- 10/11/2019
- 6:00 pm - 7:00 pm
- Sacred Heart Catholic Church
655 C Ave
Coronado, CA 92118
The Young Adults Ministry hosts Eucharistic Adoration the second Friday of every month
from 6PM – 7PM.
All are welcome!
The Young Adults Ministry hosts Eucharistic Adoration the second Friday of every month
from 6PM – 7PM.
All are welcome!
Sacred Heart Catholic Church
655 C Avenue
Coronado, CA 92118
Phone: (619) 435-3167
sacredheart@sacredheartcor.org
Today’s Eucharistic procession 🙏💒
Happy are we who are called to His supper
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I loved this today so empowering 🙏
Gospel of the Day (Mark 14,12-16.22-26)
On the first day of the Feast of Unleavened Bread, when they sacrificed the Passover lamb, Jesus’ disciples said to him, “Where do you want us to go and prepare for you to eat the Passover?”
He sent two of his disciples and said to them, “Go into the city and a man will meet you, carrying a jar of water. Follow him.
Wherever he enters, say to the master of the house,
“The Teacher says, “Where is my guest room where I may eat the Passover with my disciples?”’’ Then he will show you a large upper room furnished and ready. Make the preparations for us there.” The disciples then went off, entered the city, and found it just as he had told them; and they prepared the Passover.
While they were eating, he took bread, said the blessing, broke it, and gave it to them, and said, “Take it; this is my body.”
Then he took a cup, gave thanks, and gave it to them, and they all drank from it.
He said to them, “This is my blood of the covenant, which will be shed for many.
Amen, I say to you, I shall not drink again the fruit of the vine until the day when I drink it new in the kingdom of God.”
Then, after singing a hymn, they went out to the Mount of Olives.
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A blessed Feast of Corpus Christi
Celebrating the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist and in the Church.
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As we celebrate this feast of Corpus Christi, a reprise of Holy Thursday, we are invited to join the disciples in hearing Jesus’ invitation to receive the bread of Communion and to drink the cup of the new covenant with him. St. Augustine teaches us: “If you want to understand the body of Christ, listen to the apostle telling the faithful, You, though, are the body of Christ and its members (1 Cor 12.27).
Sermon 272
According to St. Augustine, the Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ is our feast day. On this day, like every Sunday, we repeat the celebration that forges our identity and strengthens us to be the very body of Christ that we receive. Jesus let his disciples know that joining him in the celebration of the Passover was an event of communion in his self-giving love. Celebrating the body and blood of Christ always calls us to do what he commanded: to share our lives as he did. When we dare to say “Amen,” we proclaim, “Yes, we will receive what we are and be what we eat.”
-St. Joseph Sr. Mary M. McGlone
*Corpus Christi is celebrated at all masses this weekend, concluding with EUCHARISTIC PROCESSION
Sunday, June 11TH
after the 11AM Mass
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Photos from Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Coronado's post ... See MoreSee Less
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“There is an ancient prayer — I learned it from my grandmother — which said: ‘Jesus, make my heart more like yours.’ It is a beautiful prayer. ‘Make my heart more like yours.’ A beautiful prayer, short, to pray during this month of June which is dedicated to the Sacred Heart of Jesus..”
-Pope Francis
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Joy
Joy is essential to the spiritual life. Jesus reveals to us God’s love so that his joy may become ours and that our joy may become complete. Joy is the experience of knowing that you are unconditionally loved and that nothing—sickness, failure, emotional distress, oppression, war, or even death—can take that love away.
Joy is not the same as happiness. We can be unhappy about many things, but joy can still be there because it comes from the knowledge of God’s love for us. . .
Joy does not simply happen to us. We have to choose joy and keep choosing it every day. It is a choice based on the knowledge that we belong to God and have found in God our refuge and our safety and that nothing, not even death, can take God away from us.
- Henri Nouwen
📸Fr. Mike and Bradford sharing some Joy at our Mass of Inclusion
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Together we Pray
By prayer, community is created as well as expressed. Prayer is first of all the realization of the community itself. Most clear and most noticeable are the words, the gestures, and the silence through which the community is formed. When we listen to the word, we not only receive insight into God’s saving work, but we also experience a new mutual bond. When we stand around the altar, eat bread and drink wine, kneel in meditation, or walk in procession, we not only remember God’s work in human history, but we also become aware of God’s creative presence here and now. When we sit together in silent prayer, we create a space where we sense that the One we are waiting for is already touching us, as he touched Elijah in front of the cave (1 Kings 19:13). - Henri Nouwen
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St Justin Martyr was beheaded in 165
AD for his Christian belief. He had examined all the philosophies of his time and concluded that Christianity made most sense. His Apology sets out his understanding of Christian theology, including belief in the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist.
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We tend to see the Pentecost story from the perspective of the disciples waiting in that room, receiving the gift, and being empowered to go out and be the witnesses to it all. The ones who were communicating the story to the Other. But we are simultaneously the ones on the outside, the ones being invited into the conversation they didn’t even know was happening. The ones who can suddenly be called to-and heard-in their own soul’s language.
Do you ever feel like you need to speak some certain kind of language to be heard (by others, by God? So many of us learned what language was appropriate for prayer (and what wasn’t) in our early years of faith.
We’ve probably all been there when someone was having a “normal” conversation with a friend, and then transitioned into a time of prayer, and heard the voice shift, the tone change-a formality, almost a foreignness, as if we were speaking the common language that God understands.
But in Pentecost, we see the Spirit speaking the language of every single heart. What is yours? What would it be to talk to God as if God was listening to every nuance underneath every syllable and silence?
To not speak as if we’re writing a formal letter to someone who must be addressed properly, but with the everyday language we use with family and friends?
(We know this, and yet...) To trust that even when the only thing we can say is “I can’t” or “It hurts!”-or perhaps even more colorful language!-there is deep understanding of exactly what that means?
If you could trust that you are being listened to, in the midst of your real experience, what would you say? Or, perhaps more accurately, what IS your soul already saying, that is even now being heard by the Spirit listening in? How is God speaking your language right back to you? Listen in on the conversation that you may not have even been consciously aware was happening. What is your soul saying? How does God respond? Without you ever having to translate your words into “proper” prayer?
Via anam cara ministries
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