Preparing the Way for Christ as Faithful Citizens

Preparing the Way for Christ as Faithful Citizens

Dear Parishioners:                        

Political opponents yell over each other at a political rally.

Last week, I was in Washington, DC, attending the Annual Meeting of the National Association of State Catholic Conference Directors. We gather in Washington annually to get updates from the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' staff and other policy experts.    At this meeting, part of our discussion was how to advocate effectively in an increasingly partisan political situation and a very ideologically polarized nation. The recent election results demonstrate that we are a deeply divided nation. We discussed strategies that can help with certain public policy issues in such an environment. 

   We also heard an excellent talk from Professor Helen Alvare, the Dean at the Antonin Scalia Law School at George Mason University. She discussed her book, Religious Freedom After the Sexual Revolution. Drawing upon Scripture, tradition, history, theology, and empirical evidence, the book attempts to help Catholics defend religious liberty and explain how our institutions and communities foster authentic love, freedom, and happiness.   

Catholic Charities Respite Center for Migrants in the Rio Grande Valley, Texas.

  We received an update from Catholic Charities USA, and the USCCB Office of Migration and Refugee Services on the terrible migration problems as our country grapples with the increasing migration of people fleeing poverty and oppression. Catholic Charities and other Catholic institutions across the nation, especially along the southern border, face growing challenges because there seems to be no end to poverty, war, oppression, and misery in the world. Many developed nations like the U.S. continue to experience pressure from a growing number of people who desire to resettle in their lands. Catholic social teaching is realistic: While people have the right to move, no country has to receive so many immigrants that its social and economic life is jeopardized.

Migrants being held on the US southern border.

The Catholic Church in the United States is an immigrant Church with a long history of embracing newcomers from across the globe and providing assistance and pastoral care to immigrants, migrants, refugees, and people on the move. Our Church has responded to Christ's call to "welcome the stranger among us," for, in this encounter with the immigrant, the migrant, and the refugee in our midst, we encounter Christ. Yet our Catholic agencies continue to work in a broken system that  government and elected officials of both political parties do not seem to desire to fix in a meaningful manner.

We also heard from a panel of economic experts about policies that assist economically poor women and families in thriving and flourishing. Many of these policies advance the culture of life by assisting economically poor women choose life for their unborn children.

The Catholic Church teaches respect for life from the womb until the tomb!

  We heard from Charles Camosy, a Professor of Ethics at Creighton University School of Medicine and Moral Theology at St. Joseph Seminary in New York. He discussed the promotion of a consistent ethic of life and provided insight into how to address threats to human life and dignity consistently. Much of his very insightful talk was based upon his excellent book, Resisting Throwaway Culture: How a Consistent Life Ethic Can Unite a Fractured People. He also discussed his new and timely book, One Church: How to Rekindle Trust, Negotiate Difference and Reclaim Catholic Unity.  

  It was an excellent meeting, and it is always good to be with colleagues from across the country who advocate on behalf of the Catholic Church. We share challenges to our advocacy and learn about legislative efforts to promote good policies on the state level that truly serve the common good and respect human life and dignity. It certainly helps as we prepare to advocate at a new Congress in Washington and a new General Assembly on Smith Hill.  

 I invite you to attend the Annual OLM School Christmas Pageant on Thursday at 6:00 pm. It is a night of beautiful music, singing, and a living Nativity. It is always a joyous and festive night. The Christmas and New Years' Mass and Confession schedules are in the bulletin. Please share it with your family, friends, and neighbors. You might encourage them to go to Confession before Christmas and perhaps invite them to attend Mass on Christmas!

Be well. Stay safe. Do good. God Bless. Go Pats! A Blessed Advent! 

Comings and Goings as We Celebrate the Blessed Mother

Comings and Goings as We Celebrate the Blessed Mother

Dear Parishioners:                                     

Bishop Richard Henning

The Wednesday before Thanksgiving, our Holy Father, Pope Francis, named the Most Reverend Richard G. Henning, the Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese of Rockville Centre, New York, as the Co-Adjutor Bishop of Providence. The difference between a coadjutor bishop and an auxiliary bishop is the coadjutor bishop enjoys the right to assume leadership of the diocese when the current Bishop resigns his office to retire. So Bishop Henning is to become the Bishop of Providence when he succeeds Bishop Tobin. Bishop Tobin will turn 75 years old on April 1, 2023, and must send a letter of resignation to the Pope. When Pope Francis accepts the letter is not yet known.

Bishop Henning has a stellar reputation among the priests and people of the Diocese of Rockville Centre. He is known to be a very kind and pastoral priest and Bishop, as well as very hard-working and highly intelligent. Bishop Henning holds a Doctorate in Theology and speaks fluent Spanish and Italian. In his priestly ministry, he has served as a parish priest, a seminary professor, and a rector and worked extensively with Hispanic immigrants in Long Island. The Bishop will be formally received into the Diocese of Providence on January 26, 2023, at a Mass of Reception at the Cathedral of Saints Peter and Paul in Providence. Please pray for him as he prepares to begin his ministry among us.

Bishop Robert C. Evans

On the same day, the Holy Father, Pope Francis, accepted Bishop Evans’ letter of resignation, which he sent on his 75th Birthday on September 3, 2022. We thank Bishop Evans for his 49 years of priestly ministry and 13 years as our Auxiliary Bishop. We pray for his health and happiness during his well-deserved retirement. Ad multos annos!    

Also, I hope you noticed the new statue of the Sacred Heart of Jesus has been placed in Mercy Park. We are very grateful to the Ponte Family, who generously donated the beautiful statue. It was hand carved by a well-known Mexican sculptor of Catholic statuary. The beautiful statue stands over 5 feet tall and weighs nearly 900 pounds. The stand the statue rests upon weighs almost 400 pounds and is 3 feet tall.     We are grateful to the former OLM Altar Server, now a Landscape Architect Aleksus Jagminas, and his partner, Robbie Paulsen, of R.K. Industries for their work placing the statue in Mercy Park.

We celebrate the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary this Thursday. It is a holy day of obligation. There is a Mass on Wednesday at 5:00 pm and also Masses on the holy day at 7:30 am, 9:00 am, and 7:00 pm.  Plenty of opportunities to get to Mass for the holy day.

Through the centuries, the Church has become ever more aware that Mary, “full of grace” through God, was redeemed from the moment of her conception. That is what the dogma of the Immaculate Conception confesses, as Pope Pius IX proclaimed in 1854: “The most Blessed Virgin Mary was, from the first moment of her conception, by a singular grace and privilege of almighty God and by virtue of the merits of Jesus Christ, Savior of the human race, preserved immune from all stain of original sin.”


The Immaculate Conception by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo (1767–1768)

The dogma of the Immaculate Conception places Our Lady before us as an example of what God can do and what we can do if, like Mary, we put ourselves in God’s hands and at God’s service, always open to what God asks and always seeking to fulfill God’s will.  The dogma also encourages us to do our best to remain free from sin.

Although we are all born with original sin and, through the grace of Baptism, are freed from sin, in the course of our life, because of human weakness, we fail and sin. The feast of the  Immaculate Conception reminds us that if we cooperate with God‘s grace, as did the Blessed Virgin Mary, we can lead a life as free from sin as is humanly possible.

I hope your Advent days are prayerful as we continue to prepare for the coming of Christ. Take some time for prayer and reflection in these busy days before Christmas. Stop by the Church and visit with our Lord. He’s waiting for you! Pray and practice patience in this season of joyful anticipation. Get to Confession and receive his mercy, love, and forgiveness. It’s Advent, prepare the way and make straight his paths!

Be well. Stay safe. God Bless. Go Pats!

Patiently Praying  "Come, Lord Jesus!"

Patiently Praying "Come, Lord Jesus!"

Dear Parishioners:                                    

We begin the Season of Advent (from "ad-venire" in Latin or "to come to"), a season encompassing the four weeks leading up to the celebration of Christmas. It is a time of preparation that directs our hearts and minds to Christ's second coming at the end of time and to the anniversary of Our Lord's birth on Christmas.

From the earliest days of the Church, people have been fascinated by Jesus' promise to come back. But the scripture readings during Advent tell us not to waste our time with predictions. Advent is not about speculation.      Our Advent readings call us to be alert and ready, not weighted down and distracted by the world's cares. Like Lent, the liturgical color for Advent is purple since both are seasons that prepare us for great feast days. Advent also includes an element of penance in preparing, quieting, and disciplining our hearts for the full joy of Christmas.  

  While the secular world is busy and noisy in the weeks leading up to the birth of our Savior, Advent should be a season of waiting in silence, praying with patience, and full of joyful expectation. Advent has us waiting for Christmas but also nursing the hope of ancient Israel for the arrival of the promised Messiah. He came first as the Holy Infant of Bethlehem and then promised He would come again at the end of time to bring us home.

  Our lives today can be filled with tensions, setbacks, frustrations, and weariness. It's incomplete! We await the completion of God's plan when He arrives in glory as the Judge of the living and the dead.   All the challenges and adversities of this life are potent reminders that we are in need, we are incomplete, something is missing, and we sense the void. That's what we're waiting for: salvation, rescue, redemption, and fulfillment. And that only comes when Jesus returns.

Many people put up their Christmas trees and lights in early November. My family never put up the Christmas tree and decorations until after Thanksgiving. Also, the Nativity scene had a prominent place in our home, but the crib was empty! The baby Jesus was placed in the crib after Christmas Midnight Mass.

  The empty crib is a radiant symbol: that's our world; that's our lives! Empty, awaiting someone. That someone is Jesus Christ, the Savior of the World, born on Christmas Day. Advent is a time to recall the cry of the early Christians: "Maranatha!" "Come, Lord Jesus!"

We put up the Advent Wreath in Church but also in our homes. It is made of evergreens, signifying continuous life. The circle of the wreath, which has no beginning or end, symbolizes God's eternity, the soul's immortality, and the everlasting life found in Christ.

Altogether, the evergreens wreath depicts our soul's immortality, and the new, everlasting life promised to us through Christ, the eternal Word of the Father. Christ who entered our world, becoming true man who was victorious over sin and death through His passion, death, and resurrection.

The four candles on the wreath represent the four weeks of Advent. Each week represents one thousand years, a total of 4,000 years, from Adam and Eve until the Birth of the Savior. Three candles are purple, and one is rose. The purple candles symbolize the prayer, penance, and preparatory sacrifices and goods works undertaken at this time.

The rose candle is lit on the third Sunday, Gaudete Sunday, sometimes called Rose Sunday, because of the color of the vestments. It is the Sunday of rejoicing because we have arrived at the midpoint of Advent when our preparation is now half over, and we are close to the great celebration of Christmas.

The progressive lighting of the candles each week symbolizes the expectation and hope surrounding our Lord's first coming into the world and the anticipation of His second coming to judge the living and the dead.

Advent is our time to slow down and prepare, not speed up and shop. It is our time to prepare the room for Christ to come more intimately into our lives, hearts, and homes. It’s Advent; use this sacred time to prepare more room for Christ in your life by praying daily, making a good Sacramental Confession before Christmas, and staying nourished and strengthened at Sunday Mass. “Come, Lord Jesus!”

Be well. Stay safe. Do good. God Bless. Go Pats!

 

It Is Right & Just to Give Thanks to God!

It Is Right & Just to Give Thanks to God!

Dear Parishioners:                                   

Freedom from Want by Norman Rockwell

On Thursday, we celebrate Thanksgiving Day. A secular and uniquely American holiday commemorating the good fortune the Puritans found in the New World, a good fortune that we Americans share to this day. However, Thanksgiving Day also has religious and even Catholic overtones.                                                

On October 3, 1789, President George Washington received a message from Congress requesting him "to recommend to the people of the United States a day of public thanksgiving and prayer." His proclamation declared that the day "be devoted by the People of these States to the service of that great and glorious Being, who is the beneficent Author of all the good that was, that is, or that will be."

The first Thanksgiving feast shared by the Puritans and the Wampanoag tribe was arranged by Squanto, a Native American who the Dominican Friars from Spain had catechized. He had been captured by the English, who planned to sell him into slavery. The Dominicans Friars rescued him, instructed him in the Catholic Faith, baptized him, and helped him to return to his people.  Squanto helped the Puritans survive by teaching them to hunt, fish, and grow corn. He also tried to help the Wampanoag tribe build a peaceful relationship with the Puritans, one that sadly did not survive. 

Squanto

The thanksgiving feast we recall was between the Wampanoag tribe and the Puritans. However, it wasn't the first celebration of Thanksgiving on American shores. Over 50 years before the Puritans established the Plymouth Colony, a group of Spanish colonists celebrated a Mass of Thanksgiving followed by a feast with members of the Timucuan tribe near Saint Augustine, Florida. 

When those Spanish priests celebrated a Mass of Thanksgiving, it was the most Catholic thing to do. It is part of our Faith as Catholics to thank God for the many blessings he has given us. Most importantly, we give thanks for the gift of his son, Jesus Christ, who sacrificed himself for the forgiveness of our sins. In our Catholic view of the world, that gift is the most powerful of all of God's gifts. 

As Catholics, we celebrate Thanksgiving every time we go to Mass. The word eucharist comes from the Greek word for thanksgiving and reminds us that we have so much to be thankful for as followers of Christ. We are thankful for his love and his mercy. We are thankful for the Catholic Faith that has been passed on to us by all those who have gone before us. We find peace and joy in giving thanks and offering our gratitude to God.  

First Catholic Mass of Thanksgiving in St. Augustine, Florida in 1585

We are called to share our gratitude, bounty, and blessings with others, especially those in need and less fortunate. That is the real lesson of the Thanksgiving feast. So, for this Thanksgiving and every day that will follow, we should look beyond our immediate family to share our blessings. Share the mercy and love God has showered upon us. We gather around the dinner table and enjoy a good meal but first, we gather at the altar, where we thank God. Begin the secular holiday of Thanking Day at Mass at 9:00 AM. Make it a true Catholic holiday, and give thanks to God! 

  Holidays can be stressful, whether hosting or traveling, celebrating with family, or spending the day alone. There's no better way to begin than with a  prayer of thanksgiving to God, and that's especially true on Thanksgiving Day! Begin the day with this prayer:

"Good and gracious God, we give You thanks today, as we do all days, first and foremost, for the gift of creation and the gift of life. We ask You to bless this food that it may nourish us and sustain us, and strengthen our ability to do Your will. We pray in thanksgiving for all the hands involved in bringing it to our table. You tell us, Lord, that to whom much is given, much is expected. May this meal and the fellowship we enjoy not only serve as clear reminders of Your love of us but of Your call for us to share Your love and to serve our brothers and sisters, especially those most in need. We ask this as we ask all things through Christ, our Lord. Amen."

As we offer our thanks to God for the blessings of OLM, Fr. Mahoney and I  offer you our best wishes for a Happy Thanksgiving! Be well. Stay safe. Do good. God Bless. Go Pats! 

Who Rules Our Life?

Who Rules Our Life?

Dear Parishioners:                        

With all the warm weather we have been enjoying, it's hard to believe it's November! Hopefully, it is a harbinger of a warm winter with little snow! Given the price of electricity, oil, and natural gas, we would certainly benefit from warmer temperatures in the winter!   As Daylight Saving Time has begun, our days are shorter with less sunlight. Winter is approaching and officially begins on December 21st. However, our Church year ends next Sunday with the great Solemnity of Christ the King.

Each year the Church celebrates the Feast of Christ the King on the last Sunday before Advent, also known as the last Sunday of the liturgical year. Catholics have recognized Christ as our King for over 2,000 years. Each time we attend Mass, genuflect before the Blessed Sacrament, or receive a sacrament, we honor our King. Pope Pius XI instituted this feast in 1925 with his encyclical Quas Primas ("In the first") to respond to growing secularism and atheism.

His Holiness recognized that attempting to "thrust Jesus Christ and his holy law" out of public life would result in continuing discord among people and nations. This solemnity reminds us that while governments come and go, Christ reigns as King forever.

During the early twentieth century, in Mexico, Russia, and some parts of Europe, militantly secularistic regimes threatened the Catholic Church and its faithful and civilization itself. Pope Pius XI's encyclical gave Catholics hope and—while governments around them crumbled—the assurance that Christ the King shall reign forever. Jesus Christ "is very truth, and it is from him that truth must be obediently received by all mankind" (Quas Primas, 7).

   Today, just as in 1925, our world continues to experience turbulent times. In addition to political unrest and division, there is war in Ukraine and threats of wars across the globe. People are becoming increasingly more secularized and more materialistic. Church attendance worldwide is also on the decline, especially since the pandemic.

Many push Christ aside as they tend to more "important" matters like sports and leisure activities. Some may not even realize they are doing it. We live in a society where many individuals are caught up in their lives, getting their needs met and focusing on wealth and possessions.

The Feast of Christ the King is a wake-up call for all of us to stop and assess our lives. Do we include our faith in all the decisions we make? Do we only remember to pray when we need something? When we attend Holy Mass, do we actively listen to the Scripture readings and reflect on the messages? When at Holy Mass, do we prayerfully participate and worship Christ?

  As we approach the Feast of Christ the King, let the words of Pope Pius XI resonate with us: "He must reign in our minds, which should assent with perfect submission and firm belief to revealed truths and to the doctrines of Christ. He must reign in our wills, which should obey the laws and precepts of God. He must reign in our hearts, which should spurn natural desires and love God above all things, and cleave to him alone. He must reign in our bodies and in our members, which should serve as instruments for the interior sanctification of our souls."

   With Christ the King, we see the end of Ordinary Time in the Church Calendar and begin Advent! Thanksgiving Day is just around the corner! Of course, all the stores have been creating Christmas displays since September!

Speaking of Christmas, the children from OLM are having a Christmas Bazaar with homemade arts and crafts and food next Saturday in Mercy Park. Festive foods and holiday gifts are available from 1:30 pm until 3:30 pm. Be sure to stop by and support the youngsters of our parish family.

The work of installing the new Sacred Heart statue began last week. The statue stands over five feet tall, weighs over 800 pounds, and must be anchored in the ground. We are grateful to OLM Parishioner Aleksus Jagminas for working on this project. It will be a beautiful spot to pray and meditate on the Sacred Heart of Jesus.

  Fr. Mahoney is away this week celebrating his birthday with his parents, who live in Arizona. Be well. Stay safe. Do good. God Bless. Happy Birthday, Fr. Mahoney! Go Pats!

 

Think, Pray and Vote! Election Day is Coming!!

Think, Pray and Vote! Election Day is Coming!!

Dear Parishioners:                    

On All Souls' Day, Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller ( 15 January 1793 – 23 August 1865)

As we begin this All Souls Month, we continue to pray for the souls in Purgatory. We especially remember those members of our parish who were laid to rest this past year and whose names are listed in the bulletin. Over the last year, more than sixty souls have had a Mass of Christian Burial here at OLM. We offer the 10:30 AM Mass for the gentle repose of their souls and the consolation of their grieving families.

As we remember our beloved dead in our prayers and at Masses in this All Souls Month, let us offer this prayer attributed to the great English Dominican Friar, Father Bede Jarrett, OP, who wrote:

We seem to give them back to You, O God, who gave them first to us. Yet as You did not lose them in giving, so do we not lose them by their return. Not as the world gives, do you give, O Lover of souls. What You give, You take not away, for what is Yours is ours also if we are Yours. And life is eternal, and love is immortal, and death is only a horizon, and a horizon is nothing, save the limit of our sight.

   Lift us up, strong Son of God, that we may see further; cleanse our eyes that we may see more clearly; draw us closer to Yourself that we may know ourselves to be nearer to our loved ones who are with You. And while You prepare a place for us, prepare us also for that happy place, that where You are we may also be for evermore.”

Tuesday is Election Day in our country, state, and town. I urge you to vote but to cast a vote for candidates after praying and reflecting on your conscience. In today’s vitriolic political culture of sound bites and partisanship, it’s not always easy as Catholics to practice our call to faithful citizenship. The public square is filled with partisans, but the Church’s social teaching is consistent and neither “left” nor “right,” “liberal” or “conservative,” Democrat or Republican.

As people of Faith and reason in a world often at odds with our values, our guiding star is Christ’s commandment to “love one another” rather than any alternative ideology. The U.S. Catholic bishops teach us to respond by supporting a consistent ethic of life and by avoiding two temptations in civic life.

The first temptation is to fail to make a moral distinction between different kinds of issues involving human life and dignity. The second temptation is to focus solely on one or two moral issues and ignore other serious threats to human life and dignity. Not all issues have equal moral weight.

Some issues involve intrinsic evil and are therefore incompatible with the love of God and neighbor. Abortion, euthanasia, physician-assisted suicide, and immoral, destructive experimentation on human embryos, are under this category. They are never acceptable and must be rejected. Moreover, these are intrinsically evil acts, those that directly attack life, and are a direct violation of human dignity. The right to life is our first right and must be defended with maximum determination.

While certain issues (such as doing all we can to save 4,000 children from being aborted each day in our country) have a special claim on our consciences, we can’t ignore other issues, such as the death penalty, poverty, immigration, economic injustice, and discrimination. These are not “optional concerns which can be dismissed.” These issues involve using the virtue of prudence to determine the best solution to a particular problem.

  Sadly no political party or candidate can check all the boxes in these areas of Catholic concern. So, how do we vote? First, listen to our Church, which offers us a 2,000-year-tradition of social and moral teaching. Secondly, prayerfully consider first what the Church teaches in matters that involve Catholic social teaching. A well-formed conscience (not what we feel or think but God’s eternal voice resounding in our human hearts) is essential in making sound moral judgments.

   As we enter the voting booth on Tuesday, let our measure of candidates be our Catholic Faith, not our political loyalties or ideologies. Be guided by the common good, not self-interest. It won’t be easy, but we have Faith—and God—on our side. Think, pray and vote! You may have noticed the work being done in Mercy Park. We are preparing to place our new Sacred Heart of Jesus statue there!

Be well. Stay safe. Do good. God Bless. Go Pats!