Parish Articles

Day: April 11, 2020

Holy Week Live Stream Photos

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_custom_heading text=”The photos below were taken by Craig Smith on Good Friday, Holy Saturday, and Easter Morning of 20220. His thinking was that in St. Ignatius’ 164 years, this season of Coronavirus isolation is a moment in our history that needs to be recorded too.” font_container=”tag:h2|font_size:30|text_align:left|color:%23b42525″ google_fonts=”font_family:Actor%3Aregular|font_style:400%20regular%3A400%3Anormal”][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column][vc_gallery interval=”5″ images=”21584,21585,21614,21615,21609,21611,21610,21612,21613,21616,21608,21583,21587,21588,21589,21590,21591,21592,21593,21594,21595,21596,21582,21607,21597,21598,21599,21600,21601,21602,21603,21604,21605,21606″][/vc_column][/vc_row]

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The Sixth Sunday of Easter

In yesterday’s Gospel, Jesus used the agricultural analogy of a vine to teach us that two lessons:  a)     There must be regular pruning of fruitless branches. b)    Branches that remain close to the vine will bear fruit.  The first lesson, that of pruning, hit home for me personally. I’m wearing a cap on

The Fifth Sunday of Easter

Greetings on a sunny afternoon. Fr. Brian was indisposed this week so we were unable to video our weekly chat of ‘The Thought.’ The buck got passed back to me and here I am taking my pulse on how I am feeling in our world at the moment… Continue on

The Sixth Sunday of Easter

In yesterday’s Gospel, Jesus used the agricultural analogy of a vine to teach us that two lessons:  a)     There must be regular pruning of fruitless branches. b)    Branches that remain close to the vine will bear fruit.  The first lesson, that of pruning, hit home for me personally. I’m wearing a cap on

The Fifth Sunday of Easter

Greetings on a sunny afternoon. Fr. Brian was indisposed this week so we were unable to video our weekly chat of ‘The Thought.’ The buck got passed back to me and here I am taking my pulse on how I am feeling in our world at the moment… Continue on

Become a Parishioner

As a Jesuit parish, we believe we are called to explore, discover, respect, protect, and enhance whatever is humane and graced in every person, and in every culture.