Saint Cecilia - The PilotSaint Cecilia P ARISH Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time 7 July 2019 The...

12
Saint Cecilia P A R I S H Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time 7 July 2019 The Tribute Money, detail Masaccio, 1425

Transcript of Saint Cecilia - The PilotSaint Cecilia P ARISH Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time 7 July 2019 The...

Page 1: Saint Cecilia - The PilotSaint Cecilia P ARISH Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time 7 July 2019 The Tribute Money, detail Masaccio, 1425

Saint CeciliaP A R I S H

Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time

7 July 2019The Tribute Money, detail

Masaccio, 1425

Page 2: Saint Cecilia - The PilotSaint Cecilia P ARISH Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time 7 July 2019 The Tribute Money, detail Masaccio, 1425

2

SAINT CECILIA PARISH

MINISTERS OF THE LITURGY

Saturday, July 6 | 5:00 p.m.Rev. Peter Grover, OMV, celebrant Catherine Horsley, lectors

Sunday, July 7 | 8:00 a.m.Rev. Peter Gyves, SJ, celebrantBob Mann, lector

Sunday, July 7 | 9:30 a.m.Rev. John Unni, celebrantJulie DesAutels, Rosaria Salerno, and Virgen Palermo, lectors

Sunday, July 7 | 11:15 a.m.Rev. John Unni, celebrantSarra Pelssar, Chika Offurum, and Natasha Pierre, lectors

OUR COMMUNITY NEWS

SPECIAL INTENTIONS

Saturday, July 6 | 5:00 p.m.John Nichols, Memorial

Sunday, July 7 | 8:00 a.m.Mary, Eileen, & Margaret Kervick,Memorial

Saturday, July 7 | 9:30 a.m.Al Alves, Memorial

Sunday, July 7 | 11:15 a.m.Robert Flaherty, Memorial

TODAY'S READINGS

Isaiah 66:10-14Galatians 6:14-18Luke 10:1-12, 17-20

NEXT SUNDAY'S READINGS

Deuteronomy 30:10-14Colossians 1:15-20Luke 10:25-37

Page 3: Saint Cecilia - The PilotSaint Cecilia P ARISH Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time 7 July 2019 The Tribute Money, detail Masaccio, 1425

3

SAINT CECILIA PARISH

Prayers & Occasions

Our DeceasedPray for the eternal repose of Gerald Doyle, MD who died on June 21. Pray also for the consolation of his family, friends, and patients. The Funeral Mass will be celebrated at Saint Cecilia on Tuesday, July 9 at 10:00 a.m. May his soul and the souls of all the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest in peace.

Our SickPlease pray for all our sick and for those who are in need of our prayer, especially Mary Pickering, Caeden Boyce, Stephanie Brown, Kim Villanueva, Francisco and Valentin Castro Goudovitch, Bill Croke, Helene Schabes, Mary Jane Kinne, Steven Clark, Patricia Finn, Mary Sue Cappoza, Marc Pelletier, Ashlyn Couture, Eugenia Valente, Diego Cruz, and Roy Frost.

Welcome to Saint Cecilia ParishWe are pleased to welcome the following new members of our parish who have recently registered: Brian Pruitt of Bos-ton and Anna and Roque Martin of Boston. If you have not previously registered with the parish, there are forms in the narthex for this purpose or you can register online at www.stceciliaboston.org.

BaptismsToday we celebrate baptism at the 9:30 liturgy for Archibald Henry, son of Natalie Nonken. At the 11:15 liturgy we cel-ebrate baptism for London Rose and Parker Nolan, children of Adam and Tiffany Coldwell. The Christian community wel-comes you with great joy, Archibald, London, and Parker!

Weddings at Saint CeciliaCongratulations to Shannon Slaughter and Eric DeLorey who were married here on June 29. May God bless the happy couple as they start this next phase of their lives to-gether.

Happy Anniversary!This week we celebrate the baptismal anniversary of Caitlin Corrieri who was baptized on July 7. May the Lord continue to bless her with the grace to live out her baptis-mal call. Happy Feast Day, Caitlin!

Summer PrayersFor the safety of travelers, for rest and renewal for vacation-ers, and for a summer filled with joy and delight, reunions with dear friends, and encounters with beautiful places, we pray!

"I am sending you like lambs among wolves."

Page 4: Saint Cecilia - The PilotSaint Cecilia P ARISH Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time 7 July 2019 The Tribute Money, detail Masaccio, 1425

4

SAINT CECILIA PARISH

Saint Veronica – July 12

Our stained glass windows add immeasurably to the beau-ty of Saint Cecilia Church and they serve an important pur-pose in reminding us of the communion of saints—those men and women who were friends of God and who have gone before us marked with the sign of faith. This week we celebrate the feast day of Saint Veronica whose stained glass window is on the west side of the church. Our win-dow depicts Veronica with her eyes downcast, gazing on the cloth or veil she holds in her hands which has been im-printed with the image of Jesus' face. Veronica was a wom-an of Jerusalem who, upon seeing Jesus struggling with the weight of his cross as he walked to his crucifixion on Golgotha, offered him a cloth to wipe his face. When Jesus returned the cloth to Veronica she saw that it bore a por-trait of his face. In 1297 Veronica's veil was brought to Saint Peter's in Rome by order of Pope Boniface VIII. Although little is known about Veronica and she is not referenced in the canonical Gospels, her simple, quiet act of charity to-wards Jesus encourages us to treat those we encounter on their journeys with compassion. Veronica's encounter with Christ is also commemorated in the sixth Station of the Cross. Veronica is the patron saint of photographers and laundry workers.

Wisdom and Mature Spirituality

Group

Sunday, July 21 | 10:00 a.m. St. Clement Eucharistic Shrine (1105 Boylston Street)

What kind of world do we want to leave to those who come after us, to children who are now growing up?” At our next meeting we will discuss this environmental problem. Our reading is Laudato Si by Pope Francis. This Encyclical is an overview of the environmental crisis from a religious point of view. Because we are under renovation, our July and Au-gust meetings will be held at St. Clement Eucharistic Shrine (1105 Boylston St.) We are grateful to Fr. Peter Grover, OMV for his generous gift of a very comfortable space for our meeting. When you arrive in the foyer of St. Clement our meeting is in the parlor on the left. If you are someone in the second half of life who is interested in opportunities for spiritual growth, we invite you to join us. New members are always welcome.

VOLUNTEERING AT PINE STREET INN

Our parish has committed to volunteering at Pine Street Men's Inn one night a month throughout 2019. Our next opportunity will be on Sunday, July 14, starting at 4:45 p. m. There are 8 slots open for volunteer parishioners to assist in feeding the guests at Pine Street Men's Inn. If you would like to join us from 4:00 to 6:30 p. m. on Harri-son Avenue in the South End, please contact Mark Lippolt at [email protected] for more information! Some park-ing is available at the shelter. Please let us know if you can help with carpooling, too.

Feast of Saint Benedict –

July 11

On Wednesday evening, in commemoration of the Feast of Saint Benedict, we will cele-brate Vespers at 6:30. Benedict is considered the father of western monasticism. His Rule directed that monastic life should balance work and prayer, and that monstaries should be places of hospitality.

Page 5: Saint Cecilia - The PilotSaint Cecilia P ARISH Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time 7 July 2019 The Tribute Money, detail Masaccio, 1425

5

SAINT CECILIA PARISH

Shakespeare on

the Common

and Parish

PotLuck Picnic

Saint Cecilia parishioners will be going to see Cymbeline on Tuesday, July 23 on the Boston Common near the Parkman Bandstand. We'll be reserving

space and having a potluck picnic beforehand. The picnic is at 6:00 p.m. and the play starts at 8 p.m. For more in-formation contact Jenny Jones at [email protected]. The play is free, though donations to the Commonwealth Shakespeare Company are appreciated: http://www.com-mshakes.org/

Young Neighbors is taking off!

Next Saturday, July 13, roughly 30 high school students and adults from Saint Cecilia are heading to Washington, DC to participate in this summer's Young Neighbors in Ac-tion service-learning trip. They will spend the week serving people in need in the DC area, learning how to be agents for social justice, and growing in their faith. Please remem-ber to keep them in your prayer over the next week until they return on July 20.

HUNGER & HOMELESSNESS MINISTRY

DRIVERS NEEDED

Each weekend parishioners have the opportunity to pick up donated food from four local supermarkets and deliver it to either Catholic Charities' Haitian Multi-Service Center in Dorchester or the Pine Street Inn in the South End. This vital ministry takes place at 7:30 a.m. every Saturday and Sunday morning and on Sundays can be completed in time to attend the 9:30 Mass. We need drivers for all the Sat-urdays and Sundays in June. Please email [email protected] if you can help out.

LOW-GLUTEN ALTAR BREAD AVAILABLE

If you have celiac disease, please let us know. We have a supply of low-gluten altar bread available for those who cannot tolerate gluten. These hosts are prepared by the Benedictine Sisters of Perpetual Adoration in Clyde, Mis-souri.

Join the Saint Cecilia Team

Last October a small team of Saint Cecilia parishioners and staff participated in the Reebok Boston 10K for Wom-en, and we came in 3rd place! While many of us ran and walked, it was a great time and we plan to do it again. Registration ($50) is already open, and the race will take place on October 14. If you're interested, please email [email protected] for instructions on how to officially join the team. For more information about the race or for suggested training materials, you can visit https://boston10kforwomen.com/.

Page 6: Saint Cecilia - The PilotSaint Cecilia P ARISH Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time 7 July 2019 The Tribute Money, detail Masaccio, 1425

6

SAINT CECILIA PARISH

Adult Faith

Formation Events

FAITH FORMATION EVENTS AT SAINT CECILIA OFTEN APPEAR ON PAGES 4—7

SUMMER EVENTS AT BC SCHOOL

OF THEOLOGY AND MINISTRY

For further details or to register for these events, please check the School of Theology and Ministry web-site: https://www.bc.edu/content/bc-web/schools/stm/continuing-education/campus-events.html

Intimate Wilderness: Navigating the Sacred Space between Self and OtherPresenter: Michele Saracino, professor of religious studies, Manhattan CollegeSaturday, July 13 | 10:00-11:45 a.m. | Robsham The-ater, Chestnut Hill Campus | Registration Required Free of charge

Nevertheless, She Persisted: Women’s Religio-Politi-cal Witness for Love and JusticePresenter: Rosemary P. Carbine, associate professor of religious studies, Whittier CollegeFriday, July 19 | 12:00-3:00 p.m. | St. Ignatius Church and Corcoran Commons, Heights Room, Chestnut Hill Campus | Registration Required | Free of charge, includes lunch

ONLINE COURSES

For further details or to register for these events, please check the STM Online: Crossroads website: https://www.bc.edu/bc-web/schools/stm/sites/crossroads.html

Adult Faith Formation for a Vibrant ChurchJuly 24 - Aug 28, 2019 | 5-Week Online Course Registration Required| $50.00

Teaching Religion to Adolescents: Creative Strategies and Best PracticesJuly 24 - Aug 28, 2019 | 5-Week Online Course | Reg-istration Required| $50.00

Teaching Religion to Children: Creative Strategies and Best PracticesJuly 24 - Aug 28, 2019 | 5-Week Online Course | Reg-istration Required| $50.00

The Creed: What We BelieveJuly 24 - Aug 28, 2019 | 5-Week Online Course | Reg-istration Required| $50.0

A REQUEST FROM

CATHOLIC CHARITIES

Celebrating its 100th anniversary, Sunset Point Camp has provided a dream vacation at the seashore to over 40,000 low-income, at-risk children aged 6-13 from Greater Bos-ton without regard for their race, nationality, or religious affiliation. Nearly 450 city-based boys and girls travel to Hull each summer for a one or two-week overnight camp experience letting them enjoy the fresh air, learn new tal-ents, receive academic summer support and simply have fun.

Sunset Point Camp is operated by our friends at Catho-lic Charities. They have mentioned to us that they always need donations of sunscreen for the kids at the camp. So the next time you're at CVS or Walgreen's or your local su-permarket, please consider picking up an extra tube of sun-screen and dropping it in the plastic bin identified for this purpose in the narthex. We have been told the higher the SPF number, the better. The Camp also needs kids' flipflops for boys and girls age 6 to 12.

DONATIONS FOR CATHOLIC

CHARITIES' FOOD PANTRY

Now that our Faith Formation classes have ended for the academic year and summer is approaching, many of the families that have been faithful donors to our collection of food items for Catholic Charities will be away until Sep-tember. We hope that all parishioners will participate in this important ministry during the summer months so that the volume of our donated food remains strong. The lo-cal economy might have improved for some of us, but the working poor and unemployed continue to face enormous challenges.

Saint Cecilia has committed to providing these items to the Catholic Charities' food pantry: Cheerios or corn flakes, peanut butter, white flour pasta and spaghetti, macaroni and cheese, canned tuna fish, canned chicken breast, cook-ing oil, and tomato sauce. While any canned or shelf-stable items are appreciated, it is particularly helpful when parish-ioners can help with the staples listed above. We cannot accept donations of baked items or produce in the narthex.

Page 7: Saint Cecilia - The PilotSaint Cecilia P ARISH Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time 7 July 2019 The Tribute Money, detail Masaccio, 1425

LITURGY OF THE HOURS Please join us for Evening Prayer & Morning Prayer

Tuesday, June 11 at 6:30 p.m. Memorial of Saint Barnabas

Thursday, June 27 at 6:30 p.m. Solemnity of the Sacred Heart

Saturday, June 29 at 9:00 a.m. Solemnity of Saints Peter & Paul

Tuesday, July 16 at 6:30 p.m. Memorial of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel

Monday, July 22 at 6:30 p.m. Feast of Saint Mary Magdalene

Thursday, July 25 at 6:30 p.m. Feast of Saint James

Monday, July 29 at 6:30 p.m. Memorial of Saint Martha

Wednesday, July 31 at 6:30 p.m. Memorial of Saint Ignatius of Loyola

Tuesday, August 6 at 6:30 p.m. Feast of the Transfiguration

Thursday, August 8 at 6:30 p.m. Memorial of Saint Dominic

Monday, August 12 at 6:30 p.m. Memorial of St. Jane Frances de Chantal

Wednesday, August 14 at 6:30 p.m. Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary

Tuesday, August 20 at 6:30 p.m. Memorial of Saint Bernard of Clairvaux

Thursday, August 22 at 6:30 p.m. Memorial of the Queenship of Mary

Tuesday, August 27 at 6:30 p.m. Memorial of Saint Monica

Thursday, August 29 at 6:30 p.m. Memorial of the Passion of St. John the Baptist

“The liturgy of the hours, like other liturgical services, is not a private matter but belongs to the whole Body of the Church, whose life it both expresses and affects.

“Hence, when the people are invited to the liturgy of the hours and come together in unity of heart and voice, they show forth the Church in its celebration of the mystery of Christ.”

General Instruction of the Liturgy of the Hours

Page 8: Saint Cecilia - The PilotSaint Cecilia P ARISH Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time 7 July 2019 The Tribute Money, detail Masaccio, 1425

8

SAINT CECILIA PARISH

I am a stumbling, doubting, failing, fearful Christian, so I fit right in with the rest of them. I was raised by athe-ists who, for complicated reasons, sent me to a Catholic school when I was 11, assuming that I was too smart to believe any of the abracadabra and would just focus on the classes.

But they had some other tricks up their sleeves, those Catholics. The first was prayer, which just about knocked me flat the first time I saw its practical application. One of the nuns came to talk with us about some dire issue from the real world; maybe it was Vietnam, maybe it was some-one from the parish who was very ill—I don’t remember. She summed up the situation, and I sat there wondering what the action plan was, because that was the world I in-habited. And then she said that what we were going to do was pray about it. I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. Something terrible was happening and it would somehow improve if a classroom full of sixth graders closed their eyes and mumbled?

I lived in Berkeley, a radical place, and my parents were hard-core lefties (grape boycotters, war protesters, sup-porters of student strikes, occasional tear-gas-ees), so I had pretty much heard it all in my house, including a scheme to bring down Richard Nixon that was so im-probable it might have worked. But this was the most radical thing I’d ever encountered. This was levitating-the-Pentagon type stuff. Why not give it a try?

The other thing that had my attention was a set of post-ers in Sister Kathleen’s room. You cannot imagine how important classroom posters were in the days before cellphones. You would be out of your mind with bore-dom, and you’d just gaze at them for hours. She had eight posters on her wall: the Beatitudes. I doubt I even knew that they had come from the Sermon on the Mount, or whether I even knew what the Sermon on the Mount was.

All I knew was that I was a desperately unhappy person, and that the words on these posters were turning every-thing I believed on its head.

Blessed are the meek,For they shall inherit the earth;

Blessed are the merciful,for they will be shown mercy.

What can I tell you? I drifted. I floated over. On some level, I just abandoned the rational world and found my place elsewhere; maybe I was already there and just hadn’t known it. My parents weren’t happy about it, but what could they do? They’d wanted private-school education on the cheap, and you get what you pay for.

All of this came back to me this morning as I read the first draft of this essay, which was nothing about the little Catholic school in Berkeley and all about how smart I am and how angry I feel right now. The subject of my anger is the wretched conditions the migrant children are enduring in the camps, and the display of my intelligence was a sophisticated reading of the Convention on the Rights of the Child. Every single member of the United Nations is a party to the convention except … the United States. I had a lot to say about that. I had a great rant go-ing, and it included a strong set of highly tweetable lines. I was already imagining myself talking about it on the radio and sounding like a very, very good person.

But then: Blessed are the meek.

The children are meek. The ones told to comb out one another’s lice and go to sleep hungry on cold floors under bright lights; the ones who have no one—no one at all, save one another—to comfort them. So I was on sound territory there. But the Beatitudes come at you sideways

CHRIST IN THE CAMPS

By CAITLIN FLANAGAN

Page 9: Saint Cecilia - The PilotSaint Cecilia P ARISH Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time 7 July 2019 The Tribute Money, detail Masaccio, 1425

9

SAINT CECILIA PARISH

sometimes, and that’s when you’re really in trouble. It occurred to me this morning that maybe as a Christian I’m also supposed to be meek. To be humble.

I never should have agreed to go to that school.

I humbly reach out to the only faction of Americans I know of who have the ear of the administration and who care about children: my brothers and sisters in Christ who attend evangelical churches. It seems clear that we are in the midst of a profound humanitarian crisis and that children are being forced to suffer in terrible ways. Maybe it was never supposed to be this way; maybe the system just got overwhelmed. But this is a disaster. Chil-dren are programmed to think that any separation from a parent or a caregiver is a life-or-death situation. I keep imagining one of these children having a dream that he’s home, with his mother and brothers and sisters, but then waking up to see he’s still in a terrible place. If evangeli-cal Christians stood up for these children, things could change in the camps very quickly.

I especially appeal to powerful evangelical leaders such as Rick Warren who have a heart for the immigrant. Warren famously said, “A Good Samaritan doesn’t stop and ask the injured person, ‘Are you legal or illegal?’” The political problems and policy debates that brought us to this situation are not the point right now; the point is that children are cold and filthy and frightened and we can stop it, or at least greatly improve their situation.

I ask the pastors to request of the administration that all of us—the volunteers and charitable givers of all faiths and of no faith, the army of us who are so eager to help these children—can have access to the sites. Allow us to bring cots and toothbrushes and blankets and food. Allow us to arrange for carefully screened volunteers to work shifts at the sites, to help with diapers and bed-times and combing for lice and checking for fevers. Al-low us to be there when one of these children wakes up from a nightmare or breaks down from sorrow.

I also want to humbly ask all Americans to expedite get-ting all necessary aid to these children. A week of adult argument is an ocean of time to a 3-year-old. I respect the workers at Wayfair who are protesting the company’s

planned fulfillment of an order of some 1,600 mattresses and 200 bunkbeds for one of the camps. Profiting from these camps is not morally acceptable. But this is an emer-gency, and we need to get those beds to those children as fast as possible. Getting 1,600 kids off those cold floors is close at hand—let’s not make them wait a minute longer.

Ever since the most recent round of reports on condi-tions in these camps came out, I’ve been waking up at night, thinking about the children and wondering what was going on at that moment. I know that while I lie in my warm bed, in my own home and with all my relatives accounted for, children are lying on those cold floors, des-perate for their mother, and crying. At those moments, all I can do is think of the nuns at the School of the Mad-eleine, and how they believed that nothing—nothing at all—was beyond the reach of prayer. And so I lie there and do what millions of other Americans do when they think about these children and come up against the many brick walls keeping us from alleviating their plight: I pray for them.

We know exactly where Christ is, because he told us. He’s with the sick and the jailed and the hungry. He’s in those camps with those suffering children. And we need to be there, too.

~Caitlin Flanagan is a contributing editor at The Atlantic. She is the author of Girl Land and To Hell With All That.

A Honduran asylum seeker, recently released from federal detention with fellow immigrants, holds the hand of her 6-year-old daughter at a bus depot in McAllen, Texas, on June 11, 2019.

Page 10: Saint Cecilia - The PilotSaint Cecilia P ARISH Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time 7 July 2019 The Tribute Money, detail Masaccio, 1425

10

SAINT CECILIA PARISH

Parish Office & Mailing Address18 Belvidere Street, Boston, MA 02115Hours | Monday–Friday, 9:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m.Phone | 617 536 4548Fax | 617 536 1781E-mail | [email protected] | www.stceciliaboston.org

Parish StaffRev. John J. Unni, PastorMary Kaye, Pastoral Director of Operations,[email protected] Melaugh, Finance Director,[email protected] Donohoe, Pastoral Associate,[email protected] J. MacDonald, Director of Faith Formation and Parish Visibility, [email protected] Glynn, Director of College and Youth Ministry, [email protected],Jeanne Bruno, Chaplain, Pastoral Associate, Coordinator of Pastoral Outreach,[email protected] Duff, Director of Music, [email protected] Pickering, Events and Facilities Manager, [email protected] Bennett, Communications and Operations Coordinator,[email protected]

Assisting ClergyRev. Peter Grover, OMVRev. Peter Gyves, SJRev. James Shaughnessy, SJ

Schedule for LiturgyWednesday, Thursday, & Friday | 8:00 a.m.Lord’s Day | Sat 5:00 p.m.; Sun 8:00, 9:30, and 11:15 a.m.Holy Days | 8:00 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.

ReconciliationThe sacrament of reconciliation is available by appointment. Please call the Parish Office.

Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults (RCIA)The Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults is the communal process through which non-baptized men and women become members of the Catholic Church. It is also suitable for those baptized in different faith traditions who are interested in becoming Catholic, or, for those who were baptized Catholic, but have yet to receive the sacraments of Eucharist and confirmation.

Baptism for InfantsInfant baptism is celebrated on the first Sunday of the month. For more information, please contact Mark Donohoe in the Parish Office.

Faith Formation for ChildrenTo register your child for our Faith Formation Program, please contact Scott MacDonald in the Parish Office.

MarriageCouples who wish to prepare for marriage should contact Mark Donohoe in the Parish Office at least six months in advance.

Care of the SickTo arrange for the Sacrament of the Sick, for Holy Communion to be brought to those unable to attend the Sunday celebration, or for Viaticum for the Dying (Holy Communion for those in danger of death), please contact the Parish Office. It is always possible to anoint the sick during regularly scheduled liturgies.

Order of Christian FuneralsThe parish is prepared to celebrate the Vigil (wake) in the church. Please contact the Parish Office for more information.

Child Abuse Prevention (CAP) TeamThe CAP Team is responsible for training all parish staff and volunteers in mandated reporting laws and the Protecting God’s Children program (VIRTUS). They also provide consultation and support to anyone in the parish who has concerns about reporting child abuse and neglect. Please contact Lois Flaherty ([email protected]), Maria Roche ([email protected]), Letitia Howland ([email protected]), or Erin Young ([email protected]) if you have any questions or concerns.

The Archdiocese of Boston has in place a vigorous program to protect children from harm and to educate its ministers and faithful about the nature of abuse, with a goal of increasing knowledge, creating a safe environment for children, and recognizing and reporting potentially dangerous situations. The full text of the policy is also available in the narthex and Parish Office, as well as on our website.

For Those with Celiac DiseaseIf you have celiac disease, please let us know. We have a supply of low-gluten altar bread available for those who cannot tolerate gluten.

Hearing Assistance in ChurchThe church is equipped with an FM listening device. Small receivers are available for anyone who may have trouble hearing the sound system. Simply request a receiver from any one of our greeters before Mass.

Access for the DisabledBoth the church and Parish Pastoral Center are accessible by elevator.

ParkingThere is reduced rate parking for $11.00 at the Hynes Auditorium Garage located on Dalton Street on Sundays until 3:00 p.m. and every evening after 4:00 p.m. Please be sure to ask one of our greeters for a parking validation ticket before leaving the church. There is also reduced rate parking on Sundays only at the Prudential Center South Garage (enter at Huntington Avenue or Dalton Street); up to 4 hours: $14.00, up to 5 hours: $20.00.

Joining Our CommunityWe’re happy that you’re with us! Our community offers a warm, spiritu-al home for a diverse group of Catholics. We come from many neighbor-hoods in and around Boston but also have parishioners from as far afield as Marlborough, Newburyport, and Stow. Please introduce yourself to a staff member, drop in for coffee on Sunday, or fill out a new parishioner form in the narthex.. No matter what your background, please know that you are always welcome at Saint Cecilia.

PARISH RESOURCES

Page 11: Saint Cecilia - The PilotSaint Cecilia P ARISH Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time 7 July 2019 The Tribute Money, detail Masaccio, 1425

For Advertising call 617-779-3771 Pilot Bulletins Saint Cecilia, Boston, MA 4338

BUILDING MINDS & CHANGING LIVESONE STUDENT AT A TIME

4,000 need-based scholarships for students at 84 Catholic schools in the

Archdiocese of Boston

Make an Impact in a Child's Life

Today, Visit CSFBoston.org

THE CATHOLIC SCHOOLS FOUNDATION

TBROSTRETHEWEY BROTHERS INC.

For all your cooling needs.4280 Washington St. Roslindale MA

617-325-3283 tbros.com lic# 11207

THE NEWMAN SCHOOLA coed, private college preparatory high school in the Back Bay. Small class sizes, quality college acceptances, vibrant sports program, International Baccalaureate diploma option.www.newmanboston.org

NOW Grades 7-12

“He has risen.” Matt 28:6

W. C. Canniff & Sons, Inc.531 Cummins Hwy • Roslindale617-323-3690

Since 1896www.CanniffMonuments.com

Monuments &Lettering FOOD IS LOVE!

Located right around the corner!

OFFER EXCLUDES LOBSTERS. CANNOT BE COMBINED WITH ANY OTHER OFFER.

1020 Dorchester Avenue, Dorchester, MA617-265-9840 • [email protected] • www.jmurphyfh.com

All of our services are available to this wonderful parish community here in

this beautiful worship space.

Honoring. Remembering.

Celebrating.

Family owned and operated for four generations

Michael L. Carucci

617 901 [email protected]

Executive Vice President

( Select Buyer and Seller Representation )

Serving the Boston Real Estate market for over 25 years!

Katherine Rielly, ABR

The Realty Concierge 230 Congress Street, 10th Floor

Boston, MA 02110 Phone: 781.363.3759

Fax: 617.344.5889 [email protected]

Jerry Pallotta Captivating Children’s Literature inspired by 16 Years of Catholic Education at BC High and Georgetown University Follow @jerrypallotta on Facebook, Twitter, Youtube and Instagram or at www.jerrypallotta.com

Waterman-Langoneat Boston Harborside

Funeral and Cremation services

580 Commercial Street, Boston, MA 02109617-536-4110

Pre-Planning Service AvailableNow Offering Onsite Refreshments and Hospitality

A Service Family Affiliate of AFFS/Service Corp. Int’l206 Winter St, Fall River, MA 02720 508-676-2454

Private Care Duty - 24 Hr Service Housekeeping - Alzheimer’s

Dementia Care & More

bostonbesthomecareserviceinc.com617-323-0072

Rosaries from Flowers “Handmade from the Flowers

of your Loved One”

841 Main Street Tewksbury, MA 01876

(978) 851-9103

www.rosariesfromflowers.com

AD SPACE AVAILABLE

617-779-3771

Page 12: Saint Cecilia - The PilotSaint Cecilia P ARISH Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time 7 July 2019 The Tribute Money, detail Masaccio, 1425

For Advertising call 617-779-3771 Pilot Bulletins Saint Cecilia, Boston, MA 4338

330 Newbury StreetBoston, MA 02115

617-262-0363Hours:

Mon - Sat 10AM – 11PMSun 12PM – 8PM

www.bauerwines.com

7 8 1 • 9 3 3 • 1 1 0 0 • A L B R E CH T A U T O . c o m

INFINITI OF NASHUA • INFINITI OF NORWOODMILFORD NISSAN • MARLBORO NISSAN • WOBURN TOYOTA

e Albrecht Family is a proud supporter of

St. Cecilia’sank you for all you do.

“Be a Servant” Matthew 20:26

Edward F. Cahill, J.D., CFP®Financial Adviser*, Eagle Strategies LLC,

A Registered Investment Advisor

(978) 927-9352 | [email protected] 306 Cabot Street, Beverly, MA 01915

*Registered Representative offering securities through NYLIFE Securities LLC, Member FINRA/SIPC, A Licensed Insurance Agency

EA Spry & Co., Inc. 54 Holton St. Woburn, MA 01801

Richard J. SpryParishioner

Main: 781-933-8250 Cell: 617-538-9038www.sprymoving.com

SPRYMOVING BOSTON

COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL MOVING EXPERTS

[email protected]

J.T. Electrical ServicesResidential & Commercial Wiring

Please call Jesus for a Free Estimate

Cell: 617-590-2479Office: 617-708-1217

[email protected] Insured - Lic. #14285-B

Specializing in Fine Luxury Residential Sales www.campionre.com

172 Newbury Street • Boston, MA • 617 236.0711

CAMPIONRE.COM

HerbChambers.com

A Wonderful Experience Needed For All People Of All Denominations.

Thought Provoking And Positive Motivation For Enhancing Our Lives.

St. Cecilia’s

KERRY McMENAMY Offering Free Tax and Financial Review

in May & June

p. [email protected] • www.erocktax.com

Aloisi & Aloisi LLCA Full Service Family Law Firm

Since 1934

T: 617 227 6272 | F: 617 227 1230 | [email protected]