Friday, November 15, 2013

11.17.13 & 11.24.13

Campus Ministry Bulletin
vol 22 no 13

November 17, 2013 - Thirty-Third Sunday in Ordinary Time
+ Malachi 3:19-20 + 2 THessalonians 3:7-12 + Luke 21:5-19 +
Masses this Sunday at 10:30am and 6:30pm

November 24, 2013 - Feast of Christ the King
+ 2 Samuel 5:1-3 + Collossians 1:12-20 + Luke 23:35-43 +
Due to Thanksgiving Break, no masses will be celebrated in the chapel during the week of Nov 24 - 30.


Mass Intentions:
Sunday11.1710:30am  
Sunday6:30pm
Monday11.18Noon+Sully Greaber, SAC
Tuesday11.194:30pm+Albert Roels, SAC
Wednesday  11.209:15pmStudent Intentions
Thursday11.21  4:30pm+Robert Beh, SAC     
Friday11.22Noon50th Anniversary of JFK Assassination   

This Week's Activities Include:
Monday: Music Ministry 6pm (Chapel)/College Bible Study 9pm (Gathering Space)
Tuesday: Bridge Bible Fellowship 9pm (Gathering Space)
Wednesday: Ambrosians for Peace and Justice 8pm (Lower Chapel)/Mass and More 9:15pm (Grotto/Chapel)

The Sacrament of Reconciliation (confession) is celebrated Wednesday from 8:30-9pm in the Reconciliation Room in the Chapel and by appointment.


Reasons to Be Grateful
Cicero, the first century B.C. Roman philosopher and statesman, is credited with saying, “a thankful heart is not only the greatest virtue, it is the mother of all virtues.” Through the centuries the wisdom of that ancient statement has been verified many times over. There have been numerous modern studies that give evidence to the fact that grateful people are also happy people. Grateful people are more apt to be generous with others. Grateful people have full social lives. Grateful people deal with the ups and downs of life in the most healthy way.  And one study even suggests that gratitude leads to better physical health. Need any more reason to be thankful?  For those who live and work with others, perhaps a very good reason to practice gratitude is that it also makes life better for the people around you. Grateful people are more likely to find fend off feelings of bitterness and discontent. In the academic world, the Thanksgiving holiday comes at a time in the semester when students, as well as faculty and staff, need a break. It is a gift for students at St. Ambrose to have a whole week off.  But more than a break from regular activity, it gives us an opportunity to be grateful to God and to nourish within our hearts the “mother of all virtues,” gratitude.  A safe and blessed Thanksgiving to all!    ---Fr. Chuck 


•Thanksgiving Break Schedule
Due to Thanksgiving break, there will be no Sunday or daily Masses offered from Sunday, Nov 24th through Saturday, Nov 30th.  Regular Mass schedule will resume with 6:30pm Mass on Sunday, Dec 1st, celebrating the Feast of our Patron St. Ambrose. Please have a safe and blessed thanksgiving!

•Typhoon Relief
Thanks to those who have contributed to the Campus Ministry efforts to raise funds for those most harshly affected by Typhoon Haiyan and the devastation in the Philippines. If you’d like to contribute to funds which will be forwarded to Catholic Relief Service please send contributions in campus mail to Campus Ministry (checks can be made out to “Campus Ministry Disaster Relief”).

•Advent Season Events
Sunday December 1 not only marks our liturgical celebration of the Feast of St. Ambrose and the presentation of the McMullen Award Ceremony at the 6:30pm mass, it also is the first day of Advent.  Advent not only is a season of preparation for Christmas, it acknowledges our need to be constantly vigilant for the Lord’s return, “waiting in joyful hope.”  Here are ways you can make it a joyful season of hope:

→Pick up a copy of the booklet of daily meditations by popular story-teller Jay Cormier.  They will soon be available in the chapel gathering space and in the window space by the Rogalski Center Post Office.

→Take advantage of opportunities for Daily Mass in Christ the King Chapel. Monday and Fridays at 12:00 pm. Tuesdays and Thursdays at 4:30pm, and Wednesday at 9:15pm.

→Take part in the Advent Communal Celebration of the Sacrament of Reconciliation, Wednesday December 4 at 8:30pm in Christ the King Chapel.  A short service of prayer is followed by the opportunity for individual confession to one of the priests who are present.

→Plan to take part in the Student Candlelight Mass preceding Midnight Breakfast on Tuesday Dec. 10 at 9:00pm.  In the chapel, filled with light from candles held by students, we celebrate the mystery, the joy,a and the hope Christ’s birth has brought to our world.  All are welcome to each of these events.

•Survey for the Extraordinary Synod on the Family 2014
Pope Francis has invited members of the church from dioceses throughout the world to complete a survey conveying your thoughts on the pastoral challenges of the family.  Responses will be used to prepare for the Extraordinary Synod on the Family. The Synod will convene in Rome in October 2014. For members of the Diocese of Davenport, Bishop Amos has placed the questionaire on the diocesan website: https://adobeformscentral.com/?f=tM6c3*iKjavNLe0TW4gZzA#.

•Feast of Ambrose Music Rehearsal
This Monday, November 18,  we will have a special rehearsal for music for the Feast of St. Ambrose Mass.  Please join us in the Chapel for rehearsal starting at 6:00pm!  All SAU students, faculty, and staff are invited to join with Music Ministry and the Chamber Singers in providing music for the liturgy.  Contact Chris Clow at ministry@sau.edu for more information.

•Service Trips
Interested in going on a service trip for Winter or Spring Break?  Contact Kelly Bush at bushkellya@sau.edu for more information or stop in Lower Chapel to pick up an application!

•Service on Saturday
Are you interested in service opportunities in our local community? There are still spots available for service this semester on November 23 from 2pm-4pm for visiting ministry at the Kahl Home and December 7 from 11am-1pm and 3pm-5pm to help with Gold Coast’s High Tea Fundraiser.  Contact koniuszykaitlync@sau.edu

•RCIA/Sacramental Preparation: The next session for those interested in becoming Catholic, receiving the Sacrament of Confirmation or just wanting to learn more about the church will continue on Sunday following the 10:30 am mass. There is still time to join. Contact Sheila, deluherysheilam@sau.edu.

Thursday, November 7, 2013

11.10.13

Campus Ministry Bulletin
vol 22 no 12

November 10, 2013 - Thirty-Second Sunday in Ordinary Time
+ 2 Maccabees 7:1-2, 9-14 + 2 Thessalonians 2:16 - 3:5 + Luke 20:27-38 +
Masses this Sunday at 9:00am, 10:30am and 6:30pm
Welcome Families!





Mass Intentions:

Sunday11.109:00am  

10:30am  Families of St. Ambrose   

6:30pm
Monday11.11Noon+Robert Aguilar
Tuesday11.124:30pm+Fr. Joe Rogers
Wednesday  11.139:15pmStudent Intentions
Thursday11.14  4:30pm+Adrienne Striegel Corsiglia    
Friday11.15Noon+Lester Starner, SAC

This Week's Activities Include:
Monday: Music Ministry 6pm (Chapel) / Brewed Awakening 8pm (Gathering Space) / College Bible Study 9pm (Gathering Space)
Tuesday: Bridge Bible Fellowship 9pm (Gathering Space)
Wednesday: Ambrosians for Peace and Justice 8pm (Lower Chapel)/Mass and More 9:15pm (Grotto/Chapel)

The Sacrament of Reconciliation (confession) is celebrated Wednesday from 8:30-9pm in the Reconciliation Room in the Chapel and by appointment.

BOUND TOGETHER
It is coincidental that we celebrate Family Weekend at SAU at a time when Pope Francis has asked input into an Extraordinary Synod on the Family. Family is important.  A comedian who takes a more cynical view once said, “Youth is that time in life when you blame all your troubles on your parents. Maturity comes when you learn that that everything is the fault of the younger generation.”  In truth, maturity comes not when we cast blame, but when we learn to take responsibility for our own actions and learn to be grateful for the sacrifices, support, and love that have enabled us to be the persons we are today.  While every family has its own narrative and it unique functions and dysfunctions, ideally “family” is the place where we learn essential messages about life, love, and service to others. In family we learn to love and be loved; to take and to give; to forgive and to be forgiven.  As we welcome the family members of our students to campus this weekend and honor the sacrifices made, we are reminded not only to bring those life lessons to our time together here with classmates, colleagues, and friends right here, but also to the broader family of human kind.  That’s such a timely thought as Family Weekend leads us directly into Hunger Week.  As Archbishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa stated upon reception of the 1987 Pacem in Terris Award in Lee Lohman Arena, “My humanity is bound up in yours, for we can only be human together.”  Thank God for families. They teach us to be human together.   Enjoy Family Weekend!  ---Fr. Chuck

•EXTRA MASS This Sunday – Family Weekend
Because of the increased Mass attendance on Family Weekend we will add a 9am Mass to our regular 10:30am and 6:30pm schedule this Sunday, November 10. Please join us in Christ the King Chapel!

•Survey for the Extraordinary Synod on the Family 2014
Pope Francis has invited members of the church from dioceses throughout the world to complete a survey conveying your thoughts on the pastoral challenges of the family.  Responses will be used to prepare for the Extraordinary Synod on the Family. The Synod will convene in Rome in October 2014. For members of the Diocese of Davenport, Bishop Amos has placed the questionaire on the diocesan website: https://adobeformscentral.com/?f=tM6c3*iKjavNLe0TW4gZzA#.

•Chad Pregracke
As part of the Sustainability series, on Wednesday, November 13, at 7pm in the Rogalski Center, Quad Cities native and founder of Living Lands and Waters, Chad Pregracke speaks about cleaning up America's waterways. He received an Honorary Doctorate of Public Service from St. Ambrose University in 2003. This event is free and open to the public. Chad has been chosen as one of 10 CNN Everyday Heroes - vote for him at CNNHeroes.com until Sunday, November 17!

•Geiger Lecture
Ed Martini, PhD, a recognized expert on the environmental and personal impact, both short and long term, of herbicides and chemicals employed in the cause of war will deliver the Geiger Lecture on Thursday, November 14 at 7pm in the Rogalski Center. Martini's research into the use of napalm and Agent Orange by United States military during the Vietnam War is documented in the book Agent Orange: History, Science, and the Politics of Uncertainty. Another book, Playing with Fire, examines the use of napalm during World War II, as well as in Vietnam.

•Brewed Awakening
Monday, Nov. 11: “The Nature of Truth” Come enjoy specialty coffees and teas as Theology Professor, Fr. Bud Grant, helps students to explore the concept of Truth, ideas about Nature, and relationships between the two. Join us for good coffee and great discussion! Meet in the Chapel Gathering Space at 8:00pm.

•Hunger Week
This week is Hunger Week is a week at St. Ambrose, dedicated to creating awareness around hunger issues and fundraising to help alleviate hunger, both locally and around the globe.  Start by donating one of your Sodexo meals.  On Wednesday, Nov. 6th and Thursday, Nov. 7th, sign up to donate one lunch (Monday, Nov. 11th lunch) to benefit Kids Against Hunger.
---Hunger Week activities include:
Monday:  Donate your Sodexo lunch today to benefit Kids Against Hunger.  Residence Hall can donation competition begins.
Tuesday: “Eat to Feed” Bake sale sponsored by Greenlife from 10:30-2:30 in the Beehive.  Proceeds go to Oxfam to purchase livestock
Wednesday:  Clean water Campaign.  Come see Chad Pregracke of Living Lands and Waters speak about cleaning America’s waterways. 7 p.m. in the ROGO Ballroom
Thursday:  Spoons Tournament sponsored by Phi Eta Sigma at 8 p.m. in the ROGO Food Court
Friday:  Hungry Games residence hall can collection ends at noon
Saturday:  Kids Against Hunger meal packaging event 2:45 p.m. to 4 p.m. in the ROGO Ballroom.
THE HUNGRY GAMES:  9 p.m. in the Beehive.  

•Service Trips
 Interested in going on a service trip for Winter or Spring Break?   We have a few new options this year.  Contact Kelly Bush at BushKellyA@sau.edu for more information or stop down to Lower Chapel to pick up an application!

•Service on Saturday
Spots are available for service on Nov. 23 from 2pm-4pm for visiting the Kahl Home. Contact Koniuszykaitlync@sau.edu or sign up on the bulletin board in the Lower Chapel!

•RCIA/Sacramental Preparation
The next session for those interested in becoming Catholic, receiving the Sacrament of Confirmation or just wanting to learn more about the church will continue on Sunday following the 10:30 am mass. There is still time to join. Contact Sheila, deluherysheilam@sau.edu.

Friday, November 1, 2013

11.3.13

Campus Ministry Bulletin
vol 22 no 11

November 3, 2013 - Thirty-First Sunday in Ordinary Time
+ Wisdom 11:22 - 12:2 + 2 Thessalonians 1:11 - 2:2 + Luke 19:1-10 +
Masses this Sunday at 10:30am and 6:30pm






Mass Intentions:

Sunday11.310:30am  +Elinore Picklo
Sunday6:30pm
Monday11.4Noon+Thomas Hughes
Tuesday11.54:30pm
Wednesday  11.69:15pmStudent Intentions
Thursday11.7  4:30pm+Carl Stahler, Sr.   
Friday11.8Noon+James McGrath   

This Week's Activities Include:
Monday: Music Ministry 6pm (Chapel)/College Bible Study 9pm (Gathering Space)
Tuesday: Bridge Bible Fellowship 9pm (Gathering Space)
Wednesday: Ambrosians for Peace and Justice 8pm (Lower Chapel)/Mass and More 9:15pm (Grotto/Chapel)

The Sacrament of Reconciliation (confession) is celebrated Wednesday from 8:30-9pm in the Reconciliation Room in the Chapel and by appointment.

THE IMMEASURABLE ACTION OF FAITH
The business world likes to see results.  They forecast, plan, calculate the cost and benefit ratios, examine demographics. If there is a good indication that there will be results, the plan goes forward. But if not, the project is scrapped. Faith inspires a different approach. Actions inspired by faith leave the assessment of results to God. To use an agricultural analogy, we plant seeds, water the plants and nurture fragile growth, but most often, we never see the harvest. Mahatma Ghandi, whose very life inspires us to serve others, expressed it this way:

“It's the action, not the fruit of the action, that's important. You have to do the right thing. It may not be in your power, may not be in your time, that there'll be any fruit.  But that doesn't mean you stop doing the right thing. You may never know what results come from your action. But if you do nothing, there will be no result.”   

This Sunday is Bee the Difference Day. Ambrosians, driven by a conviction about our Catholic, Diocesan mission and their own firm belief that they can make a difference, swarm our neighborhoods in service to others. Raking leaves and cleaning gutters might not seem world-altering to many, but such deeds might well be world-altering in the lives of the neighbor who is helped by them. Will we see the results?  Probably not. But tiny actions do lead to larger ones that we may well not have ever envisioned if we had not done the tiny ones first. Most of us will never see results from the service faith inspires us to do. Do it anyway. It’s the only way to make a difference.          
---Fr. Chuck 


•Central Standard Time begins on Sunday, November 3. Don’t forget to set your clocks back one hour before going to bed Saturday night.

•Remembering Our Deceased Loved Ones--In the Catholic Tradition November is the month of All Souls. We invite all Ambrosians to acknowledge your deceased loved ones by writing names on cards which will be available in the Gathering Space. Please drop the filled out cards in the basket provided in the Gathering Space and they will be placed before the altar and remembered at all of our masses throughout the month of November.

•BEE the Difference Day November 3
The annual day of service to those who live in the SAU neighborhood takes place today, Sunday November 3 from 1:00 - 5:00pm.  Contact Brady Curran, curranbradyr@sau.edu or Kelly Bush, bushkellya@sau.edu.

•Family Weekend Masses 
Because of the increased attendance at Family Weekend masses NEXT WEEKEND, November 10, please be reminded that mass will be celebrated at 9:00am, in addition to the regular 10:30am and 6:30pm times.

•Service Trips
Interested in going on a service trip for Winter or Spring Break?  It is not too early to start thinking about service trips!  We have a few new options this year.  Contact Kelly Bush at BushKellyA@sau.edu for more information or stop down to Lower Chapel to pick up an application!

•Hunger Week
Starting this week, keep your eye out around campus for signs regarding Hunger Week.  Hunger Week is a week at St. Ambrose, dedicated to creating awareness around hunger issues and fundraising to help alleviate hunger, both locally and around the globe.  Start by donating one of your Sodexo meals.  On Wednesday, Nov. 6th and Thursday, Nov. 7th, sign up to donate one lunch (Monday, Nov. 11th lunch) to benefit Kids Against Hunger.

•Adoration Holy Hour
Come and join for a time of prayer on Thursday, November 7 at 7:00pm in the Chapel.  Spend time in prayer before the Blessed Sacrament with Scripture, praise and worship music, and silence.  Contact Chris Clow at ministry@sau.edu to learn more or to help out!

•College Bible Study
College Bible Study is a group of college students who meet to reflect, study,  and pray with the scriptures for the upcoming Sunday. This prepares us better to hear the Word of God on Sunday.  So often the given scriptures speak to exactly what’s happening in our lives at this time. Come discover the power of God’s Word. Please join us Monday at 9:00 pm in the lower Chapel conference room.

•Music for the Feast of St. Ambrose Mass
Rehearsals start this Monday at 7pm in the Chapel for music for the Feast of St. Ambrose Mass.  All SAU students, faculty, and staff are invited to join with Music Ministry and Chamber Singers to help out with music for this special liturgy on Sunday, December 1 at 6:30pm.  If you are interested, please contact Chris Clow at ministry@sau.edu to learn more!

•Respect Life Workshop: The Dioceses of Davenport Respect Life Coordinator Jeanne Wonio, invites all Respect Life Representatives and interested people to a workshop and informational session on life issues. Nov. 16, St. Paul the Apostle Church, Davenport. Please contact ministry@sau.edu or go to: http://davenportdiocese.org/socialaction/socialactionlibrary/Respect%20Life%20Worshop%20Rev.%2011-16-2013.pdf

•Service on Saturday:  Spots are available for service on Nov. 2 from 9am-noon to maintain the prairie @ Nahant Marsh;  Nov. 9 from 8am-2pm for holiday decorating @ CASI;  &  Nov. 23 from 2pm-4pm for visiting the Kahl Home. Contact Koniuszykaitlync@sau.edu or sign up on the bulletin board in the Lower Chapel!

•RCIA/Sacramental Preparation: The next session for those interested in becoming Catholic, receiving the Sacrament of Confirmation or just wanting to learn more about the church will continue on Sunday following the 10:30 am mass. There is still time to join. Contact Sheila Deluhery, deluherysheilam@sau.edu.