Thursday, February 23, 2023

2.26.2023

 

Campus Ministry Bulletin - February 26th, 2023
Tammy Norcross-Reitzler, Director of Campus Ministry
Rev. Ross M Epping, Chaplain
Colin Evers, Coordinator of Music Ministry
Nicky Gant, Coordinator of Service & Justice
Fabian Barthalonzo, Graduate Assistant


Follow us online for news, events, prayer and spiritual resources, plus much more:
Facebook
Instagram
YouTube
Between long lines at the airport, heavy suitcases, turbulence, lack of legroom and rude passengers - travel can be daunting. 

But as anyone who has ever taken a great vacation knows - the challenges are worth it! When we get to our destination, the discomfort of the journey disappears into the joy of memories that last a lifetime. 

As we enter into the season of Lent, I think it helps to look at our sacrifices as a journey to the most fabulous destination we could ever dream of - the miraculous heart of God. 

As we put extra emphasis on prayer, fasting and almsgiving on this 40-day journey through the desert together, we can feel very uncomfortable. Without as many distractions, our interior doubts, fears, trauma and regrets rise up to the surface, demanding to be seen and felt. A 40-day car ride with crabby toddlers  can be easier than a 40-day journey into the darkness of our own souls. 

Like any good vacation though - Lent is worth the travel pains! 

As we work through all of our interior baggage, we are increasingly able to embrace the heavenly reality of Christ's resurrected presence within and all around us into a more deeply unified state with the Holy Spirit.  We realize God's unconditional love for us has always been there - just blocked from awareness by our own attachment to worldly distractions. 

Lent is an uncomfortable journey to the resurrection of Jesus Christ in our own lives, here and now. 

I encourage you to embrace the sacrifice of lent - not begrudgingly as a chore - rather as an opportunity to experience more peace, love, joy, strength and inspiration in your life. 

God bless you every step of the way! 

– Nicky 
Click here to register for the Antioch retreat!
If you would like to carpool to the Immigration & Refugee Summit, click here to register for this and other Service & Justice initiatives this spring.
Click here to register for the 2023 Lenten Challenge Group.
Movie Night!
February 27th @ 7:00 pm 
in the Rogalski Center Ballroom

Join DEI for the screening of the movie Aftershock. "A Sundance-award winning film that follows two families as they galvanize activists, birth-workers and physicians to reckon with one of the most pressing American crises of our time – the U.S. maternal health crisis." Click here to see the movie trailer.
Click here to sign up for Service Saturday with Living Lands & Waters on March 4th, along with other Service & Justice Opportunities.
Input caption text here. Use the block's Settings tab to change the caption position and set other styles.
If you would like to support CRS global initiatives to alleviate global poverty, stop by Chapel to pick up your lenten ricebowl or click here to make a CRS Rice Bowl donation online.
Click here for more information about the meaning of lent, and the Catholic tradition of fasting, almsgiving and prayer throughout lent.
Click here to email Emily Mohr for more information about the Clothing Drive.
Click here to email ministry@sau.edu for more information about joining the Tuesday Faith Sharing Group during lent.

Francis at 10: A Papacy of Possibilities

St. Ambrose University extends a special invitation to students, faculty and staff to join us this spring for a 3-day event celebrating 10 years of Pope Francis!

A leader from and for the margins, this humble servant of God has captured the imagination of people across the globe. Attendees will hear from experts from around the world as they examine Pope Francis, including his theology, his ministry, and the future directions he has set for the Church and Christianity. Presentation topics will range from environmental concerns, economics and justice to a church on the margins, world religions, evangelization and inclusion. 

The impressive keynote speaker lineup includes:

We are honored to share that the event's closing mass will be hosted by the Papal Nuncio to the United States, His Excellency Archbishop Christophe Pierre, Titular Archbishop of Gunela.

Students, Faculty, and Staff are invited to attend any of the keynote or concurrent sessions Friday, March 17 and Saturday, March 18 without charge by registering for the conference and using the promo code PAPAL23.

Those who would like to attend the dinner Thursday night and/or the lunches Friday and Saturday, are asked to pay $40 and register using the promo code HUNGRYBEE.  

Click here to register. The cost is free for students, faculty and staff using the discount code PAPAL23. Discounted meals available with the promo code HUNGRYBEE.
If you are a student and want to attend the opening prayer & dinner, click here to email the provost. There are 50 free meals for students available.
Click here to sign up for Service Saturday at Project Renewal on April 15th, along with other Service & Justice Opportunities.
Click here for to email Colin Evers for more information about Music Ministry.
If you would like more information about becoming a liturgical minister for spring semester, click here to email ministry@sau.edu.
Click here to request access the food pantry.
Click here to email beesknees@sau.edu with a prayer request or to be part of the prayer chain ministry.
Have a question about a program or event going on in Campus Ministry?
Got an idea for something you'd like to see happen?
EMAIL US at ministry@sau.edu.


Tammy Norcross-Reitzler, Director of Campus Ministry
Rev. Ross M Epping, Chaplain
Colin Evers, Coordinator of Music Ministry
Nicky Gant, Coordinator of Service & Justice
Fabian Barthalonzo, Graduate Assistant


Follow us online for news, events, prayer and spiritual resources, plus much more:
Twitter
Instagram
Facebook

Friday, February 17, 2023

2.19.2023

 

Campus Ministry Bulletin - February 19th, 2023
Tammy Norcross-Reitzler, Director of Campus Ministry
Rev. Ross M Epping, Chaplain
Colin Evers, Coordinator of Music Ministry
Nicky Gant, Coordinator of Service & Justice
Fabian Barthalonzo, Graduate Assistant


Follow us online for news, events, prayer and spiritual resources, plus much more:
Facebook
Instagram
YouTube
One morning, Dorothy Day was working at her desk in the front room of her Catholic Worker House in New York City when a donor came in and gave Dorothy a diamond ring. Dorothy thanked her for it and put it in her pocket. Later a rather ornery woman came in, one of the more irritating regulars at the house. Dorothy took the diamond ring out of her pocket and gave it to the woman to wear.

Some of the staff saw her do this and immediately began berating her, saying, "Wouldn't it have been better if we took the ring to the diamond exchange, sold it, and paid that woman's rent for a year?"

Dorothy replied that the woman had her dignity and could do what she liked with the ring. She could sell it for rent money or take a trip to the Bahamas. Or she could enjoy wearing a diamond ring on her hand like the woman who gave it away. "Or do you suppose," Dorothy asked, "that God created diamonds only for the rich?"

Do you suppose that God created diamonds only for the rich? Do you suppose that God created beauty only for a select few?

The gospels are full of stories showcasing God’s healing power. Jesus bringing Lazarus back from the dead. The story of Jesus and the Samaritan woman at the well. Even the story of Jesus celebrating at a wedding with fresh water-turned-wine. And the common thread that runs through these stories is that Jesus cares, he unites, he builds. There’s a mission here that Jesus wants to highlight. It is a mistake to assume that Jesus came to make bad people good. He didn’t. Rather, Jesus came to make all people live. Like, actually live lives full of goodness and beauty, enjoying the fullness of creation and the gift of community.

Jesus didn’t come to save the righteous. He didn’t come because there were a select few people who were super holy or really good and he just wanted to hang out with them. He came to bring hope. He came to bring peace. He came to challenge the way folks look at the world and act in the world, in the hope that the world might be different.

So, no. God didn’t create diamonds only for the rich. And God didn’t create beauty only for a few. God continually creates, with reckless abandon. Hoping beyond hope that this creative beauty challenges us to rethink and reimagine the ways in which we live and move and love.

-Fr. Ross
Click here for more information about the meaning of lent, and the Catholic tradition of fasting, almsgiving and prayer throughout lent.
Stop by Chapel to pick up your lenten Rice Bowl or click here to donate to make a CRS Rice Bowl online.
Click here to register for this year's Social Justice Leadership Training by 2/13!
Click here to email Campus Ministry for more information about Praise & Worship night!
Click here to register for the Antioch Retreat registration:
Click here to email Emily Mohr for more information about the Clothing Drive.
Click here to sign up for Service Saturday with Living Lands & Waters on March 4th, along with other Service & Justice Opportunities.
Click here to email ministry@sau.edu for more information about joining the Tuesday Faith Sharing Group during lent.
Click here to register for the 2023 Lenten Challenge Group.

Francis at 10: A Papacy of Possibilities

St. Ambrose University extends a special invitation to students, faculty and staff to join us this spring for a 3-day event celebrating 10 years of Pope Francis!

A leader from and for the margins, this humble servant of God has captured the imagination of people across the globe. Attendees will hear from experts from around the world as they examine Pope Francis, including his theology, his ministry, and the future directions he has set for the Church and Christianity. Presentation topics will range from environmental concerns, economics and justice to a church on the margins, world religions, evangelization and inclusion. 

The impressive keynote speaker lineup includes:

We are honored to share that the event's closing mass will be hosted by the Papal Nuncio to the United States, His Excellency Archbishop Christophe Pierre, Titular Archbishop of Gunela.

Students, Faculty, and Staff are invited to attend any of the keynote or concurrent sessions Friday, March 17 and Saturday, March 18 without charge by registering for the conference and using the promo code PAPAL23.

Those who would like to attend the dinner Thursday night and/or the lunches Friday and Saturday, are asked to pay $40 and register using the promo code HUNGRYBEE.  

Click here to register. The cost is free for students, faculty and staff using the discount code PAPAL23. Discounted meals available with the promo code HUNGRYBEE.
If you are a student and want to attend the opening prayer & dinner, click here to email the provost. There are 50 free meals for students available.
Click here to sign up for Service Saturday at Project Renewal on April 15th, along with other Service & Justice Opportunities.
Click here for to email Colin Evers for more information about Music Ministry.
If you would like more information about becoming a liturgical minister for spring semester, click here to email ministry@sau.edu.
Click here to request access the food pantry.
Click here to email beesknees@sau.edu with a prayer request or to be part of the prayer chain ministry.
Have a question about a program or event going on in Campus Ministry?
Got an idea for something you'd like to see happen?
EMAIL US at ministry@sau.edu.


Tammy Norcross-Reitzler, Director of Campus Ministry
Rev. Ross M Epping, Chaplain
Colin Evers, Coordinator of Music Ministry
Nicky Gant, Coordinator of Service & Justice
Fabian Barthalonzo, Graduate Assistant


Follow us online for news, events, prayer and spiritual resources, plus much more:
Twitter
Instagram
Facebook