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RALLY FOR RELIGIOUS FREEDOM

Friday, June 8, Noon

San Francisco U.S. Federal Building

(90 Seventh St., San Francisco)

Our very own pastor Fr. Joseph Illo has been invited to speak at this event.

 
 
 
 
The following audio talks are from St. Joseph's Lenten Mission.  Fr. Jay Mello shared with us The Secret of Holiness: Reflections on the lives and teachings of Bl. John Paul II & Pope Benedict XVI.  We were so blessed to have him share his insight and personal experiences of being a seminarian in Rome during the Easter season of 2005 (the death of John Paul II and the election of Benedict XVI).
Sunday Night: Are You Ambitious for Holiness?
Monday Night: The Life of Bl. John Paul II
Tuesday Night: The Pontificate of Pope Benedict XVI
Wednesday Night: St. Peter & Judas
_Videos of Fr. Jay's Monday and Tuesday talks are coming soon.  The talks and the videos will be available to be checked out of our parish library soon.   Thank you.
 
 
In March, Fr Francis gave a Lenten Mission talk on Blessed Mother Teresa of Calcutta at St. Francis of Rome in Riverbank.  Enjoy...
 
 
 
 
Doctor John English spoke at the 5:30pm Sunday Mass on March 11th.  As a physician, he gave his perspective on birth control sharing the truth and dispelling the myths of contraception. 
 
 
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_THE COLLECT...

Let us pray:  O God, who through your Word reconcile the human race to yourself in a wonderful way, grant, we pray, that with prompt devotion and eager faith the Christian people may hasten toward the solemn celebrations to come.  Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever.  Amen.

God so loved the world that He sent His Son, Jesus Christ, the Word Incarnate to save humanity from eternal death.  This same God who gave life to all creation calls us constantly to Himself.   Especially during Lent, a time of atonement and spiritual renewal, we are called to surrender to Him, who is Love.   That we come in humble supplication to the cross and fully partake of its fruit is our highest endeavor.   This holy time of Lent, like the spiritual life of all those who are His friends, plunders us into a valley of darkness and at times of desolation, yet it is in this place of solitude that we encounter ourselves before God, and are able to offer Him the small fruits of our daily crosses.  He, our merciful Father, gathers our gifts and receives them with tender affection, and in turn fills us with His grace.  “How precious the gift of the cross, how splendid to contemplate! ...The fruit of this tree is not death,...This tree does not cast us out of paradise, but opens the way for our return ”(from a sermon by St. Theodore the Studite).    Let us hasten to embrace this sacred time with courage and perseverance, trusting always in the Good Lord.  And like St. Therese of Lisieux exclaim, “I do not fear trials sent by Jesus, for even in the most bitter suffering we can see that it is His loving hand that causes it.”  We can trust that He wills only what is best for us and only that which will bring us closer to Him.

_By Maria Delgado-Braun
Administrative Assistant Religious Education Department
St. Joseph's Catholic Church
mbraun@stjmod.com
 

Mass & Mission

03/08/2012

 
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_From the Mass we are sent...

The word Mass or Missa actually comes from the word for mission.  The Mass calls us to mission, at the end of Mass we are sent forth.   That is why our mission at St. Joseph’s is: To Evangelize God’s People Beginning with the Gift of the Holy Eucharist.  The Eucharist is the source and summit of the Christian life, (CCC 1324, Lumen Gentium 11).  Everything we do comes from the Eucharist and everything we do needs to be pointed to the Eucharist. Therefore, as Catholics the Mass cannot be separated from our daily lives and everything we do. 

Most often at the end of Mass we hear the priest or the deacon say:  Go fourth, the Mass has ended.  To which the people respond:  Thanks be to GodFrom the new translation of the Roman Missal we have different options for the Concluding Rites.  You might hear the priest or deacon say more often:

Go and announce the Gospel of the Lord.

Go in peace, glorifying the Lord by your life.

In some sense the Mass does not end as the two new options above allude; we are called to take the Mass to our world, our jobs, our schools, our families, our hearts, witnessing to the love and mercy Christ has for everyone.  Perhaps ask yourself… Who can I invite to Mass who hasn’t been in awhile?  Who can I share the message of Christ’s love and mercy with this week in my workplace or school?

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The gospel narrative of the disciples on the road to Emmaus in the Gospel of Luke (Chapter 24) illustrates this point.  In this story two of Jesus’ disciples are on their way to Emmaus three days after Jesus had been crucified.  The Resurrected Christ appears to them and reveals Himself through the scriptures and the breaking of the bread.  Which we can see similarly to the Mass; first, we read Sacred Scripture and then we have the Liturgy of the Eucharist.  After this experience they went back in haste to Jerusalem where the other disciples were gathered, proclaiming to them how much their hearts were burning because of how they encountered Jesus. 

I pray that our hearts might burn for Jesus in the Holy Mass, through Sacred Scripture and the Eucharist, so that we go forth into our world sharing the love and mercy of Christ.  Like those disciples on the road to Emmaus, once we have an authentic encounter with Christ, in particular at the Mass and receiving Him in Holy Communion, our lives can not be the same, we are changed.   That change is not just an interior change but the way we live our lives outwardly must change.  We are called from the Mass to be sent out on a Mission to be a disciple of Christ, to live as he has taught us and to spread the Good News of God's love, peace and mercy to everyone! may these words of Christ himself, penetrate our hearts and lives. "Go into all the world and proclaim the gospel to the whole of creation," (Mark16:15),

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If you would like further reading about the Concluding Rites of the Mass or the other changes in the translation of the Roman Missal, Third Edition, check out Magnificat's Companion available in St. Joseph's bookstore.  You can also visit our webpage on Welcoming the Roman Missal, Third Edition.

_By Michael Webster
Director of Religious Education
St. Joseph's Catholic Church
mwebster@stjmod.com
 
 
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THE COLLECT...

Let us pray:  O God, author of every mercy and of all goodness, who in fasting, prayer and almsgiving have shown us a remedy for sin, look graciously on this confession of our lowliness, that we who are bowed down by our conscience, may always be lifted up by your mercy.  Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your son, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever.  Amen.

We are a little less than half way through Lent; perhaps, whatever we gave up for Lent is looking really good,  (the girl scout cookies being sold out in front of the grocery store look so tempting).  Resist and stay strong in your Lenten fasting.  It is precisely through fasting, prayer and almsgiving that we grow in holiness, because with these in our lives there is no room for sin.  We fast from material goods of this world, because when we experience detachment we rely completely on God.  Prayer is an upward leap of the heart, an untroubled glance toward heaven, a cry of gratitude and love which I utter from the depths of sorrow as well as from the heights of joy, (St. Therese of Lisieux).  Through almsgiving, we follow the example of Love par excellence - Christ on the Cross, which is what Lent is all about. 

Perhaps some of us have given in to our Lenten fasts.  Resist the temptation to be discouraged.  Don’t give up, start over again.  This Sunday’s collect addresses this point beautifully.  All of us are sinners, even the Saints, but they relied completely in the Mercy of God, which is what we have to do every day. We need to humbly recognize our lowliness before God, and He will indeed lift us when we fall by His Mercy. 

_By Michael Webster
Director of Religious Education
St. Joseph's Catholic Church
mwebster@stjmod.com
 
 

Video: We Hold These Truths