Category Archives: Current

Use this category to assign current weekly bulletins and pastors messages.

May 19, 2024

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

After nine years here as pastor, I recognize that I am prone to repeating myself sometimes. For example, you may have caught my reference last week to St. Ignatius’ Spiritual Exercises and the meditation on the king. I know for certain that I have spoken about that and written about it a number of times in these last nine years. It’s not that repeating myself is necessarily a bad thing, but it can be risky. So throwing caution to the wind, I’d like to run the risk of repeating an anecdote I may have shared at some point in the past.

Years back, I came across a recording of sacred music for the liturgical year that was made by a French monastic community. For the music that followed today’s great feast of Pentecost, the title “temps de l’eglise,” was used. My French is pretty bad, but the name made perfect sense – the time of the Church. This is precisely what we live in following the event of Pentecost. As the Holy Spirit descends on the Apostles and sends them out to proclaim the Gospel, to baptize, and to serve, we see the time of the Church inaugurated. If the time of the Church began on that Pentecost in Jerusalem, our annual celebration of this is both a marking of an anniversary and a reminder that the time of the Church continues to this day. We are living in that time. What is the Church for, that God gives her this time?

The Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, Lumen Gentium, from the Second Vatican Council gives us insight into the purpose of the Church from her very beginnings on the first Pentecost. “When the work which the Father gave the Son to do on earth was accomplished, the Holy Spirit was sent on the day of Pentecost in order that He might continually sanctify the Church, and thus, all those who believe would have access through Christ in one Spirit to the Father” (LG 4). The Church exists so that all who believe might have access to God’s grace and directly to relationship with God. Where do “all who believe” come from? The mission of the Church is not only to be an access point, but also a missionary influence. That is, the Church is sent into the whole world to proclaim the Gospel to all people. The Church, then, exists so that all people can come to faith, to evangelize the whole world, and with that proclamation made, to be a place where believers live the life of grace. And so from the first Pentecost on, we are living in the time of the Church, the time in which believers live more and more deeply the life of grace.

Lumen Gentium also reminds us that “Uninterruptedly He [the Holy Spirit] renews her and leads her to perfect union with her Spouse.” In other words, the Church is constantly renewed by the presence of the Holy Spirit so that all who belong to the Church might be in more perfect union with Jesus. This is why the annual celebration of Pentecost is so vital in the life of the Church. We need constant renewal in our relationship with God. As we renew the time of the Church today, the whole Church throughout the world, each of us who bears the name of Christian, is invited to experience anew the gifts of the Spirit, and to grow in our relationship with the God who provides us in and through the Church with the means of access to eternal life.

Peace,

Fr. Sam

April 28, 2024

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

The image on the cover of our bulletin today is of St. Gianna Beretta Molla, whose feast day is ordinarily marked on April 28. Born in Milan, Italy in 1922, Gianna was the tenth of thirteen children in her family. Her parents taught her the importance of a life of faith that included both prayerful devotion and active service. She was very active in serving the elderly and needy through the St. Vincent de Paul Society, and chose to pursue an education in medicine, which she viewed as God’s particular mission field for her. Gianna earned degrees in medicine and surgery from the University of Pavia, after which she opened a clinic in her hometown in 1950. She then furthered her studies with a specialty in pediatrics at the University of Milan, and dedicated her practice to caring for mothers, babies, the elderly, and the poor. In 1955, Gianna married Pietro Molla. A beautiful book, “Love Letters to My Husband,” contains their correspondence and sheds light on a marriage truly rooted in Christ.

In addition to her medical work and particular care for the vulnerable, St. Gianna was extremely happy to become a mother. By 1959, she and Pietro were parents to three children, Pierlugi, Maria Zita, and Laura. In 1961, pregnant with her fourth child St. Gianna began to experience significant pain. She had a fibroma in her uterus. Her doctors gave her three options: an abortion, which would save her life and allow treatment of the tumor; a hysterectomy, which would save her life but prevent any further pregnancies; or removal of the fibroma, which would leave open the possibilities of additional complications. Fully aware of life she was carrying in her womb, and, given her professional qualifications, knowing each and every risk, St. Gianna asked her doctors to do everything they could to save the life of her child. Thus she ruled out abortion and hysterectomy, and prepared herself for the possibility of medical complications. “If you must decide between me and the child, do not hesitate: choose the child? I insist on it. Save the baby,” she told Pietro and her family.

The surgery to remove the tumor was performed, and her daughter Gianna Emmanuela was born on April 21, 1962. Sadly, the complications from surgery could not be overcome and St. Gianna died on April 28, 1962, at the age of 39. The story of her life and sacrifice was soon known even to Pope St. Paul VI, who described her life as one of “conscious immolation.” She knew fully what she was doing and why, and motivated by love for her daughter, was willing to sacrifice her life. St. Gianna Beretta Molla stands as a witness to the dignity of human life, the gift of motherhood, and the power of self-sacrifice. Gianna Emmanuela has traveled the world speaking about the heroism of her mother and encouraging mothers, medical professionals, and pro-life advocates. St. Gianna’s work and life have also inspired numerous “Gianna Centers” (www.giannacenter.org) providing Catholic healthcare. Locally, St. Gianna is an inspiration for Dr.  Kathleen Berchelmann, co-founder of MyCatholicDoctor (www.mycatholicdoctor.com). The example of St. Gianna also inspired contemporary mothers, such as Roman-born Chiara Corbella Petrillo, whose heroic life and maternal sacrifice can be read about in her biography “Chiara Corbella Petrillo: A Witness to Joy.” St. Gianna Beretta Molla is a modern saint, an accomplished woman, a model wife and mother, an outstanding physician, and now a patron saint for mothers, doctors, the pro-life movement, and unborn children. St. Gianna, pray for us!

Peace,

Fr. Sam

April 21, 2024

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

The Fourth Sunday of Easter, with its Gospel reading focused on Jesus as Good Shepherd, is marked in a special way as the World Day of Prayer for Vocations. In particular, we are asked to pray for those whom God is calling to serve as priests and religious. We pray not only for greater numbers, but that those who have been called to this noble vocation would be given the grace to be true imitators of Christ. Jesus uses the image of a good shepherd, one who truly guards the flock and keeps vigil, not simply out of employment obligation but out of true concern. This is how the Incarnate Son of God approaches His flock. Just so, we pray today that those whom the Lord is calling to the priesthood and to religious life, would have the grace to imitate the Good Shepherd.

To be a faithful, courageous shepherd is no easy task, especially in the society in which we live. While the dangers faced by one keeping watch over the sheep are particular – lions, wolves, hazards of geography or climate – the dangers we face today are very different. One of the greatest dangers is the what if. Perhaps the phrase is inelegant, but “whatifism” runs rampant in the minds of clergy, myself included. What if I say the wrong thing? What if, by speaking about what the Church teaches, I run afoul of popular opinion? What if I let fear get the better of me, avoid the sensitive topic, but end up leading people further from God as a result? “A hired man, who is not a shepherd and whose sheep are not his own, sees a wolf coming and leaves the sheep and runs away,” Jesus says in the Gospel. This is a true temptation for every priest, no matter what form the wolf might take. On the World Day of Prayer for Vocations, the Church invites us to pray that those the Lord is calling to minister as shepherds might have the courage and strength of the Good Shepherd, that they might be free of these fears, and if not free, then courageous in facing them with the strength that comes from God.

To pilgrims at World Youth Day in Lisbon last year, Pope Francis said, “Rise up!” Let us awaken from sleep, let us leave indifference behind, let us open the doors of the prison in which we so often enclose ourselves, so that each of us can discover his or her proper vocation in the Church and in the world, and become a pilgrim of hope and a builder of peace! Let us be passionate about life, and commit ourselves to caring lovingly for those around us, in every place where we live.” He echoes these words in his message for this World Day of Prayer for Vocations. There are so many zealous souls being called by God to the priesthood. May they maintain that fervor, have it tempered by charity, and so become courageous, generous, good shepherds who reveal the heart of Jesus to all they serve.

A prayer for vocations in the Diocese of Bridgeport

Almighty and eternal God,
in your unfailing love you provide ministers for your Church.
We pray for those whom you call to serve the Church of Bridgeport as priests.
Inspire in them a generous response.
Grant them courage and vision to serve your people.
May their lives and service call your people to respond to the presence of your Spirit among us
that, faithful to the Gospel and hope of Jesus the Christ, we may:
announce glad tidings to the poor,
proclaim liberty to captives,
set prisoners free,
and renew the face of the earth.

Amen.

Peace,

Fr. Sam

April 14, 2024

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

There is a story I heard as a seminarian and which I have recounted many time since. If it isn’t true, it ought to be. The story goes that a great professor of theology gained a reputation among his students, often immersed in a skeptical university environment, for his plainspoken approach to the discipline. At the beginning of each lecture, after a prayer, he would look at the lecture hall and say simply, “The Incarnation happened,” before proceeding with the lecture of the day. He signaled the end of his discourse by repeating once more, “The Incarnation happened.” If the exact details of the story have gotten blurry in the retelling, the fault is mine, but I believe the message holds up. Jesus Christ, God the Son, the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity, really and truly took on our human flesh, uniting His divinity to a real human nature, and He dwelt among us. This is no mere pious tradition, it is historical fact. The great G.K. Chesterton suggests that there is only one real subject, one real topic which all other things depend upon, and that is the Incarnation. Our theological understanding, our whole spiritual life, is built not on some superstition, but on the bedrock of God’s intervention in human history.

As the Easter season continues, the Church proclaims not only that the Incarnation happened, but also that the Resurrection happened. Just as Jesus took on our human flesh and lived in this world, so too He suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, died, and was buried. And, as we joyfully claim each Sunday in the Creed, He rose again on the third day in accordance with the Scriptures. The tomb that once held the body of the Lord remains empty to this day because the Resurrection happened. The triumph over sin and death accomplished by our Lord through His Passion and glorious Resurrection is a reality with which we, and the Apostles, will be confronted again and again in this holy season. We will also see how this was God’s plan all along.

Today’s Gospel begins with the two disciples recounting what happened when they met Jesus on the road to Emmaus. On that seven-mile journey, our Lord appeared to them and opened their minds and hearts to understand everything that the Scriptures had said about the Messiah, that is, everything that God had revealed as His plan for the salvation of the world. Their eyes, finally, were opened when Jesus broke bread before them. With that story told, the Risen Jesus stands in their midst, proof of the Resurrection in the flesh. As He had on the road to Emmaus, Jesus summarizes all of Scripture, showing the apostolic band that everything written in the prophets pointed to the Messiah’s glorious resurrection. With all of this said, Jesus commissions the apostles: “You are witnesses of these things.”

It is in the apostolic mission that past meets present, that the stubborn fact of the Incarnation and Resurrection become more than events in an historical moment and are transformed into present realities. From Jerusalem, the Apostles will go into the whole world proclaiming both the historical events and the current reality that Jesus is alive, God has visited his people and still dwells among us. The mission of the Apostles, to be witnesses of these things to the whole world, is the mission of the Church, and thus the mission of each individual Christian. We are called to be witnesses of these things. Our witness will be stronger if we understand the history, the prophecies, and the living reality of our Risen Savior. The Easter season invites us to learn our history – the Incarnation and the Resurrection happened – and to engage with the God who is present with us here and now – Jesus is risen from the tomb and is alive, and we recognize Him in the breaking of the bread, the Eucharist. The Incarnation happened. The Resurrection happened. You are witnesses of these things.

Peace,

Fr. Sam

April 7, 2024

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

As many of you know, last May I celebrated my 15th anniversary of priestly ordination. In the months leading up to that anniversary, I began a conversation with Bishop Caggiano about a unique opportunity afforded to priests of the Diocese of Bridgeport who have served for fifteen or more years: a sabbatical. The purpose of a priest’s sabbatical is to engage in a time of prayer, study, rest, and ministry that is otherwise not possible during his ordinary priestly ministry. Bishop Caggiano has very kindly granted me permission to take a three month sabbatical this summer, covering the months of June, July, and August. Just to make sure everything is clear: this is a sabbatical, not a leave of absence, and I will resume my pastoral responsibilities here at St. Pius X at the end of August. While I am gone, Fr. Brendan will serve as temporary administrator of the parish. I am very grateful to him for taking on this role and for his generosity in allowing me to step away for this time.

Part of the sabbatical is to give a priest the chance to engage in a ministry he does not ordinarily exercise. Since ordination, I have (mostly through St. Pius!) worked with Catholic Heart Workcamp and the young people who serve with them. As a chaplain for the last twelve summers, I have been introduced to the good work done behind the scenes of this organization, and have gained some significant insight into the needs of their staff. For a few years, I have had a conversation with CHWC about some of these elements, and this summer, they have invited me to assist with their staff training in June. From there, I will accompany a team of Catholic Heart Workcamp staff and serve as the chaplain at three of their camps. This is a ministry I have come to love and enjoy, and I look forward to spending June with CHWC.

Another important component of sabbatical is prayer. A portion of July will be dedicated to a time for retreat and solitude. After that I will make my way to Wyoming. There, I will offer daily Masses and some spiritual conferences to Catholic families at a ranch who come for a week of outdoor – device free – refreshment. With a fairly relaxed schedule, I will also have some time for reading and fishing. At the end of August, I will pack up and head back to Connecticut.

I am very grateful to have the chance to take this sabbatical. It is made possible by the generosity of Fr. Brendan and our parish staff who will keep things going here while I am gone. I am grateful to all of you, also, for your understanding. I am looking forward to this opportunity, and will keep you all in my daily prayers!

Peace,

Fr. Sam