2004 theme logoPeriod 4 - Saturday, February 21, 2004
10:00 a.m. - 11:30 a.m.

Religious Education Congress
February 19, 2004 (Youth Day)
February 20-22, 2004


CONGRESS 2004 WORKSHOPS & LINKS

THURSDAY  Youth Day Schedule

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2004 FEATURES  • Closed Sessions  •  Schedule  •  Speakers  •  Statistics
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SEE PHOTOS FROM CONGRESS 2003


NOTE: Workshops filled by Feb 2 are indicated by "(Workshop Closed)."

4-01 A Question of Trust – Evangelizing Young Adult Catholics (Workshop Closed)

In this session we will first discuss four challenges to Christian belief and practice posed by contemporary American culture: a pervasive skepticism about any claims to universal truth; a rejection of external authority; a suspicion of comprehensive "master" narratives; and disillusionment in the face of empty promises and broken myths. Then, we will identify the responses and resources of Catholics and other Americans under 40 and the best ways to welcome them more fully into the Catholic community.

R. Scott Appleby

Scott Appleby is Professor of History at the University of Notre Dame and Director of the Joan B. Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies. With an interest in American Catholic history and world fundamentalism, he has authored a book titled "Church and Age Unite! The Modernist Impulse in American Catholicism," and is co-author and co-editor of others.

4-02 Alternative Parish Staffing 

We are blessed by a rapidly growing Catholic population. However, accompanying this growth there is a significant decline in the number of priests available for parish ministry. This brings the challenge of providing a resident pastor to all parish communities. Throughout the United States there are parishes without resident pastors for whom alternative types of staffing for pastoral leadership encourage the parish to continue to be a vital community of faith and ministry.

Bishop Gerald R. Barnes

Though born in Phoenix, Gerald Barnes grew up in the Boyle Heights area of East Los Angeles. While student-teaching at local high schools he discerned a vocation to the priesthood and, in 1975, was ordained a priest for the San Antonio Archdiocese. He later became Auxiliary Bishop for the Diocese of San Bernardino, Calif. In March 1996, he was appointed Bishop of the diocese.

Lynn Zupan

Lynn Zupan is the Pastoral Coordinator at San Gorgonio Catholic Church in Banning, Calif. She brings 10 years of parish experience and 10 years of diocesan experience to her position at one of the parishes in San Bernardino Diocese without a resident priest. Mother of four grown daughters, Zupan has a master’s degree in religious studies from Mount St. Mary’s College.

4-03 Creating Connections: Small Church Communities (Workshop Closed)

"Humans are integrated into networks, networks that reveal God," says Andrew Greeley. Small church communities in parish life develop these networks, networks that can also connect us with the traditions of our faith and mission in the world. This workshop will address the qualities of a small church community that empower and develop leadership for our church and our world.

Rosemary Bleuher

Rosemary Bleuher is Associate Director of Adult Faith/Small Church Community Formation for the Diocese of Joliet, Ill. She has been with the diocese for more than 20 years, most recently directing their RENEW 2000. She has given keynotes, training seminars and workshops throughout the United States and Canada and has authored numerous articles on small church communities.

4-04 The Biblical Teaching on Social Justice 

The biblical ideas of justice are rooted in our relationship with God as revealed in the many-sided experiences of creation, covenant, liberation, prophecy and wisdom in the Old Testament, and the death and resurrection of Jesus in the New Testament. It is a rich and comprehensive "blueprint" for our spirituality today.

Rev. Lawrence Boadt, C.S.P.

Fr. Lawrence Boadt is President and Publisher of Paulist Press in Mahwah, N.J. Since 1997 he has served as Professor Emeritus of Scripture Studies at Washington Theological Union in Washington, D.C. Fr. Boadt has taught at both Fordham and St John’s universities. He is the author of "Reading the Old Testament, An Introduction."

4-05 Filling Up the Idea Box (Workshop Closed)

Dr. Eleanor Ann Brownell

The multi-tasking youth of today enjoy a multimedia approach to faith. Come fill up your idea box with creative ways of making faith lessons come alive.

4-06 Songs of the Soul (Workshop Closed)

Richard Cheri & The Liturgical Music Team

Come see how we can sing a new song that lifts us up to greater praise.

4-07 Naming God  (Workshop Closed)

Dr. Kathleen O. Chesto

The names we have for God shape our spirituality. Most of those names are given to us in childhood. Because of those names, some of us have trouble believing in a personal, loving God. This workshop looks at discovering new ways to talk with a personal God and new ways to share that God with our children.

4-08 Clergy Sexual Abuse and the Catholic Church

This workshop will outline the nature of clergy sexual abuse in the context of the abuse of children and the problems facing the Church in the United States in 2004. This session will be pastorally oriented in order to understand the questions of pedophilia, homosexuality and the Church’s response to these concerns.

Rev. Gerald D. Coleman, S.S.

Fr. Gerald Coleman is President/Rector of St. Patrick’s Seminary in Menlo Park, Calif. He is a member of the Catholic Theological Society of America and has written widely in the areas of moral and pastoral theology, as well as bio-medical ethics. He has authored a number of books, and has written "Clergy Sexual Abuse and Homosexuality" as part of the forthcoming book "Sins Against the Innocent."

4-09 Marian Reflections for the Feminist Soul (Workshop Closed)

Nancy A. Dallavalle, Ph.D.

Devotion to Mary remains a touchstone for many Catholics, but such devotion – or the rejection of this devotion – sometimes seems to be more an ideological position than a response of faith. Using recent work from across the spectrum, this session will have feminist women and men in mind as we explore, rethink and retrieve Marian devotion in its many dimensions.

4-10 Evangelizing Catechesis: Potentials and Challenges

Carole M. Eipers, D. Min.

Pope Paul VI’s apostolic exhortation on evangelization in the modern world, Evangelii Nunciandi, reminds us that the Church "exists in order to evangelize." How is our catechizing faithful to that mission? We will identify ways to see and to serve evangelization as the goal and measure of our catechetical efforts.

4-11 A Quest for The Holy: Wilderness Replete with Light 

Barbara Fiand, S.N.D. de N.

We live in extraordinary times: On the one hand we experience unprecedented darkness, confusion and violence, on the other hand creativity and insights abound. There is a transformation of consciousness emerging and calling us to responsible stewardship. This is the time when both authentic spirituality and religion can play a major role in supporting us in our quest for meaning. What is asked of us is courage in the wilderness and trust in the Presence that pervades what looks like chaos and meaninglessness. We will reflect on this process together.

4-12 The Church, Same-Sex Unions and the Suffering People of God 

Dr. Greer C. Gordon

So many people today are really struggling with moral-ethical questions about human sexuality. Issues of sexual identity and moral development are of a particular concern as homosexual and heterosexual people alike attempt to figure out what it means to be sexually responsible adult believers. This session will address homosexuality and issues related to same-sex unions. We will look at Church teachings in relation to the theological statements of other Christian communities, as the Church universal attempts to respond to this complex question.

4-13 Where Faith Begins: In The Family 

Thomas Groome, Ph.D.

Most Church documents over the past 50 years have restated that the family is the primary religious educator of its children. But in practice, this has been little more than rhetoric. We need to turn our thinking about catechists upside down if we are to honor, engage and support "where faith begins." This workshop will offer practical ways for how any family can be the primary catechist.

4-14 Are You Ready to Ask a Sacred Question? The Art of Courageous Decision-Making (Workshop Closed)

    Richard F. Groves

    Real faith has less to do with finding answers than asking questions. The great spiritual sages of our Judeo-Catholic tradition offer indispensable wisdom in order to discern life’s greatest challenges. Come and rediscover an ancient bridge spanning the "disconnect" that many Post-Modern people feel between faith and life – between the personal and the global. Caution: At this workshop you should be prepared to think out of the box … and ask your sacred question.

4-15 An Invitation to the Ephod Dance: Life as Risk, Gift and Celebration 

    We’ve been told that life is about achievement, appearance and accomplishment. And so we live image-conscious and tense. On the dance floor of life, we become easily afraid. In this workshop, Terry Hershey invites us all to dance – as if "nobody is watching" – the great Ephod dance of King David. What does it mean when God takes the box we’ve created for control, flattens it, and makes a dance floor for us to celebrate life’s gift? What does it mean to live with a heart full of awe and love for God? Where is the healing power of laughter?

Rev. Terry Hershey

Terry Hershey is founder of A Few Things That Matter Seminars. He is a minister, writer and landscape designer on Vashon Island, near Seattle. He speaks throughout the country on relationships, spirituality and gardening. He is a regular on the Hallmark TV show, "New Morning," and author of "Soul Gardening."

4-16 You Gotta Be Kidding! (Workshop Closed)

Bill Huebsch

Everyone’s talking about adult education in the church today. But who are we kidding? How will we ever succeed in providing adult formation, given our heavily child-centered parish and school programs? This workshop will provide a series of alternatives for adult formation – which fit into everyday home and parish life and do not require attending "classes at church." It will help you make better use of "Our Hearts Were Burning Within Us," the U.S. bishops’ pastoral letter on adult education. Everyone who attends will be given samples.

4-17 The New National Adult Catechism: Previews of Coming Attractions 

Bishop Richard J. Malone, S.T.L., Th.D.

Very soon, the Church in the United States will be given a substantial yet wonderfully user-friendly new resource for the work of adult faith formation: the new "National Adult Catechism." Come for a preview of this exciting development, and get ready to make the best possible use of this new blessing in adult ministry.

4-18 Multicultural Church: Beyond Tolerance (Workshop Closed)

In our efforts to embrace our diversity while striving for unity, best intentions have, at worse, resulted in tokenism and alienation and, at best, tolerance. In a desire to move through and beyond tokenism and tolerance, let’s discuss the questions, the "answers," and explore possible solutions for the people of God to move from stranger and guest to full fledged family members!

Jesse Manibusan

Presenter, workshop clinician, composer, performer – Jesse Manibusan is a familiar face at the L.A. Congress and at conferences throughout the United States and Canada. He travels extensively with appearances as emcee, keynote and speaker. Manibusan wrote the 2003 Religious Education Congress theme song, "Bearer of Hope, Restoring Spirit."

4-19 The Writing of the Gospels (Workshop Closed)

Timothy Matovina

Knowing how early Christians’ experience and memory of Jesus came to comprise the four Gospels enhances our capacity to understand, believe, cherish and pray with the Sacred Scriptures. This workshop examines the formation of the Gospel tradition from historical events in the life of Jesus to the church’s acceptance of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John as the official canonical Gospels some four centuries later. It is recommended that participants bring their Bibles to this workshop.

4-20 "I Saw a Beast With Ten Horns and Seven Heads!": Making Sense Out of the Book of Revelation 

The Book of Revelation is a hot topic among fundamentalists and televangelists. As a result, Catholic educators are frequently called upon to explain the Church’s understanding of the Book of Revelation to Catholics and non-Catholics alike. This workshop will offer clear and simple guidelines for understanding apocalyptic literature in general, and for interpreting Revelation according to solid Catholic teaching.

Rev. J. Patrick Mullen, Ph.D.

Fr. Pat Mullen, a priest of the Los Angeles Archdiocese, is Assistant Professor of Biblical Studies in New Testament at St. John’s Seminary in Camarillo. Calif. Born and raised in Holy Family Parish in Glendale, he has served in two local area parishes – St. Margaret Mary in Lomita and St. John Vianney in Hacienda Heights.

4-21 Why All Need To Understand the Catechumenate (Workshop Closed)

Sheila O’Dea, R.S.M., D.Min.

Are you a catechist with adults or with youth or with children – in a parish or school? Wherever you minister as a catechist, do you draw upon the catechumenate to inspire your catechizing activity? How is lifelong catechesis "enriched by those principal elements which characterize the catechumenate"? This workshop is intended to deepen an understanding of the catechumenate for anyone who ministers anywhere as a catechist.

4-22 Ready to Forgive and Be Forgiven 

Christine A. Ondrla

Reconciliation – how can we help children understand the meaning and importance of Reconciliation? This presentation will move beyond the ordinary approaches to Reconciliation to an understanding of the wideness of God’s mercy and love. It will offer a foundation for younger children on which to build a moral life. For the older child it will provide challenges that encourage growth and deeper understanding of forgiveness. Our world needs peacemakers and people who carry God’s mercy to all. Let us teach our children well.

4-23 Dead Man Walking – The Journey Continues 

Sr. Helen Prejean is a Southern storyteller. She will share her journey of being spiritual advisor at Louisiana State Penitentiary to six death row inmates, five of whom have been executed. She will reveal how she wrote the Pulitzer Prize-nominated book "Dead Man Walking," how the movie came to be, and about the opera version. She will share details from her soon-to-be-released book about two possibly innocent men on death row, the legal system, and whether the whole justice system can be fixed.

Sr. Helen Prejean, C.S.J.

Sr. Helen Prejean has lived and worked in Louisiana all her life. In 1991, while working at the St. Thomas Housing Project with poor inner-city residents, she began counseling death row inmates and continues this ministry today. The Sister of St. Joseph of Medialle also works with murder victims’ families and founded a group in New Orleans called Survive.

4-24 Praise God’s Name in the Festive Dance! (Workshop Closed)

This workshop invites participants into an experience of moving prayer and praise. Is it possible to animate our liturgical assemblies with ritual gesture that can become a fuller expression of movement and danced prayer? Come and see!

Robert VerEecke, S.J.

Fr. Bob VerEecke has served for 15 years as Pastor of St. Ignatius Church in Chestnut Hill, Mass. He is also Jesuit Artist-in-Residence at Boston College and Director of the Boston Liturgical Dance Ensemble. He has worked in the field of sacred and liturgical dance for 30 years and has lectured and presented workshops in the United States, Canada, Australia and England.

4-25 Wisdom of the Body: How Spirituality Embraces Passion and Grace 

Evelyn Eaton Whitehead & James Whitehead

"The glory of God is the human person fully alive!" In this compelling image, St. Irenaeus, second-century bishop of Lyons, describes the goal of Christian spirituality. In this session the Whiteheads examine the contemporary significance of this ancient hope, by exploring the links between passion and spirituality, between eros and grace.

4-26 "Sleep Faster ... We Need the Pillows!" Ways to Keep Perspective in an Intense World (Workshop Closed)

Dr. Robert J. Wicks

The 50 ways to remain spiritually and psychologically healthy – no matter what is going on – that are taught to professional helpers and "healers" are shared here for anyone interested in keeping perspective in today’s intense world.

4-70 VIETNAMESE WORKSHOP

Dr. Peter Phan


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