Sign Up for Our Newsletter!


By submitting this form, you are consenting to receive marketing emails from: . You can revoke your consent to receive emails at any time by using the SafeUnsubscribe® link, found at the bottom of every email. Emails are serviced by Constant Contact

EPISODE#50
CATHEDRAL SQUARE: LENTEN MISSION CHRIST CATHEDRAL PARISH (SECOND OF A 3-PART SERIES)

Fr. Christopher Smith is the Rector and Episcopal Vicar of Christ Cathedral; and, he hosts the weekly Cathedral Square radio show. If you have ever been fortunate to hear one of his homilies at mass, you know that he is truly a gifted speaker. Last year, he shared a 3-part parish mission at one of our beautiful parishes in the Diocese of Orange.

This podcast is the second of a 3-part series.

Be sure to share this with someone. You will both benefit tremendously!

 

 

 

Originally broadcast on radio in April of 2020

EPISODE#49
CATHEDRAL SQUARE: LENTEN MISSION CHRIST CATHEDRAL PARISH (FIRST OF A 3-PART SERIES)

Here is a wonderful opportunity to listen to a parish mission without leaving the safety of your home!

Last year, Fr. Christopher Smith was honored to share a 3-part parish mission at one of our beautiful parishes in the Diocese of Orange.

This podcast is the first of a 3-part series.

Be sure to share this with someone. You will both benefit tremendously!

 

 

 

Originally broadcast on radio in April of 2020

EPISODE #7
SOUNDS FROM THE SANCTUARY: EVERYONE DANCE!

Episode No. 7: Everyone Dance!              

Join us for EVERYONE DANCE! Featuring guest organist Dr. Emma Whitten, Associate Director of Music and Organist at Mission San Luis Rey Parish in Oceanside, California, the largest of the 21 California

missions. Dr. Whitten just recently recorded a program for the Los Angeles Chapter of the American Guild of Organists consisting of organ music influenced by many forms of Dance, old and new.

As a complement to her Los Angeles performance, Sounds from the Sanctuary Host David Ball and Dr. Emma Whitten discuss the centuries-old relationship between dance forms and organ music, and even explore Dr. Whitten’s own

unique background of both math and music degrees.

EPISODE#47
CATHEDRAL SQUARE: FR CHRISTOPHER SMITH IS HONORED BY CONCERN AMERICA

The Very Rev. Christopher Smith, rector and episcopal vicar to Christ Cathedral, was recently honored by Concern America for his 30 years of service to the organization.

As you know, he is also the host of the Cathedral Square radio show and podcast.

On today’s special episode, we present to you a very special presentation featuring John Straw (the Executive Director) and several others honoring Fr. Christopher.

You’ll also enjoy some musical musings and – perhaps a few surprises as well!

Be sure to share this podcast.

 

 

Originally broadcast on 1/2/21

PRIESTHOOD ISN’T AN ASSIGNMENT – IT’S A MISSION, POPE TELLS SEMINARIANS

Vatican City, Feb 16, 2018 / 07:38 am (CNA/EWTN News) – On Friday Pope Francis met with the community of the Pontifical Maronite College, explaining how their seminary formation isn’t about them or even for them, but for the people they will eventually serve in their parishes and dioceses.

“The human, intellectual and spiritual enrichment you receive in these years is not a reward for you, much less a good to be earned for your career, but a treasure for the faithful who await you in your Eparchies and to whom your life looks forward to being donated,” the Pope said Feb. 16.

“You will not be called to exercise, even well, an assignment – it is not enough! – but to live a mission, without savings, without many calculations, without limits of availability.”

Pope Francis held an audience at the Vatican with around 45 seminarians and priests of the Pontifical Maronite College in Rome, which was founded in 1584 by Pope Gregory XIII as a place of study for Catholic seminarians of the Maronite rite.

The Maronite Catholic Church traces its roots to the early Christians of Antioch, the first believers to be called Christian. In its liturgy, the rite still uses the Syriac language, which is a dialect of Aramaic, the same language Jesus spoke.

The rite takes its name from the fourth century hermit St. Maron, whose way of life inspired many monks and laity to follow him, eventually resulting in the distinctive Maronite rite.

During the encounter, Pope Francis told the priests and seminarians that as pastors, they will need to listen to people a lot, and that God will “confirm you through their lives, through many encounters, through its unpredictable surprises.”

“And you, as pastors in close contact with the flock, will savor the most genuine joy when you bend over them, making yours their joys and their sufferings, and when, at the end of the day, you can tell the Lord the love you have received and given,” he said.

Pointing to the Maronite Church’s recent Feb. 9 celebration of St. Maron, the Pope praised the monastic life of the saint, saying it shows a proper discontent with living only a moderate or mediocre faith, but wants “to love with all its heart.”

“It is by drawing on these pure sources that your ministry will be good water for today’s thirsty people,” he explained.

Our heart is like a compass: It orients and directs itself toward what it loves, Francis said, quoting the words of Jesus in the Gospel of Matthew: “Where your treasure is, there will your heart be.”

He explained that these years of study, spiritual formation, and community life in Rome are a good time to “arrange the heart well.”

“All this you are called to live in a time not without suffering and dangers, but also pregnant with hope,” he said, pointing out how the people they will be called to serve will be unsettled by the instability which continues to plague the Middle East.

They “will search for, in you, pastors that console them: pastors with the word of Jesus on their lips, with their hands ready to wipe away their tears and caress suffering faces,” he continued.

“Pastors forgetful of themselves and their own interests; pastors who are never discouraged, because they draw every day, from the Eucharistic Bread, the sweet power of love that satisfies; pastors who are not afraid to ‘be eaten’ by the people, as good bread offered to brothers.”

A MISSIONARY VACATION

Be honest. Would you rather spend your next vacation on a beach in Jamaica sipping Caribbean drinks, reading a good book, and enjoying sumptuous meals at a resort hotel, or staying in the slums of Kingston with no air conditioning or hot water? While there, you’ll be bathing, feeding, and caring for the poorest of the poor who have been rejected among their own radical poverty, most of whom are physically deformed, blind, deaf, or mute and living in substandard conditions.

No question, the former. That is, until you learn what you can experience and receive from the latter. Peace. Incredible peace. Joy. Indescribable joy. Love. Amazing love. Christ. The very face of Christ.

When you arrive in Kingston, the transformation begins immediately. Hearts are opened wide as you witness and experience the love of God through the Brothers of the Missionaries of the Poor (MOP) and the hundreds of men, women and children they care for. Their residents are not the homeless and marginalized of Jamaica, but the poorest of the poor. Many are physically deformed and mentally challenged. They are what Jesus refers to in Matthew 25 as the “least of my brothers.”

The founder of the Missionaries of the Poor, Father Ho Lung emphasizes: “You activate the love of Christ in your heart by doing. Serving the poor lights up the Christ in your heart.” His words ring true. The experience is indescribable. I recently returned from my second MOP vacation, more at peace and relaxed than had I spent a month at a 5-star resort on Maui.

Opening your mind with the love of Christ in your heart to those in need allows you to ignore the heat, humidity, and appearances. Instead of disgust, you see and feel a sense of deep personal appreciation, a direct spiritual connection with your brothers and sisters in Christ who, by your presence, return more love than you can ever imagine.

When working with the Missionaries of the Poor, whether it is in one of the five Jamaican centers or a center in the Philippines, Uganda, India, Indonesia or Haiti, visitors leave their daily worries, anxieties, and stress behind. Daily strife is replaced with works of love, fellowship, and prayer–an average of 3 ½ hours of prayer throughout the day. The result is intense peace, profound joy, and restful sleep.

The principal differences between Father Ho Lung’s Missionaries and Mother Teresa’s Missionaries lay in community and evangelization. Father Ho Lung’s vision is for the residents at the centers to form a community, a family, of which the Brothers are a seamless part. In his communities, we witness interaction of young and old, the physically fit and the physically disabled; in such a way that each learns to love and help his neighbors. Further, while Mother Teresa’s Missionaries of Charity shied away from open evangelization of the poor whom they serve, largely due to the fact that it might be seen as insensitive or even provocative, the Missionaries of the Poor are unabashed in the evangelical dimension of their apostolate.

MOP was introduced to the Diocese of Orange in 2004 when Deacon Al Scaduto and his wife Linda visited the Missionaries of the Poor in Kingston. That trip changed their lives and became the catalyst for Al to enter the deaconate. What began 13 years ago has led our Vicar General, Fr. Steve Sallot, Fr. Brendan Manson, Fr. Eugene Lee, Fr. Loc Tran, and a host of other priests, deacons, and nearly 100 intentional disciples from our diocese to become true missionaries and work with these, the poorest of the poor.

The Missionaries of the Poor was founded in 1981 had has received both papal and episcopal approval for their work and constitutions. Today, the order has over 550 brothers serving in nine missions around the world.

 

Hank Evers is director of development and communications for the Orange Catholic Foundation.

BEING ALTAR SERVER IS CALL TO PRAYER AND MISSION, POPE SAYS

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Catholics are more fortunate than the Old Testament prophets were because in the Eucharist they experience Jesus’ closeness and know that God is not far off on a lofty throne, Pope Francis told thousands of altar servers from across Europe.

“In the Eucharist and in the other sacraments,” the pope said, “you experience the intimate closeness of Jesus, the sweetness and power of his presence.”

Pope Francis ended his three-week summer vacation at the evening meeting and prayer Aug. 4 with some 9,000 altar servers. The largest groups of young men and women came from Austria, Germany and Italy.

The pope thanked the young people for braving Rome’s August heat, although they did find some relief before the pope arrived. They began gathering in St. Peter’s Square about three hours earlier when the sun was still at its strongest. To deal with the high summer temperatures in the square, the young people stood under showers of cooling water provided by the hoses of the Vatican fire department.

The theme of the gathering was “Here I am! Send me” from the prophet Isaiah.

“You are more fortunate today than the prophet Isaiah,” Pope Francis told the youths. In the Eucharist, Jesus is not “placed on an inaccessibly high throne, but in the bread and wine.”

Isaiah was purified and forgiven by God and sent to bring God’s word to others, the pope said. “Isaiah realized that, by entrusting himself into the hands of the Lord, his whole existence would be transformed.”

God’s word, the pope said, “does not shake the doorposts, but rather caresses the strings of the heart.”

Like Isaiah, Christians recognize that “it is always God who takes the lead, because it is he who created you and willed you into being,” the pope said. “It is he who, in your baptism, has made you into a new creation; he is always patiently waiting for your response to his initiative, offering forgiveness to whoever asks him in humility.”

God’s call, the pope said, is a call to go out and share God’s mercy and the joy of faith. It cannot be lived or protected “in an underground bunker to which we flee in difficult moments.”

Serving at the altar, the pope told the young people, is a privileged way to draw closer to Jesus, which in turn “enables you to open yourselves to others, to journey together, to set demanding goals and to find the strength to achieve them.”

“The closer you are to the altar,” he told them, “the more you will remember to speak with Jesus in daily prayer; the more you will be nourished by the word and the body of the Lord, the better able you will be to go out to others, bringing them the gift that you have received, giving in turn with enthusiasm the joy you have received.