admin

Celebrations for St. Francis

The Parish of St. Francis, held a ‘Celebration Weekend’, honoring both their patron saint and celebrating the recent completion of their church renovations.

On Saturday, October 4th, A Blessing of the Animals was held inside the church. This event welcomed all sorts of pets and their owners for this special blessing. This Service opened with a warm welcoming by Father Andrew Koterba and followed by a reading from parishioner, Thomas Kompa, on the life of St. Francis of Assisi. Father Andrew than administered a general blessing of all animals and a special blessing for sick animals. In closing each animal was sprinkled and blessed with holy water and all received a St. Francis prayer card and medal, as a keepsake. Each year this blessing increases in attendance, and continued success!

Sunday, October 5th, St. Francis Parish celebrated their 76th Anniversary and Blessing of their newly renovated church, in a Eucharistic Celebration, held at 4 pm. This Mass was celebrated by Most Rev. Robert M. Nemkovich, Prime Bishop and the Rt. Rev. Anthony Mikovsky, Bishop Ordinary of the Central Diocese. The Mass proved to be both powerful and spiritually moving for all in attendance. The church was full to capacity, with all in attendance, by the clergy of the Diocese, Parishioners and the many friends of St. Francis Parish and many stood beyond the church doors!

A delicious dinner followed, prepared by Monika Koterba and the Parishioners of St. Francis. It remains a grand and memorable event to long remember!

The following is one segment, authored by Thomas P. Kompa, and read at that Celebration Mass

GOD’S DWELLING PLACE … BLESS THIS HOUSE

Today we take time to bless and rededicate our church of St. Francis, which was founded in 1932, and has successfully served our community for 76 years!

Take time to look around you and find this place a special place, a place of Peace and Prayer. God’s dwelling place! In it’s time witnessing, baptisms, communions, confirmations, weddings and funerals. It has held par¬ishioners and friends of St. Francis, priests and bishops and many of God’s creatures … to mention but a few. These walls have heard a Babel of languages, heard laughter and tears. These windows have seen change both inside and out. Once surrounded by farmland and now suburban sprawl. But still sunshine shone through brightly and rain and snow and many a storm beat these glass panes through our prayers.

This church was built with love, hope and faith and hard struggle from many. Parishioners have made this a place to endure. A place to practice their faith and tradition, a holy place for God. Work and struggle is the motto here! Dinners and dances, fairs and sales, blessings of Easter food baskets and blessings of creatures, have all taken place here. All have kept this humble Parish of St. Francis afloat through the years.

This parish has seen both good times and bad! But more recently bad times have tended to stay longer and the struggle was starting to become more than the parishioners could bear. But change was on our horizon! As the Very Rev. Father Wiesław Pietruszka, of Holy Cross Parish, in South Brooklyn, was made our Administrator, for the last several years. He saw how hard we struggled and the promise that was here. In a period of change, the old Holy Cross Church was closing, with a new continuation for that parish, in Commack, Long Island. In part of their change was a gift given to St. Francis Parish, which helped with improvements and new renovations which were badly needed here.

To Father Wes and to the good Parish of Holy Cross, we thank you sincerely for your kindness and generosity. It is more than we dreamed of … as you see all around us change and repairs … brightness abounds us once again!

In thoughtful thankfulness, we quote from the words of our Patron, St. Francis … “That a single sunbeam is enough to drive away many shadows” and in the recent arrival of Father Andrew Koterba and his dear wife, Monika. They have become our sun-beams, bringing new possibilities and dreams to St. Francis Parish. So to all we say “Thank You”!!!

And we add this blessing of St. Francis – “That the Lord bless you and keep you. May he show his face to you and have mercy. May he turn his countenance to you and give you peace.

The Lord bless YOU all!

Celebrations for St. Francis Read More »

Reflection for Solemnity of the Christian Family

Joe approached his pastor after Mass: – Father, you talked about inviting people to our services.

I had an experience in the army. Bill and I were buddies, both Catholics. But we never went to Mass. We were having a five-day mission on the base. I asked Bill to come along, but he had some kind of excuse. The second and third night more excuses. Finally, on the fourth night he came with me to the chapel. Something hit him, because from then on he went with me to Mass and Communion regularly. That was twenty years ago. I haven not seen him since, but he writes to me every year and thanks me for asking him to go to that mission.

Jesus just told us the kingdom of heaven is like a king who gave a marriage feast for his son. The kingdom of heaven means the family of God here on this earth. The marriage feast is the table loaded with spiritual food.

My thought for today is that every one of us is a servant of the great King. Christ is His Son. The heavenly Father sends us out to invite everyone to share the spiritual feast offered by His Church.

Who are the people we can invite? Almost everyone practically.

Many people have never attended a mission, a retreat, or joined rosary, altar society or any organization in a parish. Fallen-away Christian often need a little encourage to start their way back to the family of God.

We are thinking especially of the many who attend no church and of our friends of other faiths who are looking for the spiritual nourishment we have.

Where do we meet these possible guests? They could be neighbors, schoolmates, fellow workers, even relatives. They could be chance acquaintances at a game, at the store, on the bus, in the doctor’s waiting room.

Don’t limit your invitation to so-called respectable people. Invite the underprivileged, the outcast, the sinner. As the king commanded in today’s Gospel: “Go out and invite all whom you can find, both bad and good.” Invite them to a regular Sunday Mass, or preferably to some special service.

Suppose they turn down your invitation.

Well, you have done your duty, a duty of faith, a duty of charity. You are showing that your faith means something to you. You are concerned, considerate and kind enough to want others to share the spiritual banquet we are enjoying this very hour.

God bless you.

Reflection for Solemnity of the Christian Family Read More »

Reflection for 26th Sunday in Ordinary Time – A

My Dear Brothers and Sisters

God gave us free will. We are responsible for our life, our behavior, words, deeds and decisions. And because of that free will, one day each one of us will have stand in front of God and be judged for our good deeds or bad. The good news is that with the help of God’s grace we can change the direction of our lives for the better.

The Liturgy, the Eucharist points out that there must be a connection between what we say and what we do.

Jesus criticized some of the people in leadership of his days because they did not live up to what they promised. Their promises were empty, they said yes to God and did nothing to fulfill that yes; and because of that they were not pleasing God. Jesus tells them that their observance of the law was an outward show and that there has to be more honesty and a greater readiness to accept the call for repentance.

Jesus told us a beautiful story. And this story is for all ages. Each of us has points of inconsistency between what we promised and what we did or do. The lesson the gospel offers us is that we may be saying “yes” to God on Sunday and turning our back on what we profess during the rest of the week. Many of us who say “yes” to the Body of Christ during Holy Mass completely forget what we promise to Jesus during the week. Very often we behave like the second son from today’s Gospel.

My Dear Brothers and Sisters

I know who we would like to be in today’s Gospel. Of course we would like be the one who would say NO but actually go and fulfill God’s request.

The choice is ours. We can do even better than the son who eventually did the work. We can say YES and do the work of God. So as God’s children, let put all differences behind us and let’s start to say yes our God every day of our life.

After the homily we are going to profess our faith. I would encourage everybody to think what we profess, and live that profession this week, and all the weeks of our life.

Reflection for 26th Sunday in Ordinary Time – A Read More »

Reflection for 25th Sunday in Ordinary Time – A

We just heard great teaching of Jesus. The principle lesson of this parable is that God is generous, that the kingdom of heaven is not run like the kingdom of earth, that God’s ways are not people’s way.

Yes, God is generous. The question is: are we generous?

Many times we hear statements: “I grew up with the Church, I went to a Catholic school, I go to Church every Sunday, I pray every day, I go systematically to the sacrament of Reconciliation to reconcile myself with God, I go to communion all the time. So I work in ‘God’s field’ all my life, therefore I have to get better rewards than others.

And who are the others? Some of them are the people who converted and joined the faith later; some of them join our faith on their death bed. And maybe they did not work as hard in God’s field, as hard as we did. Maybe they worked as hard as or even harder than we did, but for short period of time.

Are we generous to recognize their work, without pointing that we did more, or the same — but for a longer period of time? Didn’t we agree to our reward?

If we look closer into our behavior, we really think and behave as that first group from Jesus’ parable.

Yes, as Christians, we who are working in God’s field by spreading the good news throughout our families, our neighborhoods, we can expect a reward, and we should expect a reward. But we cannot expect more than we agreed to.

Through baptism, first communion, confirmation, didn’t we agree to do what God requires from us for our reward. So, we really cannot expect more than we deserve, more than we agreed to. And at the same time we cannot put anybody down.

We have to accept God’s generosity. And that generosity is not only toward those who joined us later. The love of God and His generosity is toward all of us. Without His mercy none of us probably could reach the final reward, which is Heaven.

Why?

Because none of us is perfect. Therefore, let’s work toward perfection in our own lives as hard as we can, so at the end we will receive the the agreed to reward. Amen.

Reflection for 25th Sunday in Ordinary Time – A Read More »

Reflection for Solemnity of Brotherly Love

On the second Sunday of September each year we celebrate a special feast day, the Solemnity of Brotherly Love.

This Solemnity was set aside by the Synod of our Church in Chicago in 1914. The General Synod established this day for the faithful of the Church in order to remember the great commandment of God that is to love your neighbor as you love yourself.

During the Holy Sacrifice of Mass on This solemnity, we read the Gospel except from Luke 10:25-37, the parable of the Good Samaritan. That parable begins when a lawyer stood up and began to test Jesus by asking Him – what must I do to inherit eternal life?

Jesus said to him, “What is written in the law? What do you read there?”

He answered, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind; and your neighbor as yourself.”

And Jesus said to him, “You have given the right answer; do this, and you will live.”

And the lawyer then wanted to justify himself by asking,” Who is my neighbor?”

And we all know the rest of the story about the Samaritan man who had pity and assisted the man who was robbed and beaten and left by the roadside. The Samaritan was truly the neighbor of the victim who was robbed.

It is not everyday that we have the opportunity to help someone who encountered such a situation as the man who was robbed. But, each and every one of us has numerous opportunities every day to show compassion and love toward others.

My Brothers and d Sisters, what are we to do?

We can help people who are in need by praying for them and also by giving some material help.

Lots of people around us, members of our families, friends, and people who lost everything need our material and spiritual help. We have to remember them. We can not leave them alone.

The Solemnity of Brotherly Love gives as hints and direction what we have to do and what is our Christian responsibility for each other.

We must remember what Jesus said in today’s Gospel – “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind; and your neighbor as yourself.”

Reflection for Solemnity of Brotherly Love Read More »

Reflection for 23 Sunday in Ordinary Time – A

On a busy corner in New York City an Irish cop was directing traffic. While doing his duty, he saw a pedestrian starting across on a red light. The policeman went to that offender and discovered that he was a fellow Irishman. Calmly but firmly the cop explains: “Wait a minute, Red is not you color. Green is your color. Wait for the green light and then start across.”

This story may help us apply what Jesus tells us in today’s Gospel: “If your brother sins against you go and tell him his fault, between you and him alone.”

To correct others is a duty of some people, like the policeman in our story, like parents, a teacher.
A point is how to do it. Jesus gives us some direction in today’s Gospel. Our little story gives us some hints. All those come to one rule – be positive.

The Police officer did not emphasize so much the wrong of crossing on the red light, but the need to cross on the green, He did not shout it for everyone to hear. He told the offender quietly but firmly, and with a little humor. By doing so he told him what to do as well as what not to do.

Offer the correction to your wife or husband, to your children, a co-worker, a long-time friend, just as you would want him or her to offer a correction to you. What does this mean? This means that if one makes a mistake, even if it is against us, in reality it is more against God than us. So in pointing out the mistakes and faults of another be sure to emphasize that the fault is not so much an offense against you, as it is an offense against the love of God.

As Jesus mentions, you may have to call in one or two others to back up your correction. Our Lord even talks about the extreme situation where the offender will listen to no one. Then tell the Church or the group authority. If he or she refuses to listen to a higher authority, tell him or her to leave. Harsh words, however Jesus knew that in the future some will want to make their own rules. And, my brothers and sisters, many times some Christians do not want to listen- they want to make their own rules.

Certain people have the duty of giving correction. It takes humility; it takes honesty to accept a correction. To offer a correction and to accept a correction requires God’s help.

That help is given to each of us during every mass, during every prayer.

Wait for the green light, then go ahead and offer corrections with love; and accept corrections – with love.

May God bless you and Mary always keep you in her prayers.

Reflection for 23 Sunday in Ordinary Time – A Read More »

Scroll to Top