SEEDS OF HOPE

As we celebrate this year, we want to encourage and edify others with testimonies of hope and stories of God's work that bring hope.


 

Resource: Jesus and the Jubilee: The Biblical Roots of the Year of God’s Favor by Dr. John Bergsma

 

 

The "Seeds of Hope" series continues with Allen's testimony of his faith journey and his yes to the Lord.

Allen Golan, a parishioner at St. Michael's, has been accepted as a postulant into Mt. Angel Abbey. Currently residing in Portland, but originally from Silverton, OR, Allen is a cradle catholic but fell away from the faith after high-school. Many years later, after the covid lock downs, Allen experienced a mental health crisis, which was the catalyst for his return to the faith. He attended Alpha at St. Michael's, and had a powerful experience at the Holy Spirit Retreat. Since then he has been on fire for God, with the discernment of religious life being a natural fruit. Allen will be entering Mt. Angel Abbey on March 20, 2025, and would appreciate prayers for humility and perseverance from the St. Michael's community. 

 

 

We continue with our series "Seeds of Hope" during this Jubilee year. You can read Joe’s testimony below!

A few years after I was baptized in 1971, my family left the Catholic church. We came from generations of Catholics, so leaving caused heartbreak and division among my relatives. We became Baptists, and I grew devoted to Baptist theology. I even went to seminary. There, I studied church history, which drew me to the sacraments; the sacraments led me to Lutheranism. After moving to Portland in 2019, I stepped into St. Michael's. I'm still not sure why. But after RCIA (twice), tribunals, and lots of struggle, Father Ignacio received me into the church in April 2024—over fifty years after my baptism.

This news brought some disappointment for family and friends. So it was an even bigger surprise when my youngest son called me in September from Bellingham, where he lives and attends school. He said he was joining OCIA. Then, in January, Christopher texted, "You should come to mass Saturday [because] that's when my confirmation is." That day, with two pews of friends and family, Christopher was received into the Church in the same building where his grandparents (and toddler father) had attended over fifty years earlier. 

God's time works differently than ours; fifty years is not too late, and a few months is not too soon. He never gives up on us, nor does he turn a deaf ear to the prayers of his people.

Photo: Christopher Johnson, pictured here with Father Jeffrey Moore, Church of the Assumption, Bellingham, WA (January 11, 2025)

 

 

Here's our first story from our Mercy Missionaries and some of their friends: 

Last year, we started to find out our street friends' birthdays and favorite cakes, and go out looking for them to celebrate their lives. The first person we gave a homemade cake to said, "I don't know when I last celebrated my birthday."  He was turning 33. It's amazing what a difference it makes for them--to know they are loved, that someone is glad they're alive, to receive a cake, to be sung "Happy Birthday to you," to be told you are being prayed for.  

Last Friday, five of us went out to celebrate Riley's 25th birthday. He wanted a giant chocolate peanut butter chip cookie, so we made it and brought it to him, with candles and napkins. He was really moved by it, hugged us, took selfies, and set up his phone to take a group picture. "I've been looking forward to this so much," he said.  "I was afraid you wouldn't find me." (He had recently had to move because of a sweep.) "Riley," we told him, "we would have kept looking until we could find you. Happy birthday!"

 
 
 
 
 
 

You can also learn more about the Jubilee of Hope and look up the local Pilgrimage Sites on the Archdiocese website!