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12.18.2006

Third Week of Advent

We're in the home stretch! Only one short week left before we enter the season of Christmas. To help our students prepare for this glorious event they will be watching The Nativity Story on Monday (1st-4th Grade) and Wednesday (5th-8th grade). Parents are encouraged to talk to their children about this viewing.
In religion class, students will be finishing Chapter 9 and preparing for this Christmas season. They will test over the Chapter on Thursday. Friday will be a 1/2 day for all students. Middle school students will attend Mass then report back to their homeroom teacher. They will be given time to exchange presents, clean out their lockers/backpacks/binders, eat breakfast, and then celebrate with a Christmas dance.
May you have a blessed and peaceful Christmas season!
Blessings & Peace,
Hugo De La Rosa III (Mr. D.)

12.11.2006

2nd Week of Advent

This week finds us in the 2nd week of Advent, meandering ever closer to the celebration of the birth of Jesus. To help our students prepare, all students in grades 3-8 will have the opportunity to celebrate the sacrament of reconciliation this week. It will be one more step in their pilgrimage through the Advent season and on to the Christmas season.

In 7th grade I am particularly proud of the work the students did on their church projects - the finished products are on display in the upstairs hallway. Everyone did a great job! :-) This week and next we will finish our religion books by finishing up the second chapter that deals with our liturgical year.

Finally, Worship Committee will not meet this week. One of my closest friends is getting married on Saturday, and the rehearsal is Friday at 5 pm. Both Ms. Camarena are involved in the liturgy, so we need to be there at 4:30, making a meeting all but impossible that afternoon.

May everyone have a blessed and holy Advent season!

Blessings & Peace,
Hugo De La Rosa III (Mr. D.)

12.03.2006

Chapter 10 - The Sacrament of Reconciliation

This week we will focus on the sacrament of Reconciliation in anticipation of our students' celebration of confession the following week. Students' Church projects are due this week. The season of Advent began on Sunday. Here is a reflection on this important season in our church year.

Advent – A Time of Joyful Hope

Brothers and sisters: You know the time; it is the hour for you to awake from sleep. For our salvation is nearer now than when we first believed; the night is nearly over; daylight is on its way. Let us then throw off the works of darkness, and ready ourselves for the light. (Romans 13:11-12)

Every year, our church gives us a wonderful gift several weeks before Christmas: Advent (the word means “it is coming” or “the promise is near”). It is a time of preparation for us; a time to get ready, to prepare the way, to make a space. It is a time to prepare ourselves for the coming of the light - the birth of Yeshua ben Joseph, Jesus of Nazareth, Jesus the Christ.
Advent is also a time of listening, of watching, and of waiting. We look to the changing seasons to let us know that time keeps moving forward. We listen to the readings at our Sunday celebrations and we know that the time is almost near. We wait in expectation for the central time in human history, when God broke through into creation in a very tangible, touchable, sacramental way.
And it is a joyful expectation, a time to get ready for one of our great Christian holy days of celebration. We wait in joy, awesome, wonderful joy, as parents wait for the birth of a child, as flowers wait for the coming of the dawn, as children wait for desert after a meal – we wait and we wonder in deep down, soul and body filling joy.
But above all, and especially in our times of war and unrest, we wait in hope for the coming of our brother and our savior, the Prince of Peace. We wait for a time when everyone - lion and lamb, American and Afghan, Catholic and Protestant, wealthy and poor, cool and uncool, parent and teenager, teacher and student - will sit together at a common table and share a meal together. We wait for the coming of our Lord, who is Hope incarnate, and who gives us the hope that tomorrow will always better then today.
One of the ways our church helps us to prepare is with the tradition of the advent wreath. The wreath is filled with symbols and meaning: the circle of evergreen boughs reminds us that God is everlasting, with no beginning and no end, and with a love for us that never dies. The four candles symbolize almost 4,000 years of waiting for our Messiah to be born, and the light from the candles symbolizes the light of Christ, burning brightly in the darkness. The purple candles remind us that, like Lent, Advent is a time of preparation and waiting. The third candle (the pink one) symbolizes that our time of waiting is almost over, and the celebration is about to begin. The middle white candle, which traditionally is put there on Christmas Eve and lit on Christmas day, symbolizes the birth of a vulnerable, trusting, loving little boy who changed the course of history.
Our church also encourages us to spend more time in prayer during Advent. Make some time to pray by yourself. Just after rising or before going to bed are two excellent times for us to pause and spend even a few unrushed moments with our God. Before mealtimes, we can take a minute to silently (if alone), or vocally give thanks to God for the blessing of a nourishing meal. Making time for a leisurely trip to Mass on Saturday evening or Sunday morning would be a prayerful change of pace for many of us. Reading even small portions of Scripture would be prayerful. And spending time together as a family in prayer would be an excellent way to prepare for Advent, as would celebrating the Sacrament of Reconciliation.
If whatever ways you decide celebrate, my prayers are with you and your family as we prepare together for the arrival of our greatest gift ever – the gift of light and love that burned so brightly in Bethlehem 2,000 years ago and that continues to be born in our hearts and in our lives each Christmas.