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Blessed Kateri and the Divine Sower
User's Guide to Sunday
BY Tom & April Hoopes July 6-12, 2008 Issue |
Posted 7/1/08 at 10:55 AM
Sunday, July 13, is the 15th Sunday
in ordinary time (year A, cycle II). This week, Pope Benedict XVI will travel
to Sydney, Australia, for World Youth Day.
World Youth Day Schedule
Pope2008.com is the Register’s
site to follow along with World Youth Day events. Times are local; times in
parentheses are U.S. Central Daylight Time.
July 15
4:30 p.m. (1:30 a.m. Tuesday):
Opening Mass celebrated by Cardinal George Pell at Barangaroo
July 16
9 a.m. (6 p.m. Tuesday): Catechesis
July 17
9 a.m. (6 p.m. Wednesday):
Catechesis
2:45 p.m. (11:45 p.m. Wednesday):
Pope’s boat-a-cade at Sydney Harbor
3:30-4.30 p.m. (12:30 a.m.
Wednesday): Pope’s arrival at Barangaroo
4:30-5.30 p.m. (1:30 a.m. Wednesday):
Pope’s motorcade through Sydney’s streets
July 18
9 a.m. (6 p.m. Thursday): Catechesis
3 p.m. (midnight Thursday): Stations
of the Cross
Youth Festival
July 19
From 5:30 a.m. (2:30 p.m. Friday):
pilgrimage walk across the Sydney Harbor Bridge to Randwick Racecourse (for
registered pilgrims only)
7-9 p.m. (4 a.m. Saturday): evening
vigil with the Pope; sleeping under the stars at Southern Cross Precinct
(Randwick Racecourse and Centennial Park)
July 20
9 a.m. (6 p.m. Saturday): Papal
flyover and motorcade through Southern Cross Precinct
10 a.m. (7 p.m. Saturday): Mass
celebrated by Pope Benedict at Randwick Racecourse and Centennial Park
12:30-5 p.m.: Youth Festival events
at Southern Cross Precinct
Parish
EPriest.com offers details on best
practices in parishes.
The members of St. Matthew’s Parish
in the Diocese of St. Augustine, Fla., have developed a novel way to help the
sick in their parish: the prayer blanket ministry.
“Thanks to this ministry, our parish
has seen healings from cancer, depression, kidney infections, difficult
pregnancies, post-abortion trauma, family problems” and more, says parishioner
Annie McCranie.
The project originated with the
local St. Vincent de Paul Society.
A group of parishioners gets
together each month to make blankets. The pastor blesses them at Mass. The
blankets are given to parishioners who are ill, patients in nearby hospitals,
babies at risk, military personnel overseas, pregnant women and others, along
with a rosary and an explanation of the devotion.
Find details at the EPriest website,
along with testimonies to the benefits the program brought not just to the sick
but also to their families and the parish.
Family
KateriShrine.com is the site of
Blessed Kateri’s national shrine in Fonda, N.Y.
July 14 is the feast day of Blessed
Kateri Tekakwitha.
Our family loves the Auriesville,
N.Y., shrine where St. Isaac Jogues and the North American Martyrs served from
1642 until the last martyrdom in 1649. It can seem as if their effort was
wasted, as they died at the hands of a people who never fully embraced the
faith.
But many did, and their legacy
continues to this day. Kateri was born in Auriesville in 1656.
Read her story online at her
shrine’s website. In her honor, this week would be a good week to take a nature
walk or hike with your family. She is a patroness of the environment, so bring
along a bag and pick up as much trash as you can along the way.
Heads up: In this
fall’s Faith & Family magazine, we feature a
story about how kids today suffer from “nature deficit disorder” and what you
can do about it.
Readings
Isaiah 55:10-11; Psalm 65:10, 11-14,
Romans 8:18-23, Matthew 13:1-23 or 13:1-9
EPriest.com offers free homily
packs for priests.
Our Take
All the readings point together
toward the Gospel and the Parable of the Sower, and Christ’s mini-homily about
his own parable.
There are many ways to apply the
parable. Since last week we spoke about understanding the readings at Mass, and
since the first reading focuses on the Word of God, we’ll apply the parable to
hearing the Liturgy of the Word at Mass.
“The seed sown on the path is
the one who hears the word of the Kingdom without understanding it.”
Christ’s first piece of advice for
Mass, therefore, is: Actually listen to the Scripture. Minds wander at Mass. We
think about other things. We become distracted. Christ here gives the first
remedy: Tune in. Don’t let the Word of God pass you by. Latch onto the words of
the liturgy as your first lifeline to being more involved in Mass.
“The seed sown on rocky ground
is the one who hears the word and receives it at once with joy. But he has no
root and lasts only for a time.”
Second:
Apply the words to yourself. We all know that, in human relationships, if we
only listen to a friend when he’s saying something funny or exciting, but not
when he’s saying something sad or challenging, we won’t have that friend for
very long. It’s the same at Mass. We all hear things at Mass that we decide we
aren’t interested in them, they don’t apply to us or are too difficult. Make it
a point to listen to these, too.
“The seed sown among thorns is
the one who hears the word, but then worldly anxiety and the lure of riches
choke the word and it bears no fruit.”
Third: Act on what you hear. Once
you’ve actually heard the Word of God and admitted that it applies to you, it’s
necessary to act on it, despite all obstacles. We will always have worries and
attachments that have to be cleared away for the word to take root. Clear them
away.
The Hoopeses are editorial directors of
Faith & Family magazine
(faithandfamilymag.com).
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