Prayer for Christ Church
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Almighty and everliving God, ruler of all things in heaven and earth, hear our prayers for Christ Church Parish. Strengthen the faithful, arouse the careless, and restore the penitent. Grant us all things necessary for our common life, and bring us all to be of one heart and mind within thy holy Church; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
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Forward the Angelus!
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Remember to forward the Angelus to your friends and family.
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John Mason Neale, Priest August 7, 2014
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Planning Meeting for Blessing of the Firetrucks
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A planning meeting is scheduled for tonight, August 7 at 7:00 to confirm plans for this year's event. There's plenty still to do, so please plant to attend if you can. The meeting will be held at 106 Prince St. If you'd like to help but can't attend, please call Kate Williamson at 856-577-1334.
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Joint Parish Picnic
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Christ Church Bordentown and St. Mary's Burlington are getting together to share our faith and some great times! St. Mary's is hosting the picnic, which begins with a Mass at 6pm. Bring a lawn chair and a dish to share. A sign up sheet has been posted on the board outside of the parish office.
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The Blessing of the Firetrucks
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Saturday, September 6, 4:30pm
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Thirsty Thursdays for Bordentown's Bravest
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Christ Church has partnered with the Farnsworth House to raise money for our city's fire companies. Come out to the Farnsworth House on Thursday's from 5pm to 10pm, and $1 from any beverage purchase (even coffee and other soft drinks) will go to Consolidated Fire Association and Hope Hose Humane.
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Bordentown Farmers' Market
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Wednesdays, 3pm at Carslake
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Ushers Needed For the Blessing of the Firetrucks
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We're expecting our biggest crowd yet for this year's Blessing of the Fire Trucks, and we're expecting Bishop Stokes to attend as well, so we'll need four ushers to welcome everyone to Mass and to assist those who may need help finding their way around the parish house. Ushers will need to arrive no later than 5:00. If you're able to serve, please contact the Parish Office.
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NYC 9/11 Memorial & Museum Trip
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Christ Church is sponsoring a bus trip to New York City to visit the 911 Memorial and museum on Saturday, October 18, 2014. There are 47 seats available at a cost of $100 each. This cost includes the bus, the museum entrance fee, and lunch at Bubba Gumps, Times Square. A $50 deposit will be required when initially reserving your seat. Please make checks payable to Christ Church, memo bus trip. The balance of $50 will be due by September 7, 2014. We look forward to your participation on October 18, 2014. For more information call the church office 298-2348, or Carol Hensley 298-4985.
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Electronic Giving
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The Parish has partnered with ADP to provide an alternative way to contribute to the parish through Electronic Giving. This benefits you by making your pledge and occasional giving fast and easy, and the parish will benefit from a reliable, more efficient and more convenient means to process contributions. To sign up for electronic giving, go to our website at www.ccbtown.com - click on the donation link, and you will be able to select from various opportunities to contribute to our parish and activities. If you have any questions regarding the new electronic giving service, please call the parish office at 298-2348.
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Upcoming Events
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Every Thursday, 5-10pm: Thirsty Thursdays for Bordentown's Bravest (Farnsworth House) August 1, 6pm-8pm: BHS Peach Social (Friends Meeting House) August 15-16: Bordentown Sidewalk Sale August 20-22: Hope Hose Humane Carnival (Retro Fitness) September 6, 4:30pm: The 7th Annual Blessing of the Firetrucks
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The Propers
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For Sunday, August 10
This Sunday is the Ninth Sunday after Pentecost
OT: Jonah 2:1-9
Psalm 29NT: Romans 9:1-5
Collect: Grant to us, Lord, we beseech thee, the spirit to think and do always such things as are right, that we, who cannot exist without thee, may by thee be enabled to live according to thy will; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
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Serving This Week
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For Sunday, August 10
Lectors: 5:30pm: Eliza Peterson 8am: Barbara Fusco 9:30am: Bill Collom & Anne Lyon
Ushers: 8am: Linda Voorhees & Jack Hartz 9:30am: Anne Lyon
Acolytes:8am: Wayne Voorhees & Richard Trout
9:30am: Mary Ellen Carty, Andy Jones, Chris Neal, Eva Lundeen
Altar Guild: Preparation: Vinnie Stout Linens: Anne Lyon
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Quote of the Week
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"The Lord has a plan. We always think the plans are A, B, C and D, and everything is going to be perfect for us and it may not be that way, but it's still his plan." ~ Tony Dungy
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Church Schedule
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Saturday, 9 August :: The Vigil of the Ninth Sunday after Pentecost · 5:30 p.m. - Vigil Mass (Lady Chapel)
Sunday, 10 August :: The Ninth Sunday after Pentecost · 8:00 a.m. - Low Mass (Church)
· 9:30 a.m. - Sung Mass (Church)
· 10:30 a.m. - Lemonade on the Lawn (Lychgate)
· 7:00 p.m. - A.A. Meeting (Parish Hall)
Monday, 11 August :: Clare, Abbess at Assisi, 1253· Church Office Closed
Tuesday, 12 August :: Hippolytus, Priest & Martyr, 235 · Church Office Closed
Wednesday, 13 August :: Jeremy Taylor, Bishop of Down, Connor, and Dromore, 1667· 6:00 p.m. - Tai Chi (Parish Hall) · 8:00 p.m. - A.A. Meeting (Parish Hall)
Thursday, 14 August :: Jonathan Myrick Daniels, Seminarian & Martyr, 1965 · 10:00 a.m. - Low Mass (Lady Chapel) Friday, 15 August :: The Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary · 10:00 a.m. - Low Mass (Lady Chapel) Saturday, 16 August :: The Vigil of the Tenth Sunday after Pentecost (Stephen of Hungary, King & Confessor, 1038 · 5:30 p.m. - Vigil Mass (Lady Chapel)
Sunday, 17 August :: The Tenth Sunday after Pentecost · 8:00 a.m. - Low Mass (Church)
· 9:30 a.m. - Sung Mass (Church)
· 10:30 a.m. - Lemonade on the Lawn (Lychgate)
· 7:00 p.m. - A.A. Meeting (Parish Hall)
The Parish Office hours are Tuesday-Friday from 8:30am to 2:00pm.
Fr. Matt is available during normal business hours and most evenings. Please don't hesitate to call or stop by the church.
Confession is available by appointment. Please call the Church Office or Fr. Matt to schedule a time.
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This Week in Church History
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July 30, 1718: William Penn, founder of Pennsylvania as a colony for Quakers to enjoy religious liberty, dies.
July 30, 1775: The U.S. Army founds its chaplaincy, making it the Army's oldest division after the infantry.
July 30, 1956: In God We Trust becomes the official motto of the United States by an act of Congress signed by President Dwight D. Eisenhower.
July 31, 1556: Ignatius of Loyola, Spanish Roman Catholic reformer and founder of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits), dies in Rome. During his life he saw 1,000 men join his order and 100 colleges and seminaries established. Apart from his order, Ignatius' greatest legacy he left in his Spiritual Exercises, a devotional guide that has been in constant use for over 460 years.
July 31, 1566: Bartolome de las Casas, the first Spaniard ordained in the New World and "Father to the Indians," dies in Spain. He wrote several books detailing the horrors committed upon Native Americans by the Spanish settlers, and argued for the humanity of the Indians against many of his countrymen who had described them as children or subhuman.
July 31, 1966: After John Lennon proclaims the Beatles to be "more popular than Jesus," residents of Alabama burn the band's records and other products.
August 1, 1714: The "Schism Bill," which was intended to reestablish Catholicism in England, dies with its chief supporter, Queen Anne. For years, Dissenters regarded the date as a day of deliverance, the "Protestant Passover."
August 1, 1779: Francis Scott Key, author of "The Star-Spangled Banner" and a devout Episcopalian who helped establish the American Sunday School Union, is born.
August 2, 1100: William the Conqueror's son and successor Rufus, a wicked king who delighted in torture, seizing church property, and blasphemy, is mysteriously killed while hunting by an arrow that flew out of nowhere. No one mourned, and England took his eternal damnation for granted.
August 5, 642: Oswald, the king of Northumbria who first began the official establishment of Christianity in England, is "martyred" in battle against the pagan Penda of Mercia. Converted at Iona, Scotland, Oswald erected a wooden cross before one of his earliest battles and commanded his soldiers to pray. When he defeated the English king in that battle, Oswald commissioned the Irish monk Aidan to begain establishing Christianity.
August 5, 1570: Spanish Jesuits, intent on converting the Native Americans, arrive in Chesapeake Bay, Virginia. Six months later, Native Americans massacred the group, and the Jesuits ended their work in the region.
August 5, 1604: John Eliot, the "Apostle to American Indians," is baptized. He succeeded in converting over 3,600 Native American, publishing the Bay Psalm Book (the first book printed in America), and forming the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel.
--taken from Christianity Today
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Saint of the Week | |
St. Cajetan
Priest, 1547
In 1523, the Church was in sad shape. People could not get the spiritual nourishment they needed from the large numbers of uneducated and even immoral priests who took their money but returned nothing. When good priests and laypeople turned to the hierarchy for help, they found leaders at best apathetic and indifferent to their concerns.
How should a good Catholic respond to this situation? We all known how Luther and others responded -- by splitting away from the Catholic Church when their pleas went unheard.
Cajetan took a different route. Just as concerned as Luther was about what he observed in the Church, he went to Rome in 1523 -- not to talk to the pope or the hierarchy but to consult with members of a confraternity called the Oratory of the Divine Love. When he had first come to Rome many years before, he had felt called to some unknown great work there. A few years later he returned to his hometown of Vicenza -- his great work seemingly unrealized. He had however studied for the priesthood and been ordained and helped re-establish a faded confraternity whose aims were promoting God's glory and the welfare of souls.
In the years he had been gone from Rome, he had founded another Oratory in his home town and Verona where he had promoted spiritual life and care for the poor and sick not only with words but with his heroic example. He told his brothers, "In this oratory we try to serve God by worship; in our hospital we may say that we actually find him." But none of the horrors he saw in the hospitals of the incurables depressed him as much as the wickedness he saw everywhere he looked.
In his former confraternity, he found other clergy who felt the way he did. They didn't want to split off from the Church, they wanted to restore it. So they decided to form an order based on the lives of the apostles in the hopes that these lives would inspire them and others to live holy lives devoted to Jesus. In order to accomplish this they would focus on moral lives, sacred studies, preaching and pastoral care, helping the sick, and other solid foundations of pastoral life. This new order was known as Theatines Clerks Regular because it was an order of the regular clergy and because a bishop known as Theatensis was their first superior general (although Cajetan is considered the founder).
Not surprisingly, they didn't find thousands of formerly greedy and licentious priests flocking to their door. But Cajetan and the others persevered even in the face of open opposition from laity and clergy who didn't want to reform. It was his holy example that converted many as well as his preaching.
Worn out by the troubles he saw in his Church and his home, Cajetan fell ill. When doctors tried to get him to rest on a softer bed then the boards he slept on, Cajetan answered, "My savior died on a cross. Let me died on wood at least." He died on August 7, 1547.
--Catholic Saints & Angels
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Parish Prayer List
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Of your charity, please pray for:
the sick: Paula Flesch, Bob Bernard, Alice Ward Carriger, Pat Temple, Danielle Morgan, Jai Autar, Emma Burris, Kelly Jones, Ardelle Zervous, Kelley Gilger, Lynn Ford, Heidi Kelly, Michael Slaper, Jim Tranter, Nancy Dix, Sister Gussie, Jennifer Vigh, Patty Beddia, Hailey Pfeiffer, Peggy Tunney, Jean Fithian, Gwen Boner, Nancy Biocco, Barbara Kianka, Lorraine Kunkel, Joseph Varga, Geobel Marin, Jane Humble, Michael Chahanovich, Anita Kronstadt, Gloria Law, Cheryl Leavers-Morrow, and Carol Redwood.
and those who have long term illnesses: Jean Weitzel, John Moscatiello, Mark Casais, Kevin Kintner, Earl Slaper, Arthur Jukes, Dixon Leavers, Robin Kintner, John McCoy, The Rt. Rev. George Councell, Karen Campbell Hillman, Amanda Howard, Robert Kelley, Carla Douglas, Stuart Shafer, Richard Cook, Ryan Murray, Lester Sickels, Justin McCafferty, Zachary McCafferty, Jeanine Walker, Kevin Kochie, Brianne Nicosia, Mario Batist, Treavor Curtis, Dean Curtis, Robert Ackerman, Paul Wesley Morrison, Bob Liberman, Kelly Bergen, Bill Yale, Hannah McNinch, Gabe Fresco, Fr. Ted Anderson, Norma Stirpe, Hayley Weber, Linda Sue Slone, R. Loraine Burke, Katherine Carter, Shawna Catarinicchia, Carol Weishoff, Patricia Dixon, Mackenzie Sutter, John Lobos and Daniel Applegate.
those in military service: Ben Skarzynski, USMC; Maxwell W. Warrack, USMC; Col Kelly Scott, USAF; Neil Gerrish, USNG; Abbygale Albert, USN, CSM John Seelhorst, USA, James F. Preto, USNG.
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St. John's Avalon
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Remember to pray for the parish and people of St. John's by the Sea in Avalon, on whose board sits our own Dave Mohr. Fr. Matt spends two weeks a year serving the people of St. John's. You can read about St. John's here: http://www.stjohnsavalon.org
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Sermon Blog | | Domine, non sum dignus
In case you missed it, couldn't hear it, or wish to send it to a friend, Father Matt's sermons can be found online at:
http://etsanabituranimamea.wordpress.com
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Posting in the Angelus | | Please let Fr. Matt know if you would like any announcements to be included in the weekly Angelus. Submissions must be made by Tuesday noon. |
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