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  • Page 2 Twenty-third Sunday in Ordinary Time September 6, 2020

    ST. JUSTIN PASTORAL STAFF

    Rev. Christopher Bransfield, Pastor 408-296-1193, x 107, [email protected]

    Rev. Gerald Nwafor, Parochial Vicar 408-296-1193, x 113, [email protected]

    Mrs. Maira Gutierrez-Folchi, Principal 408-248-1094, x 232, [email protected] Ms. Tracy Sevigny, Director of Faith Formation 408-296-1193 x 104, [email protected] Mr. Joe Bauer, Facilities Coordinator 408-296-1193 x 109, [email protected]

    Mr. Clement Cano, Music Director 408-296-1193 x 112, [email protected] Ms. Laura Ortiz, Office Manager 408-296-1193 x 102, [email protected]

    Ms. Diane Serrianne, Receptionist 408-296-1193 x 100, [email protected]

    Mrs. Nancy Uyeda, Food Pantry Manager 408-296-1193 x 105, [email protected] Rev. James Okafor, In Residence

    PHONE NUMBERS

    Parish Office 408-296-1193 ext. 100

    Fax: 408-244-9437

    Website: www.st-justin.org

    Catechetical Ministry Ext. 102 Ministry to the Sick Ext. 113 Youth Ministry Ext. 104 Liturgical Ministry Ext. 107 Community Ministry 408-243-1462 School Office 408- 248-1094

    Go to our website at www.st-justin.org to make safe and secure donations by credit card, checking or savings.

    We have over 200 regular users!

    Happy Birthday Our Lady, the Blessed Mother of God, was born on September 8th. Lucky me, I was born on September 2nd. We are birth-month-mates. I wish I had been knowledgeable enough before my birth to plead with my mother to deliver me on the 8th of September. In that case Our Blessed Mother would have been my birthday-mate. Moreover, please celebrate with us by praying for Mother Mary to intercede for me. Happy Birthday, Blessed Virgin Mary. Happy Birthday, Fr. Gerald. As we celebrate the birthday, we should not lose sight of what the readings of September 6th state. Start with the Gospel, “For where two or three are gathered in my name there am I in the midst of them.” Matt 18:20. “Please let us gather for prayers,” my mother would always shout from her room. In those days we kids were not always happy hearing that call to prayer. In reply, she would quote the above passage from the gospel of Matthew and start off the rosary. Now I understand better. The call to prayer was about fulfillment of the letter of the law and about love. Love is the topic of today’s second reading. It says that it is the only thing we owe to our brothers and sisters. “Owe nothing to anyone, except to love one another.” Rom 13:8. The

    summary of all the Law and the Prophets, according to Christ, is Love. I have received so much love from St. Justin since

    my arrival in 2014. My honest prayer is “Lord grant me the wisdom to give back in love all I have received. May I preach the Gospel message in season and out of season to fulfill my priestly calling.” If I fulfill my work as the mouthpiece of God, I have saved myself. If I refuse to spread the message and people are denied the Gospel nourishment, I am doomed. God forbid. In the first reading the Lord said, “You shall warn them for me.” Ezekiel 33:7. I am also warning myself, because in the message of God, the messenger and the audience are held to the same standard of the law. We should banish all wickedness and hate. May we gather to celebrate in love to fulfill the law of God. Happy Birthday to our September babies!!!

    Fr. Gerald Nwafor

    Upcoming Second Offerings Your generosity is appreciated. *Denotes Parish Second Collection.

    9/6 Catholic Education

    9/27 Building Fund*

    WEEKLY STEWARDSHIP REPORT AUGUST 30, 2020

    Goal $12,500.00 1st Collection $5,356.00

    Online Giving $1,849.04 Variance -$5,089.96

    Direct Deposit $205.00

  • Page 3 Twenty-third Sunday in Ordinary Time September 6, 2020

    READINGS FOR THE WEEK

    Mass Dedications for the Week of September 7 – September 13, 2020 + notes deceased

    We pray for those who are ill or suffering from loneliness, sadness, or depression. We pray for those who care for them. We pray for our deceased family and friends. We pray for our men and women who are serving in the military.

    This week we pray especially for those who are ill or preparing for surgery: Letty Acierto, Vivian Armenta, Rene Bayard, Carmencita De La Cruz, Maurizio “Tito” Ghezzi, Virginia Ghezzi, Hiro Manaka, Conrad Marzan, Pilar Marzan, Jana McCune, Gloria Rohrig, Don Seghieri, Lynda Sattler, Ernest Souza, Oliver Totah, Jack Varty, Vincent Vergano, Mark Walsh

    and for those who have died: Henry Ponce, Chris Sullivan

    Monday 8:30 a.m.

    Domingo, R.J. and Carmen Mendez +

    Saturday 5:00 p.m.

    No Intention

    Tuesday 8:30 a.m.

    Marcia, Fabian and Francis Ver +

    Sunday 7:30 a.m.

    Robert Hargrove +

    Wednesday 8:30 a.m.

    Domingo and Audan Felix + Marcos Hernandez +

    Sunday 9:00 a.m.

    Kieran Coyle +

    Thursday 8:30 a.m.

    Nick Gomez Loralyn Gomez

    Sunday 10:30 a.m.

    FOR ALL PARISHIONERS

    Friday 8:30 a.m.

    Maria Natalia Pereira Sunday 12:15 p.m.

    Ronnie Villavicencio +

    Saturday 8:00 a.m.

    All Souls Sunday 7:00 p.m.

    Henry Ponce +

    Monday: 1 Cor 5:1-8; Ps 5:5-7, 12; Lk 6:6-11, or, for Labor Day, any readings from the Mass “For the Blessings of Human Labor,” nos. 907-911

    Tuesday: Mi 5:1-4a or Rom 8:28-30; Ps 13:6; Mt 1:1-16, 18-23 [18-23]

    Wednesday:1 Cor 7:25-31; Ps 45:11-12, 14-17; Lk 6:20-26

    Thursday:1 Cor 8:1b-7, 11-13; Ps 139:1b-3, 13-14ab, 23-24; Lk 6:27-38

    Friday: 1 Cor 9:16-19, 22b-27; Ps 84:3-6, 12; Lk 6:39-42

    Saturday: 1 Cor 10:14-22; Ps 116:12-13, 17-18; Lk 6:43-49

    Sunday: Sir 27:30 — 28:7; Ps 103:1-4, 9-12; Rom 14:7-9; Mt 18:21-35

  • CATECHETICAL MINISTRY NEWS Email Laura Ortiz, [email protected] for registration/sacramental documentation questions.

    Email Tracy Sevigny, [email protected] for program questions.

    Children’s Faith Formation: (Stay tuned for details on distance learning in the Fall) New Family Registration: Email Laura to receive a packet. Fees cover materials & possible postage. Returning Registration: Ongoing Faith Formation registrations have been mailed. Please review, sign, and return with fees. Add any additional children. First Reconciliation/First Eucharist Registration:

    Email Laura to arrange Registration Interview. Interviews will be conducted remotely, as will components of the preparation.

    High School Confirmation Registration: Email Laura to arrange Registration Interview with Noel. Interviews will be conducted remotely, as will components of the preparation.

    If you would like to inquire about becoming Catholic, send Tracy an email for more information.

    All Sessions are by remote invitation at this time.

  • Page 5 Twenty-third Sunday in Ordinary Time September 6, 2020

    MINISTRY NEWS

    Community Ministry Food Pantry The Community Ministry Food Pantry is still functioning. Our pantry has been designated an “Essential” operation. Since we still have volunteers and staff willing to help (No Senior Citizens are allowed at this time), we are open Tuesday through Saturday from 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. If you have any questions please leave a phone message or email for Joe Bauer - 408-296-1193 ext. 109 [email protected] or Nancy Uyeda – 408-296-1193 ext. 105 [email protected]

    Grocery-sized Paper Bags & Volunteers Needed If you have surplus grocery-sized paper bags (from Lucky, Safeway, etc.) Community Ministry is in need of them. Please bring them by the food pantry Tuesday through Saturday (10-12 noon)

    Volunteers needed to pick up Lucky (store) donations 1-3 times a week.

    Grocery Shopping for Our Senior Citizens Given the CDC advice for seniors to stay away from

    crowded places and the craziness going on at grocery stores, if you are in need of assistance with your grocery shopping needs please do not hesitate to contact Joe Bauer at 408-296-1193 ext. 109 [email protected] or Nancy Uyeda at 408-296-1193 ext. 105 [email protected]

    Outreach Dinners Because of precautions that we are taking due to the COVID 19 virus, our future Outreach Dinners will not be taking place until future notice. We are sorry for any inconvenience and disappointment that this might cause.

    Community Ministry Thrift Shop Due to precautions we are needing to take with the COVID 19 virus, the St. Justin Community Ministry Thrift Shop is closed until further notice.

    COMMUNITY MINISTRY SAINT PETER CLAVER (1581-1654) September 9 Nearly two hundred years before the Declaration of Independence proclaimed “that all men are created equal,” two hundred fifty years before the Emancipation Proclamation mandated an end to slavery, three hundred fifty years before Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream,” and four hundred years before the election of an American president boasting African heritage, Peter Claver left his native Spain behind to volunteer for the Jesuit missions in Colombia. There, he was horrified both by slavery as an institution and by the inhuman brutality inflicted upon the slaves. He solemnly vowed to become “the slave of the slaves,” and lived that vow heroically for close to forty years. Not knowing their language, Peter began his ministry among the slaves by using the universal language of practical charity, providing medical care and a tangible though wordless assertion of their human dignity: “We spoke to them not with words but with our hands, kneeling beside them, bathing their faces and bodies, encouraging them with friendly gestures” (see Liturgy of the Hours, Volume 4, p. 2018). Then came evangelization and baptism. Holiness as human wholeness: Peter Claver’s enduring witness. —Peter Scagnelli, Copyright © J. S. Paluch Co.

    PRAYER TO PATRON SAINT OF

    FIRE FIGHTERS

    Saint Florian, please pray for those affected by the Northern California

    wildfires, the first responders fighting those blazes, and the souls of the seven

    people who have lost their lives.

  • Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

    On this Labor Day weekend, on which we Americans have traditionally rested from work and spent time with family and friends, often in backyard cookouts, I wish to share a few thoughts with you. I wish to reflect with you about the Lord’s Day and its focus on worship, rest, and solidarity as well as our baptismal call to live as God’s co-workers, building up the Kingdom of God through the work of our hands, minds, and spirits. We are now half of a year into the COVID 19 pandemic and may face another half-year sheltering in place, distant from each other, in isolation from familiar networks and communities. Even as scientists and doctors search for a vaccine and a cure for the virus, we continue to pray for a timely end to this pandemic that the widespread suffering throughout the world may be alleviated.

    The Dignity of Work We have grieved with those millions of Americans, and others around the world, who have lost their jobs during this pandemic. Not only has income been lost, but dreams dashed, small businesses shuttered, and optimism diminished. For too many, a sense of purpose seems elusive. While a job is important in helping us to provide for our families, in social networking, in helping us to build a sense of purpose and contribution to society, a job should never define us. Work (as distinct from a job), on the other hand, expresses and even builds our character, who we are. Work is an important expression of who we are as human beings. And for us who are baptized, we recognize our labor, both inside the home and outside of it, as God’s own invitation to build the Kingdom. Our human labor is a participation in God’s creative work. Pope Francis notes, “We were created with a vocation to work.” He continues, “Work is a necessity, part of the meaning of life on this earth, a path to growth, human development and personal fulfilment” (Laudato Si’ 128). He moreover notes that “Jesus worked with his hands, in daily contact with the matter created by God, to which he gave form by his craftsmanship. It is striking that most of his life was dedicated to this task in a simple life which awakened no admiration at all: ‘Is not this the carpenter, the son of Mary’ (Mk 6:3)” (LS 98)? Pope Francis reinforces the Catholic teaching that work not only contributes to personal fulfillment, but even to our own redemption. He states, “In this way he sanctified human labour and endowed it with a special significance for our development. As Saint John Paul II taught, ‘by enduring the toil of work in union with Christ crucified for us, [a human person] in a way

    collaborates with the Son of God for the redemption of humanity” (LS 98) Whenever we do God’s will, we participate in God’s redemptive work for us and all humanity. We find encouragement, then, in believing that every action of ours, whether of child care or elder care, of tending the family and the home, of contributing to the good work of small or large companies, is a way to actively participate in the Redemption Christ has won for us. Our work is God’s work for the life of the world. St. John Paul II wrote of work as participating in and continuing God’s work of creation as well as an activity that is essential to humanity. “Work is a good thing for man – a good thing for his humanity – because through work man not only transforms nature, adapting it to his own needs, but he also achieves fulfillment as a human being and indeed, in a sense, becomes ‘more a human being’” (Laborem Exercens 9.3)

    Work during the Pandemic You may be asking the question, “If work is so important to our human dignity and development, and even redemption, what do we say about so many persons who are out of work now or who are underemployed because of the pandemic?” A very legitimate question. Above I distinguished work from a job (or employment). I did this for an important reason. We do important work outside of our jobs or employment. I have been told countless times by married couples that marriage takes work! Raising children takes work. Tending the frail elderly or chronically ill family members takes work. When we reach out to others in charity we refer to these actions in Christian tradition as “Spiritual Works of Mercy” or “Corporal Works of Mercy.” The work of humanity goes far beyond employment and that which we do at a job. The work that we do during this pandemic certainly requires a transition, a shift in perspective, in focus. In our families, we are called to tend to our family members – to work on building those relationships that are so important to us! As Christ’s disciples, we also recognize that our family includes brothers and sisters “from every tribe and language and people and nation” (Rev.5:9): we are our neighbors’ keepers. In this pandemic when we must be physically separate from others, we are called to reach out to them in perhaps new and creative ways: a phone call to a neighbor, a relative or a parishioner living alone; a virtual chat with loved ones or fellow parishioners can go a long way in dispelling the isolation that plagues us in this pandemic. The Spiritual Works of Mercy involve instructing, advising, consoling and comforting, as well as forgiving and bearing wrongs patiently. As one who grew up in a household of eight siblings,

    the spiritual works of mercy sound like a summary of family life! One of the Corporal Works of Mercy is to visit the imprisoned. There are many who are “imprisoned” in their homes because of their age or health conditions. Can we pay a virtual visit to them? A phone call? Run errands, drop off food, tend the yard?

    Many in our communities have volunteered with Catholic Charities in the weekly distribution of food at several of our parishes. Some of our youth groups have organized to provide grocery shopping for the elderly in their community. What a magnificent witness! Feeding the hungry is another Corporal Work of Mercy. Others volunteer in firefighting. How grateful we are to them during the wildfire season in California! Others are helping to provide shelter to those evacuated from the fires. Providing shelter: another Corporal Work of Mercy.

    We are mindful of and grateful for so many persons in our communities who risk their own health and safety by working for us – those “essential workers” in hospitals, fields, factories, grocery stores, etc. Many in our fields, food processing plants, and grocery stores have been infected by the Coronavirus. Let us not only be grateful for them because they keep food in our pantries – let us pray and advocate for them, for their protection!

    Let us continue to do the work of humanity and Christianity during this pandemic. We need a more humane society, one of love and mercy! As we pray together in the words of our Eucharistic Prayer: “Open our eyes to the needs of our brothers and sisters, inspire in us words and actions to comfort those who labor and are burdened. May your Church stand as a living witness to truth and freedom, to peace and justice, that all people may be raised up to a new hope” (EPMVNIV).

    Working from Home: Unintended Consequences It has been a blessing during this pandemic that so many have been able to work from home. Those persons have been able to maintain their employment, contribute to society in various ways, and to spend more time with family. However, some of the negative consequences of working from home quickly became apparent, particularly the blurring of boundaries between work and home. To some degree both work and family life have been compromised, particularly for parents of school age children. I have been particularly concerned for parents working from home, while supervising children during their virtual schooling. This must be tremendously difficult and stressful! While many persons have made it

    Work, Rest and Solidarity

  • a regular rhythm of their lives to multitask, multitasking during this pandemic seems to have reached a tipping point. It has affected people’s health, physical and mental, with the added effect of making us less effective. I do pray that our families are able to find a proper and healthy balance in their lives, particularly during this pandemic, which has brought added stress into people’s lives. And I invite us all to pray for children and adults whose home environment may expose them to danger, to the possibility of neglect or abuse, even to food insecurity.

    Worship during the Pandemic: Keeping the Lord’s Day Holy As multitasking at home has become part and parcel of our culture and lives, I wonder if it has affected our sense of the sacred and our commitment to keeping the Lord’s Day as a time of worship, of rest, and of solidarity – particularly as we have shifted to on-line worship during the pandemic. While we are all members of a multitasking generation, I am offering this Labor Day message as an opportunity for us to reflect collectively on how to make time and space in our busy lives for the sacred – for connecting with God and with the Body of Christ, the Church. While this is not always the case, there are moments when your child, your spouse, a dear friend, or even a stranger, need your undivided attention. We are better for granting that time and space to someone, listening, acting. Our soul is enlarged in making space for someone, allowing them to tell their story, to get a weight off their shoulders, to connect with someone who cares. As Christians we are better when we devote time and space to the sacred, to connecting with God and with our Community, the Church. We worship not because God needs our praise, but because worship confirms and reminds us of our filial relationship with the God who created us, redeemed us, and sustains us with his love and grace, and our familial relationship with the Body of Christ, the Church.

    The Lord’s Day As Jesus rose from the dead on a Sunday and thus began a new age in human history, an age of hope, of grace, of redemption, Sunday is referred to as the Lord’s Day. The Catechism of the Catholic Church notes that the “Sunday celebration of the Lord’s Day and his Eucharist is at the heart of the Church’s life” (2177). Sunday is a day of worship, of rest, and of solidarity, a day we keep holy by prayer, works of charity, and devoting time apart from work to nurturing the vital relationships in our lives. Beginning on March 14, 2020, when we suspended public liturgies in the Diocese of San

    José because of the pandemic, I dispensed Catholics in the Diocese from the obligation to attend Mass until further notice. Even with the limited opening of public Masses outdoors, that dispensation remains in effect until further notice. When I issued a general dispensation from Sunday Mass, I encouraged our parishioners to follow the livestreamed Masses on-line and to pray from their homes. Many have continued to do so, and others have begun to return to in-person Masses outdoors in our parishes. I am most grateful to our clergy and parish leaders who have adjusted logistics to make this new setting possible. While the dispensation lifts the obligation, there is a fundamental need as people of faith to connect with God and his Church. St. Augustine’s prayer never gets old: “O Lord, you made us for yourself, and our hearts are restless until they rest in you.” This brief, insightful prayer, hints to us that worship, rest and solidarity are fundamentally connected. Worship helps us confirm our relationship with our God and the body of believers, the Church. It also helps us mitigate restlessness. There are few things more reassuring and determinative of mental and physical health to children than to know that they are loved. As children of God, we need that connection to God in worship, in sacred moments, so that we too can be reassured in mind, body, and spirit. Below I will offer some suggestions for worship and maintaining our spiritual lives during this pandemic. With regard to rest and leisure, the Catechism of the Catholic Church notes the following: “Just as God ‘rested on the seventh day from all his work which he had done,’ human life has a rhythm of work and rest. The institution of the Lord’s Day helps everyone enjoy adequate rest and leisure to cultivate their familial, cultural, social, and religious lives” (2184). Thus, the Lord’s Day is not only about worship, but about cultivating proper relationships with others – our family, our community. Works of mercy are also especially appropriate on the Lord’s Day, for these reasons. Thus, we confirm our relationships with our loved ones, our neighbors, our communities.

    Some Practical Suggestions During this pandemic, let us acknowledge our hunger for the Eucharist. Here are some practical suggestions for keeping the Lord’s Day during this pandemic: 1. Set aside a specific time and even space for

    prayer; Identifying a particular place and time for prayer helps us to mark those moments and spaces as sacred;

    2. Set aside times for family conversation, perhaps at a Sunday meal;

    3. Make time to call friends and relatives to

    check in on them; 4. Connect with your parish, either virtually or in

    person, at Sunday Mass; 5. Set aside time for quiet meditation; just five

    minutes in the morning can make a big difference in how you respond to events throughout your day; it can help your attitude, your disposition to others, to challenging situations;

    6. Pray before meals; 7. Make time for works of mercy, spiritual or

    corporal; they are beneficial not only to those to whom we reach out, but to us, as well;

    8. As Christ is really present in his Word, parishioners find nourishment in reading and reflecting over the Scripture readings for Sunday Mass; face-to-face or virtual conversations might include sharing those words or phrases from Scripture that touched our heart;

    9. As Christ is really present in the members of his Body gathered, parishioners find nourishment in encountering Christ in the parish community as well as in those most vulnerable among us; as this Sunday’s Gospel reminds us: “Where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them” (MT 18:20); using every means of communication with which we are blessed, we reach out to others;

    10. Even though we may be unable to celebrate the Mass every Sunday, we may still keep faithful to two patterns which are the foundation of the Eucharist: thanksgiving and intercession. Sunday is the ideal time to reflect on the blessings and experiences of the previous week, and to offer thanks and praise to God for the grace of these divine encounters.

    11. As faithful disciples, we then turn our thoughts from thanksgiving to intercession as we pray for the needs of our own Parish and Diocese to the needs of all brothers and sisters oppressed throughout the world.

    12. And we recall that every Mass ultimately leads to mission. Before the sacred time of the Lord’s Day draws to a close, we take a moment to commit ourselves to the particular mission which God sets before us, to the work that is ours to do in our family, our work place, our neighborhood, our community in union with the Risen Christ as he continually works to bring the redemption of the world to fulfillment.

    Yours in Christ,

    Most Rev. Oscar Cantú

    Work, Rest and Solidarity Continued...

  • Registering in a parish is a declaration of your desire to be part of a Catholic community and a commitment in all its

    dimensions brings you advantages, recognition, and

    responsibilities of many kinds. Being a registered

    parishioner makes things much easier when it is time for infant

    Baptism, weddings, when asked to be a Baptismal or Confirmation Sponsor and

    even funerals.

    We are often asked to provide affidavits for Baptismal and Confirmation Sponsors. We

    can only do this if a person is a registered, active and contributing member.

    So, are you a registered parishioner?

    If not, please consider registering. Registration forms

    are available online at www.st-justin.org

    Ever Thought of Being a Catechist? As we prepare to return to the classrooms with social distancing protocols in the Fall, we are in need of substitute catechists. Part of our adherence to the County Health Order is to ensure that anyone (catechist included) who is not feeling well should remain at home and not enter our facilities. Therefore, more than ever, we need to have back-ups. This is a wonderful opportunity for you to dip your toe into this ministry, obtain the training required, and join our catechetical team! We are in particular need for Grades 1, 4, & 5, as the catechists for those grades are from a single household. However, it is ideal to have substitute availability for all ages. If the Spirit is speaking to you to share the gift of your faith with the youth of our parish, email Tracy at [email protected] for more information.

    Marriage Anniversaries

    If your anniversary is coming up, please let us know!

    Laura Ortiz at (408) 296-1193

    ext. 102 or [email protected]

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