Friday, March 4, 2022

ST. PATRICKS FELLOWSHIP / MARCH 13TH

 

ST. PATRICKS DAY  FELLOWSHIP AT ST. CHARLES OF BRAZIL 

Save the date and bring your appetite !! The Parish Life Team is planning an “Irish Luncheon” and much more. Should be fun and delicious !!  

We will gather after mass on Sunday March 13th to celebrate the special feast of St. Patrick


May the road rise up to meet you.
May the wind be always at your back.
May the sun shine warm upon your face;
the rains fall soft upon your fields
and until we meet again,
may God hold you in the palm of His hand.

 


Tuesday, March 1, 2022

FREE AT HOME COVID TESTS NOW AVAILABLE

 

Place Your Order for Free At-Home COVID-19 Tests

                            


Residential households in the U.S. can order one set of 4 free at-home tests

Here’s what you need to know about your orderLimit of one order per residential address 

One order includes 4 individual rapid antigen COVID-19 test

Orders will ship free starting in late January

The link is below:




                    

Monday, February 28, 2022

ASH WEDNESDAY SERVICES IN PERSON


ASH WEDNESDAY SERVICES:

WEDNESDAY MARCH 2, 2022 @ 7 P.M.     

  Ashes are a symbol. The goal is transformation.


Lenten Reflections from the editors of America Magazine

Listen to the words of Genesis,  “Remember you are dust and to dust you shall return” (3:19).

For some time now, for so many of us, the words have sounded somber yet stilted. A bit too morose. Yes, we will all die. Someday. But not today. Not I. Never today. Never I.

Like everything else that stands beyond human life—God, time and space—we might claim to understand death, but we do not know it. Our own death is not a part of life, something we experience and learn from. It is life’s limit. Small wonder that the true thrust of this sacred season, resurrection, eludes even our imagination.

We do know from history that no way of life is eternal, that cultures and civilizations, as the work of human hands, must pass. But we only know from experience a small fraction of history, our own lives. The rest is inherited guidance. Lessons well learned but easy to forget.

“Remember you are dust and to dust you shall return.” We hear this admonition again. Not that this year it will finally sound out the bottom of our souls. That is why some of us—but only some of us—will hear it again a year from now, when it will burrow perhaps better still..

We go to church and have the Sign of the Cross traced on our foreheads, in dark black ash.  Then we leave the church, where not only “others” but everyone can tell we are marking Lent   Hopefully, for most people Lent is far deeper than this outward sign.

One of my favorite words in the Gospels is one used by both John the Baptist and Jesus. They both talk about “metanoia,” a Greek word that means a change not only of mind but of heart. Sometimes it’s translated as “repentance.” And that’s accurate, but in English that means mainly being sorry for your sins. Metanoia is deeper. It’s a wholesale turning around, a re-orientation of everything. And you can do that whether or not your face is clear or dirty