Ash Wednesday Mass times:
St. Leo’s: 9am & 5:30pm
Blessed Sacrament: 8am, 12:05pm, and 6:00pm
Resurrection: 7am, 12:15pm, 5:45pm
St. Mary’s: 7am, 12:05pm, 5:15pm (English) 7pm (Spanish)
St. Leo’s: 9am & 5:30pm
Blessed Sacrament: 8am, 12:05pm, and 6:00pm
Resurrection: 7am, 12:15pm, 5:45pm
St. Mary’s: 7am, 12:05pm, 5:15pm (English) 7pm (Spanish)
Stations of the Cross
FRIDAYS:
February 16, 23, March 2, 9, 16, 23
St. Leo’s: 6:30pm
Blessed Sacrament: 7pm
Resurrection: 7pm
St.Mary’s: 12:05pm & 6pm (English) 7pm (Spanish)
FRIDAYS:
February 16, 23, March 2, 9, 16, 23
St. Leo’s: 6:30pm
Blessed Sacrament: 7pm
Resurrection: 7pm
St.Mary’s: 12:05pm & 6pm (English) 7pm (Spanish)
Join Armando this Lent for a six part series on Holy Week.
Project begins on Febraury 15th at 6:45pm-8:00pm Resurrection Parish 4130 Cannon Rd.Grand Island, NE 68803 Register at: https://form.jotform.com/80255944418158 More information about the project can be found at: https://www.facebook.com/truedevotion/ Lenten Brown Bag Talks
St. Mary’s Cathedral Square 12 -1 pm (Talks begin at 12:10 and end at approx. 12:50) Enjoy your lunch while being spiritually nourished. Coffee and water will be provided. (Free Will Offering) February 21 Bishop Emeritus Wm. Dendinger “Grief and Loss” February 28 Kathleen Hahn, J.C.L. “Marriage & Nullity: Facts and Fiction since Pope Francis” March 7 Fr. Scott Harter “The Last Words of Jesus from the Cross” March 14 Bishop Joseph Hanefeldt “The Seven Deadly Sins.. and Their Remedy” March 21 Fr. Jim Golka “Denying Oneself” |
Centering Prayer
Every Wednesday of Lent at 7:10am (except Ash Wednesday) we will meet in the Sanctuary of St. Leo's Church for Centering Prayer. Centering Prayer is a method of prayer, which prepares us to receive the gift of God’s presence, traditionally called contemplative prayer. It consists of responding to the Spirit of Christ by consenting to God’s presence and action within. It furthers the development of contemplative prayer by quieting our faculties to cooperate with the gift of God’s presence. Centering Prayer facilitates the movement from more active modes of prayer - verbal, mental or affective prayer - into a receptive prayer of resting in God. It emphasizes prayer as a personal relationship with God. At the same time, it is a discipline to foster and serve this relationship by a regular, daily practice of prayer. It is Trinitarian in its source, Christ-centered in its focus, and Ecclesial in its effects; that is, it builds communities of faith. |