Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception

Springfield, IL

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Mass Intentions

Monday, October 11

7am – Anna A. Eleyidath
(Augustine Eleyidath)

5:15pm – NO MASS

Tuesday, October 12

7am – Special Intention for EllenMattox
(Shana Gray)

5:15pm – Norman & Eileen Rovey
(Family)

Wednesday, October 13

7am – Anna Geraldine Gasaway
(Bob Gasaway)

5:15pm – Giner Hermon
(Jeannette Giannone)

Thursday, October 14

7am – Richard Willaredt
(Donna Favier)

5:15pm – William F & Shirley Logan

Friday, October 15

7am – John & Edith Bakalar
(John Busciacco)

5:15pm – J. R. Weakley
(D. A. Drago)

Saturday, October 16

8am – Kathy Jarvis(Carol Bellm)

4pm – Judith Hubbell

(Family)

Sunday, October 17

7am – Angeline Sherman

(Bob & Deane Buretta)

10am – Sr. M. Pauletta Overbeck, OP

(Becky & Woody Woodhull)

5pm – For the People

Prayer Wall – 10/01/2021

for Angela V. who is still trying to recover from COVID-19 long haul.

Prayer Wall – 09/30/2021

For Jeff who is undergoing a liver transplant

Prayer Wall – 09/30/2021

For a mom with a sick baby. She hasn’t been able to work and needs practical and spiritual support.

Prayer Wall – 09/29/2021

JADE,TOO RECEIVE SALVATION AND WATER BAPTIZED IN JESUS NAME.

Accepting the Kingdom Like a Child

In our Gospel for this Sunday, we hear Jesus saying the following about entering the Kingdom of Heaven: “Amen, I say to you, whoever does not accept the kingdom of God like a child will not enter it.” (Mk 10:15)  What does the Lord mean by accepting the Kingdom like a child?  I recently read a commentary on this verse which I find very helpful in understanding this important statement from our Lord:

All are called to be “children” in relation to the kingdom. What is it about children that makes them such apt recipients of the kingdom? Children have no accomplishments with which to earn God’s favor, no status that makes them worthy. In their dependency they exemplify the only disposition that makes entrance into the kingdom possible: simply to receive it as a pure, unmerited gift. 

Mary Healy, The Gospel of Mark, Catholic Commentary on Sacred Scripture (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 2008), 199.

As we begin this month of October, our theme for the month is our Vocation to Beatitude.  Put another way, we are called (vocation) to be with God forever in the Kingdom of Heaven (Beatitude).  As we progress through this year of catechesis, we will be hearing how we prepare for this gift by the way we live our lives, conforming them to the Commandments, the Beatitudes, and the teachings of Christ and His Church.  But we must avoid falling into the trap of thinking that Heaven is something that we earn as a result of our good behavior.  As the commentary above mentions, the Kingdom is a gift that is granted to God’s beloved children, and one that we should simply receive with humility and gratitude.

The question may be raised, then: Why do we put so much value on our actions?  After all, if I cannot earn Heaven, why should I care about acting a certain way?  The gift of the Kingdom is given to us already in this life on the day we were baptized, and this gift is meant to be protected so that we do not lose it.  The teachings that our Lord and the Church give to us are directed toward that end, keeping safe the gift that we have, one that we did not earn, that of sharing in the life of Christ through the gift of grace (a word which means gift).  Therefore our actions do matter, for by them, we freely choose to keep safe or reject this gift that the Lord has so generously blessed us with.  Seen this way, our life in Christ is not so much about earning something as it is preserving and protecting something that has been given to us by no merit of our own.

Another aspect of being a child is the unconditional trust that children have in the love of their parents and their greatest fear is losing that love.  Whatever the parents ask, the children heed because they do not doubt that the parents have their best interest at heart.  So too for us with regard to our relationship to God our loving Father, and our holy Mother, the Church.  As children, we are called to assent to their teachings, trusting that doing so is in our best interest, and that following those teachings we will experience true happiness and freedom as we remain in the love of God in this life and forever in the next.  This is how we are called to be childlike in our obedience to the Lord.  But we must always fight the temptation of falling into being childish, being rebellious and demanding our own way.  With the graces the Lord offers to us freely in the sacraments, we can indeed live as the children He has called us to be, and so accept the Kingdom of God that He freely offers to us.

Father Alford     

St. Bruno, from Cologne, to Clairvaux, through Craziness

Feast Day: October 6th  

In 1984, a German Flimmaker wrote to the original Carthusian monastery, located in a valley of the French alps, miles from the nearest vehicular roads, the Grande Chartreuse – famed for its rigorous prayer and silence, and 500-year-old 130-flavor liquor recipe of the same name – and asked if he could stay at the monastery and unobtrusively film the daily life of the monks.  They wrote back to him 16 years later and gave him permission to come.  The final film is almost three hours long, and is almost entirely silent … because the life of the monks is almost entirely silent.  Their silence had begun almost 1000 years before.

We begin not in Chartreuse, but in Cologne.  Our story begins with a young priest of that diocese, ordained around the year 1055, now tasked with overseeing the schools of the diocese.  Fr. Bruno had been giving a good education and comfortable upbringing, so perhaps he was the right man for the job, in any case he stayed in that position for almost two decades, gradually acquiring a reputation as a philosopher, theologian, and adviser for his pupils and diocese.  20 years into his priesthood, he moved up to being Chancellor for the Archdiocese of Reims.  So far, so ordinary.

But then a violent, power-hungry, man was named the new bishop of Reims.  The clergy of the diocese pushed back against the vicious bishop, who responded by having his mobs tear down their homes and sell their possessions.  Meanwhile, Henry IV, the Holy Roman Emperor had just declared the election of the Pope Gregory VII invalid and demanded he abdicate.  Gregory excommunicated Henry, who pressured the bishop of Utrecht into excommunicating the pope.  Lightning destroyed the cathedral of Utrecht and the bishop died a month after.  Let’s just say it wasn’t a great time to be the chancellor there in Reims…  

Still, God was at work in the lousy situation, not only in the eventual removal of the bad bishop, but in the movement that he was beginning in Bruno’s heart.  25 years a priest, he had become a canon during the preceding years – living in community with the other priests of the cathedral – and now found himself drawn to deepen that life of focus on the Lord and his brother priests.  Three priests and two laymen, in the middle of their stable and ordinary lives were catapulted into religious life in the midst of the machinations of the distracted and disordered hierarchy of the Church of their day.  They had providentially crossed the path of St. Hugh, the holy bishop of Grenoble, who gave them an isolated piece of property up in the rocky alps in the northern reaches of his diocese.

500 years later, there would be built the spectacular, silent, Monastery of the Grande Chartreuse, built upon the alpine rocks from which it received its name, and the harried, hardworking, humbled chancellor-now-hermit from Cologne who had sought God there.  500 years later, now surviving for almost a millennia, the order remains an inspiration to every Christian of the priority of prayer, and openness to the graces given in crazy times.

“How lovely is your dwelling place” [Psalm 84] is taken to refer not so much to the Jerusalem temple as the heavenly dwelling of God in heaven according to the spiritual sense or meaning of Scripture.  To reach the courts of the house of the Lord, we must climb the steps of virtue and good works.
– St. Bruno, Commentary on Psalms [Ps. 83: Edit. Cartusiae de Pratis, 1891, 376-377]

– Fr. Rankin first saw “Into Great Silence” as a teenager.  Of course, 3 hours of silently watching monks walk and work and worship was not, at first, an exciting prospect.  Yet it was captivating.  There was a profundity and contentment revealed in their simple lives that no amount of activity has ever given me.  One scene sticks in my mind: the weekly spatiamentum when the monks all hike together up in the hills and are allowed to chat with each other.  Beautifully, the silence they cherished was the foundation for the joy they found sledding and joking and being brothers to each other. 

Mass Intentions

Monday, October 4
7am – Jean Reno Greenwald
(Robert & Shirley Dunham)
5:15pm – Kathy Jarvis
(Carol Bellm)

Tuesday, October 5
7am – Anna A. Eleyidath
(Augustine Eleyidath)
5:15pm – Jean Anne Staab
(Vincent & Anna Fanale)

Wednesday, October 6
7am – Kathy Jarvis
(Ken & Michelle Campbell)
5:15pm – Vincent Darrigo
(Jeannette Giannone)

Thursday, October 7
7am – Patria & Rufino Gotanco
(Hati Uy)
5:15pm – Special Intention for Ellen Mattox (Shana Gray)

Friday, October 8
7am – Richard Willaredt
(Donna Favier)
5:15pm – Special Intention for Bianca (D. A. Drago)

Saturday, October 9
8am – Warren Bequette
(Sotiroff Family)
4pm – Barbara McGee
(Tom McGee)

Sunday, October 10
7am – Mary Ann Midden
(William Midden)
10am – For the People
5pm – Jean Anne Staab
(James & Rita Keys)

Prayer Wall – 09/28/2021

For Bonnie who has Acute Myeloid Leukemia; for Monica Tichenor – Healing of Toe; for Mick Palazzolo with serious health issues & in hospital; for Connie who has been battling cancer for 8 years; for Carrie & Bill, who are Homeless people. Both have each lost a son to suicide. Frank & Dorothy Frohn

On Being a Disciple, Not Just a Member

Vicki Compton recently sent the priests of the house an article by a pastor who offered some reflections on the struggles that every church faces when it comes to those who make up their congregation.  He makes the following interesting observation:

Like the American economy, local churches have plenty of jobs, but we don’t have the people who are willing and trained to do those jobs.  

The pastor points to the often-misdirected efforts to focus primarily on driving up attendance, but that in itself is not sufficient.  He writes: “We got really good at driving attendance, but we were lousy at making disciples.”  He then proceeds to provide a sketch of what it looks like to be an active disciple, as opposed to being just a passive observer:

A disciple is very different from a church member. A disciple may be a church member but a church member doesn’t have to be a disciple. What’s the difference? A disciple understands the Grand Arc of Salvation History and the ultimate purpose of God’s heart that drives our evangelistic mission…Second, a disciple understands their role in the mission. All of us have gifts. No one has all of the gifts. Each of us is created to play a significant, yet particular, role in that mission. Each disciple understands their giftedness…Lastly, each disciple is constantly being refreshed, retrained, and refocused as their mission evolves. Every disciple knows they need a regular routine of worship, deep study, and prayer to refresh their soul and inner life. Without this routine of soul care, the disciple will either burn out or flame out. Neither is a desirable outcome.

These words really convicted me and reiterated the direction we have been trying to take here at our Cathedral Parish.  Our efforts to offer various types of formation for our entire parish family (not just out students) are aimed toward building a culture of discipleship, so that our pews are not filled just with church members, but with disciples who realize their importance to this community and who willingly and generously offer their gifts for the good of the community.

The author’s final point about the importance of having “a regular routine of worship, deep study, and prayer to refresh their soul and inner life” is so key, because these are the activities of a disciple that help us to keep our eyes constantly fixed on Christ, who must always remain at the heart of discipleship.  The moment it ceases to be about Him and our relationship with Him, it is already on the path toward failure.  This is the point made in the Catechism at the end of the introductory paragraphs of Section Three on Life in Chris which will be our focus for this year:

The first and last point of reference of this catechesis will always be Jesus Christ Himself, who is “the way, and the truth, and the life.” It is by looking to Him in faith that Christ’s faithful can hope that He Himself fulfills His promises in them, and that, by loving Him with the same love with which He has loved them, they may perform works in keeping with their dignity. (CCC 1698)

May we all renew (or proclaim for the first time) our desire to not be content with just being a member of the Cathedral Parish, but to commit to being “disciples of the Risen Lord and steadfast stewards of God’s creation who seek to become saints” by making “a conscious, firm decision, carried out in action, to be followers of Jesus Christ no matter the cost to themselves” for the good of the Church. (quotes from Declarations 1 and 4 of the Fourth Diocesan Synod)

Father Alford     

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Liturgy

Sunday Masses (unless noted differently in weekly bulletin)
Saturday Evening Vigil – 4:00PM
Sunday – 7:00AM, 10:00AM and 5:00PM

Weekday Masses (unless noted differently in weekly bulletin)
Monday thru Friday – 7:00AM and 5:15PM
Saturday – 8:00AM

Reconciliation (Confessions)
Monday thru Friday – 4:15PM to 5:00PM
Saturday – 9:00AM to 10:00AM and 2:30PM to 3:30PM
Sunday – 4:00PM to 4:45PM

Adoration
Tuesdays and Thursdays – 4:00PM to 5:00PM

 

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Parish Information

Parish Address
524 East Lawrence Avenue
Springfield, Illinois 62703

Parish Office Hours
Monday thru Thursday – 8:00AM to 4:00PM
Fridays – CLOSED

Parish Phone
(217) 522-3342

Parish Fax
(217) 210-0136

Parish Staff

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