Catholic News Around Indiana
            Compiled by  Brandon A. Evans
            Diocese of Evansville
            National  School Choice Week Is Jan. 22-28
            
Across America, National School Choice Week  will be observed from Jan. 22 through Jan. 28 with a variety of events  highlighting educational options for students.
              “Every January, National School Choice Week  spotlights the millions of students, parents, teachers, and civic leaders who  make education options realities in their own communities and states,” said  Andrew Campanella, president of National School Choice Week. “With 2017 poised  to be a pivotal year for school choice, National School Choice Week will  provide an unprecedented chance to celebrate school choice where it exists, and  demand it where it does not.”  
              “We are grateful that Indiana parents have a  choice in their children’s educations.  All Catholic schools in the  Diocese of Evansville participate in the Indiana Choice Scholarship Program,”  said Dr. Daryl Hagan, Superintendent of Catholic Schools for the Diocese of Evansville.  The Choice Scholarshop Program provides vouchers to those families who wish to  enroll their children in non-public schools. 
              National School Choice Week 2017 will easily  surpass 2016’s total of 16,745 independently planned events, breaking records  once again as the largest celebration of educational opportunity in American  history. National School Choice Week 2017 will feature more than 20,450 events  across the country, with more being planned and added every day.  Please  contact your local Catholic school to learn how they will be celebrating School  Choice.
              The Week’s events are diverse in size and  type – from pep rallies featuring the National School Choice Week dance to open  houses, parent information sessions, large-scale rallies, roundtable discussions,  and more. The goal of National School Choice Week is to shine a positive  spotlight on effective education options for children.
              Dr. Hagan encourages parents and parishioners  to reach out to their elected officials and thank them for supporting school choice  in Indiana.  Parents interested in learning more about vouchers should  contact their local Catholic school.
            Photo caption: Principals and  administrators gather for a photo promoting National School Choice Week during  the Jan. 10 meeting for Catholic schools administrators at the Catholic Center  in Evansville. The Message photo by Tim Lilley.
             
            (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
            Marian physics student visits CERN
            
By Andrew Mentock
              A senior  at Marian High School in Mishawaka was invited to Switzerland last fall to  participate in an experiment that few physicists will have the chance to  experience during their lifetimes.
              James  Twaddle, 17, traveled to Geneva to use the legendary particle detectors located  at the headquarters of the European Organization for Nuclear Research, or CERN.  The opportunity surfaced because he was a standout participant in the  University of Notre Dame’s summer particle physics program known as QuarkNet.
              CERN is  perhaps most well known for its involvement in the discovery of the Higgs  Boson. “For a Ph.D. physicist to go to Geneva to do research at CERN would be a  coup,” said Rebekah Randall, Twaddle’s physics teacher at Marian. “But for a  high school student who hasn’t even completed one year of physics to not only  visit but to do research there (is) exceptional.  Unheard of, perhaps.”
              Twaddle  traveled to Geneva with his two instructors from QuarkNet, Brian Dolezal and  John Taylor, both local high school teachers. The research project they worked  on wasn’t necessarily cutting-edge science, but it was visual; and the  opportunity to use the equipment at CERN was very informative.
              Perhaps  the best part of the trip, they said, was the opportunity to be around some of  the best physicists in the world and observe them interacting with each other.
  “It’s the  holy grail of science: the most important experiment on the planet,” said  Dolezal, a teacher at Saint Joseph High School in South Bend. “You have  thousands of scientists from around the world, and what’s really impressive is  that the physicists may be working with someone from a country who does not  speak the same language as them.”
  Photo caption: An LHC magnet is displayed on the grounds of CERN, the European  Organization for Nuclear Research, in Geneva, Switzerland. Marian High School  senior James Twaddle visited the facility and performed an experiment there  last fall.
   
            (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
Local  Catholic Charities official serves with national disaster team
By Marlene A. Zloza 
  HAMMOND— Extending “a national reach with a  local presence,” the National Disaster Response Team from Catholic Charities  USA deployed volunteers from across the country to aid flood victims after  Hurricane Matthew cut a path of destruction through eastern North Carolina in  early October.
  Stephanie Miller, parish community outreach  coordinator for Catholic Charities of the Diocese of Gary, was among those  answering the call. “I was actually at a disaster training session Oct. 31 to  Nov. 4 in Maryland when the call came that they needed people in North  Carolina, so I volunteered; one of my instructors did, too,” said Miller, who  joined the national team just last summer after completing six days of case  management training with the Archdiocese of Indianapolis.
  “Jennifer Dyer, the executive director at  Catholic Charities (in the Diocese of Gary), has a lot of experience with  disaster recovery, and she brought the Indianapolis training to my attention,  thinking I might be interested,” explained Miller, a Gary resident and mother  of 10-year-old Jaden, who was indeed interested in helping families affected by  floods, fires, tornadoes and other natural disasters.
  “I trained to be a case manager, same as my  job here, but in a disaster area there are different guidelines and different  needs, and I was also taught to train supervisory case managers,” Miller added.
  In Maryland, Miller completed a variety of  practical disaster response courses. “We learned how to muck houses, and about  safety measures and the type of safety gear to use, like air masks.”
  Once Miller’s two-week mission trip to North  Carolina was approved by Dyer, she headed to the Diocese of Raleigh on Nov. 9  to work on a two-person team.
  “Responding to a disaster in your own  backyard is extraordinarily different than responding in another location,”  Dyer said. “We have Catholic Charities agencies in 186 dioceses, and when we  put out a call, trained staff from anywhere can volunteer.”
  Photo  caption: Stephanie Miller, the  parish community outreach coordinator at Catholic Charities of the Diocese of  Gary, works in the Hammond office after returning in late November from serving  a two-week stint with the Catholic Charities USA National Disaster Response  Team in the Diocese of Raleigh, North Carolina to help flood victims. (Marlene  A. Zloza 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
Speaker:  Faith, science, reason are ‘old friends’
By  Jesica E. Hollinger
  CARMEL — Does science need religion? Can  physics prove the existence of God? Can life scientists be Christian disciples? 
  In the first session of his adult faith  formation series at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Parish on Jan. 15, Joseph Tumasian  explored these questions and more, helping define the relationship between  faith, science and reason.
  Tumasian — a professor of theology and  psychology — addressed a crowded room of more than 40 attendees (a surprise to  the organizers who had prepared for half that number). 
  In his presentation on “Catholic Cosmology  and the Big Bang: Understanding the Beginning of Everything,” Tumasian noted  that the Catholic Church historically has been one of the greatest contributors  to the field of science. 
  “Epistemology is the theory of knowledge with  regard to its methods, validity and scope; the investigation of what  distinguishes justified belief from opinion,” he said.
  Some of the earliest recorded philosophy, he  said, dates back to Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius in his personal writings  known as Meditations, which reflect the influence of Stoicism and an  encouragement to cultivate a cosmic perspective. 
  “Throughout history, man has developed  different ways of knowing, including philosophy, theology, science, and poetry,  Tumasian said. “The role of the Protestant Reformation, Cartesian Solipsism (I  think therefore I am, Rene Descartes), and the resurgence of Platonic Dualism (Plato’s  Theory of Forms) have all contributed to our ways of knowing.”
  The Protestant Reformation brought about the  separation of metaphysics and introduced the concept of reductionism, and the  theories of Fideism and Scientism, which divided many.
  “This is the error of the two ways –  believing in faith alone, like those who believe in Fideism, or in facts alone,  like those who believe in the theory of Scientism,” Tumasian said. 
  “Some could argue that the militant group,  Isis is a contemporary example of Fideism, whose believers maintain that faith  is independent of reason, and that reason and faith are hostile to each other,  with faith being superior at arriving at particular truths,” he added
Photo caption: Joseph Tumasian presents the first of his discussion  series on “Faith, Science and Reason: Reuniting Old Friends” on Jan. 15 at St.  Elizabeth Ann Seton Parish.
 
‘Visit, O  blessed Lord, this home’
By  Caroline B. Mooney
  LAFAYETTE — Eighth-grade students in Tori  Hart’s classroom at Central Catholic Junior-Senior High School celebrated the  feast of the Epiphany by “chalking” their doorway to invite Christ into their  lives.
  “My grandparents always chalked their door,  but as a kid I didn’t know what it was for,” said Jodi Justak, director of  campus ministry at CC. “I read an article about the tradition and thought it  was a great idea. I shared it with our teachers and Tori said she wanted to do  it in her classroom.” 
  The “chalking of the doors,” a centuries-old  custom, is a house blessing performed on the feast of the Epiphany, which marks  the visitation of the three Wise Men to the baby Jesus. 
  The tradition is to use blessed chalk to  write above the home’s entrance: 20 + C + M + B + 17. The letters C, M, B have  two meanings. One is the initials of the traditional names of the three magi,  Caspar, Melchior, and Balthazar. The letters also stand for the Latin words  Christus mansionem benedicat, meaning: “May Christ bless the house.” The “+”  signs represent the cross and 2017 is the year.
  “When you bless your house, you’re connecting  the feast of the Epiphany and encountering Our Lord,” said Father Dominic  Petan, pastor of All Saints Parish, Logansport. He explained the tradition  to his parishioners and had blessed chalk available for them to use at their  homes. 
  “We are asking for the Lord’s hospitality,  saying, ‘Christ we want you to dwell here with us. We know you are always  knocking on our hearts and in our lives. Hopefully when we do this blessing,  it’s a reminder every day that we are supposed to open our hearts more and more  to the Lord.’ 
  “It can become a New Year’s resolution to do  this every year,” Father Petan said. “We are inviting the Lord to be part of  our year, but also trying to remember how we can make this a better year for  him.”
  While chalking the door, is it customary to  say: “The three Wise Men, Caspar, Melchior, and Balthazar followed the star of  God’s Son who became human more than two thousand years ago. May Christ bless  our home and remain with us throughout the new year. Amen.”
  Then offer the following prayer: “Visit, O blessed Lord, this home with the  gladness of your presence. Bless all who live or visit here with the gift of  your love; and grant that we may manifest your love to each other and to all  whose lives we touch. May we grow in grace and in the knowledge and love of  you; guide, comfort, and strengthen us in peace, O Jesus Christ, now and  forever. Amen,”
  Photo  caption: Eighth-grade students in  teacher Tori Hart’s “10:10” class at Central Catholic Junior-Senior High School  participated in the custom of “chalking of the doors” for the feast of the  Epiphany. The students used blessed chalk to write above the doorway to their  classroom. (Photo by Caroline B. Mooney)
   
  Priests,  seminarians compete in second ‘Cassock Classic’
By  Brigid Curtis Ayer (For The Catholic Moment)
  WESTFIELD — Priests and seminarians of the  Lafayette diocese faced off Jan. 2 at the second annual “Cassock Classic”  basketball game, held before an energized crowd of nearly 700 at Westfield High  School. 
  For the second year, the seminarians came  away with the win; this year’s final score was 44 to 39.
  The event was organized by the Frassati  Society of Young Adult Catholics.
  The society’s goal in hosting the “Cassock  Classic” is to highlight the value that young adults have in the Church and the  importance of young adult ministry, said Louis Paiz, director for the Frassati  Society. 
  After welcoming spectators to the event, Paiz  spoke to the young adults in the audience, saying, ”Your Church desperately  needs you. We need your help and your talents.” 
  He invited young adults to join the Frassati  Society or other parish young adult groups. He also encouraged those attending  to consider creating a young adult group in their home parish if one doesn’t  already exist.
  Photo  caption: Priests and seminarians  of the Lafayette diocese prepare for the tip-off of the second annual “Cassock  Classic,” held Jan. 2 before a crowd of nearly 700 at Westfield High School.  The seminarians team came away with the win for the second straight year in the  event organized by the Frassati Society of Young Adult Catholics. (Photo by  Brigid Curtis Ayer)
   
(For  news from the Diocese of Lafayette, log on to the website of The  Catholic Moment at www.thecatholicmoment.org)