January 2019

III Sunday in Ordinary Time “C” – January 27, 2019

In today’s Gospel we hear the great Jubilee text. Jesus goes to the sabbath service in the synagogue at Nazareth. His reputation has spread throughout the countryside, and many have come to see Him, curious about what He might say. After all miracles He has been performing in other places, they look to Him to explain himself. Jesus concludes with: “This text is being fulfilled today even as you listen.” The Old Testament principle of Jubilee is restored in the teaching of Jesus. Jubilee behavior involves showing compassion and care for those crushed by social and economic injustice.

As a congregation, a school group, a family or even as individuals, we are called to live in step with the spirit of Jubilee renewal. This means showing compassion to people in need, but also working to break the chains of structural injustice that prevent millions throughout the world from realizing full and dignified lives. The biblical vision of Jubilee provides a perspective to guide the Christian community’s behavior in the larger economic system. It invites us to listen to the voice of people who are poor, oppressed and powerless, to deepen understanding of the structural causes of global poverty and injustice, to pray for long-term solutions to the global poverty crisis, and to share wealth with those who are poor. In recent decades, there have been strong Jubilee movements, involving churches, to cancel the debt of low-income countries, bring about trade justice, and challenge the huge amounts of global spending on arms trading and nuclear weapons. Through prayer and action, our congregation can be part of the worldwide Jubilee movement to tackle greed and inequity, and build a just and fair global economy within a sustainable environment, for the sake of the world’s poorest communities.

III Sunday in Ordinary Time “C” – January 27, 2019 Read More »

II Sunday in Ordinary Time “C” – January 20, 2019

Today’s Gospel reading is about a wedding, one that Jesus and His disciples attended in Cana. The bridal couple were probably comparative strangers, as was the custom in those days. They, too, may have been “surprise by joy” as they entered the lifelong process of deepening love and mutual discovery. The wedding celebration at Cana conveys an important truth about God’s desire to be one with God’s people in a new covenantal relationship. This was not a new message. The prophet Isaiah in our first reading today describes how the Lord will “wed” His faithful people, “like a young man marrying a virgin”. People did not expect such an event until the end of time, so it came as a surprise when Jesus announced that the reign of God was already arriving. Those who were poor in Jesus’ day didn’t expect to be so blessed. When Mary observed that the wine had run out, it is as though she were lamenting a faith whose joy had run dry. She knew that faith is not about rules but relationship.

The wedding at Cana is a kind of parable, showing how God longs to relate to us, not in harsh or exacting judgment, but in tender, faithful love. In the presence of Jesus those huge stone ceremonial vessels containing water for purifying began instead to overflow with wine for rejoicing. The same change takes place within the believer’s heart: we may feel glad and uplifted instead of sad and sinful. The “best wine” has been saved until now, as the steward of the last feast said; it has been saved for us. St. John tells us that there were six of jars. Since the number 7 is the Jewish idea of perfection, 6 stands a symbol of incompleteness. However hard we may try, we can never achieve holiness by our own efforts. In our relationships and in our work, it may sometimes feel as though the joy run out and that we have nothing left to give anyone else. The let us turn to Jesus in our incompleteness. “Do whatever He tells you,” says Mary to us, as she said at Cana. This is our chance to begin again, to accept His forgiveness and healing, and allow God’s Spirit to fill our hearts. Jesus didn’t say to the servants at Cana, “Store that good wine until the end of time.” He said, “Draw it now.”

II Sunday in Ordinary Time “C” – January 20, 2019 Read More »

Bishop Bernard’s Pastoral Letter on Discipleship

January, 2019

HAPPY NEW YEAR to all of you in our Central Diocesan family, and welcome to the Year of Discipleship in our holy Church!

In the words of our national PNCC Future Direction Sub-Committee recently given to us..…..As our Lord said to His disciples “Follow Me” for His public ministry, He continues to call us to follow Him and wants our relationship with Him to grow and strengthen as the days, months and years goes by.  Our PNCC is calling us to renew our Discipleship in our Lord this year and as we begin 2019…. 

Soooo – let’s get a handle on this idea of discipleship, shall we?

Not too long ago I was watching a Netflix presentation about the Masons, with a focus on their place of origin, Freemasons’ Hall in Great Queen Street, London.  As I became drawn into the narrative of this society’s founding and growth, I was struck by how clearly they laid out the expectations of a mason.  By contrast, I was struck by how often our Church is hesitant to name the expectations of discipleship for its members. 

Our Future Directions Sub-Committee has begun laying out these expectations and will continue that effort throughout the year.  I’d say, it all boils down to five basic opportunities to “grow and strengthen our relationship with Jesus.” 

Worship – We worship God together, through his Son Jesus.  Worshipping regularly is a part of who we are as Catholic Christians. The people of God join together in the house of God to worship and honor God (Psalm 150). Worship is about community: the Christian community gathers to worship, to pray together, and to continue its growth in the faith.

Grow – We become affiliated with a parish society, Bible study, the School of Christian Living to grow in faith and our walk with Jesus.  Jesus went to the synagogue “as was His custom” (Luke 4:16).  Synagogue for Jesus was a place of discernment, learning scripture, and growing in the knowledge and love of God and neighbor.  We join with other PNCC-ers here in order to grow together.

Mission – We are called to love our neighbors.  We are encouraged to be involved in some mission emphasis.  Jesus had a special place in His heart for the poor, marginalized, outcast, and lost. We are called to be the hands, feet, and voice of Jesus Christ in our world.  We seek to love and serve others and believe this is vital in our Christian walk.

Talents and Abilities – All of us have talents and abilities that can be used for the glory of God.  Some have the gift of teaching or leading.  Others have the gift of administration, or may be gifted in finance and can help the church to be faithful stewards of the gifts offered for ministry and mission.  Some have the gift of compassion, or love to send cards to those who are sick. Some feel called to reach out to the unchurched, while others have the gift of hospitality.  Yes, all of us have some God-given gift, talent, or ability that we can use for the glory of God.

Proportional Giving – Stewardship is a spiritual discipline and an act of worship.  Our offering is a recognition that everything we have and are is a gift to us from God.  We are all blessed.  We are all called by God to offer our first-fruits and our [portion] to God for the work of His kingdom (Leviticus 27:30-33; Deuteronomy 14:22-29).  Our offering at a regular percentage of giving is an act of gratitude, an act of obedience, and an act of our covenantal agreement with God.  Our offering is used, then, in ministry and mission on behalf of our Lord Jesus Christ.     

So let’s take time to reflect on these five expectations as we undertake a life of Catholic Christian discipleship.  After all, God proved he loves us so much by giving His only begotten Son to live among us, to teach us of God’s love and kingdom, to die that we might be forgiven, and to rise that we may have eternal life.  God has promised to be with us always.  Discipleship, then, is our faithful response to this God who “so loves the world”  (John 3:16)      

Peace and grace to all.

Bishop Bernard 

Bishop Bernard’s Pastoral Letter on Discipleship Read More »

Epiphany of the Lord “C” – January 6, 2019

Today’s story from St. Matthew’s Gospel provides us with an insight into how men and women 2000 years ago would stargaze and learnt to plot the course of a journey in doing so. It is worth pondering just how challenging journeys in those days must have been. There were none of the modern means of transport and travel, and yet we know that men and women had by then migrated from one continent to another and trade routes were already well established. Beasts of burden, like camels and donkeys, carrying not only the travelers but their belongings, made long journeys possible.

St. Matthew was writing for his own Jewish people and one of his concerns was that they grasped the fact that Jesus, while He had come to liberate them, had also come to liberate all men and women of all time. Having helped his own people make the necessary connection with the prophecy about Bethlehem being the place towards which they were heading, he also links their journey with Isaiah’s prophetic vision of the nations seeing the light and traveling to pay homage with their gifts. The gold points us to the fact that Christ child has come to establish the kingdom of God. The incense reveals that He is no ordinary child but God’s Son, while myrrh warns us of the disturbing prospect of His passion and death: His body will need to be anointed after His death.

The Church has incorporated the wonderful symbols of the wise men’s gifts into its liturgy. Just think of how we use incense to remind us not only of the preciousness of Christ’s presence in the sacraments, but also of the preciousness of each and every one of us. In the funeral rite the body, which has been anointed in the sacraments, is incensed: a reminder that our mortal bodies are destined for resurrection. In today’s world the invitation to you and me is to be ever conscious of the need to reach out to everyone and embrace all people as God’s precious children. This feast of Epiphany provides a wonderful opportunity for us to think about the expansive and all-embracing nature of God’s revelation to the world, embodied in Jesus, and above all of what it means for us to respond to the needs of our brothers and sisters.

Epiphany of the Lord “C” – January 6, 2019 Read More »