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GLUTEN SENSITIVITYGLUTEN SENSITIVITYGLUTEN SENSITIVITY We We We have gluten-free hosts. Just identify yourself before Mass begins
so we can ensure your reception of the Blessed Sacrament.
Blessed Trinity Parish St. Edmund - St. Genevieve - St. Thomas More
Mass Schedule
St. Genevieve
Monday-Saturday 9:00am Saturday 4:00pm
Sunday 9:00am and 12:00 Noon
St. Edmund 10am
St. Thomas More
Monday-Saturday: 8:30am Saturday 5:00pm
Sunday 8:30am, 11:30am
Penance Every Saturday at 4:00pm at
St. Thomas More (Also at anytime convenient upon request)
Sacrament of Baptism STOP BY THE RECTORY FOR INFORMATION
Sacrament of the Sick
Please call the Rectory with information of any Parishioner who wishes to receive the Sacrament or
approach any Priest anytime after each Mass
Sacrament of Holy Matrimony Couples contemplating a Christian Marriage should come
to the rectory Nine Months in advance. This allows time to prepare the necessary paper work
and Pastoral Instructions required.
Blessed Trinity Staff
Rev. Peter J. Rayder, Pastor Rev. Raynolds Basilious , Parochial Vicar
In Residence
Rev. Msgr. John J. Bracken, P.A., In Residence Rev. Msgr. Joseph Nagle, In Residence
Rev. Msgr. Ronald Newland, PA Retired Active Assistant Rev. Michael Perry
Retired Active Assistant Deacon Richard Lee
Deacon James F. Ruoff
Rev. Raynolds Basilious, Ph. D Director of Faith Formation
Mr. Richard Louis-Pierre Director of Music Marlene Baisley
Maureen McVeigh Parish Secretaries
Office: St. Thomas More Rectory 204-25 Rockaway Point Boulevard
Rockaway Point, N.Y. 11697 718-634-6357
www.btparish.org Email: blessedtrin@aol.com
Rectory Office Hours
Monday—Thursday 9am—6pm, Friday 9am—2:30pm
Blessed Trinity Mission Statement Washed by the waters of the sea and blessed with generations of faithful worship we, a trinity of churches: Saint Edmund, Saint Genevieve and Saint Thomas More, stand united in our mission.
To embrace the presence of Christ in our community and strive to assist all to deepen their relationship with the Lord. To seek to be a parish of service and comfort to all.
To commit ourselves to be a vessel through which our Catholic heritage and traditions may be preserved and grow so that our parish may flourish in the Spirit of the Lord
Please keep in your prayers the faithful members of Blessed Trinity who are currently serving in the
United States Armed Forces Lawrence T. Alvelo
Tom Boggiano Ronald Brown Denis Cashin
Michael Capobianco Mark Dennington
Ryan Dorogoff Michael Dunne
Joseph Finn, III Thomas Gabriele Keith Gallagher Caitlyn Ganley
Philip Gatti Daniel Gillen Bobby Girard
Erik P. Glasser Michael Halas
James Hayhurst James Hegarty
Christoher Jamison Kevin Kearney
Christopher W. Knowles Luke Kane Maguire
James Lavin Elana Marino
John McBride, Jr. Kevin McCabe
Thomas McDonald William Mullin
Michael R. Nilson Kevin O’ Hara
Eric Reilly Stephen J. Ryan Donny Santasieri
Brad Stoultz Kevin T. Walsh
Michael K. Watson
Monday, April 15— Sunday, April 21
Monday, April 15 8:30am St. Thomas More Rev. Brice Riordan O’Carm. 9am St. Genevieve's none Tuesday, April 16 8:30am St. Thomas More John Sullivan and Frank Mc Guire 9:000am St. Genevieve’s none Wednesday, April 17 8:30am St. Thomas More Dr. Paul & Margaret Ansbro and Paul V. Ansbro 9am St. Genevieve’s none Thursday, April 18 8:30am St. Thomas More Morning Prayer 7:30pm St. Thomas More Mass of the Lord’s Supper Friday, April 19 8:30am St. Thomas More Morning Prayer 3:00pm St. Thomas More Liturgy of the Passion of the Lord Saturday, April 20 8:30am St. Thomas More Morning Prayer Saturday Vigil 8:00pm St. Thomas More Easter Vigil Sunday, April 21 8:30am St. Thomas More Phyllis Patrizio 9am St. Genevieve's Billy Ryan 10am St. Edmund Bob and Cathy Kane 11:30am St. Thomas More Charles V. Rorke and Al Lovoi 12noon St. Genevieve’s Kathryn Conroy and Lauren Caffrey
ESSENTIAL REDUCTION All my theology is reduced to this narrow compass:
Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners. --Archibald Alexander
Patrick McMahon, Rita Gibson, Kevin Reilly, Jim Carlson, Arlene Mulholland, Maureen Ritter, Carol Brown, Timmy Guvaitis, Matthew Kearney, Oswaldo Vera, Bridget Harpur, Madeline Case, David Jeremy Santos, Saykar Boodhoo, Mary Ambery, Ian Tissot, Eileen Shine, Kathleen Battista, Pat Newall , Annie McMahon, Donald Ritter, Frank Marmo, Grace Mandry, Mark Trapani, Zorida Cirillo, Eileen Britton, Colleen Britton, Jim Kingston, Rob Follinger, June Silverman, Loretta Szumski, Elenor Heiberg, Rick Manero, Eileen Corral, Fannie Calabro, Vita Manfredi, Jordyn Negron, Jim Cannon, Debbie Walker, Gerry Hunt, Baby Callie Grace Watson and William J. McLaughlin
Eternal Rest Eternal Rest Eternal Rest Grant Unto Them, O Lord…Grant Unto Them, O Lord…Grant Unto Them, O Lord…
...We remember in our prayers
the faithful departed of Blessed Trinity Parish especially
Catherine Tennyson
The Candles for the Week in St. Genevieve’s
Are offered in loving memory of Everette, Phyllis & Carrie Ann Duemig, Mel & Gladys Duemig and
Eldon & Dorothy Raymo
The Hosts and Wine and for the Week St. Genevieve’s
St. Thomas More
In Loving Memory of Mary Mc Nerney requested by Ginny Yorey
The Light Before St. Jude in St. Genevieves’s Is offered this week in loving memory of
Mary & Joe Ferrandino.
The Sacred Linens
St. Thomas More The week of April 7th: Anna Mae Lyons
The week of April 14: Joan Mahoney St. Genevieve
Carol Weinsheimer Thank You, Ladies!
WEEKLY OFFERING WEEKLY OFFERING WEEKLY OFFERING Weekend of April 7, 2019Weekend of April 7, 2019Weekend of April 7, 2019 Due to an early bulletin Due to an early bulletin Due to an early bulletin
deadline collection will be deadline collection will be deadline collection will be published next week.published next week.published next week.
Thank You For Your Support Thank You For Your Support Thank You For Your Support
Be Vigilant of Child Abuse at all times! It is vitally important that we are constantly vigilant-that we always observe the behaviors of those who interact with children. And we must always communicate our concerns to the appropriate parties When children exhibit dramatic behavioral changes, adults must find out what caused the changes. Being aware of what's happening with our children means talking to, listening to, and observing them-at every opportunity. For help you may call: Maryellen Quinn, Diocesan Safe Environment Coordinator, 718-965-7300
Palm Sunday of the Lord’s Passion -- April 14,
“The Lord God has opened my ear, and I was not rebellious.” Docility in prayer is essential to vocation discernment. Are you open to a vocation to the priesthood, diaconate or the consecrated life? Contact the Vocation Office at (718) 827-2454 or email: vocations@diobrook.org.
LIVING OUR FAITH @ BLESSED TRINITY… ...BROUGHT TO YOU BY M2 DECKING
Dear Holy Week People, Our journey to the cross with the Lord continues. We have begun Holy Week. All of us are invited to enter more deeply into the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ — especially this week. Will this week be like any other in our life? Will we make time (especially this week) to slow down and pray alone and pray with others in Church during our Holy Week celebrations? As a way to begin our Holy Week journey together, I offer this reflection that was given to me last week. Read ... and pass it on ....
On the day I die a lot will happen, a lot will change. The world will be busy. On the day I die, all the important appointments I made will be left unattended. The many plans I had yet to complete will remain forever undone. The calendar that ruled so many of my days will now be irrelevant to me. All the material things I so chased and guarded and treasured will be left in the hands of others to care for or discard. The words of my critics which so burdened me will cease to sting or capture anymore. They will be unable to touch me. The arguments I believed I’d won here will not serve me or bring me any satisfaction or solace. All my noisy incoming notifications and texts and calls will go unanswered. Their great urgency will be quieted. My many nagging regrets will all be resigned to the past, where they should have always been anyway. Every superficial worry about my body that I ever labored over—about my waistline or hairline or frown lines—will fade away. My carefully crafted image, the one I worked so hard to shape for others here, will be left to them to complete anyway. The sterling reputation I once struggled so greatly to maintain will be of little concern for me anymore. All the small and large anxieties that stole sleep from me each night will be rendered powerless. The deep and towering mysteries about life and death that so consumed my mind will finally be clarified in a way that they could never be before while I lived. These things will certainly all be true on the day that I die. Yet for as much as will happen on that day, one more thing will happen. On the day I die, the few people who really know and truly love me will grieve deeply. They will feel a void. They will feel cheated. They will not feel ready. They will feel as though a part of them has died as well. And on that day, more than anything in the world they will want more time with me. I know this from those I love and grieve over. And so knowing this, while I am still alive I’ll try to remember that my time with them is finite and fleeting and so very precious—and I’ll do my best not to waste a second of it. I’ll try not to squander a priceless moment worrying about all the other things that will happen on the day I die, because many of those things are either not my concern or beyond my control. Friends, those other things have an insidious way of keeping you from living even as you live; vying for your attention, competing for your affections. They rob you of the joy of this unrepeatable, uncontainable, ever-evaporating now with those who love you and want only to share it with you. Don’t miss the chance to dance with them while you can. It’s easy to waste so much daylight in the days before you die. Don’t let your life be stolen every day by all that you believe matters, because on the day you die, much of it simply won’t. Yes, you and I will die one day. But before that day comes: let us live.
Great food for thought as we begin Holy Week. See you this week in Church!
Blessings, Fr. Peter
Blessed Trinity’s 50/50 At least once a month a parishioner will come into the rectory asking us “What are those envelopes that say 50/50 all
about?” Just in case there are others out there who don’t know how they work, here is the explanation. The 50/50 is a simple fundraiser for the parish of Blessed Trinity. For every $5.00 you place in your envelope you will have one ticket
entered into the drawing. (So, if you place $20.00 in your envelope you will have 4 tickets placed in the drawing for that month). At the end of the month, any money that was put in the 50/50 envelopes that month is totaled up. Half
goes to Blessed Trinity and half is split between 4 parishioners whose tickets are drawn on the last weekend of the month. Being a parish that has three churches, some of our bills are triple what a parish with one church would be.
Three electric bills, three gas bills, three flower bills, three insurance bills….And so your participation in this simple fund-raiser really helps us to balance our budget . Your help is greatly appreciated.
“Put Out Into The Deep”
Looking for information on vocations in the Diocese of Brooklyn?
Check out our website page: https://www.btparish.org/vocations
St. Edmund’s Community Center
On the following page you will see the floor plan for the section of the Community Center that will be used by many groups in the future.
The floor plan indicates that there is space for 170 chairs or if tables are set up, 80 chairs. There are four closets being built into the wall for
groups to use for storage. Whether it might be the Youth group, the Arts and Crafts Group, the Altar Rosary Society, Holy Name Society or CYO, there will be space for a multitude of activities or meetings. Hopefully
this meeting space will enhance our ability to reach out to all age groups...young and not so young, alike.
Next week……Updates continue...
PALM SUNDAY OF THE PASSION OF THE LORD From the proclamation of the Gospel at the beginning of the liturgy, we know that today is different, not only because we hear two Gospel passages, or because we hold palms and process. Today begins Holy Week, a time set apart, a week in which to listen, pray, reflect, and take to heart the truth of Christ’s passion, crucifixion, death, and ultimately, resurrection. It takes a week, and a lifetime, to truly hear the message of Christ’s love. It is difficult for us to compre-hend that Jesus willingly sacrificed himself, so we must hear the story again and again. Let this week be for us a new moment of faith in which we, together with the criminal who was crucified with Christ, cry out, Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom.
JESUS ANNOUNCES GOD’S KINGDOM OF LOVE Jesus had walked, healed, forgiven sins, performed miracles, and eaten with the people. His message was simple yet profound: in Christ, the kingdom of God is at hand. Jesus announced God’s kingdom of love, teaching all who would listen. In God’s kingdom, the greatest is as the youngest; the leader is the servant. Those who follow Jesus are called to wash feet, attend to the last and the least, show mercy to the sinner, and love enemies. Even in the hour of his passion, Jesus did not turn away from his mission of love. He healed the ear of one who had come to arrest him, did not lash out at Pilate or Herod, consoled the women who wept, and forgave those who crucified him. He heard the cry of the criminal who called out to him from the cross, and promised him a place in Paradise. Jesus shows us that God’s way is the way of love at all costs, even when it means giving more than we think appropriate or possible.
WE SHARE CHRIST‘S MISSION Let us not be mistaken. Jesus’ mercy and forgiveness led him to the cross, and we who follow him will surely experience trials and be misunderstood in our determination to live as disciples. We will be called to make difficult decisions about the way we live our lives, serve others, give of our time and money, show patience, and favor those who are poor and vulnerable. Friends may turn away, family members may question our commitment to Christ above all else. Jesus remained singularly focused on God’s will. And so must we. Jesus gave without counting the cost, and so must we. In Christ, we also have a mission of love. We, too, are called to stay focused on God’s will. In this, we will announce God’s kingdom and be assured of our place in it when Christ returns in glory. In this Holy Week, let us reflect deeply on the mystery of God’s love for us in Christ and renew our commitment to live as Christian disciples in the world. Copyright (c) J. S. Paluch Co., Inc.
TREASURES FROM OUR TRADITION
Later this week, the Chrism Mass is celebrated in every cathedral in the world in preparation for the Easter Triduum. Only a bishop can consecrate chrism, pure olive oil infused with rich fragrance, so this liturgy is a sign of the unity of the local Church and the bishops ministry to all who will be baptized and confirmed in our parishes in the coming year. Chrism is also used in the ordination of priests and bishops and the consecration of new altars. Two other sacramental oils, the unscented olive oil for catechumens and for the sick, will be blessed in the same liturgy and transported carefully to every parish by the beginning of the Triduum. Remember when Noah’s dove returned with the sign of the world’s rebirth? The dove carried an olive branch, a pledge that God was breathing the world to life again. Yet olives require human nurture. Olives are inedible unless they are cured by human labor. Olive trees grow on sunny slopes, away from the shade of city walls, so they can only be properly tended, cured, and laboriously pressed in peace time. The Chrism Mass with its olive oils expresses God’s deepest desires for us, and our resolve to place our lives in service to God’s saving, healing, loving plan. --Rev. James Field, Copyright (c) J. S. Paluch Co.
April 14, 2019 Palm Sunday of the Passion of the Lord
THE STORY OF OUR REDEMPTION We begin the final week of Lent with these familiar readings. This year, we hear the Passion from the Gospel of Luke. These readings for Palm Sunday and the Passion used to be read on successive Sundays. Now they are combined into a single feast, so that we may see the whole sweep of the glory and the suffering played out. Jesus accepts the adulation of the crowd, the foreshadowing of his glory in the Resurrection. He bids farewell to his disciples in his last Passover, and forgives his tormentors as he dies on the cross. Later this week, we enter the Holy Triduum of Holy Thursday, Good Friday, and Holy Saturday, when the whole story of our redemption will play out once again. Copyright (c) J. S. Paluch Co., Inc.
Generations of Faith Update Thanks to the generosity of many families that
donated to the Capital Campaign of the Brooklyn Diocese: “Generations of Faith.”
As of April 10 , 2019 Our Parish Goal was: $645,000
Number of Pledges: 286 Amount Pledged:$1,373,050
“Hunger Awareness in Brooklyn and Queens” With the Help of St. Edmund’s Prep High School PLEASE RETURN YOUR CHANGE CANS TO THE
RECTORY OR LEAVE IN THE BACK OF CHURCHTHANKS FOR YOUR HELP IN FEEDING THE
HUNGRY IN OUR BACKYARD
One Who Serves In the long form of the Passion from Luke's Gospel, Jesus refers to himself as "the one who serves." He was chiding the apostles who were arguing about which one was the greatest disciple. This reminds me of today's second reading from Paul's letter to the Philippians. He says that Christ "emptied himself, taking the form of a slave" (Philippians 2:7). Jesus is not just being humble here. He gives us an example of how far God will go for love of humanity. I suspect the apostles were confused when Jesus talked this way. Jews considered the firstborn son to be the one to inherit the bulk of the family estate. The youngest would get the least. Yet he tells them to be like the youngest: expect little reward for what you do for others. Now the apostles might have thought, "Sure, I can do that. I'll preach about the Kingdom of God for free. Then I'll really look important and holy." So Jesus reminds them that the world looks at the person being served as more important than the servant. But he is one who serves, and if the apostles are to be leaders of the church, they will need to be servants, too. Why? Because that is how God comes to the people--as a child born in a manger, a man who feeds the hungry but goes for forty days in the desert without food for himself, a man who washes the feet of his own disciples, and who heals the sick but accepts the suffering of crucifixion. In the Passion according to Luke, Jesus heals one of the men sent to arrest him. He even makes friends of those who were enemies, Pilate and Herod (Luke 23:12). Barabbas, a murderer, is set free so Jesus can be crucified. As he is led to the cross, he consoles the women who weep for him. And even on the cross, he is the suffering servant who asks the Father to forgive those who are killing him. He accepts the faith of the criminal who is also being executed and promises him a place in Paradise. With the example of service that Jesus shows toward those who put him to death, can we at least be "one who serves" those around us? Can we at least forgive those who hurt us--maybe even pray for our leaders, especially the ones with whom we disagree? Tom Schmidt, Copyright (c) J. S. Paluch Co.
Floater and Smitty … Floater: While camping with my dog, a strong wind came along and blew our tent away. I said, “Toto, I’ve a feeling we’re not in canvas anymore.” Smitty: Never iron a four leaf clover! You don’t want to press your luck! Floater: How did we survive? Our moms wiped our faces clean with spit on a hanky, not an antibacterial wipe. Smitty: I didn’t think wearing orthopedic shoes would help but I stand corrected. Floater: I may look like I’m having deep thoughts but 99% of the time I’m thinking about who is going to buy me coffee. Smitty: So Genghis Khan had a brother who contracted leprosy and was banished to Ireland where he was known as Leper Khan Floater: A prankster once challenged me to balance two eggs on my head. It wasn’t long before I realized the yolk was on me. Smitty: Did you hear about the corduroy pillows? They’re making headlines Floater: My friends all say I’m the cheapest person they’ve ever met… …I don’t buy it! Smitty: Eye drops are technically blinker fluid.
Golden Age Calendar
April 16: Denise Neibel—BPC
April 23: Closed for Easter Vacation
Home Bound? If you or a loved one are homebound and would like to receive the sacrament of Penance or to have Communion brought to you, please call the rectory at 718-634-6357. You will be visited by a priest and then a member of the parish will contact you to set up a date when Communion can be brought to you. Do you know a neighbor who is unable to get out to Mass and might not see this notice? Why don’t you bring them a bulletin and / or tell them about Communion to the homebound. We are all called by God to reach out and serve others. What a beautiful way to do that...right here in our own parish of Blessed Trinity.
Ministers’ Schedule EASTER SUNDAY
Sunday April 21, 2019 St. Thomas More 8:30am
Lectors: Lou Durante Eucharistic Ministers: Terry Durante, Chris Donley and
Lucia Greenberg St. Genevieve 9am
Lectors: Michelle Bernabo Eucharistic Minster: Pat Lighthall
St. Edmund 10am Lector: Jennifer Pye
Eucharistic Minister: Deacon Jim St. Thomas More 11:30am
Lector: Bernadette Flynn Eucharistic Ministers: Grace Gorman, Diane Ryan and
Pat Lunny St. Genevieve 12 noon
Lector: Eileen Lennon Eucharistic Minister: Peggy Conroy
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Geraldine McManus, D.D.S.Breezy Point Medical Center204-08 Rockaway Point Blvd.
Rockaway Pt. 718-474-6500
GOLDEN AGE SEA BREEZE TRAVEL: Trip to Broad Hollow Theatre in Elmont, LI to see “How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying” on Wednesday May 8, 2019. Cost: $75.00 includes transportation and lunch at Filomena’s in Franklin Square. $20 due with reservation. Balance of $55 due 4/3. Pick up SFDS 9:45 am Breezy Pt. 10 am. Checks payable to GOLDEN AGE SEA BREEZE Travel. For info: Mary Ellen Carroll 718-634-6307. Trip to Empire Casino –Yonkers. Tuesday, May 21, 2019 Cost: $27. Coupons for $10 Free Play and $5 food . If interested call Marie Howley 718-474-4172. PRAYER, REFLECTION and BENEDICTION The Children of God’s Love Prayer Community meets on Tuesday Evenings from 7:30pm to 9pm in St. Thomas More, invites everyone to join in Prayer, and Reflection ending with Benediction. The third Tuesday of each month Fr. Francis Obu Mends, our Moderator, will celebrate the Eucharist, assisted by Deacon Dick Lee. (Weather Permitting during Winter Months.) ROXBURY CATHOLIC CLUB: To rent the Roxbury Catholic Club call Tim (917) 578-4823 for information and details. A message from … ...Rockaway Point Volunteer Ambulance: If you are on 24/7 In-Home Oxygen we are looking to assist you, especially after many in Breezy Point have been losing electric power. Please call Rockaway Point Fire Department 718—474—2593 and leave a voice message with your name and address. More importantly please have your Doctor Fax a letter to PSEG for-merly LIPA (631—844—3635) addressing your needs. ST. VINCENT DE PAUL CLOTHING DRIVE: The St. Vincent De Paul clothing truck will be in front of St. Thomas More Church on Saturday April 27, 2019 from 9am to 12 noon. The Breezy Point Green Committee will be giving away plants and seeds that day. BOSTON HISTORY ADVENTURE: Last call for a room. Contact PJPurpurasr@aol.com or call 917-576– 8114. ST. EDMUND PREP HIGH SCHOOL: 2nd Annual 5K eagle Run—Saturday, May 11, 2019 9:00am start BBQ to follow. More info @ www.stedmundprep.org/eaglerun/
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Standing on the Rock CD by James Wahl
FUN AND FAITH-FILLED MUSICfor little ones, with 10 songs based onBible stories and the teachings of Jesus.
This is a new music collection for preschoolchildren and those who are in early grade school.
$17.00 + S&H
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