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June 5, 2016
SAINT BASIL the GREAT PARISH
202 HARCOURT STREET, WINNIPEG, MB R3J 3H3
Parish Office: 204-837-4180 Parish Hall: 204-889-9057
Parish Priest: Rt. Rev Canon Walter Klimchuk
The Sacred Heart – The Lover of Mankind
From Father Walter
In June we celebrate the feast
of the Sacred Heart. It is a feast
that reminds us of Our Lord's
love for us. The words of the
Divine Scripture gives us the
perfect statement of the
supreme love: "Greater love
than this no man has that he
gave up his life for another."
This is what Our Lord and
Saviour did. He give His life for
you and me.
And, to those who respond to
His love through a devotion to the Sacred Heart, Our Lord
promises the following blessings:
1. I will give them graces necessary for their state of life.
2. I will establish peace in their homes.
3. I will comfort them in all their afflictions
4. I will be their assured Refuge against all the snares of their
enemies in life, and above all in death.
5. I will bestow abundant blessings upon all their undertakings.
6. Sinners shall find in My Heart the source and infinite ocean of
mercy.
7. Fervent souls shall mount to high perfection.
8. I will bless every dwelling in which an image of My Heart shall
be exposed and honoured.
9. Tepid souls shall become fervent.
SUNDAY DIVINE LITURGY
10:00 a.m. (Rosary precedes each
Liturgy by one half hour)
WEEKDAY SERVICES (Tue-Fri)
8:30 a.m. Rosary followed by Liturgy
CONFESSIONS
Before Divine Liturgies
BAPTISIMS
By appointment
FUNERALS
By arrangement
MARRIAGES
By appointment at least three months
in advance
WEBSITE: www.saintbasilwpg.ca
PARISH OFFICE EMAIL ADDRESS:
parish@saintbasilwpg.ca
BULLETIN SUBMISSIONS:
bulletin@saintbasilwpg.ca
June 5, 2016
10. I will give to priests the gift of touching the most hardened hearts.
11. Those who promote this devotion shall have their names written in My Heart, never to be
effaced.
12. To all those who receive the Holy Eucharist on the First Friday of the month, for nine
consecutive months, I will grant the graces of final repentance.
Let us go to Jesus and find in His loving gentleness, the refuge and comfort that we seek,
the healing that we need. Let us find in Him and through our devotion, a source of grace
and God's life in us, of love and of the Holy Spirit enabling us to be God's children.
JESUS LOVES YOU!
He spoke of His Heart in the Gospel. "Learn of Me
for I am meek and humble of heart." (Matt. 11:29).
It is a sign that He loves YOU. It is also a reminder
that He wants YOU to love HIM.
You love Jesus
especially by
keeping His commandments and avoiding sin.
The CROWN OF THORNS around the Heart of Jesus
means that our sins hurt Him.
The WOUND in His Heart is made by His enemies who
hate Him, but their spear did open for you the font of ALL MERCY.
The FLAMES mean that Jesus' Heart is on fire with love for ALL people - white and
colored, rich and poor, sinners and saints. Place your petition before HIM.
The CROSS tells us that Jesus died on the Cross out of love for us, to save our souls
from Hell.
Prayer of Praise and Thanksgiving
Good Jesus, grant that I may live in you and for you. Protect me in the midst of danger;
comfort me in my afflictions: give me health of body, assistance in my temporal needs,
your blessing on all that I do, and the grace of a holy death.
Heart of Jesus, burning with love for us, inflame our hearts with love of You.
Pray: One "Our Father", One "Hail Mary", and "Glory Be". Amen.
June 5, 2016
The Beatitudes, Part Three:
Have you ever been acquainted with anybody who truly desires to
mourn? No doubt we have all known people who were deeply
depressed with the way things were going in their lives. Perhaps we
have all been that way ourselves at some point. When we are
dejected and despondent, we make efforts, sometimes very strenuous
ones, to get rid of the heavy spirit that is depressing our sense of well-
being. So great is the human desire to seek "happiness" that it seems
as if the whole world has bent every effort to find as many entertaining
diversions as can exist to distract the mind from the tensions of living in this fast-paced
culture.
Mourning is a quality that is hateful and irksome to our spirit; we are not naturally motivated
to seek it. Since it is perfectly normal for human nature to seek the cheerful and joyous, we
shrink from suffering and sadness. Thus, it seems paradoxical that Jesus calls those who
mourn "blessed"! This strikingly highlights how different God's perception of human well-
being is from mankind’s.
This beatitude is almost completely contrary to the
world's logic. Indeed, at first glance it also seems to be
contrary to another of Jesus' statements in John 10:10:
"The thief does not come except to steal, and to kill, and
to destroy. I have come that they may have life, and
that they may have it more abundantly." To people in all
places and ages, men deem as blessed the prosperous
and happy, but Christ pronounces the poor in spirit and
sorrowful as blessed.
Undoubtedly, a biblical key, perhaps several, disclose this incongruity. Does God confer
some benefit upon the character of those who mourn? Is there something about the mindset
of the sorrowful that helps them to view both self and life itself from a more stable and
realistic basis? Could Jesus be speaking of a certain kind of mourning different from the
mourning associated with death, catastrophes, frustration of dashed hopes and other tragic
events?
God is not against mourning a personal tragedy, but public display that focuses attention on
the self does not have His approval. The mourning Jesus calls a blessing in Matthew 5:4 is
most assuredly not a highly visible and dramatic kind, but has a private, spiritual quality
inseparably linked to the other beatitudes.
Evidently, a specific type of mourning is the kind that receives the comfort of God
The Bible shows three kinds of sorrow. The first is the natural grief that arises from tragic
circumstances. The second is a sinful, inordinate, hopeless sorrow that can even refuse to
be comforted. Perhaps the outstanding biblical example of this is Judas, whose remorse led
June 5, 2016
him to commit a further sin, self-murder. Paul, in II Corinthians 7:10, calls this "the sorrow of
the world [which] produces death." The third sorrow is godly sorrow. In the same verse, Paul
writes, "For godly sorrow produces repentance to salvation, not to be regretted. . . ."
Mourning, grief or sorrow is not a good thing in
itself. What motivates it, combined with what it
produces, is what matters. Thus, II Corinthians
7:10 states a vital key: The mourning that Jesus
teaches is a major spiritual component of godly
repentance that leads to or helps to produce the
abundant life of John 10:10.
This principle arises often in secular life because
humans seem bound and determined to learn by
painful experience. For example, only when our
health is either breaking or broken down, and we are suffering the painful effects of
ignorantly or willfully ignoring health laws, do we make serious efforts to discover causes that
lead to recovery of health and relief from the pains of disease. At that point we truly want to
bring the comfort of good health back into our life.
Solomon addresses this truism in Ecclesiastes 7:2-4:
“It is better to go to the house of mourning than to go to the house of feasting, for that is the
end of all men; and the living will take it to heart. Sorrow is better than laughter, for by a sad
countenance the heart is made better. The heart of the wise is in the house of mourning, but
the heart of fools is in the house of mirth.”
Solomon is in no way saying that feasting and laughter are to be avoided, but rather he is
comparing their relative value to life. Feasting does not contain an inherent power to motivate
positive change in the way one is living. Instead, it motivates one to remain as he is, feeling a
sense of temporary well-being. Contrariwise, sorrow—especially when pain or death is part
of the picture (Psalm 90:12)—has an intrinsic power to draw a person to consider the
direction of his path and institute changes that will enhance his life.
This general principle applies to virtually all life's difficulties. Whether health problems or
financial difficulties, family troubles or business hassles, in falling into them and being
delivered from them, we generally follow this pattern. However, spiritually, in our relationship
with God, some variations from this general principle arise because God is deeply involved in
leading and guiding our creation into His image.
In this case not everything is happening "naturally." He intervenes in the natural processes of
our life and calls us, revealing Himself and His will to us. His goodness leads us to
repentance. By His Spirit we are regenerated, taught, guided and enabled. He creates
circumstances in our life by which we are moved to grow and become like Him in character
and perspective, but some of these circumstances cause a great deal of sorrow. By His
June 5, 2016
grace He supplies our every need so that we are well equipped to meet His demands on our
life and glorify Him.
But Jesus' teaching never detaches this principle of sorrow or mourning from God's purpose
because the right kind of mourning properly directed has the power to motivate wonderfully
positive results. God definitely wants results, fruit produced through our relationship with
Him. As Jesus says, "By this My Father is glorified, that you bear much fruit; so you will be
My disciples" (John 15:8).
The Greek word for ’ to mourn’, used here, is the strongest word for mourning in the Greek
language. . . . It is defined as the kind of grief which takes such a hold on a man that it
cannot be hid. It is not only the sorrow which brings an ache to the heart; it is the sorrow
which brings the unrestrainable tears to the eyes. This illustrates mourning's emotional
power, indicating it has enough power to produce the resolve to accomplish more than
merely feeling badly and crying. Mourning always precedes genuine conversion, for there
must be a real sense of sin before the remedy, or deliverance from it, will even begin to be
desired.
How do we measure against those whom the Bible uses as standards of mourning?
Consider the woman of Luke 7:36-38:
“Then one of the Pharisees asked Him to eat with him.
And He went to the Pharisee's house, and sat down to
eat. And behold, a woman in the city who was a sinner,
when she knew that Jesus sat at the table in the
Pharisee's house, brought an alabaster flask of fragrant
oil, and stood at His feet behind Him weeping; and she
began to wash His feet with her tears, and wiped them
with the hair of her head; and she kissed His feet and
anointed them with the fragrant oil.”
The woman, seems aware of nothing except her sinfulness and her great need of
forgiveness. This resulted in mournful weeping over her destitution and love for the One who
could fill her need.
Perhaps nothing shuts us off from God more firmly than human self-sufficiency (Revelation
3:17). It is a strange phenomenon that the more clearly we see our sins the better person we
are. Perhaps the most damaging of all sins is to be conscious of no sin. The supreme lesson
in this vignette is that the woman's attitude not only resulted in forgiveness but also played a
major role in producing gratitude and loving devotion for Christ in her.
The Parable of the Prodigal Son unveils a clear progression from awareness of pain arising
from want and recognition of sin then on to sorrow for what he had become and done.
Repentance, forgiveness and acceptance were the fruit:
“But when he had spent all, there arose a severe famine in that land, and he began to be in
want. Then he went and joined himself to a citizen of that country, and he sent him into his
June 5, 2016
fields to feed swine. And he would gladly have filled his stomach
with the pods that the swine ate, and no one gave him anything. But
when he came to himself, he said, "How many of my father's hired
servants have bread enough and to spare, and I perish with hunger!
I will arise and go to my father, and will say to him, ‘Father, I have
sinned against heaven and before you, and I am no longer worthy
to be called your son. Make me like one of your hired servants.'" (Luke 15:14-19)
In another example, the publican stood far off, beat himself upon his breast and cried out,
"God be merciful to me, a sinner!" (Luke 18:13). Also, the 3,000 converted on the Day of
Pentecost exhibited a similar reaction: "Now when they heard [Peter's sermon], they were cut
to the heart, and said to Peter and the rest of the apostles, ‘Men and brethren, what shall we
do?'" (Acts 2:37).
The publican and the multitude who repented at Peter's preaching felt the plague of sin, each
in his own heart. This mourning springs from a conscience made tender and a heartfelt
awareness of hostility toward God's will and personal rebellion against Him. It is grief
expressed because one has become acutely aware that the morality he holds falls so far
short of holiness that shame rises to the surface. One also feels this agony when he realizes
that his personal behavior and attitudes have caused the death of his Creator and Savior.
This affords us insight into the painfully heartfelt repentance of an entire nation across every
social strata. This ought to give us a clear picture of the depth of feeling God expects when
we recognize what our sins have produced. It is very evident that mourning accompanies
and motivates the kind of change that God approves. It is no wonder, then, that Jesus says
that mourners are blessed.
When Jesus gives this beatitude, He does not say, "Blessed are those that have mourned"
but "Blessed are those who mourn." He states it as a present and continuous experience.
Repentance is not a one-time experience, nor does human nature simply disappear after we
receive the new nature. Christianity involves a continuous learning and growing process. We
are not instantly created in the image of God by fiat. God has decreed that we must live by
faith, and that requires time and experience. We are created in the image of God through the
fires of life's sorrows and adversities, as well as its joys. Even of our Savior, Isaiah writes,
"He is despised and rejected by men, a Man of sorrows
and acquainted with grief" (Isaiah 53:3). Paul adds:
“Who, in the days of His flesh, when He had offered up
prayers and supplications, with vehement cries and
tears to Him who was able to save Him from death, and
was heard because of His godly fear, though He was a
Son, yet He learned obedience by the things which He
suffered. (Hebrews 5:7-8)”
The Christian is one whose mind is attuned to God's
through an ever-deepening relationship. He has much to
June 5, 2016
mourn over because the sins he commits—both of omission and commission—are a daily
sense of grief and will remain so as long as his conscience stays tender. A tender
conscience becomes hardened through the deceitfulness of sin. An active and growing
relationship with God will lead to an enhanced discovery of human nature's depravity
because God will faithfully reveal the massive gulf between His holiness and our corrupt and
ever-polluting heart. He will make us conscious of the distance and coldness of our love, the
surges of pride and doubt, and the lack of fruit we produce.
The apostle Paul, whom all would consider a most mature Christian, writes,
“For what I am doing, I do not understand. For what I will to
do, that I do not practice; but what I hate, that I do. . . . For I
know that in me (that is, in my flesh) nothing good dwells;
for to will is present with me, but how to perform what is
good I do not find. For the good that I will to do, I do not do;
but the evil I will not to do that I practice. . . . O wretched
man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death?"
(Romans 7:15, 18-19, 24)
Paul was not living a life of sin as he had before conversion. His words reflect the keen
perception into the deceitfulness of human nature of a man so close to God he could see
virtually every self-centered, evil, twisted and perverted nuance of carnality that still lurked in
him. He abhorred it, groaning and yearning for complete deliverance from it!
He says of us in Romans 8:23:
“And not only they, but we also who have the first fruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves
groan within ourselves, eagerly waiting for the adoption, the redemption of our body.”
In a related verse, Paul also includes us in his thought, "For in this we groan, earnestly
desiring to be clothed with our habitation which is from heaven" (II Corinthians 5:2). These
verses not only reflect the joy of what lies before us but also the sorrow of living each day
with the burden of the world, our flesh and our mind that so easily lead us into sins we have
no desire to commit.
In our godly sorrow, we never want to fall short of God's glory or to bring shame upon His
name. We want to honor Him by our every thought, word and deed. When we turn aside in
some way—no matter how small it may seem to others—we bear an internal burden of
sorrow that we wish we did not have, kicking and asking ourselves why we did such a stupid
thing! It is an emotional price we must pay because we love Him.
The same apostle reminds us of our indebtedness to Him:
“Therefore remember that you, once Gentiles in the flesh—who are called Uncircumcision by
what is called the Circumcision made in the flesh by hands—that at that time you were
without Christ, being aliens from the commonwealth of Israel and strangers from the
June 5, 2016
covenants of promise, having no hope and without God in the world. But now in Christ Jesus
you who once were far off have been made near by the blood of Christ.” (Ephesians 2:11-13)
Earlier, Paul had laid the groundwork for a proper sense of obligation and commitment to
Christ by stating a few undeniable facts: That we conducted our lives according to the course
of this world, according to Satan's will (verse 2); that we fulfilled the desires of the flesh and
the mind (verse 3); and because of disobedience we were as good as dead (verses 1, 5).
Through no merit of our own but by God's grace alone, He through Jesus Christ rescues us
from this.
In those who understand this deeply and personally, this creates an exquisite sense of
indebtedness, devotion and longing to honor Him. It accounts for the sorrow we feel each
time we are aware of falling short of fully pleasing Him. This is not bad; it is good because it
motivates those who have this in balance to intensify their devotion and redirect their efforts
along the right path.
The more closely a Christian lives to God, the more he will mourn over all that dishonors
Him.
Those of us in this end-time age may have difficulty comprehending some aspects of the
mourning God expects and respects in His children. Our conscience, unless we carefully
guard it, can easily adapt itself into accepting its cultural environment. Society's ethics and
morals are not constants. There exists a very real pressure for them to decline from God-
established standards; what one generation considers immoral or unethical might not be by
the next. For instance, what appears on public movie screens over the past thirty to forty
years has changed dramatically.
The mourning Jesus desires is the kind that exhibits a softness
of heart that is ready for change in a righteous direction, one
that knows it has done wrong and is eagerly willing to have it
cleansed into holiness. We of this generation face an uphill
battle because, through such media as television and movies,
we have vicariously experienced the breaking of God's law in
unparalleled frequency and in vividly sympathetic ways. On the
screen life is cheap, property is meaningless, sexual purity is
scoffed at, stealing is fine "if it's necessary," and faithfulness is
nerdish and corny. Where is God in it? How much of this
world's attitudes have we unwittingly absorbed into our character? Is our conscience still
tender? Is mourning over sin—ours and others'—a vital part of our relationship with God?
Godly mourning plays a positive role in producing the changes God desires to produce in us.
We need to pray with David, "Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a steadfast spirit
within me" (Psalm 51:10). He asks God to give him what did not exist before, that his
affections and feelings might be made right, and that he might not have the callused attitude
that led him to adultery and murder. A plea of this kind is one that God will not deny. If we are
truly serious about overcoming and glorifying God, it is well worth the effort.
June 5, 2016
THE TRAVELING ICON OF THE MOTHER OF POCHAIV
You can arrange to have the icon in your home by using the sign-up sheet at the back of the church. Just write your name on the week in the calendar that corresponds to your choice of time period.
When we speak of icons as a medium for “gazing into heaven”, we refer to their value as much more than ethereal-looking religious art. Instead, icons serve as a very real means for connecting us with God and His love. Icons are beautiful, but without relationship behind it, beauty alone feeds only a portion of the human soul, and ultimately patronizes the deep human need for loving connection with the Transcendent. With this in mind, we seek to view icons as points of visual and spiritual intersection with eternal things, as living prompts for our prayers, and as reminders of the very real world that exists beyond the limitations of this temporal one. Icons can seem complicated or strange at first. Take time to come present to the icon, to simply gaze, allowing both your sense of sight as well as the longings of your heart to interact with what the icon presents to you in a particular moment. Icons have a way of teaching the heart spiritual truths the mind cannot. This is part of what is meant by icons being “theology in color.
While the Icon is in your home pray before it, alone or with others, for all your intentions and needs. You may pray the Rosary, in whole or in part, or the prayers from the Moleben to the Mother of God, or pray in your own words; or simply spend some silent moments in meditation, listening and being attentive to God's Word.
In your prayers, approach the Blessed Mother with childlike confidence and bring her all your concerns, worries, disappointments, hurts and sufferings, and all your needs, wishes and hopes. But also say a prayer of thanksgiving for all of your successes and joys, your graces and blessings, known and unknown. Make the most of the presence of Mary's Icon in your home.
PLEASE REMEMBER THOSE
WHO NEED OUR PRAYERS
Oh God our Father we pray You
restore to physical health, those
who are weakened with illness.
Give peace of mind to those
troubled with worry and comfort
those discouraged with problems. Help them find their inner strength, a faith and trust in you and a
love for one another to guide them through any health challenges or troubles they may face. Amen.
Walter Lotocki Steven Marchensk Joyce Hojlo Bill Morant Annie H. Kruk
Margaret Hadubiak Dorothy Labay Kay Tokarwiski Mildred Kalyniuk Helen Czaplynsky
Serge Larouche Adele Genik Veronica Darichuk Anna Labay Paul Klym Rose Swidinsky
Father Gerard Regnier Wallace Darichuk Jason Yaskiw Pearl Genik
If someone you know needs the prayers of the parish community, please contact the Parish Office.
“Therefore...pray for one another, so that you may be healed.” (James 5:15)
If anyone wishes to receive the Sacrament of Confession or Holy Communion at home
or in the hospital or nursing home please contact the parish office at 204-837-4180.
June 5, 2016
LITURGIES & INTENTIONS
INTENTION OFFERED BY
PLEASE NOTE THAT FATHER WALTER WILL BE AWAY UNTIL JUNE 12TH
JUNE 5TH 10:00 am +SOUL OF VICKI PUSHKA FATHER WALTER
JUNE 12TH 10:00 am HEALTH & BLESSINGS DOREEN MUSICK ROSE OLYNYK
+SOUL OF LOU GOLLETS MERV & SONIA MICHALYSHEN
+SOUL OF ANNA HORBONIS MARY TURKO
+SOUL OF JOSEPH SWEREDA 10 YEARS DEACON LEON & OLGA TWERDUN
JUNE 13TH NO MASS
JUNE 14TH 8:30 am +SOUL OF LOU GOLLETS V. KASKIW
JUNE 15TH 8:30 am +SOUL OF ED PILAT J.W.
JUNE 16TH 8:30 am +SOULS OF STANLEY & EMILY STOYANSKY & FAMILY C & A
JUNE 17TH 8:30 am +SOUL OF MARJORIE ROMANIK PATRICIA CAFFERTY
JUNE 19TH 10:00 am BLESSINGS ON ALL FATHERS LIVING & DECEASED
+SOUL OF VICKI PUSHKA FATHER WALTER
+SOUL OF LOU GOLLETS ROSE & JOHN WASYLIW
+SOUL OF ED PILAT ROSE & JOHN WASYLIW
JUNE 20TH 6:30 pm +SOUL OF ED PILAT TONY SKLAR
JUNE 21ST 8:30 am +SOUL OF RAY POPLAWSKI MARY POPLAWSKI
+SOULS OF GREGORY NICK POPLAWSKI MARY POPLAWSKI
JUNE 22ND 8:30 am +SOUL OF LOU GOLLETS MORLEY & EVELYN LUHOWY
JUNE 23RD 8:30 am +SOUL OF MARJORIE ROMANIK CAROL KOCH
JUNE 24TH 8:30 am +SOULS OF STANLEY & EMILY STOYANSKY & FAMILY C&A
JUNE 26TH 10:00 am +SOULS OF ALEX & DARLENE BUGERA VICKI BUGERA
JUNE 27TH NO MASS
JUNE 28TH 8:30 am +SOUL OF ED PILAT STELLA PROKOPOWICH
JUNE 29TH 8:30 am +SOUL OF MARJORIE ROMANIK PHYLLIS FEDORCHUK
JUNE 30TH 8:30 am +SOUL OF LOU GOLLETS ADELINE SHYMANSKI
JULY 1ST NO MASS HAPPY CANADA DAY
JULY 3RD 10:00 am +SOUL OF VICKI PUSHKA FATHER WALTER
+SOUL OF LOU GOLLETS MARY TURKO
June 5, 2016
SANCTUARY LIGHT
WEEK OF INTENTION OFFERED BY
JUNE 5TH PERSONAL INTENTIONS CATHY STOYANSKY
JUNE 12TH +SOUL OF HUSBAND BORIS MUSICK (28 YEARS) DOREEN MUSICK & FAMILY
JUNE 19TH +SOULS OF SISTERS CHRISTINE, MARY & PEARL DOREEN MUSICK & FAMILY
JUNE 26TH +SOULS OF BROTHERS PAUL, WALTER & NICHOLAS DOREEN MUSICK & FAMILY
JULY 3RD HEALTH OF ANNA LABAY ANDY & LINDA LABAY
JULY 10TH +SOUL OF TONY NAHULIAK VIRGINIA MOORE
JULY 24TH +SOUL OF EMILY STOYANSKY ANGELA & CATHY STOYANSKY
AUGUST 28TH HEALTH & BLESSINGS ANGELA STOYANSKY CATHY STOYANSKY
SEPTEMBER 4TH +SOULS OF WILLIAM & NELLIE KABAN KABAN FAMILY
SEPTEMBER 11TH +SOUL OF ROSE CAMERON KABAN FAMILY
SEPTEMBER 18TH HEALTH & BLESSINGS ANGELA STOYANSKY CATHY STOYANSKY
SEPTEMBER 25TH +SOUL OF FRED SOLTYS ANNE SOLTYS & FAMILY
OCTOBER 2ND HEALTH & BLESSINGS FATHER WALTER CATHY & ANGELA STOYANSKY
OCTOBER 30TH +SOUL OF ANNE SKOCHYLES GERRY SKOCHYLES
NOVEMBER 6TH HEALTH & BLESSINGS CATHY STOYANSKY ANGELA STOYANSKY
NOVEMBER 13TH +SOUL OF LARRY FEDORCHUK PHYLLIS FEDORCHUK & FAMILY
DECEMBER 4TH +SOUL OF JOHN LABAY ANDY & LINDA LABAY
DECEMBER 18TH +SOUL OF STANLEY STOYANSKY CATHY & ANGELA STOYANSKY
DECEMBER 25TH +SOUL OF HNAT ZAMRYKUT ANNE TANCHAK & FAMILY
A Sanctuary Light burns eternally to indicate the presence of Jesus in the Holy Eucharist in the Tabernacle. It is a marvelous thing that we can actually be in His presence!
"In the presence of Jesus in the Holy Sacrament we ought to be like the Blessed in heaven before
the Divine Essence," - St. Teresa of Avila
."Can you feel the fragrance of Paradise which diffuses Itself from the Tabernacle?," - St. Philip
"The faith of the Church is this: That one and identical is the Word of God and the Son of Mary
Who suffered on the Cross, Who is present in the Eucharist, and Who rules in Heaven," - Pope
Pius XII
"Jesus, Food of strong souls, strengthen me, purify me, make me godlike," - St. Gemma Galgani
June 5, 2016
AS YOU MAY KNOW, OUR BOILER
NEEDS TO BE REPLACED. THE
PROCESS WILL BEGIN ON JUNE 6TH
.
SOME REMOVAL OF ASBESTOS WILL
BE REQUIRED, SO IT IS ESSENTIAL
THAT NO ONE IS IN THE CHURCH
DURING THE WEEK OF JUNE 6TH
. FOR
YOUR OWN SAFETY, PLEASE STAY
AWAY. PLEASE PASS THIS MESSAGE
ON TO SOMEONE WHO MAY NOT BE IN CHURCH TODAY.
UCWLC NEWS
LADIES LEAGUE WIND UP JUNE 7TH.
We have two events this June with the Pancake breakfast + Spiritual Baby Shower on June 5th, all are very welcome to join us for a delicious breakfast and support for our Spiritual Baby Shower. Our second event is the Knights of Columbus wind up on June 16, 2016 with a 5:00 pm start with divine liturgy. Brother knights please bring your wives along and all wives of deceased member are very welcome to
attend this function and enjoy the bar-b-que and fellowship with friends. Thank you and have a wonderful summer.
MUSICIANS WANTED
Marianne has had to give up her organ playing duties. She brought a lot to
our services through her gift of music. She will be missed.
If you play an instrument and would like to share your gift, please contact
Father Walter or the parish office. If you know of someone who may like to
play, please talk to them about it. Thank you.
IF IT’S BROKEN…
IF YOU NOTICE THAT ANYTHING IN THE CHURCH,
BASEMENT OR OUTSIDE THE BUILDING IS IN
NEED OF REPAIR, PUT A NOTE IN THE
SUGGESTION BOX WHICH IS LOCATED ON THE
WALL, TO THE RIGHT OF THE LITERATURE RACK.
June 5, 2016
Ukrainian Park Summer Camp The camp is located near Gimli, along the west shore of Lake Winnipeg. Children grades 6-10 can register to attend July3-10; grades K-6 attend July 10-17. Camp Counsellors and parent volunteers are needed. Visit the link below for the Camp brochure, registration form, video, and more. See you at Camp this summer!
HAPPIEST OF BIRTHDAYS TO:
LINDA J GORAL who will celebrate on June 9th
BETTY KOLOCHUK who will celebrate on June 15th
JOHN BEREZIAK who will celebrate on June 16th
MNOHAYA -MNOHAYA LITA! GOD GRANT YOU MANY HAPPY YEARS
HAPPY ANNIVERSARY TO:
GEORGE & NOELLE RICHARDSON JUNE 5 1965
KEVIN & KERRI-LYN SZWALUK JUNE 12 2004
JOHN & NATALIE BEREZIAK JUNE 17 1961
May your marriage be blessed with love, joy and companionship for all
the years of your lives.
“Love is patient, love is kind, it does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It is not rude, it is not
self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil but
rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.”
(Corinthians 13:4-8)
Counters for June are:
Ron & Phyllis Marchenski and Tony Sklar. Submitted by Sylvia Martyniuk
Cleaners for June :
Mary Prima Marilyn Slobogian James Rubleski
FOUND
A HARDCOVER ‘VICTORIA’ BOOK. PLEASE CONTACT THE PARISH
OFFICE.
June 5, 2016
The Ukrainian Catholic Church
Of St. Basil the Great Family Fun Picnic
All parish members are invited to celebrate
family and faith on
Sunday, June 26th at 11:00 a.m. (following the liturgy)
Bring your favourite lawn chair and an
appetite for fun!
Sign-up will be available at the back of the church
June 5, 2016
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
VELYCHKOVSKY PILGRIMAGE TO UKRAINE 2016 July 3 to July 25, 2016 - The
Bishop Velychkovsky Martyr's Shrine is conducting a pilgrimage for 22 days to places in
Ukraine where Blessed Martyr Vasyl lived, worked and suffered. Some of the places we will
be visiting are: Lviv, Ternopil, Ivano-Frankivsk, Kovel, Kamianetz Podilsk, Kyiv, the
Carpathian Mountains, Zarvanytsia, Pochaiv, etc. On this pilgrimage we will have prayer
services and hear stories of Blessed Vasyl’s life as well as sight-seeing throughout
Ukraine.Cost of the trip is $4500 CDN which includes: flights from Winnipeg to Lviv/Kyiv to
Winnipeg, travelling in air-conditioned bus throughout Ukraine, accommodations, meals and
attractions. Travel and medical insurance is not included. For more information contact by
e-mail: bvshrine@mymts.net or phone 204-338-7321. Book as soon as possible as space is
limited to 20 pilgrims. Deadline for reservations and non-refundable deposit of $300.00 is
February 29, 2016. Tour conducted by Fr. John Sianchuk, C.Ss.R. & Mary Jane Kalenchuk.
Come and experience Blessed Vasyl’s homeland and the beauty and hospitality of Ukraine.
World Youth Day 2016!
CUCP ~ Canadian Ukrainian Catholic Pilgrims Ukrainian Catholics from Canada will be joining
together to experience WYD 2016. July 12-August 3, 2016July 12-14 ~ Lviv, Ukraine July 15-
17 ~ Zarvanytsia, UkraineJuly 18-24 ~ Days of the Eparchy in Przemysl, PolandJuly 25-31 ~
World Youth Day Week in Krakow, PolandAugust 1-3 ~ Wrap Up Retreat Days in Krakow,
PolandCost Approx $3800-$4200 For more information on the Pilgrimage you can email either
Sarah at uwitness2youth@gmail.com or Millie at youth@edmontoneparchy.com Please join us
for a Pilgrimage of a Lifetime! (Register early, space is limited)
The Canon Luhovy Assembly Educational Foundation provides financial assistance to
Ukrainian Catholic students, seminarians & religious sisters who attend post-secondary
institutions, seminaries & private Catholic secondary schools. Bursary application forms are
available on the bulletin board. The closing date for receipt of applications is September 30th.
Ukraine-Kyiv Pavilion is starting its volunteer recruitment drive for folklorama 2016. This
year, Ukraine-Kyiv Pavilion will run during the first week of Folklorama (July 31 to August 6,
2016) and will be located at Maples Collegiate, 1330 Jefferson Avenue. Pavioion set up will
take place from July 25 theough 30. Pavilion take down will take place on Monday, August 8.
If you are interested in volunteering, please contact us at volunteers@kyivpavilion.ca. Please
note that volunteers must sign up ahead of time by July 24, 2016.
June 5, 2016
◄ May June 2016 July ►
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1
2 Knights of
Columbus Meeting
6:45 pm
3
4
5 Knights of
Columbus
PANCAKE
Breakfast &
Spiritual Baby
Shower
6
ASBESTOS
7
REMOVAL
8
STAY AWAY
9
FROM THE
10
CHURCH
11
12
13
14
15
16 Knights of
columbus wind up
Liturgy 5 pm
17
18 International
Picnic Day
19 Father's Day
20 Parish Council
Meeting 6:30 pm
21 National
Aboriginal Day
(Canada)
22
23
24
25
26 FAMILY FUN
PICNIC 11:00 am
27
28
29
30
Notes:
Recommended