Prayers to end Abortion Liturgy Roster for 19th October Saturday 6pm:

Transcription

Prayers to end Abortion Liturgy Roster for 19th October Saturday 6pm:
Prayers to end Abortion: Prayers are
invited every Friday for an hour before
Mass at St Mary's Chapel to end
abortion. This will be done in
conjunction with those who go to pray
and be advocates for the unborn outside
the Abortion Clinic at Tweed Heads
every Friday.
Communion: Communion Ministers
take Holy Communion to the sick in
their homes and in various Nursing
Homes in the parish. If you have a
family member who is unable to
come to Mass and wishes to receive
Communion, please
contact the parish office.
Hospital Visits:
If you or a family member
are in hospital and would like to be
Anointed or receive Holy
Communion,
please contact the
Parish Office on 66260 200. This is
an important ministry for which we
are never too busy to attend too. A
Priest, Deacon or one of our Parish
Pastoral Visitors will visit you.
It is important when a family
member enters the hospital, that their
next of kin list them as Catholic, so
that the Catholic Hospital Chaplain
and Parish Pastoral Visitors know
they are there.
DIOCESAN INVESTMENT FUND
Head Office: Farrelly House Magellan
St,
Lismore
1800
802516.
Agent: Cathedral Parish Office,
Liturgy Roster for 19th October
The 29th Sunday in Ordinary Time:
Saturday 6pm:
Commentator:………… ….. S Harris
Reader:…………….…...Br J McCabe
Reader:..………………….....D Wynn
Ex’nary Minister.:…… ……..F Griffin
Servers:…...A & M Butler, E Dunn, A Pezzutti
Children’s Lit:………J & M Sheridan
Sunday 9am
Commentator:...………………M Ford
Reader……...…..…..……R Shearman
Reader:……………….……L Wallace
Ex’nary Minister:….……M Doolan
Servers:…M. McKendry & R Naliman
Counters….……….S Harris & B Gow
Sunday 6pm
Commentator:.......…..……....B Walsh
Reader:...………..…….Marist Brother
Reader:..…………...................J Smith
Ex’nary Minister:…………... R Grant
Servers:..... J & V Bush, G McMaster, J Moase
BAPTISM:
AT LEAST ONE
MONTH’S NOTICE IS REQUIRED to
enable families to attend the Baptismal
Program which takes place on the 1st
Sunday of each month at 11.15am or on
the 2nd Thursday of the month
at 5.30pm in the Parish Centre.
Please phone the Parish office
to book in for a Baptismal
Program. Baptisms take place
on the 2nd, 3rd and 4th Sundays
of the month at 11.15am.
WEDDINGS: By appointment: please
contact Parish Office for all bookings.
ST. CARTHAGE'S CATHEDRAL BULLETIN
Mass Times:
St Mary’s Chapel:
Dunoon:
Goolmangar:
Nimbin:
Carmelite Monastery:
Confessions:
Vigil Sat 6pm, Sunday 9am & 6pm.
Tues 5.20pm; Wed, Thurs& Fri 12.20pm.
1st & 3rd Sunday, 9.30am.
2nd & 4th Sunday 9.30am.
5th Sunday 9.30am.
Sun -Fri 7am (Sat 8am) Sung Mass (EF) 3rd Sunday 11am
Saturday 12-12.30pm in the Cathedral,
and after most weekday Masses in the Chapel.
Fr Nicolas Maurice, Administrator.
Fr Roland Agrisola, Assistant Priest.
6 Leycester Street, (PO Box 2) Lismore Ph: 02 6626 0200 Fax: 02 6621 2301
Web Page: www.stcarthages.org.au
Email: [email protected]
the 28th Sunday in Ordinary time, 12th October 2014
______________________________________________________
FIRST READING:
Is 25:6-10
RESPONSORIAL PSALM: Ps 22. R. v.6
(R.) I shall live in the house of the Lord
all the days of my life.
SECOND READING: Phil 4:12-14.19-20
ACCLAMATION: Alleluia, alleluia!
May the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ
enlighten the eyes of our heart
that we might see how great is the hope
to which we are called. Alleluia!
GOSPEL: Mt 22:1-14
Jesus said to the chief priests and elders of
the people: ‘The kingdom of heaven may
be compared to a king who gave a feast for
his son’s wedding. He sent his servants to
call those who had been invited, but they
would not come. Next he sent some more
servants. “Tell those who have been
invited” he said “that I have my banquet all
prepared, my oxen and fattened cattle have
been slaughtered, everything is ready.
Come to the wedding.” But they were not
interested: one went off to his farm,
another to his business, and the rest seized
his servants, maltreated them and killed
them. The king was furious. He dispatched
his troops, destroyed those murderers and
burnt their town. Then he said to his
servants, “The wedding is ready; but as
those who were invited proved to be
unworthy, go to the crossroads in the town
and invite everyone you can find to the
wedding.” So these servants went out onto
the roads and collected together everyone
they could find, bad and good alike; and
the wedding hall was filled with guests.
When the king came in to look at the
guests he noticed one man who was not
wearing a wedding garment, and said to
him, “How did you get in here, my friend,
without a wedding garment?” And the man
was silent. Then the king said to the
attendants, “Bind him hand and foot and
throw him out into the dark, where there
will be weeping and grinding of teeth.” For
many are called, but few are chosen.’
Mass and Liturgy
Weekday Masses:
Monday: Mary’s Grange 9.00am
Wednesday: St Joseph’s10.30am
Friday: St Vincent’s 10.30am
Holy Hour & Benediction: Sunday
in the Cathedral after the 9am Mass
concluding with Benediction.
Feast Days this Week:
Wed: St Teresa of Jesus
Fri: St Ignatius of Antioch
Sat: St Luke
Feast of St Teresa of Jesus (of Avila):
On Wednesday the Carmelite Family
worldwide will begin celebrating a
Centenary Year to mark the 500th
Anniversary of the birth of St Teresa of
Jesus (of Avila).
There will be a special Mass at the
Carmelite Monastery at 10 am Please
note there will be no 7am Mass on that
day. The ‘Friends of Carmel’ Auxiliary
will be holding a stall after the Mass.
All welcome!
Rosary: Pauline Buckland, 4.30pm
Unit 26 St Matthew’s Jubilee Ave,
Goonellabah
Come and pray the Rosary!
"Ask and you shall receive"
Please pray for the following:
Recently Deceased:
Leah Hughes, Patricia
Kenny, Ellen Reardon,
Norma Lynch, Francis
Spinaze, Sr Mary Blanch,
William Godfrey, Lenore Quinn,
Enid Quirk, Eileen Dillon,
Anniversaries: Aileen Sims, Vergenia
& Malou Castillo, Dennis Ramsay,
William Tooley, Jack Kenny Leslie
Clifford Conlon, Thomas Croke,
Deceased: Clem & Grace Cawley,
Dick & Audrey Chute, Peter Swan.
Special Intentions: Michael &
Gwen Zietsch, Kathleen & Clare
Gallagher
Rex Baldwin, Cooper Sweeney, Betty
Kinkead, Doris Murphy
Morning tea: Come
and have a cuppa after the 9am Mass
this weekend, hosted by the Cody team
in the parish centre. Everyone welcome
Meetings in the
Parish Centre

Tues 14th
Playgroup 10am –
12noon

Wed 15th
Hospitality Info night - 6.30pm

Thurs 16th Oct
Finance Council - 6pm
Journey through the Bible - 6pm
Adult Faith Formation - 7pm
Pastoral Council:
Nominations are being called for the
Pastoral Council. Nominations forms
are at the back of the Church If you are
interested in joining the Pastoral
Council or know of someone who
maybe please fill out the form and
return to the Parish Office.
Understanding the Mass:
The
Preparation of the Gifts (Part I)
With the Preparation of the Gifts, the
chief part of the Mass, namely, the
Liturgy of the Eucharist, begins. “At
the Preparation of the Gifts, bread and
wine with water are brought to the
altar, the same elements, that is to say,
which Christ took into his hands”
when he instituted the Eucharist at the
Last Supper.
The General Instruction of the Roman
Missal says, “First, the altar, the
Lord’s table, which is the centre of the
whole Liturgy of the Eucharist, is
prepared by placing on it the corporal,
purificator, Missal, and
chalice...” (73)
From this point forward, the altar is
the centre of activity and attention.
The priest goes to the altar and
remains there until the prayer after
communion. The altar, says the
Catechism of the Catholic Church,
“represents the two aspects of the
same mystery: the altar of the
sacrifice and the table of the Lord.
This is the more so since the Christian
altar is the symbol of Christ himself,
present in the midst of the assembly of
his faithful, both as the victim offered
for our reconciliation and as food
from heaven who is giving himself to
us.” (no. 1383)
What are the objects used or placed on
the altar during the Liturgy of the
Eucharist? They are the sacred
vessels, the Roman Missal and missal
stand and the cloths. The sacred
vessels used are the paten, chalice,
ciborium and cruets, ewer and basin.
The paten is the holy plate, on which
the bread is prepared and consecrated,
changed into the Body of Jesus Christ.
The chalice is the holy cup, in which
wine is prepared and consecrated,
changed into the Blood of Jesus
Christ. The ciborium is a chalice with
a lid, in which smaller bread is
prepared and consecrated, especially
if there are many people communing
to Communion. It is also used for the
Hosts kept in the tabernacle. The
cruets are the jugs which hold the
wine and water. They are usually
made of glass. The ewer and basin are
the jug and the bowl for the washing
of the priest’s hands. In the cathedral,
they are used for more solemn
celebrations. The linens used at Mass
with the sacred vessels are the
corporal, the purificator, the pall, and
the finger towel. The corporal is a
square-shaped linen, put at the centre
of the altar, on which the paten and
chalice (and ciborium) are placed with
the prepared bread and wine. The
purificator is a white cloth used as a
towel to clean the chalice and the
paten. The pall is made of linen,
around a square piece of cardboard,
used to cover the chalice during Mass.
The finger towel is used to dry the
priest’s hands. A chalice veil and a
burse, usually of the same colour as
the vestments, is used in the cathedral.
A burse is a large, flat wallet in which
the folded corporal is kept.