Twenty-Eighth Sunday in Ordinary Time, October 12, 2025
Dear friends,
For the first time in our short history as a parish community, we celebrated the Memorial of Our Lady of the Rosary with a candlelight Marian procession on Tuesday, 7 October. Our candles were lit from the Eternal Flame; what a privilege and responsibility to be keepers of the flame! I am greatly indebted to Peter and Fran Behrens for coordinating the Marian procession with all of its beautiful decorations. I’d also like to thank our Filipino community for decorating Mother Mary who was carried in the procession. Thanks to our Brazilian community for decorating the grotto with flowers galore and to the many others who worked so hard to plan such a beautiful tribute to our Mother.
October is the Month of the Rosary. We are blessed to have our beautiful Grotto of Our Lady of Lourdes where people flock to pray the Rosary and to meditate on the Stations of the Cross. Every evening this month, we will be praying the Rosary at the grotto at 6 p.m., so please join us as we help one another get to heaven. In his book, “Rediscover the Rosary,” Matthew Kelly asks us these questions: “Loving devotion to Mary is part of Christianity that can be traced back to the very first Christians. Who is Mary to you? What role does she play in your spiritual life?”
Paco Farach deserves our whole hearted gratitude for making this year’s Silver Jubilee Golf Tournament an amazing experience. Thanks to all who worked on the team. Thanks to our sponsors and players for their support.
We now have a new ministry for doctors, nurses, and all those in the medical profession: the SJE Medical Ministry. I am very grateful to Dr. Kevin Campbell and Dr. Brendan Prendergast for heading this ministry. We are truly blessed to have so many in the medical profession in our parish. They will help us with any medical emergencies during our weekend worship and, while we thank them for their generosity, let us also pray for them, that the healing ministry of Jesus may continue to be accomplished through their service. Please join us in honoring them with a White Mass (also known as “Health Care Mass”) on the Feast of St. Luke the Evangelist, patron of physicians and medical professionals, to be celebrated on Saturday, 28 October at 10 a.m. in the church.
On this 28th Sunday in Year C, the Scripture readings speak of the healing that God worked among the people of Israel − even among those from other backgrounds − through the ministry of the prophets as we hear in the first reading taken from the second Book of Kings. Naaman, army commander for the king of Aram, comes seeking to be healed of his dreaded leprosy by the prophet Elisha. Once cleansed and freed from his leprosy, he is filled with gratitude and recognition of the power of the God of Israel. He has a conversion experience and, as a result, commits himself to worshipping the Lord in his own land upon his return.
In the Gospel of Luke, we are given the example of the ten lepers who desire to be healed by Jesus. While they may not have fully understood who Jesus was, they recognized him as a prophet and did what he asked them to do. Of the ten who were healed, only one, a non−Jew (a Samaritan) returned to give thanks to Jesus, recognizing the power of God. He, though an outsider like Naaman, responds with gratitude. What is our attitude to Jesus for the innumerable healings we experience every day of our lives? Do we simply take them for granted? Do we have an attitude of entitlement? Both Naaman and the Samaritan leper who were healed challenge our attitude of complacency in our faith life, a great lesson to ponder this week.
In this year of our Silver Jubilee, let us renew our commitment to keeping God as our one and only Master, binding us as people chosen by the Lord, a people on a mission to transform lives through devotion to the Eucharist and love of neighbor. Let us shine courageously and cheerfully, embodying hope and deep love for both ourselves and our communities. May ours truly be a “Journey of Grace, Faith, and Hope!”
Have a blessed weekend,
With Love,
Fr. John









