Friday, May 24, 2013

Reflections of our Parochial Vicar


Aspects of Discipleship & Trinity

We celebrate this weekend our Trinity Godhead is of the same substance and that each person of the Trinity, which we celebrate on this Trinity Sunday, is important in our lives.  We have been chosen for eternal life out of the Father’s love for us, and so can address God the Father as “Our Father” in the Our Father Prayer said at every Mass.  Christ the Son spends a good deal of time in the gospels letting us know that the spirit that is within Him is the Spirit of the Father, the love that is within him is the love of the Father. Jesus became Man so as to allow us to become acquainted with the Triune God whose love for us can only be described as “radical.”

 

After giving us the Ten Commandments, the Beatitudes and wonderful example, Jesus went so far as to give His very life for ours! When Jesus rose from the dead, we were given the choice to choose life with God or death in choosing the ways of the world as our highest values. We were invited to eternal life with God as adopted sons and daughters. At Pentecost we celebrated being filled with the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, allowing us to choose right from wrong, allowing us to trust, allowing us to share love and compassion and become forgiving ourselves. How wonderful!!

 

 I compose this article reflecting that my time here as God’s disciple and priest has been more than I could ever have expected.  I have enjoyed the people – all ages, more than I can possibly communicate. I have felt  privileged with those I have celebrated the sacrament of Baptism with; I have also had the privilege of presiding at wonderful liturgies, serving as confessor; anointing of the sick; companioning families through the funeral processes; counseling; spiritual direction and weddings have been life-giving as the excitement of the bride and groom and families I find infectious.  I hope I have helped build a bridge between school and parish life for our school children and de-mystified what goes on in God’s tremendous love for us and in the actions  of a priest.  There are many other ways I have been called to serve  but in all have truly felt the presence of  God. Whatever gifts I have are and have been shared gifts from God. I have also found the people of the parish most charitable even when we differ on some points, because we agree in our belief of our Triune God working in our lives.


I have found a family that I love here in the parishioners, as if you were all related by birth. I will always hold you in my heart as I do my love for God. Because we are family, though soon to have a minor distance, it does not end my love and affection for you all. It simply means that we might not see each other as often. You all are always welcome wherever I am called to minister.  I believe we also have this deepening sense of being loved by God, if we search for spiritual awareness in our lives. There is no geography or circumstance that could change this.  God truly exists in and for us!

 

  Fr. Mike

 

Wednesday, May 22, 2013


    Making New Beginnings – Last Sunday we celebrated Jesus’ Ascension.  With Jesus’ departure, the Apostles were commissioned to continue His work.  So this marked a new beginning for the Apostles as they set off on their own.  Fortunately, Jesus didn’t abandon them but left them His Spirit to guide them, to encourage and to strengthen them in their work.  That’s what we celebrate today, the feast of Pentecost, the coming of the Holy Spirit upon the Apostles and the birth of the Church.  As we celebrate Spring, it is a celebration of new life and new possibilities, the old giving way to the new.  For many of our 8th graders who have been here at St. Brendan School since Kindergarten, it is the ending of one chapter of life, but a beginning of another.  In less than 2 weeks, they will be graduating on Friday, May 31. 

   Today, they celebrate with the parish at the 8am mass, to
    thank you for all the financial and spiritual support you’ve
    given them over the years and to ask for your ongoing
    prayers. It’s very appropriate that their parish graduation
    mass falls on the feast of Pentecost, because just as the
   Apostles were fearful of what to do, as Jesus left their
   side, but guided by the  Holy Spirit they were able to
   do great things and the Church quickly grew, in spite
   of persecution and hardships. So relying on the Holy
   Spirit, our young men and women can also achieve
   and do great things.  Please keep them in your prayers,
   as they begin an exciting and new chapter in life. 
 
    Congratulations, 8th graders!  Our prayers go with you…

    Fr. Mike’s Graduation – Speaking of new beginnings,
    most of you have already heard that Fr. Mike Quinn will
   also be graduating from St. Brendan and going to
    bigger and better things.  Although he has been
   ordained a priest for only 4 years, but he has
    maturity and life experience.  With the
   announcement of Fr. Tom Parenti’s retirement
   at Star of the Sea in Sausalito, the Archbishop has
   asked Fr. Mike to become the Pastor there, beginning
   on July 1.  So we congratulate him and of course,
   pray for him that God may bless him, so that he
   may achieve great things for God there in Sausalito. 
   A farewell celebration will be held for him on Sunday,
   June 23 following the 9:30am mass.

    Welcome New Parishioners – We’re blessed to be able
    to welcome new parishioners to St. Brendan this Sunday
    at the 9:30am mass.  Twice a year, one before
    Thanksgiving and one near the feast of our patron saint,
    St. Brendan (May 16), we welcome new Catholics to our
    community.  I want to thank the Welcome Committee
   chaired by Rebecca Kassekert and Paula Haskell-
   Miraglia for planning and organizing this event. 
   To our newest members, a hearty warm welcome to
   you all!  You get first “dibs” on the coffee and pastries
   this Sunday. 

   Fr. Dan

 

 

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Reflections of our Parochial Vicar


Life is Dynamic and Changing – Celebrate the Ascension

 

This Sunday we celebrate the Ascension of Christ.  As believers in the Death and Resurrection of Christ, we recognize this as our time to respond in faith. If I might simplify things a bit, biblically,  up to this point we have been given the Promise of sharing eternity with God both as the Old Testament unfolds and the New Testament, the life of Jesus Christ and his Apostles is recorded in Sacred Scripture. At his point in the unfolding of the Gospel story of Jesus we have been students , so to speak, urged to develop a sense of trust, faith and a sense of being loved – just as we love others.
 
Because of the Ascension, Jesus entrusts the building of his church to the people of God for all time and for all ages, not limiting his presence to one time in history or one place in the world. Jesus promised in last week’s gospel message that God the Father would glorify all who choose to believe in Christ.  That includes us!!!

 Throughout the ages, the true Church, which is the people, have tried to understand and educate others as to their God. The True Church is not comprised of buildings or government- like entities, but rather the body of believers acting as one. We are called to be part of this effort. It definitely is not a passive activity. We are called to action! Throughout history, because the Church is comprised of men and women like you and me, there have been different emphases, different liturgies, some mistakes –but not in core matters. The important part is to have our hearts pointed towards God. Parents at Baptism are asked to educate their children in the ways of faith, by word and example.  The Ascension is one Feast where we might ask ourselves if we have been true to Christ’s trust in us. When Jesus left the world, he did not leave us, only His physical Body did. My favorite book on the Easter Season is The Wellspring of Worship , authored by Jean Corbon. A selection follows:

  But in fact the Ascension is a decisive turning point.  It does indeed mark the end of something that is not simply to be cast aside: the end of relationship to Jesus that is still wholly external. Above all, however, it marks the beginning of an entirely new relationship of faith and of a new time: the liturgy of the last times.

“… In his Ascension , then , Christ did not disappear; on the contrary, he began to appear and to come… If , however , we reduce this “ascent” to a particular moment in our mortal jistory, we simply forget that beginning from the hour of His Cross and Resurrection Jesus and the human race are henceforth one.  He became a Son of Man in order that we might become children of God. The Ascension is progressive

“ until we all… form the perfect Man fully mature with the fullness of Christ Himself” (Eph 4:13). The movement of the Ascension will be complete only when all the members of the Body have been drawn to the Father and brought to life by His

Spirit… It is the never-new “moment of His coming.”

 

         Are we living and celebrating our participation in this
         moment and mystery?

     Fr. Mike

 

Monday, May 6, 2013

Pastor's Corner

St. Brendan Mother’s Club Auction – The Mother’s Club Auction was held last Saturday at St. Mary’s Cathedral, courtesy of Msgr. John Talesfore, Rector of the Cathedral.  The hall spaces were beautifully decorated with a touch of Paris.  The Silent Auction was held in a side hall while the main hall, hosted the fancy dinner catered by Knight’s Catering whose owners are also St. Brendan’s parishioners, Adrian and Maureen Kelly.  The main dining hall was decorated like the city of lights.  The ambiance was exquisite as guests were dazzled by the lighting effects provided by one of our parents, John and Megan Woods.  Many people made this event possible, especially the donors who provided the items for auction.  There were over 35 items for the Live Auction and they included a keep-sake photo collage of each class, special dinners, room makeover, vacations at special destinations, a special pew and parking for Graduation, a 49er Tailgate party, and even a cruise around the Bay on a SFFD Fireboat.  Msgr. John Talesfore even made a generous $500 contribution to the school, if he was allowed to celebrate the next Christmas eve mass here at St. Brendan.  He is always welcome, whether he makes a contribution or not, but don’t tell him that. 

It was a wonderful evening with music, friendship, dancing and laughter.  Special thanks go to the Auction chairs, Lisa Ikeda, Karen Pierotti, Maureen Simpson and to Kevin Morrison, the coordinator from the Men’s Club.  To all who supported them and gave generously for this School’s fundraiser, a great big THANK YOU!!!

Praying for a Deeper Conversion – I would like to enlist you to join me in praying for a deeper conversion in our parish, in our Archdiocese and throughout the world.  As part of the Year of Faith (YOF), Pope Emeritus Benedict called us to have a deeper appreciation for the gift of our faith.  But there are many whose faiths have turned lukewarm or cold.  I think we all know family members or friends who were baptized Catholics but are no longer practicing the faith, or that would only do so on Christmas and Easter.  Mother Mary, in each of her many apparitions throughout the centuries, had one consistent message.  She called on her children to return back to God and she encouraged us to pray and fast for a deeper conversion, beginning with ourselves, and then for others.  The rosary is a special prayer she gave us, so we can join her in that endeavor, to pray for each other.  I’ve returned to the practice of praying the rosary, since October of 2012, at the beginning of the Year of Faith.  The Lord put in my heart a special desire to pray for you, the people of this parish and I invite you to join me to pray, in particular, for those who have fallen away from their faith, the teens at Juvenile Hall, the sick at home or at Laguna Honda Hospital.  Prayer, said a cloistered nun, is the most effective and efficient way of getting things done.  So pray with me, for a deeper conversion of our students, their parents, and for each other.  And if you are able to join me in a pilgrimage to Medjugorje, for these or for your personal intentions, visit www.trinitypilgrimage.com for more information.  Their contact person is Jim Benzow at 408-443-3912.  Or you can also contact our parishioner, who is coordinating this locally, Mrs. Zdenka Bodisco at zbodisco@sbcglobal.net or at 415-681-4100.  The pilgrimage will be from Sep 26 – Oct 5, 2013, departing from San Francisco, and it includes round trip air and ground transportation, 7 nights in Medjugorje, breakfast and early dinner daily, all taxes and tips included.  The cost is $2,650 per person. 

Peace,
Fr. Dan