FROM THE PASTOR'S DESK
Today, Divine Mercy Sunday, is the 8th and final day of the Octave of Easter. Because of early submittal times for the bulletin, as I write this (on Good Friday), we have celebrated Holy Thursday and Good Friday. Thank you for great turnouts (including the Young Adult Youth Group on Holy Thursday) for the biggest celebrations of the Church year. I am currently getting all the wood ready for the Easter Vigil Mass fire!
The Living Stations of the Cross at St. Bartholomew Church (on April 13, Palm Sunday) was an amazing experience! Thanks to all the adults who helped prepare the students. The booklet listed who played which role. In case you missed it, here are the young actors and actresses who helped reenact part of salvation history: Jesus: Luke Adkins; Roman Soldiers: Andrew Jones, Giuseppe Vasconi, Ivan Metro; Pontius Pilate: Cameron Hoovler; Virgin Mary: Ella Gaines; Mary Magdalene: Hannah Dorfi; Simon of Cyrene: Andrew Ealy; Alexander: Joseph Lucas; Rufus: Vincent Belin; Veronica: Madelyn Presley; “The Women:” Ellie Danilovics, Lydia Presley, Farrah Gory, Hannah Jones, Kenlyn Masters, Joella Masters; Men casting lots: Giovanni Vasconi, Zack Dudzenski, Max Adkins, Easton McElhinney, CJ Phipps; Apostle John: Noah Scott; Nicodemus: Noah Knicely; Joseph of Arimathea: Chap Kimpan; Reader: Catherine Mehler; Conscience: Anna Rodriques; Greeter: James Jones; Spot light: Luca Paoletta; Lights: Liam Paoletta. Thank you!
This year we celebrate a big anniversary: the First Ecumenical Council of Nicaea was 1,700 years ago, in the year 325! On April 3, Kristina Millare, writing for Catholic News Agency, wrote the following article:
Vatican Releases Document to Mark 1,700th Anniversary of First Council of Nicaea
The Council of Nicaea convened during the pontificate of Pope Sylvester I in 325.
The Vatican on Thursday released a historical document to recognize the opening of the Council of Nicaea, convened during the pontificate of Pope Sylvester I in 325.
The International Theological Commission (ITC) published the in-depth document “Jesus Christ, Son of God, Savior: The 1,700th Anniversary of the Ecumenical Council of Nicaea” to highlight the significance of the Church’s first ecumenical council, which defended the divinity of Jesus Christ as a profession of faith amid the spread of the Arian heresy.
“This anniversary occurs within the jubilee year, centered on the theme ‘Christ Our Hope,’ and it coincides with a shared celebration of Easter for Christians in both the East and the West,” the ITC press release stated.
The commission said on Thursday that the Nicene Creed “stands at the heart of the Church’s faith.”
“It is a source of living water to draw upon even today to enter into Jesus’ gaze and, in him, into the gaze that God, Abba, has toward all his children and toward the whole of creation.”
Emphasizing that the document is not just a historical record or a “text of academic theology,” the Vatican’s theological commission said the publication responds to Pope Francis’ desire to promote fraternity among Christians and inspire greater participation of Catholic faithful within local Churches.
“It was in Nicaea that the Church’s unity and mission were first expressed emblematically at a universal level (and from here, it draws its designation as an ecumenical council) through the synodal form of that ‘walking together’ which is proper to the Church,” the ITC shared on Thursday.
“Nicaea stands as an authoritative reference point and inspiration in the synodal process in which the Catholic Church is involved today, in its commitment to live a conversion and reform marked by the princi-ple of relationship and reciprocity for mission,” the press release stated.
Answering Pope Francis’ call to proclaim faith in Jesus Christ in a world scourged by the “tragedy of war along with countless anxieties and uncertainties,” the theological commission said the Nicaea Council publication can be used as a dynamic resource for Christian evangelization.
“The document highlights the relevance of these resources for a responsible and shared way of addressing the epochal change that is having a global impact on culture and society,” the press release stated. “The faith professed at Nicaea opens our eyes to the explosive and enduring newness of the coming of the Son of God among us.”
A special “study day” on the document will take place on May 20 at the Pontifical Urbaniana University in Rome. [end of article]
Saint Catherine of Siena, pray for us.
Father Miller