:: Quote of the Day :: |
Magdalene, sinner, knew forgiveness when she began to love. - Emmanuel d'Alzon
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News
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Fr. Roland, at 93 years old, continues to minister (safely) to those around him as a member of the Assumptionist Center Community in Brighton. He recently did a "car blessing" for one of our employees and friends. Thank you, Fr. Roland, for your life of love and joyful service!
"Let us remember that we are, above all, subjects of Jesus Christ our king, citizens of the Church, our homeland, and that we owe Jesus Christ and his Church our fidelity, our service, our love and our life." - Venerable Emmanuel d'Alzon, founder of the Assumptionists, to his brother Assumptionists
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By Fr. Dennis Gallagher, A.A., the provincial superior of the North American Province of the Augustinians of the Assumption
The article was first reported by Catholic Digest Magazine.
Q: Does the New Testament “cancel out” – or outweigh – the Old Testament? Is one of these parts of the Bible more important than the other? – Newbie Bible student
A: Dear Newbie Bible student:
Thanks for your question. I suppose one way of approaching an answer to it is to note the use of the Bible in the Church’s liturgy. On Sundays during the liturgical year, except for the Easter season, the first reading at Mass is always taken from the Old Testament. Included among those readings are passages from many different books: the prophets, the book of the Law (the Torah), the historical books, the wisdom literature. If the New Testament simply cancelled out the Old, to use your term, the importance signaled by their place in the Church’s liturgy would be difficult to understand. The Church clearly teaches that God continues to speak to us through the words of the Old Testament.
But how does he speak to us? The liturgy again provides some help. The Old Testament passage chosen for a particular Sunday always has some relation to the Gospel reading of the day. Often enough, the relationship is one of fulfillment: that something foreshadowed in God’s dealings with the people of Israel is brought to completion in the coming of Jesus Christ into the world. Sometimes we are presented in the Old Testament passage a “type” of something that is fulfilled in the New Covenant. Take, for example, the story of Joseph’s brothers in the Book of Genesis selling him into slavery in Egypt, which is a type of Judas’ betrayal of Jesus for thirty pieces of silver. Or the later episode in Genesis, when Abraham is asked to sacrifice his only son, Isaac, to be fulfilled beyond all measure by God’s sacrificing his only Son, Jesus.
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Last Updated on Friday, 04 September 2020 11:45 |
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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 2020 at 11:30 AM (Virtual) Celebration of Assumption University & Mass of the Holy Spirit
Please join us as we celebrate Assumption University and the start of the new academic year with a Mass of the Holy Spirit livestreamed from the Chapel of the Holy Spirit.
Mass will begin at 11:30 a.m. and will be presided by the Very Reverend Dennis Gallagher, A.A., Assumptionist Provincial Superior for the North American Province.
The Mass will be immediately followed by a video, "Assumption: Ever Ancient, Ever New," documenting pivitol moments in the history of the institution. After the video, a blessing and the unveiling of the new Unviersity sign at the front entrance will take place, followed by the debut of the University Alma Mater, performed by the Assumption University Chorale, and virtual greetings from community members from throughout the country and abroad.
Students who are residing on campus are invited to attend a BBQ cookout at Taylor Dining Hall.
The Mass and other events will be livestreamed and available at Assumption.edu/MassoftheHolySpirit and on the AU app.
In the event of inclement weather, all events except for the Mass will be rescheduled for Saturday, Sept. 5, beginning at 11:30 a.m. The Mass will still be held on Sunday, Sept. 6, but at 7 p.m.
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Last Updated on Thursday, 03 September 2020 12:38 |
The article was first reported by The Catholic Free Presss.
by Tanya Connors
STURBRIDGE - Renewing their vows Aug. 28, the Feast of St. Augustine, at St. Anne and St. Patrick Parish, were four Augustinians of the Assumption: Brother Brian Verzella, who serves at the Assumptionist-staffed parish; Brothers Daniele Caglioni and Hugo Morales, who serve in campus ministry at Assumption University in Worcester, and Brother Matthew-Mary Okereke, a student at Boston College School of Theology and Ministry.
Assumptionist Father Dennis Gallagher, provincial superior, told them in his homily that living through this unusual time of pandemic is an opportunity for them to affirm that Jesus Christ is always the answer to the world’s problems.
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