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The Families That Adore Together
Pro-Family Profile
BY EDDIE O’NEILL
October 25-31, 2009 Issue |
Posted 10/16/09 at 3:10 PM
The late Father Patrick Peyton, founder of the
Family Rosary Crusade, coined a phrase that has since become ubiquitous: “The
family that prays together stays together.”
Those
words, first spoken in the 1940s, are coming alive in a new way in the
Archdiocese of Milwaukee. That’s thanks to Families in His Presence,
an apostolate dedicated to fostering greater devotion to, and love of, Jesus in
Eucharistic adoration for families.
According
to Laura Smrecek, one of the group’s founders, the inspiration for the family
Holy Hours came to several moms who regularly prayed the Rosary together. “We
thought it would be really nice to have Eucharistic adoration together,” says
Smrecek, a mother of four young children.
The
moms contacted Dick Boldin, leader of the Rosary Evangelization Apostolate in
Milwaukee (online at RosaryEA.org). They worked with Boldin to create a new
group within the Rosary apostolate that would promote Eucharistic adoration for
whole families.
Smrecek
says their apostolate had no problem getting the approval of Archbishop Timothy
Dolan, who was then archbishop of Milwaukee. In his letter of endorsement, the
archbishop, who now leads the Archdiocese of New York, wrote: “What could be
more appropriate than families gathering and visiting with Jesus? Truly, the
family needs to allow Jesus to take root and permeate our daily lives.”
Families
in His Presence held its inaugural event on the feast of Corpus Christi in May
2008. Father Antoine Thomas, a member of the Congregation of St. John in the
Peoria, Ill., area, led the Holy Hour. Father Thomas is known around the world
for his Eucharistic adoration program for kids called Children of Hope
(ChildrenofHope.org).
Smrecek
says she was “very pleased” when more than 200 people turned out for the
kickoff family Holy Hour.
All Ages
Since
the first Holy Hour, Families in His Presence has hosted five more in the
Milwaukee Archdiocese. Each has been well attended, notes Smrecek. Hoping to
make adoration more widely known, the group is looking to present these events
in parishes throughout the archdiocese.
Families
in His Presence first approaches a potential parish to host one of its Holy
Hours by sending out an information packet. The folder includes a letter of
introduction for the parish priest, a DVD and an outline of a sample Holy Hour.
The group does all the work of organizing the hour of prayer — from finding a
presiding priest to coordinating the reception afterwards.
All the hosting parish has to do is
say Yes and open its doors.
According to the group’s materials,
the actual Holy Hour could include the singing of traditional Eucharistic
hymns, meditations and prayers, a decade of the Rosary and even a Eucharistic
procession, all led by the priest. Younger children sit on carpet squares in
the front of the church while the parents populate the pews.
Father James Kubicki, a Jesuit
priest and head of the Apostleship of Prayer in Milwaukee, presided over
Families in His Presence’s Holy Hour last November at St. Anthony’s Church. He
says he found in the Holy Hour a source of great personal consolation.
“Not only were the kids very
attentive and reverent, but their parents and others who remained in the pews
were also very attentive, eager to hear what I was saying to their children,”
Father Kubicki recalls. “I think this is one of the beautiful dynamics of the
Holy Hour. It’s almost as if in talking to the children you have the parents’
undivided attention, as well.”
Smrecek says the children witness
the power of the Eucharist to the grown-ups. “It’s amazing,” she says. “You
picture these little ones wriggling the whole time, but it’s incredible how
much they pay attention. We are teaching our children how to pray in the true
presence of the Lord, and we are teaching the adults to become like children.”
Real Revival
With
eight kids ranging in age from toddler to teenager, Chuck Wichgers, a member of
St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church in Greenfield, Wis., is always on the
lookout for prayerful events that will inspire his children to stay on the path
of holiness. He knows that is not easy these days, given the state of the
culture at large.
When he first found out about
Families in His Presence last year, he was certain he was getting an answer to
prayer. He and his family have attended several of these Holy Hours.
“What
impressed me most with these Holy Hours is the atmosphere,” Wichgers told the
Register. “To have a Holy Hour where our kids are learning the Rosary in front
of the Blessed Sacrament as well as hearing about the lives of the saints is a
welcomed event.”
Wichgers
says that to have Holy Hours where families are gathered around the Real
Presence is especially important in a time when so many Catholics either don’t
know about, or don’t believe in, the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist.
Father
Kubicki couldn’t agree more. “One of the best ways to teach about the
Eucharistic presence of Jesus and to renew Catholics’ faith in that presence is
to provide opportunities for adoration,” says the priest. “When we adore Our
Lord present as the Church teaches — body and blood, soul and divinity — we put
our faith into action.”
Smrecek
says she has had nothing but positive feedback on the Holy Hours. She is
especially touched by those for whom Families in His Presence provided their
very first experience of a Holy Hour. “It’s exciting to know that this is their
first one,” she says, “or their first as a family.”
Looking
ahead, Smrecek says Families in His Presence is open to expanding its ministry
beyond the boundaries of Milwaukee if that is God’s will. In the meantime, they
are excited about spreading Eucharistic devotion one Holy Hour at a time.
“If
seeds from Families in His Presence Holy Hours take root leading to the start
of increased Eucharistic adoration at a specific parish,” says Smrecek, “we
would be overjoyed to see Our Lord exalted as he deserves.”
Eddie O’Neill writes from
Green Bay, Wisconsin.
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