Christmas Schedule for Faith Formation:
Children's Liturgy of the Word, Parish School of Religion &
Confirmation Classes will be on break until Sunday, Jan
10th, 2021. Please enjoy the Christmas season with your
families. We would also like to thank
Children's Liturgy of the Word, Parish School of Religion &
Confirmation Classes will be on break until Sunday, Jan
10th, 2021. Please enjoy the Christmas season with your
families. We would also like to thank our teachers and
assistants who volunteer their time and share their faith
with our young parishioners. You serve your Church and
our young people week after week and we truly
appreciate your dedication. If you have the chance,
please thank these selfless volunteers. Paige Bailey,
Rebekah Bodine, Ron Bohrer, Troy Cronkhite, Hannah
Demster, Kaydie Demster, Jessica Jennerjohn, Steve
Lobdell, Janet McBride, Genevieve Vallentine & Jen
Velten. We also thank Jill Gold and Jan McEvoy who
have substituted for our program so far this year.
If you have questions about our St. Agnes Faith Formation
Program at St. Agnes Cathedral, please call the parish
office or contact Iris at ibounds@sta-cathedral.org. We
welcome new families and students. We have programs
for special needs students and for children who may need
to receive a sacrament as well. We have a wonderful
group of
From the Pastor’s Desk:
It seemed like only a few days ago we were celebrating Thanksgiving and now we are celebrating the 4th Sunday of Advent. It is important to remember what we are celebrating and why. In the newspaper a man wrote, “Christmas is about God coming in the flesh to save mankind from an eternal place in hell.” Our country has for the last 25-30 years sought to take Christ out of Christmas and using the Constitution to tell us we cannot sing songs about Jesus or have a Nativity scene on the courthouse lawn.
It seemed like only a few days ago we were celebrating Thanksgiving and now we are celebrating the 4th Sunday of Advent. It is important to remember what we are celebrating and why. In the newspaper a man wrote, “Christmas is about God coming in the flesh to save mankind from an eternal place in hell.” Our country has for the last 25-30 years sought to take Christ out of Christmas and using the Constitution to tell us we cannot sing songs about Jesus or have a Nativity scene on the courthouse lawn.
Why are some people so concerned that Christianity needs to be removed from the public eye? Could it be that the reason people want Jesus Christ out of everything is that they are afraid and offended by the Gospel? The Gospel says we are all sinners and that we need a savior. Christ is our savior who chose to be born, to live, and to die for you and me. On Christmas we celebrate the birth of the Son of God. If that upsets people, then they shouldn’t have a tree, or give presents, or have special food on the 25th of December, or send cards. They should go to work on Christmas Day while Christians celebrate. It is not “Happy Holidays” time; it is Christmas, the birthday of Christ. This year more than ever we need to celebrate our Savior’s birth into our world of pain, suffering and dying. Jesus is the ray of hope, joy and love.
Advent is a journey into the mystery of God, the reckless love of God, the spiritual reality of God, the Incarnation. Within all of us—male or female, young or old, atheist, Muslim, Jew, or Christian, there is something missing that makes the human being incomplete. We are searching and longing for that something. I believe that that something is being in the presence of God, the love of God, the very being of God.
As we celebrate His birth this Christmas Eve/Christmas Day, listen to the words of the heavenly hosts: “Glory to God in the highest and peace to his people on earth.” These are the words we now sing in the Gloria. Be at peace, receiving from the Lord the gift of a loving, trusting, and prayerful heart. Have a blessed and joyous Christmas.
LIVING NATIVITY
St. Agnes Parish will host a Living Nativity on Sunday, Dec. 20th between the hours of 9:00 AM- 12:00 PM. This will be held under the tent and parishioners are welcome to drive through the parking lot to view the Nativity.
St. Agnes Parish will host a Living Nativity on Sunday, Dec. 20th between the hours of 9:00 AM- 12:00 PM. This will be held under the tent and parishioners are welcome to drive through the parking lot to view the Nativity.
FEAST OF THE NATIVITY OF OUR LORD: CHRISTMAS 2020
Bishop Edward Rice will be in Cape Girardeau to celebrate the Christmas Masses in St. Mary of the Annunciation Cathedral. He will preside at Midnight Mass, the 8:30 a.m. Mass (Live-streamed on parish Facebook page) and the 10:30 a.m. Mass (broadcast on KZIM 960 AM) on Christmas Day
Bishop Edward Rice will be in Cape Girardeau to celebrate the Christmas Masses in St. Mary of the Annunciation Cathedral. He will preside at Midnight Mass, the 8:30 a.m. Mass (Live-streamed on parish Facebook page) and the 10:30 a.m. Mass (broadcast on KZIM 960 AM) on Christmas Day
OUR CHRISTMAS COLLECTION
How have priests helped you through difficult or stressful times? How have priests helped you grow closer to our Lord and to each other? How can you help prepare the men who will serve your parish in the years to come? What can we do to show our gratitude for the priests who have ministered to us? The Christmas collection will give us the opportunity to
How have priests helped you through difficult or stressful times? How have priests helped you grow closer to our Lord and to each other? How can you help prepare the men who will serve your parish in the years to come? What can we do to show our gratitude for the priests who have ministered to us? The Christmas collection will give us the opportunity to assist the diocese in funding the formation of our future priests – our seminarians – and meeting the needs of our retired diocesan priests. We ask you to generously support Those Clergy Who Have Served and Those Clergy Who Will Serve. Even though we have recently completed a diocesan endowment campaign for these needs, many of those pledges will not be completed for a few years, making this collection still necessary at this time.
From the Pastor’s Desk:
This weekend as we celebrate the Third Sunday of Advent it seems as if time is just flying. The last nine months have been unlike anything I have ever lived through, a truly hard time to minister to people. Priests have had to step outside the box, at times way outside to find ways to minister in our parishes. The Advent Season as well as we now look to the celebration of Christmas is so different. Nothing is like it has been in the past. It is not going to be the Christmas of the past. I wanted the Vietnamese youth to realize our traditions and ways we celebrate Christmas has been a long time in getting us to where we are today. So in my homily at their mass I gave them a calendar of Christmas.
332—Constantine the Great, decreed December 25, the birth
This weekend as we celebrate the Third Sunday of Advent it seems as if time is just flying. The last nine months have been unlike anything I have ever lived through, a truly hard time to minister to people. Priests have had to step outside the box, at times way outside to find ways to minister in our parishes. The Advent Season as well as we now look to the celebration of Christmas is so different. Nothing is like it has been in the past. It is not going to be the Christmas of the past. I wanted the Vietnamese youth to realize our traditions and ways we celebrate Christmas has been a long time in getting us to where we are today. So in my homily at their mass I gave them a calendar of Christmas.
332—Constantine the Great, decreed December 25, the birth of Jesus Christ
337—Pope Julius I, decreed December 25 as the date of the birth of Jesus Christ
1050---1st German Christmas Carol
1200---St. Francis, Nativity and 1st Christmas Carol in Italy
1539—Notre Dame in Paris displayed 1st public Christmas tree in France
1659—Puritans laws against Christmas celebrations in Massachusetts
1600--- The Dutch and English place stockings on the fireplace for gifts
1820—German immigrants in Pennsylvania, holiday trees
1822—Night before Christmas poem by Clement Moore
1828—Dr. Joel Poinsett introduces poinsettias to the US from Mexico
1840—Christmas Cards first in England
1856—Massachusetts is the last state to legalize Christmas
As immigrants came to the US from all over the world, they brought with them their traditions, music, foods and decorations of how they had celebrated Christmas and we today are heirs to all along with what we create as truly American. This 2020 Christmas will be somewhat different, perhaps we will create new traditions more centered around our immediate families. This would be a good opportunity to attend one of the nights of the Christmas Novena beginning on December 17th. Confessions will also be available at 6:30 each night of the Novena.
If you haven’t signed up to reserve your spot for the Christmas Masses please call the office at 831-3565 and do so! We want to make sure we are prepared so no one gets turned away.
JESSE TREE
There will be a small Jesse tree and baskets in
church this Advent suggesting items for the poor.
Please take a tag or two and buy the items
and return to the parish office. Again we will
be giving these to Crosslines, Grace United
Methodist Church and Sammy’s window. Thank
you. This is one way to make difference in the
lives of the poor.
There will be a small Jesse tree and baskets in
church this Advent suggesting items for the poor.
Please take a tag or two and buy the items
and return to the parish office. Again we will
be giving these to Crosslines, Grace United
Methodist Church and Sammy’s window. Thank
you. This is one way to make difference in the
lives of the poor.
CHRISTMAS FLOWERS
Donations are being accepted for Christmas Flowers. Please
include your name and the name of the person/ family your
donation is honoring.
Donations are being accepted for Christmas Flowers. Please
include your name and the name of the person/ family your
donation is honoring.
FEAST OF THE NATIVITY OF OUR LORD:
CHRISTMAS 2020
Bishop Edward Rice will be in Cape Girardeau to
celebrate the Christmas Masses in St. Mary of the
Annunciation Cathedral. He will preside at
Midnight Mass, the 8:30 a.m. Mass (Live-streamed
on parish Facebook page) and the 10:30 a.m. Mass
(broadcast on KZIM 960 AM) on Christmas Day
CHRISTMAS 2020
Bishop Edward Rice will be in Cape Girardeau to
celebrate the Christmas Masses in St. Mary of the
Annunciation Cathedral. He will preside at
Midnight Mass, the 8:30 a.m. Mass (Live-streamed
on parish Facebook page) and the 10:30 a.m. Mass
(broadcast on KZIM 960 AM) on Christmas Day
From the Pastor’s Desk:
This weekend we celebrate the beginning of the season of Advent. A time of waiting in which we are to prepare ourselves to welcome once again the comforting mystery of the Incarnation and the light of Christmas, it is important to reflect on Christian hope. If I have ever needed a season of hope, this year is at the top of the list. Our life changed drastically nine months ago with the shutdown of our economy, followed by a gradual opening of much of our world. But it has come at a great cost, over 251,500 deaths here in the United States. For those families life will never be the same. Advent is a time to look to God with a renewed hope
This weekend we celebrate the beginning of the season of Advent. A time of waiting in which we are to prepare ourselves to welcome once again the comforting mystery of the Incarnation and the light of Christmas, it is important to reflect on Christian hope. If I have ever needed a season of hope, this year is at the top of the list. Our life changed drastically nine months ago with the shutdown of our economy, followed by a gradual opening of much of our world. But it has come at a great cost, over 251,500 deaths here in the United States. For those families life will never be the same. Advent is a time to look to God with a renewed hope in the coming of Son, it is a hope that never disappoints. Optimism disappoints, but hope does not. In our troubled times that are violent, filled with anger, we have need of hope. We may feel discouraged because we are powerless and seems like there is nothing we can do. We cannot abandon our hope because God is beside us, God walks with us. God has not abandoned us, because God, with his love, walks with us. The birth of the Savior is the hope that pierces and ends violence and hatred. He brings joy, happiness and hope.
The decorating, the parties, the gifts, the cards we send, the special foods we bake; are all ways in which we may prepare to celebrate the birth of the Son of God. But this year these traditions need to be different, they need to be small family groups. As we have begun this new Church liturgical year, make the Eucharist a priority in your life, whether Sunday or one of the daily masses during the week. Only then can you/we put Christ first in your/our lives. Otherwise it is simply happy holidays, give me presents and get this silly tree out of the living room on December 26th. Without gathering around the Lord’s Table, without Christ in our lives on a regular basis, we really have nothing to celebrate on December 25th.
Just as our Advent prayers and Scripture readings are to prepare us for Christmas, so also should our Advent decorations lead us to the celebration of Christmas. The blue violet color of Advent can become the background for Christmas. Using ribbon or material shot through with gold can be enhanced in the Christmas season. The purples can be added to with golds or silvers. Greenery can be left unlit through Advent and then become aglow during the Christmas season. Regardless, as we celebrate Advent this year, we are called as God’s holy people to open our hearts, individually and communally to the reality of Jesus Christ.
In the Catholic Church before Vatican II, Christmas was the only time that Mass was allowed to be held at Midnight. This was because in the early church, it was believed that Jesus was born at midnight, although there has never been any proof of this! A lot of Churches have midnight services on Christmas Eve. This year St. Agnes Cathedral will have 3 Christmas Eve masses, followed by 3 Christmas day masses. It will enable more people to attend and still be social distanced. The parish has Advent Booklets to help you walk through the Season of Advent, and free 2021 Calendars, please pick them up at Church, chapel, or stop by the office.
THANK YOU!
YOU MADE A DIFFERENCE in the lives of the poor and vulnerable in our diocese by donating to the annual Second Collection for Catholic Charities. If you have not donated, please prayerfully consider a gift: Online donations may be made at www.ccsomo.org, or call (417) 720-4213, or mail your donation to Catholic Charities of Southern Missouri, 424 E. Monastery St., Springfield MO 65807. Thank you for your prayers and support.
YOU MADE A DIFFERENCE in the lives of the poor and vulnerable in our diocese by donating to the annual Second Collection for Catholic Charities. If you have not donated, please prayerfully consider a gift: Online donations may be made at www.ccsomo.org, or call (417) 720-4213, or mail your donation to Catholic Charities of Southern Missouri, 424 E. Monastery St., Springfield MO 65807. Thank you for your prayers and support.
JESSE TREE
There will be a small Jesse tree and baskets in church this Advent suggesting items for the poor. Please take a tog or two and buy the items and return to the parish office. Again we will be giving these to Crosslines, Grace United Methodist Church and Sammy’s window. Thank you. This is one way to make difference in the lives of the poor.
There will be a small Jesse tree and baskets in church this Advent suggesting items for the poor. Please take a tog or two and buy the items and return to the parish office. Again we will be giving these to Crosslines, Grace United Methodist Church and Sammy’s window. Thank you. This is one way to make difference in the lives of the poor.
~ Sr. Elizabeth Ann
Youth Activities
Just a few notes on upcoming events:
First Reconciliation retreat and celebration is Dec. 5th at 9:30 am in the Cathedral.
CLOW and PSR classes will resume on December 6th.
There will be a Youth Christmas Party and white elephant gift exchange on December 6th in the gym. Price of admission will be a hygiene item for donation to Sammy’s Window.
The Confirmation Retreat is scheduled for Dec. 13th at C.C.M. It will be an all day retreat. The cost for the retreat is $25. A permission slip is required. Questions: email ibounds@sta-cathedral or call the office 831-3565 ext. 107.
If you reserved an advent Kit and have not yet picked it up, please do so at the Parish office.
Just a few notes on upcoming events:
First Reconciliation retreat and celebration is Dec. 5th at 9:30 am in the Cathedral.
CLOW and PSR classes will resume on December 6th.
There will be a Youth Christmas Party and white elephant gift exchange on December 6th in the gym. Price of admission will be a hygiene item for donation to Sammy’s Window.
The Confirmation Retreat is scheduled for Dec. 13th at C.C.M. It will be an all day retreat. The cost for the retreat is $25. A permission slip is required. Questions: email ibounds@sta-cathedral or call the office 831-3565 ext. 107.
If you reserved an advent Kit and have not yet picked it up, please do so at the Parish office.
HOW YOUR MONEY FOR THE POOR HAS BEEN SPENT
In the past month, through the St Vincent de Paul organization and our parish, at least $1800 has been spent to help 10 households with utility payments. Generally each household is helped no more often than once every 6 months. 17 gas vouchers were given out, 120 bus passes were given to the Well of Life for people to use if they have a doctor or work related appt. One person was helped with lodging. This is in addition to at least $500 a month that is given both to Well of Life and Crosslines for food purchases.
In the past month, through the St Vincent de Paul organization and our parish, at least $1800 has been spent to help 10 households with utility payments. Generally each household is helped no more often than once every 6 months. 17 gas vouchers were given out, 120 bus passes were given to the Well of Life for people to use if they have a doctor or work related appt. One person was helped with lodging. This is in addition to at least $500 a month that is given both to Well of Life and Crosslines for food purchases. Having these two organizations help the poor in this way, takes the burden off our church; we wouldn’t have room for an inventory of food anyway. Also our parish provides funds for 40 laundry vouchers for the poor each month and another $200 to help with the Breaking Bread Project at Grace United Methodist Church where two evening meals a week are provided. I have been taking used winter clothes over there as they come in, and will be taking some stocking caps, gloves and socks to Connecting Grounds this week.
You will be seeing my usual requests for the poor during Advent. Please help if you are able. Thank you for your generosity.
From the Pastor’s Desk:
Why do we go to Church? Why do we give money in the collection basket? Why did I choose to be a priest, giving up the choice to have a family? The answers to these questions are found in Jesus and what He told the Apostles and Disciples as He ascended, “Go and make disciples.”
Why do we go to Church? Why do we give money in the collection basket? Why did I choose to be a priest, giving up the choice to have a family? The answers to these questions are found in Jesus and what He told the Apostles and Disciples as He ascended, “Go and make disciples.”
The Church exists to go and make disciples of Jesus Christ. Anything we do that does not fit into that purpose is outside our mission and is a waste of time and money. If people are in a relationship with Jesus, the church’s mission is to help them grow closer to Him. If people do not know Jesus or have grown away from Him, it is the Church’s mission to introduce or reintroduce them to Jesus Christ. For people who already are on the discipleship path, it means helping them to go deeper in their relationship with Jesus Christ.
The Acts of the Apostles describes the church as a movement that “turned the world upside down.” The Church exists to be a movement establishing the kingdom of God in people’s minds and hearts and to manifest itself concretely in our world. To be a movement, the church must move, never to be satisfied. When we think of church we so often think of buildings, but church is the people of God. St. Agnes Cathedral can be destroyed in a tornado, but unless every single member of parish was inside and were killed, the church of St. Agnes would continue. Since we are the church, the people of God, it means that the people have to move into a deeper relationship with Jesus Christ.
When we read the Gospel, we find people coming to Jesus because they wanted something from Him: they came to hear him speak, they came to be healed, and they came because family or friends needed his help. They were simply consumers, focused on their needs. Even the apostles didn’t follow Jesus because they looked to him or believed in his mission. He was a rabbi who taught with authority and they felt good about themselves and he was popular. They were focused on being on Jesus’s left and right when he was made king. Even at the Last Supper the Apostles were arguing about who was the greatest.
Today with the virus rampaging through our country the Church’s mission is much harder to live out. Here at St. Agnes we are working in the school as well as in the church to be as safe as possible with the wearing of masks as well as the sanitizing. We are also trying to the best of our abilities to meet the sacramental needs of the people in these uncertain times. Our parishes exist to help move people to develop their own personal relationship with Jesus Christ, taking ownership of their own faith, and then, out of that relationship, taking ownership of the mission of the church to go and make disciples. And all of this is strengthened by uniting around the Eucharistic table on Sundays and being fed with the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ.
Let us keep in prayer all those suffering from COVID-19.
ADVENT ACTIVITY KIT
Due to COVID 19 and being unable to meet as a parish for Advent Fair Activities or Breakfast With Santa etc, The Faith Formation program of St. Agnes Cathedral is offering an Advent Kit for families of
The Connecting Grounds Outreach Center
at 3000 W. Chestnut Expressway is looking for some help for the homeless:
Volunteers to hand out hand warmers, blankets, coffee, gloves and hats to the homeless between Oct. 25-Mar 31 in the evenings.
People to prepare and/or serve meals at the Outreach Center.
at 3000 W. Chestnut Expressway is looking for some help for the homeless:
Volunteers to hand out hand warmers, blankets, coffee, gloves and hats to the homeless between Oct. 25-Mar 31 in the evenings.
People to prepare and/or serve meals at the Outreach Center.
You can join the TCG Outreach Volunteers Facebook, or theconnectinggrounds.com to learn more.
Donate items such a gloves, bus passes, cups with lids, sleeping bags, hand warmers, socks, blankets and sweatshirts. Bring them to the church office. I will see that these are dropped off at the Center.
Thank you, Sr. Elizabeth Ann
MERCY IN A COVID TIME
COVID continues and continuing to follow the necessary guidelines for safety is sometimes wearying. I was thinking it would be a wholesome idea to add a new corporal/spiritual work of Mercy to your practices: Calling people whom we know are alone and staying at home.
COVID continues and continuing to follow the necessary guidelines for safety is sometimes wearying. I was thinking it would be a wholesome idea to add a new corporal/spiritual work of Mercy to your practices: Calling people whom we know are alone and staying at home. We have seen how small a world can become. You might set a goal of phoning one person a week and four different people a month. These could be relatives, or former co-workers or people you know from church. You may never know how much this means to the other person.
Sr. Elizabeth Ann
SECOND COLLECTION FOR CATHOLIC CHARITIES
Next Sunday, Nov. 22, is the annual Second Collection to support the work of Catholic Charities of Southern Missouri (CCSOMO). Thousands of individuals and families turn to CCSOMO every year for help. Due to COVID, the number of those CCSOMO is serving has increased dramatically-many have never before needed assistance.
Next Sunday, Nov. 22, is the annual Second Collection to support the work of Catholic Charities of Southern Missouri (CCSOMO). Thousands of individuals and families turn to CCSOMO every year for help. Due to COVID, the number of those CCSOMO is serving has increased dramatically-many have never before needed assistance.
CCSOMO responds to all with Christ-like compassion in the name of our entire Catholic community. Please be a partner this year by making a generous donation to the Second Collection in support of CCSOMO. This collection is an opportunity for Catholics throughout our diocese to unite to Reach Out, Provide Hope and Change Lives.
From the Pastor’s Desk:
Our government, along with the Supreme Court, seems to want to rewrite 3000 years of the Jewish/Christian understanding of marriage, and morality. What is morality? I was taught, granted 39 years ago, that morality is the rightness or wrongness of one’s actions. Within our Jewish/Christian background our morality is guided by the 10 Commandments, the Bible, and 2000 years of Christian teachings. Much of the Western World seems to want to rewrite the guiding principles of morality today.
Our government, along with the Supreme Court, seems to want to rewrite 3000 years of the Jewish/Christian understanding of marriage, and morality. What is morality? I was taught, granted 39 years ago, that morality is the rightness or wrongness of one’s actions. Within our Jewish/Christian background our morality is guided by the 10 Commandments, the Bible, and 2000 years of Christian teachings. Much of the Western World seems to want to rewrite the guiding principles of morality today.
Many human actions, which may be freely chosen, will always be unacceptable. These actions are referred to as “intrinsic evils” and are immoral regardless of circumstance. “I did not want to hurt their feelings, so I told a little white lie.” First of all, lies are not colored, according to the 8th Commandment it is either the truth or not. A person in a sad marriage without any physical contact, having physical relations with someone not their spouse is committing adultery. The list and the examples can go on endlessly. If we would but follow God’s 10 Commandments, the world would be a much better place.
Morality itself is, by its very nature, a code of black and white. Fixed moral values must always guide our decisions. If we begin to play the game of “gray” areas, the whole fabric of society begins to unravel. Robin Hood robbed from the rich and gave to the poor, but the 7th Commandment says, “do not steal”, it doesn’t say except from the rich. In the eyes of much of the world’s population Americans are all rich, therefore, it would be ok to come to our country and take whatever they wanted.
In rewriting what is marriage, our court system, and our governmental leaders are setting Christianity, as well as Judaism, and Islamism to the sideline and are stating they know better than the major world religions. When governments seek to trump what the major religions of the world believe, teach, and have held from their foundation, then those governments are seeking to take the role of religion itself. Study history, the human race never seems to learn from the past, thus we repeat the same mistakes.
It took Judaism and Christianity many centuries to come to the understanding that marriage needs to be between one man and one woman. We cannot allow modern society to form our conscience. Neither can we allow politicians or even courts of law to form our conscience. All of these change as the winds of time blow. For years our society has been driven by the news media, and Hollywood. It has become a society that centers around the “me, myself, and I” attitude. We have become a society that has spent our children’s future so we do not have to go without. We do not need everything shown on television, we do not need to continue to have the biggest, fastest, and newest of everything.
Pope Francis has been criticized with his stance of CIVIL UNION for gay couples, notice, that is not marriage. That is simply legal union giving them rights under the law. Civil union has nothing to do with the Sacrament of Matrimony. Stated by Canon Law, marriage takes place between a man and woman with the possibility of producing children. In France a couple must have a civil union before they can have a sacramental church marriage (separation of church and state). I have been asked if the Pope’s statement causes me concern, “No because for 4,000 years of human history marriage has been between men and women, a civil union is a legality for two people as I understand it.”
ADVENT ACTIVITY KIT
Due to COVID 19 and being unable to meet as a parish for Advent Fair Activities or Breakfast With Santa etc, The Faith Formation program of St. Agnes Cathedral is offering an Advent Kit for families of the parish. The kit will include supplies to make an advent wreath for your home. an Advent calendar, crafts, daily meditations and special activities to make the Advent season more meaningful for your families.
Due to COVID 19 and being unable to meet as a parish for Advent Fair Activities or Breakfast With Santa etc, The Faith Formation program of St. Agnes Cathedral is offering an Advent Kit for families of the parish. The kit will include supplies to make an advent wreath for your home. an Advent calendar, crafts, daily meditations and special activities to make the Advent season more meaningful for your families. This is also a great resource for all families, even grandparents who may wish to do something memorable with grandchildren. We do ask that you call the parish office 831-3565 to reserve a kit or email Iris at ibounds@sta-cathedral.org. Advent is fast approaching so we will have pickup Sunday, November 22nd through November 24th. Let's make the Advent season special even with the pandemic!