Thursday 24 March 2011

Rain, Rain, a blessing from God (really?)

We have had rain a few times since arriving in Israel. March is the end of the "Winter" and the begining the dryer season, yet today we had what our driver said was the wetest day of the year!  The rains were so bad and so strong today - that we postponed our boat ride on the sea of Galilee.  We started with Mass at Mount Tabor - the site which celebrates the Transfiguration of our Lord. The base of mount Tabor is perhaps the place where there has been the greatesat change in the time from when I first came to Israel, and now. In days gone by, there was once a simple flat dirt parking area - where Pilgrims transferred from their large bus to a series of Taxis - which would usher you up the twisting switch back road to the top of the Mountain.  Now there is a paved area, with a Kiosk, a shop and a fruit stand, and a large paved are for the pilgrim buses to wait.
We were early for mass, and they were able to allow us to start early. (This is very unusual in the Holy Land!)  After Mass we made our way back to the shore of the sea of Galilee, and stopped for Lunch at a restaraunt that offers St. Peter's Fish (aka Talapia). After Lunch we visited Nof Kinosar which houses the Jesus Boat, a boat found in the mud of the shoreline of the sea of Galilee in 1986.  The boat is on display here with a short video showing the history how they were able to save the fragile wooden structure.  Then we visited a diamond jewelry factory.  (It seemed that the women lead the way into the factory!)
We have pushed our Boat Ride to Saturday, which is already quite full. Each day is tiring - dealing with issues that surface, keeping people happy, and providing snacks for the time on the Bus.  The rain has stopped tonight, and the weather is to be be much better in the next few days...
Shalom!

Wednesday 23 March 2011

Pilgrimage in Israel

Sunday Evening myself and Fr. Scott Young and 32 pilgrims from Bolton, Mississauga and beyond embarked upon a pilgrimage to the Holy Land.  We arrived Monday morning and transferred to our Hotel in Tel Aviv.  After a short nap, people went off to explore and walk around the hotel area.  Some went to the Carmel Market, others went to the Beach and dipped their toes into the Mediterranean Sea.  All of these activities allowed us to clear the cobwebs that an 11 hour flight leaves in our minds.  Tuesday Moning, after attending to a few health concerns, we made our way to Jaffa, the Ancient port city of Israel, where St. Peter had a vision, that declared all foods clean (Acts 9).
We made our way up the Mediterranean coastline to Ceasarea Maritima, where the first Gentile was Baptized: Cornelius - a member of the Roman Cohoart. 
We realized that we were here today because of what had happened here 2 centuries ago. We ended our day celebrating mass at Stella Maris in Haifa.
Today (Wednesday) we started with Mass in Nazareth in the Basilica of the Annunciation, then we walked to St. Gabriel's Greek Orthodox Church. We then boarded the bus for the short drive to Cana - where the first miracle of Jesus ocurred - changing water into wine at a wedding feast.  We went down to the grotto and the couples who are on the pilgrimage renewed their wedding vows, and Fr. Scott and I renewed our Priestly promises.  We went for Lunch and a first century experience at Kefar Kedeem.  We got dressed in ancient garb, and learned about sowing wheat in a land where you had to trust in God to send rain to make the wheat grow. After baking our own Pita bread, we had a meal of Hummis, salad, chicken breast strips, and lamb Sausage Kebobs. Then people had a chance to ride a donkey!  I did not ride one - cruel and unusual punnishment comes to mind.
Then as we traveled to our hotel in Tiberias - where we will stay for 4 nights - we learned of the explosion in Jerusalem.  We are all very safe - some 200 Kilometres north of Jerusalem.  We can expect more security when we do make our way down the Jordan valley and eventually working our way up to Jerusalem.  We pray for those injured, and for the people who mourn the 1 death that we know of at this time.  We also will keep praying for peace in this Land that is holy.  Peace

Saturday 19 March 2011

St. Joseph's Feast day

St. Joseph is the first Patron Saint for Canada.  With the canonization of the North American Martyrs in the 20th Century they were added as co-patrons of our country.  A friend of mine (an immigrant to Canada) used to say "It is a national day of celebration in my country" when ever he wanted to have an excuse to celebrate.  Well today is OUR national day of Celebration!  The recent canonization of St. Andre of Montreal (last fall) precipitated a wonderful documentary of his life produced and aired by Salt and Light TV.  This 1 hour video showed Brother Andre's keen devotion to St. Joseph - which resulted in the construction of St. Joseph's Oratory in Montreal.  The Oratory (another name for a chapel) sits high above Montreal - almost looking over the city - as St. Joseph looked over the Holy Family.


St. Joseph the Betrothed
Today I pray in a special way for the men of Holy Family parish - that (we) may pray to God for a share in the courage and character of St. Joseph in our task of living the gospel today. It has been over 2000 years since Joseph himself accepted the call of God, and kept Mary as his wife, and thereby became the "foster father" of Jesus.
Saint Joseph - Pray for us!

Friday 18 March 2011

Preparations for Israel

On Sunday I will be leaving for a 12 day pilgrimage to Israel. We are a group of 34 in total including Fr. Scott Young and myself as the tour leaders. This will be my 7th time in Israel. It is always a privilege to journey with fellow pilgrims to these places where our faith truly comes alive. Perhaps one of the best perks of traveling with a group Fr. Scott and I organize is the pilgrims prayer book we offer. This booklet (76 pages) includes prayers, reflections, and songs we sing during the different moments of prayer as we visit the sites in the Holy Land. Last night I finished the technical task of printing and collating the pilgrim books for this year's trip and delivered them to Staples for binding. I also finished the main presider's book and "lectionary" we will use for the daily masses which we celebrate. I have to say - it was a relief to get that done - even if it meant I did not get out to a pub on St. Paddy's day! Peace!

Thursday 17 March 2011

St. Patrick

My Mom used to say today there's only 2 types of people: "Thems that is Irish and thems that wish they were!"  My Dad is French Canadian - but each year on this day he would wear his knitted green sweater very proudly! (It didn't hurt that his favourite colour is green!)
We have 2 funerals today at Holy Family - so no chance to really celebrate St. Patrick, so I thought I would post my thoughts here.  
On Saturday I posted part of the prayer attributed to St. Patrick. I wanted to reflect on 1 line: Christ to win me.
I don't know about you - but when I am asked to make two columns on a sheet of paper, and write my good qualities on one side and my faults on the other... I seem to fill the "faults" side before I can get 3 entries in the "good" column!  Sunday we will hear in the Gospel how Jesus was Transfigured before Peter, James and John on the mountain top.  We will hear that God speaks of Jesus "This is my beloved,"  and I think we will be challenged to realize that we are Beloved of God.  As I reflect on this line of the Breast-Plate of St. Patrick I am reminded that I might be such a prize - that Christ wins me. That I might be some sort of prize - more valuable than the Lotto Max Jackpot! That Christ might win me - a beloved child of God! Praise to you Lord - King of eternal glory!
Peace

Tuesday 15 March 2011

Patrick would have been 50 this week

In 1998 I was assigned as Pastor of Holy Martyrs of Japan Parish in Bradford, ON.  Holy Trinity is the Catholic Secondary School in Bradford , and shortly into my first year there a new chaplain was appointed: Patrick Wren. Patrick was a man of deep faith, and came from a "very catholic" family, with deep roots in the Archdiocese of Toronto.  Patrick loved boats - classic / vintage boats - and had a hobby business on the side restoring these old boats.  It was through his boating connections that he met and later married Sally Ann MacGillivray (affectionately known as Sam) in the spring of 1999.  I not only worked well with Patrick in Bradford, I was also privileged to visit he and Sam at their cottage in Muskoka over the years.  In 2007 Sam was diagnosed with a rare form of abdominal cancer, and she died in January 2008. It was a devastating time for Patrick.  I was able to anoint Sam in early January before I went to China to visit my brother who was teaching for 1 year there, but I was unable to be at Sam's Funeral.  Patrick and I had spent some time together after the funeral, and I was shocked when in January 2009 I found out the Patrick had a brain Tumor.  Surgery provided temporary relief, but it was inoperable, and in June of 2009 Patrick went home to God.  I was able to celebrate that Funeral and pray with the Wren family.
This week Patrick would have turned 50 - and on Sunday afternoon I gathered with the Wren family for Mass, to celebrate life and love and new life. Sunday was the First Sunday of Lent, the first Sunday of the March Break, and it was - Ted Wren's 84th Birthday (Patrick's Father)!  The irony I noted at the mass was that Patrick would never have been in Toronto on March Break! He booked flights to Florida for March break for Sam and himself each year in May - almost as soon as they were able to do so on line!  The Mass on Sunday was a powerful time of prayer and fellowship with a family of faith.  Almost 2 years later - Patrick is still dearly missed.  The consolation we have is from the Gospel of Matthew: "Blessed are those who Mourn, for they shall be comforted" (Chapter 5)  Mourning is the price we pay for having loved. Having Loved and having been loved - we are truly blessed.
I believe that Patrick was a great role model for the Students he served as chaplain at Holy Trinity in Bradford, and as a religion teacher in Sacred Heart in Newmarket. He lived as Christ lived - an unselfish life of service.


Eternal rest grant unto him O Lord,
and let perpetual light shine on him.
May he rest in peace. Amen.
May his soul, and the souls of all the faithful departed, 
through the mercy of God, rest in peace.  Amen.

Sunday 13 March 2011

First Sunday of Lent

So this is what a Homily looks like on my crib notes:
Embark upon Lent – Thru Desert / w or wo dessert!

Admitting How & Where   we have underestimated our influence letting our words or silences     hurt
          Abusing trust / betraying confidence

Admitting H & W we have made a show of relig.
          attracting attn more to us than to our God

Admitting H & W in our lives vague interest
     has become dangerous passion
          and we are not sure what to do / ? in control

For God’s ways are not our ways /
          nor our thoughts God’s thoughts
For God looks at the ugliest soul
          & sees unstirred the wings of angel
we scan our finest neighbours anxious find flaw

God views time in the context of eternity and so finds a place for waiting/yearning/suffering/ dying
          We demand instant results
          looking for tomorrow before savoring today

God knows the one who suffers can ultimately save
          this why Christ walks the way of the cross
& we fear that vulnerability which defies our power
          & so we cry for crucifixion

Facing our Temptations / food or drink
          habit or addiction / Power or prestige
facing the burden of our Cross
          we make our way thru the desert
We are here not to have our worst confirmed
          but to have our best liberated


And if we looked for or longed for an easier Gospel
          a lighter cross / a less demanding savior –
    – then  here at this table we beg the Lord
          to turn our eyes and Avert our longing
          from what we want to choose
                   to the one who has chosen us

Saturday 12 March 2011

LifeTeen - A Night on St. Patrick

This evening's LifeNight was on St. Patrick. A saint born in Scotland - can you believe that?!? Patrick was a mighty man of prayer, one who trusted in God's plan for his life, and used cultural symbols to evangelize and spread the Gospel Message. (Patrick used the shamrock in his teaching on the Trinity - 3 persons - 1 God.) One of my reflections with the Grade 12 small group was how God's Pan for our lives is often manifested in the his providence. In the gifts and talents that God gives me, and the people who God places in my life to affect me and effect change within me.
I conclude with a prayer often called the breast plate of St. Patrick:
Christ be with me, Christ within me,
Christ behind me, Christ before me,
Christ beside me, Christ to win me,
Christ to comfort and restore me,
Christ beneath me, Christ above me,
Christ in quiet, Christ in danger,
Christ in the hearts of all that love me,
Christ in mouth of friend and stranger.

Friday 11 March 2011

Humble Pie

Well the Students of Pope John Paul II were victorious 2 days in a row!  Yesterday they won the Beacon Family of Schools Hockey Tournament - and have a miniature Stanley cup to prove it! This afternoon we had the annual ShareLife hockey game with the Students VS Staff.  The students were on the ropes early - with the Staff/Parents and Father Larry team scoring early and keeping the lead through the first period.  But in the second Period the Students stepped it up - and the game ended with a final score Students 7 - Staff 4.

One really has to ask - do those grade 8's from Pope John Paul II really want to be confirmed!?! (Just kidding!)
In the end the real winner here was ShareLife - helping the whole community through Catholic Agencies - like Catholic Family Services which offers family and crisis counselling here in Bolton.

Thursday 10 March 2011

Popcorn, Prayer and Preparation

The discipline of fasting has a long history in our faith.  From Biblical times this ancient practice allowed people to consciously focus on self discipline and prepare for a feast.  In more recent times it has come down to the question: "What are you giving up for Lent?"  When I was younger - my Mom decided what we would give up - Dessert! There was no real choice for my Dad, Brother or Sister. Mom made the choice.  In different years I have undertaken to give up different "things" during the season of Lent.  This year my focus is once again on food - but in particular on snacking.  In recent months it was always so easy to end the day - watching a show on TV - and eating a bag of microwave Popcorn. It was a comfortable - but in the end unhealthy - habit (even if it was smart pop!)



The other focus for me this Lent is to undertake more deliberately some spiritual reading. TV is such a passive media form, while reading is more engaging. I recently have been reading "Morning Sun on a White Piano: Simple Pleasures and the Sacramental Life", and one of the chapters spoke convincingly of the benefits of turning off the TV and reading more often.   I hope it will get my reflective juices going and center me during this holy season.  This is a habit I would like to extend beyond the time of Lent!



Preparation: Tomorrow afternoon (March 11 at 1:00 pm) I am playing hockey with the Teaching Staff of Pope John Paul II school in the annual ShareLife Hockey Game vs the students in grade 7 & 8.  No matter who wins - Staff or Students - the real winner is ShareLife - our Catholic Fundraising campaign that allows Catholic Agencies to support the whole community!
Peace...

Wednesday 9 March 2011

Lenten Discipline

On the first Tuesday of each month our Parish has Vitamin F (F=Faith!), a time of Faith Nourishment - because we recognize that one never graduates from faith! Last week (on March 1st) was a time of preparation for Lent. We bagan with a reminder that when one thinks of Advent, it is always in relationship to Christmas, and so in a similar way when we think of Lent - we should think of  Easter.  We should never see this season of the church year in isolation. The Lenten Disciplines of Prayer Fasting & Almsgiving allow us to prepare for the great feast of Easter. 


When we consider what type of Lenten Discipline we will take up this year, perhaps the question we should ask ourselves is:
"How will this practice better prepare me to renew my Baptismal Promises?"

Peace to you and your families as we begin this "joyful" season of Lent - a Time of Prayer, Fasting, and Almsgiving that will help make us ready to renew the promises made in our Baptism!

Tuesday 8 March 2011

The Banners are up!

The church looks like lent - and so does the blogggg!!!

Pancakes, Pancakes, and More Pancakes!

As we count down to the beginning of Lent on Ash Wednesday - we have the very common custom of eating Pancakes on Shrove Tuesday.  I started the day eating some Pancakes this morning with grade 8 boys at one of our Schools. With another feed of pancakes coming this evening at the Parish (organized by the Squires and Squirettes) I had to pace myself, but the young grade 8's had no such fears and were very obliging whenever a parent volunteer came by with some refills!  Over 800 students fed by 10:30 this morning!
The custom of Pancakes on the day before Lent begins comes from the age old practice of clearing the cupboard of all the things which would often be given up during the Lenten Fast (Cream, Sugar, eggs). So the practice of pancakes was born. There are different customs in different places: Mardi Gras in New Orleans and Rio are similar pre-lenten celebrations that count down to Ash Wednesday


Enjoy the feast - whatever you have - even if it is a bit of a carbolicious day!

Saturday 5 March 2011

Saturday LifeNight - LifeTeen

Had a terrific night at LifeTeen. It was a Social - Movie Night - and we watched "To Save a Life". I cried! Same as last year's LifeTeen Movie Night! It was a great movie (2010) about a popular kid in High School whose world is shattered after a childhood friend commits suicide. Filled with compelling questions and honest seeking of the truth, this was a movie with a message! 
Highly recommended for Teenage Youth Groups!

Summer Day Camp Registration

I am very excited this morning as we will be opening our Summer Day camp registration at Holy Family Parish. The summer day camp will allow us to serve the children in our parish during the month of July this year.
Registration opens at 11:00 AM!

Welcome to the blog!

Greetings to all! I Am Fr. Larry Léger - the Pastor of Holy Family Catholic Parish, in Bolton, Ontario, Canada.  By way of an introduction, I will quote the profile from my parish website: http://www.holyfamilybolton.ca/
Born in Toronto, Fr. Larry was raised in London, Ont., and Toronto, and graduated Brebeuf College School in 1982. After graduating from the University of Toronto he worked in Accounting and Finance for a Canadian Telephone Equipment maker. He entered St. Augustine’s Seminary in 1988 and was ordained to the Priesthood in 1993. Fr. Larry has served the Archdiocese of Toronto as Associate Pastor of St. Jerome’s (Brampton), and as Pastor of Holy Martyrs of Japan (Bradford) before being assigned as Pastor of Holy Family in June of 2007.  Fr. Larry has a brother Chris who is married to Maria and they have a son Michael. Fr. Larry also has a sister Julie who is married to Ian and they have a son Gabriel.  His father, Guy, is a retired educator who lives in Kingston, Ontario.
Fr. Larry enjoys traveling, cooking, reading about Liturgy, and often presents in parishes across the country on the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults as a team member with the North American Forum on the Catechumenate.


It is my hope that this blog will provide a vehicle to share information and events in the Parish.