Monday 6 March 2023

Novena -- Thanksgiving for Housing

Holy House at the Shrine of 
Our Lady of Walsingham, England

We are thankful to report that Jane and I (Fr. John)  have found rental housing in a very central location on Bloor Street East, Toronto. 

This will allow Jane and me to continue working over the coming year as we move into retirement. By the grace of God, in May 2023 I begin my 72nd year after completing 10 years of service to the OCSP at St. Thomas More,  Toronto.  

Thank you for joining in prayer with the Novena to St. Joseph, Patron Saint of Canada and of those in need of housing. 

The Novena continues from March 10 to 19 (see text below).  God's grace has been apparent from the outset and, indeed, has anticipated the nine days of the novena providing housing for us in a truly blessed way.

Saint Joseph and Our Lady of Walsingham, pray for us.


Wednesday 28 December 2022

Novena for Housing

NOVENA TO SAINT JOSEPH  March 10 to 19

 

An old and beautiful invocation of the prayers of Saint Joseph is traditionally prayed for nine days before the Feast of Saint Joseph, starting on March 10. It is found in many places. The full text was released in 1950 with the Imprimatur of the Bishop of Pittsburgh, Hugh C. Boyle.

 

Here is an abbreviated and edited form of the prayer.  

 

Saint Joseph, whose protection is so great, so strong, so prompt before the throne of God, we place in you all our interests and desires.

Saint Joseph, assist us by your powerful intercession, and obtain for us from your Divine Son all spiritual blessings, through Jesus Christ, our Lord; so that, having engaged here below your heavenly power, we may offer thanksgiving and homage to the most Loving of Fathers.

O Saint Joseph, we never weary contemplating you and Jesus asleep in your arms. 

Saint Joseph, Patron of Canada and of departed souls – pray for us. (Mention your intention) Amen.

 

Conclude the novena with Hail Mary, Our Father and Glory be.




HOLY HOUSE,
WALSINGHAM, NORFOLK

Monday 12 December 2022

CHRISTMAS 2022 -- EPIPHANY 2023




ADVENT  LESSONS  AND  CAROLS 
WITH  BENEDICTION  OF 
THE  BLESSED  SACRAMENT 
Saturday, December 17 at 7:00 p.m.
  

CHRISTMAS  EVE 
Saturday, December 24 
Sung Mass
5:00 p.m.



CHRISTMAS   DAY
Sunday, December 25
Sung Mass
12:30 noon

A.D.  2023

MARY, THE HOLY MOTHER OF GOD
Sunday, January 1
Sung Mass
12:30 noon



EPIPHANY OF  THE LORD
Sunday, January 8
Sung Mass 
12:30 noon



Monday 14 November 2022

REMEMBRANCE SUNDAY HOMILY -- Nov, 2021 STM TORONTO

REMEMBRANCE SUNDAY                               2021  STM TORONTO

 

Joseph Tomelty, the late Irish playwright in his play All Soul’s Night, tells a haunting story. Set in 1949, in the fictitious village of Assagh on the shores of a County Down lough, it tells the story of a family trying to get by, in the midst of strife and tragedy. On All Soul’s night they become aware of the souls of their relatives asking for prayers. 

 

The soul of a young fisherman killed tragically at sea chastises his family for neglecting to pray for him while he was at sea and even since he has died. A quote from the play is found on the playwright’s tomb stone: “Pray for the dead that they may be loosed from their sins; pray for the living that they may be loosed from their greed.”  What Tomalty refers to is that sense that artists and poets have expressed down the generations at this time of year, that somehow the veil is thinner. 

 

This time of year with All Saints, All Souls and Remembrance Day reminds us of our own mortality and that we need to pray for the Dead as well as the Living. Fr. Faber, a 19th C. Oratorian refers to a brother: “One half from earth, one half from heaven, Was that mysterious blessing given; Just as his life had been One half in heaven, one half on earth, Of earthly toil and heavenly mirth, A wondrous woven scene!”

 

This needs to be the case that for each of us, for every Catholic Christian, that our life must be marked by the character of heaven, must be shaped by the priorities of the greater city, the heavenly Jerusalem. 

 

At the heart of all is an overriding theme: the spiritual closeness to the departed, of the economy of prayer for all the children of God. In mutual prayer we trade freely in the benefits of that place where we hope to spend eternity – Jerusalem the Golden. In charity we pray for those who have died, and for those still alive that we may enjoy the vision of God together on that other shore.  And today we remember and pray for all those who gave their lives for God and the freedom of others.

 

The veil is always very thin, and our loved ones who have gone before us to that other shore are still very close to us. We pray for the dead that they might be loosed from the effects of sin, and we must pray for one another that we might lose those sometimes-greedy attachments to the things that cannot bring us to that City of Light. With God’s help, may our lives continue to be a “wondrous woven scene”, shot through with prayer for the “quick and the dead” in the gilded light of Jerusalem the Golden with the threads which will, at the last, lead us home.

Saturday 12 November 2022

Remembrance Sunday

   Sung Requiem Mass 

12:30 Sunday, Nov. 13.  

Refreshments to follow.

Tuesday 1 November 2022

HOMILY – Funeral for Antoinette Echlin Buckle and reflection on "The Greatest Generation".

 We heard at the beginning of this liturgy St. Paul’s reflection upon the love of God amidst the many changes and challenges of human life.

 

St. Paul says: “I AM persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other created thing, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.” Romans 8:38, 39.

 

Antoinette (Tony) Echlin was born in 1927, the last year of birth for those who would come to be known as “the Greatest Generation.” (1901 – 1927). They were the greatest generation not in the sense of being superior to all others but because, collectively, they embodied, in a unique way, the virtues which humanity is enabled to reflect by the grace and love of God. 

 

These virtues enable what we see in so many individuals of that generation: sacrifice for others, generosity of spirit reflected in service to humanity, devotion and humility before God and love for God and country. 

 

In an age that seems pathologically focused on the individual and the right to define one’s self in all circumstances, those who endured the Great Depression and WW II reflect the virtues that we stand so much in need of today.

 

Though imperfect, like all humans, still, those of Tony’s generation collectively maintained the importance of the Theological Virtues of Faith, Hope and Charity along with the Cardinal Virtues: Prudence, Justice, Courage and Moderation.

 

As in these days we gather to pay tribute to Her Late Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II, we know that Tony would be amongst the first to celebrate the Queen’s leadership and gallantry from the time of their youth. The Queen was one year older than Tony.  



While the youth of Canada lined up to serve in the armed forces and the many duties at home and abroad, Tony, in her own way, participated in the war effort and indeed was one who shared in sacrifice as she lost her young fiancĂ©e, Ashton, an RCAF casualty in Europe. 

 

In that great conflict every person was called to duty, something epitomized by our late Queen throughout the war and for 70 years on the Throne.

 

Like so many, my own mother and father served in the Canadian Forces. On a lighter note, people would laugh when we noted that Corporal Windsor (aka Princess Elizabeth) served near Slough, where Mum was lieutenant in charge of the post office. If they had met on duty, Princess Elizabeth would have had to salute Lt. Marjorie Hennessy. Of course, Mum would be quick to point out, and Tony would agree, that Marjorie would then curtsey before the Princess – to keep things in proper perspective.

 

So, as hundreds of thousands file by the catafalque in the great hall of Westminster Palace, Tony and those loyal souls of her generation give thanks for being united in bonds of mutual affection for their Queen and in thanksgiving for the ordered liberty we share. 

 

Tony always shared with many in the work of charities, small and large make our common life such a remarkable achievement in history – a history which Tony was always glad to remember and participate in with her work at Sick Kids Hospital Play Park; her long service in the Sunday School at St. Paul’s Church and community events at Moredale. 

 

Having read widely in the history of Great Britain and the Commonwealth Tony understood that all these activities were valuable in themselves as well as being models of how to behave. She agreed with Edmund Burke that we are bound in a mutual society of those who have died, of the living and of those yet to come.

 

Continuity and tradition were important to Tony not simply because of the age in which she lived but for the heritage passed on to her children and grandchildren. And recently, she was so pleased to see and hold in her arms, a great grandson, Josiah.

 

….“neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other created thing, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”

Sunday 11 September 2022

Days of Mourning for her late Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II

Until the official period of mourning is over after the state funeral:

  • If a Mass intention is free, the Mass should be offered for the repose of the Queen's soul. 
  • She should be remembered in all public devotions - The Litany(p. 1061) should be used during a public holy hour in place of other devotions.
  • Masses on days that are memorials or optional memorials will be the Requiem Mass found on page 1024. She is named in the propers as: "... thy handmaid Elizabeth". 
  • The Dies irae is always recited at a requiem per our customs.
  • The readings are the regular readings of the day.
  • Our Lady of Sorrows is an exception to the displacement; it is still observed.
  • After all Masses, including the Sunday Mass, up to and including the day of her state funeral, the attached versicles and responses with collect from the breviary will be said or sung instead of any other prayers after the last Gospel and before the final hymn.

V/. O Lord, show thy mercy upon us.
R/. And grant us thy salvation.
V/. O Lord save the King.
R/. And make thy chosen people joyful.
V/. Endue thy ministers with righteousness.
R/. And bless thine inheritance.
V/. Give peace in our time, O Lord.
R/. Because there is none other that fighteth for us.
V/. O God, make clean our hearts within us.
R/. And take not thy Holy Spirit from us.
Let us pray. Almighty God, the fountain of all goodness, we humbly beseech thee to bless our Sovereign Lord King Charles, the parliaments in all his dominions, and all who are set in authority under him; that they may order all things in wisdom, righteousness, and peace, to the honour of thy holy name, and the good of thy Church and people; through Christ our Lord.
R/. Amen.