Dear Parishioners:“Rejoice in the Lord always; again I say, rejoice.” So goes the Entrance Antiphon for the Third Sunday of Advent. The Third Sunday of Advent is commonly called Gaudete Sunday and sometimes Rose Sunday, this Sunday when we light the rose candle on the Advent wreath. It is called Gaudete from the Latin to rejoice. It is a command ordering us to rejoice! In these days of repentance and preparation leading up to the feast of our Savior's birth, it reminds us of the joy that is to come, and serves, amid this season of Advent as a kind of 'break' when we recall the hope we have because of the coming of Jesus. So how might we rejoice?
We can come to the celebration of Advent Lessons and Carols Sunday night in Church at 5:00 pm. There we can with prayer and praise prepare the way rejoicing at the Lord’s coming. It is a wonderful celebration of the season that calls us to prepare with prayer and patience but also with joyful anticipation. I hope you join us for this great event for our parish. We will take up a free-will collection for the Diocesan Keep the Heat Fund so those who are less fortunate than us might also rejoice.
If you cannot make it on Sunday to rejoice than perhaps you can come on Tuesday night for the OLM School Pageant. Father Shemek and I are excited about experiencing our first pageant at OLM as we’ve been told it is a great celebration of the season by our schools kids. So if you can, please join us on Tuesday at 7:00 pm, it should be a great time! You might also come to the OLM School Band Concert on Thursday at 7:00 pm. Try to stop by and rejoice a little in the season.
Of course, if you really need some rejoicing in the season I invite you to consider going to Confession. This week our OLM School children as well as our RE Classes Grades 7-9 have the opportunity to rejoice in the mercy and forgiveness of God as we will be joined by several visiting priests to celebrate the Sacrament of Confession. Going to Confession is truly a Sacrament of joy as it offers to us the chance to experience God’s unconditional love and mercy.
When is the last time you made a good Confession? When is the last time you rejoiced that God not only loves you but also forgives your sins? Confession is available every Saturday at OLM at 3:00 pm. If you cannot make it on a Saturday afternoon before Christmas, don’t worry. Father Shemek and I will be in our confessionals on Christmas Eve Day (December 24th) from 10:00 am until Noon. So why not give yourself the best Christmas gift you’ll ever receive, God’s loving mercy and forgiveness. Why not make a little room for the Lord before Christmas? Stop by and visit Him in the Confessional before Christmas comes, He’s waiting to meet you and forgive you!
Advent is truly the time to prepare for His coming into our own lives and reflect upon our own poverty, the poverty of spirit. No one wants to admit to being needy. It is, after all, allowing someone else to have strength and power to deliver what we are desperate for.
When we are well fed and hydrated, healed, clothed and safe in our homes, it is difficult to be considered “needy”. Yet most of us are ultimately bereft and spiritually impoverished, needing God even when we won’t admit it, or even reject Him. Despite the wealth with which we surround ourselves every day, our need is still great; we stand empty and ready to be filled–abundantly. Only God can fill that emptiness, only God can truly nourish us, and only God can truly save us. We sing “O Come, O Come Emmanuel” but Emmanuel means God-with-us. So we prepare in Advent for God to come to fill the voids in our lives, to nourish us with His eternal presence and to save us from the snares of this world, sin and selfishness. But we also rejoice that we that we have a Savior who is with us today! It’s Advent so stop and be silent, prepare and pray! But also as Philippians reminds us: “Rejoice in the Lord always. I shall say it again: rejoice!” Have a great week. God Bless.


Of course one of the hallmarks of this joyful season is giving to those less fortunate than ourselves. This weekend our OLM Youth Group is collecting toiletry items for McAuley House after all Masses. These simple items for personal care are greatly needed by those who can little afford them but have great need for them. I am grateful to the Youth Group for coordinating this great effort to reach out to the needy in this season.
I hope you like the new hymnals that arrived last week. I thank Brother Roger for his leadership in choosing the hymnal and coordinating the order. It isn’t easy to do as there are all kinds of hymnals to choose from and each offers something useful. The Worship Hymnal is the updated version of the one that has long been used at Our Lady of Mercy so it should prove to be an easy transition.

Advent is also a time to prepare for the second coming of the Lord. We say in the Creed, He will come again in glory to judge the living and the dead. This truth flows directly from Scripture which teaches clearly two things on which we must reflect. First, He will come again in glory. Second we cannot know the day or the hour that he will return. In fact, though some signs will precede his coming, the emphasis of Scripture falls upon the suddenness of the event. Since this is to be the case we must live lives of readiness for that day. Advent is a time when we especially reflect of the necessity of our readiness.


A recent study by the Pew Research Center indicates that the number of Americans who do not identify with any religion continues to grow at a rapid pace. One-fifth of the U.S. public - and a third of adults under 30 - are religiously unaffiliated today. Nearly 33 million people say they have no particular religious affiliation. While those Americans who are unaffiliated with any particular religion have seen the greatest growth in numbers as a result of changes in affiliation, the Catholic Faith has experienced the greatest net losses as a result of affiliation changes. While nearly one-in-three Americans (31%) were raised in the Catholic faith, today fewer than one-in-four (24%) describe themselves as Catholic. Very alarming statistics indeed!



There is no better way to give Almighty God proper thanks and praise than coming to Mass on Thanksgiving morning. Our Thanksgiving Day Mass is to be celebrated on Thursday morning at 9:00AM by Bishop Evans. I hope you join us as we give God thanks for the many blessings bestowed upon Our Lady of Mercy Parish. It is also a time to remember all those who find the holiday especially difficult due to grief, sadness, sickness, distance or financial hardship. As we give thanks for our own blessings may we also remember in prayer the burdens of others and ask our loving and merciful God to comfort the afflicted and help the needy.