Interfaith Airport Chapels of Chicago Chicago Midway and O’Hare International Airports P.O. Box 66353 ●Chicago, Illinois 60666-0353 ●(773) 686-AMEN (2636) ●www.airportchapels.org

WEEK OF JUNE 22, 2014 REFLECTING ON GOD’S WORD WELCOME TO THE INTERFAITH AIRPORT CHAPELS OF CHICAGO! The O’Hare Airport Chapel and the Midway Airport Since early this morning has been working to prepare dinner Chapel are each a peaceful oasis in a busy venue. A for his wife Sheila’s birthday. While the bread dough rose he bought place to bow your head in prayer while lifting up your fresh vegetables, cheese, and pasta. As the aroma of baking bread heart and spirit! Prayer books and rugs, rosaries, and filled the house Carla helped her father cook his special sauce. Later worship materials are available, as are for there were vegetables to prepare, pie to bake, presents to wrap, and spiritual counsel. You are welcome to attend Mass or the table to set with little George’s hand-painted placemats. At last Worship services and to come to the chapels (open Dean calls out “Dinner’s ready!” The family gathers and the prayer 24/7) to pray or meditate. May God bless your travels. begins: “Bless us, O Lord and these thy gifts, which we are about to — Fr. Michael Zaniolo, Administrator receive from thy bounty through Christ our Lord. Amen.” In shared meals the gift of food is made more nourishing by the gift of community. Today’s Scripture invites CHAPEL BIRTHDAYS & ANNIVERSARIES, EVENTS us to unwrap some of the “gifts” that we bless and receive in our Eucharistic meal. Christ ●Birthday blessings & best wishes go out to Brian Johnson this shares the gift of himself in the word, the cup, Tuesday, June 24; to Deborah McBride this and the loaf. Like Dean’s family, we in the Thursday, June 26; and to Carl Spiess this community also share the gift of ourselves Friday, June 27. This Wednesday, June 25, with one another in our sharing of the Body and Blood of Christ. marks the first anniversary of the passing of The living, breathing Body of Christ in the community nourishes the O’Hare Airport Chapel volunteer Bob Fortini life of Christ in each of us when we sit down together at the Eucha- (1931-2013). Please pray for the repose of his ristic table. — Virginia Stillwell soul and for the Fortini family. INTERFAITH CALENDAR & SPECIAL OBSERVANCES MEANING OF EUCHARIST FOR CATHOLICS ● CORPUS CHRISTI (Latin for Body of Christ) today, The Eucharist (Gk., ‘thanksgiving’) is the “sacramental celebra- Sunday, June 22, is the feast during which Catholic and tion of the Paschal Mystery (i.e., Christ’s dying and rising for hu- Anglican Christians express their faith in the real presence mankind) in a context of praise and thanks for all that God has done of Christ in the elements of Holy Communion. It is tradi- and continues to do. During the Eucharist the Holy Spirit is called tionally a time of popular Eucharistic devotion. down on the assembly that it might become the Body of Christ, the ● The Muslim observance of Ramadan will begin this Saturday, People of God.” [Encyclopedia of Catholicism, Richard P. McBrien, June 28, and continues for an entire month, during which time all General Editor] “The Eucharist is the principal act of worship of the adult and physically competent Muslims abstain from food, water Christian religion, otherwise known as the Divine Liturgy, Holy and sexual relations from dawn to sunset. Communion, Lord’s Supper, or Mass. This name has been used Source: The 2014 InterFaith Calendar, Council of Religious Leaders of Metropolitan Chicago from at least the second century, and comes from the thanksgiving prayer that constitutes a principal element of the Marriage Encounter Weekends: We, though many, are still one rite.” [HarperCollins Dicitonary of Religion] body in Christ.” And we, though husband and wife, became one The National Conference of Catholic declares, “The body in our Sacrament. Like Jesus feeds us with His Body, we need Eucharist has primacy among the sacraments. It is of the greatest to feed our marriage body so that it grows and is productive. Take importance for uniting and strengthening the Church. The Eucha- time to feed your Sacrament. The next weekends are August 8-10, ristic celebration is carried out in obedience to the words of Jesus at 2014 or October 10-12, 2014 or December 5-7, 2014, all at Burr the Last Supper: ‘Do this in memory of me.’ Ridge, IL. Early registration is highly recommended. For reserva- “When a priest pronounces the words of Eucharistic consecra- tions/information, call Jim & Kris at 630-577-0778. tion, the underlying reality of bread and wine is changed into the body and blood of Christ, given for us in sacrifice. MDW Airport Chapel ORD Airport Chapel That change has been given the name Concourse C, Mezzanine Level Terminal 2, Mezzanine Level ‘transubstantiation.’ This means that Christ him- (Inside Security Checkpoint) (Outside Security Checkpoint) self, true God and true Man, is really and sub- Scheduled Services: Scheduled Services: stantially present, in a mysterious way, under the ROMAN CATHOLIC MASSES ROMAN CATHOLIC MASSES appearances of bread and wine. SATURDAY VIGIL: 4:00 p.m. SATURDAY VIGIL: 4:00 & 6:00 p.m. “This sacrifice (of the Mass) is not merely a ritual which com- SUNDAY: 9:00 a.m. & 11:00 a.m. SUNDAY: 6:30 a.m., 9:00 a.m., memorates a past sacrifice. In it, through the ministry of priests, Monday—Friday: 11:30 a.m. 11:00 a.m., 1:00 p.m. Christ perpetuates the sacrifice of the cross in an unbloody manner. Evening before Holy Day: 4:00 p.m. Monday—Friday: 11:30 a.m. At the same time, the Eucharist is a meal which recalls the Last Sup- Holy Day: Check Bulletin Announcements or Evening before Holy Day: 5:00 p.m. www.airporthapels.org/ Holy Day: Check Bulletin Announcements or per, celebrates our unity together in Christ, and anticipates the mes- holydayschedule.html www.airporthapels.org/ sianic banquet of the kingdom. In the Eucharist Jesus nourishes ~ holydayschedule.html Christians with His own self, the Bread of Life, so that they may PROTESTANT WORSHIP ~ Saturday: 10:00 a.m., 12:00 & ISLAMIC JUMA’ PRAYER become a people more acceptable to God and filled with greater love 1:30 p.m. Friday: 1:15 p.m. of God and neighbor.” [The Catholic Encyclopedia, Robert C. Brod- Sunday: 10:00 a.m., 12:00 noon & ~ erick] 1:30 p.m. PROTESTANT WORSHIP Scriptural references to the Last Supper include Mt 26:26-28; Sunday: 10:00 a.m. & 12:00 noon Mk 14:22-24; Lk 22:17-20; and 1 Cor 11:23-25. The Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ — June 22, 2014 Not by bread alone does one live, but by every word that comes This Week in the Life of the Church forth from the mouth of the Lord. — Deuteronomy 8:3b Being a compendium of feast days and notable events in Church history. AMEN Sunday, June 22, 2014 Take a look around the walls of your church. Even if it’s only a year ✙ We Remember: ST. PAULINUS OF NOLA (c. 353-431) is or two old, the word “Amen” has resounded off those walls count- described as tender, faithful, heroic in heart, and molded by the less times at the conclusion of the Eucharis- Gospel. "Everyone," says St. Jerome, "admired the purity and ele- tic Prayer and as the faithful have come gance of his diction, the delicacy and loftiness of his sentiments, the forward to receive the Body and Blood of strength and sweetness of his style, and the vividness of his imagi- Christ. Today’s feast is about those nation." Born at Bordeaux of one of the most illustrious and wealthy “Amens” offered in faith, offered in times of Roman families (his father was of Gaul), Paulinus studied trouble or doubt, spoken in joy, spoken rhetoric and poetry and became a successful, prominent lawyer. mindlessly, but all given to God in a multi- Possessor of immense estates in Gaul, Italy and Spain - his wife tude of ways. It is our very lives that lie Therasia's native country, he held several public offices and trav- behind our “Amens” and are touched by the eled extensively, until retiring to Aquitane, where he met presence of Christ, the presence we cele- Delphinus of Bordeaux, who baptized him and his . About brate today. More importantly, we celebrate the love of Christ for us 390, Paulinus moved to Thereasia's estate in Spain where, after shown in the sacrifice on Calvary and that he continues to give to us years of childlessness, a son was born to them; but the boy died at in every celebration of the Eucharist. What can we do but rejoice in the end of a week. This tragic, life-changing experience seems to that great love, and then go out into the world and live that love in have galvanized the couple; they resolved to live more austerely and sacrificing for others? Copyright © J. S. Paluch Co. charitably, giving away large sums of money and much property to the needy. The result SUNDAY & WEEKDAY MASS READINGS of their generosity We have dared to attempt our work of seems to have taken perfection, relying not on our own TODAY’S READINGS them by surprise: on deeds and strength but on the power First Reading — Never forget the LORD your God, who brought you Christmas day, about and mercy of God. Since He is al- out of slavery (Deuteronomy 8:2-3, 14b-16a). 393, in response to a mighty, He can complete in us the Psalm — Praise the Lord, Jerusalem (Psalm 147). sudden outcry by the work of His perfection. When He has Second Reading — Because the loaf of bread is one, we who par- people, the bishop of deigned to lay the foundation and to take of it, though we are many, are one body (1 Corinthians 10:16-17). Barcelona in his cathe- begin the first scaffolding, He can con- Gospel — Jesus said, “I am the living bread; whoever eats this dral conferred upon struct it according to His measure- bread will live forever” (John 6:51-58). Paulinus the orders of a ments and complete it by roofing it. The English translation of the Psalm Responses from Lectionary for Mass © 1969, 1981, 1997, priest, even though he — Paulinus of Nola International Commission on English in the Liturgy Corporation. All rights reserved. had not previously READINGS FOR THE WEEK been a . By this Monday: 2 Kgs 17:5-8, 13-15a, 18; Ps 60:3-5, 12-13; Mt 7:1-5 time, Paulinus and Therasia had decided to relocate to an estate Tuesday: Vigil: Jer 1:4-10; Ps 71:1-6, 15, 17; 1 Pt 1:8-12; Lk 1:5- near the tomb of St. Felix of Nola, near Naples, and over the vehe- 17 Day: Is 49:1-6; Ps 139:1-3, 13-15; Acts 13:22-26; Lk 1:57-66, 80 ment objections of relatives, he sold his estates and belongings in Wednesday: 2 Kgs 22:8-13; 23:1-3; Ps 119:33-37, 40; Mt 7:15-20 Aquitane and gave most of it to the poor. Although he had parted Thursday: 2 Kgs 24:8-17; Ps 79:1b-5, 8-9; Mt 7:21-29 with much, he still had his Italian properties and continued his Friday: Dt 7:6-11; Ps 103:1-4, 6-8, 10; 1 Jn 4:7-16; Mt 11:25-30 charitable works building an aqueduct, churches, a hospice for trav- Saturday: Lam 2:2, 10-14, 18-19; Ps 74:1b-7, 20-21; Mt 8:15-17 elers at Nola, and housing many of the poor and needy in his own or, for the Memorial of the Immaculate Heart, Is 61:9-11; Lk 2:41-51 home, where he lived a semi-monastic life with several of his Sunday: Vigil: Acts 3:1-10; Ps 19:2-5; Gal 1:11-20; Jn 21:15-19 friends, Therasia presumably overseeing the household. About 409, Day: Acts 12:1-11; Ps 34:2-9; 2 Tm 4:6-8, 17-18; Mt Paulinus was chosen bishop of Nola, a position he held until death. 16:13-19 On his last day, at the hour of vespers, when the lamps were being lighted in the church, the bishop roused himself from a prolonged TREASURES FROM OUR TRADITION silence, and, stretching out his hand, said in a low voice, "I have prepared a lamp for my Christ." Some hours later, as his fol- Ordinary Time beckons, and so on this Sunday we surrender the last lowers felt a sudden tremor (as of a slight earthquake), Paulinus glimmers of paschal joy as we celebrate the renewal of our life died. He was buried in the church he had built in honor of St. Felix, around the table of the Eucharist. This feast reminds us that the where his relics remain today. St. Paulinus had a wide circle of goal of the catechumen’s journey through Lent is not the baptismal friends and correspondents, including St. Ambrose, St. Jerome, font at Easter, but rather the experience of Pentecost. It is all about St. Augustine, and St. Martin of Tours. Of his many writings, life lived in the Spirit’s embrace in relationship to the Body of some 51 letters, 32 poems, and a few prose pieces still exist. (L,L2,P) Christ, which is found both “on the table” and “at the table.” ✙ Today we also remember ST. JOHN FISHER (1469-1535) The season of confirmation is also drawing to a close, and this and ST. THOMAS MORE (1478-1535), executed by a king of feast serves as a reminder England on the same day, ironically, as ST. ALBAN (died c. 304), that this sacrament, a sol- who was probably the first martyr of Britain (though his life story is emn sending from font to based on unverifiable legend). table, is keyed to renewed John Fisher, chancellor of Cambridge University, bishop of vigor. Confirmation has Rochester (from 1504), was a giant in the hierarchy of his time and sometimes been sadly place, the only one who refused to be silently subservi- misunderstood as a kind of ent to his king. He was renowned both for his preach- graduation from religious ing and for his educational reforms. From 1519 to formation, but it is nothing 1527, St. John wrote defenses of Church tradition of the sort. It is about being led by the Lord Jesus to the place where against Martin Luther and others, making a decisive the Spirit flourishes, and where the gifts of the Spirit are most easily contribution to Counter-Reformation . After detectable. After next week we will resume our consideration of the 1527, he led the ecclesiastical opposition to Henry VIII's sacrament of confirmation, its rich and somewhat tangled history, divorce and claims to supremacy over the Church. In 1534, he was its challenging theology, and its changing celebration. arrested, and executed for treason on this day in 1535. St. Tho- —Rev. James Field, Copyright © J. S. Paluch Co. mas More was also executed for refusing to accept Henry's su- premacy over the Church in England. St. Thomas ● In 1885, the first black Protestant Episcopal studied law at Oxford and was a close friend of bishop of the American church, REV. SAMUEL DAVID Erasmus. He refused to sign an oath that declared FERGUSON (1842-1916) was consecrated on this day at Henry's marriage to Catherine of Aragon invalid and Grace Church in New York, as the successor of the Mis- that repudiated the . He resigned as Lord sionary Bishop of Liberia. (FF) Chancellor of England (the first layman to hold that ■ In 1915, the death of MOTHER XAVIER MEHEGAN in post) in 1532 and was imprisoned in 1534. Though New Jersey. She was founder of the Sisters of Charity he remained silent regarding the Act of Supremacy, of New Jersey, co-founder of St. Vincent Hospital in New York City, he was convicted on perjured evidence and be- founder of St. Elizabeth College in New Jersey. headed July 6, 1535. ❧ St. Thomas More was a humanist who argued for moral and Wednesday, June 25, 2014 social reform through education and sacred literature. His most ✙ We Remember: ST. WILLIAM OF MONTEVERGINE (1085- famous works include Utopia, a social satire written in 1516, and 1142) is one of the best remembered of the many named his letters from the Tower of London (where he was imprisoned), William. A native of Vercelli (Italy), William had led a life of pen- which reveal a deep devotion to the suffering Christ. His life and ance from the age of 15, undertaking a pilgrimage to the tomb of St. death have been ably dramatized for stage and screen in "A Man James at Compostela in Spain. Upon his return, he settled as a for All Seasons." "These two men had what we desperately need on the summit of Monte Vergine, between Nola and in dealing with the encroachment of civil powers upon the realm of Benevento. This site, sacred since pre-Christian times, had been religious faith and moral principle - a conscience that cannot be called Monte Virgiliano in memory of Virgil, who was said to have confused, a conviction that cannot be compromised, a courage that consulted the Sibyl there. William was joined by a band of hermit- cannot be conquered by the fear of death," says the Most Rev. Leo , and they followed a way of life based on the Rule of St. A. Pursley. (D, E, B) ● In 431, the Council of Ephesus, the Benedict, which was definitively adopted by the community under third ecumenical council of the Church, opened with Pope St. Ce- William's successor. (B) ● In 1530, the CONFESSION OF AUGS- lestine I presiding. It condemned Nestorianism (that Christ has BURG, the primary confession of the Lutheran church, was pre- two separate natures) and declared Mary the Mother of God sented on this day at Augsburg to the emperor Charles V. A state- (Gk., Theotokos). (E,W) ● In 1276, the death of Pope Bl. Inno- ment of Lutheran beliefs largely the work of Philip Melancthon, cent V, a Frenchman born about 1224 whose brief pontificate the confession was presented to the Diet of Augsburg as an lasted from Jan. 21 to June 22, 1276; a Dominican scholar and col- statement of belief and a defense against charges of heresy. This laborator of Albertus Magnus and Thomas Aquinas, he was the first attempt to reconcile the reforms of Martin Luther with Catholi- Dominican pope. He was also a friend of the Franciscan cism was rejected by Charles, sealing the break between the Luther- Bonaventure and preached at his funeral. The papal custom of ans and Rome. The first part of the Confession of Augsburg wearing a white cassock began with this pontificate, since the “argued that Lutheran doctrine either agreed with Catholic teach- Dominican habit is white. (E) ing or held to the true primitive doctrine from which the Catholic ❧ Church had departed.” The second part listed “seven reforms of Monday, June 23, 2014 abuses.” (E) ✚ We Remember: ST. JOSEPH CAFASSO (1811-1860), Italian ❧ moral theologian, diocesan priest, patron of prisoners, he en- Thursday, June 26, 2014 couraged one of his younger students by the name of John Bosco ✙ We Remember: SS. JOHN AND PAUL (+ 362) were Roman to continue working with youth, orphans and the imprisoned. Be- martyrs who suffered at Rome; their names appear in the First Eu- sides being a spiritual advisor to St. John Bosco (and "second foun- charistic Prayer of the Catholic Mass, and a stately basilica erected der" of the Salesians, a religious order), Fr. Cafasso led a very peni- in their name stands on the Coelian Hill in Rome. (B) Ss. John tential life and was renowned as a . He was canonized in and Paul are most famous as the saints on whose day in 1284 the 50 years ago, in 1947. (B,D) ● In 1390, the birth of ST. JOHN Pied Piper led 130 children out of the north German town of KANTY in Poland. Preacher, helper of the poor, and professor of Hameln into a hill called the Köppe or Koppelberg. scripture at Krakow University, he is patron of both Poland and ● In 1978 the of Venice, LUCIANO ALBINI, on being Lithuania. (W) elected pope, took the name John Paul, which he explained as a ❧ tribute to his immediate predecessors, John XXIII and Paul VI; Tuesday, June 24, 2014 on his unexpected death after only 33 days in office, his successor, ✙ We Remember: The Solemnity of the Birth of ST. JOHN KAROL WOJTYŁA, took the name John Paul II. (OCY) THE BAPTIST. “This solemn feast dates ● In 684, ST. BENEDICT II became pope; devoted to the poor, he from the fourth century, and at one time it secured agreement from the emperor to allow the imperial was preceded by a day of fasting as well as a (viceroy) in Ravenna to ratify papal elections instead of having to Mass for the vigil. St. Augustine and some wait for approval from Constantinople. (E) ✙ In 1794, the deaths of other theologians saw something symbolic in the MARTYRS OF ARRAS in Cambrai, France. These four Sisters of the fact that St. John the Baptist was born in Charity of St. Vincent De Paul were accused, during the French the summer, when the days are beginning to Revolution, of counter-revolutionary activity and refusing the oath shorten, and Christ was born in the winter, of fealty to the state. After suffering interrogation and the humilia- when the days are gradually getting longer. tions of an apostate priest, the Sisters were guillotined. (W) The revised liturgy has restored the vigil Mass ✙ In 1975, the death of BL. JOSE MARIA ESCRIVA DE BALAGUER in addition to the Mass for the feast. In many in Rome. He founded (Latin for Work of God) in 1928, Catholic countries, especially in Spain and Latin America, June 24 in Madrid “with the aim of spreading throughout all sectors of soci- is a day of popular celebrations. Byzantine Christians celebrated the ety a profound awareness of the universal call to holiness and apos- feast of the conception of John the Baptist on September 24.” (S) tolate (of Christian witness and action) in the ordinary circum- “God chose John to prepare the way of the Lord; he was indeed stances of life, and, more specifically, through one’s professional more than a prophet because he not only preached repentance and work..”(A) In 1982, Pope John Paul II established Opus Dei as a conversion, but he actually pointed to Christ present in the midst of “personal prelature,” international in scope, “serving the universal mankind. More than that, he baptized in the waters of the Jordan Church by way of insertion into the local Church.” (E3) Bl. Escriva him who is the author of baptism.” (V) ● In 1579, the first Chris- wrote The Way, a book of spiritual maxims which is a Opus Dei’s tian religious service in English on the Pacific coast was the guide. Beatified by John Paul II in 1992. Holy Communion from the Book of Common Prayer of the Church ❧ of England conducted by REV. FRANCIS FLETCHER of Sir Francis Friday, June 27, 2014 Drake's ship the Pelican. A 57-foot marble cross commemorates the ✙ We Remember: The Feast of Mary under the title “Our Lady event in Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, California. (FF) of Perpetual Help.” ST. CYRIL OF ALEXANDRIA, Bishop and Doctor of the Church, was born at Alexandria, Egypt, about the year 370. He received a classical and theological education and rose to the position of Patriarch of Alexandria. Champion of orthodoxy, Cyril opposed Nestorius, Patriarch of Constantinople (428), who denied the divinity of Christ and, consequently, that Mary is the Mother of God. In the name of Pope Celestine I, he presided over the third General COUNCIL AT EPHESUS (c. 431), attended by some 200 bishops, which condemned all the tenets of Nestorius and his fol- lowers. After the Council, he continued to defend orthodox Catholic doctrine and to administer his see. He was the most brilliant theo- logian of the Alexandrian tradition. His writings are characterized by accurate thinking, precise exposition, and great reasoning skill. Cyril died in 444; declared a Doctor of the Church in 1882. (B,P,V,G) ● In 678, POPE ST. AGATHO I took office. Born in Sicily, he was married and a businessman. He and his wife later entered religious life. His pontificate was marked by the definitive end of imperial support for the heresy of Monothelitism in the East and the restoration of good relations between Rome and Constantinople; he is re- vered as a saint in consequence by both the Catholic and Orthodox Churches. A kindly man, Agatho was loved by all for his cheerful good humor. Agatho died Jan. 10, 681. (E,W) Saturday, June 28, 2014 ✙ We Remember: ST. IRENAEUS, bishop and martyr, is hon- ored on this day. Born in Asia Minor about 125, he was well- educated and was influenced by men who knew the Apostles, espe- cially St. Polycarp, who had been a pupil of St. John. The Church is fortunate that Irenaeus was involved in much of its con- troversy in the 2nd century. He was a student, well-trained, no doubt, with great patience in investigating, tremendously protective of apostolic teaching, but prompted more by a desire to win over his opponents than to prove them in error. According to Gregory of Tours, Irenaeus was sent by Polycarp as a missionary to Gaul (present-day France), where he became a priest and later bishop of Lyons in 178. He was active in evangelizing the area, and became a fierce opponent of the Gnostics, whose teaching was attracting and confusing many of the Gallic Christians. After thoroughly in- vestigating the various Gnostic sects and their "secrets", he set about showing to what logical conclusions their tenets led. These he contrasted with the teaching of the Apostles and the text of Holy Scripture, giving us, in five books (Adversus omnes haereses), a system of theology of great importance to subsequent times. More- over, his work, widely used and translated into Latin and Armenian, gradually ended the influence of the Gnostics. Irenaeus was the first great Catholic theologian. His treatise against the Gnostics is witness to the apostolic tradition and in it, at this early date, is a testimony to the primacy of the pope. He was martyred around the year 200. (P,B,G,V) ✙ ST. PAUL I, POPE, died on this day in 767. Brother and successor to another pope, Stephen II, Paul served from for ten years. He received the Papal States from the Frankish king Pepin, and his diplomacy ensured their preservation. He assailed the iconoclasm of Emperor Con- stantine V, restored Roman churches, and translated many relics of saints from the catacombs to churches. (E) ❧ Sources include: (A) Catholic Almanac, Felician Foy Our Sunday Visitor, 1995. (AP) A Pilgrim's Almanac, Edward Hayes, 1992. (AS) All Saints, Robert Ellsberg, Crossroad, 1997. (B) Book of Saints, Benedictine Monks, Morehouse, 1993. (CB) Cambridge Biographical Encyclopedia, 1999. (C) Catholic Book of Days, John Deedy, Thomas More, 1989. (BB) Big Book of Women Saints, Sarah Gallick, HarperSanFrancisco, 2007; (CCS) Catholi- cism, Chicago Style, Skerret et al, 1993. (D) Day by Day with the Saints, Patrick Moran, OSV, 1985. (E) Encyclopedia of Catholicism, Rev. R. McBrien, HC., 1995. (ES) Encyclope- dia of Saints, C. Jöckle, Alpine, 1995. (F) Famous Christians, Tony Castle, Servant, 1988. (G) Guide to the Saints, Kristin E. White, Ivy Books, 1991. (H) Heavenly Friends, Rosalie Marie Levy, DSP, 1984. (JP 2) John Paul II’s Book of Saints, Bunson, OSV, 1999. (L) Butler's Lives of the Saints I-IV, Christian Classics, 1995. (L2) Lives of the Saints, O. Englebert, Barnes & Noble,1994. (LS) Lives of the Saints, R. McBrien, HC, 2001; (LP) Lives of the , R. McBrien, 1997. (M) The Middle Ages, Concise Encyclopedia, H. Loyn, 1989. (OCY) Oxford Companion to the Year, Blackburn, 1999. (ODP) Oxford Diction- ary of Popes, J.D. Kelly, Oxford, 1987. (ODS) Oxford Dictionary of Saints, David Farmer, 1997. (PDS) Penguin Dictionary of Saints (3rd ed.), D. Attwater/C. John, 1995. (R) Saints to Remember, Servants of Mary Immaculate, 1985. (P) Pocket Dictionary of Saints, John Delaney, Image, 1983. (S) Saints of the Roman Calendar, Enzo Lodi, Alba, 1992. (P) The Popes, Eric John, Roman Catholic Books, 1994. (V) Vatican II Weekday Missal, Daughters of St. Paul, 1975. (W) We Celebrate, We Commemorate, Patrick Walsh.

This Week in the Life of the Church is compiled by Mike Brennan. Tax- deductible contributions to the Chicago Airports Catholic Chaplaincy are welcome. E-mail: [email protected]. O’Hare Chapel Catholic Mass Intentions

● Denotes Living/Special Intention † Denotes Deceased/Memorial Saturday June 21, 2014 Requested By: 4:00 p.m. † Harry DeJonge Jim & Dorothy Lynch 6:00 p.m. ● Irene Grzyb Cindy Grzyb Sunday June 22, 2014 Requested By: 6:30 a.m. † Tony Santucci Kay Santucci 9:00 a.m. † Mrs. Asuncion Navarro B. Ortiz 11:00 a.m. † Constancia Bernabe-Cruz John Taube 1:00 p.m. † Carmela & Frank Corvo Kay Santucci Monday June 23, 2014 Requested By: 11:30 a.m. † Dasie Lee Robinson The Chapel Staff Tuesday June 24, 2014 Requested By: 11:30 a.m. † Pragovich Grandparents Tony Pragovich Wednesday June 25, 2014 Requested By: 11:30 a.m. † Bob Fortini John & Susan Schneider Thursday June 26, 2014 Requested By: 11:30 a.m. † Robert Fortini Bernice Fortini Friday June 27, 2014 Requested By: 11:30 a.m. ● Stefano Zaniolo Orfeo & Aida Zaniolo

Midway Chapel Catholic Mass Intentions Saturday June 21, 2014 Requested By: 4:00 p.m. ● Mary Cahill Susan Jamieson Sunday June 22, 2014 Requested By: 9:00 a.m. † Ted Cahill Susan Jamieson 11:00 a.m. † Jack Heintz Lois Heintz Monday June 23, 2014 Requested By: 11:30 a.m. † Waclawa Leonik Donna Leonik Tuesday June 24, 2014 Requested By: 11:30 a.m. ● Joseph I. Margevicius Joseph Margevicius Wednesday June 25, 2014 Requested By: 11:30 a.m. † Francis, Loretta, Jane & Mary B. Buser Buser Thursday June 26, 2014 Requested By: 11:30 a.m. † Boleslaw Leonik Donna Leonik Friday June 27, 2014 Requested By: 11:30 a.m. † Pete, Irma & Sally Blair B. Buser

Rev. Fr. Michael G. Zaniolo, STL, CAC — Administrator/Catholic Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago Mr. Qazi M. Biabani — Imam Khateeb/Muslim Chaplain Muslim Community Center of Chicago Rev. Dr. Hutz H. Hertzberg — Protestant Chaplain The Moody Church of Chicago Mrs. Susan E. Schneider, CAP — Office/Business Manager/Fund Raiser Mr. Michael Brennan — Bulletin Editor