Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Old versus new - full circle

The Way Wednesday
. . . . .
St. Ignatius, pray for us.
M
any of us have benefited greatly from the spirit
ual direction we received by practicing the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius of Loyola. St. Ignatius founded the Society of Jesus, also known as the Jesuits, an order dedicated to evangelization and loyal to the Pope and Magesterium of the Church.

In recent years, the Jesuits have been decreasing in numbers. Within the Church, some place the blame directly on the 'drifting' they've noticed in Jesuit practice and theology. Recently, Rome has been talking to them in very strong and direct terms. Recent comments have, in effect, told them to get back in line. So much good has been done by the Jesuits over the centuries, that it is hard to imagine them being in the condition they find themselves today.
. . . . .
Bring it on
R
ight down the road from me, about 70 miles or so, an exciting conversion is taking place. Greensburg IN is once again looking forward to a population boom. St. Mary Catholic Parish is getting ready for it. The Diocesan Newspaper, the Criterion, tells it this way.
. . .
GREENSBURG, Ind. (The Criterion) - Eighty families in a small farming and railroading community in south central Indiana gathered together as one to leave behind a legacy.

PART OF A NEW LEGACY - Anthony Treash, a third-grade student at St. Mary School in Greensburg, leaves his “lasting impression” while his mother, Gina, and sister, Sara, wait their turn
PART OF A NEW LEGACY - Anthony Treash, a third-grade student at St. Mary School in Greensburg, leaves his “lasting impression”
Families of Irish and German descent, bound together by their Catholic faith, sacrificed their time, talent and treasure to build what would become St. Mary Parish in Greensburg, the largest church and congregation in Decatur County. That was the late 1870s and early 1880s.

Today, history is repeating itself.

Exciting times are coming to Greensburg, and St. Mary Parish is no exception. A new major auto manufacturing plant is moving to town, new construction and growth are everywhere, and change is in the air — in many ways the same kind of excitement and growth that was being experienced in the late 1800s.

You can read the whole article here.
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