Mardi Gras 2024

Shaun Wolchinsky • Feb 29, 2024

   In a heartening display of community spirit, the Knights of Columbus Mardi Gras fundraiser unfolded as a resounding success, uniting parishioners and the local community in an evening of celebration and generosity. A standout moment of the night was the announcement of Erick Asero as the grand prize winner—a well-deserved 1-week stay in vibrant New Orleans, complete with airfare for two.

A Night of Celebration and Giving: The event, adorned with Mardi Gras-themed decorations, lively music, and a palpable sense of joy, proved to be a memorable gathering for all. Parishioners and community members came together, showcasing the strength of unity and shared purpose.

What adds a special touch to this celebration is the noble cause behind it. The funds raised during the Mardi Gras fundraiser will be distributed between our beloved parish and the Military Outreach Mission in San Diego. This commitment to giving back underscores the profound impact such initiatives can have on the well-being of the community and the support of crucial causes.

A Collective Thank You: We extend our sincere appreciation to all the dedicated organizers, enthusiastic participants, and generous sponsors who played pivotal roles in making this event a resounding success. Your collective efforts have not only made the evening memorable but will also create a positive ripple effect, leaving a lasting impact on both our parish and the Military Outreach Mission.

 As we celebrate this success, let's not forget the lasting impact of our collective efforts. The funds raised will go on to support vital initiatives, reinforcing our commitment to making a positive difference in the lives of those within our community and beyond.

 The Knights of Columbus Mardi Gras fundraiser stands as a testament to the strength of community, compassion, and shared purpose. As we bask in the success of this event, let it serve as inspiration for future endeavors that continue to make our community a better place for all.

 Stay tuned for more community events and consider getting involved in future initiatives. Your participation and support contribute to the continued success of our parish and the meaningful work of organizations like the Military Outreach Mission. Together, we can make a lasting impact.


Thank you To All

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by David Mills Dorothy Day liked St. Thérèse of Lisieux when she first of heard of her, from a young mother in the next bed in the Bellevue Hospital maternity ward. She very much disliked the saint when she first read her. Day and her new daughter’s father were political radicals without any religious identity, though while he rejected religion, she intended to have Tamar Teresa baptized as soon as possible, over the strong objections of the man she loved, and two years later she would enter the Church herself. She knew of saints like St. Francis, St. Augustine and St. Teresa of Avila from reading William James’ book “Varieties of Religious Experience.” She liked St. Teresa with “her vigorous writing and her sense of humor.” I think she saw them, semi-secular leftist as she was then, as Big Statement Saints and liked that. She was a Big Statement kind of person herself. She would learn better, and learn it from the Little Flower. It’s a lesson to the rest of us both in recognizing the saints and correcting our misunderstanding of what holiness looks like. Meeting Thérèse Day tells the story in the preface to her book “Thérèse,” which she began writing 20 years later and published in 1960. The young mother told Day the saint’s story and gave her a medal of the Little Flower to pin on her daughter, which she thought superstitious but took anyway. She decided she would still name her child after the St. Teresa she already knew and make the new one her child’s “novice mistress, to train her in the spiritual life.” She didn’t think much of St. Thérèse when a couple years later she came to read her at her confessor’s instructions. She found “The Story of a Soul ” “colorless, monotonous, too small in fact for my notice.” She dismissed the saint’s turning the trials of everyday life into ways to serve God. “I was reading in my Daily Missal of saints stretched on the rack, burnt by flames, starving themselves in the desert, and so on,” she wrote. That was what holiness looked like. “Perhaps, I thought, the days of saints had passed.” The difference sanctity makes I don’t think Day then saw the difference sanctity makes. (Many converts don’t. I didn’t.) Holiness makes you bigger. Even the Small Statement saints, like St. Thérèse, grow very big. Massive, even. In “Letters to Malcolm,” C.S. Lewis wrote that his minister grandfather “looked forward to having some very interesting conversations with St. Paul when he got to heaven,” as if they were “two clerical gentlemen talking at ease in a club.” Lewis saw the mistake. “It never seemed to cross his mind that an encounter with St. Paul might be rather an overwhelming experience even for an Evangelical clergyman of good family. But when Dante saw the great apostles in heaven they affected him like mountains.” Being Protestant, Lewis didn’t like devotion to the saints, but he saw the reality the devotion points to. “At least they keep on reminding us that we are very small people compared with them. How much smaller before their Master?” Seeing the saint Dorothy Day came to have a deep and deeply formative devotion to St. Thérèse. She came to see the Little Flower as a mountain. Why didn’t she see her at first for who she is? As far as I can find, she never explains how she grew to love the saint she had thought “too small in fact for my notice.” I think, from reading her, especially her diaries, that she came to understand holiness differently. Many of us converts do, because we come with our own ideas of the human ideal, which forms our idea of the kind of people saints must be. I think most of us think saints must be Big Statement Catholics. Day was, as I said, a Big Statement kind of person. She came to the Church seeing the world as a radical who wanted to change it, and change it with great actions. She wanted the revolution. Naturally, she noticed the Church’s Big Statement people. She felt drawn to the people who might have been her, had they lived when she lived. “Joan of Arc leading an army fitted more into my concept of a saint,” she wrote, and I bet she thought St. Joan could work for the Anti-Imperialist League. They’re the ideal, she first thought. That’s what holiness must look like. But she later found that it didn’t always. It might look like this young French woman she had called “too small.” Day may be remembered as a modern St. Joan, a hero, a Big Statement Catholic. But she lived her life sacrificially serving the poor imitating St. Thérèse, because she learned that the Small Statement makes a Big Statement. This article comes to you from Our Sunday Visitor courtesy of your parish or diocese.
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Thank you, God, for the flowers in the fields, the birds of the air, our family and friends far and near. Open my eyes to see the beauty all around me and help me to carry the light and joy of the Risen Christ in my heart all yearlong. This content comes to you from Our Sunday Visitor courtesy of your parish or diocese.
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