Padre Pio Parish Glenmore Park

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First Sunday of Advent Yr B PDF Print E-mail
Written by Kevin Lee   
Tuesday, 02 December 2008 16:20

adventwreathHappy New Year! We begin another Liturgical Year (B) today with the First Sunday of Advent. The common theme of today’s readings is that vigilant service prepares us for the coming of Christ as our saviour during Christmas and as our judge and Lord at the end of the world. The reason why the liturgical year ends and begins with the same theme is clear: if we have already embraced Jesus in His first coming, we will have no fear of His second coming. Advent is the season of special preparation and expectation for the coming of Christ. It encourages us to examine our lives, to reflect on our need for God to enter our lives and to prepare earnestly for, and eagerly await the coming of Christ. He will come to us in the celebration of the Incarnation, in His continual coming in our daily living and in His final coming as our Lord to judge us all and to renew the Father’s creation.

Using apocalyptic images, the gospel urges the elect to be alert for the return of Christ because no one except the Father knows the day or the hour of the Lord’s return. Jesus summarizes the complexities of Christian living to two imperatives: "Take heed!" (Be on guard) and "Watch!" (Be alert, stay awake, and don’t grow careless). Our life on earth is to be one of productive service uninfluenced by a supervisor's presence or seeming absence. We wait for Christ in two ways. The early Sundays of Advent teach the endof- the-world theme. In this context, we wait for Christ to come again in glory, to judge the living and the dead. The later Sundays of Advent celebrate a different theme: the coming of the Messiah in the flesh.

Today’s second reading from the first letter of St. Paul to the Corinthians, written from Ephesus in 57 A.D., begins with a greeting and a thanksgiving prayer. The letter is Paul's answer to reports concerning disputes and difficulties in Corinth which had reached him. It was written while he and his audience were still sure that Christ's second coming was just around the corner. Like all early Christians, the Apostle used the phrase “the day of our Lord Jesus Christ” as another way to speak about Jesus’ Parousia — His Second Coming at the end of the world. Paul reminded the Corinthians that they were not ready to face the Day of the Lord because they were misusing the gifts of the Holy Spirit. After describing the special gifts of the Holy Spirit they had received, Paul reminded the Corinthians that they were using their gifts in the wrong way. Christ's favour, the speech and knowledge they possessed, the spiritual gifts in which they gloried -- all were useless unless used for the good of the community. In fact, many of Paul's converts had been using their gifts to destroy the community instead of building it up. What should have been an asset, had become a detriment. Paul could only pray for the eventual conversion of his community. "He (Jesus) will strengthen you to the end," the Apostle writes, "so that you will be blameless on the day of Lord Jesus Christ. God is faithful, and it was He who called you to fellowship with His Son, Jesus Christ our Lord."

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 02 December 2008 16:45 )
 
Christ the King PDF Print E-mail
Written by Kevin Lee   
Saturday, 22 November 2008 19:52

padrepio_photoPeople always want the front of the bus, the back of the church, and to be the centre of attention.

Last month our parish had a Pilgrimage to Italy to familiarise the parish with our patron saint Padre Pio and we visited most of the holy places in this ancient country. We went to Lanciano the place of the Eucharistic miracle where the Host turned from bread into heart muscle tissue and bled real drops of blood (and is still able to be seen 8 centuries later!) We visited Assisi the home of St Francis and prayed at his tomb. We went to Padua and offered Mass at his tomb. We prayed at the body of Padre Pio which 40 years after his death is now on public display, showing his sanctity in life was visible even after his death.

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Building News PDF Print E-mail
Written by Frank Zammit   
Saturday, 15 November 2008 08:57

CATHOLIC CHURCH DEVELOPMENT GLENMORE PARK

With the dedication of the Catholic parish of St Padre Pio at Glenmore Park and the installation of Fr Kevin Lee as its first Parish Priest, the Catholic community of Glenmore Park has been working towards the construction of its own Parish Church. Both the Development Application and the Construction Certificate for the new church have been approved and funding has been put in place by the Diocese of Parramatta for the development. The project is now out to tender with prices due in later this month and construction due to commence prior to Christmas.

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 18 November 2008 19:19 )
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Welcome to Padre Pio Parish PDF Print E-mail
Saturday, 12 April 2008 00:00

We are the first parish in Australia to take Padre Pio as our parish patron. We began as a Parochial district affiliated with St. Nicholas of Myra Parish at Penrith, NSW in 1994. The Glenmore Park Catholic community began the canonical process of becoming a separate parish financially and was deemed to be in a position to build a parish church, presbytery and offices in 2004.

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 29 July 2008 19:46 )
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Our Pilgrimage to Italy (Part 1) PDF Print E-mail
Written by Priscilla Clements   
Friday, 07 November 2008 11:21

The Pilgrimage to Italy began on the 5th October, 2008 with 31 Sydneyites , 2 Melbournians, and 2 Canadians. We arrived in Milan airport and boarded the coach, heading off to the first port of call, Turin.

TURIN is the home of the famous Shroud of Turin, the burial cloth of Christ. It bears the image of a crucified man who is believed to be Jesus of Nazareth. Modern science has completed hundreds of thousands of hours of detailed and intense research on the Shroud. It is, in fact, the single most studied artifact in human history, and we know more about it today than ever before.

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 18 November 2008 18:47 )
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