From Our Pastor ~ Dec. 15, 2013

From Our Pastor ~ Dec. 15, 2013

Dear Good People of Saint Mary,

We have just recently completed compiling all the responses you graciously gave to our Parish Life Weekend call for ministry participation in parish groups and ministries. Thank you. If you haven’t heard from someone already, it is now the work of our group and ministry leaders to contact all you who are interested in actively participating in various activities in the parish and you should be hearing from someone soon. If you don’t, please give us a kind reminder.

Of the nearly 4,900 catalogues that were mailed to registered families, we received 765 responses, all very different, each beautiful in its expression. You see, a tangible commitment is more likely to be carried out than an “I’ll get to it” in a rare moment of calm. But the overwhelming sense that I get as I read through your comments, nearly all of which were kind and constructive this year (thank you again!) is that there is a remarkable amount of love, charity, involvement, service, commitment that could never be measured by a survey or quantified into a total analysis of “who we are.” I am humbled by the sheer immensity of the ways our people serve one another and never mention it or are never recognized for it.

Although the 765 responses, which constitute a 15% response rate, would be considered an excellent return for a direct mail piece to strangers, I think they are probably only scratching the surface of what we go about doing quietly in the name of Christ. Because the Church is not a professional association of dues-paying members and does not require any sort of annual report of our activities, we are not accustomed to the idea that it might actually be important for the benefit of all the faithful that we share what we are doing at this point in our lives, and how we are living the Gospel.

I would like to include here one such response I received attached to a returned commitment card. It was so inspiring to me, I called up this person and asked if I could use it in the bulletin. Her message was for me, itself, a work of ministry and I hope it illustrates for you this idea of what I am talking about. You just never know where people are coming from, and what they are dealing with at the present time.

Dear Fr. Don,
 
My husband and I have been in the parish for the last three years. We are both graduates of Jesuit universities where we were deeply formed in service. I have participated in many ministries during our parish lives in Boston. Now, retired and in our early 70s, I am a 24/7 caregiver for my husband who has had Parkinson’s disease for the past 20 years.

 

We were Eucharistic Ministers from 1976 to 1987. My husband has been rector in Cursillo many times and both of us on teams as well. I sponsored a candidate for RCIA. I was president of a parish organization and my goal was to sponsor a Laotian family from a refugee camp in Thailand. They eventually moved to Rhode Island and one of their sons graduated from Providence College. We were active members of the “Voice of the Faithful” in Boston when we were stunned by the sexual abuse scandal. I could go on and on!

 

My desire is to attend daily Mass (which was my habit) and be involved in as many parish activities as possible. Unfortunately, or fortunately, my altar is at my husband’s side – helping him live as normal a life as possible for as long as possible. Thus, the limited offering of time, talent, and treasure.
 
In Christ’s love.

And she signed her name. I wanted to share her message with the whole parish as a word of encouragement and inspiration for all of us in this Advent of hope-filled waiting. Trust in the deep goodness which God has placed in your hearts, and let this goodness become visible in you as we prepare for Jesus’ coming.

God bless you.

Fr. Don

Express Announcements ~ Dec. 8, 2013

Express Announcements ~ Dec. 8, 2013

On Monday, December 9 we celebrate the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception, Patroness of the United States and Patron Saint of our Parish. Masses are 6:30am, 9am, 12 Noon, 6pm & 7:30pm. There are no Religious Education classes on Monday, December 9.

Celebrate the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe on December 12, with Mananitas at 4:30am, and a special Mass at 7:30pm. Read this bulletin for details.

Join us for Advent Lessons and Carols in the church on Friday, December 13 at 7:30pm. Saint Mary Choirs present Advent songs along with scripture readings and hymns for all to sing. It is a wonderful way to celebrate the season.

SCRIP is on sale in the Parish Life Center after all Masses except Saturday 7pm and Sunday 2pm. You can start budgeting for your Christmas gift list! Please use SCRIP, and a percentage of what you spend will be applied to our school.

Please be sure to visit the display of Handmade Olive Wood Carvings and other articles outside the Church after all the Masses on December 14 & 15! Any purchase you make supports our Bethlehem Christian families who continue to endure much hardship in the Holy Land.

Sunday Coffee Shop is scheduled to be open this weekend, after the 7, 8:30 & 10:30 Masses.

From Our Pastor ~ Dec. 8, 2013

From Our Pastor ~ Dec. 8, 2013

Dear Good People of Saint Mary,

Mostly I just write the bulletin article in the office. Sometimes, it’s from a cool place like Jerusalem or Italy. Today it’s from the hospital.

Advent 2013
The Special Christmas Charities Collection will be divided between our Oblate Sisters of Saint Francis de Sales (worldwide), a Bethlehem charity, and an ongoing local social concern that involves many of our parishioners.

As I had mentioned at Masses a couple weeks ago I had some surgery scheduled to fix some lingering effects from my semicolon procedure almost two years ago. I guess it may have been a little optimistic to think I’d actually be back to work in three days, but we gave it our best shot. I actually came home in four, but learned quickly that I had sleeping guts that just wouldn’t wake up and found myself back in the hospital the next day, last Saturday night. Since then all I can do is just wait it out. I’m still here…it has been painful and miserable but things seem to be finally waking up and I hope to be out by midweek and get on with life. I’m sorry to all who have been looking for me or needed something from me while I’ve been out of commission. We will gather it all up again soon and go back to work and get done what needs to be done. If anyone calls me “sleepy guts” I’ll call you back last!

It has been an interesting experience watching the parish remotely, as it were. You can learn things from other perspectives. For example, every once in a while I like to just attend Mass as a “normal” person. You learn new things about celebration styles (how others do it), you watch how people respond, or not, there is a lot to be learned.

As I’ve been watching our communications to you I realize that they are particularly heavy on the asking side this year. It is the season of giving, to be sure, and we receive a large number of solicitations each year for the parish to support just about every cause and project you could imagine. The churches have become easy solutions for people who need funds and lack creativity, and the expectation is often that we do their promotion and collection for them, as well. We try to help people help themselves when it comes to these solicitations, and you don’t hear about them officially from us.

Even with regard to things so vitally important to the life of the Diocese like Catholic Charities. This year it almost seems like a second Bishop’s Lenten Appeal. This is an indication that it is truly that important – and requires our attention. Professionals in this area say that today this is the only way we get anyone’s attention for a collection so necessary as this is. But something inside me mourns the fact of it.

So I ask your patience and earnest support for one further collection this year, our annual Special Christmas Charities Collection. We take the second collection and divide it three ways, traditionally: one third goes to a particular need of our Oblate Sisters of Saint Francis de Sales (worldwide), one third to a Bethlehem charity, and one third to an ongoing local social concern that involves many of our parishioners.

This year, we ask your second collection donation next weekend to support:

1. The needs of the Oblate Sisters’ Father Brisson Institute in Alausi, Ecuador. Following a flood, the roof of the school was so damaged that continued deterioration of the property has continued. They recently applied for and received a grant for a new roof and are rebuilding – much work on walls and ceilings will follow and our parish can make a significant contribution to this.

2. We will continue to give an annual donation to the Creche Orphanage in Bethlehem, Palestine (could there be a more perfect Christmas charity?). The 120 or so orphans who are cared for by the Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul since 1884 are provided additional medical possibilities through donations such as ours.

3. Community Dinners in Fredericksburg have become one of the most successful and popular ministries among our many parishioners, and all churches in town. Our annual Christmas collection pays our parish’s three dinners a month which we prepare and serve.

God bless you.

Fr. Don

Express Announcements ~ Dec. 1, 2013

Express Announcements ~ Dec. 1, 2013

Sign up today for All Night Eucharistic Adoration following our 8pm First Friday Mass on December 6. 

Our Monthly Family Dinner, sponsored by the Knights of Columbus, is Saturday, December 7 from 6 to 8:30pm in the Parish Life Center. 

On Monday, December 9 we celebrate the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, Patroness of the United States and Patroness of our Parish. Masses are 6:30am, 9am, 12 Noon, 6pm & 7:30pm. There are no Religious Education classes on Monday, December 9. 

Christmas Tree Sales, by the Knights of Columbus have started and run through Sunday, December 22. Trees and wreaths will be sold at St. Jude Catholic Church, 10725 Courthouse Rd., Spotsylvania.