DVD/Video Promoting Vocations To Priesthood, Religious Life Released By Bishops’ Communications Department

WASHINGTON (June 27, 2006)— “You Could Make a Difference,” a 17-minute vocation video and DVD, is available to assist parishes, youth groups and others interested in promoting vocations.

The video/DVD, which is in English and Spanish, was developed by the U.S. Bishops’ Department of Communications and features a priest from the Archdiocese of Washington, a Christian Brother from Jersey City, New Jersey, and sisters from El Paso, Texas, and Baltimore, Maryland.

Funding for the project was supplied by the Catholic Communication Campaign as part of its It All Starts With Faith campaign and the U.S. bishops’ Committee on Vocations.

Information on the video/DVD, a user’s guide and excerpts from it can be found at www.usccb.org/vocations/videodvd.htm.

The easy-to-use and state-of-the-art tool will enable parish and other groups to get the conversation about vocations started. The video/DVD features four segments which illustrate how priests and religious can serve the needs of the church.

Bishop Blase Cupich, chairman of the bishops’ vocations committee, urged parishes and youth groups to emphasize the call to serve the church through the priesthood and religious life.

“Vocations are nurtured in the home and in the parish,” said Bishop Cupich. “We need to keep the idea of a call to total commitment to the church front and center as an option for Catholic young people. This video/DVD helps parish leaders do that.”

Father Agustin Mateo, pastor of a Latin American parish in Washington, shows life in an urban, multi-cultural parish, where Sunday means Mass, religious education, and hospitality. He highlights the strength he draws from the congregation and his belief that he can face anything because God provides for whatever is humanly lacking in him.

Brother Patrick Cassidy, a Christian Brother and administrator at Hudson Catholic Regional High School, in Jersey City, New Jersey, tells about life in a busy boys’ high school. He also outlines qualities which suggest a young man could be happy as a religious order brother.

Sister Janet Gildea, MD and Sister Peggy Deneweth, RN, Sisters of Charity from Cincinnati, show life in the medical clinic they founded in El Paso, where they practice what they call “poverty medicine.” Their work resembles that of the Charity sisters in pioneer days when they helped people along the frontier, they said.

Sister Mary Claudina Sanz, a member of the Oblates Sisters of Providence, directs the Mary Elizabeth Lange Center Baltimore, a home for troubled young women which is named for the Oblates’ founder. Sister Claudina describes girls from the program who go to college and return to help others troubled as they once were. She speaks of her family in Belize, where her parents with eight children took in three more who needed a home. At the Mary Elizabeth Lange Center, she provides similar warmth and care for young women.

Copies of the DVD are available for $10 each and copies of the videocassette are available at $15 each. Each dvd and video includes both English-language and Spanish-language presentations. They can be ordered through the USCCB Communications Department, Vocations DVD/Video, 3211 Fourth St., NE, Washington, DC 20017-1194. Orders should be accompanied by checks payable to USCCB Communications.

Email us at evangelization@usccb.org
Secretariat for Evangelization | 3211 4th Street, N.E., Washington DC 20017-1194 | (202) 541-3000 © USCCB. All rights reserved.





Email us at vocations@usccb.org
Office of Vocations | 3211 4th Street, N.E., Washington DC 20017-1194 | (202) 541-3000 © USCCB. All rights reserved.