May 2010

By Luke V.

Bishop Gladstone B. “Skip” Adams is the current Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Central New York.  Bishop Adams is the tenth Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Central New York and was consecrated in October of 2001. On Thursday May 27, Bishop Adams came to visit The Family Foundation School to talk with the student body for a few minutes as well as enjoy lunch with several Episcopal students.

The message the Bishop had for the student body was inspirational. Back in January of this year the devastating earthquake struck Haiti, with over 200,000 causalities and millions others being affected by the destruction. Bishop Jean Zache Duracin is the Episcopal Bishop of Haiti and after the earthquake he declared an early end to lent and ushered in the Easter season early. A man that often played the trumpet in the cathedral was notable to Bishop Adams because he only had one arm.  When Bishop Adams reached the Bishop of Haiti by phone shortly after the earthquake he inquired if the trumpet player had lived through the earthquake.  The bishop reported that the man had taken the Bishop’s call to celebrate Easter seriously and had begun walking through the streets of Haiti playing “Christ the Lord is Risen Today” on a trumpet. Through all the destruction the Good News of the Resurrection of Jesus was still pronounced in the suffering country of Haiti.

Bishop Adams also spent time with several of the Episcopal students of The Family Foundation School. Father Liz Groskoph, Deacon Barbara as well as the Bishop joined the students for lunch. This is not the first visit to FFS for Bishop. He has visited every so often to continue spreading the Good News to the students of The Family Foundation School. We need to ask ourselves, how are we spreading God’s Good News today? Are we helping out another person? Are we thanking God for the wonders he has given us? Are we telling others the Good News?

A Few Words

by admin on May 23, 2010

The Weekly Bulletin from the Catholic Community at The Family Foundation School

Pauca Verba (a few words)

Number 26 – May 23, 2010

People are quickly forgetting how to live together well. Saint Benedict understood: many people lived like beasts in his time. And today? In his rule for monks, Benedict lays out the basics. Do I follow these precepts or am I just going my own way?

  • Our actions everywhere are in God’s sight and are reported by angels at every hour.
  • We must be on guard against any base desire, because death is stationed near the gateway of pleasure.
  • A humble person does not love his/her own will.
  • A humble heart quickly embraces suffering.
  • A humble person is content with the lowest and most menial tasks.
  • A humble person is convinced in the heart that he/she is inferior to all.
  • A humble person controls his tongue.
  • A humble person speaks gently.
  • All the things that a person once dreaded doing, he/she will now begin to do out of love for Christ, good  habit and a delight in virtue (practiced goodness.)
  • We believe that the divine presence is everywhere.
  • Let us consider how we ought to believe in the presence of God and his angels.
  • Let us sing the psalms in such a way that our minds are in harmony with our voices.

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When asked about the people who dislike her husband, Michelle Obama answered:

“You’re not on this earth to make everyone love you. You do what you think is right and you treat other people well, and then you keep living your life.”

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We received an email from a Family School student who reflected on a life of bitterness – because the young man’s dear friend had died sadly and suddenly. It dawned on him that being angry and bitter was not the best response to his friend’s dying. He said: “When my best friend died, I blamed God and everyone else because I thought that anything good in my life would be taken away. I was wrong. Instead of focusing on how she died, I began focusing on how she lived, and I decided that I wanted to develop her kind of love and compassion to pass on to other people as she had passed this on to me.” WHOA!

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Some of us went to pray at the Shrine of Blessed Kateri Tekawitha at Fonda, New York earlier this week. We learned that Kateri had contracted smallpox as a girl and that while she survived the disease, it left her eyes damaged and her sight impaired.

Bishop Charles Chaput of Rapid City, South Dakota reflected on this aspect of Blessed Kateri’s life. She is a model for all of us. How wonderful it is to have the witness of the saints!

“Tekawitha means she who stumbles into things. Isn’t that a marvelous image of us? We bump into so many things, we struggle to know who we are and our place in the Church. But as God used Blessed Kateri’s poor gifts and made them something wonderful for God, so God uses us in our own stumbling and bumping into the things of life, and can do wonders. Although we stumble, we’re on the path that leads to God.”

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We will be together for Mass only five times more before graduation. It is no secret, but many of us who have been faithful to Mass while living here at The Family School, will never go to Mass again. Others will perhaps participate a few times and then drift away, surrendering to laziness or the world’s teachings which tickle our ears, Saint Paul writes. Pray for these souls and for ourselves, that we would be faithful to Christ who loves us from the cross. But some, even one or two, will endure  – living real Catholic-Christian lives – rooted in the Gospels, living the life of prayer and worship in the community of the Church – living compassionate, just, virtuous lives – like Katelyn (an alumna of this school) and her husband, Rob, who were married at Saint Matthew’s Church in Virginia Beach this weekend. They are eager to raise up a new family for Christ! Pray for them, and for ourselves, that we would know our own vocation – that to which God calls us.

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Almighty God,

in whom we live and move and have our being,

you have made us for yourself,

so that our hearts are restless until they rest in you;

grant us purity of heart and strength of purpose,

that no selfish passion may hinder us from knowing your will,

no weakness from doing it;

but that in your light we may see light clearly,

and in your service find our perfect freedom! Amen!

Prayer of Saint Augustine

A Few Words

May 16, 2010

The Bulletin of the Catholic Community at The Family Foundation School Pauca Verba (a few words) Number 25 – May 16, 2010 I hope we’re paying attention to these one-line teachings from the Rule of Saint Benedict. They can change our lives! Do not love quarrelling. Shun arrogance. Respect the older and love the younger. [...]

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A Few Words

May 13, 2010

The Bulletin of the Catholic Community at the Family Foundation School Pauca Verba (a few words) Number 24 – May 9, 2010 Here’s a continuation of the Rule of Saint Benedict. Interested in learning to live well – the gospel way? Read on: Yearn for everlasting life with holy desire. Day by day remind yourself [...]

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A Few Words

May 1, 2010

The Weekly Bulletin of the Catholic Community at The Family Foundation School Pauca Verba (a few words) Number 23 – May 2, 2010 Here’s a continuation of the Rule of Saint Benedict. Interested in learning to live well – the gospel way? Read on: Do not injure anyone, but bear injuries patiently. If people curse [...]

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