Catholic News Around Indiana
            Compiled by  Brandon A. Evans
            Diocese of Evansville
            Women Of  The Church National Conference Planned For October
            
By  Special To The Message
              Registration is now open for “Women of the  Church: Strength of the Past. Hope for Tomorrow. A Catholic Leadership  Conference.” The national conference will be held Oct. 7-9 in  Ferdinand. 
              Responding to Pope Francis’ call for “a more  incisive female presence” in the Church, Saint Meinrad Seminary and School of  Theology, St. Meinrad, and the Sisters of St. Benedict of Ferdinand are  co-hosting the conference, which will be held at Monastery Immaculate  Conception in Ferdinand. 
              The conference seeks to recognize and support  the many ways that women participate in the mission of the Catholic Church.  Three nationally known speakers will be featured at the national  gathering: 
              - Dr. Carolyn Woo, president and CEO of  Catholic Relief Services, will speak on “Working for a Better World: God,  Neighbor, Self.” 
              - Dr. Kathleen Sprows Cummings, director of the  Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism at the University of Notre  Dame and an associate professor of American studies and history, will speak  about models of Catholic women’s leadership. 
              - Sr. Mary Catherine Hilkert, OP, professor  of theology at the University of Notre Dame, will be speaking on “Go and Tell:  The Testimony of Women and the Faith of the Church.”
              Bishop Charles C. Thompson of Evansville and  Archbishop Joseph Tobin of Indianapolis also will participate in the program.  Topics for the breakout sessions will include leadership formation, vocational  discernment, spirituality, Catholic health care, youth ministry, the  Benedictine charism, and cultivating leaders for a multicultural Church. 
              The conference is designed for women and men  in the Church, including professional lay ecclesial ministers, scholars,  teachers, youth and campus ministers, parish leaders and volunteers, healthcare  providers and social workers, religious and those discerning a call. Conference  participation will be limited to 300. 
            Early-bird registration is now open, at $150  per person, through July 14. The regular conference rate is $190. For the  complete schedule and to register, visit www.womenofthechurch.org.
               
(For news from the  Diocese of Evansville,  log on to the website of The Message at www.themessageonline.org)
 
            Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend
            Teen reception of first Communion meant ‘coming  home’
            
By Kay Cozad
              A number  of high school youth from across the diocese have been eagerly preparing to  enter the Catholic Church with the reception of the sacraments. They have found  a home in the Church through their high school Rite of Christian Initiation of  Teens (RCIT) program offered through each school’s Campus Ministry.
              Alexandra  Broom, a senior at Bishop Luers High School in Fort Wayne, was raised  Christian, but did not attend a church regularly. As a child she learned about  the Catholic faith through her grandmother, but by 13 had accepted a friend’s  invitation to the Methodist Church where she was baptized and confirmed. Soon  she found herself investigating other faiths but remained unfulfilled.
  “Once I  started coming to Luers, my knowledge of Catholicism grew tremendously. I  considered converting to Catholicism before attending Luers. However, the four  years of a Catholic environment with excellent teachers and helpful friends  guided me to come to know the Truth easily,” she said.
              Broom’s  discernment took a full six years. “The Catholic Church was the first place I  really felt myself connect to God on a regular basis and understood His truth.  With this realization, I decided to become Catholic,” she said, adding that she  began her preparation with Meg Hanlon, the head of Bishop Luers’ religion  department.
              So along  with five other Bishop Luers students, “Every Wednesday we would meet after  school and discuss the Catholic faith and confirm this was the right path for  me. We practiced receiving the sacraments, chose our patron saint’s name (St.  Joan of Arc), chose a sponsor (my grandma, Lynn Parsons), and grew closer to  God as a group. Mrs. Hanlon really furthered our knowledge and was very  encouraging the entire journey,” she said.
              The  culmination of her formation experience had her welcomed fully into the  Catholic Church with first Communion and Confirmation conferred by Bishop Kevin  C. Rhoades during his pastoral visit to Bishop Luers at a Mass on Jan. 28.
              Broom’s  first Communion was a homecoming she said. “Receiving the Eucharist meant I was  coming home. I was finally partaking in the ultimate sacrifice for all of our  sins. I was taking responsibility for my sins and thanking God by accepting Him  into my temple so He can heal me and strengthen our relationship. It was an  overwhelming sense of grace to receive my first communion,” she said.
              
  Photo caption: Alexander Broom , Bishop Luers senior, poses with Bishop Kevin C.  Rhoades following her full reception into the Catholic Church on Jan. 28.
                               
            
(For news from the  Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend, log on to the website of Today’s Catholic at www.todayscatholicnews.org)
 
Diocese of Gary
Diocese  begins journey of faith toward first-ever synod
By Marlene A. Zloza
  GARY—Hundreds of the faithful filled Holy  Angels Cathedral on Saturday to begin “walking together” toward the Diocese of  Gary’s first-ever synod, attending a special Mass celebrated by Bishop Donald  J. Hying.
  The formal processional included more than 50  diocesan priests, deacons and seminarians who gathered with parishioners from  throughout Northwest Indiana to join in the Mass and hear the Proclamation of  the Diocesan Synod by Father Brian Chadwick, judicial vicar of the diocese.
  Bishop Hying explained the purpose of the  synod in a 24-page pastoral letter dated Feb. 25, the 59th  anniversary of the diocese. In it, he described the synod as “a dynamic  experience allowing all to gather, pray, converse, discern and plan a future  that will truly be a fruit of the Holy Spirit and will guide us for years to  come.”
  In his homily that Saturday, Bishop Hying  reiterated that the synod “is the work of the Holy Spirit,” and noted the day’s  scripture readings spoke “powerfully of our unity with Christ.”
  “ ‘We’ is the operative word,” Bishop Hying  said in reference to Christ’s joining with his people, the Church. “He wants to  unite us to fulfill his mission, the mission of his Church.”
  Bishop Hying called all Catholics of the  diocese to participate in synod activities that will include parish sessions  for reflection and insights this fall and deanery gatherings next winter to  discuss parish feedback and priorities, all leading to the synod itself on  Pentecost in 2017, followed by implementation of the ideas brought forth.
  Bishop Hying described the synod – from  ancient Greek meaning “walking together” – with the image of the Church walking  together “to fulfill the work of Christ.” In the formal process, he said, “the  entire diocese comes together to know where Christ is leading us into the  future.”
  After visiting “every church, every school,  every hospital” of the Diocese of Gary within a year of being installed as its  fourth Bishop in Jan., 2015, Bishop Hying expressed his love for Northwest Indiana  and its people.
  
  Photo  caption: Bishop Donald J. Hying  prays before the altar during the Liturgy of the Eucharist at the Mass for the  Declaration of the Synod at Holy Angels Cathedral in Gary on Feb. 27. The  declaration officially initiated the historic synod process. (Anthony D. Alonzo  photo)
       
Service for  bereaved comforts, reminds of heavenly journey
By Anthony D. Alonzo
  CROWN POINT—The passing of a loved one,  whether the loss occurred 20 years ago or 3 months ago, is universally  recognized as one of life’s most heart-wrenching chapters. The bereaved  instinctually try to manage, yet the fellowship of the faithful can help those  “lift up the cross” of their sorrow.
  Fellowship and spiritual guidance were  offered to dozens seeking to heal, look forward, and memorialize their loved  ones at the second annual “We Remember” ecumenical service at St. Matthias  Church in Crown Point.
  Prayer, poetry and scripture readings were  provided for sometimes-tearful guests in a setting featuring soft light,  candles and choir-led music. Catholic and Protestant clergymen invoked God’s  blessings to send his “angel of consolation.”
  The gathering, especially designed to help  those who have suffered the loss of a child, was coordinated by the Helping Our  Pain Ease Ministry, part of the greater Hope Ministry at St. Matthias.
  Deacon Gregory Fabian from St. Matthias  welcomed visitors and introduced guest speakers to the “Always on our Mind,  Forever in our Heart” service. He spoke of themes from St. Matthew, “Blessed  are those who mourn for they shall be comforted.”
  Registered participants each carried a blue  candle, personalized with the name of their deceased family member or friend,  and then lit it from a candle at the steps of the sanctuary.
  The Rev. John Starr of Crown Point spoke of  the departed in terms of their journey home to a loving God. 
  Starr told guests that God was like the  father in the Parable of the Prodigal Son, who, while his boy was living a  rebellious lifestyle, was all the while listening for his footsteps coming up  the drive.
   “How  many days and hours he stood on that porch looking down that dusty road,  waiting for his boy to come home, and when he saw him, the father could not  contain himself,” Starr said. “With joy bursting in his heart, he ran to get  his son.”
  Wittenberg Village chaplain Rev. Cory Wielert  spoke about the loss of his daughter, Ann Louise Wielert, just hours after her  birth 10 years ago. His yet-to-be-resolved feelings of anger were not toward  God, but rather the “sin of Adam.”
  The Lutheran minister quoted Romans 6:23 and  reminded the audience that death is a result of man’s unfaithfulness.
  Yet through Christ’s death and resurrection,  God created life eternal for our loved ones. Our departed are like the saints,  or faith heroes of ages past, he said.
  
  Photo  caption: St. Matthias Hope  Ministry committeeman Tim Kreke (right) helps locate personalizaed candles for  bereaved guests at the second annual "We Remember" service at the  Crown Point church on Feb. 21. Ministry members offered an ecumenical program  of scripture reading, song and other commemorations for those who have lost a  child. (Anthony D. Alonzo photo)
       
(For news from the  Diocese of Gary, log on to the website of the Northwest Indiana Catholic at www.nwicatholic.com)
 
Diocese of Lafayette
No news  briefs are available this week
 
(For  news from the Diocese of Lafayette, log on to the website of The  Catholic Moment at www.thecatholicmoment.org)