June 22, 2014
Transcription
June 22, 2014
695 Smithson Avenue Lawrence Park, Erie, Pennsylvania 16511 Phone: 814-899-3000 Fax: 814-899-5212 website: www.stmarkslp.org e-mail: [email protected] Office Hours: Monday – Thursday 8:00 a.m.– 3:00 p.m. Sunday Eucharistic Liturgy Schedule: Sat. Evening: 5:00 p.m. Sunday Morning: 8:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m. Weekday Eucharistic Liturgy Schedule: 7:30 a.m. in Our Lady’s Chapel (Ward Center) Sacrament of Reconciliation: Every Saturday beginning at 4:00 pm. By appointment (call rectory) Nursery: During 10:30 a.m. Sunday Liturgy in the nursery off of Hilbert Hall. Children’s Liturgy of the Word: During 10:30 a.m. Sunday Liturgy 4 year olds through 2nd graders. Open to the Holy Spirit, we, the parish family of St. Mark, are a sacramental community with the Eucharist at our center. We exist to love God and one another, to grow in our personal relationships in our Lord, and to share our enthusiasm for our faith with our community. We support one another, reach out to all, spread the Gospel, and practice our faith in our daily lives. JUNE 22, 2014 THE SOLEMNITY OF THE MOST HOLY BODY & BLOOD OF CHRIST ST. MARK THE EVANGELIST CATHOLIC CHURCH To contact us: Pastor: Rev. Msgr. Daniel Arnold, ext. 11 [email protected] Senior Deacon: Frederick Weaver Deacon Assistant: James Kaschalk Director of Parish Operations: Pat Marshall, ext. 12 Maintenance: Kathy Crotty, ext.15 Music Director: Maripat Grant, ext. 14 Religious Ed. Facilitator, K-5: Geri Hadlock, ext. 17 Religious Ed. Coordinator, 6-12: Pat Marshall, ext.12 Youth Minister: Geri Hadlock, ext. 17 St. Mark Prayerline: Judy (899-1744) or Joyce (899-7900) Bereavement Committee: Judy Stanczak (899-1744) Wedding Committee: Kathy Spiegel (866-7263) Eat Alone Dinner: Sandy Jordan (899-0984) Emmaus Ministries: Kathy Spiegel (866-7263) 1st Friday Cakes: Dolly Cagnoli (899-5390) 3rd Wednesday Meat: Mary Beveridge (899-0792) Finance Council: Gary Miller Knights of Columbus: Jim Smith (899-3581) Legion of Mary: Barbara Gainer (899-7296) Liturgy Committee: Evy Seyboldt (899-8460) Pastoral Council: Joe Newara (899-8106) PAL: Judy Brieger (899-8545) Baptisms: It is the custom at St. Mark to celebrate the Sacrament of Baptism with the parish community at any of the weekend liturgies. Parents are requested to attend a class prior to the baby’s baptism. Godparents are encouraged to attend. Please contact the office to make arrangements. Marriages: Diocesan Common Policy requests six months advance notification of the priest and attendance at Pre-Cana Instructions or Engagement Encounter. Please contact the rectory to make arrangements. Anointing of the Sick: Anytime. A person need not be dying, but simply sick from a serious illness or even weak due to old age. Those wishing to be anointed, please contact the rectory. Communion to the Sick: For visits and/or Communion calls to the sick, shut-ins and those confined to hospitals, please notify the rectory. Bulletin Deadline: Wednesday afternoon Parish Membership: Please fill out the form on the back of the bulletin and we will mail you a registration form. All those who are out of high school should register individually. Parish membership is required to be a sponsor for Baptism. SMALL CHRISTIAN COMMUNITIES SUNDAYS AFTER 8 AM Eucharist MONDAYS AT 7 PM TUESDAYS AT 10 AM & 7:30 PM THURSDAYS AT 7 PM There are still opportunities to form new groups on Wednesdays and Saturdays. If interested please contact Kathy Spiegel at 866-7263 For information about a particular group contact: Sunday (after 8 am Mass) Sandy Jordan 899-0984 Monday (7 pm) - Joe Kohler 897-9502 Tuesday (10 am) - Judy Stanczak 899-1744 (7:30 pm) - Greg & Ann Badach 899-5698 Thursday (7 pm) - Geri Hadlock 323-4188 Readings for the week June 23-29 Mon. 2 Kings 17:5-8; Matthew 7:1-5 Tues. Isaiah49:1-6; Acts of the Apostles 13:22-26; Luke 1:57-66,80 Wed. 2 Kings 22:8-13; Matthew 7:15-20 Thurs. 2 Kings 24:8-17; Matthew 7:21-29 Fri. Deuteronomy 7:6-11; 1 John 4:7-16; Matthew 11:25-30 Sat. Lamentations 2:2,10-14,18-19; Luke 2:41-51 Sun. Acts of the Apostles 12:1-11; 2 Timothy 4:6-8,17-18; Matthew 16:13-19 Family Perspective Parenting is a Eucharistic activity because from the first moment of conception children receive life from us. If we don’t sacrifice ourselves, our children would not have life. This is the paschal mystery of parenting. Christ is present in each self-sacrifice. Tuesday Thursday Saturday THE WEEK AHEAD June 23 - 29 June 24 Legion of Mary 8:15 am SCC 7:30 pm June 26 Eat Alone Dinner FA - Hilbert Hall June 28 Cursillo Secretariat 9 am - 2 pm Rooms 1 & 2 2nd Collection - Peter’s Pence Our Sanctuary Light burns this week In Loving memory of Evelyn husband, Joe Our prayers and sympathy to the family and friends of Rose Ann Bartlett who has died. May Rose Ann rest in God’s eternal peace. Thought for the week… Unless in the first waking moments of the day you learn to fling the door wide back and let God in, you will work on the wrong level all day; but swing the door wide open and pray to your Father in secret, and every public thing will be stamped with the presence of God. - Oswald Chambers 2014 Annual Diocesan Wedding Anniversary Celebrations Couples celebrating 25, 50, 60 or 60+ years of marriage in 2014 are invited to attend the annual diocesan Anniversary Celebrations this summer. During the liturgy couples will affirm their wedding vows and receive a scroll signed by Bishop Persico. This year, the Anniversary Celebrations will be held in two locations in the Erie Diocese: Sunday, August 3, 2014, Our Lady of Peace Church, Erie at 1:30 p.m. Sunday, August 10, 2014, St. Boniface Church, Kersey at 2:00 p.m. *please note differences in times and locations* Reservations are required to attend the event, or to only receive a scroll. Reservation forms are available at the Parish Office. Reservation Deadlines: Our Lady of Peace, Erie: *July 25th St. Boniface, Kersey: *July 30th *reservations received after these dates may not have their names printed in the program. WEEKLY STEWARDSHIP – June 14/15, 2014 Offertory collection: $3,652.00 Budget Needs: $4,800.00 Last week: 411 envelopes issued 117 envelopes returned 995 parishioners 292 attended Mass Thank you to all who give of their time, talent, and treasure to St. Mark’s. Liturgies for Liturgies the weekend for theofweekend June 28/29 of May (Solemnity 18/19 (Solemnity of St. Peterofand Pentecost) St. Paul, APOSTLES) Time of Liturgy Intention 5:00 p.m. Joseph & Mary Raycher June 28 John & Agnes Krisch 8:00 a.m. Fran Krahe June 29 10:30 a.m. June 29 Altar Servers Jared Anderson Lector Kim Kalie Lizzie Hohman BIRTH ANNIVERSARY DEATH ANNIVERSARY Family Edie Testa Jeff Badach Cheryl LaBoda Joe Kohler Family Jeremy Grant Eucharistic Ministers Mark DiVecchio Barbara Gainer Carol Gilmore Dorothy Pamula Sierra Michael Jaskiewicz Jaskiewicz Marycatherine Kathy Thornton Major Frank Wargo Quincy Bidwell Kori Curtis Altar Aide: Kathy Lewis MASS INTENTIONS: (Daily Masses are in Our Lady’s Chapel - Ward Center) Mon. June 23 Weekday 7:30 a.m. Barby Brunner - Marge Bleil Tues. June 24 Solemnity of the Nativity of St. John the Baptist 7:30 a.m. Oliver Finn - Jean Kidder Wed. June 25 Weekday 7:30 a.m. Melanie Krahe Richter - Mark & Melinda Krahe Thurs. June 26 Weekday 7:30 a.m. MaryAnn Hammers Wegener (BIRTH ANNIVERSARY) - Margie Hammers Fri. June 27 Solemnity of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus 7:30 a.m. Charles Stanczak - Judy & Sons June 9, 2014 Dear Sisters and Brothers in Christ, We will take up the annual Peter’s Pence Collection in our parishes on the weekend of June 28-29, 2014. That weekend the Church will celebrate the Solemnity of Sts. Peter and Paul, the two Apostles who shed their blood for Christ in Rome. The Peter’s Pence Collection supports the charitable works of the Holy Father, Pope Francis, the successor of St. Peter, as he responds to some of the most urgent needs on earth, including relief to victims of natural disasters such as earthquakes, floods, and drought. The Holy Father also supports seminaries and religious houses, orphanages, AIDS treatment centers, and other medical facilities in developing nations, as well as many other charitable works. From the beginning the Church has been there to help the most needy of our brothers and sisters in the human family. Your prayers and contributions will allow this important work to continue. Please be as generous as you can. Through our support of the Peter’s Pence Collection, all of us here in the Diocese of Erie are also helping to strengthen the ties that bind us together as one universal Church family. Please know of my gratitude for your generosity. Sincerely yours in Christ, +Lawrence T. Persico The Most Reverend Lawrence T. Persico, JCL Bishop of Erie Ushers Offertory Tom Kennedy Connie Zinger C Paul Zinger Need 1 Volunteer John & Agnes Krisch C Jim Mullen Gary R. Smith Bob Titko James D. Smith Judi Krahe C Jim Crotty Tim Gunter Walt LaPrice Ed Peszel Jeff Pierce Jack Renshaw Diane Grant CLW Nursery Shelly Sheridan Kassandra Thomas Happy Birthday June 23: Matthew Noonan, Adam Renshaw June 24: Shirley Amendola, Timothy Burke, Noah Siverd, Cameron Williamson June 25: Eli Turner, Diane Voelker June 26: Quincy Bidwell, Mary Holmes, Melanie Knight, Kristin Lazzara, Devon O’Hern, Denise Zemanek June 27: Debbie Miller, David Noonan, Craig Powers, Jacob Steen June 28: Jaxon Abele, Cheryl LaBoda, Greg Luce June 29: Linda Etter, Ely Main, Sarah Ragen Happy Anniversary June 24: Vincent & Lisa Blacksten, Rich & Terri Michael June 26: Ed & Janet Krugger June 27: John & Marion Armstrong, Tony & Gloria Ferritto, Jim & Linda Kaschalk June 28: Hal & Char Sheldon June 29: Robert & Diane Grant, Greg & MaryAnn Osborne, Fred & Lucille Sitzler Mark your calendars now: Sunday, July 13 beginning with 10:30 Mass at Shades Beach (more info to follow in the coming weeks) Items are needed for the Picnic Chinese Auction: Baskets Items to help create baskets Gift Cards Gift Certificates Donations may be dropped off in the Parish Office no later than July 7. To volunteer to help assemble baskets or for any questions please call: Annette Hale: 899-5736 or Noreen Brown: 899-3057 Worthy It is not our worthiness, but Jesus’ faithfulness that makes us worthy to come to the altar of God. Hopefully you will recall several times that I said from the pulpit that sainthood is not our Church’s declaration that one so recognized was a perfect person. Saints are not perfect people. They’re faithful people. The Church recognizes saints as “those members of the mystical body of Christ who have lived and died, whose lives were notable for holiness and virtues practiced, and who have been officially declared saints by the Church through the process of beatification and canonization.” (The Catholic Encyclopedia, © 1976) This is a concept that is beyond society’s grasp especially in this pluralistic age. Pluralism is a society’s operative belief (ethos) that the only absolute is that there are no other absolutes: all reality is subjective. Faith, therefore, is reduced to ethics based in man made law and social convention. This faith does not lead to the changed heart that Jesus taught, but only to righteousness rooted in self. In a child’s spirituality, morality is limited to choices that society, especially our authority figures (parents, teachers, etc.), defines as good or bad, right or wrong. Very many people in American society function at this level. The “authorities,” those experts whom we allow to influence us, and to whom we give our allegiance, are our “moral compass.” These guides, and their expertise are not “bad” in themselves, but when there is no objective, absolute authority, divinity gets crowded with those we idealize as gods. Is it any wonder why the first sin, according to our current culture is getting caught not practicing what we preach? In our pluralistic society, the first commandment is love your gods. In a more mature spirituality, moral life is not reduced to a matter of ethics. It’s a matter of faith in the one true God. Our relationship with God ceases to be simply a matter of wrong or right doing, it is a matter of right or wrong being. Justice is a first virtue in a child’s morality (keep the law and the law will keep you), but charity is a first virtue of Christian morality. In the story of the Prodigal Son (Luke 15: 11-32), the morality of both sons is immature and is based upon observance of the law as the factor determining moral behavior. It is the father in the story who exhibits charity as the basis of each relationship he has with his sons. It is only by making the leap of faith to charity as the basis of our relationship with the Father that we no longer evaluate the correctness of our action. Moral perfection has shifted from doing to being. This is liberating for people who see themselves as members of the Body of Christ. They find that it is energizing to discover the face of a loving and merciful God whose greeting to us is a warm heart and not a wagging finger. Our moral struggle is no longer reduced to observance of a body of laws. Our life is lived inside the house where love dwells, where there are many rooms as Jesus described it (John 14: 2), where righteousness is received as gift instead of chore, where everything the Father has is offered to us (John 17: 10) so we can live unafraid that everything we have can be stolen or lost. Our faithfulness, blended with Jesus’ own faithfulness, makes us worthy to come to the altar of God where the Body of Christ is received by the Body of Christ. Fr. Dan For Next week’s Readings Questions for the Week: Reflecting on the Word: Because we are part of the Church, we are part of an institution. When Peter acknowledged Jesus as the Messiah, he said a mouthful. As institutional people, we have an important task, and that task Remember that Jesus was in no way the sort of messiah the Jewish is to point away from the institution toward God. If we’re spending people had come to expect. He was not a national figure. He was no all our time pointing to ourselves or to the institution, we run the military leader. For Peter to say that Jesus was the Messiah, the anointed deadly risk of seeing the Church as a closed kingdom, a selfone of God, then, was an acknowledgment of the first water. And that’s sufficient empire. The Church is not for the Church. It’s for the why Jesus knew that Peter’s recognition had sprung from faith. Peter’s world. Its mission, ministry, and witness are all for the world. The profession did more than concede a title to Jesus. It conceded that for Church is not for being in charge of the world. It’s for pointing out Peter and for all others, Jesus was the answer to prayer, the culmination of to the world that it is the Lord who’s in charge here and hope, the Son of God. Likewise, Jesus’ renaming of Peter did more than everywhere, today and forever after. confer a new title on him. It confirmed that the messianic work would Who do you say that Jesus is? continue and that it would continue to be sparked by the power and In what ways are we who are baptized also rocks upon governance of God. The question addressed by Jesus to Peter is which the Church is built? How do we also bind and loose addressed to each one of us. As he did with Peter (and Paul), Jesus on earth and in heaven? invites us to make a personal response of faith to who he is and who he is How well do you think the Church is carrying on the work of for us. The way we respond makes all the difference in the world, to us Peter and Paul? and to all those who come after us. Copyright © 2004, World Library Publications. All rights reserved. ST MARK EVANGELIST MEMBERSHIP FORM - 695 Smithson Ave., Erie, PA 16511 – phone: 899-3000 Family Name: ___________________________________________________________________ Phone ______________________ Address:____________________________________________ City/State:_____________________________ zip_______________ CHECK ONE: New Registration___ Change of Address___ Moving out of Parish___ Place in offertory basket, give to an usher or send to church office. Want Envelopes___