Catholic Schools Week, Celebrate the OLM Advantage!

Catholic Schools Week, Celebrate the OLM Advantage!

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Dear Parishioners: schools_graphicAcross the country we celebrate “Catholic Schools Week” beginning this Sunday. It is always a great week of activities and celebrations of the great contribution our Catholic Schools make to our Church, our nation and our local community. Once again we begin the week with an Open House at OLM School where you can meet and greet students and faculty. OLM School offers an opportunity for parish families to consider educating their children in an disciplined environment that excels in academically, supports Catholic service and develops Catholic virtues. In age when God and religious faith are being marginalized in the public square, OLM School begins and ends every day with prayer. OLM School Students are taught in a loving, nurturing and truly Catholic atmosphere. Amidst the many sports programs,OLM School science programs, robotics programs, social clubs, musical clubs, and community service projects the Catholic Faith is passionately taught and boldly lived every day! There is tuition assistance available from the Diocese of Providence as well as from the Parish. In fact, last year we gave out nearly $75,000 in tuition assistance to parish families. So I invite you stop by and take a look around OLM School and discover the OLM Advantage!

schoolI was recently reminded when reading about the actor Michael Keaton about how many different people have benefited from a Catholic School Education. He just won the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor for his role in movie Birdman. I haven’t seen the movie but I did see his comments about Catholic School and I believe they reflect many Catholic School grad’s experience. Keaton was raised one of seven children with parents who worked two jobs to send him and his siblings to the local parish school. In the interview he said: “I liked going to Catholic school. It kind of builds who you are. It was a good experience for me. It does shape who you are and what you believe in.” I encourage you to take a look at OLM School during the Open House on Sunday. Also please read the message from our new OLM School Principal Scott Fuller on behalf of our great school and faulty.

I am grateful to Fr. Connors for organizing the Day for Prayer for the Protection of Unborn Children and the for the many parishioners who turned out to pray for ROSARY28Adwb.jpglife. This week we put our prayer into action as the RI Right to Life Committee holds its Annual Pro-Life Rally at the RI Statehouse. On Wednesday you can join the hundreds gathered to make the vulnerable voice of the unborn heard in the halls of power. You can join with local pro-life leaders, pro-life elected officials and area clergy as they remind our state leaders that the unborn have the right to life! I’ve attended this rally for many years and it is always a powerful witness for the state’s elected officials to see how many people still respect human life and are papa2willing to stand up in protection of the unborn. It is a gathering of people of all ages, races and religions united with the common goal of ending legalized abortion. They pray, sing and shout for life! Won’t you join them? Again Pope Francis reminds us of the urgency of promoting life and standing against the culture of death. In a speech last year to group of Catholic Doctors he stated: “Every child who, rather than being born, is condemned unjustly to being aborted, bears the face of Jesus Christ, bears the face of the Lord, who even before he was born, and then just after birth, experienced the world’s rejection. And every elderly person…even if they are ill or at the end of their days, bears the face of Christ. They cannot be discarded, as the ‘culture of waste’ suggests!” Celebrate Catholic Schools Week! Discover the OLM Advantage! Rally of Life! God Bless. Go Pats!!!! Superbowl here we come! It was a great season!

Praying for Peace, Life and Priests!

Praying for Peace, Life and Priests!

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Dear Parishioners:Last week we watched in horror as yet more innocents were killed by terrorists. This time it was in France but we have seen it in United States, Spain, England, Australia, Pakistan and across the Middle East.B7Gqn2NCIAAsh2U.jpg large These horrific attacks by Jihadists should cause us all to pause and pray. We pray for the many victims and their grieving families, we pray for the police and military who protect us from such attacks, and we pray for peace and justice among peoples and nations. We even pray for the terrorists and all those filled with hatred and violence that they may have a conversion of heart. Praying for our enemies is never easy yet we know we must do so as Christians. So let us pray for all those who seek to do us harm, all those who kill in the name of religion, all those who persecute and oppress peoples and nations, that the God of love might guide them away from violence and hatred to His peace and justice. Prayer must be the weapon we use to wage war on hatred, violence, terror and injustice!

March_for_Life,_Washington,_D.C._(2013)I invite you to join with us in prayer this Thursday as we mark the anniversary of the tragic Supreme Court Decision Roe v. Wade that legalized abortion in our nation. This is yet another sad occasion that calls for our prayers, We join Catholics and many others across the nation in observing a Day of Prayer for the Legal Protection of Unborn Children. Thousands are to attend the March for Life in Washington, DC on Thursday to support the right to life for the unborn and rally in defense of life. Pope Francis reminded us of the great and urgent need to defend life when as Archbishop of Buenos Aries he said: “Defend the unborn against abortion even if they persecute you, calumniate you, set traps for you, take you to court or kill you.” I hope you can stop in Church on Thursday and offer prayers in support of life.

This weekend we are privileged to have with us one of our outstanding young priests, Father Chris Murphy. Fr. Murphy serves as Chaplain at Hendricken High School and also as Assistant Vocations Director for the Diocese of Providence. These two important jobs keep him busy and so I am grateful that he was able to take some2011 Vocation Prayer Card time to be with us at Our Lady of Mercy. Father is here to preach at all Masses about his important work in promoting vocations to the priesthood. We are blessed to have a vocation from the parish as Brian Morris of Our Lady of Mercy continues his studies at St. John’s Seminary in Boston. We continue to pray for him and his vocation. However, we must also take up prayers for more vocations to the priesthood for the Diocese of Providence. Presently there are twenty  young men preparing for the priesthood for our diocese. This June we are scheduled to ordain three young men to the priesthood. However, we may have as many as six priests retiring from active ministry this year. So you can see there is urgent need for more vocations! We are blessed at OLM with two priests, a deacon and even a seminarian from the parish. However, many other parishes have just one priest for two churches and sometimes even just one priest for three churches! There is a great need for more priests to serve God’s people here in Rhode Island. So I urge you to please pray for more vocations to the priesthood. Also please encourage your sons, grandsons, nephews, brothers and any young man you may know to consider the priesthood.

bill-belichick-nfl-denver-broncos-new-england-patriots2-850x560I hope you survived the cold and frigid weather over the last week. We saw temperatures below zero with cold, snowy and gusty winds! Thankfully the new gas boiler in church was working overtime. It is hard to keep the heat at a high level in our large church but the new boiler sure did a great job. The old boiler in the Rectory had a more difficult time but Paul Anderson, our crafty maintenance man, managed to apply some Band-Aids to it and keep the heat on for us! We hope to replace the Rectory boiler in the spring. Have a great week. Pray for peace, in defense of life and for vocations! Welcome to OLM Fr. Murphy! I am away on vacation this week. God Bless. Go Pats Go!!!

Celebrating and Renewing Our Baptism

Celebrating and Renewing Our Baptism

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Dear Parishioners: Baptism-of-Jesus-by-Juan-Fernandez-de-NavarreteWe celebrate the Baptism of the Lord this weekend. This is the end of the Christmas Season and on Monday we begin to take down the beautiful decorations. The crèche is to be put away for another year, the trees put in storage and the beautiful poinsettia plants are to find a new home. At first glance, the Baptism of the Lord might seem an odd feast. Since the Church teaches that the Sacrament of Baptism is necessary for the remission of sins, particularly Original Sin, why was Christ baptized? After all, He was born without Original Sin, and He lived His entire life without sinning. Therefore, He had no need of the sacrament, as we do.  However, in submitting Himself humbly to the baptism of St. John the Baptist, Christ provided the example for the rest of us. If even He should be baptized, though He had no need of it, how much more should the rest of us be thankful for this sacrament, which frees us from the darkness of sin and incorporates us into the Church, the life of Christ on earth! His Baptism, therefore, was necessary--not for Him, but for us.

It is a time for us to recall our Baptismal promises to live the faith, to regularly receive the Sacraments of the Church, and to proclaim theStained_glass_window_depicting_Episcopal_baptism Gospel in word and deed. At the celebration of the Sacrament of Baptism the parents of the child are asked: “You have asked to have your child baptized. In doing so you are accepting the responsibility of training him (her) in the practice of the faith. It will be your duty to bring him (her) up to keep God's commandments as Christ taught us, by loving God and our neighbor. Do you clearly understand what you are undertaking?“ Over the last twenty years I have performed hundreds of baptism and each time the parents answer “Yes”! Sadly many of these parents along with their children drift away from the Church. It always saddens me when that “Yes” proclaimed with such joy, hope, and faith fades away and good people drift away from God and His Church.

Last week while celebrating Mass in St. Peter's Basilica on New Year’s Day, Pope Francis spoke about those who seek to live their faith outside the Church. He said the faith "is not an abstract doctrine or philosophy, but a vital and full relationship with a person: Jesus Christ. Where can we encounter him? We encounter him in the Church. Pope Francis baptises one of 32 babies during a mass in the Sistine Chapel at the Vaticanit is the Church, which proclaims Him; it is in the Church that Jesus continues to accomplish his acts of grace which are the sacraments. No manifestation of Christ, even the most mystical, can ever be detached from the flesh and blood of the Church, from the historical concreteness of the Body of Christ. Without the Church, Jesus Christ ends up as an idea, a moral teaching, a feeling. Without the Church, our relationship with Christ would be at the mercy of our imagination, our interpretations, our moods." Today as we celebrate the Baptism of the Lord As and begin this New Year may we commit to praying for those who have drifted from the Church. Let us pray they might return to the fold and once again be part of our community. Let us also invite those we know back, welcome them home and encourage them to keep the faith in the Church!

Father Christopher Murphy, Chaplain at Bishop Hendricken High School and Assistant Vocations Director is to preach at all Masses next weekend. He is anmurphy_preach outstanding young priest and I think you will find him a dynamic preacher. He is to preach to us about his work promoting vocations to the priesthood. We continue to grieve and mourn the tragic death of two of New York City’s finest while our nation continues to grapple with issues of violence, race and justice. So I invite you to join with members of the many diverse faith communities of our state along with the members of state and local police departments for a Prayer Vigil for Peace. Certainly prayer is a positive way for all of us to respond to the violence that continues to plague our nation. The Prayer Vigil is to take place this Tuesday night at 7:00PM at the Cathedral of Saints Peter and Paul. God Bless! Go Pats!!!!

Welcoming a New Year and the Wisemen!

Welcoming a New Year and the Wisemen!

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best-free-happy-new-year-borders-clip-art-1Happy New Year! I hope and pray that 2015 may be a year of blessings for all of you and for our parish. It is hard to believe that it’s already a new year. Where did 2014 go? I thank the Carparco Family of the Hill Funeral Home for once again sponsoring our parish calendars. These beautiful Catholic calendars were distributed last weekend at all Masses. We are grateful for them and hope you put them to good use in your homes. On the Epiphany of our Lord, according to an ancient practice of holy Church, the movable feast days are announced. The proclamation of the date of Easter and the other moveable feasts on Epiphany dates from a time when calendars were not readily available. It was necessary to make known the date of Easter in advance, since many celebrations of the liturgical year depend on its date. The number of Sundays that 'ADORATION OF THE MAGI'follow Epiphany, the date of Ash Wednesday, and the number of Sundays that follow Pentecost are all computed in relation to Easter. Although calendars now give the date of Easter and the other feasts in the liturgical year for many years in advance, the Epiphany proclamation still has value. It is a reminder of the centrality of the resurrection of the Lord in the liturgical year and the importance of the great mysteries of faith which are celebrated each year. It can be found in this week’s bulletin, so be sure to mark your calendars! The Rhode Island General Assembly begins its new legislative session on Tuesday, January 6th. Also on that day our new Governor and all the of the General Officers are to bebishop-tobin-550x200 sworn in and begin their duties. We wish them well and commend them all to Almighty God. We pray that they may truly serve our state with integrity and honesty and serve the common good of all citizens. We pray that they ensure the protection of the most vulnerable among us: the poor, the elderly, the refugee, the sick and the unborn. And may Saint Thomas More inspire them and intercede for them. As the General Assembly resumes its duties in January so also do I resume my duties as the 460xDirector of the RI Catholic Conference and chief lobbyist for the Church on Smith Hill. Once again the Church’s advocacy for the unborn, the immigrant, the poor and the most vulnerable among us continues on. Without a doubt there is much work to be done by our state leaders on the economy but also ensuring the sanctity of all human life and respecting the human dignity of all. I ask for your prayers for me and for the work I do with our elected officials.

This is the final week of the Christmas Season as it ends next Sunday on the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord. So take a good look around the Church at the beautiful decorations, plants and the crèche. After next Sunday they are to be put away until next Christmas! I received many positive comments about the new outdoor crèche in Mercy Park. It certainly is beautiful and I am grateful to Paul Anderson and Doug Green who designed and constructed the barn for the figures. The design and the lighting of Homelie_Epiphaniethe crèche invite you to stop, reflect and pray to the Holy Family. This beautiful nativity set was purchased at Tally’s just before Christmas and is available to be memorialized if anyone is interested please contact me.

We celebrate the great feast of the Epiphany this week. What the Church celebrates today is the manifestation of our Lord to the whole world. He is revealed to the Magi who have come from the East to adore Him. The Epiphany is an affirmation of universal salvation. Pope Francis reminds us: “The destiny of every person is symbolized in this journey of the Magi of the East: our life is a journey, illuminated by the lights which brighten our way, to find the fullness of truth and love which we Christians recognize in Jesus, the Light of the World. Like the Magi, every person has two great ‘books’ which provide the signs to guide this pilgrimage: the book of creation and the book of sacred Scripture. What is important is that we be attentive, alert, and listen to God who speaks to us, who always speaks to us.” Happy Epiphany! God Bless.

Join us in Rejoicing This Christmas!

Join us in Rejoicing This Christmas!

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Dear Parishioners: We did a lot of rejoicing last weekend on Gaudete Sunday! On Saturday our All Day Confessions had hundreds coming all day long to receive God’s mercy and forgiveness. There were four priests at all times and a steady flow of people for the entire six hours. We rejoice that so many received the grace of the Sacrament of Confession. It is the best Christmas gift that money cannot buy! I wish to thank Father Connors who organized the entire day and arranged all the priests and volunteers who helped to make the day a great success. We thank the many priests who heard Confessions for hours and the volunteers who helped people feel welcomed and made Confession easy. We hope to have another All Day Confessions during the Season of Lent and also schedule another day next Advent.

bronzino129On the Feast of the Immaculate Conception our Holy Father, Pope Francis, lit the Vatican Christmas Tree. During the ceremony he spoke about Confession. He said: If you have something dark in your soul, ask the Lord for forgiveness. Christmas is  a great opportunity to cleanse the soul, eh! Do not fear, the priest is merciful, forgiving all in the name of God, because God forgives everything. let light be in your hearts, in your families, in your cities. And now, with this wish, turn on the light.” This Monday night we are adding an extra hour of Confessions for those who have not yet made a good Confession before Christmas. Two priests are available from 6:00PM until 8:00PM . If you haven’t yet, seize the opportunity to give yourself the best gift of Christmas, a clean soul!

We also rejoiced last Sunday with our twelve new Altar Servers. These fourth graders are all trained and were formally installed at the 10:30AM Mass last week. They begin their service at God’s Holy Altar in January. Keep them in your prayers as they serve our parish in this very important ministry.

On Monday night we rejoiced with Bishop Evans on the fifth anniversary of his ordination as a Bishop. For these five years he has faithfully served our Church of Providence as our Auxiliary Bishop. I thank Bishop Evans for presiding at the Vespers on Monday night and Father Richard Valentine for his inspirational homily. Ad multos annos, Bishop Evans!

Advent is soon to end as Christmas arrives this Thursday! I pray and hope that you have been able to take some time to pray with God in silence and reflect on the true meaning of the great feast of the Nativity of the Lord we soon celebrate. Christmas invites us to pause before the manger and place our aspirations and needs before the Prince of Peace. Christmastime calls us to consider the Word which became flesh, dwelt among us, and freed us from sin. There never has been, is not now, and never will be anyone not saved through the merits of Jesus Christ. OLM Creche PIc

The Christmas Mass Schedule at Our Lady of Mercy is in the bulletin. I invite you to share it with your family, friends and neighbors who may not come to Mass or have slipped away from the practice of the faith. Invite them to come to God’s House this Christmas to experience the joy and peace of the Christ Child. The more the merrier but remember that the 4:00PM Vigil is usually standing room only. You might consider the Midnight Mass or attending a Mass on Christmas Day where there is more seating available. If you are traveling and are to be away from OLM at Christmas, please know that Fr. Connors, Deacon Dowd and I will keep you in our prayers. I ask you to please pray for the sick and shut-in of our parish during this Christmas Season. And also for those who find the holiday a time of grief and sorrow. On Christmas kindness and truth, justice and peace meet; they have become incarnate in the child born of Mary in Bethlehem. That child is the Son of God; he is God appearing in history. His birth is a flowering of new life for all people. May every heart and home receive the kindness and truth, the justice and peace of Christ. A Happy and Holy Christmas to you and your loved ones!

The Lord is Near!  Let us Rejoice!!  Celebrating Late Advent...

The Lord is Near! Let us Rejoice!! Celebrating Late Advent...

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Dear Parishioners: OLM School (2)On Monday as we celebrated the Holyday of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary, I also distributed report cards to our OLM school students. It’s always a privilege to do so to our fine students who are so well taught by our outstanding faculty. The report cards were very good as we are blessed with students who work hard, study hard and are dedicated to their studies. We are blessed to have such a fine school as OLM where students not only are provided academic excellence but also most importantly taught the Catholic Faith by word and example on a daily basis.

In our secular age when Christmas is becoming the Winter Holiday and God is removed fromIMG_0466 the public square, how blessed we are to have a fine parish school where the faith is practiced and God made welcome every day. At OLM School during the Advent Season our students are taught the value of patience and prayer as they joyfully anticipate the coming of Christ. In very concrete ways they are taught to serve God and neighbor. As they study the rigors of math and science they also are taught Christian Charity on a daily basis. This is done unabashedly and proudly as the students  learn  to think not only of themselves but of those less fortunate and those suffering in need. Whether its helping the good folks at McAuley House serve the poor and homeless or supporting the Keep the Heat On Fund, the OLM School students, faculty and families strive to serve others first and foremost. It is clear that OLM School makes a difference in our community and in our world and we should all be proud of the school and her continued mission of mercy.

How is your Advent going? Have you been able to slow down and pray? Have you made a good confession? Have you put God at the top of the list of things to do this season? Advent moves quickly as does the world around us this time of year. Take some time1108791_ext_110602_angelico – kopie_bg in the next week to stop, pray and reflect on the real meaning of the season. God came to us in human flesh at Christmas not so we would spend hours waiting in lines to shop and spend but rather that we might spend our time trying become more like Him, more Godly!

One great way to stop and reflect on the Season of Advent is to take place on Monday night at 7:00PM. I invite you to join us for a celebration of Advent Vespers as we gather to sing and pray the psalms and songs of the season. We are grateful that Bishop Evans is to lead our time of prayer especially as Monday marks his fifth anniversary of ordination as a bishop. Also I am so pleased to have Father Richard Valentine, the Pastor of St. Michael's Parish in Smithfield, offer a reflection on Advent. I hope you might join us for thirty minutes of prayer, song and reflection as we celebrate the true meaning of the Season of Advent. The mall can wait, join us on Monday night! The Lord is near, let us rejoice!

43794760_Bass4This week we move into what is traditionally known as the Late Advent Season as we begin to pray and recite the “O Antiphons” from December 17th through December 23rd. In the bulletin this week we have included an explanation of the “O Antiphons” as well as a prayerful reflection for you to use during this time. It is during these Late Advent Days that our preparation and prayer for the coming of Christ becomes more intense as we joyfully anticipate his arrival and the celebration of his birth on Christmas.

Advent is a season of vigil that calls us to remain vigilant for Christ in our lives. During the busiest days preceding Christmas we are called to watch in prayer and with patience for the signs of Christ’s coming to bring us His peace. Christ comes not in the past nor in the future but Christ comes to us in our everyday life and in our world today. Let us prayerfully prepare roomAdventVespers for Him in our hearts, homes and world! We rejoice in the Lord on this Gaudaute Sunday because His arrival is near. May these next weeks be a time of rejoicing in the Lord with prayer and patience, charity and love, generosity and faith, hope and mercy! Have a great week, celebrate Advent! God Bless. Go Pats!