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July 20-26, 2008 Issue |
Posted 7/15/08 at 12:08 PM
Sunday, July
27, is the 17th Sunday in ordinary time (Year A, Cycle II). Pope Benedict will
recite the noon Angelus at Castel Gandolfo, his summer residence.
Parish
EPriest.com offers Best
Practices helps for parishes.
St. Michael Catholic Church in the
Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis understands the importance of
missionary trips.
Once children (and adults!) actually
put their faith at the service of others, they take their faith to heart.
Tupy heard about the Catholic Heart
Workcamp weeks. The weeks include time for prayer, Mass, confession, worship
and fellowship, along with a daily work schedule that runs from 8:30 a.m. to 3
p.m. The students help elderly or low-income housing owners complete projects:
painting, fix-it jobs, cleaning, yard work, etc.
See ePriest for more details.
Family
Today’s Gospel suggests an idea for
the family this weekend: A mega treasure hunt.
Tom did this once for our children
on a Saturday. We planned to go to Groton, Conn., and visit the U.S. Navy
Submarine Force Museum. We planned to begin the day with Mass. But we didn’t
tell the kids.
At the church we planned to attend
for Mass, there is a statue of St. Martin de Porres. Tom went to the church
ahead of time and hid a series of rhymed directions under the statue.
We told the children about St.
Martin de Porres on Friday night. The next morning, the kids woke up to find
instructions by their pillows inviting them to begin a treasure hunt by looking
under the statue of a Peruvian Dominican.
The kids knew who that was, so we
went to look — at 7:30 a.m. Mass. We found the directions for the rest of the
day. The series of clues first directed us to go to Dunkin’ Donuts after Mass.
After that, they asked us to go north on Interstate 95. The children didn’t
understand that direction but, luckily, their parents did.
Finally, the trail ended at the
museum, where we found the solution to several riddles left under the statue:
What is the land of the blue midgets? The front lawn of the museum, with its
midget submarines. What is the underwater home? The U.S.S. Nautilus, a
submarine visitors are invited to stroll through.
Readings
1 Kings 3:5, 7-12; Psalm 119:57, 72,
76-77, 127-130; Romans 8:28-30; Matthew 13:44-52 or 13:44-46
EPriest.com offers free homily
packs for priests.
Our Take
An old children’s book offers a key
to Gospel readings like this Sunday’s that are about the Kingdom of heaven.
“The Kingdom is the Church,” it
repeats, again and again. And it’s true. The Kingdom of heaven is with us
already in the Church. As we saw in last Sunday’s Gospel, that Kingdom has both
wheat and weeds. As we hear today, it has both wicked and righteous people.
But the overwhelming reality of the
Church is its slow, steady movement toward God. We recite in the Creed that the
Church is “one, holy, catholic and apostolic.” The Church is holy not because
it’s free of weeds or bad fish — we all know it has its share. The Church is
holy in its origin (Christ) and its ends (heaven).
To take a lesson from today’s first
reading, the Church is holy because, through it, we effortlessly get the gift
that Solomon got. He could have had any riches he wanted, but he asked for
wisdom. In baptism, confirmation and the other sacraments, we’re given the
gifts of the Holy Spirit: wisdom, counsel, understanding, knowledge, fear of
the Lord, piety and courage.
These are the treasures we find in
the Church. Just as Solomon passed up riches for wisdom, Christ compares the
gifts the Church gives us to spectacular treasures found in a field or a great
pearl found in an oyster. You would sell everything to buy that field. A
merchant would divest himself of lots of lesser pearls to obtain that great
one.
So must it be with us. The gifts of
the Holy Spirit lead inexorably to interior peace in this life and heaven and
eternal bliss in the next.
The question to ask is: Just what
will we be willing to give up in order to get these great gifts? And then,
specifically: What must we give up
before we can have them?
The
Hoopeses are
editorial
directors of
Faith
& Family magazine (faithandfamilymag.com).
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