Sunday, December 31, 2006

December 31: Feast of the Holy Family

The Seventh Day of Christmas
The Holy Family - icon from Coptic Museum in Cairo
"After they had completed the days of Passover,
as they were returning,
the boy Jesus remained behind in Jerusalem,
but his parents did not know it." (Luke 2:41-52)


Today's prayer

In the course of our spiritual journey, it often happenes that we think Jesus is still at our side when actually he hasn't been walking with us for some time. And far more than once, when we have gone seeking him with hurt feelings, his response has been, "How is it that you have sought me?" But we have never understood his words, because we do not understand his heart.

We are also going to Jerusalem, but we only go at the appointed times, following the rules. We make the sacrifice, we keep our "Passover," but when we have done what is required, we return to our own path, assuming that Christ will be with us on the way we have laid out for ourselves. The result is that day by day, year after year, we walk without God.

O Lord, help us to understand what is in your heart, to follow in your footsteps. Save us from our own stupidity, in which we expect you to follow us. Amen.

Prayer from China

Saturday, December 30, 2006

December 30: The Sixth Day in the Octave of Christmas

The Sixth Day of Christmas
“Night truly blessed when heaven is wedded to earth
and man is reconciled with God!” (Easter Exsultet)


Today’s song

The lost verses of “Hark! The Herald Angels Sing!”

Come, Desire of nations, come,
Fix in us thy humble home;
Rise, the woman’s conquering seed,
Bruise in us the serpent’s head.

Now display thy saving power,
Ruined nature now restore;
Now in mystic union join
Thine to ours, and ours to thine.

Adam’s likeness, Lord, efface;
Stamp Thy image in its place.
Second Adam from above,
Reinstate us in thy love.

Let us Thee, though lost, regain,
Thee, the life, the inner Man:
O! to all thyself impart,
Form’d in each believing heart.

Charles Wesley, Hymns and Sacred Poems, 1739.

Friday, December 29, 2006

December 29: Memorial of Saint Thomas Becket (Thomas of Canterbury)

The Fifth Day of Christmas
Murder of Saint Thomas Becket - www.lamp.ac.uk
Read more about Saint Thomas Becket.



Today's song

Seynt Thomas honour we...Al holy chyrch

Seynt Thomas honour we,
Thorgh whos blod Holy Chyrch ys made fre.

Al Holy Chyrch was bot a thrall
Thorgh kyng and temperal lordys all,
To he was slane in Cristys hall
And set all thing in unite:
Hys deth hath such auctorite.

Seynt Thomas honour we...

The kyng bot lytyl whyl hym sparyd:
Knyghtes in chyrch hys crown of paryd;
Thus the corner-ston was squaryd
Betwen clergy and temperalte,
To knytt pes and unite.

Seynt Thomas honour we...

(translation)
Saint Thomas honor we,
Through whose blood Holy Church is made free.

All Holy Church was but a thrall
Through king and temporal lords all,
Till he was slain in Christ’s hall
And set all things in unity:
His death hath such authority.

Saint Thomas honor we...

The king but little while him spared:
Knights in church his crown off pared;
Thus the cornerstone was squared
Between clergy and temporality,
To knit peace and unity.

Saint Thomas honor we...

Thursday, December 28, 2006

Is the Feast of the Holy Family a good time to bless families?

The Church recognizes the family as “the Church of the household, [which] has the duty of upholding clearly before all people the values of the kingdom of God in this world and hope in the life to come by fulfilling its divinely appointed mission and carrying out its proper apostolate” (cf. Lumen gentium, #11 and #35, and Gaudium et spes, #47-52). Therefore, the family can make use of sacramentals, such as blessings, “that in particular situations enrich the life of the family” (Book of Blessings, #41).

The Book of Blessings offers an official order for the blessing of a family (Chapter 1) which may be celebrated outside of (first option) or within Mass and can be led by a priest, deacon, or lay person. The rite gives no particular suggestion as to when the rite should be used except that it is suitable “whenever a blessing is requested by the family or suggested by pastoral considerations” (#42). The book of Catholic Household Blessings and Prayers also offers a similar rite which it recommends “be used annually on a day of special significance to a family, or at times when members of the family who live far apart have come together, or at times when the family experiences special difficulties or special joys” (p. 206).

Recently, there has been some debate among parish circles whether or not the Feast of the Holy Family is an appropriate time to bless families. With divorce, single-parenting, children being raised by grandparents, and different kinds of family arrangements, more and more families do not reflect the idealistic image of family—married mother and father with their children. The holiday season also amplifies any rift in these relationships, often making the Christmas season one of increased depression and anxiety.

For some communities, a blessing of families within Sunday Mass on the Feast of the Holy Family may be beneficial. But I suspect that for most parishes, this will be a delicate subject. The rite should always be adapted “to the circumstances of the place and the people involved” (#43). Therefore, if you decide to celebrate a blessing of families on the Feast of the Holy Family, make sure you know who you are inviting to be blessed, who may feel left out, and be very attentive to the words you use in the invitation and in the rite itself.

Another, perhaps more pastoral, option is to distribute a copy of the blessing and invite families to use it in their own homes at their own family gatherings, or use the blessing at other times when parish families gather together, such as infant baptism or marriage preparation sessions. Such a blessing would also be very appropriate whenever a new family joins the parish.

Another option is to move the blessing of families to a celebration that is more focused on “households” rather than “families,” a subtle but significant distinction for those who may feel anxiety over their own family situation. The solemnity of the Epiphany is one such traditional time to bless homes and households.

Sample Intercessions for December 31, 2006 - Holy Family

Feast of the Holy Family of Jesus, Mary, and Joseph, Year C
December 31, 2006

Things, events, and news items to keep in mind:

  • Click here for the day's readings.
  • As of December 28, 2006, 2,989 US soldiers have died in Iraq, surpassing the number who died in the attacks of September 11. 357 US soldiers have died in Afghanistan. So far, 3,346 US soldiers have died in the war on terror.
  • Significant deaths this week include entertainer, James Brown (December 25), and former president, Gerald R. Ford (December 26).
  • Colorado faces another debilitating blizzard while the Bay Area was hit with a major winter storm, leaving 8000 homes without power. The homeless and those without heat are left in danger.
  • Iraqis wait for the impending execution of Saddam Hussein.
  • Three million Muslims gather from throughout the world to begin the annual Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca.
  • Visitors will continue filling local churches during the holiday season. Travelers will be far from home.
  • This Feast of the Holy Family may bring up some painful images for those in strained and broken family relationships, those grieving the loss of a loved one, those terminally ill, those with family far away, or those alone or abandoned.
  • January 1 is the Solemnity of Mary, the Mother of God and a day of prayer for peace. It is not a holy day of obligation.
  • The New Year brings many parties. It also brings a time for reflection on the past and hope for the future.
  • The Christmas season calls for more solemnity. Consider using a sung response and having your deacon, cantor, or reader chant the intercessions.
  • The following communities in the diocese celebrate their patron's feast day this week: Holy Family Parish (December 31),
The following are just samples meant to inspire your work. Use them as ideas for your own assembly's intercessions. Read 10 Principles for Writing Intercessions and How To Write Intercessions to help you write your own.

Presider:
Emmanuel has come, the hope of all the peoples.
Let us lift our voices in prayer with the saints
and cry out with the angels: Glory to God in the highest!

Reader:
For the faithful who called to be the children of God,
for those preparing for baptism
and all who seek to be in the Father's house: [pause]
May they be clothed with the glory of Christ
to live in love with one another.
We pray to the Lord.

For the world broken by poverty and greed,
for nations at war that dream of a new year of peace: [pause]
May they be clothed with love that is beyond reason
to show mercy and compassion to those most in need.
We pray to the Lord.

For those far from home during this holiday season,
for travelers, missionaries, and those in the military,
for those distanced from family by miles or past hurts: [pause]
May they be clothed with the prayers of loved ones
to bring them safely home.
We pray to the Lord.

For all kinds of families, large and small,
for marriages, communities, and relationships
weighed down by strife,
for those who have no one to call family: [pause]
May they be clothed with heartfelt compassion and kindness,
humility, gentleness, and patience,
to heal whatever pain, anger, or loneliness remains.
We pray to the Lord.

For mothers and fathers, brothers and sisters,
for grandparents and relatives,
for all those we call our family who have loved us into being: [pause]
May they be clothed with abundant blessings.
We pray to the Lord.

For loved ones ill or close to death,
for the aged and all who are in need of our prayers,
including those we now name…: [pause]
May they be clothed with God's healing power.
We pray to the Lord.

For our deceased loved ones whom we miss this season,
for those who died alone,
for innocent victims of violence,
including those we now name…: [pause]
May Christ gather us together into the eternal light of heaven.
We pray to the Lord.

Presider:
Lord Jesus, Everlasting Light,
clothe your children with your holiness, and hear our prayers,
for we have confidence in you and believe your word.
Make of us a holy family,
strong in wisdom and rich in favor before you
so that all people may live
in the peace of the Spirit you have given us.
We ask this in your name, Emmanuel,
God with us, for ever and ever. Amen.

December 28: Feast of the Holy Innocents, Martyrs

The Fourth Day of Christmas
Duccio di Buoninsegna detail from The Slaughter of the Innocents; 1308-11, Museo dell'Opera del Duomo, Siena
Read more about the Massacre of the Holy Innocents.


Today's prayer

I saw a child today, Lord,
who will not die tonight,
harried into hunger's grave.
He was bright and full of life
because his father had a job and feeds him,
but somewere,
everywhere,
ten thousand life-lamps will go out,
and not be lit again tomorrow.
Lord. teach me my sin. Amen.

prayer of a Christian Aid worker in Africa

Wednesday, December 27, 2006

December 27: Feast of Saint John, Apostle, Evangelist

The Third Day of Christmas
Saint John the Evangelist - by Ina Hecker
Read about Saint John here.


Today's message

Consider what is said to you: Love God. If you say to me: Show me whom I am to love, what shall I say if not what Saint John says: No one has ever seen God! But in case you should think that you are completely cut off from the sight of God, he says: God is love, and he who remains in love remains in God. Love your neighbor, then, and see within yourself the power by which you love your neighbor; there you will see God, as far as you are able.

Begin, then, to love your neighbor. Break your bread to feed the hungry, and bring into your home the homeless poor; if you see someone naked, clothe him, and do not look down on your own flesh and blood.

What will you gain by doing this? Your light will then burst forth like the dawn. Your light is your God; he is your dawn, for he will come to you when the night of time is over. He does not rise or set but remains for ever.

In loving and caring for your neighbor you are on a journey. Where are you traveling if not to the Lord God, to him whom we should love with our whole heart, our whole soul, our whole mind? We have not yet reached his presence, but we have our neighbor at our side. Support, then, this companion of your pilgrimage if you want to come into the presence of the one with whom you desire to remain for ever.

Saint Augustine, 4th century
Office of Readings

Tuesday, December 26, 2006

December 26: Feast of Saint Stephen, First Martyr

The Second Day of Christmas
Saint Stephen - www.maronite-heritage.com
Read about Saint Stephen's martyrdom at Acts 6:8-10, 7:51-60.


Today's song

Good King Wenceslas looked out on the Feast of Stephen,
When the snow lay round about, deep and crisp and even.
Brightly shone the moon that night, though the frost was cruel,
When a poor man came in sight, gathering winter fuel.

“Hither, page, and stand by me, if you know it, telling,
Yonder peasant, who is he? Where and what his dwelling?”
“Sire, he lives a good league hence, underneath the mountain,
Right against the forest fence, by Saint Agnes’ fountain.”

“Bring me food and bring me wine, bring me pine logs hither,
You and I will see him dine, when we bear them thither.”
Page and monarch, forth they went, forth they went together,
Through the cold wind’s wild lament and the bitter weather.

“Sire, the night is darker now, and the wind blows stronger,
Fails my heart, I know not how; I can go no longer.”
“Mark my footsteps, my good page, tread now in them boldly,
You shall find the winter’s rage freeze your blood less coldly.”

In his master’s steps he trod, where the snow lay dinted;
Heat was in the very sod which the saint had printed.
Therefore, Christian men, be sure, wealth or rank possessing,
You who now will bless the poor shall yourselves find blessing.

Good King Wenceslas. Words: John M. Neale (1818-1866); Music: Tem­pus Adest Flor­i­dum, 13th-cen­tu­ry spring car­ol, 1582.

King Wenceslas
“When you hold a banquet, invite the poor, the crippled,
the lame, the blind;
blessed indeed will you be because of their inability to repay you”
(Luke 14:13-14).

Friday, December 22, 2006

Who should sing the Christmas Proclamation?

The Proclamation of the Birth of Christ, also called the Roman Martyrology, is the Church's formal announcement of the nativity of the Lord. It recounts the history of events that marked the day of Christ's birth, thus placing this divine act squarely in the midst of human history. This is a profound statement of the Incarnation: that the timeless eternal One chooses to become bound by time, taking on our temporal human nature, counting the days.

The proclamation is not a chant of the assembly but is assigned to particular ministers, serving as a true announcement to those gathered together. So who should sing this proclamation? The presider? the deacon? the cantor? Click here to find out.

Thursday, December 21, 2006

Rite of Election 2007 - Instructions, Rehearsals, and Registration

Bishop Patrick J. McGrath welcomes to the Cathedral Basilica of Saint Joseph (80 South Market Street, San Jose) the catechumens from all parishes, institutions, and missions of the diocese who are ready for the Rite of Election where they will be chosen to celebrate the sacraments of baptism, confirmation, and Eucharist at the next Easter Vigil. All the liturgies will be multilingual.

Please note: Because Bishop McGrath will be on pilgrimage in Vietnam this February and will be unable to celebrate the Rite of Election in person, he has appointed Msgr. Fran Cilia, Vicar General of the diocese, to act as his delegate for the Rite of Election.

Rite of Election - 2007
Sunday, February 25, 2007, 3:30p
Monday, February 26, 2007, 7:30p
Tuesday, February 27, 2007, 7:30p

Cathedral Basilica of Saint Joseph
80 South Market Street, San Jose


Rehearsals for Rite of Election
There will be two rehearsals for the Rite of Election. Catechumens and godparents DO NOT attend these rehearsals. At least two people from your parish must attend one of the rehearsals (the catechumenate director may be one of the following persons):
  • one person to carry your Book of the Elect,
  • one (or two) people to read your names of the Elect.
Rehearsals for Rite of Election
Monday, February 19, 2007, 7:00p – 8:00p
or Tuesday, February 20, 2007, 7:00p – 8:00p

Cathedral Basilica of Saint Joseph
80 South Market Street, San Jose

After 6:00p, there is free parking on the street or in the parking lots on San Fernando Street between First and Third Streets. Click here for a map (PDF) showing all the free parking lots near the Cathedral.


Instructions
You can download these Word documents and distribute them to the godparents and those carrying the Book of the Elect or reading the names.

Registration
So that enough seats can be reserved for your catechumens and their godparents, please submit the names of your eligible catechumens no later than January 25, 2007.

There are two ways to submit your names for the Rite of Election:
The final schedule for the three celebrations will be announced January 26, 2007 on the Rite of Election web site.

If you have any questions, please contact Diana Macalintal at 408-983-0136.



Rite of Election 2007
Registration deadline: January 25, 2007

Contact Information

Parish, Mission, or School Name


Catechumenate Director's Name


Catechumenate Director's Phone Number


Catechumenate Director's E-mail Address



Rite of Election Schedule

Please check your parish's first choice (check only one):
    Sunday, February 25, 2007, 3:30p.
    Monday, February 26, 2007, 7:30p.
    Tuesday, February 27, 2007, 7:30p.
    We have no preference.

Please check your parish's second choice(s):
    Sunday, February 25, 2007, 3:30p.
    Monday, February 26, 2007, 7:30p.
    Tuesday, February 27, 2007, 7:30p.

We are unable to attend the following date(s) (check all that apply):
    Sunday, February 25, 2007, 3:30p.
    Monday, February 26, 2007, 7:30p.
    Tuesday, February 27, 2007, 7:30p.

Catechumen Information

TOTAL number of catechumens*
*Only catechumens (the unbaptized) will be called forward during the Rite. However, candidates are welcomed to participate as members of the assembly.

How many of your catechumens are children?

We have catechumens who speak the following languages other than English:


Names of Catechumens

Please list each catechumen's name on a separate line in alphabetical order by last name, using this format:
First Last



Bernard Nemis from the Office of Pastoral Ministry will contact you to confirm your registration. Please make sure all your information is correct before submitting this form.


Holiday Time-Wasters

Click here to make your own warning label!

During this time of year, everyone is trying to help you save time. I, on the other hand, am giving you the gift of time with these Holiday Time-Wasters. What better way to show that you have an abundance of time! So go ahead. Click away. But beware. These can be addicting.

De-Stress Tools for the Busy Minister

Being Jackson Pollack

Line Rider - the ultimate bane of efficiency

Don't say I didn't warn you. Merry Christmas!

Christmas is a season of light....

But this is a little overboard. It's a 10-minute light show in Sherman Oaks, California.

Here's a shorter, relatively simpler light show.

See also last year's light show hit here.

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

The Dining Table: Home for the holidays

Part of learning how to prepare the Mass well is learning how to dine well at home. Because the domestic Church is connected to the ecclesial Church, the way we attend to the details and actions of one table can influence how we live around the other. And the one sacrifice made at the altar of Christ reflects and strengthens the daily sacrifices we make in our home. So here are some tips for making your dining experience at home more like worship at Church.

Gingerbread Nativity Scenes
Creating a gingerbread house is a great holiday project for families. You can find a lot of patterns and kits by Googling. A simple recipe and pattern can be found here.

If you want to really get into the season, try building a gingerbread Nativity scene.

Here is one recipe for an edible Nativity scene.

There's even one recipe by Better Homes and Gardens that uses gingerbread, cookie dough, and pretzels!

As you create your edible houses and nativities, reflect on how your home feeds others in big and small ways. What can you do this coming year to make your home a place where people can be fed spiritually as well as physically?

Jesus was born in a manger, literally a feeding trough for the stable animals ("manger" is French for "to eat"). In this symbolic way, the story of the Nativity of the Lord highlights how Jesus is "bread for the world," feeding us not only by the Eucharist but also by the Word that he brings.

After you’ve built your masterwork, send me your photos, and I’ll post the best ones here.


Blessings and Prayers
Here are a couple of Christmas blessings to use in your domestic Church.

St. Charles Borromeo Catholic Church in Arlington, Virginia, provides this house blessing you can use. There's a prayer for almost every room in your home.

The Book of Blessings provides a "Blessing of a Christmas Manger or Nativity Scene" that you can use at home. The liturgy can be led by a lay person.

The Gift of Time and Talent: Gospel Values in Action - January 16, 2007

The time that you give sharing your skills with the needs of the parish and of the community is time that you are living the Gospel mandate to love our neighbor. Come participate in a conversation with Rev. Larry Snyder, President of Catholic Charities USA, hosted by Mr. Greg Kepferle, CEO of Catholic Charities of Santa Clara County.

The Gift of Time and Talent: Gospel Values in Action
January 16, 2007, 7:30p
John XXIII Multi-Service Center
195 East San Fernando Street, San Jose

Free parking in the 4th Street Garage
RSVP to Elizabeth Lilly at 408-325-5262

Sample Intercessions for December 24/25, 2006 - Christmas

The Vigil of Christmas - The Nativity of the Lord, Year ABC
December 24/25, 2006

Things, events, and news items to keep in mind:

  • Click here for the readings of the Vigil Mass.
  • Click here for the readings of the Mass at Midnight.
  • Click here for the readings of the Mass at Dawn.
  • Click here for the readings of the Mass during the Day.
  • 2,950 US soldiers have died in the three years and nine months of fighting in Iraq; 22,000 US military personnel have been injured; 245 Coalition soldiers have been killed; at least 50,000 Iraqis have died. The last two US military casualties in Iraq were of a 43 year old from Hilo, Hawaii, and a 19 year old from Newark, New Jersey.
  • Immigration raids by the US government targeting meat-packing facilities throughout the country resulted in fear, distrust, and chaos, with hundreds losing their jobs and being separated from their families to be detained or deported.
  • The search continues for two climbers who have been missing for 12 days on Mount Hood in Oregon. A third climber was found dead on Sunday.
  • The Pacific Northwest continues to experience heavy winds and cold, leaving many without electricity for days. Several die from downed trees.
  • San Jose continues to have near freezing overnight temperatures, filling up local homeless shelters and putting those who remain on the streets at risk.
  • Visitors will be filling local churches for Christmas Masses. Travelers will be far from home.
  • Family gatherings and the holiday season are not always joyful times for those in strained relationships, those grieving the loss of a loved one, those terminally ill, those with family far away, or those alone or abandoned.
  • Kwanzaa begins on December 26.
  • Parish staffs and liturgical ministers will be stretched to their limits by the rare calendar event of the 4th Sunday of Advent coinciding with Christmas Eve.
  • The Christmas season calls for more solemnity. Consider using a sung response and having your deacon, cantor, or reader chant the intercessions.
The following are just samples meant to inspire your work. Use them as ideas for your own assembly's intercessions. Read 10 Principles for Writing Intercessions and How To Write Intercessions to help you write your own.

Presider:
Emmanuel has come, the hope of all the peoples.
Let us lift our voices in prayer with the saints
and cry out with the angels: Glory to God in the highest!

Reader:
For the faithful who have become children of God,
for those preparing for baptism and all who seek the infant-king: [pause]
May the Word Made Flesh raise in us a cry for justice,
a shout for joy, and a song of comfort for all people.
We pray to the Lord.

For the world in darkness that has seen a great light,
for nations at war that dream of everlasting peace: [pause]
May the grace of God appear to them, saving them,
training them to live in hope and justice.
We pray to the Lord.

For travelers and those in the military far from home,
for all who find themselves in places of fear and conflict: [pause]
May every boot and cloak bloodied by war
be transformed by the flame of peace leading them safely home.
We pray to the Lord.

For the unemployed or the homeless,
for those unsure of where their next meal will come from,
for marriages, families, and relationships weighed down by strife: [pause]
May the yoke that burdened them be smashed by the Lord’s holy arm,
removing their fear and bringing them comfort.
We pray to the Lord.

For children born and children hoped for,
for friends near and those distanced by miles or anger,
for loved ones ill or close to death,
including those we now name…: [pause]
May they receive from God’s mercy grace upon grace.
We pray to the Lord.

For our deceased loved ones whom we miss this season,
for those who died alone,
for innocent victims of violence,
including those we now name…: [pause]
May Christ gather us together into the eternal light of heaven.
We pray to the Lord.

Presider:
Lord Jesus, Everlasting Light,
shine your mercy upon us, and hear our prayers.
Do not let the darkness of doubt overcome us,
but stir in us deeper faith in you,
for you are the Lord of hosts, and your zeal will do this.
We ask this in your name, Emmanuel,
God with us, for ever and ever. Amen.

Sample Intercessions for December 24, 2006 - Fourth Sunday of Advent

Fourth Sunday of Advent, Year C
December 24, 2006

Things, events, and news items to keep in mind:

  • Click here for the readings of the day.
  • 2,950 US soldiers have died in the three years and nine months of fighting in Iraq; 22,000 US military personnel have been injured; 245 Coalition soldiers have been killed; at least 50,000 Iraqis have died. The last two US military casualties in Iraq were of a 43 year old from Hilo, Hawaii, and a 19 year old from Newark, New Jersey.
  • Immigration raids by the US government targeting meat-packing facilities throughout the country resulted in fear, distrust, and chaos, with hundreds losing their jobs and being separated from their families to be detained or deported.
  • The search continues for two climbers who have been missing for 12 days on Mount Hood in Oregon. A third climber was found dead on Sunday.
  • The Pacific Northwest continues to experience heavy winds and cold, leaving many without electricity for days. Several die from downed trees.
  • San Jose continues to have near freezing overnight temperatures, filling up local homeless shelters and putting those who remain on the streets at risk.
  • Visitors will be filling local churches for Christmas Masses. Travelers will be far from home.
  • Family gatherings and the holiday season are not always joyful times for those in strained relationships, those grieving the loss of a loved one, those terminally ill, those with family far away, or those alone or abandoned.
  • Kwanzaa begins on December 26.
  • Parish staffs and liturgical ministers will be stretched to their limits by the rare calendar event of the 4th Sunday of Advent coinciding with Christmas Eve.
The following are just samples meant to inspire your work. Use them as ideas for your own assembly's intercessions. Read 10 Principles for Writing Intercessions and How To Write Intercessions to help you write your own.

Presider:
With prayers for a world waiting in hope,
let us turn to the Lord, and we shall be saved.

Reader:
For the Church
still waiting for unity,
still hoping for renewal,
still searching for steadfast faith: [pause]
May all the faithful be blessed by the sound of the Gospel
proclaimed to the ends of the earth.
Come, Lord Jesus…hear our prayer.

For all nations
still waiting for peace,
still hoping for an end to war
still searching for common ground: [pause]
May all peoples be blessed by the sound of understanding
between clans and tribes, rulers and races.
Come, Lord Jesus…hear our prayer.

For those who have lost hope,
still waiting for a job,
still hoping for a cure,
still searching for a place to call home: [pause]
May those without joy this season be blessed
by the sound of God's promise for them fulfilled.
Come, Lord Jesus…hear our prayer.

For travelers and visitors, families and friends,
still waiting for welcome,
still hoping for reconciliation,
still searching for a way to mend what has been broken: [pause]
May everyone we encounter this season be blessed
by greetings of peace, compassion, and hospitality.
Come, Lord Jesus…hear our prayer.

For the sick and the dying and those who care for them,
still waiting for results,
still hoping for a miracle,
still searching for courage and comfort,
including those we now name…: [pause]
May all the sick be blessed by the sound of God's healing word
and the strength of our prayers.
Come, Lord Jesus…hear our prayer.

For the dead,
loved ones whom we miss this season,
forgotten ones who died alone,
innocent ones caught in the crossfire of violence,
including those we now name…: [pause]
May all who have died be blessed by the sound of God
welcoming them home.
Come, Lord Jesus…hear our prayer.

Presider:
You are near to us, Lord,
as close to us as the child in the womb of her mother.
And yet we wait in expectant hope for your coming.
Attune our ears to hear your voice in all those we meet,
and open our eyes to see your abiding presence in our world.
Hear our prayers and make us turn to you
that we may leap for joy at the sound of your saving Word,
Jesus, Emmanuel, God with us, for ever and ever. Amen.

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Picturing Mary - December 21, 2006

Picturing Mary is a stunning new, high-definition documentary to debut December 2006 on public television (in the Bay Area it will air on KQED on December 21, 2006, at 9:00p). It explores how images of the Virgin Mary reflect numerous traditions, devotional practices, and cultures. The one-hour program leads viewers on a pictorial journey through history from earliest Christian times to the present day. It presents a fascinating array of art from twelve locations in eight different countries.

The documentary is a joint effort of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Catholic Communication Campaign and New York Public Television station Thirteen/WNET. The program is narrated by actress Jane Seymour and features quotations read by actor James Keach.

For background information, visit www.picturingmary.com.

DVD copies will be available for purchase at $19.95 a copy from USCCB Publishing, or telephone 1-800-235-8722.

New Bishop of Monterey - Bishop Richard Garcia

Bishop Richard GarciaChristmas has come early to one of our own San Jose priests! Bishop Richard J. Garcia, Auxiliary Bishop of Sacramento, has been named by Pope Benedict XVI as the successor to Bishop Sylvester D. Ryan, to become the next Bishop of Monterey. Bishop Garcia was a priest of the San Jose diocese before he was ordained a bishop for the Sacramento diocese in 1998. The announcement was made by the apostolic nuncio to the United States, Archbishop Pietro Sambi, this morning in Washington, DC.

Read the press release (PDF) from the Diocese of Monterey here.
Read Bishop Ryan's pastoral letter of welcome (PDF) to Bishop Garcia here.
Read Bishop Garcia's biography (PDF) here.

Thursday, December 14, 2006

What Heaven Is and Is Not

Get up, dead ones! Present yourselves to the JudgementThe first half of Advent had been a traditional time when the Church looked toward the "end times" and what will happen when Christ comes again. This focus on the "end" also included an emphasis on death (the Dies Irae that became the traditional Requiem sequence was first the sequence for the First Sunday of Advent). In a disucssion about music and funerals, Neil, who writes at Todd's Catholic Sensibility blog, talks about a recent Advent sermon by Anglican priest and theologian Samuel Wells that discussed three things that heaven is not and three things that heaven is.

Heaven is not the “continuation of a person’s eternal soul....Can anyone look at Jesus on the cross and say 'death is nothing at all'? Can anyone look at the aftermath of a suicide bombing in a market square and imagine the words 'I have only slipped away into the next room'? Our death is the end of us. Our hope lies not in pretending otherwise, but in knowing that our death is not the end of God.”

Heaven is not “our reabsorption into the infinite....God is wholly absent from this understanding of heaven. Jesus seems to have achieved nothing of any significance in his cross and resurrection, at least as far as our death and life thereafter is concerned. Perhaps the reason that the verses usually entitled 'Death is nothing at all' and 'Do not stand by my grave and weep' have become so enormously popular in our contemporary culture is that they offer pictures of continuity beyond death that require no belief in God or reference to Jesus whatsoever. The trouble is, they do so by denying the reality of death, and the pictures they offer, of heaven as a waiting room or as a disembodied wind, are so bleak as to offer little or no real hope at all.”

Heaven is not the “reconstitution of our fleshly bodies....This is less of a mistake than the first two, and it may sound obvious in an age where cremation of dead bodies is relatively commonplace, but it’s still worth stating. The funeral sermon that says 'I’m sure Peggy’s up there now watering and pruning her roses just as she did down here' seems to be assuming that heaven is basically a continuation of our present physical life in all it prosaic mundanity. To be sure, heaven is a physical existence, but the bodies of the saints are not simply embalmed versions of the ones we have here.”

The problem in common with these three views is that they “lose their credibility when they deny the overwhelming horror of death,” and, then, unsurprisingly, “they lose any sense of wonder when they ignore the overwhelming glory of God.”

So what is heaven?

First, heaven is worship:
“The reason we put so much care and attention into the way we worship at Duke Chapel is because we believe that the way we worship is the most significant way we depict and anticipate the life of heaven. Every Sunday Christians gather together and depict and anticipate the life of heaven. That’s why worship matters so much – because in eternity, that’s all there’ll be. And worship isn’t just some abstract ideal. Everything depends on who we worship. And the book of Revelation makes it absolutely clear who we worship – we worship the Lamb who was slain, the Lamb on the throne, Jesus, the one who gave his life because God loved us too much to leave us to oblivion and obliteration, the one whose resurrection gave us the life of heaven for which we long and on which our hope depends.”

Second, heaven is about friendship:
“The heart of God is three persons in perfect communion. And yet at the table there is a fourth place – a place left for us to join the communion of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. This is heaven – the experience of being invited to the table of friendship to join the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. At last we discover, not just what God can do when left to do it on his own, but what is possible when in perfect communion humanity and all creation join the everlasting dance of the Trinity.”

Finally, heaven is a banquet:
“This is maybe the most common picture of all in the New Testament – heaven as a great feast, a banquet celebrating the marriage of heaven and earth, the perfect union or communion of God and all God’s children. Just imagine a fabulous meal where there were no allergies, no eating disorders, no inequalities in world trade, no fatty goods, no gluttony, and no price tag.…We are made friends with God and one another when we eat together in worship. In eating together we recall the transforming meals Christ shared before, during and after his passion, and we anticipate the great banquet we shall share with him.”

Link to Neil's entire post and the full sermon here.

Adapting Simbang Gabi for your Community

You've done Las Posadas. So now try Simbang Gabi. Here's some background information directly from the Philippines and the schedule of Masses in the Diocese of San Jose.

Below is an article by Diana Macalintal that originally appeared in Simple Gifts, Vol. 6, No. 6, December, 2000.

Adapting Music for Liturgy: Simbang Gabi

On one of my visits to the Philippines I took a walk in one of the barrios, a small village town where some homes still used gas lamps for light. The sun had long gone, and the dirt road was empty of the occasional jeepney or carabao. The moon had not yet risen, but the sky was filled with starlight. Still, all around me was pitch black except for a spot of light in the distance. As I walked toward the light, I saw it came from a star, a parol, hanging from the eave of the neighbor’s porch. Like those travelers long ago, I was drawn to that bright star and led to a place of welcome and shelter from the darkness. It was the Advent season in the Philippines, and the parols hung brightly from every house signaling the family’s welcome of the Word made flesh.

During the nine days before Christmas, Filipinos traditionally celebrate Simbang Gabi, or “church of night” by having Mass each day in the early morning which includes catechesis and food. The custom is also called misa de gallo or “mass of the rooster” because the original celebration took place at dawn before the start of the farming day and at the end of a long night of fishing. The missionaries who began Simbang Gabi used it as a way to catechize and evangelize and to pass on the traditions of the Filipino people. Food and music are integral parts of every gathering, so a fiesta of food and Christmas music would follow the Mass each day. Simbang Gabi is often called the longest Christmas party in the world! Though Christmas carols are sung during these Advent-time masses, the focus is on joyful longing and thanksgiving today for the one who is still to come. Today, Simbang Gabi is usually celebrated at night to accommodate the modern work schedule, though the elements of prayer, catechesis, food and music are still at the heart of the celebration.

Most people today would find it difficult to devote the nine evenings before Christmas to gathering together for Mass. However the Latino community has made it a priority by celebrating Las Posadas during this time. Perhaps with some catechesis, preparation, and the enticement of food and festivity, more communities can spend the days before Christmas in prayer and celebration rather than at the malls and gridlocked highways. Here is one way to incorporate the tradition of Simbang Gabi into your community.

Each evening Mass would use the readings of the day and retain the restrictions of Advent. However a festive song of praise would follow Communion which would lead directly into more feasting and music in the parish hall or at a parishioner’s home. As part of the homily, an activity is prepared that highlights the Filipino traditions and connects it to the spiritual preparation for Christmas. The “O Antiphons” also begin on December 17th. They are each day’s antiphons for the Magnificat at Evening Prayer. They are also the Gospel Acclamation verses for each day’s Mass (see Lectionary #202). Be sure to sing the corresponding verse of “O Come O Come Emmanuel” as part of each day’s celebration.

Day One – December 16
The first reading for the Saturday of the second week of Advent speaks of Elijah and the fiery chariot in the sky. Build your own parol using wooden dowels, string, glue, and rice paper or luminaria paper. A parol is a three-dimensional star illuminated by a lit candle or light bulb inside. Some Filipino stores will have designs for parols. (Here's a web site that shows you how to make your own parol.) As a song of praise, sing “We Three Kings” or Bernadette Farrell’s “Christ Be Our Light” (OCP).

Day Two – December 17
The Third Sunday of Advent is traditionally known as Gaudete Sunday, or “rejoice!” The Gospel today challenges us with the question “what must I do?” John the Baptist tells us “let the one with two coats give to the one who has none.” As part of the day, collect clothing to be donated to a local shelter. As a community take these clothes and a potluck supper to the shelter to share in a fiesta with those most in need of rejoicing. For the Sunday Mass, use Bob Hurd’s “I Want to Praise Your Name” (OCP) as a song of praise. Or script the Gospel reading so that the assembly can sing the refrain of “O Come O Come Emmanuel” at various points.

Day Three – December 18
The Gospel tells of Joseph’s dream of how Mary is to bear a son and name him Emmanuel, “God is with us.” Take some time at the Mass to reflect on how you were named. Invite some parents to share how they named their children and what those names mean. Discuss in small groups the importance of being named a “Christian.” Sing “You Are Mine” (GIA) by David Haas as a song of praise.

Day Four – December 19
Today’s Gospel story of Zechariah the priest becoming mute is highly dramatic and vivid in its images. Members of the community may want to “proclaim” this Gospel through a short play that involves the children and the elders of the community. For a song of praise, try “I Will Sing/Cantaré” by Julie and Tim Smith (RPI).

Day Five – December 20
What have you conceived this year? What do you hope will come to birth in you this Christmas? Create a litany of life, inviting the assembly to share in a word or a short phrase something that has been born in them or something they hope to bring to birth. As a response after three or four phrases, sing the last line of the Bernadette Farrell’s “God Beyond All Names” (OCP) which reads “in our living and our dying we are bringing you to birth.”

Day Six – December 21
As we near the end of the year, today’s readings challenge us to see again those against whom we have not removed judgement. What steps can we take to be able to say “you have no further misfortune to fear”? What would it take for us to say to them “blessed are you among women, blessed are you among men”? As today’s activity, write a forgiveness letter to someone you have yet to forgive. You don’t need to send it, just write it. During the Christmas season you may want to consider sending the letter along with your Christmas card to that person. As a song of praise, sing “Healing Is Your Touch” by Monica Brown (RPI).

Day Seven – December 22
Mary’s greeting to Elizabeth this day gives us a chance to look at how we greet one another. In the Filipino culture, elders are greeted with a “mano po.” The younger person takes the elder’s hand and lifts it to his and her own forehead while saying “mano po,” which literally means “your hand, please, Sir/Ma’am.” It is both a greeting and a blessing. As part of the sign of peace today, invite the assembly to give “mano po” to the elders of the community. These last few days before Christmas, use the spiritual “Soon and Very Soon” as your song of praise.

Day Eight – December 23
Children and their parents are the central image in today’s readings. It may be a good time for parents to tell their children their hopes for them and also to say to them how they see the “hand of the Lord” upon them. Or ask each person to write an imaginary letter to themselves from God their Father. Have them imagine how God would answer the question about them “what will this child be?”

Day Nine – December 24
This Fourth Sunday of Advent, have a procession of stars using the parols that your community made the first night of Simbang Gabi. These parols can be processed in at the Sunday Mass and left up for the Christmas season beginning that night.

Make a 3-D Paper Snowflake

Can't figure out how to make your own parol? Then try this really easy project for making three-dimensional snowflakes. Imagine stringing several large snowflakes on vertical strings, like we do with paper cranes, in the vestibule. Could be a fun, inexpensive, easy way to decorate for Christmas.

What Lies Beneath: Finding Easter in Christmas

This article by Diana Macalintal originally appeared in Simple Gifts, Vol. 6, No. 6, December, 2000.

Stare at a Christmas tree sometime. Or step back from your front door and take another look at your Christmas wreath. Once you get past the initial thought of “yet another Christmas season,” what do you see? Do you see “the wood of the cross on which hung the Savior of the world”? Do you see the “sacred head surrounded by crown of piercing thorn”? In the red holly berries do you see the “blood of the new and everlasting covenant”? What lies hidden in the idyllic scenes of Bethlehem is the blood of Gethsemane, the crown of Calvary, and the empty tomb of the garden—spring Easter lilies hidden beneath the winter snow.

In the liturgical year, the two major seasons are Easter and Christmas, with Easter being the pre-eminent celebration. In the first three centuries of the Church, Christians celebrated an annual memorial of Christ’s resurrection. But it wasn’t until the fourth century when the Church began to celebrate Christ’s birth. These earliest Christians understood what one Christmas carol tries to teach, “Christ was born to save.”

Today, in some ways, Christmas has surpassed Easter in importance and in energy exerted by liturgy teams, environment crews, and music ministers. Worse yet, the Christmas that we celebrate is too-often watered down and tamed of its deeper, daunting, and awe-full implication that this birth leads all of us to ultimate death and sacrifice. What we see is a harmless infant bundled in swaddling clothes; what is hidden is the linen wrappings that had swaddled the lifeless body of the God-Man. What we hear is the angel’s greeting to stupefied shepherds, “Do not be afraid; for behold, I proclaim to you good news of great joy that will be for all the people”; what is hidden is the angel’s greeting to grief-stricken women, “Do not be afraid! I know that you are seeking Jesus the crucified. He is not here, for he has been raised just as he said. Go quickly and tell his disciples.” What we taste is the Christmas feast; what is hidden is a bit of bread and a sip of wine shared at a final meal with friends. What we adore is a wooden manger cradling the child of Mary; what is hidden is the veneration of the wood “on which hung the Savior of the world. Come, let us worship.” O come, let us adore him.

Why is it important to keep Easter in mind when preparing our Christmas celebrations? When we rediscover the hidden images of Christmas, we reclaim the true power of this birth. The Incarnation becomes more than just a day in the year or an isolated season in the liturgical calendar. It becomes a way of life. The spirit of Christmas becomes more than just goodwill to all. It becomes a reminder of our commitment to the Word made flesh, a Word that brings glad tidings to the poor, proclaims liberty to captives, gives sight to the blind, freedom to the oppressed, and favor to all. This is the word, the good news, that Jesus died for. When we celebrate Christmas, we welcome that Word once again and recommit ourselves to live and die for that Word. When we celebrate the birth of the child Jesus in this way, we are really celebrating the life, passion, death, and resurrection of the adult Christ our Savior. We can make the connection between these two seasons every year in the songs and acclamations we choose, in the homilies we preach, and in the renewal of our baptismal promises.

After several years of unwrapping the hidden meanings of Christmas, maybe our children will know that the best gift one can give is their life for another, maybe our youth will have something to live for and something to die for, maybe those searching for the Christ-child will find the Body of Christ alive and risen among us. Merry Easter!

You Have More Power Than You Think

Here's an interesting interpretation of the Gospel story of the feeding of the 5000. It's a good reminder to all of us that giving from our surplus and our need is a year-long activity.

a different kind of advent calendar

Realizing that the 4th Sunday of Advent and Christmas Eve are only 10 days away, you may be needing a different kind of Advent calendar by this time.

4th Sunday Advent/Christmas Eve transition help

Q: This year’s Christmas schedule is crazy with the Fourth Sunday of Advent falling on the same day as Christmas Eve! How can our parish use our time most effectively to help keep everyone sane?

A: Most communities have a Sunday night mass, and most communities schedule a Christmas vigil Mass early in the evening. This year’s situation would make it wise for your community to cancel the usual evening Mass for the Fourth Sunday of Advent. Instead offer the opportunity for the community to gather that afternoon to help decorate the church. The choir could even rehearse during the decorating to help add to the Christmas mood and anticipation. In addition, use the same eucharistic prayer acclamations during both Advent and Christmas, adding more instrumentation and harmonies for Christmastime. Use more Christmas carols and less “choir pieces” to help ease the burden of additional rehearsals and to increase assembly participation.

Multi-Faith Christmas Concert - December 16 and 17, 2006

On Saturday, December 16, and Sunday, December 17 from 7:00p to 9:00p, there will be a multi-faith Christmas concert celebrating the birth of our savior Jesus Christ and his message to us, “Feed My Sheep.” Performers will include Alexandra Mena from Mission City Opera (Saturday only) and Isaac Hurtado from Opera San Jose. Others include Caritas Choir from Holy Family Catholic Church directed by Bruce M. Wiley and Zion, Directed by Christy Williams. There will be a bell choir and several youth groups as well. This is a charitable event for Toys for Tots and the Second Harvest Food Bank, so please bring a donation (no money will be accepted). This is an event for families and will conclude with a sing-a-long of Handel’s Hallelujah Chorus. There will be refreshments following the concerts.

Christmas Concert
“Feed My Sheep”
to benefit Toys for Tots and Second Harvest Food Bank
December 16, 2006, 7:00p
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints
December 17, 2006, 7:00p
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints

National Migration Week - January 7 - 13, 2007

Prayer for Migrants and Refugees
Mary Most Holy,
you, together with Saint Joseph and the Child Jesus,
experienced the suffering of exile.
You were forced to flee to Egypt to escape the persecution of Herod.
Today we entrust the men, women and children
who live as migrants and refugees to your maternal protection.
Grant us the grace to welcome them with Christian hospitality,
so that that these brothers and sisters of ours
may find acceptance and understanding on their journey.
Teach us to recognize your Son
in the migrant who labors to bring food to our tables,
in the refugee seeking protection from persecution, war, and famine,
in the woman and child who are victims of human trafficking,
in the asylum seeker imprisoned for fleeing without documents.
May all those who are far from their place of birth
find in the Church a home where no one is a stranger.
We ask this in the name of your blessed Son, Jesus, our Lord. Amen.

Oración por los migrantes y refugiados
María Santísima,
tú, junto con san José y el niño Jesús,
experimentaste el sufrimiento del exilio.
Te viste obligada a huir a Egipto para escapar de la persecución de Herodes.
Hoy confiamos a tu materna protección a los hombres, mujeres y niños
que viven como migrantes y refugiados.
Concédenos la gracia de acogerlos con hospitalidad cristiana,
para que estos hermanos y hermanas nuestros
puedan encontrar aceptación y comprensión en su camino.
Enséñanos a reconocer a tu Hijo
en el migrante que labora para llevar el alimento a nuestras mesas,
en el refugiado que busca protección de la persecución, el hambre y la guerra,
en la mujer y el niño o niña que son víctimas del tráfico humano,
en el que busca asilo y está preso por huir sin documentos.
Que todos aquellos que están lejos de su país natal
encuentren en la Iglesia un hogar en la que nadie es extranjero.
Pedimos esto en el nombre de tu bendito Hijo, Jesús, nuestro Señor. Amén.


Letter from Bishop Gerald R. Barnes
Bishop of San Bernardino
Chair, USCCB Committee on Migration

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

I invite you to join in the 26th annual observance of National Migration Week, January 7 to 13, 2007. The theme for 2007 is Welcoming Christ in the Migrant, which is at once an invitation and a challenge to provide welcome for the migrants, immigrants, refugees, human trafficking victims, and other people on the move who come to our land seeking justice and peace. Our theme reminds us of Jesus' scriptural admonition to us:
'Lord, when did we see you a stranger...and not minister to your needs?' He will answer them, 'Amen, I say to you, what you did not do for one of these least ones, you did not do for me.' (Mt. 25: 44-45)
This reminder is particularly timely as our citizens and leaders grapple with the complexities and many dimensions of the migration experience. Our nation's legitimate security concerns have been distorted by some who would foment anxiety, fear, and a distrust of migrants. The present immigration reform debate has lost much of its reason and is often being fueled by raw emotions. Scriptures and Catholic Social Teaching call upon all of us to examine the issues and respond to the strangers among us as we would to Jesus Himself. The Holy Family found safety and new lives in Egypt during their time of great need. Many migrants today follow similar paths as they embark on their journey of hope.

I invite you to welcome Christ in the migrant through prayer, education, and parish outreach. To assist you in this expression of faith, a wide variety of resources for parishes and schools has been developed and are available on the USCCB/MRS National Migration Week web site. The enclosed poster, prayer card, and parish guide are available in larger quantities. Additionally, we encourage you to become informed and active in the Justice for Immigrants: A Journey of Hope campaign.

When we reach out to aid and comfort the newcomers to our land we are indeed offering ourselves and our gifts in service to the Lord. This is not only our Christian duty but a privilege, knowing that we too have been adopted into God's family. May you be richly blessed by your faithful acts of hospitality in Christ's name.

Sincerely Yours in Christ,
Most Reverend Gerald R. Barnes

4th Sunday Advent/Christmas schedules

My awesome administrative assistant, Bernard, gathered 4th Sunday of Advent / Christmas schedule information from many of the parishes and most especially from Dorothy Carlson and the volunteers of Holy Spirit Parish who did much of the work. From all their efforts, here are the schedules for the 4th Sunday of Advent to Christmas transistion from all 52 of our parishes. If you're looking for a parish to celebrate in, please contact them to confirm their schedule in case it may have changed. If you're doing the weekend marathon at your parish, then you can compare your schedule with some of these schedule and either cry or rejoice.

Cathedral Basilica of Saint Joseph
4th Sunday of Advent Masses
• 4:30p (English Saturday)
• 8:30a (English)
• 10:00a (Spanish)
• 11:30a (English)
• 1:00p (Spanish)
Christmas Eve Masses
• 4:30p (English)
• 7:30p (Spanish)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (Bi-Lingual; Bishop McGrath principal celebrant)
• 9:00a (English)
• 10:30a (Spanish)

Catholic Community at Stanford University
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (English)
• 10:30a (English)

Chinese Catholic Community
4th Sunday of Advent Masses
• 2:00p (Tri-lingual)
Christmas Day Masses
• Midnight (Tri-lingual)
• 3:00p (Mandarin)

Christ The King
Christmas Eve Masses
• 4:00p (Vietnamese)
• 7:00p (Multilingual)
• 10:00p (Spanish)
Christmas Day Masses
• 8:30a (Spanish)
• 10:00a (English)
• 12:00p (Vietnamese)

Church of the Ascension
4th Sunday Advent Masses
• 7:30a
• 9:00a
• 11:00a
Christmas Eve Masses
• 6:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (English)
• 9:00a (English)
• 11:00a (English)

Church of the Resurrection
Christmas Eve Masses
• 5:00p (English)
• 9:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (English)
• 7:00a (English)
• 8:30a (English)
• 10:00a (English)
• 11:30a (English)

Church Of The Transfiguration
Christmas Eve Masses
• 5:00p (English)
• 9:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• 10:00a (English)

Five Wounds
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (Bilingual)
• 8:00a (English)
• 10:00a (Portuguese)
• 12:00p (Portuguese)

Holy Cross
Christmas Eve Masses
• 8:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (English)
• 8:30a (English)
• 10:00a (Spanish)
• 11:30a (English)
• 1:00p (Italian)
• 6:00p (Spanish)

Holy Family
4th Sunday Advent Masses
• 5:30p (Saturday)
• 8:00a
• 9:30a
• 11:15a
Christmas Eve Masses
• 5:00p (English)
• 7:00p (English)
• 9:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (English)
• 8:00a (English)
• 9:30a (English)
• 11:15a (English)

Holy Korean Martyrs
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (Korean)
• 10:30a (Korean)
• 1:00p (English)
• 2:30p (English)

Holy Spirit
Christmas Eve Masses
• 3:00p (English)
• 5:00p (English)
• 7:30p (English)
• 11:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• 8:00a (English)
• 9:30a (English)

Most Holy Trinity
Christmas Eve Masses
• 4:00p (Vietnamese)
• 6:00p (English)
• 8:00p (Spanish)
• 10:00p (Vietnamese)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (English)
• 8:00a (English)
• 11:00a (Spanish)
• 12:30p (Tagalog)

Our Lady Of Guadalupe
Christmas Eve Masses
• 7:30p (English)
• 10:00p (Spanish)
Christmas Day Masses
• 9:00a (English)
• 11:00a (Spanish)

Our Lady Of Peace
Christmas Eve Masses
• 6:30p (Spanish)
• 8:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (English)
• 7:30a (English)
• 9:00a (English)
• 10:30a (English)
• 12:00p (English)
• 5:00p (English)
• 6:30p (Spanish)
• 8:00p (English)

Our Lady Star of the Sea
4th Sunday of Advent Masses
• 8:00a (English)
• 9:15a (Spanish)
• 10:45a (English)
Christmas Eve Masses
• 6:00p (Spanish)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (Bilingual)
• 9:00a (Bilingual)

Queen Of Apostles
Christmas Eve Masses
• 5:00p (English)
• 9:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• 7:30a (English)
• 9:00a (English)
• 11:00a (English)

Sacred Heart (Saratoga)
4th Sunday Advent Masses
• 7:30a
• 9:00a
• 11:00a
Christmas Eve Masses
• 5:00p (English)
• 10:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• 7:30a (English)
• 9:00a (English)
• 11:00a (English)

Sacred Heart Of Jesus
4th Sunday of Advent Masses
• 5:00p (English Saturday)
• 6:30p (Spanish Saturday)
• 9:00a (English)
• 10:30a (Spanish)
• 12:00p (Spanish)
Christmas Eve Masses
• 8:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (Spanish)
• 9:00a (English)
• 12:00p (Spanish)

Saint Anthony
Christmas Eve Masses
• 4:00p (English)
• 6:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (English)
• 10:00a (English)
• 11:45a (English)

Saint Athanasius
Christmas Eve Masses
• 4:30p (English)
• 7:30p (Spanish)
• 10:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• 8:30a (English)
• 10:30a (English)
• 12:00p (English)

Saint Brother Albert Chmielowski
Christmas Eve Masses
• 9:00p (Polish)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (Polish)
• 9:00a (English)
• 10:30a (Polish)
• 12:30p (Polish)

Saint Catherine of Alexandria
Christmas Eve Masses
• 4:00p (2 Masses)
• 6:00p (Youth)
• 7:30p (Spanish)
Christmas Day Masses
• 12:00a (Bilingual)
• 7:15a (English)
• 8:45a (English)
• 10:30a (English)
• 12:15p (Spanish)

Saint Christopher
4th Sunday Advent Masses
• 6:30a
• 8:00a
• 9:30a
• 11:00a
Christmas Eve Masses
• 4:00p (2 Masses)
• 5:45p (Children)
• 9:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (English)
• 8:00a (English)
• 9:30a (English)
• 11:00a (English)

Saint Clare
4th Sunday Advent Masses
• 5:00p (Saturday)
• 7:45a
• 9:00a
• 10:30a (Family)
• 12:00p (Spanish)
• 2:00p (Cantonese/Mandarin)
Christmas Eve Masses
• 5:30p (Family)
• 8:00p
• 10:00p (Portuguese)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (Chinese)
• 7:45a (English)
• 10:30a (Family)
• 12:00p (Spanish)
• 1:30p (Cantonese)
• 3:00p (Mandarin)

Saint Cyprian
Christmas Eve Masses
• 5:00p (English)
• 11:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• 9:00a (English)
• 11:00a (English)
• 12:30p (Spanish)

Saint Elizabeth
Christmas Eve Masses
• 5:00p (English)
• 7:00p (Vietnamese)
Christmas Day Masses
• 12:00a (English)
• 8:00a (English)
• 9:30a (English)
• 11:00a (English)
• 12:30p (Spanish)

Saint Frances Cabrini
Christmas Eve Masses
• 10:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• 9:30a (English)
• 11:30a (English)

Saint Francis Of Assisi
Christmas Eve Masses
• 5:00p (English)
• 6:00p (English)
• 9:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (English)
• 9:00a (English)
• 10:30a (English)
• 12:30p (English)

Saint John the Baptist
4th Sunday of Advent Masses
• 7:30a (English)
• 9:00a (English)
• 10:45a (English)
• 12:30p (English)
• 7:00p (English)
Christmas Eve Masses
• 9:00p (English)
• 11:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• 7:30a (English)
• 9:00a (English)
• 10:45a (English)
• 12:30p (English)
• 4:45p (Vietnamese)
• 7:00p (English)

Saint John Vianney
Christmas Eve Masses
• 5:00p (English)
• 7:00p (Spanish)
• 9:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (English)
• 9:00a (English)
• 10:30a (English)
• 12:00p (Spanish)

Saint Joseph (Mountain View)
Christmas Eve Masses
• 5:00p (English)
• 7:00p (Indian)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (Multilingual)
• 7:00a (English)
• 8:30a (English)
• 10:00a (English)
• 11:30a (English)
• 1:00p (Spanish)

Saint Joseph of Cupertino
Christmas Eve Masses
• 5:00p (English)
• 8:00p (English)
• 10:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• 8:00a (English)
• 9:30a (English)
• 11:00a (English)

Saint Julie Billiart
Christmas Eve Masses
• 4:00p (English)
• 6:00p (English)
• 8:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• mdnight (English)
• 9:30a (English)
• 11:00a (Bilingual)

Saint Justin
4th Sunday Advent Masses
• 5:00p (Saturday)
• 7:30a
• 9:00a
• 10:30a
• 12:15p
Christmas Eve Masses
• 5:00p (Family)
• 10:30p Carols
• 11:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• 7:30a (English)
• 9:00a (English)
• 10:30a (English)
• 12:15p (English)

Saint Lawrence the Martyr
4th Sunday Advent Masses
• 8:00a
• 10:00a
• 12:00p
Christmas Eve Masses
• 4:30p (English)
• 6:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (English)
• 8:00a (English)
• 10:00a (English)
• 12:00p (English)

Saint Leo The Great
Christmas Eve Masses
• 7:oop (Spanish)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (Spanish/English)
• 9:30a (English)
• 11:00a (Spanish)

Saint Lucy
4th Sunday Advent Masses
• 5:15p (Saturday)
• 7:00a
• 9:00a
• 11:00a
Christmas Eve Masses
• 5:15p
• 7:30p
• 9:30p (Spanish)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight
• 7:00a
• 9:00a
• 11:00a

Saint Maria Goretti
Christmas Eve Masses
• 5:30p (English)
• 7:30p (Spanish)
• 9:30p (Vietnamese)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (English)
• 6:30a (Vietnamese)
• 9:30a (English)
• 11:00a (English)
• 12:30p (Spanish)
• 3:00p (Vietnamese)

Saint Martin (Sunnyvale)
Christmas Eve Masses
• 4:00p (English)
• 6:00p (Vietnamese)
• 8:00p (English)
• 10:00p (Spanish)
Christmas Day Masses
• 8:00a (English)
• 10:00a (English)
• 11:30a (English)

Saint Martin of Tours
4th Sunday of Advent Masses
• 5:00p (Saturday)
• 7:00a
• 8:30a
• 10:00a
Christmas Eve Masses
• 4:00p (English)
• 6:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (English)
• 7:00a (English)
• 9:00a (English)
• 11:00a

Saint Mary (Gilroy)
Christmas Eve Masses
• 5:00p (English)
• 11:00p (Bilingual)
Christmas Day Masses
• 7:00a (English)
• 8:15a (English)
• 9:45a (Spanish)
• 11:30a (English)

Saint Mary Of The Assumption Croatian Mission
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (Croatian/English)
• 9:00a (English)
• 11:00a (Croatian)

Saint Mary of the Immaculate Conception (Los Gatos)
4th Sunday Advent Masses
• 7:30a
• 9:00a
Christmas Eve Masses
• 4:00p (2 masses)
• 6:00p (English)
• 10:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• 7:30a (English)
• 9:00a (English)
• 11:15a (English)

Saint Nicholas
4th Sunday Advent Masses
• 5:00p (Saturday)
• 9:00a
• 11:00a
Christmas Eve Masses
• 4:00p (English)
• 6:00p (English)
• 9:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (English)
• 9:00a (English)
• 11:00a (English)

Saint Patrick Proto-Cathedral
Christmas Eve Masses
• 3:30p (Vietnamese)
• 5:30p (Vietnamese)
• 7:30p Bilingual (English And Spanish)
• 9:00p (Vietnamese)
• 11:00p (Vietnamese)
Christmas Day Masses
• 7:00a (Vietnamese)
• 8:45a (Vietnamese)
• 10:30a (English)
• 12:00p (Spanish)
• 5:00p (Vietnamese)

Saint Simon
4th Sunday Advent Masses
• 5:00p (Saturday)
• 7:30a
• 9:00a
• 10:45a
Christmas Eve Masses
• 4:00p (English)
• 6:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (English)
• 7:30a (English)
• 10:45a (English)
• 12:15p (English)

Saint Thomas Aquinas
Christmas Eve Masses
• 5:00p (English - at Saint Albert the Great)
• 5:00p (English - at Our Lady of the Rosary)
• 6:00p (English - at Saint Thomas Aquinas)
• 8:00p (Spanish - at Our Lady of the Rosary)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (Gregorian - at Saint Thomas Aquinas)
• 7:30a (English - at Saint Thomas Aquinas)
• 9:00a (English - at Saint Albert the Great)
• 9:00a (Spanish - at Our Lady of the Rosary)
• 10:30a (English - at Saint Thomas Aquinas)
• 10:30a (English - at Our Lady of the Rosary)
• 12:00p (Gregorian - at Saint Thomas Aquinas)

Saint Thomas of Canterbury
4th Sunday of Advent Masses
• 9:00a (English)
Christmas Eve Masses
• 5:00p (English)
• 10:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• 9:00a (English)

Saint Victor
Christmas Eve Masses
• 5:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (English)
• 7:00a (English)
• 8:00a (English)
• 9:15a (English)
• 10:45a (English)
• 12:15p (English)

Saint William
Christmas Eve Masses
• 5:00p (English)
• 8:00p (English)
• 11:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• 9:00a (English)
• 10:45a (English)

Santa Teresa
4th Sunday Advent Masses
• 7:00a
• 10:00a
Christmas Eve Masses
• 4:00p (English)
• 6:00p (English)
• 9:00p (English)
Christmas Day Masses
• midnight (English)
• 7:00a (English)
• 9:30a (English)
• 11:30a (English)

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Sample Intercessions for December 17, 2006

Third Sunday of Advent, Year C
December 17, 2006

Things, events, and news items to keep in mind:

  • Click here for the readings of the day.
  • 60 Iraqis were killed and 220 were hurt in one car bomb in Baghdad Tuesday morning.
  • 43 US troops have been killed in Iraq so far in December. The total number of US military casualites since the beginning of the war in 2003 is 2,933.
  • A Philadelphia high-school student commits suicide at school. Suicide is the fifth leading cause of death among those 5-14 years old. Suicide is the third leading cause of death among those 15-24 years old. Over 30,000 people in the United States die by suicide every year.
  • The Third Sunday of Advent is traditionally known as "Gaudete" Sunday, from the Latin word for "rejoice." The Sunday's opening antiphon and the second reading inspire this title.
  • December 21 is the winter solstice, the longest night of the year in the northern hemisphere.
  • Hanukkah continues through the week while Las Posadas and Simbang Gabi continue through December 24.
The following are just samples meant to inspire your work. Use them as ideas for your own assembly's intercessions. Read 10 Principles for Writing Intercessions and How To Write Intercessions to help you write your own.

Presider:
Shout for joy, for God is in our midst!
Therefore, let us make our requests known to God.

Reader:
For the Church
whose strength and courage is the Lord: [pause]
May God renew us in his love
and sing joyfully because of our care for one another.
Come, Lord Jesus…hear our prayer.

For all nations
among whom the Lord dwells: [pause]
May they soon cry out with joy and gladness
that war is ended and peace begun.
Come, Lord Jesus…hear our prayer.

For those who cannot rejoice,
who have lost their home, their job, their hope in life: [pause]
May the peace of God which is beyond reason
guard their hearts and minds in Christ.
Come, Lord Jesus…hear our prayer.

For those most in need this season,
without the basics of food, clothing, or dignity: [pause]
May we share with the person who has none
during this season and all throughout the year.
Come, Lord Jesus…hear our prayer.

For the sick and the dying and those who care for them,
including those we now name…: [pause]
May the good news of John the Baptist
lead them through their dark night
to the healing light of Christ.
Come, Lord Jesus…hear our prayer.

For the dead,
loved ones whom we miss this season,
forgotten ones who died alone,
innocent ones caught in the crossfire of violence,
including those we now name…: [pause]
May they be gathered into the eternal dwelling of God,
rejoicing in the Lord always.
Come, Lord Jesus…hear our prayer.

Presider:
You are near, Lord, closer to us even than our own breath.
And yet we wait in expectant hope for your coming.
Free our world from all fear and anxiety,
and hear the prayers and petitions of your people,
for you have baptized us with the fire of your Holy Spirit
and given us a joy that can change the world.
We ask this in your holy name, Jesus, Emmanuel,
God with us, for ever and ever. Amen.

Christmas in the Ballroom - December 17, 2006

Ann Assarsson & Friends proudly present the 4th Annual Christmas in the Ballroom! They invite you and your family to join them for hot cider and cookies as we celebrate the traditional music of the season! This year’s concert will take place at the beautiful and newly renovated San Mateo County History Museum! Leave holiday stress behind and surround yourselves with the charming sights and sounds of “Christmas in the Ballroom!”

Christmas in the Ballroom
Sunday, December 17, 2006, 7:30p
San Mateo County History Museum

Ann Assarsson, soprano
Ivy M. Depner, soprano
Kristen Sharpley, soprano
Andrew Roberson, baritone
Paul Ziller, tenor
Trond Gilbert, piano

General Admission - $10
includes hot cider and cookies

To reserve tickets, please contact Ann at (650) 704 4211.

Thursday, December 07, 2006

Santa Clara Chorale Holiday Concerts - December 9 and 10, 2006

Santa Clara Chorale in PragueI'm a proud Alto II member of the Santa Clara Chorale, a local choir made up of people of all ages who love to sing. There are also several music ministers from our parishes who participate in the chorale. We sing three concerts during the year as well as other shorter performances at the Cathedral Basilica of Saint Joseph's "Season of Hope" (December 14, 2006) and other venues in the Santa Clara County...even on the radio! (We'll be live on KBAY 94.5 this Saturday around noon broadcasting from Christmas in the Park, downtown San José.)

The Chorale is proud to present its annual Holiday Concert, this year titled, "Comfort and Joy." My first encounter with the Chorale was attending one of their holiday concerts at the invitation of Ray Crisologo, one of the Chorale members and music director at Saint Lawrence the Martyr. This year's concert will be even more fun with drums, flute, and organ in the beautiful Mission Santa Clara de Asis on the campus of Santa Clara University. You'll even get a chance to sing some favorite Christmas carols and holiday songs. Please come join us, rain or shine, for this fun holiday event.

Santa Clara Chorale Holiday Concert
Comfort and Joy
Saturday, December 9, 2006, 8:00p
Sunday, December 10, 2006, 4:30p
Mission Santa Clara
on the campus of Santa Clara University

$20 General Admission
$15 Seniors over 60
$15 SCU Faculty and Staff
$5 Students 18 and under

Purchase tickets online, by phone at 408-369-1289,
at the door, or through this Word document

The Santa Clara Chorale offers the community the opportunity to grow musically and perform regularly in programs that bring significant choral music from the past and present to growing audiences in the beautiful Mission Santa Clara setting. Since its beginnings in 1963, the Chorale has performed in numerous locations in the Bay Area and carried its music abroad in several concert tours, most recently in the summer of 2006 to Prague, Salzburg, and Vienna. If you'd like to audition, click here. We rehearse Monday nights at Santa Clara University.