Wednesday 10-minute Myth Burner

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

 Pope Francis certainly has the world's attention!  Part of this is because he is preaching the Gospel, which in itself is enticing, challenging, and calls to the human heart.  Another reason for his popularity is because he preaches with consistency and sincerity -- something for which we all deeply long.

The third reason is somewhat more problematic: Pope Francis' popular press is at the mercy of how the secular new agencies choose to portray him.  They can choose to reduce his message to that of another "happy friar," or seem to recruit him into political camps of partisanship.  People reading the news are free to cherry pick what coverage about the Pope they like, without ever really looking into his teachings or the teachings of the Church.  Likewise, stalwart Catholics are tempted to cherry pick as well.

The Pope is definitely challenging people!  We know that the Gospel message will make each of us uncomfortable in our areas of hypocrisy and self-centeredness.  It it is meant to change us, not to assuage us.

"I have come to set the world on fire, and how I wish it were already blazing." (Luke 12:49)

"The person without the Spirit does not accept the things that come from the Spirit of God but considers them foolishness, and cannot understand them because they are discerned only through the Spirit." (1 Corinthians 2:14)


Knowing that the Pope is the "rock" upon which Christ built His church (Matthew 16:18), we need to read what Pope Francis is actually saying, not just want People Magazine or Fox News says about him.  Each Wednesday, a short excerpt of his most recent encylical, "Laudato Si" will be posted here - so that we can all learn, digest, pray and discern one snippet at a time.  Come Holy Spirit, teach us and guide us, and may Your Will be done!

1. “LAUDATO SI’, mi’ Signore” – “Praise be to you, my Lord”. In the words of this beautiful canticle, Saint Francis of Assisi reminds us that our common home is like a sister with whom we share our life and a beautiful mother who opens her arms to embrace us. “Praise be to you, my Lord, through our Sister, Mother Earth, who sustains and governs us, and who produces various fruit with coloured flowers and herbs”.[1]

2. This sister now cries out to us because of the harm we have inflicted on her by our irresponsible use and abuse of the goods with which God has endowed her. We have come to see ourselves as her lords and masters, entitled to plunder her at will. The violence present in our hearts, wounded by sin, is also reflected in the symptoms of sickness evident in the soil, in the water, in the air and in all forms of life. This is why the earth herself, burdened and laid waste, is among the most abandoned and maltreated of our poor; she “groans in travail” (Rom 8:22). We have forgotten that we ourselves are dust of the earth (cf. Gen 2:7); our very bodies are made up of her elements, we breathe her air and we receive life and refreshment from her waters.

Nothing in this world is indifferent to us

3. More than fifty years ago, with the world teetering on the brink of nuclear crisis, Pope Saint John XXIII wrote an Encyclical which not only rejected war but offered a proposal for peace. He addressed his message Pacem in Terris to the entire “Catholic world” and indeed “to all men and women of good will”. Now, faced as we are with global environmental deterioration, I wish to address every person living on this planet. In my Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Gaudium, I wrote to all the members of the Church with the aim of encouraging ongoing missionary renewal. In this Encyclical, I would like to enter into dialogue with all people about our common home.

4. In 1971, eight years after Pacem in Terris, Blessed Pope Paul VI referred to the ecological concern as “a tragic consequence” of unchecked human activity: “Due to an ill-considered exploitation of nature, humanity runs the risk of destroying it and becoming in turn a victim of this degradation”.[2] He spoke in similar terms to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations about the potential for an “ecological catastrophe under the effective explosion of industrial civilization”, and stressed “the urgent need for a radical change in the conduct of humanity”, inasmuch as “the most extraordinary scientific advances, the most amazing technical abilities, the most astonishing economic growth, unless they are accompanied by authentic social and moral progress, will definitively turn against man”.[3]

5. Saint John Paul II became increasingly concerned about this issue. In his first Encyclical he warned that human beings frequently seem “to see no other meaning in their natural environment than what serves for immediate use and consumption”.[4]Subsequently, he would call for a global ecological conversion.[5] At the same time, he noted that little effort had been made to “safeguard the moral conditions for an authentic human ecology”.[6] The destruction of the human environment is extremely serious, not only because God has entrusted the world to us men and women, but because human life is itself a gift which must be defended from various forms of debasement. Every effort to protect and improve our world entails profound changes in “lifestyles, models of production and consumption, and the established structures of power which today govern societies”.[7] Authentic human development has a moral character. It presumes full respect for the human person, but it must also be concerned for the world around us and “take into account the nature of each being and of its mutual connection in an ordered system”.[8] Accordingly, our human ability to transform reality must proceed in line with God’s original gift of all that is.[9]

6. My predecessor Benedict XVI likewise proposed “eliminating the structural causes of the dysfunctions of the world economy and correcting models of growth which have proved incapable of ensuring respect for the environment”.[10] He observed that the world cannot be analyzed by isolating only one of its aspects, since “the book of nature is one and indivisible”, and includes the environment, life, sexuality, the family, social relations, and so forth. It follows that “the deterioration of nature is closely connected to the culture which shapes human coexistence”.[11] Pope Benedict asked us to recognize that the natural environment has been gravely damaged by our irresponsible behaviour. The social environment has also suffered damage. Both are ultimately due to the same evil: the notion that there are no indisputable truths to guide our lives, and hence human freedom is limitless. We have forgotten that “man is not only a freedom which he creates for himself. Man does not create himself. He is spirit and will, but also nature”.[12] With paternal concern, Benedict urged us to realize that creation is harmed “where we ourselves have the final word, where everything is simply our property and we use it for ourselves alone. The misuse of creation begins when we no longer recognize any higher instance than ourselves, when we see nothing else but ourselves”.[13]

Weekly Digest

Monday, September 28, 2015

Welcome back, EVERYONE!
Here's the lineup for the week at the Parish:
  • Tuesday - Family Playgroup (10:30 am), Choir Practice (7 pm), Fatima Apostolate (7 pm)
  • Thursday - First Friday Confessions (4 pm), Confirmation Rehearsal (7 pm @ Saint Camillus)
  • Friday - First Friday Adoration (all day, Benediction at 5:00, Mass at 5:30 pm)
  • Saturday - CONFIRMATION DAY (10:30 am @ Saint Camillus), Confessions (3 pm)
  • Sunday - Children's Choir Practice and Mass (arrive 8:15 am), Coffee and Donuts (after 9 am Mass), Adult Choir (10:30 am Mass), Depart for 40 Days for Life Prayer (1:30 pm), Infant Baptisms (2 pm)
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Saint Agnes Family Playgroup - CHECK THE BLOG BEFORE YOU LEAVE!
The Saint Agnes Family group holds weekly Tuesday playgroups outdoors at nearby parks.  We start at 10:30 am (but sometimes moms run late).  You are welcome to join us! To print a written schedule of our summer playgroup locations, please click here. To see a map of our summer park schedule, please click here.

This Tuesday, September 29th, we will meet at Parallel Park (174 Medford St.) in Arlington. This fenced park has shade, play structures and swings, as well as an open field and sidewalk for scooters.  Bring your own lunch or snack and join us!

**NOTE THAT our outdoor summer schedule is highly dependent on good weather. If the weather seems questionable, please check your email or the blog page before you leave for playgroup. In case of rain, playgroup will be cancelled for the day. Thanks!**

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First Friday Adoration
This Friday, October 2nd, is the first Friday of the month. On Thursday, October 1st, from 4:00-5:00 pm, there will be the opportunity for confession in the lower church. On Friday, Saint Agnes will be offering all-day Adoration, concluding with Benediction and Mass at 5:00/5:30pm, in the lower church. Also at noon there will be a Holy Hour to pray for priests and victims of clergy sexual abuse. Adoration is a wonderful opportunity to spend some quiet time with the Lord and gain some focus in our lives - especially with all the busy distractions of daily life. For more background on the long tradition of keeping a First Friday devotion, look here or here.


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Children's Choir
Are you children interested in singing in the Children's Choir at Saint Agnes?  The choir's first 9:00 am Mass is next Sunday, October 4th, with the pre-Mass rehearsal beginning at 8:15 am.  Children 1st grade and up are welcome.  You can find a printable schedule and full details at this blog post, or by visiting the Music Ministry webpage in the upper right corner of the blog.  Encouraging your kids to be involved in the Mass is a wonderful way to foster their joy!  It also (helps) them to pay attention and to make new friends at church.  Join us!

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Massachusetts Alliance to Stop Public Funding of Abortion
Did you know that your tax dollars are being used to pay for abortions in Massachusetts? Abortion kills an innocent human life, but we know we are called by God to protect His precious gift of life. Fortunately, there is something each of us can do to stop this. Volunteers throughout the state are collecting signatures on a petition to amend the state constitution so that taxpayer subsidized abortions are no longer a constitutional entitlement in Massachusetts. Stop and sign the petition, to amend the state constitution so that tax dollars no longer subsidize abortions in Massachusetts. You can also call 781-312-8755 or email StopPublicFundingofAbortion [at] gmail.com so we can get your signature.

40 Days for Life
Saint Agnes will be participating in the 40 Days for Life campaign in Boston, September 23rd-November 4th! 40 Days for Life is a community-based campaign that draws attention to the evils of abortion through the use of prayer and fasting, prayer vigil, and community outreach. 40 Days for Life takes a determined, peaceful approach to showing local communities the consequences of abortion in their own neighborhoods, for their own friends and families.

Please join Saint Agnes Parishioners for Life as we participate in 40 Days for Life this fall! Saint Agnes will be leading a rosary hour each Sunday afternoon from 2:00-3:00 pm at Planned Parenthood in Boston during the campaign starting Sunday, Septebmer 27th. For carpooling, we will meet at 1:30 pm in the public parking lot adjacent to Saint Agnes church. If you have any questions, please e-mail Eileen Cahill (SAParishforLife [at] gmail.com).
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Small Groups
In the coming year, the Outreach committee will endeavor to create, organize, and structure small faith-sharing groups at Saint Agnes. The concept is for each group of 7-10 people to be self-contained and self-directing, while maintaining connectivity to leadership of the parish. Those who are interested will be able to join a group at periodic intervals, for example, at the Parish Ministry fair upcoming in October.

If you are interested in leading such a group, please create a concept for your group: you can pick your own topic, meeting time and location, and whether your group will be men, women, or co-ed. Let's start the discussion! Please email Marianne Hudelson (SaintAgnesFamilies@gmail.com) with your ideas if you are able to lead. Many thanks!

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FALL 2015 REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN FOR OUR WONDERFUL PARISH SCHOOLS!
FIDELITY HOUSE - Preschool and Pre-K
SAINT AGNES GRAMMAR SCHOOL - Pre-K through Grade 8
ARLINGTON CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL
Links to these websites are located at the top right-hand of the blog page.
When you invest and involve your family here, you can participate
in the evangelical mission and service of these community resources,
which are offered by - and in the long tradition of - our very own Catholic Church.
Financial Aid is available. WOW!

Kid's Choir Starts Next Sunday!

Saturday, September 26, 2015

Are you children interested in singing in the Children's Choir at Saint Agnes?  The choir's first Mass is next Sunday, October 4th, and the printable schedule is posted below.  Encouraging your kids to be involved in the Mass is a wonderful way to foster their joy!  It also (helps) them to pay attention and to make new friends at church.  Join us!

Here are the basics:
Saint Agnes Children's Choir is for children Grades 1+, with older kids having more cantoring opportunities.  Since most of our first graders can't read all that well, you can expect that your child might be a bit behind for the first few choir sessions, but soon they will learn quickly and be confident enough to sing out!!

Each of the Sundays on which the Children's Choir sings includes attendance at the 8:15 am choir rehearsal in the upstairs church, followed by participation in the 9:00 am Family Mass.

Our dress code, unless announced, will be black or navy bottoms and white tops.

Parents, please make sure you give your name and email address to one of our adult helpers (at practice or on Sunday), to be added to our choir email group list for reminders of dates, dress code changes, snow cancellations, etc.

FOR SNOW ACCUMULATION more than a "dusting," children's choir will be cancelled.  If CCD is canceled due to weather, you can likewise assume there is NO children's choir.  Please do not drop your children off and leave if there is ANY question as to potential weather issues.

More information and our schedule can be found at the Music Ministry Website, www.AgnesMusic.net, or by emailing Michael Vaughan (mrv2022 [at] gmail.com).

Lessons in the beauty of forgivness from Cuba

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

As the Pope visits the Americas (specifically, the east coast!), we can't help but somehow feel connected to his mission here on our turf. What is Christ calling us to do in response to the Pope's example? Pope Francis seems to have a keen sense of the pain that conflict within the church has caused over the years, and his desire to reconcile and extend forgiveness is unprecedented. Asking and extending forgiveness is never easy, and leading a movement of reconciliation in the public eye is even trickier! But the Pope's gracefulness in matters of hurt and forgiveness speaks to his humility and lack of presumption; an example he sets for us all.

Here is a beautiful article about the Papal Mass in Cuba, and the response which Cuban Catholics have had to their country's own mistreatment of them. As I tell our own children, "Forgiveness is what changes a very sad story into a wonderfully happy one." (Just think how Joseph's forgiveness of his brothers in Egypt changed his story from one of utter betrayal into a family reconciliation, reuniting, and a new chapter in the history of Israel.) Forgiveness gives us hope.

This story was published in the Boston Pilot, and can be found here.


Holguin Catholics experience the unimaginable: papal Mass in public

HOLGUIN, Cuba (CNS) -- The scene would have been unimaginable a few years ago: A Catholic Mass in Holguin's Revolution Plaza, where May Day parades and other patriotic events exalting the Cuban Revolution take place.

But on Monday, thousands flocked to the public space, also known as the Plaza Calixto Garcia Iniguez, and exalted Christ and the Virgin of Charity, as the city hosted its first religious event in that plaza: a Mass celebrated by the head of the Catholic Church.

A giant poster of the Virgin of Charity, Cuba's patron saint, faced the plaza in the distance, as well as the red star signaling the headquarters of the Cuban Communist Party. Workers and schoolchildren were given the day off to attend the event, though it was clear that some in the crowd, unsure of how to pray, arrived just to get a glimpse of Pope Francis.

It has not been easy to get to this point, said Maria del Carmen Zellek Camayd, a local Catholic doctor who attended the Sept. 21 Mass.

"We were terribly discriminated," she said.

Up until a few years ago, Christians, but particularly Catholics, could not be members of the Communist Party in Cuba and were banned from holding certain jobs or coveted spots at universities following the 1959 Cuban Revolution. Many practiced the faith in secret, and those who did not hide it suffered.

But some like Zellek say the hardships that she and other Cuban Catholics have faced have served as "purification" for the people and the church they love. But after that "purification," Catholics in Cuba are undergoing a period of fence-mending with Cuban authorities, who have worked with church officials to prepare events before the pope's arrival.

Father Angel Andres Gonzalez of the Diocese of Holguin said there is still a long way to go until Christians can fully participate in Cuban society, but papal visits certainly help. When St. John Paul II visited Cuba, it helped the government open itself up to the Catholic Church, he said. Pope Francis' visit, as his predecessors' visits also have done, forced collaboration between the government and the church. They learned to work together and have established some level of trust, as well as new paths of communication, he said. It also strengthened the church because its members worked more in communion with one another, he said.

Pope Francis' visit also has brought about renewed hope by many Catholics on the island who are calling for more spaces and more collaboration with the state so that Catholics can help the country in areas where help is needed, such as education and societal values.

Juana Dania Vaillnit and Francisco Reyes Mora, have been married for 50 years -- a feat in a country where Catholic marriage, and even civil marriage, has become rare. They said the church can help young people prepare for marriage and a family, institutions that can strengthen Cuba.

"We have to recognize that we learned love through our ancestors, who learned it through religion, through the church. It's a place that helps form values," Reyes said.

Getting help and freedoms from the government is a first step, but having Pope Francis, the spiritual leader of the church, talk to young people about the future addresses the spiritual side, which a lot of young people struggle with, Vaillnit said.

But this pope, with his humility and simplicity, is able to walk the tightrope that might be required to help the church make even more progress, not just with the government but also with people who have grown up without faith, Zellek said.

On Monday, Pope Francis went to bless the city of Holguin from the top of a hill that has a cross. In a simple place, he offered a simple prayer, asking that God bless and light the lives of the families, children, young people, the sick, and all who suffer. It's a place that, though humble, is of great importance to "Holguineros," as the people of Holguin are called, said Oscar Ramirez, 69.

The cross is a symbol of the town but also of Cuba and its outlook on life. There are a lot of lessons to learn up there, lessons that the world can learn from Cuba, Ramirez said.

"We know how to carry the cross with dignity," Ramirez said.

Like a lot of Latin American nations, Cuba is a place that values humility, values a person who works hard, is not ostentatious, knows how to deal with hardships and grows closer to God through them, he said.

In visiting a poor and complicated country that has deep wounds, Pope Francis was deliberate in the lesson he wants to teach others, Zellek said. Life in post-revolution Cuba was difficult for Catholics, but would have been even more difficult without the church, its priests and religious, its values, Zellek said.

"They taught us to adapt," to remain charitable when others closed the doors to places of worship, and to find creative ways to remain faithful.

What she has learned from the journey, she said, is that by embracing all those hardships, she embraced the Gospel and learned the lesson the pope has come to Cuba to teach.

"I believe in forgiveness and reconciliation," she said.

Weekly Digest

Monday, September 21, 2015

Welcome back, EVERYONE!
Here's the lineup for the week at the Parish:
  • Tuesday - Family Playgroup (10:30 am), Choir Practice (7 pm), Fatima Apostolate (7 pm)
  • Wednesday - Women's Bible Study (7:30 pm)
  • Thursday - Dad's Night Out (8 pm)
  • Saturday - Retreat for Confirmation Students (all day @ Saint Camillus Parish), Confessions (3 pm)
  • Sunday - Coffee and Donuts (after 9 am Mass), Adult Choir (10:30 am Mass), Retreat for Confirmation Students (all day @ Saint Camillus Parish)
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Saint Agnes Family Playgroup - CHECK THE BLOG BEFORE YOU LEAVE!
The Saint Agnes Family group holds weekly Tuesday playgroups outdoors at nearby parks.  We start at 10:30 am (but sometimes moms run late).  You are welcome to join us! To print a written schedule of our summer playgroup locations, please click here. To see a map of our summer park schedule, please click here.

This Tuesday, September 22nd, we will meet at Center Park (90 Clarke St., Lexington) for some back-to-school fun!  It will be great to see everyone again and catch up.  This park has play structures and swings, as well as a lot of open field space, tennis walls, and a track.  Bring your own lunch or snack and join us!

**NOTE THAT our outdoor summer schedule is highly dependent on good weather. If the weather seems questionable, please check your email or the blog page before you leave for playgroup. In case of rain, playgroup will be cancelled for the day. Thanks!**

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Dad's Night Out
Once a month from 8:00 - 9:30 pm, Saint Agnes welcomes parish dads to gather at Fusion Taste Restaurant, around the corner from the church (303 Broadway, Arlington). This month, the Dad's Group will meet on Thursday, September 24th. We will discuss relevant topics of careers, family, or just to catch up with old friends and meet new ones. For the first half hour we'll formally discuss short readings of interest, then catch up over beverages and dinner for the remaining time. The topic for September's discussion will be: "Catholic by Choice."  The link for the brief reading material is here.  Please come and join us, whether or not you have been able to read ahead. We look forward to meeting you!   If you have questions, please email Justin Quattrini (justin.quattrini [at] gmail.com).

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Massachusetts Alliance to Stop Public Funding of Abortion
Did you know that your tax dollars are being used to pay for abortions in Massachusetts? Abortion kills an innocent human life, but we know we are called by God to protect His precious gift of life. Fortunately, there is something each of us can do to stop this. Volunteers throughout the state are collecting signatures on a petition to amend the state constitution so that taxpayer subsidized abortions are no longer a constitutional entitlement in Massachusetts. Stop and sign the petition, to amend the state constitution so that tax dollars no longer subsidize abortions in Massachusetts. You can also call 781-312-8755 or email StopPublicFundingofAbortion [at] gmail.com so we can get your signature.

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Small Groups
In the coming year, the Outreach committee will endeavor to create, organize, and structure small faith-sharing groups at Saint Agnes. The concept is for each group of 7-10 people to be self-contained and self-directing, while maintaining connectivity to leadership of the parish. Those who are interested will be able to join a group at periodic intervals, for example, at the Parish Ministry fair upcoming in October.

If you are interested in leading such a group, please create a concept for your group: you can pick your own topic, meeting time and location, and whether your group will be men, women, or co-ed. Let's start the discussion! Please email Marianne Hudelson (SaintAgnesFamilies@gmail.com) with your ideas if you are able to lead. Many thanks!

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FALL 2015 REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN FOR OUR WONDERFUL PARISH SCHOOLS!
FIDELITY HOUSE - Preschool and Pre-K
SAINT AGNES GRAMMAR SCHOOL - Pre-K through Grade 8
ARLINGTON CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL
Links to these websites are located at the top right-hand of the blog page.
When you invest and involve your family here, you can participate
in the evangelical mission and service of these community resources,
which are offered by - and in the long tradition of - our very own Catholic Church.
Financial Aid is available. WOW!

Happy Sunday! Search for God!

Sunday, September 20, 2015

Happy Sunday!  We all go through periods of trial, doubt, struggle, anger, spiritual dryness, etc. in our lives.  Have you ever sat at Mass, staring at the crucifix, wondering if all the Divine Mysteries can really be true?

Bishop Robert Barron outlines reasons why learning and teaching about Christ, struggling to pray and know Him, and persevering in our faith in God are of ultimate - not merely religious - importance.  Likewise, teaching our children to know and love their faith has impact on our entire human family.


How can we do this?  Let us pray, with Pope Francis' intentions this month, "That catechists may give witness by living in a way consistent with the faith they proclaim."


The article below, by Bishop Robert Barron, was published in the Boston Pilot, and can be found here.

It was revealed this week that, for the first time in its history, Harvard University, which had been founded for religious purposes and named for a minister of the Gospel, has admitted a freshman class in which atheists and agnostics outnumber professed Christians and Jews. Also this week, the House and the Senate of California passed a provision that allows for physician assisted suicide in the Golden State. As I write these words, the governor of California is deliberating whether to sign the bill into law. Though it might seem strange to suggest as much, I believe that the make-up of the Harvard freshman class and the passing of the suicide law are very really related.

I suppose we shouldn't be too surprised that non-believers have come to outnumber believers among the rising cohort of the American aristocracy. For the whole of their lives, these young people have been immersed in the corrosive acids of relativism, scientism, and materialism. Though they have benefitted from every advantage that money can afford, they have been largely denied what the human heart most longs for: contact with the transcendent, with the good, true, and beautiful in their properly unconditioned form. But as Paul Tillich, echoing the Hebrew prophets, reminded us, we are built for worship, and therefore in the absence of God, we will make some other value our ultimate concern. Wealth, power, pleasure, and honor have all played the role of false gods over the course of the human drama, but today especially, freedom itself has emerged as the ultimate good, as the object of worship. And what this looks like on the ground is that our lives come to belong utterly to us, that we become great projects of self-creation and self-determination.

As the Bible tells it, the human project went off the rails precisely at the moment when Adam arrogated to himself the prerogative of determining the meaning of his life, when he, in the agelessly beautiful poetry of the book of Genesis, ate of the fruit of the knowledge of good and evil. Read the chapters that immediately follow the account of the Fall, and you will discover the consequences of this deified freedom: jealousy, hatred, fratricide, imperialism, and the war of all against all. The rest of the Biblical narrative can be interpreted as God's attempt to convince human beings that their lives, in point of fact, do not belong to them. He did this precisely by choosing a people whom he would form after his own mind and heart, teaching them how to think, how to behave, and above all, how to worship. This holy people Israel--a word that means, marvelously, "the one who wrestles with God"--would then, by the splendor of their way of life, attract the rest of the world. On the Christian reading, this project reached its climax in the person of Jesus Christ, a first-century Israelite from the town of Nazareth, who was also the Incarnation of the living God. The coming-together of divinity and humanity, the meeting of infinite and finite freedom, Jesus embodies what God intended for us from the beginning.

And this is precisely why Paul, one of Jesus' first missionaries, announced him as Kyrios (Lord) to all the nations, and why he characterized himself as doulos Christou Iesou (a slave of Christ Jesus). Paul exulted in the fact that his life did not belong to him, but rather to Christ. In his letter to the Ephesians, he wrote, "there is a power already at work in you that can do infinitely more than you can ask or imagine." He was referencing the Holy Spirit, which orders our freedom and which opens up possibilities utterly beyond our capacities. To follow the promptings of this Spirit is, for Paul and for all the Biblical authors, the source of life, joy, and true creativity.

All of which brings me back to Harvard and legalized suicide. The denial of God--or the blithe bracketing of the question of God--is not a harmless parlor game. Rather, it carries with it the gravest implications. If there is no God, then our lives do indeed belong to us, and we can do with them what we want. If there is no God, our lives have no ultimate meaning or transcendent purpose, and they become simply artifacts of our own designing. Accordingly, when they become too painful or too shallow or just too boring, we ought to have the prerogative to end them. We can argue the legalities and even the morality of assisted suicide until the cows come home, but the real issue that has to be engaged is that of God's existence.

The incoming freshman class at Harvard is a disturbing omen indeed, for the more our society drifts into atheism, the more human life is under threat. The less we are willing even to wrestle with God, the more de-humanized we become.

Dad's Night - Reading Material

Thursday, September 17, 2015

Our parish's kick-off Dad's Night is one week away! Put it on your agenda, then promise your wife to cook dinner AND do the dishes sometime soon :) Reading material for the upcoming Dad's gathering can be found below.

Once a month from 8:00 - 9:30 pm, Saint Agnes welcomes parish dads to gather at Fusion Taste Restaurant, around the corner from the church (303 Broadway, Arlington). This month, the Dad's Group will meet on the last Thursday, September 24th. We will discuss relevant topics of careers, family, or just to catch up with old friends and meet new ones. For the first half hour we'll formally discuss short readings of interest, then catch up over beverages and dinner for the remaining time. The topic for September's discussion will be: "Catholic by Choice."  The link for the brief reading material is here.  Please come and join us, whether or not you have been able to read ahead. We look forward to meeting you!  
 If you have questions, please email Justin Quattrini (justin.quattrini [at] gmail.com).

Wednesday: Minute Message to Pray About!

Wednesday, September 16, 2015

Once Roe v. Wade established a constitutional right to abortion, there were subsequent attempts in various states to require the husband (or father) to consent to, or at least to be informed about, the abortion, even if he couldn't veto it. The US Supreme Court invalidated all these regulations, including, most notably in the Casey Case in 1992, a spousal notification requirement that contained an exception for abusive spouses. The abortion decision was to be the mother's sole call. Fathers need not even know.

Professor Dwight Duncan, UMass School of Law

March 3, 2015
This posting can be viewed originally on the PLLDF Professor's Corner webpage.

Weekly Digest

Monday, September 14, 2015

Welcome back, EVERYONE!
Here's the lineup for the week at the Parish:
  • Tuesday - Family Playgroup (10:30 am), Choir Practice (7 pm), Fatima Apostolate (7 pm)
  • Wednesday - Training for Eucharistic Ministers (7 pm), Arlington Catholic Women's Club (7:15 pm @ Arlington Senior Center)
  • Thursday - Saint Dymphna Society (6:30 pm)
  • Saturday - Confessions (3 pm)
  • Sunday - Coffee and Donuts (after 9 am Mass), Adult Choir (10:30 am Mass), Infant Baptisms (2 pm)
*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
Saint Agnes Family Playgroup - CHECK THE BLOG BEFORE YOU LEAVE!
The Saint Agnes Family group holds weekly Tuesday playgroups outdoors at nearby parks.  We start at 10:30 am (but sometimes moms run late).  You are welcome to join us! To print a written schedule of our summer playgroup locations, please click here. To see a map of our summer park schedule, please click here.

This Tuesday, September 15th, we will meet at Rindge Avenue Playground (26 Rindge Ave., Arlington) for some back-to-school fun!  It will be great to see everyone again and catch up.  This park has play structures and swings, as well as a lot of open field space overlooking the Arlington Reservoir, great for soccer or kites.  Bring your own lunch or snack and join us!

**NOTE THAT our outdoor summer schedule is highly dependent on good weather. If the weather seems questionable, please check your email or the blog page before you leave for playgroup. In case of rain, playgroup will be cancelled for the day. Thanks!**

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Extraordinary Ministers of the Eucharist
You are invited to be trained as an Extraordinary Minister of the Eucharist at Mass.  It is a wonderful way to serve our Parish. The training, a 90-minute discussion and training by Father Flatley, will take place on Wednesday, September 16th in the upper Church at 7:00 pm.

You will be able to ask questions and request which Masses you would like to serve. It is a set monthly schedule, revised yearly. For example, you could choose the 2nd Sunday of each month at the 9:00 am Mass. You may request as many weeks of the month as you would like. There are no commitments for Easter and Christmas, or the months of July and August. Your service is a gift to our parish. Please email Ginny Lawrence to confirm your attendance, or with questions (Ginnygdcooking [at] gmail.com).



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Massachusetts Alliance to Stop Public Funding of Abortion
Is God calling you to use your skills to protect God’s precious gift of life? Join the Massachusetts Alliance to Stop the Public Funding of Abortion. We are in need of people to help organize and gather the signatures needed to start this process. There is a role for everyone…both behind the scenes and on the front line. Please e-mail SAParishforLife [at] gmail.com or call Tom Harvey at 617-710-3616. More information can be found at www.stoppublicfundingofabortion.org.

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Small Groups
In the coming year, the Outreach committee will endeavor to create, organize, and structure small faith-sharing groups at Saint Agnes. The concept is for each group of 7-10 people to be self-contained and self-directing, while maintaining connectivity to leadership of the parish. Those who are interested will be able to join a group at periodic intervals, for example, at the Parish Ministry fair upcoming in October.

If you are interested in leading such a group, please create a concept for your group: you can pick your own topic, meeting time and location, and whether your group will be men, women, or co-ed. Let's start the discussion! Please email Marianne Hudelson (SaintAgnesFamilies@gmail.com) with your ideas if you are able to lead. Many thanks!

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FALL 2015 REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN FOR OUR WONDERFUL PARISH SCHOOLS!
FIDELITY HOUSE - Preschool and Pre-K
SAINT AGNES GRAMMAR SCHOOL - Pre-K through Grade 8
ARLINGTON CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL
Links to these websites are located at the top right-hand of the blog page.
When you invest and involve your family here, you can participate
in the evangelical mission and service of these community resources,
which are offered by - and in the long tradition of - our very own Catholic Church.
Financial Aid is available. WOW!

Making Music, Praying Twice: starts September 17

Sunday, September 13, 2015

Making Music Praying Twice
at Belmont Collaborative (St. Luke/St. Joseph)
Belmont, MA

MMP2 is an early childhood music education program that gives your child all the benefits of a music and movement class in a genuine faith-based environment.  It is designed for ages 0-5 with a caregiver.

Fall Classes: Thursdays at 10:30 am
The fall season of classes encompasses Ordinary Time and Advent/Christmas. Class is offered for all ages on Thursday mornings from 10:30-11:30 am beginning September 17. The tuition for this 12 class session is $110/one child and $155/two or more, plus a $45 material fee per family for two CDs and songbooks. To ask questions please contact the teacher, Dot Bowe (dbowe [at] newroadscatholic.org).  All classes will be held at St. Joseph Parish, 130 Common Street, Belmont, MA.


Registration for is ongoing and available online at:
http://www.newroadscatholic.org/making-music-praying-twice.html
or by calling the parish office at 617-484-0279.  No payment is necessary until the first class.

Wednesday: Minute Message to Pray About!

Wednesday, September 9, 2015

Law students and attorneys are particularly concerned with determining human rights, and defending them. This is as it should be. We are well advised to ponder the words of Dr. Joseph Stanton, patriarch of the pro-life movement in Massachusetts, who stated: “Protection of innocent human life in its most fragile and awesome beginning…and at its so often dependent close, is at once the highest privilege and most profound obligation of a caring and humane society.” By embracing this sage advice, the legal community can properly compass attention to a broader understanding of human rights.

Professor Scott FitzGibbon, Boston College Law School
December 1, 2014
This posting can be viewed originally on the PLLDF Professor's Corner webpage.

Weekly Digest

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Welcome, EVERYONE!
Summer is finally coming to an end.  Here's the lineup for the week at the Parish:

  • Tuesday - Family Playgroup (10:30 am), Fatima Apostolate (7 pm)
  • Thursday - Mom's Night In (8 pm)
  • Friday - Prep for Boston Sock Exchange (7 pm)
  • Saturday - Memorial Service for Aborted Children (7:00 am), Boston Sock Exchange (11 am at Park Street T-stop), Confessions (3 pm)
  • Sunday - Parish Pancake Breakfast (after 9 am Mass), Adult Choir (10:30 am Mass)
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Saint Agnes Family Playgroup - CHECK THE BLOG BEFORE YOU LEAVE!
The Saint Agnes Family group holds weekly Tuesday playgroups outdoors at nearby parks.  We start at 10:30 am (but sometimes moms run late).  You are welcome to join us! To print a written schedule of our summer playgroup locations, please click here. To see a map of our summer park schedule, please click here.

This Tuesday, September 8th, we will meet at Poet's Corner Park (4 Shelley Rd., Arlington) for some back-to-school fun!  It will be great to see everyone again and catch up.  This playground has a LOT of sand, if you are a digger!  Bring your own lunch or snack and join us!

**NOTE THAT our outdoor summer schedule is highly dependent on good weather. If the weather seems questionable, please check your email or the blog page before you leave for playgroup. In case of rain, playgroup will be cancelled for the day. Thanks!**


Here's a friendly reminder that Mom's-Night-In
is THURSDAY, September 10th

We will get together for a stress-free evening, pray a devotion together, and enjoy some social feminine fellowship!
I will not publish the hostesses address online, 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 8:00 pm.

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Boston Sock Exchange
This Saturday, September 12th is the Boston Sock Exchange at 11:00 am at the Park Street T-Stop.  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, September 11th 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 Sheila O'Brien (ObriensMo [at] hotmail.com).

The Boston Sock Exchange is currently in need of small 8 oz. bottled water, SOCKS, and men's and women's summer clothes.  We also need rain gear: ponchos and umbrellas.  Thank you!

"One of the greatest diseases is to be nobody to anyone." -Mother Teresa-

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Massachusetts Alliance to Stop Public Funding of Abortion
Is God calling you to use your skills to protect God’s precious gift of life? Join the Massachusetts Alliance to Stop the Public Funding of Abortion. We are in need of people to help organize and gather the signatures needed to start this process. There is a role for everyone…both behind the scenes and on the front line. Please e-mail SAParishforLife [at] gmail.com or call Tom Harvey at 617-710-3616. More information can be found at www.stoppublicfundingofabortion.org.

Our parish's next Respect Life meeting will be Monday, September 14th at 7:00 pm in the Parish Center.  Please join in sharing your gifts to save lives!

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Small Groups
In the coming year, the Outreach committee will endeavor to create, organize, and structure small faith-sharing groups at Saint Agnes. The concept is for each group of 7-10 people to be self-contained and self-directing, while maintaining connectivity to leadership of the parish. Those who are interested will be able to join a group at periodic intervals, for example, at the Parish Ministry fair upcoming in October.

If you are interested in leading such a group, please create a concept for your group: you can pick your own topic, meeting time and location, and whether your group will be men, women, or co-ed. Let's start the discussion! Please email Marianne Hudelson (SaintAgnesFamilies@gmail.com) with your ideas if you are able to lead. Many thanks!

*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
FALL 2015 REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN FOR OUR WONDERFUL PARISH SCHOOLS!
FIDELITY HOUSE - Preschool and Pre-K
SAINT AGNES GRAMMAR SCHOOL - Pre-K through Grade 8
ARLINGTON CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL
Links to these websites are located at the top right-hand of the blog page.
When you invest and involve your family here, you can participate
in the evangelical mission and service of these community resources,
which are offered by - and in the long tradition of - our very own Catholic Church.
Financial Aid is available. WOW!

Theological Institute: Grow in Faith and Knowledge!

Thursday, September 3, 2015

The Theological Institute at Saint John’s Seminary began fall semester courses on September 1st!  Do you feel called in a new direction?
As Catholics by virtue of our Baptism we are called to bring Christ to others. You can make a difference for our Archdiocese by growing in faith formation and spirituality. Come expand your resources in the faith to renew and rebuild the Church. Courses are offered from 5:00-7:00 pm and 7:30-9:30 pm on Tuesday and Thursday evenings. A few course highlights are: Fundamental Theology, The New Evangelization, Transformative Learning: Call to Holiness and Implications for Evangelization and Galatians and Romans.

Come and See what is happening at The Institute, ‘Learning From Within the Heart of the Church!’ The campus is located at 149 Washington Street, Brighton and is accessible by train. To learn more or to register, visit www.theologicalinstitute.org, or call 617-779-4104.