Pentecost: A Stewardship Feast to Celebrate

Similar documents
2014 Orlando, Florida October 5-8

2014 Orlando, Florida October 5-8

2014 Orlando, Florida October 5-8

Stewardship in the Public Square

Resources for Prayer. Praying for Our Diocese at Candlemas and onwards

Be a Good Steward of the Lenten Season

President apologizes for archbishop's assassination

The Catholic Community of Gloucester & Rockport

Good Stewards Live the Beatitudes

Stewardship and Our Baptismal Promises

February February 2 Super Bowl Background: Opportunities: February 13 Absalom Jones and Black History Month Background: Opportunities:

FROM "THOUGHTS FROM SOLITUDE" BY THOMAS MERTON

Being Good Stewards of Our Common Home: The Pope s Encyclical

diocese of BOISE OFFICE OF CATECHESIS

RESOURCES FOR LITURGY

Volume 24 Number 2 May 2015 THE HOMILY IS A HYMN

ST. CHARLES. The dress. The flowers. The menu. There are usually a million things to accomplish between BORROMEO CATHOLIC CHURCH PREPARING FOR FOREVER

Vocation General Intercessions First Sunday of Advent 2016 to Feast of Christ the King 2017 Cycle A

Diocese of Owensboro Office of Vocations. Vocation Plan

Cathedral of Saint Raymond Nonnatus Cathedral Adult Choir and Choral Scholars Season

MEMO Office of Stewardship PHONE (856) FAX (856)

Parents Guide to Diocesan Faith Formation Curriculum Grade 5

FAITH FORMATION CURRICULUM

Grade 4 DATE LESSON FAITH OBJECTIVES September 27 Week 1 Family Prayer in Church followed by. Opening Lesson (in the classrooms)

Chrism Mass Introduction

RUTILIO GRANDE, MAN, CHRISTIAN, PRIEST

Stewardship in the New Year: Making Commitments to the Lord

Does Your Parish Have an Evangelization Plan for Young Adults?

UNITED IN HEART AND MIND A

NASSAU COUNTY RED MASS MOST REVEREND JOHN O. BARRES, STD, JCL OCTOBER 2, 2018

MEMO Office of Stewardship PHONE (856) FAX (856)

Prayers Of The Faithful 19th Sunday Yearc

Labor Day. It Takes All Kinds to Make the World Go Round

PARISH STEWARDSHIP. Annual Conference. Hospitality at Mass: A Key to Good Stewardship. Remember, we are Christ s ambassadors (2 Corinthians 5:20).

OUR REDEEMER LUTHERAN CHURCH March 24, 2019

ANNUAL THEOLOGICAL COLLEGE ALUMNI MASS CRYPT CHAPEL OF THE NATIONAL SHRINE MOST REVEREND JOHN O. BARRES, STD, JCL OCTOBER 3, 2018

Year B: Questions of the Week

The Chrism Mass. Homily by Bishop Paul J. Bradley, Bishop of Kalamazoo. March 22, :00 p.m. St. Augustine Cathedral

56th Annual Conference October 28-31, 2018 Nashville, Tennessee

Office for Divine Worship and the Catechumenate

CHURCH OF SAINT AEDAN PARISH CALENDAR September 2016 June 2017*+

Y E A R S I X. Religious. Education Test 2008 NAME: CLASS: TEST TIME: 1 hour

Vocation Bulletin Blurbs First Sunday of Advent 2017 to Feast of Christ the King 2018 Cycle B

RCIA Brings New Life into Our Community of Faith

AN INTERVIEW WITH FR. PAUL SCHINDLER By: Rafael Garcilazo

Religion Curriculum. Pre-Kindergarten

Who is My Neighbour? Adult Faith Leaders Guide

Lent and the Desert Experience

CHANCERY BULLETIN March 25, 2013

The. For. Prayer.) man than. Day Day Day Day Day. jail detainees Day Day Day Day. serve our Amen

Third Grade Big Idea # 1: Who is Jesus Christ?

GUADALUPE MINISTRY REPORT 2014

ST. ELIZABETH SETON LEGACY OF FAITH

Advent With Evening Prayer I of the First Sunday of Advent the New Liturgical Year of 2018 begins.

Cycle of Prayer Model Intercessions

The Great Jubilee Year

St. Michael the Archangel Stewardship Fund Conference & Parish Grants

Creed. Content Standard. Rationale. Performance Standards Creed

Lent and the Desert Experience

Vocation. ~ The Year We Begin 21 st Century Vocations Promotion in Kyoto Diocese ~ Bishop s New Year Pastoral Letter, 2009

LiturgyNotes Liturgical Calendar 2010 Page 1 of 5

LITURGICAL YEAR CALENDAR AND NOTES 2017

Title: Grade 3 - Unit 4 Chapter Student Name: Date:

Vocation General Intercessions

Religion Standards Pre-K through 8 th Grade

TRUE LIFE HOLY ORDERS

Saint Barnabas School of Religion 413 East 241 st St., Bronx, N.Y FIRST SEMESTER

Today It Is Your Turn : Young Hispanic Leaders and the New Evangelization. The Most Rev. José H. Gomez, Archbishop of San Antonio

What does it mean to work in a Catholic school?

Second Grade Religion Curriculum Map Unit 1 Student Learning Expectations: 1a, 1b, 1c, 2a, 2b, 2c, 3a, 3b, 3c, 4a, 4b, 4c, 5a, 5b, 5c

Grade Three. To introduce the children to the fact that God has a Church to help transform the world.

Faith Formation Standards Diocese of St. Cloud

Liturgical Calendar Advisory for the Diocese of Dallas Lectionary Cycle B ~ Year II

Blessed. Growing in the Faith and Fellowship Through Cursillo

Homily by Oscar Romero on the feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, 1977

But other thanks are very much in order and they too are a part of our prayers this morning. Thanks to the priests and deacons who are here.

LENT 2018 RESOURCES FOR COORDINATORS

Stewardship of Prayer

SAINT BENEDICT CHURCH MARGUERITE, PA ALTAR SERVER S MASS HANDBOOK

GUIDE FOR PLANNING AND ORGANIZING YOUR MINISTRY FAIR

Vocation Bulletin Blurbs First Sunday of Advent 2018 to Feast of Christ the King 2019 Cycle C Attn: Bulletin Editor and Parish Vocations Committee

LITURGY CALENDAR Cycle B (Mark) 2015

Advent With Evening Prayer I of the First Sunday of Advent the New Liturgical Year of 2017 begins.

RCIA CLASS 11A CATHOLIC LITURGY: AN INTRODUCTION AND A SENSE OF MYSTERY

Best Practices Increasing Listenership. Cynthia Nickless Executive Director & Founder The Presence Radio Network Portland, ME

Prophets of a Future Not Our Own

NEWSLETTER. Mission Visits to schools and parishes

Correlation to the Diocese of Columbus Religion Course of Study. Based on the Six Tasks of Catechesis GRADES -

FEDERATION OF DIOCESAN LITURGICAL COMMISSIONS [FDLC] MYSTAGOGICAL REFLECTIONS ON THE COLLECTS

Saturday of Fifth Week of Easter. Ordination to the Order of Deacon: (Readings: Jer.1:4-9; 1Pet.4:7-11; Jn 10:11-16)

For the Classroom Formation in Christian Chastity, Grade 6 Lesson Plan 1 Theme: God Made Us to Love And To Be Loved

NOTATIONS ON THE LITURGICAL CALENDAR. for the ARCHDIOCESE OF SAINT PAUL & MINNEAPOLIS

LITURGICAL YEAR CALENDAR AND NOTES 2018

Annunciation Catholic Church Ascension Mission

Office of Catechesis September 2014

The Confirmation of Catholic Adults

SERVANT LEADER. Leader s notes: Welcome. Gathering prayer

Congratulations to all First Holy Communion Candidates!

CALENDAR. November 2018 June 2019

Happy St. Valentine s Day! We do not know a lot about the original St. Valentine beyond the fact that he was a Roman priest and martyr.

Transcription:

Chicago, Illinois October 22-25, 2015 2015 Annual Conference International Catholic Stewardship Council CATHOLIC STEWARDSHIP May 2015 e-bulletin In memory of Oscar Romero (1917 1980) A Step Along the Way Orlando, Florida October 5-8 A STEWARDSHIP PRAYER for May It helps now and then to step back and take a long view. The Kingdom is not only beyond our efforts, it is beyond our vision. We accomplish in our lifetime only a fraction of the magnificent enterprise that is God s work. Nothing we do is complete, which is another way of saying that the kingdom always lies beyond us. No statement says all that could be said. No prayer fully expresses our faith. No confession brings perfection, no pastoral visit brings wholeness. No program accomplishes the Church s mission. No set of goals and objectives includes everything. This is what we are about. We plant the seeds that one day will grow. We water the seeds already planted knowing that they hold future promise. We lay foundations that will need further development. We provide yeast that produces effects far beyond our capabilities. We cannot do everything, and there is a sense of liberation in realizing this. This enables us to do something, and to do it very well. It may be incomplete, but it is a beginning, a step along the way, an opportunity for the Lord s grace to enter and do the rest. We may never see the end results, but that is the difference between the master builder and the worker. We are workers, not master builders, ministers, not messiahs. We are prophets of a future not our own. By Bishop Ken Untener of Saginaw (1937-2004) Pentecost: A Stewardship Feast to Celebrate A challenge for the Christian steward is accepting, and even rejoicing in, the fact that our commitment to faith is often a counter-cultural one. Perhaps this is nowhere more striking than in the quick cultural end of the Easter season, and our own belief that Easter is leading us through May to the great feast of Pentecost on May 24. We see this discordance in many Christian celebrations adapted by the popular, commercial culture. While we are still enjoying the season of Christmas and looking forward to Epiphany, most American homes have taken the Christmas tree to the recycling center and moved on to thoughts of Valentine s Day. During the sacrificial early days of Lent, there s something jarring yes, just wrong about all those pastel Easter eggs and bunnies appearing in stores. And all that chocolate! So, as Christian stewards, we feel no surprise that as we break our Easter fast and begin our meditation on the Resurrection, we find that the stores have tucked those chocolate bunnies away on discount shelves, and we re off to the next commercially competitive venture. And as the great feast of Pentecost beckons us, we realize that the society around us gives this occasion hardly a passing nod. Apparently, there s Continued on page 2

Continued from page 1 no money to be made from Pentecost, the day the Holy Spirit came among the apostles and imbued in them the courage to be true followers of Christ. Courage, strength, faith, the Spirit these are hard to market in the public square, aren t they? The willingness to live and ultimately to die as martyrs for Christ, as the apostles did, these are things that are hard to package in bright paper. They don t fit well in the greeting card aisle. Perhaps during these days of May when we as Catholic stewards continue to celebrate the season of Easter and look forward to Pentecost, we might examine our own willingness to step outside the culture in our celebration of great Christian feast days. Keep the As the great feast of Pentecost beckons us, we realize that the society around us gives this occasion hardly a passing nod. reminders of the Resurrection around you. Let your family prayer reflect the marvels of the season. Help your children to be aware of the liturgical calendar. Explain to them the meaning of the changing colors of the priests vestments. Dress up in red for Pentecost Sunday. But most importantly, educate yourself and your family on how powerful it is to understand and celebrate the great markers and mysteries of our shared faith experience. STEWARDSHIP SAINT for May Archbishop Oscar Romero: A Gift to the World Salvadoran Archbishop Oscar Romero (1917-1980), formally recognized by Pope Francis as being martyred in hatred of the faith, is to be beatified in San Salvador on May 23, 2015. Born into a poor El Salvadoran family, Romero received the public education that extended from grades one to three only. He was accepted into a minor seminary at age 13, and, showing promise, was sent to study in Rome. He was ordained to the priesthood there in 1942. When he returned to El Salvador, he served as a parish priest, was appointed auxiliary bishop of San Salvador, bishop of the Diocese of Santiago de Maria, and finally, in 1977, archbishop of San Salvador. Many Catholics were dismayed at Romero s appointment because of his reputation as a conservative in a time where there existed tremendous economic and political repression in El Salvador. The ruling military junta was controlled by a small oligarchy of the wealthiest families who dominated the economy. A month after taking office, Romero s close friend, Jesuit priest Rutilio Grande, was assassinated by a Salvadoran death squad for speaking out against the inequality and injustice. It was to change Romero s life. He said later, When I looked at Rutilio lying there dead I thought, If they have killed him for doing what he did, then I, too, have to walk the same path. Archbishop Romero turned the facilities at the cathedral into a space for people to come for relief, food and medical assistance. He also began hearing the stories of countless Salvadorans who told him how their family members were tortured and killed, or just disappeared. He quickly began to speak out on behalf of the poor and powerless. His weekly sermons, broadcast throughout El Salvador by radio, cited human rights violations by the government. He soon earned the hatred of the military junta and by many in the wealthiest classes. His life was threatened on several occasions, to which he responded: I have frequently been threatened with death. I must say that, as a Christian, I do not believe in death but in the resurrection. If they kill me, I shall rise again in the Salvadoran people. The day before his death, Romero appealed directly to members of the military, pleading with them in a national broadcast not to obey orders that were immoral and illegal: In the name of God, in the name of our tormented people whose cries rise up to heaven, I beseech you, I beg you, I command you, stop the repression! On March 24, 1980, as he was celebrating Mass in the chapel of the Carmelite Sisters hospital for cancer patients, where he lived, he was shot to death. His martyrdom bore striking resemblance to the martyrdom of Saint Thomas Becket in Canterbury Cathedral. Pope Francis recently quoted from a homily by Archbishop Romero: We must all be willing to die for our faith even if the Lord does not grant us this honor. The May 23 Mass and beatification ceremony has been referred to by Pope Francis as a gift to the world.

Celebrating the Year of Consecrated Life A Model Stewardship Teacher: Sister Esther Joy by Mary Ann Otto, Stewardship Director, Diocese of Green Bay, WI I remember her vividly. As I look through the eyes of a Christian steward, I could see why my teacher, Sister Esther Joy perfectly inspired the young students in her care. Second grade was her specialty and there were about fifty of us. Sister Esther was able to use her God-given talents as a teacher. Her joy and faith were passed on to us. It seemed like we each had a place and school was an experience of Jesus as well as a place for learning. I believe that Sister Esther was an expert at time management because we accomplished so much that year. We honed our skills in the three R s (Reading, writing and arithmetic), were perfectly prepared for First Penance and First Communion and played games to remember the answers to the questions in the Catechism. We also prayed the rosary in Latin every day and filled our rice bowls during Lent. She was with us at Mass each day and encouraged Saturday participation where she would have her classroom open and we could work on crafts after Mass. Sister Esther was also a woman who loved music and literature. She would encourage us to finish our projects and had us all singing as she played the violin. At the end of the day she would read aloud a chapter from a book. I remember Heidi as being one of my favorites. This lovely woman was fifty-three years old when I encountered her as a second grade student. It was the sparkle in her eye, her love and her many gifts that touched me so deeply. She died on February 22, 1989. She was 79 years old, taught for 40 years and had just celebrated her 60th anniversary as a Racine Dominican. Amazing! I would invite everyone to celebrate the Year of Consecrated Life by going to the website of your favorite religious community. Find out how you could tell one of your own stories and thank them for how they have impacted your life. No doubt, they deserve our gratitude and we deserve the joy of remembering. Calling All ICSC Parish Members! ICSC 2015 Parish Stewardship Award Information Has your parish developed stewardship materials that would help others? Did your committee work hard on resources you are proud of? Please consider applying for one or more ICSC Parish Awards in 2015. Parishes at all stages of the stewardship journey are encouraged to apply! Entries will be judged by members of the ICSC Parish Stewardship Education and Services Committee. Application Deadline is June 30. All applicants will be contacted by August 15. For additional information, list of awards, and entry forms CLICK HERE

Called. Transformed. Sent to serve. BECOME AN ICSC MEMBER TODAY It will enhance your stewardship efforts tremendously! International Catholic Stewardship Council Who is ICSC? The International Catholic Stewardship Council (ICSC) is a professional organization recognized internationally as a source of education, networking and information to advance the ministry of Christian stewardship as a way of life in the Roman Catholic Church in dioceses and parishes worldwide. ICSC is the only organization dedicated exclusively to advancing Christian stewardship in North America as well as overseas. Founded in 1962, ICSC has over 1,200 members representing over 800 dioceses and archdioceses, parish communities, Catholic organizations and professional firms. ICSC Provides Expert advice for introducing Christian stewardship to your parish community Techniques proven to revitalize parish life Practical stewardship ideas Support for teaching stewardship to children Reflections for preaching stewardship A network of speakers for parishes and diocesan gatherings Conferences that offer the wisdom and experience of those committed to stewardship as a way of life Retreats that offer in-depth reflection and study on Christian stewardship Publications that inform and enhance our understanding of stewardship Access to stewardship resources, models and samples online Opportunities to exchange ideas and information with stewardship parishes in North America and beyond Best practices for promoting stewardship in the parish Membership Includes Discounts for conferences, institutes and publications Membership directory Access to past conference presentations Monthly parish e-bulletins offering weekly reflections, prayers, bulletin inserts and much more Web site section for members only with the latest parish stewardship resources Access to parish leadership planning tools Opportunities to exchange ideas, network, share best practices and grow in faith The promotion of the practice of stewardship is important for the mission of the Church and for the spiritual well-being of each individual Christian. Everyone benefits from the sacrificial gift one makes of his time, talent, and treasure. -Pope Benedict XVI

A STEWARDSHIP MOMENT Fifth Sunday of Easter Weekend of May 2/3, 2015 Jesus offers a quintessential stewardship statement in today s Gospel reading: Whoever remains in me and I in him will bear much fruit, because without me you can do nothing. Jesus Christ offers us the fullness of eternal life. Do our lives reveal that this is what we want? Do we believe that by hearing the Word of the Lord and responding we not only produce good fruit, but abide in the very life of God? Sixth Sunday of Easter Weekend of May 9/10, 2015 Jesus calls his disciples his friends and commands them to love one other as he has loved them. We are called to be stewards of this friendship; to love one another as Jesus loves us. Do we give serious attention to what this love requires of us? Does this require us to actively seek the welfare of others? What is the price of this friendship with the Lord? The Ascension of the Lord Thursday, May 14 or Weekend of May 16/17, 2015 Before he ascended into heaven, Jesus instructed his disciples to proclaim the Gospel to all of creation. As stewards of this legacy, we too are called to give witness to the Gospel of Jesus Christ in our words and actions; in how we live and how we treat others. Are we sharing the life of Christ with others in our day-to-day lives? In what ways do we see ourselves proclaiming the Gospel? In what ways can we do better? Pentecost Sunday Weekend of May 23/24, 2015 Today we celebrate the gift of the Holy Spirit, the birth of the Church and the beginning of its mission in the world. Pentecost Sunday reminds us that our lives are filled with the Holy Spirit and God has accomplished creative things in us through this gift. We have been entrusted with this great gift of the Holy Spirit. Now is a good time to ask: Are we being good stewards of this gift? What creative things have we done to glorify God s accomplishments in us? Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity Weekend of May 30/31, 2015 In today s Gospel and reading from the letter of St. Paul we hear of the gift of the Triune God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit. In our devotional life we make the sign of the cross and recite the Glory Be as an expression of our faith as a Trinitarian people. But what does it mean for Christian stewards to accept in a practical way the experience of God in this three-fold gift? Is it a call to share our own life in community, with compassion and love, and to work for healing, justice, peace and unity? Is it an invitation to invite others into fellowship with us in the unity of the Father, Son and Spirit? International Catholic Stewardship Council (800) 352-3452 ICSC@catholicstewardship.org www.catholicstewardship.org We encourage you to check out the ICSC online community at www.catholicstewardship.org under members where members can share ideas and questions. The Parish Stewardship section is reviewed every day by members of the Parish Stewardship Education and Services Committee.