Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Staff on "Serving": Michael Gormley

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One of the more recent SJN staff members is Michael Gormley, aka "Gomer," having joined the staff in summer 2009.  We recently had the chance to find out more about him and his philosophy on the idea of what it means to serve.


What is your job title at SJN?

Pastoral Associate of Youth Ministry

How long have you been a parishioner at this parish?

Since July 1, 2009

What parish ministries are you involved in, outside of your official job description?

Knights of Columbus, Between the Masses, RCIA and Vacation Religion School.  Outside of the parish, I'm involved with Theology on Tap.

Why do you think it's important to be involved in the parish?

It is important to be involved directly in the parish life as well as from the heart of the parish to the community. Within the parish life, my mission is, largely, evangelization and catechesis because I think that is where my talents are the most. I do it because Jesus is teaching me gratitude. I need to remember that all is gift and life is grace, so I surround myself with the mission of spreading His grace to others. It is just as important to spiritually feed others as it is to allow yourself to be fed by others.

Who is a saint you admire or spiritual role model you look toward for inspiration? Why?

My patron saints are Joseph because he was a true man, husband and father; Francis because he unwaveringly responded to God's call in his life; Thomas Aquinas because he devoted his whole life to faith and reason; and, finally, Ignatius of Loyola, who was the tireless soldier of the Truth and a constant fighter of his own vices. These four saints inspire me to greatness and push me away from mediocrity, both in my personal life and in my ministry.

What ministries would you like to see at SJN that don't already exist?

Two things: First, I would like to see parish missions, days of praise, big liturgies -- events done at this church where the whole purpose is simply to lift up the name of Jesus, not even have a catechetical component, save that of teaching people how to pray and praise Him. Second, I would like to see existing ministries intentionally, purposefully, carve out places within their ministries for the teens of our parish to serve alongside as equal laborers in the vineyard. I want a culture of doing ministry at SJN that is ordered toward the full incorporation of the young Church within the parish. My dream is to have teens as actively recruited for ministries as adults.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Deciding which ministry to join

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Thinking about volunteering or getting involved in the parish?  Most people visit the parish Web site or pick up a ministries brochure to see what kind of opportunities St. John Neumann Church offers to parishioners wishing to dig a little deeper in putting their faith into action.  Once people see that we have 56+ ministries, each with several different ways to get involved, some people can get pretty overwhelmed with the many choices.  Understandably.  Enter in the parish director of ministries.

Jen Crowley, director of ministries, is on staff full-time to help parishioners get involved.  Her primary ministry at SJN is to direct discerning parishioners toward whatever volunteer or fellowship opportunity might best suit them. 

Through a Gifts and Talents Survey to chatting one-on-one about past experiences and current interests to ministry events, such as the annual Ministry Expo, Jen serves to plug each parishioner into the parish.  She has the most current information about news and events happening with the different ministries and will be able to help you narrow down your choices. 

There are one-time opportunities, long-term opportunities, short-term opportunities, at-home opportunities, youth opportunities -- something for everyone! 

So if you're feeling a little overwhelmed with the long list of ministries or if you don't have a clue as to where you'd like to serve, try contacting Jen to see how she can help you.  It's what she's here for, and she's happy to help!

Friday, March 26, 2010

Gift Shop coming soon to SJN!

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Did you know that a parish Gift Shop Committee has been working hard to get a gift shop started in our parish?  It's true!  They're nearing the final stages of putting together a business plan, ordering inventory and getting final approval from all appropriate parties, and they hope to have a shop up and running this summer.

Until the new church building is built, the gift shop will consist of a kiosk and display case in the entryway to Morris Hall in the Pastoral Office building.  The committee hopes to feature items such as baptism items, rosaries, metals, holy cards, Bibles, crosses and more!

Completely run by volunteers, the committee will need a good list of willing parishioners willing to volunteer their time and talent in working the gift shop.  Hours will be:

Sundays, 8 to 11:30 a.m.
Tuesdays, 9 to 11 a.m.
Wednesdays, 4 to 6 p.m.

If a strong list of volunteers is gathered, the shop will be able to expand its hours if demand requires it.

Look for more news to come about the shop's grand opening, and let us know if you're interested in serving on the committee or volunteering to work a few hours at the shop when you're available!

This cross is offered from Autom, one of the vendors the gift shop will use.  Look for items like this in the gift shop, set to open soon!

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

How To: Get Ethics and Integrity in Ministry certified

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The Diocese of Austin requires anyone in a parish who ministers to or with minors or vulnerable adults (i.e. elderly, homeless, ill, people in crisis situations) to complete their Ethics and Integrity in Ministry Training.  This means that anyone who participates in the following SJN ministries must get this certification:
  • Alpha Prison Ministry
  • Boy Scouts
  • Care Communities
  • Challenge
  • Christian Medical Missions
  • Coffee and Donut Social Hosts
  • Communion to Sick
  • Cub Scouts
  • Extraordinary ministers of Holy Communion
  • Engaged Sponsor Couples
  • Faith Circle for High School Students
  • Family Religious Education
  • Catechists
  • Vacation Religion School
  • Bereavement Ministry
  • Godly Play
  • Hearts and Hands Respite Ministry
  • K for J
  • Life Teen volunteers
  • EDGE volunteers
  • Readers
  • Ushers
  • Sacristans
  • Mary and Martha Guild
  • Mobile Loaves & Fishes
  • Parish library volunteers
  • Southwest Austin Caregivers
  • Summit / Querencia Communion Service Teams
  • St. Vincent de Paul Society
  • Touching Hearts, Bridging Hope
  • Venture Crew
  • Weekend collection counters
  • Gift Shop volunteers
The reason the diocese asks most volunteers to go through the training is so that we can do our part to protect the vulnerable entrusted to our care and ministry.  You can read more frequently asked questions about the training on the diocesan Web site.

The training involves a two-part process -- one of which can be completed from the comforts of your own home!
  1. Complete the diocesan Application for Ministry, which will run a background check.  This is best to be completed online, but you can go to the same link to print out a hard copy and mail it to the parish office for us to input into the system, if you wish.
  2. Attend a basic workshop.  These are constantly being scheduled all around the Austin area (and beyond); schedules can be viewed at http://www.austindiocese.org/.  It's best to call the number listed ahead of time, but it's also perfectly fine to just show up the day of the workshop if it's a last minute convenience. 
Completing the application is a one-time requirement -- the system automatically runs a background check every few years with no extra work required on your part. 

Attending a workshop, however, must now be done every three years, so if it's been more than three years since you last attended a workshop, it's time to renew your certification!  The good news is that the refresher workshop, as they're called, is half the time that the basic workshop is.  You can also find the list of upcoming refresher workshops at http://www.austindiocese.org/department_home.php?id=9, under the header "Upcoming EIM Refresher Workshops.

Thank you for helping us do all we can to ensure the comfort and safety of those to whom we minister as a Church!
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Image courtesy of http://enrichmentjournal.ag.org/

Friday, March 19, 2010

Parishioners inspire confirmation students to serve

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A couple Sundays ago, seven parishioners seeked to inspire 80 confirmation students who are preparing to receive the sacrament later this spring.  Eric Paul Carreiro, Jo Creath, Alan and Tricia Graham, Meghan and Matt Klassen, and Buddy Quaid visited the March 7th class to each speak to groups of 10 students at a time as the students rotated from "station to station" where each parishioner gave a witness talk on why they are involved at the parish.


Eric Paul Carreiro leads the Sunday 5:30 p.m. Life Teen Choir.


Jo Creath has been involved in the Lay Missionaries of Charity, Altar / Sacristy Ministry, Mobile Loaves & Fishes, Eucharistic Adoration, extraordinary ministers of Holy Communion, Habitat for Humanity and other ministries.


Alan and Tricia Graham were two founders of Mobile Loaves & Fishes and Alan currently serves as the president of the parish-sponsored ministry that has over 10,000 volunteers nationwide.  They've also been involved with Knights of Columbus, the Christ Renews His Parish Retreat Program and Just Faith.



Meghan and Matt Klassen have been involved with the Christ Renews His Parish Retreat Program, Eucharistic Adoration and Habitat for Humanity.


Buddy Quaid has been involved with the Communications Committee.

After receiving the sacrament of confirmation later this spring, it will be tempting for the high schoolers to fall into the routine of attending Sunday Mass as their sole weekly church activity since religious education classes won't be required of them any longer.  To help prevent this, these seven witnesses were asked to show how they are being faithful to God and flourishing as a human person in responding to His call to serve others in love.

There are many opportunities for young people to serve Christ and His Church -- in liturgical ministry (i.e. readers, ushers, extraordinary ministers of Holy Communion, music), social ministry (i.e. Hearts and Hands Respite Ministry, communion to the sick), Christian life ministry (i.e. coffee and donut hosts), faith formation (i.e. catechists, EDGE leaders) and stewardship ministry (i.e. parish library volunteers, Welcome Committee). 

Join us in praying for these young people who will be on fire with the Holy Spirit, that they may seek to know how to best use their gifts and talents to serve God and His people!  Also send up a prayer of thanksgiving for the witnesses of Eric Paul, Jo, Alan, Tricia, Meghan, Matt and Buddy, that they may be blessed for saying 'yes' to showing how they try to serve as Christ's hands and feet in the world and that they may have the courage to continue to witness in their everyday lives.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

CHRISTianity or MEianity: Living repentence within ministry

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Editor's note: This is a guest post from Michael Gormley, St. John Neumann Catholic Church youth minister

Be perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect!

These words of Christ in the Sermon on the Mount may fill us with fear: "But I'm not perfect, and I never will be. This Christian life is impossible!"

Such a response is totally natural because as human persons after the Fall we are continually confronted with the reality of our own imperfections. Mistakes, weaknesses, past sins, baggage, drama and family history seem to conspire to make of us the worse version of ourselves. We can whole-heartedly agree with Saint Paul that more often than not, we do that which we do not want to do and do not do the very thing we want! How is this amplified in our ministries?

Faced with our frailty, there are three responses to this commandment of Christ to be perfect.

First, we can reject it and turn back to our former ways, despising Christ and His Church. This is a genuine reaction (I would rather you were hot or cold...), but is obviously not ideal. Second, and most common, but also the most pathetic, we can reinvent Jesus' Christianity to suit our perspectives, our times, our version of life so that the demands are not so darned difficult. But this is an entirely false Christianity, ME-ianity, one that lets the creature tell the Creator how things ought to be (but you are not hot or cold but lukewarm. Therefore I will vomit you out of my mouth). This Christianity says to God, "Listen, Lord, Your servant is speaking," instead of Samuel's response, "Speak Lord, your servant is listening."

Or finally, we can live repentance and surrender to His grace. As G. K. Chesterton once said, It is not that Christianity has been tried and found wanting. But rather, it has been found difficult and left untried. This lived repentance is our contribution to Jesus' gift of salvation.

Repentance is the first impulse of a true Christian. It declares that Jesus' words are true, that we are called to be perfect as God the Father Himself is perfect but that we are far from that perfection. We are not independent business partners engaging in a contract with God for salvation in exchange for tithing and some moralistic behaviors. We are creatures who openly and consistently rebel against our Father in favor of ourselves. There is no deal brokered, no goods and services exchanging hands equally. There is only our lack, our brokenness, our sinfulness and His desire to save us beyond all death.

Lent is the Season of Repentance, not just the time when the Church makes us feel guilty for drinking too much soda or liking meat too much. It is an intense period of meditation on our very personal need for a Savior, for God to remove from us the things that keep us in the tomb of our own wretchedness. Easter's message is that the tomb is empty, that we are free because Christ has conquered death and sin has no claim over us. Lenten fasts challenge us to confront those tombs and conquer them, not with white-knuckled human effort, but through prayerful surrender.

Lent is not about working our way to heaven but about realizing that, thanks to Baptism, Confirmation and the Eucharist, heaven is already working its way in us. We so often have it backwards! God has already saved us. Repenting is the path toward making more room in our hearts for that grace to seep in. Repenting declares to the universe that we are responsible for our own sins "through what I have done and what I have failed to do." But thanks to the cross and resurrection and to the institution of the Church, His Body, our repentance becomes the source of the forgiveness that Christ won for us on the cross, especially in Confession.

Ministry in or from the Church must always carry within it both the cross and the empty tomb. Whether we are serving at tables or preaching the Gospel, serving soup or pouring our hearts out at a Christ Renews His Parish Retreat testimony or in small groups with high school students, we do it knowing that God's grace is alive and is moving His people toward repentance. Conversion is not a one-time-only event but must become integral to life. The goal is to be perfect as God the Father is perfect and every single time we fall short of that goal, then repenting and converting re-pristinates this gospel within us.

It does not matter if we are literally perfect at our deaths (that's what Purgatory is for!) but that we strive always toward this goal. It perpetually makes the complacent disciples uncomfortable, rather than comforted by the false gospel of ME-ianity.

Look at the story of the woman caught in adultery. She was caught in the very act of adultery (where's the man?) and dragged by the supposed Righteous Ones (self-appointed, as always) into the center of the town to be used in a trap for Jesus Christ. We know Jesus' response to the Pharisees, "Let he who is without sin cast the first stone," but do we remember His words to the woman? "Is there anyone here to condemn you?" She responds, probably trembling at what next will happen, "No one, sir." And now He says to her, "Neither do I condemn you. Go, and sin no more."

Transformed from sinner to public object of scorn to salvation by the ministering words of our Lord. She was not perfect as her heavenly Father is perfect. But through encountering the radical forgiveness of Jesus in that public space, she now is on the path toward perfection.

So let this Lent become a call for you to repent and believe again in the Gospel, but also let this message of lived repentance challenge your ministry. Look deeply into the daily mechanics of what makes your ministry happen and ask yourself and your volunteers, "How can we make this work more His work? How can we become more transparent to let His mercy shine through? From what do we need to repent?"

Asking these questions and honestly seeking the answers can cause some radical changes in your ministry or maybe small adjustments. Often we can get bogged down in the attitude that, "It's always been done this way," but that tool of Satan can cause us to demand the Spirit follow our institutions rather than having our hearts follow the Spirit.

Ministry led by unrepentant sinners will fail because it becomes self-glorifying rather than God-glorifying. Ministries led by men and women who are living out their repentance, who are following the Spirit, who are not afraid to say, "I messed up and I am sorry," these ministries will endure and bear fruit sixty, eighty and a hundred fold. So be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect. This Lent is a perfect opportunity to begin anew with a cry of repentance on our lips!
 
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Michael Gormley, aka "Gomer," is the youth minister at St. John Neumann Catholic Church. His main mission is to evangelize within the Church, seeing major problems with both the pre-Vatican II emphasis on rote memorization and the post-Vatican II emphasis on a watered-down experiential catechesis. Gomer heads Life Teen, Confirmation and EDGE and you can see him helping out around the RCIA program and "Between the Masses" from time to time.  Follow his blogs, Passionate Catholic and Another Thing.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Why volunteer?

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  1. Help others.
  2. Make a difference.
  3. Find purpose.
These are the top three reasons to volunteer, according to VolunteerMatch.org.  Other reasons listed include: enjoy meaningful conversation, connect with your community, feel involved, contribute to a cause you care about, use your skills in a productive way, develop new skills and meet new people.  All fantastic reasons.

Let me take it a step further, though, and apply it to your faith.  Your spirituality.  The way in which you deepen your relationship with God.

James 2:26: "For just as a body without a spirit is dead, so also faith without works is dead."

As Catholics, we believe that we must put our faith into action.  St. Teresa of Avila charged us with serving as Christ's body on earth; we are called to build God's Kingdom while we're here.  It is a big responsibility, but one that is so easy to act upon! 

Anyone can volunteer or spread the Good News, and no matter how big or small the task is, there's something for everyone.  Some opportunity just for you exists -- an important opportunity.  Find out what it is and start building!

"Christ has no body now but yours,
No hands, no feet on earth but yours.
Yours are the eyes through which He looks
compassion on this world.
Christ has no body now on earth but yours."
~ St. Teresa of Avila

SVDP Christmas Food Drive 2009

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

New SJN ministry: Bereavement Support

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Image courtesy of www.bereavement-hypnotherapylondon.co.uk

A new parish ministry at SJN has been approved and will begin its formation!  Please welcome the Bereavement Ministry as No. 56 on our ministry list!  (That's right, folks -- we offer 56 ministries for which our parishioners to become involved.)

Founding member Pat Flathouse is helping to spearhead the effort in starting this ministry, which aims to provide comfort, support and encouragement for members of the parish community who are experiencing personal loss through death.  Support groups led by trained facilitators provide support to parishioners as they walk through the grieving process with emphasis on the emotional and spiritual needs of the bereaved.

This ministry is just in the beginning stages of formation, so it's looking for volunteers to help organize a program.  If you have ideas or resources that might be helpful or are interested in volunteering your time and talent to this new ministry, please contact us, or leave a comment below.

Friday, March 5, 2010

Upcoming seminar on service based on pope's third encyclical

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The Texas Catholic Conference Charity and Justice Department is sponsoring an upcoming seminar based on Pope Benedict's third encyclical, Caritas in Veritate.  The event, Charity and Truth in Ministry: Our Call to Service, will be April 30 - May 1 at the Hilton Austin Airport Hotel.

Caritas in Veritate links charity and truth in the pursuit of justice, the common good and authentic human development.  In doing so, the pope calls all men and women to think and act anew.  This seminar is an opportunity for volunteers in church ministry to gather and reflect on our common call to service.  Participants are also offered workshop choices to hone skills in specific areas relevant to their ministries, including fund raising, volunteer retention, Hispanic outreach, legislative advocacy, re-entry services and wrap-around services for families of the incarcerated, and more.

For more information, call (512) 339-9882 or visit www.TXCatholic.org.

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

SXSW: Events where volunteerism is the headliner

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Sure, SXSW Conferences & Festivals offer the unique convergence of original music, independent films and emerging technologies, but something you may not realize is that they also offer a few events touching on the topic of social change and volunteerism.  If you know about a SXSW-related event that touches on this topic, let me know, either by leaving a comment below or contacting me.

Saturday, March 13


A Conversation About Social Change Through Social Media / 12:30 p.m.at Austin Convention Center

A few words, a few pictures, a transformative experience. Good stories are three-way -- they include the storyteller and the audience both in the experience and transport to a third place, a shared experience, together. Learn how social media can affect real social change!

Sunday, March 14


Crowd Sourcing Innovative Social Change / 3:30 p.m. at Austin Convention Center

Social media builds buzz and raises money, but what about real, on-the-ground change? The Social Change Challenge will crowdsource innovative ideas from nonprofits to change the world. We'll share big ideas for using social media for nonprofit program delivery and some good tips for crowdsourcing for social change.


Tuesday, March 16


Change the World, Lives, With Bikes / 11 a.m. at Austin Convention Center

This core conversation will talk about how cycling, the bike and social media are changing the world and lives. You'll learn about Livestrong's community and Bike Hugger's blog, events like the Mobile Social, and the millions who follow Lance Armstrong on Twitter. It's a discussion of bike and pop culture and socializing the good with these Interweb tools.