St. Hugh of Grenoble Catholic Church The Baptism of the Lord January 11, 2015 All you who are thirsty, come to the water! — Isaiah 55:1 Clergy The Sacraments Rev. Walter J. Tappe, Pastor Reconciliation: Saturday: 3:30 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Baptism: 2nd Sunday of the month after the 11:00 a.m. Mass. Call the rectory to make arrangements. Marriage: By arrangement. Contact the pastor at least six months before intended date of wedding. Rev. R. Scott Hurd and Rev. Richard D. Kramer, Jr., Assisting Priests Mr. Desi Vikor, Deacon Parish Staff Ms. Maggie Gutierrez, Business Manager Mrs. Mary Wade, Coordinator of the School of Religion Mrs. Jennifer Goltz, Director of Music Gerald Muller, DMA, Principal Organist and Director Emeritus Mr. Hung Le, Plant Manager Parish Office Office Hours: 8 a.m.-2 p.m. Monday—Friday Anointing of the Sick: Call the Office when a loved one is seriously ill to arrange for the sacrament. New Parishioners See the Greeter after Sunday Mass to register. School of Religion (CCD) Please inform the parish office that you’re leaving. 301-474-4322 Music for this Sunday shreligioused4@gmail.com Entrance: no. 548 Mrs. Mary Wade, Coordinator St. Joseph Regional School 11011 Montgomery Road Beltsville, MD. 20705 301-937-7154 Mrs. Anne-Marie Miller, Principal Holy Hour Mass Times Departing Parishioners SUNDAY Sat. 5 p.m. Vigil 8 a.m. 9:30 a.m. Preparation: no. 554 Eucharistic Acclamations: Schubert Deutsche Messe Muller Christm as Mass Communion: no. 686 11 a.m. DAILY Mon.-Fri. 7:15 a.m. Marian: no. 1012 Saturday 9 a.m. Final: no. 553 Fed. Holidays 9 a.m. First Fridays at 7:00 p.m. 135 Crescent Road Greenbelt MD, 20770 www.sthughofgrenoble.org Phone (301) 474-4322, FAX (301) 474-9263 sthughoffice@gmail.com Your Prayers Requested This Week at a Glance For those preparing for their vocations Today 1/11/2015, The Baptism of the Lord † 8am Mass † 9:30am Mass † 11am Mass ♦ Coffee Social after all Masses, Grenoble Hall ♦ Religious Education 10:30am, School ♦ Youth Group noon, School Jack Berard and Joe Lomax For those preparing for the sacraments For all those preparing for the Sacraments of Initiation, and our children preparing for 1st Reconciliation and Confirmation. For the sick Please pray for: Bobby Mittelstetter; Elizabeth Pels Nash; Ludvik Matyas; Dave Williams; Lori Moran; Ray & Loretta Turek; Patricia Molden; Nancy DePlatchett; Stephen Blizard; Jennifer Montgomery; Dale Ude; Wilson Hayden. Monday 1/12//2015 † 7:15am Mass Tuesday 1/13/2015, St. Hilary † 7:15am Mass ♦ Knights of Columbus 7:30pm, Grenoble Hall For the deceased Wednesday 1/14/2015 † 7:15am Mass In your charity, please pray for the souls of our beloved dead: Mary Matyas; Elizabeth Maffay; Connie Turner. Thursday 1/15/2015 † 7:15am Mass For our troops Friday 1/16/2015 † 7:15am Mass Please pray for: Adam Weaver, James Hall, Christopher Pfaffman, Anthony (Tj) Hose, Anthony Ladnier, Tony Alves, Karen Mealey. To add a name to these lists, please call the rectory. Saturday 1/17/2015, St. Anthony † 9am Mass † 3:30pm-4:30pm Confessions † 5pm Vigil Mass ♦ RCIA 10am, Rectory The calendar is also online: www.sthughofgrenoble.org TREASURES FROM OUR TRADITION We invite parishioners to consider registering with Faith Direct to make their contributions to the church. You can set up on-line how you want to manage your giving. This way, you no longer need to write checks or place cash in parish envelopes. To register online, go to www.faithdirect.net. Enroll by using the parish code MD593. With online enrollment you are able to access your account at any time to view it and make changes. Faith Direct is a service hired by the parish to provide this service to parishioners. Masses for the Week of 1/11-1/18 Saturday 5pm Int. the Stratchko family Sunday 8am Intention of the Parish 9:30am Charles Fuchs 11am David Dodge Monday 7:15am Cecilia Hanyok Tuesday 7:15am Leonard Stratchko Wed. 7:15am Charles Fuchs Thursday 7:15am Larry Keller Friday 7:15am Mary Jane Windlan Saturday 9am Int. Dawn Cuozzo 5pm Intention of the Parish Sunday 8am John B. Latham, Jr. 9:30am Bishop Olivier 11am Cecilia Hanyok In the 1560s, the Council of Trent attempted to standardize the widely variant customs for the pastoral care of the sick and dying. We had inherited a practice called “extreme unction,” from the Latin words meaning anointing at the point of death. The deeper tradition, however, is about the prayer of faith that will heal and restore the sick person, and is straight from the Letter of James. The Fathers went back to the beginning, and while not discarding the “extreme unction” name, made a plea for the proper use of this sacrament. As soon as a person is in danger of death from sickness or old age, they reasoned, the time for the sacrament had already arrived. As a result of this desire, the next ritual text for anointing contained an innovation: a rite for visiting the sick that included readings from scripture, psalms, and prayers. Old customs fade slowly, however, and the quality of pastoral care languished for centuries while people delayed the celebration of a consoling and effective sacrament, sometimes missing the opportunity completely. A priest ministering to a dying and unconscious patient alone in a room has never been the desire of the Church. Our tradition is far too rich for this sacrament to be celebrated in such a diminished and ungenerous manner. —Rev. James Field, Copyright © J. S. Paluch Co. READINGS FOR THE WEEK Monday: Heb 1:1-6; Ps 97:1, 2b, 6, 7c, 9; Mk 1:14-20 Tuesday: Heb 2:5-12; Ps 8:2ab, 5, 6-9; Mk 1:21-28 Wednesday: Heb 2:14-18; Ps 105:1-4, 6-9; Mk 1:29-39 Thursday: Heb 3:7-14; Ps 95:6-11; Mk 1:40-45 Friday: Heb 4:1-5, 11; Ps 78:3, 4bc, 6c-8; Mk 2:1-12 Saturday: Heb 4:12-16; Ps 19:8-10, 15; Mk 2:13-17 Sunday: 1 Sm 3:3b-10, 19; Ps 40:2, 4, 7-10; 1 Cor 6:13c-15a, 17-20; Jn 1:35-42 From the Pastor This Sunday the Church concludes the Christmas season with the celebration of the Lord’s Baptism. Christmas is about the unveiling of God’s plan of salvation for the human race through the Incarnation of his Son. The whole Old Testament was a time of preparation for the coming of Christ. To be sure, this was not always clear to the people of the Old Testament, not because God was being purposely obscure, but because man, weakened by sin and immature in faith, could only understand so much. God accommodated his plan to the weakness of his creatures. He had made us the kind of creatures who do not learn all at once, but only gradually. That is our nature. Therefore, God unveiled his plan gradually, but perfectly. We still marvel at its beauty and its wisdom. So, in the fullness of time—that is, at the right moment according to God’s perfect timing—God sent his Son, born of the Virgin, to accomplish the work of our salvation. The Person of the Son, co-eternal with the Father and the Holy Spirit, took to himself a human nature with the consent of the Virgin Mary, to manifest in human form God’s love for the human race which was from the beginning. As a man, Jesus gave a perfect return to God. As a man, he embraced every human being with the love he shared from all eternity with the Father. The genuineness of Christ’s love for us was proven in his suffering. We threw everything we could at him—every vice possible, every vice imaginable, every form of coldness and ingratitude, of selfishness and utter disregard. And through this he loved us and offered us the chance of forgiveness, the opportunity to begin again, but to begin in a new way as new men and women living a whole new kind of life, his life, a life of union with his Father. Christmas is about reconciliation—God bringing the human race back to himself through Christ, and we through Christ bringing ourselves back to God, sobering up from a life of dissipation. All the feasts of the Christmas season celebrate this reconciliation—God and man reconciled in Christ. And so, also, with today’s feast. John the Baptist performed baptisms in the desert as the sign of man’s desire to be reconciled to God. When Jesus submitted to the baptism of John, he expressed God’s desire that the human race be reconciled to him, and established baptism as the means by which the human race could be born again into friendship with God, be reconciled to God and set at peace with him. When Jesus was baptized, the Father revealed Jesus’ true identity to the world, as his beloved Son sent to redeem us. When we submit to baptism, the Father adopts us as his own beloved children in Christ and declares it publicly through the Church. Through baptismal grace, we were reconciled to God. But our reconciliation with God is also something that we work at. Sin has weakened our nature. We must build it up through the practice of faith and charity. Sin remains an ever-present danger. We must resist valiantly, always calling upon the power of God’s grace. We fall into sin continually. Therefore, we must repent continually, activating that baptismal desire to be reconciled to God more and more. As we celebrate the Lord’s baptism and bring this year’s Christmas season to a close, let us rouse ourselves as a parish to be reconciled to God, to activate the grace of our baptism more and more and show ourselves as his beloved children, sent in power to bring his peace into the world. Yours in Christ, Father Walter CHRISTMAS BAZAAR RAFFLE - The Christmas Bazaar Committee would like to thank everyone who participated and made the 2014 Raffle a huge success. We are pleased to announce the following winners: Elizabeth Carey - 1st Prize, Laura McAndrew - 2nd Prize, Mariquita Barnachea - 3rd Prize, Henry Haslinger - 4th Prize, and Ireneo Abadejos -5th Prize. Thank you again for participating and we look forward to our 2015 Raffle. Parish Life Income Tax Information The parish will be happy to provide an official 2014 statement of contributions for all those who need it, but to prevent needless preparation of statements for all parishioners, we are asking those who need them to fill in the form below and drop it in the collection. Statements cover all contributions which are identifiable—those made through the envelope system or FaithDirect. NAME: ADDRESS: ENVELOPE #: From the School of Religion: † † † A “Thank You” and an Invitation from the Confirmation Candidates: Each candidate selected a saint and wrote a report or created a trading card that briefly summarized the life of the saint, expressed the special meaning the saint had for them, and included a personal prayer to the saint. These reports are now posted on the bulletin board in the back of the church. The Confirmation candidates - Thomas, John, John Carlo, Michael, Joseph, Benjamin, Nathaniel, Andrew, Brian, Jared, Beverly, Kayla, and Tyler - invite you to take some time to enjoy reading about “their” saints...and thank you for your ongoing prayers as they prepare to receive the Sacrament of Confirmation on April 30, 2015. Invitation to Parish Youth: The Sodality Union of the Archdiocese of Washington is pleased to present an Essay/Drawing Contest with the winners to be announced Feb. 7, 2015 at St. Francis Xavier. Participants for the age groups 8-10, 11-12, 13-15 and 16-18 are asked to respond to the following question: “What can I do to preserve the Earth?” God has asked us to take care of the Earth, God’s creation (Genesis 2:15). Entries must be received by January 20, 2015. Please contact Mrs. Brown at 301.899.8995 for details about this event. FATIMA GUILD NEWS -You are invited to join the St. Hugh Rosary Guild! An individual or family makes a commitment to pray the Rosary for one week, beginning on a Wednesday. Rosary Guild members bring an image of Our Lady of Fatima to the host household on Wednesday and will return the following week to take the image to its next host household. Rosaries and a Rosary Prayer Guide are provided. The signup sheet for hosting the Guildʹs Rosary Pilgrimage from January - June 2015 is located on the table in the back of the church. Contact Jessica at 240-472-3575for information or with any questions. Congratulations and many thanks to our parish catechists and children who presented a joyful, engaging, and prayerful Christmas Pageant in the school gym on the Feast of the Epiphany! A special thanks to our families for their generous offering of food and drinks for our potluck lunch and for being a most enthusiastic audience...and to all of our parents, catechists, and youth who helped put away the chairs and tables and cleaned up. Together, you made it a friendly and blessed occasion. Gabriel Network Seeking Professional Assistance Professionals Offering Reduced Fee for Services: The Gabriel Network is developing a business directory of generous professionals who will offer their services for free or at minimal charge to needy Gabriel mothers who need limited professional help for up to six months, for such needs as medical, dental, educational, legal, financial, automotive, and home repair services. We ask you to consider sharing your talent or ask your service providers if they are willing to offer these services. Responses should be made to Tom Trunk by phone 240-593-6982 before January 15, 2015. Professionals For Gabriel Network Registry: The Gabriel Network asks you to offer your professional services for free or at reduced rate for needy mothers who are referred to the St. Hugh Gabriel Network. Are you a physician, dentist, educator, social worker, job counselor, financial counselor, lawyer, computer specialist, or auto mechanic? Your generosity may save a life and bring stability to a family in need! To be added the serREMINDER – There will be no Religious Education on Januvice registry phone Tom Trunk on 240-593-6982, or ary 18 for the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Federal Holiday. email him, tomjtrunk@hotmail.com. Dear St. Hugh Families, It is so nice to have all of our students back from Christmas break. They All have stories of adventures and gifts and family time. Our students bring us so much joy and show us the face of God. Re-registration has already begun. Current students should re-register using the email link sent to them. New families may enroll on line www.stjos.org/school , click on TADS. New students will begin being accepted after January 28, 2015 for the 2015-16 school year. Did you miss our Open House? We will have two more Open House’s, Wednesday, January 28th 2015 for 8:30-11:30 am. and Saturday, March 7, 11:00am-2:00 pm. We hope to see you there. Upcoming events: Jan 26-31 Catholic Schools Week: Celebrating Communities of Faith, Knowledge and Service. Peace and all Good, Mrs. Anne-Marie D. Miller, OFS 301-937-7154 Around the Archdiocese Faith Foundations — Make learning more about your faith a New Year’s resolution that you stick with! A new schedule of Faith Foundations in-parish courses is available. Visitwww.adw.org/faithfoundations to learn about these adult formation courses that can be completed online or inparish. Faith Foundations draws upon the pillars of The Catechism of the Catholic Church with courses on: Creed, Sacraments, Christian Morality, Prayer, and Scripture. 2015 Adult and Family Rally and Mass for Life Once again this year, the Archdiocese of Washington and the Association of Ecclesial Movements and New Communities will sponsor the Adult and Family Rally and Mass for Life on the morning of the National March for Life on January 22. This event for parishioners of the Archdiocese of Washington will be held at The Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle (1725 Rhode Island Ave., NW). The Rally kicks off at 9am and features Sr. Maris Stella, S.V. (Sister of Life), as the main speaker. Fr. Avelino Gonzalez will celebrate the Mass, which begins at 10am. Attendees depart for the National March for Life at 11:30am. Registration is required: adw2015familyrally4life.eventbrite.com. Please visitwww.adw.org/ Adult-Mass-For-Life for more information. St. Matthew’s Cathedral 175th Anniversary Choral Ecumenical Service The 2015 opening event in the 175th anniversary celebration of the Cathedral of St. Matthew Apostle as a parish will be a Choral Ecumenical Service Celebration, to be held at 3pm on Sunday, January 25 at the Cathedral (1725 Rhode Island Ave., NW). Thirteen neighboring Christian parishes have been invited to this special service. Renowned Rev. Cheryl Sanders of Howard University Divinity School will give the Gospel reflection, and three of the surrounding parish leaders will offer prayers. This observance will take place on the Feast of the Conversion of St. Paul, the final day in the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity. All are invited to this opportunity to pray together, to be inspired by the Cathedral Schola’s music, and to join in the reception following. [Metro: Red Line to Farragut North (L Street exit) or Dupont Circle (South exit)]. Blessed Teresa of Calcutta Vocation Society: Day of Recollection On Saturday, January 31 from 9am to 2pm, Fr. Carter Griffin, Vice-Rector of St. John Paul II Seminary and Director of Priest Vocations for the Archdiocese of Washington, will lead a day of recollection on the theme of The Blessed Virgin Mary in the Life of the Disciple. This event will be held at Annunciation Church (3810 Massachusetts Ave., N.W.), and it is not required to be a member of BTCVS to attend this event! For more information and for fliers for downloading and printing, please visit www.dcpriest.org. You many also contact Maris Moriarty at moriartym@adw.org or 202-636-9020. Man on a Mission 2015 The annual Archdiocese of Washington Men’s Conference, Man on a Mission 2015, will be held on Saturday, March 14 from 8am-3pm at the St. John Paul II National Shrine. The theme for this year’s conference is The Biblical Vision for Men. Our keynote speaker is Glenn Stanton, who serves as Director for Family Formation Studies at Focus on the Family. Bring your Bible with you! In his address Glenn will take us into the Scriptures to discover the biblical vision for men. Glenn has authored five books on marriage and family life, and he lives in Colorado Springs with his wife and five children. In addition to breakout sessions where you will have the opportunity to gain practical insights for living as a man with biblical vision, a highlight of this year’s conference will include an opportunity to see the world class exhibit on the life of St. John Paul II and to venerate his relic at his national shrine located right here in the Archdiocese of Washington. Registration is $20, which includes refreshments and lunch. Register now at www.adw.org/manonamission. Talk With Your Loved Ones on End-of-Life Issues Illness and death – whether our own or that of a loved one – are issues many of us avoid thinking and talking about until they are immediately confronting us. Too often we are unprepared for the questions that arise and find ourselves making difficult decisions in the midst of a crisis, without the benefit of time and reflection. Maryland’s bishops have released a pastoral letter, Comfort and Consolation, on care for the sick and dying to encourage Catholics to take that time now, before facing a crisis, so that when illness and death inevitably come, we can face them with the comfort and peace of understanding our faith, and knowing Our Lord is there to embrace us in our hour of need. Visit the Maryland Catholic Conference at www.mdcathcon.org/ comfort for downloading copies or to order. Our Blessed Mother in Art Experience Picturing Mary: Woman, Mother, Idea at the National Museum of Women in the Arts, at 1250 New York Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C., now through April 12, 2015. This landmark exhibition, organized with the support of the Archdiocese of Washington, brings together more than 60 Renaissance- and Baroque-era masterworks from the Vatican Museums, Uffizi Gallery, and other museums, churches, and private collections in Europe and the United States. Visit www.nmwa.org/exhibitions/picturing-mary-woman-mother-idea to learn more. CHURCH NAME: ST. HUGH OF GRENOBLE 135 Crescent Rd. Greenbelt, MD. 20770 BULLETIN NUMBER: 511528 CONTACT PERSON: Jennifer Goltz OR Mary Wade OR Maggie Gutierrez (301)474-4322 sthughoffice@gmail.com DATE OF PUBLICATION: 1/11/2015 (Sunday’s date) Windows 7 Publisher 2013 NUMBER OF PAGES TRANSMITTED: 6 SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS: Office hours end at 2pm. 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