Easter Evangelization, It’s now Up to You!

Hopefully, you noticed the postcard we sent to every home in the parish this week as part of our Easter evangelization efforts. One was delivered to the rectory on Monday. As I have mentioned before, the mailing will hopefully scratch the surface of the hearts of fallen away Catholics and the un-churched. Each of us has to follow up on that by planting the seeds of faith in their hearts. This week invite five people who you know who aren’t coming to church to join you for Easter. Remember it takes an average of five invitations before a non-church going person will take up the invitation to come to church. Don’t get discouraged and keep trying. Each of us is the key to effective evangelization.

Smile You’re a Good Evangelizer

Oh, I could never be an evangelizer! Often I hear people make that claim. They equate evangelizing with standing on a soapbox and doing some Bible thumping. Evangelization is really much simpler. Last weekend I asked the congregation at several of the Masses if they could smile. Most people’s hands went up. I was very encouraged! The truth is that if you can smile, you can evangelize.

Last week I began a series of articles on evangelization. I told you I had found a list of 99 or more accurately 115 ways to evangelize. Then I asked you to be bold about sharing your faith. I told you about hearing sports talk radio hosts Michael Holley and Kirk Minihan talking about their practice of the Catholic faith on their radio program. It was a good example of them being bold in the sharing of their faith.

Another simple way to evangelize is to smile. When we have a ready smile on our face, we are much more attractive. It makes us happy and other people happy, too. It is a great witness to Christian joy. Too often Christians are portrayed as dower and joyless. That is a stereotype we can disprove if we are joyful and have a ready smile.

You can be a Christian Evangelizer by becoming an Easter Hospitality Volunteers. Here is a form to volunteer to help at one of the Easter Masses.

 

Mass Times & Parish Information For St. Patrick’s Church & St. Anthony’s Chapel…

UPCOMING PARISH INFORMATION

Masses for Holy Days of Obligation are celebrated as published in the Parish Bulletin.

Reconciliation (Confession) will be held in the CHURCH. They will be offered on Saturday afternoons from 3:00 PM – 3:30 PM. Please call for an appointment if you cannot attend on Saturday afternoons.

Please Note: Our 10 AM Mass Will Continue To Be STREAMED LIVE VIA FACEBOOK OR OUR WEBSITE https://www.facebook.com/stpatswareham/
Or  http://stpatrickswareham.org/)  

Please Note:

St. Vincent DePaul Food Pantry—The St. Vincent dePaul Society has made the difficult decision to permanently close its food pantry on December 27 after 12 years of dedicated service to the Wareham community. We will continue to deliver parishioner food donations to nearby pantries as well as make emergency deliveries if necessary. Though the pantry will close, the St. Vincent dePaul Society will continue to hold true to its core mission of promoting a culture of love by serving those in need. We will continue to provide vetted support for many disadvantaged people in emergency financial situations. Your generous monetary donations prevent people from losing their homes and electricity and fuel shutoffs. It also provides emergency care for fire victims, assistance due to medical challenges and so much more. Year-to-date over 70 families have been helped and there have been multiple emergency food drops. We pray that you will continue to support our organization and our efforts to serve our local Wareham community.   

Sacraments

We encounter the living Christ in the Sacraments. The Sacraments are visible signs that cause invisible grace. In other words, an action, perceivable by our senses is performed, and through this action God grants participation in His life. The Lord instituted seven Sacraments in order to continue His saving presence in the world. The Sacraments actually do something to us because through them we meet God. This union with God through the Sacraments is the highest form of worship and will lead to salvation. In the end, the happiness of heaven is union with God. The union with God achieved through the Sacraments offers a foretaste of the perfect union with God in heaven.

The Sacraments are divided into three categories:

The Sacraments of Initiation are Baptism, Confirmation, and Holy Eucharist.

The Sacraments of Healing are Reconciliation (Penance) and Anointing of the Sick.

The Sacraments of Service to Others are Holy Orders and Holy Matrimony.

Understanding of Being a Catholic:

Would you like to test your understanding of what it means to be Catholic? Click here:https://www.catholicfaithinventory.org/exploreyourfaith/seeker_signup.php

Online Giving

Pope John Paul II said: “We cannot stand idly by, enjoying our own riches and freedom if, in any place the Lazarus of the twentieth century [or any century] stands at our doors.”

1 Timothy 6:17-19 states:

Command those who are rich in this present world not to be arrogant nor to put their hope in wealth, which is so uncertain, but to put their hope in God, who richly provides us with everything for our enjoyment. Command them to do good, to be rich in good deeds, and to be generous and willing to share. In this way they will lay up treasure for themselves as a firm foundation for the coming age, so that they may take hold of the life that is truly life.

Malachi 3:6-10 warns:

I the Lord do not change. So you, O descendant of Jacob, are not destroyed. Ever since the time of your forefathers you have turned away from my decrees and have not kept them. Return to me, and I will return to you,’ says the Lord Almighty.

But you ask, ‘How are we to return?’

Will a man rob God? Yet you rob me.

But you ask, ‘How do we rob you?’

In tithes and offerings. You are under a curse–the whole nation of you–because you are robbing me. Bring the whole tithe into the storehouse, that there may be food in my house. Test me in this,’ says the Lord Almighty, ‘and see if I will not throw open the floodgates of heaven and pour out so much blessing that you will not have room enough for it.

Four Principles of Tithing:

a) Give back to the Lord in gratitude a portion of everything God has given, whether through paychecks, dividends, unexpected windfalls, Social Security payments, allowances or gifts.

b) See the tithe as a sacrifice, a donation that seems almost more than affordable, an offering that “makes holy” (the literal meaning of the word “sacrifice”) all the efforts and earnings of the past month.

c) Use whatever means the Local Community may use to identify your tithe as a donation from you, thus both manifesting to others your commitment to regular support of the Community and actively participating in the collection as part of the Community’s Conventual Mass worship.

d) Consider the biblical norm of tithing in determining the amount of your sacrificial gift. The biblical norm was ten (10) percent of one’s income. The specific amounts or percentages recommended for members shall be discussed in the General Directory.

Tithing in Scripture

Tithing is rooted in the Hebrew Scriptures, or Old Testament, reinforced by the New Testament teaching on generosity and exemplified in the lives of the early Christians.

The following passages from each of those sources illustrate this Scriptural challenge of tithing and generous giving:

Old Testament: “Glorify the Lord generously, and do not stint the first fruits of your hands. With every gift show a cheerful face, and dedicate your tithe with gladness.” – Sirach 35:8-9 (RSVCE)

New Testament: “In everything I did, I showed you that by this kind of hard work we must help the weak, remembering the words the Lord Jesus himself said: ‘It is more blessed to give than to receive.’” – Acts 20:35

Early Christians: “All the believers were together and had everything in common. Selling their possessions and goods, they gave to anyone as he had need.” – Acts 2:44-45

Additional passages on the biblical basis of tithing are: Dt 12:17-18; 14:22-29; 15:7-11; 26:1-15; Nm 18:21-32; Neh 10:36-40; 13:4-5, 10-14; Sir 35:1-10; Mt 25:44-46; Lk 6:24-25; 9:25; 16:13; 16:19-31; 18:25; Acts 2:42-45; 4:32-35; 2 Cor 8:2; 9:7; Jas 2:15-17.

Trusting God

Holy Scripture also promises that God will care for the needs of those who tithe and generously return a share of what the Lord has given them.

These verses exemplify this biblical summons to trust and the promise of our Creator’s providential support:

Old Testament: “I was young and now I am old, yet I have never seen the righteous forsaken or their children begging food.” – Ps 37:25

New Testament: “But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well. Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.” – Mt 6:33-24

Additional Scriptures on this call to trust are: Mal 3:10; Mt 6:19-34; Lk 12:22-32; 1 Tm 6:17-19.

Additional Principles of Tithing:

a) The word “tithe” orignally meant ten percent (10%). The “tithe,” however, is only a barometer or guideline to help determine one’s sacrificial giving. Some can and should offer more than a 10% tithe; others may have circumstances that warrant them paying less than a 10% tithe.

b) If a tithe (10%) is legitimately too much for one’s current budget, a member may begin with a lower percentage that will be both sacrificial and yet possible. Then the member may gradually raise the level of giving until the full tithe is reached. In this way brothers and sisters and families are making a decision for the Lord first and only afterward considering their own needs and wants.

c) Families should involve their children in tithing by teaching them through word and by example the priority of returning to God a portion of the blessing He has given us. Children may do this through tithing their allowances or income from part-time jobs.

d) Those faithful Christians who do tithe (give sacrificially) report how remarkably their material needs have been met. Moreover, they will cite these blessings as even greater, spiritual rewards:

1. a sense of serenity and satisfaction that comes from generosity;

2. an awareness that God comes first, even in decisions about money;

3. a recognition that one has eliminated the practice of making contributions that are mere leftovers or contributions of habit;

4. a deep sense of satisfaction in the progress made by the Order due to the amount of tithing by its members;

5. an ability to distinguish between wants and needs;

6. a deeper consciousness of society’s materialism and consumerism;

7. A keener appreciation of the world’s poor and how we should and can alleviate their pain and poverty;

8. a quiet confidence in the Lord’s protective care.

* based on the brochure, “Where Your Treasure Is …” by Rev. Fr. Joseph Champlin, (Collegeville, MN: The Liturgical Press, 1983)

Stewardship

What is Stewardship?

How Much Should I Tithe?

Make a Pledge and/or Online Donation

Make a Donation Online Now The “pledge” form below sends an email to our Parish Office Manager informing us of your intent to make a donation of time, talent, or treasure. To make a credit/debit card payment now, please click on the green “Make a Donation Online Now” button above.

    RCIA

    We also offer the “Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults (RCIA)”. This special opportunity is open for anyone who is not Catholic, or has been baptized Catholic but has never received any other sacraments and wants to become fully initiated into the Catholic Church by receiving the sacraments of Eucharist and Confirmation. We also offer Adult Confirmation for those adults who are over 18 and have been baptized in the Catholic Church, received First Eucharist but did not receive Confirmation.