AFFC BLOG: For the month of December, the Adult Faith Formation Commission is discussing ADVENT. Please visit our blog – FAITH MATTERS – to find reflections written by parishioners as well as links to lots of great information. “Like” us on Facebook to receive regular updates on our monthly theme!
Category Archives: Adult Faith Formation
December 7: News from the AFFC
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FAITH MATTERS: Much Ado About Advent
Increasingly Advent (the period of four weeks before Christmas Day) has become associated with the period of time between Thanksgiving and Christmas Eve. This is the time when we ‘shop till we drop’, go to parties, watch Christmas movies, fill our world with Christmas lights and music and wish everyone ‘Happy Holidays’! It seems to equate with the ‘Holiday Season’ and ends on Christmas Day (sometimes with Christmas trees being discarded on the side of the street by the afternoon).
However 50 years ago, Advent was a very different experience (at least according to my family in Europe.) Advent was a time of preparation of soul and body for the joy of the Christmas Season, which in those days meant the twelve days of Christmas ending on January 6th. This day was when the coming of the three Wise Men (or Kings) to bring gifts to the baby Jesus was celebrated. In much of Eastern Europe, this was the day when children received gifts (rather than Christmas morning). In the West, January 6th was celebrated in France as the feast of the three kings with a special cake being baked and in Ireland it was known as ‘Little Christmas’ with various celebrations, including the baking of a ‘three kings cake’ containing three rings to be found with much excitement.
Back in those days, Advent was viewed as a mini-Lent. It was a period of four weeks rather than six, and people fasted, but not as severely as during Lent. A poem called ‘Advent’ by Patrick Kavanagh talks of ‘dry black bread’ and ‘sugarless tea’. This poem clearly illustrates the understanding of people in times past, ‘Through a chink too wide there comes in no wonder’. In order to prepare for something special it was necessary to deal with the jadedness of a world where nothing is special. Through familiarity we get used to our world and take it for granted. So as Patrick Kavanagh says, ‘penance will charm back the luxury of a child’s soul’ in each of us. Then we are ready to enjoy, and appreciate the twelve days of Christmas. People are ready to party, to celebrate and enjoy each other. By their experience of Advent they have learnt again that it is important to savor the good things of life and take nothing for granted. Their hearts are filled with gratitude and they are open to the presence of God in all things, ‘and Christ comes with a January flower’.
Some of this past understanding of Advent can still be found today. You will notice that purple is worn by the priest during both Advent and Lent; the difference is in the shade of purple! Purple can symbolize pain, suffering, and therefore mourning and penitence. It is the liturgical color of Lent. It is also the color of royalty and traditionally has also been used for Advent. It is still used in Catholic churches but blue is replacing purple for Advent in many Protestant churches. The difference in ‘purple’ between Lent and Advent is that, in Lent, a deeper darker shade is used since Lent is the time we ask God to prepare us for Our Lord’s death (before ‘all things being made new’ Easter morning). Advent purple is a lighter shade with a hint of pink. After all, the third Sunday of Advent is ‘Joyful’ Sunday and is represented by a pink candle (rather than purple) in the advent wreath. We would do well to remember that we are awaiting a baby’s birth and it would be heartbreaking not to notice ‘God’s breathe in common statement’!
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Evening for Women: Tuesday, December 3 at 6:30pm
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 on Tuesday, December 3 at 6:30pm in the Social Hall. (Bring a favorite Fall recipe!) All Welcome!
Moderator: Sr. Evelyn Ronan, SND
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November 24: News and Events from the AFFC
AFFC BLOG: For the month of November, the Adult Faith Formation Commission is discussing SAINTS. Please visit our blog, Faith Matters, to find reflections written by parishioners as well as links to lots of great information. “Like” us on Facebook to receive regular updates on our monthly theme!
EVENING FOR WOMEN: 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. Our next gathering is December 3, 6:30pm. Starts in the Social Hall. Moderator: Sr. Evelyn Ronan, SND All Welcome! (Bring a favorite Fall recipe!)
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FAITH MATTERS: The Canonization of Saints
What does the Catholic Church mean by “Saint”? The Catholic Church calls some people “saint” in an official way because they offer exemplary model to the rest of us as to how to be open to God; how to say “yes to God. At first saints were proclaimed by popular acclamation. When a holy person died, the people of the local area would begin calling him or her a saint and, over time, these saints were understood to be particularly good witnesses to living the Christian life. Continue reading
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FAITH MATTERS: A Great Cloud of Witnesses: The Communion of Saints
The Church teaches us that we are all a part of the communion of saints – the community of all men and women of good will, both living and dead. But this is a difficult thing to imagine, this communion of saints. Fortunately, the Bible gives us a wonderful image. Continue reading
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FAITH MATTERS: What is a Saint?
November 1st is the day on which Christians celebrate all saints, known and unknown. But what is a ‘Saint’? In St. Paul’s First Letter to the Corinthians we read: ‘To the church of God which is at Corinth, to those sanctified in Christ Jesus, called to be saints together with all those who in every place call on the name of our Lord Jesus Christ,’ (I Cor 1:2). What does St. Paul mean by use of the word ‘saint’? In other translations of the Bible, ‘called to be saints’ is translated from the original Greek as ‘called to be holy.’ So saint is a synonym for holy. Continue reading
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November 12: AFFC Lecture with Fr. Liam Bergin – “Proclaim the Lord’s Death Until He Comes in Glory”
Join us on Tuesday, November 12 at 7:00pm in the Social Hall for a lecture with Fr. Liam Bergin – “Proclaim the Lord’s Death Until He Comes in Glory.” How does our faith in Jesus Christ influence the way we meet the challenges that face the church and the world in times of economic, political, ecclesia and personal uncertainty? In 1932 the German Benedictine Odo Casel wrote that Christian life and worship is an insertion into the “mystery of Jesus Christ”. Although not well known, the influence of Casel on the Second Vatican Council and beyond has been significant. This lecture presents some of the ideas of Casel that may well inspire women and men of faith today.
Liam Bergin is a priest of the diocese of Ossory (Ireland). He has been teaching sacramental theology at Boston College since 2011. Previously he was rector of the Pontifical Irish College in Rome for ten years. He has written and edited a number of articles and books in theology and has commented on many contemporary Church issues in the media. Since transferring to Boston, he has become an incurable Red Sox fan!
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Next AFFC Film/Potluck Supper on November 9
The next Film/Supper night will be held on Saturday, November 9 and will feature the movie Best Exotic Marigold Hotel. The event will take place in the Social Hall following the 5:00 p.m. Mass. Bring your favorite Fall recipe and drinks. All Welcome! The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel follows a group of British retirees who decide to “outsource” their retirement to less expensive and seemingly exotic India. Enticed by advertisements for the newly restored Marigold Hotel and bolstered with visions of a life of leisure, they arrive to find the palace a shell of its former self. Though the new environment is less luxurious than imagined, they are forever transformed by their shared experiences, discovering that life and love can begin again when you let go of the past.
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Evening for Women: Tuesday, November 5 at 6:30pm
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 this Tuesday, November 5 at 6:30 p.m. in the Social Hall. (Bring a favorite Fall recipe!) All Welcome!
Moderator: Sr. Evelyn Ronan, SND
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