Regina Fontana was in an airport on her way home from a pilgrimage to Italy when she realized she wanted to leave her job and pursue a calling from God — she just didn’t know what. 

It was only in the weeks after she turned down a job offer as a flight attendant — her dream for many years — that she came across Team Saint Paul. 

“I made this really big decision and I quit everything,” she recalled. “And here I am like, ‘What’s next, Lord? I don’t know what I’m doing here, so I need your help.’”  

Team Saint Paul, a new endeavor by the Archdiocese for the Military Services, USA, places team members near military bases to help organize faith-based activities and build Catholic community in the area.

When Fontana came across the ministry, it seemed like an answer to her prayers.

Team Saint Paul is a new initiative of Archbishop Timothy Broglio, head of the USCCB and the Archdiocese for the Military Services, USA. Modeled after FOCUS’ work on college campuses, the archdiocese sends several young adults to organize faith-based opportunities for service members at military bases.

“I ended up applying and prayed about it a lot,” Fontana told CNA. “And it was a really good fit. The rest is history.”

Regina Fontana attends the Nashville Eucharistic procession with service members. Credit: Team Saint Paul
Regina Fontana attends the Nashville Eucharistic procession with service members. Credit: Team Saint Paul

Fontana has now been working for Team Saint Paul for almost a year at Fort Campbell, Kentucky. She helps organize Bible studies, adoration nights, and community-building events. 

“What was really attractive was that our daily lives are rooted in prayer and Jesus,” Fontana told CNA. 

“Our day-to-day changes a lot,” Fontana said when asked what an average day looks like. “Every day we have Mass and Holy Hour. Those two things are always set.”

In addition to a daily structure of prayer and worship, Fontana organizes frequent events for the service members. 

“One of the first things we started implementing when we got here was adoration. We held adoration twice a week for the soldiers,” she said. “That was just something that we really saw they needed. We’re going to be starting a Bible study finally in January. We meet one on one with them. They have questions; we respond to them.” 

Team Saint Paul also coordinates activities on the weekends, from rock climbing to line dancing. 

“We’re really close to the Nashville Dominicans [the Dominican Sisters of St. Cecilia Congregation], and so one of the things … is we’ll go pray vespers with the sisters, and then go line dancing afterwards.”

“They love it so much. They do it on their own,” Fontana said of the service members. “If we’re busy, they’re like, no, we’re just going to go.” 

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McKenzie Mauss, the program’s organizer and the associate director for Missionary Discipleship for the military archdiocese, told CNA that the goal of Team Saint Paul “is to minister to young adults in the military and form missionary disciples.”

“I think the greatest effect of Team Saint Paul has been cultivating authentic Catholic communities at the installations they currently serve that invite young adults to draw closer to Jesus Christ,” Mauss said.

Father Lukasz “Luke” Willenberg, a military chaplain for the 5th Group Special Forces (Airborne), noted that Mass attendance has been up by 50% since Team Saint Paul came to town.  

“Seeing more active-duty members in uniform attending daily Mass brings great joy to our hearts,” Willenberg said. “It is wonderful to observe how Caroline [McDermott, another Team Saint Paul member] and Regina use their gifts to personally engage with random Mass attendees, creating moments of encounter and bringing them closer to the Lord. After Sunday Masses there is a circle of young adults chatting, getting to know each other, and making plans to keep each other encouraged in the faith.”

Team Saint Paul members and service members attend the National Eucharistic Congress together at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis in July 2024. Credit: Team Saint Paul
Team Saint Paul members and service members attend the National Eucharistic Congress together at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis in July 2024. Credit: Team Saint Paul

When asked about the response of military members, Fontana said “many of them were just really hungry for community, authentic community.”

“This has been the first thing that we did when we got here was really just start fostering that community, meeting people, hanging out with them, introducing them to their peers who they didn’t know,” Fontana explained. “And through that, they’ve built close friendships with each other.”

“We got here and we met people so quick, and they were just so eager for that community that we couldn’t even keep up with [it],” she recalled.

Fontana said one of the biggest challenges is navigating it as a pilot program and “figuring it out as we go along.”

Currently, there are programs at Travis Air Force Base in California and at Fort Campbell, Kentucky, but the team is hoping to expand to a third location. 

Team Saint Paul members and service members attended the National Eucharistic Congress together at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis in July 2024. Credit: Team Saint Paul
Team Saint Paul members and service members attended the National Eucharistic Congress together at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis in July 2024. Credit: Team Saint Paul

One of the most memorable events for Fontana was attending the National Eucharisitc Congress with a group of soldiers.

“Almost every single one of them had some just crazy encounter with Jesus in the Eucharist,” she said of the service members. “One of them was like, I think he had been praying about whether or not he wanted to reenlist, to continue or to get out of the Army. And he just heard God being like, ‘No, just stay where you’re at.’ And so he got a huge answer there.”

When asked about the lasting impact, Fontana said she hopes that other service members will be inspired to lead ministries when they are transferred. 

“It’s so hard because the nature of the military is so fluid,” she explained. “People are always moving. People are in and out. So even when you have those good leaders who take initiative to do things, you have them for maybe two years, and then they’re gone.”

She said she hopes service members will learn to build community as they go to new areas.

“Then they can take it to the next place, even if there’s no missionaries there and they can start their own community,” Fontana said.