From Our Pastor ~ August 10, 2014

From Our Pastor ~ August 10, 2014

Dear Good People of Saint Mary,

We are at the beginning of a very active year when all of you will be invited to participate in
many activities. Everybody knows, nobody is worse than priests about returning RSVPs in a timely manner. Well, that is what I’ve always heard until lately! We’ve had a number of classes and receptions in which we’ve asked for RSVPs and ended up with twice as many people as responses received. Please help us know how to plan by responding in a timely manner so that we can provide the most effective hospitality for you, and all we serve.

One of the great new ideas we are introducing this year at Saint Mary is a system of coordinating
volunteers. I would like you to check in with the parish via email if you are interested in being considered as a volunteer for a particular need throughout the year. For example, if you have a particular gift of sewing, or carpentry, or addressing envelopes, or baking croissants, or cleaning or hauling — whatever it might be, I ask you to send an email to: volunteer@stmaryfred.org and tell us 1) your name, 2) your best phone number, 3) your email (if different from the one from which you are sending) and 4) a list of your talents. See below for ideas.

Our office will compile a database of volunteers, and when a need arises we will send out a call in a timely manner to see who can respond and assist. Our Operations Committee, under the direction of Pam Biedenbender, will coordinate ministries and willing hearts to get jobs done. These jobs mostly will be one-time in nature, usually community-oriented and rewarding.They are not intended to replace commitments to particular ministries, which we will have the opportunity to sign up for in September.

The possibilities of this system are unlimited. Consider this system for community service
hours and youth participation in the parish, too. Thanks for all you do.

May God bless you,

Fr. Don

Ideas for you on the Volunteer List:

* Do you have special office talents? stuffing envelopes, filing, typing, etc.
* Do you like to cook? Would you cook a mealfor someone? Can you give rides to people – to church, to the doctor, to the store?
* Are you good at entertaining? planning social events, coordinating food, hospitality?
* Do you like talking on the phone?
* Can you substitute for religious education?
* Do you have a green thumb?
* Would you like to be a small group leader?
* Do you find fulfilment in praying for others?
* How are you with physical labor? – setting up or taking down furniture for meetings, etc.
* Can you sew?
* Do you like to shop? help with food, flowers, items needed for special events
* Can you act as a translator, spoken or written word? What languages are you fluent in?
* Do you have talent as a tradesperson? building, plumbing, carpentry, electrical?
* Do you have a gift for design? decorating?
* Do you have IT talents? Website maintenance, calendar updates, electronics
* Do you like to visit people?
* Are you a good listener to someone who needs a friend?
* Would you be willing to be on call as needed for any type of general help? Anything else?

Send your name, best phone number, best email and list of talents to volunteer@stmaryfred.org.

Express Announcements ~ August 10, 2014

Express Announcements ~ August 10, 2014

* Friday, 15 August is the Solemnity of the Assumption of Mary into Heaven, and is a holy day of obligation. Join us for our usualholy day Mass schedule: Thursday Vigil Masses at 6 & 7:30pm, Friday Masses at 6:30 & 9am, Noon, and 6 & 7:30pm.

* RCIA begins September 8. We welcome all who are interested in learning more about Catholic faith. If you or someone you know are seeking answers, call and register for the process in the parish office, and come and see.

* Local Virtus Training is available August 21 for all in ministry whose service involves working with youth. See p. 7.

* Coming soon: New BLUE Hymnals! In a few weeks we will have the latest edition of Gather – updated with the current English version of the Mass and new musical settings of the Gloria,
Sanctus and Memorial Acclamation; plus all our favorite songs from the old edition and some new ones as well.

* SCRIP is on sale this weekend in the Parish Life Center after all Masses except Saturday 7pm and Sunday 2pm. Please use SCRIP and help our school.

Express Announcements ~ 3 August 2014

Express Announcements ~ 3 August 2014

* Patience, please, while our church restrooms are being renovated. We regret the inconvenience, but the church restrooms will be closed until August 15. Restrooms in the Parish Life Center will be available for use.

* It is not too soon to start thinking about RCIA. The Rite of Christian Initiation for adults begins September 8, and we welcome all who are interested in learning more about Catholic faith. If you or someone you know are seeking answers, call and register for the process in the parish office, and come and see.

* Calling all Catechists! Please respond to the call to share your faith with our children and youth. Catechist meetings begin mid-August, so please sign up soon.

* Local Virtus Training is be planned for all in ministry whose service involves working with youth. See p. 7.

* SCRIP is on sale this weekend in the Parish Life Center after all Masses except Saturday 7pm and Sunday 2pm. Please use SCRIP and help our school.

From Our Pastor ~ 3 August 2014

From Our Pastor ~ 3 August 2014

Dear Good People of St. Mary,

I was on the phone the other day with a dear friend of mine who is an evangelical minister in the Chicago area, we were trying to put together details for some upcoming meetings. It was a Saturday afternoon and I told him I would email him the information shortly, as soon as I could get to it after confessions were over. He said, “That’s fine. But just know that I won’t respond to you until Monday morning. I shut my phone off for the Sabbath.” My reaction was, “You’re kidding, right?” I mean, I didn’t say it out loud to him, but I was thinking it.

As accustomed as we have tried to become to constant emailing and texting, I wonder the damage caused by the sheer volume of communication as a constant activity. But if we don’t check in very regularly, the emails and messages pile up so quickly that we don’t have time to catch up.
My friend isn’t actively serving a congregation as a pastor at the present time, he attends a church, so he doesn’t have the weekend demand. But still — I don’t think I could go off the grid for the Lord’s Day. I think of myself as one who has tried to keep limits on these things, to manage several hundred communications a day. I tried Facebook for about three months, only to learn that it filled my inbox with information that either wasn’t necessary or simply not any of my business.

I learned things about people and how they dealt with each other that I realized I’d just rather not know. As for all the “friends” and “friending” that was taking place, I found it a very cheap substitute for real relationship and, if we were honest, was more of an addiction for information, scanning, searching, consuming knowledge about other people and what is going on. It is a modern-day, infinite version of the one-column by five-inch article in the newspaper (old school) that we used to call the weekly “gossip column.” Back to my friend. The more I thought about it, I realized that we have allowed these hundreds-a-day invasions of time. We all know people who do little else all day long. One young adult I know counts among his very best friends those with whom he chats on line, people that he actually has never met in person. “Doesn’t that trouble you?” I asked him. “Not at all,” he replied. “Should it?” Have you found yourself resenting the many demands which too easily can be made by anyone who types a sentence and hits “send”? Your response is expected. This “remote control” allows us to hold expectations for others with very little personal accountability for ourselves. It also allows us to act inhumanly, even cruelly, without any responsibility, patricularly when we communicate anonymously. We learned a long time ago to never look at a public blog, some seem basically a license for hatred.

One social media site popular with teens advertises itself as the place where you can “be anyone you want to be.” It makes you wonder if the person on the other end of the ether is who they say they are, at all. Some people have begun to refuse to use email or social media at all. “If you want to speak to me, or ask me something, you just need to call.” There is a growing awareness that community cannot be established and nurtured through an unnatural, impersonal message (which is so often misunderstood, anyway). Since community is built on relationships, these relationships need to be real, face-to-face, and multi-leveled. Our community is based on the quality of its communication. How are we doing? Are we losing the ability to communicate we once had? Will a new generation develop with a completely different, detached understanding of relationship? There will never be a substitute for real-time encounter and sharing. Give somebody a call.

May God bless you,

Fr. Don