This Sunday copies of the Annual Report for Fiscal Year 2022 are available to you in the pamphlet rack of the front vestibule of the Main Church. There are two separate reports: one for the Parish Cemetery of St. Mary’s (1 page, double-sided) and one for the Parish Church (2 pages—one double-sided, one single). I encourage you to take these reports home so as to help you be adequately informed on the economic realities of the Parish.
It was Ralph Waldo Emerson who observed ruefully back in the 1800s:
“Can anyone remember when times were not hard and money not scarce?” These words seem particularly apropos to me as we consider the difficulties we face to keep our parish open in these our times.
Last year, I was able to present to you an Annual Report that showed our Parish Church revenues showing a slight surplus. This was due in large part to the strong, faithful giving of you the parishioners in spite of the unending disruptions caused by the COVID-19 Pandemic. When the chips were down your collective sacrificial giving carried the day.
This year’s Annual Report, however, shows a revenue short-fall of
$137,471.00. The shortfall was mitigated by us coming in lower on actual expenses to budget by
$24,342.00.
I am well aware of the heavy pressures on your household economies. I am not advocating a providentialist approach: I am not saying you should just give to the Church in amounts untethered to what you can actually afford to give and still meet all your other obligations. I am, however, asking you to please support your Parish at a stewardship-level of giving.
What do I mean by “stewardship-level giving”? I mean a commitment to supporting the Church out of your substance, not your surplus, in accordance with your means. I am not asking anyone to give money you don’t have: but I am asking everyone to give the Lord His portion out of what you do have.
Many Catholics seem to equate giving for Church support with giving to charity. Church support and charity are not the same. Charitable giving is an alms-deed and comes out of what is over and above our living expenses. We use some of what is left over for good works and relieving the wants of the neediest. It is a very important part of Christian living.
Church support, however, is distinct from charitable giving, even if the U.S. tax-code conflates it. It is part of our basic religious duties. It is a recognition that God is the 100% owner of all the worldly resources we have and we give Him back a portion in token of gratitude. This is what is expressed in the verses from the Book of Sirach which I often place in our weekly Stewardship column:
Glorify the Lord generously, and do not stint the first fruits of your hands. With every gift show a cheerful face, and dedicate your tithe with gladness. Give to the Most High as He has given, and as generously as your hand has found. For the LORD is the One who repays, and He will repay you sevenfold.—Sirach 35
I see the donor lists for this Parish. It moves me very deeply to see the level of sacrificial giving that is being made in so many of our households. It is a testament to your own personal faith and to your love for God that you make such sacrifices.
I want to use this occasion of the Annual Report to say thank-you to all who given to the support of this parish of Mary Immaculate of Lourdes in the last Fiscal Year. May God bless you for the sincerity of your gifts and sustain you in all your needs.
SAINT MARY'S CEMETERY
Our Annual Report for our Parish Cemetery of St. Mary’s shows a solid financial footing. The net income from FY 2022 was
$46,824.00. I want to thank our parishioner and Superintendent Ron Goguen and the members his family-run company Guardian Estate Management for taking such excellent care of St. Mary’s and for making sure that it retains its character as a Catholic Cemetery. It is now one decade since Guardian Estate Management took over the running of St. Mary’s. I want to commend also Margie Bibbo who wears two hats at the rectory, running both the parish and the cemetery office, and who always extends herself for families in their time of loss. Finally, I want to thank our Business Manager Sharon Hogan for the excellent financial reports and her work as the parish accountant, which gives us the clear picture of our financial standing as we try to “navigate the waters”.
Mary Immaculate of Lourdes is Newton and Needham Massachusetts' oldest Roman Catholic Parish. Founded as Saint Mary Parish in 1870, it was renamed "Mary Immaculate of Lourdes" when the new Church was dedicated on Thanksgiving Day, 1910. In addition to being a regular territorial parish of the Archdiocese of Boston it is also a "Mission Parish" since 2007 with a special apostolate for the Traditional Latin Mass (1962 Missal).
Mary Immaculate of Lourdes Church
270 Elliot Street
Newton, MA 02464
USA
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