CHARLOTTE — Catholic professionals in their 20s and 30s will soon have a chance to gather for fellowship, networking, mentoring, spiritual formation, and other enriching opportunities.
A new chapter of Young Catholic Professionals (YCP) is starting in the Diocese of Charlotte. To celebrate, a free launch party will be held from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Nov. 16 at Truist Field – home of the Charlotte Knights Minor League Baseball team – amid ‘twinkle lights’ and dramatic views of the city’s skyline.
The event will feature remarks from several Catholic leaders in the diocese and time for networking and mingling as well as free appetizers and a cash bar. Attendees will learn about YCP and network with other young professionals.
“Charlotte is one of the fastest growing cities in America, attracting thousands of young professionals each year. Our city features vibrant young adult groups at many of the local parishes, but there can sometimes feel like a gap in opportunities to bring everyone together – specifically in a professional environment,” says Santiago Cubillos, YCP’s Charlotte chapter president.
YCP bridges that gap, he said, by bringing together participants’ professional, social and faith lives.
Chapter activities include networking happy hours, an executive speaker series, executive panel discussions, mentorship, a local annual retreat, and the national conference.
Some of the benefits to members include spiritual formation with fellow young Catholic workers, personal mentorship from local Catholic executives, and job placement resources and portal.
Cubillos stresses the new chapter is meant to partner with the parishes and ministries in the diocese to inspire young professionals with the beauty of the Catholic faith.
“Young Catholic Professionals aims to bring all these groups together with the mission of growing in our Catholic Faith and inspiring young adults to ‘Work in Witness to Christ’ – the YCP motto,” Cubillos says. “We want to empower the next generation of Catholic leaders.”
— Annie Ferguson
RSVP for the free Young Catholic Professionals Charlotte Launch Party on Nov. 16, as space is limited to 400. To register, go online to www.youngcatholicprofessionals.org/chapter/charlotte
CHARLOTTE — St. Peter Church in uptown Charlotte has launched a capital campaign to fund major renovations needed for its 130-year-old building on Tryon Street.
The fundraising goal for the Renovations and Repair Capital Campaign, launched Oct. 1, is $2.6 million. Jesuit Father Tim Stephens, pastor, said the goal is to conclude the fundraising campaign by Dec. 3, the first Sunday of Advent.
“This is essentially a renovation plan which is about maintaining and restoring the church that we have,” said Father Stephens. “The plan is focused on the original elements – the floor, the ceiling, the pews – and bringing electricity and lighting and sound up to code and modern standards. We’re doing this so the church we have received from past generations can be passed on to future generations.”
He noted this is just a few weeks before the parish celebrates 130 years in the current building, which was dedicated on Christmas Eve, 1893.
Renovations and repairs are aimed to begin in early May 2024 and conclude by September 2024 in order to cause as little disruption to the life of the parish as possible, Father Stephens said.
A plan for the renovation project, published on the parish website, said the campaign has two primary goals: to restore the church building to its original soundness and preserve it for the future, and enrich the worship experience.
The needed structural renovations include replacing the tin ceiling in the sanctuary and nave, repairing the original tin ceiling below the balcony and narthex, replacing the original hardwood floors including the subflooring, improving the weather-tightness of the exterior, and painting and repairing the bell tower.
The historic pews, a gift from St. Katharine Drexel in 1910, will be restored. Improvements will be made to the sound system and acoustics in the church and the overflow area in Biss Hall.
Lighting will be retrofitted, and work will be done on the interior and the entry way to improve access for all while also maintaining safety.
While the renovations are going on, every effort will be made not to disrupt worship and other parish activities, Father Stephens said.
“We’ll be offering Mass on the parish campus at Benedict Hall, which can hold about 200 people with an overflow area in the basement,” he said. “We also plan to add more Masses so everyone will be able to be served.”
St. Peter Church was originally formed in 1851, when Father J.J. O’Connell laid the cornerstone for the original building. Six Benedictine monks served at the church before the original building’s foundation was declared structurally unsound – the damage caused by a munitions explosion at the end of the Civil War, according to a published parish history.
In 1893, the cornerstone was laid for the Victorian Gothic-style building that currently stands at 507 South Tryon St.
Attendance at the church dwindled as the Catholic population in Charlotte shifted to the suburbs in the 1960s, and St. Peter ceased to exist as a full parish in 1970. It became a full parish again in 1986 after then-Bishop John Donoghue asked Jesuit priests from Maryland to staff the parish.
The church was renovated and rededicated in 1989, then repaired again in the early 2000s after the church’s famed Ben Long frescoes were damaged.
— Christina Lee Knauss