Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception

Springfield, IL

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Mass Intentions

Monday, November 20

7am – Pamela & Fred Tucker
(John Busciacco)

5:15pm – Linda O’Brien
(John O’Brien)

Tuesday, November 21

7am – Christina Maher
(Chris Sommer)

5:15pm – William F. Logan
(Lisa Logan & Lori Motyka)

Wednesday, November 22

7am – McDonald Family
(Janine McDonald)

5:15pm – Linda O’Brien
(John O’Brien)

Thursday, November 23

9am – For the People

Friday, November 24

7am – The Benner Family
(Kathleen Benner)

5:15pm –
NO MASS

Saturday, November 25

8am – James Bock Jr.
(Chris Sommer)

4pm – Bernice Lauduskie
(Sandy & Jim Bloom)

Sunday, November 26

7am – Mercedes & Charles Nesbitt
(Kathy Frank)

10am – For the People

5pm – Brother Francis Skube
(Community)

Prayer Wall – 11/10/2023

Pray for my friend, Shelley Monroe who has Ovarian cancer & can no longer take chemo. Pray for her husband, Lenny & their children for strength & hope.

Prayer Wall – 11/10/2023

Please pray for Frank Frohn. He is 90 years old & fell & broke his hip. He is waiting to have surgery. Pray for Dorothy, his wife, she has congestive heart failure & now is on oxygen every day. Pray for their daughter, Paula, who has been taking care of them.

The Offertory

The first part of the Liturgy of the Eucharist is generally referred to as the Offertory.  There are several things that take place during this relatively short part of the Mass, but they are significant.

Let us start by considering the Preparation of the Gifts.  First and foremost, the gifts that are prepared are the bread and wine which will be transformed into Christ’s Body and Blood.   At many Sunday masses, it is the custom to have some of the faithful bring these gifts forward to the priest or deacon who will be preparing the altar.  The General Instruction of the Roman Missal describes this action in the following way:

The offerings are then brought forward. It is a praiseworthy practice for the bread and wine to be presented by the faithful. They are then accepted at an appropriate place by the Priest or the Deacon to be carried to the altar. Even though the faithful no longer bring from their own possessions the bread and wine intended for the liturgy as was once the case, nevertheless the rite of carrying up the offerings still keeps its spiritual efficacy and significance.

(GIRM, 73)

Note that there was a time when the faithful would bring their own bread and wine to be used for the celebration of the Mass.  No doubt that helped foster a sense that they were actively contributing to what was about to take place on the altar.  And even though this is no longer the case, we should see the presentation of these gifts as something we join in offering.  The action is not insignificant.

To help deepen our understanding of our participating actively in the offering of the gifts, it is also a common practice, especially on Sundays, to take up a collection of money, which gives the people in attendance an opportunity to offer something physical.  Though they are not directly at the service of bringing about the Body and Blood of Christ in the liturgy, they are at the service of providing for the Body of Christ, which is the Church.  With those offerings made from the abundance of God’s generosity to us, the Church makes use of these funds to continue the mission of the church on a parish level, on the diocesan level, and on a universal level.  Even if you are making your contribution by electronic means, why not also consider placing something in the basket as the collection is taken?  The physical offering, while important for the mission of the Church, is also important for our understanding of our identity at Mass.  We are all asked to offer ourselves at Mass.  To be sure, we can and should offer our hearts to the Lord, asking the Lord to accept them and transform them, but our offering is not spiritual alone.  We are human beings, made up of body and soul, so if all we are offering is just a spiritual sacrifice, are we not in some way only offering a partial sacrifice?

Let me pause there, lest you think I am trying to guilt you in to offering more money at the collection!  That is not my goal…and least not in this article!  I just want to invite us to consider our role in participating in the offering.  As Jesus offered Himself in sacrifice, He offered His entire self, body and soul.  He is asking nothing less from us.  And so we can prayerful examine whether, at this point in the Mass, we are willing to offer our entire selves to Him, body and soul?  Can this be do without putting money in the basket, absolutely!  But does it help us to better understand our offering when we offer something tangible and physical at this point, to go along with the offering of our spiritual selves?  Absolutely!

St. Clement of Rome

Feast Day: November 23rd | Patronage: Mariners, Stone-Cutters| Iconography: Wearing Papal Vestments, Mariner’s Cross, Tied to Anchor, Palm of Martyrdom

So, I’m sitting in Caribou Coffee perusing Pope St. Clement letter to the Corinthians. “Photograph” by Ed Sheeran continues the mellow-pop playlist that has been filling the 72 degree air for the last hour. Off to my left I can see an inordinate variety of packaged snacks stretching out of sight, with the certainty that the Hy-Vee next door has an even more incredible quantity of food for the buying. A fall breeze whips leaves around as cars continue to refill with gas. Almost nothing that now surrounds me existed when Pope Clement led the church in its first century. The only physical commonality that I can find is the cement that makes up the parking lot in front of me. Cement was invented some thousands of years ago, but many consider the Romans to have perfected, with no greater example being the Pantheon which still stands in Rome having had its walls and dome poured into their forms almost 2000 years ago. (I doubt this Hy-Vee will be here in 200 years, much less 2000.) 

Just knowing two words about Clement: “pope” and “martyr” tell you most of what we know of his life. A few more descriptors tell you almost everything else: he is an apostolic father (knew the apostles), wrote a Letter to the Corinthians (he called them to repentance), and died under Diocletian (so, around 99 or 101 A.D.). But if he lived in a world so different from ours, what can we learn from him? More provocatively, is the story – the Gospel – that transformed his life and death still applicable to us? Does His Lord still reign? Does His Savior still save? Of course Christianity claims to have application to every era, political-climate, architecture-style, human culture, or culinary surroundings. Our faith stakes itself on the reality that the human heart faces the same chains that it always has, and needs (and desires) the same redemption that it always has. Fundamentally, Jesus still claims to be “the way, and the truth, and the life”.

Yet plenty of people have stopped believing it. 

25 years ago, only 5% of Americans would claim to have no religion. Now that number is around 25%. Said differently: when I was a kid and went to the grocery store, one in twenty people would have said they were not religious, now one in four would say that. But, here’s a further eye-opening fact: in the entire Roman Empire in the year 100 A.D., as Clement went to his martyrdom there were probably about 25,000 Christians (thus, using the reasonable estimate that the empire had a population around 60 million, that means 0.04% were Christian). 100 years later those that believed in Christ were up to about 218,000 (0.36%), and a further century on we had boomed up to 6.3 million (still only 10.5%). 

It would be several more decades before Christians became a majority of the empire, and though we’ve gotten used to a relatively Christian surroundings in our Western European-American culture, the fact is that the Church has spent a lot of her time as a small community within the larger world. This has been the case from Golgotha on through the early centuries, but also in every mission territory ever since. Rome wasn’t Christian when Clement got there. Ireland wasn’t when St. Patrick arrived. India wasn’t when St. Francis Xavier landed, nor when Mother Teresa came. We shouldn’t be shocked, nor discouraged, either when the Gospel can no longer be assumed as the common operating principle of our neighbors and coworkers. Only rarely has the Church ever been able to presume that, even if until recently we have gotten used to it.

Strangely though, I think that all of this means that as we look out on a world, spiritually (if not physically) it is more similar to the Rome of Clement’s day than we are to Paris of 1221, the Philadelphia of 1776, or even the New York of 2001. Our world today, like Clement’s, offers lots of idols, and demands that we place them above Christ. Our world today, like his, disposes of children and the elderly, and expects us to do the same. Our world today, like his, doesn’t know Jesus, and it’s up to all of us to worship, act, and speak in such a way that they might. When Pope Clement wrote to the Corinthians, he not only assumed to have spiritual authority over them (as the Bishop of Rome always has), but he also speaks to every Christian there to call them to repentance and to live a life directed by Jesus’ words through and through. The Church then, and our Church now, has no professional evangelizers, that’s all of our responsibility.

– Fr. Dominic has to mention another fascinating fact from Clement’s letter. He writes about the Apostle Paul: “Owing to envy, Paul also obtained the reward of patient endurance, after being seven times thrown into captivity, compelled to flee, and stoned. After preaching both in the east and west, he gained the illustrious reputation due to his faith, having taught righteousness to the whole world, and come to the extreme limit of the west, and suffered martyrdom under the prefects.” (“Letter to Corinthians”, Chapter 5). Now, it’s only a single reference, but from a man who knew Paul personally, that perhaps between the Apostle to the Gentiles, between his imprisonment and martyrdom in Rome, actually finally preached the Gospel to Spain. We’ll have to get the whole story from them when we are called before Christ ourselves!

Mass Intentions

Monday, November 13

7am – Mary Conway 
(Julie & Steve Shields)

5:15pm – Raymundo Figueroa 
(Bev & Larry Smith)

Tuesday, November 14

7am – Rev. Msgr David S. Lantz 
(Lou Ann Mack & Carl Corrigan)

5:15pm – Bishop William O’Connor 
(Fr. Zach Edgar)

Wednesday, November 15

7am – John W. Montgomery
(John Busciacco)

5:15pm – Diane Kruzick 
(Steve & Vicki Stalcup)

Thursday, November 16

7am – Betty Schuett 
(Carol West)

5:15pm – Katie B. 
(D.A. Drago)

Friday, November 17

7am – Rita Greenwald 
(Mary Cartwright)

5:15pm – Cathy Furkin 
(Family)

Saturday, November 18

8am – Brother Francis Skube 
(Friends)

4pm -Eulalia & Raymond Ohl 
(Angela Ohl-Marsters)

Sunday, November 19

7am – Mary Ann Midden 
(William Midden)

10am – John Brunk & Deceased Members
(Estate)

5pm – For the People

Eucharistic Congress

As we now make the transition from the Liturgy of the Word to the Liturgy of the Eucharist, I want to pause our reflections in order to consider the great blessing of our Eucharistic Congress that took place this last Saturday at the BOS Center in Springfield.  At the conclusion of the Mass that closed the Eucharistic Congress, Bishop Paprocki said that he knows that he will always remember that day, and I have been reflecting on that as well.  In my nearly eleven-and-a-half years as a priest, I think that day ranks as one of the greatest highlights.  I have certainly been to bigger gatherings, with thousands more people at them, but there was something that made this day for more special.  

The talks were all amazing, and for those who you who had the chance to hear them, I hope you found them fruitful as well.  I was pleased to hear Father Chase Hilgenbrinck, whose friendship I have enjoyed for the past several years, talking about making Mass the priority in our lives.  In particular, I loved how he offered some very helpful and practical ways of preparing for and praying at Mass better, something I have enjoyed writing on in these bulletin articles.  One of the greatest joys of the day was sitting in the front row as Sister M. Karolyn Nunes, F.S.G.M. gave her talk.  I count Sister M. Karolyn as one of my very best friends, and to be there to hear her share such an inspiring talk brought me so much joy, first for the gift of what she shared and second for the gift of her friendship.  I am sure I will be processing many more of the graces from that day in the days and weeks to come, and for those of you who were able to be there, I hope you do the same.

Perhaps the greatest grace for me from that day was the experience of the closing Mass.  As I sat among my brother priests, looking out on the huge crowd of so many familiar faces, I kept thinking: “This is what Heaven is going to be like!”  In Heaven, we will all be united as brothers and sisters in the Lord, friends of one another who rejoice in the gift of those relationships.  In Heaven, we will be united with one another as we praise God, surrounded by the beautiful music of the choir of angels.  On Sunday, as we resumed our Sunday masses at the Cathedral, that thought continued to stay with me.  I caught myself thinking that same thing a few times during those masses: “This is what Heaven is going to be like.”  Of course, as amazing as our Masses may be here on Earth, gathered as brothers and sisters to praise God, these experiences are merely a morsel of what awaits us in Heaven.  But until we get to our final destination, what a gift it is for us to have the Mass to lift our hearts as we receive this foretaste of the Heavenly banquet that awaits us in the Kingdom.

Earlier this week, we celebrated All Saints Day, and the experience of the Mass at the Eucharistic Congress was the image that was in my mind and my heart.  The saints are experiencing the fullness of what we have only tasted, a fulness that will continue on for eternity.  As filled as my heart was from last Saturday, I know the Lord has more in store for me and for all of us.  From their place in Heaven, the saints are praying earnestly for us to persevere in our journey, so that we can one day join them in that experience of the fullness of joy, peace and friendship with one another as we gather together to worship the Lamb unceasingly.  

St. Cecilia

Feast Day: November 22nd | Patronage: Hymns, Musicians, Poets, Organs and Organists| Iconography: Holding Musical Instruments: Flute, Violin, Harp, Harpsichord, Organ, or Musical Notation; With Songbirds; Singing; and as her body was found centuries after its martyrdom.

Who would you say were the two greatest theologians of the Church? Two greatest evangelists? Two saintliest parents? Or consecrated religious? Or martyrs? Of course, the saints themselves are (no longer) asking “who’s the greatest?”, but I think this sort of questioning forces us at the very least to consider which saints we most connect with and how we got to love them.

This week I began investigating the two greatest historians of the Church. Perhaps those who have collected and retold the stories of the past are less famous, renowned, or honored than the apostles and martyrs and mothers and fathers … but they are the ones who pass onto us the stories of the saints, who put us in touch with all these holy men and women who inspire, encourage, befriend, and intercede for us, so praise God for the humble work of historians. And the two greatest historians of the Church are Eusebius of Caesarea and Caesar Baronius (Bede the Venerable would be a runner up here; he’s the one who got the world dating things according to the “year of our Lord”, “A.D.”, and, it should be said, of these three, he’s the only one who is canonized.) 

Now Eusebius was born just a few decades after St. Cecilia had received the crown of martyrdom, but by mainly living and writing in Caesarea, far from the turmoil still engulfing Rome, he was blessed to not himself faced martyrdom there. He was the first to attempt a comprehensive Church History (handily, that is the title that he gave his magnum opus), and while many can critique the biases or limitations of his work, it is a phenomenal glimpse back into the early centuries of the Christian faith. To our tremendous benefit, he tells us of saints and martyrs and popes and characters from the first three centuries of our Church. Now, he sadly doesn’t include St. Cecilia’s story himself (which had just happened, and would not actually set down for 250 more years or so).  But, Eusebius was the first to take the honor and love that the Church always had for her saints, which had previously been mainly expressed in hymns, prayers, narrations, and sermons, and wrote down for us these epic accounts of God’s grace in human lives. His work was the concretization of the Church’s faith that the saints live forever, and that you and I can befriend Christians like Aquinas, Joseph, Maximilian, and Cecilia. 

Fast-forwarding 1200 years, Caesar Baronius did live amidst the hubbub of the Eternal City. He, a friend of St. Philip Neri and Cardinal of Pope Clement VIII, found that persecution in Rome of the 1500s was no longer from pagan but Christian emperors, who were constantly vying to control the Church and accrue power throughout Europe. Baronius, a great student first of law, then theology, and then Church History would not have been surprised by all of it, but certainly those squabbles purified his heart for the Lord. It seems likely that his vocation as an ordained member of Neri’s Oratorians, as well as a Church Historian, may have been inspired when, as a boy, he would have watched wide-eyed as the pylons and walls of the “new” St. Peters rose from the Vatican Hill to look out over Rome. The great colonnade, obelisk, and fountains in front of the Basilica would not be finished until several years after Baronius passed from this life, yet he was still involved in that, and other such, projects of his day. For instance, Pope Clement also worked to move the bodies of the saints into the Eternal City. Thus, on one day in 1599, Baronius, the greatest historian of the Church, stood next to one of the greatest sculptors of that age, Stefano Maderno (not to be confused with Carlo Maderno, possibly his brother, who would craft that first fountain in front of St. Peter’s). They were in Trastevere, the old Jewish Ghetto where St. Peter probably first lived when he got to Rome, and they were opening the tomb of the much beloved ancient martyr, Cecilia. 

The Acts of her martyrdom were legendary: her virginity promised to Christ, her husband converted by her ardent love for the Lord, her boldness before the Roman judge, and the distress of her executioner. Legends said her body was still incorrupt. The group reverently approached her place of rest, discovering the bodies of her husband and her fellow martyred converts nearby. Then, opening her tomb, before their eyes lay the beautifully, beatifically, preserved body of the youthful martyr. Lovingly attired, but with her wounds also visible, the historian found history proven true and the sculptor found a sublime image of the beauty of Christian fidelity. And we find a saintly friend.

– Fr. Dominic went far down the rabbit hole trying to translate Baronius’ magnificent Annales Ecclesiastici. His vivid account from the tomb of St. Cecilia can be found in the 9th Tome/Volume if that immense work, in the section indicated by “Christus 821”. But, an even more vivid glimpse is found in Maderno’s sculpture of the scene that met their eyes that day:

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Mass Intentions

Monday, November 6

7am – John Brunk & Deceased Family
(Estate)

5:15pm – Joe Metzger 
(The Fleck Family)

Tuesday, November 7

7am – John & Edith Bakalar 
(John Busciacco)

5:15pm – Joseph & Mary Schweska
(Tom McGee)

Wednesday, November 8

7am – Mary E. Steil 
(Steil Family)

5:15pm – Brother Francis Skube
(Community)

Thursday, November 9

7am – Jim Kluckman
(Paul Steil & John Paul Steil)

5:15pm – Karen Bucari
(Alan Bucari)

Friday, November 10

7am – Thomas John & Family 
(A Grateful Pilgrim)

5:15pm – Intention for Bianca 
(D.A. Drago)

Saturday, November 11

8am – Mark Kessler 
(Margie & Jacob Hermes)

4pm -For the People

Sunday, November 12

7am – Cynthia Crispi 
(John Busciacco)

10am – Shirley Logan 
(Lisa Logan & Lori Logan Motyka)

5pm – Anna Geraldine Gasaway
(Robert Gasaway)

Mass Intentions

Monday, October 30

7am – Ryan Goodwin Family 
(Family)

5:15pm – Brother Francis Skube 
(Friends)

Tuesday, October 31

7am – Helen Lewis 
(The Kappel Family)

5:15pm – Karen & Justin Howard 
(Richard & Kay King)

Wednesday, November 1

7am – Sivak Family 
(John & Mary Sivak)

12:05pm – For the People

5:15pm – Anna Geraldine Gasaway 
(Robert Gasaway)

Thursday, November 2

7am – Mary Ann Midden 
(Estate)

5:15pm – Kessler Family 
(Family) 

7:00pm – Recently Departed

Friday, November 3

7am – Mary Jane Kerns 
(Estate)

5:15pm – Kenneth Stetyick 
(Fr. Zach Edgar)

Saturday, November 4

8am – David Smith 
(The Berte’s)

4pm – Pamela Harmon 
(Archie Harmon)

Sunday, November 5

7am – For the People

10am – Robert & Anna Gasaway 
(Rob & John Gasaway)

5pm – David & Virginia Eddington 
(Jantzen Eddington)

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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

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