Start Your Day with a Daily Gospel Meditation from Father Bert Buby SM
Link to the blog for his Scripture Reflections.
http://scripmed.blogspot.com
This may be used to see last week's reflections and also has handy links to the right for the Mary Page and other Marianist Resources.
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 Marianist Social Justice Collaborative Steering Committee - We Need Your Help! We are seeking nominations for two young adults (ages 20-40) to serve on the MSJC Steering Committee. Know anyone? Interested yourself? Click here for more information and to fill out a nomination form. Thanks!
Jim Vogt, Director 859-291-6197 jimvogt2@yahoo.com; www.msjc.net |
Free Online Marianist Resources
Explore our web site for audio files and articles related to Marianist scholars and key Marianist topics. Here is just a sample of what is available for free: * Daily spiritual inspiration from the writings of Ad�le de Batz de Trenquell�on, available in audio format. (See below for more details.)
* Audio interviews of Brother Tom Giardino, SM, reflecting on the life and influence of Marianist scholar William J. Ferree, SM.
* Articles by or about foremost Mariologist Emile Neubert, SM (Mary and the Priestly Ministry, A Marian Apostle of Modern Times, and The Neubert Heritage: A Marian Apostolic Thrust), and key Marianist scholar William J. Ferree, SM (including, A Conference on Father Chaminade's System of Virtues and The Sacrament of Our Mission).
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Environmental Tips from MEEC Marianist Environmental Education Center 1. Use city-provided recycling programs.
2. Slow down! Driving above 60 mph dramatically decreases your vehicles gas mileage.
3. If possible, carpool, cycle, work from home or ride the bus.
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VOLUNTEER?
If you are interested in becoming a Marianist Volunteer or know of someone who is looking for a volunteer opportunity, please contact the Marianist Volunteer Program at drichter@sm-usa.org.
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BOOK REVIEW I'd like to hear from you! What did you read over the summer that others might find interesting? Send a short couple of paragraphs with your review and I'll publish in the next E-news. MLNNA editor
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JOYFUL NEWS
Do you want to share a big event in your life? New job, new baby, or recovery from an illness. You can submit any information for the E-news Click here
PRAYER REQUEST Submit a request for community prayers to the E-news here.
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Editor's Note
I welcome, in fact, I am always looking for articles. Send an article for the next newsletter to me by November 9th.
Keep copy short and describe who, what, why, when and how
Please include digital pictures if you have them. Select 1 or 2 of digital images in JPEG format (100 - 900K) and attach to the e-mail
Think about what you have to share with your fellow Lay Marianists. Contact me at MLNNA editor
"Live your beliefs and you can turn the world around." Henry David Thoreau
Thanks for reading to the end.
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Stop Me If You've Heard This Before.

If I speak in human and angelic tongues but do not have love, I am a resounding gong or a clashing cymbal. And if I have the gift of prophecy and comprehend all mysteries and all knowledge; if I have all faith so as to move mountains but do not have love, I am nothing. If I give away everything I own, and if I hand my body over so that I may boast but do not have love, I gain nothing.
Love is patient, love is kind. It is not jealous, love is not pompous, it is not inflated, it is not rude, it does not seek its own interests, it is not quick-tempered, it does not brood over injury, it does not rejoice over wrongdoing but rejoices with the truth. It bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never fails. If there are prophecies, they will be brought to nothing; if tongues, they will cease; if knowledge, it will be brought to nothing. For we know partially and we prophesy partially, but when the perfect comes, the partial will pass away. When I was a child, I used to talk as a child, think as a child, reason as a child; when I became a man, I put aside childish things. At present we see indistinctly, as in a mirror, but then face to face. At present I know partially; then I shall know fully, as I am fully known. So faith, hope, love remain, these three; but the greatest of these is love. Okay, so you've heard it. Now let me put it in context. When Paul wrote this letter to the Community at Corinth the Community was struggling. This letter was Paul's advice on how to build community. Paul reminded the Christians of Corinth that we want to get this faith thing right but it is love that builds community. All communities struggle from time to time. If your community is lacking, listen to Paul to ease your struggle. If that doesn't work, contact me (aj@marianistfamily.org) and I will try to get you with someone who can help.
peace and love,
aj
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MLNNA Can benefit from your on-line purchases! More than 700 of your favorite internet retailers and travel sites including Amazon, eBay, Target, Apple, Expedia and more have joined forces with GoodShop.com to donate part of every purchase to MLNNA!
It takes just a few seconds to go to www.goodshop.com, select MLNNA as your charity, and then click through to your favorite store and shop as usual.

Also, Yahoo has teamed up with GoodShop's sister-site, GoodSearch.com, to donate a penny to MLNNA every time you search the web. This is totally free as the money comes from advertisers.
Please tell 10 friends about GoodShop and GoodSearch today. They've been featured in the NY Times, the Wall Street Journal, CNN, Oprah Magazine and more.
In September, we earned $5.85 with GoodSearch and $5.17 because of members who used the GoodShop service. This is the best month for MLNNA with a total of $11.02 earned. THANK-YOU.
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Making a House a Home by Robert Manuel, St. Louis volunteer, 2007-2008
Introduction by Ruth Pera, Assistant Coordinator MVP
This article was written by Rob Manuel as he ended his year with the Marianist Volunteer Program (MVP) this past July. He is now a graduate student in Education at the University of Dayton and a Residence Coordinator in one of the freshman dorms. One of the houses built by the Solomon Project (described in this article) is now being used to house the Marianist Volunteer community in St. Louis.
I entered this year with hopes of understanding more fully ideas of service, simplicity and justice through firsthand experiences. I hoped to know what it meant to live the Gospel message in solidarity with the underserved. I strove to make this a year of quiet reflection and active participation in order to best define and find my place within a life choice of authentic commonality.
I applied with the Marianists, having experienced the Charism the order holds close. With their emphasis on community, service, education and an awareness of cultural appreciation, I knew I was in safe hands for a year of exploration and dedication to my work. I foresaw my assimilation into a larger community as being essential to a fruitful living environment and spiritual growth. I knew that, after graduation from St. Mary's University, I was to be put in a challenging position with everything I needed to succeed. When applying with MVP, I requested work involving my hands in some way. Having grown up working in kitchens and bakeries, I recognized the important spirituality I received when using my hands.
I was placed in St. Louis, Missouri at a non-profit organization known as North Grand Neighborhood Services (NGNS). NGNS (pronounced: engines; something used to affect change) was founded nearly three years ago by Fr. Gary Meier, a Catholic diocesan priest, in response to stated needs of the community. When Fr. Gary arrived at Sts. Teresa and Bridget parish, 42 percent of all properties in the three and a half blocks surrounding the parish were abandoned and blighted. It is difficult to imagine nearly half of all the buildings one would see on a daily basis empty, burned out or being used as drug houses and prostitution.
In active participation with the parish council and social justice committees, NGNS was founded to stabilize the neighborhood through a number of different avenues. Solomon Project (SP) - the first of the programs created through NGNS - was created to address housing issues around the parish. SP purchases empty buildings and properties. Those projects are turned around by volunteer labor and services and turned into low-income housing. Stemming from these efforts was our "First Time Homeowner Mentoring Program." Applicants apply for houses and agree to a commitment to monthly meetings addressing issues of first-time home-ownership, monthly service requirements and mandatory credit counseling. From NGNS' beginnings, the process of homeownership was seen as being essential to the stabilization of the neighborhood. From there, other efforts came about from NGNS, including a small baking business run by neighborhood youth (Angel Baked Cookies - www.angelbaked.org), participation in and expansion of parish after-school and summer programs, along with other avenues working toward "community stabilization."
 Father Gary with Rob Manuel and Travis Rindler (MVP)
What became most important to me through being involved in the programs described above were the relationships I built with community members and others with whom I worked. I met lifelong community members, students from local and national youth groups, high schools, middle schools and parishes. It was through the relationships I built with the parish community, though, that the most fruitful relationships were formed and important conversations began. I met families who moved into North St. Louis to consciously live and work in solidarity with those most in need. I found the passion and hope I was searching for in this community, which inspired them all to work toward the betterment of the place they called home. It was incredible to see this group of incredibly diverse people unite not under a common faith identity, not by place of residence, not even under common ideals, but under a concern and respect for this little area of a much larger neighborhood. The effort toward respecting the residents here provided what I am beginning to see as the perfect example of what I have looked for from the beginning of my volunteer year, true solidarity with the downtrodden, underserved and forgotten.
I encourage you to link to the following video:
It's a 17-minute documentary about the work of NGNS. The video features
Rob and is a FANTASTIC description of the work of NGNS. It's really a
great supplement to Rob's article.
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You are invited to join with the members of the State Community, Miryam Community and members of the SM, FMI and Lay Communities in Dayton and beyond to reflect on:
Marianist Movements: Common Roots and Future
 Saturday, October 25, 2008 9:00 a. m. to 4:00 p.m. Bergamo Center for Life Long Learning
Liturgy at 7:30 p.m. on October 25th at the Queen of Apostles Church 4435 East Patterson Rd. Beavercreek, Ohio 45430. All members of the Family of Mary are invited to attend and a social will immediately follow.
Presenters include Mike Lisbeth S.M., Nicole Trahan FMI, A.J. and Joan McGinnis-Wagner, Tony Garascia, President of the International Marianist Lay Communities and Isabella Moyer, International MLC Representative for North America, Asia, Australia and Ireland
Please join us for part of the day or the entire day - kindly RSVP to Susan Vogt for the retreat, meals the liturgy and the social by Saturday October 18, 2008 SusanVogt@fuse.net
Contributions to cover the cost of meals for this day are greatly appreciated.
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