Catholic News Around Indiana
            Compiled by  Brandon A. Evans
            Diocese of Evansville
            Diocesan  Choir heads to Italy for 10-day pilgrimage
          
By  MARY ANN HUGHES (Message staff writer)
              There will be high notes and strong voices  during the Diocesan Choir’s pilgrimage to Italy, but Jeremy Korba is hoping  that the pilgrims are touched by the quiet moments — because those are the  times, he believes, when faith can come alive.
              He’s the director of the choir which began a  10-day trip to Italy last Tuesday. The itinerary includes visits in Venice,  Florence, Siena, Assisi, Padua, Rome and Vatican City.
              Jeremy has been the director of the Diocesan  Choir for about five years. Its members, which often include as many as 110  people from parishes all over the diocese, sing at ordinations and other  diocesan events including the Chrism Mass.
              Of that larger group, 35 are heading to Italy  this week, along with 25 others including spouses.
              Last Sunday, the choir presented a concert at  St. Benedict Cathedral in Evansville which featured several of the songs they  will be singing in Italy. Terri Abbot was the first person to arrive for the  concert. “I came early,” she said, “so I can hear everything they are doing. I  just know the music today will be exceptional. It will be really beautiful.”
              Before the concert began, the four members of  the Colbert family talked about the upcoming trip. Colton Colbert is 12, and a  male soprano in the choir. He said he was “very excited” about the trip, and  looking forward to seeing Pope Benedict XVI. His older brother, Remington, who  is a tenor with the choir, said, “I’m looking forward to the food.”
              The family, which also includes father, Ken,  has sung with the diocesan choir during Chrism Masses and at the last diaconate  ordination.
              About 400 attended last Sunday’s concert at  the cathedral which began with an introduction by the choir director who told  the audience that members range in age from 12 to 82. “We have professional  musicians and those who cannot read music.” 
              He said the group will sing at a High Mass at  St. Peter’s Basilica in Vatican City, perform a short recital in the Sistine  Chapel, and sing during a papal audience.
            Photo caption: Benedictine Father  Gregory Chamberlin offers a blessing to the Diocesan Choir last Sunday at the  conclusion of their concert at St. Benedict Cathedral in Evansville where he  serves as pastor. The group left Tuesday for a 10-day trip to Italy with  scheduled stops in Venice, Florence, Siena, Assisi, Padua, Rome and Vatican  City. (Message photo by Mary Ann Hughes)
          (For this story 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
            Catholics, Mennonites reflect on ‘blessed are  the peacemakers’
          By Ann Carey
              SOUTH BEND  — “Blessed are the Peacemakers” was the theme of a day of reflection between  Catholics and Mennonites at St. Matthew Cathedral in South Bend on Sept. 18.
              At the  prayer service that started the day, Bishop Kevin C. Rhoades of the Diocese of  Fort Wayne-South Bend, who led the service, told the approximately 55  participants that he was pleased to find upon his recent arrival in this  diocese that a Catholic-Mennonite dialogue was ongoing here. He said that many  Mennonites and Amish live in his former Diocese of Harrisburg, Pa., but  Catholic-Mennonite relations were not as well established there.
              After the  9 a.m. prayer service in the cathedral, the dialogue got underway in the St.  Matthew School auditorium with opening talks on ecumenism by Bishop Rhoades and  Marlene Kropf, an associate professor in Spiritual Formation and Worship at  Associated Mennonite Biblical Seminary in Elkhart. Kropf is also the  denominational minister of worship for the Mennonite Church USA Executive  Leadership and co-chair of the bi-national Mennonite Church Worship Council.
              Kropf  explained that Mennonites believe the church is “the bride of Christ,  unblemished and pure.” Thus, for generations, Mennonites formed their own  strong communities and lived their faith without getting involved with outside  people or issues. 
              Mennonites  developed “a kind of myopia” because they didn’t always recognize the face of  Christ in neighbors, strangers and people of other faiths, Kropf said. That  attitude changed as Mennonites began to work for peace with other churches and  ecumenical organizations, she explained. 
              Today,  Mennonites recognize that “The love of Christ joins unlikely people together  into one family,” with Christ calling that Christian family to the same  commitment to peace, she said.
          
          “I believe God wants us to step  inside each others’ homes and take the risk of intimate friendship,” Kropf  concluded. “And I also believe that if our friendship brings us closer to  Christ, that will be worth it, and that is our call.” 
 
          
Queen of Angels welcomes man from outer space
                      
By Kay  Cozad
            FORT WAYNE  — Spirits were soaring out of this world at Queen of Angels School on Sept. 17  when students and staff welcomed a special visitor. NASA astronaut Michael T.  Good addressed the assembly with a presentation on space flights that the  students will not soon forget.
            Good is from Ohio and is a graduate of the University of Notre Dame. Recently  retired from the U.S. Air Force, Col. Good has logged over 30,000 hours in more  than 30 different aircraft. 
            But the  students of Queen of Angels School were most impressed with the fact that the  man in the blue NASA one-piece uniform was a real astronaut who had been in  space not once but twice. 
            Good was a  member of the crew of the STS-125 space flight that repaired the Hubble Space  Telescope in 2009 and participated in the delivery of supplies to the  International Space Station on space flight STS-132, the final flight for the  space shuttle Atlantis, in 2010. 
            Queen of Angels School is a Project READS site, an after- school tutorial  program for kindergarten through third-grade students, sponsored by the Allen  County Education Partnership (ACEP), which coordinated Good’s visit.  Fifth-grade teacher Karen Chesterman, who for many years facilitated a young  adult astronaut program at Queen of Angels, is Project READS coordinator at the  school and passionate about space. She said, “I’ve always wanted to have an  astronaut come. God smiled down on us and gave us Mr. Good!”
            Ann  Miller, principal of Queen of Angels, was thrilled to welcome Good as well, and  said, “We are so blessed to meet a true astronaut.”
            In opening the presentation, “No Dream is Impossible,” Good explained to the  rapt audience that space was his dream. He encouraged the students to dream big  and make those dreams come true. “Think about your own dreams, work hard and  persevere. Stick with it and set high goals to turn your dreams into reality,”  said Good. 
          Photo caption: Astronaut Col.  Michael Good high-fives a student after an assembly at Queen of Angels School  where he presented a talk on his space travels on Sept. 17. 
(For these stories 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
No briefs  available this week
 
(For news from the  Diocese of Gary, log on to the website of the Northwest Indiana Catholic at www.nwicatholic.com)
 
Diocese of Lafayette
All-Catholic  meet off to enthusiastic start
By  Kevin Cullen
  NOBLESVILLE — Amanda McCauley is a  17-year-old senior at Our Lady of Providence High School in Clarksville, across  the Ohio River from Louisville, Ky. She’s been running cross country races  since she was in the sixth grade.
  But the inaugural Indiana Catholic Cross  Country Championships — held Sept. 11 at St. Theodore Guerin High School — were  refreshingly different.
  “We don’t have any all-Catholic meets,” she  said shortly before toeing the starting line. “It’s good competition and there  are some way bigger schools up here. We don’t play any of them in any other  sports.
  “We’re getting different comments. Already,  during warm-ups, people are saying, ‘Good job!’ and ‘Good luck! They’re a lot  nicer than the people from the public schools we run against.”
  More than 700 fleet-footed teenagers from 18  Catholic high schools traveled from all over the state for the rain-dampened  races. The event featured four 3.1-mile races: for varsity boys, varsity girls,  junior-varsity boys and junior-varsity girls.
  All that was followed by a Mass, then a lunch  provided by Guerin Catholic boosters.
  “This event is not about cross country, but  about our shared faith, and a celebration of the Indiana (Catholic) high school  community,” said Cliff Babbey, event director. His son, Mark, is on the Guerin  cross country team.
  “This is the only sport where this concept is  possible and we are thrilled, stunned and humbled to see how enthusiastically  folks have taken to the event,” he said.
  Mark Brunsman, 18, is a runner for Oldenburg  Academy in Oldenburg, 45 minutes from Cincinnati.
  “I felt united, as a Catholic, to see all  those Catholic (school) names. Some had crosses on the backs of their shirts,”  he said. “It was a new experience to run in an all-Catholic race. It has more  of a social aspect than a normal meet.”
  Participating teams came from as far away as  Lake Michigan on the north to the Ohio River on the south, and from the  lllinois border on the west to the Ohio line on the east.
Photo caption: Teammates from Brebeuf  Jesuit Preparatory School, Indianapolis, gather before a race at the first  Indiana Catholic Cross Country Championships, held Sept. 11 at St. Theodore  Guerin High School in Noblesville. 
 
Local  Church priest to run New York City Marathon
By  Caroline B. Mooney
  NOBLESVILLE — Nov. 7 will mark the  culmination of years of training for Father Joshua Janko as he will be among  more than 45,000 runners in the ING New York City Marathon.
  The 26.2-mile race, with a course through New  York City’s five boroughs, is one of the premier running events in the United  States. One of the largest marathons in the world, it had 43,659 finishers in  2009. More than 100,000 runners apply annually to the race, so a lottery  drawing picks the participants.
  Father Janko, 34, is associate pastor of St.  Alphonsus Church, Zionsville. He said he was flipping through TV channels last  November “and all of a sudden I saw part of the NYC marathon. I saw the man who  won. He was a naturalized citizen, and he was so excited and proud that it  triggered something in me. I had been talking about doing this for 10 years. I  trained a couple times, but I kept getting injured. I just said, ‘I want to be  there next year.’”
  He applied early this year and found out he  had been selected in April.
  Father Janko started his running career the  summer before seventh grade.
  In 1995, while still in college, Father Janko  started running the OneAmerica 500 Festival Mini-Marathon, a race in downtown  Indianapolis that draws nearly 40,000 runners. He has missed running the “mini”  only twice since then.
  “It’s been an annual event for me,” he said.  “It’s neat because it starts off the season for the Indianapolis 500, and  because of the sheer number of people there.
  “I started practicing my faith more in my  junior year in high school, and I started to think about God more as I ran,”  Father Janko said. “I always pray before I run.”
  Anyone who would like to sponsor Father Janko  spiritually can post prayer pledges on his blog site: http://fatherjoshua.blogspot.com after  Sept. 19.
Photo caption: Father Joshua Janko at the  2009 “Race for Vocations” in Indianapolis (Photo provided) 
(For  these stories and more news from the Diocese of Lafayette, log on to the website of The  Catholic Moment at www.thecatholicmoment.org)