Author Archive

homily – March 15

Sunday, March 15th, 2009

John 2:13-25

When Jesus came to Jerusalem to celebrate the Passover He was met with great enthusiasm. Many believed in Him because of the signs He worked, the things He taught and the way He confronted the authorities of the day. The people saw Jesus as someone who was going to change things, bring them a better tomorrow. The way He cleansed the Temple and challenged the leadership that let this holy place become a market place was a sign of hope to the little people of the time. Jesus was their hero, their hope.

Then we read in today’s gospel, “But Jesus on His part would not entrust himself to them because he knew all people and needed no one to testify about human nature, for he himself knew what was in the human person.” Jesus knew this enthusiasm and excitement would not last. He knew this admiring crowd could be fickle and unpredictable. He was wise enough not to entrust Himself to them.

I find these words ‘He knew himself what was in the human person’ to be very consoling. As Christians we believe that Jesus of Nazareth is both human and divine. St. John begins his gospel stating, “In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God.” Then John goes on to say, “And the Word was made flesh and dwelt amongst us.” We could say Jesus knew what was in the human person because He was God. But the reality is, Jesus knew what was in the human person because He was human. Jesus knew what was in the human person because He was bone of our bone and flesh of our flesh. St. Paul tells us that, like us Jesus was tempted in all things but He did not sin.

Jesus knew what it means to have close friends, to love and admire them, people like Mary and Martha and Lazarus. Jesus knew what it is like to be accepted and He knew what is what like to be rejected. His own people drove Him out of His own town. Jesus enjoyed a good meal and good wine.

As we will see during our celebration of Holy Week Jesus knew the deep pain and disappointment of being deserted by his followers, betrayed by one friend and denied by another. Jesus knew the shame of being publicly humiliated, falsely condemned and sentenced to death. Jesus knew what it is like to feel like a failure. Jesus experienced the feeling of being forgotten by God as He suffered the agony of the garden and the cross. Being one like us in all things but sin He was no stranger to human love and human pain.

The Church is the extension of Jesus in time and space bringing His life and love to the world through word, sacrament and service. You’ve heard the saying, “I have no hands but yours, no eyes but yours, no ears but yours.” From over 2000 years of experience the Church knows and understands human nature, for the church itself is made up of us, human beings, and mistake making beings. But there are times when the Church, we ourselves and those who officially represent the church do not give witness to that understanding of the human condition. I wonder how Jesus or a more compassionate bishop would have handled that tragic situation in Brazil that recently made headlines around the world. A 9 year old girl pregnant with twins after being raped by her stepfather had an abortion. The whole situation is fraught with sadness and madness. This abused child, a product of a poor and abusive family life is the victim. How could a nine year old be expected to deliver twins? Instead of excommunicating the mother of this child, cutting her off from the community of faith wouldn’t have been more Christ like, more understanding of what is within the human person, to be there for this child and her family. Wouldn’t this bishop be more faithful to Christ if he had shown compassion instead of condemnation, understanding before judgment? This is what this mother and daughter needed and deserved. This was not an easy decision for a mother to make for her daughter. Don’t you think that Christ, Who knew what was within human nature would have embraced this wounded family and brought them healing?

As we continue to celebrate this Eucharist we can pray for ourselves and for each other that as we struggle with the strengths and weaknesses of our own humanity and seek the understanding of others for our faults and failings, we be gifted with the grace to be more understanding and compassionate when we are touched by, hurt by, disappointed with the human nature of others, be they bishops, priests, even ourselves.



bulletin – March 15

Sunday, March 15th, 2009

LENTEN AND EASTER SCHEDULE 2009

Stations of the Cross

Friday Evenings at 7:30 PM
There will be no Stations of the Cross on Friday, March 27th.

Reconciliation Service

Wednesday, April 1 at 7:30 PM

Palm Sunday

April 5
Masses 4:30 PM, 8:30 AM, 10:30 AM, 12:30 PM

Holy Thursday

April 9
No 9:00 AM Mass
7:30 PM Mass of the Lord’s Supper
Followed by Adoration until 10:00 PM

Good Friday

April 10
10:00 AM Morning Prayer
3:00 PM Solemn Passion of Our Lord
7:30 PM Stations of the Cross

Holy Saturday

April 11
Confessions 11:00 AM to 12 Noon
No 4:30 PM Mass
8:30 PM Easter Vigil

Easter Sunday

April 12
Masses 8:30 AM, 10:30 AM, 12:30 PM

Easter Monday

April 13
No 9:00 AM Mass
Office closed

EXTRA PARKING AT ELKHORN PUBLIC SCHOOL

STATIONS OF THE CROSS

Stations of the Cross will take place on Friday evenings during Lent at
7:30 PM.

There will be no Stations of the Cross on Friday, March 27th.

SUNDAY COLLECTION: March 7-8, 2009

Total: $9,830

–>

4:30 8:30 10:30 12:30
Loose
Env. $
Total $2,702 $1,098 $2,745 $3,285
# of Env. 147 61 133 138

Number of Envelopes Issued: 1,136
Number of Envelopes Used: 479

ANNOUNCED MASSES

Date Time Intentions
March 16 9:00AM IN THANKSGIVING Requested by Margaret Joseph
March 17 9:00AM MARY FLANAGAN Requested by the Family
March 18 9:00AM YOLANDE PAYEUR Requested by Cathy Sacco
March 19 9:00AM OLIVIA BARRON Requested by the Barron Family
March 20 9:00AM RITA MCCAUGHEY Requested by Moira McCarthy & Bob Torpey
March 21 4:30PM ALMA MCGUINNESS Requested by the Family

TUESDAY NIGHTS AND WEDNESDAY MORNINGS ARE LEARNING TIMES

Wednesday, March 18th at 10:30 AM
Topic: The Reformation

Tuesday, March 24th at 7:30 PM
Topic: How the Bible Was Written

In case of inclement weather, please call Mary Landry at 416-293-3760.

LENTEN DAY OF REFLECTION:
EXPLORING GOD & ME

Lent is a great time to take a look at our relationships – especially our relationship with God. On Thursday, March 26th from 10 AM to 3 PM, we will take time to look at how, when and where the Spirit of God dwells within us (St. Paul). Since lunch will be provided (suggested cost $10) please register. Call Mary Landry at 416 221-8866.

RECONCILIATION SERVICE

Wednesday, April 1st at 7:30 PM

This is an opportunity to spend some time in peace and quiet, to reflect upon how we are responding to our call to be sons and daughters of God. Recognizing the fact that we are “good people”, we also accept the fact that good people can sin. Through an examination of conscience we face those sins, admit them and are reconciled to God. For those who wish, individual confessions will be celebrated after the service. We encourage you to take advantage of this celebration.

WALKING GOD’S PATH SERIES
CHRISTIAN JEWISH DIALOGUE

The Christian Jewish Dialogue of Toronto is again sponsoring the Walking in God’s Path Series this year. The series seeks to stimulate real conversation between Jewish and Christian congregations. As in last year, St. Gabriel’s will be one of the participating institutions. The themes to be explored this year are:

Closing Event: Where are We Going and How Do We Get There
March 18th at 7:30 PM
Beth Tzedec Congregation

The closing program will feature a panel discussion between Fr. Paul McGill, retired Anglican Archbishop, Terrence Finlay and Rabbi Erwin Schild, to be moderated by Mr. Frank Faulke, producer of the CBC Series, Tapestry. These meetings will allow us to further explore the Jewish roots of our Christian faith. It will also offer a good opportunity, for those interested, to meet some of our Jewish friends and to visit different synagogues.

As a partner institution, St. Gabriel’s will be hosting the first meeting of the series. The focus, very appropriately for our parish, will be on ecological justice. The discussion will be lead by Father Paul, our pastor.

For further information on this series of events, please contact Fatima Lee at 416-221-8866.

YOU CAN WORK WONDERS

It’s a wonder teens can grow through difficult times…..

“I was very fortunate to have been welcomed into Pelletier Homes for Youth six years ago. I was in one of their foster homes…for two and a half years. If Pelletier Homes was not introduced into my life, I do not know where I would be today. They are responsible for allowing me to grow into the dedicated young woman (I am) today.”
Natasha, former resident,
Pelletier Homes for Youth

ShareLife Sunday – March 29th 2009
With your help, we can work wonders!

EARTH HOUR

March 28th 8:30 PM to 9:30 PM

As you know, on March 28th, millions of people around the world will be shutting off their lights for one hour in a symbolic demonstration of their concern for climate change.

As parishioners of Canada’s First Green Church, we at St. Gabriel’s will also be celebrating Earth Hour. Please join others from the Parish on March 28th here in the Church at 8:30 PM for an hour of prayer and reflection. All are welcome.

CARDINAL CARTER CONCERT

Friday, March 27th, 2009

Dr. Lydia Adams with the Elmer Iseler Singers, working with The Cardinal Carter Academy for the Arts singers and conductors, Mark Huang and Eric Hauser will hold a workshop/symposium at St. Gabriel’s Church on Friday, March 27thfrom 4:00 to 6:00 PM.

The symposium will be followed, after an hour break, by a wonderful concert opportunity from 7:00 until 8:30 PM. This is an educational outreach initiative by the Elmer Iseler Singers in memory of John C. Bird. It is a wonderful gift of music blessing our community!

All are welcome. Tickets are $10 and are available through Marilyn Calderone at 416-618 2041.

Due to this concert, there will be no Stations of the Cross on Friday, March 27th.

MARGUERITE BOURGEOYS FAMILY CENTRE

Easter Egg Sale

The Marguerite Bourgeoys Family Centre helps couples to achieve and avoid pregnancy through Creighton Model Fertility Care System and to improve women’s health using NaPro Technology which is rooted and grounded in Catholic Church teaching.

To raise funds, they will be selling hand-made Belgian chocolate Easter eggs for $3.00 each or 2 for $5.00 before and after the Masses on March 21st and 22nd.

Your support will help them promote and maintain their service in the Diocese.

GOD’S OWN CHILDREN

The last of the Church mosaic pictures have been sold. The money, along with a donation from the Church, went to God’s Own Children, an organization which provides schools for children with special needs in Sri Lanka. For pictures of the group and further information, please see the newsletter on the bulletin board.



homily – March 8

Sunday, March 8th, 2009

Romans 8:31-34

We all know this story of God demanding that Abraham offer his only son Isaac as a sacrifice. We wonder what kind of a God would ask for such a thing, ask a father to kill his only son. We have to remember we are talking about a very primitive stage in the development of religious belief. In order to placate God or plead with God or thank God people offered sacrifices – gifts – to God. Many times the gift offered was what was most important and most precious to the person offering the gift. There were times when that gift was a child, a son, a daughter. Human sacrifice was not unheard of in those days. So when God made this request of Abraham he was not shocked, confused for sure, but not shocked. Abraham would be confused because God made him a promise that through his only son Isaac Abraham would have descendents as numerous as the sands on the sea shore. Through Isaac his family name would continue til the end of time. This demand of God was in complete contradiction to this promise. Abraham still trusted that God would fulfill that promise no matter what and so he offered what God asked of him.

We hear in the story that God stayed the knife wielding hand of Abraham and God restated his former promise to him, “I will make your offspring as numerous as the stars of heaven and as the sand on the seashore because you have obeyed my voice.”

Abraham became the father of all believers, the model of all those who trust in the presence, the fidelity and the love of God no matter how many circumstances in their lives tell them differently.

Our second reading tells of another Father, a Father who did not spare his own son but gave him up for us all. God stopped the hand of Abraham from striking his son but God did not stop the hands of those who whipped His Son, God did not stop the hands of those who wove the cruel crown of thorns and pressed them down into His Son’s head, God did not stop the hands of those who slapped His Son’s face to humiliate and mock Him, God did not stop the hands of those who put a cross on His Son’s shoulders, God did not stop the hands of those who drove the nails through His Son’s hands and feet, God did not stop the hands of those who raised His Son up on the cross.

In our first reading God asked Abraham to give Him what was most precious to him, his only Son Isaac. In our second reading we heard of God giving up what was most precious to Him, Jesus His only Son as a sign and pledge of God’s great love for each of us.

So often, when we face our own faults and failings and we imagine God to be so angry or fed up and tired of our weaknesses we can’t seem to get our heads around what today’s scripture is telling us, “God who did not spare his own son, but gave him up for us all, will he not, with him, give us everything else?”

“Who will separate us from the love of Christ?” The love of the crucified Christ sweeps over us like a tsunami; it overwhelms us, engulfs us, and sweeps us up. In one of his letters St. Paul claims, nothing can come between us and the love of God made visible in Christ Jesus our Lord. What we’re talking about here is not our love for God but God’s love for us. God’s love for us is a given, proven beyond all doubt. Our response, our openness to that love is another issue.

The only thing that can come between us and the love of God made visible in Christ Jesus is ourselves and our unwillingness to open our lives to the love and life offered us by the crucified Christ. The only thing that can come between us and the love of God made visible in Christ Jesus our Lord is our unwillingness to distance ourselves from persons or places or mind sets or life styles that come between us and the life and love Christ offers us.

You’ve heard of the story of the young couple out for an evening drive. He’s behind the steering wheel, she over by the passenger door. She looks at him and says, “We didn’t sit like this when we were courting”. He looks at her and says, “I haven’t moved.” If anything can come between us and the love of God, it is our distancing ourselves from such a love.

During these days of Lent we can pray for ourselves and for each other that we come to grips with the awesome truth we celebrate and remember in this Eucharist, “God did not spare His Own Son but gave Him up for us all.”



bulletin – March 8

Sunday, March 8th, 2009

STATIONS OF THE CROSS

Stations of the Cross will take place on Friday evenings during Lent, at 7:30 PM.

RECONCILIATION SERVICE

Wednesday, April 1st at 7:30 PM

This is an opportunity to spend some time in peace and quiet, to reflect upon how we are responding to our call to be sons and daughters of God. Recognizing the fact that we are “good people”, we also accept the fact that good people can sin. Through an examination of conscience we face those sins, admit them and are reconciled to God. For those who wish, individual confessions will be celebrated after the service. We encourage you to take advantage of this celebration.

SUNDAY COLLECTION: Feburary 28 – March 1, 2009

Total: $11,183

–>

4:30 8:30 10:30 12:30
Loose
Env. $
Total $3,480 $1,871 $3,806 $2,026
# of Env. 134 84 184 119

Number of Envelopes Issued: 1,136
Number of Envelopes Used: 521

TUESDAY NIGHTS AND WEDNESDAY MORNINGS ARE LEARNING TIMES

Tuesday, March 10th at 7:30 PM
Topic: How the Bible Was Written

Wednesday, March 18th at 10:30 AM
Topic: The Reformation

In case of inclement weather, please call Mary Landry at 416-293-3760.

LENTEN DAY OF REFLECTION: EXPLORING GOD & ME

Lent is a great time to take a look at our relationships – especially our relationship with God. On Thursday, March 26th from 10 AM to 3 PM, we will take time to look at how, when and where the Spirit of God dwells within us (St. Paul). Lunch will be provided (suggested cost $10) so please register. Call Mary Landry at 416 221-8866.

ANNOUNCED MASSES

Date Time Intentions
March 9 9:00AM DANICA PETRANOVIC Requested by the Petranovic Family
March 10 9:00AM SHERLY BUCKLEY Requested by Victoria and Lourdes
March 11 9:00AM SEBASTIAN D’GAMA. Requested by Joseph D’Gama
March 12 9:00AM JEAN VILLENEUVE Requested by Moira and Bob Torpey
March 13 9:00AM JOSEPHINE BADALI Requested by John, Sal and Patsy
March 14 4:30PM NINA and MICHEL FOTY Requested by the Family

ST. GABRIEL’S YOUTH

The youth of St. Gabriel’s will hold a meeting in the Gabriel Room on Sunday, March 15th right after the 12:30 PM Mass.

The following will be on the agenda:
*Easter Egg Fundraising Campaign
*Musical Talent Showcase

EARTH HOUR

March 28th 8:30 PM to 9:30 PM

As you know, on March 28th, cities around the world will be celebrating Earth Hour. By the simple action of turning off the lights, Earth Hour intends to reinforce the powerful message about the need for action on global warming. Participating cities are encouraging their citizens to turn off their lights from 8:30 to 9:30 PM.

As parishioners of Canada’s First Green Church, we at St. Gabriel’s will also be celebrating Earth Hour here in our church during that time. We encourage all of you to participate in this important gesture. Please see the bulletin next week for further details.

JUST COFFEE

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

Regular ground Coffee: $5
Decaffeinated $6
Whole Beans $5
Chocolate Bars: $4 including taxes
Hot Chocolate and Cocoa: $4.50
Teas: $3.25 to $4.00 by variety

CARDINAL CARTER CONCERT

On March 27th at 7:00 PM here at St. Gabriel’s Church

Cardinal Carter Choir will be performing with the Elmer Iseler Singers. More details in next week’s bulletin.

WALKING GOD’S PATH SERIES
CHRISTIAN JEWISH DIALOGUE

The Christian Jewish Dialogue of Toronto is again sponsoring the Walking in God’s Path Series this year. The series seeks to stimulate real conversation between Jewish and Christian congregations. As in last year, St. Gabriel’s will be one of the participating institutions. The themes to be explored this year are:

March 11th at 7:30 PM
Beth Tzedec Congregation
1700 Bathurst Street (south of Eglinton)

Closing Event: Where are We Going and How Do We Get There
March 18th at 7:30 PM
Beth Tzedec Congregation

The closing program will feature a panel discussion between Fr. Paul McGill, retired Anglican Archbishop, Terrence Finlay and Rabbi Erwin Schild, to be moderated by Mr. Frank Faulke, producer of the CBC Series, Tapestry. These meetings will allow us to further explore the Jewish roots of our Christian faith. It will also offer a good opportunity, for those interested, to meet some of our Jewish friends and to visit different synagogues.

As a partner institution, St. Gabriel’s will be hosting the first meeting of the series. The focus, very appropriately for our parish, will be on ecological justice. The discussion will be lead by Father Paul, our pastor.

For further information on this series of events, please contact Fatima Lee at 416-221-8866.

YOU CAN WORK WONDERS

It’s a wonder children in isolated regions receive sacramental training…

Last year, we approached the Pastoral Mission Fund with an application requesting financial help for a faith formation program. at Govindapuram mission parish (India). On the concluding day, the Holy Eucharist was celebrated by our bishop. He administered the sacrament of Confirmation on 64 children. It was a memorable day for our people, especially the children. This was all possible because of your generous contribution.
Thank you.

Fr. Kanmury Niranjan,
St. Mary’s Church, Govindapuram

ShareLife Sunday – March 29th , 2009

With your help, we can work wonders!

WORLDWIDE MARRIAGE ENCOUNTER

Upcoming Weekend Date: April 17 -19, 2009

Married Couples: You deserve a weekend to celebrate being together; to rediscover each other and to focus on ways to make your relationship even better. A Worldwide Marriage Encounter Weekend offers this opportunity. Consider giving each other or another couple that you know the gift of a weekend away from daily pressures; time to be with each other and with God on a Marriage Encounter Weekend.

For Further information or registration, please contact Cora and Mike Bryce at 905-896-2958 or by email at cora-mikebryce@sympatico.ca

NORTH YORK RETIRED MEN’S CLUB

Tuesday, March 10, 2009 at 2:00 PM, Blessed Trinity Hall
Guest speaker, Len Walker, will talk on “The Origin of the Universe”.
Prospective members are cordially invited to attend.

CWL

Day of Recollection: With Bishop Richard Grecco

Monday, March 16, 9:00 AM to 1:00 PM at Blessed Trinity Parish.
Tickets: $16 (includes lunch)
Call Camilla at 905 763-7670 or Joyce 416 221-2471.



Lunar New Year 2009

Thursday, March 5th, 2009