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MASS TIMES Sunday: 6:30, 8, and 10am, and 5pm Mon: 12:10pm Tues, Thurs, First Sat: 8:30am Wed, Fri: 6:30 am Saturday (anticipated Sunday): 4pm Clergy Fr. Mark Derise, Pastor Bishop Emeritus M. Jarrell, In Residence Deacon Cliff Tanner Trustees John Allen Prejean Elsie Smith Parish Office Hours Mon.-Thurs. 10am-4pm and Fri. 10am-12pm For information on contacting parish staff see page 7, and for Sts. Peter and Paul Catholic School information see page 5. April 23, 2017 Second Sunday of Easter God of everlasting mercy, who in the very recurrence of the paschal feast kindle the faith of the people you have made your own, increase, we pray, the grace you have bestowed, that all may grasp and rightly understand in what font they have been washed, by whose Spirit they have been reborn, by whose Blood they have been redeemed. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Mail us: P.O. Box 610 Visit us: 1110 Old Spanish Trail Scott, LA 70583 Call us: (337) 235-2433 Fax us: (337) 233-4868 STS. PETER & PAUL CATHOLIC CHURCH Est. 1904 Contact or Visit Us Virtually: Email: [email protected] Web-site: www.stspeterandpaulscott.org Diocesan Website: www.diolaf.org And like us on Facebook! CONFESSION TIMES Saturdays 3:00-3:45pm; Sundays 6:00-6:15am, 7:30-7:45am, 9:15-9:45am, & 4:15-4:45pm; 30 minutes before weekday Masses and by personal appointment. If a temporary illness or permanent disability keeps you or someone you know from Sunday Mass: Please contact the parish office to inquire about Holy Communion visits for the homebound. Religious Education of the Youth: Contact the CCD office for inquires and registration of new students grades 1-8. Contact the parish office for inquiries and registration of new students grades 9 -11. New Parishioners should complete the form found in church and on our website (Policies and Forms, Census Form) then return it to the office. HE IS RISEN! TRULY RISEN!

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Page 1: HE IS RISEN! TRULY RISEN!stspeterandpaulscott.org/wp-content/uploads/525201... · 2017-04-18 · Our universities are shutting down speakers they ... are asked to give it in turn

MASS TIMES

Sunday: 6:30, 8, and 10am, and 5pm Mon: 12:10pm

Tues, Thurs, First Sat: 8:30am Wed, Fri: 6:30 am

Saturday (anticipated Sunday): 4pm

Clergy Fr. Mark Derise, Pastor

Bishop Emeritus M. Jarrell, In Residence Deacon Cliff Tanner

Trustees John Allen Prejean

Elsie Smith

Parish Office Hours Mon.-Thurs. 10am-4pm

and Fri. 10am-12pm

For information on contacting par ish staff see page 7, and for Sts. Peter and Paul Catholic

School information see page 5.

April 23, 2017 Second Sunday of Easter God of everlasting mercy,

who in the very recurrence of the paschal feast kindle the faith of the people you have made your own, increase, we pray, the grace you

have bestowed, that all may grasp and rightly understand in what font they have been washed, by whose Spirit they have been reborn, by

whose Blood they have been redeemed. Through our Lord Jesus

Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you in

the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever.

Mail us: P.O. Box 610 Visit us: 1110 Old Spanish Trail

Scott, LA 70583 Call us: (337) 235-2433 Fax us: (337) 233-4868

STS. PETER & PAUL CATHOLIC CHURCH Est. 1904

Contact or Visit Us Virtually: Email: [email protected] Web-site: www.stspeterandpaulscott.org

Diocesan Website: www.diolaf.org And like us on Facebook!

CONFESSION TIMES

Saturdays 3:00-3:45pm; Sundays 6:00-6:15am, 7:30-7:45am,

9:15-9:45am, & 4:15-4:45pm; 30 minutes before weekday Masses

and by personal appointment.

If a temporary illness or permanent disability keeps you or someone you know from Sunday Mass: Please contact the par ish office to inquire about Holy Communion visits for the homebound.

Religious Education of the Youth: Contact the CCD office for inquires and registration of new students grades 1-8. Contact the parish office for inquiries and registration of new students grades 9-11.

New Parishioners should complete the form found in church and on our website (Policies and Forms, Census Form) then return it to the office.

HE IS RISEN! TRULY RISEN!

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Do not be afraid: Hope just got real

Does this sound like wishful thinking to you? “The Catholic Church’s best days are ahead of it. Our culture is on the cusp of a great and beautiful change.”

That is the message the Church shouts at us every Easter: We have nothing to fear from the future, because we know it is in good hands — God’s hands. Each year, we need that hope more and more.

Look at the darkness of 2017. Overseas, trouble mounts in North Korea and China and Russia. We are disgusted by the civil war in Syria, and by U.S. involvement in yet another Middle East conflict. We are heartsick over the “mother of all bombs” in Afghanistan. Online searches of “World War 3” have reached an all-time peak.

Domestically, violence is growing in our inner cities, on our college campuses, on live Facebook feeds — and now, even on airplanes. Some talk about “American carnage” and others talk about a “rape culture,” but both agree that America is in a frightening place.

It looks like the world is in the grip of evil — and evil is tightening its fist. Out of the darkness, we need to hear the voice that says: “Do not be afraid! I know that you are seek-ing Jesus … he has been raised just as he said!”

Or maybe we look at the political situation and get demoralized. Maybe we think President Trump is a disaster; or maybe we think he is doomed to disaster by vicious hostile forces. Maybe we look at the Church and worry about our pope, whom many Catholics denounce. Or maybe we worry about all the Catholics so ready to denounce our pope.

Maybe it looks like all hope for Christ — in the Church and in the state — is lost. Maybe we want to say: “Our chief priests and rulers both handed him over to a sentence of death and crucified him. But we were hoping that he would be the one to redeem us!”

We need to listen to the voice that answers, “Oh, how foolish you are! … Was it not necessary that the Christ should suffer these things and enter into his glory?”

We know the Catholic Church’s best days are ahead of it. The New Testament says so. Our Lady of Fatima says so. Even Pope Benedict XVI said so. He described “the Pope Benedict Option” to bishops in the United States this way:

“We can and must believe, with the late Pope John Paul II, that God is preparing a new springtime for Christianity. What is needed above all, at this time in the history of the Church in America, is a renewal of apostolic zeal.”

We know that our culture is on the cusp of a great and beautiful change.

It was nearly 100 years ago that T.S. Eliot wrote, “The World is trying the experiment of attempting to form a civilized but non-Christian mentality. The experiment will fail; but we must be very patient in awaiting its collapse; meanwhile redeeming the time: so that the Faith may be preserved alive through the dark ages before us; to renew and rebuild civilization, and save the World from suicide.”

We have patiently waited, and the results are now coming in. Our society is attempting suicide. Our universities are shutting down speakers they disagree with. Christians are the ones defending the notion that it is okay for people to disagree.

Our laws are rejecting the science that says chromosomes are male and female, that a mother and fa-ther are best for children, and that human DNA makes an embryo human. It falls to Christians to as-sert these truths in law. The time to wake up and rebuild has arrived. The Church’s story has always been the story of disciples standing in ruins and looking up at a mountaintop.

We started that way after the horror of the crucifixion, and we have found ourselves there again and again as civilizations crumble around us. The mountaintop always seems impossibly far away, until Christ rises from the dead, stands there and holds out his hand. Then we do everything our power to bring as many people as close to him as possible.

Do not be afraid! Christ our hope is arisen, and goes before us to show the way.

(Written by Tom Hoopes and taken from: http://aleteia.org/2017/04/17/do-not-be-afraid-hope-just-got-real/)

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Catechism of the Catholic Church II. DYING IN CHRIST JESUS 1005 To rise with Christ, we must die with Christ: we must “be away from the body and at home with the Lord.” In that “departure” which is death the soul is separated from the body. It will be reunited with the body on the day of resurrection of the dead.

Death 1006 “It is in regard to death that man's condition is most shrouded in doubt.” In a sense bodily death is natural, but for faith it is in fact “the wages of sin.” For those who die in Christ's grace it is a participation in the death of the Lord, so that they can also share his Resurrection.

1007 Death is the end of earthly life. Our lives are measured by time, in the course of which we change, grow old and, as with all living beings on earth, death seems like the normal end of life. That aspect of death lends urgency to our lives: remembering our mortality helps us realize that we have only a limited time in which to bring our lives to fulfillment:

Remember also your Creator in the days of your youth, . . . before the dust re turns to the earth as it was, and the spirit returns to God who gave it.570

1008 Death is a consequence of sin. The Church's Magisterium, as authen-tic interpreter of the affirmations of Scripture and Tradition, teaches that death entered the world on account of man's sin. Even though man's nature is mortal God had destined him not to die. Death was therefore contrary to the plans of God the Creator and entered the world as a consequence of sin. “Bodily death, from which man would have been immune had he not sinned” is thus “the last enemy” of man left to be conquered.

1009 Death is transformed by Christ. Jesus, the Son of God, also himself suffered the death that is part of the human condition. Yet, despite his an-guish as he faced death, he accepted it in an act of complete and free sub-mission to his Father's will. The obedience of Jesus has transformed the curse of death into a blessing.

Minute Meditation In fact, everything that exists and moves in the Church - the sacraments, doctrine, institu-

tions - draws it's strength from Christ's Resurrection.

-Fr. Raniero Can-talamessa, Life in Christ, 67

Rome Sweet Home The heartbeat of the Risen Lord is granted us as a gift, a present, a new horizon. The beating heart of the Risen Lord is given to us, and we are asked to give it in turn as a transforming force, as the leaven of a new humanity... When the High Priest and the religious leaders, in collusion with the Romans, believed that they could calculate eve-rything, that the final word had been spoken and that it was up to them to apply it, God suddenly breaks in, up-sets all the rules and offers new possibilities. God once more comes to meet us, to create and consolidate a new age, the age of mercy. This is the promise present from the beginning. This is God’s sur-prise for his faithful people. Rejoice! Hidden within your life is a seed of resurrection, an offer of life ready to be awakened.

-Pope Francis, Easter Vigil Homily 4/15/17

Commentary Corner Thomas’s profession of faith and Jesus’ glorified humanity

Upon seeing the wounds of the risen Jesus, Thomas responds with the most robust profession of faith in the Gospel: My Lord and my God! The pairing of the titles Lord (kyrios) and God (theos) recall the naming of God as “the Lord God” or “the Lord, your God” and the address “O Lord God.” This pairing is found throughout the Old Testament, as in the psalm-ist’s prayers to “my God and my Lord” (Ps. 35:23). Through this title, Thomas identifies the risen Jesus with the Lord God, YHWH himself. The risen Jesus has completed the work of his hour and has returned to the Father in glory. Thomas’s profession recalls the Gospel’s opening verse, which declares “the Word was God” (1:1). Before he came to his hour, Jesus prayed, “Glorify me, Father, with you, with the glory that I had with you before the world began” (17:5). However, it is crucial to recog-nize that Jesus’ glorification in his hour is not a straightforward return to his preexistent glory as the Word, because “the Word became flesh” (1:14). The glorification of Jesus in his hour is the glorification of his humanity. The glorified humanity of Jesus provides the way for his disciples, who will come to share in his resurrection, to enter the “Father’s house” (14:2). Thomas makes this profession of faith because he recognizes the wounds on the glorified body of Jesus as a sign, a disclosure of his divinity through his glorified humanity.

From Catholic Commentary on Sacred Scripture

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Please pray for those in our parish who suffer mental and physical ailments and disabilities

If you are interested in becoming Catholic or receiving Confirmation as an adult, or if you simp-ly want to learn more about your faith, contact the office to inquire about RCIA. “Jesus said to them, ‘Come, and you will see’” (John 1:39).

Parish Announcements

Time, Talent, or Treasure Christ is Risen! All things are made new in him. And the baptized participate in the Resurrection of the God-man, Jesus. Not only will our bodies be resurrected after our death on the Last Day, but the glorified humanity of Jesus affirms the dignity our human lives now no matter how small or insignificant we may consider them. In the Glorious Light of the Resurrection, we can see ourselves truly beloved and, resting there, find ourselves refreshed. In this way, the Paschal Mystery becomes the seed of strength by which we are able to give time, talent, and treasure we never knew we had or never believed could make a difference to the Church and our neighbor in need. For this reason we shout: Christ is Risen! Truly Risen!

Collection Report Palm Sunday: $11,273.42 Holy Thurs: $1,226 & Good Fri: $1,099 Easter: $15,212.38 Maintenance: $2,830.26

WEEKLY EXPENSES: $17,000.00 MONTHLY EXPENSES: $68,000.00

PLEASE REMEMBER TO PUT OUR CHURCH AND SCHOOL IN YOUR

WILL.

AS ALWAYS, THANK YOU FOR YOUR

GENEROSITY! 

Men’s Work Day, Saturday, May 6, at Our Lady of Sor rows Retreat Center , 103 Railroad Ave., St. Martinville, 70582. Work begins at 8am and ends at 4. Lunch will be provided after Holy Mass at noon. Come when you can and stay as long as you can. For more info, contact Lloyd Dekerlegand at (337) 849-0185 or the Center of Jesus Crucified at (337) 394-6550 or www.jesuscrucified.net

Immaculata Reunion, Saturday, Apr il 29, 10am-4pm. This reunion is open to all former students and faculty (and their family members) of Immaculata Seminary. Lunch will be catered by Fezzo’s,

and the day will conclude with Holy Vigil Mass in Immaculata Chapel. A suggested donation of $20 can be given at the door. For more information, contact Michael Walker who prefers to be emailed at

[email protected] or he can be called at 850-456-4017.

Companions Along the Journey is a bereavement suppor t group meeting in the Kather ine Drexel Room of the Immaculata Center, 1408 Carmel Dr., 70501, every fourth Monday of the month. For more info call the Office of Pro-Life Apostolate, 337-261-5607.

For a complete list of where you can find Catholic programming on television and radio, please visit https://www.diolaf.org/rtv

Diocesan Announcements

Men with a Mission Retreat, a free retreat for men who are interested in the new evangelization, beginning 7pm on Fri. Apr. 28 and ending on Sun. Apr. 30 at 3pm. Register early to reserve your place by calling Vic Guidry (337) 824-3045. The retreat master is Fr. Michael Champagne, CJC. Meditations will include texts from Scripture, the popes, and the saints on becoming missionaries in your state in life. Bring your own toiletries. Dress is casual but shorts are not permitted.

Friends of St. Monica Widow-to-widow Bereavement Support Group, Thurs., Apr . 27, 6:30-8:30pm in the parish hall of Our Lady of Lourdes Church (700 South Broadway St., Erath 70533).

Because a meal is provided, attendees are asked to RSVP to Donna Hargrave 501-8244.

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Other Announcements 26th National Day of Prayer, Thursday, May 4, 11am-1pm, Scott Events Center, 110 Lions Club Rd. The program will consist of short prayers by the pastors of all churches in Scott and a combination of music and fellowship. A delicious jambalaya meal will be served for FREE. Everyone is invited. For more info, call City Hall at (337) 233-1130.

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A Prayer for Priests by St. Therese of Lisieux God our Father, through the Immaculate Heart of Mary,

I ask You to bless and strengthen the spiritual renewal and vitality of all priests so that your Church may shine more resplendently and bear witness to Your presence in our world today.

I recommend to You the priests dearest to me especially [Name priests]. O Jesus, keep them all close to Your Sacred Heart, and bless them abundantly in time and in eternity. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Pray for Our Priests & Seminarians

Apr 23 Rev. Paul LaFleur & Rev. Mr. Rene

Pellesier

Apr 24 Rev. Keith Landry & Stephen Pellessier

Apr 25 Rev. O’Neil Landry & Ben Pitre

Apr 26 Rev. Ralph Landry & Matthew Pitre

Apr 27 Rev. Charles Langlois & Connor Poirrier

Apr 28 Msgr. H.A. Larroque & Rev. Mr. David Rozas

Apr 29 Rev. Bernard Lebiedz, OSB & Peter Sahuc, Jr.

Characteristics of the risen body

All shall rise from the dead in their own, in their entire, and in immortal bodies; but the good shall rise to the resurrection of life, the wicked to the resurrection of Judgment. It would destroy the very idea of resurrection, if the dead were to rise in bodies not their own. Again, the resurrection, like the creation, is to be numbered amongst the principal works of God; hence, as at the creation all things are perfect from the hand of God, so at the resurrection all things must be perfectly restored by the same omnipotent hand. But there is a difference between the earthly and the risen body; for the risen bodies of both saints and sinners shall be invested with immortality. This admirable restoration of nature is the result of the glorious triumph of Christ over death as described in several texts of Sacred Scripture: Isaiah 25:8; Osee, xiii, 14; 1 Corinthians 15:26; Apocalypse 2:4. But while the just shall enjoy an endless felicity in the entirety of their restored members, the wicked "shall seek death, and shall not find it, shall desire to die, and death shall fly from them" (Revelation 9:6).

These three characteristics, identity, entirety, and immortality, will be common to the risen bodies of the just and the wicked. But the bodies of the saints shall be distinguished by four transcendent endowments, often called qualities.

The first is "impassibility", which shall place them beyond the reach of pain and inconvenience. "It is sown", says the Apostle, "in corruption, it shall rise in incorruption" (1 Corinthians 15:42). The Schoolmen call this quality impassibility', not incorruption, so as to mark it as a peculiarity of the glorified body; the bodies of the damned will be incorruptible indeed, but not impassible; they shall be subject to heat and cold, and all manner of pain.

The next quality is "brightness", or "glory", by which the bodies of the saints shall shine like the sun. "It is sown in dishonour," says the Apostle, "it shall rise in glory" (1 Corinthians 15:43; cf. Matthew 13:43; 17:2; Philippians 3:21). All the bodies of the saints shall be equally impassible, but they shall be endowed with different degrees of glory. According to St. Paul: "One is the glory of the sun, another the glory of the moon, another the glory of the stars. For star differeth from star in glory"'(1 Corinthians 15:41-42).

The third quality is that of "agility", by which the body shall be freed from its slowness of motion, and endowed with the capability of moving with the utmost facility and quickness wherever the soul pleases. The Apostle says: "It is sown in weakness, it shall rise in power" (1 Corinthians 15:43).

The fourth quality is "subtility", by which the body becomes subject to the absolute dominion of the soul. This is inferred from the words of the Apostle: "It is sown a natural body, it shall rise a spiritual body" (1 Corinthi-ans 15:44). The body participates in the soul's more perfect and spiritual life to such an extent that it becomes itself like a spirit. We see this quality exemplified in the fact that Christ passed through material objects.

(Taken from: http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12792a.htm)

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Sts. Peter and Paul Catholic School

International Dress Spirit Day – In celebration with Festival International de Louisiane, we will have an international dress spirit day on Friday, April 28th. Students are invited to wear

native dress attire representative of any country.

May Crowning Mass – Please join us for May Crowning on Thursday, May 4th at 8:30am.

Teacher Appreciation Week – We will celebrate our teachers and all the gifts they share with our students the week of May 1-5, 2017. Dismissal on Friday, May 5th will be at 11:00am.

Save the Date: The 11th annual Knights Classic Golf Tournament is scheduled for Mon-day, May 8th. Please save the date and register early. Registration/Sponsor forms can be found

on the school website.

Our Catholic School News

Teurlings Catholic

The Teurlings Athletics App can be purchased in the iTunes store and is designed to give users up-to-date game schedules.

Teurlings participates in the FundingFactory® Recycling Program which earns cash for the school when they recycle printer inkjet and laser cartridges. Support TCH by bringing your

cartridges to the front office.

Thanks to the RABC moms, the Swap Shop is now open every Thurs. from 7-7:30am. Uni-forms can be purchased for $5 or trade one-for-one of your gently used uniforms.

Visit them: 139 Teurlings Drive Lafayette, LA 70501

Call them: (337) 235-5711 Fax them: (337) 234-8057

Contact or Visit Them Virtually: Web-site: www.tchs.net

Email: [email protected] And Like Them on Facebook!

Sts. Peter and Paul & Teurlings Catholic

Visit them: 1301 Old Spanish Trail Scott, LA 70583

Call them: (337) 504-3400 Fax them: (337) 504-4995

Contact or Visit Them Virtually: Web-site: www.sts-peter-paul.org

Email: [email protected] And Like Them on Facebook!

Dr. Robert Richard, Principal Jim Andrepont, Advisory Council Chair

Fr. Hampton Davis, Chancellor Mr. Michael Boyer, Principal

To Channel His Spirit for the Glory of God

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Sacramental Information

Baptism: Expectant parents should contact the office four to six (4 - 6) months before the birth of the child.

Marriage: Couples planning marr iage need to make an appointment with one of the pastor at least six months before the intended wedding date to begin the preparation process. A wedding date cannot be scheduled without approval of the pastor.

Anointing of the Sick: Contact the office to schedule an appointment, home or nursing home visit, and, if death is immanent, contact the office for immediate action.

First Communion and Confirmation: Contact the Elementary DRE or High School DRE respectively.

Sts. Peter and Paul Parish Staff

Secretary & Bookkeeper Monica D. Laperous

Dir. of Religious Ed. for Elementary School Students Janet Hebert

Dir. of Religious Ed. for High School Students & Youth Minister A. Max Harrington

Choir Director Yvette Weber Broussard

Weekly Parish Calendar

April 29/30 Eucharistic Ministers, Readers, and Altar Servers*

PAGE SEVEN

Weekly Events: Sun - Come, Lord Jesus Bible Study@6pm in CCD Bldg.; AA @ 8pm in Rm 11; Tues - 9am Rosary in Cry Room; Come, Lord Jesus Bible Study@9:30am in CCD Bldg.; AA @ 7pm in

Rm 11; Wed - 10am Prayer Group in Cry Room; 6pm Choir Practice; Come, Lord Jesus Bible

Study@6:30pm in CCD Bldg.; AA @ 8pm in Rm 11; Thurs - AA @ 7pm in Rm 11; Fri - AA @ 8pm in

Rm 11; Sat - AA @ 7pm in Rm 11 Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament Mon-Fri

after the morning Mass until 5pm

SUN 23 MON 24 TUES 25 WED 26 THURS 27 FRI 28 SAT 29

1st Commun-ion at 10am Holy Mass

Easter Season

ACTS 2:42-47 PS 118 1 PT 1:3-9 JN 20:19-31

Bible Time-line@6:30pm in Hall

Easter Season

ACTS 4:23-31 PS 2 JN 3:1-8

Feast of St. Mark, evan-gelist

Easter Season

1 PT 5:5B-14 PS 89 MK 16:15-20

ACTS 5:17-26 PS 34 JN 3:16-21

Easter Season

School Mass @ 8:30am in Church

Easter Season

ACTS 5:27-33 PS 34 JN 3:31-36

ACTS 5:34-42 PS 27 JN 6:1-15

Easter Season

Mem. of St. Catherine of Sienna

ACTS 6:1-7 PS 33 JN 6:16-21

Easter Season

Masses Eucharistic Ministers Readers Altar Servers

Sat. Apr 29 @ 4pm

Karen Granger, Carolyn Prejean, Dn. Tanner

John Prejean John Clostio, Philip Clostio, Grant Duplechin, Camille Dwilley

Sun. Apr 30 6:30am 8am 10am 5pm

Laura Mouton, Dn. Tanner

Eric Stromer, Steve Hebert, Dn. Tanner, Steve & Jean Provost Brian & Holly Schlesinger, Debbie Boudreaux Danielle Babineaux, Mark & Trina Habetz

Robert Richard Troy Bergeron Lee Boudreaux Paula Pearson

Adrienne Hendrix, Isabelle Sabatier, Mary-Ester Leblanc, Abigail Mahne Justin Brice, Matthew Brice, Kaiton Hayes Cade Cormier, Mitchell Touchet, Guy Griffin Ashley Menard, Elizabeth Galland, Marleigh Baudoin, Dakota Breaux

*Please remember: if you are unable to attend your scheduled Mass, you are responsible for finding a substitute

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Holy Sacri ice of the Mass Offered For: Saturday, April 22 @ 4:00pm: Comeaux‐DuetDFM,DupreHebert,RaymondMartin,George&MonaMartin,CaritaCredeur,EmetileDBourque&EdwardBourqueSr.(L),DavidL.“Boo”Prejean,Adley&BeverlyScrantz,MollieDomingue,Dol&DonMontoucet,RitaBroussard,AllenLloydLaughlin,JamesDidier,JoeAlleman,Evan&LouiseDomingue,Michael&AshleyHilbun,Mr.(Anniv.)&Mrs.ClamDuhon,Paul&LeaBrown,AliceMatte,Joe&Belle(L)Alleman,Clifford&DelmayAbshire,TubertAb‐shireFly,Sunday, April 23 @ 6:30am: ForthePeople

Sunday, April 23 @ 8:00am: J.P.Savoy(Anniv.)AudreyMenard,Mercedes&ClaytonHollier,Spir‐itualHealing,Sunday, April 23 @ 10:00am:RayfordG.Domingue,DeannaSonnier,CarlGuidry,Waver&Sos‐theneGuidry,Gene&LouisProvost,CharlieProvost,LauriceDubuc,Adrian&EulaliaVega,PaulSr.&ClarineMartin,WilliamR.Martin,LeliaDoucet,PrestonRoyer,SylviaComeaux,DoraMaeDugas,Pres‐tonRoyer,AnnBacque

Sunday, April 23 @ 5:00pm:Carrol&ShirleyLavergne

Monday, April 24 @ 12:10pm: AnnaSonnierArceneaux, Tuesday, April 25 @ 8:30am: Marae&BrentCarrier(L)HappyAnniv.,CarrolSonnier,Edna(Anniv.)&FrankSonnier,Wednesday, April 26 @ 6:30am: PaulineLacy(Anniv.)Thursday, April 27 @ 8:30am: N/AFriday, April 28 @ 6:30am: MollieDomingue,

Queen of Heaven V. Queen of Heaven, rejoice, alleluia. R. For He whom you did merit to bear, alleluia. V. Has risen, as he said, alleluia. R. Pray for us to God, alleluia. V. Rejoice and be glad, O Virgin Mary, alleluia. R. For the Lord has truly risen, alleluia.

Let us pray. O God, who gave joy to the world through the resurrection of Thy Son, our Lord Jesus Christ, grant we beseech Thee, that through the intercession of the Virgin Mary, His Mother, we may obtain the joys of everlasting life. Through the same Christ our Lord. Amen.

This is one of four Marian antiphons, with following versicles and prayers, traditionally said or sung after night prayer, immediately before going to sleep. It is said throughout Eastertide. (That is, from

Easter Day through Pentecost, the seventh Sunday after Easter.) The Regina caeli is also said in place of the Angelus during Eastertide.

Regina Caeli (Trans., Queen of Heaven) V. Regina caeli, laetare, alleluia. R. Quia quem meruisti portare, alleluia. V. Resurrexit, sicut dixit, alleluia. R. Ora pro nobis Deum, alleluia. V. Gaude et laetare, Virgo Maria, alleluia. R. Quia surrexit Dominus vere, alleluia.

Oremus. Deus, qui per resurrectionem Filii tui, Domini nostri Iesu Christi, mundum laetificare dignatus es: praesta, quaesumus; ut per eius Gen-etricem Virginem Mariam, perpetuae capiamus gaudia vitae. Per eundem Christum Dominum nostrum. Amen.

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CHURCH NAME AND ADDRESS Sts. Peter and Paul Church #525201 1110 Old Spanish Trail Scott, LA 70583 TELEPHONE 337 235-2433 CONTACT PERSONS Max Harrington EMAIL: [email protected] SOFTWARE MSPublisher 2016 Adobe Acrobat X Windows 10 PRINTER HP Laserjet 6P TRANSMISSION TIME Tues. Apr. 18 @ 11:45am SUNDAY DATE OF PUBLICATION April 23, 2017 NUMBER OF PAGES SENT 1 through 9 SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS