Important Message Regarding Closures and Cancellations due to Coronavirus

The Archdiocese of Detroit has announced the closure of all Catholic schools within the archdiocese on Friday, March 13 and Monday, March 16 due to the Coronavirus outbreak.

The St. Valentine Friday Fish Fry scheduled for Friday, March 13th has been cancelled due to virus concerns.  Please check back to see when the best fish fry in Redford Twp. will resume!

Message from the Archdiocese Regarding Coronavirus

As a Church, one of our sacred duties is to look after the health and safety of the community in our parishes and schools. Part of that duty is to help prevent and respond to infectious diseases that may be in the community.

In light of growing concerns about the coronavirus and its effects on those who have contracted the disease, we ask each of our parishes and schools to implement the following precautionary measures to help prevent the transmission of any virus.

FOR PARISHES:
  • Urge the faithful to stay home from Mass if they are experiencing any signs of illness. Ensure your community that in this cold/flu season, and especially in light of concerns about coronavirus, an individual does not commit any sin by avoiding Mass to protect others from the potential spread of illness.
  • For those who do attend Mass, we recommend congregations suspend the practice of shaking hands during the Sign of Peace or elsewhere, and of holding hands during the Our Father.
  • We recommend emptying (and cleaning) all holy water fonts.
  • We recommend our parishes suspend offering parishioners the Cup of the Most Precious Blood during Holy Eucharist, out of an abundance of caution. If this is a regular practice at your parish, it may help to remind the faithful that the Consecrated Host is the full Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity of Christ, meaning an individual does not need to receive from the Cup in order to achieve full Communion with Christ.
  • The Office of Christian Worship has provided prayer resources including a prayer for the sick, a prayer for an end to the coronavirus and information on Acts of Spiritual Communion for those unable to attend Mass
FOR SCHOOLS:
  • Update emergency plans and ensure all contact lists are up to date. If you do not already have a Pandemic Plan, we encourage you to develop one. To initiate or build upon an all-hazards plan, visit the Readiness and Emergency Management for Schools website.
  • Monitor daily attendance for flu-like illnesses and absences. Report to your local Health Department whenever you experience 10 percent or greater school absenteeism, including staff.
  • All sick employees and students should stay home. Plan ahead for extended school closures, staffing shortages, and the possibility of offering online school options.
  • Wipe down desks and surfaces daily.
  • Implement good hand hygiene practices. Instill handwashing importance. Place hand sanitizers in all classrooms and offices. Encourage children to bring in hand sanitizers.
  • Share information on your websites, social media, and newsletters. Suggestions include facts sheets and posters available from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
  • Monitor your social media channels and let the Archdiocese of Detroit know of unusual or questionable dialogue, as controlling rumors and false information will help a great deal with an effective response

Click here for more suggestions and information about the coronavirus from the CDC.

Please know that Archdiocese of Detroit has been, and will continue to, monitor news concerning the coronavirus. We are preparing for any potential impact on our parishes, schools and other ministries, and will follow any recommendations from local, state and federal officials.

Transfiguration Sunday

We are in the second Sunday of Lent and a spontaneous question that can arise in our mind today is why the scene of transfiguration, a scene which portrays the glory of Jesus is inserted during the time of Lent. We know very well that Lent mainly focuses on the passion and death of Jesus. The transfiguration scene is presented today to remove the fear and the despair of every believer. This presentation of the glory of Jesus urges us to live the remaining time of Lent with courage and conviction.

 The transfiguration is a special and privileged moment both for Jesus and his disciples. For Jesus, it was a moment of manifestation of his glory, divine confirmation of his status as the son of God and an affirmation of his mission. With all these extraordinary events confirming Jesus’s true identity, the one response demanded from us is to listen to him.

  The transfiguration beautifully portrays the effects of God-experience. God-experience reveals one’s true identity; Jesus heard the voice from the cloud confirming his sonship. Dear friends, God-experience is an experience of God’s love; Jesus experiences the love of Father in the voice, “This is my Son, the Beloved, with whom I am well pleased.” God-experience transforms; Jesus’ face shone like the sun and his clothes became bright as light. For the disciples, the divine experience was so awe-inspiring that they became ecstatic.

The divine experience was also so overwhelming that the disciples became terrified. Though the disciples preferred to remain on the top of the mountain, Jesus leads them down. Thus, Jesus offers us a lesson that contemplation and action should go hand and in hand. The experience of the Lord should lead us to corresponding action, and our actions should receive their vitality and energy from our God-experience in prayer.

 

The question for us: How am I experiencing the Lord in this Lent season?

 Fr. Kishore Babu Battu