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Browsing From the desk of Fr. Tharp

March 12, 2023 - Third Sunday in Lent

Next Sunday:  Fourth Sunday in Lent                Celebrant :  Fr. Williams

 

Daylight Savings Time

 

Sunday, March 12 (today) begins Daylight Savings Time.   If you are reading this on Saturday, remember to “spring forward” one hour.   If you are reading this Sunday morning, I am sorry I failed to warn you in last week’s bulletin.

 

Heads-up on Holy Week

 

Palm Sunday is April 2.  Easter Sunday is April 9.  As usual on Holy Thursday, April 6, I will have the Mass of the Last Supper at St. Ann starting at 5:30 p.m., and the Mass of the Last Supper at Sacred Heart at 7:30 p.m.  Feel free to attend at either as your schedule allows. 

 

On Good Friday at Sacred Heart I will participate in the three hours of services beginning at 12:00 noon and ending with distribution of Holy Communion at 2:30 p.m.  I will also celebrate the traditional three part Good Friday Service at St. Ann beginning at 7:00 p.m.

 

As of last July, St. Ann and Sacred Heart are officially a “Family of Parishes” we are to have only one Easter Vigil Mass.  Last year I celebrated Easter Vigil at St. Ann.  This year, the Easter Vigil will be at Sacred Heart.  Next year it will be at St. Ann.   Thus each church will celebrate Easter Vigil every other year.

 

On Tuesday, April 4, I must attend the Chrism Mass at the Cathedral.  I will forego the “social and dinner for priests” and try to be back to St. Ann in time for the 6:30 p.m. confessions, but I may be a few minutes late depending on how traffic is that day.  Skipping a meal will be good for my waistline. 

 

CMA: Catholic Ministries  Appeal 2023

 

I applaud both parishes in our family for your extraordinary effort.  As of Monday, March 6, Sacred Heart is at 201% of goal with 17% participation.  St. Ann is at 113% of its goal or target with 30% participation.   Remember that the Archdiocese looks both at the dollars pledged as well as the percentage of participation.  Even a very small gift lifts our participation numbers.  We have plenty of extra cards and envelopes available at both parishes.  Please help us show the rest of the Archdiocese that the Family of St. Ann/Sacred Heart does its part for the ministries funded by the CMA.  Remember that fifty (50%) percent of every dollar over goal returns to the donating parish.

 

Director of Evangelization for the St. Ann/Sacred Heart Family

 

I am pleased to announce that Mr. Jose Martinez has accepted this position.  We thank all the applicants who applied.  More information and timing will be forthcoming.

 

 

Beacons of Light Organizational Structure

 

The recommended Beacons of Light organizational structure requires a Family of Parishes to have a Director of Evangelization, a Director of Worship, and a Director of Administration.  The structure I envision will also include a Director of Real Estate and Physical Assets. (This is due to the reality that our Family needs both churches to accommodate our Sunday attendance, and both schools to accommodate our existing and anticipated students.)    Together with the two principals, all four directors will serve as an extension of the pastor in their specific areas of expertise.  “Beacons” foresees an environment not simply focused on maintaining what is, but directed to outreach, evangelization, and growth. 

 

The symmetry of all this organizational structure is not based on the clerical model I, and most priests of my age, have grown up with!  Rather it operates on a model of assumed delegation, so that the younger priest who replaces me when I retire will feel comfortable assuming the role of pastor in an organizational model normative throughout the Archdiocese.  In other words, my oversight in this process is to establish a manner of operation designed not for me personally, but for my successors about three years from now.  The reality is that priests my age (70 plus) have functional and canonical “expiration dates.”   “Beacons” is a creative structuring for where we are going; not for where we have been.   

 

Review of Mass Schedules

 

There are “five Phases” of the implementation of Beacons of Light.  Family C-4 (comprised of Sacred Heart and St. Ann) has been designated a “one priest/pastor region.”  It is almost certain that this will become the reality by July 1, 2023.   This means that there is no assisting priest envisioned.  In the Archdiocese of Cincinnati no one priest is canonically permitted to celebrate more than three Masses on any one day.   At present we have two Sunday morning precept Masses at St. Ann and three Sunday morning precept Masses at Sacred Heart.  Five Masses may not be celebrated by any one priest.  Also every precept Mass at any parish must adhere to “space utilization requirements.”  We have a declining Sunday attendance based on St. Ann and Sacred Heart’s October Count numbers.  At least three of the five existing Sunday Masses are not well enough attended to meet these utilization requirements. 

After we have the data from the survey recently completed, we will empanel an ad hoc utilization committee representing St. Ann and Sacred Heart in order to study, discuss, and reconcile our Sunday numbers with Archdiocesan utilization requirements.   In the meantime, please remind parishioners that their presence each week at either St. Ann or Sacred Heart will result in a tremendous impact on the recommendations that the ad hoc committee will be required to bring to the Archdiocese.    

Re-introduction of Precious Blood at Communion

 

We have distributors lined up for two cups at “all three Sunday morning Masses at Sacred Heart.” 

 

For the time being we only have distributors for the cup at the 11:00 a.m. Mass at St. Ann.  Again, we can only do this to the degree we have enough Eucharistic ministers willing to do cups at the various precept Masses. 

 

DO NOT FALL FOR SCAMS!!!!

 

I keep running this article because there are new scams everyday

 

Remember I NEVER solicit funds, donations, favors, or any request of any kind over the telephone, text, email, carrier pigeon, drone, etc.   NEVER!  Do not allow yourself to be taken in by scammers.  Even if they have my recorded voice, be assured it is computer generated fake!  It is not me!!!  

 

Reminder for volunteers who work with or around children

 

Please be aware that failure to register with and complete the requirements of Safe Parish will result in your inability to continue to work with or around children in any parish and/or school setting.  We have been informed by the Archdiocese that there can be NO EXCEPTIONS.

 

Live Streaming for Precept Masses

 

Please remember to access the Sacred Heart / St. Ann Pastoral Region You Tube site by clicking on the following link:  https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVLLqbEY5hKWinwz069MVcg

 

Reflection on Scripture:

 

There is an old “traditional gospel song” recorded in 1965 by Peter Paul and Mary about today’s gospel selection.  It is entitled, “Jesus met the Woman at the Well!”  In looking for the meaning of the story, many forget the context.  Samaritans considered traditional Jews as “stuck up.”   Traditional Jews like Jesus were supposed to consider Samaritans as being of mixed lineage and therefore to be distained.  Jesus would have raised eyebrows among the Pharisees just by starting a conversation with her.  In the conversation, all Jesus really does is explain the truth to her.  Sometimes the truth hurts, but the truth gives the woman at the well a whole new perspective. 

 

St. Thomas Aquinas stole Aristotle’s line when he suggested “Veritas in media stat.”   (The truth stands in the middle.)  But in this case, both philosophers were talking about “opinion” not “immutable truth.”  Jesus is talking about Divine Will.  Divine Will is both universal and immutable.  When Jesus can help us change our opinions to conform with God’s will; that is called salvation. 

 

Jesus was taking an enormous personal risk when he “met the woman at the well.”  Jesus showed the woman the truth without chasing her away.  It is a risk for us to admit we believe in Catholic principles of morality in today’s world.  Live the risk!  Be proud to take the risk for Jesus.  Live in Jesus!  Live in truth.

 

NEXT WEEK   Fourth Sunday in Lent

 

1 Sm 16:1b, 6-7, 10-13a

Eph 5:8-14

Jn 9:1-41

 

Theme: The man born blind.

 

 

 

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