United Youth Weekly Gathering @ St

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United Youth Weekly Gathering @ St ! What You Need to Know . ; Two Walking with Purpose Courses / Child Care Coordinator Wanted (Page 4) ; Mother Dolores Hart at St. Rose (Page 4) ; United Youth Weekly Gathering @ St. Rose ; Spiritual Baby Adoption & “Shower”/Life Chain (Page 3) ; SJCA Golf Outing (Page 3) Continuing Activities . ; “5 at 6” Social after 5 PM Vigil Mass ; Coffee & Donuts after 9 AM Mass ; Hot Dogs after 11 AM Mass ; Morning Prayer (Lauds) - After 6:45 & 8:45 Masses; Saturday after 8 AM Mass UNITED YOUTH ; ‘Lectio Divina’ - Mondays at 5:30 - Rectory Mtg. Room ; Adoration and Sacrament of Reconciliation - Tuesdays at Join us Sunday, September 22, for UNITED 7:00 PM New start time: 6:00pm! At St. Rose in Newtown Follow us @ctunitedyouth Email us: [email protected] KINDLY R EFRAIN FROM R EADING THE B ULLETIN D URING THE M ASS Page 1 Saint Joseph Church 25 TH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME SEPTEMBER 22, 2019 PARISH STAFF Rev. George F. O’Neill, Pastor [email protected] PRAYING FOR PEACE AND REPARATION Rev. Karol Ksiazek, Parochial Vicar We invite you to stay at the end of Sunday Mass – following [email protected] the closing hymn – and join us in praying three “Hail Mary’s” Deacon Jeffrey J. Font for Peace: in our World, in our Families and in our Hearts. We [email protected] also pray the Prayer to St. Michael the Archangel, for healing Deacon Louis F. Howe, Sr. and reparation in our Church. [email protected] Deacon Peter J. Kuhn SACRAMENTS [email protected] Baptism – The Sacrament of Baptism is celebrated on Deacon William J. Shaughnessy Sundays at 12:30 PM. A Pre-Baptism class is required for both parents prior to the Baptism of their first child. Register with [email protected] the Parish Office: 203.775.1035. Rita Golaszewski, Parish Secretary [email protected] Marriage – Weddings generally are celebrated on Friday Patricia Smith, Religious Education Coordinator evening or Saturday afternoons and must be scheduled at [email protected] least six months in advance. Please do not make final Kathy Bailo, Religious Education Assistant arrangements for your reception prior to contacting the Parish [email protected] Office. David Kendall, Director of Music Music [email protected] R.C.I.A. – Interested in becoming a Catholic? Call the Parish Arianna Carlo, Choir Director Office. [email protected] “GLUTEN-FREE” HOSTS PARISH OFFICE St. Joseph Church has a limited supply of low-gluten Phone: 203.775.1035 Fax: 203.775.1684 communion hosts available for those with a gluten allergy (not Web Site: www.stjosephbrookfield.com dietary preference). While often referred to as “gluten-free,” the hosts actually contain 0.01% gluten in order to conform to Email: [email protected] liturgical standards. Please advise a priest or deacon before Mail: 163 Whisconier Road, Mass if you wish to receive the low-gluten host. Brookfield, CT 06804 GPS Address: 1 Obtuse Hill Road Brookfield, CT 06804 IMPORTANT HOSPITAL INFORMATION Office Hours: 9:00 AM – 4:30 PM, Monday-Thursday 9:00 AM – 1:00 PM, Friday Parishioners entering Danbury Hospital as patients Mass Schedule: Saturday Vigil – 5:00 PM are urged to contact the St. Joseph Parish Office – Sunday-7:30, 9:00 & 11:00 AM; 5:00 PM (203)775-1035 – if they wish to be visited by a Monday-Friday - 6:45 AM & 8:45 AM member of St. Joseph’s clergy during their stay. Saturday - 8:00 AM Only Confessions: Tuesday: 7:00-8:00 PM Hospital chaplains will continue to visit patients who Saturday: 4:00-4:45 PM identify themselves as Catholic when being admit- ted. EUCHARISTIC ADORATION Sundays at 4 PM for the Unborn THOSE FOR WHOM WE PRAY Tuesdays, 7:00-8:00 PM FOR THOSE IN NEED OF GOD ’S HEALING , STRENGTH AND COM- FORT : Mary-Jo Howe, Jeff Moxham, Greg Licalzi, Msgr. Thomas SAINT JOSEPH CATHOLIC ACADEMY Powers, Baby Anthony, Baby Sophia, Dino Capilupi, Jennie Savona, Alberta Gregus, Bob Murphy and Matthew. Ms. Pamela Fallon, Director of Education FOR THE PROTECTION AND SAFE RETURN OF THOSE SERVING IN Phone: 203.775.2774 Fax: 203.775.5810 THE ARMED FORCES : Joshua Jugler, Andrew Krentsa, Michael [email protected] Ayala Lopez, and Michael Moreira. KINDLY R EFRAIN FROM R EADING THE B ULLETIN D URING THE M ASS Brookfield, CT Page 2 Sunday, Sep 22, 2019 25 TH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME Who’s the boss? A parish secretary worked at an urban church with five resident priests. One priest was retired, two had ministries elsewhere, and two were actively engaged in the parish itself. The secretary worked for all five men, handling incoming calls and written corre- spondence, crafting bulletins, running errands, even sewing the occasional loose button or laundering a stained sweater. No mat- ter whose task she performed first, she never escaped the charge of favoritism, because anything more than one boss doesn’t work. If Jesus is our Lord, everything and everybody else takes a backseat. TODAY’S READINGS: Amos 8:4-7; 1 Timothy 2:1-8; Luke 16:1-13 TH (135). “No servant can serve two masters.” 25 S UNDAY IN O RDINARY T IME Monday, Sep 23, 2019 Compartmentalization or consistency? In this Sunday’s Gospel, Jesus tells a strange story of a sneaky, PIUS OF PIETRELCINA, PRIEST savvy steward that raises questions about our personal Mark his words virtue. “How much do you owe? Here is your promissory Padre Pio was a popular but controversial figure during his lifetime and has remained so since his death in 1968. He is said to have note, write one for eighty.” This parable isn’t advice for exhibited signs of the stigmata (visible wounds on his hands echo- money management. Historically, there were many ing Jesus’ wounds on the cross). Some believed they were real, positions that acted on behalf of their masters regarding others were skeptical, including several popes who isolated him money, like customs agents, household stewards, and and had medical examiners weigh in. Whatever the case, his ad- tax collectors. Often these workers over-charged and vice for living a faithful life rings true: “living humbly, being disinter- skimmed off the top. ested, prudent, just, patient, kind, chaste, meek, diligent, carrying out one’s duties for no other reason than that of pleasing God, and receiving from Him alone the reward one deserves.” Let that ad- Usurious practices like this were not in line with the vice be the mark of your life. traditional Jewish understanding of money lending, which TODAY’S READINGS: Ezra 1:1-6; Luke 8:16-18 (449). “No one who strictly forbade them from to taking interest or making a lights a lamp conceals it with a vessel or sets it under a bed.” profit off of their own people. As the steward reduced the debt, he was likely writing off the amount he originally Tuesday, Sep 24, 2019 intended to take for himself. Before the steward can be May we have a word? commended, he needs to right the wrong done. Church leaders have chosen scripture passages to be read in pri- vate and proclaimed publicly at Mass every day of the year. A “The person who is trustworthy in very small matters daughter in Illinois, a cousin in England, friends in El Salvador, the pope in Rome, and the guest at a Catholic Worker House—every is also trustworthy in great ones; and the person who is Catholic involved in a liturgy is reading or hearing these same dishonest in very small matters is also dishonest in great scripture passages. The Church strongly encourages us to read ones.” This parable contains an important self-check. We from the Bible and promises that the Holy Spirit will give a have a great many things we’re responsible for that “spiritual understanding of the word to those who read it.” Read seem to have nothing to do with the kingdom of God. today’s scripture passages and ask for the grace of one small in- How do we interact in those spaces? Are we trustworthy sight. TODAY’S READINGS: Ezra 6:7-8, 12b, 14-20; Luke 8:19-21 (450). in our dealings at work and at home? Are we honest and “My mother and brothers are those who hear the word of God and faithful to our commitments to family and friends? Are act on it.” we honest with our money and prudent with how we spend our time? Wednesday, Sep 25, 2019 Gather us in Jesus calls His disciples to consistency. How often do It’s no accident that Jesus chose 12 apostles. Calling together His we expect that we can be one person one place, yet first 12 followers symbolized the reuniting of the 12 tribes of Israel shrug off that persona in a new situation? “No servant that God chose to be a light to the world, the 12 tribes that had can serve two masters.” These week, take stock of your camped in the wilderness with the Tabernacle at the center, the life. All of your life. Are you living the Gospel values 12 tribes that had then disastrously dispersed. In fact, all of Jesus’ ministry would be an invitation for all kinds of people to come to- wherever you go? gether and rejoin the fold—the healed leper could now live with his ! family again, the woman at the well could be the town hero instead ©LPi ! Continued next page ... KINDLY R EFRAIN FROM R EADING THE B ULLETIN D URING THE M ASS Page 3 25 th Sunday in Ordinary Time Continued from preceding page … of a pariah.
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