AD SENSE

25th Sunday B: Children: Greatest in the KOG

Sept 21: St Matthew, Apostle

 Ephesians 4:1-7, 11-13 / Matthew 9:9-13

There is one Lord over all: Preserve your unity.  

24th Week, Friday, Sept 20: Sts Andrew Kim and Companions

1 Cor 15:12-20 / Luke 8:1-3

Paul talks about our resurrection: Christ has been raised. 

24th Week, Thursday, Sept 19: Saint Januarius

24th Week, Thursday, Sept 19

1 Cor 15:1-11 / Luke 7:36-50

Paul talks about our roots: I passed on to you what I received.  

24th Week, Wednesday, Sept 18

 1 Cor 12:31 - 13:13 / Luke 7:31-35

Paul talks about gifts: The greatest gift is love. 

24th Week, Tuesday, Sept 17 :St Robert Bellarmine

 24th Week, Tuesday, Sept 17: 

1 Cor 12:12-14, 27-31 / Luke 7:11-17

Paul speaks about Christ's body; We are all members of one body.

24th Week, Monday, Sept 16: Sts Cornelius and Cyprian

24th Week, Monday, Sept 16

1 Cor 11:17-26, 33 / Luke 7:1-10

Paul rebukes the Corinthians; Your meetings do more harm than good.

24th Sunday B: Liturgical Prayers

 Greeting (see Responsorial Psalm)

23rd Week: Sept 9-14:

  23rd Week: Sept 9-14:

Sept 9 Monday: St. Peter Claver: 

Bl Basil Moreau and Our Lady of Sorrows

   


Basil Anthony Moreau (1799-1873)
 

Beginnings

Sept 14: Exaltation of the Holy Cross

The Triumph of the Cross

 Paul talks about Jesus; He humbled himself to death on the cross.    

Numbers 21:4-9; Philippians 2:6-11; John 3:13-17 

23rd Week, Friday, Sept 13: Saint John Chrysostom

 1 Cor 9:16-19, 22-27 / Luke 6:39-42

Paul talks about discipline:

23rd Week, Thursday, Sept 12

 Paul talks about scandal; take care not to cause others to sin

1 Cor 8:1-7, 11-13 / Luke 6:27-38

23rd Week, Wednesday, Sept 11

 1 Cor 7:25-31 / Luke 6:20-26

Paul speaks about life: The time is short.

23rd Week, Tuesday, Sept 10

 23rd Week, Tuesday, Sept 10

1 Cor 6:1-11 / Luke 6:12-19

Paul speaks about disputes: Settle your disputes among yourselves.

23rd Week, Monday, Sept 9th: St. Peter Claver

1 Cor 5:1-8 / Luke 6:6-11

Paul talks about sin: Remove the old yeast of sin. 

23rd Sunday B: Ephphatha - Be opened

 

22nd Week, Saturday, Sept 7th

1 Cor 4:6-15 / Luke 6:1-5
Paul rebukes the Corinthians: We are fools; you are wise. 

22nd Week, Friday, Sept 6th

 1 Cor  4: 1-5 / Luke 5:33-39

Paul talks about judgment: Don't pass judgment ahead of time. 

Sept 2: Labor Day in the U. S

 Sept 2: Labor Day in the U. S. The first Labor Day was observed on September 5, 1882, to celebrate the social and economic achievements of American workers and to give them a day off on the last day of the summer. Today, Labor Day unofficially signals the beginning of a new “school” year of work and study and the end of the “lazy days of summer.” It was President Grover Cleveland who signed a bill into law on June 28, 1894, declaring Labor Day a national holiday.

1) It is a day to acknowledge the dignity and necessity of labor and workers. We participate in the creative act of God by the various forms of work we do using our God-given talents, a) The Bible presents God as working six days in the creation of the world and commanding Adam to work six days and rest on the seventh. b) Jesus, God’s Son, was a professional carpenter. c) Most of Jesus’ apostles were fishermen, and Paul was a tentmaker. d) In his inaugural speech in the synagogue at Nazareth, Jesus expressed his preferential option for the poor – the working class and those who cannot work. Work is necessary for our own well-being, for health of body, mind, and spirit. It enables us to be independent and to help those who are less fortunate and unable to work. e) Works of charity are the main criteria of our Last Judgement: “Whatever you did to one of these least brethren you did to Me.”

2) A day to remember the Church’s teaching on the nobility of work and the necessity of just wages. In the encyclical, Laborem exercens (September 14, 1981), Pope St. John Paul II instructs us that all of us are called to work together for a just society and a just economy which allow us all to share God’s blessings. He reminds us that governments should see that the greed of a minority does not make the life of the majority miserable. He advises labor unions to fight for social and economic justice, better wages and better working conditions.

3) It is the day to remember and pray for the jobless people: There are thousands without work and millions more who are underemployed, working at part-time jobs or jobs that do not pay a decent wage. Society has a moral obligation to reduce joblessness because it is through work that families are sustained, children are nurtured, and the future is secured. Joblessness is also a clear threat to family life.

4) It is an appropriate time to acknowledge and bless the temporal and spiritual work that our parishioners do for their families, for their neighbors, and for the parish community. It is also a day to remind ourselves that our workplace gives us an opportunity to practice what we believe, and to display a level of integrity that matches our Faith, thus witnessing to Christ.

5) It is a day to pay attention to a warning: The warning is that we should be aware of the danger in work. If not properly oriented it can make us workaholics: we may turn work into our God or may use it as an escape mechanism to run away from spouse, children, and neighbors.

Thus, on this Labor Day, let us try to realize the dignity of work, the necessity of work, and the danger involved in work. Let us thank the Lord for the talents and work he has given us to do. Let us pray that we may find joy and satisfaction in our work, realizing that we are co-creators with God and stewards of His creation. By offering our work for God’s glory, let us transform our work to prayer. 

The Nativity of the BVM, September 8

 The Nativity of the BVM, September 8

A ruler will come from Bethlehem; He will bring peace.

Micah 5:1-4 or Romans 8:28-30 / Matthew 1-16, 18-23

12th Week: Sept 2-7

12th Week: Sept 2-7

Sept 2 Monday: Lk 4:16-30: