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Sister Christine Schenk on the History of FutureChurch Mary of Magdala Celebrations

Sister Christine Schenk, CSJ, co-founder of FutureChurch, shares the story of how FutureChurch’s annual Mary of Magdala celebrations began.

Flashback:  1989-class at St. Mary Seminary in Fr. George Smiga’s class on the New Testament. I was stunned to discover there is no evidence whatsoever that St. Mary of Magdala was a prostitute but ample evidence in all four Gospels that she was the first witness to the Resurrection. But who knew?  No one!  And I vowed then to let people know about her faith-filled leadership if ever I could.

Enter God’s inscrutable providence. In 1997, as director at FutureChurch, I was at last able to fulfill my vow by launching FutureChurch’s international campaign to restore St. Mary of Magdala to her rightful place as the apostle to the apostles.

We asked our supporters to sponsor special celebrations on or around July 22 at which a biblical expert would trace Mary’s unparalleled fidelity in accompanying Jesus through crucifixion, death, burial and resurrection. This would be followed by a prayer service at which a woman would preside, preach and encourage attendees to reflect on their own encounters with, and witness to, the risen Christ.

Our first Cleveland celebration attracted 200 people to a local parish where Fr. Smiga himself spoke. A friend encouraged about eight women from her 12-step group to attend. To my surprise, they wept unrestrainedly throughout the beautiful prayer service created and led
by pastoral minister, Laurel Jurecki, who was clothed in a white alb.

It dawned on me that we were touching something very deep within the Catholic female psyche. A long-buried wound was slowly being brought to the Spirit’s healing light.

Annual celebrations of St. Mary of Magdala exploded after that, going from 23 that first year, to 150 the following year to between 250 to 400 celebrations worldwide in each of the last 17 years. Every summer, thousands of women and men helped correct an egregious injustice done to a great woman leader in our church.  And every summer, more women wept as wounds of unconscious misogyny were healed by the Spirit’s gentle touch.

And now, just two months ago the Vatican actually changed St Mary of Magdala’s memorial to one on par with all of the other apostles.

It’s not often that working to be the change we long to see actually happens in one’s own lifetime.  I am extraordinarily grateful for the providence of God, and for the powerful Holy Spirit energy at work in literally tens of thousands women and men over the past 19 years.  This would not have happened without them.

Margaret Mead is quite correct when she says: “Never doubt that a small number of people can change the world. They’re the only ones who ever have.”  But we have a long way to go before women’s ministry is in on par with men’s ministry in the Catholic Church.  Sadly, misogyny is alive and well and coming to a poll booth near you.

This is where the Holy Spirit comes in to do her thing—but she needs our help.  So I ask you to pay attention to the Spirit’s call within you . Where can you make a difference? Where can you sow seeds for a future you may never see, but one that won’t happen at all if you don’t begin now.

I long for a Catholic church in which all of our daughters and sons are proud to raise their families.  Come Holy Spirit, Renew the face of our church so we may at last proclaim a God in whose image both women and men are made.  Amen.

Sr. Karen Klimczak

Sr. Karen Klimczak:

“Dear Brother, I don’t know what the circumstances are that will lead you to hurt me or destroy my physical body. No, I don’t want it to happen. I would much rather enjoy the beauties of this earth, experience the laughter, the fears and the tears of those I love so deeply!… Now my life is changed and you, my brother, were the instrument of that change. I forgive you for what you have done and I will always watch over you, help you in whatever way I can….”

Sr. Jean Klimczak read from a letter she found while going through her slain sister Karen’s journal at the sentencing of the man who strangled Karen to death. Sister Karen Klimczak, a Sister of St. Joseph, had written the letter just before Holy Week in 1991 — fifteen years before she was killed on Good Friday 2006 by the man who was living in the transitional home for former inmates she had founded. Sister Karen wrote the letter after having a premonition that her life would be violently taken from her.

More than a truly moving letter to her killer, it serves as a testament to how Sister Karen lived her life and the kind of life she inspired so many others to live.

Learn more about and celebrate Sister Karen Klimczak, witness of peace and nonviolence:

Resources Included:

  • Educational resources: A profile of Sister Karen and her ministry with ex-offenders and advocacy for peace  with questions for reflection and discussion; In Her Own Words: Sister Karen’s letter of forgiveness to her killer– written 15 years before her death– with questions for reflection and dialogue; recent Catholic statements on gun violence in the U.S.
  • Be a Witness of Mercy: Resources for learning and doing
  • Prayer Resources: Prayer Service for choosing to leave “PeacePrints”
  • Original Art by Marcy Hall, commissioned by FutureChurch

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Women Deacons in the Roman Church with Gary Macy

Gary Macy, Ph.D., a church historian, discusses the evidence that women served as deacons in Rome and in the rest of Western Europe until the twelfth century.  He also addresses the question of when women stopped being ordained and why.
 

Dr. Gary Macy, John Nobili, S.J. Professor of Theology at Santa Clara University, received both his Bachelor’s and his Master’s degrees from Marquette University where he specialized in historical and sacramental theology. He earned his doctoral degree in Divinity from Cambridge University in 1978.  In 1991-2, Dr. Macy was Heroditus Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton and during the 2005-2006 academic year was awarded the Senior Luce Fellowship at the National Humanities Center in North Carolina.  Among other works, Dr. Macy has published The Hidden History of the Ordination of Women in 2007 and with William Ditewig and Phyllis Zagano, Women Deacons: Past, Present and Future in 2012.

Sr. Norma Pimentel

Sr. Norma Pimentel. Since an initial surge in the summer of 2014, tens thousands of immigrants – many of them unaccompanied minors and young women with children – have crossed into the United States border at Texas’s Rio Grande Valley. The majority are from Central America, particularly Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador. Fleeing horrific gang violence, trying to rejoin family members, and looking for a way to make a living, they immediately surrender themselves to U.S. Border Patrol in the hope that the legal system will allow them to stay.

After detaining these women and children for hours and even days, Border Patrol releases hundreds of immigrant families a day with bus tickets and a ‘notice to appear’ at an immigration hearing. Tired, hungry, dirty, and distraught many of these women and families seek respite at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in downtown McAllen, Texas, where they meet Sister Norma Pimentel, executive director of Catholic Charities of the Rio Grande Valley. A sister with the Missionaries of Jesus, Sister Norma knew there was more that could be done. “They were just being dropped off at the bus station in heartbreaking conditions,” she said.

And so, in early June 2014 Sister Norma requested permission to set up a way station for immigrant families to receive the physical, spiritual, and emotional care they so desperately needed at Sacred Heart Church – just a a few blocks away from the bus station in McAllen. And just a few days later, she opened an additional facility at Brownsville’s Immaculate Conception Cathedral – just a block away from the bus station there.

Learn more about and celebrate Norma Pimentel, a sister who works on the border to welcome those seeking refuge.

Resources Included:

  • Educational resources: A profile of Norma Pimentel and her work with questions for reflection and discussion; In Her Own Words: Sister Norma’s testimony before the United States Commission on Civil Rights with questions for reflection and dialogue; A Summary of “Strangers No Longer Together on the Journey of Hope” a pastoral letter by the bishops of Mexico and the United States with questions for reflection and dialogue.
  • Be a Witness of Mercy: Resources for learning and doing
  • Prayer Resources: Prayer Service For welcoming the stranger among us
  • Original Art by Marcy Hall, commissioned by FutureChurch

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Women Deacons? Essays with Answers featuring Phyllis Zagano

This teleconference featured Phyllis Zagano, Ph.D., a leading expert on the history of women deacons in the Catholic Church. Zagano reacts to the then-breaking news of Pope Francis agreeing to establish a commission on women deacons during a meeting with the UISG (Zagano was later named to that same commission). She then discusses her book Women Deacons? Essays with Answers. 

Dr. Phyllis Zagano is an internationally acclaimed Catholic scholar who has lectured throughout the United States, and in Canada, Europe, and Australia. Her many awards include the 2014 Isaac Hecker Award for Social Justice from The Paulist Center Community in Boston for “her prolific body of work that has constantly echoed the cry of the poorest of our society for dignity and for justice both inside and outside the church….specifically the dignity of all women.” Her groundbreaking work on women in the diaconate led to her appointment to the Pontifical Commission for the Study of the Diaconate of Women in 2016. She has taught at Fordham, Boston, and Yale Universities, and currently holds a research appointment at Hofstra University, Hempstead, New York.

Dorothy Day

On May Day 1933 Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin co-founded the Catholic Worker movement and newspaper in New York City. Since then Day’s life of voluntary poverty, direct action on behalf of the worker and the poor and absolute nonviolence and pacifism has been a constant inspiration for both Christians and non-Christians. Without dismissing the importance of other leaders in the history of the Roman Catholic Church in the United States, it is fair to say that Dorothy Day remains, at the dawn of the new millennium, the radical conscience of American Catholicism.

Popular interest in Dorothy Day has grown since her death in 1980. Such interest only increased when the Vatican announced on March 17, 2000, that it had approved starting the process for Day’s canonization as a saint of the Roman Catholic Church. Scholars, too, have taken an interest in Dorothy Day. In addition to her own writings (eight books and several hundred articles), there are numerous critical studies of her life and of the Catholic Worker movement. (See references) These studies all point to a conspicuous entwined thread in the tapestry of Day’s life, the unique combination of social activism and deep religious feeling. The dual passion of social justice and intimacy with God was present in Day’s life from her early years.

Download our resource packet to learn more. Resources include:

  • Educational resources: A Biography of Dorothy Day by Stephen Krupa, SJ with questions for reflection and discussion; In Her Own Words: The Scandal of the Works of Mercy by Dorothy Day with discussion guide; Excerpts from Scripture and Catholic Social Teaching on The Dignity of Work and the Rights of Workers with Discussion Guide
  • Be a Witness of Mercy: Resources for learning and doing
  • Prayer Resources: Prayer Service Honoring Dorothy Day by Christine Schenk, CSJ
  • Original Art by Marcy Hall, commissioned by FutureChurch

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Women Deacons: Why Not Now? Resource Packet

Learn more about Phoebe, Olympias, Macrina, Dionysia, Radegund, and their sisters whose service as deacons in the Church inspires us to advocate for restoration of women deacons today. This downloadable packet contains the tools you need to learn more about this issue and promote dialogue in your own community.

This packet includes: 

  • A quick look at the issue, to give you the basics about women deacons and provides good answers to the questions and objections most often raised by church officials
  • 5 essays and prayer services about women who served the Church as deacons,
  • A Brief History of Women Deacons
  • A sample education program you can host in your community
  • The full text of Archbishop Durocher’s intervention at the 2015 Synod on The Family which called for a discussion of women deacons
  • An interview with Archbishop Durocher
  • Two articles by women deacons expert Phyllis Zagano, Ph.D.  about why restoring the women deacons is both needed and possible today
  • A discernment process to find and present women candidates for the permanent diaconate to your bishop.
  • An updated “Nine Reasons to Restore Women Deacons”
  • A sample letter to your bishop with enclosures
  • Recent information on Lay Ecclesial Ministers, the majority of whom are women, well prepared to be ordained deacons

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