A Catholic Breathing with Two Lungs - Seton Hall University
Thursday, February 9, 2023

                                    
                                    Join us to learn about and celebrate this "Jersey girl" – an example for us all, who
                                    showed by her life that we are all called to sanctity. Her practice of faith, both
                                    East and West, will be a focus of this lecture, that focuses Blessed Miriam Teresa,
                                    who found her path to sanctity right here, in the Garden State, and whose intercession
                                    continues to garner blessings in the lives of the faithful.
About the Lecture:
                                    Blessed Miriam Teresa Demjanovich was a Bayonne-born woman who was baptized, charismated
                                    (confirmed), and received Holy Communion at Saint John the Baptist Byzantine Ruthenian
                                    Catholic Church in Bayonne. She attended and graduated from the College of Saint Elizabeth
                                    (now Saint Elizabeth University) at Convent Station. Several years later, she entered
                                    the convent there and professed solemnly in the oldest order of Roman Catholic nuns
                                    in the United States. She remained both East and West until her death and serves as
                                    an example of living the Catholic faith simultaneously breathing with both lungs,
                                    as taught by Saint John Paul II in his encyclical Light of the East. This lecture
                                    will explore some of the hidden aspects of the Eastern Catholic life of this blessed
                                    woman, most especially dealing with Byzantine celebrations of Christmas and Pascha.
                                    
                                    About the Speaker:
                                    Father Joseph Bertha holds a Ph.D. in art history and currently serves both Saint
                                    John the Baptist Church in Bayonne (Blessed Miriam Teresa’s birth parish) and Saint
                                    Mary’s Church Jersey City.
About Catholic Studies
                                    Catholic Studies at Seton Hall University offers an innovative, interdisciplinary
                                    curriculum for students of any creed who are interested in deepening their knowledge
                                    of Catholicism’s rich intellectual tradition and living heritage. Combining the study
                                    of history, philosophy, theology, literature, art, sociology, and other disciplines,
                                    Catholic Studies focuses on the Church's dialogue with culture and encounter with
                                    the world. Students interested in Catholic Studies have the option to pursue a major,
                                    minor, or certificate that complements and enhances the university's other degree
                                    programs and fields of study. Over 20 years the academic program and its variegated
                                    activities have stayed true to and fulfilled the Catholic mission and vision of the
                                    University. For more information, please contact Ines Murzaku, Ph.D., or Gloria Aroneo.
About the G. K. Chesterton Institute for Faith & Culture:
                                    The G. K. Chesterton Institute for Faith & Culture at Seton Hall University, South
                                    Orange, N.J. was founded in 1974 by Father Ian Boyd, C. S. B.. Its purpose is to promote the thought of G. K. Chesterton and his circle
                                    and more broadly, to explore the application of Chestertonian ideas in the contemporary
                                    world. The Institute’s work consists of conferences, lecture series, research, and
                                    writing. The Chesterton Review, founded in 1974, has been widely praised both for its scholarship and for the quality
                                    of its writing. The journal was founded by Father Ian Boyd, C. S. B., and is edited
                                    by Dermot Quinn, Dr.Phil. It includes a wide range of articles not only on Chesterton
                                    himself, but on the issues close to his heart in the work of other writers and in
                                    the modern world. It has devoted special issues to C. S. Lewis, George Bernanos, Hilaire
                                    Belloc, Maurice Baring, Christopher Dawson, Cardinal Manning, the Modernist Crisis,
                                    J. R. R. Tolkien, Fantasy Literature, Fantasy Literature, Special Polish Issue, Special
                                    Charles Dickens issue, the most recent "Special Conversion Issue," and many others.
                                    For information about the Institute and The Chesterton Review please contact chestertoninstitute@shu.edu or visit the Chesterton webpage.
Categories: Faith and Service


 
	 
	 
	 
	