FACC Volunteer Needs

FACC is in need of subs who would be available to fill in at their shelter on the weekends. They are looking for a few one-man/one-woman teams, and all volunteers will have training. Teams are needed for back ups on Friday night (8:00pm-8:00am), Saturday night (8:00pm-8:00am) and Sunday night (8:00pm-5:00am).

If you would be interested in being an on-call sub for FACC, please contact FACC at 815-233-0435, or speak with Fr Barr.

Confirmation 2021

Bishop Malloy came out to confirm our candidates in the Religious Education program. We thank Ann Peters for all she does to oversee that these children will be ready to receive the Holy Spirit this day. We also thank Paul Murphy for his time he spent preparing the candidates with their parents and sponsors. Here is the link to the facebook for St Joseph Church, where the ceremony took place.

https://www.facebook.com/plugins/video.php?href=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fstjosephfreeportil%2Fvideos%2F451832895994915%2F&show_text=0&width=560

The Year of St Joseph

This year, 2021, has been announced by the Vatican to be the year of St Joseph, in honor of the 150th anniversary of the saint’s proclamation as patron of the Universal Church. Like St Joseph, many people during the pandemic have made hidden sacrifices to protect others, just as St Joseph quietly protected and cared for Mary and Jesus.

I invite all of you who read this to take the path less walked and walk with St Joseph this year and during Lent. Each of us can discover in Joseph – the man who goes unnoticed, a daily, discreet and hidden presence – an intercessor, a support and a guide in times of trouble. St Joseph is also a role model as a father who served his family with charity and humility. (Our world today needs fathers like him.) He is our most helpful and loving spiritual father.

I invite you, my church family, to consider spending some time this year learning about your patron St Joseph. Very soon, before Lent, there will be several options available to you to learn more about St Joseph. A limited quantity of Fr Donald H. Calloway’s book titled “Consecration to St. Joseph” will be available, and Fr Barr will announce when and where they will be available. For others who may be unable to commit to a
33-day Consecration to St Joseph that this book offers, you might find the pamphlet titled “St Joseph Novena and Prayers,” which includes the Litany to St Joseph as a better option. I have personally read “Consecration to St Joseph,” it’s a wonderful book, and makes you think about St Joseph in a whole new way. 

Because the church is hurting financially, as is everyone, we ordered a limited quantity (just a couple dozen of each), and ask that if it be possible you pay forward a small donation. You can put your donation in the box located in the foyer of St Joseph Church or mail to the office with your request of which book you would like to get.

Also, please note there will be free rosaries available in the breezeway. Though this is a St Joseph parish “event,” all are welcome to join us. – Cynthia Saar

Feast Day of the Holy Word of God

So many people to this day wander about looking for God. So many religions in so many regions have searched high and low to seek the creator of the wondrous stars above, the majestic mountains, and the powerful oceans. In seeing the world around them, they know that there has to be one who created all this or is acting behind them. Man has searched for millennia to find the one from whom humanity has come. Religions have tried to guess at who or what this entity might be. The guesses they have are so diverse it seems to be like throwing darts at a board is as good as any guess. All opinions seem equal to the world.

But thanks be to God that we do not have to guess. God came to us in the person of Jesus. He was born to us that we may truly know of His mercy and love. He died on the cross for us to prove how far He was willing to go so that we may experience His goodness, and so that we may be made whole again. He desires us to be in heaven with Him where there are no more tears. Only joy and peace lives in every soul for all eternity. We could never know this as reality if He did not come down to us in reality and do what He has done for us.

Jesus Himself is the full revelation of God, his goodness, his power and mercy. Jesus came to us for our salvation. But this salvation takes instruction. Jesus taught by word and action, which was later written down that we too may know God and believe. These writings are known to be the four gospels. The followers of Jesus wrote letters to the faithful after Jesus ascended into heaven. All of these writings are called the New Testament of the Bible. Before the time of Jesus, God inspired many prophets and kings to do His holy will and to prepare for His coming. These writings are called the Old Testament of the Bible. These two sections, the Old Testament and the New Testament, make up the Bible.

God’s definitive teaching has been written down for us so that we may have faith and hope in Him because we can know of His goodness as fact. It can be our experience now. How good it is that God would reveal Himself so that we can have such confidence and peace.

The Bible is what we have come to know is the holy Word of God. In other words, God is responsible for what is written without error. God inspires the people who wrote in such a way that each human writer would write according to their personality and understanding, yet always remain faithful to the desires of the Holy Spirit. Therefore, not one word of these holy words can be changed. Neither does anybody have the right to add or subtract from these sacred scriptures. The monks who wrote copies of the Bible from ancient times were so meticulous that if one word was mixed up, the entire parchment would be thrown out and they would start anew. In fact, the Bible is by far the most reliable ancient book there is in having the least mistakes in copies made, yet has also by far the most copies made. The Bible is not like the telephone game. There are no new teachings, nor can there be any teachings contradictory to the Bible. Everything we need to know for salvation is contained therein.

In the Bible, we find who God is. He wants us to have a relationship with Him. We also find His instructions for us on how to live our lives. There is so much wisdom as we read these words asking for the guidance of the Holy Spirit. God also strengthens us through the Bible. The Bible inspires us to pursue the good. The more we read the Bible, the more we have an encounter with the Holy Spirit while reading His word. God speaks to us through the Bible. The Bible is wholly something different than anything else in the world. It should be read daily by all believers. It is God’s gift to us.

~ You’re Invited to Join Us ~

We miss all of you! So, while still staying safe, we have been thinking of ways that we can keep in touch with one another. We are considering offering Zoom to you. Zoom is a software that offers quality video, and audio live-sharing to many people over the internet. You will be able to visit and see other parishioners on your computer, tablet or smart phone. To participate, you will need to have a device (computer, tablet or smart phone) that will allow you to access Zoom on the internet.

Zoom is a web-based platform that many are using. You may already have this on your device, so we’re asking… are any of you interested in participating in a church event via Zoom? If so, what would that church event be? We initially thought we would invite you to meet with us after 10:30 Sunday Mass for a test-run of a “virtual” cup of coffee and a doughnut – bring your own!? It has been very successful in many parishes throughout the US. But then we thought you may have a better suggestion. Some ideas might be a Bible Study, Sunday Lectio Divina on the Gospels, a book club study, and there are many, many other ideas. 

If you would like to participate in a Zoom event, please contact the church and leave your name, telephone number, and give the name of the event you would want to participate in. If you have questions, please call me, Cynthia Saar, at (815)
232-7400. Please leave a message, and I will return your call.

Pro Life Corner

(Presented by Stephenson Co. Right To Life)

Abortion is the only event that some people think too violent and obscene to portray on TV. This is not because they are squeamish or prudish. It is because if people knew what abortion really looked like, it would destroy their pretense that it is a civilized answer to the problem of what to do about unwanted babies.

2 Corinthians 8

Paul dedicates most of this chapter to generosity. He first comments on how even the poor give well beyond their possessions. Paul says in verse 3, “according to their means – indeed I can testify even beyond their means – and voluntarily…” He sees not wealth, but a disposition of the soul. As poor as they are, they want to give what they can: their very being to God and His works. It is a desire they have in their hearts, as expressed by how they voluntarily give and offer to do whatever God wants of them. In fact, they see it as a grace or “favor” (v4) to allow them to give either through money or through works.

Paul is using the example of the generosity of the poor to inspire those who do have money and time to give what they can. Paul is not commanding or trying to beat anybody down to give (8). He is begging on God’s behalf for them to have that same spirit of generosity. God desires a generous heart and a cheerful giver (2 Cor 9:7). He reminds them how good God has been to them for a couple reasons. It reminds them of this model that Jesus Himself has shown, but he particularly wants to inspire them to give by reminding them of the benefits they have received from Jesus. How much Jesus was willing to become poor Himself so that we may rejoice in Him. Joy was the fruit of the generosity of Jesus. So joy is the fruit of giving. When we give, Jesus gives us a share in His joy (9). What God offers us is a snowball effect of His Joy. The more generosity we possess, the more joy we possess. If you suffer depression, give what you can.

Neither Paul nor God expects you to become poor in your giving (12-13). But Paul does suggest to give with resolve. Do not waver back and forth so that the gift does not have fruitfulness. Everybody likes to see the effect of their giving and should hope to see it. It may not be what we expect, but the bottom line is that good comes from giving. The joy of the fruitfulness of giving confirms the gift and solidifies the resolve. Yet when troubles come, this should not lead us into despair. We give according to God’s plan. Sometimes when we give, we do not see the fruit. Jesus did not see a single conversion when He died on the cross. In fact, they cast lots for His clothes and ridiculed Him while He was hanging on the cross. Sometimes we have to either wait to see the fruits of our generosity, or trust that Our Lord will bring it about in ways we will only see after this life. Even when it is fruitless in our direct actions, God can take our desires to do good for Him and turn it into grace for others. In this way, a cheerful giver always bears an abundant fruit because it is secure in Christ, who sees to it.

The grace that flows through giving can have its payback in a very positive way. When a person gives to those in need, the joy of those in need turns into grace for those who have given. The poor in wealth provide for those who are spiritually poor while those who give provide for material things. One provides for material needs while the other provides spiritual needs (15). We are all poor in one way or another, but we all can give to help each other get to our homeland in heaven.

Paul is thankful for all those who have a generous heart in its many forms. Through his thankfulness, Paul is able to appreciate all those around him and all their efforts to help not only Paul, but Titus and the communities. Gratitude is really the main inspiration to give. Paul naturally wants to give of himself even more because he sees the fruitfulness in their lives. Goodness begets goodness. In all of this snowball effect of goodness, purity of intention is being built up and God is made known to all. The goodness of God is revealed by the way they love one another (Jn 13:35). God has been so good to us. The world needs to see proof of this (24).

2020 Yolanda Garcia Nava Award Recipients

The Yolanda Garcia Nava award is given each year to honor Yolanda for her dedication not only spiritually, but for her hard work in and for the church and the Hispanic Community as well. The award is given to an individual or individuals who do good works in the church, and with and for the Hispanic Community.

Yolanda was a special person who was always willing to help and always set a great example, not only in her commitment to the church, but also as a role model in her faith.

Two awards were given out in 2020. The first award was given to Mary Ann Hasenour for her dedication and hard work in the music department, and learning to sing and play in Spanish.

The second award was given to Orlando Marin for his dedication and help in the church and with the prayer group. He helps with the disinfecting of the church and other jobs as needed.

Thank you for all you do for the Community.