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As you know, we like to observe “celebration moments,” special milestones as we progress toward the completion of our Pastoral Center and Knight Hall. The next of these moments will take place at the end of June or beginning of July, but we will prepare for it now. The celebration moment will be the placing of religious medals under the concrete (or pavers) at the entrances to the new building. There are three entrances for us to bless in this way: the main entrance to the lobby, adjacent to the drive aisle; the entrance off the bluff; and at the foot of the stairs that lead to the terrace.


We are not looking for new medals necessarily; this is a time when you can contribute old religious medals that you do not need. The Miraculous Medal, medals of St. Benedict, St. Joseph, St. Michael, St. Dymphna, and other saints whose intercession is important to you are all very welcome. Whether they are previously used and blessed medals or not, all of them will be blessed before we put them at the entrances. This is a way to bless all of our comings and goings at the new building.


You may drop off the medals at our Parish Office anytime that it is open. We ask that you do this no later than June 29. Thank you for taking part in this special celebration moment!



Gratefully yours,

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A novena is typically a nine-day period during which prayers are said each day for a particular intention. Where did the idea of praying for nine days come from? Well, in the Acts of the Apostles St. Luke tells us that the Risen Lord remained on earth for forty days (Acts 1:3); and we know that Pentecost was fifty days after Easter. This leaves an interval of nine days from the Ascension of Jesus until the vigil of Pentecost. And what did the disciples do during those nine days? They “devoted themselves with one accord to prayer.” (Acts 1:14) That was the first Christian novena.


I tell you this now so that you may imitate the disciples and prepare for the feast of Pentecost by praying a novena. If you start on May 26 (which is celebrated as Ascension Thursday in many places), you will finish the novena on June 4, the day before Pentecost.What a great way to prepare for the coming of the Holy Spirit! Certainly we can see the need for the Holy Spirit in our lives, in our community, and in our world. Praying a novena before the feast of his coming is a way to unite ourselves with Christians of all times and places, going all the way back to that first novena prayed in preparation for the first Pentecost.


What prayers should you say during your novena? There are numerous sites on the internet, and numerous apps that contain novena prayers for the coming of the Holy Spirit; or perhaps (like me) you have a prayer book that contains such novena prayers.However you choose to do it, let’s all pray that the Holy Spirit may come with his seven gifts and all the graces we need to be truly united to Jesus Christ.


Gratefully yours,

ree



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From Holy Saturday on, these last few weeks have been marked by a very large number of sacramental celebrations here at St. Edward the Confessor and San Felipe de Jesús. Sixteen people received all three Sacraments of Initiation—Baptism, Confirmation, and First Communion. Ninety-two young people were confirmed by Bishop Freyer. Over a hundred young people have received First Communion so far (and there are more to come); of course, that was preceded by their First Reconciliation earlier on this year. And all of this is in addition to our usual Baptisms, our regular Confessions and Masses, and a number of weddings and Anointings of the Sick.This is the first meaning of the word “celebrate” in our parish vision of “Celebrate, Serve, and Evangelize.”We celebrate the sacraments.


All of this sacramental activity reminds me that the sacraments are the heart and soul of Catholic living. The Catechism of the Catholic Church tells us that “the seven sacraments touch all the stages and all the important moments of Christian life: they give birth and increase, healing and mission to the Christian’s life of faith.” (n. 1210) The sacraments are one of the things that sets us apart from most other Christian denominations.


Since the sacraments are the channels of God’s grace in our lives, we cannot live without them. I hope we treasure these special encounters with Our Risen Lord, encounters that are just as real and redemptive as the encounters with the Lord that the Gospels tell us about. Weekly Mass is a special treasure among these celebrations, and hopefully it is a priority in our lives. May we always celebrate the Paschal Mystery with devotion, gratitude, and joy!



Gratefully yours,

ree


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St. Edward the Confessor Catholic Church

33926 Calle La Primavera

Dana Point, CA 92629

Parish Office Hours

Monday-Friday 8am - 5pm

Saturday-Sunday 8am - 2pm

San Felipe De Jesus Chapel

26010 Domingo Ave

Dana Point, CA 92624

Parish Office Contact:

949.496.1307

bramirez@stedward.com

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