Archdiocese Local

Outdoor rally marks School of Faith’s 1000th daily rosary

Hundreds of Catholics turned out for last year’s live rosary with Mike Scherschligt and the Holy Family School of Faith. On May 23, Catholics are invited to another live rosary event — this time to help Scherschligt pray the 1000th daily rosary for the School of Faith podcast. LEAVEN PHOTO BY DOUG HESSE

by Moira Cullings
moira.cullings@theleaven.org

OVERLAND PARK — Mike Scherschligt never set out to start a podcast.

But he did want to share the gift of the rosary with others.

“I found when people, [like] my own kids and adult friends, had something that captivated their minds and heart during the rosary, the more fruitful was their meditation,” he said.

“So, I began to weave meditations into the five decades of the rosary, record them and make them available,” he continued. “That’s all. And it grew and grew and grew.”

In August of 2018, Scherschligt, founder and director of the Holy Family School of Faith, started recording and publishing daily rosary meditations on a podcast.

On May 23, he will pray the 1,000th one.

All are invited to join him for that rosary — in person — on May 23 from 5-8 p.m. at Fiorella’s Event Center in Overland Park.

Participants at last year’s School of Faith rosary event prayed by candlelight. This year, organizers hope for another strong turnout. LEAVEN PHOTO BY DOUG HESSE

Participants will have time for fellowship and are encouraged to bring drinks, snacks and lawn chairs.

“A wave moves us more than a drop of water,” said Scherschligt, and so he hopes the crowd will serve as an example of the strong Catholic community in northeast Kansas.

“No person is impervious to discouragement that comes from the news and social media that tells us Christianity is dying. And we need to get off that train,” he said.

“If we try to live our faith individually or only in small groups,” he added, “we get feeling very isolated and alone.

“We all need to be encouraged by witnessing thousands of people who believe come together, so that we can say to ourselves, ‘Thank God, I am not crazy, and I am not alone for believing in Jesus.’”

A young woman holds a candle during last year’s rosary event. The second one, held on May 23 this year, will offer participants the chance to pray together and share in authentic fellowship. LEAVEN PHOTO BY DOUG HESSE

For Chris Hillyer, director of membership for School of Faith, the event is an exciting opportunity for Catholics to build authentic friendships and grow in faith together.

He hopes it will be as well-attended as the first one held at Fiorella’s last August.

“Coming out of this time of isolation and separation caused by COVID, it will be an opportunity for families and friends to share and celebrate their faith,” he said.

“This night will be an opportunity to build friendships, invite others into our spiritual friendships, strengthen our faith and, most importantly, encounter Christ in each other,” he added.

Hillyer noted that it’s no coincidence the 1000th rosary will be prayed on the solemnity of Pentecost, but that it’s “divine providence.”

The rosary podcast has certainly lit a fire in northeast Kansas and beyond, said Hillyer, with a regular audience of nearly 14,500 listeners.

“As people one by one started sharing the rosary, the number of people praying daily grew exponentially,” he said. “There are now subscribers in 48 states and 17 countries around the world.”

Participants carried a statue of Mary around the crowd at last year’s live rosary event. Organizers hope this year’s event, held on the solemnity of Pentecost, will spark a fire of faith in the archdiocese. LEAVEN PHOTO BY DOUG HESSE

Scherschligt said communities like the one School of Faith has created are a key part of the faith, and that a large gathering like the live rosary serves as an example for the wider community.

“I think solitary embers grow cold,” he said. “Everyone needs a small group of family and friends with whom they can share life and integrate their faith.

“For our faith to grow, we need to invite others and give our faith away.

“Having small groups of family and friends — what I like to call teams — plus large events gives us a place to invite people where they can experience people really living their faith.”

A man holds a candle while praying the rosary at last year’s School of Faith event. LEAVEN PHOTO BY DOUG HESSE

The School of Faith team is grateful for the chance to provide this outlet in the archdiocese, said Hillyer.

“We want to recognize and celebrate our supporters and the Catholic community,” he said. “Our faith is meant to be personal, but it was never meant to be private.

“We are called to live and share our faith.”

To learn more about the live rosary event, go to the website at: schooloffaith.com/events.

To sign up for Scherschligt’s daily rosary meditations, go online to: dailyrosary.net.

About the author

Moira Cullings

Moira attended St. Thomas Aquinas High School in Overland Park and Benedictine College in Atchison. She majored in marketing and minored in psychology while playing for the women’s soccer team. Moira joined The Leaven staff as a feature writer and social media editor in 2015. After a move to Denver, she resumed her full-time position at The Leaven and continues to write and manage its website and social media channels. Her favorite assignment was traveling to the Holy Land to photograph a group pilgrimage.

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