A message from Sr. Gabriel

Decorative ImageA sincere and heartfelt thanks to all those at St. Peter’s who prayed for my healing, who visited me, made inquiries and sent cards. God bless you and your families for your kindness to me. I am progressing well and hope to return once my treatments are completed.

United in prayer – Sr. Gabriel Mary Riddle, cps

Eucharistic Adoration Update

Decorative ImageEucharistic Adoration in the Church takes place Monday to Friday after the 8:00 AM Mass until 9:30 AM. Please note that due to security reasons the Church will be closed at 9:30 AM soon after the Blessed sacrament has been reposed.

St. Peter’s 125th Anniversary Celebration!

St. Peter's Church 125 anniversary celebration. September 18 & 19, 2021

All are Welcome!
Please join us for our Celebration at our Sunday Masses:

Saturday, September 18th, 2021

  • 5:00 pm Mass

Sunday, September 19th, 2021

  • 9:00 am and 11:15 am Mass
  • Discipleship Fair and Open House ~ 12 noon to 4:00 pm
  • Solemn Vespers in the Church ~ 4:00 pm

Limited Seating Due to Covid-19 ~ First Come, First Served

“Hear me all who understand. Nothing that enters one form outside can defile that person; but the things that come out from the heart are what defile” (Mark 7:15)

Decorative ImageIn our first reading this Sunday, from the Book of Deuteronomy, we hear the people of Israel asking what other nation has a god who lives so closely with them as the God of Israel dwells with them. They believed that by observing the commandments, they were God’s people and God dwelt with them. As the psalmist proclaims: “The one who does justice will live in the presence of the Lord.” As a sign that the Lord lived with them, the people of Israel kept the Ark of the Covenant, containing the Ten Commandments given them by God, in the Temple in Jerusalem.

For us as Christians, the idea that God dwells with us actually takes on a much greater significance. We believe that God sends His Holy Spirit to dwell in our hearts. We no longer have the idea that God dwells in a building. For the Christian, each human being is called to be a Temple of the Holy Spirit. This reality, that God desires to come and dwell within us, is why Jesus places such a significance on the interior life. In this Sunday’s Gospel, Jesus draws our attention to the reality that it is what is in a person’s heart that determines whether the Lord Himself is able to dwell within that heart. As many of the great spiritual writers of our tradition have written, God cannot dwell in a heart that is full of hatred, envy, pride and greed. The heart must be a place that is open and free to contain the Lord. Continue reading

“This teaching is difficult; who can accept it?” (John 6:60)

Decorative ImageThis Sunday, after six weeks of reading it at the Sunday Masses, we conclude the Bread of Life discourse from the Gospel of John. As it comes to a close, we hear the reaction of those who have heard Jesus say: “Very truly, I tell you, unless you eat of the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you.” For many of Jesus’ contemporary listeners, the idea of eating His flesh and drinking His blood is incomprehensible and they reject the idea completely. And yet, while in many other cases when He is misunderstood, He explains himself more clearly, on this matter Jesus does not back away from his insistence that those who wish to have eternal life must consume His Body and drink His Blood. Unable to accept this idea, many of His followers state that it is a teaching that it is difficult to accept. We are told at this point, that many of Jesus’ followers turned away and no longer followed Him. When He asks the twelve if they also wish to leave, they do not indicate that they understand, they simply state that they have nowhere else to go because in faith they affirm that He has the words of eternal life and they have “come to believe and know that [Jesus] is the Holy one of God.” Continue reading