Week of December 20, 2020

Week of December 20, 2020

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Dear Parishioners,

Pope Francis has just declared this year to be the Year of St. Joseph. In order to help us reflect on the great role St. Joseph has as the foster father of Jesus, Pope Francis has written an Apostolic Letter on this subject. It is worth reading and I would like to share an excerpt from it for you to meditate with:

“Being a father entails introducing children to life and reality. Not holding them back, being overprotective or possessive, but rather making them capable of deciding for themselves, enjoying freedom and exploring new possibilities. Perhaps for this reason, Joseph is traditionally called a ‘most chaste’ father. That title is not simply a sign of affection, but the summation of an attitude that is the opposite of possessiveness. Chastity is freedom from possessiveness in every sphere of one’s life. Only when love is chaste, is it truly love. A possessive love ultimately becomes dangerous: it imprisons, constricts and makes for misery. God himself loved humanity with a chaste love; he left us free even to go astray and set ourselves against him. The logic of love is always the logic of freedom, and Joseph knew how to love with extraordinary freedom. He never made himself the centre of things. He did not think of himself, but focused instead on the lives of Mary and Jesus.

“Joseph found happiness not in mere self-sacrifice but in self-gift. In him, we never see frustration but only trust. His patient silence was the prelude to concrete expressions of trust. Our world today needs fathers. It has no use for tyrants who would domineer others as a means of compensating for their own needs. It rejects those who confuse authority with authoritarianism, service with servility, discussion with oppression, charity with a welfare mentality, power with destruction. Every true vocation is born of the gift of oneself, which is the fruit of mature sacrifice. The priesthood and consecrated life likewise require this kind of maturity. Whatever our vocation, whether to marriage, celibacy or virginity, our gift of self will not come to fulfilment if it stops at sacrifice; were that the case, instead of becoming a sign of the beauty and joy of love, the gift of self would risk being an expression of unhappiness, sadness and frustration.” (Pope Francis, Patris Corde)

God bless!

Fr. Carter

P.S. Christmas is coming! If you plan to attend either the 2 pm or 4 pm Mass on Christmas Eve, make sure you register ahead of time. Also, don’t forget our Parish Feast Day is coming up. We are celebrating a 7 pm Latin Mass on December 28th.