Bulletin – Ascension/7th Weekend of Easter

Mass on Saturday, May 20, 2023 at 4:30 P.M.

Masking is optional.

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Dear Friends,

With this weekend, we will be concluding the Easter Season, a time if we have been paying attention, that has prepared us to walk more fully in Jesus’ footsteps, aided by the gift of his Spirit.

Come; pray with us on Saturday.

Peace and love,

Pastor Kathy

P.S. If I can help you in any way, please don’t hesitate to call, 507-429-3616, or email, aaorcc2008@gmail.com.

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Readings:

Acts: 1: 1-11

1 Peter 4: 13-16

John 17: 1-11

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Homily – 6th Sunday of Easter

My friends, it is with great joy that I can stand and perhaps at times today, sit before you, and for all of us to gather once again.  We have been away from each other for four weeks as I have been recovering from knee surgery. 

   Now I compare this time to where we were three years ago in the beginning weeks of shut-down due to the COVID pandemic for which there was no vaccine to keep us safe, except for masking and social distancing.  We all stayed away from each other in order to keep us safe.  And now today, this is the first Sunday with masks being optional, following the lead of all the hospitals in the area. 

   These past several weeks then, have not been about you, but about me, as I was simply not able to either prepare much, or to be present to you due to my recovery.  I found myself being filled with gratitude for your out-pouring of love and care for me, through cards, emails, calls, gifts of food, and all other expressions of love.

   Being that we are still in the season of Easter, the Scriptures are filled with ways that the apostles—now, also filled with the Spirit are reaching out, not just to the Jewish people, but to all who will listen to the story of Jesus, the Christ—and of how he spoke to, visited with, and was generally present to all who he encountered.  It didn’t matter where people came from, who they associated with—he welcomed all, and offered alternatives to lives without hope and as a result, showed all who he encountered, the best ways to live.

   John’s gospel for today includes Jesus’ wonderful words of promise and hope— “I will not leave you” [alone]—actually, he says, “orphaned”—which is the same idea!

   A word on these first disciples…we see them going out among strangers—for the most part, preaching what Jesus had said to them that gave them such hope. With the life of the Spirit, they had the faith and the strength to proclaim Jesus’ message of love, justice, and mercy to all who would listen.  We might consider friends if we would be able to do the same.

   In many ways, for these first disciples, this is all that they, as Jesus’ true followers could do—share with others what had been so graciously shared with them.  The psalmist today says rightly what should be the song of us all, as we attempt to follow in Jesus’ footsteps— [Let us] “make a joyful sound to God…” [over] “all the earth.” 

   There is much talk in our country today from folks who claim to be, “Christian Nationalists.”  To my mind, these two words seem to contradict each other.  To be a “Christian” in Jesus’ footsteps is all about “including” everyone, whereas being a “nationalist” seems to advocate for “excluding” many, except, “our own kind.” 

   Jesus, when with us, always talked about knowing someone’s identity by, “the fruits” they produced—is it about justice, mercy, love, and care, not just for ourselves, or for others too? When a group tends toward angry statements, untruths, an inability to really listen, and to hear, and basically a self-serving stance in our world, we have to wonder what Christian actions are in fact taking place. 

   This time of year within Catholic and other Christian churches is often when young people are confirmed within their faith communities and challenged to be their very best as inspired followers of their brother Jesus. 

It is also a good time for those of us to recall our own confirmations, even if it was many years ago, and re-confirm within ourselves what that meant then, and if it means the same today.  Peter’s opening to the people in the 2nd reading today seems appropriate for those of us who wish to walk in Jesus’ footsteps, “Venerate Jesus, the Christ in your hearts.”  We might also say, keep his message, his actions, always before you, if you truly wish to follow him. Amen? Amen!

Bulletin – 6th Sunday of Easter

  • We will meet for Mass this Sunday, May 14, 2023, Mothers’ Day at 10 A,M.!!! I will be back and hope that many of you can join us! My recovery continues!
  • This past Wednesday, May 10th marked our 15th anniversary as a Vatican II parish! We will celebrate a bit later –perhaps in June, just a simple remembrance, when I am more fully recovered. For now, we will just concentrate on getting us back together.
  • Mask-wearing will now be optional. This issue has been discussed by our board and the general consensus seems to be, that it is time. All the medical facilities in the area have made mask-wearing optional as well. It would be expected that if you have symptoms and are not feeling your best, then you should mask. Also, if you would feel more comfortable wearing a mask, for personal reasons, certainly feel free to do so.
  • We will be returning to having fellowship as well, and this we will do again, beginning May 28th–one step at a time.

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Dear Friends,

We will be back together this Sunday! My recovery has kept us apart for most of the Easter Season, but this week, as we gather again in person, let us keep in mind that our brother, Jesus, is always with us, and that we as his followers must do likewise–hear and see the needs of others.

With spring unfolding now in Winona, and in other places too, let us carry on in hope, knowing that we are not alone, but joined in love.

Come; be with us this Sunday!

Peace and love,

Pastor Kathy

P.S. Please don’t ever hesitate to be in touch if I can help you in any way. 507-429-3616 or aaorcc2008@gmail.com.

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Readings:

  • Acts 8: 5-8, 14-17
  • 1 Peter 3: 15-18
  • John 14: 15-21

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Bulletin and Message for the Week – 5th Sunday of Easter

  • NO MASS AGAIN THIS WEEK, May 7, 2023. We are hoping to resume liturgies next week, May 14, 2023. A final decision will be made toward the end of next week. I continue to have trouble with my nights and sleeping, which makes it difficult to get going in the morning. Continue to pray for me as I do for you. Thanks! Pastor Kathy

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Readings:

  • Acts 6: 1-7
  • 1 Peter 2: 4-9
  • John 14: 1-12

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Dear Friends,

Once again, I can’t be with you for Mass this week, but let’s look forward to next week! In lieu of that, I share a story with you from the past, for your reflection this week. Please keep in mind that the Scriptures included above, for this Sunday, hold the simple message that our God walks with us each day, and, we are never alone.

Luke, in the Acts of the Apostles, lifts up the image that those who “preach the Word” should be “freed” from the daily tasks of “caring for others.” In this, I would say, he is wrong. “Preaching the Word” and “caring for the needs of others,” are one and the same, and the mission of all, as was so well demonstrated through the life of our brother Jesus.

Peter, in the 2nd reading confirms that Jesus can be a “stumbling block,” but if we keep our eyes on him, doing as he did, remembering to “not let our hearts be troubled,” all will be well.

His message was always, “If you have seen me, you have seen my Abba-God.” And by extension, we too must see God in others. In light of this, the following story from Sister Joan Chittister says well what we are to be about in our world.

“An old rabbi once asked his pupils how they could tell when night had ended and the day had begun. ‘Could it be,’ asked one of the students, ‘when you can see an animal in the distance and tell whether it’s a sheep or a dog?’ ‘No,’ answered the rabbi.  Another asked, ‘Is it when you look at a tree in the distance and can tell whether it’s a fig tree or a peach tree?’  ‘No’ answered the rabbi.

 ‘It is when you can look on the face of any man or woman and see that it is your sister or brother. Because, if you cannot see this, it is still night.’ ”

   Friends, we must always see life on a larger scope than the students in the story did—Jesus, the Christ who came to be one of us, we remember as, “the Light of the World” –if we are to truly follow him, we must too, bring light and not darkness.

   Joan ends her reflection of the old rabbi by saying, “Pay attention to the new nativism,” [that seems to continue to be spreading across our country, because] as Joan continues, “if you don’t, we may never know when the night has ended and the day has begun.”  Amen? Amen!

Bulletin and Message for the 4th Sunday of Easter

  • Again, NO MASS this week–my apologies! I am making minuscule improvement each day, just hard to see sometimes. Thank you all for so many well wishes, prayers and love.

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Dear Friends,

Being that my days of late have needed to be about “care for myself” as I recover from knee surgery, I am including a few paragraphs for your consideration from a past homily for this week. Hopefully, you will find meaning in reflecting upon them once again.

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Readings:

  • Acts 2: 14, 36-41
  • 1 Peter 2: 20-25
  • John 10: 1-10

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Thoughts to consider based on the above readings:

     I begin today with a story as it serves well, I think, as a fine example of what we are each to be as Jesus’ followers:   A person stopped for the yellow light, and the person who was tailgating, furiously honked because they missed their chance to get through the intersection.  Still in mid-rant, that person heard a tap on the window. The officer ordered the person to exit the car with hands up, was ultimately taken to the station, searched, finger-printed, photographed and placed in a holding cell.  After a couple of hours, a police officer escorted the would-be criminal back to the booking desk and the arresting officer who said, “I am very sorry for the mistake, but I pulled up behind your car while you were blowing your horn, and giving the person in front of you the finger. I noticed the “What Would Jesus Do?” bumper sticker, the “Choose Life” license plate holder, “Follow Me to Sunday School” bumper sticker and the chrome-plated Christian fish emblem on the trunk, so naturally I assumed you had stolen the car.

Good to remember that people are watching!

The reading from Peter today as well as the gospel from John speak of Jesus, the Good Shepherd, one who knows his own and calls them by name—who has “put up with suffering [for us] for doing what is right” and only asks that we try and do the same.  If our stance toward our world is going to be one of “pastoring” as opposed to that of “legislating,” we will have to see our world through a lens that is often more gray as opposed to black and white.

   I began these thoughts with a story that asked us to consider if we merely “proclaim” our Christianity or actually “show it” through our actions.  Only we can determine how that will be for us.  Only we can determine if we will live, as Jesus did—trying to understand, giving a response and action that is reflective of justice, mercy and love for each other, or not.  Amen? Amen!