Page 2 The Ascension of the Lord May 20, 2012 A Spirituality of the
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Page 2 The Ascension of the Lord May 20, 2012 A Spirituality of the
Page 2 The Ascension of the Lord May 20, 2012 A Spirituality of the Ascension by Oblate Father Ron Rolheiser The Ascension throws some important light on the mystery of love and intimacy. What’s the Ascension? It’s an event inside of the life of Jesus and the early church, a feast- day for Christians, a theology, and a spirituality, all woven together into one amorphous bundle of mystery that we too seldom try to unpack and sort out. What does the Ascension mean? Among other things, that the mystery of how we touch each others’ lives is strangely paradoxical in that the wondrous life-giving power of arriving, touching another’s life, speaking words that nurture, doing actions that build up, and giving life for another, depends also upon eventually leaving, being silent, absorbing rather than actively doing, and giving our goodbye and death just as we once gave our presence and our life. Presence depends too upon absence and there’s a blessing we can only give when we go away. That’s why Jesus, when bidding farewell to his friends before his ascension, spoke these words: “It’s better for you that I go away.” “You will be sad now, but your sadness will turn to joy.” “Don’t cling to me, go instead to Galilee and I will meet you there.” How might we understand these words? How is it better that someone we love goes away? How can the sadness of a goodbye, of a painful leaving, turn to joy? This is something that’s hard to explain, though we experience it daily in our lives. Allow me an example: When I was 22, in the space of four months, my father and mother died, both still young. For myself and my siblings, the pain of their deaths was searing. Initially, as with every major loss, what we felt was pain, severance, coldness, helplessness, a new vulnerability, the loss of a vital life-connection, and, the brutality and finality of something for which there is no preparation. There’s nothing warm, initially, in any loss, death, or painful goodbye. Time is a great healer (though there’s a lot more to this than simply what washes clean or is anaesthetized by the passage of time). After a while, for me this took several years, I didn’t feel a coldness any more. My parents’ deaths were no longer a painful thing. Instead their absence turned into a warm presence, the heaviness gave way to a certain lightness of soul inside me, their seeming incapacity to speak to me now turned into a surprising new way of having their steady, constant word in my life, and the blessing that they were never able to fully give me while they were alive began to seep ever more deeply and irrevocably into the very core of my person. The same was true for my siblings. Our sadness turned to joy and we began to find our parents again, in a deeper way, in Galilee, namely, in those places where their spirits had flourished while they were alive. They had ascended and we were the better for it. We often have this kind of experience, simply in less dramatic ways. Parents, for instance, experience this, often excruciatingly, when a child grows up, grows away, and eventually goes away to start life on his or her own. A real death takes place here. An ascension has to happen, an old way of relating has to die, painful as that death is. Yet, it’s better that our children go away. The same is true everywhere in life. When we visit someone, it’s important that we come, it’s also important that we leave. Our leaving, painful though it is, is part of the gift of our visit. Our presence partly depends upon our absence. This however must be carefully distinguished from what we mean by the axiom: “Absence makes the heart grow fonder.” In essence, that’s not true. Absence makes the heart grow fonder, but only for a while and mostly for the wrong reasons. Physical absence, simple distance from each, without a deeper dynamic of spirit taking place beneath, ends more relationships than it deepens. In the end, most of the time, we simply grow apart. That’s not how the ascension deepens intimacy, presence, and blessing. The ascension deepens intimacy by giving us precisely a new presence, a deeper, richer one, but one which can only come about if our former way of being present is taken away. Perhaps we understand this best in the experience we have when our children grow up and leave home. It’s painful to see them grow away from us, painful to say that particular goodbye, painful to see them, precisely, ascend. But, if their words could say what their hearts intuit, they would say what Jesus said before his ascension: “It’s better for you that I go away. There will be sadness now, but that sadness will turn to joy when, one day soon, you will have standing before you a wonderful adult son or daughter who is now in a position to give you the much deeper gift of his or her adulthood.” —www:liturgy.slu.edu/ Page 3 The Ascension of the Lord Mass Intentions Weekly Events at St. Didacus Saturday...……………..May 19 5:00PM…………………†Eva Diaz-Rondon Sunday……………..…..May 20 8:30AM…………..…….†Antoni Kropiouski 10:00AM…………..……†Eugene Sergi 11:30AM………………..People of St. Didacus Monday………………...May 21 7:30AM………….……...†Raymond Keeyes Tuesday………..…..….May 22 6:00PM………………in thanksgiving to the Sacred Heart Wednesday………..….May 23 8:30AM………………....†Carolyn Curiel Hastings Thursday………...…….May 24 7:30AM……………...….†Ernesto Fuentes Friday…………....……..May 25 7:30AM ………………..†Bernard & Elizabeth Morzinski Saturday...……………..May 26 5:00PM…………………Watson Family, Spec. Int. Readings for the Week of May 20, 2012 Sunday: Monday: Tuesday: Wednesday: Thursday: Friday: Saturday: Next Sunday: Acts 1:1-11/Eph 1:17-23 or 4:1-13 or 4:1-7, 11-13/Mk 16:15-20 Acts 19:1-8/Jn 16:29-33 Acts 20:17-27/Jn 17:1-11a Acts 20:28-38/Jn 17:11b-19 Acts 22:30; 23:6-11/Jn 17:20-26 Acts 25:13b-21/Jn 21:15-19 Acts 28:16-20, 30-31/Jn 21:20-25 Acts 2:1-11/1 Cor 12:3b-7, 12-13 / Jn 20:19-23 GIFTS OF OUR TREASURY THE WEEK OF May 13, 2012 Collection for May 13, 2012 Restricted Funds for May 13, 2012 Total Income: May 20, 2012 $4,832.00 $ 265.00 $5,097.00 Rest In Peace † Juliette Cote Eternal rest, grant unto her, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon her. Sunday, May 20, 2012 Monday, May 21, 2012 Spanish RCIA Cub Scouts Small Faith V Tuesday, May 22, 2012 Small Faith III Youth Night Small Faith IV Wednesday, May 23, 2012 Eucharistic Adoration Religious Education Choir Thursday, May 24, 2012 Small Faith I&II Spanish Choir RCIA English Baptism Seminar Friday, May 25, 2012 Bear Scouts Saturday, May 26, 2012 Spanish Baptism Seminar 5:30-7:00pm 6:30pm 7:00pm 8:30am 6:30pm 7:00pm 7:30am-8:30am 5:30pm 7:00pm 6:30pm 6:30-8:00pm 7:00pm 7:00pm 3:00-5:00pm 10:00am Location Location Hall Hall Winona Location Hall Hall Hawley Location Church School Church Location Hall Church Hall Hall Location Hall Location Hall Go and teach all nations, says the Lord; I am with you always, until the end of the world. Please Pray For Maria Luz Arrellano Jim Barnes Herbert Baxter Herminia Brignoni Ibeth Brignoni Ruben Campos Marie Cavanaugh Connie Craig Walter Craig Bart Diaz Juanita Diaz Fred Dueber Maria Fielding Nancy Gray Susan Guenzel Rosie Kinninger Marcella Halweg Maria Koter Anita Laing Juanita Lopez Maria Lopez Sue Medearis Dolores Mediano Esteban Mediano Joe Moser Segunda Ordona Sylvia Paiz Dominick Palestini Diane Porter Atina Rodriguez Aaron Rodriguez Alette Rodriguez Gladys Palestini Carlos Sainz & family Jeff Salazar Patricia Seay Christine Segura Terrie Small Michael Smith Raymond Sparks Helen Treat Charles & Therese Tucker Pat Weaver Sue Walker Rose Zaragosa Catarina Zizzo Adalina Zarate And the special intentions in our Book of Needs Welcome to St. Didacus Parish! Masses Saturday 5:00pm Sunday 8:30am & 10:00am English 11:30am in Spanish Daily Mass Mon., Thurs., Fri. 7:30am Wednesday 8:30am & Tues. 6:00pm Eucharistic Adoration Wednesdays 7:30am—8:30am First Fridays 8:00am—9:00am Confessions—Saturdays 3:30pm or by appt. Pastor, Fr. Michael J. Sinor Parish Office 619-284-3472 Page 4 The Ascension of the Lord May 20, 2012 Taco Sunday! Next Week! May 27 —Support our 4630 34th Street, San Diego CA 92116 284-8730 parish’s Youth Program and enjoy some great food, too! The Youth Group will be selling tacos after all the Sunday Masses. St. Rose of Lima Parish in Chula Vista is hosting a one day retreat Living Everyday with Passion and Purpose With Matthew Kelly and musical guest Eliot Morris June 2, 2012 9am-1:30pm Tickets for this special event are available on-line at www.strosecv.com or for more information call 619-235-0961 ext. 340. St. Didacus School May Crowning, May 11, 2012 It’s not too late to turn in your donations for the Annual Catholic Appeal! Extra envelopes are available in the pews or from the Parish Office. Please pray for the repose of the soul of Richard Griswold’s mother, Rosemary Del Castillo. Her funeral will be at Nazareth House on June 1st at 9:30am. Vacation Bible School at St. Didacus Parish Save the date: Monday July 23rd – Friday July 27th, 9:00am – 12:00pm For Children ages 4 yrs – 5th grade Fee: $40 per child/ $60 per two Page 5 The Ascension of the Lord The risen Lord’s ascension is an invitation to us to preach the gospel by the way we live. The most effective preaching is the goodness of our own lives. Practically, this means we relate to others the way Jesus himself did, since it is his mission we take up. We reach out with comforting words that heal broken hearts, strong hands to lift up the discouraged, and integrity of action that makes clear to whom we belong—the risen Lord. This way of living calls us to surrender into the Father’s hands just as Jesus did. —Living Liturgy May 20, 2012 Resurrection in Hard Places: London in World War II In 1939, when it was certain that war was on its way, the trustees of the National Gallery decided that the whole collection should be sent to Wales and then on to Canada for safety. But in the middle of the battle for France, Churchill sent a telegram to Kenneth Clark, the Director of the National Gallery, which said: “Bury them in caves or in cellars, but not a picture shall leave these islands.” So the paintings were put into slate mines in Wales. However, two years later the public started to complain. There were daily concerts in the National Gallery but no Old Masters. A letter to the Times on January 2, 1942, said, “Because London’s face is scarred and bruised these days, we need more than ever to see beautiful things. Would the trustees of the National Gallery consider whether it were not wise and well to risk one picture for exhibition each week?” The trustees decided on one a month. Kenneth Clark began finding out what the public wanted and he was astonished to find that they didn’t want paintings that would show resilience or the strength of the human spirit. The picture they wanted most of all was Titian’s Noli me tangere, a picture of the resurrection. —Living Easter Through the Year Kid’s Corner The Ascension of Jesus Start Here After he said this, he was taken up before their very eyes, and a cloud hid him from their sight. Acts 1:9 What is the “good news” that the disciples discover and proclaim to everyone? It is that God is with us at every moment of our lives—from birth to death, and even after we die. God is always with us. “If you seek yourself, you will find yourself —to your own ruin. For the man who does not seek Jesus does himself much greater harm than the whole world and all his enemies could ever do.” —Thomas á Kempis Pagina 6 La Asencio del Señor ¿Estás registrado en la parroquia? En los estados Unidos los católicos se registran a la iglesia que atienden con regularidad. Registrarse en la parroquia de San Didacus es una declaración de su deseo de ser parte de nuestra comunidad católica y un compromiso con la vida de nuestra familia parroquial. Estar registrado en nuestra parroquia hace las cosas más fáciles para usted en los momentos como bautismos, matricular a sus hijos en la escuela de San Didacus, RICA, Catecismo, Primera Comunión, Confirmación, Bodas, cuando se le pide ser padrino de bautismo o confirmación, e incluso para los funerales. Las parroquias suelen solicitar la verificación del estado de una persona practicante como católico en la asistencia a Misa, etc, cuando a una persona se le ha pedido ser padrino o madrina. Si no esta registrado no se puede hacer esta verificación. Para registrarse, favor de recoger un formulario de registro de color verde a la entrada de la Iglesia. Usted puede enviarlo por correo o entregarlo en la oficina parroquial. Si usted tiene alguna pregunta, por favor no dude en pasar por la oficina y estaremos encantados de ayudarle. 20 de mayo, 2012 “El próximo domingo, Domingo de tacos” 27 de mayo El Programa de Jóvenes de la parroquia, los invita a disfrutar de ricos tacos, la venta de tacos será después de las misas del domingo, para ayudara a los jóvenes para ir a retiros y conferencias. Marque en su calendario/ 2do Evento de Reciclaje El ministerio de Jóvenes de San Didacus los invita el sábado 30 de junio al domingo 1◦ de julio a reciclar, computadoras, celulares, etc. En el estacionamiento de la escuela de San Didacus de 9 a.m.-4 p.m. CORONACION A LA VIRGEN Para finalizar nuestro año del catecismo el miércoles 30 de mayo tendremos la Coronación de la Santísima Virgen con toda las familias del catecismo, 5:30pm. Vacaciones de Verano de San Didacus Guarde esta fecha: Lunes 23 al viernes 27 de julio 9:00am – 12:00 pm Para niños de 4 años a 5° de primaria Cuta: $40 por niño y $60 por dos.
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