Moms Newsletter 2-13 - SS Peter and Paul Parish
Transcription
Moms Newsletter 2-13 - SS Peter and Paul Parish
Group News February 2013 Meeting Other Mothers Ss. Peter and Paul Catholic Church Naperville, Illinois [email protected] Chairs: Kelly Heffron 630-956-4550 [email protected] Kate Henry 630-364-1579 [email protected] Ministries Spiritual: Lisa Walton 231-329-3130 Service: Kelly Heffron 630-956-4550 Kate Henry 630-364-1579 Social: MOMs’Activities: Mary Beth Zabinski 630-369-8439 Children’s Activities: Susie Bentley 630-677-1197 Communications: Lynn Esser 630-857-9502 Save the Date Monday, February 11th, St. Valentine’s Celebration A Message From the Chairs Dear MOMs, Lent is fast approaching, and the MOMs Group has many opportunities for you to come be involved. We'll host weekly rosary playgroups, regular playgroups, Reconciliation, a Valentine's Day party, and more. Please watch your email for evite invitations. There is still a need for volunteers to coordinate some of our programs, so if you feel called to put some of your skills to good use, we'll be glad to use your talents. We are especially in need of an assistant to work on our Communications team. If you have some computer talent or the willingness to learn, and if you are willing to help with creating our newsletter and editing, we want you on the team! Please contact us at [email protected]. We wish you a blessed and fruitful Lenten season. With warm regards, Kelly Heffron and Kate Henry MOMs Group Chairs Lenten Rosary Playgroup Come join us with your intentions as we gather to pray the rosary at 9:30 AM this Lenten season. Thursday, 2/14 at Kelly Heffron's Home 2074 Dorval Drive, Naperville 630-364-2299 Thursday, 2/21 at Kate Henry's Home 6509 Southbury Court, Lisle 630-364-1579 Thursday, 2/28 at Lynn Esser’s Home 636 Century Farm Ln, Naperville 630-857-9502 **Watch for the Evite to RSVP. Children are very welcome to play and/or pray. If you are interested in hosting a future rosary-playgroup, please contact Lisa Walton at 231-329-3130. Spring Playgroups Spring playgroups meet on Tuesday and Thursday mornings. Please contact the MOMs Group if you would like to participate. Create in Me a Clean Heart A Lenten Reconciliation and Playgroup will be held in the Ministry Center, date to be announced. Please watch for the evite. St. Valentine's Celebration Come and join us in the Ss Peter and Paul Ministry Center on Monday, February 11th from 3:30 to 5:00 pm for a fun afternoon filled with crafts, snacks and stories to celebrate St. Valentine's Day. We will also have a table set up to make cards for the residents at St. Patrick's Nursing Home. If you are able to bring supplies (heart punches, stickers, red/pink paper, etc) to donate or borrow, we would greatly appreciate it. This will be an open-house gathering, so please come at your convenience. We hope to see you there! Please call Susie Bentley at 630677-1197 if you have any questions. St. Patrick’s Recipe Night at Quigley’s Pub Join the MOMs Group for a fun evening at Quigley’s Irish Pub in Naperville on Monday, February 25 at 7:30PM. Please bring a dish (it doesn’t have to be Irish) to share with the group and copies of the recipe. This is a great chance to enjoy the company of other moms and try some delicious fare. Please wear GREEN! An EVITE will be coming your way soon! Infants and nursing babies are always welcome at all MOMs Events Please contact Mary Beth Zabinski ([email protected]) 630369-8439 for more details. St. Patrick’s Residence Hosts Its Annual St. Patrick’s Day “Come To Mom’s House” Party The Guild of St. Patrick’s Residence invites you, your family and all your friends to join us on Sunday, March 3rd beginning at 11:30 a.m.-3:00 p.m. for a day of entertainment and family fun. Come and enjoy the Irish musicians, Irish and Scottish dancers, games and face painting for the children, raffle and more. What would an Irish party be without the traditional food? Irish soda bread from Winston’s Market, corned beef sandwiches and hot dogs will be available for purchase. The Super St. Patrick’s Sweepstakes include a Grand Prize of airfare to Ireland for two and other Irish surprises. St. Patrick “himself” will be here to greet you and will be available for family photographs. All proceeds will benefit the residents of St. Patrick’s Residence. Come join this wonderful Irish celebration. For more information regarding the St. Patrick’s Day Party, please contact Madelene Bernar at (630) 416-6565, ext. 511. St. Patrick’s Residence is a not-forprofit, 210-bed nursing and rehabilitation facility served by the Carmelite Sisters for the Aged and Infirm located at 1400 Brookdale Road in Naperville . Journey to the Foot of the Cross: Bishop Ricken Offers 10 Things to Remember For Lent Bishop David L. Ricken of Green Bay, Wisconsin, chairman of the Committee on Evangelization and Catechesis of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), offers “10 Things to Remember for Lent”: 1.Remember the formula. The Church does a good job capturing certain truths with easy-to-remember lists and formulas: 10 Commandments, 7 sacraments, 3 persons in the Trinity. For Lent, the Church gives us almost a slogan—Prayer, Fasting and Almsgiving—as the three things we need to work on during the season. 2.It’s a time of prayer. Lent is essentially an act of prayer spread out over 40 days. As we pray, we go on a journey, one that hopefully brings us closer to Christ and leaves us changed by the encounter with him. 3.It’s a time to fast. With the fasts of Ash Wednesday and Good Friday, meatless Fridays, and our personal disciplines interspersed, Lent is the only time many Catholics these days actually fast. And maybe that’s why it gets all the attention. “What are you giving up for Lent? Hotdogs? Beer? Jelly beans?” It’s almost a game for some of us, but fasting is actually a form of penance, which helps us turn away from sin and toward Christ. 4.It’s a time to work on discipline. The 40 days of Lent are also a good, set time to work on personal discipline in general. Instead of giving something up, it can be doing something positive. “I’m going to exercise more. I’m going to pray more. I’m going to be nicer to my family, friends and coworkers.” 5.It’s about dying to yourself. The more serious side of Lenten discipline is that it’s about more than self-control – it’s about finding aspects of yourself that are less than Christ-like and letting them die. The suffering and death of Christ are foremost on our minds during Lent, and we join in these mysteries by suffering, dying with Christ and being resurrected in a purified form. Continued... 6.Don’t do too much. It’s tempting to make Lent some ambitious period of personal reinvention, but it’s best to keep it simple and focused. There’s a reason the Church works on these mysteries year after year. We spend our entire lives growing closer to God. Don’t try to cram it all in one Lent. That’s a recipe for failure. 7.Lent reminds us of our weakness. Of course, even when we set simple goals for ourselves during Lent, we still have trouble keeping them. When we fast, we realize we’re all just one meal away from hunger. In both cases, Lent shows us our weakness. This can be painful, but recognizing how helpless we are makes us seek God’s help with renewed urgency and sincerity. 8.Be patient with yourself. When we’re confronted with our own weakness during Lent, the temptation is to get angry and frustrated. “What a bad person I am!” But that’s the wrong lesson. God is calling us to be patient and to see ourselves as he does, with unconditional love. 9.Reach out in charity. As we experience weakness and suffering during Lent, we should be renewed in our compassion for those who are hungry, suffering or otherwise in need. The third part of the Lenten formula is almsgiving. It’s about more than throwing a few extra dollars in the collection plate; it’s about reaching out to others and helping them without question as a way of sharing the experience of God’s unconditional love. 10.Learn to love like Christ. Giving of ourselves in the midst of our suffering and self-denial brings us closer to loving like Christ, who suffered and poured himself out unconditionally on cross for all of us. Lent is a journey through the desert to the foot of the cross on Good Friday, as we seek him out, ask his help, join in his suffering, and learn to love like him. Meals For MOMs Our Meals for MOMs ministry is designed to help families put a hot meal on the table during a stressful or overly busy time. Most often, we’re providing dinners over a two-week period for women who have just welcomed a new baby into the home. But the ministry can reach out to other families too...If you know of a family who needs this ministry please do not hesitate to contact the MOMs group. If you enjoy cooking and would like to help out, do not hesitate to contact us or volunteer when a sign-up email is sent out. MOMs Group Website We are officially online! Check out our link from the SSPP home page. http://www.sspeterandpaul.net/moms-group/ Advertisements Whether you have started a new business, are looking for a babysitter or having a garage sale, we are happy to share the information. **Disclaimer: The MOMs Group does not endorse any outside advertisement, nor does it provide recommendations. Do you have an interest in helping with the MOMs Group? Even if you cannot make a daytime commitment this is a fantastic way to help. We are looking for moms who might be interested in and assisting with our Communications team . Please contact the MOMs Group @ [email protected] or Lynn Esser @ 630-857-9502.. Who Is St. Valentine? Valentine was a holy priest in Rome, who, with St. Marius and his family, assisted the martyrs in the persecution under Claudius II. He was apprehended, and sent by the emperor to the prefect of Rome, who, on finding all his promises to make him renounce his faith ineffectual, commanded him to be beaten with clubs, and afterwards, to be beheaded, which was executed on February 14, about the year 270. He is the Patron Saint of affianced couples, bee keepers, engaged couples, epilepsy, fainting, greetings, happy marriages, love, lovers, plague, travellers, young people. Family Prayer for Ash Wednesday Dear God, in praying ashes to ashes and dust to dust, we remember that you created us and all the earth. We gather as a family to praise you and to begin this season of Lent. For the next forty days, we want to grow closer to you through family prayers. Bless our family, oh loving Jesus. We pray for your love to be in our home. Help us to share love with others. We pray for your peace to be in our home. Help us to be peacemakers. We pray for your forgiveness for each one of us. Help us forgive one another. We pray for your Holy spirit to be in our home. Help us to follow the guidance of your spirit as we remember all the events of your crucifixion, death, and resurrection. In the name of Jesus, we pray. Amen. May you & your family grow in Faith, Hope & Love this Lenten Season. Sincerely, The MOMs Group