MUSICAL MYSTAGOGY: EXPLORING THE MUSIC OF EASTER – Cancelled
MUSICAL MYSTAGOGY: EXPLORING THE MUSIC OF EASTER
Break open the beautiful rites and music of Holy Week and the Easter season in this course. The course will explore how music accompanies the actions, and how the stories of our faith are told through the music that is sung celebrating the passion, death and resurrection of the Lord.
Participants will examine the breadth of the sacred treasury of music: classical, contemporary, and ancient works.
Instructor: William Mulligan, M.Mus.
Sundays, April 16 – May 14, 2023
3:00 – 4:00 PM;
Classroom 1B
Fee: $50.00
Lenten Pardon and Peace: Encounter God’s Mercy
Lenten Pardon and Peace: Encounter God’s Mercy
Thursday, March 30th
at 6:30 PM
in the Upper Church
Join us for our annual Lenten Pardon and Peace communal celebration of reconciliation.
Let us encounter God’s gift of mercy and reconciliation together and prepare our hearts to encounter Christ anew in the Resurrection.
Donate flowers in memory of your loved ones at Easter
The flowers and plants that will decorate our church at Easter are a sign of our joy in the Resurrection of Christ and our hope in the resurrection of those who have gone before us.
We invite you to remember deceased members of your family and friends with a donation for our Easter decorations.
Please fill out this form below, or click here for a form you can download and return with a check: Flower Donation Form
The names of those received by Monday, April 3 will be posted online for Easter weekend.
The Pastor’s Corner – Sunday, April 2, 2023
Dear Community and Friends of the Church of St. Francis of Assisi,
May the Lord give you peace.
Our solemn celebration of Holy Week has begun. We have prepared for five weeks. Our time of transformation continues. I invite you to listen to the passion through the ears of love. We began our season with Jesus in the desert. Having been named son, beloved, and favored at his baptism, his time of fasting is a time of faithfulness to this core identity and relationship with Father, lover, and giver of favor. The temptations to deny his identity fail. We go from the desert to the mountaintop, where this title is repeated in the presence of Peter, James, and John. Moses and Elijah are there. Moses, the instrument of the covenant on the desert, which was ratified by the blood of a sacrificed animal, encounters the giver of the new covenant, which will be ratified in his own blood.
Elijah, the great prophet, encounters the prophet who will give himself unreservedly in love for all people. We go to Samaria, where Jesus encounters a Samaritan woman at the Well of Jacob. He offers living water. The water of his grace flow without bounds through the Samaritan town calling the citizens to faith. At Bethesda, he opens the eyes of a man born blind and is grieved by leadership’s lack of vision. They have eyes but do not see. They name others sinners while they attempt to limit the experience of God’s grace. Then it is off to Bethany and his encounter with Martha, Mary, and those who with them grieve the death of Lazarus. He received a message noting, “the one you love is ill.” He embodies what it is to be the “resurrection and the life” as he calls Lazarus forth from the place of death and restores him to life in the community.
With this journey, we have been asked to realize that we, too, are daughters and sons, beloved, and favored. Despite many temptations to forego this identity, we are called to faithfulness. Like Peter, James, and John, we are encouraged to realize the glory of God, ever-present among us, and to affirm our commitment to the new covenant in him. With the woman at the well, we are swept up by the living water of grace. The new vision of man born blind is our call to wash the mud paste of cultural attitudes and bias from our eyes so that we might see the Son of Man. Jesus, the Lord of the living and the dead, calls us forth from our places of death and hiding. He invites our communities to liberate us from what binds us so that we can fully live as beloved daughters/sons and favored ones. From this space, we walk the way of the cross with him realizing the depth of his love and faithfulness to identity.
Please join us for as many of the Triduum celebrations as you are able. This will be a blessed time for our community and friends. The schedule is available on our website and also on the cards at the doors of the church. This year we invite any member of the congregation to come forward to have their feet washed. We will also restore the cup at mass as of Holy Thursday. You can choose to receive from the cup if you like. We have been through a lot in the last few years. We are blessed to be able to come together this year and delight in the love of God ever present among us.
Finally, on a sad note, another school shooting calls us to pray for the community of Nashville, TN. We pray for the healing of our nation and the care for all who grieve.
Thank you for all you bring to our community.
Blessings,
Fr. Tom, ofm
Easter Prayers Greeting Cards
Offer your loved ones the gift of prayers this Easter with a St. Francis of Assisi Easter Card. Easter Masses are offered by our fairs for those to whom the card is given.
Donations for the cards help support the ministries of the Church of St. Francis of Assisi. Cards are available at our Hospitality Desk or can be ordered online.
We have three Easter card designs for you to chose from. Click on the image to order the card:
Lent Soup and Scripture
Come encounter God through the Word this Lent.
Join us as we break bread, drink soup, and open the Sunday Lenten Gospels
• ALL ARE WELCOME •
February 27
March 6
March 13
March 20
March 27
• TIME •
6:30pm
• LOCATION •
The Francis Room
The Soup is on! Join us for one, two, three or all five reflections.
This is a free event but since soup is being served, please let us know that you are coming….
ALL ARE WELCOME!
The Pastor’s Corner – Sunday, March 26, 2023
Dear Community and Friends of the Church of St. Francis of Assisi,
May the Lord give you peace.
We had a wonderful gathering to Contemplate the Passion. With nearly 70 people present: we shared the reading of Matthew’s Passion account, reflected on images or ideas that touched us from the text, listened to one another, and engaged in lively discussions. Thanks to all who participated in the experience. Special thanks to the Converge ministry that hosted this event.
This week we hear the story of the raising of Lazarus from John’s Gospel. We are invited to enter into the experience, to feel the sorrow of Martha, Mary, and Jesus. The call to Jesus from Martha and Mary is: “the one whom you love is sick.” Jesus declares to Martha, “I am the resurrection and the life.” Jesus calls Lazarus forth from the tomb and entrusts the mission of unbinding him to those gathered. As we have journeyed together these days of Lent, we realize we are loved as Lazarus was loved. We have been called forth from our places of darkness and death to light and life. We need one another to free us from what binds us. Our pilgrimage is into ever greater love.
On Thursday, the 30th, please join us for our Pardon and Peace reconciliation service. This is a graced opportunity to come forth and be unbound. The gracious gift of God’s healing forgiveness is ever-present. We can celebrate it together as a community of faith. This is an excellent preparation for our experience of Holy Week.
This year during our Celebration of the Lord’s Supper on Holy Thursday, we invite anyone who wishes to come forward to have their feet washed. The foot washing of the disciples was their call to mission. Jesus tells them, “As I have done for you, so must you do for one another.” We are all called to share in the mission of the Gospel.
Finally, we have begun our thirteen Tuesdays in honor of St. Anthony. Please join us each Tuesday. The Novena prayers are available on our website and hard copies in the church. You can come in person, participate online, or simply pray the novena alone. Some may want to gather with family or friends to pray this novena.
Blessings and peace,
Fr. Tom, ofm
Recent News & Events
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St. Francis Weekend Retreat 2025 January 8,2025
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Converge and Laudato Si Book Club January 8,2025
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Martin Luther King, Jr. Holiday Schedule January 8,2025
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Laudato Si Circle — Sure We Can January 8,2025
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Sunday Bulletin - January 12, 2025 January 8,2025
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Sunday Bulletin - January 5, 2025 January 3,2025
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