Bulletin for Sunday, January 31, 2021

Read page 2 for an invitation to join a Small Church Community or the Busy Person’s Retreat this Lent. The Ann Arbor daytime warming center continues to be in need of volunteers and donations – new this year, consider signing up to help with laundry.

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Bulletin for Sunday, January 24, 2021

Read page 2 for an introduction to Nate Cortas, a Jesuit Novice joining SMSP this semester. Registration is open for the Lenten sessions of Small Church Communities and the Busy Person Retreat.

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Bulletin for Sunday, January 17, 2021

Read the pastoral perspective from Fr. Jim on racial justice on page 2. The daytime warming center, held at First Baptist this month, continues to be in great need of volunteers and donations. Please see page 3 for more information and a link to sign-up.

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Bulletin for Sunday, January 10, 2021

The January Warming Center, held at First Baptist Church this year, is seeking volunteers and donations. Please see page 3 for more details and a link to sign up to help. Women of the Heart returns on January 14. See page 4 for our parish office hours and mass times, which are the same as last semester.

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Bulletin for Sundays Dec 20-27, 2020 and Jan 3, 2021

This bulletin covers three weeks from Dec 20 – Jan 3. Read page 2 for a pastoral perspective written by Fr. Mark. The advent prayer books, along with our 2020 Christmas Card and year-end appeal, still have not been delivered to registered parishioners. We are deeply saddened by this delay due to USPS/Covid-19 logistics. Click here: https://michigancatholics.org/2020-year-end-appeal/ to read Fr. Jim’s year-end appeal letter and we encourage you to make a year-end donation to support SMSP. Thank you!

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2020 Year-End Appeal

2020 Year-End Appeal

Here I am, the servant of the Lord, let it be with me according to your word. Luke 1:38

Some of the words that come to my mind when thinking about this past year are: strange, unexpected, difficult, challenging, sad, inspiring, and grace-filled.  As you can see, I have been emotionally and spiritually all over the place. COVID-19 has humbled us.  The senseless killing of George Floyd and others has disheartened us and opened our eyes anew to the sin of racism. The outpouring of nonviolent protesters gives us hope for a better future. The tumultuous elections reveal the divide among us and the need to work together for the common good.  We are living in an economic, political, and health crisis that we never imagined.

This past year I have often pondered Mary’s words and her “yes.”  Not knowing the consequences and the hardships that were ahead of her, Mary said “yes, I am your servant, let it be according to your word.”  She accepted God’s mission to bring Jesus into the world. She heard and saw because she was praying and discerning.

Perhaps you too have seen the presence of God this past year. I have had the privilege of spending  time with so many families in our parish with baptisms, first communions, confirmations, weddings, funerals, outdoor cookouts, etc., and I have seen your love and faith. I have seen God in so many of you who have kept me well fed this past year! God’s presence is revealed in our staying connected, reconnecting with old friends, and reaching new friends across the country and around the world with our live-streamed Masses. As many of our families have struggled to put food on the table for their children, so many of you have become angels through your generous donations.

As we enter into this season of Advent and Christmas, I find myself remaining hopeful because of you. These days are shorter and darker, but it is your shining light that has me smiling. Our mission is all possible because of our collective yes.  I am so grateful for you and your ongoing generosity, and I hope that I can ask for just a little bit more.  As you know, it is time again for our Annual Appeal, and we need your help. Our goal this year is to raise $400,000 to help keep our Campus Ministry program thriving. We are committed to our ongoing Christian formation and the formation of young Catholic leaders for tomorrow.

I invite you to prayerfully consider what you and your family can give this year to our Annual Appeal. This Advent, inspired by Mary’s courage and fidelity, let’s continue to “say yes” together at St. Mary Student Parish, and courageously and faithfully bring Christ into the world. You can give online today: https://michigancatholics.org/about/give/

May this beautiful season fill you and your families with light, hope, and love.

With grateful prayers and affection,
Rev. James Gartland, SJ

 

Watch Mass for Sunday, December 13, 2020

Mass will be streamed live in English at 9:00 AM each Sunday. You may watch the recording of the mass anytime after the live-stream has ended. Click here to view/download the music for today’s mass: https://michigancatholics.org/wp-content/uploads/music-12-13-2020-english.pdf

Click here to read this week’s bulletin: https://michigancatholics.org/category/bulletin/

Misa de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe / Mass for Our Lady of Guadalupe

Haga clic aquí para ver / descargar la música de esta misa: https://michigancatholics.org/wp-content/uploads/guadalupe-music-12-12-2020.pdf

Click here to view/download the music for this mass: https://michigancatholics.org/wp-content/uploads/guadalupe-music-12-12-2020.pdf

THE STORY OF OUR LADY OF GUADALUPE

From the USCCB Our Lady of Guadalupe Toolkit 2018 (justiceforimmigrants.org)

December 12 is the feast day of Our Lady of Guadalupe. She is Mexico’s patron saint, Patron of the Americas, and a symbol of love and strength for Latin Americans and believers across the world.

In 1531, on the hill of Tepeyac in Tenochtitlán (now Mexico City), the Virgin Mary appeared as an indigenous woman to Saint Juan Diego Cuauhtlatoatzin.  Juan Diego was an indigenous farmer, and Our Lady of Guadalupe visited him four times between December 9 and December 12. In his native language, she told him, “Let your face and heart not be troubled, don’t be afraid … Am I not here who am your mother? Are you not under my shadow and bosom?”

Our Lady of Guadalupe asked for a church to be constructed in her honor in that very place. There, she would be a mother to the people, console them in their troubles, hear their struggles and prayers, and give them her compassion and her peace.

Juan Diego went to the archbishop of Mexico City, Juan de Zumárraga, and told him what had happened. At first, the archbishop did not believe. With the encouragement of Our Lady of Guadalupe, Juan Diego revisited him to ask a second time. The archbishop told Juan Diego to ask the Virgin for a sign to prove that she was the Mother of God.

Our Lady of Guadalupe instructed Juan Diego to go to the hill of Tepeyac to collect roses, even though it was December, when roses did not grow.  He collected the roses in his tilma (cloak) and went to the archbishop. When he opened his tilma the flowers fell to the floor, revealing on the tilma a miraculous image of Our Lady of Guadalupe exactly as she had appeared. The archbishop immediately believed, and construction of Our Lady’s church commenced.

The image of the Virgin on Juan Diego’s tilma is preserved today at the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico City. It is the most visited Catholic pilgrimage site in the world, with up to twenty million believers visiting per year.

The tilma image is rich with symbolism, and it is significant that Our Lady of Guadalupe is mestiza, with both European and indigenous features. She speaks to and represents those who are not from the dominant culture, making her truly the mother of all people.

¡Que viva la Virgen de Guadalupe!

Bulletin for Sunday, December 13, 2020

Read page 2 for the Pastoral Perspective written by Fr. Jim. There is still time to donate to the Advent Giving Tree – live your faith that does justice and support the many organizations found on pages 4-5. Christmas mass reservations are filling quickly; if you need to cancel or change your reservation for any reason, please remember to do so through the signup genius system. Thank you!

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Watch Mass for Sunday, December 6, 2020

Mass will be streamed live in English at 9:00 AM each Sunday. You may watch the recording of the mass anytime after the live-stream has ended. Click here to view/download the music for today’s mass: https://michigancatholics.org/wp-content/uploads/music-12-6-2020-english.pdf

Click here to read this week’s bulletin: https://michigancatholics.org/category/bulletin/

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