Express Announcements ~ 21 June 2015

Express Announcements ~ 21 June 2015

* Beginning this Sunday, Fathers’ Day, a Novena of Masses will be offered for all the intentions placed in front of the altar. These intentions will remain before the altar throughout the Novena. Fathers’ Day Cards and extra novena envelopes are available in the vestibule of the Church and in the Parish Office.

* Join us to build up a robust ministry of ushers and greeters. Consider serving the Church in this manner. See p. 8 for information, and call the office and add your name to the list for the meeting August 29.

* If you are new to Saint Mary, welcome! Our next new parishioner welcome meeting is Sunday, June 28 following the 10:30am Mass in the church.

* Be sure to keep up on all is happening at St. Mary by subscribing with your email address at our home page, lower right corner, at www.stmaryfred.org!

From Our Pastor ~ 21 June 2015

From Our Pastor ~ 21 June 2015

Dear Good People of Saint Mary,

Summer is certainly here! Do you remember the last time 90+ temperatures arrived early in mid-June? It was five years ago, when we gutted the church for renovations and the schedule said we would have the air conditioning back on by the 4th of July. We were suddenly in the 90s in June preparing for one of the hottest summers on record…we were in the 100s in July…the air conditioning didn’ʹt come back on until September. All we had were the little portable air conditioners that put out more noise than cool…

This past weekend I was remembering this as it seemed pretty hot in church. They haven’t invented yet a system that can figure out how to go from empty to 650 people in 10 minutes on a hot day. But we are constantly fine tuning! Please be patient with us. We didn’t have air conditioning as children, and my dad had prophetic words for this: “a family that sweats together, sticks together.”

Speaking of sticking together, I’ve been thinking a lot about the things that can quickly threaten our families. Families aren’t unlike church communities: the first thing that breaks up families is when we value our individualism above our relationship with the people that God has placed in our lives. When the family or parish becomes the place to do for me what I want, then the whole idea of community is turned upside down. We are placed here for those around us, those around us aren’t placed here for us.

It has huge impact on the spiritual life, too, because God can become just another one of those things that exists to serve the individual. Then we don’t get what we want, God seems “distant,” either we get frustrated or bored or even angry. Many Christian churches have turned to the Gospel of prosperity or drum kits and entertainment or have become communities requiring no obligation whatsoever to try to coexist with this destructive individualism rather than trying to change it. The reality is, no matter how much modern churches are trying to become “relevant” to the individual, that is not really the job of the Church. The question is: How relevant is the individual to the life of the Church?

Down deep, I believe everyone is seeking to be relevant, but we have bought the whole selfish social ideal that it becomes a struggle too complicated to solve. Both can’t exist at the same time it is like matter and antimatter. It is easier to be served than to serve, but Jesus came to serve and to be the example for all those who follow as his disciples. It is service that we find our relevance; it is in love that we find our purpose, both in his love for us and in our love for one another. Ultimately it is all about love, and love can’t exist in an individual alone, because at some we realize that loving myself just doesn’t go anywhere.

The key is when we realize that we did nothing to deserve anything that we have received. Life, gifts, hopes, relationships, grace, salvation, perseverance, courage, reconciliation, God. Nor is there anything that we can do to earn or merit any of it. It is not false humility to say that I am not worthy of any of this. None of us are worthy, yet God chooses to love us anyway. Only when we get to the point that we truly realize that
God freely gives all these things to us who don’t deserve it will we understand the sentence, “God is love.” And “God loves me.” And in this fact I find my identity. And that identity is everything.

God bless you.

Fr. Don

Express Announcements ~ 14 June 2015

Express Announcements ~ 14 June 2015

* The second collection this weekend is for the parish building fund. Thank you for your support.

* Beginning June 21, Fathers’ Day, a Novena of Masses will be offered for all the intentions placed in front of the altar. These intentions will remain before the altar throughout the Novena. Fathers’ Day Cards and extra novena envelopes are available in the vestibule of the Church and in the Parish Office.

* If you are new to Saint Mary, welcome! Our next new parishioner welcome meeting is Sunday, June 28 following the 10:30am Mass in the church.

* Be sure to keep up on all that is happening at St. Mary by subscribing with your email address at our home page, lower right corner, at www.stmaryfred.org!

From Our Pastor ~ 14 June 2015

From Our Pastor ~ 14 June 2015

Dear Good People of Saint Mary,

It has been a while since I’ve written about housekeeping items in church, but since we are coming into the summer season and it seems that the complaints are coming in more numerously, now is as good a time as any to cover some of these things. So I have a few invitations for you, as you come to Mass.

Invitation 1
Please reflect on what you are about to wear to Mass. Fashion, like language, says so much about you, and I suspect there are many people who are saying a lot of things that they do not intend (at least I hope so). Some forms of clothing are never appropriate, and definitely not at Mass. I understand that people just don’t spend money on dress clothes anymore, and maybe can’t, but when you buy attire please consider items that include sufficient fabric to actually clothe. I think this is important. Sometimes when people come to confession and ask if cussing is a sin, I say to them that, for some words, the verdict may still be out. But, I ask, is that how you want people to remember you? We as a society have bought wholesale the cheap look of disrespect for self and others: it isn’t appropriate anywhere.

Invitation 2
If you are parents with young children, you are invited to check out the cry room. I spoke with one family with young children last weekend, new to the parish, who were not aware that we have one. We welcome children, we love them,too—but you have no idea how hard it is to focus on giving a homily when there is so much going on in the church. I am also aware, from what I have heard from many, how hard it is also to pray. Phone conversations in the pews, reading children’s books to your family, conversations, noisy toys—all these things need to be kept outside the doors of the church. Church is for one purpose,for us to pray as Jesus to the Father. And when we get in the way of people who are seeking that goal, we are the problem. And we are not teaching our kids to be reverent and attentive.
Here are a few rules for the cry room.

1. It is for crying. If your children are crying this is your place for the moment. If your children are good, don’t go in there until you need to.
2. It is not for playing. Parents have told me that they don’t go in there because there are children playing and they don’t want this to be what their children learn about church.
3. If you do not have crying children, you may not use the room. A number of people seem to like going in there; those seats are for parents who are trying to hold it together with their kids.

Invitation 3
To be helpful, if you don’t have young children, try to sit on the choir side of the church; then parents with crying children don’t have so far to go. Don’t fill up the seats in front of the cry  room windows if you don’t have young children. Likewise, if you have potentially upset children, please sit near the cry room or vestibule so you can gain rapid escape. When I was a kid the  Monsignor of the parish frequently put in the bulletin: “Good intentions, like crying babies, should be carried out immediately.”

Invitation 4
I invite you to consider the need for silence in the church before and after Mass. It is the general and honorable practice of the Church (and a good  one) to pray silently in preparation for Mass: “Lord, open my heart to hear your Word; Lord open my heart to receive your Life.” People might be trying to pray the rosary, meditate on the readings  of Sacred Scripture for today’s Mass in the missalette, even praying Morning Prayer or Evening Prayer of the Liturgy of the Hours. But imagine how hard this can be when there is so much going on around you. For this reason I ask that everyone observe this respectful silence before Mass. Actually, we are one of the best parishes for this that I have seen, but we get a little off our form in the summer.  Also, after Mass is a good time to make a special silent prayer of thanksgiving to God for his goodness today.

Invitation 5
This is the one people tell me to write about the most, many want announcements before Mass begins… Beware the diabolical devices of mobile communications! Really. We all have to have one, but there is a silent mode that we should all take advantage of. I’m guilty, too, but it only took one time for my phone to ring during consecration for me to remember to switch it off before entering the church. Please, I invite you to shut off anything that is going to speak with any kind of tone other than human praise and thanks.

God bless you.

 Fr. Don