Local parish helps support those Catholics displaced from their spiritual home 
			
			Church sign in front of St. Elizabeth of Hungary Parish in Cambridge City.
			By  Mary Ann Wyand
			CAMBRIDGE CITY—The sign outside St. Elizabeth of Hungary Church on April 7 read, “St. Anne, our  prayers are with you.”
			 Inside the church, it was standing room only during a shortened Easter  Vigil Mass for members of three parishes in east-central Indiana.
			 After fire destroyed St. Anne Church in New Castle  during the early morning hours of Holy Saturday, the Vigil Mass for members of  St. Anne Parish, St. Elizabeth Parish and St. Rose Parish in Knightstown was  held at the church in Cambridge   City.
			 Father Joseph Rautenberg, administrator of St. Elizabeth Parish and  sacramental minister of St. Anne and St. Rose parishes, rewrote his homily on  Saturday afternoon to address the devastating loss of the historic church.
			 “The Vigil … usually begins with a service of light and the blessing  of the Easter fire,” he said. “Fire is an important symbol. It represents the  spiritual light of Christ—his truth and the comforting warmth of his love. …  But fire can also … seem to take on a life of its own where it escapes control  and destroys, even kills. … As most of you know, the Church  of St. Anne at New Castle was heavily damaged by fire.”
			
			The Easter Vigil being celebrated at St. Elizabeth of Hungary Parish in Cambridge City. 
			 Expressing his condolences, Father Rautenberg asked the people to  contribute to a second collection to help with some of the parish’s immediate  expenses.
			 Three Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults candidates from St. Anne  Parish—Yvonne Mroz, Steven Higgins and David Sharpe—entered the Church during  the Mass at St. Elizabeth Church.
			 “The fire was a shock and a blow, kind of like your home being  destroyed,” Father Rautenberg said. “Fortunately, no one was killed or  seriously hurt. But the loss hurts. In life, sometimes we do suffer major  losses.
			 “… But Jesus rose from the dead and with him rose the hopes of his  disciples—those of 2,000 years ago and us today,” he said. “Out of death comes  life. Jesus lives and reigns forever. … None of the blows of life can defeat or  destroy us unless we give up. A church has been … destroyed, but the parish and  its history and its faith continue. So does the faith of St. Elizabeth and St.  Rose [parishes]. Despite the pain and the sorrows and the evil forces in this  world, Jesus has risen. May our spirits rise with him to joyful discipleship.”  †