Eighteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time, August 3, 2025
Dear friends,
This weekend, we take time to pray in thanksgiving for Deacon Steven Lumbert and his 25 years of service to the diaconate. He was ordained in the Diocese of Pueblo on August 4, 2000 by Bishop Arthur Tafoya and served his first five years at his home parish of Holy Family. He was then assigned as Pastoral Associate for
St. Paul the Apostle in Pueblo West for three years, followed by a two-year stint as Associate Director of Deacon Formation. In 2010, he was assigned as Administrator of St. Anne’s Parish and served there for nine years. During his active ministry, he assisted at most of the parishes in Pueblo, celebrating quinceañeras, weddings, funerals, committals, Word Communion services, and other ministries as needed. In 2019, he retired from the Diocese of Pueblo and moved with his ailing wife Socorro to Florida to be closer to their daughter Karina and son-in-law Rob and their children, becoming members of our parish. In 2023, he asked to serve in retirement through his diaconate ministry at St. John’s. It has been lovely knowing him and his family, and we thank him for his ministry, praying that he will continue to serve the Lord with joy. Congratulations, Deacon Steven Lumbert, on completing 25 years of service to the Lord and His people.
I also take this occasion to thank George and Cis Franzen for their commitment to the Christ Renews His Parish ministry. George has served us faithfully for 15 years, beginning in 2010. Having stumbled into CRHP by chance, he has given his heart and soul toward promoting this life-changing ministry at St. John’s. George now passes the baton to Joe Flora with the hope that he will run with it for another 15+ years. Thank you, George and Cis, for your great passion. You will always be the “father figure” of CRHP at St. John’s.
I offer a hearty welcome to Chris McLaughlin who will lead the music ministry during Sunday 4:30 p.m. Masses beginning this weekend. He comes to us with vast experience in leading LIFETEEN camps through amazing worship experiences. Please welcome Chris and plan to join us as a parish community in ever more vibrant praise and thanksgiving during our Eucharistic celebrations.
On this Eighteenth Sunday, the Church calls us to reflect on building our treasures in what matters most to God and not be fooled into indulging worldly attractions and desires that will surely perish. In his letter to the Colossians, St. Paul invites us to seek what is above and put to death the parts of us that cling to this
Earth.
We look forward to the return of our children to full Mass participation and continued religious education. Have a blessed week!
With Love,
Fr. John
Let us now continue reading Spes Non Confundit, “Hope Does Not Disappoint,” written by Pope Francis to inaugurate the Ordinary Jubilee Year 2025, titled “Pilgrims of Hope.” We pick up where we left off last weekend:
Pilgrimage is of course a fundamental element of every Jubilee event. Setting out on a journey is traditionally associated with our human quest for meaning in life. A pilgrimage on foot is a great aid for rediscovering the value of silence, effort and simplicity of life. In the coming year, pilgrims of hope will surely travel the ancient and more modern routes in order to experience the Jubilee to the full. In Rome itself, along with the usual visits to the catacombs and the Seven Churches, other itineraries of faith will be proposed. Journeying from one country to another as if borders no longer mattered, and passing from one city to another in contemplating the beauty of creation and masterpieces of art, we learn to treasure the richness of different experiences and cultures, and are inspired to lift up that beauty, in prayer, to God, in thanksgiving for his wondrous works. The Jubilee Churches along the pilgrimage routes and in the city of Rome can serve as oases of spirituality and places of rest on the pilgrimage of faith, where we can drink from the wellsprings of hope, above all by approaching the sacrament of Reconciliation, the essential starting-point of any true journey of conversion. In the particular Churches, special care should be taken to prepare priests and the faithful to celebrate the sacrament of Confession and to make it readily available in its individual form. To be continued ...









