I have a brochure entitled, “Why do we ‘have’ to go to Mass?”. The cover photo portrays a young child facing backwards in the pew and looking bored. My husband, a convert, long ago also asked the same question about the “obligation” of going to Holy Mass. Each question came from a different orientation, i.e., boredom versus obligation. Of course, the answer is because it is one of the Ten Commandments to Keep Holy the Lord’s Day! It is not an obligation so much as it is a commitment to honor the Lord’s Day.
Personally, I never had either of these feelings because I always felt it was an honor to go to Holy Mass (BTW, when did we drop the “Holy” Mass part?). Every Sunday on the way to Holy Mass I say to myself, “I GET to go to Holy Mass today.” It is an invigorating expectation! As I genuflect to the Altar and Tabernacle, I’m excited!
After Vatican II lay people were encouraged to participate more fully in the Liturgy. I finally got the courage to volunteer as a Lector/Reader and Extraordinary Minister of Holy Communion. What a gift that has been in my life. I GET to give Jesus to others. I GET to serve Him more dearly. I GET to speak His words in this Holy place, our Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception What a blessing!
Rebecca and husband, Woody, have been Cathedral parishioners since the mid-1990’s and led the Cathedral Bible Study group for many years. She assists Sr. Francella with home and hospital visits. Rebecca has served as CCCW President, Springfield Deanery President, Springfield Diocesan CCW President, Chicago Province Director, and National
Last weekend at each of the parish Masses I preached on the subject of abortion. Abortion is the most brutal act that is allowed in our “advanced society” because abortion targets the most innocent and the most defenseless among us. This heinous act also arouses strong passions in people, passions both good and bad. Sadly, we have allowed this satanic act against the sanctity of human life to become a political football. Human rights, of which the right to life is paramount, should not be political issues as they, along with human dignity, are the gift of God and not the purview of the state except that the state is morally obliged to protect these gifts of God. In an 1864 letter to the editor of the Frankfort Commonwealth,
From a very young age we’re taught the value of accruing knowledge , relationships, popularity, and success—a storing up and clutching onto good things that can help us sail effectively toward a happy life. We’re groomed not to dispense of anything we own or acquire that has value, but instead to cultivate it, protect it, hold onto it with tireless resolve. What we have and collect—our education, gifts and talents, intellect, possessions—we are expected to use strategically to our advantage. We become hoarders so we can navigate the world and be victorious within it.


Crusaders for Life
When I was growing up, I somehow got it into my head that I really wanted to study at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. I didn’t know what I wanted to study or why I wanted to go there—I was just excited by the idea of it. My 8th-grade class at St. Kevin Catholic School in East Alton was nine students; at Marquette Catholic High School in Alton, my graduating class was 76. There was something about going to a university of over 40,000 students that made the extrovert in me leap for excitement.
Jennifer Smith and SPARC receives a donation of $660.27 from the Cathedral Fr. Augustine Tolton Knights of Columbus Council 16126 with donations received from the Annual Individuals with Intellectual Disabilities conducted in the fall at White Oaks Mall. The funds will go to those with special needs who benefit from the many SPARC programs.