First Sunday of Advent, Make your own Wreath, and Feast of Saint Nicholas

Saturday, November 30, 2013

How was your Thanksgiving weekend?  Are you wondering what to do, now that the food hangover has worn off?
Why not start the season of Advent off right, by coming to our parish Advent Wreath Program tomorrow!
This craft will be held on Sunday, December 2nd in the Saint Agnes School Hall, following the 9:00 and 10:30 am Sunday Masses.
Join us!

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Finally, don't forget that this Friday(Dec. 6) is the Feast of Saint Nick!  Taking time to learn about Saint Nicholas can be a wonderful way to help your children make the connection between Jesus' birthday, opening our hearts to Christ, giving gifts, and sharing
sacrificially with those around us.  You can read Saint Nick's bio here.

You can also TAKE your kids to a Saint Nicholas day party at the Lexington parishes of Sacred Heart / Saint Brigid on Saturday morning.  See details below, and be sure to RSVP by December 5th!

Holy Families of Faith of the Lexington Catholic Community invites all families with children ages 6 and under to a celebration in honor of St. Nicholas!

The celebration is Saturday, December 7th, from 9:30-11:30 am at Sacred Heart Parish Center (21 Follen Rd., Lexington). We will have games, activities, stories and songs, treats, and perhaps a visit from the good bishop himself!

RSVP to stnicklexington@gmail.com by December 5th.  Siblings and Grandparents welcome! A suggested donation of $5/child ($15 family cap) is appreciated.  Let’s be glad and full of cheer, good St. Nicholas will soon be here!

Catholic Reading Wednesday and Thanksgiving Mass

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Did you ever stop to think what a wealthy country (even region of our country) you are blessed to live in?
Of the outpouring of community, health, rich food, social stability, and access to education that we have?
We all have troubles and crosses in daily life. We also enjoy innumerable blessings.

Could we find the strength to offer God a "sacrifice of praise" even if we had NONE of these blessings,
as many Catholics around the world do each day?

Join our Parish Community tonight at
7:00 pm for the Thanksgiving Eve Mass

Let's rejoice and THANK HIM!
And let's also set our hearts and our praise on the Lord, putting all things in the proper order,
to draw close to Him and learn how we should use these blessings as He wills.
Love and generosity always require sacrifice if they are to be truly good and enjoyed, having the power to change hearts and lives.
May His abundant blessings never fall on infertile ground.

"The rich and the poor have this in common: the Lord is the maker of them all."
(Proverbs 22:2)
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With many thanks to our awesome curator, Karen Celano, you can delve into a faith-related news article each Wednesday! Karen writes:

Thanksgiving Day is coming! In between your turkey and pumpkin pie, I invite you to take a moment to think about the historical and theological aspects of this national tradition, which has its roots in English Christianity but which is very different from what the Pilgrims of our national myth would have conceived.

In her article explaining the history of Thanksgiving, Eve LaPlante explains that the Calvinist ("Pilgrim") tradition of declaring days of thanksgiving emerged, in part, as a reactionary response to the Catholic tradition of a set calendar of feasts and fasts. Calvinists felt that the Catholic calendar, with its pre-established "holidays" or holy days, encouraged spiritual laziness and a lack of attentiveness to God's immediate presence in the world. Thus, to have Thanksgiving on a set and established day each year would, actually, be quite upsetting to the very anti-ritualistic Pilgrims, who saw their thanksgivings as spontaneous responses to what they perceived as acts of God on their behalf.

Our tradition of celebrating Thanksgiving on a fixed date every year began with Abraham Lincoln, who sought to cheer up a war-torn nation while also providing a vision of hope that the country could be reunited (as, supposedly, the Indians and the Pilgrims were). It has been argued that Lincoln's presidency inaugurated a new era in American "civil religion" (in other words, America's understanding of itself and its institutions in theological and religious terms), and Lincoln certainly was aware of the power of ritual, symbol, and myth to unite a culture and a people. What is also remarkable about Lincoln's proclamation is that it unites the concepts of thanksgiving and repentance: "while offering up the ascriptions justly due to [God] for such singular deliverances and blessings," he declares, Americans should also express "humble penitence for our national perverseness and disobedience." This Thanksgiving, perhaps we should follow Lincoln's example, and unite our prayers of gratitude to prayers of repentance for our own sins and the sins of the world.

Catholics, of course, have long understood the importance of ritual, symbol and shared myth in creating unity, and they have also long understood the relationship between repentance and thanksgiving. For Catholics, every Mass we attend is a Thanksgiving feast, as the word "Eucharist" comes from the Greek for thanksgiving. Even more literally, the word eucharistia in Greek means good gift of grace. In her reflection on the relationship between the Mass and Thanksgiving, Marina McCoy speaks about the Mass as a cyclical giving of gifts: God gives to us, we return to God, God bestows upon us even more. The catch, however, is that we must be willing to give back to God what He gives to us - and to give it back "wholly and without reserve." Giving back to God can be very difficult and distressing, and it can even cause grief and despair - think of Abraham's sorrow when asked to sacrifice Isaac - but through Scripture and the Eucharist we know that in giving back to God we receive from God in abundance again, even if we can't immediately see how.

The idea of the Eucharist as a cycle of gift-giving puts me in mind of Jesus' parable of the talents, in which the Master bestows gold on his servants, praises them when they invest it wisely, and chastises them when they hide it in fear. Often I feel that in our narcissistic culture we interpret this parable as meaning that we should not be shy but rather let our "talents" shine forth. But I think there's actually a much deeper meaning here. If the gift of gold represents a blessing from God, then the Master is praising those who are willing to risk the gift, to labor and strive with the gift, and perhaps even to suffer for the sake of the gift. The Master condemns the one who clings to the gift, who is not willing to put it to use for fear of losing it. The message is that each of God's blessings - each of His gifts - is also a responsibility and a challenge, and when we give thanks to God for all that He has blessed us with, we must also be willing to return those blessings to God - we must be willing to give up the gifts if God asks us, and we must be willing to suffer and toil with and for the gifts He has given us.

The person who modeled this dynamic best was, of course, Christ Himself. The irony of the Eucharist is that it is an act of thanksgiving in the midst of great suffering: Christ is unjustly murdered, but His death becomes a thanksgiving gift to God for the sake of those who murdered Him. Alexander Schmemann, a Russian Orthodox priest and theologian who spent his life studying the Eucharist, understood the way in which great suffering can be a vessel to great joy through the Eucharist, and he lived out this understanding in his own life. Though he was dying of cancer, during the last liturgy he celebrated (which providentially happened to be on Thanksgiving Day), he delivered this humble and touching prayer of thanks, which expresses gratitude to God for suffering, which, he says, purifies us and turns our minds towards the 'one thing needed': the Kingdom of God. As we give thanks to God this year, let's also keep in mind those who are suffering, and let's try to pray for the grace to turn our own sorrows into "good gifts of grace": Eucharistic and thanksgiving gifts to God.

Support Fidelity House, Playgroup Activity, Saint Nick on Saturday!

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Wondering where to eat out tonight?  Each Tuesday in November, you can help support Fidelity House by dining at Not Your Average Joe's (Arlington location is within walking distance of church).  Click and print the coupon below and bring it to your dinner.  Enjoy!

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Today at playgroup we had our fourth lesson of the winter, talking about Advent as a season of penance and preparation!  Using playdough and (nearly-appropriately) colored birthday candles, the children made their own small Advent Wreaths to remind themselves to get their hearts "cleaned up" and ready to welcome the infant Jesus.  Click and print the handout below, which also goes along with the Advent Wreath Workshop this coming Sunday.  Enjoy working on the Bible Verse and coloring page with your children this week.  Hope to see you next Tuesday!

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Finally, don't forget that next Friday is the Feast of Saint Nick!  Taking time to learn about Saint Nicholas can be a wonderful way to help your children make the connection between Jesus' birthday, opening our hearts to Christ, giving gifts, and sharing sacrificially with those around us.  You can read Saint Nick's bio here.

You can also TAKE your kids to a Saint Nicholas day party at the Lexington parishes of Sacred Heart / Saint Brigid on Saturday morning.  See details below, and be sure to RSVP by December 5th!

Holy Families of Faith of the Lexington Catholic Community invites all families with children ages 6 and under to a celebration in honor of St. Nicholas!

The celebration is Saturday, December 7th, from 9:30-11:30 am at Sacred Heart Parish Center (21 Follen Rd., Lexington). We will have games, activities, stories and songs, treats, and perhaps a visit from the good bishop himself!

RSVP to stnicklexington@gmail.com by December 5th.  Siblings and Grandparents welcome! A suggested donation of $5/child ($15 family cap) is appreciated.  Let’s be glad and full of cheer, good St. Nicholas will soon be here!

Weekly Digest

Monday, November 25, 2013

Welcome everyone!
This week at the parish:
  • Tuesday - Saint Agnes Playgroup (10:30 am), Fatima Apostolate (7 pm), Benefit Fidelity House at NYAJ
  • Wednesday - Mass of Thanksgiving (7 pm)
  • Thursday - Happy Thanksgiving - safe travels everyone!
  • Sunday - Annual Advent Wreath Workshop (following 9:00 and 10:30 am Masses)
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We are now moving into "Winter Playgroup" mode, when Fidelity House hosts our playgroup within their building.  We owe them our thanks!  We also are grateful to Father Flatley for helping us to get a small curriculum going this year.  Bring your thinking caps and get ready to pay attention to some short activities about Jesus.

Thus, Tuesday playgroup will take place at Fidelity House, right near church: 25 Medford Street, from 10:30 am-12:30 pm.
  • Please remember some behavior guidelines: No running out of the playroom, no kids in the toy closet, respect physical limits, use a time-out chair, please discipline your own children promptly, and be considerate of others!
  • Fidelity House is being very generous by letting us use this space. Please consider a donation to help with their costs. Minimum suggested donation is $1 per person in attendance.
  • Please no food.... drinks in spill proof containers are OK. 
Parking is on the street around Fidelity House. Check the street signs for the rules. Once you walk in the front door, go up the stairs, past the front desk, and to the back of the building. There is a door from the room to an outdoor courtyard, so bring your kids' coats too. We will also teach a brief lesson for the kids.

**Unless otherwise noted due to warm weather, future winter playgroups will take place at Fidelity House, 25 Medford St., Arlington.  In case of unusually warm and sunny weather, please check your email or the blog page before you leave for playgroup.  We may take advantage of the nice day and meet at a park.**


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Are you making plans for Thanksgiving weekend?  Wondering what to do once the food hangover has worn off?  Why not start the season of Advent off right, by coming to our parish Advent Wreath Program!  This craft will be held next Sunday, December 2nd in the Saint Agnes School Hall, following the 9:00 and 10:30 am Sunday Masses.  Join us!

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Help Benefit Fidelity House by enjoying a night out at Not Your Average Joe's
Each Tuesday in November, you can help support Fidelity House by dining at Not Your Average Joe's (Arlington location is within walking distance of church).  Click and print the coupon below and bring it to your dinner.  Enjoy!

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The Family Liturgy Group is looking for “Advent Families”
During Advent, the 9:00 am Family Mass begins with a Parish family doing a brief reading and lighting the Advent wreath for that week. This is a wonderful opportunity for the whole family to be able to participate in the liturgy together. If your family would be interested, please contact Tricia Sheehan at pmksheehan [at] gmail.com or 781-648-7709. 

In addition, the Family Liturgy Group would like to welcome new members who would be willing to work with the children of the Parish once a month, preparing them to read at the 9:00 am Family Mass. For more information, please contact Tricia Sheehan.

First Sunday of Advent: Advent Wreath Workshop

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Are you making plans for Thanksgiving weekend?  Wondering what to do once the food hangover has worn off?
Why not start the season of Advent off right, by coming to our parish Advent Wreath Program!
This craft will be held next Sunday, December 2nd in the Saint Agnes School Hall, following the 9:00 and 10:30 am Sunday Masses.
Join us!

Catholic Reading Wednesday and Catechesis Tonight

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

With many thanks to our awesome curator, Karen Celano, you can delve into a faith-related news article each Wednesday! Karen writes:

Typhoon Haiyan, which ravaged the Philippines from November 3-11, has left in its wake more than 4,000 dead souls in a nation which is 80% Catholic. The Wall Street Journal writes that the cathedral in the town of Palo has been converted into a morgue, as Catholics in Tacloban followed Fr. Robert Reyes in a procession around their devastated town to declare that they will overcome this tragedy. National Catholic Reporter speaks of Catholic religious communities in the Philippines who are both struggling to repair their own monasteries and convents while at the same time offering assistance to the people around them. One sister, Sr. Sandra Clemente, spoke of the concern people had for her wellbeing, as well as their own "creativity and resourcefulness": "Because they had no water," she said, "I saw people had taken the fire hydrant seal apart and managed to get the water running so they could wash, bathe, and drink there." NPR reports that Filipinos are poignantly turning to their faith, uniting their sufferings to Christ's Passion, using their loss as an opportunity to grow in dependence on God, and showing gratitude for the places and people who have survived.


Meanwhile, Catholics around the world are uniting to help their Filipino brothers and sisters. A Michigan church raised money to construct a storm shelter that saved a village, and bishops around the U.S. have called on their parishes to collect donations for aid. Unfortunately, the Christian Science Monitor writes that American support for the relief effort is far less than that for past natural disasters, and suggests that the news about the "Obamacare" rollout eclipsed news about the typhoon.


This week, consider following the example of Flipino Catholics and offering up any difficult or challenging situations in your own life on behalf of our suffering family in the Philippines. Also, if you haven't already, please consider donating to Catholic Relief Services to aid the 11.8 million people affected by this storm.


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Don't forget to join us tonight at 7:00 pm
for our third installment of the Father Barron Catholicism Series!

Support Fidelity House, Playgroup Activity, Catechesis on Wednesday

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Wondering where to eat out tonight?  Each Tuesday in November, you can help support Fidelity House by dining at Not Your Average Joe's (Arlington location is within walking distance of church).  Click and print the coupon below and bring it to your dinner.  Enjoy!

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Today at playgroup we had our third lesson of the winter, beginning to understand that God made each of us, and we can see that He made us each uniquely and with intention!  Click and print the image below.  Enjoy working on the Bible Verse and coloring page with your children this week.  Hope to see you next Tuesday!
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Don't forget to join us on Wednesday night at 7:00 pm
for our third installment of the Father Barron Catholicism Series!

Weekly Digest

Monday, November 18, 2013

Welcome everyone!
This week at the parish:
  • Monday - Sodality of Our Lady (7 pm)
  • Tuesday - Saint Agnes Playgroup (10:30 am), Choir Practice, and Fatima Apostolate (7 pm), Benefit Fidelity House at NYAJ
  • Wednesday - Arlington Catholic Women's Club Mass (5 pm), Bereavement Meeting and Community Catechesis (7 pm)
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We are now moving into "Winter Playgroup" mode, when Fidelity House hosts our playgroup within their building.  We owe them our thanks!  We also are grateful to Father Flatley for helping us to get a small curriculum going this year.  Bring your thinking caps and get ready to pay attention to some short activities about Jesus.

Thus, Tuesday playgroup will take place at Fidelity House, right near church: 25 Medford Street, from 10:30 am-12:30 pm.
  • Please remember some behavior guidelines: No running out of the playroom, no kids in the toy closet, respect physical limits, use a time-out chair, please discipline your own children promptly, and be considerate of others!
  • Fidelity House is being very generous by letting us use this space. Please consider a donation to help with their costs. Minimum suggested donation is $1 per person in attendance.
  • Please no food.... drinks in spill proof containers are OK. 
Parking is on the street around Fidelity House. Check the street signs for the rules. Once you walk in the front door, go up the stairs, past the front desk, and to the back of the building. There is a door from the room to an outdoor courtyard, so bring your kids' coats too. We will also teach a brief lesson for the kids.

**Unless otherwise noted due to warm weather, future winter playgroups will take place at Fidelity House, 25 Medford St., Arlington.  In case of unusually warm and sunny weather, please check your email or the blog page before you leave for playgroup.  We may take advantage of the nice day and meet at a park.**


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Help Benefit Fidelity House by enjoying a night out at Not Your Average Joe's
Each Tuesday in November, you can help support Fidelity House by dining at Not Your Average Joe's (Arlington location is within walking distance of church).  Click and print the coupon below and bring it to your dinner.  Enjoy!

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The Family Liturgy Group is looking for “Advent Families”
During Advent, the 9:00 am Family Mass begins with a Parish family doing a brief reading and lighting the Advent wreath for that week. This is a wonderful opportunity for the whole family to be able to participate in the liturgy together. If your family would be interested, please contact Tricia Sheehan at pmksheehan [at] gmail.com or 781-648-7709. 

In addition, the Family Liturgy Group would like to welcome new members who would be willing to work with the children of the Parish once a month, preparing them to read at the 9:00 am Family Mass. For more information, please contact Tricia Sheehan.

Catholic Reading Wednesday

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

With many thanks to our awesome curator, Karen Celano, you can delve into a faith-related news article each Wednesday! Karen writes:

In June, a Methodist pastor in Tennessee named Willie Lyle spent four days "undercover" as a homeless person, begging for food and shelter.  During his experiment, he experienced disdain and rejection, and learned how the material discomfort of homelessness is augmented by spiritual and emotional poverty and alienation.  He speaks about the need to learn from the homeless and hungry, which I take to mean that we should approach them with spiritual and intellectual humility.  He also speaks about the need to reach out beyond our "comfort zones" and our comfortable communities - and he reminds us that Christ's cross is not a comfortable place to be.

Pope Francis has also been gently but poignantly reminding his Church to reach beyond their comfort zones, most recently by his embrace and kiss of a man suffering from neurofibromatosis.  Reporting on this event, Mathew Schmalz writes that Pope Francis' embrace reminded him of Mother Teresa's confession that working with the poor and sick can be, quite frankly, physically revolting - and of how it takes persevering prayer to develop the sacramental worldview that helps us overcome that revulsion and see Christ in those who are diseased or disfigured.  He writes of the need to go beyond mere compassion and to show through our deeds our wholehearted embrace of the "ugliness" of suffering and disease - not by whitewashing it, but by entering into it and allowing ourselves to experience and overcome the mental and physical distress we sometimes feel towards those who look or act differently from ourselves.

We are approaching the season of Advent, which, though we often forget it, is one of the two penitential seasons of the Church year.  Although Catholics are always called to live out the three spiritual pillars of prayer, fasting, and almsgiving, the season of Advent is a particularly good time to emphasize these practices as we begin to prepare for Christ's birth.  As I read these articles this week, I was struck by the ways in which prayer, fasting, and almsgiving are intimately interrelated.  Normally we see "fasting" as simply abstaining from food, but I think the examples of Pastor Lyle and Pope Francis show that fasting, in the broader sense of asceticism, is about breaking out of our physical, emotional, and spiritual "comfort zones" - to allow ourselves to experience discomfort in a way that contributes to our ability to practice charity (or almsgiving) by fully embracing those who suffer.  And it is prayer that gives us the spiritual strength to overcome our repulsion towards discomfort and helps unite our struggles to the Paschal Mystery.

There are people who are sick, hungry or homeless in our own community and parish.  These maladies strike people in material, spiritual, emotional, and mental ways - and I believe they are used by Satan to drive wedges into the Body of Christ.  Our natural tendency to avoid those who are different or strange is corrupted into a force that causes alienation and disunity.  We who wish to strengthen Christ's body must overcome these forces.  We may not need to drink pus or suck on a leper's sores the way Catherine of Sienna or Catherine of Genoa did, but there are other things we can do: Spend time talking to a mentally ill person.  Reach out to someone who dislikes or even hates the Church.  Sit beside a homeless person on the bus and ask him about his day.  Reach out beyond our "comfort zone" and do something that downright repels us.  In doing so, we will emulate Willie Lyle, Pope Francis, Mother Teresa, Catherine of Siena - and Christ Himself.

Support Fidelity House and Playgroup Activity

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Wondering where to eat out tonight?  Each Tuesday in November, you can help support Fidelity House by dining at Not Your Average Joe's (Arlington location is within walking distance of church).  Click and print the coupon below and bring it to your dinner.  Enjoy!

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Today at playgroup, we had our second lesson of the winter, with some new friends joining us to learn that God made everything there is!  When we look at creation, we can see how great God really is.  We can also learn things about God by learning and thinking about creation.  Click and print the image below.  Enjoy working on the Bible Verse and coloring page with your children this week.  Hope to see you next Tuesday!

Weekly Digest

Monday, November 11, 2013

Welcome everyone!
This week at the parish:
  • Tuesday - Saint Agnes Playgroup (10:30 am), Choir Practice, and Fatima Apostolate (7 pm), Benefit Fidelity House at NYAJ
  • Wednesday - Bereavement Meeting (7 pm)
  • Thursday - Moms Night In (7 pm)
  • Sunday - Arlington Catholic High School Open House (1 pm)
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We are now moving into "Winter Playgroup" mode, when Fidelity House hosts our playgroup within their building.  We owe them our thanks!  We also are grateful to Father Flatley for helping us to get a small curriculum going this year.  Bring your thinking caps and get ready to pay attention to some short activities about Jesus.

Thus, Tuesday playgroup will take place at Fidelity House, right near church: 25 Medford Street, from 10:30 am-12:30 pm.
  • Please remember some behavior guidelines: No running out of the playroom, no kids in the toy closet, respect physical limits, use a time-out chair, please discipline your own children promptly, and be considerate of others!
  • Fidelity House is being very generous by letting us use this space. Please consider a donation to help with their costs. Minimum suggested donation is $1 per person in attendance.
  • Please no food.... drinks in spill proof containers are OK. 
Parking is on the street around Fidelity House. Check the street signs for the rules. Once you walk in the front door, go up the stairs, past the front desk, and to the back of the building. There is a door from the room to an outdoor courtyard, so bring your kids' coats too. We will also teach a brief lesson for the kids.

**Unless otherwise noted due to warm weather, future winter playgroups will take place at Fidelity House, 25 Medford St., Arlington.  In case of unusually warm and sunny weather, please check your email or the blog page before you leave for playgroup.  We may take advantage of the nice day and meet at a park.**


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Help Benefit Fidelity House by enjoying a night out at Not Your Average Joe's
Each Tuesday in November, you can help support Fidelity House by dining at Not Your Average Joe's (Arlington location is within walking distance of church).  Click and print the coupon below and bring it to your dinner.  Enjoy!

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Mom's Night In - THURSDAY, November 14th - We will get together for a stress-free evening, and play some get-to-know-you games (think: Apples to Apples) . I would rather not publish the hostesses address, so please email me at saintagnesfamilies [at] gmail.com if you plan to come. Please bring a snack or drink to share!  We will kick it off at 7:00 pm.

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The Family Liturgy Group is looking for “Advent Families”
During Advent, the 9:00 am Family Mass begins with a Parish family doing a brief reading and lighting the Advent wreath for that week. This is a wonderful opportunity for the whole family to be able to participate in the liturgy together. If your family would be interested, please contact Tricia Sheehan at pmksheehan [at] gmail.com or 781-648-7709. 

In addition, the Family Liturgy Group would like to welcome new members who would be willing to work with the children of the Parish once a month, preparing them to read at the 9:00 am Family Mass. For more information, please contact Tricia Sheehan.

Boston Sock Exchange this Weekend

Friday, November 8, 2013

"The hunger for love is much more difficult to remove than the hunger for bread." Mother Teresa

This Saturday, November 9th is the Boston Sock Exchange at 11:00 am! This ministry helps the homeless men and women of Boston, by distributing gifts of sandwiches and clothes near the Park Street T-Stop on the second Saturday of the month.

Prep and packaging for the day will be held TONIGHT, November 8th at 7:00 pm in the parish center. Help and/or donations is a wonderful way to put our faith in action!  For more information, see the calendar to the right, or email Jennifer Hermanski at jennifer.hermanski [at] gmail.com.  Participants under the age of 18 must be accompanied by an adult.

The Boston Sock Exchange is currently in need of winter clothing, especially winter coats, SOCKS, long sleeved-shirts, sweatshirts, coats, hats, gloves, and scarves.  We also need rain gear: ponchos and umbrellas.  Thank you!

Baptism Briefing, Support Fidelity House, and Playgroup Activity

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Have you had a new baby? We wish you many heartfelt congratulations!

Don't forget that baptisms for babies at Saint Agnes are held on the 1st and 3rd Sundays of the month at 2:00 pm. You must attend Baptismal Briefings prior to having your child baptized.


Baptism briefings happen once a month, and you can go to one tonight! The briefing session begins at 7:00 pm in the Saint Agnes Parish Center at 51 Medford St., Arlington. The meeting usually lasts under an hour.

If you would like to learn a little more about Christian baptism and why the Catholic Church encourages infants to be baptized, you can read about it here.

Baptism is the sacrament of faith. But faith needs the community of believers. It is only within the faith of the Church that each of the faithful can believe. The faith required for Baptism is not a perfect and mature faith, but a beginning that is called to develop. The catechumen or the Godparent is asked: “What do you ask of God’s Church?” The response is: “Faith!” (Catechism of the Catholic Church, #1253)

Parenting is certainly not an easy task: it is filled with difficult decisions, personal setbacks and growth, expanding relationships, disagreements, love, AND forgiveness. We offer you our support and encouragement along this journey, and we invite you warmly into our parish and Christian life!

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Wondering what to do before the Baptism Briefing?  Why not treat yourselves to a dinner out?  Each Tuesday in November, you can help support Fidelity House by dining at Not Your Average Joe's (Arlington location is within walking distance of church).  Click and print the coupon below and bring it to your dinner.  Enjoy!

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Today at playgroup, we had our first lesson of the winter, introducing ourselves and finding out that we will learn more about Jesus this year.  Especially when we gather to be with Him, Jesus also comes to be with us.  Click and print the image below.  Enjoy working on the Bible Verse and coloring page with your children this week.  Hope to see you next Tuesday!

Weekly Digest

Monday, November 4, 2013

Welcome everyone!
This week at the parish:
  • Monday - ProLife Meeting (7:00 pm)
  • Tuesday - Saint Agnes Playgroup (10:30 am), Baptism Briefing, Choir Practice, and Fatima Apostolate (7 pm)
  • Wednesday - Bereavement Meeting (7 pm)
  • Thursday - Saint Agnes School Open House (6 pm)
  • Friday - Prep for the Boston Sock Exchange (7 pm)
  • Saturday - Boston Sock Exchange (11 am)
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We are now moving into "Winter Playgroup" mode, when Fidelity House hosts our playgroup within their building.  We owe them our thanks!  We also are grateful to Father Flatley for helping us to get a small curriculum going this year.  Bring your thinking caps and get ready to pay attention to some short activities about Jesus.

Thus, Tuesday playgroup will take place at Fidelity House, right near church: 25 Medford Street, from 10:30 am-12:30 pm.
  • Please remember some behavior guidelines: No running out of the playroom, no kids in the toy closet, respect physical limits, use a time-out chair, please discipline your own children promptly, and be considerate of others!
  • Fidelity House is being very generous by letting us use this space. Please consider a donation to help with their costs. Minimum suggested donation is $1 per person in attendance.
  • Please no food.... drinks in spill proof containers are OK. 
Parking is on the street around Fidelity House. Check the street signs for the rules. Once you walk in the front door, go up the stairs, past the front desk, and to the back of the building. There is a door from the room to an outdoor courtyard, so bring your kids' coats too. We will also teach a brief lesson for the kids.

**Unless otherwise noted due to warm weather, future winter playgroups will take place at Fidelity House, 25 Medford St., Arlington.  In case of unusually warm and sunny weather, please check your email or the blog page before you leave for playgroup.  We may take advantage of the nice day and meet at a park.**


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Baptism Briefing
Don't forget that baptisms for babies at Saint Agnes are held on the 1st and 3rd Sundays of the month at 2:00 pm. You must attend Baptismal Briefings prior to having your child baptized.

Baptism briefings happen once a month, and you can go to one on Tuesday night! The briefing session begins at 7:00 pm in the Saint Agnes Parish Center at 51 Medford St., Arlington. The meeting usually lasts under an hour.

If you would like to learn a little more about Christian baptism and why the Catholic Church encourages infants to be baptized, you can read about it here.

Baptism is the sacrament of faith. But faith needs the community of believers. It is only within the faith of the Church that each of the faithful can believe. The faith required for Baptism is not a perfect and mature faith, but a beginning that is called to develop. The catechumen or the Godparent is asked: “What do you ask of God’s Church?” The response is: “Faith!” (Catechism of the Catholic Church, #1253)

Parenting is certainly not an easy task: it is filled with difficult decisions, personal setbacks and growth, expanding relationships, disagreements, love, AND forgiveness. We offer you our support and encouragement along this journey, and we invite you warmly into our parish and Christian life!

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This Saturday, November 9th is the Boston Sock Exchange at 11:00 am
This ministry helps the homeless men and women of Boston, by distributing gifts of sandwiches and clothes near the Park Street T-Stop on the second Saturday of the month. Prep and packaging for the day is held in the parish center on Friday night, November 8th at 7:00 pm. Help and/or donations is a wonderful way to put your faith in action!  For more information, see the calendar to the right, or email Jennifer Hermanski at jennifer.hermanski [at] gmail.com.  The Boston Sock Exchange is currently in need of winter clothing, especially winter coats, SOCKS, long sleeved-shirts, sweatshirts, coats, hats, gloves, and scarves.  We also need rain gear: ponchos and umbrellas.  Thank you! 

"Here is what we seek: a compassion that can stand in awe of what the poor have
to carry, rather than stand in judgement of how they carry it." Fr. Gregory Boyle, SJ