Follow five Sylvania Franciscans as they blog about living their mission of joyful service to all people. Each week you can read a new entry from the personal journal of a Sister and how she applies Franciscan values to her ministry and the impact they have on the community where she lives. If you like what you read, comment back. We’re always looking for a good conversation.

Category: Sister Nancy Surma

Sister Nancy Surma

“Well done good and faithful servant”

By. Sister Nancy Surma

Health care is a complicated business.  Every health care organization has people employed in a variety of capacities.  It takes not only doctors and nurses but a whole range of persons with a variety of gifts and talents to provide the services needed to address illness, aging and accidents.  Some of the positions involve clinical skills such as occupational, physical, and respiratory therapists, nurse aides, lab and radiology techs, and phlebotomists.  Chaplains also are an important part of the care team.  Many other persons contribute in support services—housekeeping, maintenance, billing, and security to name a few.

The corporate office of Sylvania Franciscan Health is also a place where people with a variety of experiences and expertise come together.   Senior management includes those skilled in strategic planning, mission integration, finance, quality/risk management and human relations.  Behind all these areas are the persons who answer the phones, type out untold number and kind of documents, get the mail posted, greet visitors, arrange meetings, file records and generally hold the office together.  As we start Administrative Assistants Week, it is only right to point out the role these persons play in linking the services our office extends to our ministries in Texas, Ohio and Kentucky.  "We are many parts; we are all one body."

I want to recognize in particular an administrative assistant who has served long and well.  Helen Pyles was the second employee hired when what was then Franciscan Services Corporation (now Sylvania Franciscan Health) was formed in 1984.  She has been the face of the organization to those who called or visited ever since.  Helen is retiring at the end of April after nearly 28 years of service.  Day after day, month after month, year after year, Helen tended to her job, offering the same level of respect and service to anyone who needed her help.  Her contributions came not in anything splashy or newsworthy, but rather in the attention to daily routine and care of people.  As she leaves, we can say “Well done, good and faithful servant.”
  1. Re: "Seeing Franciscan"

    Nancy, your blog this week reminds me of a quotation attributed to St. Francis: "Preach the gospel a

    --Sr. Sharon Derivan

  2. Re: What do I say?

    Excellent insights. I find that people have the same reaction when someone dies. The grieving person

    --Joan

  3. Re: “Well done good and faithful servant”

    Helen certainly has expressed the Franciscan values through her daily efforts within the ministry of

    --Sr. Julie

  4. Re: “Well done good and faithful servant”

    Nancy, Well said! While I haven't know Helen for more than a few months, she is a wonderful represen

    --Barb

  5. Re: “Well done good and faithful servant”

    Congratulations to Helen on many years of a job well done! May she enjoy her retirement with good he

    --Sr. Sharon Derivan

Meet the Sylvania Franciscan bloggers. We invite you to join us helping the Christian community commit themselves to works that reverence human dignity, embrace the poor and marginalized, and respect the gift of all creation.


Sister Nancy Linenkugel
Education

Sister Nancy is the Chair/Director of the Department of Health Services Administration at Xavier University in Cincinnati, Ohio and concurrently serves on the Sylvania Franciscan Leadership Team. Prior to that, she was president of Chatfield College in St. Martin and Cincinnati and her 30-plus years in healthcare administration include being president of Providence Hospital and the Providence Health System in Sandusky, Ohio. She is a church organist and cellist with various groups, including the National Medical Musical Group, Washington D.C. and the Cincinnati Metropolitan Orchestra.

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Sister Sharon Havelak
Justice and Peace

Sister Sharon is an artist, educator and long-time peace activist, who currently oversees All Good Things, a store/gallery/gift shop featuring art by the Sisters, handmade soaps and lotions, and Fair Trade products.* She also serves as the coordinator of the Sylvania Franciscan’s Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation efforts, and teaches art history at Lourdes University. She keeps her creative juices flowing by painting on silk scarves.
* All Good Things gallery is located in our Sylvania Franciscan Village and many of the items are sold on our website.

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Sister Karen Zielinski
Art and music

Sister Karen is Director of Canticle Studio for the Sisters of St. Francis of Sylvania, Ohio. Canticle Studio concentrates on articles, prayers and products which blend spirituality and health. She has been published in St. Anthony Messenger magazine, The Way of St. Francis, Spirituality & Health magazine and others. A musician, she has lived with multiple sclerosis since 1975. She loves jazz and the Detroit Red Wings hockey team!

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Sister Nancy Surma
Health and Human Services

Sister Nancy is a native of Detroit and was taught in grade school by the Sylvania Franciscans. Her early years were spent teaching and administering at the junior high and high school level. Life took a turn, as it so often does, and she served as administrator in four different Catholic colleges and universities, earning a doctorate in higher education administration along the way. She currently works for Sylvania Franciscan Health, the Sisters’ sponsored health and human service ministry, in the world of mission integration. Sr. Nancy lives with three other Sisters in a house that is filled with laughter and love.

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Sister Julie Myers
Religious Vocations

For the past two years, Sister Julie has served as the Vocation Minister for the Sylvania Franciscans. She also has ministered as a Physical Therapist Assistant at Mercy St. Vincent Medical Center for 20 years, and recently celebrated her 23rd anniversary as a Sister of St. Francis. Her initial path of living and learning about life and God began in a family of seven brothers and two sisters; her parents just celebrated their 54th wedding anniversary. She lives in community with three other Sisters, and for her they serve as beautiful mentors of the importance of balance in community living, prayer, and ministry.

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