Welcome and congratulations to our second grade students who make their First Holy Communion at the 5pm Mass! Girls and boys, you have studied diligently, attended Mass many times and practiced the prayers. Your questions have helped all of us recall the great gift the Eucharist is to sustain all of us on our journey of faith in each day of our lives. We have watched you come up on the Communion line and cross your arms over your chest and heart with respect. Today we are so happy that you will join us today and for the rest of your lives, every time you participate at Mass. May this process bring you and all of us closer to Jesus and each other as we walk this life to God’s kingdom one day.
I want to thank all who got us to this day. Mariela Kadow is our amazing second grade teacher and she has been very diligent in preparation for this day since the school year began this year. Keri Nims and our principal, Alicia Ortegon, have guided the special lessons leading up to this day. Rob Cakebread gave extra time to teaching our students the music we sing at Mass to help them and all to actively participate when we pray together. Special gratitude and thanks to the parents of our First Communicants. You chose to have them baptized and are the first teachers of the faith to them. Congratulations on your work and may the Lord help you to continue to foster this spiritual part of their lives each day so we may all rejoice one day in what Jesus has promised to his disciples.
Last year, we displayed the pictures of many who have gone before us in this parish who celebrated their First Communion here. Throughout our celebrations of being a parish for a hundred years, we treasure hundreds and thousands of moments that we are sure have brought us closer to the Lord and one another. A parish exists for that reason and the mission to bring Christ’s good news to our neighbors, friends, family, community, and world. This has taken shape in many ways throughout the two thousand years the Church has existed.
On Wednesday morning we woke up to news that the diocesan Mission Alignment Process a bishop had determined that thirteen of our eighty parishes will be closed. I refer to you read the actual letter making this announcement and some of the reasons that has caused these decisions to be made. (You may find it in our bulletin, Friday Flocknote and on the diocesan website.)
Several of our neighboring parishes are affected: Sacred Heart, St. Patrick’s, St. Augustine’s, and Our Lady of Lourdes are all fairly close to our parish location. If you know any parishioners that are affected, please reach out and contact them. Offer them your prayers and support and assure them they are welcome to join our parish community.
Change is never easy, especially the older we get. Even though our Church is growing nationally with the most recent census and reception of adults this past Easter, in our own diocese, where many Catholics once lived, now has much fewer and places to our East is bursting and that is just one of the many reasons for these decisions.
Let us commit ourselves to treasure our parish, recommit to keep it vitalized and supported and always on the watch to welcome and bring in the newcomer. I conclude with a few words the bishop used in his announcement this past week:
“Pope Francis again reminds us that we cannot be so burdened with the past that we cannot birth the future Church: “The parish is not an outdated institution; precisely because it possesses great flexibility, it can assume quite different contours depending on the openness and missionary creativity of the pastor and the community. While certainly not the only institution which evangelizes, if the parish proves capable of self-renewal and constant adaptivity, it continues to be ‘the Church living in the midst of the homes of her sons and daughters.’” (Evangelii Gaudium, The Joy of the Gospel, No. 28)