St. Francis of Assisi
Parish Social Ministry
Service 4 Justice
Hello, and welcome! 
Jesus Christ is alive! 

I am pleased to introduce you to the St. Francis of Assisi Parish Social Ministry.

As Christians, we the Church, follow Christ in both word and deed.  The three constitutive elements of living faithful to Jesus' Gospel include: SCRIPTURE studies; SACRAMENTS celebrating His presence; and SERVICE charity for the good of our neighbors.

Our Parish Social Ministry is concerned with developing opportunities of service which both directly service the immediate needs of our community members, as well as, making a habit out of caring for the future generation of seekers of justice & advocacy.  By providing coordinated service opportunities and by teaching Catholic social thought, we witness the Gospel of Jesus Christ and become ever more united with Christ in the love of neighbor.  In this labor together united with Christ present in the Sunday Eucharist, we experience a glimpse of Heaven right here at St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church. 

We want justice for all people & we care for God's creation, our environment, because we believe that all people are holy, made in the image of God, and that people are both holy and social; when one suffers, we all suffer.  People have a basic right to life, food, shelter, health care, education and work, especially the poor and vulnerable.  Money, work and business exist to serve people, not the other way around.

Our Parish Social Ministry involves the work of many individuals, teams, committees & groups including those found at: 
www.stfrancisa2.com/socialministry/

We are proud of our collaborative work to help our neighbors, especially the poor & to promote justice through projects such as those we have listed at: 
www.stfrancisa2.com/socialministry/

Thanks to your involvement, and, especially the persons that volunteer to help coordinate each of these projects is made possible.  To GET  INVOLVED, please contact the parish Social Ministry Office 821-2121 & VISITwww.stfrancisa2.com/socialministry/

Christ provides for all of our needs according to His riches in glory, while, at the same time we serve one another in specific direct ways. (Also read: Isaiah 58 & Matthew 25).

Your brother in Christ, 
Scott Wright, BSW, M.Div., 
Parish Social Ministry Director
Read more about Scott Wright, the Parish Social Ministry Director.

Sound the Shofar 
The Liberty Bell, rung in July, 1776, to proclaim the Declaration of Independence, is inscribed with a biblical verse: "Proclaim Liberty throughout the Land unto all the Inhabitants Thereof" (Leviticus 25:10). The occasion for the biblical proclamation was the beginning of the Jubilee Year. But the biblical instrument of proclamation was not a bell but the horn of a ram. "You are to send the ram's horn throughout the land to sound a blast" (Lev. 25:9). Our word "Jubilee" is, in fact, derived from the Hebrew word "Jabel," meaning "ram's horn." 

The ram's horn is also called a "shofar." It is still sounded in Jewish worship on the High Holy Days or Days of Awe, Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. The startling and penetrating sound of the shofar has been described as a joyful sound, as a wild shout or battle cry, and as the wail of a person crying for mercy. 

In the Old Testament the shofar was blown to rally troops and terrify the enemy. (This use was revived in modern times during the Israeli Six-Day War when a bearded military chaplain parachuted with his troop, blowing the shofar as he descended.) The shofar was also sounded to warn of danger, to celebrate the anointing of a king, and to call the people to repentance. It was at the sound of seven shofars that the walls of Jericho collapsed. The sound of the shofar was heard when Yahweh descended in fire and smoke on Mount Sinai. It is believed that the shofar was sounded for the first time at the creation of the world and will sound for the last time at the resurrection of the dead. 

A Jewish writer has described the power of the shofar to make people "stop thinking about business, personal problems, important meetings, and what lunch will be" and to get them thinking "about improving their family life" or "about giving charity or helping other people who are in need." 

You are invited to inspect the shofar hanging on the wall of the Parish Social Ministry Office.
 
 


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To learn more about who we are as the church, read:
St. Francis Parish Pastoral Plan
 

St. Francis Parish Catholic Social Teaching

 

We want to acnowledge the valuable contributions made by our previous St. Francis Parish Directors of Social Ministry:
  • 2000 - The present:  Scott Wright.
  • 1999 - 2000  Adam Ruiz.
  • 1986 - 1999  Bill Flick.
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