bulletin – May 18

May 18th, 2008

ShareLife

COVENANT HOUSE

Covenant House is the country’s largest emergency shelter for street kids. With your support of ShareLife, 2224 young people were reached through Covenant House in 2007, providing food, clothing, counseling and recreation programs.

With your support, 22 people graduated from the long-term housing program at Covenant house, with 4 moving on to University and 18 moving into independent or supportive housing. For more information about the 34 Agencies funded by ShareLife visit our website at www.sharelife.org

2007 ShareLife Total: $164,652.60
2008 ShareLife to Date: $128,633.00

ANNOUNCED MASSES

Date Time Intentions
May 20 9:00AM REINE ELIZABETH Requested by Fernand & Susan Elizabeth
May 22 9:00AM DANICA PETRANOVIC Requested by the Petranovic Family
May 23 9:00AM THOMAS DONAGHY Requested by the St Vincent de Paul Society of St. Edward’s Church
May 24 4:30PM FU-SAI WEN Requested by Mary To

TUESDAY NIGHTS AND WEDNESDAY MORNINGS ARE LEARNING TIMES

Tuesday evening, May 20 at 7:30 PM
Topic: Catholics in Nazi Germany

Wednesday morning, May 21 at 10:30 AM
Topic: St. Paul – Pastor and Theologian

Victoria Day

On Monday, May 19, the Parish Office will be closed for Victoria Day.

FROM THE DESK OF FATHER PAUL

This coming week, Fr. Bernard, Fr. Steve and I will be in Hartford Conn. attending a very important meeting of the Passionist Community. Like every religious community, the Passionists are faced with aging members and aging buildings and must make decisions as regards both. Please pray for the Passionists as they meet this coming week.
Fr. Paul

COLLECTION FOR PAPAL CHARITIES

Thank you for your generosity to the Collection for the Pope’s Pastoral Works. $2,474.74 has been collected
and will be used wherever the Pope feels it is most needed.

SUNDAY COLLECTION: May 10/11, 2008

Total: $7,425.61

–>

4:30 8:30 10:30 12:30
Loose
Env. $
Total $1,849 $2,081 $2,748 $1,447
# of Env. 112 106 154 82

DOORS OPEN TORONTO

St Gabriel’s Parish will again be taking part in this year’s Doors Open Toronto on Sunday, May 25th from 2:00 PM to 5:00 PM. For more information, please call the Parish Office.

CATHOLIC FAMILIES GOLF CLASSIC

HELPING FAMILIES IN TORONTO

Our new activities kick off on Wednesday, May 21, 2008 with a day of golf for all parishioners at the glorious Glen Eagle Golf Club. Individual players as well as foursomes are welcome and we have a great mix of both men and women players. The event is open to both casual and competitive golfers and is followed by a magnificent Dinner and Awards Banquet.

Catholic Family Services are looking for volunteers to help with fundraising events and to serve on the Board of Directors. For more information, please contact Mark Evans at Catholic Family Services by phone at 416-921-1163 or by email at mevans@cfsofto.org.

CYCLONE NARGIS RELIEF – MYANMAR, BURMA

As news reports continue to filter out of Myanmar (Burma) following the devastation of Cyclone Nargis on May 3, more than 20,000 people are already confirmed dead. More than 40,000 more are reported missing and as many as 1 million people have been left homeless, according to the World Food Program.

The ShareLife office will be accepting donations to support humanitarian relief efforts underway in Myanmar, assisting in the provision of food, shelter, clean water, and medical assistance. The Catholic Church’s official relief body, Caritas Internationalis, is coordinating the efforts for its 162 national members, working with staff in the region. As has been the case in the past, contributions will be channelled through the Canadian Catholic Organization for Development & Peace, the Caritas representative organization in Canada.
Those wishing to help may do so in the following ways:

  • Online through ShareLife’s website: www.sharelife.org
  • By phone through the ShareLife office – 1-800-263-2595 or 416-934-3411
  • Through the parish, making cheques payable to:
    ShareLife – Name of Parish – Cyclone Nargis Relief

We offer our prayers for the thousands of families affected by this natural disaster. Thank you for your ongoing efforts to serve the poor and marginalized both here at home and around the world.

Be assured that ShareLife does not apply any administrative fees to humanitarian relief contributions, ensuring as much money as possible is directed toward assistance of those in crisis.

Archbishop Collins
Auxiliary Bishops
Mr. John McGrath

RAFFLE FOR KENYA

Two of our young parishioners, high school students Robin Ivory and Colleen Shea, will be traveling to Kenya this summer as part of a volunteer group organized by the Toronto Catholic District School Board in conjunction with Free the Children. They will be helping to build and supply a school in a remote tribal area, and are selling raffle tickets for a variety of great prizes to help offset the cost of materials. Robin and Colleen and their families have been active parishioners of St. Gabriel’s for many years, and we encourage you to support their efforts.

Tickets are $10 each or 3 for $25 and will be available after all the Masses May 24/25 and May31/June 1.

CASSEROLES – GOOD SHEPHERD CENTRE

Your prepared chicken rice casseroles (frozen please) will be collected at the Masses next weekend for delivery to the Good Shepherd Centre. More volunteers are encouraged to get a copy of the casserole recipe and a pan and give it a try. For more information, please contact Irene Albrecht at 416 221-2791.

INTERNATIONAL EUCHARISTIC CONGRESS COLLECTION

Every four years, Catholic faithful from around the world are invited to gather together to reflect on and celebrate the great mystery of the Eucharist during the International Eucharistic Congress. From June 15-22, 2008, it is expected that between 12,000 to 15,000 bishops, priests, deacons, religious and lay people will gather in Quebec City to come to a deeper appreciation of “the eucharist, gift of God for the life of the world,” the theme of this 49th Congress. There will be a special collection for this Congress on May 24/25. Envelopes are in the pews.

BUTTERFLY 5K WALK AND RUN

LIVERight and join our local community Butterfly 5K Run/Walk in the East Don River Park in memory of Olivia Barron. Join the fun and help raise awareness and funds for children’s liver disease research on Sunday, June 8. Register at www.runningroom.com. If you would like to contact us or pledge Olivia’s brother, please call 416 – 490 – 0134 or email us at p.barron@sympatico.ca.

BUNDLE UP WEEKEND

The Society of St. Vincent de Paul will be collecting gently used clothing and household linens for those in need on the weekend of June 14Th and 15Th. There is a particular need for textiles and footwear. A St. Vincent de Paul truck will be parked on the upper parking lot opposite the garden. Volunteers will assist with loading before and after each of the Masses on Saturday and Sunday.

MARYGROVE CAMP

The Society of St. Vincent de Paul operates Marygrove camp for disadvantaged girls ages 5 to 13. Over 1,100 children attend camp each summer. There will be a second collection for Marygrove Camp on June 15/16.

IMPROVE YOUR ENGLISH!

Fred Speed, a long-time parishioner, is offering to teach English to small groups of new immigrant women. The groups will be between four and six persons. It is anticipated that classes, with an initial focus on conversational English, will be offered one afternoon a week here at the parish. They will be targeted to immigrants with a beginner level of English. Details about the classes may be found on the bulletin boards.
Those interested, please contact Fatima Lee at (416) 221 – 8866, Ext. 228 for further information and/or to register.



Student Visit to Temple Har Zion

May 12th, 2008

On May 6, 2008, some of the classes from St. Gabriel’s school visited the Jaffari Islamic Centre and Temple Har Zion in Thornhill. They had an enjoyable time with the Iman and Rabbi Cory Weiss. Temple Har Zion had its beginnings at St. Gabriel’s lower church back in 1997 and St. Gabriel’s and Har Zion have had an ongoing relationship ever since.

homily – May 11

May 11th, 2008

John 20:19-23

Many of the thoughts in this sermon come from an article by Fr. Ron Rolheiser published recently in the Register.

Can you remember what life in the church was like about 50 years ago? We were a pretty cohesive community. If you are new comers to Canada, remember how your faith community back home was like. If you come from a country where Catholics were a minority, you pretty well stuck together and supported one another in your faith.

But here in Canada – in the good old days – we lived in a culture within which faith and religion were part of the very fabric of our lives and by and large the culture helped carry the faith. No matter what your denomination, everyone went to church on Sunday. Sunday shopping wasn’t part of the scene. You had to be pretty brave and bold not to go to Mass or Sunday service on a Sunday. I went through school with a kid named Gordon Henderson – he was different. First of all he called his parents by their first names – not done. In Lent were we all expected to give up candy and movies. Not Gordon. He never missed a Saturday at the Mayfair theatre on Waterloo Street. We all waited for him to be struck dead. He never was.

But in those days confession on Saturday, Mass on Sunday, fish on Friday, family rosary, daily Mass and fasting in Lent, these were things we just did. Everyone else was doing them too.

We all know things are quite different today. Have you ever seen a Catholic friend give you a strange look when they find out you go to Mass quite regularly? In the past it took a lot of guts to miss Mass on Sunday – it would be noticed. Today it takes a strong inner-anchored act of faith to come to Mass on a Sunday. God bless you for being here.

The truth of the matter is, all that moral support that sustained us in years past is gone. Our culture no longer carries the faith and the church and the teachings of the church, especially as regards the dignity and sanctity of life in all it stages. The days and the times are gone when we lived in a community where most believed, went to church and shared the same moral values. This is now true of Catholics and other Christian denominations. Without that community support there are times when we can feel like the ‘lonely little petunia in the onion patch.’ Maybe in those good old days we never gave much thought to what we did or why we did it. We just went with the flow. But there was a sense of security in that flow.

Rita MacNeil has a great song, “You’re flying on your own.” That’s pretty much where we are these days, as individuals and as a community. We have to rely on our own resources, our own sense of commitment.

Our resources are bolstered by our main resource – the Holy Spirit, whose feast we celebrate today. Without the Spirit the early church could never have survived. The first followers of Jesus were ostracized by their families and faith communities, they were seen as betrayers of their traditions, suspected of strange beliefs and weird rituals. Because of their faith in Jesus they had nothing in common with the values and morals of the times. They certainly were flying on their own, but the wind beneath their wings was the ‘gusting’ of the Holy Spirit. The Spirit gave them the courage and fortitude to profess and live their new found faith even to the point of death. The Spirit gave them the wisdom not to second guess their commitment to the Risen Christ. The Spirit gave them the understanding and counsel to discern how to live their Christian lives among people who could not comprehend their beliefs and way of life.

It is that same Spirit who offers us an inner strength and meaning that is rooted in something beyond what the world thinks and what the majority is doing. The Spirit will help us hold on to the conviction that right is right if no one is doing it, and wrong is wrong if everyone is doing it.

As Fr. Rolheiser says, “To be committed believers today – to have faith truly inform our lives requires finding an inner anchor beyond the support and security we find in being part of the believing majority wherein we have the comfort of knowing that, since everyone else is doing this, it probably makes sense. Many of us now live in situations where to believe in God and church is to find ourselves without support of the majority and at times without the support of those closest to us – family friends and collogues”. Can you relate to his observation? I can.

In our personal struggles to live our lives as Christians we need the support of one another. It is the Holy Spirit who binds us together, it is the Holy Spirit who gives us that attitude of gratitude which makes us grateful for all the gifts with which our lives are blessed, it is the Holy Spirit who brings us together today to praise and thank God for the blessings of our lives, it is the Holy Spirit who gives us the conviction and courage to live as fully as we can the life to which we are called even when we may feel we are flying on or own.

As we continue to celebrate this feast of the Holy Spirit we pray for ourselves and for each other that every day our lives we keep our minds and hearts open to the presence and the power of the Holy Spirit as the Spirit forms us into the likeness of Christ.



bulletin – May 11

May 11th, 2008

ShareLife

PASTORAL MISSION FUND

The Pastoral Mission Fund, funded by ShareLife, was established in 1982 to assist missionaries working at the grass roots level in developing nations with pastoral/evangelical programs. Funds are allocated to small – scale projects for the support of missionaries.

Because you give… Missionaries, Priests and Sisters in developing nations can:

  • receive a motorcycle or bicycle to enable them to travel to remote and rural villages in their territories where no public transportation exists.
  • develop and conduct programs, lectures, seminars and courses such as spiritual animation, faith formation, HIV awareness, marriage/family preparation, Christian values, empowerment for women, youth and children in the community.
  • dig clean water wells in areas where the people must otherwise travel many kilometers to find water for drinking, cooking and everyday needs.
  • religiously educate a seminarian.

2007 ShareLife Total: $164,652.60
2008 ShareLife to Date: $120,222.00

ANNOUNCED MASSES

Date Time Intentions
May 13 9:00AM PAULINE EMBLEM Requested by Sheila Emblem
May 15 9:00AM PEARL JONES Requested by Pam & Pat Burrell
May 16 9:00AM JOSEPH GRIECO Requested by the Family
May 17 4:30PM MIRO FIDELE Requested by Laura Fidele

TUESDAY NIGHTS AND WEDNESDAY MORNINGS ARE LEARNING TIMES

Tuesday evening, May 20 at 7:30 PM
Topic: Catholics in Nazi Germany

Wednesday morning, May 21 at 10:30 AM
Topic: St. Paul – Pastor and Theologian

CONFIRMATION

Congratulations to the young people of our parish who were confirmed last Sunday, May 4th by Fr. Paul Cusack, C.P.

Catherine Alulio
Veronica Lei
Julian Arellano
Christina Leung
Asif Baksh
Arthur Li
Ethan Ballos
Julian Li
Lashawna Barry-Green
Sasha Maghami
James Booker
Laura Lee May
Maria Brandes
Nathan Moore
Cathleen Calica
Laura Munro
Vivian Chan
Joseph Ng
April Cho
Robin Ng
Daniel Choi
Hannah Noel
Lucas Cryer
Lindsey O’Neill
Kathleen De Barra
Morton Nguyen
Madeline Della Mora
Jessica Oakie
Jackson Donnelly
Christopher Piatek
Nathan Donnelly
Jessica Prieur
Connor Flanagan
Marc Stedman
Geneva Frank
Sonia Tam
Lucas Furlan
Arjun Tharumalingam
Christina Galowitsch
Alexander Tran
Hannah Galway
Simon Urbanc
Jessica Goldson
Laura Valderrama
John Goncalves
Joshua Vandittelli
Scott Hall
Alexander Videka
Robert Iannuzziello
Clare Wheeler
Catherine Kim
Hanson Wong
Vanessa Laxton

It was a beautiful celebration marking an important moment in their journey of faith. We were proud to celebrate this important event with them. We promise them our continued prayers and support.

IMPROVE YOUR ENGLISH!

Fred Speed, a long-time parishioner, is offering to teach English to small groups of new immigrant women. The groups will be between four and six persons. It is anticipated that classes, with an initial focus on conversational English, will be offered one afternoon a week here at the parish. They will be targeted to immigrants with a beginner level of English. Details about the classes may be found on the bulletin boards.
Those interested, please contact Fatima Lee at (416) 221 – 8866, Ext. 228 for further information and/or to register.

SUNDAY COLLECTION: May 3/4, 2008

Total: $8,266.44

–>

4:30 8:30 10:30 12:30
Loose
Env. $
Total $2,078 $2,102 $2,441 $1,715
# of Env. 102 114 133 62

CYCLONE NARGIS RELIEF – MYANMAR, BURMA

As news reports continue to filter out of Myanmar (Burma) following the devastation of Cyclone Nargis on May 3, more than 20,000 people are already confirmed dead. More than 40,000 more are reported missing and as many as 1 million people have been left homeless, according to the World Food Program.

The ShareLife office will be accepting donations to support humanitarian relief efforts underway in Myanmar, assisting in the provision of food, shelter, clean water, and medical assistance. The Catholic Church’s official relief body, Caritas Internationalis, is coordinating the efforts for its 162 national members, working with staff in the region. As has been the case in the past, contributions will be channelled through the Canadian Catholic Organization for Development & Peace, the Caritas representative organization in Canada.

Those wishing to help may do so in the following ways:

  • Online through ShareLife’s website: www.sharelife.org
  • By phone through the ShareLife office – 1-800-263-2595 or 416-934-3411
  • Through the parish, making cheques payable to: ShareLife – Name of Parish – Cyclone Nargis Relief

We offer our prayers for the thousands of families affected by this natural disaster. Thank you for your ongoing efforts to serve the poor and marginalized both here at home and around the world.

Be assured that ShareLife does not apply any administrative fees to humanitarian relief contributions, ensuring as much money as possible is directed toward assistance of those in crisis.

Archbishop Collins
Auxiliary Bishops
Mr. John McGrath

BLESSED TRINITY CWL COMMUNION BREAKFAST

Blessed Trinity’s annual Communion Breakfast will be held on Sunday, May 25TH in the church hall following the 9:00 AM Mass. The guest speaker is Michael McManus, National Catholic Broadcasting Council. The cost is $15. For tickets, please call Kathy Nelson at 905-886-7681 or Joyce Egberts at 416-221-9969

DOORS OPEN TORONTO

St Gabriel’s Parish will again be taking part in this year’s Doors Open Toronto on Sunday, May 25th from 2:00 PM to 5:00 PM.

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
Hot Chocolate and Cocoa: $4.50

BUNDLE UP WEEKEND

The Society of St. Vincent de Paul will be collecting gently used clothing and household linens for those in need on the weekend of June 14Th and 15Th. There is a particular need for textiles and footwear. A St. Vincent de Paul truck will be parked on the upper parking lot opposite the garden. Volunteers will assist with loading before and after each of the Masses on Saturday and Sunday.

CATHOLIC FAMILIES GOLF CLASSIC
HELPING FAMILIES IN TORONTO

Our new activities kick off on Wednesday, May 21, 2008 with a day of golf for all parishioners at the glorious glen Eagle Golf Club. Individual players as well as foursomes are welcome and we have a great mix of both men and women players. The event is open to both casual and competitive golfers and is followed by a magnificent Dinner and Awards Banquet.

Catholic Family Services are looking for volunteers to help with fundraising events and to serve on the Board of Directors. For more information, please contact Mark Evans at Catholic Family Services by phone at 416-921-1163 or by email at mevans@cfsofto.org.

A MESSAGE FROM THE CATHOLIC CHILDREN’S AID

Dear Parishioners of St Gabriel’s,

Thank you once again for your generosity towards our families this past Christmastime. As you know, we continue to serve numerous families and feel honoured to provide them with your donations at Christmastime. As well, the food that you donate throughout the year enables us to maintain a small food bank here at the branch. This allows clients who are visiting the branch to pick up items in emergency situations and the social workers to assist our client children and parents when they are most in need.

Please accept this plaque (now in the display case) in appreciation of your generosity and our continued best wishes to each of you at St. Gabe’s. We really value the partnership between St. Gabriel’s Parish and the North Branch of this Society.



homily – May 4

May 4th, 2008

Matthew 28:16-20

One of the things we should keep in mind when dealing with today’s scripture is that we really can’t take Luke’s words literally; Jesus being lifted up into the clouds, no longer visible to the apostle’s sight is Luke’s way of describing in symbolic and poetic language how the relationship of the apostles with Jesus changed. Jesus will no longer be physically present to them but his relationship would be far deeper than in the past. They would be challenged, as we all are, to trust the reality of His presence to us every day of our lives in and through the Spirit He would send, “I am with you always, to the end of time.”

In our personal times of happiness and joy, in our personal times of desperation, confusion or grief, no matter how alone we may feel the truth of the matter is, we are never alone. “I am with you always.”

It’s very much like when someone we dearly love dies. They are no long physically present to us but we know they are with us in and through the life and love we’ve shared over the years. Death does not break the bonds of love we’ve forged over the years. Those we loved and loved us will always be part of our lives.

We are not meant to get caught up looking up into the sky at a disappearing Jesus. The most important aspect of this feast is the command of Jesus – ‘go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.’

This is Communication Sunday. We are all meant to be communicators of the good news of God’s love for all of us, a love manifested and proven in the Passion, Death and Resurrection of Jesus. Our place is not meant to be on a mountain looking up; we are meant to be on the road sharing with all we meet the love God had for each of us, friend or stranger. Each one of us has a mission. Our faith in Jesus Christ, a gift given to us in baptism and nurtured through family, church and school, is not just about keeping us from sin and it’s not just about our own one on one relationship with Jesus. Each one of us is called to take His place in this world – as you’ve heard so many times before, we are meant to be His voice, His eyes, His ears, His hands and feet. Each one of us is meant to share His good news with others – to make a real difference. We are meant to be communicators of His good news that every person is precious and loved by Christ, redeemed by His blood, healed by His wounds, enlivened by His death.

There was a famous line in the movie “Cool Hand Luke” when the prison warden says to Luke who kept escaping from prison, “What we have here is a failure to communicate.” Do we have a failure to communicate? How different are our lives and values from those of friends and neighbours and co-workers who never darken the doors of a church and live their lives as if God did not exist? We’ve all met people from different Christian churches that are almost ‘in your face’ with the enthusiasm they have for their faith. Most of us are not that way. We are not used to their ‘God talk’. Are we are too private about our faith and what it means to us? Are we are too reticent to talk about what our faith means to us, too silent about how our faith in Jesus has seen us through the hard times in our lives. As I said, it’s just not our Catholic way. But is this is a weakness on our part? Do we have a failure to communicate? There is that old question, ‘if you were arrested for being a Christian would there be enough evidence to convict you? Would we be any different from all those others in the line up?’

Could each one of us hear in a new way our constant petition in our weekly prayer of the faithful: may we live this Mass outside these walls in the lives we live, the work we do, the service we give and the prayers we pray? Could each one of us ask the question, ‘do I have a failure to communicate my faith in Jesus Christ in the life I live, the work I do, the service I give and the prayers I pray?’

I love using that quote from St. Francis of Assisi; ‘preach the gospel at all times and when necessary use words.’

As we continue this Mass we can pray for ourselves and for each other that we be good communicators of our faith in Jesus Christ, Who loved us and gave His life for us, doing this outside these walls, in the lives we live, the work we do, the service we give and the prayers we pray.