Palm Sunday of the Passion of the Lord, April 13, 2025
Dear Friends,
During the 40 days of Lent, our intention has been to walk with Jesus. We have been determined to remain close to Him, so that we might fully experience His profound love for us—a love so huge that it impels Him to endure the excruciating pain inflicted by His torturers, the bitter humiliation heaped on Him by His mockers and revilers, the shame of being publicly stripped naked, and even the ignominyof beingcrucified like acommon criminal. Oh, what ineffable love!
Our commitment and dedication to this Lenten journey has been our way of demonstrating our love for Him. In the process, something profound has happened. We have been changed.
Jesus seeks us as and where we are. Whenever we are beaten down and lie there, frustrated and alone, waiting for someone to help us get back on our feet, Jesus finds us, lifts us up, and invites us to walk to with him. As we do, He introduces us to His most loving Father and welcomes us into Their intimate life of love. Because Jesus reached out to us, a new way of life has opened up to us, as it did for the Samaritan woman at the well and the man born blind whom Jesus healed. Our Lenten journey has taught us how to pickup our mats and move towards the new horizon that Jesus has revealed to us.
If we have failed in our resolution to follow Him closely, it’s not too late! We can still have the experience of being transformed by Jesus. All we need do is muster up the courage to stay close to Him throughout the upcoming Holy Week, the most important days of the liturgical year.
Holy Week is filled with such blessings that we need to look at each day carefully so we can map out the final days of our spiritual pilgrimage.
† Palm Sunday—the triumphal entry of Jesus into Jerusalem. Our pilgrimage begins with blessed Palms in our hands. We, too, should sing, “Hosanna to the Son of David!”
† Monday of Holy Week—Jesus clears out the temple with a whip. It is a day to reflect on the humanity of Jesus.
† Tuesday of Holy Week—after a long day of preaching on the Mount of Olives, Jesus and His disciples go to Bethany to rest. It is here that Mary, the sister of Lazarus and Martha, anoints Jesus with perfumed oil, a sign of His pending death. We, too, are invited to rest with him.
† Spy Wednesday—Jesus is betrayed by Judas Iscariot. It is a day when Jesus experiences a most painful blow to His carefully formed relationship with His disciples. It is a day of great sadness, and we are invited to take time to mourn this rupture.
† Holy Thursday—the first day of the Easter Triduum. It begins in the evening, when Jesus celebrates the Last Supper with His disciples as they commemorate the Jewish Holy Day of Passover. During this commemoration, Jesus institutes both the priesthood and the Sacrament of the Eucharist. Later that night, Jesus spends time in intense agony as He prays in the Garden of Gethsemane before being arrested. We, like Peter, James and John, are invited to watch and pray with Jesus. Can we, will we?
† Good Friday—a day of incredible suffering during which Jesus is sentenced to death, tortured, mocked, beaten, scourged, crucified, dies on the Cross, and is buried. Today is the day to help Jesus carry His cross and console His sorrowful Mother.
† Holy Saturday—the body of Jesus lays in the tomb while He descends into hell. This is a day of silence and preparation for Easter. As night falls, we begin the Easter Celebration during the Vigil Mass. At the Vigil, we have the joy of receiving our Elect and our Candidates into the Catholic Church and in to our St. John’s Family!
† Easter Sunday—We celebrate Jesus’ resurrection from death. The history of the world changed on this Sunday. It was -and remains- a life-changing day for believers. Let us tell all the world: He is risen!
These are critical days for our Catechumens, now known as the Elect of God, as well as for our Candidates, who have been preparing for the past several months to embrace “the way of faith and conversion” before receiving First Eucharist and/or Confirmation. It is absolutely our most solemn duty as parishioners to accompany these wonderful people who are soon to reach the goal of their devoted preparation. I invite you to continue to pray for them, especially during Holy Week, that they might find in our community a visible expression of what it is to be followers of Christ.
Stay close to the fire! With love,
Fr. John



