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SACRAMENTS AND SACRAMENTALS

CONFRATERNITY OF ST. ALBERT THE GREAT Estis sal terr

Baptisms: Baptisms are by appointment. At least one parent as well as the sponsor (only one sponsor is required) must be practicing Roman Catholics who attend the Traditional Latin Mass exclusively. Blessings: Religious articles are blessed on the first Sunday of every month after Mass. The Blessing of Expectant Mothers will take place on the second Sunday of every month after Mass. Catechism: Contact Jan Satola for details. Confession: Confessions are heard before Mass on Sunday and during Mass whenever a second priest is available. Confirmation: The Sacrament of Confirmation will be administered every year at a time appointed by the bishop. First Communion: First Holy Communions are made on the Solemnity of Corpus Christi. Funerals: Call Father for assistance in making arrangements with the funeral director. Last Rites & Sick Calls: Father Ramolla serves a wide area and must often travel far to administer these Sacraments. Please do not put off making arrangements until the last moment. Let us know if a church member is sick, hospitalized or in danger of death. Matrimony: If you are contemplating marriage, please make an appointment to speak with Father before setting a date.

ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA MISSION


TRADITIONAL LATIN MASS CENTER

6811 Dublin Center Drive Dublin, Ohio 43017

Our Lord Jesus Christ the King


October 30, 2011

Sede Vacante
a.s. mmxi

CONTACT INFORMATION 513 870 0222 Cell 513 746 0291 (Emergency) @ pastor@albertthegreat.org www.albertthegreat.org http://stanthonymission.blogspot.com/

Sunday October 30, 2011 Our Lord Jesus Christ the King Pentecost XX Todays Mass Intention: Fr. Ramollas Intention Todays Missal Settings: OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST THE KING (XX SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST) 2ND COLLECT: Twentieth Sunday after Pentecost, PRF: Christ the King, PROP. LAST GOSPEL: Twentieth Sunday after Pentecost

Calendar for the Week of 31 October


Month of the Most Holy Rosary and Holy Angels
DATE 131 OCT (MON) DAY Vigil of All Saints Fast MASS

Announcements
Welcome to Saint Anthony of Padua chapel at the Dublin Village
Center. Please feel free to talk to Father and our friendly parishioners after Mass to learn more about the traditional Latin Mass.

In your charity, please continue to pray for our friends Anne and Larry
Brugger, Sr., and for Peggy Miller. Peggy had a recent fall requiring surgery to repair a fractured pelvis, and is currently recovering quietly. Due to complications following her surgery, Anne has been moved to a nursing facility called Vancrest, south of Urbana on route 68, about a mile south of where route 55 crosses route 68. She is in good spirits and would enjoy a call from her friends at 937-652-4539.

Month of the Holy Souls


001 NOV (TUE) 002 NOV (WED) 003 NOV (THU) 004 NOV (FRI) All Saints Day Holy Day All Souls Day Resumed Mass of the Sunday Within the Octave First Friday St. Charles Borromeo, BpC Within the Octave Ss. Vitalis and Agricola, Mm First Saturday Within the Octave Pentecost XXI Within the Octave
11:00 AM6811 DUBLIN VILLAGE CENTER

All Saints Mass (Holy Day of Obligation) is scheduled here at the Saint

Anthony of Padua Dublin Village Center chapel this Tuesday morning, 1 November at 11:00 AM.

LAST WEEKS STATISTICS


Attendance: 30 Collection: $ 399.00

005 NOV (SAT)

06 NOV (SUN)

2:00 PM6811 DUBLIN VILLAGE CENTER ______________

KEY TO SYMBOLS
Traditional day of complete abstinence (no meat)

NO Mass celebrated in Columbus Holy-Day of Obligation

Mass celebrated in Columbus Todays Epistle (Ephesians 5:15-21) Brethren, See how you walk circumspectly, not as unwise, but as wise redeeming the time, because the days are evil. Wherefore, become not unwise, but understanding what is the will of God. And be not drunk with wine, wherein is luxury, but be ye filled with the Holy Spirit, speaking to yourselves in psalms and hymns, and spiritual canticles, singing and making melody in your hearts to the Lord; giving thanks always for all things, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, to God and the Father, being subject one to another in the fear of Christ. Lesson: How may we redeem time? By employing every moment to gain eternal goods, even should we lose temporal advantages thereby; by letting no opportunity pass without endeavoring to do good, to labor and, suffer for love of God, to improve our lives, and increase in, virtue. Do you wish to know, says the pious Cornelius Lapide, how precious time is: Ask the damned, for these know it from experience. Come, rich man, from the abyss of Hell, tell us what you would give for one year, one day, one hour of time! I would, he says, give a whole world, all pleasures, all treasures, and bear all torments. O, if only one moment were granted me to have contrition for my sins, to obtain forgiveness of my crimes, I would purchase this moment with every labor, with any penance, with all punishments, torments and tortures which men ever suffered in purgatory or in Hell, even if they lasted hundreds, yes, thousands of millions of years! O precious moment upon which all eternity depends! O, how many moments did you, my dear Christian, neglect, in which you could have served God, could have done good for love of Him, and gained eternal happiness by them, and you have lost these precious moments. Remember, with one moment of time, if you employ it well, you can purchase eternal happiness, but with all eternity you cannot purchase one moment of time! Todays Gospel (St. John 4:46-53) At that time, There was a certain ruler whose son was sick at Capharnaum. He having heard that Jesus was come from Judea into Galilee, went to him, and prayed Him to come down, and heal his son; for he was at the point of death. Jesus therefore said to him: Unless you see signs and wonders, you believe not. The ruler with to Him: Lord, come down before my son die. Jesus saith to him: Go thy way, thy son liveth. The man believed the word which Jesus said to him, and went his way. And as he was going down, his servants met him, and they brought word, saying that his son lived. He asked therefore of them the hour wherein he grew better. And they said to him:

Yesterday at the seventh hour the fever left him. The father therefore, knew that it was at the same hour that Jesus said to him: Thy son liveth: and himself believed. and his whole house.

ALL SAINTS DAY


The Church day by day gives special veneration to one or more of the holy men and women who have helped to establish it by their blood, develop it by their labors, or edify it by their virtues. But, in addition to those whom the Church honors by special designation or has inscribed in her calendar, how many martyrs are there whose names are not recorded! How many humble virgins and holy penitents! How many unknown anchorites and monks, Christian fathers and mothers, young children snatched away in their innocence! How many courageous Christians, whose merits are known only to God and His heavenly court! Should we forget those who remember us in their intercession? Are not some among them our ancestors? members of our immediate family? our friends and fellow-Christians, with whom we have lived in daily companionship? In fact, all of Heaven is but one family Our Lords, as He Himself said: Who is My mother and who are My brethren? And stretching forth His hand towards His disciples, He said, Behold My mother and My brethren! For whoever does the Will of My Father in heaven, is My brother and sister and mother. Today we have the opportunity to thank God, if at other times we forget, for their aid and their love. And today we adore Him with them, for the grace which raised them to their present joy. The Church requires this homage of us, by making this day a holy day of obligation for all. Our place, too, is awaiting us in this home of eternal light, peace and love, if we persevere to the end in the fulfillment of Gods holy Will.

purgatory; others must provide. Let us reflect well that if we do not ourselves repair our sins and faults, we place our burden on others; is that what we want?
Source: Little Pictorial Lives of the Saints, a compilation based on Butlers Lives of the Saints and other sources by John Gilmary Shea (Benziger Brothers: New York, 1894).

COMMEMORATION of the FAITHFUL DEPARTED


The Church teaches us that the souls of the just who have left this world with traces of venial sin remain for a time in a place of expiation, where they suffer whatever punishment may be due to their offenses. Even if pardon has been obtained for our sins, satisfaction must be made to God, our Creator, in this world or in the next; for His sanctity has been, as it were, insulted by the self-will of one of His ignoble creatures. The more noble the person offended, the more serious the offense, even according to human laws. It is a dogma of our faith that the suffering souls are relieved by the intercession of the Saints in heaven and by the prayers of the faithful upon earth. To pray for the dead is therefore an act of charity and of piety, certainly obligatory for a Christian who professes to have charity in his heart. We read in Holy Scripture: It is a holy and wholesome thought to pray for the dead, that they may be loosed from their sins. (II Maccabees 12:46) When towards the close of the tenth century, Our Lord inspired Saint Odilon, Abbot of Cluny, to establish in his Benedictine Order a general commemoration of all the faithful departed, the practice was soon afterwards adopted by the entire Western Church and has been continued unceasingly to our day. Let us always bear in mind the departed who have died in the love of God, and offer up our prayers and sacrifices to help expiate for them. By showing this mercy to the suffering souls in purgatory, we gain for ourselves very devoted friends, who will in their turn pray for us. We shall then be entitled to be treated with mercy at our departure from this world, and to share more abundantly in the suffrages of the Church, continually offered for all who have fallen asleep in Christ. Reflection: When we offer satisfaction to God in this life for our offenses, there is merit attached to our penances. There is no longer any merit in

Our First Mass at the Dublin Center !


Our first Mass was appropriately held on Mission Sunday, after many prayers and much planning, and finally quite a bit of work by a small but dedicated team led by Bob Bastaja.

ALL SOULS DAY

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