If you’re having trouble viewing the bulletin, or to print your own copy, please click here.
http://wp1333.wp3-o1.pgservers.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/Bulletin_March_3_2013.pdf
by
If you’re having trouble viewing the bulletin, or to print your own copy, please click here.
http://wp1333.wp3-o1.pgservers.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/Bulletin_March_3_2013.pdf
by
Join fellow parishioners on Sunday March 3rd, anytime from 9:30am to 12:30pm, to see the various ministries in which we can all be involved, from liturgical & pastoral ministries to faith formation & service ministries. And to entice you a bit: visit one of our tables and talk with any of our ministry representatives and you can enter into a drawing to win a $100 Target® gift card! Click here for insert.
Who knows, you may even find that you are drawn to sign-up for a new ministry!
by
On Sunday, March 10th beginning at 3:00pm all are invited to enter into retreat to consider “The Return of the Prodigal Son”, to be held at the Church of St. Mary. There will be guided reflections as well as time for quiet and peace. Catered dinner will be served at 5:45pm, and 7:00pm will conclude our day. Please contact the Parish Office to RSVP by Mar 3. Click here for insert.
by
Sunday, March 17th at both morning Masses, we welcome Bishop Capistran Heim, OFM. Here’s an interesting article about Bishop Heim’s former ministry:
Born in Catskill, N.Y., in 1934, Bishop Capistran F. Heim, OFM, has served the Prelacy of Itaituba, Brazil for eight years. He came to know about St. Francis as a boy, taught by Franciscan Sisters of Allegany, and later as a meat cutter where Franciscan friars did their shopping.
In 1954 I was drafted into the Army as the Korean war was winding down. I served almost two years in southern California and left the service with a four-year college scholarship under the GI Bill of Rights. I thought of becoming a veterinarian and enrolled in biology courses at Siena College, where Holy Name Province friars taught.
During my last months in the Army and my first semester at Siena, the idea of a priestly vocation kept popping up. I banished it, trying to convince myself that I would one day be a veterinarian. Around the beginning of the second semester, the province’s vocation director came to Siena to speak to us about the vocation to the priesthood and to religious life. It was the last straw! In a matter of half a year, veterinary medicine ceased to be a priority in my life. I was soon on my way toward an adventure that has lasted almost 40 years and is still going on.
In the years of formation for the priesthood and Franciscan life, I came to know St. Francis and the down-to-earth way of living the Gospel that he left to his followers. I came to know and love the simplicity and brotherhood of scores of friars who, each in his own way, influenced my life and painted rich details into the scenery along the way. But halfway through theology, when everything seemed so orderly and regulated, the Lord came up with another invitation to adventure.
Fr. Donald Hoag, our provincial, offered three of us the opportunity to finish our studies in Brazil, to better prepare ourselves for work in the mission in the state of Goias. We would be the first friars of the province to do this. After two years I felt comfortable with the Portuguese language and the Brazilian people.
My missionary work was about to offer me a rich and varied experience of the presence and guidance of the Lord in my own life and in the lives of those that I served.
This was the call to serve the Lord and his missionary Church in Brazil as the bishop of the Prelacy of Itaituba in the midst of the Amazon rain forest. This is a vast area the size of all of New York State plus all of New England with no paved roads, only eight priests, one brother and 12 sisters, all deeply committed to the missions.
There are social injustices that cry out to heaven, drugs, juvenile prostitution, greed and epidemics of tropical diseases. But I’m also encouraged to find generous and dedicated lay men and women, a vibrant Church in the first stages of evangelization.
My journey with the Franciscans continues, and every day brings a new challenge.
This essay was written in 1996 when Bp. Heim was serving the Prelacy of Itaituba, Brazil. It appeared in the December 1996 issue of The Anthonian magazine.
Imagine what your life would be like if you awoke tomorrow morning and found that there was no water coming into your home. What would you do? Probably you'd get a few gallons of bottled water, and feel a bit grungy and inconvenienced until the water came back on. Other than that, things would really be OK. But what if the water never came back on? And what if the stores ran out of bottled water? What if the nearest drainage ditch became the only place we could get any water at all? … Help The Thirsty