FAITHhelps: learning companion to FAITH MagazineFAITHteen: monthly e-zine for teensFAITHe-talk: ask our experts a questionFAITHforums: join our discussion forumsFAITHlinks: great Web sites and resources


FAITHteen
FAITHteen: a monthly e-zine for teens

FAITHhelps
FAITHhelps: a learning companion to FAITH Magazine

Fr. Charles Irvin
Monday Morning Alka-Seltzer: Fr. Charlie's weekly pick-me-up


FAITH can help
your diocese
get the Word out with FAITH Publishing Service

 

July/August 2007
We have a limited number of back issues available in print. To request back issues, e-mail jjob@dioceseoflansing.org or call 517-342-2595. You will be charged the regular cover price of $2.50 per issue.
cover story
As Michigan State University’s new head football coach, Mark Dantonio promises toughness, pledges to land top high-school recruits and casts a vision of winning championships. But he surprised everyone when he stared into the cameras and, without prompting, declared his relationship with God was more important to him than winning games. Find out why this Big Ten coach is big on faith.
God and the gridiron

By Todd Schulz

profile
John Linden is the newest priest of the Diocese of Lansing
Father John Linden said God knocked on the door for a long time – find out how answering that knock led to the priesthood.
What do I know?
By Marybeth Hicks

profile
The cost of a seminary education can be a real hurdle. In the Diocese of Lansing, the Bishop Albers Trust Fund helps defray some of those costs. Find out more and discover how you can help support vocations.
how the Bishop Albers Trust helped me become a priest
By Bob Horning
culture
Good-cheer smoothie – a refreshing way to be neighborly.
Good-cheer smoothie
Michelle Sessions DiFranco

God and the gridiron
Faith is more important than winning
to Michigan State University's head coach

By Todd Schultz | Photography by John Gwillim, MSU Sports Information

Mark Dantonio said precisely what long-suffering Spartan fans wanted to hear when he was introduced in November 2006 as Michigan State University’s new head football coach.

Dantonio promised toughness, pledged to land top high-school recruits and cast a vision of winning championships. Steely and serious, he looked and sounded like the stereotypical Big Ten football coach.

But Dantonio’s first press conference also strayed from the script long enough to provide a surprising peek into his soul. He stared into the cameras and, without prompting, declared his relationship with God was more important to him than winning games.

“I’ll stand up here today and tell you that my faith is very, very important to me,” Dantonio said at the time.

Today’s college football coaches live in a win-or-else world where the paychecks and the pressure to produce are astronomical. Rabid fans, influential boosters and cash-strapped school presidents all want victories – and they want them now.

Dantonio, who earns $1.1 million annually at Michigan State, wants to win as badly as anyone. He knows the scoreboard on Saturday afternoon will ultimately determine his success with the Spartans

But Dantonio also keeps the pigskin in perspective. His Catholic faith keeps him focused on Christ, his family and the long-term welfare of his players and assistant coaches. It’s those relationships – even more than the results on the field – that make Dantonio passionate about his high-profile profession.

“Coaching is my ministry,” Dantonio said in February. “It can’t be just about wins and losses. The intense scrutiny that comes with this job – it’s going to be there. I understand that. At the same time, it’s got to be about how we can get our players to move forward with their lives and do things correctly off the field. You’re able to make a difference as a coach.”

Dantonio, 51, was raised as a Catholic in Zanesville, Ohio, where he grew up attending weekly Mass with his parents, Justin and Maryann, and his three brothers.
Faith was as much a part of life as football for Dantonio, who earned all-league and all-state honors as a player at Zanesville High and went on to play at the University of South Carolina.

“Faith just always was there,” says Dantonio, who earned three letters as a defensive back at South Carolina. “It was there at a young age. During college, I strayed this way and that way. But whenever I went to church, I always felt a sense of calmness that I’d be able to solve any problems.”

Dantonio can’t pinpoint the moment he accepted Christ. But he knows his spiritual journey – and his life – took a key turn in 1985 while he was working as a secondary coach at Akron. That’s when he met his wife Becky, an Akron native who was home after attending Ohio State.

“That’s when I started looking more at the big picture,” he says. “I started learning more about my walk.”

The Dantonios have grown together in their faith through the birth of their daughters – Kristen, 14, and Lauren, 12 – and a long list of stops on the college coaching trail, including successful stints as an assistant at MSU and Ohio State and his first head coaching job at Cincinnati.

Mark considers Becky – who converted to Catholicism during his six years as a Spartan assistant – his most influential spiritual mentor. Married in 1990, the couple prays together every morning and, win or lose on Saturday, worships at St. Martha Parish in Okemos on Sundays.

“His faith was always important to him and a relationship (with God) was there,” says Becky, who introduced her husband at his first MSU press conference. “(But) it really took off after we got married. There’s a time in life where you decide what your faith is going to be and it’s no longer the faith of your parents.”

College football is big business to universities and a religion to many fans. But does God really care who wins and loses these games?


“I don’t think so,” Dantonio says, laughing. “But there’s probably people praying on both sides.”

The Michigan State faithful have prayed for a savior for the better part of 40 years. The perennially mediocre Spartans haven’t won a national title since 1966 or a Big Ten Conference crown since 1990. They last reached the Rose Bowl in the 1987 season.

Enter Dantonio, who was 18-17 in three seasons at Cincinnati before landing the MSU job. Dantonio served as an assistant coach at Michigan State from 1995-2000 and was thrilled when offered the school’s top job. But before accepting, he gathered Becky, Kristen and Lauren to pray – and to vote.

“This was a family decision,” Dantonio said. “It was not a decision made by one person. Everybody had one vote and one vote could have canceled us.”

In the end, the choice was unanimous.

“The girls kept telling me it was my dream job,” Dantonio says with a chuckle. “I said, ‘Hey, it’s got to be your dream, too. You’re the ones who are living it.’”

Dantonio’s dream is to restore gridiron glory in East Lansing. Winning championships is definitely on his to-do list.

In fact, it’s No. 6. Dantonio says five other priorities come first for his players, his coaches and himself:

1. Making the right decisions as people
2. Family
3. Graduation
4. Giving back to the community
5. Getting bigger, faster and stronger

“You can’t get to a championship without getting to the others first,” Dantonio says with a shrug.

For Dantonio, faith is as fundamental to football success as blocking, tackling and toughness. He’s attended weekly Bible study at every stop. As the defensive coordinator at Ohio State (where he helped lead the Buckeyes to the 2002 national title), Dantonio even took breaks from the frenzied game planning for arch-rival Michigan to meet with God.

“I came out of there with a calmness and perspective that it’s not all about what happens in that stadium,” Dantonio recalls. “It has to go beyond that, otherwise you’re not going to be a very happy person because you can’t be on top forever.”

When Dantonio formed his coaching staff at Cincinnati, he took a spiritual inventory of the assistants he was interviewing.

“I asked them where they were at (in their relationships with God),” said Dantonio, who brought most of the same coaches to MSU. “The accountability (for coaches) has to go beyond the accountability to me. I want coaches to care about kids. That’s important to me.”

So is caring for his coaches. Though they log long hours during the season, Dantonio encourages his assistants to make time to attend recitals, ballgames and other can’t-miss events for their children.

Dantonio spent his spring driving to Cincinnati to see Becky and his daughters, who finished school before the family moved to East Lansing. The Dantonios will be together this fall when Mark leads Michigan State on to the field. They trust God to be with them.

“He’s given us all the good things in our life,” Becky Dantonio said. “He’s guiding us. He brought us to MSU and I don’t think he brought us here to fail.”

---

Where to find spiritual support in college

Most major universities have a Catholic presence on campus in the form of a Newman Center and/or a student parish. Often, even smaller schools have a campus minister. In the Diocese of Lansing, there are student parishes at:

The University of Michigan – St. Mary Student Parish, 331 Thompson St., Ann Arbor, 734.663.0557, www.stmarystudentparish.org

Michigan State University – St. John Student Parish, 327 MAC Ave., East Lansing, 517.337.9778, www.stjohnmsu.org

Eastern Michigan University – Holy Trinity Student Parish, 511 W. Forest, Ypsilanti, 734.482.1400, www.catholicsoncampus.org


What do I know?
Meet Father John Linden
By Marybeth Hicks | Photography by Tom Gennara

On June 9, the Diocese of Lansing gained a new priest with the ordination of Father John Linden, 40. Father Linden will be assigned to St. Francis Parish, Ann Arbor. He will serve as parochial vicar, working with Father Jim McDougall, the pastor.

How did you discern that God was calling you to the priesthood?

Looking back, I realize the Lord had been knocking on the door for quite some time, but it took me quite a while before I finally answered him!

I grew up in the Irish Hills in Jackson County, where I graduated from high school. I went off to college, but didn’t complete the first year. Instead, I came home and enrolled in community college while working on a farm. I spent about 10 years not even practicing the rituals of my faith. I always believed in God and I prayed, but the only way I actually participated in my faith was to go on an annual men’s retreat, which I did primarily to be with my dad.

At one point, I decided that maybe God was calling me to use my interest in music to touch people’s hearts.

But slowly, the Lord showed me that music wasn’t the way that I would be serving him and his people. I went on my annual retreat with my dad and this time I learned about the lives of the saints.

I began to wonder if I could make a total gift of myself to God’s service and finally I perceived that God was calling me. I started reading the Scriptures and realized there were some scary lines in the Bible! At least, they seemed scary to me because they seemed to be speaking to me. Lines like, “Sell all that you possess and distribute it to the poor, and you shall have treasure in heaven” and “Come, follow me.”(Luke 18:22)

How did you get from realizing that God was speaking to you through some scary verses of Scripture and deciding to make a total gift of yourself to God?

You could say I “backed into” the priesthood – I discerned my calling by process of elimination or via negativa. I just kept taking away the things that God was not calling me to do until I finally realized the direction he was pointing.

I felt a commonality with St. Francis and, in fact, I first discerned religious life at a Franciscan community. But, while God was calling me to the priesthood, he was not calling me to that particular order.

The questions, then, became how and where did God want me to pursue my vocation?

God put the idea of becoming a diocesan priest into my mind.

When I finally entered the seminary, I was 33 years old. I had to earn my bachelor’s degree as well as my master’s in theology, which is why it took me seven years to be ordained!

What would you tell your younger self?

I would tell my younger self not to be so fearful – to be a little more faithful and trust in the Lord. He has the plans that work and he has the ability to repair the plans we make for ourselves so that we can ultimately serve him as he wants us to.

When have you seen true wisdom?

I’ve seen true wisdom in people who are willing to admit their faults and accept that they aren’t perfect. Perhaps Pope John Paul II exemplified this most beautifully. He wasn’t afraid to show his weaknesses, especially at the end of his life, so he was most inspiring when he was physically weakest.

When have you seen true justice?

I think justice is revealed in the mercy of God. True justice isn’t the justice of this world – the idea that we must always pay every last penny for what we have done. God was merciful enough to call me to the priesthood and in this he shows that he calls sinners to help sinners – this is what he sees as just.

What have you learned about people?

How much they’re like me! We all struggle with the same things. For so long, I thought I was so unique, but over the years I’ve learned we all face similar issues in life even if our circumstances are different. Knowing this is helpful as I set about writing homilies.

What is your greatest joy?

My greatest joy is seeing people at moments when they are having an experience of intimacy with God; when they are obviously touched by God’s love expressed in others. Those moments of relationship with God inspire me and I hope to have many, many more of them throughout my priesthood. Finding joy in God’s presence means we can have it at happy times but also in times of heartache and sorrow.

What question would you ask God if you could?

I’ve learned not to be so quick in asking questions of God. I think oftentimes we’re not ready or able to hear the answers to our questions. It’s his mercy that keeps us from knowing more than we need to know. God is Abba – our papa. He is the loving father who protects us from things we don’t need to know or that we may not yet be ready to handle.

When you get to heaven, what do you hope God will say to you?

I hope God says, “My son, how long we’ve awaited you.”


The price of priesthood
How the Bishop Albers Trust
helped fund Father Tim’s seminary education

The guidance counselor at Flint Central High School called Tim MacDonald into his office and asked, why, since he was sixth in his class, he hadn’t submitted any college applications. “I told him that none of them seemed to fit me,” Father Tim says now. “But just his pointing it out made me realize that if I was being called to the priesthood, I needed to do something about it.”

MacDonald was halfway through his senior year in high school before he had even started thinking much about his faith, let alone the priesthood. “I began taking ownership of my spiritual life,” he says, “praying more and getting more involved in church activities.”

It wasn’t long before thoughts of the priesthood entered his mind. He attributes that partly to the subtle influence of the joy and simplicity of Father Matt Fedewa, his pastor at St. Michael’s in Flint. And to his brother, Adam: “A guy I used to fight with over little things, now in seminary, and very happy being there.” Father Adam is a Divine Word missionary.

So MacDonald talked to the diocesan vocations director, Father Mark Inglot. “That fall, I entered college seminary at Saint John Vianney (St. Paul, Minn.), to further discern my vocation,” he says. “After being there a couple of months, I felt the hand of the Lord upon me, kind of like someone knocking on my door. I had a growing sense that this was the path for me. The seminary rector and the brotherhood of the other guys, who were in the same situation as I was, were very influential.”

Before entering seminary, Father Tim did have one dilemma – where the money would come from. Since his father is a teacher and his mother was a housewife, he had no way to pay for his education. He would receive scholarships from the university, along with government grants and loans, and planned on summer employment, but he still needed help.

He learned from Father Inglot about the provision that the diocese had for helping – the Bishop Joseph H. Albers Trust Fund. “Fortunately, the diocese long ago had the foresight to anticipate and plan for the increasing cost of seminary education,” Father Tim says. “Had there not been an Albers Fund, I don’t know if I would be a priest today. It was a great relief for me and my parents to know that a lack of finances wouldn’t keep me from God’s calling. I saw this as a confirmation of my vocation.

“Looking back now, eight years into my priesthood, I am eternally grateful to the benefactors of the Albers Trust for their investment in my future. I owe my priesthood to their support, and I plan to repay that debt by serving the churches across the Diocese of Lansing.

“One of my efforts is to let prospective seminarians know that the Albers Fund is available. After all, the initial expense of college seminary makes these men and their parents very nervous. I also try to inform people in the diocese that the fund needs more donations if it is going to be there far into the future to help young men.

“I tell my parishioners that if you pray for vocations, you also need to be willing to pay for vocations. We can spend our money to build great, beautiful churches to worship in, but without priests, come Sunday morning, we will just be sitting there twiddling our thumbs.”

Father Tim is the pastor of Holy Redeemer in Burton. Prior to that, he served as pastor of Most Holy Trinity, Fowler. While in Fowler, he began a weekly eucharistic holy hour for vocations from the parish and the diocese. Four young men from the parish have joined the seminary since then, including identical twins. “The Albers Fund helps answer prayers for vocations.”

Father Tim also notes that, “Although some parishes don’t have anyone in seminary, it is still important for them to contribute to the Albers Trust Fund if they can, because every parish needs a priest. “We are a universal church, so this is a shared commitment to our future.”

The Albers Fund isn’t meant to be a way for the diocese to pay someone to become a priest. What it does is take some of the pressure off the undergraduate seminarian so that he is free to pray and study and discern without the worry of paying bills. “That’s what it did for me,” says Father Tim.

---

What’s the good news and bad news about the Albers Trust?


Good News: Andrew Brinkman (Christ the King, Ann Arbor), Neil Atzinger (St. Andrews, Saline), and Ben Pohl (St. Mary, Westphalia) are three of the 21 college seminarians from the diocese who will be enrolled at the University of St. Thomas/St. John Vianney Seminary in St. Paul, Minn., this fall. Just four years ago, those three would have equaled the total number from the diocese.

Bad News:
The cost to Andrew, Neil, Ben, and the 18 others currently enrolled in undergraduate seminary will be approximately $25,000 per student per year.

Good News:
Back in 1962, Lansing’s first bishop, Joseph Albers, saw the need for supporting prospective priests and allocated a substantial amount of his estate toward that purpose. In 1972, Bishop Alexander Zaleski and Auxiliary Bishop James Sullivan established the Joseph H. Albers Trust Fund as an ongoing source of financial help. Bishop Zaleski was one of the first to make a significant contribution to it. The fund has helped support most of the seminarians since.

Bad News:
Since the trust fund is a self-supported endowment, only the earned income in the form of interest and dividends are available as grants to seminarians. Mike Kelterborn, treasurer of the fund, says that legacy gifts have been a big part of building up the fund, but that none have been received in the past five years.

Good News: Kelterborn, who is also a CPA, pointed out that there are numerous ways of giving large gifts, such as through a will, an estate gift, a life insurance policy, an IRA or other pre-tax retirement plans. In some cases, these may not only provide tax benefits, but also a steady stream of income to the donor while still living.

Recent changes in the federal tax code now provide that the age 70 1/2-required-distributions from Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) and other pre-tax retirement plans may now be satisfied by directing such distributions directly to charities. This direct donation method provides not only a convenient means of making such contributions, but can also provide the donor direct tax benefits. These benefits can include reducing the amount of their Social Security income subject to taxation, and may also lower taxes for taxpayers who are unable itemize deductions.

Kelterborn suggested getting legal advice for the plan that best fits a donor’s needs and desires.

Bad News: At present, because of the increase in college seminarians and the amount of principal in the Albers Fund, grants to Andrew, Neil, Ben and the others need to be capped at $5,000 per student per year. The Albers Fund is the main source of aid that college seminarians receive from the diocese. Tuition for students in major seminary at Sacred Heart in Detroit is covered by the Diocesan Services Appeal.

Good News: Fr. Jerry Vincke, vocations director for Lansing, says that the students and the diocese regularly search all other possibilities for meeting the cost of education. That includes scholarships at the university, government grants and loans and contributions by parents. He said that many Knights of Columbus councils give $500 a year to each student to help cover the cost of books, transportation and personal items.

And college seminarians are able to work during their summers to make money.

“One reason for the large expense is that they are paying out-of-state tuition,” Fr. Vincke says, “but we believe they are getting the best education and formation possible at St. John Vianney. And the school does give them a 35 percent reduction in tuition.

“When it comes to helping the seminarians financially, we are probably more generous than most dioceses. When parents and students find out about the Albers Fund, it gives them some relief.”

More Good News: Kelterborn points out that the permanent corpus of the Albers Fund is invested in the Ave Maria Family of Mutual Funds, so the holdings are made with companies whose activities and policies are consistent with Catholic values (for example, companies with no ties to the abortion or pornography industries). Furthermore, he says that the legal, administrative and investment services necessary for managing the trust are volunteered.

The trustees for the fund are always looking for anyone willing to promote the trust by organizing golf outings or other fundraising activities.


good-cheer smoothie
Michelle Sessions DiFranco | Photography by Phillip Shippert

One hot summer day, my husband David came into the house with an ice-cold smoothie he had picked up on the way home. He placed it on the counter and went downstairs to find a tool. I gazed at the smoothie. It gazed back. It taunted me and tempted me. So I took a sip. In a word, it was perfect. And in a minute it was gone.

But as I set down the now- empty cup and gazed out our kitchen window, I noticed our elderly neighbor, Emily, sitting on her porch in the sweltering heat, fanning herself with a newspaper. It was common for her to sit and watch passersby and hope for a neighbor to strike up a conversation. She lived alone. However, I knew she wouldn’t be getting many passersby that day, thanks to the heat.

I suddenly felt both pity and guilt.
I bet she would have loved some of that smoothie. But then it hit me; I could make her one! I quickly gathered all the ingredients I could: a banana, frozen berries, yogurt and a bit of orange juice and honey. I threw all of the ingredients into the blender and pureed them. I removed the lid and filled a large glass with the pink concoction. I walked out the door and headed straight toward Emily. I truly felt I had made her day by such a simple gesture as giving her a smoothie and chatting for a little while. I can also honestly say that I think I got more out of making her happy than she got out of the friendly gesture and conversation.

As I was happily returning to my house, my husband stepped outside with a perplexed look on his face and his empty smoothie cup.
“What happened to my drink?” he asked. Before I could answer, Emily, from across the street, lifted her glass up in the air as if to make a toast and shouted, “Thank you for the smoothie, David.” I didn’t want to ruin the sense of contentment he must have felt at that moment for making Emily so happy, so I just stayed quiet. A little charity is good for him, too.

The good-cheer smoothie:

• 1 banana (cut up)
• 2 cups frozen mixed berries
• 1 cup vanilla or berry yogurt
• 2-3 tablespoons orange juice (for slight tartness)
• 1 teaspoon honey

Directions: Throw wet ingredients into the blender first (OJ, yogurt and honey) and blend for 5 seconds. Add banana and half of the frozen mixed berries and blend for another 5 seconds. Add remaining frozen berries and blend until smooth.

Give to an elderly or homebound neighbor who needs some cheering up on a hot summer day. Double the recipe so you can try it for yourself!

veggies.