Dear Parishioners: This Wednesday we begin the Solemn Fast of Lent. The forty days of prayer, fasting and alms-giving as we prepare spiritually for the great and glorious celebration of Easter. Are you ready for Lent? Are you prepared to pray more, fast more and give more alms for the next forty days? We begin this sacred season on Ash Wednesday as ashes are smeared on our foreheads. We are reminded of our own mortality as we receive the ashes: “Remember you are dust and to dust you will return.” It is a time for us to repent, turn away from sin and selfishness and convert our lives to the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
We have a full schedule for Lent at OLM including an extra daily Mass at 12:05pm, Confessions every day Monday through Friday, guest Confessors on Monday nights, Stations of the Cross every Friday and a Lenten Mission from March 25-29, preached by Fr. Christopher O’Connor.
Fr. O’Connor is a priest of the Archdiocese of Boston who serves as the Vice-Rector of St. John’s Seminary in Boston. He is a talented and dynamic preacher who has a terrific Irish wit. So mark your calendar now that you might make the Mission this year, you won’t regret it!
Lent is all about doing extra and sacrificing more in an effort to repent of our sin and renew our relationship with the Lord. For forty days, we are asked to pray more, come to Mass more, go to Confession and receive God’s mercy, forgiveness and love.
Lent is truly a wonderful opportunity to refocus our lives on what is important and lasting, our relationship with God. We are called to deepen our faith and commitment by conversing more with our God in prayer, renew ourselves by making acts of penance and sacrificing from pleasures and comforts, take up fasting and abstaining from meat. We do all this and much more not to beat ourselves up but rather to deepen our Catholic Faith and convert our lives more fully to Jesus Christ.
We are also called during Lent to consider the plight of the poor and needy. We do this by sacrificing to help them with our love and bountiful charity. So take a Rice Bowl home and fill it not from your surplus coins but give up a meal out so a hungry child in Africa might have food to eat. Please make a donation to the Catholic Charity Appeal so a homeless addict has a warm bed and a hot meal. Please consider making a generous donation to the OLM Outreach so a local family might be helped in their time of need with food, heating or rent assistance. All of these are terrific ways to give alms during Lent.
There is much information about Lent and the Lenten Schedule at OLM in the bulletin. Clip the schedule out and put it on your refrigerator. Also find the guidelines for Abstinence and Fasting during Lent are available to guide you. Read all this information carefully so you may properly prepare for the solemn fast of forty days beginning this Wednesday.
In his Annual Message for Lent, our Holy Father, Pope Francis writes to us the following for our reflection:
“Dear friends, Lent is the favorable season for renewing our encounter with Christ, living in his word, in the sacraments and in our neighbor. The Lord, who overcame the deceptions of the Tempter during the forty days in the desert, shows us the path we must take. May the Holy Spirit lead us on a true journey of conversion, so that we can rediscover the gift of God’s word, be purified of the sin that blinds us, and serve Christ present in our brothers and sisters in need.
I encourage all the faithful to express this spiritual renewal also by sharing in the Lenten Campaigns promoted by many Church organizations in different parts of the world, and thus to favor the culture of encounter in our one human family. Let us pray for one another so that, by sharing in the victory of Christ, we may open our doors to the weak and poor. Then we will be able to experience and share to the full the joy of Easter.”
Yes, Easter will indeed be all the more joyful and glorious if we faithfully take up our cross, deny ourselves and follow the example of the Lord in Lent. Pray! Fast! Give Alms! Live Lent 2017 to the fullest and your faith is to surely deepen and your relationship with Christ is to surely be renewed. The forty days are coming soon, so “Repent and believe in the Gospel!”
Next week we kickoff the Catholic Charity Appeal at all Masses. OLM usually leads the Diocese in supporting this very important charity of our Church. I thank you once again for your support this year. Be well. Do good. God Bless. Lent is coming, are you ready yet?!





This Sunday, January 22, 2017 is the 44th Anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court Decision that legalized abortion in the United States. As the U.S. Bishops have stated: “Abortion has become the fundamental human rights issue for all men and women of good will. For us abortion is of overriding concern because it negates two of our most fundamental moral imperatives: respect for innocent life, and preferential concern for the weak and defenseless.”
are asked to pray, advocate and act against abortion. Monday is a National Day of Prayer for the Legal Protection of the Unborn. This important Day of Prayer will be observed at OLM with All-Day Adoration of the Eucharist beginning after the 7:30am Mass. Join us Monday night at 7:00pm as we pray a Rosary for Life and listen to a Reflection on the Sanctity of Life. Our speaker is the Dominican Friar, Father Albert Duggan, OP. He is a graduate of Brown University and currently serves as the University Chaplain there. Even if you cannot attend Adoration or the Rosary, I ask you to please spend some time on Monday praying for the protection of the unborn.
Statehouse on Tuesday and add your voice to the chorus of pro-life people calling for the protection of the unborn. If you cannot make it to the Statehouse then perhaps you might write or call your State Representative or State Senator and urge them to support all pro-life legislation or thank them if they already do support it!
On Friday thousands of pro-lifers from across the nation gather in Washington, DC for the Annual March for Life. The March begins with a rally with thousands of pro-lifers on the National Mall before marching to the Supreme Court. Rally speakers include religious leaders, Members of Congress and also this year the Baltimore Ravens Tight End Benjamin Watson and Abby Johnson, a former Director of Planned Parenthood in Texas.
support group and healing retreats. The Life and Family Ministry Office is always in need of volunteers and financial assistance.
Next Sunday we kickoff the Annual Catholic Schools Week with an Open House at our wonderful OLM School from 10:00am until 12:00pm. Some of our great OLM students will be speaking at Masses next weekend in celebration of this Catholic Schools week.
Let it snow, let it snow, let it snow! Last weekend saw the first big snowstorm of the season. A few people called to ask if we were having Mass or would it be cancelled because of the snow? As long as Fr. Barrow and I are in the Rectory there will always be Mass. We don’t have a long commute so the snow doesn’t prevent us from making it to Church. We got a foot of snow on Saturday but a few parishioners still managed to make it to the 4:00pm Mass! Kudos to them!
crew who plowed and shoveled the snow last weekend. The walkways and parking lots were cleared of the slippery snow for Masses. We thank them for their hard work in ensuring the snow is removed in a timely fashion. Enough of the white stuff for now! If you’re praying for snow, aim for weekdays not weekends! This week all the beautiful decorations of Christmas were removed as the season officially ended on Monday with the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord. The crèche from Church and the one from the front lawn were put away for another year.
Ordinary Time is a time for growth and maturation, a time in which the mystery of Christ is called to penetrate ever more deeply into history until all things are finally caught up in Christ. The goal, toward which all of history is directed, is represented by the final Sunday of Ordinary Time, the Solemnity of Christ the King of the Universe.”
This Friday, January 20th, is Inauguration Day as Donald J. Trump is sworn in as the 45th President of the United States of America. Regardless of which candidate we voted for, which party we belong to or whose personality we like or dislike, as a people of Catholic Faith we must pray for our new President and Vice-President. The future of our nation and the free world are now in the hands of our new president and his administration. So please Pray for President Trump and Vice-President Pence that they might be inspired to lead with justice, truth and love for all human life and a deep respect for human dignity. We must pray for all our elected leaders that they may truly serve the common good of our nation.
“We pray Thee O God of might, wisdom, and justice! Through whom authority is rightly administered, laws are enacted, and judgment decreed, assist with Thy Holy Spirit of counsel and fortitude the President of these United States, that his administration may be conducted in righteousness, and be eminently useful to Thy people over whom he presides; by encouraging due respect for virtue and religion; by a faithful execution of the laws in justice and mercy; and by restraining vice and immorality. Let the light of Thy divine wisdom direct the deliberations of Congress, and shine forth in all the proceedings and laws framed for our rule and government, so that they may tend to the preservation of peace, the promotion of national happiness, the increase of industry, sobriety, and useful knowledge; and may perpetuate to us the blessing of equal liberty."
his fight for justice. Dr. King reminds us: “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” Let us pray for an end to all injustice, bigotry, racism and hatred. Happy MLK Day! Be well. Do good. God Bless. Go Pats, Go!!!