Posts Tagged “catholic convert”

Completing a manuscript is no easy feat.  It's nothing you can just whip out in a few minutes, days, or weeks.  Writing is every bit as much a discipline as it is a charism and/or skill.  I don't have the charism of writing (at least I doubt very seriously that I do, else I would have WAY more readers commenting), but I feel compelled to write.  Right now, the most compelling thing for writing is my story.  I want to put it all to paper before the little details slip from my mind.  I want to be able to look back not just on "the big stuff" of critical moments and crises of faith, but I want to see the whole story in all its detail.  Once that is done, I want to condense it into a handy book and get it published.  

Anyway, that was my thought for the day.  Writing can be frustrating.  

If you have a charism for writing, please join this catholic blogging community.  You can teach me.

Morning, everybody.  My appearance tonight on "The Journey Home" with Marcus Grodi on EWTN has been cancelled.  I received the call last night from Jim Anderson of the Coming Home Network, that Marcus was ill and would not be able to make the taping today.  He also said that I would be rescheduled sometime soon.  Check back here for updates.  As soon as I'm rescheduled, you'll see the new information here.

Thanks for your prayers.  Pray now for Marcus that he'll get better soon.  

The trip wasn't a total waste (yes-I was already in Birmingham when I learned of the cancellation).  I had my good friend Larry with me to keep me awake and share good conversation.   

Back to work I go.

Oh, sorry that you all had to cancel your "Andy on EWTN" parties.  Just take the banners and streamers down and save them for the next time.   

 

I am scheduled to appear on television Monday.

I'll be Marcus Grodi's guest on EWTN's "The Journey Home" television program.

The Journey Home airs on Monday's at 7pm Central on EWTN.

Since I got my invitation, people have been telling me that they are going to watch me and that they will be praying for me.  Well, folks, I'm calling in those favors.  I want your prayers.  Why?  Not just because of my nerves, but because of what I feel is riding on this show appearance.  You see, I've been wanting to be on Marcus' show for a while because I feel that the way God has dealt with me over the past 15 years has a message for cradle Catholics, Catholic converts, and even non-Catholics, whether they are exploring the Church or not.  I have seen such a HUGE spiritual change in my life that I want others to know THIS IS POSSIBLE.  It's not psychological, it's not triumphalism, it's not emotional, it's not anything people might seek to use as a label to "excuse away" what has happened TO me and IN me.  The answer is one word - Grace.  Grace, not just a concept of kindness or mercy, but ACTUAL supernatural grace has changed EVERYTHING.  I'll never be the same again.  

How will I convey that to the global audience watching EWTN?  I've been wrestling with this for weeks, trying to shorten my testimony to fit in the allotted time and agonizing over which details have to be left out.  Many of you have read my story before, and many of you have heard portions of my testimony in the various talks and sessions I've delivered over the last five years.  Those posts and those witnesses only barely scrape the surface of what has occurred in my life by God's love and mercy.  And, yes, that's why the book is in the works.  But, back to my request, I want your prayers.  I know and I'm 100% sure that the Holy Spirit is in charge and that He will provide me with the right things to say.  This is His gig, not mine.  I am also 100% sure that God uses the prayers of the faithful to work and move.  After all, we are family, co heirs with Christ and fellow laborers for His Kingdom.  So will you pray for me?  I know the answer, and I appreciate your willingness to support me.  

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Saint Polycarp is my patron saint.  He was really the one who got me to begin reading about the early Church, and he was the one who introduced me to the Eucharist.

I have a little writeup about him on my ministry site.

http://catholicdestination.com/community/polycarp/who-is-saint-polycarp/

I'm also glad that CatholicDestination.com has Polycarp Medals.  Everybody needs one because he is such an awesome saint!

I’m posting an article from the February 10, 2008 East Tennessee Catholic about Bishop-Designate James Vann Johnston because I am excited he is coming closer to my neck of the woods.  Then Father Vann Johnson was one of two priests in Knoxville who took time out of their super hectic schedules to speak with me regarding the Catholic Faith.  Bishop-designate Johnston and his ministry are special to me.  He’s a good man and I know the people of his new diocese are going to love him. 

Future bishop’s new diocese ‘in many ways’ like his native one

Bishop-designate James Vann Johnston’s new diocese in Missouri is larger than his native one of Knoxville by some 10,000 square miles, although the number of Catholics—as in East Tennessee—represents a small percentage of the population.

The Diocese of Springfield-Cape Girardeau was founded in 1956, and its 25,719 square miles include the 39 counties of southern Missouri. Sixty-six parishes and 19 missions serve 66,000 Catholics in an area that has about 1 million people overall. The diocese has 22 elementary and three high schools. Retiring Bishop John J. Leibrecht, 77, is the diocese’s longest-serving ordinary.

More than 40 active diocesan priests serve with fellow clergy from several religious communities.

“I think I’ll fit in pretty well,” said Bishop-designate Johnston. “In many ways it’s a lot like the Diocese of Knoxville. The Catholic Church there is strong and has been there a while, but it’s still a distinct minority.

“Many of the parishes are small- to medium-sized and in areas where they may be the only Catholic church for miles. Many of the priests there have to serve several parishes or missions, so I’m familiar with what the priests’ situation is because it sounds very similar to the church I’ve grown up in.”

The diocese’s seven seminarians include two transitional deacons. “That’ll be one of my happier tasks this summer: ordaining two priests,” said Bishop-designate Johnston.

The Springfield–Cape Girardeau Diocese includes most of the Mark Twain National Forest. “It’s a beautiful area, and I’m glad it’s pretty,” said Bishop-designate Johnston. “I’ll be going back and forth through there a lot.”

Much of the Catholic population in Springfield–Cape Girardeau is in the two see cities. Entertainment mecca Branson lies just south of Springfield. The city of Springfield, with about 150,000 residents, is the third largest in Missouri and by far the biggest in the diocese. Joplin, on the Kansas border near Oklahoma, is another principal city.

Diocesan offices are at the Catholic Center in Springfield, next to St. Agnes Cathedral. The bishop’s residence is an older home, “a beautiful two-story house” in Springfield, said its future occupant.

The diocese has a second cathedral, St. Mary, in Cape Girardeau, a Mississippi River town about three counties above Tennessee’s northwest corner and some 270 miles from Springfield. The cathedral rectory includes an apartment for the bishop.

The Catholic Center was the former home of Springfield Catholic High School before it moved.

“The bishop told me not to be surprised if in the middle of the day I hear somebody shooting baskets down the hall in the gym,” said Bishop-designate Johnston.

The bishop-designate met with Catholic Center staffers following a press conference announcing his appointment Jan. 24.

“I was very impressed with the priests,” said Bishop-designate Johnston, “but also I had a chance to meet our Chancery staff, and they look to be a wonderful group of people. I’m looking forward to working with them.”

Two future cardinals first became bishops for Springfield–Cape Girardeau: Cardinal Bernard F. Law and Cardinal William W. Baum.

Bishop-designate Johnston said one of his only two previous trips to Missouri involved Cardinals—a stop in St. Louis to see the baseball team of that name. He also was present for Pope John Paul II’s 1999 visit to St. Louis.

Here’s another article about his appointment.  Hooray for awesome Priests and Bishops!