• Announcements

    Rosemary’s Blessing   

     

    Oh God who created galaxies and worlds without number

    Animals and plants, and microbes beyond count,

    And tiny subatomic particles we can barely imagine,

    Help us to be as bountiful and gracious to all those we meet this week as you have been to us.

     

    Andrew N Greeley   A Book of Irish American Blessings and Prayers

                                                                                                                                     

     

    Leo

    Leo


      
                                                                                                            

    Our Special Thanks:

    •    For Reading: John & Jean
    •    For The Team:  Georgie & Kevin
    •    For the Communion Bread:  Alison
    •    For the Wine & Cups: Jean & Cliff
    •    For the Pictures & Video:  Connie & Rick
    •    For the coffee and pastries:   Judy & Mike & Jackie, Michelle, & Beth D.
    •    For the altar & sound: Jackie & Hue
    •    For the Music:  Ray & Wendy & Shonda

     

     

    Brooklyn

    Brooklyn

     

     

    Birthdays:    Dawson Dinsmore (17, today, Sunday), Cindy Ekes (Thursday)

     

    Buddy and Tori
    Buddy and Tori

     

     

    Emma

    Emma

     

     Please Remember these special people:

    For Cindy's brother, Larry, who died this week;  For Chuck Webster getting a heart operation July 15;   For Morgan Froebe teaching English in Equador for the summer;  For Fred’s brother, John, who is really sick with cancer;     For Jan's sister Carol who just died recently and for Jan and her family;   For Marilyn Ackerman from a staff infection and a bad bang on her leg;   Mike & Dee Miller's daughter, Lisa, not doing well;  For Tom Quinn's continued recuperation from shoulder surgery;    for Nina Tucker's dad;   Jackie Urbanczyk's continued recovery;    for a special girl named Missy Ackerman; Judy Thompson's dad in the hospital;  John Cade's mother in law, Kalliopi Piskiouli;  Charlie's brother in law with cancer;  Beth Dugan's dad struggling with prostate cancer;  from Rob, the brother of his business associate who has cancer;   For Diane Drescher with a bad back;

     

    Harper

    Harper

     

    Frank’s sister, Grace Campos, 84, with stage one;  Margie McKeon’s brother, Bill, with lung cancer;  Jackie's sister, Shellie;  Diane McClurg's mom having a hard time making the transition to assisted living;   Dee's friend, Don Fox, with cancer;   Dick Thompson's daughter, Teri Jill & her cousin Terri.  Barb & Warren's grandbabies, Leighton Elizabeth and Warren Phillip;   Judy Carrell's friend, Matt Larson;  Rita; 

     

    Kevin

    Kevin


     

    Bernadette Delgado's mom; Gilberto's mom and brother; Tom and Teresa Quinn's niece, Chawna, with cancer, plus Neva Flynn, Angel, and Diane Kreeitzer; Connie Doherty's mom and her sister, plus Kevin's cousin, Peter; Mary Ellen's Christopher, Margaret and Jim; our friends, sons, and daughters in the military, including Cole Carey, Ryan McClurg, and Chebino; cure for autism from Laura Chollick; for our President that he have great success and someday hold his grandchildren in his lap.

     

    Tom and Brent

    Tom presenting Brent with a check for $2,000 for Soul's Harbor

     

     

    Your Finances, July 20, 2014

    Expenses:   $ 495.00

    Outreach:   $ 499.00

     

    Your Finances, July 27, 2014

    Expenses:   $ 2,025.00 

    Outreach:   $ 591.00

     

     We Donated this week:  

     $2,000.00 to Soul's Harbor

     

    Thanks for your Generosity.

    Have a Good Week, J.S

    (214-783-0443)

     

    Sienna

    Sienna

     

     

     JSM Mission-Faith Statement  

          Help create a Catholic Community that welcomes all God’s People,  provides for & challenges spiritual & total growth.  

          Reaches out to help people who are disadvantaged & make the world  we live in a better place to live.

      

     

     

  • Reminder for Sunday, July 27, 2014, 17th Ordinary Time, Cycle A

     

     

    Welcome: Catholic Mass with coffee and juice and pastries, both bought and home-made, after Mass.

    Time: 9:30; Celebrate with the Community & John.

    Place: Vines High School, 15th between Custer & Independence.

     

     

    Readings:

    1 Kings  3, 5, 7-12,   The Lord appeared to Solomon in a dream one night.

    Psalm 119,   Lord, I love your commands.

    Romans 8, 28-30,  All things work for good who love God.

    Matthew  13, 44-52,  The kingdom of heaven is like a treasure buried in a field.

     

     

    Community Events:

    1.   ROMEO lunch Friday, July 25.   The Old Geezer will miss.  Those Iowa hills still calling .

     

     

    What's going on in our Catholic World:    

    1.       Twin Cities Archbishop holding on, National Catholic Reporter,  July 10, 800 words,     Download Twin Cities Archbishop 7-24-14

           

      

    True? 

     Joy in one's heart and some laughter on one's lips are signs that the person down deep has a pretty good grasp of life.

    Hugh Sidey, American journalist

     

     

    See you Sunday, July 27, 2014, 17th Ordinary Time, Cycle A

    J.S., 214-783-0443

     

     

     JSM Mission-Faith Statement

         Help create a Catholic Community that welcomes all God’s
    People, provides for and challenges spiritual and total growth.

        Reaches out to help people who are disadvantaged and make the world we live in a better place to live.

     

     

  • Sunday Homily, July 20, 2014, 16th Ordinary Time, A

    Readings:

    Wisdom  12, 13, 16-19,   You judge with clemency.

    Psalm 86,   Lord, you are good and forgiving.

    Romans 8, 26-27,  The spirit comes to the aid of our weakness.

    Matthew  13, 24-43,  A farmer sowed good seed in his field.

     

                                                                                                                                              

    Our first reading (Wisdom 12) is from the Book of Wisdom, written about 100 years before Jesus. Though the author is unknown, he was a member of the Jewish community at Alexandria in Egypt and wrote in Greek. Solomon did not write this book as we used to think; the author sometimes speaks as Solomon, a common artifice authors used to emphasize the value of their writings.

    The second reading (Romans 8) continues Paul’s letter to the Christian community in Rome. This community was predominantly Gentile, though there were Jewish Christians there too. In this letter Paul is making a point that Christians were free of the Jewish law of Moses. Paul’s view was that Jesus and faith in Jesus was the only source of salvation and he was beginning to push Christian communities away from Judaism and toward a faith more compatible with Greco-Roman thinking.

    The Gospel reading continues in Matthew (Matt 13). Most scholars date this Gospel as around the year 70, probably after the destruction of Jerusalem.  It points to a growing rift between the followers of Jesus and official Judaism. It is clearly anti-Pharisee and anti-scribe.  It quotes the holy books of Judaism a lot more than the other Gospels to show their promises were fulfilled in Jesus and that he is the Messiah. Matthew also writes about how Jesus was not accepted by most Jews but accepted by many Gentiles. It is clear that Matthew depended on Mark, written several years before. Matthew contains 600 of Mark’s 661 verses.

                                                                                                              

     

    Homily 

    I want to focus today on Jesus’ teaching that God is now and was always with us, and how we can see God. There’s that Bible verse in today’s Responsorial Psalm 86 vs.5 that says “You, O Lord, are a God merciful and gracious, slow to anger, abounding in kindness.” Stack has said it’s his favorite line in the Bible.  I decided to google this verse and found the same words in multiple places in the Bible.  Psalm 145: vs. 8-9 has exactly the same lines. And Psalm 103 vs. 8 has the same.  And it’s not just in the Psalms.  The Book of Exodus Ch. 34, verse 6 reads, “The Lord is a merciful and gracious God, slow to anger and rich in kindness.” The Book of Joel Ch. 2, verse 13 has exactly the same line. And the Book of Jonah Ch. 4, verse 2 has the same.

    The take-away from those verses that describe God as “gracious and merciful, slow to anger and rich in kindness,” could be that whenever we see those traits and those behaviors, we are seeing God.  Jesus’ said the kingdom of God is here, and is experienced when we share mercy and kindness with one another.

    On July 4th I joined a group of family and friends for the Fair Park fireworks display. At the end of the evening Leo & Freddie, seeing fireworks for the first time, said, “This was the coolest ever.”

    Later I remembered some of what I saw and experienced about being gracious and showing kindness.

    1. I got to Fair Park early and walked around, then sat on a bench eating a corn dog slathered with mustard. I saw a woman walking with 2 children and an infant in a stroller. The little one dropped a stuffed toy to the ground. Another woman saw it and, noticing the mother hadn’t seen it happen, called out to her and pointed to it.  They made eye contact and I saw them connect with a smile as the mother picked up the toy. This was a brief but gracious human contact.
    2. At one point after our group got together at the lagoon, my nephew Merik, offered to take Leo and Freddie on a walk around the lagoon. He entertained them for 30 or 40 minutes, and his act of kindness allowed the other adults time to visit.
    3. Gina, a close friend of my daughters Joey and Sam, came with her husband and 2 daughters, who are a little older than my grandsons. Gina thought about the 4 kids who would be there and brought snacks for all of them and also light sticks to make necklaces or bracelets or, like Freddie, just to wave around. The kids loved it and I took note of her thoughtful kindness.
    4. Most of the group had gotten snow cones while walking around. So I decided to get in line for a snow cone for myself (I was told that there were sugar free ones) and for Gina’s daughter who had missed out on one. It was a really long line of more than 30 people. After a while I struck up a conversation with a woman in line. Later another woman, also in line, joined in the conversation. At one point the latter woman, who was sort of ahead of me and the first women (line not straight but uneven), offered that we both go ahead of her. Of course by this point we had all been in line a long time and had tired feet. That was another act of kindness and mercy.

     My question: when have you seen God lately?  And when do others see God in you?

     

     

     

       

  • Announcements

    Rosemary’s Blessing   None this week.

     

    Our Special Thanks:

    •    For Reading:  David & Jackie 
    •    For The Team:  Georgie 
    •    For the Communion Bread:  Alison
    •    For the Wine & Cups: Jean & Cliff
    •    For the Pictures & Video:  Sorry none this week
    •    For the coffee and pastries:   The Dinsmores & Jackie & Beth D.
    •    For the altar & sound: Jackie & Hue
    •    For the Music:  Ray, Shonda & Bethany        

        and      

              For Miguel, who comes early to open up and turn on AC for us
     

     

    Birthdays:   Lily Shaw (Monday) 

    Anniversaries:

     David and Donna Dinsmore (28th, Saturday)

     

     

    Please Remember these special people:

    For Fred’s brother, John, who died this past Tuesday and for the family; For Cindy's brother, Larry, who died a couple of weeks ago;  For Chuck Webster recuperating from his operation July 15;   For Morgan Froebe teaching English in Equador for the summer;    For Jan's sister Carol who just died recently and for Jan and her family;   For Marilyn Ackerman from a staff infection and a bad bang on her leg;   Mike & Dee Miller's daughter, Lisa, not doing well;  For Tom Quinn's continued recuperation from shoulder surgery;    for Nina Tucker's dad;   Jackie Urbanczyk's continued recovery;    for a special girl named Missy Ackerman; Judy Thompson's dad in the hospital;  John Cade's mother in law, Kalliopi Piskiouli;  Charlie's brother in law with cancer;  Beth Dugan's dad struggling with prostate cancer;  from Rob, the brother of his business associate who has cancer;   For Diane Drescher with a bad back;

     

    Frank’s sister, Grace Campos, 84, with stage one;  Margie McKeon’s brother, Bill, with lung cancer;  Jackie's sister, Shellie;  Diane McClurg's mom having a hard time making the transition to assisted living;   Dee's friend, Don Fox, with cancer;   Dick Thompson's daughter, Teri Jill & her cousin Terri.  Barb & Warren's grandbabies, Leighton Elizabeth and Warren Phillip;   Judy Carrell's friend, Matt Larson;  Rita; 

     

     

    Bernadette Delgado's mom; Gilberto's mom and brother; Tom and Teresa Quinn's niece, Chawna, with cancer, plus Neva Flynn, Angel, and Diane Kreeitzer; Connie Doherty's mom and her sister, plus Kevin's cousin, Peter; Mary Ellen's Christopher, Margaret and Jim; our friends, sons, and daughters in the military, including Cole Carey, Ryan McClurg, and Chebino; cure for autism from Laura Chollick; for our President that he have great success and someday hold his grandchildren in his lap.

     

     

    Your Finances, July 20, 2014    Next Week

    Expenses:   $  

    Outreach:   $

     

     We Donated this week:  

     Nothing special

    Thanks for your Generosity.

    Have a Good Week, J.S

    (214-783-0443)

     

     

     JSM Mission-Faith Statement  

          Help create a Catholic Community that welcomes all God’s People,  provides for & challenges spiritual & total growth.  

          Reaches out to help people who are disadvantaged & make the world  we live in a better place to live.

      

     

     

     

     

  • Reminder for Sunday, July 20, 2014,16th Ordinary Time, Cycle A

     

     

    Patisserie

    Welcome, Everybody, to the community bakery, Harper, Cathy, and Geri.

     

    Welcome: Catholic Mass with coffee and juice and pastries, both bought and home-made, after Mass.

    Time: 9:30; Celebrate with the Community & John.

    Place: Vines High School, 15th between Custer & Independence.

     

    Kids' blessings

    Special blessings for the kids.

     

    Readings:

    Wisdom  12, 13, 16-19,   You judge with clemency.

    Psalm 86,   Lord, you are good and forgiving.

    Romans 8, 26-27,  The spirit comes to the aid of our weakness.

    Matthew  13, 24-43,  A farmer sowed good seed in his field.

     

    Pretzels

    The pretzel jar. Oops, only room for one hand at a time.


     

    Community Events:

    1.   ROMEO lunch Friday, July 18.   The Old Geezer will miss.  Those Iowa corn fields are calling, plus home made rhubarb & strawberry pie.   Sorry about your brother's death, Fred.

     

     

    Community work station

    Community work station with busy workers.

     

    What's going on in our Catholic World:    

    1.       A very interesting case about confessional secrecy from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, National Catholic Reporter,  June 27, 555 words,      Download Confessional Secrecy Case 7-17-14 

    2.        Fr. Tom Reese, an excellent man and a Jesuit, at that, National Catholic Reporter,  July 7, 280 words,     Download Excellent Man & Jesuit at that 7-17-14   

     

    Offertory

    Offertory, Doug, Joe, John and Alison.


     
    True? 

     We make a living by what we get;

    We make a life by what we give.

     

    Harper 3

    Says Harper, "Is is cupcake time yet?"

     

    See you Sunday, July 20, 2014, 16th Ordinary Time, Cycle A

    J.S., 214-783-0443

     

    Emma

    Says Emma, "Bye, see you next week."

     

     

     JSM Mission-Faith Statement

         Help create a Catholic Community that welcomes all God’s
    People, provides for and challenges spiritual and total growth.

        Reaches out to help people who are disadvantaged and make the world we live in a better place to live.

     

    Don't look

    Don't look. Iowa will get rid of all these extra calories.

     

      

     

     

     

     

  • Sunday Homily, July 13, 2014, 15th Ordinary Time, A

    Readings:

    Isaiah  55, 10-11,   My word shall not return to me void.

    Psalm 65,   The seed that falls on good ground will yield a fruitful harvest.

    Romans 8, 18-23,  We know that all creation is groaning in labor pains.

    Matthew  13, 1-23,  A sower went out to sow.

     

    Kevin

    Kevin says, "Welcome, Everybody, It is good to be back home.

    Isaiah, The Great One, observations

    Who:  One of the Big 3 prophets, the greatest in my estimation.  Jeremiah and Ezekiel are the other two.  Actually, the book includes the work of 3 prophets.   Our selection is the last chapter written by Isaiah 2.

    Time:  Isaiah 2 was living during the Babylonian Captivity, ca. 555.  Isaiah 1 writes before the Captivity, maybe 150 years.  Isaiah 3 writes after the return to Jerusalem.

     

    Georgie

    Georgie also says, "Hi, Everybody, It is fun to be home again."

     

    Subject today: better times will come.  I am expanding today’s passage, because it is so good.

    Isaiah 2 has some of the most beautiful passages, many of which are seen as foretelling the coming of the Savior.  His readings are used all through the Advent & Christmas readings, as well as in Lent.  Handel uses Isaiah 2 in his marvelous work, The Messiah.

    Both the Isaiah reading and Psalm 65 are beautiful.  

     

    The Kids

    And Zoe, Tori, and Buddy all say, "Hi, Folks, it is so fun to be back again."

    And My Seed Landed Where?

    This morning I would like to talk about how Jesus is said to describe how the farmer’s seed is scattered on four different types of ground, the path, the rocks, the thorns, and the fertile.  Where did your seed fall?  Where did my seed fall?  I’m sure a lot of volunteers would be happy to let me know where my seed fell.

    If you are a sinful gambler poker player you would look at this explanation and notice the bad odds, one out of four.  I would propose, however, that we all landed on fertile soil.  Let me offer some examples. 

    I’ve shared this example once before, so you might remember it, but probably not. 

     

    John

    Cupcake of The Week to John on his birthday.

     

    When I was a little kid about 5 years old, I was playing in the driveway of our house in University Park.  There were no fences and the drive went from the street, through the space between our house and the neighbor’s, and to the back up against the alley. 

    The neighbor was Sam Berger, who owned a hat store in downtown Dallas.  He was Jewish and lived next to us all during the Holocaust.  I was oblivious to it all.  He & his wife had a big black lady who not only worked in the house, but lived in the back in an apartment attached to the garage, the servant quarters.  This black lady was not nice to me.

     

    Beth 2

    And a Cupcake of The Week to Beth on her birthday.

     

    So this day as I am playing in the driveway, the lady steps out of the kitchen door & stands on the steps.  Without thinking, I say, “You are a big fat elephant.”

    To the lady’s credit, she marches right across the drive and tells my mom.  My mom comes out of the house, drags me in, and spanks me.  Thinking back, I am impressed that my mom respected the lady.  The spanking, however, and her treatment of me confirmed my suspicions that my seed had fallen at least on the path or rocks, if not right on the thorns.   I definitely grew up with the belief that I was a bad kid. 

     

    Harper 2

    And a Cupcake of The Week to Harper for her 3rd birthday about 3 weeks late.

    Despite the fact that you folks might agree with that assessment, I would propose that I was just a normal little boy doing silly things. 

    This habit of doing silly, not bad things, can continue into adult years.  I know a guy who gets on his bike and rides off for an hour leaving the driver’s door of his car wide upon. 

    I know a lady who last week let her Lincoln run out of gas in rush hour traffic.  Her husband, a bit nettled, brought gas, but then could not start the car.  It had to be towed.

     

    Zoe

    Zoe seriously at work.

     

    I know a dear friend who drove into her garage with a canoe strapped to the top of her car. 

    You do this stuff and you begin to believe the bad news, ‘I am a loser, I am bad, my seed obviously landed in the ditch.” 

    And then there are the malicious acts.  You know where I come in on this.  Kids hurt and abused grow up to hurt and abuse.  They are not bad.  They are damaged. 

    So, who landed on fertile soil?  All of us.  God don’t make bad seed.

    So, what do you think about all this?

     

    Emma

    Emma and her pal say, "It is so nice to be here."

     

     

     

  • Announcements

    Rosemary’s Blessing   

    May what you see in the mirror delight you,

    and may what others see in you delight them.                                                                              

    www.irishcultureandcustoms.com/Blessings/Bless5.html

           

    Hugh

    Hugh reading Isaiah.


                                                                                                            

     Our Special Thanks:

    •    For Reading:  Hugh and Richard
    •    For The Team:  Georgie & Kevin 
    •    For the Communion Bread:  Alison
    •    For the Wine & Cups: Jean & Cliff
    •    For the Pictures & Video:  Beth & Mike & Beth Dugan
    •    For the coffee and pastries:   The Dinsmores & Jackie & Beth D. & Jerry
    •    For the altar & sound: Jackie & Hue
    •    For the Music:  Ray, Shonda & Bethany

     

    Richard

    Richard reading Romans.

     

    Birthdays:    John Schanot (today), Beth Robinson (Saturday)  

    Anniversaries:

    Ron & Marilyn (51st, Today, Sunday)

     

    Music

    Bethany, Shonda, and Ray.

     

     

    Please Remember these special people:

    For Cindy's brother, Larry, who died this week;  For Diane McClurg with pneunomia;   For Chuck Webster getting a heart operation July 15;   For Morgan Froebe teaching English in Equador for the summer;  For Fred’s brother, John, who is really sick with cancer;     For Jan's sister Carol who just died recently and for Jan and her family;   For Marilyn Ackerman from a staff infection and a bad bang on her leg;   Mike & Dee Miller's daughter, Lisa, not doing well;  For Tom Quinn's continued recuperation from shoulder surgery;    for Nina Tucker's dad;   Jackie Urbanczyk's continued recovery;    for a special girl named Missy Ackerman; Judy Thompson's dad in the hospital;  John Cade's mother in law, Kalliopi Piskiouli;  Charlie's brother in law with cancer;  Beth Dugan's dad struggling with prostate cancer;  from Rob, the brother of his business associate who has cancer;   For Diane Drescher with a bad back;

     

    Kevin talking

    Kevin preparing to share with the community the places he has visited in Europe on his band trip. His favorite, London.

     

    Frank’s sister, Grace Campos, 84, with stage one;  Margie McKeon’s brother, Bill, with lung cancer;  Jackie's sister, Shellie;  Diane McClurg's mom having a hard time making the transition to assisted living;   Dee's friend, Don Fox, with cancer;   Dick Thompson's daughter, Teri Jill & her cousin Terri.  Barb & Warren's grandbabies, Leighton Elizabeth and Warren Phillip;   Judy Carrell's friend, Matt Larson;  Rita; 

     

    Georgie talking

    Georgie sharing with the community the best of her vacation in San Antonio. The best, tubing down the river.


     

     Bernadette Delgado's mom; Gilberto's mom and brother; Tom and Teresa Quinn's niece, Chawna, with cancer, plus Neva Flynn, Angel, and Diane Kreeitzer; Connie Doherty's mom and her sister, plus Kevin's cousin, Peter; Mary Ellen's Christopher, Margaret and Jim; our friends, sons, and daughters in the military, including Cole Carey, Ryan McClurg, and Chebino; cure for autism from Laura Chollick; for our President that he have great success and someday hold his grandchildren in his lap.

     

    Cowboy Cole

    Cowboy Cole rehearsing how he will herd his live stock.

     

     Your Finances, July 13, 2014

    Expenses:   $690.00  

    Outreach:   $415.00

    Video:  Sing a New Song, Entrance, 2:00 min. 

     

     We Donated this week:  

     Nothing special

    Thanks for your Generosity.

    Have a Good Week, J.S

    (214-783-0443)

     

    Buddy

    Buddy, says, "Bye, Everybody, see you next week."

     

    JSM Mission-Faith Statement  

          Help create a Catholic Community that welcomes all God’s People,  provides for & challenges spiritual & total growth.  

          Reaches out to help people who are disadvantaged & make the world  we live in a better place to live.

      

     

     

     

  • Reminder for Sunday, July 13 , 2014,15th Ordinary Time, Cycle A

     

    Emma - Sophia

    Emma says, "Guess what is coming, Sophia."

     

    Welcome: Catholic Mass with coffee and juice and pastries, both bought and home-made, after Mass.

    Time: 9:30; Celebrate with the Community & Stack.

    Place: Vines High School, 15th between Custer & Independence.

     

    2girls

    Happiness is a cupcake.

     

     Readings:

    Isaiah  55, 10-11,   My word shall not return to me void.

    Psalm 65,   The seed that falls on good ground will yield a fruitful harvest.

    Romans 8, 18-23,  We know that all creation is groaning in labor pains.

    Matthew  13, 1-23,  A sower went out to sow.

     

    Brent -Cindy

    Even big kids are happy with a cupcake of the week.

     

    Community Events:

    1.   ROMEO lunch Friday, July 11.   Ice cream creations a la Mike for all?  

     

    Coloring

    Do not disturb, artists at work.

     

    What's going on in our Catholic World:    

    1.       A Really Boring Marriage Document, National Catholic Reporter,  June 27, 580 words,      Download Boring Marriage Document 7-10-14

    2.        Better Days are coming, National Catholic Reporter,  July 7, 1000 words,       Download Better Days coming 7-10-14

     

    Music

    And more artists at work.

      

    True? 

    We do not receive wisdom, we must discover it for ourselves, after a journey through the wilderness which no one else can make for us, which no one can spare us, for our wisdom is the point of view from which we come at last to regard the world.  

     Proust

     

    Toy train

    New transport for Preston Hollow, 4th of July.

     

    See you Sunday, July 13, 2014, 15th Ordinary Time, Cycle A

    J.S., 214-783-0443

     

    Zoo

    July 4 petting zoo, donkeys, pigs, cow, and others.


     

     JSM Mission-Faith Statement

         Help create a Catholic Community that welcomes all God’s
    People, provides for and challenges spiritual and total growth.

        Reaches out to help people who are disadvantaged and make the world we live in a better place to live.

     

    A treat

    A special gift.

     

      

     

     

     

  • Sunday Homily, July 6, 2014, 14th Ordinary Time, A

    Readings:

    Zechariah  9, 9-10,   Rejoice heartily, shout for joy.

    Psalm 145,   I will praise your name forever, my king and my God. 

    Romans 8, 9, 11-13,  You are in the spirit.

    Matthew  11, 25-30,  Come to me, all you who labor and are burdened, and I will give you rest.

     

    Emma

    Emma says, "Come in, Everybody, Welcome."

     

     

    Zechariah:  Zechariah is the 11th of the 12 Minor Prophets and lived just when the Hebrews were released from the 70 year long Babylonian Captivity, in other words around 555 B.C. He is in Jerusalem and encourages the people to rebuild the temple.

    He is called a minor prophet only because his little work has simply 14 chapters, unlike the Big 3, Isaiah, Jeremiah, & Ezekiel, who have many chapters, in fact 66 for Isaiah.

    He was a favorite of the N.T. writers because he is rich in messiah predictions.  Today we have one of those visions.   You might picture how this message is coming across.  The people have been crushed, they have been slaves in Babylon, and the Jerusalem they have returned to is nothing but disaster. 

     

     

    Sophia

    Sophia, also, says, "Hi, Everybody, Welcome."

     

    Psalm 145, 8-9: here it is again, The Terrific Line: "The Lord is gracious & merciful, slow to anger and abounding in love."  Watch for it.

     

    July 4, Independence Day

    July 4, 1776, Declaration of Independence signed.

    50th anniversary, July 4, 1826: two signers of the Declaration died, the only 2 to serve as presidents, mutual friends, Thomas Jefferson & John Adams (excellent source, David McCullough’s John Adams).

     

    Chad - Kayli

    Ever wanted to see what two people look like just after they have just finished an Ironman? Take a look and Chad and Kayli. Looking pretty good.

     

    My Yoke is Easy and my Burden Light

    This morning I would like to talk about Matthew’s statement about Jesus saying, My yoke is easy and my burden light.  I would also like to include that line which is one of my most favorite lines from the Bible, The Lord is gracious and merciful, never gets angry, and is abounding in love.

    I would suggest the first line about my burden being light is influenced, sometimes, by the fact that the Lord is gracious and merciful.  On the other hand, however, sometimes the burden is really blasted heavy.  For example…  The Story of The Week:

     

     

    Chad

    Chad finishing.

     

    Thursday afternoon Rosemary & I had just left Plano Cycling, where I had left my bike to have it fitted with a new chain and cassette, the gear assembly on the rear wheel.  I was feeling pretty proud of myself, that I had actually worn out a bike chain and cassette.  I thought only Tour de France people did such things.

    So, we are in the van headed south on Central.  The usual traffic, especially for those exiting onto the Bush just past Plano Parkway.  I knew we had to get out into the middle to avoid that blockage. 

     

     

    Kayli

    Kayli crossing the finish line, Coeur d'Elane, Idaho.

     

    I move over from the right lane.  I want to move over even to the next lane.  I’m watching in the side mirror.  Finally, before the blockage I see a space and move over in front of a big white pickup that seems way back far enough. 

    The guy in the pickup, however, seems upset.  Next thing I know his front bumper is in the back of our van.  I can see the hairs in his nostrils.  I can see the color of his eyes, black with flames shooting out.

     

     

    Offertory

    Offertory, Grace (Ironmanmomma of Kayli), Mary Ellen, and Donna.

     

    Then, yes, you guessed it.  There was space to the left in those lanes.  So my friend swerves to the left, floors it, stomps on the horn, races past us with various hand signals, and swerves back in front of us, where he proceeds another 100 yards before he has to hit the brakes because he was climbing the back side of another car.

    What did I do?  Well, I did not follow my impulse to blow our horn.  I also did not want Rosemary cussing me out.  I did nothing but continue along south bound Central.  I am grateful for that.

     

     

    Mike

    The Old Man of The Mountains returned, Mike.

     

    As we drive along and talk about this, I admit that if I knew this guy’s story instead of judging the book by the cover, my favorite path, I would probably be more empathic.  Has he just lost his job, his wife, his dignity?  Has he come from a horrible childhood that has him permanently damaged and angry?  This is my profession.   I know this.  His behavior in itself says so much.

    Tell this guy your yoke is light and your burden in life is easy.  He would laugh and probably cuss you out.  How many people have burdens that are not light?   No way.

    Look at these kids coming across the border.  The little girls, 10-14 years of age, really carrying a heavy burden.

     

     

    YoYo

    Namesakes: Two Rosemarys, or YoYo & RoRo.

     

    You hear the story of this Louie Zamperini, who just died in his nineties?  After his B-24 went down in the Pacific during the war with Japan, he and two other guys spent 47 days on a flimsy raft.  After being rescued by a Japanese boat, life got only more brutal in the numerous prison camps he spent time in before being released after the war. 

    So how do you carry the load if you are Zamperini or the pickup driver? 

    This sounds almost insulting or obscene, but it is psychologically sound, acceptance.  Accept what is happening to keep my mind and spirit sane.  Zamperini said that he also worked to keep his spirit alive and hopeful, disciplining himself like he did when he was an Olympic sprinter.

    This is where I suggest contemplating the positive.  Maybe my childhood was horrible and my life is bad.   Can I not find love and graciousness somewhere? 

    Perhaps that pickup driver is suffering.  He does not seem to be handling his suffering well.

    How do you deal with the heavy burden?

     

    She's back

    She's back, Folks, the party is over. RoRo doing her blessing.

     

     

  • Announcements

    Rosemary’s Blessing   

    May God help us to

    Wag more and

    Bark less.   

     

     

    Jackie

    Jackie reading Zechariah.

     

    Our Special Thanks:

    •    For Reading:  Jackie & Patricia
    •    For The Team:  (Georgie, on vacation to San Antonio);   (Kevin on a band trip to Europe)
    •    For the Communion Bread:  Alison
    •    For the Wine & Cups: Jean & Cliff
    •    For the Pictures & Video:  Beth & Mike & Beth Dugan
    •    For the coffee and pastries:   The Dinsmores & Jackie & Beth D.
    •    For the altar & sound: Jackie & Hue
    •    For the Music:  Ben & Wendy, Shonda & Bethany

     

    Patricia 2

    Patricia reading Romans.

     

    Birthdays:    Harper (3, last Tuesday),  Carol Eshelbrenner (last Saturday), Brent (today), Byan Ekes (22, Monday), Kim Cross (Monday), Cindy Cramer ( Wednesday), Mike Miller (Saturday)  

    Anniversaries:

    Jan & Sir Charlie (52, last Saturday)

     

     

    Caupcakes

    Cupcakes of The Week for Cindy & Brent on their birthdays, and to Emma and Sophia (we had 2 extras).


     

    Please Remember these special people:

    For Chuck Webster getting a heart operation July 15;   For Morgan Froebe teaching English in Equador for the summer;  For Fred’s brother, John, who is really sick with cancer;     For Jan's sister Carol who just died this past Tuesday and Jan and her family;   For Marilyn Ackerman from a staff infection and a bad bang on her leg;   Mike & Dee Miller's daughter, Lisa, not doing well;  For Tom Quinn's continued recuperation from shoulder surgery;    for Nina Tucker's dad;   Jackie Urbanczyk's continued recovery;    for a special girl named Missy Ackerman; Judy Thompson's dad in the hospital;  John Cade's mother in law, Kalliopi Piskiouli;  Charlie's brother in law with cancer;  Beth Dugan's dad struggling with prostate cancer;  from Rob, the brother of his business associate who has cancer;   For Diane Drescher with a bad back;

     

    Cupcakes 2

    Cupcakes for Grace (Ironmanmomma) and Scott, our biker.

     

    Frank’s sister, Grace Campos, 84, with stage one;  Margie McKeon’s brother, Bill, with lung cancer;  Jackie's sister, Shellie;  Diane McClurg's mom having a hard time making the transition to assisted living;   Dee's friend, Don Fox, with cancer;   Dick Thompson's daughter, Teri Jill & her cousin Terri.  Barb & Warren's grandbabies, Leighton Elizabeth and Warren Phillip;   Judy Carrell's friend, Matt Larson;  Rita; 

     

    Patti

    You were right when you said a bunch of nuts live in Preston Hollow, for example, Patti Cody, our neighborhood association president who organizes terrific July 4th celebrations in the neighborhood.  Plus her three refreshments providers.

     

    Bernadette Delgado's mom; Gilberto's mom and brother; Tom and Teresa Quinn's niece, Chawna, with cancer, plus Neva Flynn, Angel, and Diane Kreeitzer; Connie Doherty's mom and her sister, plus Kevin's cousin, Peter; Mary Ellen's Christopher, Margaret and Jim; our friends, sons, and daughters in the military, including Cole Carey, Ryan McClurg, and Chebino; cure for autism from Laura Chollick; for our President that he have great success and someday hold his grandchildren in his lap.

     

    Toy train

    Neighborhood transportation.

     

    Your Finances, July 6, 2014

    Expenses:   $1440.00  

    Outreach:   $ 315.00

    June 29, 2014

    Expenses:    $730.00

    Outreach:    $545.0

     

    Emma 4

    Emma says, "Thanks for coming, Everybody, wow, that cupcake was super."

     

     We Donated this week:  

     Nothing special

    Thanks for your Generosity.

    Have a Good Week, J.S

    (214-783-0443)

     

    Sophia 2

    Sophia says, "Thanks for making it so fun here, Everybody."

     

     JSM Mission-Faith Statement  

          Help create a Catholic Community that welcomes all God’s People,  provides for & challenges spiritual & total growth.  

          Reaches out to help people who are disadvantaged & make the world  we live in a better place to live.