February 9: This Week in Religious Education

Religious-Education-Contemporary_SMALLThis Week: Sunday, February 9
Grade 4 Mass 9:00 a.m.
Grades 1 – 6 Class 10:00 – 10:45 a.m.
Grade 4 Parent Visit
Grades 7, 8 Class 6:00 – 8:00 p.m.
Grades 9, 10 High School Retreat 1:00 p.m., Social Hall
Grade 9 Class 7:00 – 8:00 p.m.
Grade 10 Friends for Good 6:00 – 7:00 p.m.
Class 7:00 – 8:00 p.m.
Next Week: No Classes

RELIGIOUS EDUCATION CLASSES CANCELLED TODAY – Wednesday, February 5

Winter-StormDue to the storm, all Religious Education activities scheduled for today have been cancelled.
The Grade 2 Parent Meeting will be rescheduled.

Wednesday, February 26 at 7pm: AFFC Lecture with Prof. Jeff Bloechel – “The Jesus Prayer”

Jesus Prayer-sinai-christ-pantokratorPlease join us in the Social Hall on Wednesday, February 26 at 7pm for a lecture on The Jesus Prayer with Jeff Bloechel, Associate Professor of Philosophy at Boston College.  From Prof. Bloechel: “The ‘Jesus Prayer’ is distinguished by its simplicity (in Greek it is only five words long) and by its age (explicit references date to the 5th century). It is generally understood as a prayer by which the mind is taken into the heart, where God’s love touches us most deeply. In modern times, the Prayer was revived in Russia and brought to Mt. Athos, where it has become the center of an entire spirituality for many Greek Orthodox monks. My own encounter with the Prayer was shaped by three visits to Mt. Athos, and so I will include some discussion of the Holy Mountain in my thoughts on the Prayer.”

Attention Young Singers!

Music_Youth Choir LogoChildren in grades 1-8 are invited to participate in the St. John’s Easter Youth Choir.  The children will sing at the 9:00 AM Family Mass on Easter Sunday, April 20, 2014.

Sign up and first rehearsal is on Sunday, March 16 from 10:50-11:50 in the Chapel. Registration closes Sunday, March 23.  High School Assistants are welcome. There are 5 rehearsals: March 16, March 23, March 30, April 4, and April 13.  All rehearsals are from 10:50-11:50am in the Chapel.

For more information and to register call Maria Wardwell 781-237-2148 or Maria.wardwell@stjohnwellesley.org.

An Update on Our Capital Campaign

Faith_in_Our_Future_NewWe are pleased to announce that we have raised over $1,140,000 in pledges and one-time gifts toward our minimum goal of $1,250,000! If you have not decided on your gift to the campaign, we invite you to prayerfully consider making your gift at this time. Our hope is that as many parishioners as possible support this effort. Every gift, no matter the amount, truly makes a difference! Thank you to the many families that have already supported the campaign. You generosity is greatly appreciated.

Campaign Pledge Reminders:
This past week pledge reminders were mailed to parishioners who pledged to the capital campaign. Monthly reminders will be mailed at the end of each month. Quarterly reminders will be sent each January, April, July and October. Semi-Annual will be sent January and July. Annual reminders will be mailed each December (allowing for year-end gifts). You may also make payments at your convenience. Please be sure to include your payment coupon along with your check to ensure proper credit to the capital campaign. If there is an error with your statement, please make a note of it and your account will be updated. Thank you!

Tuesday, February 4 at 6:30pm: Evening for Women

heart-of-godThis year’s theme – Becoming a Space for God… A Journey Into the Heart of Life – invites us to travel down new avenues of seeing and hearing to experience the grace in everyday life. Through reflection, prayer, sharing, with a fabulous potluck, we’ll travel this road together every first Tuesday evening.  Join us at 6:30 pm in the Social Hall – bring a favorite winter recipe! All are Welcome!  Moderator: Sr. Evelyn Ronan, SND

February 2: News and Events from Adult Faith Formation

Ordinary TimeFAITH MATTERS: Have you ever wondered about ORDINARY TIME? What is Ordinary Time? Why is it different from Advent/Christmas and Lent/Easter? What do we celebrate during this time? What is ordinariness and is this a good thing? For the month of February, the Adult Faith Formation Commission is discussing The Specialness of “Ordinary Time”. Please visit our blog page to find reflections written by parishioners as well as links to lots of great information. Choose the “like” option on Facebook to receive regular updates on our monthly theme!

heart-of-godTuesday, February 4 – Evening for Women
6:30pm, Chapel/Social Hall
This year’s theme – Becoming a Space for God… A Journey Into the Heart of Life – invites us to travel down new avenues of seeing and hearing to experience the grace in everyday life. Through reflection, prayer, sharing, with a fabulous potluck, we’ll travel this road together every first Tuesday evening. Join us at 6:30pm in the Social Hall – bring a favorite winter recipe! All are Welcome!  Moderator: Sr. Evelyn Ronan, SND

Jesus Prayer-sinai-christ-pantokratorThursday, February 26 – Lecture: The Jesus Prayer 
7:00pm, Social Hall
Jeff Bloechel, Associate Professor at Boston College
From Prof. Bloechel: “The ‘Jesus Prayer’ is distinguished by its simplicity (in Greek it is only five words long) and by its age (explicit references date to the 5th century). It is generally understood as a prayer by which the mind is taken into the heart, where God’s love touches us most deeply. In modern times, the Prayer was revived in Russia and brought to Mt. Athos, where it has become the center of an entire spirituality for many Greek Orthodox monks. My own encounter with the Prayer was shaped by three visits to Mt. Athos, and so I will include some discussion of the Holy Mountain in my thoughts on the Prayer.”

FAITH MATTERS: The Specialness of “Ordinary Time”

Ordinary TimeFor most of my life, seeing ‘Ordinary Time’ Sundays between Christmas Season (ending with The Baptism of the Lord) and Ash Wednesday, and then from Trinity Sunday all the way through to Advent, made me feel really dismal. It meant that there was nothing to celebrate or prepare for! I love having a focus to my time and I interpreted ‘Ordinary Time’ as unfocused, lost time. The word ‘ordinary’ sounded dull, lifeless, and boring to me. ‘High days and Holidays’ were the times I felt alive in Church and I enjoyed having a purpose to the days, even if I was ‘giving up’ chocolate for Lent.

So why does the Catholic Church designate so many weeks of the year as ‘Ordinary’? The Episcopal Church celebrates the Advent, Christmas, Lenten and Easter Seasons but also has the Epiphany Season which continues from January 6th through to Ash Wednesday, and the Season after Pentecost which runs from Trinity Sunday to Advent. To my mind that sounded more ‘up-beat’, more celebrating, less ordinary.

Then, the Holy Spirit must have inspired me! I realized that some humility was in order, so I explored what the Catholic Church actually meant by using the word ‘Ordinary’. What I discovered was filled with the Holy Spirit.

Let me explain. To begin, I realized that each occasion upon which Ordinary Time begins it follows a particular revelation of God. The first follows the Season of Epiphany (which includes the Visit of the Magi, the Wedding Feast at Cana, and the Baptism of the Lord) when Jesus, the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity, is revealed to the world. The second follows the coming of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost, the Third Person of the Blessed Trinity. The full revelation of the Trinity is celebrated on Trinity Sunday and then ‘Ordinary Time’ begins.

Each revealing of a Person of the Trinity takes time for us to accept into our deepest selves; we slowly learn to welcome God into our souls and become aware of ‘God Within’. The Catholic Church gives us Ordinary Time as a time in which to recognize this truth, accept it and choose to say ‘YES’ to God as the Lord of our Life. As a very dear friend of mine (an 80 year old nun) says, ‘It is like inviting God to take over the steering wheel of my life, recognizing that I am now the passenger and willingly accepting whatever happens next!’

In the Gospel of Luke (1:26-38), Mary says ‘YES’ to God after some perplexity, pondering and a moment of questioning; then the Holy Spirit overshadows her and she conceives Jesus, the Son of God. Unfortunately, for most of the rest of us, it takes a lot longer for us to overcome our layers of resistance to handing over our perceived independence (similar to layers of an onion is how I imagine our layering of self protection and fear) so as to rejoice in our dependence on God. We need all the Ordinary Time we can get!

So how do we live our life ‘aglow with the Spirit’ as St. Paul describes our new existence filled with the Spirit? He says, ‘serve the Lord, rejoice in your hope, be patient in tribulation, be constant in prayer, contribute to the needs of the saints, practice hospitality, bless those who persecute you, rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with those who weep, live in harmony with one another, do not be haughty but associate with the lowly, never be conceited, repay no one with evil but take thought for what is noble in the sight of all’ (Romans 12:11-17).

This is a lot to manage, but, God, understanding our fear of losing control, leads us gently into oneness with the Spirit; it is the work of our lifetime. Actually Pierre Teilhard de Chardin describes best what Ordinary Time is all about:

Above all, trust in the slow work of God. We are quite naturally impatient in everything to reach the end without delay. We should like to skip the intermediate stages. We are impatient of being on the way to something unknown, something new. And yet it is the law of all progress that it is made by passing through some stages of instability—and that it may take a very long time.

And so I think it is with you; your ideas mature gradually—let them grow; let them shape themselves, without undue haste. Don’t try to force them on, as though you could be today what time (that is to say, grace and circumstances acting on your own good will) will make of you tomorrow.

Only God could say what this new spirit gradually forming within you will be. Give Our Lord the benefit of believing that his hand is leading you, and accept the anxiety of feeling yourself in suspense and incomplete (Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, Hearts on Fire).

February 2: This Week in Religious Education

Religious-Education-Contemporary_SMALLThis Week: Sunday, February 2
Grades 1 – 6 Class 10:00 – 10:45am
Grade 2 Parent Meeting/Visit
Wednesday, February 5
Grades 1 – 6 Class 3:30– 4:45pm
Grade 2 Parent Meeting/Visit
Next Week: Sunday, February 9
Grade 4 Mass 9:00am
Grades 1– 6 Class 10:00 – 10:45am
Grade 4 Parent Visit
Grades 7, 8 Class 6:00 – 8:00 p.m.
Grades 9, 10 High School Retreat 1:00pm, Church Social Hall
Grade 9 Class 7:00 – 8:00pm
Grade 10 Friends for Good 6:00 – 7:00pm
Class 7:00 – 8:00pm

Thank You to St. John’s Music and our Ministers of Music

Music, ChoirThe saying “He who sings prays twice” is often attributed to St. Augustine. There is reason to believe that he may not have written that exactly but wrote, “Singing belongs to the one who loves.” The nature of music is such that it can raise our spirits toward happiness, it can evoke memories of times past, it can express our sadness when the burning lump in our throat holds us back. Song (singing), a gift from God, brings us together in community with each other. We thank God for this gift – how?? By singing!

Our ministers of music (Youth Choir, instrumentalists, Family Mass Music Group, Parish Choir, cantors, directors) Continue reading