Third Sunday of Lent ~ March 8, 2015 SATURDAY, March 7, 2015 5:00PM– John Galione by–Marilyn Murphy SUNDAY, March 8, 2015 7:30AM– Special Intention of Phyllis McCann by–Joe & Justine DeLuccio 9:00AM – Edward DeFinis by–Joan Larson 11:30AM–Jim Halloran by–Dorothy & Bob Callahan MONDAY, March 9, 2015 8:45AM – Carmela Monaco by–Phyllis McCann 7:00PM–Confession TUESDAY, March 10, 2015 8:45AM –Barbara Figueras WEDNESDAY, March 11, 2015 8:45AM –For the Intentions of Pat & Richard McCaffrey by–Dot & Leon Vandemeulebroeke THURSDAY, March 12, 2015 8:45AM – Peter & Laurie Choma FRIDAY, March 13, 2015 8:45AM –Marjorie Todd by–Jack & Elaine Orzechowski & Family 3:00PM –Eucharistic Adoration 7:30PM– Turk & Mary Uszenski Followed by Stations of the Cross SATURDAY, March 14, 2015 8:45AM –People of the Parish 5:00PM –James MCDonnell by–Family SUNDAY, March 15, 2015 7:30AM –Intention Phyllis McCann 9:00AM –The Silconas Family 11:30AM – Cary Mattos 6:00PM–Deceased Members of the Collins Family March 14 – 5:00PM –Catherine McCabe, Angelina Koppel March 15– 7:30AM –Hope Margarum, Katie Bertoa March 15– 9:00AM –Eduardo & Andrea Piedrasanta, Allen Trudnos March 15 – 11:30AM – Meghan VanAlstyne, Mai Lani & Morgan Castro Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament Adoration takes place each Friday from 3 – 6 PM. Please use the sign-up sheet available on the table in the Narthex. The Holy Hour becomes like an oxygen tank to revive the breath of the Holy Spirit in the midst of the foul and fetid atmosphere of the world. (Archbishop Fulton Sheen) Spend some quiet time with the Lord. THIRD SUNDAY OF LENT First Reading: Exodus 20:1-17 Through Moses, God passed on the commandments he wished all people to follow. He tells us not to worship idols or take the name of the Lord in vain. All the laws God gave to us, if followed, would ensure that we could live in peace and harmony with one another as he had planned. Second Reading: 1 Corinthians 1:22-25 Paul tells the Corinthians that Christ is the power and the wisdom of God. Although they claimed to possess wisdom, “God’s folly is wiser than men, and his weakness is more powerful than men.” Gospel: John 2:13-25 Jesus went to the temple of Jerusalem to find merchants there selling sheep and doves. He knocked over their tables and drove the animals away. The merchants asked him for a sign that he was authorized to do this. He told them to “destroy this temple (referring to his body) and in three days I will raise it up.” The merchants misunderstood, and did not believe he could rebuild in three days what had taken nearly 50 years to build. Still many believed in him, after seeing the miracles he had performed. Altar Bread and Wine – If you would like to donate the Altar Bread and Wine used in the weeks liturgies in memory of a loved one, kindly sign the list available on the table in the Narthex. The Sanctuary Light – If you would like to donate the Sanctuary Light, a reminder of the Divine Presence, in memory of a loved one, kindly sign the list available on the table in the Narthex. Altar Flowers - No Flowers during Lent Renewal of Wedding Vows ♥ If you were married in the month of March and would like to renew your vows nd on Sunday, March 22 at the 9:00 a.m. Mass, please sign the list on the table in the lobby of the Church. Visits to the elderly and sick are made on a weekly basis. Please contact the office if you or someone you know would like a visit. Please remember in your prayers those who are sick, in nursing homes, hospitals or confined to home and cannot join us to worship at the liturgies. Lenten Prayer- Lord of Easter newness, drive out of our homes and hearts the unnecessary and the useless that clutter our lives and monopolize our time. Restore our spirits to a sense of perspective that enables us to use the wonders of creation and technology to realize the meaning and purpose of our lives. May these days of Lent be a “spring cleaning of those things that clutter and “muddy” our relationships with you and one another. (Excerpt from Not By Bread Alone Jay Cormier) Students who are parishioners here and attend Pope John HS in grades 9 & 10 must also register in our Religious Education Program. You may download a Calendar on our website at stjudehamburg.org March 22nd – 1st Grade Mass with Parents at 11:30 AM. April 18th – Second Grade Retreat from 1 – 3:30 p.m. First Communion – May 9th Confirmation – June 13th at 5 :00 PM. Dates to Remember Parish Council Meeting –March 18th at 7:30 PM. Prayer Shawl Ministry –If you would like a Prayer Shawl for someone who is ill (man or woman) or who is in the hospital, please call the rectory! There is no cost. If you would like to donate yarn to the Ministry, please call the Rectory at 973-827-8030. Rosary Makers – meetings take place on Monday morning at 10 a.m. in the multi-purpose room. Please call the rectory if you would like to join. Rosary Society – Meetings are held the first Tuesday of each month at 7 p.m. Due to inclement weather the next meeting will take place on March 10th! St. Jude Seniors – Next meeting is on March 12th . Anyone who is over 55 and would like to join please come to our meetings the second and fourth Thursday of each month at 1 PM. Membership is open to nonparishioners but parishioners have first priority. St. Jude’s Prayer Chain – For those that are in need of prayer, please call Tara Ann Gulotta at 973-702-7604 or call the rectory and the message will be forwarded to Tara. SING TO THE LORD! Choir practice is every Monday night, from 7:30 p.m. until 9:00 p.m., at the church. If one of your New Years resolutions is to strengthen your relationship with God, please join us. It’s an excellent way to participate in the Lent and Easter liturgies. We emphasize participation as well as performance—all are welcome! Members of the choir have their choice of singing/playing at the 5 p.m. Mass on Saturday, or the 9:00 a.m. or 11:30 a.m. Mass on Sunday. All come together for special liturgies like Holy Week, Pentecost, Christ and Confirmation as well as others. Anyone with musical ability, from grade six on up is most welcome. St. Augustine once said that “They who sing pray twice.” So if you play an instrument—keyboard, guitar, flute, clarinet, percussion, others—or sing well, consider joining and helping the rest of the St. Jude community and “pray twice”. It can be a wonderful way to help and serve others. Contact Fr. Bill, or Frank Fanelli (973-827-4579) if interested. th Easter Egg Hunt and Bunny Breakfast – March 28 at 10 AM (weather permitting) – Donations of prizes, candy & money are most welcome and may be placed in the basket in the Narthex. th Church Decorating for Easter – April 4 – Holy Saturday at 9AM – sign-up sheet on the table in the Narthex. A NEW IDEA Everybody thinks of changing humanity; nobody thinks of changing themselves. —Leo Tolstoy Mass will be celebrated at 8:45 a.m. & 7:30 p.m. every Friday during Lent. Evening Mass will be followed by Stations of the Cross. All Fridays of Lent are days of Abstinence. Good Friday is a day of Fast and Abstinence. Abstinence means no meat or meat products for all who have reached the age of 14. Fast means one full meal for everyone between the ages of 18 and 59. Those who are excused from fast or abstinence besides those outside the age limits, those of unsound mind, the sick, the frail, pregnant or nursing women according to need for meat or nourishment, manual laborers according to need. Confessions will be heard every Monday during Lent (except on March 30th ) beginning at 7:00 p.m. Welcome Home to Healing This Lenten season, each Catholic parish in the Diocese of Paterson will have Confession available every Monday evening from February 23 to March 23, from 7:00 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. If you have been reluctant to come to the Sacrament, have been away for some time or just found it difficult to get to a Saturday afternoon Confession time, this is a wonderful opportunity to reconnect with Christ and His Church. Don’t be afraid! Information will be provided. Ask the priest to help you. Experience the gracious mercy of God! www.WelcomeHomeToHealing.org Operation Rice Bowl - Third Week of Lent Hungering for a Season of Hope - The next stop on our CRS Rice Bowl journey is the African nation, Niger, where we’re reminded that life’s joys and challenges are often seasonal. This week we pray for people who struggle to feed their families during the hungry season— when food is in short supply—and we commit to acting for the common good. Pick up your family’s rice bowl in the Narthex. SAVE THE DATE! – March 14St. Patrick’s Day Dinner in the Church Hall. Tickets: $15 - to be sold after Masses. Youth/Family Mass – This mass will be held on the 3rd Sunday of the month at 6:00 PM. Youth friendly liturgies are vibrant celebrations that speak to young people and challenge them to live as disciples of Christ. We are inviting all high school and college students that have a desire to serve to participate at this mass. For those interested in playing or singing at this mass please contact Mr. Nass at (973) 219-4993 or [email protected]. Contribution Statements- If you would like a statement for the 2014 tax year, please add your name to the list that is available on the table in the Narthex. Easter Flowers Please use the Easter Flower envelope in your Feb/March packet to help decorate the Church for Easter in memory of your loved ones. Additional envelopes are available on the table in the Narthex. The Chrism Mass will be celebrated on March 30th at 7:00 p.m. at Saint Philip the Apostle Parish, Clifton. The date of the Chrism Mass is on a Monday evening to allow more of the faithful the opportunity to avail themselves of this important event. All of the faithful are invited to attend. Wanted: Yoga Instructor - Catholic Charities Straight and Narrow at 508 Straight Street, Paterson, needs an affordable male yoga instructor, one hour per week, for its male clients. Hours can be flexible: weekday evenings or weekends. If interested, contact Judy Kurtzer at S&N (973346-6000 x6256. Volunteer Labor Needed at Straight & Narrow. S&N is recruiting volunteers for much needed spackle and paint work on its men's residential unit. 86 men live in bedrooms housing from 4 to 12 residents who stay for up to six months. S&N will supply the paint, spackle, brushes and related supplies. You supply the volunteer labor. Can you organize a team (perhaps a youth group, confirmation class, or other willing parish group) to do one or more rooms? We can schedule around your availability: weekdays, weekends, or evenings. There are also large shower/bathrooms, recreation rooms and offices that would appreciate a makeover. If interested, contact Joe Duffy at 973-345-6000 x6280. Catholic Seniors 55+ as Evangelists - How do we share the faith at home across the generations? These sessions will inspire and train Catholic seniors – grandparents, aunts, uncles, and godparents – to be evangelists to their families and parishes through a fourweek program concentrating on the practical aspects of sharing the faith. Madison, Mondays, March 2, 9, 16, and 23 from 10:00-11:30 a.m. St. Joseph’s Table - A Mass and gathering of men and women in trades, crafts, and other skilled professions (carpentry, contracting and constructing, electrical, plumbing, mechanics, etc.) to honor and celebrate that work and to reflect on integrating faith into their professions. Madison, Saturday, March 14 from 5:00-7:30 p.m. Women’s Conference: Feminine, Faithful, Fearless A conference for women at any age and any stage of life, affirming who we are in Christ. Keynoter: Dr. Deborah Savage. Advance Tickets: $20.00 per person. Register at www.insidethewalls.org. Madison, Saturday, March 21 from 9:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m. Please go to our website www.insidethewalls.org and download our 2014-15 program brochure and register for any program at http://insidethewalls.org/events-1 205 Madison Avenue, Madison Food Pantry – The Partnership for Social Services in Franklin has many clients who are in need of food. In order to help the agency build up their food pantry we ask that you bring nonperishable food items to Mass on the second Sunday of each month. Your support is greatly appreciated. Coupons for the Community - Donate your unwanted coupons for food, household and personal care items. Please help to feed the hungry in this way and place your coupons in the basket on the table in the Narthex. THANK YOU for your constant support of this program. By taking the time to drop your coupons in the box, you are making a difference in the lives of others. No need to clip the coupons! THINK OF CATHOLIC CHARITIES CLOTHES DONATION BOXES - Place your old clothing in the bin located in our upper parking lot. The clothing box revenues help to feed almost 9000 people every month in our pantries as well as fund other emergency services for the poor. Resident of Crystal Springs seeking a ride to Mass on Sundays. Please call the rectory if you are able to help. †Please keep our troops in your prayers† Pizza Night with Bishop will be held at Pope John XXIII High School on Monday, March 23rd at 7 PM. All young men of high school age are invited to participate in this evening of prayer, discussion and fraternity with Bishop Serratelli and other young men as well as priests from around the diocese. If you know someone who may be interested, please ask the young man to contact the Vocation Office at 973-777-8818, extension 711 or by email at [email protected]. Living With Grief –Tuesday evenings – April 7,14, 21 & 28 from 6 – 8 p.m. hosted at Joseph T. Quinlan Bereavement Center – 61 Spring Street, Suite 100, First Floor, Newton, NJ. Guest Presenter: Cecelia T. Clayton, MPH, Executive Director, Karen Ann Quinlan Hospice. An Exploration of Grief: the normal, natural, unavoidable reaction to loss. For more information call 973-383-0115. Registration for this lecture series is $25. Seating is limited. The Catholic Schools Office of the Diocese of Paterson is seeking applicants for anticipated openings for elementary school principals and for elementary school and secondary school teachers for the 2015-2016 academic year. Information about openings as they become known and application materials can be found at http://www.patdioschools.org/cso/Employment A FRESH PERSPECTIVE ON THE SUNDAY READINGS THE PATH TO FREEDOM Most of us, if we were asked “Does the phrase ‘the Ten Commandments’ appear in the Bible?” would likely get it wrong, because the answer is “no.” “The Ten Commandments” is a post-biblical, phrase that developed along with an image of God as police officer that is not found in today’s passage from Exodus. The first phrase is the key: God is the one who brings us out of slavery; following God’s law or commands is our path to freedom. The moneychangers whom Jesus drove from the temple were not explicitly breaking any of the commandments, but neither were they helping people to find God’s path to freedom as they came to worship at the temple. This is an important Lenten lesson for us. We need to stop asking ourselves whether or not we are breaking specific rules or regulations and instead examine our lives to see if we are truly following a path to God’s freedom through Christ. HIS WORD TODAY by Rev. William J. Reilly Third Sunday of Lent March 8, 2015 “Brothers and sisters: Jews demand signs and Greeks seek for wisdom, but we proclaim Christ crucified, a stumbling block to Jews and foolishness to Gentiles, but for those who are called, Jews and Greeks alike, Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God”… “His disciples recalled the words of Scripture, ‘Zeal for your house consumes me.’” St. Paul was a fighter, taking on all adversaries, persecuting the first Christians and forming many newly found Christian communities. The focus of his work was the Person of Jesus Christ. Copyright © J. S. Paluch Co. TREASURES FROM OUR TRADITION Participating in Lent, we are engaging in patterns that have endured across the centuries. From very early times, we have the sense of accompanying the elect on their journey to the font. From as long ago as the fourth century, we receive Lent as forty days to shake the dust from our spirituality and reorder our conduct. Then, fasting was not seen as a strict duty, yet it seems it was widely observed. Think of the rules of politeness and courtesy that everyone agrees on. Fasting was also seen as a social duty, since food was in short supply as winter wore on, and the weak and the sick had the first claim on what remained on hand. As a boost to the fasting of the body, the church developed a richer spiritual fare, including celebration of the Eucharist every day. This practice began in Rome by the sixth century. Weekday Mass was only at designated “stations.” The pope would arrive on horseback at the stational church. In those days, although the catechumenate was already in eclipse, there were pre-baptismal activities at the stational Masses: the giving of the Lord’s Prayer, prayers for the godparents, and constant references to baptism. —Rev. James Field, Copyright © J. S. Paluch Co I, the LORD, am your God . . . You shall not have other gods besides me. — Exodus 20:2a, 3 SAINTS AND SPECIAL OBSERVANCES Sunday: Third Sunday of Lent; First Scrutiny; Daylight Saving Time begins; Girl Scout Sunday Monday: St. Frances of Rome Friday: Abstinence The sign for him was found in the cross of Jesus Christ, one whom he had never met until God’s intervention on the Damascus road. The wisdom for Paul came from direct revelation received from the same Christ, the ‘Jesus you are persecuting.’ Continuing my Lenten journey and reflecting on my own spiritual life I too seek signs and wisdom. I wish to know Christ Jesus in my life, deepen my relationship with Him, and know that I am one with Him. Look at the cross, the sign of God’s never tiring mercy for me, and express gratitude for His saving power at work in me today. Begin this third week of Lent asking for the grace to be zealous in living the holy period, which will never be the same again. Why wait? Third Sunday of Lent Sunday Ex 20:1-17 or 20:1-3, 7-8, 12-17; 1 Cor 1:22-25; Jn 2:1325 Monday 2 Kgs 5:1-15b; Lk 4:24-30 Tuesday Dn 3:25, 34-43; Mt 18:21-35 Wednesday Dt 4:1, 5-9; Mt 5:17-19 Thursday Jer 7:23-28; Lk 11:14-23 Friday Hos 14:2-10; Mk 12:28-34 Saturday Hos 6:1-6; Lk 18:9-14 ONLINE Giving – We are keeping up with technology! We are now offering the option of Online Giving as a convenient way to make contributions to St. Jude’s. Simply go to our website @ stjudehamburg.org and click on the online giving icon and follow the directions. You may create a new account or use quick give. All transactions are safely secured.
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