Category Archives: Lent

Please Join Us Monday, March 2 for a Special Lenten Lecture with Fr. John Connelly

Fr John Connelly_square

Faith Working Through Love
Galatians 5.6
Revisiting “The Joy of the Gospel”
Monday, March 2 at 7:30pm

Upper Church

Our Lenten Program – C21 Engage: Mind ~ Heart ~ Life

Engage_CD_2ENGAGE: a faith formation program for adults is offered by the Church in the 21st Century Center (C21) at Boston College. Drawing upon the best resources available in the Boston College community, this initiative provides dynamic programming and strategies to nurture an adult’s faith.  We are delighted to be able to offer this wonderful program to our Parish.

Similar to our successful ARISE Program, ENGAGE is designed to build Catholic community by sharing Religious and Spiritual experiences and practices in small groups (6-10 people), in a parishioner’s home or our Parish Center, led by a facilitator, in five sessions, on the themes of: Spirituality Matters, Prayer, Discernment, Hospitality and Family Practices. The resources provided are based on the textbook Catholic Spiritual Practices: A Treasury of Old and New by Colleen Griffith and Thomas Groome from B.C. and include guidelines, videos and reflections.

Groups will begin the week of March 16.

Registration sign-up sheets for participants, hosts, and facilitators available in the Glen Road foyer and on our website.  Sessions will be in the evenings (7:30 to 9:00pm) or during the day at a time that a group selects.  Please consider hosting or facilitating a group – love to have you!

For more information please contact mail our Adult Faith Formation Commission: affc@stjohnwellesley.org or the McConvilles: jfmcconville@comcast.net or 781-237-6458.   You can also visit the C21 ENGAGE website.

ADVANCE NOTICE – ST. JOHN LENTEN PROGRAMS

Catholic_Spiritual_Practices_largeAll are invited to participate in one of our Lenten programs presented in collaboration with Boston College’s The Church in the 21st Century and based on a book by theologians Colleen Griffith and Tom Groome titled Catholic Spiritual Practices – A Treasury of Old and New.  This series, “Engage – Mind, Heart & Lives”, is similar to our ARISE Program of years ago. Groups of 8-12 will meet in homes or at St. John’s. We will need volunteer HOSTS and FACILITATORS. Boston College’s The Church in the 21st Century  program will provide us with the program instructions – including: SERIES OUTLINE, VIDEOS and BOOK.  In our groups, we will explore the concepts of Spirituality and Religion in relation to each other and the treasury we have of old and new spiritual practices. If interested in volunteering, please contact the McConvilles at (781) 237-6458 or jfmcconville@comcast.net 

ADVANCE NOTICE – ST. JOHN LENTEN PROGRAMS

Catholic_Spiritual_Practices_largeAll are invited to participate in one of our Lenten programs presented in collaboration with Boston College’s The Church in the 21st Century and based on a book by theologians Colleen Griffith and Tom Groome titled Catholic Spiritual Practices – A Treasury of Old and New.
This series, “Engage – Mind, Heart & Lives”, is similar to our ARISE Program of years ago. More information to come!

White Flower near Christian Cross

He is Risen!


Easter Sunday, April 20

White Flower near Christian CrossHe is Risen!
7:30am  Mass
9:00am  Family Mass
11:00am  Mass
Upper and Lower Church

Holy Saturday, April 19

Holy Saturday_Easter Vigil10:00am–12:00pm Sacrament of Reconciliation

7:30pm Mass of the Easter Vigil

Holy Thursday, April 17

last supper painting7:30pm Mass of the Lord’s Supper
Followed by Adoration until 10:00pm

Monday, April 7 at 7:30pm: Fr. Bryan Hehir and Fr. John Connelly on “The Christian of Tomorrow”

Fr Connelly_Fr. HehirPlease join us this Monday, April 7 at 7:30pm in the Upper Church for the final lecture in our Lenten Lecture Series – “An Exhortation from Pope Francis, The Joy of the Gospel” .  The series concludes with Fr. Connelly and Fr. Hehir speaking together on “The Christian of Tomorrow:   Doctrinal Reflection, Ethical Reflection.”

And remember – if you missed one of the previous lectures (or would just like to listen again), visit our Podcasts page to listen online or download to your iTunes library.

April 8 at 7:30pm: “The American Catholic Experience” with Fr. Mark S. Massa, S.J.

Fr. Mark MassaPlease join us on Tuesday, April 8 at 7:30pm in the Social Hall for a Lenten Lecture with Fr. Mark S. Massa, S.J.,  Dean of the School of Theology and Ministry at Boston College.  Fr. Massa will be speaking on “The American Catholic Experience.”

Here is Fr. Massa describing his work and areas of interest:

For the past decade my research interest has focused on the Catholic experience in the United States since World War II.  Catholics and American Culture sought to provide a non-“master narrative” approach to understanding how Catholics left their secure ghetto after 1945 to enter the verdant pastures of middle class affluence, with somewhat mixed results.  And precisely because of those mixed results, I utilized Reinhold Niebuhr’s rich category of “theological irony to tell my tale.  Anti-Catholicism in America mined David Tracy’s protean distinction between “analogical” and “dialectical” pre-conceptual languages to explain how – and – why – Catholics and other Americans actually do see the world differently, a difference that has contributed significantly to “prejudice” against Catholics in the U.S. And I use that term in neutral sense (and not in its more usual pejorative) sense: prejudice comes from two Latin words that mean “prejudgment.”  I thus attempted an ideologically neutral approach to anti-Catholic “prejudice.”  My latest book, The American Catholic Revolution (Oxford 2010) examines what happened after Vatican II when historical consciousness (i.e., the awareness that everything in history changes) was let loose in the American Catholic community. The book starts with Vatican II, and examines the reception of Humanae Vitae, the “Catonsville Nine” anti-Vietnam War protest, the reform of women’s religious orders, and Avery Dulles’ classic work, Models of the Church.