St. Philip Neri Parish: The Northwest Paulist Center
St. Philip Neri Parish: The Northwest Paulist Center
St. Philip Neri Parish: The Northwest Paulist Center
Director
of
the
NW
Paulist
Center
for
Evangelization
&
Reconciliation
Fr.
Charlie
Brunick,
CSP,
x117
........................
[email protected]
SATURDAY
VIGIL: 4:00pm SUNDAY: 8:30am
and
10:30am
MONDAY
THRU
THURSDAY
&
SATURDAY:
SCHEDULE OF MASSES
OFFICE HOURS
MASS INTENTIONS____________ Monday September 19 8:00 AM Mass ( Dominico Hai Do) Chapel Tuesday September 20 8:00 AM Mass (students and teachers) Chapel Wednesday September 21 8:00 AM Mass ( Frank & Mary Ignazzitto) Chapel Thursday September 22 8:00 AM Mass (single parent families) Chapel Friday September 23 12:10 PM Mass (the underemployed and the unemployed) Chapel Saturday September 24 8:00 AM Mass (people who are living with depression and fear) Chapel 9:3011:00 AM Liturgy Workshop Carvlin Hall 4:00 PM Mass (people who are all alone) Church Sunday September 25 8:30 AM Mass (People of the Parish) Church 9:3010:25 AM Homeless Outreach Class Paulist Center 10:30 AM Mass (James McCauley, Sr.) Church Church cleaning, September 1925: Lola Ramey, Glenda McCall, & Rose Wolfe
French Toast Breakfast TODAY
(Sept.
18)
in
Carvlin
Hall
after
the
8:30
and
10:30
Liturgies.
Come
and
enjoy
some
delicious
French
toast,
sausage,
juice,
coffee.
Adults
-
$5
and
children
5-12
years
-
$3.
We
look
forward
to
seeing
you
there!
Do you have a fun event
that
you
think
the
parish
would
really
enjoy?
Like
the
upcoming
Oct.
30
Halloween
party/karaoke,
11:45am1:30pm;
Nov.
12,
Harvest
party/dinner/music
by
Jim
Revello;
or
Dec.
18th
Christmas
Party/karaoke/carols,
11:45am 1:30pm
If
you
would
like
to
work
on
any
of
these
already
planned
events
or
have
some
ideas
for
events
you
would
like
to
talk
about,
please
come
to
a
short
Parish
Life
Committee
meeting,
TODAY,
Sunday,
Sept.
18th,
11:45am
in
Carvlin
Hall.
If
you
are
unable
to
attend,
please
contact
the
parish
office
and
leave
your
name
and
idea.
Announcements continued
Do you know
what
the
Church
was
like
prior
to
Vatican
II
(1963-
65)?
Do
you
know
what
changed
and
why
the
changes
were
important?
Do
you
know
how
those
documents
affect
us
today?
Should
we
be
concerned?
Starting
on
Sundays
in
October
from
7- 8:15pm
in
Carvlin
Hall,
a
Pastoral
Team
will
open
several
of
the
important
documents
(The
Church
in
the
modern
world,
Ecumenism,
Mission
of
the
Laity,
and
the
meaning/work/purpose
of
the
Liturgy...).
We
will
discuss
how
it
was
before...and
how
the
documents
pointed
to
where
we
should
be
going...
Professor
James
Harrison
will
open
this
series
with
a
presentation
on
what
lead
up
to
Vatican
II
and
why
it
was
necessary.
Announcements continued
John told us all about what Jesus said and did, but not one of them mentioned what he looked like. The vaguely European-featured Jesus with a brown beard/hair or blonde hair/blue eyes was pretty much the standard for most of history, at least until Rembrandt van Rijn (1606-1669) the greatest painter, draftsman and printmaker of the Dutch Golden Age, came along. In the mid-17th century he and students at his Amsterdam studio painted a series of at least eight heads of Christ which set the liturgical art world on its ear. Rembrandt's studio was in a section of Amsterdam with a fairly large Jewish population, and it is believed the same young Jewish man was the model for all the portraits, which look remarkably like the olive- skinned and dark-haired men you would see strolling the Galilee shore today. For the first time ---six of these paintings are brought together for an exhibit, "Rembrandt and the Face of Jesus," which was first exhibited at the Louvre in Paris and now at the Philadelphia Museum of Art (August thru October) after which it will travel to the Detroit Institute of Art (November thru February). (Catholic News Service).
the Church. We continue to collect non-perishable food items and sundries which include toothpaste, toilet paper, diapers, body soup, shampoo, hygiene items for women/men/children. An extra can of soup or kidney beans, a bag of rice/spaghetti/macaronione or two extra items each time you shop is an immediate way to help our ministry of the Corporal Works of Mercy. We can do something about hunger!
station, KBVM-FM 88.3 will broadcast its Fall Sharathon October 3 7. The weeklong event will feature a variety of special guests, interesting conversations about the importance of our faith and an opportunity for listeners to support the regions only Catholic radio station. More info is available at www.kbvm.fm or 503-285-5200.
Pastoral Corner