Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception

Springfield, IL

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Prayer Wall – 12/19/2021

Prayer For The Dead.

Let us pray for
The loved ones
We’ve lost today
And we’ll remember
Them in our special
Little way and there
In our hearts every day
And we can see them smiling
Today and we give thanks
To the Lord Jesus Christ and we feel his peace and everlasting
Love in our heart every day.

A Gift for the King

Several years ago, I was attending a meditation given by a priest shortly before Christmas.  He mentioned that his favorite Christmas song was “The Little Drummer Boy.”  Ever since then, I’ve listened to the words of that song more carefully and found in them some helpful points for my own reflection surrounding the birth of Jesus.  I am happy to share some of those with you as we once again prepare to celebrate this joyful feast.

In the second verse, the drummer boy recognizes that he has “no gift to bring…that’s fit to give our King.”  When it comes to Christmas, we spend a lot of time, energy, and money on gifts to give other people.  This is a respectable tradition, but do we consider giving a gift to the one whose birthday is the reason for this great day?  To be sure, the drummer boy has it right, recognizing that there is nothing that we can give Him that is fit for the Messiah.  We know that God has no need of anything from us, and that can be a humbling thought.  Even though He does not need us, He wants us.  Otherwise, He would have given up on us after the sin of our first parents.  Instead, He loves us so much that He wants us to share in the gifts He desires to shower upon us.

So, then, the question still remains – what can we give to this newborn King who has no need of anything that we can bring?  Look at the next verse as the drummer boy looks at what little he has and asks the question – “Shall I play for you…on my drum?”  Mary, His Mother, nods, and the drummer boy begins to play his drum for Jesus.  I remember reading a commentary on this song and how the author noted how foolish it was of this boy.  Why would you go banging a drum in front of a new baby?  I think that thought misses the deeper point.  In playing the drum, the boy is offering to Jesus what he has, humble as it may be, out of a sign of reverence for Him who is the Savior of the world.  Note how he plays his drum, according to the song: “I played my best for Him.”  The Lord has blessed each of us with gifts, humble as they may seem to us.  We do not have to have extraordinary gifts in order to offer them to our God.  What He wants is for us to use the gifts He has given to us as best we can as a sign of our gratitude for the giver of every gift that we have, the Lord Himself.

This Christmas, let us take some time to reflect on all of the gifts He has given to us, not worrying about what we lack or what other people have that might be more attractive than what we have.  Then, let us bring them to the newborn baby and resolve to use them to the best of our ability each day and experience the same thing the drummer boy did: “Then He smiled at me.”

As a final thought, I would like to invite all of you to consider coming to the church at some point during this final week of preparation before Christmas.  As you may know, we have Mass every day at 7 am and 5:15 pm.  We also have Eucharistic Adoration from 4 pm – 5 pm on Tuesday and Thursday.  You can also just stop in for a few quiet minutes during the day.  Coming to Mass or making a visit to Our Lord in the church can be a very helpful way of preparing our hearts to experience the coming of Christ with greater joy and peace.

Father Alford     

Mass Intentions

Monday, December 20
7am – Anna Eleyidath
(Augustine Eleyidath)
5:15pm – Presca F. Simbajon
(Lolita Klicker)

Tuesday, December 21
7am – Mary Kay Butler
(Bev & Larry Hoffman)
5:15pm – Charles P. Nicoud
(Timothy Nicoud)

Wednesday, December 22
7am – Bettie Rapps
(Hank & Mary Loue Smith)
5:15pm – Margaret Graham
(Tom McGee)

Thursday, December 23
7am – Special Intention for Patrick Ketchum
(Chris Sommer)
5:15pm – Kristin King & Family
(Kay & Richard King)

Friday, December 24
7am – Mary Celine Sestak
(Ruth & Sharon Kruzik)
4pm – Kyle Buckman
(Mom)
7pm – Jean Anne Staab
(Chris Wiseman)

Saturday, December 25
12am – John & Edith Bakalar
(John Busciacco)
9am – Barbara McGee
(Tom McGee)
4pm – NO MASS

Sunday, December 26
7am – Mary Ann Midden
(William Midden)
10am – Dr. & Mrs. Michael V. Sivak
(John Sivak)
5pm – For the People

St. Peter Canisius

Feast Day: December 21st 

I have to laugh every time we enter Advent and we hear again and again the Gospel of the Annunciation.  It is given to us on December 8th, for the feast of the Immaculate Conception, and then again on December 12th for Our Lady of Guadalupe (though this year, the 3rd Sunday of Advent took priority).  Last year, it came up again on the 4th Sunday of Advent, though this year we will be meditating on the Visitation that weekend.  And, on top of all those occasions, we heard it twice this year during our Novena leading up to the feast of the Immaculate Conception, and we got it again a few days afterwards, during our Advent Lessons and Carols.  And, we will hear it again on December 20th, Monday of the 4th week of Advent. (We hear it the rest of the year only on the Annunciation itself, March 25th; on Our Lady of the Rosary, October 7th).  Don’t get me wrong, it is one of the most important moments in world history.  There are few seconds that have had as much impact as did that second upon which Mary said “yes” to the Angel Gabriel, and the Word of God, the Son of the Father, became man in her womb.  But, it has to be one of the most repeated Gospels in our liturgies!

This week, I want to go beyond this passage just a bit with a saint we celebrate this week: St. Peter Canisius.  A Jesuit scholar up in Germany after the Protestant Reformation, this holy priest was a force to be reckoned with in bringing people back to the fullness of the faith and truly swaying whole countries back to Catholicism (Poland, Lithuania, Bohemia, Austria, Hungary, parts of Germany … all these countries could have swayed towards various protestant sects if not for the preaching and publications of St. Peter Canisius).  But, though he was known by the end of his life for his gentleness in evangelizing, his boldness in smuggling tracts from the council of Trent to bishops who could not be there, and the popularity of his catechism (which went thorough 200 editions, in 12 languages, within his lifetime).  He was first, and best, known for a tender love for the poor and humble, and above all for our poor and humble Blessed Mother.  

I tried valiantly to track down some of his sermons on her, for they are said to be tremendous, but did not have much luck as my midnight cutoff was approaching … but, I realized something better!  When our saint first got to Vienna (center of Germany, a crossroads of Europe, and disintegrating around the fragmentation of faith which follows from sola scriptura), he started preaching fervently in the main cathedral.  And no one came.  What was the saint to do?  He had to become a living homily.  He cared for the poor, he nursed the sick, he tended the dying.  Here was a pre-curser to Mother Theresa – along with so many other saints – wearing a very different guise, working in a very different century, and entering a very different slum, but incarnating the very same radical Gospel.  As is the case whenever Christ’s love pours forth from the heart of His follower, people take notice.  The tender love that Peter had found in his Blessed Mother, now captivated the crowds in Vienna.

But how might he sum this all up?  How might he send this ember of Christ’s love down the centuries?  How can he possible package into words what he had discovered in the poor and humble mother, who loved the poor and humble multitudes?  He pondered the question as he meditated again on his rosary, and as he repeated “Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with you.  Blessed are you among women, and blessed is the fruit of your womb, Jesus” it came to him: he would add a few words to each recitation of the angelic salutation.  He wanted to keep it short, what about: “Holy Mary, mother of God, Pray for us sinners now, and at the hour of our death.”  These last words of our Hail Mary didn’t come from Gabriel, nor from Elizabeth, they came from St. Peter Canisius during dark days as the Church splintered and the poor suffered.  But with those several extra words, he entrusted all that suffering, and his own self, into the hands of the greatest of mothers, and he’s reminded us to do the same all these years since!

– Fr. Dominic Rankin has prayed the rosary daily since he was a little child.  It started with just a decade before bed, and then the whole rosary (14 minutes feels like a long time when you’re little!) with the family sometime in the evening.  But, those hundreds of thousands of Hail Mary’s add up over time, and it makes a lot of saints smile as we join our little greetings of our Queen to all the times they did the same!

Prayer Wall – 12/13/2021

Please pray for my family and girlfriend for their health and wellness and protection, and for the patients I treat, for Jesus to keep doing healing work through my hands.

Embrace the Future with Hope

This week we turn to the third and final point of reflection inspired by Pope Francis and Pope St. John Paul II.  Having looked to the past with gratitude and having recommitted ourselves to living the present with passion, we now embrace the future with hope.

To aid in our reflection for this week, we can turn to the Pope who served in between the two already mentioned, Pope Benedict XVI.  Pope Benedict wrote a very beautiful reflection on the topic of Christian hope in his second encyclical, Spe Salvi (Saved in Hope).  At the conclusion of the first section, the Holy Father writes about the day-to-day hopes that we have, none of which are bad.  But they are limited.  He then provides the following key understanding of Christian hope:

[W]e need the greater and lesser hopes that keep us going day by day. But these are not enough without the great hope, which must surpass everything else. This great hope can only be God, who encompasses the whole of reality and who can bestow upon us what we, by ourselves, cannot attain. The fact that it comes to us as a gift is actually part of hope. God is the foundation of hope: not any god, but the God who has a human face and who has loved us to the end, each one of us and humanity in its entirety. His Kingdom is not an imaginary hereafter, situated in a future that will never arrive; his Kingdom is present wherever he is loved and wherever his love reaches us. His love alone gives us the possibility of soberly persevering day by day, without ceasing to be spurred on by hope, in a world which by its very nature is imperfect. His love is at the same time our guarantee of the existence of what we only vaguely sense and which nevertheless, in our deepest self, we await: a life that is “truly” life. (31)

It can be an interesting exercise to notice how often we use the word “hope” in our daily vocabulary.  We have so many hopes that help to keep us moving forward.  We must, however, not fall into the trap of thinking that the fulfillment of these hopes will ever be enough.  Only in God can our deepest hope be fulfilled, and only in Him can we truly live.  When we embrace that truth, our future becomes so much brighter.

Look back at the quote above and notice the following sentence: “God is the foundation of hope: not any god, but the God who has a human face and who has loved us to the end, each one of us and humanity in its entirety.”  It is this mystery of God who has a human face that we celebrate at Christmas.  God, the source of our hope and life, has come down into our human condition to become one of us, such that we can look upon Him face to face.  This is truly remarkable!  Many of us will be setting up our nativity sets in our homes soon, and I encourage you to practice the custom of keeping the baby Jesus hidden away until Christmas.  In the days leading up to Christmas, as you look at the scene, let your hearts be filled with hope as you look forward to finally seeing Him lay in the manger on Christmas morning.  Let that be the driving hope in these final days, surpassing other hopes such as what you might get for Christmas presents, or being able to see family members.  All of those are good, but they all fall short of the hope that we have in seeing our God face to face.  When you finally are able to place Christ in the scene, why not give Him some sign of your affection, for in doing so, you are embracing the one who is the fulfillment of our hope.  May that embrace spur us on to persevere on this journey with joy as we look forward to the final goal of our hope, seeing Him face to face in Heaven.

Father Alford    

St. Ambrose, again

Feast Day: December 7th  

Last week, we were able to recount the dramatic shift that happened in the life of Theodosius and Ambrose when, between the years of 374 AD and 381 AD, they both went from being young, popular Roman civil servants to becoming Emperor and Bishop respectively. But climbing the social ladder-of-power was not the most substantial change that occurred in their lives during those years.  Nor was the political promotion they each received the shift that would have the greatest consequences for later history.  The most impactful event in either of their lives during those years was that they each were baptized.  They were set free from original sin; they were made sons of God; and they were given the gifts of Faith, Hope, and Love. 

This month we are investigating the topic of the virtues, and so we look to these men as examples of how the theological virtues can operate in someone’s life.  (We will save the other virtues, specifically the cardinal ones, for next week).  Both Ambrose and Theodosius, in an age that was debating whether Jesus was God, and with all the pressures of the world on their shoulders, chose to be baptized in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, and with that interior transformation complete, they then began to practice in their actions and demeaner the exterior transformation that befits a Christian. 

I don’t mean to argue that both of them suddenly were perfect, and yet in the months after receiving this first sacrament, what do we see them doing: upholding the fullness of the faith and responding to the horrors of their day with an exceptional amount of vision, patience, even mercy.  (Theodosius convenes the council of Constantinople, and promulgates the Codex Theodosianus, calling for faith in the Trinity.  Ambrose convokes the synod of Aquileia, and writes De Fide defending the orthodox faith).  In the moment, neither man could have quantified how much grace had changed them, and yet their actions – in retrospect – depict individuals who had allowed themselves to be redirected by those theological virtues. The question would be whether they stayed true to those virtues in times of testing that would come.

In 383, Gratian (the emperor of the West) was killed by Magnus Maximus, placing Gratian’s 12 year old heir, Valentinian II, on the throne.  The boy, and his mother (who acted as his regent), were Arian, and within two years were attempting to takeover Catholic Churches for the use of the Arians.  (She, Justina, still hated Ambrose for his helping to appoint an orthodox bishop to Sirmium, whom they had clashed with years before, and couldn’t stand his strident defense of Jesus’ divinity and all the corollaries from that).  Ambrose stubbornly barricaded himself inside the Church, and sent this scathing reply to the Emperor who had soldiers at his door:

“If you demand my person, I am ready to submit: carry me to prison or to death, I will not resist; but I will never betray the church of Christ. I will not call upon the people to succour me; I will die at the foot of the altar rather than desert it. The tumult of the people I will not encourage: but God alone can appease it.”

Valentinian backed down and Ambrose continued to teach his congregation the simple songs that upheld the full-faith he had so boldly defended.  The political situation being what it was, Valentinian and Justina’s schemes were derailed further by Maximus coming for them with an army.  They fled, and were only rescued by the happily orthodox Theodosius sweeping in from the East. This year, 388, seems to also be the time when our two characters first meet in person!  It was not the last. 

In 390, after a riot took place in Thessalonica (in which, it seems one of his military leaders was killed), Theodosius sent in troops to punish the city, and they brutally murdered thousands of the Thessalonians as they were gathered in their town circus.  This, just as much as Valentinian’s heresy, was contrary to the Catholic faith, and so we now find Theodosius outside Ambrose’s Cathedral, not with an army threatening to storm the altar, but humble and contrite for his sins.  Ambrose forced the Emperor to wait 6 months before accepting his contrition as forthright and allowing him to return to Holy Communion.

Theodosius would eventually become the last single person to rule the entire Roman Empire, dying in 395, in Milan, repentant and faithful to the end.  Ambrose would die 2 years later, still archbishop of that same city, where so many of the crises and characters of the previous decades had crossed.  Both men were sorely tried in the virtues of their baptism, we should expect the same for ourselves.  Regardless of the trials we face, God will provide the courage, and clemency, we need to remain faithful.

– Fr. Dominic Rankin’s favorite songs are Advent hymns.  There is something so gentle and powerful in their heralding the coming of Christ.  Ambrose composed one of the greatest of these hymns, Veni Redemptor Gentium.  Here are the final 3 stanzas (translated into English).  The divinity of the Christ child has not been forgotten here!

5. From God the Father He proceeds,
To God the Father back He speeds;
His course He runs to death and hell,
Returning on God’s throne to dwell.

6. O equal to the Father, Thou!
Gird on Thy fleshly mantle now;
The weakness of our mortal state
With deathless might invigorate.

7. Thy cradle here shall glitter bright
And darkness breathe a newer light,
Where endless faith shall shine serene,
And twilight never intervene.

Mass Intentions

Monday, December 13
7am – Sophia Bartoletti & Family
(Estate of Sophia Bartoletti)
5:15pm – Special Intention for Elmo& Francis Kistner Family
(E. John &Debra Beltramea)


Tuesday, December 14
7am – Barb Copeland
(John Busciacco)
5:15pm – Anne Gustafson
(Jeanette Giannone)


Wednesday, December 15
7am – Drew Dhabalt
(Bill Vogt)
5:15pm – Ben Garde
(Family)


Thursday, December 16
7am – Anna A. Eleyidath
(Augustine Eleyidath)
5:15pm – Dr. John & Adele Karle
(Mary Karle)


Friday, December 17
7am – Sophia Bartoletti & Family
(Estate of Sophia Bartoletti)
5:15pm – J. R. Weakley
(Doris Drago)


Saturday, December 18
8am – Barbara Conkrite
(Litina Carnes)
4pm – For the People


Sunday, December 19
7am – Mary Ann Midden
(William Midden)
10am – Carl Layendecker
(Becky & Woody Woodhull)
5pm – Frank Coffey
(Family)

Prayer Wall – 12/08/2021

For Karilyn & Kevin Williams, Karilyn is due any day with their 3rd child and Kevin just tested positive for Covid.
Please pray for all of them.

Live the Present with Passion

In last week’s bulletin article, I introduced a threefold theme proposed by both Pope Francis and Pope St. John Paul II, that we as Christians are encouraged to: 1) Look to the past with gratitude; 2) Live the present with passion; and 3) Embrace the future with hope.  In this second reflection in the series, we will reflect on how to live the present with passion.

As I mentioned last week, it can be easy for us to get stuck in the past, remembering our faults and failures, those missed opportunities for doing good.  Our focusing on the past is not always remembering our failures, though.  Sometimes we focus on the good memories of the past, what we were once able to do, the opportunities we had, and we can get struck wishing those days were back.  The same can apply to the future.  We can become paralyzed thinking about what might or might not happen in the days, months, and years ahead.  The uncertainty of the future might frighten us, causing us to tun in on ourselves and so do nothing.  Or, the future might excite us, causing us to want to get to what lies ahead as soon as possible, ignoring our present obligations and needs.  By focusing too much on the past or the future, we have little energy to dedicate to the present, and it is only in the present that we are able to actually do anything.  When considering this tension, I am often reminded of the following anecdote: “Why worry about the past which you cannot change, and the future which may never come.  Live in the present!”  This is very good advice, and very much rooted in our Christian outlook.

The overarching theme for the end of Ordinary Time and the beginning of Advent is the necessity of being prepared, not so much for the celebration of Christmas, but for the Second Coming of Christ which will come at an unknown day and unknown hour.  With that in mind, the best thing to do to be prepared is to be attentive to how we are living our lives in the here are now.  Tomorrow, next week, next month, or next year should never be something we say when it comes to living our Catholic faith.  None of us is guaranteed tomorrow, so now is the time to live as disciples of Jesus.  And not just live as His followers in name only, but to live our lives intentionally and passionately.

There is a line from the Prophet Isaiah that is used on the First Sunday of Advent in the Year B Cycle of Readings which applies to this very well: “Would that you might meet us doing right, that we might be mindful of you in our ways” (Is 64:4).  To adapt this line to match our theme, we can say something similar to the Lord: “Would that you might find us living our faith passionately when you come to us, whenever and however that might be”

During this Advent season, this can be a good topic on which to reflect.  Are we too focused on the past or the future, such that we are not living the present well?  It does not have to be this way.  We can make the conscious decision now to live in the present by making our faith the foundation for all of our thoughts, words, and actions, letting the love of Christ enflame our hearts so that we will in turn love Him and our neighbor with charity and mercy, and so to be truly prepared to meet Him when He comes.

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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