Dear Parishioners: I hope by now everyone has their power back! The blizzard hit us hard last weekend here at OLM. We lost power on Friday and it wasn’t restored until after Fr. Shemek celebrated the 4:00PM Mass on Saturday in the dark and cold. There was a band of brave souls who made it out for the Mass. Saturday night the power was restored and so Sunday Masses had light and heat but not very many people! I am grateful to our maintenance crew who worked so hard plowing and shoveling all that snow. Also I wish to thank Sister Jeanne, OLM Principal, who took in Sisters Edna, Lucy and Rose to the St. Rose Convent during the blizzard. Both our convents lost power and I was grateful to the Warwick Police for transporting the good sisters from OLM to St. Rose Convent so they could be safe, warm and well fed!
No sooner did we start recovering from the blizzard when news arrived of Pope Benedict’s startling news that he is to resign as our Pope at the end of the month. The Holy Father has decided that age 85 he doesn’t have the physical strength to continue leading our Church with the vigor needed for the job. This is the first time in centuries that a reigning Pope has resigned and so it has left many asking what will happen. Pope Benedict will step down and the College of Cardinals will gather in conclave in Rome to elect a successor. This will take place in March and I hope we might have a new Pope by Easter! In the meantime, let us pray for our Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI, and offer our thanks to God for giving us such a gentle, wise and humble shepherd to lead our Church.
We were reminded on Ash Wednesday that “we are dust and to dust we will return” and to “repent and believe in the Gospel.” As we begin our Lenten journey of forty days, I invite you to consider joining us each day for Daily Mass at 7:30 AM or 12:05 PM and to walk the Way of the Cross each Friday at 7:00 PM, Our Lenten Year of the Faith Lecture Series begins this Monday night at 7:00 PM in the OLM School Auditorium with the young and dynamic Father Joseph Upton speaking on the Sacraments of the Church. A complete listing of the series is in this week’s bulletin. In this Year of Faith and during this Lenten Season, these lectures are a great way to deepen our knowledge and understanding of our Catholic Faith.
One of the three pillars of Lent is almsgiving. Pope Benedict XVI explained "In inviting us to consider almsgiving with a more profound gaze that transcends the purely material dimension, Scripture
teaches us that there is more joy in giving than in receiving (Acts 20:35). Every time when, for love of God, we share our goods with our neighbor in need, we discover that the fullness of life comes from love and all is returned to us as a blessing in the form of peace, inner satisfaction and joy." One of the many ways we bear witness to almsgiving during Lent is through the annual Catholic Charity Appeal. I am happy to announce that Kevin and Nancy McDevitt will serve as the General Chairs of the CCA here at OLM We will kickoff the Charity Appeal the first weekend of March with the in-pew part of the drive. This is the first time OLM has used in-pew solicitation for the Charity Appeal but most parishes use this system very effectively as the means to obtain pledges and donations.
Last year Our Lady of Mercy Parish fell short of reaching its goal for the Charity Appeal but I am confident that with the strong leadership of our Chairs and your generous response we will not only reach our goal of $195,000 but surpass it! I also wish to thank Stephen and Antonia Zubiago for agreeing to serve as the Chairs of the Bishop’s Partnership in Charity portion of the Appeal. The BPC is for those donors who can generously donate $1,000 or more to the Charity Appeal. We will be reaching out to our BPC donors in the coming weeks as the kick-off the Appeal at OLM approaches.
Have a great Lent! I wish a happy and healthy vacation this week to all our school children! Remember Fridays are for fish and Stations of the Cross. God Bless.








spiritual and physical health of his people. Persecution of Christians still raged in Armenia and Blaise was forced to flee. He lived as a hermit in solitude and prayer. One day a group of hunters stumbled upon Blaise’s cave. They were first surprised and then frightened. As the hunters hauled Blaise off to prison, the legend has it, a mother came with her young son who had a fish bone lodged in his throat. At Blaise’s command the child was able to cough up the bone. The local pagan Governor tried to persuade Blaise to make sacrifices to pagan idols but the brave bishop refused and was beaten. The next time he was asked and refused, St. Blaise was suspended from a tree and his flesh torn with iron combs. Finally, he was beheaded and martyred for the faith. He is invoked as the patron of throat ailments and so we will bless throats after all Masses this weekend. May St. Blaise, bishop and martyr, intercede for us and our parish!
sex marriage in our state. The bill now moves to the State Senate for consideration and debate. I encourage you to contact your State Senator today and urge them to oppose the bill. You can find out more about the issue and how to contact your elected officials at www.faithfulcitizenri.org I wish to publically offer my thanks and commend Rhode Island State Representatives Antonio Giarrusso from East Greenwich and Doreen Costa from North Kingstown for voting against the bill to legalize same-sex marriage. Despite strong lobbying by a small, well-financed special interest group and intense political pressure from the leadership of the House to vote for the bill, they stayed true to their convictions that marriage is between a man and a woman. I am grateful for their courage and steadfastness in their beliefs. God Bless.




Some claim that as long as religious ministers are not forced to preside over same sex “marriages” the principle of religious freedom is protected. This is not true. The notion that the exercise of religious freedom is confined to the interior of churches, synagogues, temples or mosques or what one does on Holy Days is incorrect. The freedom of religion also extends to the many ministries of religious organizations and the individual conscience. So if marriage is redefined in civil law, without proper conscience protections, individuals and religious organizations – regardless of deeply held beliefs – will be compelled to treat same sex unions as the equivalent of marriage in their lives, ministries and operations.