Thursday, July 19, 2012

Celebrating the Ordinary


 16th Sunday in Ordinary Time

  It is so good to be back at St. Brendan’s in San Francisco!!!!  I want you
  all to know that you were missed  by me, and as I reflected upon this fact, I 
  decided to take the Christian approach and to pray for you daily.  I further
  reflected that many of us, including myself, grow accustomed to the 
  wonderful people in our lives and perhaps become slower to
  appreciate them and to communicate this sense of  gratitude for 
  seemingly ordinary tasks, but when done in a spirit of brotherhood/
  sisterhood enrich us far beyond the apparent.

  In this Sunday’s Gospel the message is that the Lord nourishes and
  strengthens us, guiding us in right paths and exhorts a sense of peace
  between ourselves and the rest of humanity. We can achieve this
  peace by developing a greater aptitude to appreciate the present
  moment in our busy lives. We can further enhance this sense by actually
  thanking people for the seemingly mundane tasks they perform. 

  There are countless things to be thankful for and we must be sure
  to include God on our list of individuals we wish to begin a relationship
  with marked with ever greater gratitude.

  I believe we can even be grateful for accurate and well written Church
  bulletin announcements. I’d like to share portions of fractured
  announcements we do not receive because people make the extra effort
  to be careful that I received via email.

  These sentences (with all the BLOOPERS) actually appeared in church
  bulletins, NOT St. Brendan’s, or were announced in church services:

· The Fasting & Prayer Conference includes meals.

· The A.M. sermon: 'Jesus Walks on the Water.' The sermon tonight: 'Searching for Jesus.'

· Ladies, don't forget the rummage sale.It's a chance to get rid of those things not worth keeping around the house. Bring your husbands.

· Don't let worry kill you off - let the Church help.

· Next Thursday there will be tryouts for the choir. They need all the help they can get.

· Irving Benson and Jessie Carter were married on October 24th in the church. So ends a friendship that began in their school days.

· At the evening service tonight, the sermon topic will be 'What Is Hell?' Come early and listen to
      our choir practice.

· Low Self Esteem Support Group will meet Thursday at 7 PM . Please use the back door.


Fr. Mike

Friday, July 13, 2012

News Around the Parish


 Coming Soon to St. Brendan – an excellent spiritual resource.  Lighthouse Catholic Media makes available, in audio CDs and booklets, materials to help us grow in faith.  During the Easter break, I was down at Santa Cruz and dropped in at St. Joseph’s Church and gift shop.  There, I encountered these excellent materials.  As I drove back up along Highway 1, I began listening to a CD I had purchased and listened to Dr. Scott Hahn’s conversion story.  He was a Presbyterian pastor and militant anti-Catholic, who in following the promptings of the Holy Spirit and the Bible, found God leading him into the Catholic Church.  I soon discovered other titles and authors and was touched by their stories and teachings.  Pope Benedict has called upon the worldwide Church to make the coming year, beginning in October 2012, the Year of Faith.  A year where we will take the time to re-examine what many of us, perhaps, have taken for granted.  A time where we might seek to learn more about our spiritual treasure.  So I encourage you to try this for yourself.  As Lighthouse Media seeks to make this as available to as wide an audience as possible, the CDs are relatively inexpensive, only $3 each.  And they can be purchased in a bundle of 5 for $15.  They can be played on our CD players in the car or at home and I have found them uplifting in my own spiritual journey.  We have the material on order and hope to be able to kick it off in early August.  Look for it.  It will be worth your while. 

Welcome, Sr. Quiche Le – Sr. Le is Vietnamese and a member of the Congregation of the Lovers of the Cross.  They are a Vietnamese religious community founded in 1670.  They are both a contemplative order and an apostolic community, meaning they serve as both Martha and Mary.  They are at the same time attentive, sitting at the feet of Jesus and go about meeting the needs of the poor and less fortunate.  Although Sr. Le’s father was not Catholic, but her mother was and had her baptized when she was a baby.  And although Vietnam is a Communist country and the Church’s freedom is limited, however, the faith there is vibrant.  She wanted to love and serve Jesus, so she joined this community of religious women.  She was sent to France to learn theology so she could return and teach.  She has spent 6 years already in France studying Fundamental Theology and has 2 more years to go before she completes her study in Spirituality.  She is here on vacation from July 3 – September 3, and hopes to learn some English.  I, on the other hand, have had a refresher course in French, thanks to her and Google Translate.  So if you see a stranger around the convent and wish to practice your French, you can say hello to her. Welcome, Sr. Le.

Gone Fishing – As Fr. Mike returns from vacation, I will also take some time off before school starts.  I will be away from July 16 to August 17.  Where the sheep go, the shepherd must follow.  So I will take some time off to visit a priest friend up near Lake Tahoe and will also take some time off to be with family and friends.  See you next month.

Fr. Dan

Monday, July 2, 2012

News Around the Parish


Changes in Assignment – There was a rumor out there that I was being transferred and that is not true.  And neither is Fr. Mike.  A pastor’s term is 6 years with the possibility of being renewed a 2nd term, making that a total of 12 years.  An Associate Pastor, like Fr. Mike, in order to give them more experience in different parish settings and working with different communities and staff before becoming pastors themselves, is assigned usually a term of between 3-5 years.  But the good news is, we are both staying and have not been asked to move.  July 1 is usually when changes in priest assignments become effective, simply because it is a quieter time in the rhythm of the parish.  The Associate Pastors in our neighboring parishes, St. Anne, St. Gabriel and Holy Name have been reassigned.

Closer to home, as you know, Sr. Rita has retired and it became effective June 30.  Sr. Elizabeth Johnson of their community, who also lived in our convent and worked as a chaplain at Laguna Honda Hospital, is also being transferred.  In their place, Sr. Herminia Cosico and Sr. Sharon Brannen have been assigned here.  Sr. Herminia is from the Philippines.  She is the first in her family to enter the convent.  Afterwards, her two other sisters followed and entered the same religious community and a brother also became a priest.  She studied nursing in England and returned to serve in the Philippines.  In 1995, she studied at UCSF’s Hospital Chaplaincy program.  Afterwards, she served at Holy Name parish.  She will take over Sr. Rita’s responsibility and serve as the RCIA (Rite of
Christian Initiation of Adults) and Children’s baptism coordinator. 

Sr. Sharon is a native of Boston.  She entered the Canossian community in 1990.  She has a degree in music, theology and Administration.  She has been a missionary in Chihuahua, Mexico, and helped build a community center there.  The missionary center there provides education for the youth, work for women and care for the sick.  Although her responsibilities will not be here at the parish, she is currently interviewing for a position at one of our local universities, but she will nonetheless be part of our community. 

Sr. Sharon is currently here in the summer, but along with Sr. Herminia, they will not be officially assigned here until September 1st.  Their community in the U.S. gathers every year for a retreat in July at Albuquerque, NM.  So we bid Sr. Elizabeth godspeed in her future assignment and we welcome to our community, Sr. Herminia and Sr. Sharon.  “Mi casa es su casa.” 

Fr. Dan
: )


News Around the Parish


Farewell Celebration for Sr. Rita – The thanksgiving celebration last Sunday for Sr. Rita’s retirement was very nice.  In attendance were not only parishioners of St. Brendan and her family members, but also parishioners from Holy Name and St. Cecilia Churches where she had ministered before.  At both the 9:30 and 11:30am masses, she shared about how much she enjoyed ministering here among us.  Even though she had been a principal in a prestigious Catholic school in Hong Kong of 1,300 students, she said, it could not compare with what she found here.  She said, teaching the faith to adult inquirers “re-evangelized” her and gave her a deeper appreciation for the gift of faith.  For those of you who were away and could not be there, she too wanted you to know of her gratitude and privilege for the opportunity to serve here.  On Thursday, June 28, she will return to Hong Kong.  Already, several families who will be travelling there this Summer said they‘d be going to visit her.  Together as a community, we prayed for her and wished her God’s blessing as she continues the next chapter of her life of service to the Lord.

Missionary Speaker, Fr. Lee Havey – After preaching at all our Sunday masses last week, Fr. Lee stayed an extra day and got to see more of our fair city in perfect weather.  As I showed him around, I learned that prior to becoming a Passionist Order priest, he had worked in an interesting business sector.  His office was the liaison between foreign governments, US corporations and interacted with State Department, White House, Think Tanks, Defense Department, Humanitarian organizations to promote trade and cooperation with Southeast Asian Nations.  After High School, he thought about becoming an attorney.  However, in College, he discovered that that was the last thing he wanted to be.  So he graduated with a degree in English.  Not sure what he wanted to do still, he took a year off to travel around the world.  He began in New York, and after a year, returned back to New York.  The Australian Aborigines, he said, had a term called the walkabout, in order to discover yourself.  And this “little” walkabout he did around the world, landed him in the perfect position as the liaison between foreign governments, US corporations and our own government.  He describes that it is like diplomatic work.  He also could not see himself doing this for the rest of his life, as it was high stress work.  In his travels, however, he had met a priest in Rome, Msgr. Charles Elmer, who saw something in him and asked him to consider the priesthood.  Nothing happened until 8 years later.  Then, when he shared his decision to become a priest with his family and friends, they all said they saw it coming.  He shared that the journey towards priesthood was not a sudden decision he had made, but one that was gradual and that was a part of his life for many years.  He was surprised himself, as he thought he would marry one day and settle and live somewhere with his wife in Asia.  However, the Lord had other plans.  He became a Passionist priest in 2004.  He has done 2 years of retreat work, 3 years as a parish priest, and the last couple of years, he has been an itinerant preacher, offering missions to different parishes around the U.S.  I inquired about his availability to do a parish mission for us during Lent, and he said that he is booked until 2015.  So he is a much sought after speaker.  We certainly wish him well and thank him for saying “Yes” to God.  Hopefully we will still be able to have him come out and do a parish mission for us someday soon.

Fr. Dan