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My Experiences Taking and Leading a Faith Study

When I first decided to take a CCO faith study it was in preparation for World Youth Day Rio.  I was at a very different point in my faith journey than I am now.  I attended Sunday mass fairly regularly, said a prayer here and there, but I didn’t engage in my faith, I didn’t feel it.  When I was in Church I was mostly on autopilot.  Thus I was apprehensive to say the least, about revisiting the basis of my faith, and sharing my thoughts in a small group.  As the weeks went by I enjoyed reading and sharing, but I didn’t truly open myself up to the experience.  I didn’t share a lot of my fears, or misgivings, I chose not to do some of the challenges, and then didn’t share why I hadn’t done them for fear of being judged.  I was still on autopilot.

 

However this was not time wasted.  Someone recently shared a very good analogy about evangelization being similar to growing plants.  One person may plant a seed, another may water it, and so on.  Many different things contribute to the plant’s growth, but the seed is essential.  During this time, many seeds were being planted in my head.  I started thinking more about the Bible verse at the end of each lesson, thinking more about what other members of my group shared, learning the reasoning behind some views of The Church, and figuring out what I believed in.  My experiences over the summer, first doing Mission work with the Christian Life Movement in Peru, and then going to World Youth Day in Rio allowed these seeds and others to flourish.  Things I had struggled with earlier suddenly made sense. I was learning about my faith, engaging in it, and I was finally feeling the fire alive in my heart.

 

World Youth Day had largely focused on evangelization and the theme for this year was “Go and make disciples of all nations” (Mathew 28:19).  I was determined to start doing this.  Pope Francis had challenged the youth of the world: “Young people, please: don’t put yourselves at the tailend of history. Be active members! Go on the offensive! Play down the field, build a better world, a world of brothers and sisters, a world of justice, of love, of peace, of fraternity, of solidarity. Play always on the offensive!” I sat around my house wondering how on Earth I was going to do this.  Then I got an email from Holly asking me if I’d be interested in leading a faith study.

 

I was a sign! I agreed to lead a Discovery group, and also decided to take the next faith study, Source.  At first I was fearful.  How could I lead when I had just started figuring things out? I put my trust in the Lord, and set aside my fears.  It ended up being one of the best choices I’ve made.  Leading Discovery I was able to reengage in the text, and reflect on my previous thoughts. I was honest with my group about early stages in my faith journey, I enjoyed sharing my testimony with them, and most of all I loved learning from them.  Taking Source with my new perspective I learnt so much more about my faith and my beliefs.  I shared honestly in the group discussion, about my fears or apprehensions, or enthusiasms, and made an effort to complete challenges.  I learned so much from the girls I took the study with, and I enjoyed the fellowship in the faith we shared.  Taking the faith studies also opened me up to new experiences, such as attending CCO’s Rise Up conference over this past New Year, or sharing my faith with my friends who aren’t as religious.  I can feel that my faith is as strong as ever, and I hope that it keeps growing and that I can continue share it with others.

 

So, I encourage you to sign up for a faith study.  No matter what your faith background is, no matter how involved you are, it’s an excellent way to engage more with Catholicism, figure out your beliefs, and learn from other people.  If you took one last semester but are unsure if you’ll take another, then sign up anyway! You may be surprised with what happens.  Keep an open mind and an open heart, and share honestly with your group about any of your struggles. Finally, if you’ve taken a faith study, I challenge you to try leading a group.  It’s a completely different experience from taking one.  Be honest with your group, and listen to their thoughts and feelings.  Take up Pope Francis’ challenge, and go and make disciples of all nations!

 

Much Love,

Desiree

Discovery Faith Study Winter 2013
Discovery Faith Study Winter 2013
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Top 8 Catholic New Years’ Resolutions

Make your New Year’s Resolutions count this year by committing to growing in faith and holiness. Here are some suggestions:

 

1) Make a resolution to go to mass weekly! Did you know that each Sunday is a Holy Day of Obligation? If you aren’t going to mass every week, this is the time to start! If you are already a frequent-mass-goer, try attending daily mass one day each week. It’s a good way to put a little more Eucharist in your life.

 

2) Make a resolution to go to confession monthly. Making the habit to go at the end of every month can rid you of complacency, fear or that “oh I’ll go later” attitude. I like this article that draws from some of the coolest saints and Church documents to explain ‘Why Confession?‘ Fr. Greg is usually around his office at Newman for confessions Tuesday-Friday from 2:30(ish) until 4:00pm mass to hear confessions

 

3) Make a resolution to carve a prayer time into your life. Choose a time daily that makes sense for you and stick with it. Not sure what to do in that time? Try P.R.A.Y. – Praise (thank God for the blessings in your life), Repent (make a small Examination of Conscience), Ask (What do you seek from God?), Yield (Spend some time in quiet, or perhaps read Scripture – what is God trying to tell you). Want to learn more about prayer – Talk to Fr. Greg or Terrel Joseph.

 

4) Make a resolution to read through the Gospel of Luke and Acts this year, a chapter a week! A chapter really isn’t all that much when you think about it, and reading slowly will allow you more time to reflect. There are 49 chapters if you put the two together, so that will be almost perfect for 52 weeks of the year. If you don’t have a Bible, go talk to Nathan Gibbard (our director) and he’ll set you up with one!

 

5) Make a resolution to pray for others. Find small ways to offer prayer and sacrifice for those around you. Simple ways to start include thinking a person who really needs your prayers each time to attend mass or every time you sit down for an exam, offer it for a friend.

 

6) Make a resolution to evangelize. It doesn’t have to be scary! Evangelization simply means proclaiming the Good News of Jesus wherever you are. Not sure where to start – Pray! God is really good at opening up opportunities for you speak simply and clearly about the faith. It can be as simple as inviting a friend to Church with you, or to an activity at Newman, or being available and loving when listening to others when they voice questions or concerns about their faith. A good place to get started here is to take a Discovery Faith Study, in which you can learn more about being a missionary wherever you are!

 

7) Make a resolution to serve. Find a way to serve others this year. Service takes a variety of forms. You can serve your fellow students by cooking at Saturday Night Supper for them. You can serve the Church by volunteering to be a lector or acolyte, or sing in the choir. You can serve the poor through Social Justice and volunteer activities (talk to Katie, our VP Social Justice). You can serve the lonely at a nursing home (see Fr. Greg about opportunities at St. Margaret’s). The list goes on and on and on…

 

8) Make a resolution to sleep well, exercise often and eat healthy. Bet you didn’t expect this one on a Catholic list, but God desires you to take care of the beautiful body and mind He made you! Resolutions #1-7 will be easier and more fruitful if you are well-rested and at your best! (PS – Regarding vegetables, can I suggest Soup and Bagels for lunch?)

 

Try focusing on one or two of these resolutions at once. You’ll be surprised how normal each of these resolutions can become when they are part of your life, just as much as brushing your teeth or walking to school. And don’t worry,  trying to fulfill all these resolutions may be overwhelming, but know that you have friends rooting for you to become a saint!

Happy-New-Year-2014-Gold-Background

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A Short History of Liturgical Music – Hymns

Back after a bit of a break, to tell you a little about the hymns we sing at Newman. Saying that I will give you a short history of hymns is a bit of a misnomer, since a hymn is literally any “song of praise” – it doesn’t even have to be Christian or spiritual at all! But in our context at Newman, we know hymns as the songs we sing together during mass. Usually, there are four main hymns sung in the Catholic mass.

 

We start with an Opening or Processional Hymn. We try to make this a more upbeat and easy-to-follow song that everyone can sing together as we welcome the procession (including the lectors, acolytes and priest) up to the alter. Sometimes we pull from the Catholic Book of Worship, and other times from the Gather. There is usually a noticeable difference between these two hymnals. Catholic Book of Worship contains mostly traditional hymns. Many date back to the 19th century when modern Christian hymnody was at its peak. Did you know that many hymns are actually borrowed from Protestant composers? For example, one of the most prominent composer of Christian hymns is Charles Wesley, who founded the Methodist movement in Protestantism. In some instances the lyrics have been slightly changed in our Catholic Book of Worship, but often they express the basic Christian message so well! Take a listen to one of his most popular hymns (that we sung during Advent): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jjn3fBTvBjY

 

The next hymn we sing is for Offertory. This is the period in between the two sections of the mass – The Liturgy of the Word and the Liturgy of the Eucharist. We try to choose a hymn that is more meditative that reflects the readings from that day. So, for example, if the Gospel was about the Beatitudes, we may choose something like this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=chqY9S1Lm2w You will also notice that this piece comes from our Gather hymnal. It was written by a contemporary American composer, David Haas. It has a more modern/contemporary feel to it.

 

Next we sing a Communion hymn, which the congregation is receiving communion. We sing not just to ‘fill up the space’ but to put everyone in a reflective and meditative atmosphere. The choir won’t usually announce this hymn, but know that you are always welcome to sing along! We do a variety of music (such as the Chant or Polyphony mentioned in earlier posts) or hymns or praise and worship music. We try to pick something that makes sense with the liturgical season and something that may be a little too complicated for the entire congregation to sing (since most won’t sing anyway because they are receiving communion).

 

Finally, after all the announcements and the final blessing, we sing a Recessional Hymn as the priest, acolytes and lectors process to the back. Again, we try to make sure this is something everyone can join in, from either the Catholic Book of Worship or the Gather.

 

Now you know a little more about the structure of music at mass and the wide variety of hymns we sing!

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Advent… a time of waiting

We live in a culture that doesn’t like to wait. We are trained from very young to expect to get what we need and want very quickly. The technologies we have created also serve to reinforce this impatience. When we turn on a computer and it takes more then a minute to load, we feel like its taking an eternity. Progress in technology is basically measured in terms of how much less we have to wait for the thing to work compared to the older version. If it’s faster, it’s better, period!  Because we don’t like to wait!

 

When we translate this impatience to our spiritual lives it can be problematic. The thing about God though, is that he’s not a high speed computer, he isn’t updated every 6 months, if you get tired of him you can’t trade him in for a new one. If he doesn’t suit your style you can’t switch brands. But people love to try to treat God like a fancy computer or a smart phone don’t we. And we get angry at God when we don’t get want we want in life when we want it. The point that I’m trying to make is that God by definition isn’t like any of the contingent, changeable things we can control in this world. St Thomas Aquinas described God as “ipsum esse subsistence”, or the shear act of to be itself. God isn’t an item in the world that we can grasp and control on our time. Rather God…is…period.

 

What does this have to do with advent? Well our culture loves to skip advent doesn’t it! We start Christmas right after Halloween. The shopping malls pull out all the Christmas decorations, and start selling Christmas stuff. Just like the advance of the computers and Smartphone’s, Christmas starts earlier and earlier, and progress is measured by how much less we have to wait. “Shop at our store”, the commercials say, “Christmas starts November 2nd….the other mall only starts Christmas November 9th”. They are telling us you can have Christmas now, when you want it.

 

What is advent telling us? The word advent means, “to come to, or coming to”. It’s telling us a very different and much more realist message. It’s telling us a sobering message that our post-modern culture doesn’t want to hear. It’s saying…. wait. It’s saying Christmas isn’t hear yet, but Christmas is coming on Gods time not ours. Unlike the gods of computers and smartphones and the gods of immediate gratification that we love to worship, the true God can’t be grasped at, can’t be controlled.  All the good things God gives us in this world are a gift, not a pay check. We don’t earn it or deserve it, it’s offered to us by the God who does not need us, but chooses to love us anyways.

 

At Christmas we celebrate two things that defy cultural expectations. The first thing is, that the long awaited messiah of Israel, the one who will defeat the enemies of Israel, and make it the dominate society of the world, turns out to be a tiny helpless baby, born to a couple of nobodies, in the middle of know where. Very much not want the people of Israel were expecting, and probably not what they want to hear. How is this baby going to accomplish his mission? Well they had to wait and see. The second thing we celebrate at Christmas is that the same Christ has promised to come again. Um…great…… when is that going to happen? Well we have already been waiting 2000 years for Him to come again, and chances are we will be waiting a bit longer.

 

God is that which we can’t grasp, God is that which we can’t control, because the true God…IS. (period!). The season of advent is meant to remind us that we are not the centre of the universe, and that life doesn’t operate according to our schedule. In real life, things don’t magically happen exactly as you want when you want it, as our culture teaches us. Advent is the season that reminds us that Jesus is the centre around which the universe spines (if I can press the metaphor), and everything happens on God’s schedule. During advent we are reminded that Christ is coming, but we haven’t a clue when that’s going to be. During advent we are meant to remember that God knows what God is about, and he will answer our prayers, but it’s going to happen how he wants it to happen, and it’s going to take place when we least expect it, and all we can do now, is slow down, and wait, and surrender to grace. Christmas and Christianity isn’t primarily the story of humanities quest for God, but rather its mostly the story of God’s quest for us, it’s about God’s desire that we share in his life. Not because he needs us. God doesn’t need anything or anyone. But because he loves us. Grace is God’s free unsolicited gift of himself. It’s a gift we are free to accept or reject. God is making us wait so as to prepare our hearts for the gifts he is planning to give us when we are ready for it, when we are ready to surrender to grace.

 

By: Terrel Joseph (Campus Minister)

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Social Justice Update

Another semester comes to a close, and it’s time to update you and what we have done together to support those working towards social justice around the world!

 

Our first Social Justice Event was a back-to-school clothing drive. Students were able to drop off gently used clothing in the bagel-lounge for the first month of school. Many bags were then packaged up to be sent to Benedict Labore House, a day centre for the homeless, here in Montreal.

 

Shortly thereafter we organized a Thanksgiving food drive for the St. Willibrord Parish Soup Kitchen (in Verdun) and needy parishioners. We filled a giant box of nonperishable items to donate which was taken to St. Willibrord’s.

 

In late September, we organized a bake-sale for Jesuit Volunteer Corps, which sends recent university graduates (including our very own NSS Alumna Emily) to work in impoverished communities around the United States. For example, Emily works at the Open Door Mission, a rehabilitation clinic and convalescent care center for homeless men in Houston, Texas. We were able to support their mission through a donation of $50.

 

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We have continued our partnership with St. Padre Pio Parish in the Philippines this year. This is a rural parish in Camarines Sur. We are truly brothers and sisters in Christ, so we continue to pray for them (and them for us!). We also are able to support their children’s feeding program, through donations. This semester we had three fundraisers for them – a special soup and bagel, a bake sale and, of course, our semesterly coffee house. We were able to donate $504 this Christmas from these three events.

 

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In November, we re-launched our popular Sandwiches for the Homeless program, in which students make and distribute sandwiches to the needy of Montreal. We hope to make it a monthly occurrence come the winter!

 

In light of the recent storm in the Philippines, we also leaped into action to raise funds for those affected by the storm. We were able to raise money through a second collection after mass (which will be sent to the Red Cross) and our Christ is Coming Dinner, in which we donated $100 from ticket sales to Caritas International.

 

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Finally, our Advent second collections will be going to the Sisters of Life, a community of religious sisters who uphold the dignity of life, through retreats, support for pregnant women and other programs in the United States and Canada. Here’s one opportunity you haven’t missed out on yet – we will be collecting funds throughout Advent.

 

What should we support next year? You can always contact your VP Social Justice Anita if you have ideas!

 

Holly, Webmaster Chairperson

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Message from Alumna Amy

Howdy! My name’s Amy, and I was a Newmanite circa 2007-2009. I wasn’t on the NSS council, I wasn’t in the choir, I wasn’t baptised or married at the Newman center – the way Newman has deeply touched my heart and my life can’t be attributed to obvious Big Participation. I’m very happy to share with you how I spent my time at Newman back then and why you’ll see me popping up now and then even now. It’s going to inevitably be constructed as a composite of portraits (because of course, the people around you are what give any chapter in your history colour and depth) and snapshots of events; I’m not really a historian, so if homey tales are what you want you’ve come to the right place.

 

First of all, I chose McGill largely because of the NewmanCenter. I was a more-or-less freshly-returned Catholic (my then-boyfriend, now-husband Tony had led me back to the Church through a series of conversations and challenges at cégep), and I’d spent a lot of time with the daily-mass suburban parish crew (aka the over-70 club) and delightful as those men and women were, dear to me as they still are, I knew I needed peers in my faith other than Tony and the internet to move to the next level of Being Catholic.

 

That first summer, a small group of us did the Christopher West Theology of the Body DVD and discussion group series led by Sister Susannah, a Monastique de Jerusalem who was with us as campus minister before the equally well-loved Terrel. It was very fruitful for me personally. There were a lot of laughs and insights and ah-hah moments. The Theology of the Body remains a core part of my Catholicism, loosened and smoothed now into a less sharply-defined version, weaving into and integrated with my own experiences and reflections.

 

Now, if you never had the pleasure of meeting Sister Susannah, you need to imagine a near-constant Cheshire-like grin, a lot of laughter, and a very intense, intimate love of the Blessed Sacrament. When she wasn’t with her community or on a desert day she was reliably found around the center or in her office (now the Claude Ryan reading room). She was always ready to do counselling about painful experiences or to tell anecdotes about her time in Italy or about her past as a Seventh-Day Adventist or just listen to you vent about university life.

 

Sister Sue grinning at the Newman Ball 2008
Sister Sue grinning at the Newman Ball 2008

A lot of you do probably know Richard, who was our Director in those days. I’ll be brief about Richard since he is more likely to read this, and I don’t want to embarrass him, but as we all know he is one of the best human beings around and was a fantastic Director. My two images are Richard at Newman are of him and Kale cracking each other up over soup and bagels (I’ll try to keep references to people who’ve moved on down but Kale and Richard just pressed each others’ hysterically clever buttons in a way that was incredible, they had us rolling on the floor the entire time) and of Richard up in the common room, fingertips together, frowning in his thoughtful way as he chooses the best way to answer a question that’s been put to him. To my knowledge, he never let anyone down at that. (In fact, one of the questions I had for him was about the theology of Bl. John Henry Newman, whose approach has become an important part of my faith – full details here http://hosheana.blogspot.ca/2009/10/john-henry-newman-on-reason.html).

 

Congress pilgrims in Quebec city – author is the first on the left in the back
Congress pilgrims in Quebec city – author is the first on the left in the back

Our pastor was Fr. Sylvain, a wonderful francophone priest who’d occasionally ask you into his office to have you proof his pronunciation of key words in English homilies he was working on. When I think of the Divine Praises I still hear Fr. Sylvain’s voice: “Blessed be Sain’ Jozeph, ‘er mos’ chaste spoose [rhymes with moose]”. Father Sylvain formally received my husband, formerly Greek Orthodox, into the Catholic Church right up in the chapel.

 

 Tony entering full communion with the Catholic Church, with his sponsor Richard and Fr. Sylvain
Tony entering full communion with the Catholic Church, with his sponsor Richard and Fr. Sylvain

So to get back to history, after that first summer, and with the personalistic context set, we move on to daily university living. I was a commuter in those days, travelling to and from Chateauguay (about an hour away by bus and metro) daily, so perhaps more than other students I saw Newman as my retreat. I plopped on those couches many times. I love to laugh and be with people but I also need a steady diet of quiet and calm to keep me going, and the NewmanCenter was the place for it.

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Hard at Work

 

That first year, I volunteered at a McGill conference about religion in the public square (an amazing experience!), I worked the lunch program for a semester or two, I went to the Newman Ball, I tabled for NSS and I helped fundraise for the Eucharistic Congress pilgrimage trip in 2008. Tony and I didn’t actually go to Sunday Mass often, because we were the token Latin Mass couple back in our day (and actually Fr. Sylvain’s uncle was our pastor over at St Irenée, the Latin Mass parish, at the time!), but we would go to Adoration and weekday Masses regularly. I started working that spring, and decreased to part time studies the following academic year, but the Newman Center continued to be my base.

 

Newman Ball 2008
Newman Ball 2008

Choose Life started in 2007 or 2008, if I recall correctly. I was on the exec from the get-go (I think I was VP communications), and we had at least a couple of events at the Center. I definitely remember going to an ice cream social at the Center in 2010, when my son was a tiny bean and the leadership torch had been passed on from Natalie to Lizzy, but I’m getting a little ahead of myself.

 

Tired of the commute, I decided to move to the Coach House in May 2009. I ended up only living there a few months, because we got engaged (Tony proposed right in the Coach House, actually!) and so in July I moved to a little apartment on my own to get the nest ready for our upcoming December wedding. While I was there, though, I enjoyed being right in the thick of things, eating with my housemates, visiting the chapel, and generally relishing being part of the succession chain of Newman residents. That was toward the end of my Newman time; I started working full time that fall and didn’t finish my degree at McGill, so between working, and then planning our wedding, and then being pregnant, Newman involvement basically decreased to zero.

 

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Freshly-engaged at the Coach House

However, the connections I made continued to take root, sometimes in ways that surprised me. There were a number of people I’d say I was friendly with in my actual university days, but with whom I wasn’t intimate friends. Once I left school, I figured that would also just fizzle out and become a nice memory. But, in a wonderful way, that hasn’t been the case. There are in fact several old Newmanites with whom we are closer now than we were at university. I suppose that, predictably, I (or I should say, we) maybe took a lot of the community for granted, the sense of communion and solidarity and easy smalltalk that comes from shared experiences; when we find each other now it’s like smelling a delicious childhood smell you’d nearly forgotten. The culture beyond university common rooms doesn’t really have as many spaces and opportunities to just hang out in an unstructured way and get to know people, nor does the world give you the sense of family the Church does.

 

A lot at Newman is the same. Y’all have your daily Mass, your fireside chats with the Bishop, SNS, bagel lunches, Bible studies, social justice events, and so on… the green donation jar for soup and bagels is the exact same one, Linda is still whipping you all into shape, and beyond a few cosmetic reconfigurations most of the art and furniture is also the same. I hope that despite working too hard, weathering inevitable cliqueishness and the drama of sin, dealing with heartbreaks and personal growing pains, the Center has been and will continue to be for you a refreshing sanctuary that will bear much fruit. Just remember, you get out of it what you put into it! And if you see me loitering, smiling to myself while I examine the familiar surroundings with more satisfaction than seems normal, with or without my preschooler at my feet, feel free to come over, say hi, and tell me what the Newman Center means to you! God bless you.

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Message from Julian

November 25, 2013

 

Dear Newmanites! Dear Friends in Christ!

 

Greetings from New York! As you near your finals and I reach the end of my second month here at the UN, I wanted to send you some words of encouragement and let you know how things are going in the Big Apple.

 

Everything here is phenomenal! Plenty of work but an extraordinary experience! I’m learning so much and working with such a wonderful group of people, both the interns and the permanent staff. Each day brings a broadened perspective on the intricate workings of the international community, the conditions and crises of our brothers and sisters around the world, the unique role of the Church in global affairs. All the while gaining insights into those basic truths, hopes, dignity, and aspirations that bind and animate us as human beings—no matter our nationality, language, culture, political positions, socioeconomic status, or religion.

 

Here, seemingly at the centre of the world, you realize most profoundly that people are people, that our deepest desires are for good, and that peace starts with us, with individuals, in ways as simple as a smile.

 

To give you a picture of what we’re doing here and what life’s like on a day-to-day, included below is a post I wrote for the Salt + Light blog (saltandlighttv.org/blog) which will be published this Wednesday.

 

Be assured of my continued daily prayers and warm wishes as you embark on your finals and enter this wondrous season of Advent. May the joy of Jesus’ coming dispel any darkness and bring you hope. May your steps be guided in His peace and your hearts touched by His love!

 

In the words of Winston Churchill: “Never, never, never give up!”

 

In the words of Christ: “I am with you always, to the end of the age.” (Mt. 28:20)

 

Cor ad cor,

 

Your brother Julian J

 

From the floor of the Security Council, where I chill.
From the floor of the Security Council, where I chill.

The Adventures of an Intern: From Salt + Light to Peace and Security

 

At the end of September, I reached the end of my second summer working at Salt + Light.  It had been another enriching and exciting several months spent with wonderful, warm, and dedicated people in a close-knit and faith-filled working environment.  But this time, instead of heading back to McGill University to continue my studies, the end of my time at Salt + Light was the beginning of a journey southbound, the start of something new, something exciting: an adventure.  Thanks to the kindness and generosity of Fr. Tom Rosica, our CEO, I was off to New York to serve as an intern with the diplomatic mission of the Holy See to the United Nations!

 

Two months into the internship, it’s still as exciting as it sounds!  Living in New York, working at the UN, and serving the Church in such a unique way, each day brings fresh excitement and a new reason to be thankful and rejoice.

 

There are seven interns in total: two from Canada, two from the United States, and one each from Spain, Kenya, and Syria.  They’re all wonderful and gifted people and it’s been a blessing to experience these months together.

 

Each of us is assigned to a different committee or council of the UN, follows the meetings of that body, and writes daily reports on their proceedings.  My assignment is to the Security Council, which is the body entrusted with the maintenance of international peace and security on behalf of the nations of the world.  Thus, the matters addressed by the Council cover a wide range of peace and security issues, which range from eliminating chemical weapons in Syria to fighting piracy off to Somali coast to resolving the decades-long Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

 

As the most powerful organ of the UN system, the Council generates a high degree of interest and draws an impressive array of guests.  This past week alone, the it heard briefings from the Prime Ministers of Serbia and Kosovo, and one of its committees was addressed by former British Prime Minister Tony Blair on the importance of fighting religious extremism through education.  Needless to say, it’s an incredible place to be and work and every day brings the urge to pinch oneself to make sure you’re not dreaming.  To put it one way, it’s UN-believable!

 

Our day begins at 9:00 in the chapel of the Holy See Mission, where the entire staff gathers to pray Midmorning Prayer of the Liturgy of the Hours. From there, we have a morning meeting to review the UN Journal of the day’s meetings and events before heading to UN headquarters for the first sessions of the day, which begin at 10:00.  Between morning and afternoon meetings, we all return to the Holy See Mission to come together and share a meal.  Together with Midmorning Prayer, this is a crucial mainstay to remaining united as a community of disciples at the service of the Church.

 

In the same vein, during the course of our internship, we live together at Ss Peter and Paul, a vibrant and active parish in Hoboken, New Jersey—right across the river from Manhattan.  The view is spectacular and the experience of living in community is superb!

 

In a setting as secular but significant as the UN, how essential it is to remain focused on our true mission of serving the Lord.  Living the call to discipleship in the midst of all the prestige, power, and politics, but also the crises, the suffering, the tragedy and injustice.  In a place where debate too often outweighs decisive action, we are present not to be swept up in political division and partisan vitriol but to be a leaven: to bring hope, to see with faith, and to plant seeds of unity and peace.

 

Amid such a formative and exciting experience, I want to express my profound gratitude to Fr. Rosica, without whom none of this would have come about or been possible.  His strong support has been a great gift to so many young people, and I consider myself blessed to be among them.

 

Until next time, peace and blessings from the Big Apple! The adventure continues!

The Holy See interns with our boss, Archbishop Francis Chullikatt (purple sash), Permanent Observer of the Holy See to the UN, and his predecessor Cardinal Martino, who established the internship program with Fr. Tom, at the Holy See’s annual “Path to Peace” gala dinner.
The Holy See interns with our boss, Archbishop Francis Chullikatt (purple sash), Permanent Observer of the Holy See to the UN, and his predecessor Cardinal Martino, who established the internship program with Fr. Tom, at the Holy See’s annual “Path to Peace” gala dinner.
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A Short History of Liturgical Music – Polyphony

This post is part of our series on liturgical music. Also check out our part on Gregorian Chant!

 

Another type of music we love to sing with the choir is polyphony (If you have no clue what I’m talking about, these are the pieces we sing on special occasions during communion, the ones that sound particularly ‘Catholicy’). Polyphony was introduced in the late Middle Ages and early Renaissance and contrasts from Gregorian Chant in that multiple voices build ontop of each other to create a really unique texture and complexity to the music. Some popular composers include Byrd (who wrote the Ave Verum Corpus we often sing), Palestrina (who wrote the Sicut Cervus and the Jesu Rex Admirabilis you will most likely hear this Sunday), and Tallis (who wrote a piece that’s in our duotangs for next semester, If Ye Love Me).

 

Did you know that polyphony was not always particularly welcomed within the Catholic liturgical tradition? This may be surprising the lyrics so clearly point to Scripture and liturgy. But it was precisely because the words are sometimes hard to hear in polyphony that it stirred up so much controversy. You will probably notice that it’s hard to make out (despite the language differences, as we sing mostly in Latin) exactly what the lyrics are because the multiple voices are overlapping each other. So when you hear polyphony, you might not quite understand the words, but many people note that the beauty of the music certainly lifts their soul! We hope that it helps you to lift your thoughts and pray!

 

Take a listen: Ave Verum Corpus – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vFZZMF7SRRo

Secut Cervus: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0yd5EE0hAB8

Jesu Rex Admirabilis: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BXQuOQccCWA

 

Holly Ann Garnett, Director, Newman Centre Choir

 

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A Short History of Liturgical Music – Gregorian Chant

You may have noticed that the Newman Choir sings a lot of different styles of music – everything from chant to hymns to praise and worship. This is intentional – the goal of the choir is to bring all the beautiful traditions of Catholic liturgical music to students at the Centre during mass. It is such a blessing that we are able to put this beautiful music where it belongs – in the context of the liturgy. So over the next few weeks, we will go through some of the different styles of music you will hear at the Newman Centre at Sunday mass so you can understand better what we are singing.

 

Gregorian Chant

 

You may notice that during Advent and Lent our mass parts change. We go from a choral four-part mass setting to a more austere (though equally beautiful) chant setting in Latin. We sing a very simple Gregorian Chant mass setting. Gregorian chant, or plainchant, is one of the earliest forms of liturgical music, dating back to the 9th or 10th centuries (though it’s earliest forms date back further!). The ‘Gregorian’ part of its name is (perhaps incorrectly) often attributed to Pope Gregory the Great.

 

Did you know that Gregorian Chant was written on a very different musical staff than we know today? It usually had four lines (rather than five) and a different system of notation (with square notes and different markings). The music we sing at the Newman Centre has taken this notation and written it into notation that we can read easier. You may also notice that chant is written without many bar lines. As such, rather than singing with a specific beat, we take care to have the music reflect the words we are singing and the phrasing of it. This is one of the greatest challenges when singing chant in a group! Most often the Newman Centre choir will sing with multiple harmony parts. But in chant, we sing together, taking care to sound like we are one voice!

 

This idea of singing as one voice is amplified by the fact that the Chant setting is use is not unique to us at the Newman Centre, or even here in Canada. It is sung around the world. For example, when I was in Norway one summer, I went to mass, obviously in Norwegian, so I didn’t really understand the specific words being used. However, I was delighted when the priest began the Kyrie – in Latin chant! Using the same setting we use at Newman! I was able to sing along in unison with my Norwegian friends.

 

Some of the popular chants that we use at Newman (besides the mass setting) is the Pange Lingua (text written by none other than St. Thomas Aquinas), the Veni Creator, or the Crux Fedelis (sung on Good Friday).

 

Take a listen: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DnrOwiYqTcc

By: Holly Ann Garnett, Director, Newman Centre Choir

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Message from Alumnus Josh

November 4, 2013

Dear Newmanites,

 

Hello all!  I hope this letter finds you all well and happy with your studies and lives in Montréal.  My name is Joshua Abrego and I graduated from my Masters in Voice performance in 2012 from McGill University at the Schulich School of Music.  Now I have the immense pleasure of starting my career as an Opera singer.   I am writing to you from Calgary, Alberta where I have stted my first contract with an opera company (Calgary Opera).  I have now been here for a little over a month and am in my 4th week of work here.  Unfortunately, Calgary is not as nice a city as Montréal.  It’s much colder (believe it or not) and it feels very bland as a city.  There are plenty of buildings to go buy things and work, but there isn’t much in the way of culture, museums, parks, or landmarks.  The landscape is very flat and everything is very spread out (so if you don’t have a car you basically have to commute for a LONG bus/train ride or you need to live in the heart of downtown).  I am fortunately living downtown in the busiest areas of the city so  I don’t have to worry about travelling much.  I do miss hearing the familiar Québecois accents and seeing the french signs and stores.

 

I’ve had a few performances already with the company and we’re being trained on a daily basis (which I’m very thankful for).  We get private lessons every day as well as yoga, movement and acting classes.  It’s kind of like an internship program where everything is catered to our development and personal needs.  I’m very blessed to be in a program where I have the flexibility and time to focus on my own progress rather than delivering something for the company.

 

In terms of my relationship with God and the church, I have been going to mass at a couple of churches here; one of them is called St-Pius X and the other is called Sacred Heart.  They are both nice churches with active ministers which is nice, but I haven’t had the chance to really get to know anyone yet.  I’ve been told that Calgary has a very lively Catholic youth community so I’ll  have to find out how I can become involved.

 

I do miss the Newman center very much.  For those of you who are there for the first time, please take advantage of it!  I was blessed to live at the Newman center for 3 years and to be involved with the community for nearly 7.  There is no other place that I’ve seen like it!  The sincerity, friendship, love and humour that you find at this center is so unique and wonderful that once you are no longer able to partake in it anymore, you feel it very deeply in your heart.  The friends that you’ll make there are true friends that you’ll want to keep in touch with for as long as you can.

 

I don’t plan on staying long in Calgary (such is the nature of Opera singers).  My contract ends in May 2014 and I want to go to another big city where I can further develop my skills and meet new artists so I can train and learn more!  Who knows, maybe I’ll be in Montreal again one day.

 

Those of you who are on the fence about getting involved with the Newman center somehow, DO IT!  Join the Newman choir!  Do something in the Coffee house!  Cook meals for Saturday Night Supper!  Become a part of the student council!  The more you give and participate in the Newman society, the more it gives back to you!  It will enrich your lives and bless you with such joy and love that you will not experience otherwise in your university lives.  This place is an oasis amidst the difficult university life and the metropolis that is Montréal!

 

I wish you all the best and pray for all of you

 

Joshua Abrego

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Josh is on the far left (in the red shirt and black vest)