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Youths from Our Lady of Perpetual Help, Edgewater, and Our Lady of Sorrows, West River, spent the morning of Dec. 1 wrapping Christmas gifts for an outreach sponsored by the seminarians at St. Mary’s Seminary and University in Baltimore. (Kevin J. Parks/CR Staff)

Southern Anne Arundel pastorate in the making boosts seminarian-led outreach

December 4, 2018
By Paul McMullen
Filed Under: Feature, Local News, News, Video

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Our Lady of Sorrows, West River, parishioner Ellie Wilson wraps a Christmas gift for an underprivileged child during an outreach project Dec. 1 at St. Mary’s Seminary and University in Baltimore. (Kevin J. Parks/CR Staff)

Add one more moving part to The Gift of the Magi program that is a defining outreach of St. Mary’s Seminary in Roland Park.

Coordinated by the seminarians’ Peace and Justice Committee, the Christmas gift-giving program benefits students from Baltimore’s Mother Seton Academy and children whose families are clients of Project PLASE, which addresses homelessness in Baltimore.

The outreach involves not just seminarians, but the campus’s Ecumenical Institute, where the faculty are among those donating gifts.

Youths from Our Lady of Perpetual Help in Edgewater joined the effort in 2015, and this year they were accompanied for the first time by teens from Our Lady of Sorrows in West River, the church with which it is forming an Archdiocese of Baltimore pastorate in southern Anne Arundel County.

“One of the priorities for the pastorate is to share youth ministry,” said Father Timothy Klunk, pastor of the two parishes. “Sharing an outreach like this makes it that much more powerful a program, and a benefit to the parishes.”

More than 30 youths piled onto a bus at Our Lady of Perpetual Help for an 8:30 a.m. departure for the seminary Dec. 1. That meant a 7 a.m. Saturday morning wake-up for Natalie McDonald, an eighth-grader at Southern Middle School whose family worships at Our Lady of Sorrows, the southernmost parish in the archdiocese.

She had never set foot in a seminary, nor wrapped a gift without her mom’s help.

“We’re here to make the world a better place,” the 13-year-old said.

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Joey Murphy, a junior at South River High School who wants to study marine biology in college, was making his fourth trip in as many Decembers to the seminary. The cards he wrote included passages inspired by Scripture, such as “Rejoice.” He’s one of three teens on the core group that has led youth ministry at OLPH.

“These teens are affected by what we say,” Murphy said of “Edge Nights” designed for middle-schoolers. “They hear from younger guys, like us, that church can be fun.”

Ryan Hepler, from left, Joseph Loughlin and Alex Kline wrap Christmas gifts at St. Mary’s Seminary and University in Baltimore Dec. 1 for underprivileged children. Youths from Our Lady of Perpetual Help in Edgewater and Our Lady of Sorrows in West River participated in the outreach hosted by the school’s seminarians. (Kevin J. Parks/CR Staff)

Bill Kraus is the volunteer youth minister who began the involvement of the Anne Arundel faith communities in The Gift of the Magi program

“We’re teaching them that church is something more than 50 minutes a week in a pew,” Kraus said. “It also gives them a chance to see that not every priest is over 40. … We brought kids today who are not Catholic, because they heard about it from their friends and wanted to come.”

He spoke as McDonald, Murphy and other teens sat alongside seminarians in a lecture hall, wrapping more than 110 presents and personalizing as many Christmas greeting cards.

Their morning began with a brief prayer service in the seminary chapel, where Brennan Ferris, a seminarian for the Diocese of Wilmington, Del., told the young visitors to “see Christ in each of those we serve.”

“The seminarians always enjoy this day,” he told the Review. “Plus, I think the kids are better at wrapping than we are.”

 

Email Paul McMullen at pmcmullen@CatholicReview.org

 

 

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