Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Tomorrow is World Peace Day

Tomorrow-- January 1-- the Church will commemorate the 42nd World Day of Peace. In his message for the 1st World Day of Peace, Pope Paul VI wrote, “We address Ourself to all men of good will to exhort them to celebrate ‘The Day of Peace,’ throughout the world, on the first day of the year, January 1, 1968. It is Our desire that then, every year, this commemoration be repeated as a hope and as a promise, at the beginning of the calendar which measures and outlines the path of human life in time, that Peace with its just and beneficent equilibrium may dominate the development of events to come.”

The Catechism of the Catholic Church discusses Catholic teaching on peace and just war in its treatment of the Fifth Commandment. Between 1914 and 1968, five popes wrote 21 encyclicals on peace. Since 1968, papal teaching on peace has primarily been expressed in the messages for the World Day of Peace.

Click on the headline to read Pope Benedict's messaage for World Peace Day.




Peace Prayer of St. Francis (excerpt)
Lord, make me an instrument of your peace:

Where there is hatred, let me sow love;

Where there is discord, harmony;

Where there is injury, pardon;

Where there is error, truth;

Where there is doubt, faith;

Where there is despair, hope;

Where there is darkness, light;

Where there is sadness, joy.

Mass is Saturday for Catherine Tipton


Catherine M. Tipton, age 89, passed away peacefully on December 29th, 2008 at Clare Bridge Memory Care Center in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

She was the beloved wife of the late Erbie R. Tipton. Kay was an active member of the South Akron Knights
of Columbus Wives and St. Paul's Parish for many years. She loved her family and travel, and was an avid bowler. She moved from Altoona, Pa., to Akron in 1937 and there raised her four children, Judy (Al) Ransweiler, Janice (Mel) Moss, Richard Tipton, and Mary (Ken) Nixon. Kay is also survived by her loving grandchildren, Mary Alice Franz, Ann Hirsch, and Stephen, Michael and Matthew Ransweiler, and 11 great-grandchildren. Kay is also survived by her brothers, Francis and Robert Davis, and sister, Cecilia Forbes, and numerous nieces and nephews.

Visitation will be on Friday, January 2nd from 5 to 7 p.m. at Dunn-Quigley Funeral Home, 811 Grant St., Akron, Ohio, where a Parish Rosary will be recited at 5:15. Mass of Christian Burial will be Saturday at 10 a.m. at St. Paul's Church, 1580 Brown Street, Akron, with burial following the mass at Holy Cross cemetery. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made in Kay's loving memory to the Alzheimer's Association www.alz.org, or Arbor Hospice www.arborhospice.org.
[Beacon Journal, Akron, OH,Wednesday, December 31, 2008, page B7, col. 4 ]

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

The Crib at St. Paul's Church

Solemnity of Mary: Holy Day of Obligation

Thursday, the eighth Day of Christmas, the Church celebrates the Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God, our Lady's greatest title. It is a Holy Day of Obligation. This feast is the octave of Christmas. In the modern Roman Calendar only Christmas and Easter enjoy the privilege of an octave. According to the 1962 Missal of Bl. John XXIII the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite, January 1 is the Solemnity of Circumcision of Our Lord.

"Mary, the all-holy ever-virgin Mother of God, is the masterwork of the mission of the Son and the Spirit in the fullness of time. For the first time in the plan of salvation and because his Spirit had prepared her, the Father found the dwelling place where his Son and his Spirit could dwell among men. In this sense the Church's Tradition has often read the most beautiful texts on wisdom in relation to Mary. Mary is acclaimed and represented in the liturgy as the "Seat of Wisdom." — Catechism of the Catholic Church 721

[Source: Catholic Culture news agency]

Masses are at 7 p.m. Wednesday and 9 and 11 a.m. Thursday

What Americans know about the Bible


While American Christians proudly cite the Bible as their favorite book (93 percent own one, usually the King James version) and two-thirds see it as the source for answers to “all or most of life’s basic questions,” they actually do not know or understand much of what is written between the covers.

Only half of U.S. adults, for example, could name a single Gospel, and most do not know the name of the first book of the Bible. Even those scriptura-citing Protestants who intimidate Catholics with chapter-and-verse recitations are not doing too well. According to a survey conducted in 2000, 60 percent of evangelicals said Jesus was born in Jerusalem, not that “little town of Bethlehem.” And despite all our bitter battles over posting the Ten Commandments, six in 10 Americans cannot name five of them, while half of high school seniors think Sodom and Gomorrah were married.

Monday, December 29, 2008

Pope pleads for end to Gaza violence

Pope Benedict XVI called for an end to the violence in Gaza during his Angelus audience on Sunday, December 28. "The earthly homeland of Jesus cannot continue being witness to such bloodshed that is repeated without end!" the Holy Father said, asking international leaders to "do everything possible" to "help the Israelis and Palestinians out of this dark alley." While the Pope avoided taking sides in the clash, Father Federico Lombardi, the spokesman for the Holy See, told a Vatican Radio audience that Israel's reaction to Hamas bombing was producing "many innocent victims," and said that Israeli strikes would "damage peace prospects." Later, responding to a rumor that swept through the Vatican press corps, Father Lombardi said that it was "premature" to suggest that the latest fighting could endanger plans for a papal visit to the Holy Land in May 2009.
[Source: Catholic Culture news service]

Text of Benedict XVI's urbi et orbi message


URBI ET ORBI MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE BENEDICT XVI CHRISTMAS 2008


"The grace of God our Saviour has appeared to all" (Tit 2:11, Vulg.)

Dear brothers and sisters, in the words of the Apostle Paul, I once more joyfully proclaim Christ’s Birth. Today "the grace of God our Saviour" has truly "appeared to all"!

It appeared! This is what the Church celebrates today. The grace of God, rich in goodness and love, is no longer hidden. It "appeared", it was manifested in the flesh, it showed its face. Where? In Bethlehem. When? Under Caesar Augustus, during the first census, which the Evangelist Luke also mentions. And who is the One who reveals it? A newborn Child, the Son of the Virgin Mary. In him the grace of God our Saviour has appeared. And so that Child is called Jehoshua, Jesus, which means: "God saves".

The grace of God has appeared. That is why Christmas is a feast of light. Not like the full daylight which illumines everything, but a glimmer beginning in the night and spreading out from a precise point in the universe: from the stable of Bethlehem, where the divine Child was born. Indeed, he is the light itself, which begins to radiate, as portrayed in so many paintings of the Nativity. He is the light whose appearance breaks through the gloom, dispels the darkness and enables us to understand the meaning and the value of our own lives and of all history. Every Christmas crib is a simple yet eloquent invitation to open our hearts and minds to the mystery of life. It is an encounter with the immortal Life which became mortal in the mystic scene of the Nativity: a scene which we can admire here too, in this Square, as in countless churches and chapels throughout the world, and in every house where the name of Jesus is adored.

The grace of God has appeared to all. Jesus – the face of the "God who saves", did not show himself only for a certain few, but for everyone. Although it is true that in the simple and lowly dwelling of Bethlehem few persons encountered him, still he came for all: Jews and Gentiles, rich and poor, those near and those far away, believers and non-believers… for everyone. Supernatural grace, by God’s will, is meant for every creature. Yet each human person needs to accept that grace, to utter his or her own "yes", like Mary, so that his or her heart can be illumined by a ray of that divine light. It was Mary and Joseph, who that night welcomed the incarnate Word, awaiting it with love, along with the shepherds who kept watch over their flocks (cf. Lk 2:1-20). A small community, in other words, which made haste to adore the Child Jesus; a tiny community which represents the Church and all people of good will. Today too those who await him, who seek him in their lives, encounter the God who out of love became our brother – all those who turn their hearts to him, who yearn to see his face and to contribute to the coming of his Kingdom. Jesus himself would say this in his preaching: these are the poor in spirit; those who mourn, the meek, those who thirst for justice; the merciful, the pure of heart, the peacemakers, and those persecuted for righteousness’ sake (cf. Mt 5:3-10). They are the ones who see in Jesus the face of God and then set out again, like the shepherds of Bethlehem, renewed in heart by the joy of his love.

Brothers and sisters, all you who are listening to my words: this proclamation of hope – the heart of the Christmas message – is meant for all men and women. Jesus was born for everyone, and just as Mary, in Bethlehem, offered him to the shepherds, so on this day the Church presents him to all humanity, so that each person and every human situation may come to know the power of God’s saving grace, which alone can transform evil into good, which alone can change human hearts, making them oases of peace.

May the many people who continue to dwell in darkness and the shadow of death (cf. Lk 1:79) come to know the power of God’s saving grace! May the divine Light of Bethlehem radiate throughout the Holy Land, where the horizon seems once again bleak for Israelis and Palestinians. May it spread throughout Lebanon, Iraq and the whole Middle East. May it bring forth rich fruit from the efforts of all those who, rather than resigning themselves to the twisted logic of conflict and violence, prefer instead the path of dialogue and negotiation as the means of resolving tensions within each country and finding just and lasting solutions to the conflicts troubling the region. This light, which brings transformation and renewal, is besought by the people of Zimbabwe, in Africa, trapped for all too long in a political and social crisis which, sadly, keeps worsening, as well as the men and women of the Democratic Republic of Congo, especially in the war-torn region of Kivu, Darfur, in Sudan, and Somalia, whose interminable sufferings are the tragic consequence of the lack of stability and peace. This light is awaited especially by the children living in those countries, and the children of all countries experiencing troubles, so that their future can once more be filled with hope.

Wherever the dignity and rights of the human person are trampled upon; wherever the selfishness of individuals and groups prevails over the common good; wherever fratricidal hatred and the exploitation of man by man risk being taken for granted; wherever internecine conflicts divide ethnic and social groups and disrupt peaceful coexistence; wherever terrorism continues to strike; wherever the basics needed for survival are lacking; wherever an increasingly uncertain future is regarded with apprehension, even in affluent nations: in each of these places may the Light of Christmas shine forth and encourage all people to do their part in a spirit of authentic solidarity. If people look only to their own interests, our world will certainly fall apart.

Dear brothers and sisters, today, "the grace of God our Saviour has appeared" (cf. Tit 2:11) in this world of ours, with all its potential and its frailty, its advances and crises, its hopes and travails. Today, there shines forth the light of Jesus Christ, the Son of the Most High and the son of the Virgin Mary: "God from God, light from light, true God from true God. For us men, and for our salvation, he came down from heaven". Let us adore him, this very day, in every corner of the world, wrapped in swaddling clothes and laid in a lowly manger. Let us adore him in silence, while he, still a mere infant, seems to comfort us by saying: Do not be afraid, "I am God, and there is no other" (Is 45:22). Come to me, men and women, peoples and nations, come to me. Do not be afraid: I have come to bring you the love of the Father, and to show you the way of peace.

Let us go, then, brothers and sisters! Let us make haste, like the shepherds on that Bethlehem night. God has come to meet us; he has shown us his face, full of grace and mercy! May his coming to us not be in vain! Let us seek Jesus, let us be drawn to his light which dispels sadness and fear from every human heart. Let us draw near to him with confidence, and bow down in humility to adore him. Merry Christmas to all!

Vocation Awareness Week is January 11-17


The Catholic Church in the United States will celebrate National Vocation Awareness Week, January 11-17. This year’s theme is “Proclaim Good News.”

"This week is a chance for parishes across the country to highlight the gift of vocations in the church through prayer and education," said Cardinal Sean O'Malley of Boston, chairman of the Bishops' Committee on Clergy, Consecrated Life and Vocations. "As a church, we recognize the need to safeguard and promote this gift."

Fr. James Steffes, executive director of the Secretariat of
Clergy, Consecrated Life, and Vocations for the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, added, "The church needs to help young people hear the Lord in prayer, so they can recognize him in their lives."
i
i"This week reminds us that it is our responsibility to pray for vocations and to invite young people to consider a call to ordained ministry and consecrated
life."

For further information contact Sr. Lenore Thomas, IHM, lthomas@dioceseofcleveland.org
or Father Michael Gurnick, mgurnick@dioceseofcleveland.org, at the Diocesan Vocation
Office, 216-696-6525 or 800-869-6525 ext. 3490.



Prayer for Vocations


Compassionate God, You speak your word to us through prophets of long ago and you continue to reveal your message of love today. With great expectation we look to your Spirit to work in our world, empowering us to serve you as Jesus did.

May we listen to your word and respond generously to your call. Renew in us the grace of our own baptism. Strengthen married couples, single men and women, deacons, priests, sisters and brothers as they seek to serve you by sharing their love and compassion.

Grant wisdom to those who are discerning their call. With gratitude we proclaim the Good News of Jesus in the power of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

Pope Benedict XVI's January prayer intentions


General: That the family may become more and more a place of training in charity, personal growth and transmission of the faith.

Mission: That the different Christian confessions, aware of the need for a new evangelisation in this period of profound transformations, may be committed to announcing the Good News and moving towards the full unity of all Christians in order to offer a more credible testimony of the Gospel.

Saturday, December 27, 2008

It's Happening at St. Paul


SUNDAY, December 28
Feast of the Holy Family

TUESDAY, December 30
All Day Adoration The church is open all day until 8 p.m.
Senior Prayer Hour at 1 p.m. with Eucharistic Adoration.l

WEDNESDAY, December 31 New Year’s Eve
Mass at 7 p.m.


Thursday, January 1 Solemnity of the Blessed Virgin Mary (Holy Day of Obligation)
Mass at 9 a,m.

Mass at 11 a,m.

SUNDAY, January 4 Feast of Epiphany also called Twelfth Day or Little Christmas.

There is no PSR or coffee and donuts this weekend or next.

FEAST OF HOLY FAMILY
The first Sunday after Christmas, on the liturgical calendar, celebrates the Holy Family. Pope Leo XIII instituted this feast in 1892, encouraging societies honoring the Holy Family to be established everywhere.
He established this feast day to remind families of the sacredness of the family and to provide the laity with a model upon which to structure their own families.

Scripture tell
s us practically nothing about the first years and the boyhood of the Child Jesus. All we know are the facts of the sojourn in Egypt, the return to Nazareth, and the incidents that occurred when the twelve-year-old boy accompanied his parents to Jerusalem. In her liturgy the Church hurries over this period of Christ's life with equal brevity. The general breakdown of the family, however, at the end of the past century and at the beginning of our own, prompted the popes, especially the far-sighted Leo XIII, to promote the observance of this feast with the hope that it might instill into Christian families something of the faithful love and the devoted attachment that characterize the family of Nazareth. The primary purpose of the Church in instituting and promoting this feast is to present the Holy Family as the model and exemplar of all Christian families.
— Excerpted from With Christ Through the Year, Rev. Bernard
Strasser, O.S.B.

FEAST OF HOLY INNOCENTS
Since the sixth century, on December 28, the Church has celebrated the memory of those children killed because of Herod's rage against Christ (cf. Mt 2:16-17). Liturgical tradition refers to them as the "Holy Innocents" and regards them as martyrs.

EPIPHANY
The Epiphany of our Lord is the wonderful liturgical festival observed on January 6. It is the oldest of the Christmas festivals. It is still the climax of the Christmas season in churches of the Eastern Orthodox tradition. The story of the Epiphany, i
n which a star leads the Magi to come from the east and adore the Christ Child, is told in Matthew 2 It commemorates the baptism of Jesus, the visit of the Wise Men to Bethlehem, and the miracle of Cana. It is the Twelfth Day of Christmas, the final day of the 12 days between Christmas and Epiphany.

Gleaned from the church bulletin


CLUSTER SHARING: PRAYER SHAWL MINISTRY AT NATIVITY
You may have read the recent article in the Catholic Universe Bulletin regarding Prayer Shawl Ministries. This ministry is already at our cluster parish of Nativity of the Lord Jesus, 2424 Myersville Rd. Those who are interested in this ministry of making prayer shawls for the sick or suffering are invited to meet on Tuesday, January 13, at 10 a.m. in Room 11 at Nativity. Many hands are needed to pray and knit, crochet, quilt or craft the shawls in any medium. For more information, call Barb Zimmerman at 330-699-4769 or Ginny Smith at 330-644-4132. There is a website at http://www.shawlministry.com

CALLING ALL ST. PAUL ALUMNi
The Stewardship Committee and Fr. Thomas, our Pastor, are looking for alumni of St. Paul School to help us organize and contact all of our alumni. If you are able to help out, please call Ellen McAvoy at 330-773-7389.

MUSICIANS NEEDED FOR SPIRIT SINGERS
The Spirit Singers Choir would like to add another guitarist and bass player to our lineup. The Spirit Singers typically play once a month and on holidays and other special occasions as needed. Please call John Wilson if interested 330-671-0950.

SACRAMENT OF CONFIRMATION
Anyone who is of high school age or older and is interested in receiving the Sacrament of Confirmation, is invited to an informational meeting on Sunday, January 18, 2009 at 12:15 p.m. in the Church.

Datebook: What's Happening Elsewhere


COME AND SEE AT ST. MARTHA JANUARY 6
Fr. Norm Douglas, co-founder, Heart to Heart Communications, will speak on “Catholic View: Balancing Life and Work” at the next gathering, Tuesday, January 6 at 7 p.m. at St. Martha Church, 300 E. Tallmadge Ave.. Following Fr. Norm’s presentation, there will be an opportunity for small group sharing, including time with Fr. Norm to continue discussing the evening’s topic.

WORLDWIDE MARRIAGE ENCOUNTER JANUARY 10
Find our what a Marriage Encounter is by attending a free candlelight dinner at St. Francis de Sales Parish, 4019 Manchester Rd., Akron, on Saturday, January 10. For more information or reservations call Terry & Sue Smith at 330-896-4978 or email SSDQ123@aol.com.

GIFFELS TO DISCUSS BOOK AT WALSH JESUIT JANUARY 15.
The Alumni Mothers Club at Walsh Jesuit High School will host author, educator, and former Beacon Journal columnist David Giffels on Thursday, January 15, 2009 at 7 p.m. in the school’s theater. He will speak on his book, “All the Way Home: Building a Family in a Falling -Down House.” A reception will follow. The event is free but reservations are requested. Please RSVP to Rosanne Drake at 330-929-4205 ext 186 or draker@walshjesuit.org. Walsh is located at 4550 Wyoga Lake Rd., Cuyahoga Falls, OH


Mass Intentions for December 27 - January 4


SATURDAY, December 27

4:30pm Sunday Vigil
Harry Vezzani, Sr. +

SUNDAY, December 28 Holy Family of Jesus, Mary and Joseph
9:00am Living & Deceased Parishioners of St. Paul
11:00am Victor Alexander +

MONDAY, December 29 Thomas Becket, bishop, martyr
7:00am Rose & Walter Bednarz +
8:30am The Klingler Family

TUESDAY, December 30 Sixth Day in Octave of Christmas
7:00am Irene Hoover +
8:30am Morning Prayer and Communion

WEDNESDAY, December 31 Sylvester I, pope
7:00am For the ill and homebound
8:30am For all men & women in the military
7:00pm For Peace throughout the world

THURSDAY, January 1 Solemnity of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of God
9:00am Joseph Pillitiere +
11:00am Stella Helon +

FRIDAY, January 2 Basil the Great and Gregory Nazianzen, bishops and doctors
7:00am Morning Prayer and Communion
8:30am Mason Parvin +

SATURDAY, January 3 Christmas Weekday
4:30pm Sunday Vigil
John Kozma +

SUNDAY, January 4 Epiphany of the Lord
9:00am Kathryn Brightwell +
11:00am Johanna & Louis Pertz + & Family

Friday, December 26, 2008

Lectors, Extraordinary Ministers for January


Lectors forJanuary

Saturday 4:30 p.m. Jeff Renfro
Sunday 9:00 a.m. Terry Nesline
Sunday 11:00 a..m. Youth lector

Extraordinary Ministers of Holy Communion for January

Saturday 4:30
Sandy Bojo
Robin DeFago
Carol Eich
Bob Kerr
Heather Lott
Hank Richard
Judy Richard
Bob Struckel

Sunday 9:00
Julia Gabelman
Bob Hamilton
Nellie Kremer
Art Mileski
Rosemary Mileski
Suzanne Nixon
Angie Roosa
Bob Roosa

Sunday 11:00
John Amedeo
Ashley Barta
Brittany Barta
Karen Matusicky
Jeannette Michel
Kelly Reed
David Ruegg
Debbie Starosto

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Text of Benedict XVI's Christmas Eve Message


"I Once More Joyfully Proclaim Christ's Birth"

VATICAN CITY, DEC. 25, 2008 - Here is a Vatican translation of Benedict XVI's Christmas message, which he delivered from the main balcony of St. Peter's Basilica today at noon.

* * *

"The grace of God our Saviour has appeared to all" (Tit 2:11, Vulg.)

Dear brothers and sisters, in the words of the Apostle Paul, I once more joyfully proclaim Christ's Birth. Today "the grace of God our Saviour" has truly "appeared to all"!

It appeared! This is what the Church celebrates today. The grace of God, rich in goodness and love, is no longer hidden. It "appeared", it was manifested in the flesh, it showed its face. Where? In Bethlehem. When? Under Caesar Augustus, during the first census, which the Evangelist Luke also mentions. And who is the One who reveals it? A newborn Child, the Son of the Virgin Mary. In him the grace of God our Saviour has appeared. And so that Child is called Jehoshua, Jesus, which means: "God saves".

The grace of God has appeared. That is why Christmas is a feast of light. Not like the full daylight which illumines everything, but a glimmer beginning in the night and spreading out from a precise point in the universe: from the stable of Bethlehem, where the divine Child was born. Indeed, he is the light itself, which begins to radiate, as portrayed in so many paintings of the Nativity. He is the light whose appearance breaks through the gloom, dispels the darkness and enables us to understand the meaning and the value of our own lives and of all history. Every Christmas crib is a simple yet eloquent invitation to open our hearts and minds to the mystery of life. It is an encounter with the immortal Life which became mortal in the mystic scene of the Nativity: a scene which we can admire here too, in this Square, as in countless churches and chapels throughout the world, and in every house where the name of Jesus is adored.

The grace of God has appeared to all. Jesus – the face of the "God who saves", did not show himself only for a certain few, but for everyone. Although it is true that in the simple and lowly dwelling of Bethlehem few persons encountered him, still he came for all: Jews and Gentiles, rich and poor, those near and those far away, believers and non-believers… for everyone. Supernatural grace, by God's will, is meant for every creature. Yet each human person needs to accept that grace, to utter his or her own "yes", like Mary, so that his or her heart can be illumined by a ray of that divine light. It was Mary and Joseph, who that night welcomed the incarnate Word, awaiting it with love, along with the shepherds who kept watch over their flocks (cf. Lk 2:1-20). A small community, in other words, which made haste to adore the Child Jesus; a tiny community which represents the Church and all people of good will. Today too those who await him, who seek him in their lives, encounter the God who out of love became our brother – all those who turn their hearts to him, who yearn to see his face and to contribute to the coming of his Kingdom. Jesus himself would say this in his preaching: these are the poor in spirit; those who mourn, the meek, those who thirst for justice; the merciful, the pure of heart, the peacemakers, and those persecuted for righteousness' sake (cf. Mt 5:3-10). They are the ones who see in Jesus the face of God and then set out again, like the shepherds of Bethlehem, renewed in heart by the joy of his love.

Brothers and sisters, all you who are listening to my words: this proclamation of hope – the heart of the Christmas message – is meant for all men and women. Jesus was born for everyone, and just as Mary, in Bethlehem, offered him to the shepherds, so on this day the Church presents him to all humanity, so that each person and every human situation may come to know the power of God's saving grace, which alone can transform evil into good, which alone can change human hearts, making them oases of peace.

May the many people who continue to dwell in darkness and the shadow of death (cf. Lk 1:79) come to know the power of God's saving grace! May the divine Light of Bethlehem radiate throughout the Holy Land, where the horizon seems once again bleak for Israelis and Palestinians. May it spread throughout Lebanon, Iraq and the whole Middle East. May it bring forth rich fruit from the efforts of all those who, rather than resigning themselves to the twisted logic of conflict and violence, prefer instead the path of dialogue and negotiation as the means of resolving tensions within each country and finding just and lasting solutions to the conflicts troubling the region. This light, which brings transformation and renewal, is besought by the people of Zimbabwe, in Africa, trapped for all too long in a political and social crisis which, sadly, keeps worsening, as well as the men and women of the Democratic Republic of Congo, especially in the war-torn region of Kivu, Darfur, in Sudan, and Somalia, whose interminable sufferings are the tragic consequence of the lack of stability and peace. This light is awaited especially by the children living in those countries, and the children of all countries experiencing troubles, so that their future can once more be filled with hope.

Wherever the dignity and rights of the human person are trampled upon; wherever the selfishness of individuals and groups prevails over the common good; wherever fratricidal hatred and the exploitation of man by man risk being taken for granted; wherever internecine conflicts divide ethnic and social groups and disrupt peaceful coexistence; wherever terrorism continues to strike; wherever the basics needed for survival are lacking; wherever an increasingly uncertain future is regarded with apprehension, even in affluent nations: in each of these places may the Light of Christmas shine forth and encourage all people to do their part in a spirit of authentic solidarity. If people look only to their own interests, our world will certainly fall apart.

Dear brothers and sisters, today, "the grace of God our Saviour has appeared" (cf. Tit 2:11) in this world of ours, with all its potential and its frailty, its advances and crises, its hopes and travails. Today, there shines forth the light of Jesus Christ, the Son of the Most High and the son of the Virgin Mary: "God from God, light from light, true God from true God. For us men, and for our salvation, he came down from heaven". Let us adore him, this very day, in every corner of the world, wrapped in swaddling clothes and laid in a lowly manger. Let us adore him in silence, while he, still a mere infant, seems to comfort us by saying: Do not be afraid, "I am God, and there is no other" (Is 45:22). Come to me, men and women, peoples and nations, come to me. Do not be afraid: I have come to bring you the love of the Father, and to show you the way of peace.

Let us go, then, brothers and sisters! Let us make haste, like the shepherds on that Bethlehem night. God has come to meet us; he has shown us his face, full of grace and mercy! May his coming to us not be in vain! Let us seek Jesus, let us be drawn to his light which dispels sadness and fear from every human heart. Let us draw near to him with confidence, and bow down in humility to adore him. Merry Christmas to all!

© Copyright 2008 -- Libreria Editrice Vaticana

Pope decries selfishness in economic crisis


Blog Note:
This is the first of two stories on the Christmas message of Pope Benedict XVI. This is an Associated Press story which focuses on the economy. The other story is by Reuters which focuses on a plea for peace. The full text will be posted when it becomes available.

VATICAN CITY – Pope Benedict XVI in his Christmas message Thursday warned that the world was headed toward ruin if selfishness prevails over solidarity during tough economic times for both rich and poor nations.

Speaking from the central balcony of St. Peter's Basilica on the day Christians commemorate Jesus' birth in Bethlehem, Benedict declared that the "heart of the Christian message is meant for all men and women."

The traditional papal Christmas Day message "Urbi et Orbi" — Latin for "to the City and to the World" — usually covers the globe's hot spots, but this year Benedict also addressed the gloomy economic conditions worrying many across the planet.

Amid near daily news of layoffs, failing companies and people losing homes they can no longer afford in many parts of the world, Benedict's words seemed tailored in part to the global economic crisis.

He said his Christmas message also applied to "wherever an increasingly uncertain future is regarded with apprehension, even in affluent nations."

"In each of these places may the light of Christmas shine forth and encourage all people to do their part in a spirit of authentic solidarity," Benedict said. "If people look only to their own interests, our world will certainly fall apart."

Without citing countries, Benedict said he hoped the light of Christmas would radiate to places where "the basics needed for survival are missing."

Wearing a crimson mantle against a damp chill, Benedict told tens of thousands of people in St. Peter's Square that God's saving grace could "alone transform evil into good" and "change human hearts, making them oases of peace."

Benedict dedicated part of his message to Africa, singling out Zimbabwe, where hunger is spreading and deepening. He said that people there were "trapped for too long in a political and social crisis which, sadly, keeps worsening."

International pressure has been mounting for longtime Zimbabwe leader Robert Mugabe to step down, following disputed elections in March. Millions of Zimbabwe's people need food aid, and a cholera epidemic has sharpened problems in a country once considered African's breadbasket.

Suffering also continues in the war-raged region of Kivu, in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and in Darfur, Sudan, the pope added. In Somalia, people are weighed down with "interminable sufferings" as "the tragic consequences of the lack of stability and peace," he said.

Benedict spoke of violence and tensions in the Middle East, lamenting that "the horizon seems once again bleak for Israelis and Palestinians."

He denounced what he called the "twisted logic of conflict and violence" and said he hoped dialogue and negotiation would prevail to find "just and lasting solutions to the conflicts troubling the region."

Benedict also cited Lebanon and Iraq.

Without naming any particular groups, the pope called for an end to "internecine conflict" dividing ethnic and social groups and disrupting peaceful coexistence. He also denounced terrorism "wherever" it continues to strike.

After reading a litany of the world's woes, the pope added a lighter touch, reciting holiday greetings in 64 languages, including Latin, the Church's official tongue.

The pope had rested for a few hours after celebrating Midnight Mass in St. Peter's Basilica in the early hours of Thursday.

During that ceremony, the pope lamented the suffering of children who are abandoned, living on the streets or forced to serve as soldiers in conflicts.

Pope's 'urbi et orbi' message: A plea for peace


VATICAN CITY (Reuters) – Pope Benedict said on Thursday he hoped Christmas would bring hope to those suffering from war, terrorism, injustice and poverty and appealed for peace in the Holy Land.

In his "Urbi et Orbi" (to the city and the world) Christmas Day mess
age, the Pope also turned his thoughts to some of the world's wealthiest countries, which have been hard hit by the world financial crisis.

"In each of these places may the light of Christmas shine forth and encour
age all people to do their part in a spirit of authentic solidarity," he said from the central balcony of St Peter's Basilica to tens of thousands of people below.

"If people look only to their own interests, our world will certainly fall apart."

Benedict is expected to visit the Holy Land in 2009, with possible stops in Israel and the Palestinian territories.

He hoped the region, the site of renewed violence after a truce ended this month between Israel and Palestinian factions led by Hamas militants, could return to the path toward peace.

"May the divine light of Bethlehem radiate throughout the Holy Land, where the horizon seems once again bleak for Israelis and Palestinians," Benedict said, condemning the "twisted logic of conflict and violence."

"May it spread throughout Lebanon, Iraq and the whole Middle East."

The pope, celebrating the fourth Christmas of his pontificate, lamented deepening troubles in Zimbabwe, where under President Robert Mugabe a cholera epidemic has killed more than 1,100 people and hyperinflation doubles prices every day.

The people of Zimbabwe, he said, were "trapped for all too long in a political and social crisis which sadly keeps worsening."

The pontiff cited violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Darfur, as well as Somalia's "interminable sufferings."

The address was broadcast live to more than 60 countries and after it the pope, sitting on a throne and wearing a red and white cape, read Christmas greetings in 64 languages.

He acknowledged that "an increasingly uncertain future is regarded with apprehension, even in affluent nations."

In his greeting to Italians, he called for solidarity during a "considerable economic crisis" that economists forecast could plunge Italy into its longest recession since World War II..

Earlier Thursday Pope Benedict led the world's 1.1 billion Roman Catholics into Christmas at a midnight Mass in which he appealed for an end to child abuse in all its forms.

"Let us think of those street children who do not have the blessing of a family home," he said.

"Let us think of those children who are victims of the industry of pornography and every other appalling form of abuse, and thus are traumatized to the depths of their soul."

Benedict said Catholics had to "do everything in our power to put an end to the suffering of these children."

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Students stand out at Christmas Vigil Mass

Student choir singing opening hymn for Christmas Vigil Mass

There was standing room only, as usual for the 4 p.m. Christmas Vigil Mass..

A student choir, accompanied by music director Tim Longfellow and fourth grade teacher Janet Hazlett, sang for the Mass. Lori Wammes and John Wilson played guitars.

The pastor, the Rev. Fr,. Ralph Thomas, asked all youngsters to gather and sit on a blanket in front of the altar while he read a Christmas story. after his homily.

After Communion, members of Mrs.
Debbile Dodson's kindergarten class gathered in a line in front of the altar to sing. Music director Longfellow says they can really sing bjt were a bit overwhelmed by the huge crowd.




Kindergarten class gathered in front of the altar after Communion to sing.

Making a visit to the crib



Jennifer Horton and her daughter, Lillian, stopped by the Crib for a visit prior to the 4 p.m. Christmas Vigil Mass. Lillian is five months old. Her father is Robert.

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Click on the 'Yule Masses' link at left to see the holiday Mass schedule

For Homebound: Bishop's Mass on Channel 8


Cleveland Bishop Richard Lennon will be the celebrant of a special half-hour Christmas Day broadcast of the "TV Mass"? The "TV Mass" will be broadcast beginning at 6:30 a.m. and will conclude at 7 a.m. on Cleveland's FOX8. Be sure to tell a homebound friend or relative.

Here's a little peek at Christmas decor

Women decorating altar for Christmas

It’s not fair to peek, so you will have to wait until Christmas Eve at least to see the Crib and other holiday decorations.

The photo above will give you some idea of how the poinsettias on t
he main altar will enhance the beauty of the Christmas Masses. There also will be a Nativity display in front of the lectern and more flowers behind the presider’s seating. Flowers also surround the statues of Jesus, Mary and Joseph.

A hardy group of women worked most of the morning Tuesday on the decorating and the pastor enjoyed helping with the task. Helping with the decor
ating were Millie Borisuk, Sandi Denholm, Millie Hilton, Rosemary Mileski, Dottie Thoerig, Maggie Walker and Dora Weigand.

Just so you don’t miss an added touch this Christmas, we should tell you to watch out for the Three Kings. The Kings, it seems, are excitedly journeying toward the Crib. You will notice one king near the north entance to the narthex, another at the south entrance and one nearer the Crib on the south side.

If you arrive a couple of ,minutes early, you will have time to look around a bit before Mass begins.

Bishop Richard Lennon's Christmas Message


Joy to the world! This angelic announcement of Christmas resounds throughout our churches, our homes, and even our public airwaves and the marketplace. It is the core and crux of the great event of our salvation, the Nativity of our divine Lord, Jesus Christ.

Joy to the world! The Lord is come: Let earth receive her King,
Let every heart prepare him room, And heaven and nature sing.


These first and now familiar tidings of great joy acknowledged the birth of baby born to simple parents of faith, in a distant and remote place on the globe, at a distressed time in their home
land. In spite of its apparent worldly insignificance, the impact of this single birth has been universal and eternal. The world has not been the same since. It brought mankind hope.

This hope, born in the manger, announced to shepherds, embraced by people of faith is the sign of the love that God has for mankind. This hope is the gift of knowing that God desires to live in union with us now and forever. This hope has its source in the depth of God’s love for mankind manifested in the suffering, death and resurrection of this newborn messiah and the unleashing of everlasting life in the Holy Spirit.

This is hope, this is the cause of our joy. And so we sing with the angels

Joy to the earth! The Saviour reigns: Let men their songs employ;
While fields and floods, rocks, hills and plains repeat the sounding joy.


Yet, my friends, the world in which we live has not fully embraced this Truth nor has it acknowledged this hope; thus, it does not reflect this joy of which we and the angels sing. We, the believers of this Good News, live rather in the midst of a human race mired in conflict among nations, trouble within cities, terrible challenges brought about by greed, poverty, cruelty, and disharmony. And yet we sing, Joy to the World!

We sing of the joy announced by the angels because the world is indeed a different place in light of the Savior’s birth. In spite of the trouble, sadness, and despair the birth of Jesus Christ has made a real change, a difference that so much wishes to be embraced by a still unwelcoming world, a difference that must permeate the hardened hearts of humanity.

We as the children of God and the disciples of Jesus are not immune to this hardness of heart and darkness of despair. We are called continuously not only to sing of our salvation, but to believe it more fully ourselves. Every year we return to celebrate these great events of our salvation in the hope that we might more deeply share in the communion of life and love promised us at that first Christmas in Bethlehem. We must celebrate and affirm what our Saviors tells us that the “Reign of God is at hand.”

The call of the Baptist to “repent and prepare the way of the Lord” is directed at those who have yet to believe and it is heard by those of us who claim already to believe. A new evangelization is afoot among the nations. The little known third verse of this popular Christmas carol reminds us of this deepening and continuous call.

No more let sin and sorrow grow, nor thorns infest the ground:
He comes to make His blessings flow far as the curse is found.


The power, the truth, and the new life that was born on Christmas day, into the arms of the Virgin Mary, announced to shepherds, and sung by angels is proclaimed to us again this Christmas. It inspires a new and deeper faith in each of us. With that faith comes a hopeful confidence lived in communion with God which brings us joy and peace – peace to all of Good Will.

It is this witness of joy and the invitation to peace that the world longs for and to which the world will ultimately respond. It is the love of God in our newborn Savior that speaks so eloquently to all the nations, all those in conflict, all those in anguish, affliction, and need.

He rules the world with truth and grace, and makes the nations prove
The glories of his righteousness and wonders of his love.

God challenges each of us this Christmas to joyfully accept the message and to live it for and with all people so that the world itself may sing Joy to the World. A blessed and joy-filled Christmas and New Year to all!

Monday, December 22, 2008





MERRY CHRISTMAS

from

Saint Paul TODAY



Click on the headline to read
the story of the first Christmas

Emily’s outstanding record: 18,717 dolls


A story of an amazing lady with a 91-year-old Christmas tree


Emily Herrick has made 18,717 rag dolls and is still counting. Spreading Christmas cheer is a year-round pastime for the 91-year-old St. Paul parishioner.

She has a Sears Christmas tree as old as she in her living room. It has candles on it;
not light bulbs.

Her life is a long assortment of more than one amazing story.

She did secret work for the Army during World War II and has two grandsons ser
ving in Iraq. She raised six children--one is a deacon at St. Francis de Sales. She sold ride tickets at old Summit Beach Park during the Depression and nylons after the war at 0' Neil’s. She ran Emil's Pizza on Aster Avenue for a a number of years after her husband's death. She has been to the Vatican and more than a half dozen foreign counrtries.

The dollma
king started when she decided to make a doll for her youngest daughter Marianne when she was two or three years old. That was in 1952.. The dollmaking has continued ever since, but Emily did not start keeping count of the dolls she made until Christmas a year later.

Emily has given dolls to the Catholic Service League, Haven of Rest, Humility of Mary Housing Ministry in Fairlawn, St. V
incent de Paul Society and . St. Paul’s adult ministry program. Dolls have been distributed to other parishes and social agencies and often are distributed with food baskets. She also has given them to schools including four second grade classrooms in Akron public schools and to kindergartners at St. Paul.

The dolls have gone to Mexico, Canada, Honduras, France, England and South Africa. ..
You might think the dolls would be an expensive endeavor, but Emily seldom pays for any of the materials. Often she says she will open her front door to find that someone has left something she needs for her dollmaking, except perhaps for glue sticks and fiber fill. “I use glue sticks like crazy,” she said.

It takes Emily only about 17 minutes to make a doll. She doesn’t ordinarly make them that quickly, but a grandson has timed her a couple of times just to see how long it takes.

Learn more about Emily’s dollmaking and other extraordinary events in her life by clicking on these links:

A longer story
with six photos is on our web space.

An album of 26 photos also is available

This story also is on the Upublish section of Ohio.com, the Akron Beacon Journal website.

‘Around 50’ closed Buffalo parishes for sale

Approximately 50 closed parishes in the Diocese of Buffalo are for sale or will soon be for sale, according to the diocese’s director of communications. Since 2005, Bishop Edward Kmiec has closed 85 of the western New York diocese’s 265 parishes.

[Source: Catholic News Services]

Give a gift to your parish: Volunteer to serve Mass


Blessings to Scott Johnson and Ryan Testa who have volunteered to serve Mass on Christmas Eve. Scott has volunteered fpr the 7 p.m. Mass and Ryan for the 10 p.m. Mass.

Time is running short, however, and two volunteers are needed for the Masses at 9 and and 11 a.m. on Christmas Day. And another server is needed for each of the Christmas Eve Masses.

There certainly should be students attending those Masses. Any students who will be there anyway, should know that volunteering to serve would be the greatest Christmas gift one might give to the parish.

Please call
Jo Shoup at 330-773-9555 if you can share. If Jo is not home, please leave a message or call the rectory.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Greetings from our pastor


Dear Parishioners and friends of our St. Paul Family,


As we celebrate the Birth of Our Lord Jesus Christ, may his peace brighten your hearts and homes with many blessings. The Word Made Flesh calls us to become God's creation--we are called not only to give lovingly but also to be "love in deed and in truth."

May the love of God touch and bless you in this New Year.

In the Peace of C
hrist,

It's Happening at St,. Paul

Sunday, December 21
PSR from 9 to 10:30 a.m. in the Parish Activity Center
Coffee and donuts after Masses in the Parish Activity Center

Monday, December 22
No School. Christmas vacation
Men’s Fellowship will meedt at 7 p.,m. in Room 11 for prayer and Bible Study. The Bible study passage will be John 17: 1-26 Jesus prays for us

Tuesday, December 23

Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament. Church is open from 7:30 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Senior Prayer Hour at 1 p.m. with Eucharistic Adoration


Wednesday, December 24

Christmas Vigil Masses at 4 p.m., 7 p.m. and 10 p.m.

Thursday, December 25 Merry Christmas
Christmas Day Masses 9 a.m. and 11 a.m.

Sunday, December 28
No PSR
No Coffee and Donuts

Friday, December 19, 2008

Your signature can show support for life


Be a "Voice for the Voiceless." Please show your support lor life by slgmng the Signature Ad for Life.. Volunteers .will be in the narthex collecting signatures and donations for the Right to Life after all the Masses on January 3 and 4 and January 10 and 11. Your participation is vital to help continue building a culture of life. If you would like to volunteer to collect signatures after one of the Masses, please call Ellen Wooley at 330-724-0316.

How about a gift for the Peter Maurin Center?


St. Paul's has become a valuable partner with the Peter Maurin Center. The Peter Maurin Center at 1096 S.. Main St. provides assistance and needed services for the poor and homeless. The parish helped supply desserts for the community Thanksgiving dinner and we are asking your help again. Here are ways you can help:

Cookies and desserts for Christmas dinner
Peter Maurin is in need of cookies and bite-sized desserts for the Christmas dinner they will be having. You can drop off your contributions in the Parish Activity Center on Christmas Eve from Noon until just before the 10 p.m. Mass and Christmas Day from 8 to 11 a.m.

Collection box for sleeping bags, blankets, cothing items
There is a new collection box in the narthex labeled for the Peter Maurin Center. We will be collecting donations of the following items on an on-going basis: sleeping bags, blankets, tarps, gloves, socks, and thermal bottoms (they have enough thermal tops).

Volunteers for weeking service
Volunteers are needed for the Christmas dinner and weekly during service hours: Sundays from 1 to 4 p.m., Tuesdays 1 dto 3 p.m. and Fridays 1 4 p.m.

Mass Intentions December 20-28


SATURDAY, December 20 Late Advent Weekday
4:30pm Sunday Vigil
Elizabeth & Andrew Thomas + & Family

SUNDAY, December 21 Fourth Sunday of Advent
9:00am The Mileski Family
11:00am Living & Deceased Parishioners of St. Paul:

MONDAY, December 22 Late Advent Weekday
7:00am Marie Pektor +
8:30am Harry & Catherine Weigand + & Family

TUESDAY, December 23 John of Kanty, priest
7:00am Richard McIntyre +
8:30am Morning Prayer and Communion

WEDNESDAY, December 24 Vigil of Christmas
4:00pm Peace in the world and in our families
7:00pm Peace in the world and in our families
10:00pm Peace in the world and in our families

THURSDAY, December 25 Nativity of the Lord
9:00am Living & Deceased Parishioners of St. Paul
11 :00am Living & Deceased Parishioners of St. Paul

FRIDAY, December 26 Stephen, first martyr
7:00am Morning Prayer and Communion
8:30am Steve Remis +

SATURDAY, December 27 John, apostle & evangelist
4:30pm Sunday Vigil
Harry Vezzani, Sr. + ..

SUNDAY, December 28 Holy Family of Jesus, Mary and Joseph
9:00am Living & Deceased Parishioners of St. Paul
11:00am Victor Alexander +

St. Martha to observe 90th anniversary


Saint Martha parish on North Hill, founded January 10, 1919, will observe its 90th

Anniversary the weekend of January 17-18. Former parishioners, religious sisters,
seminarians, deacons and priests who either were members of the parish or who have served in
the parish are invited to participate in any of the liturgies on that weekend.

The schedule of
Masses for the weekend will be 4:30 p.m. on Saturday, January 17, and 11 a.m. on Sunday, January 18. On Sunday, The Most Reverend Richard G. Lennon, Bishop of Cleveland, will preside and preach at a Mass of Thanksgiving, followed by a reception in Frey Hall. The pastor of St. Martha is the Rev. Fr. Michael A. Matusz.
For religious who
may be attending, as well as deacons or priests, please, contact Mary Winters at (330) 376-5144 and let her know. Deacons who may be participating and priests who will be concelebrating, please bring a white stole. To conclude the festivities, Evening Prayer will be celebrated on Monday, January 19 at 7:p.m.

Snow Day is nice -- but not THIS


Ordinarily, St. Paul students might hope for a snow day to get off from classes.

But a day off from school because of icy conditions is not welcome on the last day of class before vacation.

Not on a day when classes were all planning Christmas parties.

Not on a day when a special student Mass was planned with singing of a special Prince
of Peace. hymn

Ah--but CHRISTMAS IS COMING.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Christmas play stresses Christmas meaning

Hopefully someone got a few better photos than the blog guy

The Parish Activity Center was packed Thursday evening as usual for the annual Christmas program. Many were in the PAC a half hour early to get a good seat.

The program this year was a musical play telling a Christmas story with related songs. It was one of the best in a number of years with a befitting religious theme..

Students in Mrs. Suzanne Inglis first grade, Miss Mary Means second grade and Mrs. Jenette Michel’s third grade turned in an admirable performance with r
obust singing and well-rehearsed lines.

Music director Tim Longfellow and Mrs, Michael were seated at center stage to direct
with Miss Means on the left side and Mrs. Inglis on the right.

The play was about the missing Baby from the crib. One of the first songs was “S
omebody stole the Baby.” A detective questioned people and finally it was discovered that the baby was not stolen but just stored away. The janitor came up with a key to a storage room and boxes of Christmas decorations and there was the Baby. The theme of the play was that Christmas and the Baby is not something artificial but really always just what is in the heart..

The audience of family members of students got into the act, too, when students sang “O Come All Ye Faithful.” Signs were raised urging the audience to “Sing Along.”

A nice tou
ch at the end was the introduction of all the performers and bow-taking by the students.

Family members themselves did a little performing. Everyone had a camera and the stage was stormed just after the play ended.


Students take well-deserved bow after performance.

Your Giving Tree gift is on the way

Packagers surveying your gifts are (from left) Paula Adam, Marilyn Spiros, Lu Johnson,
Terry Nesline, Pauline Broske and Rosemary Mileski on the job in the rectory

If you took an ornament from the "Giving Tree" and left a small gift, you might not realize what it meant to one of our shut-ins or parishioners in a nursing home. You also may not be aware of the huge and unsung efforts by other parishioners who helped with wraapping and distributing your small gift.

Be assured though that your gift is in one of the 70 or more special packages or baskets being delivered to our parishioners in 22 nursing homes, to shut-ins still living in the parish area and several in places like Chapel Hill, Streetsboro, Canton and Canal Fulton.

Each basket will include some of your gifts like shampoo, lotions, towels, popcorn, candy and so on. Baskets also will include a parish calendar, a mini loaf of bread baked by a parishioner and a small gift card from Target, Walmart or a grocery store.

Delivering the gifts to the shut-ins will be Sally Casenhiser, Cheryl Childress, Diane Clute, Debbie Dodson, Patti, Katie and Matt Hogue, Aimee Nesline an Suzie Stanik.

Nursing homes will be covered by Dave Clute, Helen and Adam Dadich, Helen Dunn, Betty Ciborek, Mickey Eritano, Laura Grubb, Barb Hughes, Siana Munroe and Jim and Jean Vondemkamp.

Coordinating the huge effort is Terry Nesline, director of adult ministries. She will be delivering the baskets to the outying communities.

Women who gathered in the rectory on Thursday to wrap
and pack the gifts included Paula Adam, Pauline Broske, Sandi Denholm, Lucretia Johnson, Rosemary Mileski and Marilyn Spiros,

Packing (from left) are Pauline Broske, Marilyn Spiros and Rosemary Mileski

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

December altar servers: SERVERS NEEDED


Altar servers are needed for the Christmas Masss highlighted in blue.
If you are able to serve, please sign up for one of the Christmas Masses and contact Jo Shoup 330-773-9555.


Saturday, December 6
4:30 Matt Kannel and Jeremy Swords

Sunday, December 7
9:00 Marco Colant and Noelle Coland
11:00 Adam Gray and Scott Johnson

Saturday. December 13
4:00 Alyse Bachmann and Michael Sartoski

Sunday, December 14
9:00 Jacqueline Wammes and Aaron Abernathy
11:00 Michael Altomore and Zachary Durbin

Saturday, December 20
4:30 Trevor Ellis and Matt Kannel

Sunday, December 21
9:00 Ryan Testa and Josh Garey
11:00 Adam Gray and Scott Johnson

Wednesday, December 24
4:00 pm Marco Colant and Noelle Colant
7:00 pm SServers needed
10:00 pm Servers needed

Thursday, December 25
9:00 am Servers needed
11:00 am Servers needed

Saturday, December 27
4:30 Jeremy Swords and Alyse Bachmann

Sunday, December 28
9:00 Erin Liggett and Zachary Durbin
11:00 Isabelle Mioller and Sierra Robinson

Saturday, January 3
4:30 Michael Sartoskii and Trevor Ellis

Sunday, January 4
9:00 Marco Colant and Noelle Colant
11:00 Emily Roberts and Jacxqueline Wammes

If you are unable to serve at your scheduled Mass, please arrange for a substitute.

Altar servers for January


New altar servers will be added in February. The more-experiencd servers will be paired with the less-experienced servers.

Saturday, January 3
4:30 Michael Sartoski and Trevor Ellis

Sunday, January 4
9:00 Marco Colant and Noelle Colant
11:00 Jacqueline Wammes and Emily Roberts

Saturday, January 10
4:30 Matt Kannel and Jeremy Swords

Sunday, January 11
9:00 Aaron Abernathy and Erin Liggett
11:00 Michael Altomare and Scott Johnson

Saturday, January 17
4:30 ichael Sartoski and Alyse Bachmann

Sunday, January 18
9:00 Marco Colant and Noelle Colant
11:00 Katie Roberts and Emily Roberts

Saturday, January 24
4:30 Trevor Ellis and Matt Kannel

Sunday, January 25
9:00 Aaron Abernathy and Erin Liggett
11:00 Jacqueline Wammes and Sierra Robinson

Saturday, January 31
4:30 Alyse Bachmann and Jeremy Swords

Sunday, February 1
9:00 Ryan Testa and Josh Garey
11:00 Isabelle Miller and Angie Miller

If you are unable to serve at your scheduled Mass, please arrange for a substitute.

Christmas and New Year's Mass schedule


Wednesday, December 24, 2008, Christmas Eve
4:00 p.m. Mass
7:00 p.m. Mass
10:00 p.m. Mass

Thursday, December 25, 2008, Christmas Day
9:00 a.m. Mass
11:00 a.m. Mass

Wednesday, December 31, 2008, New Year's Eve
7:00 p.m. Mass

Thursday, January 1, 2009, Solemnity of the Blessed Virgin Mary
9:00 a.m. Mass
11:00 a.m. Mass

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

BJ breaks story on parish closings


Sacred Heart on Grant Street
submits own plan to stay open


At least six — and possibly seven — of the 35 Catholic parishes in Summit County could be closed by July 2010, according to a story by religion writer Colette M. Jenkins in the Akron Beacon Journal today. The story fills a 5-column by 11-inch space on page A1 and continues inside.

There has been no information from the diocese which is expected to announce
approval of the various cluster plans in March.

The Summit County parishes that could be affected are Annunciation, St. John the Baptist, Sacred Heart, Christ the King, St. Hedwig and St. Martha, and Barberton's SS. Cyril & Methodius.

Sacred Heart parish on Grant Street will submit its own proposal in addition to the one submitted by the Summit South 3 District which also includes Announciation, St. John the Baptist, St. Mary, Sacred Heart and St. Matthew. Those parishes were told to downsize to one school (from two) and to four parishes.


Their proposal suggests that Annunciation and St. John the Baptist merge and use the Annunciation site at 55 Broad St. It expected to indicate Sacred Heart as a closing or a merger with St. Bernard, but parishioners at Sacred Heart decided to submit a separate proposal, meaning the bishop will make a decision without input from the cluster team.

The Rev. Robert Clancy, pastor at Sacred Heart, said the proposal from his parish asks the bishop to keep Sacred Heart open. The parish, on Grant Street, has about 175 families and 280 parishioners.

''We are one of the few parishes that are financially solvent. We're in the black,'' Fr. Clancy said. ''Our people here didn't want to close or merge with another parish. What we're trying to do is survive and it's up to the Bishop to decide what happens. We're prepared for the worst but hoping for the best.''

The Rev. Jonathan Zingales of Annunciation said the cluster proposal simply says that Sacred Heart will be submitting its own proposal.

'We are, as a cluster, willing to work with the people of Sacred Heart based on whatever the bishop decides,” Fr. Zingales said. “We understand that in the city, the Catholic Church doesn't have the luxury to be here only for the sacraments. We have to reach out to people because that's part of the gospel mandate and if we're going to do that effectively, we have to do it together. ''

The cluster planning team determined that both the schools at St. Mary and St. Matthew are vibrant and the bishop has already approved each school's five-year plan, Zingales said.

Another cluster that includes St. Anthony of Padua, Christ the King, St. Hedwig and St. Martha, were told to scale down to one school (from two) and two parishes. Their proposal recommends that St. Martha and Christ the King merge with the congregation of St. Hedwig and use the St. Martha site at 300 E. Tallmadge Ave. The St. Hedwig church would close. It also suggests that both schools, at St. Anthony and the North Akron Catholic School at the Christ the King site, remain open with close monitoring.

''If the health of either school is jeopardized, in terms of enrollment or financial solvency, action steps can be taken,'' said the Rev. Michael Matusz of St. Martha parish. ''The proposal for the schools also calls for increased collaboration wherever possible in the student, administrative and teaching populations because clustering is also about establishing ongoing, long-term relationships that serve a particular area of the diocese.''

Another cluster involves SS. Cyril & Methodius, Barberton; St. George, Clinton; St. Andrew the Apostle, Norton; SS. Peter and Paul, Doylestown; Prince of Peace, Barberton; and Sacred Heart, Wadsworth. They were told to reduce to four parishes.

The proposal recommends that SS. Cyril & Methodius close. The cluster was already reduced to five parishes when parishioners at St. George in Clinton requested in August that the little church there be closed. That happened on Oct. 25, and its members went to other parishes.

''I was torn during the discussions because I am the pastor at Sacred Heart and I grew up at SS. Cyril & Methodius. A lot of who I am today as a priest and as a Catholic comes from there,'' said the Rev. Joseph Labak. ''I kept focus by reminding myself that we are called sometimes to make sacrifices for the good of the Church and the good of God's people. As painful as it is, this is going to make the Church more vibrant and put us in a position to better serve the people.''

Mergers will require that a new parish identity be established and that new pastoral leadership be assigned. The new entity will be responsible for the assets and liabilities of the merging parishes. That means the Annunciation site and the St. Martha site will be renamed and will include sacred items and artifacts of the merging congregations.

When parish property is closed, the diocese takes on the responsibility. As in the case of St. George, the communities that receive parishioners from a closing parish will also receive sacred and other items from the church. When the property is sold, any net proceeds will also follow parishioners from the congregations of the closed churches.

The final approved cluster plans are expected to be announced by the bishop in March. Before that, the proposals will be reviewed by the Vibrant Parish Life — Phase II Committee, the bishop's Cabinet staff and the priests council.

The Vibrant Parish Life committee includes representatives from each of the 13 diocesan districts as well as representatives of the major consultative groups and different areas of the diocesan administration.

Click on the headline to read the full story by Colette Jenkins in the Beacon Journal.

You also can hear Bishop Lennon answering questions about the clustering by clicking on the Diocese Video on the diocesan website. . Some comments made by the Bishop in that video are included in the Beacon Journal story.

Mass for Betty Capron is Thursday


Betty A. Capron (nee Bryant)

Betty A. Capron, born September 16, 1923 in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, passed away December 14, 2008 with her family by her side.

She was the daughter of the late Genevieve and Edison Bryant. She graduated from Cuyahoga Falls High School in 1941 and worked at B.F. Goodrich during World War II. After the war she married Richard G. Capron of Kenmore and they were together for 52 y
ears. They moved to Firestone Park in Akron where they raised their six children together. Betty was a member of the Knights of Columbus #3410 and past president of the K of C Wives. She was a member of their bowling team and a member of St. Paul Catholic Church. Betty was an avid lover of movies, books, baseball and hot fudge sundaes.

Preceded in death by her husband, Richard G. Capron in 1999, she was the loving mother of children, Christine Capron of Cuyahoga Falls, Cathi (Richard) Toth of Falmouth, Ky., Colleen (Ken) Stout of Bath, Constance Capron and Richard (Karen) Capron, both of Akron and Claudette (Fred) Bird of Johnson City, Tenn.; grandchildren, Stephanie (Matt) Lause, Lisa (Travis) Coulter, Matthew (AnnJanette) Toth, Claudia Toth, Jeremy Stout, Jacob Stout (Erin Galloway), Kendra Stout, Rachel Capron, and Shannon and Ryan Bird; brother, Don (Kathy) Bryant; six great-grandchildren; and many nieces and nephews along with close family friend, Dr. Barbara Armstrong.

Calling hours will be Wednesday, 4 to 8 p.m. at the Dunn-Quigley Funeral Home (811 Grant St.), where Parish Rosary will be recited at 4:30 p.m. Memorial Mass will be 10 a.m. Thursday at St. Paul Catholic Church (procession to form at church). Inurnment to follow at Holy Cross Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, the family requests that memorials be made to the Sheldon Traeger Critical Care Center or the Acute Palliative Care Unit at Summa Health System both at 525 E. Market St., Akron, OH 44304.
[Beacon Journal, Akron, OH,Tuesday, December 16, 2008, page 6, col. 1]

Blog Note: Her husband was a former member of Akron City Council.