Passion Sunday

Blessing of Easter Baskets:

The blessing of the Easter food or the “Swieconka” is a tradition dear to the heart of every Pole. Being deeply religious, he is grateful to God for all His gifts of both nature and grace, and, as a token of this gratitude, has the food of his table sanctified with the hope that spring, the season of the Resurrection, will also be blessed by God’s goodness and mercy. The usual fare on the Easter table includes ham and kielbasa, cakes of all kinds – particularly babka; eggs — some shelled or some decorated. There is usually a Paschal Lamb or “Baranek” made of butter, some cheese, horseradish, salt, vinegar and oil.

The food is brought to the church and blessed by the parish priest on Holy Saturday. The food can also be blessed in the home. After the blessing the food is usually set aside until Easter morning when the head of the house shares the blessed egg, symbol of life, with family and friends. Having exchanged wishes, all continue to enjoy a hearty meal.

This centuries old customs is indeed richly symbolic and beautiful. It is one in which the whole family can participate and help prepare.

May this tradition endure for many generations to come. All of you can enjoy this beautiful Polish custom by participating at the blessing of the Easter food “Swieconka” at St. Francis Polish National Catholic Church. This is an excellent way to teach the younger members family about this treasured Polish tradition.

Holy Week schedule at St. Francis Church:

April 5 – Palm Sunday – 9 am Liturgy and distribution of Palms
April 9 – Holy Thursday – 7pm Holy Mass
April 10 – Good Friday – 7pm- Passion Service
April 11 – Holy Saturday – 1pm – Blessing of Easter food, blessing of new fire and holy water.
April 12 – Easter Sunday – 8.30 am – Procession of the Resurrection High Mass – 9am.

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Reflection for 4th Sunday of Lent – B

Many times we as humans have doubts and questions like Nicodemus. We even doubt God’s goodness. Especially if something happened to us or to our family. During those times we ask: God, why are you so cruel, don’t you care about your creation? Don’t you love us? If you would love us, you would never allow this to happen to me.

In today’s Gospel we can see that “God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him may not die, but may have eternal life.” So we have evidence that God really loves us. The question is: Do we truly love God? Do we recognize the light which came to the world? Or do we prefer darkness rather than light?

When I taught students in High School I heard many questions: Why do I have to do everything in this or that way? Why do I have to follow the Church teaching? Why does the Church not lighten up and ease some of her regulations?

Because of our free will we need guidance in choosing the light, in choosing the right, in choosing to obey the Commandments of God, the Church’s teachings, Jesus’ way. We need in accepting the right kind of light to triumph over the darkness.

Jesus came into the world to be the light of the world. Light tells the truth, about our age, what we are doing, who we are with, who is missing, what the story is. Light shows all the seams in our lives, where achievement meets failure, and promise meets pain. We may not want to see so clearly; but the presence of Jesus in our midst demands we do.

Because of God’s Love, we received from Jesus a wonderful gift; the gift of reconciliation. If I truly love Jesus, if I truly love the Light, than I would do everything possible to be with Jesus, to be in his light. And we achieve that light during our reconciliation with God.

God already knows what we did; good or bad things. But He wants us to come to him and tell Him all of that. And when He forgives us, we find a clean soul. We live in the Light again.

As we will raise the new Paschal candle in our Church (which symbolizes the resurrection of Jesus from death to new eternal life; from the dark into the Light) on Holy Saturday, in just a few weeks, we will be challenged to keep that light held high into the future.

The challenge is to walk to a future filled with eternal promise, with eternal light, with eternal life. Our opportunity starts today. The choice is ours.

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Reflection for 3rd Sunday of Lent – B

“Remember to keep holy the Sabbath day. Six days you may labor and do all your work, but the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord, your God”

Some students were discussing Sunday Mass in their religion class. One boy told how at one Sunday Mass, the adults of his parish had to fill out a questionnaire. When his father came to the question “Why do you go to Mass?” he wrote: “To be a good example to my kids.” The boy said, “I didn’t think that is a very good answer”.

My Dear Sisters and Brothers

Why we come to Mass each Sunday? Let’s take a look at tree major reasons why many Catholics come to Mass Sunday after Sunday.

The first reason is that lot of Catholics come to church for one thing: Not to fulfill an obligation, not to ask God for anything, not to complain to God. They come for only one thing: to give praise and glory to God.

The second reason why we come to Mass week after week is because Jesus is there. Jesus said: “Where two or three come together in my name, I am there”. Jesus is in the Liturgy of the Word. “Whoever listens to you listens to me.” He is in the Liturgy of the Eucharist. At the Last Supper, after sharing his Body and Blood with his disciples, he said, “Do this in memory of me!” And so the second way Jesus is present is in the community of believers, in the reading and explaining of Scripture, in the breaking of the bread: the Eucharist.

A third reason why we Catholics return Sunday after Sunday to celebrate Mass together is because down deep in our hearts, we feel a thirst for God. In the words of the psalmist: As a deer longs for a stream of cool water, so I long for you, O God. I thirst for you. Like Jesus in today’s Gospel, a zeal for “our Father’s house” and the mystery of God’s love keep us coming back Sunday after Sunday.

And so by way of review, there are three main reasons why we Catholics go to “our Father’s house” each Sunday:

First, to give praise and glory to God. Second, to meet Jesus in the community of believers, the readings of Scripture, and the sacrificial meal of the Lord’s Supper. Third, because there is in us a spiritual hunger and thirst that only God can fill.

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Reflection for 2nd Sunday of Lent-B

In today’s Gospel we heard Peter, James and John experienced something of extraordinary: Transfiguration of Jesus – Change in His appearance.

So many times we want to change our appearance. We would go through so many inconveniences to discipline ourselves to go to gym few times a week to work out; some of us would get up from bad very early in the morning to go for a walk, or for jogging before work. And we would discipline ourselves because we want to stay healthy, because we want to change our appearance.

In today’s Gospel we can see Peter, usually the wise guy, hardly know what to say. And if we would read Chapter 8 we would see that only six day earlier Peter declared Jesus as the Messiah, The Son of the leaving God. And during that time Jesus instituted the sacrament of reconciliation.

Jesus said to him in reply, “Blessed are you, Simon son of Jonah. For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my heavenly Father. And so I say to you, you are Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church, and the gates of the netherworld shall not prevail against it. I will give you the keys to the kingdom of heaven. Whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven; and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.”

Jesus knew that we need spiritual change, spiritual transfiguration.

During this time of Lent, time of preparation for Jesus’ suffering, death and resurrection, we can discipline ourselves, in order to change appearance of our soul. We can do various things to achieve that change of our soul. We can keep our promises which we started at the beginning of this Lent. We can pray together as family, as friends.

My brothers and sisters, as we heard in our second reading: “if God is for us, who can be against us?”, however first we have discipline ourselves to transfigure our soul, so on our part we can be with God. Because if we will be in state of grace, if we will do everything possible to be with God, I assure you God for sure will be with you.

So let’s make every effort to be with God more than one hour per week. “If God is for us, who can be against us.”

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Reflection for the First Sunday of Lent – B

Last Wednesday we began the season of Lent which is our preparation for the Easter, for Jesus’ resurrection.

It is a season of forty days, in imitation of Jesus spending forty days in the desert. Jesus fasted in the desert, and overcame the devil’s temptations. In the Gospel for Ash Wednesday Jesus is telling us about prayer, fasting and almsgiving. These three things are very important in our lives during Lenten time: prayer, fasting and almsgiving. During Lent, in imitation of Jesus in the desert, let us pray more, fast, and help the poor. We have a lot of people around us who need help. Sometimes we have to look carefully. Many people need food, money, very often only a good word from us. Please remember during Lent the words of Jesus, “Whatever you did to one of the least of these you did to me”. This is our work for Lent.

Fasting is another task the church encourages us to undertake during Lent.

The Bible tells us that fasting from food is not what is important; it is what the fasting symbolizes that really matters. The Bible tells us that fasting from food must go together with fasting from violence and fasting from oppressing people. In other words, when we fast from food it is no use unless we also have a loving and forgiving attitude towards others.

Let’s take the example of Jesus in the desert seriously and make an effort to forgive those who have hurt us. Let us go out into the desert during Lent this year, and say no to the evil temptations to continue committing sin and instead trust in God like Jesus. Let us say like Jesus, ‘Man does not live on bread alone but on every word that comes from the mouth of God’.

Prayer is another activity we should reevaluate during Lent. A life without prayer is a life without the joy of God’s presence. If we do not pray we are not proper Christians. Martha was busy serving when Jesus came but Mary spent time with him and Jesus said, “Martha, Martha, you worry and fret about so many things and yet few are needed, indeed only one. It is Mary who has chosen the better part”. Lent is not only about helping others, about doing something, it is also very much about the type of person we are. To be better people we need to pray more because all goodness comes from God. God is a loving Father who desires that we allow Him to be close to us. So let us pray more this Lent and experience more of the joy of God in our lives

The word Lent is an old English word which means springtime. May this Lent really be a new springtime in our lives. Through prayer, fasting and help to the others, may we like Jesus in the desert for forty days overcome temptation and thus be well prepared to celebrate Easter.

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The Lenten Season, Holy Week, and Easter at St. Francis Parish

  • February 25 – Ash Wednesday and the beginning of Great Lent – Holy Mass and Distribution of Ashes at 7pm.
  • Stations of the Cross every Sunday during the Lent after 9am Holy Mass.
  • March 08 – Solemnity of the Institution of the PNCC
  • March 15 – St. Patrick’s/St. Joseph’s Day Fundraiser Dinner at 3pm in the St. Francis Church Hall (downstairs) featuring: Home-made Irish, Italian, and Polish favorites! Plus lots of raffles and great company!
  • March 29 – Passion Sunday
  • April 5 – Palm Sunday – Blessing and distribution of Palms.
  • April 7 – Holy Tuesday – Clergy Conference and Chrism Holy Mass at St. Stanislaus Cathedral in Scranton, Pennsylvania.
  • April 9 – Holy Thursday: Institution of the Holy Eucharist and the Holy Priesthood — Holy Mass at 7pm. We commemorate the Last Supper where Jesus instituted the Holy Eucharist and the Holy Priesthood. At the conclusion of Holy Mass the Holy Eucharist is removed to the Altar of Repose, symbolizing Christ’s night in prison before His trial and crucifixion.
  • April 10 – Good Friday Liturgy of the Presanctified and the Opening of the Tomb at 7pm.
  • April 11 – Holy Saturday – Easter Basket Blessings at 1pm.
  • April 12 – Solemnity of the Resurrection – Easter Sunday – Holy Mass and procession at 8am.

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Reflection for Ash Wednesday -2009

Jest drabina do nieba,
Przy drabinie stoi krzyż

Here is the ladder to heaven
And beside the ladder stands the cross

These words are translated from a very old Polish Lenten hymn.

Jesus came to call us to heaven. This is a wonderful invitation but the party is not free. There is work to be done.
We are called to repent and to do even more. We are called to be reborn, or as Bishop Hodur said, to be regenerated.

From the bottom of the ladder it looks like a long way to the top. Even worse, we must pass by this cross. Before we begin our climb we have to look up and see the body of Jesus, bloody, beaten, and dying on this cross.

If our faith is weak, if we are not committed to Christ, we walk away from the ladder. We take the easy road – the way of the world. For those of us here tonight we are well on our way. We are climbing. Some may be on the lower rungs, some higher up. We are making the climb.

Today’s readings remind us that our God is a God of forgiveness. He is a God that cares more about the loyalty of the heart than about outward appearances. Our God gives us the grace and strength to make the climb as long as our hearts are loyal to Him.

Do we slip a few rungs?
Do we sometimes hold on by only our fingers?
Do we make mistakes? Yes!
Does that doom our climb and cast us into hell? No! Because our God is a God of forgiveness.

I started by saying that the invitation to the party is not free. The offer is free, but we have to respond to the offer.

We respond by our work and our dedication.
We respond by our love.
We respond by the loyalty in our hearts.

I will mark you with ashes. Picture this mark in your minds and remember it is always there. You are Christians. Use this Lenten season to gain control. Ask for God’s grace to control your desires. Fast, abstain from meat as the church asks you to. It is not simple piety. It is the first step to saying that with God’s grace we have mastery over the world. We can control evil’s influence over us.

When the road to spiritual death seems most open and easy, when the road to sin looks like fun, picture the sign on your heads and hang onto that ladder.

Amen.

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St. Patrick’s & St. Joseph’s Dinner – March 15th

Please join us on Sunday, March 15th at 3pm for a fundraiser dinner in honor of St. Patrick’s and St. Joseph’s days.

There will be plenty of traditional, homemade, Irish and Italian specialties like corn beef and cabbage, as well at Santa Guissepe’s pastries.

Reservations are required. Please call Carol at (516) 546-2535. Adults: $15, children under 12: $6.

St Patrick and St Joseph dinner at St. Francis parish

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Reflection for the Second Sunday in Ordinary Time – B

John was standing with two of his disciples, and as he watched Jesus walk by, he said, “Behold, the Lamb of God.” The two disciples heard what he said and followed Jesus. Jesus turned and saw them following him and said to them, “What are you looking for?”

In the beginning of my homily today I ask you all, like Jesus did in today’s Gospel “What are you looking for?” Why are you here today?

I believe you are here because of your desire to answer your spiritual calling to grow in the Lord Jesus. You are here because you have a faith; strong believe that Jesus is the Son of God. You are here because Jesus calls you to be his disciples in this world. You are here because you are seeking his blessing, strength, and his help in your spiritual life and in your daily life.

My dear Brothers and Sisters

Today’s Gospel speaks to us about God’s calling. It is revealed to us by the actions of the two disciples of John the Baptist who followed Jesus. John told them: He is the Lamb of God. After this they fallow Jesus. But John tells us a lot more about Jesus: He will take away the sins of the world. He is a man. He comes after me but ranks before me. He existed before me. The Spirit came down on him – resting on him. He is going to baptise with the Holy Spirit. He is the Chosen One of God. We must follow Jesus in order to be saved. He is the Lamb of God, the perfect human sacrifice for the redemption of ours sins. Jesus is our Rabbi, our Teacher. He shows us the way, the truth and the life.

From the Gospel Reading, we also learned how Peter came to follow Jesus. His call came through Andrew who was God’s instrument of grace to call Peter. Throughout the Holy Bible and even in our daily lives, we see how the grace of God works through His chosen people.

So, I ask you again, “Why are you here today? What are you looking for? Are you looking to answer the calling of the Lord?” If you are looking for the way, the truth and the life, then you must fix your eyes on Jesus. You must answer your calling by living holy lives.

When I see your presence here, I rejoice! Why do I rejoice? It is because I know that you are striving to walk in the way, the truth and the life that comes to each and everyone of us through Jesus. Your presence here today is a spiritual sign that the grace of God is at work in all of you. It is a sign that you are desire to participate in fellowship as one in the Body of Christ. It is a sign that you desire to receive the Sacrament of the Holy Eucharist, the Bread of Life.

As long as you continue to receive the Sacrament of the Holy Eucharist on a weekly basis, although being weak in human nature, there is hope. And as long as there is hope, the grace and mercy of God will not let you down. May God be with you as we continue with the celebration of the Holy Mass.

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Reflection for the Solemnity of the Baptism of our Lord – 2009

John the Baptist came one day to the Jordan River to begin his ministry of preaching and baptizing. His message was very simple: ”God is about to do something big. Don’t be caught unprepared. Turn from your sins and be baptized”.

There was also something simple about John. People came from all over to hear what he had to say. Soon some people began to wonder. Could this unusual man be the promised Messiah? John answered them: ”One mightier than I, is coming after me. I am not worthy to stoop and loosen the thongs of his sandals.”

John, of course, spoke about Jesus. “I have baptized you with water….He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit.”

John’s point was that his baptism with water was only a baptism of repentance. It was only a “sign” that people who stepped into the river to be baptized by him repented their sins of their past. They wanted to have them washed away and begin new lives.

Jesus’ baptism with Spirit, on the other hand, would be something different. It would be a baptism of rebirth. It would communicate to people the new life they were seeking.

My Dear Sisters and Brothers

The Solemnity of the Baptism of our Lord also speaks to our own baptism. We are baptized into this same Jesus Christ. We become one with Him after our sacrament of Baptism. We are one with the Lord and yet we do not always choose to live from that unity with Him. Today’s solemnity can remind us that we have a power: the grace to live in the Lord if we are baptized.

There are two aspects of living in Christ: dying to ourselves and living in Him. These aspects cannot be separated except in our thinking. As we die to all that is darkness, sin, and brokenness within us, we come to new life in Him.
We are invited today to live our baptism. We are invited today to wonder at the Lord’s baptism. Jesus is baptized unto death. Jesus dies so that we might live. Jesus rises and changes the whole earth.

Let us rejoice in Him.

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