Tag: Christmas

Homilies

Reflection for the Nativity

God is Born

He has come to give the promise of 
His mercy full and gracious. For the Word was made Incarnate,
 And in truth, has dwelt amongst us!

The miracle we have awaited has come. And now, every time I see your face, I see Jesus in you. Every night before I sleep, I know that He dwells with you. In every prayer I offer I am assured that His miracles are real in your life. Before we accepted Christ and were regenerated, He accepted us. Knowing that, I sing high praise to God who has joined us to His Son and to each other. May His everlasting presence enrich and bless you and yours at this moment, throughout the coming year, and always in every way.

Deacon Jim

Events, , , ,

Midnight Holy Mass in Schenectady

All are welcome, tonight at midnight, to join in celebrating the Shepherd’s Holy Mass at Holy Name of Jesus Parish, 1040 Pearl Street, Schenectady, NY. We will begin with a beautiful and traditional candlelight procession to the manger, there to worship the new born King. This is the place to be, in Schenectady, tonight at midnight.

Following Holy Mass we will offer our festive repast, the “cós do chelba.” In friendship, fellowship, with open doors and hearts, we will continue in the spirit of community that Jesus came to gather.

Christian Witness, Events, PNCC, ,

Recent events around the Central Diocese

From The Sunday Dispatch: Thanksgiving Ecumenical Service in Duryea

The Duryea Ecumenical Thanksgiving Service was held on Tuesday, November 23. The host parish for this year’s service was St. Mary’s Polish National Catholic Church.

Each year the churches of Duryea choose a different theme for the service. This year it was decided to honor and give thanks to the emergency service personnel of the borough.

The service began with a procession consisting of personnel from the Duryea Police Department, Germania Fire Department, Excelsior Hose Company and Duryea Ambulance and Rescue, along with his honor Keith Moss, Mayor of Duryea.

The host Pastor Rev. Fr. Carmen G. Bolock welcomed everyone to the St. Mary’s Church. Participating clergy along with Fr. Carmen were from the Duryea Churches: Rev. Michael Shamboro, Pastor of Brick United Methodist Church; Rev. Fr. Charles Rokosz, Pastor Nativity of Our Lord Roman Catholic Church and Rev. Fr. Louis Kaminski, Pastor of Prince of Peace Roman Catholic Church, Old Forge. Fr. Louis was the guest homilist and spoke about how much we depend on those who protect us in our communities.

Lori Biscontini served on the ecumenical service planning committee. Mary Jayne Milkanin served as reader. Jan Cwikla was the organist. Many residents of Duryea attended the service.

Each year during the service an offering is taken up for the support of a good cause. This year the offering was divided between each of the emergency service departments of Duryea. Following the service a social hour was held in St. Mary’s Parish Hall.

From EastMeadowPatch: St. Francis Christmas Dinner Spreads Holiday Cheer: St. Francis’ congregation celebrates the holiday season

The holiday spirit was bustling in East Meadow on Sunday at the St. Francis Polish National Catholic Church. The congregation held their annual Christmas fundraiser dinner. There were approximately 80 members in attendance, making the event full and joyous.

The congregation adopts a family in need every year. St. Francis fundraises through this dinner to provide necessities for that family.

“We have three dinners a year, but this dinner is meant to fundraise for the family that we adopt,” Reverend Andrzej Koterba explained.

The evening was full of festivities. Throughout the church hall, there were smells of homemade Christmas dinner, sounds of happy chatter and children running around, excited at the thought of meeting Santa Claus.

Giving is definitely a sentiment that the church members were comfortable with. The congregation held a raffle where almost all members participated. A donation box for the adopted family was brimming with dollar bills. The church also had a “wish list tree,” a tree filled with cards on ornaments that list an item that the church needs. Churchgoers are able to pick any ornament that they want, and then they can purchase and donate that item to the church. Everyone was so willing to give generously, which contributed to the true Christmas spirit felt throughout the evening.

St. Francis also gave out Polish wafers. The wafers are used at Christmas dinner on Christmas everyone breaks off a piece of the wafer, symbolizing peace for the year to come.

The children, especially Natalie, 5, and Adam, 4, were more than happy to chat with a newcomer. They both eagerly explained what they wanted Santa Claus to bring them: a Lego jet, Batman, a glowdome and a remote control helicopter.

Before digging in to the wonderful home-cooked meal, Reverend Koterba delivered a beautiful blessing on the food.

A surprise visitor came in the middle of the raffle, ringing jingle bells and jollily greeting the children – it was Santa Claus! He gave a gift to each of the children in attendance, who were delighted to sit on his lap and smile for a lovely picture.

The night offered a sense of family and home that is rare. Everyone was incredibly welcoming and loving.

“We welcome everybody and we appreciate greatly the generosity of our congregation,” Joni Blenn, the vice president, said.

View photos of the celebration at EastMeadowPatch.

PNCC, Saints and Martyrs

Solemnity of the Lord’s Epiphany

Gradual:

V. Yours, O Lord, are grandeur and power, majesty, splendor and glory. For all in heaven and on earth is Yours;
R. Yours, O Lord, is the sovereignty; You are exalted as head over all.

Communion Verse:

V. You love justice and hate wrongdoing; therefore God, Your God, has anointed You with the oil of gladness above Your fellow kings.
R. With myrrh, aloes, and cassia Your robes are fragrant.

PNCC, Poland - Polish - Polonia, ,

Events and things

The Polish Community Center in Albany will be hosting its regular Polish-American buffet on Friday, January 8th from 4-8pm. The PCC is located at 225 Washington Ave. Ext., Albany NY 12205. Call 518-456-3995 for more information.

The Polish National Catholic Church of the Holy Trinity and Saint Joseph in Linden, NJ will conduct its annual Christmas Dinner on Sunday, Jan. 10, in the parish center at 407 Ziegler Avenue in Linden. Prior to the dinner, homemade Polish delicacies will be served as appetizers. Cost of the complete dinner is $15. The dinner will begin at noon following the 11:00 a.m. Polish Mass. Take out orders will be available. During the dinner the parish children will present a Christmas pageant. Reservations for the dinner and take out orders are encouraged and can be made by calling 908-925-6537.

Christian Witness, PNCC, ,

Rejoicing was heard

From the Buffalo News: Worshippers rejoice as closed church reopens with Christmas Eve service

With its plain white clapboards and a cross atop a small steeple, the former Our Lady of Mount Carmel Catholic Church in Brant looks every bit like a postcard country church.

Since closing last year, it has been little more than an image.

But on Christmas Eve, the building at 10708 Brant-Angola Road reopened as an active house of worship for the first time in 18 months.

And many of the same faithful Catholics who had worshipped there showed up to celebrate the unique holiday gift.

—God knew how hard we struggled or how much we wanted this, and we thought we were going to be able open on Thanksgiving,— said Joan Reickart, a longtime parishioner. —But I think God gave us our Christmas gift. This was our Christmas gift. I truly believe that. And it’s a wonderful Christmas gift, the best we could hope for.—

About 50 people were expected at the inaugural Mass of the Parish of Our Lady—”a new congregation affiliated with the Polish National Catholic Church.

—Opening on Christmas Eve seems pretty divine,— Brant Supervisor Leonard Pero said. —I’m just thrilled we save our community church. The community is getting a wonderful Christmas present, and the thing is, we’ll always have it.—

The congregation, composed of several people who were once part of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, purchased the building last week from the Catholic Diocese of Buffalo for $75,000.

—The excitement among the people is just unbelievable,— said John Chiavetta, who with Pero led efforts to reopen the church.

Some members of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, which was merged with St. Anthony Catholic Church in Farnham, openly objected to their church’s closure and immediately sought a way to keep it open.

—I was praying all the time to the Blessed Mother,— Pero said. And at the final Mass, Pero sat in the front row and cried.

Reickart said she felt —kind of lost— since the church closed.

—I’ve really been hurting for a place to go,— she said.

Ultimately, Pero organized a meeting between potential parishioners and officials of the Polish National Catholic Church, a denomination formed in 1897 as a result of splits within Catholic communities of Polish-Americans from the Roman Catholic Church in disputes over property and lay governance.

Unlike the Roman Catholic tradition, in which bishops make property decisions, individual congregations in the Polish National Catholic Church, as in many Protestant traditions, control such matters.

Bishop Thaddeus S. Peplowski of the Buffalo Pittsburgh Diocese of the Polish National Catholic Church has assured Buffalo Bishop Edward U. Kmiec that the church won’t actively seek to recruit former members of Our Lady of Mount Carmel.

Any Roman Catholic who joins the Polish National Catholic Church is considered excommunicated in the eyes of the Vatican.

—People who are fearful of that, we’re telling them, ‘Just attend,’ — Chiavetta said.

Some former Our Lady of Mount Carmel members aren’t bothered by the prospect of excommunication, but —for others, yes it has been difficult,— he said. —Especially for older people, they hear this thing excommunication, and they think that’s a very serious matter.—

But church laws were far from the minds of most worshippers Thursday.

After Mass, they celebrated in the church hall with a sausage dinner and a birthday cake in honor of Jesus.

—Christmas, it is the birth of Christ and a new beginning here,— Reickart said. —It’s wonderful.—

Christian Witness, PNCC, ,

My wish for you

To all my loyal readers, visitors, well wishers, and all who happen to come this way,

Today I share with you the opłatek, the Christmas wafer, symbolic of the bread of angels. In this sharing I wish you are yours every blessing this Christmas and throughout the year ahead. May the precious Christ child abide with you and in this abiding bring you every grace as well as the gifts of health, happiness, and a love that cannot be measured or earned, but that is freely given so that we may live forever.

Wesołych Świąt Bożego Narodzenia!
O joyous day! The Lord has come.

PNCC,

Around the PNCC for Christmas

A few listings. Check with the PNCC Parish in your area for further details.

  • In my Parish, Holy Name of Jesus in Schenectady, NY: Thursday, December 24th, Vigil if the Lord’s Nativity: Pasterka/Shepherd’s Holy Mass at Midnight with a festive repast to follow. Friday, December 25th, Solemnity of the Lord’s Nativity: Holy Mass of the Solemnity at 10am. Festive repast to follow Holy Mass. Sunday, December 27th, Solemnity of the Humble Shepherds, Holy Mass at 9:30am.
  • In Dureya, PA: The Rev. Carmen G. Bolock, Parish Chairman Byron Wesscott, and the parishioners of St. Mary’s Polish National Catholic Church invite the community to several special Masses they will have during the Christmas season in addition to Christmas Eve and Day services: Saturday, Dec. 26, Feast of St. Stephen, 9 a.m.; Sunday, Dec. 27, Solemnity of the Humble Shepherds, 8:30 and 11 a.m.; Monday, Dec. 28, Feast of the Holy Innocents, 8 a.m.; Tuesday, Dec. 29, Octave of Christmas, 8 a.m.; Thursday, Dec. 31, Feast of St. Sylvester the bishop, 9 a.m.; Friday, Jan. 1, a holy day of obligation, Circumcision of our Lord, 10 a.m. Mass with Benediction; and Saturday, Jan. 2, Solemnity of the Holy Name of Jesus, 8 a.m.
  • At Transfiguration Parish in Wallington, NJ a full schedule of events includes: Holy Mass on the Vigil, Thursday, December 24 at 11pm with Caroling by the Polonia Choir at 11:20pm, Blessing of Manager at 11:30pm, and Shepherd’s Mass (Pasterka) to follow. The Solemnity of the Nativity, Friday, December 25 Holy Mass in English at 9:30 am. 11am Polska Msza. Boże Narodzenie. Saturday, December 26, St. Stephen’s Day/Świętego Szczepana 7pm Holy Mass. Sunday, December 27, Solemnity of the Humble Shepherds/Święto Ubogich Pasterzy 9am Holy Mass. 11am Polska Msza. Thursday, December 31, 7pm Holy Mass of Thanksgiving for the closing of the Year 2009/Msza Dziękczynna na zakończenie Starego Roku 2009. Sunday, January 03, Solemnity of the Holy Family 9am Holy Mass with Opłatek breakfast to follow. 11:15am Polska Msza Św.
  • In Deerfield, MA: The choir and violinist of Holy Name Parish will begin their music program on Christmas Eve, December 24th, at 10:45pm. The baby Jesus will be carried into church at 11PM, and after the special liturgies of Christmas, the Holy Mass will be celebrated. The second Holy Mass of Christmas will be celebrated on Christmas day, December 25th, at 10am. On Saturday, December 26th Holy Mass will be held at 9am as we remember St. Stephen, the first martyr of the the faith. Sunday, December 27 is both the Feast of the Humble Shepherds and St. John’s Day. Attendees will share in a taste of the blessed wine following Holy Mass.
  • In East Meadow, NY: St. Francis Parish will hold its Pasterka/Shepherd’s Mass at 9pm on the Vigil of the Nativity, Thursday, December 24th. A shared meal will follow.
  • At Holy Ghost in Frackville, PA and St. John the Baptist in Shenandoah, PA: Thursday, December 24th, Vigil of the Nativity of our Lord: 7pm Mass of the Shepherds (Pasterka) and Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament in Shenandoah; 10pm Mass of the Shepherds (Pasterka) and Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament in Frackville. Friday, December 25th —“ Solemnity of the Nativity of our Lord 9:30am Holy Mass in Shenandoah; 11am Holy Mass in Frackville. Saturday, December 26th —“ Feast of St. Stephen, Proto-Marty, 10am Holy Mass in Frackville. Sunday, December 27th —“ Solemnity of the Humble Shepherds 11am Holy Mass in Frackville.
  • In Little Falls, NY: Holy Spirit Parish will hold Christmas Eve Mass Thursday, December 24 at 10pm. Holy Mass of the Nativity of Our Lord Jesus Christ Friday, December 25 at 11am.
  • In Woodland Park, NJ: Holy Cross Parish will hold a children’s/youth Holy Mass on the Vigil of the Nativity, Thursday, December 24th at 4pm. The Shepherd’s Holy Mass will begin at 10pm. Christmas Day Holy Mass will be at 10am. Holy Mass for the Feast of St. Stephen, Proto-martyr will be held Saturday, December 26th at 9am. Holy Masses for the Solemnity of the Humble Shepherds, Sunday, December 27th, will take place at 9am and 11am.
  • Holy Cross Parish near Syracuse, NY will hold Holy Mass for the Vigil of the Nativity of our Lord on Thursday, December 24 at 5pm. The Solemnity of the Nativity of Our lord will be celebrated with Holy Mass on Friday, December 25 at 11am.
Christian Witness, Poland - Polish - Polonia, , ,

The Great Orchestra

The Great Orchestra of Christmas Charity heartToday is the final for the Great Orchestra of Christmas Charity (Wielka Orkiestra Świątecznej Pomocy, WOŚP), a project that began in Poland in 1993, and to date has collected over $96 million dollars to fund children’s health care. This year’s focus is on early detection of childhood cancers.

If so moved, I encourage you to join in support of this worthy organization. Note that if you wish to donate by credit card you have to use their Polish site. Chose the banner link that says “Wpłata Kartą.” Note that donations are in Polish currency and the current exchange rate is about .33522 dollars per zł, so a 100 złoty donation would be about $33.52. Check out the OANDA Forex converter for details.

A profile of the organization and its history can be found on its website and on Wikipedia. A story covering the organization’s founder, Jerzy Owsiak (you could liken him to Jerry Lewis and the MD telethon), can be found in the Student Operated Press. That article notes that the program is being opposed by some Roman Catholic Church leaders in Poland.