in Religious Studies and Anthropology, and lives with his wife and dog. His biggest fear in life is, “That I’ll look back on my life and think that I should have done so much more to help people.” His favorite TV shows are Jeopardy, The Big Bang Theory and Friends, and his favorite radio station is 99.1 Joy FM. The most interesting place he has ever visited is Ghana, and his hobbies are card games, board games, volleyball, running, biking, and ‘anything active and/or competitive!’ His favorite dessert is Betty Crocker brownies, because you “can’t go wrong with Betty”, and if he could be any superhero, he would want to be Jesus.

      Thanks to Mark Z. for sharing with us, and thanks to everyone who participated!

      Don't forget to seize the opportunity to get to know your CSC staff personally—nothing enhances Mass like exchanging the latest events on your favorite television show, and nothing enriches life like connecting to those around you!

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Lenten Reflection eBooks Available Online

Each Lent Catholic Student Union leaders gather and compile student reflections on the Lenten daily readings. We share these reflections with you so you can appreciate how college students regard God, faith and life. The unedited words reflect their honest faith.

Fr. Gary says, "What do university students think about God and life and love and work? When they read God’s Word, where do they hear it connect with their lives? How do they challenge themselves and us in this early 21st century?

These unedited reflections are entirely theirs. We offer them to you in the hopes that their reflections on these ancient texts will bring them alive for you and help you discover how ‘forever young’ these old words are. And show you that the young church has so much to teach to all the generations if we let ourselves listen.  God bless you all for taking Lent seriously this year."

Catholic Student Union writes, "We hope the reflections in the book with help guide you through this Lenten season. And bring you closer to God's undeniable love that can be seen on every face of this community and world."

Download a PDF of the Lent Book. Save it to your desktop and open it every day.

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

CSC in 1-2-3: Social Justice

1. Our Catholic faith tradition contains a long-standing commitment to social justice. Our Catholic understanding of Social Justice is rooted in our recognition of the dignity of each human being. Its relevance can be found in the Gospel narratives of Jesus, papal encyclicals on Catholic Social Teaching (CST), theology in the Catholic intellectual tradition, and a lived commitment in Catholic communities all over the world.

2. Social Justice is evident in the Church's social teaching on human dignity, human solidarity, and principles of justice and peace; the moral judgments about economic and social matters. The term "social justice" emerged in the Catholic faith tradition in the 1800s. The modern tradition of CST begins with Pope Leo XIII's encyclical, Rerum Novarum in 1891, since that time there have been more than 10 papal encyclicals on CST, the latest being Caritas in Veritate by Pope Benedict.

3. Social Justice at the CSC includes local service opportunities, domestic and international service trips, as well as on-going dialogues on issues of injustice and marginalization. During Lent we will be participating in Operation Rice Bowl and WashU's PB and Joy program.

Written by Cynthia Enghauser, Service and Social Justice Campus Minister

Please contact Cynthia at enghauser@washucsc.org to get involved in these or other Service and Social Justice initiatives.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Msgr. Bill Lyons Memorial Mass Transcript

From http://www.pnac.org/2011/11/the-funeral-of-msgr-lyons/ (complete with video):

"Msgr. William J. Lyons, 81, a priest of the Archdiocese of Saint Louis, who had served faithfully as a spiritual director for the North American College since 2003, passed away on Monday November 21, 2011. He passed away as a private Mass was concluding in his room, receiving viaticum. As the 81 year old man we loved so much succumbed to death after battling cancer, his priestly heart of 55 years shone brightly, witnessing and revealing the profound love of the heart of Jesus Christ the Good Shepherd."

Below is the transcript of Fr. Gary Braun's memorial Mass for Msgr. Lyons here in St. Louis:

Most of us here tonight are believers I suspect. Some not, perhaps. And we are
especially glad you’re here. But if you are, who helped you to believe? Who is it
who prepared the way of faith for you? Who leveled the mountains and filled in the
valleys between you and the Mystery we call God? Who opened the door for you
between Heaven and Earth? Who over the years of your life made a path for you to
the One-Who-Is-Love?

That’s the Advent question. It’s raised for us in this Gospel tonight. And it is no
small question. For most of us here tonight, I suspect one of the names we just
might whisper would be Fr. Bill Lyons (better known as MSGR, or just plain Bill)

Bill and I lived together at the Catholic Student Center for 10 years and every
summer for the next seven after he moved to Rome. If you knew Bill, you know
that he was kinda cheap. Kinda…
It was not unusual that he would run out of
toothpaste and show up at my door with his empty tube held up in front of him and
ask to borrow mine. Then proceed to squeeze my tube of toothpaste into his right
there in front of me! And yet, who could begrudge the little bit he borrowed
from any of us because of how much he gave to each of us?

Yes, Msgr was somewhat eccentric. A bit like John the Baptist in tonight’s Gospel
eccentric. Doing what John did, Bill came to many of us in the wilderness of
growing up and college life and being seminarians, and he opened a Way for us
to God and God to us, helping us across the chasm of our young emptiness and
loneliness and helping us lower some of those seemingly insurmountable obstacles
that loomed along the way.

Perhaps one of the greatest ways he helped many of us was that he taught us
something of what it means to be a man. At a time when many of us young guys
had no idea how to “talk deep”, to communicate things like “feelings”, to express
ourselves in words and even discover the power—the transforming power—of
being vulnerable to another human being, he was helping us learn trust, the same
trust that is at the heart of faith. This was so new to many of us in those days,
so exciting and scary. Still is. It is an amazing thing to be able to choose to trust
someone. We quickly discovered that relationships are what life is all about. And
what God is all about as well.

And he showed us we could talk to God like that too.

For us who did not know how, or at least did not know where to begin, Bill told us we
could pray. And he made prayer possible, and he made us want to pray. And he told us
we could relate to God as to a dear friend. One of Bill’s Directees told me just yesterday
that “Bill had a way of describing God in the most loving of terms. You were
convinced you were loved beyond all comprehension.”

Many is the night over the last 17 years when I saw Bill sitting in the back of
our Chapel over by the Baptismal font, praying. Hands on lap, a few simple
gestures, and in a conversation with his friend--God. It was just so human. I hope

to God he felt there what he helped so many feel: that he was “loved beyond all
comprehension.”

Bill ended every email with a quote from Cardinal George written back in 06: “In the
end we have only what we surrender--- we have only what we have given to the
Lord. We have only the relationships that are established in that surrender...."
In all humility, Bill did not cling, nor grasp, nor need to control, just a non-judgmental
presence and an encouragement to be our best self and somehow he communicated that
we could do that. That sort of ‘holy detachment’ was all part of what two of his best
friends and travelling buddies, MSGRS NICK SCHNEIDER AND ED GRIESEDICK
would describe when they said to me that he lived simply, travelled light, (and often, I
might add ), and imaged Christ’s openness along the way.

It was obvious to most all of us, that Fr Bill Lyons’ abiding passion was the young
Church! Whether it was in his teaching years or his work right across the street at
UMSL for 27 years or his ongoing work in the seminary here and in Rome, he took
those young lives that are invisible to so many in our Church and he made them
visible. He dismantled the obstacles that made them invisible to us. He made us
look at them, invisible to at who they were and who they were becoming and the
impact they were capable of having and reminded us in no uncertain terms that they
need mentors and coaches they can trust to help them become their own best self.
Bill would not let them stay invisible! He knew they are too important to us being
Church and to our future on this planet.

Is it any wonder that so many followed him into the seminary and so many
seminarians and priests confided in him? Maybe because they wanted to do for
others now something of what he had done for them?

This man, this priest, made a lot of lives a little less lonely. One person at a time, he
made the world a little less lonely. He brought a little light into our Advent night.
And if that is not filling in some valleys and leveling some mountains, I don’t know
what is.

How could we not do the same?! In Bill’s memory, in the name of the Advent
Prophet John, how could we not do the same for each other?!

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

CSC in 1-2-3: Science and Faith Scholars Program

1. The program is made possible by a grant from the John Templeton Foundation, whose goal is to provide
congregations with the resources to collaborate with scientists and science educators in the development
of a deeper engagement between science and faith.

2. The CSC Science and Faith program will extend through 2012 and will include a series of discussions, led by a scientist and a theologian and facilitated by the CSC Young Catholic Scholars.

3. Our 2012 Young Catholic Scholars are David Bundy, a 4th year PhD student in Biomedical Engineering, and Joe McDonald, a sophomore in Biomedical Engineering. Both of them bring a lot of great experience, passion, and enthusiasm to the program, and Fr. Mike Demkovich and Dr. Irene Schultze (our program directors) are very excited with what these two are capable of.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

CSC in 1-2-3: Catholic Student Union (CSU)

1. Catholic Student Union (AKA CSU) is the Catholic Student Center's link to Wash U. Although the CSC has a great relationship with Wash U, the CSC is not part of Wash U, nor does the CSC receive funding from Wash U. The CSC is a separate entity (it's part of the Archdiocese of St. Louis). We're allowed on campus and in the dorms because we are a recognized organization that is linked to Wash U through CSU, which is one of many official student groups at Wash U.

2. CSU consists of a board of six Wash U undergrads who meet on a weekly basis to discuss, plan and execute various student-related activities at the CSC. Campus minister Mark Zaegel serves as the staff contact for CSU, but the CSC is merely a resource for CSU--the CSC does not control the CSU.

3. The Catholic Student Union is a great way for students to develop into leaders of church and society. And remember students: Even if you're not on the CSU board, you can participate in CSU by being a member at large or simply by participating in CSU events.