Catholics from across country meet in Indiana for National Eucharistic Congress

Bishop Andrew Cozzens of Crookston, Minnesota, who spearheaded the U.S. bishops’ initiative of Eucharistic Revival, adores Christ in the Eucharist with tens of thousands of people in Lucas Oil Stadium on July 17, 2024. (Credit: Jeffrey Bruno)

Indianapolis, Ind., Jul 18, 2024 / 16:29 pm (CNA).

Tens of thousands of Catholics from across the U.S. have come together to praise the Lord in Eucharistic adoration this week in an NFL stadium at the National Eucharistic Congress in Indianapolis.

Bishop Andrew Cozzens of Crookston, Minnesota, who led U.S. bishops’ initiative of Eucharistic Revival, called the congress “a moment of unity” for the Church in the United States.

As the bishop held up the Blessed Sacrament in a massive 4-foot monstrance in center field of Lucas Oil Stadium, the crowd prayed together “Jesus, I trust in you.”

For many, the journey to Indianapolis was a pilgrimage of profound spiritual significance. Parishes, religious orders, families, clergy, and laypeople embarked on their travels by plane, car, and on foot driven by a deep desire to deepen their relationship with the real presence of Jesus in the Eucharist.

Diane Hanley drove nearly 600 miles with three other women from Little Rock, Arkansas, for a “girls’ trip” to the July 17–21 congress.

“It was blessed the whole way,” Hanley told CNA. “We took like three hours to say one rosary in the car because of all the intentions and all the reflections and everything,” she added. “So the journey is part of the joy.”

One-hundred-fifty people traveled from the Diocese of Sacramento, California — among them Josie, who said that she came to the congress to receive Christ and to be able to better evangelize.

“I am an evangelizer in my community, and I feel like I need more learning experience to be able to better evangelize people because Christ is love and I just love him,” she said.

Dom Mann and his wife Cassidy, Ohioans in their early 20s, are spending their first anniversary at the Congress. Credit: Jeffrey Bruno
Dom Mann and his wife Cassidy, Ohioans in their early 20s, are spending their first anniversary at the Congress. Credit: Jeffrey Bruno

Newlyweds Dominic and Cassidy Mann, 23 and 21, respectively, from Cleveland are celebrating their first wedding anniversary at the congress. They told CNA that they came to the National Eucharistic Congress seeking to “experience Jesus at a whole other level.”

“Our first time being Eucharistic ministers was our wedding. So to be able to have that and to spend our one-year at the congress is just very beautiful and impactful,” Dominic said.

“The Eucharist has meant a lot in our marriage,” Cassidy added. As young Catholics, growing in faith together throughout dating, engagement, and marriage has been “transformative in our relationship,” she said.

The Manns were not the only couple to mark a relationship milestone at the congress.

Charlie Chengary, 21, and Katherine Blawas, 22, a young couple from Chicago and Ohio respectively, got engaged in Indianapolis on the eve of the congress. The two began dating a little over a year ago after meeting on Catholic Match.

“I have never been in a place with so many Catholics. This is like a little foretaste of heaven,” Blawas said.

Jaella Mac Au, one of the Perpetual Pilgrims, in front of St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church, the endpoint of the National Eucharistic Pilgrimages. Credit: Jeffrey Bruno
Jaella Mac Au, one of the Perpetual Pilgrims, in front of St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church, the endpoint of the National Eucharistic Pilgrimages. Credit: Jeffrey Bruno

Jaella Mac Au, 20, traveled 2,200 miles across 12 states over two months as a pilgrim in one of four Eucharistic pilgrimage groups that traversed the United States to arrive at the congress.

Her pilgrimage group began their journey by walking over San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge in a Eucharistic procession.

She told CNA that tears came to her eyes when she finally arrived in Indianapolis this week.

“It was wonderful and beautiful,” Mac Au said. “We were the first route to get here … and I was like, ‘I don’t believe we’re actually here.’”

She added that her experience as a pilgrim helped her understand that Jesus “doesn’t just sit in a church” but desires to be brought out into the world for all to see.

“The Lord is present in his body, blood, soul, and divinity,” she said. “He desires to go out and proclaim the good news that he sees us and that he loves us.”

Sister Faustina and Sister Anastasia Marie, Carmelite Sisters of the Most Sacred Heart of Los Angeles, came with a delegation of 22 sisters to the Congress. Credit: Jeffrey Bruno
Sister Faustina and Sister Anastasia Marie, Carmelite Sisters of the Most Sacred Heart of Los Angeles, came with a delegation of 22 sisters to the Congress. Credit: Jeffrey Bruno

Sister Faustina and Sister Anastasia Marie, Carmelite Sisters of the Most Sacred Heart of Los Angeles, came with a delegation of 22 sisters to the congress.

“The Eucharist is the center of our spirituality. All that we do comes from a relationship with our Lord, and we spend much of our day in prayer, and then we go out to serve in the apostolate,” Sister Faustina said.

“We encounter Our Lord in the Eucharist and also go out to meet him with his people. And all of that comes from encountering him in the Eucharist.”

Sister Anastasia Marie added that she is praying for people to “have a deeper encounter with God’s mercy through the Eucharist” during the congress.

Brian and Angela Barcelos from Raynham, Massachusetts, at the National Eucharistic Congress in Indianapolis on July 17, 2024. Credit: Jeffrey Bruno/EWTN
Brian and Angela Barcelos from Raynham, Massachusetts, at the National Eucharistic Congress in Indianapolis on July 17, 2024. Credit: Jeffrey Bruno/EWTN

Large crowds created long lines on the first day of the National Eucharistic Congress. Brian and Angela Barcelos from Raynham, Massachusetts, waited more than one-and-a-half hours to pick up their name badges for the congress but did not seem too upset about it. “We are here for the Eucharist!” Brian said.

More than 54,000 people had bought tickets for the congress as of July 17, according to the organizers.

All 50 states and 17 countries are represented among the congress participants, which include more than 1,000 priests and 200 bishops and cardinals.

“I feel like I’ve already gotten so much out of this already just by being in line,” Blawas said.

Bishop John Doerfler of Marquette, Michigan, called the National Eucharistic Congress July 17-21, 2024, “a privileged opportunity for us to deepen the bonds of our unity of faith in the Lord Jesus.” Credit: Jeffrey Bruno/CNA
Bishop John Doerfler of Marquette, Michigan, called the National Eucharistic Congress July 17-21, 2024, “a privileged opportunity for us to deepen the bonds of our unity of faith in the Lord Jesus.” Credit: Jeffrey Bruno/CNA

Bishop John Doerfler of Marquette, Michigan, was joined by 50 people from his diocese who made the trip from Michigan’s Upper Peninsula to the congress.

The bishop hosted a diocesan Eucharistic congress as part of the National Eucharistic Revival leading up to the national congress. He said that he is looking forward to meeting Catholics from across the country over the next five days.

“It’s a privileged opportunity for us to deepen the bonds of our unity of faith in the Lord Jesus and show him our great gratitude for the precious gift he gives to us of himself in the holy Eucharist,” Doerfler said.

Members of the National Association of African Catholics in the United States pose for a group photo on July 17, 2024, at the National Eucharistic Congress in Indianapolis. The group performed praise and worship songs from East and West Africa during the event. Credit: Jeffrey Bruno/EWTN
Members of the National Association of African Catholics in the United States pose for a group photo on July 17, 2024, at the National Eucharistic Congress in Indianapolis. The group performed praise and worship songs from East and West Africa during the event. Credit: Jeffrey Bruno/EWTN

The National Association of African Catholics in the United States registered more than 90 people for the congress.

The group performed praise and worship songs from East and West Africa, bringing their cultural heritage from Nigeria, Ghana, Cameroon, Zimbabwe, and Ivory Coast to the Exhibition Hall stage at the congress.

“Celebrating the Eucharist is at the center of everything we do,” said Sally Stovall, the president of the association. “That’s what the African community is trying to portray in terms of bringing our cultural heritage for everybody to see how we celebrate in our countries.”

Tim Glemkowski, CEO of the National Eucharistic Congress. Credit: Jeffrey Bruno
Tim Glemkowski, CEO of the National Eucharistic Congress. Credit: Jeffrey Bruno

Tim Glemkowski, father of four and CEO of the National Eucharistic Congress, told CNA that he hopes each and every attendee at the Congress will encounter Jesus personally and be sent on mission to share Christ’s love with the world.

“About two and a half years of planning have gone into this moment, and it’s incredible to see it come to fruition even greater than we expected in so many ways,” Glemkowski said.

“God is with his Church right now. This all happened — the incredible pilgrimage with 250,000 people joining and 50,000 people here — it is all possible because God is doing something in his Church right now. And so we need to be attentive to that and open to what he’s trying to do today.”


If you value the news and views Catholic World Report provides, please consider donating to support our efforts. Your contribution will help us continue to make CWR available to all readers worldwide for free, without a subscription. Thank you for your generosity!

Click here for more information on donating to CWR. Click here to sign up for our newsletter.


About Catholic News Agency 12015 Articles
Catholic News Agency (www.catholicnewsagency.com)

7 Comments

  1. 62 million US Catholics, 50,000 of wealthier or underwritten by orders or organization/parish memberships able to pay expensive lodging, food and entertainment expenses, a likely inflated 250,000 attendees nationwide pilgrimage attendees (I guess including regular church attendees at stops at churches for mass) and the USCCB has spent how much on this “evangelization”/preaching to the choir effort? And how much spent by wealthy to hang with other Catholics for a pep rally? And it reached how many average pew sitters? And it all in a knee jerk reaction (spend piles on promoting an activity for the rich who can take time off from work) to an initially flawed survey?

    Another something put together by advertising experts at the corporate USCCB….and yes, I feel the exact same about assorted Vatican run world events….shallow superficial pep rallies of generally no lasting impact past crowd emotion akin to a good live music concert….cosmic, dude…but spiritual? No….

    • If a five-day vacation to Indianapolis and a $300+ fee for the five days requires one to be “wealthy,” then the country is even in worse economic shape than I thought. I have been more interested in the Eucharistic pilgrimages going on over the past two months, beginning on Pentecost, than in the Congress. I participated in one of the larger pilgrimages with around 1,200 participants and there were much larger ones, along with ones with hundreds of participants and smaller ones with only dozens of participants. And evry size in between. But there were many of them, going on daily on four different routes. I have watched dozens of pilgrimage videos on YouTube. The pilgrimage turnout in rural areas especially surprised me. Based on what I saw,I believe the estimate of 250,000 participants is lowballing it. Unlike the Congress, there is no fee for the pilgrimages and that has probably encouraged participation, since anyone living near one of the stops on the routes could easily join in, as long as they could get there.

      I have only watched some of the Congress broadcasts but it has been better than I expected. However, I am trying to witness this through the eyes of faith in Jesus Christ as much as possible, rather than through the eyes of my many disappointments in the human failures in the Church over recent years. That has probably helped. But it is time for more of those “pewsitters” to start accepting their responsibility as members of the Body of Christ, or else little will substantially change. If the majority of folks prefer to sit back and wait for all of the bishops of the USCCB, or any bishop’s conference, to change in the way that they want, then we might as well throw in the towel right now.

      • I can understand his viewpoint, since a daily mass has the same Jesus. Yet most Catholics don’t even attend Sunday mass on a regular basis or likely feel any guilt or angst about not attending.

      • Yes, the country and most Catholics ARE far worse off than you are aware. Most people have trouble getting or taking a week-long vacation or even sick day, and when they do, they haven’t money to spend, nor can they afford somebody to watch children while maybe mom and dad spend $600 to attend a pep rally, and while news reports show bars were packed in Indianapolis for the congress with folk spending even more on boozy hobnobbing. I am always amazed at how out of touch the more successful folk are from those who keep the lights and water on, gather the garbage, and make sure clothing, food, and gas available, the flyover country in every neighborhood, while many parishoners at every church struggle with bills, health care, and alone, and utterly unseen.

        • You have no idea who I am, or where I come from, yet you seem to assume the worst of me right off the bat. But for someone living paycheck to paycheck– and I have been one of them–everyone making more money than they are seems wealthy. In fact, anyone with any sort of disposable income probably seems wealthy. I hope things improve for you, Bob. I will pray for you,

      • I agree. My daughter and her entire family have been in Indianapolis at the Congress.
        Our diocese offered financial assistance to those who could not afford the cost.
        Indianapolis might be a great place to visit but I doubt it’s a prime destination for posh vacations.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

All comments posted at Catholic World Report are moderated. While vigorous debate is welcome and encouraged, please note that in the interest of maintaining a civilized and helpful level of discussion, comments containing obscene language or personal attacks—or those that are deemed by the editors to be needlessly combative or inflammatory—will not be published. Thank you.


*