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Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary St. Stanislaus Bishop and Martyr Parish
SACRAMENT OF BAPTISM
English: 2nd Saturday of each month at 12:15 pm Spanish: 3rd Saturday of each month at 12:15 pm
Polish: 3rd Saturday or Sunday of each month
SACRAMENT OF MARRIAGE
Couples should contact the parish office at least six months in advance to make arrangements.
SACRAMENT OF RECONCILIATION
Saturday: 4:00 pm to 5:00 pm at Nativity only. Before or after weekday Masses or by appointment.
SACRAMENT OF ANOINTING OF THE SICK
Please call the rectory to notify the priest.
SACRAMENTS FOR ADULTS: RCIA
To register or for information please call the rectory.
RELIGIOUS EDUCATION OFFICE
For information regarding sacramental preparation for children Of our parish, call the rectory at (718) 845-3691, ext. 115 or
email: [email protected].
CONTACT Telephone: 718.845.3691 Fax: 718.845.8978 Email: [email protected] Web: www.nativityststans.org Follow on facebook @ Nativity Bvm St Stanislaus
TENTATIVE MASS SCHEDULE
Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary Monday—Friday
9:00 am Saturday 9:00 am 5:30 pm
7:00 pm -Spanish Sunday
7:30 am 9:30 am 11:30 am
St. Stanislaus Bishop & Martyr Location—Rockaway Blvd & 88th Street
Sunday 9:00 am Polish 11:00 am Polish
OUR LOCAL CATHOLIC ACADEMY
Divine Mercy Catholic Academy Location: 101-60 92nd Street
Telephone: 718-845-3074 • Fax: 718-845-5068 Sister Francis Marie, C.S.F.N., Principal
101-41 91st Street Ozone Park, NY 11416
RECTORY OFFICE HOURS:
Monday to Friday 9am to 4pm
October 25th, 2020 Thirtieth Sunday In Ordinary Time
Rev. John Tino
Pastor
Rev. Killick Pierrilus
Parochial Vicar
Rev. Slawomir Sobiech
Parochial Vicar
Deacon Edward J. Guster, JR
Deacon Andrew A. Marchello
Deacon Ruben G. Siavichay
Ms. Patricia Kistner Religious Education Director
Music Director Ms. Alexis Rodda
Saturday October 24th Weekday---St. Anthony Mary Claret, Blessed Virgin Mary 9:00am Felicia Garcia By Charles Marchello 5:30pm Anthony Caruana 7th Anniversary By son, Joseph 7:00pm Graciela Campo de Lozano De parte de Alfredo Maria del Cielo, Patricia, Eugenia, y Adriana Sunday October 25th Thirtieth Sunday in Ordinary Time 7:30am Tina Amorim & her Deceased Family By Amorim Family 9:30am People of the Parish 11:30am Angela Hurley By Daughter, Anna Hurley Angelo Giammarino By Marsicano Family Monday October 26th Weekday 9:00am Marek Niedzelski By Stella Sasowski Tuesday October 27th Weekday 9:00am Wednesday October 28th Weekday-SS. Simon & Jude, Apostles 9:00am Joseph Lyons By Wife, Chandra
Thursday October 29th Weekday 9:00am Elzbieta Lenart By Friends
Friday October 30th Weekday 9:00am Saturday October 31st Saturday--Blessed Virgin Mary 9:00am Daniel Pisani By his Mom & Dad 5:30pm Baby Grayson Jose Cruz By Prasenski-Cruz Family 7:00pm Michael Rondon De parte de Padres y Hermanos
Sunday October 25th Thirtieth Sunday in Ordinary Time 9:00am Regina & Stanislaw Zielinski By Son
11:00am Loving memory of Aniela & Antoni Kula By Jozefa Kula & Family Loving memory of Zofia Lipinski By Son
OCTOBER 25 th - THIRTIETH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME
Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary --- St. Stanislaus Bishop and Martyr
The Intention of the Mass The intention of the Mass is the Most
Precious Gift we can give for Our Beloved ones who are departed. We
also have Mass Cards t0 give to your friends and family for their Birthdays,
illness, or a special intention. The Mass is a truly unique special gift.
Votive Candles are available for anyone who would like to Honor/Memorialize
A loved one. Please contact the Rectory During normal hours for further
Information.
6 months-- $35/candle
1 year-- $70/candle
We invite you to consider making your parish offering through
electronic giving by going
to:
http://www.givecentral.org/natss
or text SUNDAY to 646-921-8661
text SUNDAY to 646-921-8661
Thank you for your continuing
generosity in supporting
our parish.
Stewardship Collection for last weekend of October 18th,2020
Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary -
St. Stanislaus Bishop & Martyr Parish
Total Sunday Collection $4,135.00
The collection is a total of all the Masses including
the Sunday offertory sent or dropped at the office
and online giving.
Thank you for your generosity.
Thank you for your support of the missions! Nativity BVM - St. Stanislaus B&M Parish
collected $786.00 for the 2020 World Mission Sunday Collection.
May God bless you all for your generosity.
Bishop DiMarzio has assigned Deacon Ruben G. Siavichay to our parish
as of October 15th. We welcome Deacon Ruben, and we pray
for Gods’ blessings upon his ministry here in our parish.
Remember in your prayers the sick of our parish:
Merciful Jesus be with us now. Bless those who are ill
with your healing embrace. Give them your strength
to endure the trials of their illness and grant them
healing if it be in accord with Your Holy will and that
of our Father in Heaven. Amen.
Arthur Weber, Sr.
Barbara Martuscello
Christopher Cucci
Frank Carbone
Frank Sorrentino
Stephen Petrillo
John Gaynor
Juan Ureña
Kenneth Ordonez
Luz Marina Castillo
Madeline Padilla
Maria de los Angeles -
Rojas
Shirley Aguilar
Irene Gaynor
June Dotterman
Rose Anzaldi
Gertrude Gwardjak
Paul J. Chapman
Winnie Tobias
Fr. Angelo Pezzullo
Fr. Paul Palmiotto
Erma Aloisio
Zoe Bonowitz
Erma Aloisio
Maria Abreu
Maddalena Marsicano
Beatrice Arango
Kai Sawe
John Vicedomini Jr.
Eric Kelly
Rafael Perez
Remington Stafford
Dorothy Bonowitz
Thomas J. Hurlman
Philip Schlesinger
Ann Sanfillippo
Danny C. Lourine
Ruth Foresta
Francisco Rivera
Sr. Marguerite Torre
Elizabeth Mercadante
Mary Bellina
Rose Calia
Francis
Ed & Violet Boes
Anjanelli Hall
POPE’S PRAYER INTENTIONS-- The Laity's Mission in the Church
We pray that by the virtue of baptism, the laity, especially women, may participate more in areas of responsibility in
the Church.
October 24, 2020
I would like to thank all those generous
individuals who made a pledge to the 2020
Annual Catholic Appeal during our In-Pew
weekend . If you were not able to make a
pledge, we are asking each family to consid-
er making a tax-deductible gift today.
It is important that our parish make its goal
of $64, 294 in order to fulfill our
mission and provide for all who depend on
your generosity and good will.
Give your support today on behalf of Nativity
of the Blessed Virgin Mary St. Stanislaus
Bishop and Martyr Parish online at annual
catholicappeal.org or text ACA to
917-336-1255 or call 718-965-7375 ext.
1602 and have a pledge card mailed to your
home.
Suggested giving amounts:
-$50 one-time gift
-$150 pledge = $50 a month
-$250 pledge = $21 a week
-$1,000 pledge = $12 a day
Father Tino
Pastor
The Mysteries of the Rosary
Have you ever wanted to explore the life of Jesus and Mary in a deep-
er way? Each decade highlights a sacred episode:
Joyful Mysteries: Through the Annunciation (1) and Visitation (2), we
get a glimpse at Mary’s joyful yes to God. She gives birth to Jesus in
the Nativity (3). Mary and Joseph present their son at the temple (4)
and bring him there again when he is a teenager (5).
Luminous Mysteries: Jesus is baptized in the Jordan River (1) before
Mary gives him a nudge to his first miracle at Cana (2). Jesus pro-
claims the Gospel (3), is transfigured on Mount Tabor (4), and insti-
tutes the Eucharist (5). The light is shining!
Sorrowful Mysteries: Jesus prays in agony in Gethsemane (1), know-
ing his hour of suffering has come. After his betrayal and arrest,
Jesus is scourged (2) and crowned with thorns (3). He carries his
cross (4), and Mary stands at the foot of the cross as he is crucified
(5).
Glorious Mysteries: Christ is risen in glory (1)! After appearing to
those he loves, he ascends into heaven (2). Jesus’ followers receive
the Holy Spirit at Pentecost (3). Mary, unaffected by original sin, is
assumed body and soul into heaven (4), where she is crowned queen,
humble mother of Christ the King (5).
©LPi
GOSPEL MEDITATION - ENCOURAGE DEEPER UNDERSTANDING OF SCRIPTURE
October 25, 2020 30th Sunday in Ordinary Time
For some reason, it is easier to genuflect in reverence to the presence of Christ in the tabernacle of a church, than to genu-flect in reverence to the same presence of Christ in another person’s soul. We wrongly believe that God divides himself, placing himself in one place in preference to another. It doesn’t work that way. Love of God and love of neighbor are intimately and inseparably connected because the essence and spark of God’s very presence is in all creation. God’s presence is just as real in the one who is good, as in the one who is bad, and the one who is just, and the one who is unjust. Our brains get in the way of truly contemplating the awe-someness of this truth. We like to separate things into boxes, the sheep from the goats and the deserving from the undeserv-ing. But, with God there are no distinctions such as this. Our human classifications, subdivisions, and definitions hold no power or have any weight in God’s eyes. Sadly, we relate to God and to each other as if they do. We cannot be deaf to the world’s pain. It is not about having, hording, accumulating, acquiring, securing, storing, protect-ing, owning, claiming, or any of the other human terms we use to distinguish mine from yours. We put so much power in these words and that power, even though we may not always realize it, can cause those words and the distinctions they car-ry to wound and hurt others. We have the whole order of things wrong, but we are so set on preserving this order that we are absolutely afraid to do it any other way. We go through hoops trying to convince ourselves why the perils of the person seeking a new place to call home are not our perils that we turn our back and justify closing our doors. It makes perfect sense to us. Yet, it makes no sense in terms of our faith. It doesn’t square with any of the words found in Sacred Scripture or in any time-tested teaching of the church. We have it all reversed. We know that we do because when Jesus speaks about such things and the words of the Old Tes-tament prophets ring out again, we start to feel uncomfortable and anxious. What we do, directly or by omission, to one of the least of these little ones we do to God. It is quite possible that some of what we are doing personally, economically, po-litically, globally, and even religiously is doing more harm than good. Let’s ponder that a bit. ©LPi
Divine Mercy Catholic Academy
101-60 92nd Street Ozone Park, NY 11416
P: 718-845-3074 | F: 718-845-5068 [email protected]
Q:
Pastor - Rev. John Tino Principal – Sister Francis Marie Wystepek, C.S.F.N Give your child the most important gift of all. A value-based, quality
education.
For 2020-2021 Registration or information please call our school office or visit the Academy website. SCHOLARSHIPS 2020-2021 | ALTHOUGH OUR DEADLINE OF
7/24/20 HAS PASSED, WE WILL CONTINUE TO ACCEPT APPLI-
CATIONS FROM FAMILIES THROUGH THE FALL. AWARDS
WILL BEGIN WITH APPLICATIONS THAT WERE COMPLETED
BEFORE THE DEADLINE AND WILL CONTINUE ON A ROLLING
BASIS AS AVAILABLE FUNDING ALLOWS.
TUITION ASSISTANCE APPLICATION FOR BROOKLYN AND QUEENS CATHOLIC ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS AND ACADE-MIES, GRADES K – 8, IS OPEN! (ESPAÑOL)
Step 1: Register your child(ren) in a Catholic Elementary school/academy in Brooklyn or Queens; students who are not yet registered cannot be considered for tuition assistance. Step 2: Fill out the online application and submit with required supporting documentation (applicants will be notified of
https://futuresineducation.org/scholarships-espanol/https://futuresineducation.org/scholarship-required-documents/
ALENTAR UN ENTENDIMIENTO MÁS PROFUNDO DE LA ES-CRITURA
25 de octubre de 2020 30º Domingo del Tiempo Ordinario
Desde niños hemos escuchado este pasaje del Evan-gelio y hasta lo hemos cantado infinidad de veces en nuestras Misas. Hoy la liturgia, nos pone la escena nuevamente de preguntar a Jesús sobre la resurrec-ción de los muertos y sobre cuál es el mandamiento más importante de la ley. Jesús contestó: “Amarás al Señor tu Dios con todo tu corazón, con toda tu alma y con toda tu mente”. Este es el gran mandamiento, el primero. Pero hay otro muy parecido: “Amarás a tu prójimo como a ti mismo”. El mandamiento nuevo, el mandamiento del amor. El amor espiritual vertical hacia el Señor, hacia arriba y el amor horizontal hacia el hermano/hermana, y hacia el interior de la persona, como a ti mismo. ¡Qué hermosa enseñanza nos heredó Jesús! Solo un desentendido no la comprende. Tres pasos, a seguir. 1. Ama al Señor con el corazón, con el alma, con todo tu ser 2. Ama a tu prójimo, en el ser-vicio a los demás, los necesitados. 3. Como a ti mismo, vida de oración de meditación caminando siempre hacia el interior del corazón para imitar a Jesús. Todo, absolutamente todo, se fundamenta en estos dos mandamientos. Vivimos en una sociedad que ha olvidado a Dios, lo ha hecho a un lado, la tecnología y el dinero, los negocios son primero. Ahora, a casi un año que llegó la pandemia, es el tiempo de tomar termómetro en estos tres pasos. ¿Cómo va mi relación con Dios? ¿Cómo va mi amor al prójimo? ¿Cómo va el cambio en mi corazón, sigue de piedra? Seamos honestos con nosotros mismos, pongamos en práctica lo aprendido en este tiempo de prueba ©LPi
¿Alguna vez has querido explorar la vida de Jesús y María de una manera más profunda? Cada misterio destaca un episodio sagrado: Misterios Gozosos (lunes y sábados): (1) A través de la Anunci-ación. (2) y la Visitación vislumbramos el gozoso Sí de María a Dios. (3) Da a luz a Jesús en la navidad. (4) María y José presentan a su hijo en el templo. (5) y lo encuentran allí de nuevo cuando es un adolescente. Misterios Luminosos (jueves): (1) Jesús es bautizado en el río Jordán. (2) antes de que María le dé un empujón a su primer milagro en Caná. (3) Jesús anuncia el Reino de Dios. (4) su transfiguración en el monte Tabor. (5) Instituye la Eucaristía: ¡La luz a llegado! Misterios Dolorosos (martes y viernes): (1) Jesús ora en agonía en Getsemaní. (2) sabe que ha llegado la hora de su muerte, luego de haber sido traicionado y arrestado, Jesús es azotado. (3) es coronado de espinas. (4) Carga su cruz. (5) María está al pie de la cruz mientras es crucificado Misterios Gloriosos (miércoles y domingos): (1) Cristo ha resu-citado en gloria. (2) Después de aparecer a los que ama, ¡asciende al cielo! (3) Los seguidores de Jesús reciben el Es-píritu Santo en Pentecostés. (4) María, no afectada por el pe-cado original, es asunta en cuerpo y alma al cielo. (5) donde es coronada reina, humilde madre de Cristo Rey.
Divine Mercy Catholic Academy
101-60 92nd Street Ozone Park, NY 11416
P:718-845-3074 | F: 718-845-5068 [email protected]
Pastor - Rev. John Tino Principal – Sister Francis Marie Wystepek, C.S.F.N Give your child the most important gift of all. A value-based, quality educa-
tion.
For 2020-2021 Registration or information please call our school office or visit the Academy website. SCHOLARSHIPS 2020-2021 | ALTHOUGH OUR DEADLINE OF
7/24/20 HAS PASSED, WE WILL CONTINUE TO ACCEPT APPLICA-
TIONS FROM FAMILIES THROUGH THE FALL. AWARDS WILL
BEGIN WITH APPLICATIONS THAT WERE COMPLETED BEFORE
THE DEADLINE AND WILL CONTINUE ON A ROLLING BASIS AS
AVAILABLE FUNDING ALLOWS.
TUITION ASSISTANCE APPLICATION FOR BROOKLYN AND QUEENS CATHOLIC ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS AND ACADE-MIES, GRADES K – 8, IS OPEN! (ESPAÑOL)
Step 1: Register your child(ren) in a Catholic Elementary school/academy in Brooklyn or Queens; students who are not yet registered cannot be considered for tuition assistance. Step 2: Fill out the online application and submit with required supporting documentation (applicants will be notified of what is required in order to complete the application).
https://futuresineducation.org/scholarships-espanol/https://futuresineducation.org/scholarship-required-documents/