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At the closing Mass for the 13th National Black Catholic Congress on July 23, 2023, Lynné Gray, the director of music for the congress, leads the combined choir that included singers from parishes across the United States. The gathering was held at the Gaylord National Resort & Conference Center in National Harbor, Maryland. Gray is the music ministry director at St. Anthony of Padua Parish in Washington. (Catholic Standard photo by Mihoko Owada)

At National Black Catholic Congress closing Mass, participants urged to keep flame of faith burning

July 24, 2023
By Mark Zimmermann
Catholic Standard
Filed Under: Black Catholic Ministry, Feature, National Black Congress, News, World News

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NATIONAL HARBOR, Md. – Sending forth the participants of the 13th National Black Catholic Congress at their July 23 closing Mass in the Washington, D.C., area, Bishop John H. Ricard offered them an admonition that he said he learned from his days as a youth camping in the woods – “Don’t let the fire go out!”

Bishop Ricard – the superior general of his religious order, the Josephites, who formerly served as the bishop of Pensacola-Tallahassee, Fla. – was the homilist at the Mass, celebrated at the Gaylord National Resort & Convention Center in National Harbor, Md. He encouraged the congress participants to be enlivened by the flame of the Holy Spirit, and bring that spirit of faith back to their homes, parishes, dioceses and to the African American communities in their cities and towns.

Bishop John Ricard, the superior general of his religious order, the Josephites, who formerly served in Baltimore, offers a blessing as bishops process from the altar at the closing Mass for the 13th National Black Catholic Congress on July 23, 2023. Bishop Ricard gave the homily at the Mass. (Catholic Standard photo by Mihoko Owada)

“You’ve got to poke the flame and stir it up… We can’t let the fire go out,” said, the former associate pastor and auxiliary bishop in Baltimore, also encouraging people to address problems like violence in their communities, the mass incarceration of people of color, and the challenge of reaching out to young adult Black Catholics raised in the faith who no longer go to church.

An estimated 3,000 Black Catholics from 80 dioceses across the United States attended the four-day gathering, which included Masses, keynote addresses, breakout sessions for adults and youth, and a visit to the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture.

“I’m grateful to God that you are here in such great numbers, to bear witness to our Church and our faith in the Lord,” said Bishop Ricard, who is now 83.

A combined choir of about 125 singers – many wearing traditional African dress with vibrant colors and patterns – clapped and swayed as they led the congregation in singing the opening hymn, which had the exultant refrain, “Rejoice! Rejoice! This is the day that the Lord has made.”

The procession to the altar included an honor guard of Knights of Peter Claver. The main celebrant of the closing Mass was Washington Auxiliary Bishop Roy E. Campbell  Jr., the president of the National Black Catholic Congress. He was joined by five other bishops, about 60 priests and nearly 50 permanent deacons. Joining the laypeople in the congregation were numerous African American women and men religious.

In his homily, Bishop Ricard praised the legacies of faith of the six U.S. Black Catholics being considered for sainthood whose portraits were depicted in large banners hanging behind the altar, noting how the Holy Spirit had reigned down on each of them.

“We’re here this weekend to reap the harvest that has been sown,” said Bishop Ricard.

Those candidates for sainthood include Venerable Henriette Delille of New Orleans, the foundress of the Sisters of the Holy Family; Venerable Mother Mary Elizabeth Lange of Baltimore, the foundress of the Oblate Sisters of Providence, the first religious congregation of African American women; Venerable Father Augustus Tolton of Chicago, the first publicly known Black Catholic priest in the United States; Venerable Pierre Toussaint of New York, renowned for his charitable works; Servant of God Julia Greeley of Denver, known for her devout faith; and Servant of God Sister Thea Bowman, a Franciscan Sister of Perpetual Adoration and dynamic evangelist from Mississippi who died of cancer in 1990.

Sister Thea, who was known for her soaring style of singing, participated in the sixth National Black Catholic Congress held in 1987 on the campus of The Catholic University of America in Washington. Remembering the impact of her life, Bishop Ricard said, “The Holy Spirit came upon the songbird. Didn’t she become a witness of triumph over sickness and discrimination?”

Washington Auxiliary Bishop Roy E. Campbell Jr., the president of the National Black Catholic Congress, speaks at the July 23, 2023 closing Mass for that gathering, which was held at the Gaylord National Resort & Conference Center in National Harbor, Maryland. Behind him are banners depicting three of the six U.S. Black Catholics being considered for sainthood, from left to right they are Servant of God Sister Thea Bowman, Venerable Pierre Toussaint and Servant of God Julia Greeley. (Catholic Standard photo by Mihoko Owada)

Bishop Ricard also noted the legacy of Daniel Rudd, a pioneer Black Catholic journalist from Kentucky who founded the Congress of Colored Catholics that first met at St. Augustine Church in Washington in 1889.

That group, the bishop said, “is the granddaddy of the National Black Catholic Congress,” a movement that was revived in 1987, after Rudd’s group had held five earlier national gatherings around the turn of the century.

Honoring the memory of Rudd’s effort, Bishop Ricard said, “They had the vision, they had the determination, and they had the will back then to come together, because Rudd believed that in the Catholic Church, there was the fullness of the revelation of the teaching of Jesus, and that was the answer to all of the problems that Blacks were facing…”

After Communion, Bishop Campbell spoke, noting that on his phone he has a photo from that first gathering of the nation’s Black Catholics in 1889, which includes Daniel Rudd and Father Tolton, who celebrated the opening Mass then. Bishop Campbell also noted how Bishop Ricard, then an auxiliary bishop of Baltimore, played a key role in reviving the National Black Catholic Congress movement in the 1980s.

Bishop Campbell also looked to the future, encouraging the congress participants to complete a survey to help formulate a new pastoral plan for the group that people can take back to their families, parishes and communities. Referencing the gathering’s theme, inspired by Habakkuk 2:2, he said, “We write the vision, our prophetic call to thrive. We have so much to give, and we have a lot to receive.”

The bishop also invited young people considering vocations to the priesthood or religious life to come forward, and several did, including young adults, teens and children. The congregation applauded them, and Bishop Campbell offered them a special blessing, as the choir sang words that also reflected why adults from across the country had come together for the congress: “Lord I’m available to you.”

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