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Catholic News Herald

Serving Christ and Connecting Catholics in Western North Carolina

‘Go to Joseph!’

092520 AytonaCHARLOTTE — To commemorate the Year of St. Joseph, the Diocese of Charlotte has invited the Fathers of Mercy to preach three back-to-back missions in November at parishes in Huntersville, Kernersville and Arden.

Three, four-night diocesan missions will be led by Fathers of Mercy priests from Kentucky. Their primary apostolate is to preach parish missions and retreats, which are now given throughout the United States, Canada and Australia.

The first Year of St. Joseph Mission will be held Monday, Nov. 2, through Thursday, Nov. 5, at St. Mark Church in Huntersville. Mercy Father Joseph Aytona will lead this mission. He will preach at all weekend Masses Oct. 31-Nov. 1 before the mission begins.

The theme of Father Aytona’s mission is: “In Charge of His Household: St. Joseph, father of the Incarnate God.” Topics he will cover each evening are:

  • Monday, Nov. 2: St. Joseph: Guardian, Provider and Universal Patron
  • Tuesday, Nov. 3: Master of the Interior Life (How to Pray Always)
  • Wednesday, Nov. 4: Terror of Demons and Patron of the Dying
  • Thursday, Nov. 5: Model of a Perfect Eucharistic Adorer

St. Mark Church is located at 14740 Stumptown Road in Huntersville.

The second Year of St. Joseph Mission will be held Monday, Nov. 9, through Thursday, Nov. 12, at Holy Cross Church in Kernersville. Mercy Father Ricardo Pineda will lead this mission. He will preach at all weekend Masses Nov. 7-8 before the mission begins.

The theme of his mission is: “Go to Joseph!” Topics he will cover each evening are:

  • Monday, Nov. 9: Husband of Mary and Virginal Father of Jesus
  • Tuesday, Nov. 10: Master of the Interior Life: The Seven Sorrows and Joys of St. Joseph
  • Wednesday, Nov. 11: St. Joseph the Worker: Model of Masculine Virtue
  • Thursday, Nov. 12: True Devotion to St. Joseph, Patron of the Universal Church

Holy Cross Church is located at 616 South Cherry St. in Kernersville.

The third Year of St. Joseph Mission will be held Monday, Nov. 16, through Thursday, Nov. 19, at St. Barnabas Church in Arden. Father Pineda will also lead this mission, with the same theme as his mission in Kernersville. He will preach at all weekend Masses Nov. 14-15 before the mission begins Nov. 16, with nightly talks following the same schedule as above.

092520 Fr Ricardo PinedaSt. Barnabas Church is located at 109 Crescent Hill Road in Arden.

Missions will begin each evening at 6 p.m. with Eucharistic Adoration and confession until 7 p.m. The Chaplet of Divine Mercy will be prayed each evening at approximately 6:45 p.m. The mission conferences will be held in the presence of the Blessed Sacrament from 7 to 8 p.m. and end with Benediction.

All three Year of St. Joseph Missions are free and open to the public following each parish’s appropriate health and safety measures.

A special collection will be taken on the final day of each mission, to help pay for the priests’ travel and related expenses associated with the mission and compensate their community for providing a missionary to preach in the diocese.

— SueAnn Howell, Senior reporter

More online

At www.yearofstjoseph.org: Find educational resources, prayers and devotions, and “Year of St. Joseph” event details from across the diocese, as dates for special events are finalized.

Building trust, unifying the Greensboro community

092520 habitatGREENSBORO — When Don and Mary Gay Brady decided to fund construction of a new home for a local family in need, they envisioned unifying fellow parishioners through teamwork for a worthwhile cause. What they didn’t expect, however, was to bridge the cultural gap between different faith traditions. As it turns out, God had higher plans.

Members of Our Lady of Grace Church in Greensboro, the Bradys inspired between 50 and 75 parishioners to turn out for the initial interest meeting for the Habitat for Humanity build more than a year ago – the largest group the Greensboro organization had ever had come together for a project.

Overcoming various complications and delays due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the four-bedroom home was recently completed. The owners are a Muslim family of five from Khartoum, Sudan: Salaheldin and Sanna Abdalla and their three children: Reem, 15; Ramee, 13; and Raaft, 9.
The family came to the United States via the federal government’s visa lottery in 2017 in search of better opportunities in healthcare, education and employment. Both parents work at Procter & Gamble.

They said they are grateful that thanks to Habitat for Humanity, their children will have their own rooms, plenty of space to play, and a place they will call home and grow up in.
Don Brady was overjoyed for the Abdalla family upon the completion of the project.

“It’s wonderful. I’m happy for the mother and father and three young children. It’s a testament to the community and our acceptance of immigrants,” he said.

Added David Kolosieke, president and CEO of Habitat for Humanity of Greater Greensboro and a parishioner of St. Paul the Apostle Church in Greensboro, “The Abdalla family was blessed by the generosity of Don and Mary Gay Brady, who sponsored this house in honor of the Our Lady of Grace community. It was an excellent community-building experience for the congregation, and made possible homeownership for the 501st family served by Habitat Greensboro.”

Because volunteers were not allowed on the job site after pandemic restrictions took effect, Habitat employees finished the home, and the Aug. 7 dedication was streamed live on Facebook. Present at the dedication were the Brady and Abdalla families; Kolosieke from Habitat; Sheikh Yaser Ahmed, the leader of the Islamic Center of Greensboro; Pastor DeJuan Harris of Calvary 092520 OLG Habitat HouseChristian Center; and Father Michael Carlson, parochial vicar of Our Lady of Grace Parish.

In his opening prayer, Sheikh Ahmed said, “O God, bless this house and bless the family that will live in it. Shower them with mercy, peace and tranquility, and unite their hearts and let them live in peace in this beautiful neighborhood.”

Then, Father Carlson welcomed the Abdalla family and gave them an Irish blessing.

He also reflected on the experience: “Last fall, I was out here when we first started the building project and were putting up the walls.

Everyone was working together doing their part, and I thought to myself, ‘What a beautiful thing to see. What if our communities could be like that? What if our city of Greensboro could be like that?’ All of us working together to help each other out, to give each other that helping hand up that we all need at one time or another.”

Another blessing came when Brady learned that he and Sheikh Ahmed are closer than he realized. As providence would have it, his business – Brady Services on 16th Street – and Sheikh Ahmed’s mosque are neighbors. The two met for the first time at the dedication.

“When we made the decision to donate this home, we had no idea that we’d be bringing Catholics and Muslims together,” Brady said with considerable emotion during the dedication. “What a beautiful, beautiful thing to do.”

—  Annie Ferguson, Correspondent.

Pictured: The Abdalla family – Salaheldin and Sanna Abdalla and their three children, Ramee, Raaft and Reem – pose outside their new home in Greensboro with some of the people who helped make the project possible: Don Brady, local businessman and member of Our Lady of Grace Church; David Kolosieke, president and CEO of Habitat for Humanity of Greater Greensboro; and DeJuan Harris, Habitat board member and pastor at Calvary Christian Center. Offering prayers at the opening of their new home were Father Michael Carlson and Sheikh Yaser Ahmed. Don Brady and Sheikh Ahmed meet during the dedication of the Abdalla family’s new home. (Photos provided)