Catholic News Around Indiana
            Compiled by  Brandon A. Evans
            Diocese of Evansville
            Seton  Harvest Welcomes Growing Season With Mass, Blessing
            
By Tim  Lilley
              Those attending the April 24 Mass and  blessing that formally opened the eleventh season of the Daughters of Charity  Seton Harvest community-supported agricultural initiative had a chance to  sample strawberries picked that morning. They were sweet, firm and delicious –  tasty and hopeful signs of the growing season to come.
              After offering Mass in the chapel at Seton  Residence on Evansville’s West Side, Vincentian Father Stephen Gallegos, Seton  Residence Chaplain, joined attendees for a quick trip across New Harmony Road  to the farm, where he blessed the fields and the new Seton Harvest Veggie Van.  The Veggie Van will travel throughout the Evansville area this spring and  summer to encourage healthy eating, and share recipes and fresh produce.
              The Daughters donated a passenger van, and a  local individual modified it for Seton Harvest. The van will bring more fresh  naturally grown produce and education to the community through farmers markets  and education to schools, and by enabling Seton Harvest to provide cooking  demonstrations for those entities that receive its fresh-produce  donations. 
              Sharing fresh produce is nothing new to Seton  Harvest, which is sponsored by the Daughters of Charity Province of St. Louise.  Over the past 10 years, it has donated approximately 103,000 pounds of produce  to families living in poverty. 
              As a community-supported agriculture initiative,  Seton Harvest divides up all of the produce it does not donate among a  committed group of supporters who share with the farmer the risks and benefits  of farming. Throughout the growing season, the farm harvests fresh ripe crops  that are divided equally among the shareholders. 
              The shareholders are community members who  pay the farmer an annual membership fee to cover the production costs of the  farm. In turn, shareholders receive a weekly “share” of the harvest. A share is  generally enough for a family of four.
              The organization harvested more than 45,400  pounds of produce in 2016 and donated more than 9,400 pounds of it to those in  need. Seton Harvest plans to use the Veggie Van as a pick-up for shareholders  who live on Evansville’s far eastside, Newburgh, Lynnville and Boonville. 
              Seton Harvest will hold Twilight  Farm-to-Table Dinners at the facility on May 13, June 10 and October 14. All  proceeds from the dinners will go directly toward the farm's weekly donation of  fresh produce to the food pantry systems and homeless shelters in the area.
              For more information on Seton Harvest, or to  purchase a full or partial produce share or tickets to the Twilight Dinners,  visit www.setonharvest.org. 
  Photo caption: The new Seton harvest Veggie  Van will travel throughout the Evansville area this spring and summer to  encourage healthy eating and share recipes and fresh produce. 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
            Saint Joseph High School SECO club acts on  ‘Laudato Si’
            
By Andrew Mentock
              When Pope  Francis published his environmentally conscious encyclical, “Laudato Si,” in  May of 2015, he reiterated to Catholics all over the world how important it is  that they take better care of the earth.
  “This is  why the earth herself, burdened and laid waste, is among the most abandoned and  maltreated of our poor,” wrote Pope Francis in “Laudato Si:” “…‘she groans in  travail’ (Rom 8:22). We have forgotten that we ourselves are dust of the earth  (cf Gen 2:7); our very bodies are made up of her elements, we breathe her air  and we receive life and refreshment from her waters.”
              For the  past 12 years, Saint Joseph High School in South Bend has had a Social and  Ecological Concerns Organization club, where the students meet to discuss how  they can personally help to improve the environment.
              To  incorporate “Laudato Si” into the club, all members participate in two online  social justice communities inspired by the encyclical letter: Catholic Climate  Covenant and the Ignatian Carbon Challenge.
              In  addition to caring for the environment, SECO also works to raise awareness of  other social injustices.
  “SECO is  greatly concerned about social issues,” said Kathy Kershner, a theology teacher  at Saint Joseph who has been the club’s moderator since it started. “Throughout  the school year SECO members ‘teach’ their classmates about the importance of  buying fair trade products that do not exploit poor and hardworking laborers in  underdeveloped countries around the world. SECO sponsors the selling of fair  trade chocolate on Halloween/All Saints’ Day, Valentine’s greeting cards, and  sponsors one or more fair trade cafes during the school year.”
              The club  also plans and assists with other events and activities, such as recycling much  of the school’s paper and plastic each week, creating recycling awareness  videos, running a “hygiene drive” and sponsoring the hunger bowl, which is a  yearly food drive where Saint Joseph competes against Marian High School to  benefit the St. Vincent De Paul food pantry.
              An  original idea, the SECO club was born out of a student’s passion for Catholic social  teaching, which is why communities such as the Catholic Climate Covenant works  so well with the club.
  “We are  grounded in the church’s deep history of teaching on creation, ecology and the  poor,” it says on the homepage of Catholic Climate Covenant. “Caring for  creation and caring for the poor have been a part of the Catholic story since  the beginning, but in recent years St. John Paul II, Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI  and especially Pope Francis have added a sense of urgency to their call for  Catholics to act on climate change.”
            Photo caption: Saint Joseph High School senior Jack Thomas, left,  and sophomore Emily Smith, right assist two young Earth Day participants in  creating homemade wildflower seed packets and catnip toys. SECO  volunteered to run the table for the Earth Day and Arbor Day activities on  April 22 at Rum Village Park, South Bend.
             
            Exodus 90: a Catholic man’s 90-day challenge to  freedom
          
By James Baxter 
            Exodus 90  is the fruit of a priest’s prayer and priestly experience. This 90-day challenge  emerged from a seminary years ago in response to a profound need. Today, it’s  transforming thousands of Catholic men — priests, seminarians and laymen alike  — across the country and beyond.
            In 2011,  Father Brian Doerr of the Diocese of Lafayette was appointed vice rector of  Human Formation at Mount St. Mary’s Theological Seminary in Emmitsburg, Md. He  soon realized that many of his good and generous seminarians were not as free  as they could be as they approached ordination to the priesthood.
            What did  their slavery look like? For some, it was addictions. For others, it was  wasting away their lives on Netflix, videogames, news and other technological  distractions. For still others, it was using food and alcohol as crutches to  medicate the tough times. Perhaps this is scandalizing? But the lament of the  Lord was their prayer: “Let my son go, that he may love me” (Ex 4:23).
            Father  Doerr took five of these struggling seminarians and issued them a 90-day  challenge that would change their lives forever. He did not uncover a secret  formula, but simply re-presented to them the tradition of the early church and  her emphasis on asceticism. The number 90 was not coincidental or for some kind  of secular marketing purpose, such as a “Catholic P90X”. Ninety was based off  his reading of the sciences regarding the time it takes to return the brain to  a normalized state and to begin forming new, lasting and healthy habits.
            The men  prayed and practiced penance as they never had before, with the support of a  band of brothers. Some said it was the hardest thing they had ever done, but  after only a few weeks, they would come to their fraternity meetings with  smiles on their faces. They were experiencing joy once again. The story of the  people of Israel, traveling from the slavery of Egypt into the freedom of the  Promised Land, was becoming their own.
            The  experience was so fruitful for these men that Father Doerr would go on to  launch 10 more 90-day fraternities over the next three years at the seminary,  with increasing success. Taking what he had learned, and with the help of a few  millennial friends, he issued the challenge online, at Exodus90.com, over a  year ago.
            From the  beginning, the Exodus 90 regimen was accused of many things. “This is too  extreme; no one will make these sacrifices.” “Exodus is great in a seminary,  but impossible within the hustle and bustle of family life.” “Intentional  fraternities are exclusive.” “Why aren’t you doing something for women?”
          The proof that Exodus 90 works is not only the original seminarians,  but the faces of men across the country who have been given new life through  this challenge. Some have broken decades of addiction. Others have simply been  freed to be more present to their parishes, wives and children in an age  “distracted from distraction by distraction,” as T.S. Elliot wrote in “Four  Quartets.”
           
          (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
While  Church teaching hasn’t changed, there is a need to become more pastoral in  matters of divorce
By Bob Wellinski
  MICHIGAN CITY - Using excerpts from Pope  Francis’ Apostolic Exhortation Amoris Laetitia (The Joy of Love), Congregation  of Holy Cross Father Bob Dowd of Notre Dame University clarified the Church’s  teachings on divorce, annulments and remarriage.
  Father Dowd said that too many people have  walked from their faith feeling as if they no longer belonged to the Church  after being shunned for being divorced or remarried without an annulment.
  “We need to meet people where they’re at,”  Father Dowd said.
  The Queen of All Saints and Marquette High  School alumni returned to his hometown to speak at QAS’ “Tapped In” program  March 29 at Gelsosomo’s Pizzeria.
  Father Dowd reminded the group the Church  teaches marriage is a sacrament, intended to last a lifetime, with the bride  and groom as the ministers of the sacrament. He went on to note that the Church  doesn’t teach that men and women must endure abuse within a marriage for the  rest of their lives.
  “In some cases, respect for one’s own dignity  and the good of the children require not giving in to excessive demands (and)  preventing grave injustices, violence and other chronic abuse. (In those  instances), separation becomes inevitable if that is the situation. It may even  be morally necessary,” Father Dowd read from the pope’s exhortation.
  He added that separation “should always be  the last resort, after a sincere and sustained attempt to make the marriage  work.”
  Father Dowd stressed that annulments  shouldn’t be thought of as a legal process, but rather a healing process. He  said the annulment process “should not be like a trial - accuser and the  accused,” but “should be seen as a healing process to the point we can figure  out what went wrong and process that. To learn from that and move on.”
Photo caption: Rhea Ferrell, of LaPorte, talks about her annulment  experience during Queen of All Saints' Tapped In program on divorce and remarriage.  (Bob Wellinski 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
New statue  at cathedral ‘a labor of love, time and prayer’
By  Caroline B. Mooney
  LAFAYETTE — In honor of the 150th anniversary  of the Cathedral of St. Mary of the Immaculate Conception, parishioner Rachel  Witt created a mosaic statue of Mary as a gift for the parish. 
  “It’s a beautiful expression of faith, and  wonderful to have come from such a talented parishioner. I am very grateful for  Rachel and her work,” said Father Jeff Martin, pastor of the cathedral parish.  He named the statue “Mary, Mother of Mercy, Advocate of Joy.” 
  “It was a true labor of love, time and  prayer,” he said. “I think it’s amazing how Rachel connected different aspects  of Mary — from the knots in her rope to the materials used. I like the sense  that the statue exemplifies mercy and joy together. It resonated with me when I  saw it. I think children can find it very appealing, so it’s great to have it  here with a parish school.”
  While plans were under way for the parish  anniversary celebrations last August, Witt was asked to create an art project. 
  “I really felt strongly that it needed to be  a life-size statue of Mary, although it was initially daunting to take it on,”  she said. “Devotion to Mary is something I have struggled with. This is more a  gift to me than to the parish. I grew a lot in my faith in the process of  making her and that was beautiful for me.
  “My husband, Michael, and our six kids make  sacrifices every time I take on a large project like this. Nothing happens  without their support, encouragement and, sometimes, heavy lifting.”
  In planning the project, Witt flooded herself  myself with images of Mary so that no single image stood out. 
  “I looked at about 700 Mary images from all  around the world in all different mediums,” she said. “I kept finding myself  drawn back to a mature, motherly Mary that I could connect with. It’s been  interesting because parishioners have told me they also connect with her, and  that makes me feel good. 
  “I have been working with mosaic for 23 years  and always find it to be a peaceful, meditative process.  This project was  especially so as I was able to blend prayer into the creative process in a way  I haven’t done before,” she said.
  “I’m so grateful for the time in silence and  prayer.  Every time it seemed I hit a creative hurdle, a solution came,”  she said. 
  
  Photo  caption: Rachel Witt, a  parishioner of the Cathedral of St. Mary of the Immaculate Conception, created  a mosaic statue of Mary as a gift for the parish. (Photo by Caroline B. Mooney)
   
(For  news from the Diocese of Lafayette, log on to the website of The  Catholic Moment at www.thecatholicmoment.org)