A Word from Your Pastor
Dear Parishioners:
As we continue our Parish Golden Jubilee, we are called to look more deeply into the reality of God’s plan for our community. Each year since I have been Pastor of St. Timothy Church, I have used the occasion of our Parish Feast Day, the Feast of Saints Timothy and Titus on January 26th, to highlight a particular need for prayer. This year, we pray in thanksgiving for our first fifty years, and especially for the witness of the first families of our Parish community, and we ask God to reveal to us His Plan for our Parish in the years ahead.
This weekend, as we welcome Bishop Campbell to celebrate the Sacrament of Confirmation with our 8th Graders, we may intensify our prayer that the Gift of the Holy Spirit be poured out among us in order to lead us into the Plan God has in store for us. May our youth be confirmed in their Faith and in their commitment to God and His Church, and may our whole Parish Family be ever more united in our response to the call that brings us together as a community.
As we look to our history and to the deepening of our Faith, we are inspired at the same time to look outward to share with others the gifts we have received, both materially and spiritually. It is becoming ever more evident that God wants us to discover a way of being for others as a community. At the moment, it seems to me, we are being invited to consider how we may support very specific missions in the Church locally and more globally.
Our Parish Pastoral Council is studying a project that our community has been asked to think about in Haiti. While I was away, a priest from Food for the Poor was present to share the plight of our brothers and sisters who have experienced many losses due to nature. Many have personally responded to his plea for support. Could we as a Parish do more? See the note Fr. Glen Baptiste, C.R., wrote to me recently after his visit to our Parish and let members of the Parish Council hear your thoughts.
A member of our Parish, James Foley, has taken up a more local challenge, becoming President of the Cristo Rey High School to be established in the Diocese of Columbus in 2013. Since that year will also begin our School’s Golden Jubilee, it might be that we could support that venture as a Parish and as a School on the more local level. Read the information included below and let Jim Foley and the Parish Council hear your ideas as to how we might support this venture.
As Pastor, I try to listen to the voice of the Spirit to “hear what the Spirit is saying to the Churches.” It seems to me that we are being called to answer a call to look beyond ourselves, at home and abroad, in some very concrete ways. Do you hear the same call? How will you respond?
An Invitation to support our Brothers and Sisters in Haiti
Father Tim,
. . . I have to tell you that I enjoyed my short weekend at St. Tim's.....both the community and Bill......and Marion...... great community....the way a Parish ought to be! Thank you for the invite! And, thank you for forming that community so well!
I did, however, share much with your community at St. Timothy's, but with a great emphasis on the needs of our Haitian brothers and sisters. By the way, this week marks the two year anniversary of the quake in Haiti...... And, having just returned again, I can attest that there are still a remaining 600,000 plus people who continue to live in tent cities.....families who lost what little home they had in the experience of the quake..... its terrible...... bits and pieces of dry rotted, shredded tarpaulin strapped from one bush, to a tree, to a make shift pole........and these things are not water tight by any stretch of the imagination. Young families, Tim, with young kids lying on wet, soggy, mildewed mattresses inside these tents......its unbelievable!!!! Wish I could have shown you the photos in my phone......
We have built in excess of 2600 little concrete block homes with sanitation since the quake (we have been building them for 29 years there)....but, there are so many more families in need of getting out of those horrid tent city conditions......
Little homes are $3200...or $178 a month for 18 months (and a home will be built up front, not at the end of the 18 months)....... So, I encouraged / invited your community to give that some consideration....or groups within the Parish (K of C), etc., as a possible project......Would you kindly remind and encourage your community to remember to mail in their brochure and to participate to whatever capacity they are able?
I would also, however, like to gently ask if the Parish itself might have any interest in participating by way of building a home in the name of St. Timothy's Community? I would like to further ask, if you....and or a group from the Parish....may ever wish to visit Haiti (or one of the other Countries we serve) for a few days to see and experience. I (we) would be delighted to show you some of our projects in action.......Life altering experiences to see!!
At any rate....so much to share...perhaps you might, when you have a moment, visit foodforthepoor.org to see in greater detail the nature of our work.....the how, the where, the what, etc....... Again, thank you much for the invite, and giving me an opportunity to share with St. Tim's Parish Community!
With every best wish,
Glen
Reverend Glen P. Baptiste, C.R.
Food for the Poor, Inc.
6401 Lyons Road
Coconut Creek, FL 33073
(954)427-2222 ext. 6419
(815) 451-8065 cell
gpb1042@comcast.net
A Letter from the Cristo Rey Columbus President
October 21st, 2011
Here I am Lord
Is it I Lord
I have heard You calling in the night
I will go Lord
If You lead me
I will hold Your people in my heart
That St. Louis Jesuit hymn speaks to all of us at times in our lives. It spoke loudly to me one night as I was contemplating a decision to leave behind my law practice and apply to be President of Cristo Rey Columbus. I am humbled to have been given this opportunity to help make this wonderful dream a reality. I am also thankful for the tremendous work and support of the many people who have committed themselves to bring Cristo Rey to Columbus. While we still have work to do, this mission would never even have gotten off the ground without the sponsorship and strong encouragement of Bishop Campbell. Nor would we have made the great progress to date without the generous support of our donors and work-study employers, the leadership of our Board, the energy of our volunteers, and the tireless work of our Program Director, Barbara Brown. God has called us all. We can do nothing greater and nothing less than to answer that call.
All of us have much in common with the freshmen who will be coming through the doors of our school beginning in two years. We are on a journey that will require a lot of hard work and sacrifice, and may have bumps along the way. For us—just like those future freshmen—this school is an opportunity. Having opportunities is certainly better than not having them. But at the end of the day, it is about what we make of those opportunities. All of us—like our students—are going to have to work hard, to persevere, to overcome obstacles, and to give this effort our hearts and souls, our minds, and our hands.
I am confident that we will do everything that needs to be done. In Cristo Rey, we have an amazing model that has worked in 24 other high schools to bring a high quality, Catholic, college preparatory education to economically challenged students of all religious backgrounds. We will create an academically rigorous program, and give our students the tools to succeed in high school and college. The corporate work-study program will provide our students the opportunity to pay for most of their education. It will let them experience professional job settings they would never have had a chance to be part of. Through those jobs, our students will learn first-hand the value of the education they are receiving and the importance of obtaining a college degree. We will make “learning to work and working to learn” a reality in Columbus.
Indeed, we are already well on our way. We have identified our school building. We have received offers from many businesses to be part of our work-study program. We have made significant progress on our fundraising goals. Next year, we will be adding staff and reaching out to the community and our future students. Our Board, volunteers, and supporters will be hard at work to put the final pieces in place for our 2013 opening. In the end, I have faith and confidence that we will make real what our students could barely have dreamed of. We look forward to graduating and sending on to college the future leaders of our community. In doing this, each of us will be, like Mother Teresa, “a little pencil in the hand of God who is sending a love letter to the world.”
Thanks to all of you for your interest and support.
Jim Foley
President
Cristo Rey Columbus High School
(614) 395-1505
JimF@cristoreycolumbus.org
http://www.cristoreycolumbus.org/
http://www.facebook.com/cristoreycolumbus?v=wall#!/cristoreycolumbus?sk=info
Celebrating our Golden Jubilee: Getting to know Saint Timothy’s Community of Faith.
We will begin a look at St. Paul’s Letter to the Ephesians, since Ephesus was the see where St. Timothy served as Bishop. This may offer some perspectives on the Church and the Community among whom Timothy lived and ministered.
Paul, an apostle of Christ Jesus by the will of God, to the holy ones who are in Ephesus faithful in Christ Jesus: grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. (Ephesians 1:1-2)
Scriptural Scholars have some questions about the authorship of Ephesians and, due to the fact that manuscripts are found that leave out the words “in Ephesus” in the opening address of the letter, they have doubts about the community of believers to whom the letter is addressed. This means, in short, that in the first instance, it might be that the letter was not done by Paul himself and it may not have been sent in the first place to the Ephesians. The opinion has been expressed that the author was a disciple of Paul and that the letter was sent to several different Church communities as a sort of “Circular Letter.”
Having said this, it is nonetheless possible to associate it with Ephesus, since at least some early copies “belonged” to the Church in Ephesus. The custom of sharing Paul’s Letters was clearly developed very early, since we have a Pauline Corpus, namely, the Letters attributed to Paul and the anonymous Letter to the Hebrews. Letters by Paul himself or by his disciples represent the earliest forms of writing among Christians about their Faith in Christ. Ephesus was one of the major centers of Christianity, associated with many figures familiar to us in the New Testament. Timothy’s Ephesus was Christian Community at its beginnings after the move from Jerusalem and the destruction of the Temple in A.D. 70.
The first words of the Letter to the Ephesians (and to all Christian Faithful) place at the heart of the discussion God’s Call to discipleship, the Universal Call to Holiness, and the centrality of Faith in the formation of Community. Grace and Peace, that is, Covenantal Hesed and Shalom, are presented not simply as customary greetings, but as an expression of a living relationship with God in Christ. The Apostle is addressing the Community of Believers in order to speak to them of Faith and to invite them to grow in their understanding and commitment to the Gospel that they have been living for some time. We can easily accept what is written as addressed to us as well. We are called to live in Communion with God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ, pursuing a life of Holiness and Confident Faith as the Church alive in the world today.
How well do you know Saint Timothy?
At the St. Timothy Women’s Prayer Breakfast, there was a Quiz about our Patron Saint Timothy. Test your own knowledge about the Saint. Each week, a question or two will be put in the bulletin. You’ll have to come back next week to get the answer!
Fill in the Blanks:
St. Timothy was born in _______________ in modern day _________________.
His father was _______________ and his mother’s name was _______________;
his grandmother was _________________.
He became a companion of _______________, who called Timothy his own
beloved _______________.
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