Supporting Our Missionaries with Prayer and Charity

Supporting Our Missionaries with Prayer and Charity

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Dear Parishioners: maryknollWe welcome Mr. Erik Cambrier to Our Lady of Mercy this weekend. Erik is here as part of the Annual Mission Co-op Program in the Diocese of Providence. The Mission Co-op Program is a time dedicated each year at every parish to learn more about the Church’s Missionary work. Each year a missionary is assigned to a parish to speak about the good works of the Church in distant missionary lands. Also, a collection is taken at all the Masses to support these important works. Erik is at OLM representing the work of Maryknoll Lay Missionaries. You may or may not be familiar with the missionary work of Maryknoll. It was officially established on June 29, 1911 as the Catholic Foreign Mission Society of America, now better known as the Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers. Founded by two priests, Father James A. Walsh of Boston and Father Thomas Price of North Carolina. They saw a need for a seminary to train American priests for missionary work and so Maryknoll began in New York. Father Price made an around-the-country tour of America to gain support for the new endeavor. Before it had its first seminarian, one young man applied who felt called to mission but not priesthood. Thomas McCann became the first Maryknoll Brother in 1912.  By 1918, three young priests – Frs. James E. Walsh (not related to Fr. James A.Walsh), Francis X. Ford, and Bernard F. Meyer) were ready for the foreign missions in China, just after the first world war. Price went with them as superior to the new missions, but died the following year.   The first Maryknoll missioners went to China in 1918. The mission soon expanded to include northern China and Korea. As war or unrest made mission impossible in one area, Group_portrait_of_Maryknoll_Fathers_Walsh_and_Ford_with_Bishop_Gauthier,_China,_ca._1918-1938_(MFB-LS0281)Maryknoll went to other regions: Latin America in 1942 and Africa in 1946, just as these continents entered eras of military conflict and social upheaval.  Today there are over 475 Maryknoll Priests and Brothers serving in countries around the world, principally in Africa, Asia and Latin America. Over 10 decades, more than 2,000 men have been ordained to the missionary priesthood, and several hundred have taken oaths as Brothers. The areas in which Maryknollers serve have been affected by World War II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War and other conflicts around the globe. Maryknollers have been imprisoned, tortured and killed. But the enthusiastic and joyful dedication of Maryknollers to their apostolic calling has never diminished as they carry the Gospel to Africa, SrsDeparture_1923Asia and Latin America. Like Maryknoll Priests and Brothers, Maryknoll Sisters have also served the missions for over 100 years. Founded by Mother Mary Josephine Rodgers in 1912 they now number over 500 Sisters, and serve in nearly thirty nations across the globe. The Maryknoll Lay Missioners date back to the 1930s when Dr. Harry Blaber of Brooklyn began his service in China. But they began to grow rapidly following the Second Vatican Council and the establishment of Official Lay Missioner Program at Maryknoll in 1969. Erik is part of this group and speaks to us about his experiences in the Missions. Each year we dedicate one weekend to listening to missionaries who do such good works in the name of our Church. Your prayers are needed for all missionaries who proclaim the Good News to the four corners of the earth. But also yourJF-KY13_5192 financial support is needed as well. .These good works need financial support to be effective and so I ask you to please be generous. Any contribution you make should be made payable to OLM and sent to the Diocese to be disbursed directly to the Maryknoll Lay Missions. Again, we offer a warm welcome to Erik and also offer him our thanks for his good work as a missionary. May the good works of Maryknoll, begun over one hundred years ago, continue on in the priests, brothers, sisters and lay missioners who today continue to serve the poor, the needy and the suffering across the globe. Thank you for your support of the Missionary Co-op Collection. God Bless.

Never on a Sunday!?  Keeping the Sabbath is "True Freedom"!

Never on a Sunday!? Keeping the Sabbath is "True Freedom"!

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Dear Parishioners:

family-at-churchHurricane Arthur brought lots of rain but managed to bring us some spectacular weather after he left town. I hope you had a great Fourth of July weekend and were able to enjoy the weather. Summer is the time to relax and enjoy the season. The Gospel last week spoke about resting in the Lord and Pope Francis spoke about how Sundays are no longer days of rest. He lamented the abandoning of the traditional Christian practice of not working on Sundays, suggesting that it has had a negative impact on families and friendships. Pope Francis stated that poor people need jobs to have dignity but that opening stores and other businesses on Sundays as a way to create jobs wasn’t beneficial for society. The Holy Father said the priority should be “not economic but human,” and that the stress should be on families and friendships, not commercial relationships. He stated: “Maybe it’s time to ask ourselves if working on Sundays is true freedom.

Interestingly enough in last Sunday’s New York Times, the columnist Ross Douthat wrote an excellent column about the Hobby Lobby store chain. Douthat wrote that the 600 stores owned and operated by a devout Evangelical Protestant Family employs nearly 13,000 people. It sets its lowest full-time wage at $151-hobby-lobby.w529.h352.2x per hour and it also donates 10% of its profits to charity. Hobby Lobby is also closed on Sundays because the owners believe in honoring the Sabbath. Hobby Lobby has much been in the news lately thanks to the U.S. Supreme Court Decision regarding the Obama Administration’s Healthcare Mandate that employers pay for abortion inducing drugs used by employees. The Court ruled that the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) “preventive services” mandate violates the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) as applied to Hobby Lobby to the extent that it would have forced them to provide insurance coverage for drugs and devices that violate their religious convictions on respect for human life. Douthat’s column raises some serious questions for those who would quickly dismiss the decision’s support for religious liberty for a small family owned business. He suggests that many have turned the idea of religious liberty upside down by maintaining it is confined only to liturgy and worship. I highly recommend you read his insightful column.

Sadly the decision has resulted in some terrible attacks in the media upon Hobby Lobby, committed Christians and also Catholics. Last week the Freedom from Religion Foundation ran a full-page ad in the New York Times decrying the decision and attacking the 6a00d834515d1e69e200e54f246b218834-800wifive Supreme Justices who made the decision for their Catholic Faith. Cardinal Dolan of New York responded to the ad in his weekly column stating: “Would they take out such an ad (and would any respectable newspaper publish it?) claiming a Jewish congressman could not freely vote on aid to Israel?; or that a Mormon judge could not rule on marriage?; or that a Baptist legislator could not clearly vote on issues of liquor or gambling?; or that a Quaker president was unable to be Commander-in-Chief?; or that an African-American justice had no objectivity on a civil rights issue? Of course not! But, in keeping with a long, shadowy, legacy of antipathy, justices who happen to be Catholics—never mind their past frequent votes hardly consonant with the public teaching of their faith—are branded and bullied by a group who only succeed in providing the latest example of a prejudice that has haunted us for centuries.” hobby lobby2Locally the pro-abortion, atheist group called the Humanist Society of RI held a tiny protest at Hobby Lobby last Saturday. The small group attacked the company’s Christian beliefs and called for a boycott. I suggest just the opposite and urge you to go shopping at Hobby Lobby. Support them in their mission to remain faithful to their religious convictions not just at Church but also at the workplace. Of course if you go to Hobby Lobby, you cannot go on Sundays as they are closed in honor of God! God Bless.

Let Freedom Ring!  Happy Fourth of July!!

Let Freedom Ring! Happy Fourth of July!!

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Dear Parishioners:

PHOTO ILLUSTRATION OF MAN HOLDING ROSARY WITH U.S. FLAG IN BACKGROUND It’s hard to believe but its already Fourth of July weekend. The summer is in full swing as we once again celebrate our nation’s founding. We not only celebrate having overthrown the shackles of British colonial oppression but we also celebrate our freedoms and liberties. Pope emeritus Benedict once called religious liberty “the most cherished of America’s freedom.” However, even in our own nation religious liberty is under threat as the culture becomes more secular. Those who hold to deep religious convictions are frequently criticized but also forced even by the government to violate their conscience. We do not face the violent persecution that our fellow Christians face in other nations. In countries like Syria, Iraq, China, Egypt and Nigeria, Christians often face not only government oppression but violent attacks and murderous persecution. Pope Francis recently commented on the increased persecution of Christians across the globe. He stated: “Nowadays, persecution of Christians is stronger than it was in the first centuries of the Church, and628x471 there are more Christian martyrs than in that time. This is happening 1700 years after the edict of Constantine, which granted Christians the freedom to publicly profess their faith.” As we celebrate our independence this weekend, we must not take our liberties especially our liberty to come to Mass and worship as Catholics for granted. We also pray for our brothers and sisters who follow Christ and our persecuted, oppressed and even put to death because of it. May freedom of religion soon ring for all people!

gone_fishing_signLast Sunday we marked our last Sunday 5:00PM Mass until September. This was the first year we had the 5:00PM Mass on Sunday evenings and it seemed to work pretty well. There was a dramatic decrease in attendance during the month of June, so we may consider ending it in May next year. In any case, if you are looking for a Sunday evening Mass in July and August, there are a few so-called “Last Call” Masses down at those beach parishes and a 5:00PM at Saints Rose and Clement in Warwick. And if you are travelling this summer, go to masstimes.org to find a Mass near your vacation destination!

You may have noticed in the bulletin the results of the Catholic Charity Appeal here at Our Lady of Mercy. I want to offer my thanks to the many parishioners who generously supported the Appeal. We more than surpassed our parish goal of $193,000. As of June 29th our total was $242,470.50! We came close to our parish participation goal of 600 with 594 OLM parishioners supporting the Appeal. In the name of the poor who benefit from this charity, I offer my thanks and gratitude to the many who gave so generously and also to our Chairs, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Zubiago, and Mr. and Mrs. Kevin McDevitt. Thanks for all your generous support!!

Sister Jeanne Barry, RSM, our former parish school principal, is to move into the Mercy Convent. The convent has been empty since Sister Edna moved to Mercy Mount Nursing Home. Sister Jeanne has been living in the Mercy Convent at Saints Rose and Clement but the parish is taking over the convent there for other purposes. So if you see boxes coming and going at the Mercy Convent, know that it is Sister Jeanne moving in to her new home. Welcome to the neighborhood! We are looking for high school age boys and girls who would like to work weekends as Sacristans setting up for Masses. Training is provided along with a small stipend. If you are interested or just want more information, contact Fr. Connors. It’s a great opportunity for our youth to serve the parish. This weekend we welcome to Our Lady of Mercy Mr. Henri St. Louis as our new Director of Music and Organist. Be sure to give him your usual warm OLM welcome! May St. Cecilia, the patronesslitany59 of Church musicians, pray for him and all our church musicians at OLM! Hope you had a great Fourth of July! Enjoy the summer while it lasts! God Bless America!

Summer has arrived!  Saints Peter and Paul, pray for us!

Summer has arrived! Saints Peter and Paul, pray for us!

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Dear Parishioners:It’s beginning to look a lot like summer! Last Saturday was the first day of summer but the weather has also provided that summer feeling we needed so badly. School is out and summer has begun! We had our first OLM Vacation Bible School this past week. Over fifty children from the parish and about twenty young volunteers had a terrific week learning about their Catholic Faith. I am grateful to Miss Croteau and Mrs. Maguire from our OLM School Faculty for helping organize this great opportunity. Also our Summer Seminarian Nick, Fr. Connors and several parents helped the OLM VBS be a great success. We hope that this will become an annual event at OLM where the parish children can come to a safe and friendly environment and learn more about Jesus and His Church. Fifty is a good start but we have hundreds of young children at OLM so I look forward to even more children participating in the VBS! sts-peter-and-paul-1 Last week’s Corpus Christi Procession was a beautiful tribute to the faith of Our Lady of Mercy Parish. Many of our parishioners joined the procession and filled Mercy Park for Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament. It was a great witness to our faith in the Eucharist and truly wonderful to see. Wouldn’t be great if we could get all of our parishioners to join the procession and go right down Main Street! Perhaps we might just try it in the future. I am grateful to the Adult Choir for their beautiful singing on the Feast of Corpus Christi. They did another great job of helping us to pray and worship God solemnly and joyfully. Both the Adult and Children’s Choirs will be off during the summer months. We thank them for their generosity for so willingly sharing their great talents. Both these choirs are great and we are truly blessed to have them at OLM. Also Nick La Roche who has been serving as our Interim Parish Organist and Choir Director leaves us after this weekend. Nick generously volunteered to serve for an interim period and now he returns to his full-time career. We are grateful for all his hard work and for sharing his beautiful voice with us. We wish him well and I am sure he will be back to sing on occasion. We also thank Steve Martorella who filled in as organist on Saturday and Sunday nights the last few months. IMG_0254I am happy to announce Henri St. Louis as our new Our Lady of Mercy Parish Organist and Choir Director. You have most likely heard Henri play the organ before as he has substituted here many times for Masses, Funerals and Weddings. He comes to OLM after serving as the Organist and Co-Director of music at Holy Apostles Church in Cranston. Henri is a very accomplished musician and holds a degree in Church Music magna cum laude. He has served as an organist at Holy Apostles but also at Precious Blood Church in Woonsocket, and St. Augustine Church in Providence. He will continue to serve as the Music Director at the Seminary of Our Lady of Providence. In his “spare” time he composes music, restores organs, plays the harpsichord, conducts choirs, teaches music theory and organ. Henri is the founder and conductor of the Schola Cantorum Sanctae, a choral ensemble which specializes in unaccompanied sacred music. We welcome Henri St. Louis to Our Lady of Mercy. He begins next weekend so please be sure to say hello to him and give your usual warm OLM welcome! We look forward to Henri ‘s great talent as an organist and our soloist Deirdre Donovan’s beautiful voice! Today Bishop Tobin is celebrating a special Mass in honor of the 125th Anniversary of the Cathedral of Saints Peter and Paul. It is truly fitting to celebrate such a happy anniversary for our Mother Church on the feast of our patrons, Saints Peter and Paul. There is a short history of the Cathedral in the bulletin this week. If you have never visited the magnificent Cathedral in Providence, you should make an effort to visit the newly restored Church. It is well worth the time and effort to see such a beautiful tribute to our worship of God. Happy 125th Anniversary! God Bless. Go Sox!!

Celebrating Corpus Christi and The Source and Summit of our Faith!!

Celebrating Corpus Christi and The Source and Summit of our Faith!!

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Dear Parishioners:stundenbuch3Happy Feast of Corpus Christi!! Since the Apostolic Church, Christians have been celebrating the Eucharist in which we partake of the body and blood of Christ. Jesus instituted the Eucharist on Holy Thursday. The Eucharist is also called Holy Communion, the Blessed Sacrament or the Mass (from the Latin word meaning "to dismiss"). Even though Christians have highly esteemed every sacrament, the Eucharist has traditionally held a special place among the sacraments. St. Ignatius of Antioch (105 AD) referred to the Eucharist as the "medicine of immortality" and St. Ephrem the Syrian (373 AD) taught that even crumbs from the Eucharistic host could sanctify thousands and thousands. St. Thomas Aquinas suggested the Eucharist was the greatest of all sacraments. The Church has viewed the Eucharist as unique, even among the sacraments, since the earliest times. So it is fitting that the great Feast of Corpus Christi is celebrated every year specifically to commemorate the Eucharist. flat,550x550,075,f The Catechism of the Catholic Church tells us that: “The Eucharist is ‘the source and summit of the Christian life.’ The other sacraments, and indeed all ecclesiastical ministries and works of the apostolate, are bound up with the Eucharist and are oriented toward it. For in the blessed Eucharist is contained the whole spiritual good of the Church, namely Christ himself.” (1324).” The Eucharist constitutes "the Church's entire spiritual wealth, that is, Christ Himself, our Passover and living bread.” It is the "Sacrament of Sacraments” and through it "the work of our redemption is accomplished."   Jesus Christ who is the "living bread that came down from heaven" assures us that “whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise him on the last day. For my flesh is true food, and my blood is true drink." As we celebrate this feast, let us do so with great faith, devotion and solemnity. We should never take the Eucharist for granted but celebrate it as one of the greatest gifts God has given us. This feast is a good occasion to ask ourselves how important the Eucharist is in our lives. When we come to Mass we must never forget we are coming to the greatest banquet in the history of the world. It is at Mass that Jesus Christ, the Son of God, is truly communion in the handpresent to us. It is at Mass we come forward to reverently and worthily receive our Lord in Holy Communion. It is not a casual affair and we must not become casual in how we approach the Lord at Mass. Each week many people come forward to receive Holy Communion but don’t seem to know how to properly receive the Host. We can receive the Host on the tongue or on the hand. If we are to receive in the hand, the best way is to put the right-hand down and put the left-hand on top of it and make, as Tertullian used to say, “a throne for the Lord.”  When the priest or the extraordinary minister holds up the Host and says “The Body of Christ”, the proper response is to say loudly: "Amen." Our “Amen” is a statement of faith and should be said aloud in faith and with joy! After receiving the Host we should then take a step or two to the side to make way for the next communicant. It is then we must immediately consume the Host. Communion should not be received on the run, as we are walking back to our pew or even worse as we walk out the door! The Host should be consumed immediately before returning to our seat. francesco_bergamini_b1837_the_altar_boys_sermon_wmIt should be done reverently, solemnly and prayerfully. We congratulate Robert Legare and Grant Lewandowski who serve their last Mass this weekend at OLM. They have served as Altar Servers since the 4th grade but now they are off to college. We thank them for their many years of faithful service and dedication to God and Parish. We are blessed at OLM to have such great Altar Servers. Also we welcome Mr. Scott Fuller, the new Principal of Our Lady of Mercy School, to our parish this weekend. He assumes his new duties on July 1st. Please keep Mr. Fuller in your prayers as he begins to lead our school. Have a great week. Schools out, be safe!! God Bless.

Praise the Holy Trinity, Undivided Unity, Perfect Charity! Celebrate Fatherhood!!!

Praise the Holy Trinity, Undivided Unity, Perfect Charity! Celebrate Fatherhood!!!

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Dear Parishioners:

This past Wednesday evening thirty-one of the young men and women of our 8th grade graduated from Our Lady of Mercy School. It was a great celebration for our parish and for the graduates and their families. We wish them congratulations and good luck as they head off to high school. We pray that they continue to build on the great foundation of faith and wisdom received at our parish school. This summerweek school ends in East Greenwich at both our public schools and at Our Lady of Mercy School. Of course, summer arrives officially on June 21st and so begins those lazy, hazy days of the season. We begin the celebration of summer with its vacations away from home, trips to the beach, picnics, cookouts, golfing, boating, sailing and family gatherings. I pray the summer provides you some time to rest and relax from the regular routine. The summer also means a decline in Mass attendance at OLM as many parishioners go off to summer homes or travel away on vacation. I encourage those parishioners travelling to take a look at a fabulous website called Masstimes.org which provides the Mass times at Catholic Churches across the globe. Please don’t take a vacation from Mass this summer! When you do go to Mass while travelling be sure to bring back a parish bulletin and throw it in the collection basket when you return to OLM. I always like to see where people have been traveling and also to see what’s going on at Catholic parishes outside of Rhode Island. This coming Wednesday we celebrate the retirement of Sister Jeanne Barry as the Our Lady of Mercy School Principal. She IMG_6973has been at OLM for 17 years with 13 of those years serving as our Principal. We will gather on Wednesday at 5:00PM to offer a Mass of Thanksgiving for Sister Jeanne’s many years of dedicated and faithful service to the Church, our parish and school. Following Mass we gather at the Quidnessett Country Club to pay tribute to Sister with dinner and enjoy a little roast! We thank Sister Jeanne for all she has been for us and all she has done for our parish and school. She certainly has earned such a celebration and tribute. We wish her well as she begins her much deserved retirement. God Bless you Sister Jeanne, ad multos annos! Next weekend we celebrate the great Feast of Corpus Christi, the Holy Body and Blood of Jesus Christ. We mark the feast at OLM with our Annual Eucharistic Procession following the 10:30AM Mass ending with Benediction at Mercy Park. The Eucharist is the source and summit of our Catholic Faith and so we celebrate with great solemnity and deep prayer. We officially welcome our new OLM School Principal, Mr. Scott Fuller, next weekend. He and his wife join us at 10:30AM Mass and there is a Welcome Reception in the OLM Gym following Mass. I ask you to pray for Mr. Fuller as he prepares to lead our school and I hope you can stop by to welcome him to our parish next Sunday. We celebrate Fathers’ Day today, a day that pays tribute to God’s gift of Fatherhood and we give thanks for our own Fathers. We offer Masses this weekend for all Fathers, both living and deceased. Fathers need our prayers and support, please pray for them. We need look no further 4227_5344_largethan to the patron saint of fathers, St. Joseph, for the ultimate model of fatherhood. St. Joseph sacrificed whatever self-centered inclinations he might have had for the greater good of his foster son, Jesus Christ – and not just once at the news of the Incarnation, but repeatedly in protecting and rearing the Son of God into adulthood. St. Joseph is the model of fatherhood for all fathers to aspire. May he, intercede for fathers and inspire them to be strong, loving and wise. May God bless all OLM Fathers! Happy Fathers’ Day! Also may God bless and protect all our school children this summer. May they be happy, healthy and holy during this time away from school. We look forward to their return in September. Summer is coming, so enjoy it while it lasts! God Bless. Go Sox, please!!!!!