Tag: Easter
Rogate Wed_2025
Rogate Wednesday
…Click on the above title for the bulletin.
Easter 6_2025
Easter 6 (Rogate)
…Click on the above title for the bulletin.
The promise of the Comforter
Many of you heard this past Sunday that that was the day the Church Year readings remind us to sing a new song. That theme is meant to be carried through this week. We are to hear and participate in the new song of Salvation that is ours in Christ Jesus. The united Voice of the Church continues to be lifted up in thankfulness and praise to God, for the Lord has taken our sorrow upon Himself. Having been delivered from sadness, God grants the joy that may continue in the faithful no matter what life in this world may bring upon the Church and her members. …For more, click on the title above.
People called to beautifully sing in joy with one voice
This is the day the Church Year readings remind us to sing a new song. That is the Song of God’s salvation that is ours in the Christ of the Scriptures. The reading from Isaiah reveals to us four characteristics of those who know and believe that God has saved them in Christ Jesus. Those in that state of mind and body, you we pray, the saved, receive from that Divine Salvation trust with security, an end of fear concerning their eternal destinies, strength—a fruit of trust, and song, that is, an inner welling of joy on account of that which the Lord has done, and still does, for those whom He has saved. That is what these words reveal….For more, click on the title above.
Easter 5_2025
Easter 5 (Cantate)
…Click on the above title for the bulletin.
Man’s complaint
A lament is a passionate expression of sorrow. It’s crying out in grief. It’s a complaint. That’s why there’s good reason the author of the book of Lamentations is called the weeping prophet. Jeremiah wrote the book to express the profound sadness, anguish, and despair that was before him. But to better understand the events that He and the Israelites in the Southern Kingdom went through we need to go back in Israel’s history about four hundred years. What was Jerusalem like at that time? …For more, click on the title above.
The Good Bloody Shepherd
If you haven’t figured it out yet from the name of this particular Sunday, Misericordias Domini, which translates to “the mercies of the Lord,” or from our Hymn of the Day, “The King of Love my Shepherd Is,” or the Hymn which will follow the Offertory, which we have noted as Good Shepherd Hymn, “The Lord’s My Shepherd, I’ll Not Want,” or from the Psalm appointed for this day, which is Psalm 23, or from the bulletin cover.….well, today is officially “Good Shepherd Sunday.” Our focus therefore will be on sheep and shepherds….For more, click on the title above
Easter 4_2025
Easter 4 (Jubilate)
…Click on the above title for the bulletin.
Easter 3_2025
Easter 3 (Misericordias Domini)
…Click on the above title for the bulletin.
