Shortcode
End shortcode
Women’s Cornerstone
Daily Rosary | Divine Mercy Chaplet | Eucharistic Adoration | Stations of the Cross
Men’s Cornerstone
Parish Picnic
Bereavement Ministry
Parish Picnic
Parish Picnic
Red Sample
Parish Picnic
Ed. Ginter
Spring Concert | Christmas Concert | Presentation MTV |
Piano Men
Parish Picnic
Baby Basics Drive: Feb. 27 & 28
Faith & Racial Justice: Virtual 8-Session Series begins Feb. 20
Our parish has enrolled in the JustFaith module Faith and Racial Justice, which is presented through the lens of the Christian faith. For more information, including how to register, please visit our Justice & Peace webpage (look under “upcoming programs”)
“Contemplating the Passion of Christ” | Overcoming Obstacles to Living the Foundation
~ February 8, 2021 ~
Come, Holy Spirit.
Come, you who can open my eyes to the reality of sin.
Help me to see the areas in my life that harden my heart
and make it insensitive to the suffering of my neighbor.
Holy Spirit, speak to me during this day.
Show me what’s wounding my heart.
Help me to overcome sin in my life
that I may ponder Christ’s Passion with true feeling,
Show me what’s wounding my heart.
Help me to overcome sin in my life
that I may ponder Christ’s Passion with true feeling,
that my heart may be renewed,
and that I may respond to my neighbor’s suffering
with deeper compassion and more generous mercy.
Amen.
“Contemplating the Passion of Christ”
An Excerpt from the Book of Fr Michael Gaitley:
“Consoling the Heart of Jesus”
“…The Passion of Jesus contains the greatest suffering and the greatest love, and therefore, it can evoke our compassion more than anything else. This is important because our hearts have become hardened and need to be healed. Moreover, one of the most important ways they begin to be healed is when they come face-to-face … with the suffering of another.
…The Passion contains yet another gift. With the suffering of others evokes our compassion and thus helps heal our hearts, the suffering of Jesus carries with it an extraordinary gift of grace. When we prayerfully reflect on the Passion, God’s grace powerfully works in our hearts to help us experience compassion and healing…
With deep feeling (compassion) and devotion, may we contemplate the Lord’s Passion, the suffering of his Heart, and his great love for us. In this way… our hears become transformed from stony hearts into hearts of flesh” thus we could be ready to live out the compassion, which is to console the heart of Jesus in his suffering and the suffering of others (135).
““A tree is known by its fruit; a man by his deeds. A good deed is never lost; he who sows courtesy reaps friendship, and he who plants kindness gathers love.”
Personal Response: Daily Journal
How can I console Jesus through other’s suffering today?
Private comments, reflections, and thoughts are welcomed. Email Fr. JC @ PresentationMedia.
Marian Missionaries of Divine Mercy.
Purchase the book of Fr. Michael Gaitley.
“Becoming Sensitive to the Suffering of Our Neighbor” | Overcoming Obstacles to Living the Foundation
~ February 7, 2021 ~
“Preparatory Prayer” to the Way of the Cross
O Jesus, my adorable Savior,
I seek Your forgiveness and mercy for myself and for my loved ones,
for those hardened by sin,
and all the faithful departed.
Wash away my sins and those of the whole world
through the infinite merits of Your Passion.
Give me the grace to enter more deeply into the mystery of Your Cross,
so that sharing in Your suffering and death,
I may experience a deep sorrow for my sins
and be ready to embrace willingly,
even with joy, all the sufferings and humiliations of this life and pilgrimage.
Amen.
“Becoming Sensitive to the Suffering of Our Neighbor”
An Excerpt from the Book of Fr Michael Gaitley:
“Consoling the Heart of Jesus”
“There’s nothing more in human than hardheartedness, nothing more against human nature than to be without a shred of compassion… There is a bit of a monster in all of us. Unless we’re already soaring on the heights of holiness, we all have at least some hardheartedness… all of us have at lease some place in our hearts that’s already turned into stone. This is simply one of the sad facts of sin in our lives; it hardens our hearts.
…We live under the influence of a culture that’s extremely successful at hardening peoples’ hearts.
…The culture of death in which we live is expert in killing not just babies but hearts, and it wants to kill ours… the influence of the culture of death will kill that spiritual center we call ‘the heart’. This kind of heart attack makes us incapable of true love and causes spiritual death. Such is the high-stakes battle we’re in: The culture of death threatens to kill our hearts, to kill our ability to love, to kill our true humanity.
Now, here’s some good news. There’s hope for our hearts. The culture of death doesn’t have to win; our hearts don’t have to die… The heart-hardening process can be reversed… we can get ‘new hearts’ (Ez 36:26), hearts that feel true love and compassion, hearts that are sensitive to the suffering of others. We don’t have to give in to the culture of death. We can be countercultural. We can help build up what Pope John Paul II called the ‘culture of life’ and the ‘civilization of love’.
Jesus sees so many people dying spiritual death of hardheartedness, and he calls out to them because he loves them and has the power to save them. Unfortunately, so many of them don’t come. Jesus desperately wants them to come so he can save them, but such a great number of them don’t even know they need saving. Moreover, many of them don’t want anything to do with Jesus. They think he’s the ‘Jansenist Jesus,’ the one who just wants to ruin their fun. Thus, they scorn him, run away, and harden their hearts to the God who is Love – and then they die (spiritually). This tragic reality breaks Jesus’ Heart; it’s why he needs us to console Him” (131-132).
“We do not need guns and bombs to bring peace, we need love and compassion. Let us not use bombs and guns to overcome the world. Let us use love and compassion”.
Personal Response: Daily Journal
How have I responded to the call of God and the saints to cultivate the “civilization of love”?
Private comments, reflections, and thoughts are welcomed. Email Fr. JC @ PresentationMedia.
Marian Missionaries of Divine Mercy.
Purchase the book of Fr. Michael Gaitley.
“Lent for Kids: Ash Wednesday”
“Why We Go to Confession”
Why should we celebrate the Sacrament of Reconciliation?
Reconciliation offers us healing for both our soul and our spirit,
and helps heal our relationship with God and others.
The Celebration of the Sacrament of Reconciliation
will be offered at the following times:
at Pardon and Peace on Monday, March 29 at 7:00pm,
at RECON on Saturday, March 6 from 9:30-4pm,
and daily at 9:30am following Daily Mass.
“Time of Forty Days”
Take a moment to watch this great humorous video song called
“This Time of Forty Days.”
Using the song “King of Pain” from the Police,
it gives a fun lesson on the many facets of Lent.
“A Review of the Day” | The Examen Prayer
~ February 1, 2021 ~
“Prayer for Generosity”
Music by Jandi Arboleda
Sung by St Peter’s Prer Vox Alumni
“A Review of the Day”
The Ignatian Examen
Rummaging for God: Praying Backwards through Your Day
Dennis Hamm, S.J.
The Biblical phrase, “If today you hear his voice,” implies that the divine voice must somehow be accessible in our daily experience, for this verse expresses a conviction central to Hebrew and Christian faith, that we live a life in dialogue with God. We are creatures who live one day at a time. If God wants to communicate with us, it has to happen in the course of a 24-hour day, for we live in no other time. And how do we go about this kind of listening? Long tradition has provided a helpful tool, which we call the examination of consciousness today. “Rummaging for God” is an expression that suggests going through a drawer full of stuff, feeling around, looking for something that you are sure must be in there somewhere. I think that image catches some of the feel of what is classically known in church language as the prayer of “examen”.
The examen, or examination, of conscience is an ancient practice in the church . In fact, even before Christianity, the Pythagoreans and the Stoics promoted a version of the practice. It is what most of us Catholics were taught to do to prepare for confession. In that form, the examen was a matter of examining one’s life in terms of the Ten Commandments to see how daily behavior stacked up against those divine criteria. St. Ignatius includes it as one of the exercises in his manual, the Spiritual Exercises.
It is still a salutary thing to do but wears thins as a lifelong, daily practice. It is hard to motivate yourself to keep searching your experience for how you sinned. In recent decades, spiritual writers have worked with the implication that conscience in Romance languages like French (conscience) and Spanish (conciencia) means more than our English word “conscience,” in the sense of moral awareness and judgment; it also means “consciousness”.
Now prayer that deals with the full contents of your consciousness lets you cast your net much more broadly than prayer that limits itself to the contents of conscience, or moral awareness. A number of people – most famously, George Aschenbrenner, S.J., in a classic article for Review for Religious in 1971 – have developed this idea in profoundly practical ways. I wish to propose a way of doing the examen, as an approach in five steps:
1. Pray for light. Since we are not simply daydreaming or reminiscing but rather looking for some sense of how the Spirit of God is leading us, it only makes sense to pray fo some illumination. The goal is not simply memory but graced understanding. That’s a gift from God devoutly to be begged. “Lord, help me understand this blooming, buzzing confusion.”
2. Review the day in thanksgiving. Note how different his is from looking immediately for your sins. Nobody likes to poke around in the memory bank to uncover smallness, weakness, lack of generosity. But everybody likes to savor beautiful gifts, and that is precisely what the past 24 hours contain -gifts of existence, work, relationships, food, challenges. Gratitude is the foundation of our whole relationship with God. So use whatever cues help you walk through the day from the moment of awakening – even the dreams you recall upon awakening. Walk through the past 24 hours, from hour to hour, from place to place, task to task, person to person, thanking the Lord for every gift you encounter.
3. review the feeling that surface in the replay of the day. Our feelings, positive and negative, the painful and the pleasing, are clear signals of where the action was during the day. Simply pay attention to any and all of those feelings as they surface, the whole range: delight, boredom, fear, anticipation, resentment, anger, peace, contentment, impatience, desire, hope, regret, shame, uncertainty, compassion, disgust, gratitude, pride, rage, doubt, confidence, admiration, shyness – whatever was there. Some of us may be hesitant to focus on feelings in this over psychologized age, but I believe that these feelings are the liveliest index to what is happening in our lives. this leads us to the fourth moment.
4. Choose one of those feelings (positive or negative) and pray from it. That is, choose the remembered feeling that most caught your attention. The feeling is a sign that something important was going on. Now simply express spontaneously the prayer that surfaces as you attend to the source of the feeling – praise, petition, contrition, cry for help or healing, whatever.
5. Look toward tomorrow. Using your appointment calendar if that helps, face you immediate future. What feelings surface as you look at the tasks, meetings, and appointments that face you? Fear? Delighted anticipation? Self-doubt? Temptation to procrastinate? Zestful planning? Regret? Weakness? Whatever it is, turn to it into prayer – for help, for healing, whatever comes spontaneously. To round off the examen, say the Lord’s Prayer (“Our Father…).
If we are to listen for the God who creates and sustains us, we need to take seriously and prayerfully the meeting between the creatures we are and all else that God holds lovingly in existence. That “interface” is the felt experience of our days. It deserves prayerful attention. It is a big part of how we know and respond to God.
Original Link of this article, CLICK HERE.
“Act as if everything depended on you; trust as if everything depended on God”.
Personal Response: Daily Journal
Practice prayerfully the Ignatian Examen.
Private comments, reflections, and thoughts are welcomed. Email Fr. JC @ PresentationMedia.
Marian Missionaries of Divine Mercy.
Purchase the book of Fr. Michael Gaitley.
The B.A.K.E.R. | Fr. Michael Gaitley’s Version of The Examen
~ January 28, 2021 ~
“The B.A.K.E.R. Rule”
Fr Michael Gaitley’s Version of the Examen
“Consoling the Heart of Jesus”
In the Video’s Session 6 (which we are going to be viewing today in our Zoom meeting), Fr Michael explains the Examen with the acronyms B.A.K.E.R. First, the Examen (the Examination of Conscience) – if one is not familiar with it, is St. Ignatius’ daily reflective prayer which invites people into a conversation with life and to find God in all things. The Examen helps build up good character and spirit while setting “introspective prompts” that one’s daily personal reflection. Here is Fr. Mike’s version:
B. (Blessings) – Review the day in light of the blessings of God. Get the habit of positivity.
A. (Ask) – Asking the Holy Spirit for enlightenment; to see the things we ought to see and hear the things we ought to hear. Enlightenment so that we may know darkness from light; we might know right from wrong with our hearts.
K. (Kill) – It was our sins that kill and crucified Jesus. Look at our sins (small or subtle, big or obvious)
E. (Embrace) – Think of the Image of the Divine Mercy – embrace the rays of His Merciful Love. We console Jesus, and it consoles us, when we embrace the rays of His Merciful Love.
R. (Resolution) – To look forward to the next day for potential pitfalls and/or opportunities for holiness and goodness.
“Act as if everything depended on you; trust as if everything depended on God”.
Personal Response: Daily Journal
Practice B.A.K.E.R. – include it in your daily prayer.
Private comments, reflections, and thoughts are welcomed. Email Fr. JC @ PresentationMedia.
Marian Missionaries of Divine Mercy.
Purchase the book of Fr. Michael Gaitley.
“A Brief Lesson on Mercy” & the Insensitivity of Our Hearts | Overcoming Obstacles in Living the Foundation
~ January 27, 2021 ~
“Preparatory Prayer” to the Way of the Cross
O Jesus, my adorable Savior,
I seek Your forgiveness and mercy for myself and for my loved ones,
for those hardened by sin,
and all the faithful departed.
Wash away my sins and those of the whole world
through the infinite merits of Your Passion.
Give me the grace to enter more deeply into the mystery of Your Cross,
so that sharing in Your suffering and death,
I may experience a deep sorrow for my sins
and be ready to embrace willingly,
even with joy, all the sufferings and humiliations of this life and pilgrimage.
Amen.
“A Brief Lesson on Mercy”
An Excerpt from the Book of Fr Michael Gaitley:
“Consoling the Heart of Jesus”
“Mercy is love when it encounters suffering. More specifically, it’s two movements that take place within us when we see someone (or something) suffer. The first is an emotional movement, a movement of compassion that we feel in our hearts or even, when the suffering of the other is particularly intense, deep in our guts. The second is a movement of action. In other words, as we see someone suffering and feel compassion for him, we soon find ourselves reaching out to alleviate his suffering. In sum: Mercy is love that feels compassion for those who suffer (heart) and reaches out to help them (arm)” (129).
“A hard heart is the opposite of mercy. How much we must implore God so our hearts do not become hardened like stone! Our hearts must not beceome insensitive! In fact, insensitivity is the primary sin of mankind against God and neighbor. Hardness of heart separates us from God, is the loss of our humanity, and causes so much suffering. It is also that which brought Jesus to the Cross and caused his death – it is that which crucified Him! Only the love of God that reaches as far as the Cross can open a creach in our heardened hearts” (World Apostolic Congress on Mercy, 2008).
Personal Response: Daily Journal
Which are the areas in my life where I find my heart hardened?
Private comments, reflections, and thoughts are welcomed. Email Fr. JC @ PresentationMedia.
Marian Missionaries of Divine Mercy.
Purchase the book of Fr. Michael Gaitley.
Online Mass /
Mass Schedule
Sunday Mass
Saturday 5pm (also live-streamed)
Sunday 7:30am, 8:30am, 10:00am, 11:30am & 6:30pm
Daily Mass (click here to view)
Mon. – Sat. 9:00am (also live-streamed)
Parish News & Events
Please read about all of our upcoming events in the weekly bulletin.