Welcome to
Saturday, September 04 2010  

Menu
·Home
·Current Events
·From the Pastor
·Gallery
·Groups
·History
·Holy Masses
·Office
·Our Patron
·Reverends
·Sacraments

Languages
Select Interface Language:


  
Our Patron

  • St. Jane Frances de Chantal was a devoted wife and mother before she became the cofounder with St. Francis de Sales of the Visitation nuns. Described as 'humble and meek', Jane offered her life to the service of others. Born in Dijon, France, she and her brother were raised by their father’s sister after the death of their mother.
  • At the age of twenty, she married Christophe de Rabuttin, Baron de Chantal. They had a son and three daughters; two others died in infancy. A deeply religious woman, she devoted herself to the care of her husband and children and those in need of her gentle care. Her husband was killed in 1601 in a hunting accident when Jane was 28. After his death, the grieving widow and her children went to live with her father-in-law, who is said to have been quite an unreasonable man. Jane learned to be extremely patient and dedicated herself to her children and to acts of charity.
  • In 1604, she met the gentle St. Francis de Sales, Bishop of Geneva. Both had seen visions of the other and rejoiced in their meeting. He became her spiritual advisor and close friend.
  • In 1610, after seeing to the material needs of her now independent children, she went to Annecy to become the Mother Superior to a small group of religious women that was to become the Sisters of the Visitation of St. Mary. The good women worked among the needy and took no solemn vows.
  • Jane was completely self-sacrificing, completely yielding to the will of God. She suffered illnesses and depression, but was always sustained by her deep faith. At the time of her death at 69 in 1641, there were 87 Visitandine convents. St. Jane Frances de Chantal was canonized by Pope Clement XII on July 16, 1767.
  
From the Pastor
THE NATIVITY OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY

WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 8TH
The Church has celebrated Mary's birth since at least the sixth century. A September birth was chosen because the Eastern Church begins its Church year with September. The September 8 date helped determine the date for the feast of the Immaculate Conception on December 8 (nine months earlier). Scripture does not give an account of Mary's birth. However, the apocryphal Protoevangelium of James fills in the gap. This work has no historical value, but it does reflect the development of Christian piety. According to this account, Anna and Joachim are infertile but pray for a child. They receive the promise of a child that will advance God's plan of salvation for the world. Such a story (like many biblical counterparts) stresses the special presence of God in Mary's life from the beginning.



PARISH PICNIC

CLOSING THE SUMMER SEZON WILL BE HELD ON SEPTEMBER 19 at 3:00 PM. All our parishioners are inviting to come and enjoy a day of fun and socializing.


REGISTRATION IN THE PARISH

All parishioners should be register. If you are not register we can not serve you by issuing testimonial letters in connection with sponsorship for sacraments. Please register at the rectory when you move into our parish. Notification of address changes (even within the parish) should also be made at the rectory.



Donate Food

Click to donate food

Info
  • St. Frances de Chantal R.C. Church
  • 1273 58th St
  • Brooklyn, NY 11219
  • E-mail

Redakcja: Anna Krajniak
Admin: Anna Krajniak, Contact: stfrancesrectory@gmail.com
Módl się i pracuj!
PHP-Nuke Copyright © 2004 by Francisco Burzi. This is free software, and you may redistribute it under the GPL. PHP-Nuke comes with absolutely no warranty, for details, see the license.
Page Generation: 0.10 Seconds