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45 WILUS WAY, ISELIN NJ 08830 GPS—USE 51 VERNAM ST., ISELIN NJ † Phone: 732-283-2300 † Fax: 732-283-3326
[email protected] † www.stcecelia.com (For quick reference—See pages 2 &3)
Parish Staff Fr. Thomas Naduviledathu, S.D.V. Pastor Fr. Vernon Kohlmann, S.D.V. Parochial Vicar Deacon Richard Lutomski Permanent Deacon Deacon Anthony Pepe Permanent Deacon Kathleen Beglan Parish Secretary [email protected] Sr. Anna Tran, SCC
Maria Campos
mass Schedule Monday—Friday 7 am—9:15 am Saturday 8 am—4:30 pm Sunday 7:30, 9:00, 11:00 am, 5:00 pm Spanish Mass 6:30 pm
Holy day mass times Weekday Evening before Vigil Mass 7 pm, day of: 7:00, 9:15 am, 12:05 pm, and 7 pm.
Parish office hours Monday—Friday 9:00 am—4:00 pm
Confession Saturday 11:00 am—12:00 pm / 3:15—4:15 pm
Gift shop Gift Shop—732-283-1775 Monday—Friday 10:00 am—1:00 pm Saturday 3:00 pm—6:00 pm Sunday 10:00 am—12:30 pm Hours may vary, please call before you come. Registration To enable us to better serve you, all parishioners are asked to register at the Parish Office. Family members over the age of 18 should register as individuals. To receive a letter of recommendation or character reference you should be registered for at least three months.
Social ministry office— 732-283-0150 FOOD PANTRY is open for food pick-up TUESDAYS from 10 AM to 2 PM ONLY. Call or email [email protected] for food requests/appointments for pick-up. OTHER SERVICES provided by the Social Ministry Office.
House Blessing If you would like to have a home visitation or blessing, please call the Parish Office.
The Sacraments SPONSOR LETTERS: Church law mandates that a sponsor for Baptism and Confirmation be an active Confirmed Catholic. An active Catholic is a parishioner who is registered, attends Mass weekly, contributes to the support of the Church, is in a valid Catholic Marriage, and publicly leads a life compatible with Church teaching. We can only write letters of eligibility for parishioners who meet these criteria. BAPTISM: Please contact the Parish Office for all information and to make arrangements. MARRIAGE: Make arrangements one year in advance of the proposed wedding date. One party must be a parishioner; call the Parish Office. MINISTRY TO THE SICK OR HOMEBOUND: If any of your loved ones are in need of a priest and need the sacraments, please call the Parish Office at any time. The priests are always on call! Regular communion calls to the sick, aged or homebound should be arranged in advance.
ALTAR SERVERS Children in grades 3 and up are invited join. Contact Ann Cecilia Trinh, Coordinator at the parish office 732-283-2300.
Our lady of Fatima Statue—Home Visit If you are interested in having the statue visit your home, please call Carol 732-494-8697.
Education—732-283-2816 RELIGIOUS EDUCATION CLASSES for grammar school students are held on Mondays from 5:45 to 7:15 PM at the former St. Cecelia School Building. R.C.I.A.: If you know anyone interested in becoming a Catholic or are baptized and want to receive other sacraments, please invite them to join RCIA! Call Deacon Rich at 732-680-1921.
Devotions CENACLE FOR MARIAN MOVEMENT OF PRIESTS every Wednesday after 9:15 AM Mass. NOVENAS to St. Jude and Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal after 8 AM Mass on Saturday. DIVINE MERCY CHAPLET—Fridays after the 9:15 AM Mass. 2,000 HAIL MARY’S every 2nd Saturday of the month, in the Chapel starting at 7:00 AM.
ADORATION CHAPEL—Daily starting after 7 AM Mass to 4 PM. Please arrive before 4 PM for admittance to church. When you come in the Chapel and the Tabernacle doors are closed, open them. If you are the last one in the Chapel, please close the Tabernacle doors and shut off the light (make sure they are completely pressed down). FIRST FRIDAY ADORATION—6:00 pm Adoration followed by Holy Mass at 7:00 pm
societies/organizations LEGION OF MARY—Saturdays—9 AM, Conference Room ROSARY ALTAR SOCIETY—The Rosary is prayed before every daily/weekend Mass. The meetings are the 1st Monday after 1st Sunday at 7 PM in the Church Conference Room. ST. VINCENT DE PAUL CONFERENCE— 2nd & 4th Mondays, 7:30 PM in the Parish Office. SPIRITUALITY GROUP—Every other Thursday evenings from 7:00—9:00 pm in the Conf. Room. Contact—George Madden 732-634-8031. YOUNG ADULT ADORATION—Tuesday evenings at 7:30 pm in the Chapel. Contact Anthony Chin 732-589-4182.
music ministry CLASSICAL CHOIR—Practice Tuesday evenings from September—June at 7:30 PM in the church. Coordinator—Aida Gamboa.
CONTEMPORARY CHOIR—Practice on Tuesday evenings with Classical Choir.
Youth ministry The meeting will be held on the first Saturday of every month after the 4:30 pm Mass in the Youth Ministry Room. Coordinator—Break Ministry.
Church etiquette Upon entering the church, make the sign of the Cross and bless yourself with Holy Water and genuflect before you sit. Please participate in the singing and responses. Come to Mass early enough not to disrupt and leave late enough not to insult the Lord. The Mass does not end until the final song has been completed. Worship reverently enough not to distract. This includes silence in the church and vestibule before Mass. Be mindful to turn off your electronic devices and quietly put the kneelers up and down during the Mass. Dress modestly and appropriately as you would for a special occasion.
Mass Intentions: June 13– June 21
THE MOST HOLY BODY & BLOOD OF CHRIST VIGIL MASS —6/13 4:30 PM Veronica Namutebi req, Geraldine Nakuwungu
SUNDAY—6/14 7:30 AM LIVING & DECEASED OF THE PARISH 9:00 AM *Frances Hutton req, Grust Family *Reynaldo Encarnacion req, Valdes Family 11:00 AM Victor & Maggie Perera req, Anton, Manel and Family 5:00 PM Plowden Family req, Noel Family
MONDAY—WEEKDAY—6/15 7:00 AM Joseph Donahue req, Genevieve Vitale 9:15 AM Deceased members of the Duquette/Aucoin Families req, Gloria Aucoin 1:15 PM Veterans—Dec. members of the Schmitz Families req, Judy Schmitz
TUESDAY—WEEKDAY—6/16 7:00 AM Benjamin Garcia req, Rose & Renato Garcia 9:15 AM Benito Valdes req, Virginia Dizon
WEDNESDAY—WEEKDAY—6/17 7:00 AM Joseph Donahue req, Judith Caliendo 9:15 AM Madeline Caravella req, Mike & Teresa Clifford
THURSDAY—WEEKDAY—6/18 7:00 AM Federico Orpilla req, Sylvia Lacsina 9:15 AM Christine Montoya req, Sr. Mary Martha
FRIDAY—THE MOST SACRED HEART OF JESUS—6/19 7:00 AM Lorraine Keleher req, Family 9:15 AM Madeline Caravella req, Mike & Teresa Clifford
SATURDAY—THE IMMACULATE HEART OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY—6/20 8:00 AM Rony Jacob req, Jessy TWELFTH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME VIGIL MASS —6/20 4:30 PM Veronica Namutebi req, James Rwabuhoro
SUNDAY—6/21 7:30 AM LIVING & DECEASED OF THE PARISH 9:00 AM *Leonard Daniele req, Phyllis & John Kraker *Salvatore, Antonio & Pasquale req, Eleanora Aloe & Family 11:00 AM Reimund Moyer req, Irene Moyer & Family 5:00 PM Ann P. & Anna Werner, Charles O’Connor & Jan “John” Werner req, O’Connor/Werner Children & Grandchildren
Dear Parishioners, I want to thank you all for your generosity during these difficult times. Every donation is crucially needed. I humbly ask, when donating through your envelopes, to place your offering in each envelope, for current and future dates. We are trying our best to: break down the single checks
received, to make sure each weekly envelope gets credit, and our weekly contributions are a true reflection of what is received. Thank you, and God Bless you all!
Responsorial Psalm Praise the Lord, Jerusalem (Psalm 147)
Readings for the Week Monday: 1 Kgs 21:1-16; Ps 5:2-3ab, 4b-7; Mt 5:38-42 Tuesday: 1 Kgs 21:17-29; Ps 51:3- 6ab, 11, 16; Mt 5:43-48 Wednesday: 2 Kgs 2:1, 6-14; Ps 31:20, 21, 24; Mt 6:1-6, 16-18 Thursday: Sir 48:1-14; Ps 97:1-7; Mt
6:7-15 Friday: Dt 7:6-11; Ps 103:1-4, 6-8, 10; 1 Jn 4:7-16; Mt 11:25- 30 Saturday: 2 Chr 24:17-25; Ps 89:4-5, 29-34; Lk 2:41-51 Sunday: Jer 20:10-13; Ps 69:8-10, 14, 17, 33-35; Rom 5:12- 15; Mt 10:26-33
Questions of the Week
Question for Children: How does receiving Holy Communion change how you treat those around you?
Question for Youth: Jesus tells us that through the Eucharist we will remain in him and he is us. How does the Eucharist keep you in relationship with Jesus?
Question for Adults: Share one way that the Eucharist connects us as “one body” – how does it change the way we relate to each other?
Sick Relatives & Friends Mirabella Parota, Cathy (Napiorski) Harris, Jamie Nestor, Joseph Jonathan Cem, Ryan Michael, Liz Lutomski, Lena Zimbardo, Nicole C. Rossi, Marieta M, Samuel & Rose M., Marina Gomez, Gloria Reichley, Shawn Ekatan, Alberto Batista, Thomas, Amanda & Christine Porcelli, Ligia Riezenman, Kat T., Marilyn Rentko, Robert & Mary Maurer, Raymond Kneckel, Craig Soper, Julia Hilinski, Gail Rezmerski, Howard Chubbuck, Martin & Diane Petrucci, Anita Pintozzi, Ellen Morales, Kayla Chrostowski, Sue Romanosky, John McGuire, Rose Cappiello, Olga Barritta, Arnold & Luisa Franco, Lois Donohue, Franklin Pfeifer, Jr.
In Loving Remembrance Let us remember all our departed
brothers and sisters, asking God to reward them with eternal joy and peace.
Bread and Wine In memory of Margaret R. Cerria
req, Pat Maliniak
Sanctuary Candle Anthony & Augusta Golomb req, Pat Maliniak
June 7, 2020
In-pew Faith Direct Total
$ 9,164.00 $ 2,823.25 $11,987.25
June 9, 2019
In-pew Faith Direct Total
$ 8,574.50 $ 1,513.00 $10,087.50
Catholic Comm. 2020
In-pew Faith Direct Total
$ 1,091.50 $ 50.00 $ 1,141.50
Catholic Comm. 2019
In-pew Faith Direct Total
$ 1,625.00 $ 175.00 $ 1,800.00
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From the Desk of Our Pastor…
Dear Friends in Jesus Christ…,
Dominic Tang, the courageous Chinese archbishop, was imprisoned for twenty-one years for nothing more than his loyalty to Christ and Christ’s one, true Church. After he had spent five years of solitary confinement in a windowless, damp cell, he was told by his jailers that he could leave it for a few hours to do whatever he wanted. Five years of solitary confinement and he had a couple of hours to do what he wanted! What would it be? A hot shower? A change of clothes? Certainly a long walk outside? A chance to call or write to family? What would it be, the jailer asked him. “I would like to say Mass,” replied Archbishop Tang. [Msgr. Timothy M. Dolan, Priests of the Third Millennium (2000), p. 216]. The Vietnamese Jesuit, Joseph Nguyen-Cong Doan, who spent nine years in labor camps in Vietnam, relates how he was finally able to say Mass when a fellow priest-prisoner shared some of his own smuggled supplies. “That night, when the other prisoners were asleep, lying on the floor of my cell, I celebrated Mass with tears of joy. My altar was my blanket, my prison clothes my vestments. But I felt myself at the heart of humanity and of the whole of creation.” (Ibid., p. 224). Today’s feast of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Jesus constantly calls us beyond ourselves to sacrificial love for others.Today, we celebrate the solemn feast of Corpus Christi. It is three feasts in one: the feast of the Eucharistic sacrifice, the feast of the Sacrament of the Eucharist and the feast of the Real Presence of Jesus in this Sacrament. Corpus Christi is a doctrinal feast established for three purposes: 1) to give God collective thanks for Christ’s abiding presence with us in the Eucharist and to honor Him there; 2) to instruct the people in the Mystery, Faith and devotion surrounding the Eucharist, and 3) to teach us to appreciate and make use of the great gift of the Holy Eucharist, both as a Sacrament and as a sacrifice. In the three-year cycle of the Sunday liturgy, there is a different theme each year for this Feast of the Body and Blood of Christ. In Cycle A the theme is the Eucharist as our food and drink; in Cycle B the emphasis is on the Eucharist as the sign of the covenant; and in Cycle C the theme focuses on the priesthood of Jesus. Although we celebrate the institution of the Holy Eucharist on Holy Thursday, the Church wants to emphasize its importance by a special feast, formerly called “Corpus Christi.”
Today’s Scripture readings contain three themes: the Eucharist as blessing or praise of God, the Eucharist as memorial of what Jesus did at the Last Supper and the Eucharist as food for the multitudes. The never-ending supply of bread with which Jesus fed the multitude prefigured his own Body, the consecrated Bread that sustains us until he comes again. The Eucharist is also a re-enactment of Christ’s sacrificial Self-giving. The Jews offered animal sacrifices to God, believing that life was in the blood, and the animal blood was a substitute for human lifeblood. Following this Jewish tradition, Jesus offered his own lifeblood as a substitute for the lifeblood of all human beings and, so, sealed the covenant made between God and humankind, bringing new life to the world. The Corpus Christi readings remind us of Jesus’ offering of his Body and Blood which serves in the Church as a lasting memorial of His saving death for us. We renew Jesus’ Covenant by participating in the banquet of his Body and Blood, a banquet that, through his death, gives us life. We need to prepare properly to receive Holy Communion: We have tarnished God’s image within us through acts of impurity, injustice, disobedience and the like. Hence, there is always need for repentance, and a need for the Sacramental confession of grave sins, before we receive Holy Communion. We should remember the warning given by St. Paul: "Whoever, therefore, eats the Bread or drinks the Cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner will be answerable for the Body and Blood of the Lord. Examine yourselves, and only then eat of the Bread and drink of the Cup. For all who eat and drink without discerning the Body, eat and drink judgment against themselves." Hence, let us receive Holy Communion with fervent love and respect-- not merely as a matter of routine. St. Paul is speaking also of the Mystical Body of Christ, i.e., the people of God gathered at the altar. Such a union, plainly, means that our outward piety towards the consecrated Bread and Wine cannot coexist with rudeness, unkindness, slander, cruelty, gossiping or any other breach of charity toward our brothers and sisters. By receiving Holy Communion we become Christ-bearers as Mary was, with the duty of conveying Christ to others at home and in the workplace, as love, mercy, forgiveness and humble and sacrificial service. As we celebrate this great feast of faith, let us worship what St. Thomas Aquinas did not hesitate to call, "the greatest miracle that Christ ever worked on earth ...My Body...My Blood". Before the greatness of this mystery, let us exclaim with St. Augustine, "O Sacrament of devotion! O Sign of unity! O Bond of charity!" Let us also repeat St. Thomas Aquinas' prayer of devotion in the presence of the Blessed Sacrament: "O Sacrament most holy! O Sacrament Divine! All praise and all thanksgiving be every moment Thine!" A priest I heard of, if he sees people leave early, stops them and reminds them that only one person left the Last Supper early! Well, I am not going to do that, but I am tempted to do what St. Philip Neri did: He saw someone leaving church right after Communion and he sent servers with candles and bells to accompany the man. The guy stormed back into the church and confronted the priest. "What kind of joke is this?" he demanded. St. Philip Neri said, "It's no joke. The rules of the liturgy say the Blessed Sacrament should be treated with reverence. You left the Church immediately with no prayer of thanksgiving. You were carrying the Blessed Sacrament within you. So I asked the boys to accompany you to honor Him." After Communion you and I are tabernacles - the physical presence of Jesus continues in us for a brief time. That's why we have the Communion hymn, a time of silence, the Communion Prayer - and even the announcements - to build up the Body of Christ in practical ways. I encourage you to use well the time after Communion to say thanks, to express your gratitude. (Source: Homilies of Fr. Anthony Kdavil)
God Bless You, Fr. Tom
John Howard Griffin (b. June 16, 1920 –d. September 9, 1980) Journalist, witness, author of Black Like Me (1961)
What is racism? (Merriam-Webster): a belief that race is the primary determinant of human traits and capacities and that racial differences produce an inherent superiority of a particular race.
The Catechism of the Cathol ic Church on racism: #1934: Created in the image of one God and equally endowed with rational souls, all have the same nature and the same origin…… #1935: The equality of people rests essentially on their dignity as persons
and the rights that flow from it: “Every form of social or cultural discrimination in fundamental personal rights…must be curbed and eradicated as incompatible with God’s design. (Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World – GS 29 #2: Gaudium et Spes )
John Howard Griffin was born in Texas to John and Lena May Young, a classical pianist, from whom he acquired a love for music. A gifted child with an exceptional memory and perfect pitch, he went to France at age fifteen completing studies in diverse fields such as French, literature, medicine and specializing in medieval music under the Benedictines at the Abbey of Solesmes. As an intern he conducted experiments in music as therapy for the criminally insane. Though pleased to see black students in his classes, the “custom” of ingrained racism was hard to shake. He admitted he was “appalled to eat at the same table.”
During World War II, he joined the French Resistance serving as a medic, and helping to smuggle Jewish children to safety. For three years he joined the U.S Army Air Corps in the South Pacific as a radio operator. Assigned to work with indigenous people on a Solomon Island, he acquired an interest in ethnology and also married an island woman. He suffered a bout with spinal malaria that left him temporarily paraplegic. At war’s end he was decorated for bravery but he’d had a head injury caused by an exploding shell which would eventually blind him. Now came a change of heart as he was forced to find new talents: he taught music history, Gregorian chant and wrote. He said, “The blind can only see the heart and intelligence of a person, not if they are black or white.” In 1952 he became a Roman Catholic and would at some point become a Third Order Carmelite. He received a dispensation, married, and had four children. In 1957, as he was recovering to walk again, his sight, after ten years, was inexplicably restored. Since communication between white and African-Americans did not exist, he became convinced of the need to “bridge the gap” between the races. With the support of his wife, he consulted a dermatologist who gave him medication to darken his skin. His travels as a black person in the deep South totaled six weeks through Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia, finally moving about as white by day and black by night, finding the “hate stare” on both sides by people who previously welcomed him. In his book Black Like Me, (A bestseller published in fourteen languages and later a movie.), he shares feeling lost, sick at heart, before unmasked hatred, not so much as threatening but “because it shows humans in such an inhuman light.” Most restaurants, water fountains, bathrooms, normal employment, libraries, museums were no longer accessible. He could be treated by white people politely or with absolute loathing. Returning to his home town, his picture was hung in effigy on a stop light. For a time he and his family had to flee to Mexico. In 1964, having pulled to the side of a road in Mississippi, he was approached by white men who beat him with chains so badly that it took five months to recover. Advocating for the Civil Rights Movement, he did much to promote awareness of racial situations and the passing of legislation. On an extended lecture tour in 1976 he suffered a severe heart attack. After further heart attacks and surgeries, he passed away at the age of sixty from diabetes and related complications.
Bishop’s Annual Appeal To date, the Development Office has received pledges totaling $52,724.00 and payments totaling $50,437.75 from 279 parishioners. This represents 82.4% of your $64,000.00 goal. Thank you for your efforts!
June Wedding Anniversaries Michael & Kaushini Jansz, 4 years Steve & Bruna DeMatos, 10 years John & Ma Jadoc, 20 years Vergie & Gerardo Javier, 25 years Joseph & marie Trzepla, 25 years Ana & Jose Canelas, 25 years Aldrian & Elvira Atienza, 30 years John & Tracey Peterson III, 30 years Vincenzo & Filomena Cautillo, 50 years Gordon & mary Manee, 53 years Artemio & Naomi Jongco, 54 years Victor & Celia Cruz, 60 years James & Patricia Ray, 61 years Stephen & Carolyn Colligan, 61 years John & Carol Moyle, 62 years Robert & Mary Maurer, 62 years James & Jacqueline Broderick, 63 years Martin & Emily Schaub, 65 years Daniel & Theresa Yovanovich, 74 years
FATHER’S DAY SPIRITUAL BOUQUETS
The cards For Father's Day
are available in the atrium.
All requests
must be returned to the
Parish Office no later than Wednesday June 17th,
to be on the Altar for
Father’s Day weekend.
6/14
The Church will be open:
Monday - Friday: 9:00 am - 4:00 pm Saturday: 9:00 am - 12:00 pm Sunday: 7:00 am—12:30 pm
Mass Schedule
Monday - Saturday: 9:15 am Saturday Evening Vigil Mass: 4:30 pm Sunday Mass: 7:30 am, 9:30 am, and 11:30 am
Live-Stream Schedule Daily Mass—9:15 am Weekend Masses—4:30 pm, 7:30 am and 11:30 am
To par cipate in our live streaming or view our recorded videos, please visit our website, Facebook page or YouTube Channel listed below.
Website: www.stcecelia.com
Facebook Page: St. Cecelia Iselin
YouTube Channel: St. Cecelia Church, Iselin
511586 St Cecelia Church (B) www.jspaluch.com For Ads: J.S. Paluch Co., Inc. 1-800-524-0263
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