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KINDLY REFRAIN FROM READING THE BULLETIN DURING THE MASS
What You Need to Know . . .
SJCA Open HouseJanuary 26 (Page 3)
Blessing of Bibles Next Week (Page 3)
United Youth (Page 4)
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday (Page 5)
Annual Collection (Page 4)
2020 March for Life (Page 4)
Pilgrimage to Poland with Fr. Karol (Page 4)
SJCA Raffle (Page 5)
Continuing Activities . . .
Sunday Coffee & Donuts After 9 AM Mass Parish Ctr
Morning Prayer (Lauds) After 6:45 & 8:45 Masses; Saturday
after 8 AM Mass
Monday Lectio Divina 5:30 PM Rectory Mtg. Room
Tuesday Adoration & Reconciliation7 PM
1
st
Saturday “Flash Mob” Rosary for Life after 8 AM Mass
PARISH STAFF
Rev. George F. O’Neill, Pastor
Rev. Karol Ksiazek, Parochial Vicar
Deacon Jeffrey J. Font
Deacon Louis F. Howe, Sr.
Deacon Peter J. Kuhn
Deacon William J. Shaughnessy
Rita Golaszewski, Parish Secretary
Patricia Smith, Religious Education Coordinator
Kathy Bailo, Religious Education Assistant
David Kendall, Director of Music
Music [email protected]
Arianna Carlo, Choir Director
PARISH OFFICE
Phone: 203.775.1035 Fax: 203.775.1684
Web Site: www.stjosephbrookfield.com
Email: [email protected]
Mail: 163 Whisconier Road
Brookfield, CT 06804
Office Hours: 9:00 AM 4:30 PM, MondayThursday
9:00 AM 1:00 PM, Friday
Mass Schedule: Saturday Vigil 5:00 PM
Sunday7:30, 9:00 & 11:00 AM; 5:00 PM
MondayFriday 6:45 AM & 8:45 AM
Saturday 8:00 AM Only
Confessions: Tuesday: 7:008:00 PM
Saturday: 4:004:45 PM
EUCHARISTIC ADORATION
Sundays, 3:454:45 PM for the Unborn
Tuesdays, 7:008:00 PM for Youth and Vocations
SAINT JOSEPH CATHOLIC ACADEMY
Ms. Pamela Fallon, Director of Education
Phone: 203.775.2774 Fax: 203.775.5810
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Page 1 Saint Joseph Church
PRAYING FOR PEACE AND REPARATION
We invite you to stay at the end of Sunday Mass following
the closing hymn and join us in praying three “Hail
Mary’s” for Peace: in our World, in our Families and in our
Hearts. We also pray the Prayer to St. Michael the
Archangel, for healing and reparation in our Church.
SACRAMENTS
Baptism The Sacrament of Baptism is celebrated on
Sundays at 12:30 PM. A PreBaptism class is required for
both parents prior to the Baptism of their first child.
Register with the Parish Office: 203.775.1035.
Marriage Weddings generally are celebrated on Friday
evening or Saturday afternoons and must be scheduled at
least six months in advance. Please do not make final
arrangements for your reception prior to contacting the
Parish Office.
R.C.I.A. Interested in becoming a Catholic? Call the
Parish Office.
“GLUTENFREE” HOSTS
St. Joseph Church has a limited supply of lowgluten
communion hosts available for those with a gluten allergy
(not dietary preference). While often referred to as “gluten
free,” the hosts actually contain 0.01% gluten in order to
conform to liturgical standards. Please advise a priest or
deacon before Mass if you wish to receive the lowgluten
host.
IMPORTANT HOSPITAL INFORMATION
Parishioners entering Danbury Hospital as patients are
urged to contact the St. Joseph Parish Office (203)775
1035 if they wish to be visited by a member of St. Joseph’s
clergy during their stay. Hospital chaplains will continue to
visit patients who identify themselves as Catholic when be-
ing admitted.
THOSE FOR WHOM WE PRAY
FOR THOSE IN NEED OF GOD’S HEALING, STRENGTH AND
COMFORT: Anthony Rigoglioso, MaryJo Howe, Greg Licalzi,
Msgr. Thomas Powers, Fr. Nick Cirillo, Dino Capilupi, and Al-
berta Gregus .
FOR THE PROTECTION AND SAFE RETURN OF THOSE
SERVING IN THE ARMED FORCES: Joshua Jugler, Andrew
Krentsa, Michael Ayala Lopez, and Michael Moreira.
2
nd
Sunday in Ordinary Time
January 19, 2020
On the cusp of fame, power, or influence, would you turn it
down? Today’s Gospel again features John the Baptist. Con-
troversial but popular, John has gathered quite a group of
followers. He has disciples. People come from near and far to
be baptized by him. Pharisees and government leaders are
drawn to his preaching. If John was another man, a lesser
man, he would have claimed his own greatness. Instead,
John the Baptist is a witness to humility.
“The next day he saw Jesus coming toward him and said,
‘Behold the Lamb of God … He is the one of whom I said, “A
man is coming after me who ranks ahead of me.”… the rea-
son why I came baptizing with water was that He might be
made known.’” Rather than point to himself, John points to
Christ. John could have grasped at what he had accumulated.
He could have seen Jesus as a Messianic competitor. Instead,
John knows who He is. He knows his own place as forerun-
ner. Because John knows who Jesus is. “I have seen and tes-
tified that He is the Son of God.”
A life of humility, a life for others, can be challenging to live.
So much of our culture is built around achievement and indi-
vidualism. We can justify it, too, in pursuit of “greater
goods” and higher ideals. In the process, however, we might
miss our own participation in the kingdom of God. John, for
all of his humility, was not an afterthought. In another Gos-
pel passage, Jesus calls him “the greatest prophet,” even the
greatest of men. Why? Because he fulfills the mission given
to him by God: to announce the coming of the Messiah. We
too are prophets and forerunners. Our witness to the Gospel
is meant to point people to Jesus. Consider your own mission
this week. To whom are you called to announce the good
news of the Son of God?
©LPi
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Brookfield, CT Page 3
Sunday, Jan 19, 2020
2
ND
SUNDAY IN ORDINARY
TIME
Come together
Relationships go awry when peo-
ple stop talking. That’s as true in
marriage as it is among Christians
in general. Lutheran theologian George Lindbeck was a delegate ob-
server at the Second Vatican Council. It prompted him to make a life’s
work of the LutheranCatholic conversation. He viewed doctrines as
“rules of grammar” rather than unscalable walls. He saw justice,
peace, and the environment best served when Christians work togeth-
er. The fundamental disease of our times, Lindbeck advised, is the
weakening of natural allies. As Saint Paul might say: Let’s not be parti-
sans, let’s be Church!
TODAY’S READINGS: Isaiah 49:3, 56; 1 Corinthians 1:13; John
1:2934 (64). “To you . . . with all those everywhere who call upon the
name of our Lord Jesus Christ.”
Monday, Jan 20, 2020
FABIAN, POPE, MARTYR; SEBASTIAN, MARTYR
Ultimate discipleship
This day is filled with martyrs. Fabian (c. 200250) was elected pope
when a white dove landed on his head during the voting, a clear sign to
the electors. Christianity was still illegal, so he died in prison 14 years
later. Sebastian (c. 256288) died in Rome sometime after he was shot
full of arrows. Martin Luther King, Jr. (192968), commemorated
today, was gunned down by an assassin in Memphis, Tennessee. De-
spite being harassed by the government, Dr. King won the 1964 Nobel
Peace Prize and was posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of
Freedom. Three men who shed their blood for what they believed in-
spire us to be activists for what we believe.
TODAY’S READINGS: 1 Samuel 15:1623; Mark 2:1822 (311). “To
the upright I will show the saving power of God.”
Tuesday, Jan 21, 2020
AGNES, VIRGIN, MARTYR
Take a stand
Often throughout the Church year we remember our martyrs, those
women and men who were killed because of their faith in Jesus the
Christ. These are sometimes difficult days to “celebrate” because on
the one hand, we are grateful for and inspired by their faith. But on the
other hand, the suffering they endured is horrifictorture, rape, muti-
lation, burning, and ultimately death. The martyrdom of Saint Agnes,
for example, came because of her faith in Christ but was expressed by
sexualizing and abusing her. When we celebrate our martyrs, we might
also take a stand against torture and murder today. This indeed is a
worthy form of reverence for our brave martyrs and saints.
TODAY’S READINGS: 1 Samuel 16:113; Mark 2:2328 (312). “The
sabbath was made for man, not man for the sabbath.”
Wednesday, Jan 22, 2020
DAY OF PRAYER FOR THE LEGAL PROTECTION OF
UNBORN CHILDREN
Lend a lifesaving hand
The Sisters of Life are a women’s religious order founded in 2004 in
New York. More than 70 sisters each year provide aid and support to
more than 1,000 pregnant women at their convents in Toronto and
New York City. At one of their convents, women can stay as long as six
months prior to giving birth and up to a year afterward. What are you
and your parish doing to support pregnant women and mothers who
need help establishing their families and creating a secure future for
their children?
TODAY’S READINGS: 1 Samuel 17:3233, 37, 4051; Mark 3:16
(313). “Looking around at them with anger and grieved at their hard-
ness of heart . . .”
Thursday, Jan 23, 2020
MARIANNE COPE, VIRGIN
God’s aloha at work
Rarely is a saint’s last name so apt. When more than 50 religious
communities in Canada and the United States refused a request to
work with lepers, Sister Marianne Cope, a Sister of St. Francis of
Syracuse, responded, “I am hungry for the work.” She and her sisters
who served on Molokai, Hawaii were called “God’s aloha,” or God’s
love. She assured a dying Saint Damien that his work would continue,
then brought beauty and artistry to challenging conditions. Encour-
aging laughter and gardens, she said, “We must make best use of the
fleeting moments. They will not return.” Do one thing to bring God’s
love and beauty to your living space, or someone else’s, today.
TODAY’S READINGS: 1 Samuel 18:69; 19:17; Mark 3:712 (314).
“Hearing all that He was doing, they came to Him in great numbers.”
Friday, Jan 24, 2020
FRANCIS DE SALES, BISHOP, DOCTOR OF THE CHURCH
Include God in the conversation
Francis de Sales (15671622) was a bishop and doctor of the church
who encouraged the importance of lay spirituality. At the time, peo-
ple thought that only priests and sisters were called to holiness. But
Francis took the church back to its roots, encouraging laypeople to
pray and find God in their daily lives. As a noted spiritual director he
suggested: “Retire at various times into the solitude of your own
heart, even while outwardly engaged in discussion or transactions
with others, and talk to God.”
TODAY’S READINGS: 1 Samuel 24:321; Mark 3:1319 (315). “He
named twelve as His companions whom He would send to preach the
Good News.”
Saturday, Jan 25, 2020
THE CONVERSION OF SAINT PAUL THE APOSTLE
Be a force for unity
Once he was blinded by light on the road to Damascus, Paul began to
see with a clarity that amazed everyone who knew of him. As he
preached the Good News, Paul began to speak persuasively against
requiring Gentiles to follow Jewish law, while at the same time allow-
ing Jewish Christians to keep their lifelong ritual practices. In the
midst of diversity, Paul worked to unite the followers of Jesus. It is
fitting that the feast of his conversion has been chosen as the final day
of the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity. Today your work is to do
something to bring unity in the midst of diversity.
TODAY’S READINGS: Acts 22:316 or Acts 9:122; Mark 16:1518
(519). “This man is the instrument I have chosen to bring my name to
the Gentiles.”
SAVE THE DATE
K of C Blood Drive at St. Marguerite Saturday, Feb. 15
Registration after Masses on Feb. 1 & 2 and Feb 8 & 9.
K C N
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Page 3 2nd Sunday in Ordinary Time
WHY SAINT JOSEPH CATHOLIC ACADEMY?
Multi-Age Personalized STEM Enrichment Clubs Morning Care
After Care Student Support Services Buddy Program Orchestra &
Band Foreign Language Coding Robotics Music Art Track
Cheerleading Basketball Soccer
87% of students at grade level or above in Reading
69% of students at grade level or above in Math
85% of students at grade level or above in English
Mechanics/ELA
90% participate in Enrichment Clubs
50% participate in Orchestra or Band
10 : 1 Student-to-Faculty ratio
COME AND LEARN HOW OUR MULTI-AGE,
INTERDISCIPLINARY, INNOVATIVE, FAITH-BSED
PROGRAMS PROVIDE CHILDREN AN OPPORTUNITY
TO EXPLORE, BE CREATIVE AND BE PREPARED
LEADERS FOR HIGH SCHOOL AND BEYOND!
OPEN HOUSE
Sunday, January 26
10 AM—12 PM
5 Obtuse Hill Road, Brookfield, CT 06804
203.775.2774 www.sjsbrookfield.org
Question: Why do we have a liturgical sea-
son called ordinary time? Can you explain?
Ordinary time is the longest season of the liturgical
year. This year, it began on Monday, January 13, and
will continue through Tuesday, February 25, the day
before Ash Wednesday and the beginning of Lent. Or-
dinary time picks up again the Monday after Pentecost
Sunday and lasts from twentythree to twentyseven
weeks, until the end of the liturgical year, the Saturday
before Advent begins.
Why the name ordinary? “Ordinary” is not in contrast
to “extraordinary” or “special” but rather stresses the
Latin language notion of “ordinal” or numbered Sun-
days. The Latin title for the season, tempus ordinari-
um, conveys the sense that this time of the year is
measured or numbered time. Measured time can allude
simply to the numbered Sundays, or the notion that
these Sundays are a “measured” time to deepen and
immerse ourselves completely in the realities of Jesus’
incarnation, ministry, passion, death, and resurrection.
Ordinary time offers us the opportunity to connect the
ordinary lived experiences of our lives with those of
Jesus, who modeled for us how to live a truly human
existence.
©LPi
B B
N W
Our Holy Father, Pope Francis,
has instituted the Sunday of the
Word of God, to be celebrated
annually on the Third Sunday of
Ordinary Time. For the Sunday
Masses next weekend (January
2526), we ask you to bring your
personal or family Bible to Mass
with you. We want to emphasize the importance of
the Bible in Catholic life and encourage one anoth-
er to read and study it as a regular part of our lives
as disciples of Jesus. During the Mass, we will have
a commitment and blessing prayer as you hold
your Bibles. After Mass we will provide you with a
service to enthrone ad honor your Bible in your
home.
NEXT SUNDAY!
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January 19, 2020 Page 4
Our Annual Collection is critical to
closing the gap between expenses and
funds raised through the general
Sunday offertory.
THE 2019 ST.
JOSEPH ANNUAL
COLLECTION
(Amount pledged
as of 01/13/2020)
$104,020
St. Joseph’s 2019 Annual
Collection is Ending.
Have you made your
Pledge yet?
Sunday Offertory (Jan. 1112) . . . . . . . $11,682.00 *
* Includes average weekly electronic contributions of $4,250
$90,000
$130,000
$110,000
$70,000
Join fellow parishioners from throughout the Diocese of
Bridgeport on a bus pilgrimage to the 2020 March for Life
in Washington, DC, on Friday, January 24. This year’s
these is Life Empowers: Pro-Life is Pro Woman. Buses
depart from three locations—Bridgeport, Norwalk and
Stamford. Cost is $75 pp/RT. Register online before Jan.
17 at www.bridgeportdiocese.org/faith-formation.
Informational flyers are available in the Parish Office.
VIGIL MASS WITH BISHOP CAGGIANO
Thursday, January 23 at 6:30 PM
St. Augustine Cathedral
399 Washington Ave., Bridgeport
If you are unable to make it to the March in D.C.,
please join us in prayer at this special Mass with
Bishop Frank as we pray for the pilgrims going to the
March and create awareness for the precious
gift of life.
PILGRIMAGE TO POLAND
Celebrating the 100th Anniversary
Of Pope St. John Paul II’s Birth
10 DAYS — OCTOBER 12-21, 2020
VISITING: Warsaw * Wroclaw * Czestochowa
Zakopane * Auschwitz * Wadowice * Krakow
Hosted By
FR. KAROL KSIAZEK &
BROOKFIELD KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS
$3199 FROM NEW YORK *
* Air/land tour price is $2729 plus $470 gov’t taxes/airline surcharges
For More Information Contact:
Fr. Karol — (203)775-1035
Greg Dembowski — (203)733-7209
LIMITED! SIGN UP TODAY
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PARISH MINISTRIES
Liturgy
Altar Servers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .203.775.1035
Choir Director Arianna Carlo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .203.775.1035
Faith Formation and Sacraments
Religious Education Coord. Ms. Pat Smith . . . . 203.775.1035, ext. 107
RCIA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 203.775.1035
Scheduling Baptisms Mrs. Rita Golaszewski. . . 203.775.1035, ext. 101
Marriage Scheduling/Prep . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .203.775.1035
Prayer & Devotion
Men’s Retreat Mr. Peter Brady . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 203.740.1243
Women’s Retreat Mrs. Barb Roeder . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .203.740.9428
Men of St. Joseph Mr. Carl Monti . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 203.740.9544
Parish Councils and Administration
Parish Council Mr. Andy Pacuk, Chairman. . . . . . . . . . . .917.514.5974
Finance Council Mr. Frank Cavalea, Chairman. . . . . . . . .203.482.5563
Other Ministries & Organizations
8
th
Station Bereavement Ministry
Mrs. Mary Shaughnessy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2037759138
Mrs. Pat Tharrington. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2037754836
Knights of Columbus Mr. Patrick Jennings . . . . . . . . . . .203.240.2425
MaryMartha Ministry Mrs. Pat Font . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 203.775.2335
Women’s Reflection & Prayer Group Mrs. Barb Roeder . 203.740.9428
Outreach to Sick/ShutIn Sr. Mary Ann Socha, CMGT .. 203.794.1486
Monday, January 20 Dr. Martin Luther King Holiday Observed
8:00 AM John and Ethel Magner, req. by Joann Magner
Tuesday, January 21 St. Agnes, Virgin and Martyr
6:45 AM William King, req. by Paulie Schroeder
8:45 AM James Krause, req. by George & Agnes Stutsky
Wednesday, January 22 Day of Prayer for the Legal Protection of
Unborn Children
6:45 AM Joseph Merlotto, req. by Joanne Cullen & family
8:45 AM James Thomas Carew, req. by the Riordan family
Thursday, January 23
6:45 AM For the Legal Protection of Unborn Children
8:45 AM John Rafferty, req. by the Pizzirusso family & Mr. &
Mrs. Wojnicki
Friday, January 24 St. Francis de Sales, Bishop & Doctor of the
Church
6:45 AM For the Chronically and Terminally Ill of the Parish
8:45 AM Brian Laragh, req. by the Fennell & Laragh families
Saturday, January 25
8:00 AM Deceased members of the Simo family
5:00 PM Kristopher Coons, req. by Margaret McCabe
Sunday, January 26 3
rd
Sunday in Ordinary Time
7:30 AM Antonio Almeida, req. by Anthony & Arlene D’Aquila
9:00 AM Robert Palomba, req. by Betty Stahl
11:00 AM Amelia Gregus (7th Ann.), req. by Alberta Gregus
5:00 PM William Leverance, req. by the Farrell family
Page 5 January 19, 2020
WINTER WEATHER REMINDER
When Brookfield schools are closed, both
weekday morning Masses are cancelled.
‘MAGNIFICAT’ Subscriptions
St. Joseph Parish offers subscriptions to the monthly Mag-
nificat magazine at a discounted bulk rate. If you currently
have a subscription through the parish or would like to
begin a subscription please contact Rita in the parish
office, (203)7751035. The cost of a yearly subscription will
be approximately $30, depending on the number of orders.
The magazines are mailed to the parish once a month and
are put out in the church for pickup.
Magnificat provides the Mass readings for each day of
the month, plus a daily reflection and other interesting, faith
based articles.
The Con Man
A prison inmate serving 10to15
years for robbing a bank knew that
all incoming and outgoing mail
passed through censors. So when
he got a letter from his wife asking
about the family garden
“Honey, when do I plant the pota-
toes?” he wrote back, “Under
NO circumstances should you dig
up the garden. That’s where I bur-
ied the loot!”
A week or so later he got an-
other letter from his wife saying,
“Six investigators showed up at
the house today. They dug up eve-
ry square inch of the garden.”
The con wrote back: “OK. You can plant the potatoes
now.”
SJCA SPRING
GATHERING RAFFLE!
Grand Prize $2,500
2nd Place Prize $1,000
3rd Place Prize $500
The Grand Prize drawing will take place on Saturday,
April 4, 2020 at SJCA’s Annual Spring Gathering. (You
need not be present to win.) All proceeds support the
school’s academic and enrichment programs as well as
school operations.
Purchase Tickets Online at:
https://forms.diamondmindinc.com/sjcaraffle1920
St. Joseph Parish will Observe
The Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Holiday on Monday, Jan. 20
Mass at 8:00 AM Only
Parish Office Closed
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Custom Earmold ProductsParticipating w/most Health Ins.
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toll free#: [email protected]
Call Us For Auto Home, Small Business and Life Ins.
A & A SERVICE STATION
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NEW PATIENTS WELCOME!
Ask for Us by Name!
203-792-0864
SALES • SERVICE • REPAIRS • REPLACEMENT703 Danbury Rd., Ridgefield, CT 06877
203-431-3667Paul Peloquin, Parishioner
Mention Ad ~ Receive 10% discount on service call or a FREE keyless entry with the purchase of a new electric garage door opener.
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57 Main StreetDanbury, CT 203-748-2131
Green Funeral HomeProudly Caring For Families Since 1935
Burials, Cremations, Pre-arrangements, Monuments and Inscriptions
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• Emergency Service • Discount Fuel Oil Dealer• Energy Assistance Program• No Contracts Necessary
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BROOKFIELDCleaners & Tailors
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28 Old Rt. 7, Brookfield, CT 06804
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We want your garbage!4, 6, 10, 12/15, 20 & 30 cu. yd.
Construction/Cleanup Containers203-426-8870
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CREDIT WORKS MORTGAGENMLS # 70200
487 Federal Rd., Brookfield, CT
IF YOUR BANK SAYS NO I SAY... YES, YES, YES.
I also do Small Commercial Mortgages and Reverse Mortgages.
Daniel T. Honan - Funeral Director, Managerwww.honanfh.com
Family Owned And Operated Since 1903
58 Main Street, Newtown, Connecticut 06470203-426-2751
Buying & Selling:U.S. & World Coins, Currency & Supplies, Gold & Silver
Hours: Wed. – Sat. 10AM-5:30PM499 Federal Rd., Brookfield, CT 06804
203•740•2892 www.brookfieldcoincard.com
Debra Tricaricoassociate real estate broker
e-pro,gri,sres67 Federal Rd. | Brookfield, CT
914-469-2617 [email protected]