Third Sunday in Ordinary Time, January 25, 2026
Dear friends,
“Blessed the people the Lord has chosen to be his own.” How true is this portion of the psalm we have been praying during this Silver Jubilee Year at St. John the Evangelist Catholic Community, and what a week! We thank God for sparing us from the dreadful weather that was forecast for last Sunday during the blessing of our rectory. I am filled with gratitude to God for blessing us with a new rectory for the priests who minister to our family and to all who worked to make this dream come true: our beloved Bishop John Noonan, for his gracious presence, his blessing of the rectory, and for presiding over the liturgy; Dr. Chris Haug who came all the way from South Bend, IN to represent the U.S. Province of the Congregation of Holy Cross; for Catherine McCarthy and her team who helped to ensure the successful coordination of the day’s event; for our amazing kitchen ministry team who took care of feeding so many of us; for Mr. Ed Fleis and Monarch Homes of Brevard, LLC and all the subcontractors; and for all of you and your continued generosity. In a few days, when we receive the Certificate of Occupancy, Fr. Martin and I will begin to move in. This marks another era and proud accomplishment for our parish community. Truly blessed are we, the people the Lord has chosen to be his own!
On Tuesday, 20 January, we celebrated the Feast of Blessed Moreau and the anniversary of the dedication of our church. Thanks to Dr. Chris Haug who engaged the staff in an in−service program from 11 to 2 p.m. He also delivered a beautiful presentation on Holy Cross and St. John the Evangelist as a force for good in the worldwide community of Holy Cross, how we can be makers of hope, bringers of hope, shapers of hope, and how each of us can stoke the dying embers with a renewed and burning desire to make God known, loved, and served as did Blessed Moreau.
Thanks to Joe Maurin and our CRHP men who helped empty the sanctuary on Tuesday evening to enable the work of building the wall for the mosaic project. Remember, Phase 1 will run from Wednesday, 21 January through Friday, 27 March. We will take a break for Easter and then begin Phase 2 on the Monday after Divine Mercy Sunday, 13 April, when the mosaic design will be applied. The final reveal with Thanksgiving Mass for the Jubilee Year will be held on Sunday, 24 May. For our snowbirds who will be returning home, please make sure you stay until the 24th of May.
Pope Francis, in his motu proprio of 30 September 2019, “Aperuit Illis” (8), declared that “the Third Sunday in Ordinary Time is to be devoted to the celebration of, study, and dissemination of the word of God. This Sunday of the Word of God will thus be a fitting part of that time of year when we are encouraged to strengthen our bonds with the Jewish people and to pray for Christian unity … This Sunday therefore, gives us opportunity to renew our resolve to grow in the knowledge and love of the Scriptures and of the risen Lord, who continues to speak his word and to break bread in the community of believers.” We will take time to honor the Word of God in the Scriptures and find ways to regularly read the Bible. Many of our parishioners have already followed the Bible in a Year podcast by Fr. Mike Schmitz. If you have not, I strongly suggest you do so this year.
I’d like to thank our lectors who faithfully and conscientiously prepare each day and each week to proclaim the Word of God to us. Thank you for your love of the Word and for proclaiming it so beautifully. Might we all hear afresh and be in awe of the fact that God speaks to us through the proclamation of the Word at each Mass. Jeremy Priest, reflecting about this Sunday says, “In the prologue to his gospel, Saint John helps us see that speaking is not merely something God does: not only does God speak in the beginning; not only was the Word ‘with God’ in the beginning … ‘the Word was God’ (1:1)! In this vein, the Catholic novelist, Walker Percy, famously called God Deus Loquens, the ‘speaking God.’ Indeed, the God who speaks the Word.”
Let us attune ourselves to this speaking God and his way of speaking. In the Gospel of Matthew 4: 12−23, we hear both of those who did not hear Jesus’ words and of those who heard and answered his call like Simon, Andrew, James, and John. The gospel points out that “He called them, and immediately they left their boat and their father and followed him.” Are you accustomed to hearing the Lord speak?
Have a blessed week!
With love, Fr, John
Servant of God Bishop Vincent McCauley
The oldest of six children, Bishop Vincent McCauley, was born on March 8, 1906, in Council Bluffs, Iowa. His
parish school, St. Francis Xavier, first awakened in him a desire for missionary work and evangelization. Inspired by Holy Cross priests who preached a mission at his parish in the fall of 1924, McCauley left Creighton University and entered the Congregation of Holy Cross Seminary at the University of Notre Dame.
McCauley took final vows with Holy Cross on July 2, 1929. After ordination in Washington, D.C. on June 24, 1934, his mission to East Bengal (now Bangladesh and part of India) was postponed for two years due to Great Depression funding issues, and he departed in October 1936.
McCauley’s work among the neglected Kuki Christians in Agartala (a distinct minority in the overwhelmingly Muslim country) confirmed his calling as a missionary. Unfortunately, illness forced him back to the United States in May 1944. He spent nearly a year in recovery before joining the formation staff at the Foreign Mission Seminary in Washington.
The next 13 years of his life would be devoted to seminarian formation and mission procuration, a role in which McCauley made famous the mission appeal slogan – “Wanted to build a better world: Few architects, more bricklayers.”
In 1958, McCauley was sent to lead the congregation’s new mission to Uganda. As had been the case in East Bengal, the congregation’s work in western Uganda focused on building up the local Church through the establishment, renovation, and strengthening of parish churches and schools. When Rome split western Uganda into two dioceses, McCauley was appointed bishop of the newly−created Diocese of Fort Portal. As Bishop, McCauley built the diocese from the ground up, founding numerous parishes and diocesan structures, along with St. Mary’s Minor Seminary for local priestly formation.
Remembered for his compassion and leadership, Bishop McCauley guided the Church in aiding countless refugees, widows, orphans, and migrants in the region during the political turmoil of the 1960’s and 70’s.
His leadership in the establishment of both an East African seminary and the Catholic University of Eastern Africa remains one of his distinctly Holy Cross legacies to a region in which global Catholicism finds one of its modern centers of gravity.
In August 2006, the cause for canonization of McCauley was introduced in the Congregation for the Causes of Saints. As Servant of God, Bishop McCauley’s cause undergoes review by the Diocese of Fort Portal, Uganda. Holy Cross seeks to emulate his faith, talent, energy, and joy – gifts by which he made God known, loved, and served.













