The Gregory the Great Academy 2015-2016 academic year has begun! We are very pleased to welcome 49 students this year. After a week of outdoor activities and introductory classes at the Carpathian Village, the student body has moved into Pine Hill where the regular routine of the year is underway. Monday morning began with the sound of bagpipes and the annual tradition of the handing out of the class ties. Headmaster Sean Fitzpatrick gave a brief talk about the history behind the class tartan ties and explained the significance connected with the tartan and the individual classes. The orientation period ended with the introduction of the Senior class and the singing of the school song, “The Minstrel Boy.”
Events
River Valley Festival Bands Announced
We are excited to announce the main bands at the 2nd Annual River Valley Festival: The Plate Scrapers and The Plank Stompers.
The Plate Scrapers are a four-stringed instrument band from Fredrick, Maryland. They draw their musical inspiration from folk, jam, jazz, blues, americana, and bluegrass. To get a taste of the music they will play for us at the River Valley Festival, you may visit the Plate Scraper’s Facebook page and listen to them on their website.
Our second band, the Plank Stompers, hail from Bluemont, Virginia. The Plank Stompers do not like to think of themselves as a group, but rather as a movement. Their musical style is made up of old time soul, bluegrass, and funk. You may wish to learn more about the Plank Stompers on Facebook and listen to them on their website.
Don’t forget to share with your friends and family about this year’s River Valley Festival and invite them to sign up on our website and like our Facebook page. We look forward to enjoy these bands with you and celebrate the culture of the Shenandoah Valley.
Sign Up: River Valley Festival Website
See you October 3!
Daniel Schiller
Event Coordinator
River Valley Festival
518-560-9658
Gregory the Great Academy Senior Class Pilgrimage
Gregory the Great Academy is a testament that God does provide. My name is Joseph Long and I graduated from St. Gregory’s Academy in 2008. The heart of the school is pilgrimage. Faith is the essence of any true pilgrimage. As the beginning and the end, Faith permits the person to embark on a journey – providing immeasurable confidence and surety that God will provide. It is unthinkable that so many good things could have come from nothing. God has been with the school from its beginning. Just last week, I experienced once again the nature of God’s providence with this little community of men as the senior class marched into Rome, having walked from Florence following the footsteps of St. Francis in holy pilgrimage. It became clear to me once again that God rewards those who attempt goodness. As Aesop puts it, ‘fortune favors the bold.’
I met the pilgrims in St. Peter’s Square on Saturday, June 20th. All I remember are smiles. Joy emanated from the group as they approached me in song. How humbling it is to be met with such gratitude. Although I thought myself fortunate to be there with them in the Eternal City – to lend a helping hand to my brothers in a city that I know and love having lived there for a few years – it was obvious that these young men considered themselves the fortunate ones. They had walked from Florence to Rome without any money. Song and spirit was the only currency they had – and it proved itself priceless as God’s love acted through the generous and willing support of countless individuals whom they met along the way. They had experienced true charity on their pilgrimage of Faith. By humbling themselves to a state of poverty these young men were able to give more than they ever could have with money. The songs and juggling shows that they shared with little old Italian ladies in the middle-of-nowhere Italy were more than just an act. They were a free gift of joy that reaped even more joy in return. It was not the filling of stomachs that made these pilgrims happy. It was the filling of spirit. Nothing is more joyful than seeing someone else joyful. It brings people together in spirit – in a singular and supernatural phenomenon that we call love. It was this spirit that urged the senior class to embark on pilgrimage in the first place and it was the same spirit that provided them with immeasurable good things along the way. The men simply cooperated and put themselves at the mercy of providence, which they experienced to be quite merciful, or rather, charitable.
In Rome providence could not have been more rewarding. Joy was transmitted on such a large scale. Medieval piazzas provided the scene. A whirlwind of music, juggling and prayer made its way into the hearts and minds of the thousands of people who witnessed the well-trained talents of our little group of sixteen. The reaction of the crowds was for me a witness to the power of charity. Everyone was involved in one and the same action of giving. Laughter, applause, song, encore, pictures, more pictures, Red is the Rose – it is so good to give! We were so happy. Not because of the thousands of Euro these generous people were pouring into our hats, but because of the reception our giving was given. People are good. It simply takes a bit of Faith to see it. The root of pilgrimage, Faith provided the young men of Gregory the Great with a true Christian Spirit characterized in joy, humility and courage.
God has blessed our little school so generously with His Spirit. Gregory the Great Academy returns on pilgrimage every year to remind itself of its origin and its identity. To remind itself of the reality of this earthy pilgrimage. To remind itself that God is everything and without Him there is nothing. It is curious that more people do not put themselves at the mercy of God’s providence. It proves itself overwhelmingly charitable.
Ordination and First Mass of Bro. Innocent Smith
The Dominican community of the Eastern Province celebrated the occasion in style, hosting an evening reception for the families and friends of those who had just been ordained.
The following evening, Fr. Innocent offered his first Mass at St. Thomas the Apostle Catholic Church in Washington DC. The liturgy was beautiful and very emotional for Fr. Innocent’s friends and family members.
Philip Smith graduated from St. Gregory’s in 2004. He enrolled in the University of Notre Dame the following fall, taking a double major in Philosophy and Music. During his college years, Philip discerned a vocation with the Order of Preachers. After graduating from Notre Dame in 2008, he joined the Order’s Eastern Province of St. Joseph as a novice, taking the name of Innocent after the first Dominican Pope, St. Innocent V.
After a formational year at the Novice House near Columbus, Ohio, Innocent took temporary vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience and began his formal studies at the Dominican House of Studies in Washington D.C. Innocent thrived at the House of Studies, and involved himself with several projects there in addition to his formal studies. These have included the publication of a new Dominican Hymnal and the re-founding of Dominicana a print/online journal of Dominican thought and theology. In the spring of 2013, Br. Innocent took his final vows as a Dominican and he was ordained Deacon in March 2014.
Please keep Fr. Innocent in your thoughts and prayers this year as he begins to fulfill his priestly vocation. His first assignment is to the Dominican community at the Church of St. Vincent Ferrer, in New York City where he has already begun to serve as vicar.