Mass Schedules for Holy Family Sunday: 10:30 AM Communion Service and Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament Tuesday: 12:00 PM Holy Family Catholic Church Sunday July 29th - Seventeenth Sunday in Ordinary Time - B Our Mission Statement “In Faith We Build” 78 Friesian Circle, Thayne, WY 83127 P.O. Box 1036, Thayne, WY 83127 307-883-3429 www.holyfamilywy.org [email protected]Coffey Time Images - 2018 Giovanni Lanfranc, Miracle of the Loaves and Fishes detail, 1620-23 When the people saw the sign he had done, they said, “This is truly the Prophet, the one who is to come into the world.” John 6:14 The hand of the Lord feeds us; he answers all our needs.
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Sunday July 29th Seventeenth Sunday in Ordinary TimeAugust 8th: Knights Meeting-John Howard’s home-7:00 pm August 12th: Nineteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time OLM Parish picnic - 1:00pm
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Mass Schedules for Holy Family
Sunday: 10:30 AM
Communion Service and
Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament
Tuesday: 12:00 PM
Holy Family Catholic Church Sunday July 29th - Seventeenth Sunday in Ordinary Time - B
To register please fill out a registration card on the front table or talk to Deacon Bill or Deacon Phil after Mass.
SACRAMENT OF RECONCILIATION
Anytime by appointment
SACRAMENT OF MARRIAGE
Couples should contact the Parish at least 6 months in advance of the marriage date or sooner.
INFANT BAPTISM
Parents are required to attend a Baptism preparation class, preferably prior to the birth of their child.
ANNOINTING OF THE SICK
Please notify the Parish in case of serious illness or upcoming surgery.
CATHOLIC FAITH INQUIRY
Persons wishing to inquire about the Catholic Faith or seeking to complete their Sacraments should call the Parish. Inquirers are welcome at anytime throughout the year.
DEADLINES
Weekly Bulletin - Tuesday at Noon
Ministries Calendar of Upcoming Events
Parish Staff and Information
Mass Intention for Sunday, July 29th
Sarah Regan
July 29th: Seventeenth Sunday in Ordinary time 17th, 18th, 19th, 20th, 21st Sunday’s Gospels are the Bread of Life discourses Knights lead Rosary CCW preparing brunch Catholics with Questions meeting after Mass July 31st: Mass & Adoration at 12:00 pm August 1st: Mass at 6:00pm August 5th: Eighteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time Anointing after Mass Finance Council Meeting after 10:30 Mass Begin 2 Masses - 8:30am & 10:30am August 6th: The Transfiguration of the Lord August 8th: Knights Meeting-John Howard’s home-7:00 pm August 12th: Nineteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time OLM Parish picnic - 1:00pm August 15th: The Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Holy Day of Obligation - Mass @ 6:00 pm August 17th - 19th: Wyoming Catholic Men’s Retreat August 19th: Twentieth Sunday in Ordinary Time Baptism @ 10:30 Mass Pastoral Council Meeting after Mass August 22nd: Queenship of the Blessed Virgin Mary
July 29th: 17th Sunday in Ordinary Time Lector: Katie Denney Eucharist: Jack Leaven August 5th: 18th Sunday in Ordinary Time Lector: (8:30) Chip White (10:30) Farish Thompson Eucharist: (8:30) Donna Kelsey (10:30) Sue Thomp-son August 12th: 19th Sunday in Ordinary Time Lector: (8:30) Vicki Canoso (10:30) Sharon Backus Eucharist: (8:30) Valentine Almanza (10:30) Kim Frome
Melissa Leaper, Dellamae Skinner, Danny Bunzel, Ron
Quackenbush, Sarah Schopper, Fr. Carl Beavers, Margie
Swann, Lee Williams, Birdie Jo Holybee, Stella Walmer &
Marilyn Arnold
And for the Souls of the Departed:
07/29 - 2 KGS 4:42-44, EPH 4:1-6, JN 6:1-15
08/05 - EX 16:2-4, 12-15, EPH 4:17, 20-24, JN 6:24-35
Ordinary - $1534** Building - $30 ** Youth - $199
Visitor - $275 ** Living & Giving - $900
8:30 am & 10:30 am Masses Will begin next Sunday, August 5th. Please bear with us as we iron out the growing pains. We will resume regular schedule on October 7th when CCD begins.
Back to School Needs
Dayspring Church in Etna is leading an effort within the Valley’s churches to provide back to school supplies for children in need of assistance. If you have school supplies or daypacks, there will be a box in the gathering area for these items. Donations to the poor fund will also be used to help the children. Thank you for your concerns.
High School Scholarship Information about the Knights of Columbus scholarship is on the table in the gathering area.
Pastoral Council Your newly formed Pastoral Council consists of 7 members. Three members, Carolyn Norman, Tom Hensel, and Vicki Canoso, were appointed by Fr. Lucas per Diocesan guidelines. Stephanie Ivie, Donna Kelsey, Valentine Almanza, and Jack Leaven were selected by ballot last Sunday. Take the time to express your thoughts, wishes and ideas to the Council members. Pictures for the Hall We are still in need of pictures of our Veterans, First Responders and Active Duty Personnel for the Parish Hall. Don’t be bashful please.
Dynamic Catholic “Love is a verb, not a noun. Love is something we do, not something that happens to us.” “Even when our efforts don’t bear the fruits we expect, we must trust that God knows what he is doing.”
Without seeing any vision, he understood and knew many things, as well spiritual things as things of the faith." —Ignatius of Loyola, writing of himself
"Soul of Christ, make me holy." So says the first line of a prayer that Ignatius of Loyola recommends to those who take up his Spiritual Exercises, one of the most influential devotional books in the church's history—it's still being published, and followed, some 460 years after he first conceived it. In fact, whatever Ignatius touched seemed to be set apart as something special: the order he founded, the Society of Jesus, became one of the most influential of Catholic orders. Yet Ignatius' little prayer sums up not only his legacy but also his person. He was born Iñigo Lopez de Loyola, to a noble and wealthy Basque family, and sent to the Spanish court to become a page. He embraced court life with enthusiasm, learning weapons, gambling, and courtly love—he was "a man given to the vanities of the world," he later wrote in his autobiography, "whose chief delight consisted in martial exercises, with a great and vain desire to win renown." In a battle with the French for the town of Pamplona, Spain, he was hit by a cannon ball the size of a fist. The five-foot-two-inch Iñigo was helped back to Loyola by French soldiers (who admired his courage). He underwent surgeries to reset his right knee and remove a protruding bone. For seven weeks he lay in bed recuperating. During this time, he began reading spiritual books and accounts of the exploits of Dominic and Francis. In one book by a Cistercian monk, the spiritual life was conceived as one of holy chivalry; the idea fascinated Iñigo. During his convalescence he received spiritual visions, so that by the time he recuperated, he had resolved to live a life of austerity to do penance for his sins. In February 1522, Iñigo bade farewell to his family and went to Montserrat, a pilgrimage site in northeastern Spain. He spent three days confessing his life sins, then hung his sword and dagger near the statue of the Virgin Mary to symbolize his break with his old life. He donned sack cloth and walked to Manresa, a town 30 miles from Barcelona, to pass the decisive months of his career (from March 1522 to mid-February 1523). He lived as a beggar, ate and drank sparingly, scourged himself, and for a time neither trimmed his tangled hair nor cut his nails. He attended Mass daily and spent seven hours a day in prayer, often in a cave outside Manresa. While sitting one day by the Cardoner River, "the eyes of his understanding began to open," he later wrote, referring to himself in the third person, "and, without seeing any vision, he understood and knew many things, as well spiritual things as things of the faith." At Manresa, he sketched the fundamentals of his little book Spiritual Exercises. (Christianity Today International)