Catholic News Around Indiana
            Compiled by  Brandon A. Evans
            Diocese of Evansville
            The  Cornerstone: Catholic bookstore a ministry for its owners
            
By  MARY ANN HUGHES (Message staff writer)
              Less than a week after the Cornerstone  Catholic Books and Gifts announced its closing, Melanie Seibert, president of  Artex Corporation in Evansville, announced that her company had arranged to  keep it open.
              The Cornerstone, “serving Evansville, Indiana  and Owensboro, Kentucky Catholic communities since 1983, will be acquired by  Artex Corp. in a proposed agreement between the two businesses,” Seibert said.
  “We are so excited to be able to continue the  fine tradition of the Cornerstone as a premier book and gift store serving the  local Catholic and Christian community,” she added. “The Cornerstone is a  community treasure, and we are both thrilled and humbled to be called to  continue the ministry that the Simms have nurtured for so many years.”
  “Ministry” has always been the word owners  and operators have chosen.
              The Cornerstone was opened in 1982 after  Marita Dieter and her two friends, Kathy Flynn and Sandy Lutz, heard that a  bookstore at the Catholic Center in Evansville was being closed by Bishop  Francis R. Shea.
  “We were allowed to start a Catholic  bookstore” in the former church building at Holy Rosary. “It was 1982, and we  knew nothing about how to run a bookstore. We started researching. Father  Deering was very supportive, and Father [David] Nunning was there too, and he  was very helpful.”
  “The first thing we sold was a family bible.  We couldn’t believe we had made a sale.”
              Although they were running a business, they  resolved that their “sole purpose” was “to be a ministry, to serve the  diocese.”
              Store manager Kimberly Marsh has been with  The Cornerstone for sixteen years and will continue in her role in the new  combined enterprise, according to the announcement from Artex.
              Parishes that were notified of the decision  to close the store are now being notified that there does not need to be a  disruption of service to them for their annual orders of liturgical books and  candles or the many other products they need throughout the year.
          The sale is expected to be completed by the  end of July. The store location will be moved in August to the Artex location  at 1424 North Royal Avenue in Evansville. Until then parishes and patrons can  continue to shop at the current location, 4671 Bayard Park Drive in Evansville.
            Photo caption: Kimberly Marsh and  Mary Winnecke look at merchandise at the Cornerstone, a Catholic bookstore in  Evansville. Kimberly is the store manager, and Mary is a sales associate.  (Message photo by Mary Ann Hughes) 
 
          
Father  Clemens Hut, area native, honored by Arizona for volunteer work
          
By PAUL R.  LEINGANG (Message editor)
            Father Clemens Hut, a retired priest of the  Diocese of Evansville who also served many years in Arizona — where he went for  health reasons — has been honored as the Aging Services of Arizona 2010  Volunteer of the Year.
            Father Hut, 99, lives at Friendship Village  in Tempe, and was honored at the association awards luncheon June 4 in  Scottsdale.
  “It is highly unusual for any of us to  receive a state award for volunteering, but to do it at age 99 is  unbelievable,” said Bishop Gerald A. Gettelfinger. “To do it with such joy and  candor is remarkable.”
            Bishop Gettelfinger was among the  well-wishers who attended the luncheon at a resort hotel.
            Bishop Gettelfinger described the awards  ceremony and Father Hut’s acceptance speech. Father Hut noted briefly that he  was a Roman Catholic priest, that he was a priest for 74 years, and that he had  reached the age of 99. He recalled that a bishop once joked with him, “You are  older than God.” Father Hut then said, “I think I have said enough, so I’ll  just shut up.”
            Father Hut was nominated for the state award  because of his volunteer service to others at Friendship Village. Donald Reem, a  resident of Friendship Village, submitted a letter of nomination for Father  Hut’s award.
  “I have witnessed the volunteer work of  Father Hut for the past six years (three years when my wife was a patient at  the Health Center and over three years as a friend), so I have observed many  projects that the Father has,” Reem said.
  “Although he is 99 years old and confined to  a hand driven wheelchair he hasn’t slowed in his routine of helping others. In  the morning he is out greeting people with a smile and a ‘good morning’ or  ‘hello.’ At meal times he eats with various residents, changing tables in order  to meet with more people.”
          Photo caption: Bishop Gerald A.  Gettelfinger stands behind Father Clemens Hut on the day he received the Aging  Services of America Volunteer of the Year award. A copy of this photo has been  framed and now hangs on the wall in Father Hut’s room. 
(For these stories and more news from the  Diocese of Evansville,  log on to the website of The Message at www.themessageonline.org)
 
            Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend
            Father Andrew Budzinski ordained
          By Tim Johnson
              FORT WAYNE  — It was a day of joy for the Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend. Father Andrew  Budzinski became the first diocesan priest to be ordained to the Holy  Priesthood by Bishop Kevin C. Rhoades on Saturday, June 26, at the Cathedral of  the Immaculate Conception in Fort Wayne.
              Bishop  Rhoades began Mass and said: “Today is a day of joy for me, Bishop D’Arcy, our  priests and indeed for the whole Church in the Diocese of Fort Wayne-South  Bend. It is a day of thanksgiving for the gift of the priesthood, which the  Lord bestows upon Andrew Budzinski in this ordination liturgy.”
              The Rite of Ordination began with the formal presentation of the candidate,  Deacon Andrew Budzinski, by Msgr. Bernard Galic, Deacon Andrew’s pastor at Holy  Family Church in South Bend and the director of the Office of Vocations in the  Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend. Msgr. Galic affirmed the readiness of the  candidate.
              Bishop Rhoades opened the homily with a quote from Pope Benedict XVI about the  motivation of one who has responded with joy to the call of Jesus: “There is  nothing more beautiful than to be surprised by the Gospel, by the encounter  with Christ. There is nothing more beautiful than to know him and to speak to  others of our friendship with him.”
          Bishop Rhoades spoke of how Deacon Andrew was prepared to offer his whole  life in the priestly service of Christ and His Church, and he said, “Why else,  my brothers and sisters, would a man be willing to leave all things, to promise  lifelong celibacy, to embrace a life of obedience and voluntary poverty, to  devote his entire life to the service of the Church? It is because he has heard  the call of the Lord like Simon and Andrew and James and John in the Gospel we  just heard. Like those four Apostles, Deacon Andrew has encountered Christ, has  been ‘won over by Jesus’ gaze, his voice, his warm and strong invitation’  (Benedict XVI). Andrew has been called like those fishermen to share in  Christ’s mission of proclaiming the Gospel of God, to be a fisher of men.”
          (For this story and more 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
Fifth  Anniversary: 'We're like a family now'
  CEDAR LAKE—St. Francis of Assisi is quoted as  saying, “Start by doing what’s necessary; then do what’s possible; and suddenly  you are doing the impossible.” Feeding the poor of the world seems like an  impossible task but members of the Secular Franciscan Order of Our Lady of  Lourdes Fraternity saw a need and embarked on filling it one meal at a time. On  June 14 the group celebrated the fifth anniversary of the founding of the St.  Clare’s Kitchen in Cedar Lake.
  Located in the lower hall of Holy Name  Parish, the group serves dinner to more than 100 people Tuesdays between 5-6 p.m.      
  “Our original vision was to open a soup  kitchen in south Lake County because none existed,” said Sharon Marmalejo, one  of the two founding members of the ministry. 
  Marmalejo, along with partner Kathy  Georgelas, both of Munster, approached then-pastor, the late Father Edward  Kennedy about using the Cedar Lake parish as their location. With his approval  and that of the parish pastoral council, St. Clare’s Kitchen was born. 
  When the soup kithen first opened, guests  numbered 24. Today, that number has quadrupled. “The need has definitely grown,  especially in light of the economy,” said Georgelas. 
  Their mission is to provide a warm meal to  anyone in need, but perhaps equally as important, to offer a chance for social  interaction, especially for the elderly who often are trapped in isolation. 
  Getting off the ground was a huge  undertaking,” said Marmalejo. “However, we’ve been blessed with many generous  donations over the years.” Those donations have allowed the group to purchase  necessary supplies and equipment, along with food.
  “The Holy Spirit helped us get started, and  we continue to be blessed each week.” “We profess to live the Gospel life  through our work at St. Clare’s Kitchen,” Marmalejo concluded. “This has been a  wonderful experience, not only for our guests, but for all of us as well.”
Donations to support the continued work of St. Clare’s Kitchen may be  sent to Holy Name Parish, 11000 W. 133rd Ave., Cedar Lake 46303.
(For this story and more news from the  Diocese of Gary, log on to the website of the Northwest Indiana Catholic at www.nwicatholic.com)
 
Diocese of Lafayette
A son of  the diocese shapes its story
By  Kevin Cullen
  LAFAYETTE—In so many ways, the life of  retiring Bishop William L. Higi and the history of the Diocese of  Lafayette-in-Indiana are one … warp and woof, interwoven, of the same  cloth.  
  He is a son of the diocese. He worked with  three of the four bishops who preceded him, and he has carried the crosier  himself since 1984. 
  “I really don’t recall ever imagining myself  being anything other than a priest,” he said as he looked back over a long and  eventful career.
  Bishop Higi, 76, grew up in St. Mary Parish,  Anderson. The Diocese of Lafayette-in-Indiana, once part of the Diocese of Fort  Wayne, was only 14 years old when he was ordained on May 30, 1959.
  He served as an associate pastor, secretary  to Bishop (later Cardinal) John J. Carberry, vice chancellor, chancellor, vicar  general, parish administrator, diocesan administrator and bishop. He worked  daily with Bishop Raymond J. Gallagher and Bishop George A. Fulcher.
  Bishop Higi was installed on June 6, 1984, at  age 50. He served nearly 26 years as bishop; no previous Lafayette bishop  served more than 17. He will continue as apostolic administrator until  59-year-old Bishop-elect Timothy L. Doherty, of the Diocese of Rockford, Ill.,  is installed July 15.
  Bishop Higi has confirmed more than 28,000  people, ordained 50 men to the priesthood and 11 to the permanent diaconate. 
  Since 1984, he has driven more than 500,000  miles crisscrossing a diocese that stretches from Illinois to Ohio and covers  24 counties. He has written more than 1,100 weekly columns for The Catholic  Moment.
  During his episcopacy, the Catholic  population of the diocese has grown by more than 21,000, to 105,000 souls. Two  new parishes and a new Catholic high school have opened.
  He discussed all that in interviews with The  Catholic Moment, at a recent press conference, and in an interview with Chad  Grube, host of “Upon this Rock,” a weekly radio program sponsored by St.  Patrick and St. Joan of Arc parishes, Kokomo. 
Photo caption: Bishop William Higi with  predecessors Cardinal John Carberry (left) and Bishop Raymond Gallagher (right)  in 1984. 
 
New Matrix  director sees 'little miracles' each day
By  Kevin Cullen
  LAFAYETTE — The Matrix Lifeline Pregnancy  Center, housed in a modest white house at 1824 Maple St. in Lafayette’s North  End, represents the pro-life movement at its grassroots best.
  Since 1978, the Christian, not-for-profit  organization has given thousands of expectant mothers the emotional, financial  and practical support they needed to choose life over abortion.
  Melissa McAtee started as the new executive  director of Matrix on June 1. She knows, first hand, how important it is for  women to have access to pregnancy counseling, baby clothes, education and  adoption referral.
  Four years ago, she was unmarried, pregnant  and lonely; working in Indianapolis, far from her family.
  “Every day was a struggle,” she said. “I  didn’t have a place like Matrix. I didn’t have someone to say, ‘It’s OK. God  loves you,’ or to give me a hug or help me figure out where to start out — what  help I could get, what daycare I should use, those kinds of things.
  “The only thing that saved me was God,” said  McAtee, now 28. “I got down on my knees, and especially toward the end of my pregnancy,  I prayed to God, and cried. I said, ‘Help me. I don’t know what to do.’ I was  so hurt emotionally. My heart was broken.”
  But “everything worked out the way it was  supposed to,” she said. Ella was born. McAtee converted to Catholicism and  married Ella’s father, Kyle. Their two sons, now aged 2 years and 5 months,  followed.
  McAtee gave up a seven-year banking career to  lead Matrix. She formerly was a bank manager for Old National Bank.
  “Every day I come here, I am so happy,” she  said. “I get to see little miracles every day. How can you not love that?”
  Photo  caption: Melissa McAtee started  as the new executive director of Matrix Lifeline Pregnancy Center in Lafayette  on June 1. (Photo by Kevin Cullen)
(For  these stories and more news from the Diocese of Lafayette, log on to the website of The  Catholic Moment at www.thecatholicmoment.org)