2006 Religious Education Supplement
Following her mother’s path:
Daughter of late DRE enters youth ministry
By John Shaughnessy
The framed verse hangs above Emily
Perkins’ desk, reminding her of her
mother—the woman she lost to cancer, the woman who helped her discover the depth
of her faith.
The 23-year-old Perkins glances up at
the verse, which reads, “And what does the
Lord require of you but to do justice and to
love kindness and to walk humbly with
your God” (Mi 6:8).
“She wrote that quote in a letter for me
for my senior retreat in high school,”
Perkins recalls. “It was one of her favorite
Scripture verses. It really didn’t touch me
until after she passed away. Then it made
sense because it fit her and what her
mission for her ministry was.”
Before her death on Valentine’s Day in
2004, Beth Perkins had been the director of
religious education at Our Lady of the
Greenwood Parish in Greenwood for about
20 years.
It was not the life that Emily, the oldest
of Beth’s four children, wanted for herself.
Yet here she is—a recent college
graduate—starting a new job as the
coordinator of youth ministry at Our Lady
of Lourdes Parish in Indianapolis. She’s
now trying to help young people deepen a
faith that she once seriously questioned.
“When my mom died, it made me
question my faith,” says Emily, a 2006
graduate of Marian College in Indianapolis. “It made me mad for a while. At the same
time, I couldn’t stay mad long because I
knew the kind of faith she had. And that
was a comfort.
“I remember I had one conversation
with her when she was sick. I had come
home from school to visit. I was on the bed
with her. She said, ‘I don’t know how long
I’m going to be here. I know what I have to
do. If I’m supposed to stay here and be a
mother and a teacher, I’ll stay. But if it’s
time for me to go to heaven, I’m ready to
go.’
“After she died on Valentine’s Day, one
of my friends said that God had chosen the
ultimate valentine by choosing my mom.
Valentine’s Day will never be the same for
me. In a way, it’s a celebration of her love.”
So is Emily’s choice to follow her
mother’s path.
“Education was a big thing to her,
especially religious education,” Emily says. “She wanted us to know our faith and own
our faith. I want our young people to know
they are not just the future of the Church,
but they are today’s Church. They are not
too young to do things. They are not too
young to own their faith.”
One of the most serendipitous parts of
being at Our Lady of Lourdes for Emily is working with one of her mother’s closest
friends, Beverly Hansberry, the parish’s
pastoral associate and director of religious
education.
“I’ve called her Beth a couple of times,”
Hansberry says with a laugh as she sits next
to Emily. “I think of her mother all the
time. I think she’d be excited we were
working together. It’s almost bittersweet,
too, because I worked so much with Beth,
and it’s a blessing to do it with her
daughter, too. They’re different in a lot of
ways, but they have the same passion for
ministry. I saw Beth developing into this
wonderful, beautiful person. I almost see
Emily as a step ahead of her mother at this
age.”
Emily remembers the care and comfort
that Hansberry gave to her family when her
mother was dying. She knows the
difference it made to her father, Dave, and
her three brothers, Joshua, Andrew and
Zachary. She knows the difference it made
to her.
“She helped me plan my mom’s
funeral,” Emily says. “We’ve become
close friends since then.”
Emily’s plans now include trying to
find the best ways to connect young people to their faith.
“Youth ministry just can’t be fun and
games,” she says. “There needs to be an
element of learning. An important part of
my ministry will be teaching the youth
religious education and information on
the liturgy. They need to be a full member
of the Church. They need to understand
what the liturgy is and how everything we
do is connected to that in some way.”
Her thoughts soon drift back to her
mother. “In my freshman year of college, I had
just moved in and I was homesick,” Emily
recalls. “I came home that weekend and
we went to Lake Monroe. We went tubing
and cooked out. She went on the tubes
with all of us. We have some of the best
pictures of her from that—some of the
most sincere smiles from her.”
Emily can’t stop smiling either when
she thinks about how her mother would
react to her choice to become a youth
minister.
“I think she would ask me if I’m crazy,
but she would be thrilled,” Emily says. “She saw the Church for what it should
be. She believed in the Church and the
people of the Church.” †