Lesson from Fr. Paulus | A Worthy Life Is a Simple Life

Christ's lesson is so simple!"Love God with all your heart and love your neighbor as yourself, and you will live."

It is within everyone's reach to live out this simple lesson. It was even within the reach of a Samaritan, and Samaritans were considered very low class by Jews at the time of Jesus. It summarizes the entire gospel, the entire meaning of life, with such eloquent simplicity!

But we are not satisfied with simplicity. We, like the scholar in the Gospel passage, pester him for clarifications, "Yes, but who actually is my neighbor? ..." Jesus didn't lose patience with the questioning scholar, and he doesn't lose patience with us.

He gives us the parable to explain what he means. And through the centuries, he has generously given further explanations: the words and examples of thousands of saints, the teaching of the Church in every age, the nudges of our conscience...

But we still complicate our lives; we still find it hard to learn the lesson. It's almost as if part of us doesn't really want to learn it.

Why? What holds us back from deciding once and for all to make Christ's standard our own?

Each of us has our own brand of selfishness, and selfishness creates comfortable shadows in our lives. When we get too used to them, the simple, bright light of Christ's truth hurts our eyes. But in our hearts, that simplicity rings true. We see the brilliant, clear portrait of the Good Samaritan, and we understand it perfectly.

Then we hear Jesus summarize the whole meaning of life by saying: "Go and do likewise."

 St Dominic Savio's Simple Wisdom

The Christian life has to be simple, because we are all called to be saints. If it were complicated, only the more intelligent of us would even have a chance to become a saint.

But the facts show that even children, even the uneducated and un-intelligent, can reach the very heights of sanctity and lasting happiness.

St Dominic Savio is a perfect example. He lived a simple Christian life, but he lived it so energetically that soon after he died at the young age of 15, he was canonized a saint. Dominic heard the call to the priesthood while just a boy, living in northern Italy in the 1800s.

He was encouraged to join a Catholic boys' school (called an oratory), which was being run by St John Bosco. There he lived a simple boarding school life, but he filled it to the brim with love for God and neighbor. He started a club called The Company of the Immaculate Conception, dedicated to daily prayers and to helping the oratory run smoothly.

Club members volunteered to wash floors, to take care of classmates who were sick or had special needs, and to put up with the discomforts of boarding school life (heat in the summer, cold in the winter, sickness, the bothersome ways of other people) with a spirit of humility and faith - seeing in those discomforts a chance to share in the cross of Christ.

St Dominic used to say, "I can't do big things. But I want all I do, even the smallest thing, to be for the greater glory of God." His personal motto, from the time he received his First Communion at nine-years-old, was equally simple - just three words: "Death before sin!"

That's the kind of simplicity we can all learn from.

Go and Do Likewise

Christ told his questioner in today's Gospel that if he will "Go and do likewise," if he will be like the Good Samaritan, he "will live."

Let's do an experiment this week. Let's erase all the complicated self-help theories from our minds and actually try to follow this simple formula for living a life that is truly alive.

There are two ways we can do that. First, we can carry out our normal, everyday responsibilities with the right intention. Often, we forget that most of our daily duties are actually Good-Samaritan-like deeds.

The mother running a household is being a Good Samaritan for everyone under her care. Every laborer or professional dedicates 8 or 10 hours every day to providing some kind of service for other people who need it.

The kid who is faithful to his chores and his other activities is forming his character and getting ready to go out into the world to serve his neighbors.

When we see our normal responsibilities from Christ's perspective, they take on their true, Good-Samaritan-like meaning. When we live them like that, we experience a deep sense of joy, satisfaction, and fulfillment; our lives suddenly shift into gear, and we feel like we're really going somewhere.

The second way to implement Christ's simple formula is to decide right now, enlightened by the example of this parable and strengthened by the Holy Communion we are about to receive, that when we run across someone in need this week, we will lend them a hand.

Whether friend or stranger, whether the need is material or spiritual, let's promise Jesus today that at least this week we will not just walk by on the other side of the street, but instead we will "Go and do likewise."

If we do, Jesus promises us, we will live.
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Catechism Corner | To Understand the Eucharist (Part 3)

The Structure of the Mass, Its Elements and Its Parts

THE GENERAL STRUCTURE OF THE MASS

27. At Mass that is, the Lord's Supper the People of God is called together, with a priest presiding and acting in the person of Christ, to celebrate the memorial of the Lord, the Eucharistic Sacrifice.[37] For this reason Christ's promise applies in an outstanding way to such a local gathering of the holy Church: "Where two or three are gathered in my name, there am I in their midst" (Mt 18:20). For in the celebration of Mass, in which the Sacrifice of the Cross is perpetuated,[38] Christ is really present in the very liturgical assembly gathered in his name, in the person of the minister, in his word, and indeed substantially and continuously under the Eucharistic species.[39]

28. The Mass is made up, as it were, of two parts: the Liturgy of the Word and the Liturgy of the Eucharist. These, however, are so closely interconnected that they form but one single act of worship.[40] For in the Mass the table both of God's word and of Christ's Body is prepared, from which the faithful may be instructed and refreshed.[41] There are also certain rites that open and conclude the celebration.

THE DIFFERENT ELEMENTS OF THE MASS

The Prayers and Other Parts Pertaining to the Priest

30. Among the parts assigned to the priest, the foremost is the Eucharistic Prayer, which is the high point of the entire celebration. Next are the orations: that is to say, the collect, the prayer over the offerings, and the prayer after Communion. These prayers are addressed to God in the name of the entire holy people and all present, by the priest who presides over the assembly in the person of Christ.[43] It is with good reason, therefore, that they are called the "presidential prayers."

31. It is also up to the priest, in the exercise of his office of presiding over the gathered assembly, to offer certain explanations that are foreseen in the rite itself. Where it is indicated in the rubrics, the celebrant is permitted to adapt them somewhat in order that they respond to the understanding of those participating. However, he should always take care to keep to the sense of the text given in the Missal and to express it succinctly. The presiding priest is also to direct the word of God and to impart the final blessing. In addition, he may give the faithful a very brief introduction to the Mass of the day (after the initial Greeting and before the Act of Penitence), to the Liturgy of the Word (before the readings), and to the Eucharistic Prayer (before the Preface), though never during the Eucharistic Prayer itself; he may also make concluding comments to the entire sacred action before the dismissal.

32. The nature of the "presidential" texts demands that they be spoken in a loud and clear voice and that everyone listen with attention.[44] Thus, while the priest is speaking these texts, there should be no other prayers or singing, and the organ or other musical instruments should be silent.

33. The priest, in fact, as the one who presides, prays in the name of the Church and of the assembled community; but at times he prays only in his own name, asking that he may exercise his ministry with greater attention and devotion. Prayers of this kind, which occur before the reading of the Gospel, at the Preparation of the Gifts, and also before and after the Communion of the priest, are said quietly.

From: GENERAL INSTRUCTION OF THE ROMAN MISSAL
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Church Announcements

  1. The First Sunday Adoration will be held on 3 Jul from 2:00 - 3:30 PM in our church.
  2. Urgent repair of our parish building is needed. A total cost of HK$ 1.2 million is estimated for the renovation, details of which are posted at the bulletin board. A letter of invitation with donation form will be distributed to each family. All parishioners are called upon to generously support this important work to keep our church alive. [To date, total donation towards the Renovation Fund amounts to HK$ 1,364,891.60.]
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Lesson from Fr. Paulus | The Christian’s Inner Power

The words of Sacred Scripture are both informative – they give us information, and performative - they make God present.

This means that every time we read or listen to the Bible, God wants to change us. He wants to give us a new strength to live out what we've heard. So, it's important to listen attentively, and to try to pick up the significance of even apparently insignificant details.

And in the gospel today Jesus does something extremely important. When Christ sends his disciples out to share the new life, they've discovered by being with him, he sends them out two by two.

The great commandment of Jesus is very simple: love one another as I have loved you. He's saying that no one can flourish in isolation. No one can love in isolation. No can become a saint in isolation.

Therefore, he sends them out two by two. The message could not be clearer: the only truly convincing witness to Christianity comes when we love one another.

However, the disciples were like the rest of us. Some of them didn't click with each other. Look at the way Jesus put the unlikeliest people together. For example, in his inner circle we find Matthew, a former tax collector, and Simon, a former Zealot.

Tax collectors were considered creatures of the hated Romans who occupied the Holy Land at the time of Jesus. Zealots were freedom fighters who wanted nothing more than to drive out the Romans. And Jesus put the two of them in this band of 13 men who spent three years roaming the countryside together and commanded them to love one another. And they did.

This is the new power that we receive as Christians. In our own lives, God will give us people who drive us crazy. He will give us people that we can't stand, whose one goal in life seems to be to make our lives miserable.

He commands us to love them. This doesn't mean that we'll like them. But it does mean that we will their good, we pray for them, and we show them kindness. And by the grace of God within us, we can do this. 

St Philip Neri and the Orb of Fire

St Philip Neri illustrates this new power in the way he treated a couple of sacristans at his church in Rome. They were renegade monks who had fled their monastery. For some reason they hated Philip, and made his life miserable. They knew his hatred of dirt, so they gave him the dirtiest vestments they could find.

When he was about to begin Mass, they would interrupt his preparation and send him to another altar. They would lock the sacristy door when he wanted to say Mass. Of course, St Philip got frustrated with all this. Once during Mass, he looked at the crucifix and complained: "Why don't you hear me, Jesus? I've asked you again and again to give me patience. Why is my soul still filled with thoughts of anger and impatience?"

He seemed to hear an answer: "Do you want patience, Philip? I will give it to you, if your heart desires it. You will earn it through these temptations of yours."

And God gave him the power to love these two gadflies. In fact, the story has a happy ending. One day, one of the monk sacristans started insulting Philip. The other monk began to feel remorse, and defended Philip.

He ended up punching Philip's tormentor, and Philip had to come to the rescue. Moved by this, both monks asked his forgiveness and returned to their monasteries.

Christ commands us to love others, especially those who torment us. And, like St Philip Neri, with God's grace we're capable of that.

Pray for those who persecute you

Jesus gives us a very practical way to love those who annoy or attack us. In the Gospel of Matthew 5:44, Jesus says: "Love your enemies, and pray for those who persecute you."

We all have people who persecute us. Perhaps it's unintentional, but they make our life very difficult. Maybe it's someone who speaks badly about me behind my back. Maybe it's someone who can't open his mouth without being biting and sarcastic. Maybe it's someone whom I trusted and then let me down. Maybe it's someone at work who is angling to get my job.

Whatever it is, the Lord is asking me to pray for that person. (And he doesn't mean to pray that this person gets a one-way ticket to his eternal reward.) What if I don't want to? Then ask for the grace to want to pray for that person.

And then get started. Maybe at first it will just be a simple Hail Mary prayed through clenched teeth. But don't give up; you're imitating Christ, who prayed even for those who crucified him.

When we receive Christ in the Eucharist today, let's beg him for the grace to love those who persecute us, especially by praying for them.
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Catechism Corner | To Understand the Eucharist (Part 2)

22. The celebration of the Eucharist in a particular Church is of utmost importance.

For the diocesan Bishop, the chief steward of the mysteries of God in the particular Church entrusted to his care, is the moderator, promoter, and guardian of the whole of its liturgical life.[33] In celebrations at which the Bishop presides, and especially in the celebration of the Eucharist led by the Bishop himself with the presbyterate, the deacons, and the people taking part, the mystery of the Church is revealed. For this reason, the solemn celebration of Masses of this sort must be an example for the entire diocese.

The Bishop should therefore be determined that the priests, the deacons, and the lay Christian faithful grasp ever more deeply the genuine meaning of the rites and liturgical texts, and thereby be led to an active and fruitful celebration of the Eucharist. To the same end, he should also be vigilant that the dignity of these celebrations be enhanced. In promoting this dignity, the beauty of the sacred place, of music, and of art should contribute as greatly as possible.

23. Moreover, in order that such a celebration may correspond more fully to the prescriptions and spirit of the sacred Liturgy, and also in order to increase its pastoral effectiveness, certain accommodations and adaptations are specified in this General Instruction and in the Order of Mass.

24. These adaptations consist for the most part in the choice of certain rites or texts, that is, of the chants, readings, prayers, explanations, and gestures which may respond better to the needs, preparation, and culture of the participants and which are entrusted to the priest celebrant., the priest must remember that he is the servant of the sacred Liturgy and that he himself is not permitted, on his own initiative, to add, to remove, or to change anything in the celebration of Mass.

25. In addition, certain adaptations are indicated in the proper place in the Missal and pertain respectively to the diocesan Bishop or to the Conference of Bishops, in accord with the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy [35] (cf. nos. 387, 388-393).

26. As for variations and the more substantial adaptations in view of the traditions and culture of peoples and regions, to be introduced in accordance with article 40 of the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy because of benefit or need, the norms set forth in the Instruction on the Roman Liturgy and Inculturation [36] and in nos. 395-399 are to be observed.

From: GENERAL INSTRUCTION OF THE ROMAN MISSAL
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Lesson from Fr. Paulus | Following Christ Means Transferring Our Security

My dear brothers and sisters, in today's Gospel, Luke 9:51-62, show us Jesus is traveling to Jerusalem for the last time. Along the way, he meets three men who have heard his call in their hearts.

These encounters teach us three tough lessons about what it means to follow Christ. 1) Following Christ Means Transferring Our Security; 2) Following Christ means persevering through difficulties; 3) following Christ means actively taking risks. This reflection just focusses on the first lesson.

To follow Christ, we must transfer our sense of security. We have to relocate it from ourselves to God. We have to unlearn the lesson we have been taught our whole life long, to rely only on ourselves for success and happiness. We have to learn to rely wholly upon God, plugging all our efforts in life into his grace.

This is what Jesus means when he says that "foxes have dens and birds of the sky have nests, but the Son of man has nowhere to rest his head." Christ is trustworthy, but he is not predictable.

When we follow him, we have to agree to go one step and one day at a time - he refuses to give us a full-life outline in advance. When we follow him, we have to stop pretending that we can keep our lives under control by our own efforts. By accepting Christ's friendship, we agree to follow him, to put our lives under his leadership.

Even foxes and birds have the security of their instincts and natural habitats, but Christians are on an unpredictable adventure. We simply don't know where God will lead us or what he may ask us to do. When we join Christ's army, we have to hand him a blank check.

Elisha's Example

The prophet Elisha gives us an eloquent example of this transferal of our security. When Elijah comes and calls him [Elisha] to become his successor as Israel's prophet, Elisha goes back home to tie up loose ends. And he really ties them up.

He was a farmer. His whole livelihood, his whole way of life, was linked to his farm. This was how he made his way in the world. Up until the time of his calling, this was the source of his security. But when God makes his will known, Elisha doesn't hesitate to break completely with that former way of life.

He doesn't just leave the farm behind. He actually slaughters his most important farm animals and burns his most precious tools - offering them all to the Lord as a sign that from now on he will depend on God for his livelihood and his happiness.

Not everyone is called to serve God in this way, by consecrating their lives completely to the Church. But all Christians are called to make a spiritual offering to God of our oxen and our plows, of those things, talents, or activities that we tend to depend on instead of God.

God can only fill our lives with the meaning and fruitfulness we long for if we put him first, trusting that he will lead us better than we can lead ourselves.

Keeping Christ First

This transfer of security can be misinterpreted. Through the centuries, some Christians have mistakenly used it as an excuse to be irresponsible. "God will take care of me," they say, "so I don't have to do anything." This is not true. Jesus calls us to put our hands to the plow, to do our part, to use our minds, talents, and opportunities intelligently and efficiently.

But he always wants us to keep him first, to follow his example and the teachings of the Church, because only he can give our lives dependable stability and security. Sometimes following the Ten Commandments is not the most convenient or comfortable alternative. In those moments, we have to trust that God knows what he is talking about.

Sometimes loving our neighbor as ourselves is a difficult, costly task. Those are the moments when we show that we are truly followers of Christ, not just superficial, hypocritical, cardboard-cut-out Christians. Sometimes forgiving our enemies makes our hearts bleed. Those are the times when we can follow Christ most closely, and hang with him on the cross.

We don't know ahead of time what path God will choose for us - we are not foxes or birds. But we do know where that path will lead us: closer and closer to Christ, closer and closer to the fulfillment, the interior peace, and the lasting happiness that we all long for and that we can't achieve by ourselves.

Dear brothers and sister, when Christ comes once again in Holy Communion to strengthen us for the journey, let's renew our promise to follow him, to anchor our hopes in him. Let's hand him the blank check of the rest of our lives. After all, his bank account is more secure than ours.  

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Catechism Corner | To Understand the Eucharist (Part 1)

Many Catholics found the mass celebrations boring and dry. It is really unfortunate that many of us have lost sight of what is really essential in the liturgical celebration. Why? One of the reasons is people do not understand the celebration of the Eucharist. So, for the next few weeks we try to understand the part of the Eucharist. Our hope is that by understanding the Eucharist, we celebrate the Eucharist with enthusiasm and joy and we will get the fruits of the Eucharistic.

The Importance and Dignity of the Eucharistic Celebration

16. The celebration of Mass, as the action of Christ and the People of God arrayed hierarchically, is the center of the whole Christian life for the Church both universal and local, as well as for each of the faithful individually. [22] In it is found the high point both of the action by which God sanctifies the world in Christ and of the worship that the human race offers to the Father, adoring him through Christ, the Son of God, in the Holy Spirit. [23] In it, moreover, during the course of the year, the mysteries of redemption are recalled so as in some way to be made present. [24] Furthermore, the other sacred actions and all the activities of the Christian life are bound up with it, flow from it, and are ordered to it. [25]

17. It is therefore of the greatest importance that the celebration of the Mass that is, the Lord's Supper be so arranged that the sacred ministers and the faithful taking part in it, according to the proper state of each, may derive from it more abundantly [26] those fruits for the sake of which Christ the Lord instituted the Eucharistic Sacrifice of his Body and Blood and entrusted it to the Church, his beloved Bride, as the memorial of his Passion and Resurrection. [27]

18. This will best be accomplished if, with due regard for the nature and the particular circumstances of each liturgical assembly, the entire celebration is planned in such a way that it leads to a conscious, active, and full participation of the faithful both in body and in mind, a participation burning with faith, hope, and charity, of the sort which is desired by the Church and demanded by the very nature of the celebration, and to which the Christian people have a right and duty by reason of their Baptism. [28]

19. Even if it is sometimes not possible to have the presence and active participation of the faithful, which bring out more plainly the ecclesial nature of the celebration, [29] the Eucharistic Celebration always retains its efficacy and dignity because it is the action of Christ and the Church, in which the priest fulfills his own principal office and always acts for the people's salvation.

It is therefore recommended that the priest celebrate the Eucharistic Sacrifice even daily, if possible.[30]

20. Because, however, the celebration of the Eucharist, like the entire Liturgy, is carried out through perceptible signs that nourish, strengthen, and express faith,[31] the utmost care must be taken to choose and to arrange those forms and elements set forth by the Church that, in view of the circumstances of the people and the place, will more effectively foster active and full participation and more properly respond to the spiritual needs of the faithful.

From: GENERAL INSTRUCTION OF THE ROMAN MISSAL
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Lesson from Fr. Paulus | The Eucharist Is the Thirst of God

I visited the chapel of the Missionaries of Charity several times. I saw there are two words over the crucifix: "I Thirst". As we know, Jesus spoke these words from the Cross, as he was about to die.

The words we speak at the hour of death have a special importance. There's a line in Shakespeare's play Richard II where one of the characters, John of Gaunt, says "He breathes truth, who breathes his words in pain."

Now of course everything Jesus ever said was the truth – He is the Truth – but his words from the Cross have a special meaning, since they're spoken in pain, since they reveal the depths of his heart.

And here, is it ok if I bring just one Latin expression into the reflection? It's a good one – actually it's vitally important. It's called the Communicatio Idiomatum: in English that means a linguistic interchange.

Maybe that sounds really abstract and unimportant. But it actually means that since in Jesus man and God are united in one person, whatever we say about Jesus in his humanity, we can also say about the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity.

This is life-changing! This is why we can say that God has loved with a human heart. This is why we can say that God died. And this why we can say that God thirsts for us.

We can ask ourselves, how is this thirst made manifest in my life? And the answer is the Eucharist, the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ, the real presence of God who wants to be with us so much that he transforms bread and wine into himself. The Eucharist is the thirst of God made visible.

The Most Important Visit

We like to visit people we love. And they're glad to see us too. What if we could visit God in the same way? The good news is that we can. The Blessed Sacrament is always here in the tabernacle. We believe that GOD is present here, waiting for us!

This has a profound impact on our lives. If we come to visit the Eucharist, we become filled with the conviction that God is near us. The Catechism of the Catholic Church puts it like this: "In his Eucharistic presence [Christ] remains mysteriously in our midst as the one who loved us and gave himself up for us, and he remains under signs that express and communicate this love (1380).

It doesn't take much – half an hour a week is a good place to start. Especially in our parish, we have daily adoration. You can join at least once a week.

The Eucharist is the thirst of God made visible. As we come forward to receive this gift of gifts, let's thank Christ and ask him to help us to love him more.

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Church Announcements

  1. MEDITATION - Every Tuesday at 7:00 PM, there is Christian meditation in the sanctuary. A small group meets to listen to a short teaching on meditation, and then meditate together for 25 minutes. Everyone is welcome to join. For more information, contact Daniel Lee, mobile and WhatsApp 6092 1111.
  2. Please note that in accordance with the Vaccine Pass Scheme (3rd stage), persons aged 12 and above who enter St. Anne's need to either have received the 3rd dose of the vaccine or have received the 2nd dose of the vaccine for not more than six months.Persons under 12 and holders of the Covid-19 Vaccination Medical Exemption Certificate are exempt from the aforementioned requirements. For further details, please refer to the Chancery Notice dated May 27th.
  3. Urgent repair of our parish building is needed. A total cost of HK$ 1.2 million is estimated for the renovation, details of which are posted at the bulletin board. A letter of invitation with donation form will be distributed to each family. All parishioners are called upon to generously support this important work to keep our church alive. [To date, total donation towards the Renovation Fund amounts to HK$ 1,295,200.60.] 
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Lesson from Fr. Paulus | Creation Tells Us About God

The mystery of the Most Holy Trinity is one the most difficult to explain. Pope Benedict's uses the analogy of electricity to explain the existence of God.

No one actually sees electricity, he explains, but we do see its effects, and so we know it exists - the light bulb goes on, the vacuum cleaner goes on, the alarm clock goes off. Just so, no one actually sees God directly, face to face, but we do see the works of God - the Church, the saints, and, of course, the beautiful, amazing world around us.

The Psalm 8 says: "When I see your heavens, the work of your fingers, the moon and stars that you set in place... What is man that you are mindful of him?" This expresses the sense of wonder that we have all experienced at one time or another in the face of the beauty of creation. Sometimes we are so awed by the magnificence of a sunset, or a moonrise, or an ocean view, that it almost overwhelms us.

The Book of Proverbs chapter 8 expresses the Wisdom of God is personified, and describes himself as pre-existing all the mysterious wonders of the visible world: the mountains and hills, the oceans and skies, the very foundations of the earth...

Before all these things came into existence, God's wisdom was already at work. The point the Proverb is making is that all those wonderful, beautiful things, as impressive as they are, are only a dim reflection of the wonder and beauty of God who made them.

Today as the Church turns our attention towards the inner nature of God himself, the blessed Trinity, she does so by turning our attention to the Trinity's glorious work of art: creation.

Pope Pius XII Praises Creation

As Catholics, we should be the biggest fans of nature's beauties.All of creation is for us!God has given it to us to teach us about himself, and for our sheer delight.All the recent popes have stressed this often overlooked or distorted aspect of our Catholic spirituality.

I would like to read one example, from a speech made by Pope Pius XII back in 1955. He was addressing a group of filmmakers, and as he discussed the power of movies as an art form, he gave special attention to documentaries that present the beauties of nature.

First, he summarized the Christian concept of nature as a mirror of God's wisdom: "Nature, which offers itself to the inspection of the attentive observer, reveals an inexhaustible wealth of goodness and beauty, reflecting back with transparent sincerity the infinite superabundance of the perfection and beauty of nature's Creator."

He went on to praise that beauty: "Sometimes one is enchanted and overcome by the majesty of towering mountains, at other times by the irresistible fury of the ocean tempest, the solitude of polar glaciers, the vast stretch of virgin forests, the melancholy of the desert sands, the loveliness of flowers, the limpid quality of water, the violent rush of waterfalls, the distinctive beauty of the Northern Lights... Greater astonishment and wealth of knowledge are offered by... the secrets of the animal kingdom... in forests and in inhospitable deserts, on rivers and in the depths of the sea. What a testimony to the richness and manifold variety of nature... to soothe, recreate and refresh the spirit."

Those are the words of a man who had discovered the real secret of nature - not the secret of how nature works, but the secret of what nature is for: to show us the smile and strength of our God.

Leading a Well-Balanced Life

We should thank God for the gift of creation, this first book of revelation that shows so much about God's power, beauty, and wisdom. But we should also make good use of it. The world of nature is meant to be the environment in which we live out our life's vocation, and that vocation involves the whole person, body and soul. That's why weaving contact with nature into the busy schedule of modern life is so important - it helps keep us balanced.

Lack of balance is one of the causes behind stress and depression, which, according to statistics, are among the most common negative effects of today's lifestyle. As human beings, we are meant to interact creatively with our environment - building houses and cities, making works of art, learning to use the earth's resources.

All those things are natural for us. But at the same time, we were not meant to isolate ourselves from our natural environment. We are not robots. We are not artificial. When we treat ourselves as if we were, stress and depression are the result.

We need to follow the rhythms of night and day, of the seasons. We need contact with earth, the sea, and the sky. That's how God made us. It helps us keep our balance - psychological, emotional, physical, and spiritual.

It doesn't have to be complicated and expensive. It can be as simple as family trips to the park, taking walks under the stars, as eating Sunday dinner together.

God's beautiful creation is a gift that he renews each day. Today, when we receive the Creator himself under the appearances of bread and wine, the "fruit of the earth and fruit of the vine," let's thank him for this gift, and let's promise to use it wisely. 

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Lector Schedule for July, 2022

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Vaccine Pass Scheme (3rd Stage) Applicable to Religious Premises

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Church Announcements

  1. The First Sunday Adoration will be held on 5 Jun (Sun) at 2:00-3:30 PM in our Church.
  2.  There will be a second collection in support of the Hong Kong Central Council of Catholic Laity in all parishes during the Pentecost Sunday Mass on both 4th and 5th June.  The collected funds will be used in support of our work of evangelization and lay formation.  
  3.  Please note that in accordance with the Vaccine Pass Scheme (3rd stage), persons aged 12 and above who enter St. Anne's need to either have received the 3rd dose of the vaccine or have received the 2nd dose of the vaccine for not more than six months.  Persons under 12 and holders of the Covid-19 Vaccination Medical Exemption Certificate are exempt from the aforementioned requirements. For further details, please refer to the Chancery Notice dated May 27th.
  4. BIBLE STUDY: Please note that the Bible Study on Friday, Jun 3rd has been rescheduled for Friday, Jun 10th from 7:00 - 8:30 PM. If you have any questions, please contact Margie on WhatsApp at 6801-1288 or email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. 
  5. MEDITATION - Every Tuesday at 7:00 PM, there is Christian meditation in the sanctuary. A small group meets to listen to a short teaching on meditation, and then meditate together for 25 minutes. Everyone is welcome to join. For more information, contact Daniel Lee, mobile and WhatsApp 6092 1111
  6. Urgent repair of our parish building is needed. A total cost of HK$1.2 million is estimated for the renovation, details of which are posted at the bulletin board. A letter of invitation with donation form will be distributed to each family. All parishioners are called upon to generously support this important work to keep our church alive.  [To date, total donation towards the Renovation Fund amounts to HK$ 1,028,068.]
  7. We are still missing one Lector's Workbook that normally sits in the racks at the back of the church. If you have borrowed one and it is still in your home, please return it for the use of other lectors.  Thank you for your attention to this matter.
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Lesson from Fr. Paulus | The Church’s Work: Reuniting Mankind

For the ancient Jews, Pentecost was one of the top three religious holidays. It had two important meanings.

First, on Pentecost, 50 days after the Passover (the word "Pentecost" comes from the Greek for "fifty"), the first fruits of the spring grain harvest were offered to God in a special sacrifice at the Temple. That may sound strange to people who live in a climate that has only one harvest each year. But in Palestine, they had two yearly harvests.

In this sense, it was highly appropriate that God sent the Holy Spirit to his Church in a public way on Pentecost. The Holy Spirit is the first fruit of the harvest of the New Covenant. The New Covenant is Christ giving us a new, redeemed life of grace. This life begins here on earth under the action of the Holy Spirit, but it will only reach its fulfillment - the full harvest - in heaven.

But there was a second meaning to the Jewish festival of Pentecost. It commemorated God giving Moses the Ten Commandments on Mt Sinai. Soon after the Israelites had miraculously escaped from Egypt, God sent them the Law, a guide for how they should live now that they were freed from slavery to Pharaoh.

In this sense too, it was appropriate that God sent his Church the Holy Spirit during that Festival. The Holy Spirit is the bond of unity between the Father and the Son. And the Law of the New Covenant, the Law of the Church, is unity. As St Paul says, the Church is a body with many parts, but it remains one, united body.

It is the Church's mission to reunite the human family that has been torn apart by sin. That's why all the visitors in Jerusalem heard the Apostle's words in their own languages. That's why as soon as the risen Jesus breathes on his Apostles; he instructs them to forgive sins.

ILLUSTRATION: Pope John Paul II's Funeral

Most of us (maybe) remember the events surrounding the death of Pope John Paul II in 2005. Those extraordinary few weeks gave us a brief glimpse of this work being done by the Holy Spirit through the Church, this work of gradually uniting all of mankind.

More than three thousand foreign journalists descended upon Rome as John Paul II was dying. Almost overnight hundreds of media broadcast tents sprang up on the outskirts of Vatican City.

Worldwide media gave around-the-clock coverage to viewers across the globe, of every age and ethnic group. During the week before the funeral, 2 million pilgrims paid their last respects in person to the pope as he lay in state.

Some of them waited in line for 24 hours to do so.

On the night before the funeral, more than 800,000 pilgrims spent the night praying and waiting in the streets and plazas of Rome.

Most of these were young people who had come from all five continents. All night long you could see them waiting in line for confession at makeshift, outdoor confessionals that Rome's priests had set up on doorsteps and under lamp posts.

The funeral itself was followed closely by millions via television and radio. The amount of world leaders who actually came to be physically present was extraordinary. It included four queens, five kings, seventy prime ministers or heads of government, and more than 100 other recognized dignitaries. Dozens of Orthodox, Protestant, and Jewish leaders joined them. It looked and sounded like the first Pentecost.

The whole series of events was like a living symbol of what God is doing, has been doing, and will continue to do through his Church until the end of time: making one family out of a divided world.

APPLICATION: Breaking Down Barriers

We are members of this Church, and so we have all benefited from its mission of unity - the Church has reached out to each of us and brought us into God's family. But as members, we are also responsible for carrying this work forward.

One way to do so is by breaking down barriers. Barriers are things like fear, misunderstanding, prejudice, jealously, envy, resentment, grudges. These are at the root of all the conflicts that threaten world peace. But all those large-scale conflicts can always be traced back to conflicts in individual hearts. If we learn to break down barriers in our own hearts, we will become more effective builders of unity in the world around us.

One of the barriers that come up most frequently in our daily lives is that of misunderstanding. This is also known as "lack of communication" or "miscommunication". An international business consulting firm did a study a few years ago about the most common obstacles to productivity.

They concluded that over 85% of problems in the business world stem from miscommunication. In family relationships, I would estimate that the percentage is even higher.

Jesus has given us the method for breaking down this ubiquitous barrier. Before allowing ourselves to pass judgment on someone, we should make an effort to see things from their perspective. Until we can express the other person's point of view even better than they can, we should refrain from passing judgment on it.

That's what Jesus did. Instead of passing judgment on sinful humanity, he came down from heaven and lived among us. He showed that he knew our perspective. And so, he was able to break down mankind's misunderstanding of God and open the way for a renewed relationship of trust.

Today we will receive Jesus in Holy Communion. When we do, let's promise that this week we will follow in his footsteps, doing our little part in this great Pentecost mission of uniting a divided world. 

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Chinese Sunday School 2021-2022

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Chinese Sunday School Application Form

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Lesson from Fr. Paulus | The Ascension Shows Christ as All-Powerful and All-Good

Before the very eyes of his closest followers, 40 days after his resurrection from the dead, Jesus Christ ascended body and soul into heaven. What exactly does this word "ascended" mean? As we know, every year on August 15, we celebrate a different feast: Mary's assumption into heaven. The Catechism tells us: Mary was assumed into heaven - was assumed.

There's a difference here: Christ ascends; Mary is assumed. Christ is God, the Second Person of the Holy Trinity become man. He is both fully God and fully man, a mystery so great that we cannot understand it completely.

Mary is immaculate (free from sin), and she is also the Mother of Christ and therefore properly honored as the Mother of God. But still, she is only human; she does not possess the divine nature, as Christ does. Therefore, she could not cause herself to ascend into heaven, as Christ did. Instead, God had to take her up into heaven, and so we say that she was assumed.

Christ's ascension, in other words, reveals his divinity, just as his resurrection did. Many people throughout salvation history have been raised or have raised others from the dead with the help of God's power. But only Christ rose from the dead on his own.

As true God, he holds power over life and death; he is omnipotent, all-powerful, "almighty" as we say each week in the Creed. And as true man, Jesus used that omnipotence to conquer death for our sake, to win our salvation, to redeem us. By bringing redeemed human nature up into heaven, he showed that along with being all-powerful, he is also all-good, all-loving.

Christ's ascension, then, reminds us that there is no limit to the confidence we can have in our God, because there is no limit to his power and goodness.

ILLUSTRATION: Forrest Gump Gets Something Right

In 1994 Hollywood released a popular film called "Forrest Gump," starring Tom Hanks. The film can be base at times but has some interesting insights. At one point in the story, when Forrest is feeling rejected by the people he loves, he gets an urge to just start running.

So, he walks out the door, jogs across the yard, and doesn't stop. In fact, when he gets to the ocean and runs out of road, he just turns around and runs the other way.

Throughout his run, he is videotaped on national news. Many people asked why he's running. What is the reason; "World peace? Women's rights?" But he simply answers, "I'm just running." Unintentionally, he sparks a huge national following.

The humorous and meaningful event that ends his journey takes place in the middle of a desert. Forrest stops, longhaired and long bearded, and turns around.

The handful of sweaty joggers who have followed him shush each other: "Quiet, he's goanna say something." "I'm kind a' tired," he says, "I think I'll go home now." Forrest walks through the small and silent crowd, and one of them yells after him, "Well, what are we supposed to do?!"

All people are looking for the answers to life's deepest questions. But since our thirst for truth and happiness is infinite (because that's how God made us), no finite worldly thing can satisfy us.

The characters in the film mindlessly following Tom Hanks' Gump personified that thirst for meaning. The fact that their hero abandons them without any explanation illustrates the inability of the things of this world (money, fame, politics, pleasure) to provide that meaning; eventually, we get tired of them; they let us down.

Only Christ is infinite goodness, power, and wisdom; only he is "the Way, Truth, and the Life" that we are searching for.

APPLICATION: Sharing the "God-News"

Today the Church is inviting us to reflect on this great mystery of our faith, Christ's ascension into heaven. As we do so, we should feel our confidence in God renewed and strengthened.

Jesus is ruling history right now. None of the difficulties, injustices, and problems that we face as individuals, families, and societies is outside of his knowledge or power.

He is at work in all things, even if it is sometimes hard for us to see exactly how. As today's Mass prayers remind us: "Christ, the mediator between God and man, judge of the world and Lord of all, has passed beyond our sight, not to abandon us but to be our hope" (Preface for Ascension I).

How can we express this hope, this confidence in God? By sharing it with others. Jesus didn't tell his followers that he was "one of the many ways, truths, and lives that are out there." And none of the other founders of world religions rose from the dead and ascended into heaven, and let their Resurrection and Ascension be witnessed by hundreds of followers.

Only Jesus Christ is all-powerful, all-knowing, and all-good. Only his mercy can heal hearts that have been wounded by sin and evil. Only his wisdom can untangle the moral knots that today's secular culture has tied in the minds of our neighbors. And we know Jesus Christ! We are the ones who can share the good news with those who don't!

When Jesus ascended into heaven, he didn't take the members of his Church with him. Instead, he entrusted his mission to their care: "Go out to the whole world...!" he said as he ascended.

That mission, to follow Christ and help others do the same, is still in full swing today. It's in our hands, and if to fulfill our part we do our best, surely God will do the rest.

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Lesson from Fr. Paulus | Christ’s Peace Is Lasting

Today we are brought back to the night of the Last Supper. We take our places with the Twelve Apostles, gathered around the sacred table with Christ, Our Lord.

We listen to his words, which are both mysterious and glorious. It is Christ's last meal with his closest followers. He wants to leave them a parting gift. What is it? What does Christ want to bequeath to his Apostles at the Last Supper?

Peace. "Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you." And what does he mean by peace? Not what we usually think. Jesus said, "Not as the world gives do I give it to you."

Christ's peace is lasting. It is interior peace of heart, which overflows into peace in families, in communities, in entire nations.

It is the peace that comes from knowing without any doubt whatsoever that we are loved by him. It is the peace that comes from knowing without any doubt whatsoever that whenever we offend him, he will always be ready to forgive us.

It is the peace that comes from knowing without any doubt whatsoever that we have a purpose in life, a mission - the very mission that Christ himself has given us: to spread his Kingdom. As today's Psalm puts it, to "make his way known upon earth; among all nations, his salvation."

Only because Christ has given us this peace, by giving us faith in his love, mercy, and mission, he can command us: "Do not let your hearts be troubled or afraid."

If our peace were based on anything else, for example popularity, wealth, comfort, or power, that peace would be unstable, because all those things are vulnerable to change. But Christ's peace isn't vulnerable, because it's based on his love, mercy, and mission, and those are everlasting.

Cardinal Van Thuan Converts His Guards

A few years ago, the Vietnamese Cardinal Joseph Xavier van Thuan [twahn] died in Rome, exiled from his homeland. Everyone who knew him during the last years of his life was impressed by his interior peace and joy.

He was someone who had found Christ's peace, the stability that comes from discovering and clinging to the deeper truths.

Before his exile, he was serving as Archbishop of Saigon. After the Vietnam War, when the communists took over both North and South Vietnam, he was arrested by the communist authorities.

He spent the next 13 years in prison, as the communists tried unsuccessfully to destroy the Catholic Church in that country. Nine of those years were spent in solitary confinement, in gruesome conditions and horrible privations. At first the authorities decided to have only two guards watch over the Archbishop, so as not to risk contaminating too many young soldiers with the Archbishop's Catholic ideas.

But after a month, Bishop van Thuan had made friends with both of them and taught them some Christian hymns and prayers. The officials were forced to rotate guards every week in order to avoid such embarrassing conversions.

But the rotation strategy backfired. The holy bishop radiated Christ's goodness so powerfully, even in the midst of his emotional and physical suffering, that he would win over his guards without even trying, sparking their curiosity and interest in his "secret" - that is, his faith.

In the end, they went back to assigning two permanent guards. It was better to lose two than twenty. That's the kind of interior strength and peace of mind that Christ wants to give us.

Sharing Christ's Peace

We need to be reminded that Christ's love, mercy, and mission can give us the interior peace we long for, that as our friendship with Christ grows, so will our experience of that peace. That's why this theme keeps coming up during the Easter season.

Even so, most of us probably don't experience this peace as much as we would like to. And yet, we do experience it.

When life's storms come, we know where to go. We know that Christ is here for us. We can turn to him in prayer. We can experience him in the Eucharist and in confession. We can run to his Mother, Mary, the Queen of Peace.

But so many people around us never experience this peace. They don't know where to go. They don't know that Christ's friendship is the root of peace. They have not tasted his love or mercy. They don't know that God created them for a mission.

If we who believe in Christ and have his friendship still find life so difficult, still struggle to experience the interior peace we are called to, imagine how much more difficult and turbulent it is for those who do not know Christ.

The good news is that we can help them. We can introduce them to Christ. Our prayers, words, example, and actions can bring them the message that Christ has brought to us.

Today, when Jesus comes to renew his commitment to us, let's renew our commitment to being messengers of his peace. After all, he's the one who told us: "Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God." (Mt 5:9)

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Lesson from Fr. Paulus | Love Is a Christian’s Name Tag

Imagine if God came to earth and told us: "Listen carefully. I'm going to tell you exactly what will fulfill you as a human person. I'm going to tell you exactly what I'm hoping for from you." Would we listen? I think so.

In today's gospel Jesus just did exactly that. First, He tells us that His suffering, death, and resurrection will be His glory. Why is that? Suffering, after all, doesn't seem that glorious.

It all comes back to love. As St. Therese of Lisieux put it, God thirsts for our love. And the suffering, death, and resurrection of Jesus brought us back to God. It made it possible for us to receive God's love and to love him in return in a new way.

So, after laying this foundation, Jesus tells his friends that he'll only be with them a little longer. He is saying that when they've received the power of the Holy Spirit, they will be able to go out and practice what they've seen him do. Their basic training is almost over.

What is Jesus asking them to do? To love one another as He loves them. He gives them a series of intensifiers here.

  • First, he tells them: "I give you a new commandment – Love one another." As Pope Benedict XVI said in his encyclical God is Love, love can be commanded because it has first been given. We are infinitely loved by God; therefore, we can be commanded to love others.
  • Then Jesus says: "As I have loved you, so you should also love one another." How does Jesus love us? To the end. He loves us to the point of laying down his life for us. And because of his power in us, we can love others in the same way.
  • Finally, Jesus tells us that love is the Christian's name tag. He says "This is how all will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another."

Love is meant to be our name tag as Christians. In the 3rd century, Tertullian said that when the Romans referred to the early Christians they often remarked "See how they love each other." This was how they recognized them as Christians.

And it's not just a love of good feelings. It's a love that brings us to lay down our lives for others, just as Jesus laid down his life for us. This is our great power; this is our great privilege.

God has come to earth and told us what will fulfill us. He has come to earth and told us what he's hoping for from us. "Love one another as I have loved you." Love is a Christian's name tag.

Running with Love

Brothers and sisters, you may know Rick Hoyt. He was born with severe brain damage that impeded him from speaking or using his arms and legs. The doctors told his father Dick Hoyt: "Forget Rick, put him away, put him in an institution, he's going to be a vegetable for the rest of his life."

But his father was determined to love him. He and Rick's mother took their son camping, cross country skiing, and swimming. They encouraged him to attend Boston University.

Then Rick decided he wanted to compete in triathlons. So, they fashioned a special boat and bicycle so they could swim and ride together in triathlons. Dick tows Rick in the boat as he swims, then carries his son to the bike — which has a combined weight of 400 pounds when both Hoyts are locked and loaded.

After they complete their bike ride, Dick carries Rick to the running chair and they tackle the run together. They've done 31 marathons and 252 triathlons together. Love is creative, love doesn't give up. No matter what the sacrifices, love keeps going.

An Ordinary thing with Extraordinary Love

Love is our name tag as Christians. How does our love become practical? Our love becomes practical by doing the little things with extraordinary love.

St. Teresa of Avila said that the devil wants to get us to focus on the past and on the future and forget about the present. But the present is the only time we can really love. It's vital to form the habit of asking the Holy Spirit to show us where he's asking us to love right now.

I'd like to propose one specific way that can help us to do one ordinary thing with extraordinary love. Prayer has a unique power. It may seem ordinary, but when we pray with love, its effectiveness is extraordinary.

So, this week, set aside 15 minutes to pray for someone else. We could pray a rosary for that person. We could go to daily Mass and offer it for that person. We could make a visit to the Blessed Sacrament for that person.

But whatever it is, stick to it. And then let that person know you've been praying for him. In the Eucharist we see how practical Christ's love for us it. He laid down his life for us in an outpouring of love, and he gives us the strength to follow his example.

"Love one another as I have loved you." Let's beg Jesus, really present in the sacrament of the Eucharist, to set our hearts on fire with love, and to give us the strength to love others as he has loved us: to the end. 

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