A Victorian High Tea will be held on Sunday May 17th from 2-4pm at Blessed Mary Angela Lyceum, Rt. 5 & Pangolin St. Proceeds go to the St. Gianna Pregnancy Outreach Center. A $10 Ticket includes tea, coffee, punch, scones, finger sandwiches and dessert. There will be a parade with music and a hat & glove parade prizes plus a Gift & Basket Table. For more information and reservations please call Pat 965-2738, Marlene 532-4965 or Hanna 366-4095.
Rite for the Blessing of a Child in the Womb planned for Mothers’ Day
From: Office of Communications, Diocese of Buffalo
Bishop Richard J. Malone will celebrate a special Mothers’ Day Mass at 10:30 a.m. on Sunday, May 10, at St. Joseph Cathedral, 50 Franklin St., Buffalo. The Mass will include the Rite for the Blessing of a Child in the Womb.
Parishioners will not only recognize and pray for mothers, fathers, families, and for children in the womb, but also for couples who are hoping for the gift of a child and for those who have suffered the loss of a child.
Approved by the Vatican in 2012, this rite is included in the Book of Blessings published by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB). The blessing originated when then-Bishop Joseph Kurtz of Knoxville, Tenn. (now archbishop of Louisville, Ky.), asked the USCCB Committee on Pro-Life Activities to see if a blessing existed for a child in the womb. When none was found, the committee prepared a text and submitted it to the USCCB’s Divine Worship committee in March of 2008. It was approved by the full body of bishops in November 2008, and then sent to Rome for editing and final approval.
The blessing was prepared to support parents awaiting the birth of their child, to encourage parish prayers for and recognition of the precious gift of the child in the womb, and to foster respect for human life within society. It can be offered within the context of Mass as well as outside of Mass.
The diocesan celebration of this rite, sponsored by the diocesan Office of Pro-Life Activities, is scheduled between the feast day of St. Gianna Molla (April 28), patron saint of mothers, physicians and preborn children, and Mothers’ Day (May 10).
For more information, contact the Office of Pro-Life Activities at 847-2205.
Divine Mercy Novena for Life
Divine Mercy Novena for Life
The Prolife Committee Chautauqua County annually holds a Divine Mercy Novena for Life for nine evenings during the Easter Season. Each day the Divine Mercy Chaplet and Benediction is held at various churches in the area followed by a Divine Mercy Mass on Divine Mercy Sunday.
Schedule and Locations – Divine Mercy Novena for Life 2015 – PDF
For more information on the background of the Divine Mercy Devotion visit the link below: The Divine Mercy Devotion
Memorial service lays ‘Baby Jesse’ to rest
From: Western New York Catholic
by PATRICK BUECHI
Tue, Mar 17th 2015 09:00 am
Over two dozen people gathered in Dunkirk to pay respects to a life lost.
St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Parish hosted a memorial service on March 14, for “Baby Jesse.” a fetus discovered last August on the shore of Lake Erie State Park just south of Dunkirk.
Bishop Richard J. Malone and diocesan Pro-Life Activities Director Cheryl Calire wanted to make sure the remains of the baby were treated with respect and given an appropriate burial.
“My first concern, of course is for the little one found and the family,” said Bishop Malone. “When we first heard and read the news, we began to make an inquiry about the fetus. Our particular concern was that a fetal death certificate be issued and that the child would have a proper burial.”
A fetal death certificate is given when a fetus dies after 20 weeks. New York state health code law states that after 20 weeks of gestation, the remains must be treated as human remains.
Father Dennis Riter, pastor of St. Elizabeth’s, delivered the homily at the memorial Mass.
“Today, in a small way, we come to affirm the dignity of all human life from conception to natural death,” he said. “We don’t know the circumstance by which this tiny child, yet unborn, lived and died. Somehow his body came to rest on a nearby beach. We don’t know about his mother and father, and certainly we have not come to condemn them. But we do know that this fetus, although early in gestation, was a child of God, sacred because God had breathed into him the great breath of God. His soul is destined to live forever.
“Although never baptized, we commend little Jesse to God, trusting in the mystery of God’s providence beyond all human calculations. We trust in the mystery of God’s absolute, unconditional love, revealed in the cross of Jesus.”
After the Mass, guests drove to nearby St. Mary’s Cemetery, where Jesse was laid to rest across from the Shrine for the Unborn.
“Lord God, ever caring and gentle, we commit to your love this little one and hold him in eternal life. We pray for his parents. Give them courage. Where they will all meet one day in the joy and peace of Your kingdom, through Christ our Lord,” Father Riter prayed.
Calire thanked all those in attendance and those who helped make the service and burial possible. “It’s important that we not just talk the talk, but we walk the walk,” she said.
One lady in attendance came in memory of her own son that had died very young. “I’m here just because I value life from conception to natural death,” said Dunkirk resident Sally Keppel. “I had a little boy who died naturally, but have learned through that how precious life is, and just want to be here to support whoever needs it.
“Michael LaMarca, a seminarian doing his field study with the Office of Pro-Life Activities, also attended the service.
“In many ways this has been a journey with Baby Jesse. I was thinking on Saturday during the memorial service that this was a completion of Jesse’s ministry. Jesse’s purpose brought a lot of education and awareness to me and to everyone there present. There’s a sense of ministry completed,” he said.
A family walking along the shoreline discovered the body Aug. 28, 2014. Erie County Medical Examiner determined the age to be 18 to 20 weeks. The cause of death was labeled intrauterine fetal demise or stillbirth.
Calire read about the discovery of Jesse and wondered what would happen if no one claimed the body.
“(Authorities) put out a plea, if anyone knew anything about it, to come forward, but my thought was, if no one comes forward, what’s going to happen with this little baby,” she wondered.
In December she was named custodian of the fetus, which she had named Jesse while in adoration.
The day before the service on March 13, Pope Francis declared Dec. 8, 1015 to Nov. 20, 2016 to be the Year of Mercy.
“I can’t help but think that shows, in a small way, the richness of the teachings of our Church, that we are not in any way condemning or making accusation or anything in regard to this infant. We are proclaiming that we value human life at all stages,” Calire said.
Memorial Service Photos
A Memorial Service arranged by the Diocese of Buffalo was held Saturday March 14th at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Church in Dunkirk, NY followed by a Prayer Service at St. Mary’s Cemetery. Rev. Dennis G. Riter and Rev. Walter Werbicki presided.
[slideshow_deploy id=’729′]