USA : The Diocese of Tulsa has big plans for the Year of Faith and is crowning its efforts with a “bucket list.”
“The idea of the bucket list is to encompass a lot of different aspects
of the faith, as well as advertising some of the things our diocese
has,” Erik Grayless, chairman of the diocesan committee on the Year of
Faith, told CNA in an Oct. 2012 interview.
It is “a list of spiritual activities you will want to complete before
the Year ends” on Nov. 24, 2013, according to a letter of Bishop Edward
J. Slattery to the diocese.
Grayless, a layman and Tulsa's assistant district attorney, said that
the purpose of the Year, called for by Pope Benedict, is two-fold: both a
“re-affirmation and rediscovery of the faith for those who are
Catholic” and that it is “intimately linked to the new evangelization.”
The bucket list activities are meant to appeal to both those active in
their faith and for the person who is “just coming back and
rediscovering their faith.” They can be both challenging, and simple.
Confession is one of the simpler things Catholics in eastern Oklahoma are being encouraged to do.
“Going to confession is one of those things that some Catholics
unfortunately don't take advantage of. So you go to confession once, and
you can check off on a list and see that you actually did this.”
Since confession is being promoted in Tulsa as part of the Year, Bishop
Slattery has encouraged his priests to be ever more generous in their
availability for hearing confessions.
While not yet decided, the diocese is considering having a particular
period during Lent during which “there is confession every day at every
church,” as a “more concerted push” to open up the sacrament of
confession.
More unique opportunities are offered as well.
“Getting people in Tulsa to see Clear Creek Abbey as part of a
pilgrimage, or seeing one of the local churches in the smaller towns” is
something different that they might not have experienced.
This ties in with the plenary indulgence for the Year of Faith. It was
announced Oct. 5 that one way to gain the indulgence is by making a
pilgrimage to the cathedral or a location designated by the local
bishop.
The Tulsa diocese has four shrines, which will likely be among
those designated locations in addition to Holy Family Cathedral.
Our Lady of Clear Creek Abbey is a Benedictine abbey in Hulbert, Okla.
Which celebrates the liturgy in Latin and according to the extraordinary
form of the Roman Rite.
The bucket list contains 22 different spiritual activities in which to
participate.
The diocesan website announces that anyone in the diocese
who completes at least 15 items and returns it to the diocese will
receive “a complimentary gift of appreciation” memorializing their
participation in the Year of Faith.
One of the diocese's major plans is to organize viewings of Father
Robert Barron's “Catholicism” video series in the parishes. “We're
having a diocesan trained individual, starting in January, going to each
of the parishes and showing” the series, Grayless pointed out.
“It beautifully explores the faith; Fr. Barron goes around the world to
different locations in the Church, showing how the faith is strong and
beautiful.”
Planning for the Year of Faith in Tulsa has been a group effort,
Grayless emphasized. “The priests have been very passionate about it,
and they've been very receptive to things we've suggested.”
Father Kerry Wakulich, chaplain at the University of Tulsa's Newman
Center, is among those passionate priests. He told CNA Oct. 10 that his
plans for the Year of Faith include giving students the Magnificat “Year
of Faith Companion”; pilgrimages to diocesan shrines; catechism
classes; and in May, a 15-day pilgrimage to Poland “in the footsteps of
Blessed John Paul II.”
Grayless noted that Bishop Slattery intends for the fruits of the Year
of Faith to extend beyond the year itself. He said that while the
speakers, conferences, and viewings of the “Catholicism” videos are the
“event,” but “the bishop has encouraged that this not be a one-time
event, but that this carry on, because we are supposed to be preaching
the Gospel always.”
There will be an outreach at the conclusion of the Year, in hopes that
the Church in Tulsa will see a “sustainable bump in attendance.”
In his letter to the diocese, Bishop Slattery challenged “every
Catholic in Eastern Oklahoma to reflect seriously on the Pontiff’s call
for a renewed conversion to Christ. Together let us do what we must
deepen our faith and show a greater confidence in the Gospel message of
salvation.”