Author Archive

Homily – January 8, 2017

Sunday, January 8th, 2017

You might say that this feast with it powerful symbolism of the star rising in the East, these searchers for the truth making their long and perilous journey following the star, ending their journey as they find Mary and Joseph and the child in the stable in Bethlehem, is the feast that proves that Jesus Christ is Catholic, not a Roman Catholic but in fact the perfect Catholic.

The word Catholic means universal and today’s feast teaches the truth that Jesus was born, lived and died on the cross for all peoples of any nationality and of any faith. Non-Christians may not know and accept Jesus as we do but Jesus knows and accepts them totally.

Jesus taught us that Salvation is from the Jews. Our Christian faith did not come out of nowhere. We have roots, deep roots in Judaism. In Jesus that salvation was extended to us as Paul tells us in our second reading, ‘The Gentiles have become fellow heirs, members of the same body and sharers in the promises in Christ Jesus. Peter expressed this truth when he witnessed the conversion of Cornelius and his whole family,’ I truly understand that God shows no partiality but any one of any nationality who fears God and does what is right is acceptable to God.

A few years ago I received a very interesting Christmas card

from a friend in Ireland. She`d been in Derry on Bloody Sunday on January the 30th in 1972 when many unarmed men and women were gunned down in the streets of Derry. Because of this experience she was heavily involved in the Irish Peace Movement. The Christmas card showed the Wise Men seeing the Star resting over Bethlehem but their long journey was stopped by the Israeli security wall that blocked their entrance to the town. A barrier to the birthplace of the Prince of Peace.

Walls seem to be very much on some people`s minds these days. Pope Francis reminded us that Christians are meant to build bridges not walls.

This great feast of the Epiphany teaches the truth that Jesus the Christ came for all peoples of all times. Did we ever stop and think that, by the way we relate to other people we may be building walls instead of bridges. These walls hinder, not just non-Catholics but even Catholic family members and friends who are ‘turned off’ by our attitudes of bigotry and discrimination that we harbour toward peoples of other faiths, other nationalities, cultures and life styles, that we bring to church with us every Sunday? Do we hear the harsh and dismissive things we say about other people who do not share our faith and values? Do we appreciate the fact walls can be built with words as well as with bricks and mortar.

Can we be Christian men and women who help others to follow the Star that brings them to the truth of Bethlehem as we live this Mass outside these walls?

Jesus challenged us to so let our lights, our living of our faith in him, so shine before those who do not know him, that seeing our good works and come to know him better. Can we see ourselves as stars guiding good people to come to know Jesus in a better way, luring them over the bridge that leads them to him? Remember Jesus is Catholic; he came for all peoples in all times.

Bulletin – January 8, 2017

Saturday, January 7th, 2017

The Epiphany of Christ is a shining light set at the turning of the year to illuminate all that has gone before and to guide us through the year ahead.

ANNOUNCED MASSES

January 9th – January 14th, 2017

MONDAY – DELPHINE OAKIE – Requested by the Oakie Family
TUESDAY – MARY EDITH NICOLLE – Requested by Margaret Anne Leckie & Mary Alice O’Mahony
WEDNESDAY – LOUISE MUSCAT – Requested by Lina Abela Pulis
& Christopher Muscat
THURSDAY – PERRY TANG – Requested by Shella Tang & Family
FRIDAY – FR. DON SANVIDO – Requested by Jeanne Robinson
SATURDAY – GEORGE OLDEN – Requested by Kathleen Olden Powell

SOCIETY OF ST. VINCENT DE PAUL

A Big Thank You!

Your kindness and generosity at Christmas made a big difference to all our families. Thank you to each and all for your donations and gifts over the season. Your goodness has helped in ways you may never know but be assured it is deeply appreciated

LEPROSY MISSION OF CANADA

Collecting Stamps

This is a wonderful time of year to collect stamps from your Christmas cards and letters to give to the Leprosy Mission of Canada, who are renowned for their effectiveness in the prevention, detection and treatment of leprosy. Stamps may be left in the basket outside of the office.

FOOD FOR ROSALIE HALL & GOOD SHEPHERD CENTRE

Each month food we collect is sent to Rosalie Hall and the Good Shepherd Centre.

Rosalie Hall assists young parents and their children to realize their potential through the provision of a wide range of child development, community, residential and educational services.

Good Shepherd provides hot meals and shelter for the homeless in our city as well as a chance to start again through the Resettlement or DARE Programs

With everyone struggling at this time, your food donations are more important than ever. Please check the expiry dates before donating since we cannot pass on food that has expired. Thank you for your generous support.

JUST COFFEE

Fair trade organic coffees will be on sale after all the Masses next weekend.

Regular ground coffee: $5.50
Decaffeinated: $6.00
Whole Beans: $5.50
Chocolate Bars: $4.50 incl. Taxes
Hot Chocolate and Cocoa: $6.00
Teas: $5.00

MARRIAGE PREPARATION COURSE

Weekend of April 21st, 22nd and 23rd, 2017
St. Gabriel’s Parish

A Marriage Preparation course will be offered here at St. Gabriel’s the weekend of April 21st to 23rd, 2017. The course will be held Friday from 7:00 to 9:00 PM. Saturday from 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM and Sunday from 10:00 AM to 3:30 PM. For a registration package please email Marie Deans at deansm@sympatico.ca.

TCDSB KINDERGARTEN REGISTRATION

Wednesday, January 18th

Beginning at 10:00 AM

Imagine the Possibilities!

Junior Kindergarten in the Toronto Catholic District School Board provides children with a variety of learning experiences in a caring, faith based environment. Students develop a positive attitude about themselves and others, become more independent and responsible, develop self-regulation and social skills, and learn to solve problems.

Parents can apply online beginning at 10:00 AM on January 18th at SOAR.tcdsb.org and follow up with a visit to the school to present required documents. Or they can register at their local school with the required documents beginning January 18th, 2017 at 10:00 AM.

For more information phone 416-222-8282 ext. 5314 or go to www.tcdsb.org/kindergartenregistration.

MOSAIC INTERFAITH

Sunday January 15th from 2:30 PM to 4:00 PM

Zoroastrian Temple, 3590 Bayview Avenue

Mosaic Interfaith invites you to their annual event to celebrate the birthday of Martin Luther King at the Zoroastrian Temple 3590 Bayview Avenue on January 15th from 2.30 to 4:00 PM. Professor Jamil Jivani, visiting professor at Osgoode Hall and founder of Citizen Empowerment Project will speak on “Continuing to dream: the quest for justice in our time” . There is a second entrance to the Temple at 35 Creekside Drive. See poster on the bulletin boards. For more information or to RSVP by January 12th call Nora at 416-218-0680

THEOLOGY ON TAP: Understanding the Joy of Love

Monday, January 23rd from 7:00 PM to 9:00 PM

Duke of York Pub, 39 Prince Arthur Avenue

All young adults (19-39) are invited to join us for an evening of thought-provoking conversation on theological topics with Special guest: Fr. Tom Rosica CSB, CEO, Salt and Light Catholic Media Foundation.

Pope Francis’ Post Synodal Exhoration, Amoris Laetitia, (The Joy of Love) published April 14th, 2016, draws on the long history of Church teaching and reflects a very intense Synodal experience that extended over two and a half years. Fr. Rosica served as the English-language Media Attaché at the October 2014 Extraordinary Synod on the Family and the October 2015 Ordinary Synod of Bishops on the Family. He works closely with the Holy See Press Office.

Munchies will be provided and a cash bar is available. Come and bring a friend! For more information: visit our Toronto Theology on Tap web page, or contact Vanessa Nicholas-Schmidt at 416-467-2645 or email faithconnections@csj-to.ca.

FINANCE CORNER

Weekly Offertory
December 25th $ 14,293
Christmas Collection $ 32,352
New Year’s Day $ 3,692
Collection for January 1st, 2017
Envelopes 406 $ 9,256
Loose Change 1,570
Weekly Portion of Pre-Authorized Giving 167 3,084
Total 573 $ 13,910

OFFERTORY ENVELOPES FOR 2017

The 2017 Offertory Boxed Envelopes are available in the Gathering Space. Please pick yours up as soon as possible.

If you are contributing cash to the Offertory Collection without any identification, you will not receive credit for your contribution. You must provide your full name and address. If you are not currently using parish envelopes and wish to have a set issued for 2017, please contact the Parish Office and we will prepare a box for you. This is the most effective way to keep track of your donations.

Please inform the Parish Office if you have recently moved, so that we may keep our parish records up to date.

Please do not use envelopes from previous years since that envelope number may have been reassigned to another parishioner.

Homily – January 1, 2017

Sunday, January 1st, 2017

This month of January takes its name from the two faced god – Janus – his one face looks back, his other face looks forward – Janus was the diety of opening and closing – of ending and beginning.

The scripture quote I like best for Jan 1 is that quote from St. Paul when he writes – one thing I do, I forget what is behind and I strive on to what is ahead – going with confidence to the throne of God’s mercy.

We can look back over this past year and remember things that we wish were different, better – we can remember words and actions and attitudes we regret. These come first to mind. But these words and actions and attitudes were only part of the past year. Can we bring ourselves to remember the good things we’ve done, the kind and helpful words we spoke, our efforts to be more open to other people and the times we were there when they needed us? These positives were probably more part of our past year that the negatives – but being good old guilt ridden Catholics the negatives always take first place. God forbid we should acknowledge the good things, the kind and loving and helpful things we’ve done this past year. God forbid we admit, ’we are good people.,

So each of us can make our own the mind set of St. Paul – I forget what is behind and I strive on to what is ahead – going with confidence to the throne of God’s mercy.

Today is also the feast of Mary the Mother of God. Pope Paul V1 summed up the life of Mary with this simple phrase – she whose life was available to God. An availability expressed in her response to the angel Gabriel’s disturbing message – you shall conceive and bear a son and you shall name him Jesus. Be it done to me according to your word.

Like the deity Janus – we can look back over the past year and recognize all those times our lives were available to God as we met the needs of our brothers and sisters in need. We can recognize the times when, because we were so caught up with our own needs and desires, we were not available to God as we might have been.

Looking ahead to this new year of 2017 we pray for ourselves and for each other that each of us be given the grace of generosity and that our lives, as was Mary’s, be always available to God as we meet God in all those persons who come into our lives.

Made God bless us with a happy, healthy and especially a holy new year.

Bulletin – New Year’s 2017

Sunday, January 1st, 2017

Mary was the Mother of Jesus.
May we also bring Jesus into the world for others.
Mary lived a life pleasing to God.
May we do God’s will in all things.
Mary gave the glory to God through her life.
May we give praise to God in all we do.
Mary was a holy person.
May we strive to live as God created us.
Mary was a person of courage.
May we do what we know is right.

ANNOUNCED MASSES

January 3rd to January 7th, 2017

MONDAY – OFFICE CLOSED – No 9:00 AM Mass
TUESDAY – BERNADETTE SEDGWICK – Requested by Agnes Wong
WEDNESDAY – BERNADETTE SEDGWICK – Requested by Astrid, Jacqueline & Greg
THURSDAY – MARIA DI DIODATO – Requested by the Oakie Family
FRIDAY – LEWIS ROYES – Requested by Helene Royes
SATURDAY – CELINA DELFIN – Requested by her Family

EUCHARISTIC ADORATION

Friday, January 6th from 9:30 AM – 12 Noon

ROSARY GROUPS

Chinese: Sunday, January 1st at 3:30 PM in the Gabriel Room.
English: Saturday, January 7th at 3:15 PM in the Library

ECO-SABBATH

Sunday, January 8th, 2017 at 11:30 AM in the Gabriel Room

Eco- Sabbath, normally held on the first Sunday of the month, will not take place on New Year’s Day, January 1st, 2017. It will be held instead on Sunday, January 8th at 11:30 AM in the Gabriel Room. All are welcome.

FOOD FOR ROSALIE HALL & GOOD SHEPHERD CENTRE

Each month food we collect is sent to Rosalie Hall and the Good Shepherd Centre.

Rosalie Hall assists young parents and their children to realize their potential through the provision of a wide range of child development, community, residential and educational services.

Good Shepherd provides hot meals and shelter for the homeless in our city as well as a chance to start again through the Resettlement or DARE Programs

With everyone struggling at this time, your food donations are more important than ever. Please check the expiry dates before donating since we cannot pass on food that has expired. Thank you for your generous support.

MARRIAGE PREPARATION COURSE

Weekend of April 21st, 22nd and 23rd, 2017

St. Gabriel’s Parish

A Marriage Preparation course will be offered here at St. Gabriel’s the weekend of April 21st to 23rd, 2017.

The course will be held Friday from 7:00 to 9:00 PM.

Saturday from 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM and Sunday from 10:00 AM to 3:30 PM.

For a registration package please email Marie Deans at deansm@sympatico.ca.

TCDSB KINDERGARTEN REGISTRATION

Wednesday, January 18th beginning at 10:00 AM

Imagine the Possibilities!

Junior Kindergarten in the Toronto Catholic District School Board provides children with a variety of learning experiences in a caring, faith based environment. Students develop a positive attitude about themselves and others, become more independent and responsible, develop self-regulation and social skills, and learn to solve problems.

Parents can apply online beginning at 10:00 AM on January 18th at SOAR.tcdsb.org and follow up with a visit to the school to present required documents. Or they can register at their local school with the required documents beginning January 18th, 2017 at 10:00 AM.

For more information go to www.tcdsb.org/kindergartenregistration or phone 416-222-8282 ext. 5314.

THEOLOGY ON TAP: Understanding the Joy of Love

Monday, January 23rd from 7:00 PM to 9:00 PM

Duke of York Pub, 39 Prince Arthur Avenue

All young adults (19-39) are invited for an evening of thought-provoking conversation on theological topics with Special guest: Fr. Tom Rosica CSB, CEO, Salt and Light Catholic Media Foundation.

Pope Francis’ Post Synodal Exhoration, Amoris Laetitia, (The Joy of Love) published April 14th, 2016, draws on the long history of Church teaching and reflects a very intense Synodal experience that extended over two and a half years. Fr. Rosica served as the English-language Media Attaché at the October 2014 Extraordinary Synod on the Family and the October 2015 Ordinary Synod of Bishops on the Family. He works closely with the Holy See Press Office.

Munchies will be provided and a cash bar is available. Come and bring a friend! For more information: visit the Toronto Theology on Tap web page, or contact Vanessa Nicholas-Schmidt by e-mail at faithconnections@csj-to.ca, or phone 416-467-2645.

FINANCE CORNER

Weekly Offertory

Our operating expenses average $14,550 per week.
Collection for December 18th, 2016

Envelopes 365 $ 9,891
Loose Change 1005
Weekly Portion of Pre-Authorized Giving 165 3,055
Total 530 $ 13,951

OFFERTORY ENVELOPES FOR 2017

The 2017 Offertory Boxed Envelopes are available in the Gathering Space. Please pick yours up as soon as possible.

If you are contributing cash to the Offertory Collection without any identification, you will not receive credit for your contribution. You must provide your full name and address

Please do not use envelopes from previous years since that envelope number may have been reassigned to another parishioner.

Homily – December 25, 2016

Sunday, December 25th, 2016

On the feast of Christmas we celebrate and hopefully open our lives to a great wonder. We celebrate the birth of a innocent, helpless child, God’s eternal Son who embraces our humanity, becoming as we all are and through his life shared in the joys and the sorrows that are the reality of all our lives. He knew the harshness of poverty, he earned his bread by the sweat of his brow. He knew the love and support of friends, he knew the deep hurt of those same friends betraying and denying him. He would die the humiliating death of crucifixion. This child whose birth we celebrate would spend his life telling people in his time and in ours that they are loved by God, embraced by God no matter what their faults and failings may be. God’s eternal Son would give us all a new commandment ‘ Love one another as I have loved you.’ His love for us was proven when his died on the cross for each of us. We are called to live out his challenge to us to love as we’ve been loved.

I’d like to offer another dimension to this feast we are celebrating. The birth of the Christ Child.

Our parish motto is, belonging, believing and becoming. We all want to belong, we want to be accepted by others, supported and loved by others, forgiven by someone else. It is not good to be alone. To believe that we are alone and unloved is an unbearable pain. Today’s feast tells us that we belong, belong to God in a very special way. And God belongs to us.

Jesus took to himself our humanity, in what we call the Incarnation. Jesus is like us in all things but he did not sin and he invites us to share in his divinity. Before the world began God chose us, in Christ, to be his adopted sons and daughters. Christmas tells us Jesus belongs to us and we belong to him.

We belong to the human family, a family that is showing the worst of itself these days with the devastating wars that plague our times, especially in Syria. At the same time we are a family that is showing the best of itself as we reach out to our suffering brothers and sisters and welcome them to Canada.

We belong to the family of the church, the body of Christ. Christ is the head of this body and we are its members and no one member can say to the other,’ I have no need of you’. We belong to one another as the different members of the body belong to one another. As each of us tries to be faithful to the example and teachings of Jesus we build up the body of Christ, because we belong we do what we can to maintain the holiness of the church.

If we belong then all others belong, no one is to be excluded. That’s why racism and bigotry – which has recently raised its ugly in the city – and the exclusion of other people is a sin against this feast – this feast in which we welcome Jesus into our human family just as Jesus welcomes us into the divine family. No matter what our color or creed or any other difference – we belong to one another.

We belong to the family of life, the web of life that permeates planet Earth. That’s why the careless and greedy exploitation of Earth’s limited resources, our consumerism, our pollution of lands, air and water, all these are sins against this feast. We did not weave the web of life we are stands in the web and what we do to the web we do to ourselves and we deny our belonging. We are not the Lords of creation we are emeshed in creation.

Think of Christmas as the great feast of belonging – Jesus belongs to us, he is one with us in our human family – thru Jesus God chose us to be God’s sons and daughters – as we belong to God in Jesus can we make every effort to make all those who come into our lives welcome and accepted? This can be our Christmas challenge.