Lent Schedule – 2010


ADULT BIBLE CLASS

Begins SUNDAY, MARCH 21, 2010
About 10 minutes after 9:30 am Mass.


We'll meet for six consecutive sessions with the exception of Easter Sunday. Easy to get to the 11:00 Mass, if that is your choice, from the class.

All are most welcome to come join the class, sit back and learn more about your Bible, Church etc. Any questions call John Lippert, 650-854-3278



COMMUNAL PENANCE SERVICE

March 25, 2010 – 7:00 pm

There will also be the opportunity to receive the sacrament of reconciliation individually.




LENTEN DISCIPLINES

ABSTINENCE: Everyone fourteen years of age and older is bound to abstain from meat on ASH WEDNESDAY, the FRIDAYS of Lent and GOOD FRIDAY.

FAST: Everyone eighteen years of age and older, but under the age of sixty, is also bound to fast on ASH WEDNESDAY and GOOD FRIDAY.

On these 2 days, the law of fast allows only one full meal a day, but does not prohibit taking some food during the day, so long as this does not constitute another full meal. Drinking liquids during the day is permitted. When health or the ability to work would be seriously affected, the law does not oblige.


Examination of Conscience
With the 10 Commandments
PDF File



Prayer in honor of the Five Holy Wounds of Jesus

Saints Gertrude the Great and Mechtilde

Jesus revealed to St. Gertrude that if any one of the following short prayers is repeated five times in honor of the Five Holy Wounds of the Lord, while spiritually kissing the Wounds devoutly and adding some prayers or good works, and offering them through the Sacred Heart of Jesus, they will be as acceptable to God as the most arduous devotion:

Jesus, Savior of the World, have mercy on me. You to Whom nothing is impossible, bestow mercy to the wretched. O Christ, Who by Your Cross, hast redeemed the world, hear us. The Lord is my strength and my glory; He is my salvation.

Hail Jesus, my loving Spouse. I salute You in the ineffable joys of Your Divinity; I embrace You with the affection of all creatures, and I kiss the Sacred Wound of Your love. (4)

One day, before the Feast of the Ascension, St. Gertrude repeated the following salutation five thousand, our hundred and sixty-six times:

Glory be to Thee, sweetest, most gentle, most benign, sovereign, transcendent, effulgent, and ever-peaceful Trinity, for the roseate wounds of Jesus Christ, my only Love!

After completing these salutations, Our Lord Jesus appeared to her, more beautiful than the angels, bearing golden flowers on each Wound. With a serene countenance and tender charity, He said, "Behold in what glory I now appear to you. I will appear in the same form to you at the hour of your death, and will cover all the stains of your sins, and adorn you with a glory like that with which you have adorned My Wounds by your salutations. All of those also who salute my Wounds with the same devotion shall receive the like favor."

You can say the above salutation 5466 times by praying in five times a day for three years. You may also add the following oblation which Jesus asked St. Mechtilde to pray after each division of five:

Let us pray. O Lord Jesus Christ, Son of the Living God, accept this prayer, with that surpassing love, with which Thou didst endure all the Wounds of Thy most Holy Body. Have mercy on me, and on all sinners, and on all the Faithful, living and departed. Grant them grace and mercy, remission of sins, and everlasting life. Amen. (5)

(4) – Joan Carrol Cruz, Prayers and Heavenly Promises: Compiled from Approved Sources, (Rockford IL:TAN Books, 1990) 49. Copyright © by Joan Carrol Cruz.

(5) – The Precious Blood and Mother A Compilation of Prayers from Approved Sources by the Sister Adorers of the Precious Blood, Edmonton, Canada. (Manchester, NH: Monastery of the Precious Blood) 107-108


Holy Week and Easter Schedules


St. Denis

Weekday Masses

8:00 am Mon, Tues, and Wed.

Holy Thursday

8:00 am Morning Prayer
7:00 pm Mass of the Lord's Supper

Good Friday

1:00 pm Stations of the Cross
Followed by liturgy & Communion

Holy Saturday

8:00 am Morning Prayer
9:00 am Confessions
8:00 pm Easter Vigil

Easter Sunday

Easter Masses
7:30, 9:30, & 11:30am


Our Lady of the Wayside

Weekday Masses

7:30 am Tue. and Wed.

Holy Thursday

Services at St. Denis

Good Friday

1:00 pm Stations of the Cross
2:00 pm Liturgy & Communion
Followed by Confessions

Holy Saturday

Services at St. Denis

Easter Sunday

Easter Masses
8:00 am & 9:30 am









Now is the Time to Forgive
by: Catherine Doherty

Forgiveness is one of the urgent spiritual needs and action of today! Truly there is no use beating about the bush. No use to hide behind rationalization. No use sharpening any kind of argument, philosophical or theological – man–made arguments!

Now is the time to forgive. Begin with oneself, for one must always begin with oneself to forgive oneself, for the Christians on the North American continent are guilt-ridden, and because of it often attack the ones before whom we are most guilty, in order to rationalize ourselves out of the dead end street to which we have come.

The Lord said, "Love your neighbor as yourself". Which means we must love ourselves first, for we are, in a manner of speaking, our closest neighbor.

In order to love, one must forgive. For one cannot love the object of his hostility, his anger, his hatred, his un–forgiveness. Yes, we must begin with forgiving ourselves as our Father in heaven forgives us.

Simply, most sincerely, and with grave humility, we must acknowledge our sins before ourselves. This means that we have to go into the very depths of our own souls and bring them all forth, and after having begged forgiveness from God for them, forgive ourselves.

For how often have we gone to confession, been forgiven, but have remained uneasily, tragically guilty of those very sins that we have confessed to God, not trusting, as it were, either his love or his trust of ourselves or his forgiveness.

This is the hour in which we begin to understand that we must love one another, and that means forgive ourselves and everybody else!

It might seem utterly idiotic, stupid, irrelevant, to write an editorial on the Second Commandment and implore men across the world who may never read this editorial to begin to forgive.

Yet before our world in shambles, where greed rises to bare–faced openness and nobody even tries to conceal it... where evil means are used to ensnare and subject men to men... where all dams seem to have broken down, and the sticky, bleak and black waters of evil rise higher and higher across our cities and country, what else is there left to talk about but the Second Commandment of the Lord: to love God and love your neighbor. And that demands forgiveness; that demands mercy and compassion. "Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy."

It is true that forgiveness, mercy and compassion may and probably will lead to the axiom of Christ – "Greater love hath no man than he lay down his life for his friends." But then it would be most wonderful to die trying to forgive and love, than to die with hatred in your heart. To be able to forgive and love, or love and forgive, means to pray.

On the threshold of this Fall let us ask Miriam whom we call Mary, the Mother of God and of men, who loved and forgave – and forgave and loved the humanity that killed her Son, to teach us how to pray, how to love, how to forgive.

Copyright: Madonna House Publications – With Permission under a Creative Commons License.