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Family Power in Canadian Numbers
BY STEVE WEATHERBE
October 11-17, 2009 Issue |
Posted 10/2/09 at 2:01 PM
Alberta’s
annual tent revival for Catholic families started with a carpenter and an idea.
Bob LeBlanc was always known within
the Open Door prayer group as an idea man. The charismatic group had been
meeting for several years in St. Albert, Alberta, a historic French Canadian
settlement-turned-dormitory suburb of Edmonton, the provincial capital, when he
got his best idea yet.
“He had a vision of a
multigenerational crowd of people gathered under a big tent,” recalls Mac
MacDonell, an early participant along with his wife, Suzanne. The prayer group,
which LeBlanc, a local carpenter, had led for several years had been discussing
Pope John Paul II’s encyclical on the family, Familiaris Consortio.
“Bob wanted to do a family
conference,” said MacDonell, “to gather families of like mind, with deep faith,
but who wanted more knowledge of the teachings of the Church — to let them know
they weren’t alone.”
The idea took a year to bring to
fruition: The first family conference drew 350 in its first year, 1995, and now
surpasses 1,500 attendees of all ages, most of them camping out under the stars
by the Catholic chapel on the shores of Lac Ste. Anne 50 miles northeast of
Edmonton — all meeting under the tents of LeBlanc’s original vision.
LeBlanc died in 2003 after a long
and painful illness, but the ministry is carried on by the original core group
of the Beiers, the MacDonells, Robert Boisvert and Jim Rogers under the name Catholic
Family Ministries.
The leaders have the approval of
Edmonton Archbishop Richard Smith. “They are clearly, clearly committed to the
family as the domestic church and the home as a place of formation in the life
of Christ,” he told the Register. “When I see a group like this, I can’t help
but be edified and encouraged.”
Proof in Youth
Now,
reports the organization’s publicity director, Maurice Beier, “The next
generation is stepping up.” His son Brendan has led children’s groups for years
and is in charge of all the youth groups. The LeBlanc’s daughter Katie is in
charge of cooking for the volunteers, and their eldest son, Matthew, is on the
board of directors and integrally involved as a driver, fetcher and general
troubleshooter.
Katie, who is about to enter college
for an education degree, explains that, as busy as the conference is, “It helps
me refocus on my values because I’m spending all my time with people who think
like me. My school and work friends don’t share my beliefs about church, moral
issues or chastity.” But the families she grew up with in the prayer group and
volunteering with at the conference — “we’re in the same boat, belief-wise.”
Large families and home schooling
were two common threads among those attending the prayer group.
Beier recalls the families
customarily meeting for brunch after Sunday Mass. “We always ended up
discussing our faith. We grew as a community, and those of us who were home
schooling would attend daily Mass with kids in tow.” Once a month the group
would have a potluck meal, which they dubbed a “pot blessing” because, says
Beier, “It had nothing to do with luck.”
The parents began watching tapes
together featuring Catholic apologists such as Scott Hahn and Karl Keating. “We
were sharing it with others, and our faith was becoming alive. And our children
were being raised in the faith with others their age.” They were also forging
the template for the family conferences.
Camping With Christ
After LeBlanc described his vision,
a core of enthusiasts from the prayer group formed an organizing committee and
hammered out the concept: It would be a campout in the prime of summer only a
short drive from Edmonton, so food, transportation and lodging were easily
managed.
There would be something for
everyone — inspiring speakers for the adults, who would give separate talks for
the teens.
There
would be ongoing programs for early teens, ’tweens, toddlers and elementary
students, with role-playing and skits looming large for the younger crowd,
while the youngest got the camping equivalent of day care. The group gave
themselves a year to plan and publicize, and with the Beiers already in the
marketing business, and the evident need for what they were offering —
intellectual and social support for family life lived faithfully — they perhaps
should not have been surprised to draw 350 to the first event at a small
retreat center.
So small, in fact, recalls Debbie
LeBlanc, that the facility’s plumbing was overwhelmed, prompting the move to
Lac Ste. Anne the next year.
Speakers have included Steve Wood of
St. Joseph’s Covenant Keepers and Father John Corapi. This year the speakers
were psychologist and philosopher Michael Pakaluk and wife, Catherine, an economist,
and Alan Schreck, a theologian at Franciscan University in Steubenville.
The events now last from Thursday
night to Sunday morning the first weekend in July. At first, it had been one
day shorter, but this, Debbie LeBlanc recalls, “made everything too rushed — it
was nothing but talks. Now there is more time for breaks.”
A “Men of Integrity” conference is
on tap for February 2010. (Go to CatholicFamilyMinistries.com for details.)
Family Solidarity
“This has totally changed the
direction of my life,” says Beier. “I never dreamed I’d be involved in this or
any other ministry. It’s an awesome sight to see so many Catholic families,
babies to teenagers.”
James and Jennifer Peloso have been
making the four-hour trek from southern Alberta for nine years with their (now)
family of seven. “I don’t have to drag them; the kids drag me,” says Jennifer.
To be honest, it’s busy, especially for the mom, but there’s a lot for the kids
to do.”
She
is especially keen for her older sons, now in their teens, to hear the speakers
addressing chastity issues. “They attend the local schools, and their friends
are all paddling one way. We want our sons to paddle a different way. It’s good
for them to see other Catholic families trying to live the way we do.”
Steve
Weatherbe writes from
Victoria,
British Columbia.
ON THE WEB
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