2020 Fall Retreat – December 11 & 12
We are offering a Fall Retreat for our Confirmation and High School Teens. This will be a 2-day Retreat on December 11 & 12 (Friday and Saturday). Friday schedule is from 6pm to 10pm, Saturday schedule is from 11am to 6pm. You may register online or to the office. This will be a first come, first serve basis as participants will be limited. So please register early.
Annual Christmas Toy Give-Away
We are asking our Year 1 & 2 Candidates, Parents, Sponsors and the Community of St. Martha to Donate New and Unwrapped toys for our Annual Christmas Toy-Give-Away. Our Toy-Give-Away will be held on December 19. Please drop your toy donation in the Rectory or at the Youth Office. “Let us all put a smile and cheer to our most unfortunate children in our parish & community!”
Happy Thanksgiving!!!
We wish you all with your families and friends a Happy Thanksgiving Day!
As you gather around the table for your Thanksgiving meal, may this remind you to be thankful for the goodness of God as you share the faith, hope, love and peace of this celebration.
Reminder: Year 1 Mass – November 29
@ 5pm
Challenge:
Solemnity of Christ the King – Today’s Gospel passage is the conclusion of Jesus’ discourse with his disciples. It is about the end of time, the coming of the Son of Man, and the final judgment. We hear this description of the final judgment at the conclusion of our liturgical year, the Solemnity of Our Lord Jesus Christ the King. In the context of Matthew’s Gospel, this passage might also be read as a conclusion of Matthew’s report on Jesus’ life and ministry; the remaining chapters report the events of Jesus’ Passion and Resurrection. Jesus describes to his disciples the scene of the judgment of the Son of Man. All the nations will be assembled before him, and he will separate them as a shepherd separates sheep and goats upon their return from the pasture. The judgments made by the Son of Man will be based upon the acts of mercy shown to the least ones—the hungry, the thirsty, the naked, the ill, and the imprisoned. Indeed, Jesus, who suffered on the Cross, identifies himself with the least ones. Our judgment before God will be based not only on how we have used these gifts and talents, but also on how we have extended ourselves in service to these least ones. Indeed, Jesus tells us that whenever we have served these least ones, we have served Christ himself. Jesus teaches that when the Son of Man comes in glory, he will judge the nations, separating the sheep from the goats. In accepting death on the cross, Jesus shows himself to be one of the hungry, the naked, the ill, and the imprisoned. To accept Jesus is to accept him who suffered and died on the Cross as one of the least ones. Have you accepted Jesus and his sufferings?
Matthew 25:31-46
If you can attend Mass in person and you are longing for Him in the Eucharist,
then He wants to see you.
Come to Mass this Sunday and be transformed by His Word and by the Eucharist.
“Each of you should give what you have decided in your heart to give,
Not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver.”
2 Corinthians 9:7