Pastor Letters
March 19, 2023
This year our annual St. Joseph parish dinner will be next Saturday, March 25th, after the 5:30pm vigil Mass (so 6:30pm). Tickets are on sale at every Sunday Mass until we sell out. Tickets are $25 per adult (to cover some of the cost of the dinner). Monte’s will be providing the food, as in previous dinners, so the food will be great! We’ll have Catholic trivia again too! I hope to see everyone there.
March 12, 2023
The week after our St. Joseph dinner, the week of the 26th, will be our parish mission this year. Our former vicar at St. Joseph’s, Fr. Cajetan Cuddy OP, will be the preacher this year. He’s excited to come back to St. Joe’s! He’ll preach all the Sunday Masses the weekend before, and the parish mission will be Monday through Wednesday, 3/27-29, at 7pm in the church.
March 5, 2023
This year our annual St. Joseph parish dinner will be on Saturday, March 25th, after the 5:30pm vigil Mass (so 6:30pm). Tickets are on sale at every Sunday Mass until we sell out. Tickets are $25 per adult (to cover some of the cost of the dinner). Monte’s will be providing the food, as in previous dinners, so the food will be great! We’ll have Catholic trivia again too! I hope to see everyone there.
February 26, 2023
This year our annual St. Joseph parish dinner will be on Saturday, March 25th. It’s always on a Saturday near the Solemnity of St. Joseph (March 20th) after the vigil Mass. Tickets will go on sale next Sunday and will be sold thereafter in the parish office (during office hours, 8am-4pm) and at the Sunday Masses until we sell out. Monte’s will be providing the meal again so the food will be great! I hope to see everyone there.
February 19, 2023
Ash Wednesday is the beginning of Lent, a season of penance that prepares us for the celebration of Easter. The point of penances is to open our souls to God so that we can hear His voice in our lives. It’s a form of repentance, meaning sorrow for our sin and turning from sin back towards God. Penance and repentance are thus hopeful acts: that we can be united with God by turning towards His mercy and grace.
February 12, 2023
Lent is quickly approaching: 2/22 is Ash Wednesday. Start thinking about what penances you would like to take on this Lent. There are many graces to the Lenten season so make sure to take advantage of them; it can be a time of great spiritual growth. Pick penances that will help give you the inner freedom and space to move closer to Christ. For instance, fasting from social media or the internet works well for people today. Also, make sure to increase your daily prayer during Lent—the point isn’t simply to empty ourselves of the things that distract us from God, but also to fill ourselves with the things of God.
February 5, 2023
Erin O’Kane, our parish secretary for the past four years, is moving on as she completes her master’s degree. We wish her well in her future service to the Church. However, we need to hire a new parish secretary. If you know anyone who may be interested in the position please refer that person to the parish.
January 29th, 2023
This Thursday is Candlemas, also known as the Presentation of the Lord. It’s called Candlemas because there is a special blessing of candles at the beginning and then a procession. This year we’re re-introducing this special candle blessing and procession. We’ll bless the church candles we’ll use throughout this year, and you can bring your candles that you want blessed. It starts in McGuire Hall at 7pm, and after the opening candle blessing we’ll process into the church for the rest of the mass. I encourage everyone to attend that evening—it’ll be a grace filled night. We’ll still also have our normal 12:10pm daily mass that day too, but without the candle blessing.
January 22nd, 2023
This upcoming Saturday, the 28th, is the feast day of St. Thomas Aquinas, one of the greatest theologians in Church history and a Dominican saint. His theology is the basis of our Dominican training and much of what you hear in our homilies is rooted in St. Thomas’s thought. The school of theology based on St. Thomas’s writings is called Thomism; if you’d like to learn more about St. Thomas’s theology, check out these short videos from the Thomistic Institute at https://aquinas101.thomisticinstitute.org.
January 8th, 2023
Today we celebrate Epiphany, or the revelation of God made Incarnate, made man. It’s an astounding thing when considered: that God, who is the primal cause of everything, who created the cosmos and holds it in existence at every moment, took a human nature to Himself and entered into our history.
January 1st, 2023
Today we celebrate the Solemnity of Mary, the Mother of God! We celebrate Mary because she had the unique mission of being the mother of Jesus, the Son of God. It was through her that God became man. She is also the mother of all those joined to Christ in baptism, so she is our spiritual mother.
December 25th, 2022
Merry Christmas! I pray that you have a blessed Christmas, and that Jesus brings you many blessings this Christmas season! As we celebrate the coming of Our Lord, God taking a human nature to Himself in order to save us, let us give thanks for the manifold gifts He gives us. His grace provides us with faith and hope that overcome the sufferings of this world, and his grace strengthens us to love again in this world grown cold. Let us take heart and live those great gifts of faith, hope, and love. Through them we encounter Christ, and by them He leads us to our true homeland in heaven.
December 18th, 2022
Next week is Christmas! It falls on a Sunday this year and the parish schedule for the Christmas Masses is below (and our website).
December 11th, 2022
Your generosity has been a real gift and has helped rebuild St. Joseph’s these past four years. We have restored the church building, built a parish hall, and are about to complete the first perpetual adoration chapel in Manhattan. The Holy Spirit has certainly been active at St. Joseph’s and the parish will continue to flourish because of the work we’ve done together.
December 4th, 2022
I hope that everyone’s Advent is off to a good start! This Thursday we have a Holy Day of Obligation: The Immaculate Conception. We’ll celebrate our usual Holy Day of Obligation schedule—7 pm Vigil Mass (Wednesday), 12:10 daily Mass, and 7 pm evening Mass on the day of (Thursday). We’ll have music at the 7 pm Thursday Mass.
November 27th, 2022
Advent begins! This season is one of watchfulness, vigilance, and prayer, as we await the coming of our Lord on Christmas. Let us spend this special time in spiritual practices—let us be spiritually watchful and vigilant. We won’t notice Christ’s coming if we aren’t paying attention! Just as the three magi of Epiphany knew of Christ’s coming only through diligently watching for signs in the heavens, so we too should keep our eyes on God to discern His coming. Let us be prepared with our lamps alight as Christ comes to call us to Himself—to bring us with Him to our true homeland in heaven.
November 20th, 2022
Today we celebrate the last week of the liturgical year—Christ the King Sunday is the final week of the year, so next Sunday, the First Sunday of Advent, is the beginning of a new liturgical year. We begin the year awaiting Christ’s coming at Christmas, and we end it celebrating His kingship over all creation.
November 13th, 2022
Advent is only two weeks away—it’s hard to believe it’s already almost here. Advent is a time to ready ourselves for the coming of our Lord at Christmas, so it’s a time of spiritual preparation. It can be seen as a mini-Lent, a time for greater prayer and some penance. Consider upping your prayer schedule for this Advent and giving something up as a penance to help focus on the spiritual meaning of this Season.
November 6th, 2022
The ministries in our new parish hall are really taking off! There is so much going on that we can no longer announce everything for each upcoming week at Mass—the announcements would be far too long! In lieu of long announcements every week at mass, we’ll instead post upcoming events for the week in the poster stand in the middle of the narthex. Upcoming events will also be included in the bulletin and on the website. We will still announce at Mass new or special events. I hope to see you at some of the ministries here!
October 30th, 2022
This Tuesday is All Saints Day, a Holy Day of Obligation. The evening before All Saints Day was once called All Hallowed Eve (hallowed meaning holy one, as in “Hallowed be thy Name” in the Our Father). Now in our secular age it’s called Halloween and has no real connection to All Saints Day as such.
As a holy day of obligation, we would normally host a vigil mass for All Saints on Monday night; however, because the Halloween parade makes the church inaccessible that evening, we’ll instead only have public All Saints Masses on the day itself. Thus, on 10/31 we’ll have the 12:10 daily mass (not an All Saints Mass) but no vigil mass, and on 11/1 we’ll have a 12:10pm All Saints Mass and a 7pm All Saints Mass.