[dropcap type=”4″]T[/dropcap]he André House of Hospitality west of downtown Phoenix is about to turn 30. Its outreach began with evening meals for homeless guests and expanded in response to need for clothes, transitional housing, showers and other services.
The presence of Congregation of Holy Cross priests was a mainstay through it all. This month, André House welcomed Fr. Tom Doyle as its new executive director. He follows Fr. Eric Schimmel, who led the organization since 2008.
Fr. Doyle has been a priest for 16 years with much pastoral and administrative work that will serve him well in Phoenix. He voluntarily pursued a master’s degree in business to help him become a better business ethics teacher.[quote_box_right]
André House
Rooted in ideals of the Congregation of Holy Cross and the Catholic Worker movement, core staff and volunteers meet basic food, hygiene, transitional and spiritual needs of homeless guests.
Info: (602) 255-0580 or www.andrehouse.org
[/quote_box_right]
Fr. Doyle comes with an understanding of how the mission side of things can influence the financial. He held upper level positions at the University of Notre Dame and the University of Portland where he served as vice president for university relations and then as executive vice president.
“I can’t believe how efficiently it runs,” Fr. Doyle told The Catholic Sun after visiting André House in July. “I’ve never seen anything run on such a lean budget — almost no paid staff.”
That’s because the ministry has some 10,000 volunteer opportunities each year with parish and other groups serving regularly. He sees every volunteer’s input as valuable whether they’re a rookie or a veteran. Some have been coming for 15-20 years and have formed an extended sense of community.
They all have at least a basic idea of one of the Holy Cross priest’s favorite topic: applied theology. Fr. Doyle is eager to experience it through André House.
“How do you help people understand working in the world isn’t a dirty thing? It’s a beautiful thing,” he told The Catholic Sun.
The core staff at André House see it that way too. They’re serving some 200,000 meals a year so that homeless guests don’t go hungry. They’re facilitating shower and laundry opportunities and dishing out compliments and smiles in the soup line.
They’re visiting André House’s two transitional homes nightly to share an evening meal and conversation with guests. Fr. Doyle is eager to join them at the table there and at the soup kitchen.
“It’s one thing to feed them. It’s another to be able to say, ‘We’re going to create a stable environment,’” Fr. Doyle said.
His younger sister happened to have served as a Holy Cross Associate at an outreach of André House in the 1990s, so he has known about its efforts for many years. He noted the weariness yet strength of those André House serves.
“They live with so much uncertainty and how many things they live without that we take for granted,” Fr. Doyle said.
He finds humility, strength and joy in preparing a place at the table for anyone needing bodily nourishment. André House even serves breakfast on weekends when a nearby soup kitchen isn’t open.
Brother Richard Armstrong has been serving as interim executive director. He has worked at André House almost since its inception and found Fr. Doyle to genuinely care for those they serve. He is looking forward to opening new doors together with Fr. Doyle who he describes as young, spirited and full of energy.