Monday, March 30, 2020

A Word from Your Pastor March 29 - Fifth Sunday of Lent Coronavirus Exile



The Fifth Sunday of Lent offers a reminder of what the journey is all about.  The theme of Resurrection and Life points us to the deepest truth revealed by Jesus Christ.  This world has its limits, and while on earth, we have to live within them.  But we are not created simply to live in this world.  Jesus is the Resurrection and the Life.  By raising Lazarus, Jesus allows His power to be seen in this world.  Through His suffering and death, Jesus will make clear to us that our destiny is glory.

The experience of a greater and greater isolation from one another in a physical way highlights for us the importance of our awareness of the fact that we are still one in the Lord.  We can support one another and be one in prayer no matter where we are.

Day by day, this week, I have been learning more how to use the social media to remind everyone that we can still walk together along the journey of Faith.  I have been touched by the myriad of ways folks are finding to show support for one another.  The world has changed, but we are more aware of what is most important in our lives and that does not change.

We must pray that the lessons we are learning now will stay with us.  May we grow in prayer and love and our willingness to cooperate with grace. May we put our trust in Jesus Christ, Who IS the Resurrection and the Life.

Each Day St. Timothy Church will have a Livestream Mass, usually 9 AM Weekdays, 10 AM Sundays, Technology permitting.

Facebook:                  https://www.facebook.com/FrTim

YouTube:                   https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJaOijpXO-ICDLpGPUAEHxA/

I am also sending out an update each day to those whose email addresses I have.  If you are not receiving these, send an email to tmhayes@rrohio.com and I will add you to the list.

Be sure that you are kept daily in my prayers.  We are destined to live forever together.  Let’s not let a time of “stay at home” come between our hearts.


Friday, March 27, 2020

A Word from Your Pastor March 22 - Fourth Sunday of Lent Coronavirus Exile



We have reached the Fourth Sunday of Lent.  We could never have predicted that the Lord would allow us to enter so fully into the Desert Experience that Lent is meant to evoke.   We are on a journey together.  Our sole support is the Lord Himself and the spiritual unity that we share as members of the Body of Christ, the Church.

The Gospel for this Sunday is the account of the healing of the man born blind.  The First Reading tells the story of the anointing of David as the King.  St. Paul’s Letter to the Ephesians reminds us that we are called to arise from sleep in order to receive light from the Lord.  The Responsorial Psalm gathers the whole message with Psalm 23: “The Lord is my Shepherd, there is nothing I shall want.”  We are not left in darkness.  The Lord is with us on our journey and He has plans full of hope for us.

This Sunday’s readings and the experience of being aware of our unity in spite of “social distance” bring out the importance of the intention we are praying together this year: That our eyes may be opened to see Jesus among us, so that the Light of Christ may shine through our unity.”

We are not able to gather for Mass or any of the usual meetings and encounters that generally keep us in one another’s awareness.  So now we must be creative in our efforts to express our unity.  It has been so encouraging to me personally to see how generous folks have been and how willing to share what has been discovered.  The Internet and social media are proving their worth as a means to unify hearts.

Our School children have been working with their teachers and with those who care for them at home to keep on track with learning.  Facebook and Schoolspeak are invaluable tools.  Many companies have been generous in making available resources that assist in the process of learning.

No one knows how long this will last or when we will be able to return to a sense of normalcy.  We are in the desert, but we are together and God is guiding us.  Every day, look for the manna in the wilderness.  There are many beautiful things in the desert.  One day surely we shall reach the Promised Land.  Open your eyes and see!


The US Bishops’ Website offers the Scriptures of each day.  Take time to read them with your family. 

Here is a link to Sunday’s readings:  http://www.usccb.org/bible/readings/032220.cfm






Friday, March 20, 2020

A Word from Your Pastor March 15 - Third Sunday of Lent



Prudence is good advice concerning all that occurs in our lives: it is the virtue that guides us to choose “best practices” in the face of every human situation.  Bishop Brennan has invited us to exercise prudence in our response to the reality the world is facing concerning the corona virus.  The Bishops of Ohio have dispensed obligation to attend Mass for the next three weekends, but at present we are still able to have Mass publicly.
In some countries and dioceses throughout the United States, public Masses have been cancelled.  We will take advantage of being able to be present as long as we can and pray it does not come to that for us.

Many years ago when there was a concern about an especially virulent strain of the flu, we took up precaution to address that and we have simply kept them going ever since.  So, we are set to address the current situation by already engrained good habits and practices.  We may need to make a few other changes in our common practice as things develop.  In the meantime, here are some simple suggestions.

  • If you are sick, stay home and get well.

  • If you cough or sneeze, ensure that you do so into a tissue or your elbow as the current model is set.

  • If you are an extraordinary minster Holy Communion, be sure to wash your hands thoroughly and to use the sanitizer in the sanctuary before you exercise the ministry.

  • You are free to choose to abstain from shaking hands at the Sign of Peace (a bow or nod of the head is fitting). 

Fear is a poor counselor.  We must make our decisions based on good practices and practical wisdom.

Jesus is present among us.  He is the wisest of counselors.  May we open our hearts to hear His invitation to put our trust in Him.  He is the Savior of the world.  He will guide us through whatever trials we face and bring us into His Kingdom.

Wednesday, March 11, 2020

A Word from Your Pastor March 8 - Second Sunday of Lent


Dear Parishioners:

Prayer is a practice that is at the heart of our life in Christ.  We pray in various ways throughout the Season of Lent in preparation for the celebration of Easter.

Jesus shared His experience of prayer with His disciples. When they asked Him to teach them to pray, He told them to address God as Abba, Father.  This was an invitation into intimacy with God, a sharing in Jesus’ own experience of being the Father’s Beloved Son. 

As He was preparing them for the experience of the Cross – the Paschal Mystery of the Suffering, Death and Resurrection – Jesus chose His intimate friends, Peter, James and John, and allowed them to witness what happened to Him in the midst of Prayer.  The Transfiguration is a revelation of the deep truth that God’s glory has been planted and is hidden in human nature.  The anticipated experience of the glory that God has prepared for us is made present for the disciples so that when the journey of Jesus to the Cross would begin, they would, at least subconsciously, already have a hint that the suffering was not going to end in death and loss.

The same three disciples would be invited to be close to Jesus as He experienced another kind of intimacy in prayer, the depth of His despair and anguish in Gethsemane, just before His arrest and crucifixion.  Jesus cried, “Abba, Father, take this Cup from Me.”  There, they slept through the experience.

Only John was there at the foot of the Cross as a witness of the final prayer of the Lord in the midst of the Passion, when, bowing His head, He breathed His last, releasing His spirit to His Father.

We are invited to intimacy with God.  The Prayer of the Church is the prayer of faithful hearts, individually and collectively as in the Liturgy, that becomes one with the very prayer of Jesus.  When we pray, we are in the very heart of the Lord, calling God Our Father.

May we open our eyes to see the hints of glory that are at work among us.

Thanks to all who participated in the Spaghetti Dinner last week and to all who were present for the Parish Penance Service.  Our community works and prays together, giving God His due and opening our hearts to the glory that is held in store for us.

Wednesday, March 4, 2020

A Word from Your Pastor March 1 - First Sunday of Lent


Dear Parishioners:

Lent is here.  My invitation to you, which I have offered at last weekend’s Mass and on Ash Wednesday, is to keep things very simple.  Taking my cue from God’s directions to Moses, I remind you to Be Holy.  That is, recognize that you belong to God and act accordingly.

Concerning the Lenten practices of Prayer, Fasting and Almsgiving, and the various opportunities made available by our parish and by the Catholic Church in general, I charge you to Show Up.  In other words, Be There.  Enter into the flow of grace that is offered.  God will attend to everything else that is necessary.  Transformation comes from God’s grace entering into our lives through open hearts.

This Sunday’s Gospel gives St. Matthew’s account of the Temptation of the Lord.  We are all confronted with temptations that are tailor-made to our own persons.  The devil is intelligent and knows our areas of weakness.  God is even more intelligent, and He knows that if we humble ourselves and ask for grace, the devil’s game will be lost.  We will be able to grow in grace and virtue if we allow God to win the battle for our souls by putting our trust in Him.

Our Parish Lenten Penance Service will be celebrated this Tuesday, March 3, at 7 p.m.  Get your Lent started off right.  Show up for Mercy.  Don’t delay.

Be Holy.  Show Up.  Trust in God’s Mercy.