St. Joseph the Worker Catholic Church
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August 16, 2020 Twentieth Sunday in Ordinary Time St. Joseph the Worker Catholic Church 181 W. Dundee Road ~ Wheeling, IL 60090 ~ 847-537-2740 ~ Fax: 847-537-7914 www.stjosephworker.com ~ email: [email protected] Rev. Jesus Mata Martinez, SVD (Society of the Divine Word-Techny, IL) ~ Associate Pastor Rev. Messan Kodjo Tettekpoe, SVD ~ Associate Pastor Parish Mission Statement e, the parishioners of St. Joseph the Worker, commit ourselves to developing a closer relationship with Jesus W Christ. We will joyfully celebrate Holy Mass and the sacraments and conduct our lives with the understanding that each of us is a temple of the Holy Spirit. We will increase our knowledge and practice of faith through study, word and action and help our families and others to do the same. We honor our namesake, St. Joseph the Worker, who is the pa- tron saint of the universal Catholic Church and all workers. Our outreach will be to believers, doubters and unbelievers alike as we are all children of God. We will be an inviting and hospitable parish open to all people at whatever level of faith. Though we are made up of many ethnic groups, each with its special identity, we are all united in service to Our Lord Jesus Christ. The Silver Rose Prayer Service Monday, August 24th at 7:30 pm in the Church Please join us at this prayer service in Honor of Our Lady of Guadalupe, for the spiritual renewal and the dedication to the sanctity of Human Life Sponsored by the Knights of Columbus History of the Silver Rose Our Lady of Guadalupe did so much for her people in Mexico that, in 1960, the Columbian Squires, a youth organization of the Knights of Columbus, wanted to give something back to her. The group of young men in Knights of Columbus Council 2312 in Monterrey, Mexico, came up with the idea of running a rose to the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Monterrey, Mexico. The rose was chosen to commemorate Juan Diego and the miracle of the roses, an important part of the story of Our Lady of Guadalupe. The first rose was a natural rose and was blessed by Bishop John C. Cody of London. It was then flown to New York where it was received by Grand Knight Joseph Thomasen, who in turn, took it to Supreme Knight Luke E. Hart. Mr. Hart then shepherded the rose to Dallas, Texas. There, Texas State Deputy Jack Collerin received the rose and took it to Laredo, Texas, where it was finally given to the Squires from Monterrey, Mexico, at the International Bridge in Laredo. They ran the rose from the International Bridge through Sabinas Hidalgo N.L., Mexico, to Cienega de Flores and on to the Basilica in Monterrey, Mexico, on December 12, 1960. The Squires were so enthused by the success of this effort that they wanted to invite other Squires from around the world to participate. They called on Squires from Texas and Ontario to join them. The Canadian Squires asked that the journey of the rose begin in their home and move from there through the United States, finishing at the Basilica in Mexico. After a year, the first rose had decomposed, so a group decided to make a bronze rose that would not age. When the Squires of Circle 660 in Monterrey heard of the bronze rose, they decided to make a similar rose. Silver was chosen for this new rose because it is a precious metal of Mexico. The first Silver Rose was blessed by Bishop Alfonso Espino Silva and sent to the Supreme Council headquarters of the Knights of Columbus in New Haven, CT. Both the Bronze Rose and the Silver Rose were received by Supreme Knight Luke E. Hart and were so admired by Archbishop Francis J. Spellman of New York that he kept them for a special Mass before they were flown to Texas to once again be turned over to brother Knights at the midpoint of the International Bridge. After 1961, the program was conducted by the Knights of Texas and Mexico and the Our Lady of Guadalupe Province of the Fourth Degree until the mid-1990s, when it was adopted as a Knights of Columbus Supreme Council program. In 2001, Supreme Knight Carl Anderson expanded the Silver Rose program further. “[This is] a perfect program for the Knights of Columbus,” said Mr. Anderson. “Through it we honor not only Our Lady of Guadalupe and express the unity of the Order, but we also reaffirm the Order’s dedication to the sanctity of human life. It is to the Blessed Mother that we turn in prayer as we work to end the Culture of Death that grips our society. As we think in terms of ‘One Life, One Rose,’ it is most appropriate that we turn to Our Lady of Guadalupe who made known her will through Juan Diego and the miracle of the roses.” Today multiple roses run along different North American routes from Canada to Mexico through 47 U.S. states and five Canadian provinces before all meeting in Laredo, Texas. This tradition spreads devotion to Our Lady of Guadalupe and embodies international brotherhood as jointly nurtured by these three nations. Parish Updates: • The Parish Office hours are Monday through Friday, from 9:00 am to 1:00 pm. Only one person is permitted into the building at a time. Face covering is required. • Weekday mass (No reservation required) ♦ Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 8:00 am, followed by Adoration. ♦ Thursday at 7:00 pm in Spanish ♦ First Friday of the Month at 8:00 pm in Polish • The Chapel is closed but the Church is opened for adoration and private prayer. ♦ Monday, Wednesday, Friday: 8AM—12 PM and 5PM—9PM ♦ First Friday Adoration: 8AM—12PM and 5PM—7PM • Confession is available by appointment only. Please call the parish office. • If you would like to help out with the Adoration or Masses, please visit our website and sign up online. • Visit stjosephworker.com for more info. WHY PRAY? SAINT PIUS X (1835-1914) August 21 The “foreigners” as Isaiah calls them, the Presidential vetoes we understand. But imagine vetoing a papal “Gentiles” as Paul calls them, or the “Canaanites” election! Yet in the conclave of 1903, the Archbishop of Cracow as Matthew calls them are called to worship the (ironically, a predecessor in that office of Karol Wojtyla, the future one true God in prayer. As we listen to today’s John Paul II) vetoed the leading candidate on the order of the Aus- readings, perhaps we are tempted to ask: Why tro-Hungarian emperor. Instead, the cardinals elected Giuseppe pray? The question is rhetorical; it is tantamount Sarto of Venice as Pius X, the first pope, after a succession of no- to asking why should friends talk to one another or bles and diplomats, to hail from humble origins. Nor did the papacy people in love kiss one another. Prayer is a way of alter his endearing simplicity. Tailors eventually made his cassock relating to God, a way of talking to God. The cuffs detachable because he absentmindedly wiped his fountain apostles had the opportunity to talk to Jesus in the pen on them, forgetting that his old black cassock had been re- flesh. We have the opportunity to talk to Jesus placed by papal white! Taking as his motto “To restore all things in Christ in prayer. Our relationship with him must be Christ” (Ephesians 1:10), Pius condemned the theological innova- enthusiastic; it cannot be faint-hearted. John tions called “modernism,” yet dramatically altered the then-common Donne, a fifteenth-century poet, knew what the practice whereby people rarely received Communion for fear of qualities of good prayer were. Donne asks God to unworthiness, mandating early First Communion and urging every- treat him differently from most Christians. The one to frequent reception. Refusing to bless troops assembled in poet does not want God to merely “knock, Saint Peter’s Square—“I bless peace, not war!”—he died broken- breathe, shine, and seek to mend,” but also to hearted as World War I engulfed Christian Europe despite his “break, blow, burn, and make me new” (Holy peacemaking efforts. Sonnets, XIV). —Peter Scagnelli, Copyright © J. S. Paluch Co. It takes a dynamic faith on our part to come to God in prayer. As Jesus once said, “Knock and GRATITUDE the door will be opened to you” (Matthew 7:7). It O Thou who has given us so may take pounding the door down, but if we are much, mercifully grant us one as persistent as the woman in today’s Gospel, the thing more—a grateful heart. results will follow. —George Herbert Copyright © J. S. Paluch Co. HELP OUT OUR ADVERTISERS Our Sunday bulletin is an important way for us to communicate with you, especially during these days of the Coronavirus pandemic. It might be the only way that we can reach some of you. Every bulletin that you receive is paid for through the generosity of the businesses that you see advertised on the back cover. Most of these advertisers are members of our local community, and many belong to our parish. We urge you to think of them when you decide to have a meal or other item delivered to your door. Tell the business owners that you appreciate their support of our parish through their advertisements in the bulletin. This is one small way that we can work within our own community to weather the challenges that we face.