Monday, December 8, 2025
WORLD CATHOLIC NEWS
Advertisement
  • WORLD NEWS
  • US NEWS
  • VATICAN NEWS
  • ASIA – PACIFIC
  • EUROPE
  • MIDDLE EAST – AFRICA
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • VIDEOS
  • BOOKS OF THE BIBLE
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
WORLD CATHOLIC NEWS
No Result
View All Result

He is Worthy: Damascus Catholic Mission hosts night of worship

NEWS DESK by NEWS DESK
October 29, 2020
in THE WAY OF BEAUTY
0
0
SHARES
25
VIEWS
ShareShareShareShareShare
Dam­ascus Catholic Mission hosted Eucharistic ado­ration in Plaster Audi­torium on Monday, Oct. 26.
Courtesy | Kate Cavanaugh

On Monday night, the Holy Spirit moved in the aisles of Plaster Audi­torium. 

Stu­dents gathered there for an evening of Eucharistic ado­ration and worship hosted by Catholic Society and Dam­ascus Catholic Mission Campus’s national team, trav­elling from their campus in Cen­terburg, Ohio.

Earlier in the semester, sophomore Hannah Cote and I spent a Friday night in Ann Arbor vis­iting  Damascus’s national team and wor­shipping with them at Christ the King Parish. It wasn’t until after­wards, crammed around a small table at Chili’s, that we learned they would be spending the month of October in Michigan.

Imme­di­ately, we both nearly lept out of our chairs, asking and demanding at the same time: “Come to Hillsdale!”

We spent the past summer working at Dam­ascus as mis­sion­aries on Catholic Youth Summer Camp’s (CYSC) coun­seling staff. It didn’t take much time to realize we wanted them to bring their pow­erful, anointed spirit of revival to campus. 

Damascus’s mission is “to awaken, empower, and equip a gen­er­ation to live the adventure of the Catholic faith through world-class pro­grams and an envi­ronment of encounter.” Their mission includes pro­grams such as CYSC, com­munity out­reach, and a variety of retreats hosted throughout the aca­demic year. This year, their min­istry expanded to include a national team who will con­tinue to travel to dif­ferent states until May. 

In my summer expe­rience at Dam­ascus, I found that their summer pro­gramming beau­ti­fully bal­anced the physical and spir­itual by inviting the Holy Spirit into high-adventure activ­ities including high ropes courses, ziplining, and paintball, as well as times of Eucharistic ado­ration, worship, and prayerful small group. 

Every mis­sionary at Dam­ascus abides by mindsets of being Jesus-cen­tered, mission-focused, and joy-filled. Asking the expe­ri­enced, faithful mis­sion­aries to come bring their wisdom and gifts to campus was a Holy Spirit-led oppor­tunity to share the beauty of worship they embrace on Damascus’s campus.

Damascus’s Jesus-cen­tered mission invites all souls to deeper intimacy with the person of Jesus. People of dif­ferent faiths on campus saw the joy of the Lord within them and were attracted to their invi­tation to the worship night.

“Anytime I step into worship, I’m just in awe of the way I see people love Jesus,” Cote said. “This worship night was solely about ado­ration of our Lord, and I got to witness that firsthand. Every day I’m falling more in love with Jesus, and I just want all of campus to expe­rience the love we did when we wor­shipped our God.”

The night wasn’t about bringing charis­matic Catholics to campus, though. It was about bringing Catholics on fire for Jesus to campus. It wasn’t about tra­di­tional versus charis­matic, because the Church is both tra­di­tional and charis­matic; she is one, holy, catholic and apos­tolic. We don’t need to decide between being either tra­di­tional or charis­matic: we are Catholic.

“It just makes such a dif­ference when Christ is phys­i­cally there with you in the same room,” said junior Alex Dulemba about Eucharistic ado­ration. “You can talk about a person, but it makes such a dif­ference if that person is in the room with you. I felt like the worship was so much more focused on Jesus.” 

The Catholic Society hosted the event, but all of campus was invited. While it can be easy to become caught up in philo­sophical and the­o­logical debates, it was important to us to put debate aside for a time of simply wor­shipping in com­munity at the feet of Jesus. What com­pelled Catholics and Protes­tants to give up their Monday night and spend it in Plaster Audi­torium was the one thing every heart longs for: Jesus, our only source of lasting comfort. On Monday night, the Dam­ascus team united us out of love for the same God.

“I didn’t feel unwelcome or any­thing because I wasn’t Catholic,” junior Greta Dorn­birer said. “It was a beau­tiful time of prayer and reflection. I really felt the Holy Spirit’s presence in the room.”

About 30 minutes into the evening, mis­sionary Christopher Finneman shared a reflection on the meaning of worship with us. He stood below the stage, away from the warmth of lights calling all attention to the altar and mon­strance. 

“My prayer tonight is that all of the things we know already would come and collide with Jesus,” Finneman said. “I pray that tonight would be an exhale moment for you in the midst of this semester.”

When Finneman first became a mis­sionary at Dam­ascus, he was asked to give a talk about worship itself. When researching words that describe worship, he was deeply impacted by the def­i­n­ition of the word “rev­erence,” which he dis­covered means, “a response to the presence of God.”

“A response,” Finneman said. “That healed so much of the tension inside of me, because what I was looking for was, ‘a solemn response,’ and then there was another part of me that was looking for, ‘an exu­berant response.’ But it said no such thing. It said, ‘A response.’”

For Finneman, entering in fully to give glory to God ought to be the focus of all attention. 

“What matters — the heart of the thing — is extrav­a­gance,” Finneman said. “He is worthy of extrav­agant worship. What matters is that it’s extrav­agant, and that they’re all in, one hundred percent of the way. It’s not a robotic, halfway thing. Extrav­a­gance is the standard. Not the hows, or pref­er­ences.”

The evening was a tes­tament to a God who ful­fills his promises; he who begins a good work in you will finish it. The night was not a success because of our plans, but rather because we merely said yes to a dream the Lord placed on our hearts to see revival on campus. 

We wor­shipped Monday night for one reason: Jesus is always worthy of our worship.

 

Credit: Source link

Previous Post

Citing pope’s warnings about drugs, Catholic bishops speak on ballot proposals

Next Post

Two dead in knife attack inside French basilica

Next Post

Two dead in knife attack inside French basilica

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

© 2025 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.

No Result
View All Result
  • WORLD NEWS
  • US NEWS
  • VATICAN NEWS
  • ASIA – PACIFIC
  • EUROPE NEWS
  • MIDDLE EAST – AFRICA
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • VIDEOS
  • BOOKS OF THE BIBLE

© 2025 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.