CHARLOTTE — The ongoing global pandemic has created an even greater cry for assistance, and we as Catholics are charged to come to the aid of people in need across the Diocese of Charlotte through the annual Diocesan Support Appeal.
To date, the 2021 DSA has received $5.4 million – about 88 percent of its $6.2 million goal – with a few months remaining in this year’s campaign to raise the remaining $800,000.
“Love Thy Neighbor,” the theme of the 2021 Diocesan Support Appeal, is taken from Matthew 22:39: “You shall love your neighbor as yourself.” It illustrates one way we can strive to share God’s love with others at this difficult time.
“This is a heartfelt reminder and an opportunity to put our faith into action to help others,” Bishop Peter Jugis wrote in his DSA appeal letter to the people of the diocese.
The DSA campaign funds more than 50 ministries and programs that serve thousands of people across the diocese. Most notably, the DSA is a significant funding source for Catholic Charities Diocese of Charlotte for its counseling, food pantries, pregnancy support, refugee resettlement, elder ministry, Respect Life and other programs, as well as the programs and ministries of the Education Vicariate.
The DSA also supports multicultural ministries, seminarian education, the permanent diaconate, the annual Eucharistic Congress and the diocese’s housing corporation.
Catholic Charities receives 33 percent of the funds collected in the campaign. Other DSA funds are allocated to the Education Vicariate (27 percent), vocations (14 percent), multicultural ministries (14 percent), and the Eucharistic Congress and the diocesan housing ministry (7 percent). Campaign administrative costs are projected to be 5 percent.
Parishioners in all 92 parishes and missions help fund the annual DSA. Through their contributions, people across the diocese are able to join together to do the Lord’s work – works of love and service that no one person or parish can do alone.
Last year, parishioners raised $6.4 million, $230,391 over the campaign’s goal of $6.2 million.
Bishop Jugis asks parishioners to prayerfully consider making a financial contribution to the 2021 DSA, sharing our blessings from God with others “especially during these trying times of a global pandemic when the needs of many are great. I appeal to you to reflect on your own blessings and return a portion of these gifts to make a difference in our diocese.”
How to support the DSA
ONLINE: Go to www.charlottediocese.org/dsa to make a secure online donation.
TEXT: Text “DSA” to 704-389-2096
ENVELOPE: Mail the pledge card you received in the mail or at Mass to: Diocese of Charlotte, 2021 Diocesan Support Appeal, 1123 S. Church St., Charlotte, N.C. 28203. (Pledges must be paid by Dec. 31, 2021.)
Questions?
Contact Jennifer Daigle at 704-370-3316 or email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
Sallie Kelton, pictured by her piano, recently retired after serving as St. Pius X Church’s music minister for more than two decades. (Photo provided by Terry Rumley)GREENSBORO — At a retirement luncheon celebrating Sallie Kelton’s 23 years as music minister at St. Pius X, the assistant music minister, Brian Otter, reflected on Kelton’s time at the parish.
“St. Pius X will never be the same,” Otter remembers saying when Kelton arrived in Greensboro more than 20 years ago. This mother of three and Kentucky native has blessed the parish in her vocation as music minister, mother, wife, friend, mentor and more. While most people consider her voice and unique piano style as her gift to the parish, it is her gift of bringing others closer to Christ that is the legacy Kelton leaves St. Pius X.
“Think of this. Sallie has brought thousands of people closer to Christ through her ministry,” said Otter.
Addressing Kelton, he said, “You have been present for almost all the high points in our lives: our children’s baptisms, our first Communions, our confirmations, our weddings, our children’s weddings, anointing of the sick and funerals of our loved ones. I cannot think of a more powerful way to serve the Lord as a lay person,” he said.
The retirement luncheon, held Aug. 1 in the parish’s Simmons Center, was hosted by the parish office staff and Monsignor Anthony Marcaccio, pastor. “What makes our parish so successful is its level of engagement,” Monsignor Marcaccio told Kelton. “Your ministry of music has helped engage our parish towards its goal of full, active participation in the liturgy.”
The celebration was filled with special music, gifts and reflections of gratitude for the musician. Kelton has not only reached hearts at St. Pius X, she is well respected in the Catholic music community at large. She has developed lifelong friendships with Catholic singer/songwriters Sarah Hart and John Angotti, who shared warm regards in a recorded video. Kelton’s close friend Tony Hayes performed “While You’re in the World” by Elton John, and Monsignor Marcaccio presented Kelton with a check to Caring Services Inc., an addiction recovery facility Kelton has supported ever since losing her son Griffin in 2015.
Parishioners Rebecca and Michael Schlosser called Kelton’s 23 years at St. Pius X a gift. “Sallie’s inspirational voice is truly her God-given ministry,” Rebecca Schlosser said. “She played at our son’s funeral and at my mother’s funeral. When we entered the church for our son’s funeral Mass, Sallie played ‘Be Not Afraid.’ I listen to that song and ‘On Eagle’s Wings’ almost every day now when I walk. We love Sallie. We will desperately miss her.”
In 2019, Sarah Hart invited Kelton to share her video testimony at the Los Angeles Religious Education Congress as part of Hart’s presentation “The Song of Women: Raising the Voice of the Feminine in our Church.” Five women shared personal testimonies of how God has used their gifts and even their pain to inspire hope in others. Hart was moved by how God has used the loss of Kelton’s son to unveil a new purpose in her life – using her voice not only for song but for prayer and advocacy as well.
Kelton’s hope for the parish community and music ministry of St. Pius X is that they will continue to share God’s love through prayer and song and that people will walk away from each liturgy with gratitude and love in their hearts.
As she always says, “God is good … all the time.”
— Georgianna Penn, Correspondent