We asked people from across the Diocese of Springfield in Illinois what Catholic teacher in our schools is making a big difference in the classroom? What teacher goes above and beyond, someone whose impact is deep and personal? What teacher authentically lives out what it means to be Catholic and instills our faith into his or her students? What teacher embodies St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, who founded Catholic schools in the United States?
The Office for Catholic Schools and Office for Communications for the Diocese of Springfield in Illinois, organizers of the award, received nearly 100 nominations from all across the diocese from principals, teachers, parents, priests, previous students, and current students this year. Nominations were reviewed by the Office for Catholic Education who then narrowed the list to five finalists, which Catholic Times presents in this edition along with quotes taken from nomination forms. Catholic Times will reveal the winner of the St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Award in the May 28 edition. Thank you to everyone who submitted a nomination and thank you to all our teachers for their hard work and dedication!
Andrea Raskie Ms. Raskie has gone over and beyond to show my children she cares about them, not just as a student, but as a person in this world. She smiles and says “hello” to all of my children whether at school or at Mass. She is always willing to give a hug and an encouraging word to anyone who asks. My two children she taught are on the autism spectrum and they attend ASA and social skills therapy four days a week. Andrea asked to spend an evening with them at their clinic to get a better understanding of what they do and gain knowledge to better assist them in her classroom. She has also gone out of her way to attend my children's ballet performances, while also bringing them a small gift of congratulations.
Most recently, Ms. Raskie volunteered to assist me with helping my daughter gain independence at home during her morning before-school routine. Ms. Raskie met with me to determine five specific tasks that my daughter must complete in order to earn a ticket. My daughter then brings those tickets to school and earns a chance to play a game where she receives a reward. Poof... just like that, my daughter gets dressed by herself without any help from mom or dad!
Andrea has given my husband and I the greatest sense of ease that our children are cared for and educated both spiritually and academically at a level that is far superior than most. We thank God she has taken the time to get to know our family, so she is better able to lead our children through first grade.
- Amy Zock, parent of student
I asked my children to tell me about Ms. Raskie with a focus on how they felt in her classroom. There was an overwhelming theme of safety, security, and love. My oldest Dylan, 14, shared, "I felt so welcomed in her classroom, and she still makes me feel that way. She is so outgoing and patient, and really knows how to handle all kinds of different kids." Stella, who is about to turn 13, responded by saying, "She is super gentle and kind to all her ‘littles.’ She always made me feel safe and special." My youngest, Harper, 8, couldn't stop telling stories of how she always took care of her. She told me how she is "really calm and nice." She said, "I always felt safe and happy, and she treated me like I was one of her own children."
Every day I'm in the building, I witness other children flourishing under her love and care. When I am in her classroom, I too, feel safe. She is approachable and compassionate, and I have never seen her turn away from anyone in need. She is the first to offer help and expertise. Whether it be with her students, colleagues, or families, Andrea is selfless with her time. She truly wants to help others be the best they can.
Andrea is an active participant in the life of the Church. She is devout in her practicing and is genuinely happy to see her students at Mass. She seeks to integrate Catholic values in all her teachings in the classroom as well. She recognizes the dignity and value in each and every one of her students and adapts her environment to help each one of them be successful. She understands diversity in learning and utilizes a range of teaching strategies, styles, and technologies to reach all her students. She recognizes them each as a unique child of God and is able to embrace them for both their strengths and weaknesses. She truly goes above and beyond to see the very best in each and every one of her students.
Dawn CavenyI met Mrs. Caveny almost 30 years ago when I was a student at St. Agnes. At the time, she was a recess monitor, and her son was in my class. I always remember she was very positive, energetic, kind, and always had a smile on her face. She and her family were always at Mass on Saturday or Sunday, and it was apparent that faith was a key aspect of her life. This dedication left a lasting impression on me. Her husband, Mike, was my basketball coach throughout grade school, and Mrs. Caveny was always present to support the team and her son who was also on the team. Years later, Mrs. Caveny became a resource teacher for my daughter Juliane (currently in fifth grade). I could not think of a better person to teach Juliane. Juliane is very smart, but sometimes lacks confidence and requires additional time and instruction to understand a concept. Mrs. Caveny took Juliane under her wing and has helped Juliane to excel socially and academically. Mrs. Caveny seems to have transferred her confidence and positivity to Juliane, and I cannot think of a better role model for my daughter. Mrs. Caveny has made a lasting impact on my life and that of my child. Her dedication to Catholicism and Catholic education is inspirational, and I believe that Mrs. Caveny is an exemplary example of focus and commitment to the Catholic mission.
Dawn Caveny has impacted my life and the lives of my students. She reads tests to my struggling readers or reads to those who need the quiet and safe atmosphere of her classroom. She will work to develop the students’ test-taking strategies, and I have seen firsthand how those students have grown in confidence and skill. She is flexible with her schedule to help and accommodate those students who need her. She pops into my classroom as well as other classrooms in the intermediate grades. She will notice students that may be struggling with the day’s lesson or need a gentle reminder to refocus. Sometimes her quiet voice is all it takes when she passes by a student.
The thing that is most amazing is the time she gives to students after school. She will work with students on her own time to see them succeed. After students have moved to the upper grades, she still likes to check in with them to see how they are doing. Dawn truly is outstanding to her commitment to the parish, the school, and our students.
Deborah AdamsIf there is one person in my life who taught me the value and importance of a Catholic education, who believed in the sacrifices it required, and the benefits it bestowed on you, it was my mother, Debbie Adams. My mother has been a Catholic educator since her first year of teaching and is currently serving her 43rd year as a classroom teacher. In talking to her former students and parents of the kids she's taught over the last four decades, the impact she has made on our parish community and the larger Springfield community is undeniable.
My parents always encouraged their children to follow their dreams and to walk the path that God has laid out for them. I see this witness in my mom every day. Walking into her classroom, even as an adult, is like walking into the heart of who my mom is. It is the epitome of a place that is kind, welcoming, cheerful, colorful, and open to all who enter. There are books to read and art projects on display. She will pause everything if someone is in need. She has patience for a thousand questions from curious 4-year-olds every day of the school year. She will stay late to meet with parents and will come in early to lead staff prayer. She has welcomed the technological advances over the last 20 years in her classroom with an understanding of how the generations she is teaching will embrace the world around them.
Mrs. Adams is retiring at the end of this school year, knowing that the legacy that she leaves behind is one of students who love to learn and who love God. I am so lucky to have my life be as impacted as I have with her as my mother, and it has been a joy to share her love with the students that she has taught.
In Debbie’s 43 years of being a Catholic school educator, she has positively impacted more lives than we can count. As her colleague for four of those years, I witnessed Debbie’s never-ending passion for her students, her teaching, and her own learning. She was constantly looking for new and better ways to teach, materials to use, and ways to engage her students.
As a co-worker, Debbie was the first to volunteer for new activities, trials, and needs. After 29 years as a kindergarten teacher at our school, Debbie requested to move to PreK so that she could help our youngest students as they first entered school. It was a natural shift for her but still required new learning on her part, nonetheless. Then when the COVID shutdown occurred, Debbie did not miss a beat in figuring out ways to reach her students at home. She stretched herself to new limits by sending materials home, creating videos of herself, and reaching out to support parents in every way she could.
Debbie Adams demonstrates leadership among her colleagues and often mentors new teachers. She participates in many committees, volunteers for parish events, and has introduced new curriculum materials to her school. After attending conferences, she often shares her learning with colleagues and implements new ideas within her classroom. She also brings her faith into all aspects of her teaching, which becomes infectious to those around her. Debbie Adams nurtures her students, giving them the foundation for learning, socializing, and growing in their faith. Every individual student holds a special place in Debbie’s heart, and she works tirelessly for them. Debbie truly gets to know all those in her life and shares her love with them, so it is no wonder that former students bring their own children back to BSS to be in Mrs. Adams’ class.
Lisa EvansMy son had Mrs. Evans during the 2019-2020 school year. As a boy, he never spoke much about his teachers, but loved school and always enjoyed learning. Once he became a student in Mrs. Evans classroom, he began to come home and share what he had learned in her room daily. He claimed all year (and still to this day) that his best teacher was Mrs. Evans. He talked about her fun daily geography or religion questions and how they would get to pick a religion trinket out of her treasure box. Her personality, strong faith, and love for students shined through that entire year. Even when COVID struck, she kept a strong communication with her students and families. We all grew to be a part of her family.
Fast forward a few years later, and my daughter is now a student in her class. Mrs. Evans still possesses such a strong love for the Catholic faith, a desire to make her students want to learn, and that same family atmosphere that we had experienced before. My kids want to do well for her, and they cannot say enough good things about her teaching and her relationship with them individually. She attends student events outside of school and always has a kind thing to say about my children anytime I run into her. She is a true example of a Catholic and an excellent and influential educator.
Lisa Evans is without a doubt the kindest and most caring teacher I have ever come in contact with. Whether as a parent, colleague, or collaborator, I can say without fear of contradiction that Mrs. Evans is the very best in her profession! Our daughter is in her class this year, and Lisa has not only gone out of her way to ensure that Ellie has had a great year learning not only about religion but has had a great year learning about herself most importantly as a Christian, and as a person as well. Mrs. Evans makes sure that each of her students learn about God through her daily classroom activities, but most importantly for a diocesan teacher, Mrs. Evans ensures that each of her students experience God's love for them through her every action. She mirrors Christ's teachings in her work and in her life.
We always see both Mr. and Mrs. Evans at Mass on Sunday. She always stops to say “hello” and ask how we are, and she knows each of our children by name, even though our younger two sons have not attended fourth grade yet! This is extraordinary and a true indicator that Mrs. Evans does not feel that she has to be a teacher at Holy Ghost because she has no other option; instead, she clearly feels that she teaches because that is the best and only option, as her calling and vocation from God Himself! In doing so, and in doing so with such caring and love, she is personally shaping her fourth-grade students in their own journeys through faith and through life.
Lydia SpillmanMrs. Spillman goes above and beyond to bring her grade 6-8 students to an encounter with Jesus Christ. She brings her students to weekly adoration, which they have grown to love. She gives them time for Lectio Divina. She leads them in Bible study with the Word on Fire Gospels by Bishop Robert Barron. She is guiding them to study the meaning of signs and symbols in church architecture, by designing their own church building on paper. They completed saint projects on American saints, many of them recent martyrs of the Cristero War. She uses a good balance of textbook, technology, and great books. She is kind and loving. I have had multiple parents tell me what a difference Mrs. Spillman has made in their children's faith lives. One mom asked me questions at the parish office for an hour, wanting to learn for herself what her son had learned from Mrs. Spillman about senses of Scripture.
Though Lydia Spillman has only been teaching at St. Francis Solanus School for two years, she has made a tremendous impact on her sixth-, seventh-, and eighth-grade student’s Catholic faith formation. Lydia is a peaceful, quiet, loving, Christ-seeking, and devoted teacher. Her fellow teachers and her students enjoy working with her.
Lydia does many projects in religion classes that encourage tween and teens to learn more about their Catholic faith. Lydia coordinated with a language arts teacher, Rochelle Neuman, to have students research a saint, write a paper on that saint, and place three things that represent the saint in a brown paper sack. The students then give presentations on their saints, including telling about the objects in the sack so their classmates will learn more about many saints. Eucharistic adoration was added to the school day once a week. Lydia was quick to instruct her students about the importance and beauty of spending time with Jesus. They model this for the younger students at our school. She helps with various committees at school, especially ones that involve service and faith formation. Lydia is carefully planning the eighth-grade graduation Mass around a Bible verse with students’ help. She has helped her sixth-grade students develop a relationship with their partner class of first-graders. Lydia is open to new ideas in the school and classroom. She is willing to carry on the traditions of the school. She is an asset to our school.
Lydia's devotion to the Catholic faith goes beyond the school day. Lydia and her husband, David, lead the Liturgy of the Hours at church on Sunday evenings. Lydia and David help with the church youth group. Lydia is an extraordinary minister of the holy Eucharist. St. Francis Solanus School is blessed to have Lydia Spillman as a teacher on our staff.
Julie Radel, principal
Diocesan priests, Bishop Balke to celebrate special Jubilees
By DIANE SCHLINDWEIN
Managing Editor
On Wednesday, May 3, priests from around the Diocese of Springfield in Illinois will gather at Villa Maria Catholic Life Center on Lake Springfield for a day of celebration. That day they will hear from Bishop Mark Bartosic, an auxiliary bishop from the Archdiocese of Chicago. Additionally, they will take part in Evening Prayer, a social hour, and a dinner, after which Bishop Thomas John Paprocki and the priests will honor priests who are celebrating Jubilees this year. Those men include Bishop Victor Balke, Msgr. David Peters, and Father John Sohm, who are celebrating 65 years; Father Kevin Sullivan who is celebrating 60 years; and Father Tom Meyer, who is celebrating his silver jubilee this year.
Bishop Victor H. Balke Bishop Victor Balke is celebrating 65 years as a priest this spring. He was ordained a priest of the Diocese of Springfield in Illinois on May 24, 1958, at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception by Bishop William A. O’Connor.
A native of Meppen, then-Father Balke’s first assignment was associate pastor of Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, and chaplain of St. Joseph’s Home in Springfield. He was procurator of the diocesan seminary at Lake Springfield from 1964 to 1970, and then rector of the seminary from 1970 to 1976.
He was appointed sixth Bishop of Crookston on July 3, 1976, by Pope Paul VI and ordained and installed on Sept. 2, 1976. During his tenure, Bishop Balke specifically encouraged evangelization. He reorganized the central administration of the diocese, implemented the 1983 Code of Canon Law and codified diocesan policies, encouraged renovation and building improvements in parishes, established an improved retirement program for elderly clergy, and established a benefit program for all clergy and laity employed by the Church in the Crookston Diocese. His motto was: Bless the Lord my soul.
He has returned to the Springfield Diocese many times over the years to visit relatives and friends, attend Jubilee events, and to ordain priests after Bishop McNicholas died unexpectedly shortly before the ordination of priests, and again in 2009 when the Springfield Diocese was in-between bishops.
Bishop Balke, who has been forever thankful for the gift of the priesthood, retired in 2007 but continued to celebrate Masses as needed for many years. Now at age 91, he resides at Sacred Heart rectory in East Grand Forks, Minn. He said he won’t be able to travel to Springfield for the Jubilee celebration but hopes everyone who is there “has a wonderful time.”
“As a priest, I enjoyed my years in Springfield,” he said. “My years as a bishop were wonderful and I especially enjoyed the liturgies of the Church. I’ve been retired since 2007 and that has been good, too. From beginning to end I’ve my enjoyed my journey with the priesthood.”
Msgr. David PetersDecatur native Msgr. David Peters will celebrate his 65 years as a priest on May 24, the same day he turns 91. He was ordained by Bishop William A. O’Connor in 1958 at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception. There were eight priests ordained that day and six of those men had graduated from St. Teresa High School. Four were in his class and one had graduated a few years ahead of him.
Then-Father Peters spent his first four years as a priest at Blessed Sacrament Parish in Springfield. His years at Blessed Sacrament came at a time when there were five priests at the parish. “I remember one day when we had nine baptisms at one time,” he says.
He went on to be an assistant at St. Patrick Parish in Alton and then an assistant chaplain and chaplain at St. John’s Hospital in Springfield. He was then co-administrator at St. Anthony of Padua Parish in Effingham for four years. As a pastor, he served at St. Michael Parish in Staunton, St. Bernard Parish in Wood River, and St. James Parish in St. Jacob before moving to St. Paul Parish in Highland in 1987. He spent 20 years as pastor at St. Paul and retired in 2007. “My first (period of) assignment was for six years, but then I stayed on. I felt at home in Highland,” he says. In retirement, he remained active, happily helping out at St. Paul, where he is pastor emeritus.
He came out of retirement for a short time in 2011 to act as parochial administrator of St. Anthony of Padua Parish in Effingham and Annunciation Parish in Shumway. He also has served as a delegate for senior priests. He was given the papal honor Chaplain to His Holiness (Monsignor) on Dec. 18, 2015.
After living in Highland for more than half his priesthood, he recently moved to an independent living retirement home so that he could be closer to his family members who still reside in Decatur. He says he is now settling in a new community. He is grateful for his many decades in Highland and adds that he also considers his fellow priests his “priest family.”
Father John SohmFather John Sohm, another Decatur native, was also ordained on May 24, 1958, by Bishop William A. O’Connor at Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception.
Father Sohm’s first assignment was as an assistant at St. Joseph Parish in Granite City. He went on to serve as an assistant at several places: St. Agnes Parish, Springfield; St. Raymond Parish, Raymond; and St. Patrick Parish, Alton.
In 1970 Father Sohm was named parochial administrator and then pastor of Immaculate Conception Parish in Shelbyville and at St. Columcille Parish in Sullivan. He served at St. Columcille for over four decades, where he had his home right across the street from his church. He also served for decades in Shelbyville, and at St. Isidore Parish in Bethany for many years. For shorter periods of time, he was a pastor at Holy Family Parish in Mount Sterling and Sacred Heart Parish in Dalton City. He was well appreciated in those parishes where he gave so many years of priestly life to shepherd his people. Additionally, he was a chaplain at a state prison.
Father Sohm has enjoyed periodically getting together with his many classmates and as time went on, was mindful of those men who passed away. A few years back, he expressed that he has always given thanks for the Lord’s goodness. “His love is everlasting,” he said. “It is expressed in the people of the parishes, where we (priests) have served.”
At 91, Father Sohm lives in a retirement community in Sullivan and is pastor emeritus of St. Columcille Parish.
Father Kevin SullivanFather Kevin Sullivan grew up on a family farm and spent his formative years as an altar server and organist at Sacred Heart of Mary Parish in New Berlin. There, his boyhood pastor, Father Charles Fanning, suggested that young Kevin should become a priest. “One morning, after Mass, I told him that I had been accepted at Notre Dame University,” he said. “To my surprise, he turned away and said, ‘Kevin, you belong in the seminary.’
“Some years later Mom and Dad told me that Father had come out to the farm to tell them, ‘Kevin needs to go to the seminary.’ My parents assured him that nothing would make them happier, but I was only 17. If God wanted me to be a priest, Notre Dame would be a good place to find out.”
Then, at Notre Dame, yet another person suggested the priesthood. “One day I walked across campus with Father Dan O’Neil, CSC, the Holy Cross vocation director. He asked, ‘Kevin, I know you love Notre Dame, but have you ever thought about the seminary?’ With God’s grace, I entered the seminary, assured that Notre Dame would welcome me back.”
He attended the diocesan Latin School in New Berlin and went on to St. Mary of the Lake Seminary in Mundelein. He was ordained May 25, 1963, by Bishop William A. O’Connor at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Springfield. He served as assistant pastor at St. James Parish in Decatur, Sacred Heart Parish in Granite City, and Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Springfield. While serving as the director of the Office for Religious Education, he served on the National Religious Education board, the Confraternity of Christine Doctrine, and the Society of the Propagation of the Faith. As director of the Office of the Missions, he was involved with the Holy Childhood Association and was appointed to the National Mission Board. He was also pastor of Our Lady of Lourdes in Decatur and later spent a year at St. Aloysius in Springfield. His final assignment was pastor of Our Lady Queen of Peace in Bethalto.
Father Sullivan was moved to senior priest status in 2003 and resides in Phoenix, Ariz. “I serve as volunteer chaplain of the St. Vincent de Paul Homeless Shelter, and Hospice of the Valley calls me to bring sacraments of the sick to Catholic patients,” he said. He also entertains people by playing “piano oldies” and sometimes conducts funeral services. He enjoys playing bridge and golf, and spending time with his priest friends.
Father Sullivan thinks this Year of the Eucharist is “an apt time to renew our faith in the Risen Lord, alive and well, welcoming us to God’s table.”
“No priest could ever be more thankful to God and enjoy the priesthood more than myself,” he concluded. “Wherever the assignments, every parish is filled with faith-filled Catholics who love and want to support their priests.”
Father Thomas MeyerFather Thomas Meyer was ordained to the priesthood on June 5, 1998, at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception and is celebrating his Silver Jubilee as a priest of the Diocese of Springfield in Illinois.
A graduate of Quincy Notre Dame High School, he went on to earn a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering from the University of Missouri at Rolla. It was while he was in college and attending Masses at St. Patrick Church in Rolla that he began to realize his vocation to the priesthood. He spoke with Father Mike Kuse, who was vocation director for the Diocese of Springfield in Illinois, and soon after college graduation entered Kenrick Glennon Seminary in St. Louis.
Father Meyer’s first assignments as a priest were as parochial vicar at St. Anthony of Padua Parish in Effingham from 1998 to 2002, and then at Our Saviour Parish in Jacksonville from 2002 to 2004. He then served as pastor of St. Mary Parish in Edwardsville from 2004 to 2010, before returning to Jacksonville for 10 years, as pastor of Our Saviour. While in Jacksonville he was chaplain at MacMurray and Illinois colleges as well as at the Jacksonville State Correctional Facility. He was dean of the Jacksonville Deanery from 2014 to 2020. In 2015 he was also named pastor of several smaller parishes: St. Alexius in Beardstown, St. Fidelis in Arenzville, and St. Luke in Virginia. Since 2020 he has been pastor of Blessed Sacrament Parish in Quincy.
Now that he’s been a priest for 25 years, Father Meyer said, “It is nice to be arriving at a new milestone.” He says his involvement in developing the newest Catholic high school in the diocese was one highlight of his priesthood. “I feel very privileged that I was one of the founding members of Father McGivney Catholic High School in Glen Carbon,” he said. “I am very proud of the work our board completed to bring that vision to fruition.”
Being a priest is at once extremely fulfilling and sometimes stressful, Father Meyer admits. “Throughout my 25 years, I have enjoyed a variety of different types of ministry, including Spanish ministry, ministry in a prison, and ministry at the colleges,” he said. “It can be life-giving, but also potentially exhausting if you do not take time for the other important needs in your life.”
He is most grateful that his current assignment in Quincy keeps him closer to his parents. “I am very blessed to have an assignment where I am able to watch over my parents, Joe and Marilyn Meyer,” he said. “They are able to attend Mass with me every Saturday night. This has been a wonderful blessing.”
Earlier this year, Bill Bust was presented with his choir robe and a plaque honoring the 50 years he served St. Paul Parish in Highland as the organist for the church and it’s choir. Retired St. Paul Parish organist honored for five decades of service
By DIANE SCHLINDWEIN
Managing Editor
HIGHLAND — After spending five decades as the organist for St. Paul Parish and choir in Highland, as well as 50 years working as service manager at the Wicks Pipe Organ Company, also in Highland, William “Bill” Bust finally retired when he was over 80 years old.
Although Bust stepped several aside years ago, the pandemic and all its repercussions — along with Bust’s health issues — caused a delay in his official retirement celebration, which took place earlier this year. The current St. Paul choir director, Andrea Henze, arranged a gathering at Bust’s home, where he was presented with a plaque in his honor and was also given one of his most prized possessions, his St. Paul choir robe.
It was about 1970 when Msgr. Lawrence Wiskirchen, who was pastor of St. Paul Parish, asked Bust to oversee the music ministry at the parish. Even though he had his doubts about taking over as organist for the parish and the choir while he was working full-time at Wicks Pipe Organ Company, Bust agreed. In the next decades, he went on to serve with several other pastors: Father Martin “Mitz” Mangan, Msgr. David Peters, Father Chuck Edwards, and his current pastor, Father Pat Jakel.
Because he had installed the organ at St. Paul Parish and also played it, Bust said he naturally became attached to it. “There were times when I had to tell myself, ‘This organ isn’t mine. It belongs to St. Paul’s.’” He adds that there are very few Catholic parishes in the Diocese of Springfield in Illinois that do not have a Wicks organ.
“I’m so lucky to have spent so much time at St. Paul’s,” says Bust, who was at one time a seminarian in Texas. “I have always had a great love for liturgy and we had a lot of glorious liturgies here. Not everybody is able to spend 50 years as a parish musician. Musicians are very important to the liturgy and the liturgy has always been important to me.”
Bust says he has great memories of his time at St. Paul’s, when he often played every Mass at the church, including the years he played five or six Masses on weekends and all funerals and weddings. “I look back and really don’t know how I did it,” he says. “And you know, because of all my work, I was never able to spend Christmas with my mother all those years.” He was also instrumental in playing for the St. Paul choir, led for more than five decades by his good friend, the late Sam Schwarztrauber.
“At one point we had about 40 members in the mixed choir, and we had some glorious liturgies,” Bust says. “One of our main concerns was the we were not up there to perform, but to assist the congregation to sing.” Of course, at times the choir did entertain at events for religious sisters and others.” He says Henze is doing a great job with the choir.
Henze notes that Bust went “above and beyond” in his 50 years of service. “I became director of the St. Paul choir in 2018 when Sam Schwarztrauber retired,” she says. “I had some big shoes to fill, and am so grateful for the guidance and encouragement that Bill continues to give.
“While Bill was organist at St. Paul, he took great care to make sure the music liturgy at our Masses was celebrated beautifully and properly,” Henze says. “His focus was always praising God and helping others to do the same. He continues to support the long tradition of excellence our St. Paul choir has demonstrated for more than 50 years.”
Bust concludes that now that he is in possession of his choir robe, he has definite plans for it, whenever God calls him home. “We had some very good times at St. Paul, but when I retired, all I really wanted was my choir robe,” he says. “I want to be buried in it. That’s right, I want to be laid out in my robe!”
I understand the Church recognizes Protestant's baptism, and I understand why they cannot participate in the sacrament of the Eucharist, but I am absolutely dumbfounded as to why they can't participate in the sacrament of reconciliation/penance. Why? Doesn't God call us all to repentance? Surely, He does. But why would the Church withhold absolution? While we are on the subject, I'm also very sad that my Protestant friends do not have access to the anointing of the sick. This just breaks my heart because I've seen some radical miracles in people I personally know who have received pretty dramatic physical healing as a result of this sacrament. Please help me understand why Protestants are separated from these vital sacraments.
- Christi in our diocese
Dear Christi,
Thank you for these questions and your concern for the spiritual well-being of our Protestant brothers and sisters.
I would be remiss if I did not first point out that they can receive the sacraments of penance and of the anointing of the sick if they join the Church established by Christ Jesus and enter into full communion with the Catholic Church. We do not make this invitation to them often enough. The sacraments of the Catholic Church are for those who are in communion with the Bishop of Rome, not for those who are outside of communion with us.
The sacrament of penance — oftentimes also called confession and reconciliation — not only reconciles the penitent with God, but also with the Church. This Church is not some vague spiritual notion as most Protestants imagine it, but the actual Church that Jesus founded on the rock of St. Peter, which is to say the Catholic Church.
In its Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, the Second Vatican Council taught that through the sacrament of penance the faithful “obtain pardon from the mercy of God for the offense committed against him and are at the same time reconciled with the Church, which they have wounded by their sins and which by charity, example, and prayer seeks their conversion” (no. 11). Under normal circumstances, Protestants are not able to receive sacramental absolution because they cannot be reconciled with the Church if they are not in communion with the Church.
The same situation applies with the sacrament of the anointing of the sick, which also involves the forgiveness of sins (see James 5:14-15). Again, under normal circumstances, Protestants are not able to receive the sacrament of the sick because they cannot be reconciled to the Church if they are not in communion with the Church.
If a Protestant believes in the power of the sacraments of penance and the anointing of the sick, he or she should also recognize that the Catholic Church was established by Christ Jesus as the means of our salvation and should seek to enter into full communion with the Church. If they do this, they can receive these sacraments as often as they need them.
Father Daren Zehnle, J.C.L., K.C.H.S., is pastor at St. Augustine in Ashland; parochial administrator of St. Alexius in Beardstown, St. Fidelis in Arenzville, and St. Luke in Virginia; and is the director for the Office of Divine Worship and the Catechumenate for the Diocese of Springfield in Illinois.
‘All I think about is wanting to live life to the fullest’
How prayer has kept a young girl and her family strong despite cancer, other hardships
By ANDREW HANSEN
Editor
DECATUR — Eleven-year-old Olivia Dunker of Decatur is a fighter. That courage was evident from the womb as her mom, Andrea, says.
“Olivia arrived in this world on her own time, seven weeks early, and only weighed three pounds, two ounces,” Andrea recalls. “She fought so hard the first couple weeks to be a strong baby, but she did it. They said she would do everything delayed, but she hit all her milestones. At six months, she started having seizures. She got a sleep study showing that she stopped breathing every hour of her sleep. They took her tonsils out and the next month, she had cancer.”
In 2014, the cancer was Rhabdomyosarcoma which impacts the soft tissue, connective tissue, and/or bones. In 2021, it was Osteosarcoma of the Right Mandible which also impacts bones.
Olivia’s hardships are plenty. She has had nearly all her teeth pulled from surgery and/or post radiation treatment; she has no permanent teeth underneath to grow; she has a limited range of motion due to scar tissues and bones fusing together wrongly after surgery; she will have a lifetime of surgeries on her jawbone to keep it stretched and continue her ability to eat and chew like normal; doctors used her right fibula bone to reconstruct her jawbone so that means her right ankle does not move in the same way, which could limit her ability to play certain sports or things that she might want to do; one of her chemotherapies made her hearing on her right side slightly deaf; and the family learned that Olivia has a genetic disorder that her body is prone to making cancer.
“She has plenty of scars emotionally and physically,” Andrea says about her daughter.
Despite those scars, there is hope and plenty of love that is getting the Dunker family through it all. First, the hope: As of right now, Olivia is cancer free. The love they’ve received has been profound. St. Patrick Grade School in Decatur where Olivia attends got T-shirts that were sold by the Dunker family to represent Olivia. The school had Friday dress down days to honor her and childhood cancer patients. The school and parish families had Olivia on their prayer list, and all her classmates prayed daily for her.
“We have so many people praying for her,” Andrea said. “I still run into people that say, ‘I prayed for you and Olivia and your family during the last year.’ Most of the time, I have no idea who they are, but I thank them because prayer is what got us through this last year. I pray daily that God lets me keep my child longer.
“It is so emotional, every time I think about strangers thinking of my child and my family,” she said. “I’m overwhelmed. It's truly amazing how kind people are.”
Today, Olivia has to be watched closely for any markers indicating that cancer is trying to grow. She has bloodwork and scans every three months at St. Jude’s Children’s Hospital in Memphis. St. Jude’s has since become their home away from home. The family has also turned to St. Jude to intercede for them. St. Jude is the patron saint of hopeless causes.
“Olivia has always been a fighter — a true miracle, as she makes it all look so easy,” Andrea said. “Every day, every month is a blessing that we get to keep her down on earth.”
Olivia says to keep the prayers coming because they are working and getting her through each day.
“All I think about is being a kid and wanting to live life to the fullest while I am here,” she said. “I am thankful for all my friends and family and St. Patrick’s.”
Going to confession? The priest will say something a little differently now
By FATHER DAREN ZEHNLE
Special to Catholic Times
You may have noticed that your confessor spoke a slightly different formula for sacramental absolution over the last several weeks. Perhaps you wondered about the different wording he used.
Why is there a change to the formula of absolution?
In 1973, the then-Congregation for Divine Worship published the Rite of Penance under the authority of a special mandate from the Roman Pontiff. Originally published in Latin, this liturgical book was translated into English in 1974. The translators of the English text used a translation method known as dynamic equivalence. Rather than producing a literal translation of the Latin text, they preferred to translate ideas which did not always produce an accurate translation. This translation was approved by the Holy See.
In 2001, the then-Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments published the Instruction Liturgiam authenticam on the Use of Vernacular Languages in the Publication of the Books of the Roman Liturgy. This Instruction ordered the retranslation of the liturgical books according to a literal translation instead of the method of dynamic equivalence.
The retranslation of the Rite of Penance was completed 2022 and published this year as the Order of Penance.
What has changed in the formula of absolution?
There are two subtle changes in the formula of absolution, in addition to changes in formatting. You will find the former translation on the left and the new translation on the right, with the changes to the wording in bold:
God, the Father of mercies,
through the death and resurrection of his Son
has reconciled the world to himself
and sent the Holy Spirit among us
for the forgiveness of sins;
through the ministry of the Church
may God give you pardon and peace,
and I absolve you from your sins
in the name of the Father, and of the Son,
and of the Holy Spirit.
God, the Father of mercies,
through the Death and Resurrection of his Son
has reconciled the world to himself
and poured out the Holy Spirit for the forgiveness of sins;
through the ministry of the Church
may God grant you pardon and peace. And I absolve you from your sins, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.
When does the change take place?
Confessors were allowed to begin using the revised translation this past Ash Wednesday, Feb. 22. The Order of Penance must be used beginning Divine Mercy Sunday, April 16.
What if my confessor continues to use the previous translation?
The essential words of absolution have not changed so if your confessor continues to use the old translation, the absolution will be valid. For a valid absolution, it is necessary for the priest to say, “I absolve you.” While it is recommended for a priest to say the entirety of the formula of absolution, it is not necessary for him to say the part that includes, “God, the Father of mercies … pardon and peace.
Father Daren Zehnle, J.C.L., K.C.H.S., is pastor at St. Augustine in Ashland; parochial administrator of St. Alexius in Beardstown, St. Fidelis in Arenzville, and St. Luke in Virginia; and is the director for the Office of Divine Worship and the Catechumenate for the Diocese of Springfield in Illinois.
Easter Sunday Mass times throughout the diocese
What is the Triduum?
During Holy Week, which begins on Palm Sunday (April 2) and includes the Chrism Mass (April 4 at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Springfield), Lent comes to an end before the Mass of the Lord’s Supper on Holy Thursday, which is the beginning of the Easter Triduum. The three chronological days are liturgically one day and from what the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops calls “the summit of the Liturgical Year.”
These three days witness the most exalted liturgical celebrations of the year and help us to remember Christ’s Paschal Mystery: His passion, death, and Resurrection.
The liturgical services that take place during the Triduum are: the Mass of the Lord’s Supper on Holy Thursday (April 6), the Liturgy of the Lord’s Passion on Good Friday (April 7), and the Mass of the Resurrection of the Lord (Easter Vigil) on Holy Saturday (April 8). On Easter Sunday (April 9), the Church continues to celebrate the Resurrection and triumph of the Lord.
The Triduum is concluded liturgically with Evening Prayer in the late afternoon or early evening on Easter Sunday. This is the beginning of the Easter season, which are the 50 days from Easter Sunday until Pentecost.
Triduum schedule around the diocese
The following parishes returned a request from Catholic Times for a listing of their Triduum schedule:
SPRINGFIELD
Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception
Holy Thursday: 6:30 p.m.
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 7 a.m., 10 a.m.
Blessed Sacrament
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 5:30 p.m. (Living Stations at 3 p.m.)
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 7 a.m., 8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m.
Christ the King
Holy Thursday: 5:30 p.m.
Good Friday: 5:30 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m., 10 a.m.
Little Flower
Holy Thursday: 6:30 p.m.
Good Friday: 6:30 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 7:45 a.m., 10 a.m.
St. Agnes
Holy Thursday: 5:30 p.m. (Adoration from 6:30-8:30 p.m.)
Good Friday: 5:30 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 7:30 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 9 a.m., 11 a.m.
St. Aloysius
Good Friday: 7 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 7 p.m.
St. Frances Cabrini
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 9:30 a.m.
St. Joseph
Holy Thursday: 5:30 p.m.
Good Friday: 5:30 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 9:30 a.m.
St. Katharine Drexel
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m. at Sacred Heart Church (Adoration until midnight)
Good Friday: 3 p.m. at Sacred Heart Church (Divine Mercy Chaplet/confession to follow)
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m. at Sacred Heart Church (Divine Mercy Chaplet at 3 p.m.)
Easter Sunday: 7 a.m. at Sacred Heart Church, 9 a.m. at St. Patrick Church, 10:30 a.m. at Sacred Heart Church (Latin), 12:30 p.m. at Sacred Heart Church (Spanish)
ALEXANDER
Visitation of the B.V.M.
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 9:30 a.m.
ALTAMONT
St. Clare
Holy Thursday: 6:30 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 10 a.m.
ALTON
St. Mary
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m. (Adoration until midnight)
Good Friday: 3 p.m. (Divine Mercy Chaplet after, Living Stations of the Cross at 7 p.m.)
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m. (Divine Mercy Chaplet at 3 p.m.)
Easter Sunday: 6:30 a.m., 8 a.m., 9:30 a.m., 11 a.m., 5:15 p.m. (Divine Mercy Chaplet at 3 p.m.)
Ss. Peter and Paul
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m. (Adoration until 11 p.m., closing with Night Prayer)
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m., 10 a.m.
ARCOLA
St. John the Baptist
Holy Thursday: 7:30 p.m.
Good Friday: 7:30 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 7:30 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 10 a.m.
ARENZVILLE
St. Fidelis
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m.
ASHLAND
St. Augustine
Good Friday: 6:30 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 10 a.m.
ASSUMPTION
Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary
Holy Thursday: 6 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 7:45 a.m.
ATHENS
Holy Family
Holy Thursday: 6 p.m.
Good Friday: 6 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 10 a.m.
AUBURN
Holy Cross
Easter Vigil: 8:15 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m.
BETHALTO
Our Lady Queen of Peace
Holy Thursday: 7:30 p.m.
Good Friday: 7:30 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 7:30 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m.
BEARDSTOWN
St. Alexius
Holy Thursday: 7:30 p.m.
Good Friday: 6:30 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 10 a.m. (English), 11:30 a.m. (Spanish)
BELTREES
St. Michael
Easter Sunday: 9:15 a.m.
BENLD
St. Joseph
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 7:45 a.m.
BETHANY
St. Isidore
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m.
BRIGHTON
St. Alphonsus
Good Friday: 7 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8:30 a.m.
BRUSSELS
St. Mary
Holy Thursday: 6:30 p.m.
Good Friday: 6:30 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
CAMP POINT
St. Thomas the Apostle
Holy Thursday: 5:15 p.m.
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 10 a.m.
CARLINVILLE
Ss. Mary and Joseph
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 6:30 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 9:30 a.m.
CARROLTON
St. John the Evangelist
Good Friday: 7 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m.
CHARLESTON
EIU Newman
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: Noon
Easter Sunday: 11 a.m.
St. Charles Borromeo
Good Friday: 7 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8:30 a.m.
CHATHAM
St. Joseph the Worker|
Holy Thursday: 6:30 p.m. (Night Prayer at 9:50 p.m.)
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 7 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m., 10:30 a.m.
COLLINSVILLE
Ss. Peter and Paul
Holy Thursday: 6:30 p.m.
Good Friday: 3 p.m., 6:30 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m., 10:30 a.m.
DECATUR
Holy Family
Holy Thursday: 6:30 p.m.
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m., 10 a.m.
Our Lady of Lourdes
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 7:30 a.m., 9:30 a.m.; 11:30 a.m. (Spanish)
St. Patrick
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 10:15 a.m.
St. James
Holy Thursday: 6 p.m.
Easter Sunday, 8:30 a.m.
St. Thomas the Apostle
Holy Thursday: 5:15 p.m.
Good Friday: 5:15 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 10 a.m.
DIETERICH
St. Aloysius (St. Isidore the Farmer Parish)
Holy Thursday: 7:30 p.m.
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 7:30 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m.
EDGEWOOD
St. Anne
Good Friday: 6:30 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m.
EDWARDSVILLE
St. Boniface
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m. (bilingual)
Good Friday: 3 p.m. (bilingual)
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8:15 a.m., 10:15 a.m., 12:15 p.m. (Spanish)
St. Mary
Holy Thursday: 5:30 p.m.
Good Friday: 5:30 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m., 10:30 a.m.
EFFINGHAM
Sacred Heart
Holy Thursday: 6:30 p.m.
Good Friday: 6:30 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m.
St. Anthony of Padua
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 7:30 a.m., 9:15 a.m., 11 a.m.
FARMERSVILLE
St. Mary
Good Friday: 7 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m.
FIELDON
St. Mary
Easter Sunday: 9:30 a.m.
FRANKLIN
Sacred Heart of Jesus
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m.
GILLESPIE
Ss. Simon and Jude
Holy Thursday: 5:30 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 11 a.m.
GIRARD
St. Patrick
Good Friday: 7 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 9:30 a.m.
GLEN CARBON
St. Cecilia
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m. (confession and Adoration from 8-10 p.m.)
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8:30 a.m., 11 a.m.
GODFREY
St. Ambrose
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 7 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m., 10:30 a.m.
GRAFTON
St. Patrick
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m.
GRANITE CITY
Holy Family
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 7 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8:30 a.m.
St. Elizabeth
Holy Thursday: 6 p.m. (Adoration until midnight, Night Prayer at 11:45 p.m.)
Good Friday: 3 p.m. (Divine Mercy Chaplet following)
Easter Vigil: 8:30 p.m. (Divine Mercy Chaplet at 3 p.m.)
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m., 10:30 a.m. (Divine Mercy Chaplet at 3 p.m., Holy Hour with Vespers at 7:30 p.m.)
GRANTFORK
St. Gertrude
Good Friday: 7 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m.
GREENFIELD
St. Michael the Archangel
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 10 a.m.
GREENVILLE
St. Lawrence
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 7 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 7 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m., 10 a.m.
HARDIN
St. Norbert
Easter Sunday: 9:30 a.m.
HIGHLAND
St. Paul
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m. (Adoration until midnight)
Good Friday: 3 p.m. (The Passion Play at 7 p.m.)
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 7 a.m., 8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m.
HILLSBORO
St. Agnes
Holy Thursday: 6:30 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 10:30 a.m.
HUME
St. Michael
Good Friday: Stations of the Cross at 3 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m.
ILLIOPOLIS
Resurrection
Holy Thursday: 6:30 p.m.
Good Friday: 6:30 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 10:15 a.m.
ISLAND GROVE
St. Joseph (St. Isidore the Farmer Parish)
Holy Thursday: 7:30 p.m.
Good Friday: 7:30 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 10 a.m.
JACKSONVILLE
Our Saviour
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 7 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8:30 a.m., and 10:30 a.m.
JERSEYVILLE
Holy Ghost
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 7 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 7:30 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m., 11:15 a.m.
St. Francis Xavier
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 10:15 a.m., 5 p.m.
KAMPSVILLE
St. Anselm
Easter Sunday: 6 a.m.
KINCAID
St. Rita
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m.
LIBERTY
St. Brigid
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
LILLYVILLE
Sacred Heart
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8:30 a.m.
LITCHFIELD
Holy Family
Good Friday: 6:30 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8:30 a.m.
MADISON
St. Mary and St. Mark
Easter Sunday: 10 a.m.
MARINE
St. Elizabeth
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 7 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 9:30 a.m.
MARYVILLE
Mother of Perpetual Help
Holy Thursday: 6 p.m.
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m., 10:30 a.m.
MATTOON
Immaculate Conception
Holy Thursday: 7:30 p.m.
Good Friday: 7 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m., 10:30 a.m.
MEDORA
St. John the Evangelist
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 10:30 a.m.
MENDEN
St. Edward
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday, 10:30 a.m.
MEPPEN
St. Joseph
Good Friday: Stations of the Cross at 1 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m.
MICHAEL
St. Michael
Easter Sunday: 11 a.m.
MONTROSE
St. Rose of Lima
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 7 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 9 a.m.
MORRISONVILLE
St. Maurice
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: No service (Stations of the Cross at 3 p.m.)
Easter Sunday: 10 a.m.
MOWEAQUA
St. Francis de Sales
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 9 a.m.
MT. STERLING
Holy Family
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 5:30 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 6:30 a.m., 8 a.m.
MT. ZION
Our Lady of the Holy Spirit
Holy Thursday: 6:30 p.m. (Adoration until midnight)
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8:30 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 10:30 a.m.
NEOGA
St. Mary of the Assumption
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m.
NEW BERLIN
St. Mary
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
NEWTON
St. Thomas the Apostle
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 7 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 7 a.m., 10 a.m.
NOKOMIS
St. Louis
Holy Thursday: 6:30 p.m.
Good Friday: 6:30 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 9 a.m.
OBLONG
Our Lady of Lourdes
Easter Sunday: 9 a.m.
PANA
St. Patrick
Holy Thursday: 6 p.m.
Good Friday: 6 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 7 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 9 a.m., 10:30 a.m.
PARIS
St. Mary
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 5:30 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8:30 a.m., 11:15 a.m.
PETERSBURG
St. Peter
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 7 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m.
PITTSFIELD
St. Mary
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 7 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 7 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8:30 a.m.
PIERRON
Immaculate Conception
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 10 a.m.
POCAHONTAS
St. Nicholas
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m.
QUINCY
Blessed Sacrament
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m., 10 a.m., 11:15 a.m. (Spanish)
St. Anthony of Padua
Holy Thursday: 6:30 p.m.
Good Friday: 6:30 p.m. (Stations of the Cross at 1 p.m.)
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m., 10:30 a.m.
St. Francis Solanus
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 7 a.m., 9 a.m., 11 a.m.
St. Joseph
Good Friday: 7 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 9 a.m.
St. Peter
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 7 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m., 9:30 a.m., 11 a.m.
St. Rose of Lima
Holy Thursday: 6 p.m.
Good Friday: 12:30 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 10:30 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 11 a.m.
RAMSEY
St. Joseph
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m.
RAYMOND
St. Raymond
Good Friday: Stations of the Cross at noon
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m.
RIVERTON
St. James
Holy Thursday: 6 p.m.
Good Friday: 6 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8:30 a.m.
ROCHESTER
St. Jude
Holy Thursday: 6:30 p.m.
Good Friday: 6:30 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 7:30 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m., 10:30 a.m.
ROBINSON
St. Elizabeth
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 6 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 7 a.m., 10:45 a.m.
SAINTE MARIE
St. Mary of the Assumption
Holy Thursday: 5:30 p.m.
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8:30 am
SHELBYVILLE
Immaculate Conception
Good Friday: 5 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 7 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 10:30 a.m.
SHERMAN
St. John Vianney
Holy Thursday: 6 p.m.
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8:30 a.m.
SIGEL
St. Michael the Archangel
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 6:30 a.m., 10 a.m.
STAUNTON
St. Michael The Archangel
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 7:30 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m.
ST. ELMO
St. Mary
Easter Vigil: 6:30 p.m.
ST. JACOB
St. James
Easter Sunday: 9:30 a.m.
STONINGTON
Holy Trinity
Easter Sunday: 9:30 a.m.
SULLIVAN
St. Columcille
Holy Thursday: 5:30 p.m.
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
TAYLORVILLE
St. Mary
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 7 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 11 a.m.
TEUTOPOLIS
St. Francis of Assisi
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 1 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 6:30 a.m., 8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m.
TROY
St. Jerome
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8:30 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m.
TUSCOLA
Forty Martyrs
Holy Thursday: 5:30 p.m.
Good Friday: 5:30 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m.
VANDALIA
Mother of Dolors
Good Friday: 7 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 10 a.m.
VILLA GROVE
Sacred Heart
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 7 p.m. (Stations of the Cross at 3 p.m.)
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 10 a.m.
VIRDEN
Sacred Heart
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m. (Adoration until 11 p.m.)
Easter Sunday: 11 a.m.
VIRGINIA
St. Luke
Holy Thursday: 5:30 p.m.
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m.
WAVERLY
St. Sebastian
Good Friday: 7 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 11 a.m.
WHITE HALL
All Saints
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
WINCHESTER
St. Mark
Good Friday: 5 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 10:30 a.m.
WOOD RIVER
Holy Angels
Holy Thursday: 7 p.m.
Good Friday: 3 p.m.
Easter Vigil: 8 p.m.
Easter Sunday: 8 a.m., 10:30 a.m.
Her exposure to faith was ‘nonexistent,’ then great-grandparents changed everything
The conversion story of Lianna Garrison of Troy
By ANDREW HANSEN
Editor
Thirteen-year-old Lianna Garrison of Troy didn’t have a typical childhood. She experienced much heartache from her parents. God or any faith for that matter was nonexistent.
“I was being raised by people that weren’t ready to take on the responsibility of raising children,” Lianna said.
Fortunately, she and her younger sister, Laraina, were able to get out of what was a tough situation and moved in with their great-grandparents, Lisa and Ron Frey. Since that move a few years ago, the two girls have experienced many new things.
“Now that I am here, I am experiencing faith, family, and what a normal childhood is supposed to be like,” Lianna said. “I liked, and still do like, experiencing new things that I have never done before. For example, I recently had my first real vacation to Florida, am in Girl Scouts, and participate in school activities.”
Since Lianna moved in with her great-grandparents, which started during the pandemic, she started watching church online. Her great-grandparents started talking to her about God, they taught Lianna and her sister how to pray before every meal and to pray before bedtime, adding prayers one at a time. When COVID restrictions were lifted, they started attending Mass together in person. Her great-grandparents also answered any questions she and her sister had about the Catholic faith.
“When I started going to Mass, I found that I was very curious about everything,” Lianna said. “I wanted to know what being Catholic meant and what it would feel like to be part of the parish community. I like the music and the readings because they are very calming and fascinating.”
That curiosity continued to grow until she decided to join the Catholic Church. Last year, the Triad Middle School student was initiated into the faith at St. Jerome Parish in Troy, receiving the sacrament of baptism, confirmation, and first holy Communion.
“If I had to describe this day, I would say ‘special,’” Lianna said. “I lit the fire outside the narthex. The vigil service was so moving, and then there was a reception afterward. It was just so special beyond words.”
Lianna says receiving Jesus present in the holy Eucharist for the first time was “fulfilling.” Now on fire for our faith, Lianna has gotten actively involved and says that she loves Youth Group and spending time helping out in the community, the church, and at Vacation Bible School.
“God, the saints, and the Church give me comfort by giving me piece of mind,” Lianna said. “It feels like you don’t need all the answers, just faith. My favorite thing about my faith is having Someone (God) that will always be on my side.”
Thousands descend upon Springfield to give voice to the voiceless
Illinois March for Life included hundreds from our diocese and full Sangamon Auditorium for Mass
By ANDREW HANSEN
Editor
If the size of the crowd didn’t catch people’s attention, the joy from the crowd did. For the first time the Illinois March for Life took center stage in downtown Springfield, bringing with it thousands of pro-life advocates from every corner of Illinois, including hundreds from the Diocese of Springfield in Illinois. The list included bishops, Catholic schools, Newman Centers, priests, religious, and lay Catholics.
“It’s really motivational and inspirational to see everyone standing up for the unborn,” said Maria Slagle, a home-school student in Springfield.
“I want every baby to have a chance at life,” said Joe Brangenberg, a student at Marquette Catholic High School in Alton. “There are a lot of people behind the movement. It makes you feel like you are part of something bigger. We’re doing something to help prevent abortion one day.”
While the sight of thousands of joy-filled, life-loving people was inspiring to see in downtown Springfield March 21, another sight was just as powerful — a full Sangamon Auditorium on the campus of the University of Illinois Springfield for Mass before the festivities downtown. There, nearly 2,000 Catholics from across the state heard the Gospel message, listened to Bishop Thomas John Paprocki’s homily, and received Jesus in the holy Eucharist. Other bishops from the state and dozens of priests from our diocese and beyond concelebrated. One funny moment also happened during Bishop Paprocki’s homily. A bird descended from the ceiling and landed by the altar, only to take off again for the ceiling. Without missing a beat, Bishop Paprocki said, “I guess the Holy Spirit is with us too!”

After Mass, busloads of students were dropped off downtown in front of the statehouse for the Illinois March for Life, hosted by weDignify. There, the students heard powerful speeches from Bishop Paprocki, other faith leaders, pro-life leaders, among others during a rally.
“As people of faith, we come here in peace, prayerfully asking the members of the executive, legislative, and judicial branches of our Illinois state government to harden not your hearts,” Bishop Paprocki said during the rally. “May you find compassion for the lives of the most vulnerable among us, the sacred human lives of unborn babies.”
After the rally, the thousands of people marched peacefully and prayerfully around the statehouse, a powerful witness to lawmakers who were in session that day. Following the march, people went inside the statehouse to lobby lawmakers asking them to protect the unborn, uphold the dignity of human life in all stages, and not pass legislation that attacks crisis pregnancy centers.
“At the age of 1, I was adopted from China and my mom who adopted me brought me back to Texas, so as we go through this pro-life movement, it is such a gift to be adopted and each life is a gift, and even if someone isn’t able to care for them at the time, there are people out there who want to support life in whatever way that is,” said Sister Stana Maria Burnham, FSGM, of the Sisters of St. Francis of the Martyr St. George in Alton.
“I actually used to live overseas, and my mom was really involved in foster care there for disabled children, so being exposed to that, I really feel like the unborn need to be spoken for, their lives are valued, and there are people who want them,” said Ellie Stahr, a student at St. Teresa High School in Decatur said.
After the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade last year, states around the country have been going in two different directions — either passing laws protecting the most innocent, the unborn, or passing laws that promote, advance, and/or protect the ability to destroy that precious life in womb. This is why those who believe in the right to life are taking their voices to state capitals, Springfield being one of the most important in the country, as the actions from most state lawmakers and Governor J.B. Pritzker have made Illinois the abortion capital of the Midwest. This year, there are several legislative proposals at the statehouse that would continue and even expand that unfortunate trend.
“We talk a lot about being pro-life, and I think events like this, that’s what you see is that we are not here to talk about what we are against, but to actually show the joy that life is, and it is worth fighting for,” said Father Rob Johnson, pastor of Mother of Perpetual Help Parish in Maryville.
In addition to the Mass, rally, march, and lobbying, the entire afternoon, many people spent time in adoration in front of the Blessed Sacrament at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in Springfield, turning to prayer in this fight for life.