Guest User Guest User

XXXII Sunday in Ordinary Time

Artboard_6.png

32nd Sunday of ordinary time

“Come to me, all you who labor and are burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am meek and humble of heart; and you will find rest for yourselves” (Mt 11:28-29). The Lord invites us to find peace and joy in Him this Sabbath as we set aside time to worship and rest.

PREPARE

Remember the sabbath day—keep it holy. Six days you may labor and do all your work, but the seventh day is a sabbath of the LORD your God.
— Exodus 20:8-10

Sabbath comes from the Hebrew word “Shabbat”, which literally means “to stop.” Keeping holy the Sabbath is not just a commandment, but an invitation. An invitation from the Lord to stop our work, stop our worrying, stop our striving. An opportunity to fid rest and to be renewed. A chance to refocus on the things that truly matter - the Lord, family, community. In our culture, Sunday has become a day to “catch up” on everything that didn’t get done during the week, and any time left over is often seen as an opportunity just to “get ahead” for next week. But we Christians have a chance now to remember what it means to keep the Sabbath. During this pandemic the Lord is calling us back to Himself, offering us a chance to reclaim the gift of the Sabbath, reminding us again what it means to “keep it holy.”

A basic principle for observing the Sabbath is only to do things that can be considered “rest” or “worship”. Here are a few ideas to consider to begin more to enter into the Sabbath. Maybe pick just one thing to focus on this Sunday, then next Sunday keep that practice in addition to a second one. And then the next Sunday add a third, to slowly over time begin to enter into this great gift of the Sabbath more and more.

  • Keep the Lord at the center - read the Mass readings ahead of time, participate in Mass, make more time for prayer, spend some extra time in silence focusing on the Lord

  • Try not to work - resist the urge to check your email, or catch up on a few things, and leave it for Monday

  • Plan ahead - take care of what needs to be done before Sunday, so plan the rest of your week to make sure you get the laundry done, have gone grocery shopping, etc.so you don’t have to do any of it on Sunday

  • Spend the day “screen free” - try to stay off social media, internet news, and your phone as much as possible. If you can’t make it the whole day try to go for at least a few hours

  • Be intentional with others - if you live with others (ie. family, roommates), is there something you can do together like play a game or go on a hike? If you live alone, can you reach out to a good friend and catch up?

  • Leisure, not entertainment - try to do things that are life giving; binge-watching a favorite show or playing video games for hours rarely leaves anyone with a new zeal for life. Read a good book, go on a long walk, develop a hobby.

 

PARTICIPATE

“Where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them” (Mt 18:20). Each Sunday we are called to “keep holy the Sabbath” and although that may look different for right now we will still come together as a St. Ann community through the gift of technology.

MASS READINGS

 

GIVING

Take a few minutes to give to St. Ann Parish. Please give generously and sacrificially as an act of faith during these difficult times. You can give online: 

After giving, offer ways to be generous of your whole self during this trying time for our world.

Each must do as already determined without sadness or compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver. Moreover, God is able to make every grace abundant for you, so that in all things, always having all you need, you may have an abundance for every good work.
— 2 CORINTHIANS 9:7-8
 

PROCESS

“At midnight, there was a cry, ‘Behold, the bridegroom! Come out to meet him!’ Then all those virgins got up and trimmed their lamps” (Mt 25:6-7). With this parable of the wise and foolish virgins, we begin our annual stewardship drive, which will continue over the course of this week through next weekend. The example of the wise virgins in the parable teaches us a lesson of paramount importance, namely, how to use our resources wisely to prepare for the coming of the divine bridegroom. Taking the oil in their lamps as a symbol of our resources, we see that they can be spent wisely or foolishly. The foolish virgins dissipate their oil without realizing what it was for, and run out before the bridegroom comes. Perhaps they were distracted, or forgetful, or careless, but in any case we see that they did not act as good stewards, using well what had been given to them. The wise virgins, on the other hand, use their oil well, making sure to have enough to light the way when the bridegroom arrives. In the face of so many needs and wants that we face, so many ways to potentially use our resources, how do we ensure that we use them wisely?

Wisdom is, according to our first reading, “the perfection of prudence” (Wis 6:15). St. Thomas Aquinas explains that it is a gift of the Holy Spirit which helps us to see all things in the light of divine truth (Summa Theologiae, II-II. q.45). It helps us understand clearly how God has made us for Himself, how His desire for us is to enjoy eternal beatitude with Him, and in light of these things, how we are to use our resources well. Returning to our parable, the wise virgins knew that the oil had been set aside for a certain purpose. It was reserved for the bridegroom, whose coming they eagerly desired (even though they fell asleep for a while!). The reason they could not give to the foolish virgins was not because they were hoarding their oil, but rather because it was not theirs to give – it had already been promised to God.

We are also invited not to burn all of our oil, so to speak, on only the wants and needs of this world, but to be wise in setting some aside for the Lord. This is the invitation given to us as we consider a financial commitment to St. Ann. To set aside a portion of our finances, to give back to the Lord, for use by our church. To use what we have been given to support the mission of the church, being watchful and vigilant in this work, since “we know neither the day nor the hour” (Mt 25:13). 

PRACTICE

Our practice this week is to take some time to prayerfully discern what sort of financial commitment you can make to St. Ann in the coming year.

First, we invite you to watch our series of videos that can help you as you make your decision. These videos will be released each day over the coming week and will go deeper into the theology of tithing as well as some practical help for how much and how consistently we should give.

Then, we would be so grateful for any financial commitment you can make to support the extraordinary work and mission of St. Ann. You can access online giving here.

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

Think about how you can continue to reflect on God’s word to you this week, and how you can invite others into the conversation. You can use the questions below for personal reflection, or to grow with others. Be creative! You could consider gathering with friends and family, or starting a group text, or a group FaceTime, to discuss the questions below. What stands out to you from the readings this week? What might God be speaking to you at this time?

  1. Did you do anything this past week that was inspired by last Sunday’s practice? Maybe try something new to grow in devotion to a saint?

  2. The importance of wisdom is a strong theme in the readings this week. How would you explain what it means to have wisdom? Are there ways to grow in wisdom?

  3. Can you think of a time in your life when you acted “foolishly”? What was it that impacted your decision at the time?

  4. Is there a situation you are facing in your life right now where you really need wisdom?

  5. This week at St. Ann we will be focusing on stewardship. We recognize that all we have has been given to us by the Lord and He asks us to be faithful stewards (or managers) of what He has given us. Do you feel you usually look upon what you have as “yours” or more see everything as God’s? What makes that easy or hard to do?

  6. What are some of the factors that make it challenging to commit to financial support of the parish and other charitable organizations?

  7. Have you ever experienced a time when you made a choice to give sacrificially and had a positive experience because of it?


KIDS

ACTIVITY

Tell your kids that you are going on a pretend trip. What would be the things we would need to take with us so that we are prepared? Name as many things that you would need to go on your trip.

CONNECTION

In this Sunday’s Gospel, Jesus uses a parable to tell us that we need to always be prepared for His second coming. Jesus tells us in Scripture “that He will come again in glory to judge the living and the dead” (Nicene Creed). In this parable, the wedding banquet is like God’s kingdom and the coming bridegroom represents Christ. We need to be alert and ready for the Lord’s coming because we do not “know either the day nor the hour.”

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

  1. Have you ever had to be ready for something very important, and then found that you didn’t have something that you really needed?

  2. Why were some of the girls foolish and some wise?

  3. How can we keep ourselves ready for when Jesus returns?

FAMILY PRACTICE

Take a piece of paper and fold it into fours. In one box write “Every Day,” “Every week,” “Every month”, and in the last box “Every Year”. Then write 4 things you can do in each box to help you be prepared for Jesus’ coming. Some examples are praying every day, going to mass every week, going to confession every month, doing a service project every year.

 
Read More
St. Ann Parish St. Ann Parish

XXX Sunday in Ordinary Time

Find our past Sabbath Guide Practices in our archived Sabbath Guides at the button below


30th Sunday in Ordinary Time

“Come to me, all you who labor and are burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am meek and humble of heart; and you will find rest for yourselves” (Mt 11:28-29). The Lord invites us to find peace and joy in Him this Sabbath as we set aside time to worship and rest.

PREPARE

Remember the sabbath day—keep it holy. Six days you may labor and do all your work, but the seventh day is a sabbath of the LORD your God.
— Exodus 20:8-10

Sabbath comes from the Hebrew word “Shabbat”, which literally means “to stop.” Keeping holy the Sabbath is not just a commandment, but an invitation. An invitation from the Lord to stop our work, stop our worrying, stop our striving. An opportunity to fid rest and to be renewed. A chance to refocus on the things that truly matter - the Lord, family, community. In our culture, Sunday has become a day to “catch up” on everything that didn’t get done during the week, and any time left over is often seen as an opportunity just to “get ahead” for next week. But we Christians have a chance now to remember what it means to keep the Sabbath. During this pandemic the Lord is calling us back to Himself, offering us a chance to reclaim the gift of the Sabbath, reminding us again what it means to “keep it holy.”

A basic principle for observing the Sabbath is only to do things that can be considered “rest” or “worship”. Here are a few ideas to consider to begin more to enter into the Sabbath. Maybe pick just one thing to focus on this Sunday, then next Sunday keep that practice in addition to a second one. And then the next Sunday add a third, to slowly over time begin to enter into this great gift of the Sabbath more and more.

  • Keep the Lord at the center - read the Mass readings ahead of time, participate in Mass, make more time for prayer, spend some extra time in silence focusing on the Lord

  • Try not to work - resist the urge to check your email, or catch up on a few things, and leave it for Monday

  • Plan ahead - take care of what needs to be done before Sunday, so plan the rest of your week to make sure you get the laundry done, have gone grocery shopping, etc.so you don’t have to do any of it on Sunday

  • Spend the day “screen free” - try to stay off social media, internet news, and your phone as much as possible. If you can’t make it the whole day try to go for at least a few hours

  • Be intentional with others - if you live with others (ie. family, roommates), is there something you can do together like play a game or go on a hike? If you live alone, can you reach out to a good friend and catch up?

  • Leisure, not entertainment - try to do things that are life giving; binge-watching a favorite show or playing video games for hours rarely leaves anyone with a new zeal for life. Read a good book, go on a long walk, develop a hobby.

 

PARTICIPATE

“Where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them” (Mt 18:20). Each Sunday we are called to “keep holy the Sabbath” and although that may look different for right now we will still come together as a St. Ann community through the gift of technology.

MASS READINGS

 

GIVING

Take a few minutes to give to St. Ann Parish. Please give generously and sacrificially as an act of faith during these difficult times. You can give online: 

After giving, offer ways to be generous of your whole self during this trying time for our world.

Each must do as already determined without sadness or compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver. Moreover, God is able to make every grace abundant for you, so that in all things, always having all you need, you may have an abundance for every good work.
— 2 CORINTHIANS 9:7-8
 

PROCESS

"You shall love the Lord, your God, with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind. This is the greatest and the first commandment. The second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself.” Mt 22:37-39

When we began this CommUNITY series, Jesus told the parable of the father with two sons, one of whom promises to go work in the vineyard but does not, and the other who says no but ends up going. The next week, wicked tenants fail to give the landowner the fruits of the harvest and kill the landowner’s son. In the third week, Jesus tells the parable of the wedding guests who refuse to come to the feast and of the guest who refuses to put on the wedding garment. And last week, the Pharisees attempted to entrap Jesus by asking Him about paying taxes to Cesar, but He responds that we must “repay to Caesar what belongs to Caesar and to God what belongs to God” (Mt 22:21). These parables have had some darkness to them. Jesus is trying to make clear to the Pharisees and us today that through the darkness of sin, we often turn away from God as well as harm our community. Instead, we have seen throughout this series the beautiful invitations God gives us to be engaged with our community, to use our gifts in service of others, to live the values of Boundless Mission and Abundant Hospitality, and to be active participants in our country as well as living for our Eternal Home. 

In today’s Gospel, Jesus sums up the call to all of these things in two simple commandments: love God and love neighbor. “The whole law and the prophets depend on these two commandments” (Mt 22:40). It is important to note that these are not recommendations, suggestions, teachings, nor best practices. These are commandments. Often our culture thinks of love as a feeling, but often feelings can not be controlled. We can not will ourselves to feel a certain way. If Jesus is giving us a command to love, then it shows that it involves a choice. And if they are commandments, then God also gives us the grace to be able to live it out. Love is a choice, love is an action. Jesus strengthens us to make this choice, to love our families, our neighbors, our fellow parishioners in concrete ways. As we work towards loving in concrete ways, it becomes possible to live a good life with “ease, self-mastery, and joy” (Catechism of the Catholic Church 1804). As we look back at last week’s Gospel reading, we see the rationale for loving God. In loving God, we are returning to him what is properly His: love. We offer love back to Him who is Love. 

PRACTICE

For the practice this week take some time to consider concrete ways to love God and neighbor. You could pick just one to focus on, or a few. You could even continue this practice over the next few weeks, striving to always find ways to show love to others. Use the graphic provided to write down what you hope to do, and then place it somewhere to be a reminder.

Below are a few suggestions to get you thinking as you strive to put love into action. 

God

  • spend some extra time in prayer just praising and thanking God for His goodness and telling Him you love Him

  • Make a visit to Jesus in the Eucharist, just to be with Him. You can go to the small chapel where the Eucharist is in the tabernacle or visit during the times of Eucharistic Adoration: Every Monday and Friday from 9 AM – 12 PM, and every Wednesday from 5 PM – 8 PM, in the Assembly Room.

Family

  • Write a note to a family member, telling them how much you love them, how important they are to you, and how much you appreciate them

  • Set aside some time to do something special with your family, just being together and enjoying each other’s company

Neighbors

  • Help a neighbor with something they need like mowing their lawn or seeing if they need anything at the grocery store

  • Deliver cookies or other treats to your neighbors just as something special to help them have a great day

Church community

  • Ask another person or family at St. Ann’s if they have any prayer intentions, then pray with them right at that moment.

  • Call someone you know in the community who is not able to be physically present at Church and ask how they are doing. Keep in touch with people who might be isolated through zoom, text, etc.

  • Invite friends to Fridays by the Fountain or other St. Ann community events personally and enjoy it together. https://www.facebook.com/events/337569770835216 

Extended community

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

Think about how you can continue to reflect on God’s word to you this week, and how you can invite others into the conversation. You can use the questions below for personal reflection, or to grow with others. Be creative! You could consider gathering with friends and family, or starting a group text, or a group FaceTime, to discuss the questions below. 

  1. What stands out to you from the readings this week? What might God be speaking to you at this time?

  2. Did you do anything this past week that was inspired by last Sunday’s practice?

  3. The first reading speaks of God’s great compassion and protection for the most vulnerable. Who do you feel are vulnerable in our community today? Are there ways you can show them compassion and help?

  4. In the second reading St. Paul writes to the church in Thessalonica about how from them “the word of the Lord has sounded forth.” Do you think the same thing could be said about St. Ann? If so, how do you see that? If not, are there things we could do differently so that it does?

  5. How would our culture define what it means to “love”? How is this similar or different from what Jesus is commanding in the Gospel?

  6. Can you share a recent example when you chose to love, or maybe a recent example when someone chose to love you?

  7. What does it mean concretely to choose to love:

  • God

  • Your family

  • Your neighbors

  • Your parish family

  • Your extended community


KIDS

ACTIVITY

Memorize this Bible Verse as a family: “Love the Lord, your God, with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind.- Matthew 22:37.” You can make up hand motions, make a banner, or play a game where you remove one word at a time to see who has it memorized first.

CONNECTION

In this Sunday’s Gospel, Jesus tells us that the two most important commandments are to love God and to love others as much as we love ourselves. These aren’t just nice ideas, but are given as commandments, or rules, we need to follow.  When we love others through our words and deeds, we show our love for God. These acts we do, however small or big, are living out these two commandments Jesus gave us- to love God and others.  

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

  • Why do you think these two commandments are so important to remember?

  • What do you think it means to love God with all your heart, mind, and soul?

  • What do you think Jesus means when he says love your neighbor as yourself?

  • Can you think of ways that we can put these words into action?

FAMILY PRACTICE

This week think about how you could love others as much as you love yourself and make an effort to put others before you. Maybe that means going to the back of the line at school so others get to go first, letting your siblings pick what they want to do instead of what you want to do, helping your parents without having to be asked twice. When we put other people’s needs in front of our own we show them God’s love and we show God that we love Him by following His commandment.  

 
Read More