Fourth Sunday of Advent, December 21, 2025
Dear friends,
This weekend, we celebrate the Fourth Sunday of Advent, and we will be lighting the last of the four candles, this one representing LOVE. In the gospel reading, Matthew peers into the life of Mary and Joseph who are an indispensable part of the season. Through the message of an angel, both Mary and Joseph come to know even of the name of the child before his
birth. The angel says in Matthew 1:21 that “She will bear a son and you are to name him Jesus, because he will save his people from their sins.” The birth of Jesus is the birth of a savior, not of an ordinary mortal being. Let us thank God the Father for his mercy in choosing to send his only begotten Son to be born for us as an “Emmanuel” God, a God who will always be with us. The Incarnation of the Son of God is the biggest turning point the universe has ever known.
This Fourth Week of Advent is a short one, barely a three−day affair, in busy preparation for Christmas.
A significant part of these last days of Advent is the use of the “O Antiphons” during Evening Prayer from 17 to 23 December. Each Antiphon invokes Christ by means of an Old Testament symbol: O Wisdom, O Sacred Lord, O Flower of Jesse's Stem, O Key of David, O Radiant Dawn, O King of All Nations, and O Emmanuel. Grace Hetzel sums up their importance: “The O Antiphons proclaim the coming Christ as the fulfillment not only of Old Testament hopes, but our present desires as well.” C.C. Pecknold says that “They prepare us for the great Vigil of Christmas, uniting Israel’s hopes and the desire of nations as a kind of prophetic summa in praise of divine providence. In the heart of winter’s darkness, the O Antiphons call us to worship Jesus Christ as the center of salvation history.” I wish you would have time to do exactly that.
On Tuesday, 23 December at 7 p.m., we will have an opportunity to pray the Evening Prayer in the Fr. Patrick Peyton Room, during which time we will pray the Antiphon “O Emmanuel.” Please come and experience the splendor of waiting for the fulfilment of our heart’s desire: Jesus Christ, our “Emmanuel” God who is always with us.
Following this, the Christmas celebrations will be just around the corner with morning Mass on Wednesday, 24 December at 8 a.m., as usual. Following that Mass, the season of Advent will be over, and the Christmas season begins . The celebration of Christmas begins on 24 December with the following Masses:
4 p.m. Mass is hugely popular with families with children. The children’s choir will begin with carols at 3:30 p.m., and the Nativity pageant will follow at 3:45 p.m. This is the first time we are having the pageant before the Mass to help our children — all of us — focus our attention on the Mass itself. Hence, I request you to come early. We have arranged for an overflow Mass in the Holy Cross Hall which will be simulcast.
Then we will offer the following: 6:00 p.m., 8 p.m., and midnight Masses. The choir will begin with carols at 11:30 p.m.
On 25 December, we will celebrate Mass at 10 a.m. which will also be simulcast in the hall for overflow. We will follow with another Mass at noon.
For Christmas, our office will be closed from Wednesday, 24 December at noon through Friday, 26 December. The office will reopen on Monday, 29 December.
We are privileged to celebrate Fr. Martin’s 15th Ordination Anniversary and the Feast of St. John the Evangelist, our patron, on Saturday, 27 December, with a special Mass at 10 a.m. That evening, we will celebrate Fr. Martin after the 4.30 p.m. Mass in the Holy Cross Hall with a dinner.
Our annual participation in the 5K walk or run to benefit the Children’s Hunger Project is underway. It will be held on Saturday, January 10, 2026. The race begins at Viera High. Dawn Hurley is our point of contact. As in year’s past, Fr. John Patrick Riley, C.S.C., will be joining us. Please see the bulletin for more details.
On behalf of Fr. Martin, the deacons, and the staff, I wish you and yours a very joyful and peaceful Christmas!
May the Baby Jesus for whose birth we have been waiting find us alert, awake, and prepared to behold him.
Have a joyful Advent and blessed Christmas!
With Love,
Fr. John













