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La Chiesa del Santo Rosario Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary Catholic Church The Italian Parish of Indianapolis B envenuto! Welcome to Holy Rosary Church! Whether you are a lifelong parishioner, a first-time visitor to our parish, or someone in between, we are grateful you have joined us today. Founded in 1909 as the Italian Parish of Indianapolis, we continue to serve as the parish home of people of Italian heritage and also embrace all Catholics in union with Rome, including those devoted to the Traditional Latin Mass (Extraordinary Form) and the Anglican Usage of the Roman Rite. In the words of our founding pastor, Msgr. Marino Priori: “The church is the temple of the Lord, the gate of heaven. Come after a week of earthly cares, after so much toil, after so many sorrows, after so much pain. Rest your limbs. Regenerate your spirit at the sources of grace. Raise your mind to God; thank Him for the benefits received through His creation and in daily life; ask for strength so you can win all of life’s struggles, and be able to posses the fruits of redemption.” January 7, 2018 Ordinary Form: Epiphany of the Lord Extraordinary Form: Holy Family Anglican Use: Epiphany of the Lord Mailing address: 520 Stevens St. Indianapolis, IN 46203 Telephone number: 317-636-4478 Emergency number: 317-636-4478, ext. 3 E-mail address: [email protected] Website: www.holyrosaryindy.org Facebook: www.facebook.com/holyrosaryindy Twitter: https://twitter.com/holyrosaryindy Parish Staff and Leadership: The Rev. C. Ryan McCarthy, STD ................................. Pastor The Rev. Luke Reese ........................................Parochial vicar Elizabeth Welch ................................................Music Director David Walden .............................. Director of Communications Joseph LeMark ...................................Parish Council President Marcus Shutta .................................. Finance Council President

Transcript of La Chiesa del Santo Rosario - holyrosaryindy.orgholyrosaryindy.org/assets/bulletin-180107.pdf ·...

La Chiesa del Santo Rosario O u r L a d y o f t h e M o s t H o l y R o s a r y C a t h o l i c C h u r c h

The Italian Parish of Indianapolis

B envenuto! Welcome to Holy Rosary

Church! Whether you are a lifelong

parishioner, a first-time visitor to our

parish, or someone in between, we

are grateful you have joined us today.

Founded in 1909 as the Italian Parish of

Indianapolis, we continue to serve as

the parish home of people of Italian

heritage and also embrace all Catholics

in union with Rome, including those

devoted to the Traditional Latin Mass

(Extraordinary Form) and the Anglican

Usage of the Roman Rite.

In the words of our founding pastor,

Msgr. Marino Priori:

“The church is the temple of the

Lord, the gate of heaven. Come after a

week of earthly cares, after so much

toil, after so many sorrows, after so

much pain. Rest your limbs. Regenerate

your spirit at the sources of grace.

Raise your mind to God; thank Him for

the benefits received through His

creation and in daily life; ask for

strength so you can win all of life’s

struggles, and be able to posses the

fruits of redemption.”

January 7, 2018

Ordinary Form:

Epiphany of the Lord

Extraordinary Form:

Holy Family

Anglican Use:

Epiphany of the Lord

Mailing address: 520 Stevens St.

Indianapolis, IN 46203

Telephone number: 317-636-4478

Emergency number: 317-636-4478, ext. 3

E-mail address: [email protected]

Website: www.holyrosaryindy.org

Facebook: www.facebook.com/holyrosaryindy

Twitter: https://twitter.com/holyrosaryindy

Parish Staff and Leadership:

The Rev. C. Ryan McCarthy, STD ................................. Pastor

The Rev. Luke Reese ........................................ Parochial vicar

Elizabeth Welch ................................................Music Director

David Walden .............................. Director of Communications

Joseph LeMark ...................................Parish Council President

Marcus Shutta .................................. Finance Council President

2

Liturgical schedule for the week

Saturday, January 6, 2018

4:30 p.m. ........ OF (Sung) ....... Vigil of the Epiphany of the Lord S .................. Richard (Rick) Furgason (anniversary)

Sunday, January 7, 2018

8 a.m............... AU (Sung) ....... Epiphany of the Lord S ............................................... Pro populo

9:30 a.m. ........ OF (Sung) ....... Epiphany of the Lord S ............................................... Maximilian Vanderhulst

11:30 a.m. ....... EF (Sung) ........ Holy Family 2 ............................................................. Gus & Mary Ann Caito

Monday, January 8, 2018

7:30 a.m. ........ OF ................... Baptism of the Lord F ........................................... John Connolly Gaine and the

intentions of John & Carissa Gaine

5:45 p.m. ........ EF .................... Feria (Mass of 1st Sunday after Epiphany) 4 ............. Dustin Wise

6:30 p.m. — St. Monica Guild rosary and prayer for the return of fallen-away Catholics

Tuesday, January 9, 2018

7:30 a.m. ........ OF ................... Feria .......................................................................... Abby Reese

5:45 p.m. ........ EF .................... Feria (Mass of 1st Sunday after Epiphany) 4 ............. Anthony Navarra

Wednesday, January 10, 2018

7:30 a.m. ......... OF ................... Feria .......................................................................... Michael Bova

Noon............... EF .................... Feria (Mass of 1st Sunday after Epiphany) 4 ............. Donald Wise

12:30 p.m. — Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament, followed by Adoration

5:30 p.m. — Benediction

Thursday, January 11, 2018

7:30 a.m. ......... OF ................... Feria .......................................................................... Olivia Reese

9:30 a.m. — Mother’s Holy Hour

5:45 p.m. ........ EF .................... Feria (Mass of 1st Sunday after Epiphany) 4 ............. Ed Hofmeister

Friday, January 12, 2018

7:30 a.m. ........ OF ................... Feria .................................................................... John Connolly Gaine and the

intentions of John & Carissa Gaine

5:45 p.m. ........ EF .................... Feria (Mass of 1st Sunday after Epiphany) 4 ............. Frances Caito-Navarra

Saturday, January 13, 2018

10 a.m. ............ OF ................... St. Hilary of Poitiers Opt ............................................. Daryle Roth

4:30 p.m. ........ OF (Sung) ....... 2nd Sunday in Ordinary Time .................................... Angelo Venezia

Sunday, January 14, 2018

8 a.m............... AU (Sung) ....... 2nd Sunday after Epiphany ........................................ Pro populo

9:30 a.m. ........ OF (Sung) ....... 2nd Sunday in Ordinary Time .................................... David Bunte

11:30 a.m. ....... EF (Sung) ........ 2nd Sunday after Epiphany 2 ..................................... Clients & benefactors of the

Society of St. Vincent de Paul

OF: Ordinary Form EF: Extraordinary Form AU: Anglican Use (Ordinariate Form)

1: 1st-class feast 2: 2nd-class feast 3: 3rd-class feast Opt: Optional memorial M: Memorial F: Feast S: Solemnity

MASS INTENTIONS: The standard stipend for Masses in the Archdiocese of Indianapolis is $10. Requests should indicate whether people are living or de-

ceased, and must be typed or written legibly. We will attempt to honor requested dates, but cannot guarantee they will be available. We recommend such

requests be made at least eight months in advance. Except in the year of an individual’s death, no more than 12 Saturday evening/Sunday Masses may be

requested or offered for the repose of his/her soul in a calendar year. Intentions that cannot be offered here within a year of reception are, at the pastor’s

discretion, subject to being sent to the archdiocesan Mission Office. Make checks payable to Holy Rosary Church.

Our Lady, Queen of the Most Holy Rosary, pray for us!

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Announcements

We will take up a second collection this weekend

for the Little Sisters of the Poor. Some of the Sisters

will be here seeking support for their ministry to the

elderly poor. Continuing the work of St. Jeanne Jugan,

their mission is to offer the neediest elderly of every

race and religion a home where they will be welcomed

as Christ, cared for as family and accompanied with

dignity until God calls them to Himself. Please prayer-

fully consider what you can give. Your generosity will

be deeply appreciated. You can learn more on the web

at www.littlesistersofthepoorindianapolis.org.

All are invited to bring bottles of wine for the an-

nual Blessing of Wine at all Masses here Jan. 13-14.

Please make sure all bottles are clearly marked with

the owner’s name.

Our Lady of Guadalupe Prayer Group will meet

Wednesday, Jan. 10, at 7 p.m. in our first-floor class-

room. After reciting the rosary, then the group will

discuss which books they would like to study this

year. All women of the parish are invited to attend.

Please bring a snack to share and, if possible, the

book(s) you would like to study. For more informa-

tion, call Katie Willen at 317-815-4928.

If you still have a baby bottle from the Bottles for

Life campaign, please return it to the parish as soon

as possible. They may be placed in the collection bin

in the vestibule by the Shrine of Our Lady of Guada-

lupe.

Please pray for our sick and shut-in friends:

Debbie Barry, Archbishop-emeritus Daniel M.

Buechlein, John Caito, Verna Carr, Katie Cecil, Son

Hui Christensen, Sharon Conrad, Carol Craig, Nancy

Duffy, Paquita Fallas, Jody Gassert, Sam Gorsage,

Robert Hanaway, Josephine Lombardo, Amy Mauck,

Sidia Mora, Tony Navarra, Nathan Oliver, John

Pickett, Linda Sweatland, Phil Vierneisel, Sister Rita

Vukovic, Fr. James Wilmoth and Jenifer Zehner.

Lumen Christi Catholic School, 580 Stevens St.,

will host a special Open House for Holy Rosary pa-

rishioners on Sunday, Jan. 21, from 9 a.m. until

noon. Then, for the general public, they will host an-

other Open House for Pre-K through Grade 12 on

Thursday, Jan. 25. There will be a brief presentation

at 7 p.m. Then, from 7:15 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., visitors

will be able to tour the school and meet teachers. For

more information, call 317-632-3174.

The annual Indiana March for Life will be Mon-

day, Jan. 22. It begins with Mass at St. John the

Evangelist Church at noon. The march starts at the

Convention Center at 1:30 p.m., with a rally on the

Continued on page 7

ORDINARY FORM LECTORS 4:30 Saturday 9:30 Sunday

Jan. 6: Kurt Hostettler Jan. 7: Mark Matthews

Jan. 13: Diane Fricker Jan. 14: Tim Rushenberg

BY THE NUMBERS

Sunday Collections (includes Online Giving)

Regular collection, December 23-24 $ 15,214.02

Regular collection, December 30-31 15,514.00

Holy Day collection, Christmas 7,962.29

Altar Boys’ Pilgrimage to Rome 2,823.00

Society of St. Vincent de Paul 1,533.25

Miscellaneous 125.00

Parish operating expenses/week 12,312.61

Collection budgeted/week 8,658.65

Weekly collection surplus, Dec. 23-24 6,555.37

Weekly collection surplus, Dec. 30-31 6,855.35

Fiscal Year (began July 1)

Regular collections $ 284,240.87

Parish operating expenses 332,440.47

Collections budgeted 233,783.55

Total collections surplus 50,457.32

Confessions

Week of December 17 70

Week of December 24 51

Attendance

Daily Masses, week of December 17 558

Sunday Masses, December 23-24 560

Holy Day Masses, December 24-25 856

Daily Masses, week of December 24 n/a

Sunday Masses, December 30-31 583

Approximately 30% of the operating budget comes from

Italian Street Festival revenue and other fundraisers.

Please return your United Catholic Appeal pledge card. Our goal is to have 100 per-cent participation from our parishioners. Thus far, we have had only 38 percent of the cards returned. Spare pledge cards and envelopes are on the table near the back pews.

4

T his week we celebrate the Epiphany of the

Lord. The word “epiphany” in the original

Greek means “appearance or manifestation.” In

English, it is usually used as a sudden manifesta-

tion or realization of an idea or truth. For the

Church it is used as a reference to the revelation

of God Himself in the person of Jesus.

The original feast of the Epiphany is actually

older than Christmas. It was celebrated in the

Eastern Churches as a feast of the times in which

Christ revealed that He was divine. There were

four major events marked: the Nativity (or Birth

of Christ); the Visit of the Three Kings (Magi);

the Baptism of Christ by St. John the Baptist;

and the Wedding Feast of Cana (where Christ’s

first miracle took place). To this day in most of

the Eastern Orthodox Churches, they still cele-

brate their “Christmas” as the feast of the Epiph-

any (also called Theophany).

In the Western Latin Rite Churches, the Feast of

the Epiphany was broken up into three major

feasts that follow one another and last between 12

and 20 days in total. We begin with the celebra-

tion of the Nativity on December 25th. Twelve

days later we celebrate what we call Epiphany,

and then eight days after that we celebrate the

Baptism of the Lord. [These days don’t always

work out exactly in the United States because we

often move the Epiphany to a Sunday, and some-

times the Epiphany and Baptism are combined.]

In many countries the feast was extended even

longer to February 2nd, the Feast of the Presenta-

tion in the Temple, often called Candlemas.

Because we inherited the feast of the Epiphany

from the Eastern Churches, we formally remem-

ber all of the manifestations of Jesus’ divinity on

the Epiphany. However, the arrival of the Three

Kings has been the most emphasized aspect in

the Latin Rite for centuries, probably because of

the importance we in the Western Latin Rite

place on Christmas (the Birth of the Lord).

The feast of the Epiphany is a wonderful re-

Appunti del Parroco: a Message from the Pastor

The Epiphany of the Lord

FRIDAY, FEB. 2ND

Holy Rosary Catholic Church CYO Gymnasium • 580 Stevens Street

Doors Open 6 p.m. — Contest Begins 7 p.m.

1st place wins $3,000

2nd place: $1,500 3rd place: $750

Tickets $75/person — $750/table of 10

On sale after Masses or call 317-636-4478

Proceeds benefit the

Holy Rosary Courtyard Repair Project

Trivia Night is sponsored by:

FRIDAY, FEB. 2ND

Holy Rosary Catholic Church CYO Gymnasium • 580 Stevens Street

Doors Open 6 p.m. — Contest Begins 7 p.m.

1st place wins $3,000

2nd place: $1,500 3rd place: $750

Tickets $75/person — $750/table of 10

On sale after Masses or call 317-636-4478

Proceeds benefit the

Holy Rosary Courtyard Repair Project

Trivia Night is sponsored by:

‘I had an abortion years ago. How can God forgive me?’

We are here for you: contact 317-452-0054 or [email protected]. All calls are confidential. You are not alone.

minder to us that Christmas is a feast that merely starts on

the 25th of December. We should continue to celebrate

Christmas throughout all of its wonderful days, rejoicing

in the gift Christ gave and continuously gives to us in the

revelation of God’s Love.

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T he year opens in the name of the Mother of

God. Mother of God is the most important title

of Our Lady. But we might ask why we say Mother

of God, and not Mother of Jesus. In the past some

wanted to be content simply with the latter, but the

Church has declared that Mary is the Mother of God.

We should be grateful, because these words contain a

magnificent truth about God and about ourselves.

From the moment that our Lord became incarnate in

Mary, and for all time, he took on our humanity.

There is no longer God without man; the flesh Jesus

took from his Mother is our own, now and for all

eternity. To call Mary the Mother of God reminds us

of this: God is close to humanity,

even as a child is close to the

mother who bears him in her

womb.

The word mother (mater) is re-

lated to the word matter. In his

Mother, the God of heaven, the

infinite God, made himself small, he became matter,

not only to be with us but also to be like us. This is

the miracle, the great novelty! Man is no longer

alone; no more an orphan, but forever a child. The

year opens with this novelty. And we proclaim it by

saying: Mother of God! Ours is the joy of knowing

that our solitude has ended. It is the beauty of know-

ing that we are beloved children, of knowing that this

childhood of ours can never be taken away from us.

It is to see a reflection of ourselves in the frail and

infant God resting in his mother’s arms, and to real-

ize that humanity is precious and sacred to the Lord.

Henceforth, to serve human life is to serve God. All

life, from life in the mother’s womb to that of the

elderly, the suffering and the sick, and to that of the

troublesome and even repellent, is to be welcomed,

loved and helped.

Let us now be guided by today’s Gospel. Only one

thing is said about the Mother of God: “Mary kept all

these things, pondering them in her heart” (Lk 2:19).

She kept them. She simply kept; Mary does not

speak. The Gospel does not report a single word of

hers in the entire account of Christmas. Here too, the

Mother is one with her Son: Jesus is an “infant,” a

child “unable to speak.” The Word of God, who

“long ago spoke in many and various ways” (Heb 1:1),

now, in the “fullness of time” (Gal 4:4), is silent. The

God before whom all fall silent is himself a speech-

less child. His Majesty is without words; his mystery

of love is revealed in lowliness. This silence and

lowliness is the language of his kingship. His Mother

joins her Son and keeps these things in silence.

That silence tells us that, if we would “keep” our-

selves, we need silence. We need to remain silent as

we gaze upon the crib. Pondering the crib, we dis-

cover anew that we are loved; we savor the real

meaning of life. As we look on in silence, we let Je-

sus speak to our heart. His lowliness lays low our

pride; his poverty challenges our outward display; his

tender love touches our hardened hearts. To set aside

a moment of silence each day to be with God is to

“keep” our soul; it is to “keep” our freedom from be-

ing corroded by the banality of consumerism, the

blare of commercials, the stream of empty words and

the overpowering waves of empty chatter and loud

shouting.

The Gospel goes on to say that Mary kept all these

things, pondering them in her heart. What were these

things? They were joys and sorrows. On the one

hand, the birth of Jesus, the love of Joseph, the visit

of the shepherds, that radiant night. But on the other,

an uncertain future, homelessness “because there was

no place for them in the inn” (Lk 2:7), the desolation

of rejection, the disappointment of having to give

birth to Jesus in a stable. Hopes and worries, light

and darkness: all these things dwelt in the heart of

Mary. What did she do? She pondered them, that is

to say she dwelt on them, with God, in her heart. She

held nothing back; she locked nothing within out of

self-pity or resentment. Instead, she gave everything

over to God. That is how she “kept” those things. We

“keep” things when we hand them over: by not let-

ting our lives become prey to fear, distress or super-

stition, by not closing our hearts or trying to forget,

but by turning everything into a dialogue with God.

God, who keeps us in his heart, then comes to dwell

in our lives.

These, then, are the secrets of the Mother of God:

Continued on page 6

‘As we look on in silence, we let Jesus speak to our heart’ Pope Francis delivered the following homily during Mass for the Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God, on Jan. 1 of this

year at St. Peter’s Basilica in Vatican City.

‘To call Mary the Mother of God reminds

us of this: God is close to humanity,

even as a child is close to the mother

who bears him in her womb.’

6

This week’s offerings of interest from the Internet:

When does Christmas actually end?

http://www.ucatholic.com/blog/when-does-christmas-actually-end/

Fact or fiction? The Three Kings beyond the gospel story

https://churchpop.com/2016/12/14/what-became-of-the-magi-after-visiting-jesus-their-amazing-forgotten-story/

Did St. Thomas baptize the Wise Men?

https://aleteia.org/2017/12/26/did-st-thomas-the-apostle-baptize-the-three-wise-men

Is Christmas in December a pagan carryover?

https://dwightlongenecker.com/is-christmas-in-december-a-pagan-carryover/

Cincinnati seminary booming

http://wdtprs.com/blog/2017/12/a-seminary-in-cincinnati-with-positive-numbers-action-item

The worst sins? Someone else’s

https://www.thecatholicthing.org/2017/12/28/splinters-and-beams

— Find links to these articles and more on the parish Facebook page, www.facebook.com/holyrosaryindy —

Views and opinions expressed in the linked articles are strictly those of their authors and do not necessarily reflect those of

the pastor and staff of Holy Rosary Church, Archbishop Charles C. Thompson or anyone else connected to the Archdiocese

of Indianapolis.

FamilyCatechism.com Check it out!

You’ll be glad you did for all Eternity! Sponsored by Homeward Bound Properties Inc.

silently treasuring all things and bringing them to

God. And this took place, the Gospel concludes, in

her heart. The heart makes us look to the core of the

person, his or her affections and life. At the begin-

ning of the year, we too, as Christians on our pilgrim

way, feel the need to set out anew from the center, to

leave behind the burdens of the past and to start over

from the things that really matter. Today, we have

before us the point of departure: the Mother of God.

For Mary is what God wants us to be, what he wants

his Church to be: a Mother who is tender and lowly,

poor in material goods and rich in love, free of sin

and united to Jesus, keeping God in our hearts and

our neighbor in our lives. To set out anew, let us look

to our Mother. In her heart beats the heart of the

Church. Today’s feast tells us that if we want to go

forward, we need to turn back: to begin anew from

the crib, from the Mother who holds God in her arms.

Devotion to Mary is not spiritual etiquette; it is a

requirement of the Christian life. Looking to the

Mother, we are asked to leave behind all sorts of use-

less baggage and to rediscover what really matters.

The gift of the Mother, the gift of every mother and

every woman, is most precious for the Church, for

she too is mother and woman. While a man often ab-

stracts, affirms and imposes ideas, a woman, a

mother, knows how to “keep,” to put things together

in her heart, to give life. If our faith is not to be re-

duced merely to an idea or a doctrine, all of us need a

mother’s heart, one which knows how to keep the

tender love of God and to feel the heartbeat of all

around us. May the Mother, God’s finest human

creation, guard and keep this year, and bring the

peace of her Son to our hearts and to our world. And

as children, with simplicity, I invite you to greet her

as the Christians did at Ephesus in the presence of

their bishops: “Holy Mother of God!” Let us together

repeat three times, looking at her [turning to the

Statue of Our Lady beside the altar]: “Holy Mother

of God!”

‘As we look on in silence … ’ Continued from Page 5

7

IMPORTANT THINGS TO KNOW

ABOUT HOLY ROSARY CHURCH

Weddings:

Weddings can be scheduled only after meeting

with the pastor at least six months in advance of

the ceremony.

Baptisms:

Please contact Fr. McCarthy at the parish office or

[email protected] to schedule baptisms and

required baptismal instruction.

Joining the parish:

Parish Registration Forms can be found in the rotat-

ing rack in the vestibule. Completed forms can be

placed in the collection basket or mailed to the of-

fice.

Electronic donations:

Online Giving, a convenient way to donate elec-

tronically, makes it easy for you to fulfill your fi-

nancial commitments to the par-

ish even when you are unable to

attend Mass. You do not need to

write a check or have cash available at church. Giv-

ing electronically also helps the parish staff budget

more effectively. You can make one-time or ongo-

ing contributions, the timing and amount of which

can be changed at any time. Learn more by visiting

holyrosaryindy.org and clicking on the “Online

Giving” icon. Apps are available for your phone; go

to OLGapp.com and register with the parish.

Schools:

Lumen Christi Catholic School (PreK-12)

317-632-3174 580 Stevens St., Indianapolis, IN 46203

Catholic Schoolhouse South Indy

317-201-5815 717 S. East St., Indianapolis, IN 46203

Lumen Christi and Catholic Schoolhouse use facilities that are either owned by or adjacent to our church. Although their students often attend Mass here,

they are independent academic institutions which have no formal relationship

with our parish or the Archdiocese of Indianapolis.

Central Catholic School

317-783-7759 1155 E. Cameron St., Indianapolis, IN 46203

Roncalli High School

317-787-8277 3300 Prague Road, Indianapolis, IN 46227

Central Catholic and Roncalli are the officially designated archdiocesan

schools supported by Holy Rosary Parish.

ALTAR MEMORIAL CANDLES

This week, the candles on either side of our high

altar burn for:

+Michael A. Navarra

+Joseph Kevin Beeler

To have the deceased remembered for a week, send

$5 and his or her name to the parish office.

south steps of the Indiana State House at 2:30 p.m.

and a 4 p.m. Memorial for the Unborn with key-

note address by Abby Johnson, also at the State

House. A Youth Rally and Holy Hour at St. John’s

will be conducted from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.

The Knights of Columbus Msgr. Downey Council

3660 invite all to breakfast on Sunday, Jan. 14,

from 8 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. at Central Catholic

School’s cafeteria, 1155 Cameron St. Cost is $8 for

adults, $4 for children 5-10, free for those under 5.

Author Sue Ellen Browder will discuss how

feminism and being Pro-Life go hand-in-hand

on Wednesday, Jan. 17, from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. in

the Marian University Theater. For more informa-

tion, contact [email protected].

Dr. Ray Guarendi will present, “Standing

Strong as a Parent,” on Friday, Jan. 19, from 7

p.m. to 9 p.m. at St. Luke Catholic Church, Indian-

apolis. Learn more and register at www.stluke.org/

church-news/parents-standing-strong.

Indiana Lt. Gov. Suzanne Crouch will address the

Catholic Business Exchange on Friday, Jan. 19, at

the North Side Knights of Columbus. Mass begins

at 7 a.m. and the program will conclude by 9 a.m.

Cost, including breakfast, is $15 in advance for

members and $21 for non-members. To register,

visit www.catholicbusinessexchange.org.

The E6 Catholic Men’s Conference will be Feb.

24 from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. at East Central High

School Performing Arts Center near Cincinnati. It

features talks by Fr. Larry Richards and Dr. Ray

Guarendi, and Mass celebrated by our own

Archbishop Thompson. Register online at

www.e6catholicmensconference.com.

The Indiana Catholic Women’s Conference

will be March 10 at the Indiana Convention Center

downtown. Visit www.indianacatholicwomen.com

to register and learn more about the event.

Announcements Continued from Page 3

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Reaching out to promote, preserve and share inherited Italian values of religion, family, art,

history, music, food and camaraderie.

For membership information: Gus Raggio • [email protected] • 317-335-1062

Fecunditas Mulierum FertilityCareTM Center José A. Ocampo-Mora, FCP

CREIGHTON MODEL FertilityCareTM System Understand & Control Your Reproductive Health

Available in English and Spanish, in-person or long-distance

317.786.0520 [email protected]

Show this ad for invoice pricing on all in-stock new cars

750 U.S. 31 North, Greenwood • (317) 881-6791 • tomobriengreenwood.com

or talk to Holy Rosary parishioner Paul Neuendorf

Support the Parish • Advertise in the Bulletin

Call for rates and information

3 1 7 - 6 3 6 - 4 4 7 8

Serving the South Side, Downtown

and greater Indianapolis since 1896

1458 S. Meridian Street • Indianapolis, IN 46225

www.lauckfuneralhome.com

317-636-6655

Profits help to buy ultrasound machines for crisis pregnancy centers.

C O AFÉ ROSARI

Enjoy coffee, tea, hot chocolate, milk and juice, doughnuts from Long’s Bakery, fellowship and more!

Most Sundays in Priori Hall from 9 a.m.-2 p.m.

Michael Farrell 317-255-0062 NMLS # 168737

a local Catholic company with over 17 years experience

See our video at www.grandviewlending.com

Lending based on family values:

Honesty • Sincerity • Integrity

Purchase, refinance, conventional,

reverse, FHA, VA home loans NMLS # 124728

6107 South East Street • Indianapolis, IN 46227

317-787-8224 • www.ORileyFuneralHome.com

Chris Branson, Shawn Gudat, Mark Metz funeral directors