Sunday, March 27, 2016 ES - Cathedral of Saint Andrew

Transcripción

Sunday, March 27, 2016 ES - Cathedral of Saint Andrew
Easter Sunday
Sunday, March 27, 2016
WELCOM E
Mass AT THE
CATH EDRAL
Saturday, Mar 26
8:30pm
Sunday, Mar 27
10:00 am
*Easter Vigil Mass - Church
+ Alice Garza
Easter Mass Airing Live - Church
Sign Language Interpreted for the Deaf
12:00 pm
5:30 pm
7:30 pm
Monday, Mar 28
Tuesday, Mar 29
Wednesday, Mar 30
Thursday, Mar 31
Friday, Apr 1
Saturday, Apr 2
Sunday, Apr 3
7:00 am
12:05pm
7:00 am
12:05pm
7:00 am
12:05pm
7:00 am
12:05pm
7:00 am
12:05pm
12:05pm
4:30pm
10:00 am
Misa Pascua en Español - Iglesia
Easter Mass - Church
Easter Contemplative Mass - Church
Parish Family
NO MASS or Confessions
NO MASS or Confessions
Mass - Chapel
Mass - Chapel
Mass - Chapel
Mass - Chapel
Mass - Chapel
Mass - Chapel
Mass - Chapel
Mass - Chapel
Mass - Chapel
Sunday Vigil Mass - Church
+ Roger Friar
Mass Airing Live - Church
Sign Language Interpreted for the Deaf
12:00 pm
5:30 pm
7:30 pm
Parish Family
Misa en Español - Iglesia
Mass - Church
+ Mary Ellen Darling
Contemplative Mass - Church
Confessions heard daily in the Ambrose Chapel
Monday - Friday
after 7am Mass (approx. 7:30am)
after 12:05pm Mass (approx. 12:35pm)
Saturday
11:00-11:45 am
Confesiónes
Sábados
God bless,
(Very Rev.) John J. Geaney, CSP
Rector
page 2
11:00-11:45 am
Watch Sunday Mass Online
For “live streaming” and “on demand” viewing go to
cathedralofsaintandrew.org and select the “Watch Mass Online” button.
Scri pture
Read ing...
Sunday:
Easter Sunday
Acts 10:34a,37-43
Ps 118:1-2,16-17,
22-23. Col 3:1-4 or
1 Cor 5:6b-8
Jn 20:1-9
Casting a Net
I
never expect anything to change in my lifetime.” I was in Cuba as the priest director of
Catholic Relief Services and the woman I was speaking with, who was a member of our
CRS-Caritas team in Havana had no hope of ever living to see anything change in her
native land. She was nearing fifty, and as she put it she had lived under Fidel Castro since she
was a little girl. I have no idea whether she is alive, but this past Monday something changed.
The President of the United States was received with full military honors in Havana, and those
military honors included the full throated playing of our national anthem. While I was at CRS,
Cuba was the place where I had worked to do what I could to change the structure of our
relationship with its people. I visited the island (with all the proper state department
documents) three different times and my heart ached for its people – especially those who
were poor.
Malcolm Guite wrote in his poem Crucifixion, “On this tree loss becomes gain, death opens into
birth.” What happened last Monday on the second day of Holy Week speaks to me about the
wood of Calvary. A crack, an ever so small crack has been made in the way we Americans can
reach out and touch the people of Cuba to assist them in the development of their country.
But it was a crack in the tomb of Jesus given for his use by Joseph of Arimathea that led to
Resurrection, to new life in God, to Easter. Sometimes it is the small cracks in our lives that
lead to more abundant blessings as is clear in Jesus’ Resurrection. As Guite says, on the wood
of the cross loss becomes gain and death opens into birth. That birth occurred in Jesus’
Resurrection.
Will the pageantry of a Presidential visit to Cuba change everything in the social structure of
that island nation just 90 miles off our shores? Of course not. But Guite says further in his
poem about Jesus’ crucifixion, that in the cross:
Monday:
Acts 2:14,22-33
Ps 16:1-2a,5,7-11
Mt 28:8-15
Tuesday:
Acts 2:36-41
Ps 33:4-5,18-20,22
Jn 20:11-18
Wednesday:
Acts 3:1-10
Ps 105:1-4,6-9
Lk 24:13-35
Thursday:
Acts 3:11-26
Ps 8:2ab, 5-9
Lk 24:35-48
Friday:
Acts 4:1-12
Ps 118:1-2,4,
22-27a
Jn 21:1-14
Saturday:
Acts 4:13-21
Ps 118:1,14-21
Mk 16:9-15
“We see what love can bear, and be and do.
Here our Savior calls us to his side,
His love is free, his arms are open wide.”
The cross leads to change. The cross leads us to be closer to Jesus; standing at his side. The
cross tells us that there is no cost to Jesus’ love. His love is free. And his arms, those arms that
were wrestled into place by Roman soldiers and nailed to a cross, are open wide in welcome to
all of us and to our many conflicts as a people.
When we embrace Jesus’ love, we embrace his cross and in embracing his cross we give life to
ourselves and the world through his Resurrection.
Happy Easter. Or as our Cuban brothers and sisters might say, Felices Pascuas.
Very Rev. John Geaney, CSP
Rector
Fr. John Geaney, CSP
Sunday:
Second Sunday
of Easter
(Divine Mercy)
Acts 5:12-16
Ps 118:2-4,13-15,
22-24
Rev 1:9-11a,12-13,
17-19
Jn 20:19-31
page 3
Th is week
Events and Activities
Sunday, March 27
Easter Sunday of the Resurrection of the Lord
Good Samaritan Fund Second Collection
10:00am Easter Sunday Mass
12:00pm Misa Pascua en Español
5:30pm
Easter Sunday Mass
7:30pm
Easter Sunday Contemplative Mass
8:30pm
Young Adult Fellowship
Monday, March 28
Cathedral Offices Closed. No Daily Mass or Confessions
Tuesday, March 29
7:00pm
7:00pm
Diocesan Confirmations - Church
Catholic Inquiry Class - CIC
The Cathedral Offices will be Closed
Easter Monday, March 28.
No Daily Mass or Confessions
Hungering for
Celebration
We prayed, fasted and
gave alms—and now we
celebrate! Our Lenten
journey with CRS Rice Bowl ends in our own hearts,
where Jesus reigns forever. Let us rejoice in our risen
Lord—and in the lives we’ve changed this Lent in Colombia, Laos, Rwanda, Honduras, Madagascar and all
over the world! NOTE: Please return your filled Rice
Bowls to the offering or the Cathedral office.
Wednesday, March 30
6:15pm
7:00pm
7:00pm
7:00pm
Youth Group - Parish Center
St. Monica Sodality Prayer Service - Chapel
Ensayo Coro Hispano
Diocesan Confirmations - Church
Thursday, March 31
6:00pm
West Catholic Holy Door Pilgrimage - Church
Friday, April 1
9:30am
Catholic Central Easter Mass - Church
Saturday, April 2
10:00am
5:30pm
Bautismos - Iglesia
Blood Pressure Screening
Sunday, April 3
Second Sunday of Easter (Divine Mercy Sunday)
Blood Pressure Screening after Masses
10:00am San Juan Diego Choir at Mass
12:00pm Misa con el coro de San Juan Diego
8:30pm
Young Adult Fellowship
For a complete calendar of events,
please visit
Download the Cathedral
Phone App Today!
myparishapp.com
Father G is on YouTube? You may not know that
Fr. Geaney has quite the video collection of 90-second spots
on various topics that he produces for the Catholic
Information Center. You can view these at catholicinfor
mationcenter.org or go to YouTube and search "Fr. Geaney".
cathedralofsaintandrew.org
STEWARDSH I P
Mar. 19-20 weekend
$ 15,620.68
Same weekend last year
$ 15,434.73
Weekly need
$ 14,020.00
Counters: Team 4 will be counting this week.
page 4
Experience the convenience of Online Giving.
Visit cathedralofsaintandrew.org TODAY
All children
Antczak, Rose T.
Dowling, Julie
Gallagher, Joe & Leisa
Goodwin, Garrett
Hong family
Johnson, Alessandra R.
Johnson, Deacon M.
Johnson, Emerson J.
Johnson, Michael & Rebecca
Johnson, Patrick & Jennifer
Ortega, John & Gloria
Ortega, John Jr.
Park, Sung Soon
Refugees seeking asylum
Rohen, Jeff & Lori
Ryan, Alan R.
Schmelzer, Eugene family
Segura-Martinez, Glafira
Vyhonsky, Joseph
Abbey, Betty
Albrecht, Elizabeth
Alemán
Allured, Ralph
Anderson, Marilyn
Andrews, Mildred
Antczak, Franciszek & Jadwiga
Antczak, Joseph F.
Anthon, John Sr. & Mary
Atchinson, Christopher
Aulbach, Renata Consuelo
Avendt, Ray Jr.
Avink-Williams, Grace
Banda, Augustin & Gregoria
Barle, Linda Hanks
Barnes, Henry
Barwacz, Genevieve
Battle family
Baumgartner family
Baxter family
Bennett, Althea
Bennett, Amy Hall
Bepristis-Neilson, June
Bieber, Marianne
Bonczyk, Vincent & Martha
Bordner, Floyd
Braat, Betty
Brevitz-Sarb, Anna Katherine
Brisson family
Canda, Barb
Cebelak, Aloysius & Julia
Cedillo, Joe
Christy, Thomas
Colburn, Claude & Dorothy
Conrad, James
Creswick, Howard & Alice
Cruz-Segura, Martha
Daniels, Johnel
D'Aoust, Ron
Daumer, Chris
Davis, Maria L.
Dawson, Mary
Deal, Betty
DeHaan, Ross
Delrue, Catherine
Douglas, Fremont & Flora
Doyle family
Droski, Treva
Duemler family
Ekere, Wilfred & Felicia
Ezeh family
Fettig-Vora, Pat
Frey, Burena
Galvin, Christie Barber
Gardell, John
Gardella family
Garza, Alice S.
Gibbs, Maynard & Margaret
Gledhill, Edwin
Gonzalez, Natividad
Green, Thomas
Hillebrand, A. William & Whaneta
Hohendorf family
Hook, Jessica Lee
Howes, David A.
Iacobucci, Renato Vincent
Johnson family
Johnson, Frederick J. Sr.
Johnson, Harold & Creda L.
Johnson-Alflen, Karen
Johnson-Kopec, Norma A.
page 5
Johnson-Parrish, Nancy Kathleen
Kersjes, John
Kim, Yong Bok
Kopec, Michael A.
LaFleur, Barbara
Lange family
Lars family
Lómez, Concepcion
Lynn, Camilla
Mann, Dorla
Marsh, Nate
Mata, Isaias Jr.
McClain, Rosa
McGuire, Michael
Merrill, Chuck
Michalski, Jomes & Rhoda
Moran, Patrick Renato
Morrow, Francis
Morrow, James
Nava, Apolonio
Nava, Claudia
Neil, Deloris
Ortega, John & Ruby
Parbel, Pete
Park, Sr. Ki Joo
Parra, Natividad
Pastalanic, Edward & Virginia
Pavlinek, John & Geraldine
Pope, Josephine
Ragauss, Anna
Ramirez, Alyonso Ballazar
Reed, William Robert
Rendak family
Reyes, Hector Guillen
Robinson, Jean
Robinson, Joseph
Romero family
Russell, Greg
Saunders, Israel
Scott, Ted
Silva family
Slaby, Betty
Smith, Harriet V.
Solomon, Caesar & Rainey
page 6
Squair, James B.
Stanton, Magdalia Ann
Steinhardt, Edward
Stimac, Cathy
Taylor-Honson families
Thomas, Lucille (Hobson)
Timmers, Arlene
Trejo, Jose Camilo
Unborn children
Vandenberg, Ivy
Vyhonsky, Virginia
Waldron, Glen
Ward, Cedric
Wells, Edison
Whalen, Florence
Wiktorowski, Walenty & Wiktoria
Williams, Harold & Dorothy
Wojkowski, Joseph & Catherine
Woodrick, Florence
Yoo, In Bal
Ysasi, Guillermo
Paiz, Eugene Sr.
Kudos Kolumn
Kudos to all who worked so diligently
to make Holy Week 2016 a celebration worthy of the Cathedral and so
welcoming to all. Liturgical ministers,
musicians, environment, ushers and
greeters, and the many behind the
scenes volunteers. You worship the
Risen Jesus through your service.
Adult Faith
Formation Online
Young Adults, Families, Mature
Adults, Scripture Study, Spirituality,
Catholic Resources. These are some
of the areas of great online Faith
Formation content on our website,
providing you with information connecting faith, practice and your life.
Visit cathedralofsaintandrew.org,
click on Faith Formation, then
Adults. Explore the left menu from
there. Content is updated regularly,
so bookmark your favorite pages.
REMEMBER: The Cathedral always
accepts your donations of nonperishable food items for our local
pantry. The need is year round, so
any time you bring your donations
to Mass, the Social Justice team will
get them to the pantry at Westminster. Special Pantry Need: The item
we especially need in April is Jelly.
Thank you for your generosity.
God's Pursuit of Us through the Arts
Landings is an outreach program for Catholics who, for
any number of reasons, have been inactive or away
from the Church. Are you looking to approach the
Church again? We recognize this as a sacred moment,
a Landings moment.
If you or someone you know would like more information, visit LandingsGR.org or contact
Fred Johnson, 616-456-1454,
[email protected]
Landings is a reconciliation ministry of the Paulist Fathers.
Landingsintl.org
Become a Registered Parishioner…
Almost weekly we are asked, "How can I become a
registered parishioner of the Cathedral?" Well, it's
simple: Go online to cathedralofsaintandrew.org, and
at the Home Page, click on… “I’d like to become a
member”. Fill out the registration form and submit.
Just that easy.
Mondays, April 11,18 & 25, 7pm
Presented by Fr. Bernie Campbell, CSP
St. Augustine, among many through our history,
reminds us that God best attracts us through the
beauty of creation and especially the Arts. Join in a
look at the art of opera, poetry, and the short
stories of Flannery O’Connor to better sense “the
Hound of Heaven” searching for us.
Lector Training
Wednesdays, April 13 & 27, 7pm
Presented by Fr. John Geaney, CSP
To enroll: Pastors should email a list of approved
participants from their parish. $15 per person.
This two part course is ideal for people who are
already proclaiming the Word in their parishes as
well as those who wish to become lectors. What is a
lector and how does the lector contribute to the
Liturgy? What is the difference between acting and
proclaiming? Fr. Geaney will explore these
questions and deepen our understanding of the
wonderful God given instrument called the human
voice, so we can learn to use it to communicate
God’s word as well as we can. We will hold a
practicum, during which participants may proclaim
prepared scriptures for each other, in order to
receive constructive feedback and to learn about
pronunciation, articulation and working with
microphones.
Catholic Information Center
SPRING at the CIC
Funding Senior Housing
Wednesday, April 27, 7pm
Paying for assisted living doesn't have to come from
one source. There are options available, and seniors
and their families should consider those that apply
to their unique situations. Elizabeth Harrell, from
Crossroads Eldercare Planning, will explain the
different funding options available for paying for
senior care including Medicaid, Medicaid Waiver,
Veterans Benefits, Long Term Care insurance and
private funds. She will also speak about the cost
and financial qualifications necessary to afford
communities throughout West Michigan.
When you come to Mass,
check-in to the Cathedral
on Facebook. It's a simple
way to share your faith
with your friends.
TO REGISTER 616.459.7267
catholicinformation
center.org
Located on the second floor of the Cathedral Square building at
Wealthy and Division. All interested persons (from any religious
background) are welcome to participate. There is no
registration fee, but we do accept donations (typically $10 per
session) from those who are able to contribute.
page 7
sacraments
Infant Baptisms
Please contact Herlinda
Paiz at the Cathedral
office 456-1454 Ext 1909.
Adult Baptisms &
Becoming Catholic
Please contact Fred
Johnson at the Cathedral
office 456-1454 Ext 1908.
Reconciliation
(Confession) For the
confession schedule,
please refer to page 2.
For special situations,
please contact the
Cathedral office 4561454 Ext 1909 to make
an appointment with one
of our priests.
First Communion is
prepared for through the
Religious Education
program. Contact Sean
Donovan at the
Cathedral office
456-1454 Ext 1913
Confirmation for 8th
graders is prepared for
through the Religious
Education program.
Contact Sean Donovan
at the Cathedral office
456-1454 Ext 1913.
Baptized adults can
register for Adult
Confirmation
preparation classes.
Contact Fred Johnson at
the Cathedral office 4561454 Ext 1908.
Weddings
Please contact Barb Foss
at the Cathedral office
456-1454, ext. 1902
Anointing of the Sick
Please call the Cathedral
office 456-1454 Ext 1909
if you are in the hospital
or home-bound and
would like Anointing or
Communion. For after
hour emergencies dial
option 6 and one of our
priests will be paged.
page 8
Arrojando la Red
Y
o nunca espero nada a cambio en mi vida." Yo estaba en Cuba como el director
sacerdote de Catholic Relief Services y la mujer con quien yo estaba hablando, que era
un miembro de nuestros CRS-Caritas equipo de La Habana, tenían ninguna esperanza
de vivir ver cambiar nada en su tierra natal. Ella se acercaba a los cincuenta, y como ella decía
que había vivido bajo Fidel Castro desde que era una niña. No tengo idea de si ella todavía
está viva, pero el lunes pasado algo cambió. El Presidente de los Estados Unidos fue recibido
con honores militares en La Habana, y los honores militares, incluido el juego garganta llena
de nuestro himno nacional. Mientras estaba en CRS, Cuba era un lugar donde había trabajado
para hacer lo que pudiera para cambiar la estructura de nuestra relación con su gente. He
visitado la isla (con todos los documentos apropiados de Departamento de Estado) en tres
ocasiones diferentes y mi corazón sufría por su gente - especialmente para aquellos que eran
pobres.
Malcolm Guite escribió en su poema Crucifixión, "En este árbol se convierte en la pérdida de
la ganancia, la muerte se abre en el nacimiento." Lo que ocurrió el pasado lunes en el
segundo día de la Semana Santa me habla sobre la madera del calvario. Una grieta, aunque
es una grieta tan pequeña se ha hecho en la forma en que los estadounidenses pueden
alcanzar y tocar a la gente de Cuba para ayudarles en el desarrollo de su país. Pero era una
grieta en la tumba de Jesús dada por su utilización por José de Arimatea que condujo a la
resurrección, a una nueva vida en Dios, a la Pascua. A veces es las pequeñas grietas en
nuestras vidas que pueden acceder a más abundantes bendiciones como se desprende de la
resurrección de Jesús. Como dice Guite, en el madero de la cruz se convierte en pérdida de
ganancia y la muerte se abre en el nacimiento. Que ese nacimiento ocurrió en la resurrección
de Jesús.
¿Será la pompa de una visita presidencial a Cuba cambiar todo en la estructura social de esa
nación de isla a 90 millas de nuestras costas? Por supuesto que no. Pero Guite dice además
en su poema sobre la crucifixión de Jesús, que en la cruz:
"Vemos lo que el amor puede soportar, y ser y hacer.
Aquí nuestro Salvador nos llama a su lado,
Su amor es libre, sus brazos están abiertos".
La cruz lleva a cambiar. La cruz nos lleva a estar más cerca de Jesús; de pie a su lado. La cruz
nos dice que no hay ningún costo para el amor de Jesús. Su amor es libre. Y sus brazos, esos
brazos que se luchaban en su lugar por los soldados Romanos y fue clavado en la cruz, están
abiertos en señal de bienvenida para todos nosotros y para nuestros muchos conflictos como
pueblo.
Cuando aceptamos el amor de Jesús, abrazamos su cruz, y al abrazar su cruz damos vida a
nosotros mismos y al mundo a través de su resurrección.
Feliz Pascua. O como nuestros hermanos cubanos podrían decir, Felices
Pascuas.
(Muy Rev.) John Geaney, CSP
Rector
Fr. John Geaney, CSP
pecado; sabemos que Jesús es Dios, sabemos que nosotros
resucitaremos también, sabemos que ganó para nosotros la vida eterna
y de esta manera, toda nuestra vida adquiere sentido.
La Resurrección es fuente de profunda alegría. A partir de ella, los
cristianos no podemos vivir más con caras tristes. Debemos tener cara
de resucitados, demostrar al mundo nuestra alegría porque Jesús ha
vencido a la muerte.
La Resurrección es una luz para los hombres y cada cristiano debe
irradiar esa misma luz a todos los hombres haciéndolos partícipes de la
alegría de la Resurrección por medio de sus palabras, su testimonio y su
trabajo apostólico.
El Domingo de Resurrección
El Domingo de Resurrección o de Pascua es
la fiesta más importante para todos los
católicos, ya que con la Resurrección de
Jesús es cuando adquiere sentido toda
nuestra religión.
Cristo triunfó sobre la muerte y con esto nos
abrió las puertas del Cielo. En la Misa
dominical recordamos de una manera
especial esta gran alegría. Se enciende el
Cirio Pascual que representa la luz de Cristo
resucitado y que permanecerá prendido
hasta el día de la Ascensión, cuando Jesús
sube al Cielo.
La Resurrección de Jesús es un hecho
histórico, cuyas pruebas entre otras, son el
sepulcro vacío y las numerosas apariciones
de Jesucristo a sus apóstoles.
Cuando celebramos la Resurrección de
Cristo, estamos celebrando también nuestra
propia liberación. Celebramos la derrota del
pecado y de la muerte.
En la resurrección encontramos la clave de
la esperanza cristiana: si Jesús está vivo y
está junto a nosotros, ¿qué podemos
temer?, ¿qué nos puede preocupar?
Cualquier sufrimiento adquiere sentido con
la Resurrección, pues podemos estar
seguros de que, después de una corta vida
en la tierra, si hemos sido fieles, llegaremos
a una vida nueva y eterna, en la que
gozaremos de Dios para siempre.
San Pablo nos dice: “Si Cristo no hubiera
resucitado, vana seria nuestra fe” (I
Corintios 15,14)
Debemos estar verdaderamente alegres por la Resurrección de
Jesucristo, nuestro Señor. En este tiempo de Pascua que comienza,
debemos aprovechar todas las gracias que Dios nos da para crecer en
nuestra fe y ser mejores cristianos. Vivamos con profundidad este
tiempo.
Con el Domingo de Resurrección comienza un Tiempo pascual, en el
que recordamos el tiempo que Jesús permaneció con los apóstoles
antes de subir a los cielos, durante la fiesta de la Ascensión.
HAMBRE DE CELEBRACIÓN
Oramos, ayunamos y
aportamos donativos—¡y
ahora celebramos! Nuestra
jornada de Cuaresma con
Plato de Arroz de CRS termina en nuestros propios corazones,
donde Jesús reina por siempre. ¡Alegrémonos en nuestro Señor
Resucitado—y en las vidas que hemos cambiado esta Cuaresma
en Colombia, Laos, Ruanda, Honduras, Madagascar y en todo el
mundo! Nuestra comunidad cambió vidas esta Cuaresma, y Plato
de Arroz de CRS quiere decir ¡¡GRACIAS!! No olvide entregar su
Plato de Arroz de CRS.
¡Las Escuelas Católicas Valen la Inversión!
¿Sabia que? Los estudiantes hispanos que asistan a una escuela
Católica tienen 2.5x más probabilidades de graduarse de la
universidad. El Obispo Walkowiak les invita a todos los católicos a
ayudar a planear para el futuro de las escuelas Católicas.
Únase con nosotros
El 18 de abril, 2016
5:00 - 6:30pm o 7:00-8:30pm
San Juan Diego Academy
1650 Godfrey Ave. SW, Wyoming, MI
Si Jesús no hubiera resucitado, sus palabras
hubieran quedado en el aire, sus promesas
hubieran quedado sin cumplirse y
dudaríamos que fuera realmente Dios.
Pero, como Jesús sí resucitó, entonces
sabemos que venció a la muerte y al
page 9
CATHEDRAL OFFICE / OFICINA
Th e
Paulists
We share the passion of
Paul for unity in faith and
solidarity in mission among
all the baptized in the body
of Christ. We build bridges
of respect and collaboration with people of other
world religions.
In our parishes and campus
worshipping communities
we welcome people of diverse racial and cultural
backgrounds. The gospel
we preach calls for all the
children of God to be treated with dignity and justice.
We claim Isaac Hecker as
our founder, the Holy Spirit
as our primary guide, St.
Paul as our patron, and laity as our valued partners in
mission.
We are Paulists.
Missionaries
to North America.
Monday – Thursday / Lunes – Jueves
9:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.
Friday / Viernes 9:00 a.m.—1:00 p.m.
MOST REV. DAVID J. WALKOWIAK
Bishop of Grand Rapids / Obispo
Paulist fath ers
We give the Word of God a
voice in pulpits and print,
on radio and television, on
the web and the wide
screen. We search out
those who have no church
home, and welcome home
those who have been away.
215 Sheldon SE
Grand Rapids, MI 49503
616-456-1454
Email: [email protected]
Website: cathedralofsaintandrew.org
VERY REV. JOHN GEANEY, C.S.P.
Rector (Párroco) ext. 1904
[email protected]
FR. JOACHIM LALLY, C.S.P.,
Senior Ministry Status
[email protected]
FR. MARCOS ZAMORA C.S.P.,
Associate Pastor ext. 1906
fathermarcos@cathedralofsaint
andrew.org
FR. BERNIE CAMPBELL, C.S.P.
Associate Director 616-4597267 bcampbell@catholicinform
ationcenter.org
Cathedral staff
NICK PALMER, ext. 1911
Director of Liturgical Music
[email protected]
BARB FOSS ext. 1902
Cathedral Administrator
[email protected]
SEAN DONOVAN ext. 1913
Director of Religious Education
[email protected]
HERLINDA PAIZ ext. 1909
Cathedral Receptionist
[email protected]
EULENE FREELAND, ext. 1904
Assistant to the Rector/Communications
[email protected]
FRED JOHNSON ext. 1908
Director of Adult Faith Formation
[email protected]
JOE CHIARAMONTE ext. 1910
Executive Associate
Director of Development
[email protected]
page 10
Other numbers
CATHEDRAL OUTREACH CLOTHING
CENTER / CENTRO DE ROPA
Open Tuesdays & Thursdays
Abierto los martes y jueves
9:30 – 11:30 a.m.
Closed July-August
Cerrado Julio-Agosto
PRAYER CHAIN
prayers@cathedralofsaint
andrew.org
PRAYER BLANKETS
Cathedral Office 456-1454
[email protected]
CATHEDRAL CARE HEALTH MINISTRY
cathedralcare@cathedral
ofsaintandrew.org
BULLETIN EDITOR/DESIGN
Eulene Freeland, 456-1454 ext. 1904
Send announcements via email only
by previous Monday to
[email protected]
CATHEDRAL FAX: 616-456-5110

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