Author Archive

homily – October 15

Sunday, October 15th, 2006

Mark 10:17-30

In the Information Brochure we give out to new parishioners, there is the story of the rabbi who responded to a group of young people who had been badmouthing their religious upbringing – claiming they had been dragged to church and brainwashed.

For the rabbi religion involved three things – belonging, believing and becoming. Belonging in the sense that a person knows they are welcome in a community and that they have a sense of personal ownership, responsibility and commitment to the well being of all the people in the community of faith. Believing in the sense that supported by the faith example of others in the community they grow in their own personal relationship with God. Becoming, in the sense that a person seeks to grow to a full maturity in Christ and is willing to take ownership and responsibility for the adult decisions in their lives.

The rabbi felt that most religions fail people when they deny them the opportunity to grow.

One of the teachings we can take from today’s demanding gospel is that Jesus offered this good young man the opportunity to grow. This enthusiastic, faithful young man has kept all the commandments from his youth – he was truly observant of the law, faithful to the rituals, kept the fasts and feasts. Here’s a good young person who thought he had it all together.

Mark tells us that Jesus looked at him, loved him and in that love offered him more – a challenge, chance to grow. Un-clutter your life. “Go sell what you have, give it to the poor and follow me, and I’ll show a way to live and love you could never have imagined.”

We have no idea what this young man expected of Jesus but he was stunned by what Jesus said – sell what you have, give to the poor – break out of your observant comfort zone – overcome your smugness at keeping the laws – Get beyond keeping familiar rules and rote obligations – let go of these security blankets – take a chance, a leap of faith and cast your lot with me.

What a shock, what a crazy idea. No way, he was not a gambling man – he wasn’t about to let go of his security, the certainties of his life – he had too much going for him.

Then we hear those tragic words – he went away sad, because he had many possessions – possessions that basically possess him.

He may have been wealthy but he wasn’t wise – wise in the sense of having a living sense of what things are and what they are not. He was wealthy but not wise in the sense of knowing what things in life really matter.

The rest of the words of Jesus are not against money and people who have money. No matter what we have the fact is – people and their needs come before the satisfaction we have over owning many things. We are our brothers and sisters keepers – whatever you do to one of these the least of my brothers and sisters you do to me. In the novel Angela’s Ashes no matter how little poor families had for themselves they always managed to find something to share with those who had less.

It’s providential that we hear this gospel this weekend – Sunday marks the 14th United Nations International Day for the Eradication of Poverty – Seventeen years ago the House of Commons unanimously resolved to elimate poverty among Canadian children by the year 2000. Great rhetoric – the reality is one in six Canadian children live in poverty – the reality is 770,000 Canadians rely on food banks, 40 percent of them are children.

The developed countries are 10% of the world population yet we consume 80% of the world’s resources – a city such as ours should not have people living and sleeping on the streets.

Like the astounded disciples we too ask, who can be saved? The answer is the same for the rich and the poor – those whose love for God and for their fellow human beings expresses itself in an eagerness to do good for others.

As we continue our Mass we can pray for ourselves and for each other that we take the time to pray for ‘understanding’ and that wisdom be given to each of us, a wisdom that keeps us in touch with reality – a wisdom that keeps us aware of what really matters, what thing are really important, a wisdom that makes us always willing to do good for others.



bulletin – October 15

Sunday, October 15th, 2006

ANNOUNCED MASSES

Date Time Intentions
Oct. 17 9:00AM SEYMOUR RUBENSTEIN req John Jones & Family
Oct. 19 9:00AM KATHI WATTS req Kathi & Philip Leah
Oct. 20 9:00AM SEVERA de CASTRO req Cleofe Family
Oct. 21 4:30PM KENG OWYONG req Helen

SUNDAY COLLECTION: October 7/8, 2006

Total: $10,003.66

4:30 8:30 10:30 12:30
Loose 94.15 131.34 245.82 917.45
Env. $ 2,169.90 1,775.00 3,105.00 1,565.00
Total 2,264.05 1,906.34 3,350.82 2,482.45
# of Env. 136 90 148 73

REGISTRATION FOR CHILDREN’S SACRAMENTS

PUBLIC/PRIVATE SCHOOL CHILDREN

Registered parishioners, with school-aged children in public or private schools who wish to receive one or more of the sacraments, may pick up a registration form in the main office at any time. Please bring completed forms and related documents to the parish office.

CHILDREN’S FAITH PROGRAM & ST. GABRIEL’S SCHOOL STUDENTS

Parents, please bring completed registration forms and relevant documents to the parish office on OCT 17 (Tue) between 7:30 and 9:00 PM.

TUESDAY NIGHTS AND WEDNESDAY MORNINGS ARE LEARNING TIMES

NEW CHURCH – OLD AND NEW IDEAS

This fall we will look at our new “green” church from different perspectives, including: “Who started us in this direction? Why did we choose this way of placing the pews, the altar, the pulpit (ambo)? Do we as Catholics have any tradition linking ecology and religion?” — and any other questions you may have. Each topic will be repeated the following week. You are invited to join us on:
DATE: Wednesday, NOVEMBER 1st (to be repeated on November 8th)
TIME: 10:30 AM to noon
PLACE: Come to the Parish Office

We hope the discussions will be informative and enjoyable. We are also prepared to offer this series of presentations on alternate Tuesday evenings for those interested, beginning NOVEMBER 7th at 7:30 PM. If you wish to attend Tuesday evenings, please phone Mary Landry at 416-293-3760.

On TUESDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 31st

we will begin with the topic: How is our Christian life and ethics similar to those of other faith traditions? How are they different?
TIME: 7:30 – 9:00 PM
PLACE: Come to the Parish Office

CEREMONY OF THE BLESSING OF THE SICK
WILL BE AT 3:00 PM ON SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2006.

The Sacrament of the Anointing of the Sick is one of the Seven Sacraments. This Sacrament is celebrated with those who are seriously ill, those who are preparing for surgery and the elderly. The preferred place for celebrating this Sacrament is in the Church with family and the members of the parish community present. All are more than welcome to attend.

ALTAR SERVERS

I invite any girl or boy from grade 5 and upwards to join our Altar Servers. This is an important ministry in our parish. Mr. Tom Li, who is in charge of our Altar Servers, will be holding a training session on Sunday afternoon, October 22. If you are interested in serving the parish in this way, please call the parish office and leave your name and phone number or speak to me after one of the Masses.
Fr. Paul

NEWCOMERS – AN OPEN INVITATION

A reception will be held on Saturday, November 11th at 2:00PM in the Gabriel Room II for those in the parish community who are newcomers to the country. If you came to Canada recently (say in the past five years), please join us – we would like to get to know you and hear how you are adjusting to life in Canada. Please call Fatima at 416-221-8866 and leave your name and contact number.

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 incl. taxes
NEW: Two varieties of TEA

ST. GABRIEL’S CRAFTERS will be hosting a CHRISTMAS CRAFT & BAKE SALE

on the weekend of December 2nd & 3rd. Donations of craft items & baked goods will be most welcomed for this worthwhile event. Raffle tickets will be on sale on November 11/12 after all the Masses and again on November 25/26. Volunteers will also be needed. Please contact Linda 416-226-4645 or Bernadette 416-226-0100.

DE LA SALLE COLLEGE – OPEN HOUSE ON OCTOBER 18th from 7:00 – 9:00PM.

De La Salle College is a Catholic co-educational, private school for students in grades 5 to 12. This open house is for prospective students and their families for the academic year 2007/2008. Location: 131 Farnham Ave., Toronto. Please contact the Office of Admissions at 416-969-8771 ext 228.

ST. MICHAEL’S COLLEGE SCHOOL – OPEN HOUSE ON OCTOBER 26th AND NOVEMBER 1st at 7:30 – 9:00PM

The office of Admissions is now considering applications for September 2007. While St. Michael’s is a private school for boys, they offer academic scholarships and financial aid to qualified students. Location: 1515 Bathurst St.(at St. Clair Avenue West) 416-653-3180

BREBEUF COLLEGE SCHOOL – OPEN HOUSE ON NOVEMBER 9th at 7:00PM.

All students and parents/guardians are invited. Location: 211 Steeles Ave. East. For information please contact the School Office at 416-393-5508.



homily – October 8

Sunday, October 8th, 2006

Trinity Sunday

On Trinity Sunday we celebrate the mystery that the inner life of God is a life of relationships – The Father eternally begets the Son and the Spirit of love binds all three together. It’s a reality we really can’t get our heads around but as I mentioned before a mystery is not something of which we can know nothing, it is something of which we cannot know everything.

The 15 billion year history of our universe manifests that all creation is bound in relationships – solar systems relating to solar systems, planets to planets – species to species – cells to cells – atoms to atoms into the very depth of reality.

In today’s Genesis story of creation we see this same manifestation of relationship – it is not good for man – for anyone to be alone – because God is never alone – so in this story we see God trying to cure Adam’s loneliness by offering him helpmates, partners. Adam’s very naming of animals and birds forms a relationship with them – but they are not enough for Adam’s interpersonal needs. So we have the poetic imagery of God taking Adam’s rib and forming woman – flesh of his flesh, bone of his bone – so that these two could have a loving and life giving relationship – the two become one in mind, one in heart and one in affection. It is in and through our loving and life giving relationships – with one another and with God’s creation that we are in relationship with God.

As I mentioned last week we hope that through our prayer and praise in this ‘green’ church we come to our own greening, in the sense that we become more sensitive to and aware of our relationship, our kinship with all the life forms that share planet earth with us.

Today’s gospel is always a difficult one to deal with. In it Jesus takes us back to the beginnings and His insistence on holding on to God’s original dream of human relationships – the two become one. The words of Jesus are demanding – no divorce – if you remarry you commit adultery. Marriage in the days of Jesus is far removed from our reality of marriage – yet the ideal remains the same – til death do us part.

Often we romanticize the past, we think back on the golden age when divorce was a rarity. But the truth of the matter is – there were all kinds of marriage breakdowns even though society did not tolerate marriage break ups.

Yet just about every family deals with the harsh reality of divorce – not only the reality but the hurt and disappointment of divorce. Divorce is a form of death and we grieve for those who die. Divorce shatters the lives of husband and wife and children and the whole extended family. Divorce lets loose anger and resentment, rage and revenge – it rips apart the fabric of so many lives. We know that the ones who suffer the most are the children – I hate it when people who split tell me the children are coping very well – it’s wishful thinking. They are in denial.

Marriage is supposed to be a community of life and love – but what to do if a relationship becomes physically or emotionally abusive – if it becomes death dealing instead of life giving, destructive instead of creative? No one should be expected to stay in such a relationship.

But how should we see people who have divorced? First of all we can’t stand in judgment of their decision to end their relationships. They are still family, they are still church and they are always welcome here. They need our understanding and our support. We can pray for them that their wounds heal and that they find a new life giving love.

The gospel and Jesus quoting Genesis and ‘in the beginning God made them male and female’ brings us to the divisive issue of gay marriage. People have strong feelings about this matter. The fact is the government has the obligation to protect the rights of all its citizens – rights to housing and jobs and freedom from discrimination and the freedom to enter into honest and committed relationships, relationships that are protected by law – even if we can’t understand such relationships. Contrary to common perception, our Bishops have always recognized that obligation. It is their belief that the government made a mistake in extending to such relationships the title of marriage. I believe common sense tells us this is not so. The British has the wisdom to name such relationships – civil unions – with all the civil and legal rights of marriage. And all the emotional stress and strain of being faithful to their commitments as husbands and wives have to be faithful to their commitments.

As we continue to celebrate this Mass we thank God for all the stable, healthy life giving relationships that exist within our parish family – we pray for those who are in troubled relationships – we pray for those who have suffered the breakdown and breakup of their relationships, and we pray that they may know healing and find new love.



bulletin – October 8

Sunday, October 8th, 2006

MASS WILL BE CELEBRATED ON THANKSGIVING DAY,
MONDAY, OCTOBER 9th at 10:00 AM

GOD HAS GIVEN US THE EARTH TO BE OUR HOMELAND. ALONG WITH THIS GIFT, WE ARE ASKED TO SHOW OUR THANKFULNESS BY CARING FOR THE EARTH AND BY SHARING OUR OWN GIFTS WITH ONE ANOTHER.

THANKSGIVING FOOD DRIVE – GOOD SHEPHERD MINISTRIES

We have received our annual appeal from the Brothers of the Good Shepherd for our assistance during the Thanksgiving Season. You can participate by bringing non-perishable food items on October 7th and 8th and also on Thanksgiving Day, Oct. 9th. The following is a list of urgently needed items: canned vegetables and meats, rice, canned soups and stews, cold breakfast cereals, cookies, tea, instant and ground coffee, hot chocolate, sugar, powdered milk, powdered fruit juice, powdered soup bases (chicken & beef), ketchup, paprika, garlic powder, salt & pepper. Kindly drop off your donations at the front doors of the Church and place them in the designated containers. You have always supported this appeal so generously. Please keep up the good work.

ANNOUNCED MASSES

Date Time Intentions
Oct. 10 9:00AM EDITH CHUNG req Chung Family
Oct. 12 9:00AM
Oct. 13 9:00AM
Oct. 14 4:30PM GINO GERARDI req Family

SUNDAY COLLECTION: September 30/October 1, 2006

Total: $9,785.67

4:30 8:30 10:30 12:30
Loose 125.31 69.83 153.76 692.52
Env. $ 2,289.00 2,087.25 2,613.00 1,755.00
Total 2,414.31 2,157.08 2,766.76 2,447.52
# of Env. 91 107 152 74

REGISTRATION FOR CHILDREN’S SACRAMENTS

PUBLIC/PRIVATE SCHOOL CHILDREN

Registered parishioners, with school-aged children in public or private schools who wish to receive one or more of the sacraments, may pick up a registration form in the main office at any time. Please bring completed forms and related documents to the parish office.

CHILDREN’S FAITH PROGRAM & ST. GABRIEL’S SCHOOL STUDENTS

Parents, please bring completed registration forms and relevant documents to the parish office on any of the following days: OCT. 10 (Tue), OCT. 11 (Wed), or OCT 17 (Tue) between 7:30 and 9:00 PM.

TUESDAY NIGHTS AND WEDNESDAY MORNINGS ARE LEARNING TIMES

NEW CHURCH – OLD AND NEW IDEAS

This fall we will look at our new “green” church from different perspectives, including: “Who started us in this direction? Why did we choose this way of placing the pews, the altar, the pulpit (ambo)? Do we as Catholics have any tradition linking ecology and religion?” — and any other questions you may have. Each topic will be repeated the following week. You are invited to join us on:
DATE: Wednesday, NOVEMBER 1st (to be repeated on November 8th)
TIME: 10:30 AM to noon
PLACE: Come to the Parish Office

We hope the discussions will be informative and enjoyable. We are also prepared to offer this series of presentations on alternate Tuesday evenings for those interested, beginning NOVEMBER 7th at 7:30 PM. If you wish to attend Tuesday evenings, please phone Mary Landry at 416-293-3760.

On TUESDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 31st

we will begin with the topic: How is our Christian life and ethics similar to those of other faith traditions? How are they different?
TIME: 7:30 – 9:00 PM
PLACE: Come to the Parish Office

CEREMONY OF THE BLESSING OF THE SICK
WILL BE AT 3:00 PM ON SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2006.

The Sacrament of the Anointing of the Sick is one of the Seven Sacraments. This Sacrament is celebrated with those who are seriously ill, those who are preparing for surgery and the elderly. The preferred place for celebrating this Sacrament is in the Church with family and the members of the parish community present. All are more than welcome to attend.

ALTAR SERVERS

I invite any girl or boy from grade 5 and upwards to join our Altar Servers. This is an important ministry in our parish. Mr. Tom Li, who is in charge of our Altar Servers, will be holding a training session on Sunday afternoon, October 22. If you are interested in serving the parish in this way, please call the parish office and leave your name and phone number or speak to me after one of the Masses.
Fr. Paul

SOCIAL CLUB

The parish is creating a social club for all people between 20 and 30 years of age. Whether you want to network or meet people to hang around with, you are welcome! Our first meeting will be in the Church (date to be determined). All who would like to join or who need more information are asked to email Felipe Sanchez Rijckewaert at: stgabes.socialgrp@gmail.com



homily – October 1

Sunday, October 1st, 2006

New Church

I won’t be preaching on the scripture this Sunday rather I’d like to bring you up to date on our new home. We’ve been in our new home over a month now. As you can see behind me they are still demolishing our old home. It’s a home that holds many memories for all of us. I was away the days they demolished the church – that’s such a harsh word – demolish. I was spared the experience. But the other week Father Steve Dunn and I watched as they demolished – there’s that word again, the monastery chapel, our recreation room and our refectory. The machine looked like a giant, hungry dinosaur tearing apart our home. That monastery was our home for many years – it’s loaded with memories – it’s been rough celebrating morning Mass and watching them tearing the place apart. I know many of you have had the same sad feelings as you saw the gradual disappearance of our old church. I know a lot of tears were shed.

But as the song sings – that was yesterday and yesterday’s gone.

Here we are in our new home – we’re still moving in, its a work in progress. We still have to get used to our new seating arrangement – an arrangement that is totally different from what we are used to. It’s call antiphonal seating and is based on monastery choirs when the monks stood opposite one another as we do and chanted the office back and forth. There is a reason for our seating arrangement.

The church is not the building, it is people. Recently a bishop had dedicated a new church. He remarked to the pastor, you have a magnificent building here – to which the pastor replied, yes and we have a wonderful church ie wonderful people. In his letter to the Corinthians Paul talks about their coming together as church – they had no church buildings in Corinth – when they came together in homes, they were the church. That’s why we chose this form of seating to give you a better sense of community – of being here with other people – people you can see. We all know Christ is present in the Blessed Sacrament but the truth is Christ just as present in this gathering – in you good people. Again it will take a bit of getting used to this but I’m sure we all will. I like to suggest you don’t get squatter’s rights – sitting in the same pew every Sunday – move around – mix it up – get another sense of the space, another sense of the church, the people.

Our beautiful stain glass windows are being restored and will be in place as soon as possible. The five windows from the arches in the old church will be placed in the five windows next to the doors of the church – the others will be displayed as banners as the occasion arises. This too is a work in progress. You’ll notice we’ve used much of the glass from the front doors of the old church as we could.

To have a sense of continuity we brought as much as possible from the old church – the pews – the marble for the altar, the pulpit, the baptismal font. Our tabernacle has been refurbished and has a new altar. The space in which the tabernacle is placed will be a chapel of ease – there will be chairs for your use when you come for a visit – it will provide its own ambiance of peace and quiet and privacy. New lighting will highlight the cross and tabernacle.

We brought with us our beautiful statues of the Sacred Heart and St. Gabriel. To tell you the truth I love our statue of the welcoming Christ. He was usually hidden by all the trees on the lawn of the old church – now Christ is very visible and very welcoming.

As I said, we are a work in progress. The chairs for the priests and servers have yet to arrive as well as the chairs for choir. And our reconciliation rooms which are on either side of the chapel of the Blessed Sacrament have yet to be furnished. There will be a book of appreciation, which will list the donors and the gifts they’ve provided to our new home.

In the old church we had little if any space to gather and socialize as we entered or left the church. Our new gathering space gives us a wonderful open space – it is graced by our living wall of live plants. This living wall is meant to purify the air in our gathering space. This gathering place will help us be more church to one another – as we take our time coming and going. The underground parking is working out very well and thanks for your patience and co operation in your parking. We’ll appreciate it all the more when the snow falls. Just one thing, spaces marked ‘car pool parking’ are for cars that have more than two people in them.

As you can see our restored stations of the cross grace our west wall. I know some people feel the walls are stark – they are. Someone referred to our cement walls as the elegance of simplicity. You can see this especially when they awash with the colors that come from the stain glass skylights. Our walls speak to us of the earth – sand, water and lime, slag and sludge and they are reinforced by recycled steel and our glass wall opens us up to the world around us – so that even in our worship we won’t be wrapped up in our own space but are open to and aware of the beauty and the fragility of creation.

We are called Canada’s first green church. Every church creates its own atmosphere – it has its own feeling. Our old church offered us a real sense of tranquility. Our new home has its own atmosphere too – we just have to get used to it, let it grow on us.

The goal of all those involved in the planning and building of this new church that the praise and preaching done in this new space will facilitate the greening of those who worship here. Greening in the sense that we all will come to a deeper sense the human family’s oneness with the rest of God’s good creation. Greening in the sense that we all come to a deeper awareness of the truth that ‘we did not weave the web of life, we are strand in the web and what we do to the web we do to ourselves’ – Greening in the sense that we face the truth, ‘the earth does not belong to us, we belong to the earth and what we do to the earth we do to ourselves’.

As we continue to celebrate our Eucharist we can pray for ourselves and for each other that our time spent in our new home will be blessed by God, bring us closer to each other and to the wonders of God’s good creation.