Students sing, dance, share their Catholic faith at Holy Fire Chicago

1174 0
Students from St. Alphonsus/St. Patrick Catholic School in Lemont, Ill., pray Oct. 19, 2019, during Holy Fire Chicago at the Credit Union 1 Arena. The Oct. 18 and 19 event in Chicago drew about 7,500 young people from parish religious education programs and Catholic schools with their teachers, catechists, youth ministers, chaperones and pastors from several states to dance, laugh, pray and worship. (CNS photo/Karen Callaway, Chicago Catholic)

CHICAGO (CNS) — About 7,500 middle school students sang, danced and shared their faith Oct. 18 and 19 at Holy Fire Chicago, a gathering intended to help students in sixth to ninth grade reflect on and witness to their Catholic faith in a daylong event.

Most of the attendees Oct. 18 were Catholic school students, while most who came Oct. 19 were religious education students or individual young people who came with their parents.

Similar to the National Catholic Youth Conference, a biennial national event for high schoolers, Holy Fire engages young people with music and witness talks. The day also included opportunities for the sacrament of reconciliation and eucharistic adoration and to attend Mass celebrated by Chicago Cardinal Blase J. Cupich.

This was the fourth year Holy Fire was held in Chicago, and the first time registrations for the Saturday event — the one aimed at religious education students — outstripped registrations for Friday, said Father Peter Wojcik, director of the Chicago Archdiocese’s Department of Parish Vitality and Mission.

St. Symphorosa middle school teachers Janet Funk and Eileen Akroush said they have brought their school’s seventh graders and eighth graders to Holy Fire each of the past three years.

“It’s just an extremely enjoyable day for our students,” Funk said.

“It’s a way for them to experience God and the Holy Spirit in a way they never did before,” Akroush said. “You get to get up and sing and dance.”

The teachers said their students are often skeptical about the music before they get to the event, held at the Credit Union 1 Arena, the former UIC Pavilion at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

“They’re like, ‘Christian rock? No thanks,'” Akroush said. “They didn’t think they would like it. But then they get here and they really get into it.”

This year’s lineup included the band Epic, musical artist Joe Melendrez and, this year, Father Rob Galea, a priest from Australia who is also a recording artist and author.

Father Galea sang but also told the young people about growing up in Malta, drinking and using drugs, and running with a rough crowd. When one of his erstwhile friends put the word out that he was looking to beat up the future priest, young Rob spent weeks hiding in his room — weeks that his mother spent outside his door, praying for him.

That was when he felt God calling to him, telling him he was loved.

“We don’t need to be perfect, to have our lives in order, for God to love us and to use us,” Father Galea told the students. “He’ll take our mess and turn it into a message. … You are loved by Jesus no matter how messed up you think you are.”

Colleen Dowd, a seventh grader from Queen of Martyrs School in Evergreen Park, took Galea’s words to heart.

“I’m trying to be a better Catholic,” she told Chicago Catholic, the archdiocesan newspaper. “And what he said, about how he was addicted and everything, and the way he went from that to being a priest, it shows that you can do that.”

Tina O’Shea, coordinator of faith formation at Queen of Martyrs, said she likes the way Holy Fire exposes students to thousands of other young people.

“I love the opportunity for the students to see the wider church they are part of,” O’Shea said. “There is something about being in a place with your peers who are all singing and dancing.”

Related Post

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, right, greets Archbishop Romulo Valles of Davao, president of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of the Philippines, before a meeting inside the presidential palace in Manila. (CNS photo/Rey Baniquet, Presidential Photographers Division via EPA)

Philippine bishops announce days of prayer, fasting, penance for peace

Posted by - July 14, 2018 0
MANILA, Philippines (CNS) — Catholic bishops in the Philippines, concerned about an increase in violence and police reaction to crime,…
Pope Francis prays in front of a candle in memory of victims of sexual abuse as he visits St. Mary's Pro-Cathedral in Dublin Aug. 25, 2018. Pope Francis has revised and clarified norms and procedures for holding bishops and religious superiors accountable in protecting minors as well as in protecting members of religious orders and seminarians from abuse. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

Pope issues new norms on mandatory abuse reporting, bishop accountability

Posted by - May 19, 2019 0
VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Pope Francis has revised and clarified norms and procedures for holding bishops and religious superiors accountable…
Pope Francis poses for a photo with a delegation of two Irish families led by Archbishop Diarmuid Martin of Dublin, right, during his general audience in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican March 21. Also pictured is Cardinal Kevin Farrell, left, prefect of the Dicastery for Laity, the Family and Life. At the audience the pope confirmed that he will visit Dublin Aug. 25-26 for the final days of the World Meeting of Families. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

Vatican Presents Holy See’s 1st Document on Sport

Posted by - June 8, 2018 0
By: DEBORAH CASTELLANO LUBOV ‘To Give the Best of Oneself. On the Christian Perspective of Sport and of the Human…