St. Raymond Parish Easter Sunday March 27, 2016 Our Mission: “To Know Christ Better and to Make Him Better Known” Monday - Friday……….……………………………...8:30AM & 12:15PM Saturday……………………………………………………………...8:30AM Saturday Vigil (English).…………………………………………..5:00PM Sunday…7:30, 9:00, 10:30, 12:00 Noon, 1:30PM Spanish, 6:00 Youth Holy Days…………………………………...8:30AM, 12:15PM & 7:00PM MASS SCHEDULE Parish Office……………………………………….…………828-2460 Monday - Friday 8:00AM - 4:00PM Sunday 8:30AM - 1:30PM HOURS OF OPERATION 11555 Shannon Avenue, Dublin, CA 94568-1376, Phone: 925-828-2460, FAX: 925-828-8610 E-mail: offi[email protected]Website: www.st-raymond-dublin.org
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St. Raymond Church Easter Sunday March 27, 2016
Visit us at www.st-raymond-dublin.org Page 1
St. Raymond Parish
Easter Sunday March 27, 2016
Our Mission: “To Know Christ Better and to Make Him Better Known”
School Board .................................................. Julie Kent, President PTG .............................................................. Leslie Lynch, President
Faith Formation Faith Formation Classes for Grades 1-5 are offered on
Tuesday 4:00PM - 5:30PM or
Wednesday 4:00PM– 5:30PM & 6:00PM - 7:30PM
Faith Formation classes: If you need more information, please contact the Faith Formation office at
St. Raymond Year-Round
Food Program
We are very fortunate to be able to extend our food program,
so if you or someone you know is in need of a Food Basket
anytime during the year, please provide your name and
number to our Parish Office by calling 828-2460. Your
information will be kept confidential. We look forward to
helping you!
Si usted o conoce a alguien con la necesidad de una
canasta de comida, por favor escriba su nombre y
numero de telefono a nuestra oficina parroquial,
828-2460. Su información se mantendrá confidencial.
Gracias, y Dios le bendiga!
Easter Food Baskets
THANK YOU !!
Thank you to all those who participated in the Easter Food Drive.
With your generosity, we were able to provide 1,000 people with
a wonderful Easter Basket.
Blessings to you all !
BAPTISMS St. Raymond’s celebrates the sacrament of baptism
for children on the second full weekend of the
month at the following masses: Saturday 5:00pm,
Sunday at 12:00pm and 1:30pm (Spanish Mass) and
at 2pm on Saturday afternoon.
Come to the parish office to schedule a baptism.
As you contemplate donations this year, please
keep the church in mind. Your contributions are needed
for everything from special programs to basic operating
expenses-both are deserving of your support. Please be as
generous as you can. For the convenience of church
members, we offer online giving. To donate, visit the church
website www.st-raymond-dublin.org and click on the link
under donate now.
St. Raymond Church Easter Sunday March 27, 2016
Visit us at www.st-raymond-dublin.org Page 6
Around the Diocese… and beyond
NEW! Catholic Charities of the East Bay Annual Golf Classic Raffle. This year's Golf Classic Prize Raffle features five getaways, including a week on the beautiful Rhode Island Shore, including Round Trip Air Fare for Two; a week for six in Cancun in a beach-Front Condo with typical resort amenities; and closer getaway destinations, including Lake Tahoe, Monterey Bay, and Pacific Grove. Additional prizes include a private tour of Oliver Ranch’s world famous sculptures, wine, an Oakland Zoo Package, baseball tickets and much more. Winners do not have to be present at the Golf Classic Dinner on April 11 to win. Raffle Tickets are $100 each or seven tickets for $500. To purchase raffle tickers, please contact Michael Bauman.
Details: Monday, April 11, 6:00 pm Diablo Country Club, 1700 Club House Rd., Danville
Contact: Michael Bauman 510-768-3133 or 925-451-7682 [email protected]
Web: www.cceb.org/golf
NEW! Earth Day Celebration and Family Dinner Join San Damiano Retreat Center for a fun-filled Earth Day Celebration for the whole family. Festivities begin at 3:00 pm and will include a natural history hike, stories, crafts, tree planting, music, and more. A family-style, child-friendly dinner served at 5:30 pm. Registration is $12 and $6 for children 12 and under. Details: Sunday, April 17, 3:00 pm – 9:00 pm San Damiano Retreat Center, 710 Highland Dr., Danville Contact: Kateri Kautai 925-837-9141 [email protected] Web: SanDamiano.org
Gardening Workshops at San Damiano Retreat Center San Damiano Retreat Center will have a 12-session introduction to Permaculture. The
workshops will explore regenerative methods of living and sustainable agriculture. The curriculum is designed to supply attendees with a foundation in permaculture principles: Earth Care, People Care, and Fair Share. Upcoming sessions include: April 2: The Patterns of Nature April 16: Plant Propagation May 7: All About Vegetables May 21: Carbon Sinking/Soil Building Contact: Kateri Kautai 925-837-9141 Website: SanDamiano.org
Rachel’s Vineyard Retreat Rachel’s Vineyard Retreats renews hearts broken by abortion. Our upcoming retreat offers loving support, where women and men reconcile painful post-abortive emotions and begin the process of renewal and healing. Details: April 1-3. Confidential Inquiries: Gloria 510-384-6875, [email protected]
Web: www.afterthechoice.org
Hearts on Fire: Living Faith in Daily Life with Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius of Loyola. April 1-2. Join the Office of Young Adult Ministry and Evangelization. This retreat, for young single or married people between 18-39, will include dynamic presentations, methods of prayer in daily life, and a Friday evening Coffeehouse with live music. Participants return home Friday night and return to Our Lady of Lourdes on Saturday morning. Suggested weekend registration donation is $30. Details: For more information or to register: ApostleshipOfPrayer.org. Contact: Steven Lewis 510-267-8394 [email protected] Web: Oakdiocese.org/HeartsOnFire
Enrichment Series Tuesday 12 April: “The Spirituality of
Mercy “by Dr. Margaret Turek.
Wednesday 13 April: “Prayer as a Path of Mercy” by Patti Collyer.
Thursday 14 April: “Reconciliation” (with opportunity for confession by Fr. Geoffrey Baraan
Details: 7:00 to 8:30pm, St. Anne’s , 32223 Cabello St., Union City.
Catholics@Work April Presentation - April 12, 7pm The April speaker of the 2015-16
Altar servers are boys and girls who are in 5th grade or higher and have received 1st Eucharist. If you would like to serve, please contact the Parish Office at 828-2460 to obtain an application and get more information about this ministry.
Youth and Young Adult
Young Adult Ministry
St. Raymond is starting a young adult group. Adults ages
(21-35) are invited to join in! Text the word “joy” to 84576
for more information.
Youth Ministry – Middle School
bit.ly/EdgeJump
Our Edge program meets weekly on
Tuesday evenings from 7-8:30pm. To join our JUMP
program, stop by our Youth Ministry Office or call us at 925-
Background on the Gospel Reading Today we begin the Easter Season, our 50-day meditation on the mystery of Christ's Resurrection. Our Gospel today tells us about the disciples' discovery of the empty tomb. It concludes by telling us that they did not yet understand that Jesus had risen from the dead. Thus, the details provided are not necessarily meant to offer proof of the Resurrection. The details invite us to reflect upon a most amazing gift, that is faith in Jesus and his Resurrection. Each of the four Gospels tells us that Jesus' empty tomb was first discovered by women. This is notable because in first-century Jewish society women could not serve as legal witnesses. In the case of John's Gospel, the only woman attending the tomb is Mary of Magdala. Unlike the Synoptic accounts, John's Gospel does not describe an appearance of angels at the tomb. Instead, Mary is simply said to have
observed that the stone that had sealed the tomb had been moved, and she runs to alert Simon Peter and the beloved disciple. Her statement to them is telling. She assumes that Jesus' body has been removed, perhaps stolen. She does not consider that Jesus has been raised from the dead. Simon Peter and the beloved disciple race to the tomb, presumably to verify Mary's report. The beloved disciple arrives first but does not enter the tomb until after Simon Peter. This detail paints a vivid picture, as does the detail provided about the burial cloths. Some scholars believe that the presence of the burial cloths in the tomb offers evidence to the listener that Jesus' body had not been stolen (it is understood that grave robbers would have taken the burial cloths together with the body). The Gospel passage concludes, however, that even having seen the empty tomb and the burial cloths, the disciples do not yet understand about the Resurrection. In the passage that follows, Mary of Magdala meets Jesus but mistakes him for the gardener. In the weeks ahead, the Gospel readings from our liturgy will show us how the disciples came to believe in Jesus' Resurrection through his appearances to them. Our Easter faith is based on their witness to both the empty tomb and their continuing relationship with Jesus—in his appearances and in his gift of the Holy Spirit. Source: Loyola Press
Treasures from our Traditions Fifty years or so ago, it was popular
to teach every Sunday is a "Little
Easter." After several decades of
intense liturgical reform, it is proper
to think of today as a "Big Sunday."
On every Sunday of the year, the
Church obligingly assembles, keeping
the day holy. In most places, we
hardly attain the goal of gathering
all who are in Christ by baptism.
Look around today and see what a
Big Sunday looks like!
Our tradition speaks of
remembering, anamnesis, as the
antidote to "amnesia," the tragic
forgetting of God and who we are
as God's beloved creation. On this
Easter day, we are at our best. We
remember God, and we remember
who we are in God's eyes: beloved
sons and daughters, reborn to
eternal life in baptismal waters. We
rekindle our candles, reclaiming our
baptismal promise. "Big Sunday” also
reflects the character of festivity and
leisure that should mark every
Lord 's Day. We wear "Sunday best,”
and we may take some time to stroll
through a budding garden. It is truly
a "Big Sunday," and how different
our lives would be if we took its
values and traditions forward into all
the Sundays of our lives .
St. Raymond Church Easter Sunday March 27, 2016
Visit us at www.st-raymond-dublin.org Page 9
Because this is the final work of
mercy, we might be tempted to
think, “Well, if all else fails, I can
always pray.” And it is true that
there are situations in which only
prayer avails. This is what Jesus
told his disciples when they were
unable to deliver a poor boy
suffering from demonic
possession: “This kind cannot be
driven out by anything but prayer
and fasting” (Mk 9:29).
But it would be better to think of
this final work of mercy as the
companion to all the works that
precede it. When we accompany
our actions with prayer we will
receive the discernment we need
to carry them with sensitivity,
respecting the unique needs of
each individual. More
importantly, when instructing us
to carry out such works Our Lord
said, “When you did it to one of
these least ones, you did it to
me” (Mt 25:40). Prayer reveals
the presence of Christ in others,
and this will help us approach
them with reverence and not as
some problem to be solved.
Prayer enables us in some
mysterious way to touch the
hearts of others and it dissolves
the barriers of time and
space. We are asked to pray for
the living and the dead, a
reminder that prayer unites us to
the whole human family. It is
somewhat surprising that, along
with that adventurous evangelist,
St. Francis Xavier, the Church
names St. Therese as patron of the
missions. This was a young
woman who, apart from one
pilgrimage to Rome, never left
her native region in France; she
entered a cloistered monastery at
the age of fifteen and died there
nine years later. The reason for
this unusual choice can be found
in her writings, in which she
recorded that “The zeal of a
Carmelite embraces the whole
world.” As the Letter of James
tells us, the prayer of a righteous
person has great power in its
effects (cf Jas 5:15-16).
It is above all in the Eucharistic
Prayer that we get an insight into
the way prayer unites us with
others. We always ask the
prayers of the saints and in turn
we pray for the members of the
Body of Christ all over the
world. There is no one beyond
the reach of God’s mercy, and
thus there is no one beyond the
reach of our prayer.
This is the fundamental truth that
prayer underscores: we are
instruments of God’s peace. It is
God, not us, who is the source of
mercy. One wise spiritual
writer wrote centuries ago that
if we make prayer the center of
our lives, we will discover the
difference between doing great
things for God and God doing
great things through us. Prayer is
real in its effects and it has the
added advantage of being hidden:
this is the “stealth” work of
mercy, because it is only God
who knows about our prayer.
Christ assures us that the Father
who sees in secret will reward us.
The saints are our great models
for this work of mercy, especially
Mary, the Mother of God. At the
wedding feast of Cana she
interceded with her Son for the
couple who were about to be
embarrassed in front of their
guests. Mary asked with absolute
trust, not telling her Son what to
do, but simply bringing the
matter to his attention. How
often we bring to God both the
problem and the best solution to
it! And even when it seemed that
her Son would not act, Mary
trusted him. Her final recorded
words in Scripture are the simple
directive for us to carry out this
work of mercy, and all works of
mercy: “Do whatever he tells
you” (Jn 2:5).
Source:: http://jubileeofmercy-
eb.org/page/reflection-pray-for-
Seven Corporal
Works of Mercy
1. Feed the Hungry
2. Give Drink to the
Thirsty
3. Clothe the Naked
4. Shelter the
Homeless
5. Visit the Sick
6. Visit the
Imprisoned
7. Bury the Dead
Seven Spiritual
Works of Mercy
1. Counsel the
Doubtful
2. Instruct the
Ignorant
3. Admonish
Sinners
4. Comfort the
Afflicted
5. Forgive All
Injuries
6. Bear Wrongs
Patiently
7. Pray For the
Living and the
Dead
Ministry of Care We welcome all who have suffered the loss of a beloved person: spouse, parent, child, or friend. St. Raymond's Ministry of Care Grief Support Group meets on Saturday from 11:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon in Kids Klub. Call Matt Troiano, 925-493-1137, [email protected]
Have you moved? Changed your phone number? Changed your e-mail address? Help us keep our records up to date and save us some money on our communication expense. Notify the parish office of changes, 925-828-2460 or via email at : [email protected].
St. Raymond Church Easter Sunday March 27, 2016
Visit us at www.st-raymond-dublin.org Page 10
MASS INTENTIONS March 27 – April 3, 2016
Sunday, March 27:
All Masses ~ Intentions
of the People of St.
Raymond
Monday, March 28:
8:30AM ~† Lon Williams
12:15PM ~† Carmencita Baldevia
Tuesday, March 29:
8:30AM ~ † Aidee Calma
12:15PM ~ † Vivian Parco
Wednesday, March 30:
8:30AM ~ † Rostini Gomez
12:15PM ~ † Ricardo Barredo Sr.
Thursday, March 31:
8:30AM ~ † Patrick Joseph Kennedy
12:15PM ~ † Haydee Lupe Bolton
Friday, April 1
8:30AM ~ † Barbara Sinopoli
12:15PM ~ Int. of Adriane Arnold
Saturday, April 2:
8:30AM ~ † Asuncion Bernardo
5:00PM ~ † Wendy Wilmurt
Sunday, April 3:
7:30AM ~ † Concepcion Raquiza
9:00AM ~ Intentions of the People of St. Raymond
10:30AM ~ † Creseno Mendioro
12:00PM ~ † Joseph Pereira
1:30PM ~ † Ruben & Rodolpho Galvez
6:00PM ~ † William L. Keller
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS For the Week of March 28—April 3, 2016
Monday, March 28:
Job Link Music Room
RCIA Kids Klub
Ignation Exercises M1- M3
Kairos CMF Vacaville M5
Tuesday, March 29:
Ignation Exercises M1- M3
Religious Ed. Classes Church/Hall
Youth Ministry – Edge Hall
Hispanic Young Adult Prayer Grp Church
Wednesday, March 30:
Hispanic Young Adult Chapel
Music Ministry – Adult Music Room
Religious Ed Classes Church/Hall
Thursday, March 31:
Cursillo MR5
Alpha Hall
Spanish Choir Rehearsal Music Room
Hispanic Prayer Group Church
Friday, April 1 :
Adoration Church
Saturday, April 2
Ministry of Care Kids Klub Catholic Daughters – Spring Fling Hall
Sunday, April 3:
For those we love… Please pray for all who are ill, especially Jennifer Kokolis, Gabriel Hui, George Gemmingen, Frank Rodriguez, Reina Rico, Sandy Tran, Robb, Dawn Hofman
Hummer, Lois Belmessieri, Maricel Sam Miguel, Flora Salonga, Michael Kowatszyk, Edelbreto Yee, Marie McGuinness, Bernadette Hiner, Kyrene Espiritee,
Baby Angel Josiah, Kiki Rios, Alicia Sanchez Hegarty, Gregory Vallestenos, Michelle Greb, Sheilar Tan, Antonio Guttieres, Frank Steele, Brandon Francisco,
Ariana Lemayon, Gerardo Rosas, Monica Chavez, Leonora Hernandez, Stan Bernatowicz, Sam Maruyama, Annette Bigham, Mae Ranola, Eva Martinez,
Mark & Diana Sanchez, Denise Silberman, Doug Bosma, Linda Young, Florence Hess, Sam Maruwama, Carl DeMonteverde, Cesar Diaz, Tony Amarante,
Bonnie Gurzell, Patricia Lastufka, Richard Kelly, Sharon Studulski, Elnora Fonacier, O’Brien Family, Diana Bonanno, Julie Viscovich, Nick Elward,
Camille Chabot, Valerie & Michael Brown, Rosalinda Ilagan, Priscilla Mays, Bill Presswood, Geraldine McAleer, Finbarr McAleer, Noreen Kane,