From Our Pastor

From Our Pastor

Dear Folks,

With the celebration of the Feast of the Assumption, I invite you to consider three things:

— Have you noticed that this feast has an octave of sorts?

The eighth day after the Assumption is the Feast of the Queenship of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Imagine the scene: Mary arrives in heaven to great celebration, then settles into her heavenly home to prepare for her coronation as Queen of Heaven and Earth a week later!

— Do you ever wonder how Mary can pay attention to all of her children? I think anxieties like this may stem from a lack of imagination. Scripture says, “Eye has not seen, ear has not heard, what has not entered the human heart, what God has ready for those who love Him. ” (1 Cor 2:9)

Our imaginations about what is fitting or possible must not—and cannot—limit the Lord’s plans! These feasts invite us to stretch our imagination heavenward.

— Sometimes people pull back from the practice of the faith with the phrase, “I’m spiritual, not religious.”

But this misunderstands what religion truly is: the rendering to God what is His due—thanksgiving and worship. Thanksgiving, because everything we have and are is a gift from Him. Worship, because to worship God is to acknowledge His excellence and perfection, and to render Him the honor due as the Author of all things.

To refuse Him thanks and worship is to refuse to respond rightly as a creature to the Creator. We cannot fashion the universe according to our own design; that kind of mysticism makes no demands on us.

But the Gospel does make demands—on how we live, act, and love. So live in wonder and awe at the mysteries He has revealed.

pax,

Father John Mosimann

August 24, 2025
From Our Pastor

From Our Pastor

Dear Folks,

I declare this Jeff Cavins W eek! You may know him from The Bible in a Y ear podcast, the Bible Timeline, his own podcast, or shows on EWTN—you get the idea!

Five years ago, I emailed him to ask, “Do you need another priest for an upcoming Holy Land pilgrimage sometime?” Well, a visit to the Holy Land isn’t an option right now, but I’m excited to share that I’ll be joining Jeff and his wife Emily for a trip to Egypt (base trip) and Jordan (optional extension) in January 2026. By the time you read this, Jeff will have announced the trip—and it’s likely to fill up quickly.

However, the travel agents have promised to hold a few spots for folks from my parish who might want to join

Here is a shortened link to the registration if you’re interested: https://tinyurl.com/3ry7tdcr

You can also email me for a copy of the itinerary. I believe the website should have the flyer posted by the time you’re reading this.

I haven’t given up on the Greece/T urkey “Footsteps of St. Paul” trip either! A few parishioners have told me they’re holding out for that one. If you’re interested, email me and I’ll add you to the notification list.

Finally, I want to share this adapted thought from Jeff ’s podcast episode titled “Scoot Down the Pew, Please?”

We all love our seats. Creatures of habit, lovers of ritual, we find comfort in stability—and for good reasons!

Many folks arrive early just to claim the end seats on pews. And woe to the usher who has to say, “Scoot down the pew, please. ”

As Jeff tells it, this very human moment of eye contact, hesitation, and subtle annoyance can be transformed. The paradigm shifts when a young mother, holding a car seat and guiding her three-year-old, approaches and gently asks:“Can we join you?” That gracious request changed the entire moment. Jeff and his wife gladly moved into the middle of the pew and made room for someone who did join them.

And that’s really the question: “Can we join you, Jesus?” Isn’t that the point?

Jesus is inviting us all:

• T o join His family

• T o join His Church

• T o join Him at the wedding feast of the Lamb

• T o join Him on the Cross

• T o join our crosses to His

• So when someone asks for your precious end seat on a pew…Maybe you let them join you.

pax (et Bonum!),

Father John Mosimann

August 17, 2025
August 15 is a Holy Day of Obligation

August 15 is a Holy Day of Obligation

August 15 is the Solemnity of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary and a Holy Day of Obligation.  The Mass schedule is:

August 14: 6 and 7:30pm Vigil Masses

August 15: 6:30am, 9am, 12pm, 4pm Latin Novus Ordo, 6pm, 7:30pm Bilingual

From Our Pastor

From Our Pastor

Dear Folks,

Every feast of the Assumption, I share with you the story of my grandmother visiting—and how, when she left, I got up in gratitude to say goodbye. I’ll leave that story for the Masses. It deeply resonates with me why we must come to Mass to bid farewell to Our Lady as she is assumed into heaven. We have an extensive schedule of Masses, as printed in the bulletin here.

And because this Holy Day falls on a Friday, that means added traffic. So let me renew my exhortation to be good neighbors. As good neighbors, we must be mindful that our parking needs can—and sometimes do—annoy those who live near the church. If you worry that you can’t go to the store on weekends because there will be no parking near your home… yeah… that’s difficult.

There are times when our parking spills into the neighborhood and becomes a source of frustration for our neighbors. As pastor, I’ve tried to ease this by adding an evening Mass or two at Holy Cross on Ash Wednesday— one of our most congested days.

Additionally, it seems that some folks try to reenact Our Lady flying to heaven on the wings of angels… by flying out of the parking lot at angelic speeds. Our haste does not justify unsafe driving through residential side streets.

So what can we do?

1. 2. Please use the church parking lot as much as possible. The town recently added several spots along William Street in front of the church—prime spaces that don’t impact our neighbors. But too many people still park along other residential streets even when there’s space in the lot—usually to allow for a quicker exit.

When exiting onto Stafford Avenue, please remember: you’re in a residential neighborhood, with children at play.

Let’s be good neighbors. Charity begins with the Lord—and continues as we exit the parking lot into all the places we go in daily life.

pax (et bonum)!

Father John Mosimann

August 10, 2025