united by our faith, open to transformation, growing spiritually
and reaching out to love and to serve others as Jesus taught us.
A Word from our Pastor
Sincere thanks again for all who made the ‘Irene Crosetti Ravioli Dinner’ amazingly successful. A record number of people attended, above pre-Covid numbers and people just wanted to stay and enjoy the good food, company, and interactions. I said it is a foretaste of the ‘heavenly banquet’ at Mass and I am sure Irene has blessed it to be that way.
Even though I thanked a few by name last week, I again thank Peter Nuti and his wonderful crew who shopped, prepared the gravy/sauce and mixed the salad, to Luigi Bonacini who procured the great desert treats, members of the Men’s Club who kept the beverages flowing, members of the sixth, seventh and eight grade class as well as members of the Confirmation program who helped deliver the food and clean up at the end. Special thanks to Keri Nims who coordinated the whole event and Chris and Jenny Bruni for doing everything else, even pots and pans when everyone else had left late on Saturday night. It was a great event!
Our patron these hundred years is St. Theresa of the Child Jesus. We are working on some retreat talks based on her life and the wisdom she shared that has encouraged, challenged and given purpose to millions in the world. St. Theresa did not preach to multitudes, nor travel as a missionary to a foreign land as she wanted. She allowed God to love her in a small convent in France and achieved heaven in small ways that give us a path toward our goal of being in heaven one day.
On Saturday, March 29 a ‘workday’ is scheduled to give one and all an opportunity to do ‘a couple of little things’ that will enrich the whole parish as we care for the site where we come together to pray, celebrate the sacraments, learn about life and the life to come, enjoy fun and good food together and ultimately give glory and honor to God.
Inspired by St. Theresa, I invite you to sign up for an hour, or two or three on the 29th. It isn’t just about saving the parish budget a few bucks (which is always a good idea), but about being together and honoring and respecting those who a hundred years ago started with a mandate to become a parish and have succeeded to our generation and generations to come. Please sign up at https://sttheresaoakland.org/about-us/workday.
St. Theresa demonstrated in her life that no task is too small and no effort unnoticed by God that honors God and honors those who have gone before us that allows us now to use the gifts of their labors and generosity. I look forward to seeing you on that day in my work clothes and with tools to get a few tasks done.
Catholic Relief Services reminds us every Lent through the ‘rice bowl’ program that we can make a difference with eating a simpler meal so that those who have so little can have something more. I encourage you to look online at the amazing work that CRS does in our world and to again become part of the efforts.
Maybe by the time you read this, a number of our fellow parishioners will have returned to San Diego after building a house for a family through the Corazon organization. This is the twentieth year that people from our parish have taken up this task with and without diocesan support. I want to publicly thank all who supported these efforts again. Your generosity really has made a difference for a family that will change the course of their lives in a good way. May St. Theresa intercede and get everyone home safe again!
St. Theresa Parish Lenten Opportunities
Daily Reflection Booklets
Lenten Retreat
Sunday's, April 6 & 13
10:15 am in the church
Fr. Ngema, Lenten Bible Journey
Enriching our Lenten Observance with Insights from Esther
We have firmly set Saturday, March 29 as the ‘parish workday’, Please sign up for an hour, or two hours or three with the 9am start and 2pm conclusion. Bring your garden clippers, wheelbarrow, work gloves and join a great team who will replenish the school garden, make the windows clean again in the meeting rooms, and re-secure sandbags that keep the hall from flooding and other tasks. There is something for anyone who shows up, and we need a count so we can order enough water, beverages, and a great Mexican style lunch for all who work.
“It is the historic policy of the United States to respond to the urgent needs of persons subject to persecution in their homelands. . . . Congress further declares that it is the policy of the United States to encourage all nations to provide assistance and resettlement opportunities to refugees to the fullest extent possible.”
These opening lines of the Refugee Act of 1980—the law creating the statutory authority for the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program (USRAP)—communicates the importance of responding to the needs of those forced to flee their homes because they are persecuted on the basis of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion. Carrying out the Gospel’s mandate to care for the “least of these” (Mt. 25:31-46), the Catholic Church has served refugees in the United States since well before USRAP’s creation. Learn more about USRAP and the Catholic Church.
Today, no refugees are being resettled through USRAP. This ban impacts thousands of refugees who had already been fully processed, undergone extensive security checks, and approved for refugee status by the federal government while outside of the United States. This includes many persecuted Christians, as well as Afghans who had been approved for special immigrant visas because of the assistance they provided to the U.S. mission and U.S. service members in Afghanistan.
The indefinite suspension of USRAP is the result of an executive order signed by President Donald Trump on January 20. The order requires the Secretary of Homeland Security, in consultation with the Secretary of State, to submit a report by April 20, 2025, regarding whether refugee resettlement is in the national interest. However, the order leaves the decision about whether to resume refugee resettlement to the President alone, without any timeline stated for that decision.
On January 24, the State Department issued suspension notices to domestic resettlement agencies, including the USCCB, impacting their ability to carry out services under the Reception and Placement (R&P) Program. The R&P Program provides crucial assistance to refugees and Afghan special immigrant visa holders during their first three months in the United States to support their successful integration and help them to achieve self-sufficiency as quickly as possible. Services provided through the R&P Program include help finding initial housing, securing employment, enrolling children in school, scheduling medical appointments, and English language classes.
The chairman of the USCCB’s Committee on Migration, Bishop Mark Seitz of El Paso, addressed the suspension of USRAP on January 22, stating: “Indefinitely halting refugee resettlement is unmerited, as it is already proven to be one of the most secure legal pathways to the United States.”
Ask your members of Congress to lift up their voice in support of upholding our nation’s bipartisan legacy of refugee resettlement.
Send this Message to Congress
Support Refugee Resettlement to Protect the Persecuted
As a Catholic and your constituent, I urge you to engage with the Administration to resume the resettlement of refugees and Afghan special immigrant visa (SIV) holders.
Being a place of refuge for those fleeing oppression, including Christians and other people persecuted for their faith, is fundamentally American. The U.S. Refugee Admissions Program has safely and effectively fostered this, with strong bipartisan support, for almost 45 years.
The President’s recent executive order providing for the indefinite suspension of refugee admissions leaves thousands of thoroughly vetted people, who in some cases have waited years to experience freedom, in a state of grave uncertainty. Stop-work orders issued to domestic resettlement agencies also threaten the support promised to recently arrived refugees and SIV holders, undermining their prospects of self-sufficiency.
Protection of people fleeing persecution and those who risked their lives to support our country is not only in the national interest but a moral responsibility. Please urge the Administration to immediately resume refugee resettlement.
Click the link below to log in and send your message:
Join the Social Justice committee as we pray and meditate on the Themes from Catholic Social Teaching **
Life and dignity of the human person: The Catholic Church proclaims that human life is sacred and that the dignity of the human person is the foundation of a moral vision for society.
Option for the poor and vulnerable: A basic moral test is how our most vulnerable members are faring. We must put the needs of the poor and vulnerable first.
Solidarity: We are one human family whatever our national, racial, ethnic, economic, and ideological differences. Loving our neighbor is important. We are called to be peacemakers. We must promote peace in a world surrounded by violence and conflict.
CRS (Catholic Relief Services) RICE BOWL –for 50 years has supported our global family experiencing hunger.
Catholic Relief Services has been one of the top recipients of funds from USAID.
USAID cuts this year would amount to one of the biggest blows ever to CRS, a relief group founded in 1943 by Catholic bishops in the United States to serve World War II survivors in Europe. CRS reaches more than 200 million people in 121 countries on five continents.
Pope Francis says, “The scandal of the millions of people who suffer from hunger should not paralyze us, but rather move us to act—everyone, individuals, institutions, governments—to eliminate this injustice.”
Eating a simple meal during Lent helps us reflect on the hunger that many people face worldwide.
PLEASE look at your RICE BOWL and look carefully at all CRS does.
PLEASE donate this year.
**Note text is drawn from the US Conference of Catholic Bishops and CRS
We have been invited to join Corpus Christi, in reading – All is Grace: A Biography of Dorothy Day by Jim Forest from now thru the month of March. Stay tuned for a gathering at the end of March to discuss this book; it will be sponsored by Corpus Christi’s Living Our Faith Group.
Stay tuned for more happenings. Peace from The Social Justice Committee
Heat in the church
We, were able to get the heater running at 20% capacity, so there is some heat in the church. So please bundle up when you attend Mass.
March 19th
Joseph Hebert
Director of Music Ministry,
Corpus Christi Church
Spiritual Reflection, A Melody of Hope
WOMEN IN GOD’S SPIRIT (WINGS)
WINGS is a group of women from many parishes who seek to deepen their faith and grow in their relationship with God and one another. Through prayer, thought-provoking presentations on a variety of subjects, and small group faith-sharing and discussion of how the Spirit is working in their lives, women journey together. The theme for this year is Living in Hope. The Fall Season, will focus on spirituality
Gatherings are held on Wednesdays in the Meeting Rooms from 9:00 to 11:15. All are welcome. For more information, contact Dee McDonough at deesigns@comcast.net .
Reception of the Precious Blood
The reception of the Precious Blood guideline from Bishop Barber, dated May 15, 2023 states; "Other than the priest, no communicant may ever dip the Sacred Host into the chalice to communicate himself."
Text “GIVE” to the number above to receive a link to our online giving page.
You can use our online giving platform to deepen your commitment to the church and the ministries you care about most. Your recurring gifts will sustain our mission month after month. You will also help our parish by cutting costs for envelopes and paper, and allowing our staff to spend less time processing cash and checks and more time on ministries.
Thank you for your continued support of St. Theresa.
You may also use Online Giving for Second Collections.
Our Parish SVdP Conference meets bimonthly, every third Saturday at 9:30am. If interested in learning more about our Conference’s work, contact Judy Bojorquez at jtsbojorquez@yahoo.com with any general questions. Call Greg Govan at 510-547-0911 if you have a specific question.
Please consider volunteering for one of our Liturgical ministries. Liturgy is the work of the people and we need your assistance.
What is your gift, passion, what do you really like to do? Do you like to read, talk with people, serve people, work behind the scenes, electronics? Turn that passion into a ministry, there is something for everyone. Prayerfully consider one of the following ministries.
Please remember in your prayers all those who are ill especially:
Matt Mercier, Heidi Parmelee, Dolores Gomez, Alegria Hipolito, Betty Wharton, Juanita Estrella, Olga Lamberti, Wendy Parmelee, Roger Baylocq, Susan Springer, Wendy Jones, Orlanda Gonzalez, Kevin Chapman, Diane Cerille, Tom Wilberding, Shirley Roberts, Danny Ramos, Mark Leonard, Christopher Rodriguez, Maryanne Walsh, Rhonda Santeen, John Whatley, Nancy Coyne, Kevin Stallone, Della Spinelli, Jeanne Cuttitta, Susan Buller, Ann Springer, Guy Wallace, Ray Bertolotti, William McCarthy, Cindy Crimmins, Fred & Lidia Loupy, Rebecca Rogers, Kathleen Guevara, Clarence Robinson, Armando Diaz de Leon, Fr. Ron Schmidt, Laura Jones, Bonnie & John Bouey, Susan Rubio, Fr. Paul Schmidt, Marley Malone, Isabella Guillot Williams, Ann Kirkman, Hal Lauth, Phil Stover, Joey Smith, Raymond Buckley, Jr., Norma Ninalga, Betty Jo Olson, Jennifer Walwark, Greg Govan, Anita Lim, Marilyn McCabe, Helen Lightner-Smith, Steve Lauth, Mary Malloy, Peter Cuttitta, James Lang, John Donovan, Mary & Leo Martinez, Sr., James Spalding, Tiffany Converse, Adrian McEvilly, Joan Marchi, Diana Nelson Curtis, Charlie Schnellbacher, Theresa Joyce, Maureen Carver, Ernestine Pernecco, Vince Nims, Barrett Baker, Rick Fama, Eleanor Ceccarelli, Maureen Querio, Karin Milliman, Lois Johnson, Antoinette Tamburrino, Anne Marie Roseme.
St. Theresa Parish Online Prayer Request
FOR THE SICK OR RECENTLY DECEASED
You can submit names for the Prayers of the Faithful (Prayers for the Sick or Recently Deceased) online. Please complete the form, and their name(s) will be added to the weekly Flocknote, bulletin and The Prayers of the Faithful at the weekend Masses.
Safe Environment Training for Parish & School Volunteers
It is that time of year when notices of expiring Virtus training will be arriving in your email. Please uuse the link in the email to lob into Virtus and take the training that have been assigned. Training must be renewed every three years.
To renew or register for the first time, click on the link in your email or go to https://www.virtusonline.org or click on the link in the upper right corner of the parish website sttheresaoakland.org.
Please remember that in order to volunteer at the parish or school in any capacity (Lector, Eucharistic Minister, Catechist, Choir Member, St. Vincent de Paul, Legion of Mary, CYO etc.), you must complete the training.
This was sent to a parishioner using another parishioners name as the sender in an attempt to obtain the parishes account information.
What's the current available balance in the account? And do we have Zelle or Venmo Linked with our bank account? Also, You need to process the payment immediately to the vendor for our Website Upgrade . Kindly get back to me Asap.
A number of people have once again received phony emails and texts from Fr. Bob and/or our principal Alicia Ortegon asking for gifts cards. If you receive an email from either of them requesting help with gifts, gift cards, money ..... PLEASE IGNORE and DELETE. It's a scam! They will never request help from you in this manner.