A word from Pope Francis ~ “Time is a treasure that all of us possess. Let us ask for the grace to find time for God and for our neighbor – for those who are alone or suffering, for those who need someone to listen and show concern for them.”
Today, we continue our celebration of the 12 Days of Christmas with the Solemnity of Mary, the Holy Mother of God. In the bigger picture, we are also celebrating New Year’s Day and the first Sunday of the year in 2023. This new beginning gives us a fresh, new start with many new opportunities for personal and spiritual growth. It seemed that many of the recent “2022 Year in Pictures” segments on television and in the newspapers and periodicals featured images of human suffering and pain. These images seem to call us back to the basics, to the things that really matter. Family and faith are at the head of that list of things that really matter. Also high on the list are the relationships that sustain us and give us life. These past few weeks of the Advent and Christmas seasons have given us many different opportunities to reconnect with those who are important in our lives. We realize that our faith – which gives us direction and purpose, and our relationships – which give us life, do matter the most. I hope that these truly important aspects of life influence our New Year’s resolutions this year.
Our parish celebration of last Sunday’s feast of Christmas was certainly a grand one! Thank you to our Liturgy Planning team, who guided and planned our efforts. Our Art and Environment Committee members did an extraordinary job in transforming both the chapel and the church from Advent to Christmas in the final days of Advent. Thank you to them for all of their work during these two seasons. Thank you to our Lectors, Eucharistic Ministers, Greeters, Ushers and Altar Servers for their dedicated service at our Christmas liturgies. A number of them attended one Mass with their families and then returned to a later Mass to serve in their particular ministry. Thank you to Dr. Anne Sinclair and our choir members, cantors and musicians who inspired us and led us in prayer. Many of them also did double duty so that our Christmas Masses would have appropriate leaders of music. And thank you to you, our faithful parishioners, for your hospitality in welcoming the additional visitors and dealing with our limited parking resources at Christmas. I am grateful for your planning ahead and working within our physical limitations. We began our celebration of the season of Christmas very well.
I also want to thank each one of you, the members of our St. Isidore parish family, for your continued support of our many, many parish activities. I want to thank you for your faithful financial support. Not only were you very generous in your Christmas offerings, but you are also very faithful in your weekly support of the parish through your regular Sunday offerings.
Now that we have said goodbye to 2022 and have begun the New Year, 2023, we take our cue from Mary, the Mother of Jesus, who held and treasured each of the events around her in her heart. We look to the future with faith and hope. Wherever God may lead us, we remember that, “The Lord Himself goes before you and will be with you…” (Deuteronomy 31:8). May God continue to bless us with everything that we need, and more.
Father Jim Murphy