SCRANTON – A new community garden, built on Catholic Social Services property in the 600-block of Wyoming Avenue, is not only adding beauty to the neighborhood, but it will also provide food to those in need.

On June 4, 2024, as part of Scranton City Pride, Catholic Social Services joined forces with United Neighborhood Centers and Scranton Tomorrow to install Pine Brook’s first community garden outside of Saint James Manor.

“United Neighborhood Centers offered assistance, including soil, tools, help with planting, and they even have the master gardeners coming out to do a skills class with us,” Shannon Caufield, Director of Residential Programs with Catholic Social Services, said.

With help from students at the Career Technology Center of L a c k a w a n n a County – in addition to some grant funding – several new garden beds were built and set up adjacent to the building’s parking lot.

“W e received some funding that permitted us to get some garden beds. We worked with the CTC, where they were able to build the garden beds for us as part of their senior project, and we just paid for the cost of the lumber and they came and installed them,” Caufield explained.

Residents, staff and even community members got their hands dirty – spreading out soil and putting the first plants in place.

Prior to the garden beds being installed, residents of Saint James Manor had been planting vegetables right in a dirt patch that existed.

Saint James Manor houses critical social service programs that support Scranton’s disenfranchised populations – including Saint Anthony’s Haven Emergency Shelter for those experiencing homelessness, a Mental Health Counseling Program which
provides transitional housing for individuals who are experiencing homelessness as a result of mental health issues, and the Citizens’ Re-Entry Program for the formerly incarcerated.

“They really did take ownership of it. They took care of it. It gave them something to do, some pride as well,” Caufield added. “When this opportunity came up to expand, we obviously said yes, immediately. The residents love it. Because many of them are experiencing homelessness, they need something to give them ownership and pride and this offers them that opportunity.”

In addition to regular garden beds, the CTC students also created several raised garden beds for anyone who might be in a wheelchair or have trouble bending down. When not growing vegetables, Catholic Social Services officials might add flowers to keep the area looking nice.

“We’re very excited … We’re looking forward to providing some fresh produce to our residents who can’t afford it as well as the local community,” Caufield said.

 

Diocese of Scranton

This month is a good time to consider making your will or reviewing your will to see if any changes need to be made. Here are three reasons to motivate you to write your will this August.

  1. It’s an important legal document that everyone should have.

All adults should have a will — it’s an essential document that states how you wish to distribute your property and protect your loved ones. 

  1. It provides peace of mind to you and your family.

Creating a will prevents family conflict, eliminates confusion, and ensures your assets go to the people you most want to have them. It also gives your family guidance and reassurance that they can fulfill your wishes. With a will, you can plan ahead for those who are in your care — for example, you can name a legal guardian for your minor children and choose who should care for your pets.

  1. It lets you create a legacy that lasts beyond your lifetime.

A will provides a wonderful opportunity to provide a legacy of kindness and goodwill after your lifetime.  Leaving a gift for a charitable organization in your estate plans ensures that you can make a positive impact on causes close to your heart for years to come.

Already made your will?

If you already have a will, it’s important to keep it updated. Estate attorneys recommend reviewing your will every three to five years or whenever you have a big life event (like getting married, moving or having a grandchild).

Do you need help making your will?

The Catholic Foundation for the Diocese of Scranton has materials to assist you with making your will. For more information,  contact Jame Bebla, executive director, at 570-207-2212 or  jbebla@catholicfoundationscranton.org 

EAST STROUDSBURG– A Lay Carmelite community that was founded in February 1999 in the Poconos by four parishioners of Saint Matthew Parish is celebrating its twenty-fifth anniversary this year.

Named ‘Our Lady of the Most Blessed Sacrament Lay Carmelite Community,’ the group has had enthusiastic and robust participation from the start.

Peter Cooney delivers a lecture on the history of the Carmelite Order July 20 at Saint Matthew Parish in East Stroudsburg.

Now numbering fifty members, more than forty of whom are active participants, the Community includes individuals from every parish in the Stroudsburg deanery.

Community founders were Ed Lawler, Harriett Eitzenberger and her deceased husband, Herm, and Marge Cantalupo.

In addition to the Lay Carmelite community in East Stroudsburg, the Diocese of Scranton has another one in Pittston.

The East Stroudsburg Chapter meets on the third Saturday of each month from 8:30 a.m. until 11:00 a.m. at Saint Matthew Parish, 78 Ridgeway Street, East Stroudsburg. For additional information, contact Eileen at (570) 977-8796 or Gerry at (570) 424-2879.

The Pittston community, named ‘Our Lady of the Mountains Lay Carmelite Community,’ meets on the third Saturday of each month from 9:00 a.m. until 11:00 a.m. at the Oblates of Saint Joseph Seminary, 1880 Highway 315, Pittston.
For additional i n f o r m a t i o n, contact Linda at (570) 862-2940 or Chris at (570)
239-8094.

L a y C a r m e l i t e s are lay people who share in the mission of the Carmelite Order. The call to Carmel is a call to seek God’s will in the ordinary circumstances of everyday life. This roots a Lay Carmelite in a love of those with whom they live and work.

VATICAN CITY (CNS) – The annual celebration of the World Day of Peace during the Holy Year 2025 will be inspired by “the concepts of hope and forgiveness” — including the forgiveness of foreign debt — “which are at the heart of the Jubilee,” the Vatican said.

Pope Francis has chosen “Forgive us our trespasses: grant us your peace” as the theme for the celebration Jan. 1, 2025, said an announcement Aug. 8 from the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development.

Pope Francis prays the Lord’s Prayer at the end of his weekly general audience in the Paul VI Audience Hall at the Vatican Aug. 23, 2023. (CNS photo/Lola Gomez)

The Holy Year, which the pope will open Dec. 24, is “a time for conversion that calls us not to condemn, but instead to bring about reconciliation and peace,” the dicastery said.

“When considering the reality of conflicts and social sins afflicting humanity today in light of the hope inherent in the Jubilee tradition of the forgiveness of sins and the cancellation of debts, together with the reflections of the Fathers of the Church in this regard, concrete principles emerge that can lead to a much needed spiritual, social, economic, ecological and cultural change,” it continued.

“Only from a genuine conversion on all levels — personal, local and international -– will true peace be able to flourish,” the announcement said. Conversion is needed “not only in the cessation of conflicts but also in a new reality in which wounds are healed and each person’s dignity is recognized.”

The pope’s message for the World Day of Peace usually is released in early December and shared with heads of state around the world by Vatican ambassadors.

In “Spes non Confundit” (“Hope Does Not Disappoint”), his bull proclaiming the Holy Year 2025, Pope Francis appealed to the world’s wealthiest nations to “acknowledge the gravity of so many of their past decisions and determine to forgive the debts of countries that will never be able to repay them.”

“If we really wish to prepare a path to peace in our world, let us commit ourselves to remedying the remote causes of injustice, settling unjust and unpayable debts, and feeding the hungry,” the pope wrote.

In the Hebrew Scriptures, God commanded his people to observe a jubilee as a time to restore their relationships with God, with other people and with the land, including by forgiving the debts of the poor.

 

Pictured are St. Martha’s parishioners and Festival volunteers. First row, from left: Josephine Shaul, Rev. Philbert Takyi-Nketiah. Second row: Leann Everett, Amanda Matysik, Samuel Matysik, Hannah Matysik, Abigail Matysik, Phoebe Clink, Madilyn Everett, Caroline Myers, Julia Myers, Allison Myers. Third row: Raphael Micca, Janet Romano, Rebecca Micca, Megan Howanitz, Ann Howanitz, Victoria Zultevicz, Krista Zultevicz, Sharon Telesky. Fourth row: Mary Dluzeski, Garrett Sutton, Joan Pauley, Mark Stransky, Dorothy Howanitz, Andrea Shaul, Ellen Shaul, Joann Ftorkowski, Barbara Simmons, Emma Zylo, Stanley Ftorkowski. Fifth row: John Dluzeski, Richard Matysik, Christopher Zultevicz, Bonnie Zultevicz, Gene Zultevicz, Donna Cragle, Ronald Narcavage, Joy White, Thomas White.

FAIRMOUNT SPRINGS – Holy Spirit Parish will hold its annual Festival and Chicken Dinner at St. Martha’s Church, 260 Bonnieville Road, Fairmount Springs, on Saturday, August 31 from 5:00 until 11:00 p.m. and Sunday, September 1 from 12:00 noon until 11:00 p.m. Mass will be offered at 4:00 p.m. on Saturday and at 10:00 a.m. on Sunday.

St. Martha’s Festival features Polish and American food, a café with cakes, pies, and coffee, as well as an ice cream stand, children’s games, a dime pitch, basket raffle, and a large indoor flea market. Barbecue chicken dinners will be available for outdoor dining or take out on both Saturday and Sunday. There will be live music nightly, with the Lance Thomas Band performing on Saturday and 404 Band on Sunday. The Festival will be held rain or shine under the big tent.

St. Martha’s Church, which is celebrating its centennial this year, has hosted Labor Day chicken dinners since the 1920s. In the early years of the church, local farmers donated chickens, which were dispatched, cleaned, and prepared by the women of the church. In 1980, the dinner expanded into the two day Festival that continues today.

For more information, visit www.facebook.com/saintmartha or call Florence Brozoski at 570-864-3780 or the church at 570-864-8588.


 

(Shown are Committee Members, from Left to Right) Front Row: Dr. Chris Carr, Kurt Kushner, Tony DePaola. 2nd Row: Jim Biondo, Raphael Micca, Kevin Berli, Jack Walsh, John Brzycki, Joe Adcroft, Frank Socha, Father Brian VanFossen (Conference Chaplain). 3rd Row: Mike Kilmer (Conference Chairman), Dr. Lou Guarnieri, Paul Binner, Alex Piochocki, David Sutton, Joe Alinoski, Ralph Marino, Tim Pawlik, Deacon Marty Castaldi and John Leskosky. Also in attendance was Christopher Calore.

Members for ‘Be A Catholic Man’ recently gathered to plan for its ninth annual Catholic Men’s Conference. This year’s theme will be ‘Come Follow Me’. The event will be held at Holy Redeemer High School, 159 S. Pennsylvania Ave., Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Saturday, October 5th, 2024, from 8 am to 3 pm.

Nationally known speakers will be: Deacon Harold Burke-Sivers, John Edwards, Father Bill Casey, and concluding with Mass Offered by Bishop Joseph Bambera.  These informative talks are conducive for fathers and sons, clergy, and men of every age.

Admission can be acquired by mailing $40.00 ($30.00 if mailed by Sept. 15th). Students are $15.00.  Priests, Deacons and Seminarians are free.

Mail to: “Be A Catholic Man”, PO Box 669, Wyalusing, Pa. 18853. (Please write “Men’s Conference” on the check memo and include ones contact info, e-mail, and Parish.) Online registries: www.BeACatholicMan.com.

For more information, call 570-721-0872. 

 

WASHINGTON (OSV News) – In the wake of the Supreme Court’s 2022 Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization decision, the number of abortions in the United States have increased, even as some states implemented near-total bans on the procedure, according to a report by #WeCount, a research project by the Society of Family Planning, a group that supports legal abortion. Pro-life activists who spoke with OSV News expressed concern about the report — and the trends it observed.

According to the latest quarterly #WeCount report, the national monthly total of abortions of unborn children exceeded 100,000 in January 2024, the first time that threshold was observed in the report. The report has collected data since April 2022, two months prior to the Dobbs decision, which saw the Supreme Court overturn its jurisprudence holding abortion to be a constitutional right since Roe v. Wade (1973).

A pro-life activist demonstrates outside an abortion clinic in Fort Pierce, Fla., April 27, 2024. (OSV News photo/Marco Bello, Reuters)

According to #WeCount, between 94,670 and 102,350 abortions occurred monthly from January-March 2024, with a monthly average of 98,990.

The report also found that abortion via telehealth — a term referring to health care services provided over the phone or internet — continued to increase, growing to represent about 20% of all abortions nationally.

“Telehealth abortion is making a critical difference” for those seeking abortions “in this increasingly restrictive environment,” Dr. Ushma Upadhyay, #WeCount co-chair and a professor with the University of California, San Francisco’s Advancing New Standards in Reproductive Health research group, said in a statement.

But Tessa Cox, senior research associate at Charlotte Lozier Institute, told OSV News, “It’s very concerning to see the rapid increase in abortion-by-mail.”

“Abortion drugs have four times the complication rate of surgical abortion, and the risks only increase when these drugs are sent through the mail with no in-person interaction with a medical provider,” Cox claimed. “The lack of oversight enables abusers and endangers women. Women deserve real information about their pregnancy and unborn baby, not a careless stamp of approval from an abortion provider in a distant state.”

Kristi Hamrick, vice president of media and policy for both Students for Life Action and Students for Life of America, told OSV News that the report should be treated with some skepticism, as there is no formal requirement for states to tally abortions in the United States.

“We can’t verify,” she said. “There is no national abortion reporting law in the U.S.”

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention conduct an annual “Abortion Surveillance System” report that compiles state data on abortion. However, states participate on a voluntary basis, and not every state submits data.

“We need to protect life in law and in service — not because of a report that may be false — but because it’s true that human lives have worth,” Hamrick said, adding, “I certainly hope they are wrong.”

The Catholic Church teaches that all human life is sacred from conception to natural death, opposing direct abortion as an act of violence that takes the life of the unborn child.

After the Dobbs decision, church officials in the U.S. have reiterated the church’s concern for both mother and child, and called for strengthening available support for those living in poverty or other causes that can push women toward having an abortion.

VATICAN CITY (CNS) – Each Christian and the whole Catholic Church must hold fast to the promise that “nothing is impossible for God,” especially when facing difficulties, Pope Francis said.

Resuming his weekly general audiences Aug. 7 after a six-week summer break, the pope returned to his series of audience talks about the role of the Holy Spirit in the life of the church.

Pope Francis leads his weekly general audience Aug. 7, 2024, in the Paul VI Audience Hall at the Vatican. (CNS photo/LolaGomez)

“Without the Holy Spirit, the church cannot keep moving, the church doesn’t grow, the church cannot preach,” he told pilgrims and visitors sheltered from the summer heat in the air-conditioned Paul VI Audience Hall.

Two women holding signs and shouting for the church to formally declare bullfighting a sin interrupted the reading of a passage from the Bible at the beginning of the audience. Security escorted them out of the audience hall.

Looking at how the Holy Spirit enlivens and assists the church, Pope Francis said people often wonder, “How is it possible to proclaim Jesus Christ and his salvation to a world that seems to seek only well-being in this world?”

The answer, he said, is given in the Acts of the Apostles: “You will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes upon you, and you will be my witnesses.”

Notice, the pope said, the words are almost the same as those the Angel Gabriel said to Mary when she asked how it would be possible that she would conceive and bear God’s son.

“What is said about the church in general also applies to us, to every baptized person,” Pope Francis told the crowd. “In life, all of us sometimes find ourselves in situations beyond our strength, and we ask ourselves: ‘How can I cope with this situation?’ It helps, in such cases, to repeat to ourselves what the angel said to the Virgin: ‘With God nothing will be impossible.'”

The pope prayed that everyone would find the strength to keep going “with this comforting certainty in our hearts: ‘With God nothing will be impossible.'”

“If we believe this, we will perform miracles,” he said. “With God nothing will be impossible.”

(OSV News) – Among American Olympians achieving a spot on the podium in Paris are Catholics who have expressed their dependence on faith over the years as they’ve pursued excellence in their athletic pursuits.

Swimmer Katie Ledecky is outspoken about how her Catholic faith guides her life.

Katie Ledecky of the United States is pictured during the women’s 800-meter freestyle heats Aug. 2, 2024, during the Olympic Games in Paris. (OSV News photo/Ueslei Marcelino, Reuters)

On Aug. 3, Ledecky became the most decorated American female gold medalist in any sport as well as one of only two women from any nation, in any sport, to win nine gold medals. It was her fourth consecutive Olympic gold medal in the 800 freestyle. She has 14 medals total. Just two days earlier she won her 13th Olympic medal — in itself historic. She took silver in the 4×200-meter freestyle relay.

After the 2021 Olympic games in Tokyo, the Catholic school graduate told the Catholic Standard, the Archdiocese of Washington’s newspaper, that she prayed the Hail Mary before each race to calm her nerves, just as she had during the 2012 and 2016 Olympics.

“My faith remains very important in my life, especially the last two years,” Ledecky told the Catholic Standard in 2021. She noted that watching livestreamed Mass, celebrated by her godfather Jesuit Father Jim Shea at a parish in Charlotte, North Carolina, helped her through the pandemic.

“My faith is strong, and I realized more how important that is,” she said.

Ledecky, 27, has nine gold, four silver and one bronze Olympic medals. In Paris, she is teammates with two fellow alumnae of her all-girls high school, Stone Ridge School of the Sacred Heart in Bethesda, Maryland: Phoebe Bacon and Erin Gemmell. Gemmell medaled alongside Ledecky with the 4×200 meter relay.

Ledecky and Bacon also attended the elementary Little Flower School in Bethesda, where both families are members of the parish.

They are among a host of U.S. Olympians who are Catholic, were raised in the faith, or attended Catholic schools or colleges and are now competing in Paris. Several have spoken in the past about the role their faith has played in their training and shaped their self-perception.

U.S. Olympic gymnast and Paris gold medalist Simone Biles, who was raised Catholic and in years past spoke about the role of faith in her life, has said she credits God for her success.

The high-flying 27-year-old, who trains in Spring, Texas, at her World Champions Centre gym, said in the past that when she travels, she sometimes takes with her a statue of St. Sebastian, the patron saint of athletes, and she also carries a rosary her mother gave her. Her parents have told media that they often pray the rosary for Simone. Biles and her family have also been known to attend St. James Catholic Church in Spring.

Biles, who won gold in the women’s gymnastics all-around competition in Paris Aug. 1 and helped lead the U.S. women to a team gold July 30, made those comments to Us Weekly in 2016.

“I never thought I’d be who I am,” she told Vanity Fair in a story published in January, “but look at God’s blessings.”

In recent years, Biles has been more private about her faith journey. In 2021, she diverged from church teaching on abortion access, saying on Twitter (now X) that she was “very pro-choice” arguing “you should not control someone elses body/decision.”

However, Biles has also been outspoken about addressing and prioritizing mental health, an issue the U.S. bishops have sought to raise with the National Catholic Mental Health Campaign. Following the pandemic-delayed Tokyo Olympics, Biles (a survivor of sexual abuse perpetrated by Larry Nassar, a USA Gymnastics’ national-team doctor) publicly admitted that she struggled with her mental health and athletics. At the time, she had stepped out of the Olympic competition after experiencing the “twisties,” a sense of disorientation when in motion that could lead to serious injury.

In Paris, however, Biles has exuded confidence — publicly thanking her therapist for routine care — and her dedication to her sport has paid off, with many calling her the “greatest of all time.” She is now the most decorated U.S. Olympic gymnast in history, with nine Olympic medals.

Ryan Murphy, a Catholic swimmer who grew up in Florida, is taking home a bronze medal in the men’s 100-meter backstroke. In a 2016 interview with the National Catholic Register, he described the importance of having an active prayer life and living out his faith. He said, “I’m a firm believer in God. My faith is important to me. There are, however, times when I rely on him more than others. Overall, I am private in my spirituality.”

Murphy, 29, drew the spotlight in Paris not only for his race, but for the sign his wife, Bridget, held up as he was walking to the podium: “Ryan it’s a girl!” The couple, who married in September, are reportedly expecting their first child in January.

A former altar boy, Murphy described his family to the Register as ardent supporters of Catholic education. The story described him as having “a great devotion to St. Christopher, the patron saint of swimmers.”

He garnered attention during the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro — where he won three gold medals — after genuflecting following a swim.

“I believe God has given me a great talent, for which I’m eternally grateful,” he told the Register at the time. “My faith gives me comfort despite the outcome of a race. I ultimately believe — I know — God has a larger plan for me.”

BRAINTREE, Mass. (OSV News) – Ending months of speculation about the future leadership of the Archdiocese of Boston, Pope Francis has accepted the resignation of Cardinal Seán P. O’Malley and appointed Bishop Richard G. Henning of Providence, Rhode Island, to succeed him as the archdiocese’s 10th bishop and seventh archbishop.

The resignation and appointment were publicized in Washington Aug. 5 by Cardinal Christophe Pierre, apostolic nuncio to the United States.

Pope Francis has appointed Bishop Richard G. Henning of Providence, R.I., to succeed Cardinal Seán P. O’Malley as archbishop of Boston. The pope accepted Cardinal O’Malley’s resignation as head of the archdiocese Aug. 5, 2024, and named his successor the same day. The Boston Archdiocese announced Archbishop Henning will be installed Oct. 31. (OSV News photo/Gregory A. Shemitz)

According to the archdiocese, Archbishop Henning, 59, will be installed Oct. 31. Cardinal O’Malley remains archbishop of Boston until that date.

According to rules set by St. Paul VI, all bishops must submit their resignation to the pope at age 75, which the pope is free to accept or defer as he chooses. However, because the same rules dictate that cardinals lose their appointments in Vatican dicasteries and may not participate in the conclave to elect the next pope once they turn 80, it is typically expected that the pope will accept the resignation of active cardinals at or around that age.

Cardinal O’Malley celebrated his 80th birthday on June 29. He has headed the Boston Archdiocese since July 2003. Archbishop Henning has headed the Providence Diocese since his May 1, 2023, installation.

For the time being, Cardinal O’Malley remains the head of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, a body created by Pope Francis to fight pedophilia by priests that the Boston prelate has led since 2014.

In a statement released in English and Spanish, Cardinal O’Malley welcomed Archbishop Henning on behalf of the archdiocese’s priests, religious, deacons and laity.

“We extend our deep gratitude to the Holy Father for this appointment demonstrating his ongoing pastoral care for the people of the Archdiocese,” he said, adding that he looked forward “to our people and the wider community” getting to know his successor in “in the days, weeks, months and years ahead. He ministers with the heart of a pastor with a sincere commitment to serving Christ and the Church.”

Cardinal O’Malley asked the faithful of the archdiocese to pray for the newly named archbishop “as he begins to plan for this transition. In the meantime, please be assured of my continued prayers for all of you.”

Archbishop Henning expressed gratitude to the pope “for his confidence in me and for his conferral of this new mission as Archbishop of Boston. I receive this appointment relying upon divine Providence, aware that this is the Lord’s Church and that I am no more than an unworthy servant.”

He thanked Cardinal O’Malley for serving “the Church of Boston for many faithful and joyful years” and greeted the clergy, religious and laity of the archdiocese, asking for their prayers “that I may cling to the Lord’s Holy Cross, honor His mother, imitate His saints, and love you as His people and His ministers.”

After Cardinal O’Malley and Archbishop Henning celebrated a morning Mass at the archdiocesan Pastoral Center, they held a joint press conference.

The church has faced many challenges in his 40 years as a bishop, the cardinal said, including “a time of great crisis and of great pain because of the terrible scourge of sexual abuse.” “But despite all the challenges we’ve had I’m full of hope,” he said.

Cardinal O’Malley described his successor as “someone who transmits hope to restless hearts” and said his appointment is “a time of renewal and hope.”

Archbishop Henning said he was a child himself when many of “these crimes and sins” of abuse were committed. “I’m grateful to God that I was not affected by it personally, but people in my generation were,” he added.

The survivors “deserve a listening heart,” he said. “In some ways they have as much to proclaim to us about the Gospel as we do to them.”

Shortly after his appointment was announced, Archbishop Henning told reporters his first actions as Boston’s new shepherd will be “visiting, listening, learning before I start setting priorities.”

In a statement directed at the Diocese of Providence, he said, “You may have noticed that I usually have something to say. I regret that in this instance, I do not feel that I can find the words to express my sorrow in leaving the Church of Providence. In so many ways and moments, you have welcomed me into your churches, homes, and hearts. Your resilience in the face of challenges, your commitment to family and community, and your abiding faith in Jesus have lifted me and taught me. I am ever in your debt.”

“I will never cease to pray for you, and I hope for your prayers for me,” he said.

Richard Garth Henning was born in Rockville Centre, New York, Oct. 17, 1964, to Richard and Maureen Henning, the first of five siblings. He grew up in Valley Stream, receiving the sacraments of baptism, first Communion and confirmation at Holy Name of Mary Parish, where he also attended the parish grammar school.

Archbishop Henning attended Chaminade High School in Mineola, New York, going on to earn bachelor’s and master’s degrees in history from St. John’s University in the New York City borough of Queens. He studied for the priesthood at Immaculate Conception Seminary in Huntington, New York, and was ordained in 1992.

Following his ordination, he was assigned to a local parish for five years and gained extensive pastoral experience working in the parish school and ministering to the Spanish-speaking Catholics of the area.

In 1997, then-Father Henning was assigned to postgraduate studies in sacred Scripture. He earned a licentiate in biblical theology at The Catholic University of America in Washington and a doctorate in the same subject from the University of St. Thomas Aquinas in Rome.

After his studies, Archbishop Henning joined the faculty of Immaculate Conception Seminary in Huntington, where he taught Scripture for more than 10 years.

In 2012, as part of the partnership for seminary formation among the dioceses of Rockville Centre, New York, and Brooklyn, New York, and the Archdiocese of New York, then-Msgr. Henning was appointed to lead Immaculate Conception Seminary through its transition to the largest retreat house in the Northeast. The ordinaries of Rockville Centre, Brooklyn and New York also charged him to establish and lead the Sacred Heart Institute for the ongoing formation of Catholic priests and deacons. Archbishop Henning is also noted for his work with international priests serving in the U.S.

In 2018, Pope Francis appointed then-Msgr. Henning as an auxiliary bishop of the Diocese of Rockville Centre, where he served as a regional vicar and later as the vicar for Clergy and Pastoral Planning.

In November 2022, Archbishop Henning was appointed the coadjutor bishop of Providence. He succeeded Bishop Thomas Tobin as the Bishop of Providence on May 1, 2023.