GOOD FRIDAY COLLECTION FOR HOLY PLACES

Good Friday will be the day on which the annual collection for the support of sacred places in the Holy Land will be collected. Thank you all for your continued generosity in ensuring the sacred sites which hold the memory of the Incarnation and the early Church throughout the Holy Land are maintained for the prosperity of all and for future generations to appreciate as we have.

PROJECT COMPASSION PASSION SUNDAY

PASSION (Palm) SUNDAY – Week 6 Australian Indigenous
1 April

Liturgy of the Palms: Mk 11:1-10 OR Jn 12:12-16
Liturgy of the Passion: Mk 14:1-15:47 OR Mk 15:1-39

As the Lenten season approaches its end, the Gospel readings relate the events leading to Jesus’ suffering and death – the culmination of the work he was born to do – and we look towards the great and glorious Resurrection of Christ.
During the past five weeks we have heard and reflected upon stories from Timor Leste, the Thai-Burma Border, Zimbabwe, the Philippines and Peru. These are stories of people living in poverty and injustice, lacking access to basic services and often denied the opportunity to exercise the rights that we all have as human persons.
In Australia, our Indigenous sisters and brothers also face many similar struggles. In a prosperous country where most of us claim adequate nutrition and health care as a fundamental right, Aboriginal Australians in remote communities have shortened life-spans because of high rates of diet-related illness – particularly diabetes.
The Project Compassion story this week comes from such a community, near Broome in Western Australia. With its local partners, Caritas Australia is supporting a community-owned program which promotes and educates for health care and healthy living.
Caritas Australia works for justice – for the kind of world that God desires.
Caritas works in partnership – building ‘right relationships’ between all of God’s people.
In justice and right relationships lies the path to peace.
If we want peace, we must work for justice.
The glorious celebration of new life is almost upon us. It brings hope for change and renewal for all of us.

We can show our solidarity with communities living in poverty, our compassion to those struggling against discrimination and stigma and our preparedness to challenge injustice. As Pope Benedict XVI said: “Our hearts cannot be at peace as long as we see our brothers and sisters suffering”.

If we want peace, we must work for justice.


Click on the image below to go to the Caritas website.

CLICK THE POSTER FOR PROJECT COMPASSION WEBSITE

PROJECT COMPASSION WEEK 5

FIFTH SUNDAY OF LENT – Week 5 Peru
25 March

John 12: 20-33

In this week’s Gospel story, Jesus speaks of his approaching death. The gospel focuses sharply on his great sacrifice – not merely on the outcome. We are reminded that, before His glorious Resurrection, He had to suffer anguish and death. Jesus uses the powerful image of the grain of wheat, which produces nothing unless it is dropped into the ground, where it dies. He challenges us to “lose” our lives in order to preserve them, by “dying to self” – a confronting idea.
This week’s Project Compassion story comes from Peru. Communities living on the outskirts of Lima have struggled with poverty, poor sanitation and lack of access to basic services. All of this has led to illness and high levels of stress. Violence in the home is also a common outcome.
With its local partners, Caritas continues to work alongside these communities; together they are improving access to health care and better sanitation, establishing nutrition programs and supporting families in caring for their children. In working for justice, they are healing relationships and peace is being restored. People’s lives are being transformed.
During Lent we too can become a new and better version of ourselves. Perhaps we can make our own small sacrifices by becoming partners in this work not only to help those who are in need but so as to be transformed as we shift our focus from “self” to “other”.

 

We can show our solidarity with communities living in poverty, our compassion to those struggling against discrimination and stigma and our preparedness to challenge injustice. As Pope Benedict XVI said: “Our hearts cannot be at peace as long as we see our brothers and sisters suffering”.

If we want peace, we must work for justice.


Click on the image below to go to the Caritas website.

CLICK THE POSTER FOR PROJECT COMPASSION WEBSITE

STEWARDSHIP……A WAY OF LIFE

CATHOLIC STEWARDSHIP FROM SUNDAYS READING

It yields a rich harvest


In today’s Gospel, Jesus hones in on the sacrificial element of Christian living. He explains that a grain of wheat must fall to the ground and die in order to bear great fruit – to become the wheat it was meant to be. Then, Christ makes some startling remarks. He says, “whoever loves His life loses it, and whoever hates his life in this world will preserve it for eternal life.”

That is not to say that we are to hate life here and now and solely focus on the afterlife. After all, god has placed us here, so He clearly sees fit for us to live an earthly life. He has clearly not called us to heaven quite yet. But what Christ’s words communicate to us is a sobering reality still. We are not to be living for ourselves and the things of this world. Rather, we were created to know, love and serve the Lord. We were created to go beyond ourselves and selflessly give in love and service to others. When we do so, we, like the wheat that gives of itself in “death” will bear great fruit.

God has given us innumerable gifts with which we can do so. It is our job to reflect on those many gifts and determine how He is calling each one of us to use them for His greater glory.

Copyright © 2011 www.TheCatholicSteward.com

PROJECT COMPASSION WEEK 3

FOURTH SUNDAY OF LENT – Week 4 Philippines
18 March

John 3: 14-21“God so loved the world that he gave his only Son…”
In this week’s Gospel reading, Jesus is described as the greatest gift of love that God gave to us. He is the “light come into the world”, and faith in him means everlasting life. The choice is ours – to live in that light or in the darkness.

This week’s Project Compassion story comes from the Philippines. Conflict, greed and exclusion have destroyed the peace and security of many indigenous communities, and have forced them into isolation and poverty.
Programs supported by Caritas Australia have opened up new opportunities for these indigenous people – supporting them as they protect their traditional lands, address the humanitarian crisis and engage with other groups in the community to contribute to the process of peace-building.
We are being called to lend our support to this work. When we respond with compassion, we enter into a partnership with Caritas Australia to help build the just and compassionate world that God desires. Perhaps the one who works for justice, in order to have peace, is doing as the gospel today is saying: “…whoever does what is true comes to the light in order that the light may show that what he, or she, did was in obedience to God”

If we want peace, we must work for justice.

Click on the image below to go to the Caritas website.

CLICK THE POSTER FOR PROJECT COMPASSION WEBSITE

PROJECT COMPASSION WEEK 3

THIRD SUNDAY OF LENT – Week 3 Zimbabwe
11 March

John 2: 13-25

In today’s Gospel we hear of Jesus’ forceful reaction to the abuse of the temple – his Father’s house – by the traders and moneychangers. Jesus’ dramatic cleansing of the temple is the sign of God’s action in the world. The wrong he observed moved Him to action.

This week’s Project Compassion story comes from Zimbabwe, where because of prolonged conflict and drought, thousands of people remain displaced and peace is fragile. With the additional burden of HIV-related illness, and the stigma that accompanies it, Colletta and her family, like many others, were reduced to extreme poverty.

In partnership with Caritas Australia, the local church is working to improve life for those who struggle under these conditions. Health care, sanitation, agricultural improvement and peace-building programs are having their effects.  The community is being healed as poverty, illness and trauma are gradually being driven out.

Although we do not have the same knowledge of the human heart or the authority to act that Jesus had, we can, nevertheless, detect injustice and, in righteous indignation, as Jesus did, take forceful action against it.

We can show our solidarity with communities living in poverty, our compassion to those struggling against discrimination and stigma and our preparedness to challenge injustice. As Pope Benedict XVI said: “Our hearts cannot be at peace as long as we see our brothers and sisters suffering”.

If we want peace, we must work for justice.


Click on the image below to go to the Caritas website.

CLICK THE POSTER FOR PROJECT COMPASSION WEBSITE

WORKING BEE

Working bees around St Anne’s Church resume on Saturday 4 February 2012 starting at 9 til 12.00. Our work will concentrate on the grounds around St Anne’s Church and the Parish Centre. Please bring weeding gear, wheelbarrows, shovels, whipper snipers, etc. All welcome, help make St Anne’s look like the Garden of Eden.

WORKING BEE

Working bees around St Anne’s Church resume on Saturday 4 February 2012 starting at 9 til 12.00. Our work will concentrate on the grounds around St Anne’s Church and the Parish Centre. Please bring weeding gear, wheelbarrows, shovels, whipper snipers, etc. All welcome, help make St Anne’s look like the Garden of Eden.

WORKING BEE

Working bees around St Anne’s Church resume on Saturday 4 February 2012 starting at 9 til 12.00. Our work will concentrate on the grounds around St Anne’s Church and the Parish Centre. Please bring weeding gear, wheelbarrows, shovels, whipper snipers, etc. All welcome, help make St Anne’s look like the Garden of Eden.

HELP PLEASE

It is that time of year again where we will be sorting the new Thanksgiving envelopes.
We will be sorting the new envelopes on Wednesday 25 January after morning Mass.
If you are available to help, please meet at the Parish Centre.

VALE FR TOM MCCARTHY

Fr Tom entered eternal life last week aged 90 years after being a priest for 64 years, even after retiring in 2006, he ministered in a local nursing home. He served in the parishes of East Brighton, Elsternwick, Mansfield, Clifton Hill, Glen Iris, Ascot Vale and then as parish priest of Geelong North, Macleod and Balwyn until 2006. As he began his studies for the priesthood in 1940, his local priest described Tom as “a young man of excellent, manly character, solid piety, as well as a thorough gentleman in his manner.”

SING-A-LONG

Goonawarra Nursing Home, Sunbury
Friday 2 December 2.30—3.15pm
Please come along and help entertain the residents.

THANK YOU

The collection taken for the Catholic Deaf received $909.60, an amazing effort yet again.
The Bible Society of Australia were also grateful for your generosity as they received $1732.
Your prayers and generosity are much appreciated by those in need.

MORNING TEA

Sunbury West will be hosting morning tea next Sunday 4 December after the 8.30am Mass at St Anne’s Church. Please feel  free to bring a  plate and join  us for  a cuppa and a chat.

ST VINCENT DE PAUL

The Vinnies Christmas appeal starts this Sunday 1 December. This Christmas, Vinnies will spend time helping over half a million people and you can help too. By supporting Vinnies with a donation to the Christmas Appeal, you’ll be helping to provide services which make a real difference to people’s lives: presents for children, basics like food and clothing, practical support for struggling families and emotional support for those who have no-one to turn to. And isn’t that something everyone wants?
Please, when you’re thinking about the gifts you plan to give this Christmas, think about a gift to the Vinnies Christmas Appeal and help someone change their life. Envelopes will be available at both churches for people wanting to donate via credit card or direct debit. These can be returned this week or next week.

PLEASE HELP

We desperately need more Parish Posties to help deliver the Parish Newsletters.
We send out the Newsletter only 4 times per year and need  people  who  can  deliver them  to all the families in your local neighbourhood.
It will also help keep you fit.
Please contact the Parish office on 9744 1060 if you can help.