I was born and raised as a Catholic. After living in Vietnam for 14 years, I moved to the United States. I went to Davenport West High School and attended Scott Community College. In 2015, I started a new journey at the University of Iowa. I volunteered at the Newman Catholic Student Center and got involved in other organizations in Iowa City for three years. During that time, I learned a lot of new things, and rediscovered my Catholic faith in college. Catholicism has helped me in life; faith changes my thoughts. I graduated from the University of Iowa in 2018 with a degree in journalism and mass communications. My new goals in life are to help people with God’s gifts, make a difference, and become a saint, I have volunteered with the youth ministry at Our Lady of Victory parish whenever I can since 2018.
Author: evanbrankin
Jacob Menster
I was born and raised in Davenport, Iowa. I am a 3rd generation member of Our Lady of Victory. I am also a 2nd generation graduate from JFK (‘08) and Assumption (‘12). While at Assumption, I was involved with high school ministry by going to countless retreats and two NCYC’s. The Menster’s have been attending OLV from the beginning. I graduated from the University of Iowa (‘17) with a B.A. in Sports and Recreation Management. While at Iowa, I was involved the Newman Catholic Student Center for 3 three years. I have been volunteering with youth ministry since the fall of 2017. When I’m not volunteering, I am a lector and Eucharistic minister on Sunday’s. I love sports, traveling, watching Netflix/Hulu, hang out with friends and family, music, and the Hawkeyes. I look forward to helping the youth grow more into their faith in God, and I will strive to help them reach their goals to the best of my ability. Without high school ministry and trusting in God’s plan, I wouldn’t be the person that I am today.
Kim Burken
Hello, my name is Kim Burken, and I’ve been a member of OLV parish and teaching at John F. Kennedy Catholic School for 6 years. I have been involved in Youth Ministry for the last 3 years. I love to play board games, watch movies, and most of all spend time with my family. My family includes my parents, my grandparents who have been members of OLV for over 50 years, my sister, her husband, and my adorable twin 3 year old nephews.
Michael Clarke
I was born and raised in Davenport, IA. I attended Holy Family Catholic School (now All Saints) from K-8th grade and also graduated from St. Ambrose University but honestly my formation in the faith did not become a priority until I joined this parish a little over a decade ago. My wife Amanda and I were married at Sacred Heart Cathedral in Davenport on May 19, 2012. We were blessed to complete our Pre Cana work with an OLV sponsor couple and the late Msgr. Parizek. That wonderful priest and this great parish have accompanied and supported my family on an amazing and challenging journey to what I now consider to be a life filled with faith and blessings beyond my comprehension. Our twin daughters, Jasmine and Joslynn (14 years old), attended JFK from preschool – 5th grade and I have been involved with Youth Ministry for about 3 years. We have since moved to Eldridge, IA but remain active with this parish we have come to love. I feel a true calling to accompany youth as we all strive to grow in faith, love, and understanding of God. Much of my life was filled with pursuing my selfish wants in sometimes destructive ways but now-a-days my life remains peaceful and full from spending time with family, friends, and working with several OLV ministries that continue to provide both challenges and great amounts of joy.
Somethings About Mary
Last week we celebrated the Solemnity of the Annunciation, marking nine months until the Nativity. Catholics often receive a lot of questions about Mary from non-Catholics, especially non-Catholic Christians, so here are some FAQ talking points:
Catholics don’t believe that Mary is divine or to be worshiped as God. We believe that God is One Being in Three Persons, those Persons are the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Catholics do believe that Mary is the Mother of God, or Theotokos. Specifically, we believe she was the mother of the Second Person of the Trinity, when He became Incarnate as Jesus the Messiah. We do not claim that she existed eternally, but that God stepped into history as a human person at a specific moment in time, and selected her to be His mother.
Catholics do believe that Mary was conceived without sin and remained without sin her entire life through a special act of grace on the part of her Son, Jesus. This is called the Immaculate Conception. Why do we believe this? Lots of reasons! To start, Mary is addressed by the angel Gabriel as “full of grace” and “highly favored,” yet it is impossible for a sinful human person to be either of these things (Lk. 1:26-38). Likewise, we know that God is highly demanding regarding the purity and quality of materials to be used for those vessels which carry His covenant, see Exodus 25:10-22). Yet Mary isn’t a box carrying, the presence of the Lord, a set of stone tablets, and a bit of the manna from the desert wanderings of Israel. Mary is a human person, and what she carries is the Second Person of the Trinity, God Incarnate – the Kingdom of Heaven in Person, the new and everlasting Covenant, the true Bread from Heaven, which Israel and the tablets and manna only foreshadowed.
Catholics don’t believe that Mary didn’t need salvation. We believe that all human persons besides Jesus require salvation – a salvation only made possible by the graces emanating from the Passion, Death, Resurrection, and Ascension of Jesus. In the case of Mary, we believe these graces were given to her pre-emptively. Imagine a giant pit representing sin. Jesus saves most of us by pulling us out of the pit, but He saved Mary by preventing her from falling into it. Either way, salvation only comes through Him, and is absolutely necessary for all of us.
Catholics do pray to Mary. But we understand that prayer and worship are not the same things. To pray literally means “to ask,” and a Catholic praying to Mary is only asking for her intercession – similar to how the couple getting married in Cana in John chapter 2 relied on Mary’s aid, and similar to how many of us ask our family, friends, and other loved ones to regularly pray for us.
Related to this, Catholics do believe that Mary, as Queen of Heaven, has a special intercessory role in our lives. Mary is the Queen of Heaven because in the Davidic Kingdom, the mother of the King, not the wife of the King, was the Queen of Israel. A King could have many wives (just look at Solomon) but only one mother. Queens in Hebrew history also brought requests to the King, see the book of Esther, and 1 Kings 2:19.
Catholics don’t believe that Mary saves us from our sins. But we do believe that her “yes” (or fiat) to God in Luke 1 represents a special cooperation with God in salvation history that is unique. Nowhere else save perhaps in the Gardens of Eden and Gethsamene do we see God giving human freedom so great a scope and power to affect the course of history, which is part of why we also call Mary the “New Eve.” Had she, like Eve, said no, who can imagine the course of salvation history? That she said, “yes” to God is the source of all the blessings which Luke’s Gospel claims she will receive, for truly without Jesus there is no Mary, but without Mary, there is also no Jesus.
Kathy Peterson
I am a “cradle Catholic” and have been a member of OLV for 25 years. My husband Randy and I are celebrating 25 years of marriage and have three children – Joe (graduated from college), Erica (currently in college) and Carrie (will be entering college). I have lived in the Quad Cities my entire life and completed my undergraduate and graduate degrees from St. Ambrose University. I have been involved with youth for many years as a Boy Scout Leader and through school organizations. I enjoy camping, gardening, music and spending time with family and friends.
Laetare!
John 20:15
“why are you weeping? Whom are you looking for?”
John 9:35
“Do you believe in the Son of Man?”
John 21:17
“do you love me?”