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EPISODE #115
CATHOLIC SPORTS VIEW: GUESTS ARE JILL HEGNA AND TOM TICE

Each week, Bob Gibson interviews coaches and players throughout the various Catholic high schools in Orange County.

Joining us this week on Catholic Sports View is Santa Margarita’s Jill Hegna, the coach of one of the best golf programs in the state. Then, we’ll check in with Tom Tice, the athletic director at Rosary Academy.  We’ll talk about coming out of the pandemic; and, we’ll touch on all the great sports programs at the Trinity League’s only all-girls school.

EPISODE #113
CATHOLIC SPORTS VIEW: GUESTS ARE SCOTT McKNIGHT AND KATY DALY

Host Bob Gibson interviews coaches and players throughout the various Catholic high schools in Orange County. His Twitter handle is: @catholicsv

Join us as we talk with JSerra football coach Scott McKnight; and, Santa Margarita girls volleyball coach Katy Daly. Plus, we’ll also provide you with news and highlights from around the Trinity League.

EPISODE #310
EMPOWERED BY THE SPIRIT: TEENS AND YOUNG ADULTS

On this podcast, Deacon Steve Greco welcomes first-time guest, Chris Morris to the program. Chris is fully engaged in helping to lead the RCIA program at Holy Family Church in the City of Orange. He’s also teaming up with Steubenville University (OH) to help facilitate their Franciscan Parish Mission program to local parishes.

Listen as Chris shares the unique and subtle ways he has ministered alongside youth and young adults over the years. You will no doubt be inspired by these powerful testimonies of faith!

 

 

 

Originally broadcast on 6/26/22

OUR FUTURE

It has been said crisis breeds creativity. 

That has certainly been the case throughout the Catholic Church, particularly in Youth and Young Adult Ministry programs. With across-the-board staff and service cuts, it is a ministry that has been particularly hard hit and forced to adapt.  

With many classes and instruction cancelled, community service opportunities curtailed and large events sidelined, Church leaders have had to hustle not only to introduce the faith, but engage and train emerging leaders, who are early in their Catholic journeys. 

Most agree that youth and young adult ministry is foundational. 

“People say, ‘The youth is the future of the Church,’” said Diocese of Orange Auxiliary Bishop Timothy Freyer. “However, they are also the present and so our strategic plan places an emphasis on ministry to youth and young adults.” 

This is particularly true at a time when the young are in a fulcrum position in deciding whether to fully embrace the faith. 

“If you serve the young Church now, they’ll be the future Church,” said Armando Cervantes, director of the Youth and Young Adult Ministry. “You make disciples by being protagonists for the faith. Now, more than ever, you need the connection.” 

The ministry not only brings teens and young adults into fuller communion with the Church and Church life, but promotes civic activity and awareness through charity work, such as food and clothing drives, social justice and education. 

High school-aged participants are required to track and complete service hours and young adults not only guide younger congregants but can be engaged in in-service training and National Certification opportunities. 

As Bishop Freyer says, “Our ministry helps young people not just to be connected with Christ, but as Christians to help build a more Christ-like world though care for the poor, those who are sick or suffering. Our relationship with Christ should compel each of us to strive to make our communities more just, safer and holier.” 

Combined it is a massive undertaking. The Youth and Young Adult Ministry oversees and supports programs for teens in parishes as well Catholic high schools and middle schools. 

The Young Adults program caters to young adults (ages 18 to 39) registered as Catholics in Orange County. 

Even with modern technology and social media, engaging youth has not been easy, and participation has declined. 

“The financial impact cannot be underestimated,” said Catherine Ord, coordinator of the Youth Ministry, noting staff cutbacks and the pandemic have made it impossible to stage in-person events central to the Youth Ministry. 

“Instead of hosting a youth day, we may be in the office making calls and sending Instagram messages,” she said. 

Luckily, most young members are pretty tech savvy. 

“One of the blessed things is the transition to technology hasn’t been hard,” Cervantes said. 

YouTube, Facebook and Instagram help young parishioners participate online in rosaries and adorations. Families are also becoming more involved connecting via social media in new ways. There are also online games, Bible studies and confirmation classes. 

As examples, Ord said Saint Hedwig Catholic Church created videos for families to watch that included prayers, games and teachings, as well as a summer online show modeled after late-night talk shows. Holy Trinity Parish ran a virtual Vacation Bible Camp and high schoolers created videos and led activities for youngsters. A Spanish-language youth group from Saint Polycarp Parish developed online meetings drawing national Hispanic leaders. San Francisco Solano Church held drive-in movie nights. And at Holy Spirit Catholic Church, the youth ministry used Minecraft to recreate the church. 

Some other ways to connect with youth and young adults are so-called “hybrid events,” where they can meet outdoors, while maintaining distance, in addition to having an online component. Several churches are also holding outdoor youth events immediately before or after Mass. 

On the Diocese’s Youth and Young Adult Ministry homepage, the program is designed “to draw young people to a responsible participation in the life, mission and work of our Catholic Faith Community.” 

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops lists eight components of a comprehensive ministry, including advocacy, catechesis, community life, justice and service, and prayer and worship. 

For young adults, goals include actively inviting young adults into the life of the Church and responding to their needs and concerns. Cervantes said this has helped the ministry become, “with, for and by youth. They don’t just want to be served, they want to serve.” 

This has led to a creative silver-lining in the pandemic crisis. 

“COVID has given us a chance to think creatively about how we present our faith,” Cervantes said. 

Where many programs and models have been top-down and set in stone over the years, Cervantes sees opportunities for change to better reach and connect. 

“We can throw some of the models out the window,” he said. “I’m excited to see what gets created.” 

EPISODE#211
OC CATHOLIC RADIO: GUEST IS ARMANDO CERVANTES

Each week, we bring you compelling conversation with church leaders and laity.

Today, host Rick Howick brings back one of our favorite in-studio guests, Armando Cervantes.

Armando was recently named director of the Office for Hispanic Ministry. But he also wears another hat as director of the Office of Youth and Young Adults. Needless to say, he is a very busy man.

We are thankful that he was able to carve out a little bit of time to join us in our studio – high atop the Tower of Hope.

Tune in and SHARE!

 

 

 

 

Originally broadcast on 9/19/20

Pope Francis tells youth at Medjugorje: be inspired by the Virgin Mary

Vatican City, Aug 2, 2020 / 07:30 am (CNA) – Pope Francis has urged young people gathered in Medjugorje to imitate the Virgin Mary by abandoning themselves to God.

He issued the appeal in a message to an annual youth meeting in Medjugorje, read out Aug. 1 by Archbishop Luigi Pezzuto, Apostolic Nuncio in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

“The great example of the Church that is young in the heart, ready to follow Christ with new freshness and fidelity, always remains the Virgin Mary,” the pope said in the message, sent in Croatian and released by the Holy See press office Aug. 2.

“The power of Her ‘Yes’ and Her ‘Let it be unto me’ which she said before the angel, delights us at all times. Her ‘Yes’ means to participate and take risks, without any guarantee except knowing that she is the bearer of the promise. Her ‘Behold the handmaid of the Lord’ (Luke 1:38), the most beautiful example that tells us what happens when a man, in his freedom, surrenders himself into God’s hands.”

“Let this example inspire you and be your guideline!”

Pope Francis approved Catholic pilgrimages to Medjugorje in May 2019, but he has not made a deliberation on the authenticity of the alleged Marian apparitions reported at the site since 1981.

His message to young people gathered at the site did not mention the alleged apparitions, which began June 24, 1981, when six children in Medjugorje, a town that was then part of communist Yugoslavia, began to experience phenomena which they have claimed to be apparitions of the Blessed Virgin Mary.

According to the “seers,” the apparitions contained a message of peace for the world, a call to conversion, prayer and fasting, as well as certain secrets surrounding events to be fulfilled in the future.

The alleged apparitions at the site in Bosnia and Herzegovina have been a source of both controversy and conversion, with many flocking to the city for pilgrimage and prayer, and some claiming to have experienced miracles at the site, while others claim the visions are not authentic.

In January 2014, a Vatican commission concluded a nearly four-year-long investigation into the doctrinal and disciplinary aspects of the Medjugorje apparitions, and submitted a document to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

When the congregation has analyzed the commission’s findings, it will finalize a document on the site, which will be submitted to the pope, who will make a final decision.

In his message to youngsters at the 31st International Prayer Encounter of the Youth in Medjugorje, which takes place Aug. 1-6, Pope Francis said: “The annual encounter of the youth in Medjugorje is the time filled with prayer, reflections and fraternal meeting, time that gives you the opportunity to meet the living Jesus Christ, in a special way in the celebration of the Holy Eucharist, in Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament and in the Sacrament of Reconciliation.”

“It thus helps you discover a different way of life, different from the one offered by the culture of the temporary, according to which nothing can be permanent, the culture that knows only the pleasure of the present moment. In this atmosphere of relativism, in which it is difficult to find true and sure answers, the motto of the Festival: ‘Come, and you shall see’ (John 1:39), the words used by Jesus to address his disciples, are a blessing. Jesus is also looking at you, inviting you to come and stay with Him.”

Pope Francis visited Bosnia and Herzegovina in June 2015 but declined to stop in Medjugorje. En route back to Rome, he indicated that the process of investigation into the apparitions was nearly complete.

On the return flight from a visit to the Marian shrine of Fatima in May 2017, the pope spoke about the final document of the Medjugorje commission, sometimes referred to as the “Ruini report,” after the head of the commission, Cardinal Camillo Ruini, calling it “very, very good,” and noting a distinction between the first Marian apparitions at Medjugorje and the later ones.

“The first apparitions, which were to children, the report more or less says that these need to continue being studied,” he said, but as for “presumed current apparitions, the report has its doubts,” the pope said.

Pilgrimages to Medjugorje have declined in numbers due to the coronavirus crisis. Radio Free Europe reported March 16 that the pandemic had diminished significantly the number of visitors to the town, especially from Italy.

The pope concluded his message to the youth meeting by quoting from Christus vivit, his 2019 post-synodal apostolic exhortation to young people.

He said: “Dear youth, ‘keep running attracted by that face of Christ, whom we love so much, whom we adore in the Holy Eucharist and acknowledge in the flesh of our suffering brothers and sisters. May the Holy Spirit urge you on as you run this race. The Church needs your momentum, your intuitions, your faith.’”

“In this race for the Gospel, inspired by this Festival as well, I entrust you to the intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary, invoking the light and the power of the Holy Spirit so that you may be true witnesses of Christ. Therefore, I pray and I bless you, asking you to pray for me, too.”

YOUNG PEOPLE ENCOURAGED TO ‘ABANDON EVERYTHING’ TO GOD AS WITNESSES TO LIFE

WASHINGTON (CNS) — As the sun rose on the nation’s capital Jan. 24, about 18,000 teens and young adults gathered in joyful praise and worship, celebrating the sanctity of all human life at the Capital One Arena in Washington at the Youth Rally and Mass for Life, the largest annual event sponsored by the Archdiocese of Washington. 

Two sisters, Caitlin and Ciara Baltazar, who are in the 11th and seventh grades at Stone Ridge School of the Sacred Heart in Bethesda, Maryland, arrived just as the doors opened at 6:15 a.m. to save seats in the front of the arena for nearly 30 of their March for Life club members. 

Caitlin Baltazar said it was her family’s faith that rooted her passion for the pro-life cause, adding that as young women, “it’s important for us to be involved,” she said. 

The annual event, which takes place prior to the national March to Life, gathers young people from throughout the Washington area, from across the country and from around the world to begin the day in prayer for the protection of all human life. Participants came from as near as Catholic schools and parishes in Washington and Maryland and from as far away as Australia. 

“This Mass is an invitation for all of us to leave everything, to abandon our life totally to the Lord, to be witness to the fact that a life spent to do the will of God is the greatest life possible,” said Father Daniele Rebeggiani, a Washington archdiocesan priest who is a secretary at the apostolic nunciature, in his homily at the Mass.  

EPISODE #219
EMPOWERED BY THE SPIRIT: NET MINISTRIES

Join Deacon Steve Greco as he welcomes Ryan Loutsis to today’s program. Ryan is the Mission Engagement Officer for NET Ministries.

Tune in and find out about what NET ministries is all about.

They are making a HUGE difference for the youth in our church today!

 

 

 

 

Originally broadcast on 11/17/19

EPISODE #99
CATHOLIC SPORTS VIEW: GUESTS ARE RYAN ABRAHAM AND ERIC BORBA

Host Bob Gibson interviews coaches and players throughout the various Catholic high schools in Orange County. His Twitter handle is: @catholicsv

Today’s guests are:

  • Ryan Abraham (uscfootball.com);
  • Eric Borba (head baseball coach at Orange Lutheran High School)

 

 

 

 

Originally broadcast on 9/28/19

EPISODE #212
EMPOWERED BY THE SPIRIT: THE SPIRITUAL DETOXING OF OUR CHILDREN

On this week’s program, Deacon Steve Greco welcomes C.R. (Chad) Stewart to the program. Chad has just completed a book that is already making a big impact in the lives of young people. It’s called “Britfield and the Lost Crown.”

It’s been said that about 90% of all the young adult adventure books on the market are based on occultism, witchcraft, demigods or some sort of nefarious agenda. Our guest today aims to do his part to take back our children’s minds and

hearts.

“Britfield” is a fast-paced young adult adventure novel  that took several years to complete. Tune in and hear all about this fascinating tale!

Visit the web site at: britfield.com

 

 

 

 

 

Originally broadcast on 9/15/19