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7301 BASS LAKE ROAD, CRYSTAL, MN 55428 | WWW.STRAPHAELCRYSTAL.ORG WORSHIP As long as the suspension of public Masses connues we will live-stream Masses as follows: Live-streamed Weekday Masses Monday - Saturday: 8:00 am Live-streamed Sunday Mass Sunday: 10:30 am CONTACT Fr. Michael Rudolph, Pastor x 205 [email protected] Fr. Robert Aler, Parochial Vicar x 206 [email protected] Parish Email: [email protected] Parish Phone: 763-537-8401 Parish Office Hours Monday-Thursday: 8:00 am - 4:30 pm Friday: 8:00 am - 12:00 pm SACRAMENTS Reconciliaon Weekdays: 7:30 - 7:50 am Saturday: 7:30 - 9:00 am, and 4:00 - 5:15 pm Marriage Please contact Fr. Rudolph. Bapsm Please contact the Parish Office. Faithful to the Teachings of the Roman Catholic Church, St. Raphael Parish and School promotes the Universal Call to Holiness for all the People of God. MISSION STATEMENT THE ASCENSION OF THE LORD - MAY 24TH, 2020

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Page 1: T H E A S C E N S I O N O F T H E L O R D M AY 2 4 T …...Andrea Poeschl Phyllis Raffaelli Mary Lou Wensman Jeff Woodruff Rosemund Woodruff To add a name for a six week period,

7301 BASS LAKE ROAD, CRYSTAL, MN 55428 | WWW.STRAPHAELCRYSTA L.ORG

WORSHIP As long as the suspension of

public Masses con!nues we will live-stream Masses as follows:

Live-streamed Weekday Masses Monday - Saturday: 8:00 am Live-streamed Sunday Mass

Sunday: 10:30 am

CONTACT Fr. Michael Rudolph, Pastor x 205

[email protected] Fr. Robert Al!er, Parochial Vicar x 206

[email protected] Parish Email: [email protected]

Parish Phone: 763-537-8401 Parish Office Hours

Monday-Thursday: 8:00 am - 4:30 pm Friday: 8:00 am - 12:00 pm

SACRAMENTS Reconcilia!on

Weekdays: 7:30 - 7:50 am Saturday: 7:30 - 9:00 am,

and 4:00 - 5:15 pm Marriage

Please contact Fr. Rudolph. Bap!sm

Please contact the Parish Office.

Faithful to the Teachings of the Roman Catholic Church, St. Raphael Parish and School promotes the Universal Call to Holiness for all the People of God.

MISSION STATEMENT

T H E A S C E N S I O N O F T H E L O R D - M A Y 2 4 T H , 2 0 2 0

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PASTOR’S LETTER Up, up, but not away…

I was twelve years old when Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin became the first two men to walk on the moon. It was July 20, 1969. I remember the day well. My parents, brother and I were living in Vienna, Austria at the !me. We didn’t have a TV in our apartment,

so we walked to the neighborhood bar to watch the moon landing on the black and white TV there. We watched the moon walk with awe. The other patrons found out we were Americans and congratulated us.

Some of us might think of the Ascension of Jesus Christ as being kind of like the trip those astronauts took to get to the moon—a place very far away. We could get that impression from an ini!al reading of Sacred Scripture. Saint Luke tells us about the Ascension of Our Lord: “As they were looking on, he was li!ed up, and a cloud took him from their sight” (Acts 1:9). “Li!ing up his hands he blessed them. While he blessed them, he parted from them, and was carried up into heaven” (Luke 24:50-51).

But was Jesus really going somewhere far away? The reac!on of his disciples seems to show that’s not what they thought. We are told that immediately a$er Christ’s Ascension, “they worshipped him, and returned to Jerusalem with great joy” (Luke 24:52). Normally, if someone we love leaves us, and we know we may never see him or her again in this life, we are very sad. But the disciples of Jesus were joyful! Why?

I think one reason the disciples could be joyful as Jesus le$ them was that they had finally come to understand something important about Jesus. They realized that as God, no ma&er where he was, Jesus would be able to fulfill his promise: “Behold, I am with you always, to the close of the age”. (Ma&hew 28:20).

Heaven is where God lives, so to speak, but God is as outside of space as he is outside of !me. That means that heaven is the presence of God, not a par!cular loca!on in some distant part of the universe. By ascending into heaven, Jesus was bringing his human nature into the reality in which God exists, which has no limits of !me or space. So, in some mysterious way, by leaving the disciples from one loca!on in Israel, Jesus became able to be with all people, of all !me and in all places, all at once.

Naturally, this brought great joy to the disciples. For one thing, it meant that everyone could get to know this wonderful, incredible, life-transforming, God-revealing,

miracle-working, forgiving, truth-revealing and loving Savior Jesus Christ, just as they had go&en to know him. They were also glad because they knew that as they carried out the mission Jesus had given them of making disciples of all na!ons, Jesus himself would be with them. Saint Mark refers to this reality at the end of his Gospel: “So then the Lord Jesus, a!er he had spoken to them, was taken up into heaven and sat down at the right hand of God. And they went forth and preached everywhere, while the Lord worked with them and confirmed the message by the signs that a#ended it. Amen” (Mark 16:19-20).

You and I are blessed by the Ascension, too. It enables us to enter into a new and be&er way of living, every day. Pope Benedict XVI describes this reality beau!fully in his book Jesus of Nazareth (Libreria Editrice Va!cana and Igna!us Press, 2011). He writes (p. 286): “Christ, at the Father’s right hand, is not far away from us. At most we are far from him, but the path that joins us to one another is open. And this path is not a ma&er of space travel of a cosmic-geographical nature: it is the ‘space travel’ of the heart, from the dimension of self-enclosed isola!on to the new dimension of world-embracing divine love.”

This divine love is ours to freely receive and freely share at every moment, no ma&er what the circumstances or difficul!es of our world, na!on, family or individual lives. Because when Jesus went up into heaven, he came closer to us than ever.

Your fellow beneficiary of the Ascension of Our Lord Jesus Christ, Father Rudolph

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PARISH DIRECTORY Parish Office: 763-537-8401

PRIESTS Pastor Fr. Michael Rudolph (x205) Parochial Vicar Fr. Robert Al!er (x206)

PARISH ADMINISTRATION Business Administrator Ginny Metzger (x202) Part-Time Administra!ve Assistant Sue Kubovec (x201) Administra!ve Assistant/ Bulle!n Editor Marie Nachtsheim (x222) Social Needs Coordinator Bunny Arseneau (x214) Crisis Pregnancy Hotline (x500)

PARISH TRUSTEES Ronald Gieneart Alan Johnson

FAITH FORMATION Director of Youth Ministry Joseph Turner (x211) Family Discipleship Director, Youth Ministry Assistant & Confirma!on Coordinator Josh Stegman (x211) RCIA Coordinator Mary Jo Smith (x511)

WORSHIP Prayer Line (x528) Bulle!n Prayers for the Sick (x523) Adora!on Coordinator Be&y Kreuter (763-537-1399)

SCHOOL School Office: 763-504-9450 School Principal Paul Dull (x352)

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PARISH INFORMATION

PARISH CALENDAR OF EVENTS

PASTORAL COUNCIL Mario Chavez, Sco& Gregory, Sharon

Hedman, Be&y Kreuter, Roselyn Lawrence, Jacob Nelson, Rose Pis!lli & Mike Vecellio

Pastoral Council Mee!ngs

If you would like a par!cular item on the next Parish Council agenda please

contact Fr. Rudolph.

Sunday, May 24 10:30 AM Live-stream Mass

FINANCE COUNCIL

Steve Cheney, Sharon Hedman, Kevin Hejna, Nancy Holovnia, Shawn Horn, & Tony Pis!lli

STEWARDSHIP OF TREASURE MAY 10, 2020 CONTRIBUTIONS

Contribu!ons ………………………….…..$13,872.06 Budget ………………………………………. $16,623.00 Building Fund ………………………………..$1,357.00 Budget……………………………………..…….$1,419.00 Mr. J. Scholarship Fund …..………………..$191.24

THANK YOU for your con$nued support!!

Monday, May 25 - Saturday, May 30 7:30 AM - 7:50 AM Confessions 8:00 AM Live-stream Mass Reserved Masses as Scheduled All other ac$vi$es remain cancelled.

Saturday, May 30 7:30 - 9:00 AM Confessions 4:00 - 5:15 PM Confessions

Sunday, May 31 10:30 AM Live-stream Mass

We are currently able to have up to 10 people (including the priest celebrant) at Mass. Because of the limited spots, please call the Parish Office at 763-537-8401 to reserve a spot.

PLEASE CHECK THE PARISH

WEBSITE h#ps://straphaelcrystal.org/

· Daily Reflec$ons / Prayers · Online Resources · Live-stream Mass Link to our

Facebook Page · Parish Updates · For Covid-19 Updates

Ms. Senocia Tubuo

Please pray for Deacon Paul Hedman who will be ordained to the priesthood on Saturday, May 30th!

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PRAYER & WORSHIP

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Monday May 25 8:00 AM Those who served our country. Tuesday May 26 8:00 AM + Ray Vecellio Wednesday May 27 6:30 AM Inten!ons of Randy Urista Living and Deceased Souls 8:00 AM Fr. Al!er Thursday May 28 8:00 AM + Carrie Ann Cota Friday May 29 8:00 AM + Norbert Meier Saturday May 30 8:00 AM Joan Tatley 5:30 PM St. Raphael Parishioners Sunday May 31 8:30 AM + Delroy Novak 10:30 AM + John Degnan and + Lorraine Degnan

PERPETUAL EUCHARISTIC ADORATION MASS INTENTIONS

PLEASE PRAY FOR... Gladys Benton

David Bjornquist Tom Bohlinger

Phyllis Bourgeois Richard Bruins Bailey Carrol

Judy Dancisak Peggy Diedrich

Charles Dillinger Shanna Dykhoff

Mary Edlund

Andrew Eisenzimmer Delores Ess

Michael Gardner Mary Hughes

Nichole Iverson Mary Beth Goebel Komala

Dean Landree Janna McDonald David McMillen

John Noe Kathy Osga

Bridge&e O’Brien Jayson Perry

Mary Lou Pfeifer Andrea Poeschl Phyllis Raffaelli

Mary Lou Wensman Jeff Woodruff

Rosemund Woodruff

To add a name for a six week period, please call 763-537-8401 x 523

Perpetual Adora!on at the Church of St. Raphael has been temporarily suspended due to the Coronavirus health concern, and the Adora!on Chapel is temporarily closed.

At this $me, the main church is open for private prayer from 6:00 am to 8:00 pm. You may enter in through the west, north, or east church doors. Please observe the social distancing guidelines - keeping at least 6 feet between yourself and others.

Please check the parish website for current updates. We will keep you

informed regarding the reopening of the Adora!on Chapel via the website as well. If you have any ques!ons, please call Be&y Kreuter at 763-537-1399 (h) or 763-354-4796 (c ).

Eucharis$c Adora$on

Contact: Be#y Kreuter at 763-537-1399

Readings for the week of May 24, 2020

Sunday: Ascension: Acts 1:1-11/Ps 47:2-3, 6-7, 8-9 [6]/Eph 1:17-23/Mt 28:16-20 Monday: Acts 19:1-8/Ps 68:2-3ab, 4-5acd, 6-7ab [33a]/Jn 16:29-33 Tuesday: Acts 20:17-27/Ps 68:10-11, 20-21 [33a]/Jn 17:1-11a Wednesday: Acts 20:28-38/Ps 68:29-30, 33-35a, 35bc-36ab [33a]/Jn 17:11b-19 Thursday: Acts 22:30; 23:6-11/Ps 16:1-2a and 5, 7-8, 9-10, 11 [1]/Jn 17:20-26 Friday: Acts 25:13b-21/Ps 103:1-2, 11-12, 19-20ab [19a]/Jn 21:15-19 Saturday: Morning: Acts 28:16-20, 30-31/Ps 11:4, 5 and 7 [cf. 7b]/Jn 21:20-25 Next Sunday: Vigil: Gn 11:1-9 or Ex 19:3-8a, 16-20b or Ez 37:1-14 or Jl 3:1-5 /Ps 104:1-2, 24, 35, 27-28, 29, 30 [cf. 30]/Rom 8:22-27/Jn 7:37-39. Extended Vigil: Gn 11:1-9/Ps 33:10-11, 12-13, 14-15/Ex 19:3-8a, 16-20b/Dn 3:52, 53, 55, 56 [52b] or Ps 19:8, 9, 10, 11/Ez 37:1-14/Ps 107:2-3, 4-5, 6-7, 8-9 [1]/ Jl 3:1-5/Ps 104:1-2, 24, 35, 27-28, 29, 30 [cf. 30]/Rom 8:22-27/Jn 7:37-39. Day: Acts 2:1-11/Ps 104:1, 24, 29-30, 31, 34 [cf. 30]/1 Cor 12:3b-7, 12-13/ Jn 20:19-23 LPi

WEEKLY READINGS

Rest In Peace Martha Arens

Fr. James Herrmann

“I will not leave you orphans, says the Lord. I will come back to you, and your hearts will rejoice.” ~ Gospel Acclama!on May 24, 2020 Igna!us Pew Missal

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NEWS & EVENTS

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St. Raphael Parish Website: h#ps://straphaelcrystal.org/ Please log onto the parish website where you can access the Live Stream (and archived) Masses each day, find the daily homilies, current bulle!ns, most up to date informa!on about our parish (see Covid19 Updates sec!on), Prayers and Devo!ons, Online Resources!

Also check our Facebook Page: h#ps://www.facebook.com/straphaelcrystal

SAINTS OF THE DAY - BLESSED DIANA, CECILIA AND AMATA

These three women were nuns at a Dominican convent in Bologna, Italy in the thirteenth century. When Saint Dominic began to develop the work of his order in Italy, he chose Bologna as a center because he thought its university would provide the kind of recruits he wanted for the Order of Preachers. A suitable site for the priory was found, but there was strong opposi!on from the d’Andalo family, who owned the land. They finally gave way to the wishes of Andalo’s only daughter, Diana, who had been very impressed by the preaching of the Dominican friars.

Dominic privately received Diana’s vow of virginity and solemn promise that she would enter religious life as soon as possible. She had hoped she would be able to convince her father to found a convent for Dominican nuns which she could enter, but he refused to consider the possibility or to allow her to become a nun. She then went to an Augus!nian convent at Ronzano. When her father and brothers found out, they went to the convent and took her home with such violence that one of her ribs was broken. When she had recovered, she escaped and returned to Ronzano. Then the Dominican priest Blessed Jordan of Saxony talked to her family and convinced them that Diana had a genuine voca!on to the religious life. In fact, her family was so won over that they helped him found a small convent for Dominican nuns near their palace. Diana and four companions moved there in 1222. Because the new nuns were inexperienced in the religious life, four other sisters were sent to live with them from the convent at San Sisto in Rome. Diana died at the age of thirty-five.

One of these four was named Amata. Not much else is known about her today.

Another of the four was named Cecelia. She was a member of a noble Roman family. When she was only seventeen and in a convent in Rome, she was the first to respond to Saint Dominic’s proposals for reform and convinced the abbess and the other sisters to accept his Rule. It is said that Cecelia was the first woman to receive the Dominican habit, and she became the abbess of the new convent in Bologna. Cecelia lived into old age, during which she dictated her remembrances of Blessed Jordan and drew a portrait of him.

Blessed Diana, Cecelia and Amata, pray for us!

(Excerpted and adapted with permission of the Publisher from Butler’s Lives of the Saints, New Full Edi!on ©Paul Burns 2003, Published by Liturgical Press, Collegeville, MN)

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ST. RAPHAEL CATHOLIC SCHOOL YOUTH MINISTRY CONTACT

Ques$ons? Please contact Joseph Turner at 763-537-8401 (x 211) or

[email protected] Register for any youth events on the St. Raphael youth

website: www.straphaelyouth.com

St. Raphael Youth Ministry: We are staying connected via ZOOM Mee$ngs. Our Wednesday night events will be done via ZOOM as well as Core Team mee$ngs. Please join us! Please be sure to check your emails, Facebook and Instagram as well for Youth Ministry updates, encouragement and inspira$on! God bless you!

EXTREME FAITH CAMP June 29-July 3, 2020

Big Sandy Camp in McGregor, MN Open to all 6th-8th Grade Students

COST: $400 (financial assistance is available) We hope you can join us !

The registra!on form can be found on our youth ministry website at:

www.straphaelyouth.com

FAITH FAMILY COOL DOWN EVENT

Our Faith Family ac!vity for the upcoming week is all about gra!tude. This week our students and their families will be having family conversa!ons about the word gra!tude.

In their conversa!ons they will ask: What does it mean to be grateful for something?

When we feel stressed out and feel alone, one way to remain hopeful is to prac!ce expressing gra!tude for all of God’s blessings in our lives.

Each day, our students are to think of one thing they are thankful for and to write it down on a piece of paper and in their heart.

Pray for Our Seminarians About to be Ordained

Deacon Paul Hedman, son of parishioners Mike and Sharon Hedman, will be ordained to the priesthood on Saturday, May 30, at 10:00 am. The Mass will be live-streamed from

the Cathedral of Saint Paul. You can find out more about this Mass at: h#ps://www.archspm.org/ordina$on-priesthood/ OR visit the Archdiocese Facebook page at: h#ps://www.facebook.com/ArchdioceseSPM/ You can also watch the Ordina!on Mass on Metro Cable Channel 6, or on St. Michael Broadcas!ng Channel 14.4. Please pray for Paul and all the faithful men who are being ordained to the priesthood, and for their families. May our Blessed Mother hold them in her mantle of protec!on.

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VENEZUELAN MISSION

7

Talk About Food Prices!

Conversa!ons these days in both Venezuela and Minnesota inevitably gravitate to the coronavirus and social distancing restric!ons, but what about back in “normal” !mes? In Minnesota the go-to topic is weather. With temps into the 90’s almost every day, people here do comment on the heat, but what really gets people talking is the price of cooking oil, sugar and rice. When was the last !me you had a lively discussion over such things? Probably never, I’d guess, but this is Venezuela where people spend most of their income on food. Once they get rolling, people o$en become more animated, moving on to the price of eggs, milk and chicken.

I did a cost comparison this past week of the basic food items in the Venezuelan basket, con-ver!ng various sized packaging to the price per pound, quart and dozen. The Venezuelan prices are what we pay buying in volume at a place similar to Sam’s Club or Costco. Most people here don’t have access to such stores, lacking a vehicle to get there and cash on hand to buy in vol-ume, and generally pay at least 25% more at local stores. Minnesota prices are as adver!sed last week for online shopping at Cub with the excep!on of potatoes and onions which, as you know, are always cheapest at Kwik Trip. You may wonder why I didn’t include frozen pizza, ice cream, baked beans, tuna, or other items which would have been on my shopping list back in Minnesota. I haven’t seen a frozen pizza since arriving in Venezuela nine months ago, tasted ice cream just once, and have yet to eat or even see food that comes in a can. The average Venezuelan family eats li&le or no processed food.

Contrary to what folks in Minnesota had heard in the past, there is no food shortage here. Even neighborhood shops are well-stocked. Such was not the case here three years ago when, with skyrocke!ng infla!on, the government set price limits on basic food items. Merchants couldn’t

purchase those commodi!es for less than what they had to sell them, so store shelves were empty. The current issue is not availability but affordability. The median annual household income in Minnesota in 2018 was a bit over $70,000 of which around 12% or $8,400 was spent on food with approximately $4,800 being food at home and $3,600 at restaurants. Although the typical family in our parish hasn’t eaten at a restaurant for years and has a much simpler, less expensive shopping list when going to the market, they spend nearly 100% of their income on food. How can that be?

The minimum salary here is currently around $3 a month, obviously not enough to feed a family for a few days much less an en!re month. To retain good workers, most companies give employees an addi!onal monthly bonus of $20 to $30. Those with a “Carnet de la Patria” (homeland card), which the government began issuing in 2016, receive around $3 every couple weeks deposited to their bank account and a box of basic food items distributed by the government every 2 or 3 months. The downside is that the card can be used to track votes in elec!ons. Concerned that the card is really a poli!cal tool for buying votes, many people don’t apply for one.

More than 5 million Venezuelans have le$ the country in the past five years, adding another important source of support for families in the form of money sent from foreign countries. Venezuela allows transfers up to $100 at a !me through DHL, UPS, and Western Union from which a commission of around $20 is deducted. Unfortunately, not every family has rela!ves in foreign countries to support them. Not all apply for a homeland card. Many workers, public school teachers included, receive only the basic salary with no monthly bonus, and those re!rees who qualify for a government pension only receive the equivalent of around $1.50 a month.

So, next !me you get to talking with your friends and neighbors, a$er reviewing the latest on the coronavirus and the Minnesota weather scene, consider adding the price of cooking oil, sugar and rice to your conversa!on and why, for many of our Venezuelan peo-ple, those prices are the major conversa!on starters every day.

Points to ponder What percentage of your family income do you spend on food? What would you remove from your shopping list if you had to cut way back on food purchases? What about ea!ng out?

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis has staffed and supported parishes in the diocese of Ciudad Guayana in Venezuela since 1970. These “Did you know?” papers are designed to give you a be#er understanding of life in Venezuela and to strengthen connec!ons between the parishes of the Archdiocese and their archdiocesan mis-sion during our 50th anniversary year. Please direct any comments or sugges!ons for future papers to Fr. Denny Dempsey at [email protected] or 651-368-7324.

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