Category Archives: GR PMCC Session B

Grand Rapids Parish Ministry & Catechetical Conference

B-12 | 115 | What is Liturgy?

Room115
Speaker: Dr. Aaron Sanders

What is Liturgy? – The liturgy as public prayer is more than the collected prayers of Christians praying at the same time.  But just what sets it apart from private prayer or public devotions? Starting from the Church’s definitions of “liturgy” we will explore the ways in which liturgy connects us to the divine life and the ways in which we might participate more fully in liturgical action.

Dimension: Theology

B-13 | 235 | Drawn by Light

Room 235
Speaker: Sr. Diane Zerfas

In our painful stressful times we are all looking for peace, for faith, for God’s goodness.  Together we will open our eyes to the presence of God using Visio Divina , a simple ancient prayer technique for “praying with the eyes of the heart.”  We will use the art work suggested by Henri Nouwen in his book “Behold the Beauty of the Lord.”

Dimension: Spirituality

Also offerend in session C-13

B-14 | 205 | Answering Science-Based Skepticism with a Person, Not an Argument

Room 205
Speaker: Dr. Timothy Dolch

When engaged in adult faith formation, an adult catechist will likely encounter skepticism that is purportedly science-based. While responding with reasonable arguments is important, one must not underestimate the persuasiveness of communicating the reasonableness of faith by pointing to Catholic scientists themselves. For example, big-bang cosmology was first proposed by the Belgian priest and astrophysicist, Georges Lemiatre. I will discuss the example of Fr. Lemiatre and others, largely drawn from the book From Galileo to Gell-Mann: The Wonder that Inspired the Greatest Scientists of All Time: In Their Own Words.

Dimension: Spirituality

Also offered as C-21

B-15 | 133 | Leading People in Prayer

Room 133
Speaker: Fr. Chris Rouech

At baptism, every Catholic is anointed “priest, prophet and king” – just as Christ was. And thus Catholics are called to not only be people of prayer, but people who lead others in prayer.  Participants in this workshop will learn and practice basic principles of leading at prayer in both informal and formal  occasions.

Dimension: Spirituality

B-16 | 207 | Transformation of Our Thinking

Room 207
Speaker: Dr. Mark Pestana

Understanding who we are is vital to our interactions with people who are different from us. One way of achieving deep self-understanding is to investigate the history of our own most basic ideas. Historians of ideas divide Western Civilization into four great epochs of thought—the Ancient, Medieval, Modern and Post-modern periods. In this session we will examine the common fundamental world views of the thinkers in each of these epochs, the similarities and differences between the eras, attempted explanations for the profound changes in outlook and the compatibility of the common world view of each epoch with the basic Catholic Christian understanding of reality. We will also investigate the current deadly intellectual transformation that Western thought is undergoing into a Post-human outlook.

Dimension: Evangelization

 

B-17 | 110 | Tending the Holy: Nurturing the Grounds for Spiritual Growth

Room 110
Speaker: Andy Rebollar

As catechists, it’s essential we too are growing in our relationship with Christ, but it can be challenging knowing there’s nothing specific we can do to make spiritual growth happen. Our growth is entirely dependent on God’s grace; all we can do is make the ground a little more fertile. This session will explore some practices that can help make our spiritual grounds more productive, so when the time is right, we will be ready for what God invites forth.

Dimension: Spirituality

Also offered in session A-19

B-19 | MAK Board Room | “‘Love one another:’ Well, maybe!”

Room: MAK Board Room
Speaker: Dr. Robert P. Marko

In John’s gospel we are called to love another as Jesus loves us.  This session examines the obstacles we face as human beings to reach the freedom of the daughters and sons of God that Jesus the Christ lived.  We will consider the temptations or passions in the East called cardinal sins in the West along with their opposite virtues. In short, we will consider how primordial or original sin affects us in widening the margins to include all we are called to love.

Dimension: Theology

B-20 | 114 | History of the Gifts of God in the Building of the Kingdom of God

Room 114
Speaker: Annette Witte

From the beginning of time God created with a planned order, as if preparing the world like a great and beautiful banquet. The guests invited to the banquet were human beings. They too were designed as gifts to one another. When humanity became aware of the gifts of the world around them, they asked, “Who has made all of this for us?” God responded by entering into a covenant relationship with humanity and in time, gave us the greatest gift, the gift of himself in the person of his Son, Jesus to show us the way back to God. Just as all elements of Creation play a particular role in the kingdom, so do each of us. Come and see how the Catechesis of the Good Shepherd presents to children and adults, how God calls each one of us to recognize our own unique giftedness and offer ourselves in service to help build God’s kingdom until the time when God will be all in all at the Parousia.

Dimension: Evangelization

Also offered in session A-14