St. Julia Parish
  • Home
    • Sacraments >
      • Baptism
      • First Communion/Eucharist
      • Reconciliation
      • Confirmation
      • Marriage
      • Holy Orders
      • Sacrament of the Sick
    • Parish Ministries >
      • RCIA
      • Eucharistic Ministry
      • Lectors
      • Choir
      • Altar Servers
      • Hospitality Ministry
    • Parish Groups >
      • Catholic Women's League
      • St. Vincent de Paul Society
      • Knights of Columbus
    • History of St. Julia Parish
    • Other Links
    • Parish Social Activities
  • Newsletter
  • Bulletin
    • 2023 Bulletins
    • 2022 Bulletins
    • 2021 Bulletins
    • 2020 Bulletins
    • 2019 Bulletins
  • YouTube
  • Donate
  • Events
  • Blog
  • Contact Us
  • Covid-19

19th sunday in ordinary time

8/6/2021

 
​This weekend in our Gospel from John the discourse on the Bread of Life continues.  Who is the Bread of Life?  Jesus himself.  As the one “who came down from heaven,” Jesus revealed to us an extraordinary truth of our faith.  We are never alone, for God himself is with us, the second person of the Trinity, his Son Jesus Christ, all made possible through the power of the Holy Spirit.  Enough Theology 101 for now.
 
One of the beautiful hymns in our Catholic library of music is “I am the Bread of Life.”  Did you know that this hymn was written by Sister Suzanne Toolan of the Sisters of Mercy?  As Sister Suzanne reflected…
 
I wrote “I Am the Bread of Life” for a San Francisco archdiocesan event in 1964.  I was teaching high school at the time and wrote the song during my free period.  When the bell rang for the next class, I decided I didn’t like the music, so I tore it up and threw it in the wastepaper basket.  My classroom was next to the infirmary, where the girls who didn’t want to take tests or were otherwise unprepared for class went for a period or two until they were tracked down by an exasperated teacher.  As I left my classroom, a freshman girl came out of the infirmary and said, “What was that?  It was beautiful!”  I went back into my classroom, took the manuscript out of the basket and taped it together.  It has had a life of its own ever since.  “I Am the Bread of Life” began to appear in archdiocesan liturgies.  There were many purple ditto copies going around.  Not everyone liked the hymn.  One liturgist gave talks on why it shouldn’t work, saying: “It is not metric; its tessitura [vocal range] is too high.  Its tessitura is too low.” Others objected to it because they felt by placing the words of Jesus into the mouths of the assembly, those words were being attributed to the assembly.  Travelers to Europe and Asia in the 70s and 80s would tell me about hearing “I Am the Bread of Life” in different countries.  I have a copy of it in a Slavic language, in Korean and Spanish, but it has been sung in so many other languages.  It is included in hymnals of other Christian faith traditions.  I remember being introduced to a woman who was Episcopalian.  When she heard my name she said, “Oh, number 335!”—the number of the hymn in the Episcopal Hymnal.  I could never figure out how the hymn became popular.  I know in our Roman Catholic tradition it came at the beginning of our use of the vernacular, and we simply didn’t have much to sing in our own language.  But I also think its popularity stems from its message of resurrection, which is so strong in these words of Jesus.  We so need that message of hope.  I am always touched when people tell me that at the funeral of a mother, father or friend, these sung words of Jesus gave them consolation.  Then I know the hymn has done its work.  Indeed, my most vivid memory of this hymn is from my mother’s funeral in 1994, when it was sung by a young soprano as a solo during communion at St. Patrick’s Catholic Church in Rockville, Maryland.  That rising chorus moved me then. It moves me now.  (From SistersofMercy.org)
 
I have known this hymn all of my life, and it just may be one of the most well known and enduring hymns of our time.  It took a bit of searching, but I came across this rendition from the Notre Dame Folk Choir on YouTube.  It is sung with great joy…click below and enjoy!
 
I Am the Bread of Life - Notre Dame Folk Choir 
 
Thank you being a part of our community here at St. Julia.  May God continue to bless each of you and those that you love, and I look forward to you joining me for the celebration of Mass this weekend.
 
Fr. Greg
Picture

Comments are closed.

    Author

    From Our Pastor
    Fr. Gregory Schmidt

    Archives

    March 2023
    February 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    October 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019

    Categories

    All
    Abstinence
    Acsension Of The Lord
    Advent
    All Souls
    Ash Wednesday
    Baptism
    Christmas
    Christ The King
    Concomitance
    Confirmation
    CorpusChristi
    Covid 19
    Covid-19
    CWL
    Did You Know
    Divine Mercy
    Easter
    Epiphany
    Fasting
    First Communion
    God
    Good Shepherd
    Holy Spirit
    Holy Week
    Hope
    Jesus
    Joy
    Lent
    Liturgical Season
    Mary
    Mercy
    Mother Of God
    Mothers Day
    New Year's Day
    Palms
    Palm Sunday
    Pentecost
    Prayer
    Saints
    Theological Reflections
    Trinity

Picture
251 Glenridge Ave.
St. Catharines, ON ​L2T 3K2
​
Home
Sacraments
Events
Blog
​Contact
History
Donate
​Covid-19
©2021 St. Julia Parish
Tel: (905) 684-5603
​Fax: (905) 684-9479

stjuliaparishstc@gmail.com
  • Home
    • Sacraments >
      • Baptism
      • First Communion/Eucharist
      • Reconciliation
      • Confirmation
      • Marriage
      • Holy Orders
      • Sacrament of the Sick
    • Parish Ministries >
      • RCIA
      • Eucharistic Ministry
      • Lectors
      • Choir
      • Altar Servers
      • Hospitality Ministry
    • Parish Groups >
      • Catholic Women's League
      • St. Vincent de Paul Society
      • Knights of Columbus
    • History of St. Julia Parish
    • Other Links
    • Parish Social Activities
  • Newsletter
  • Bulletin
    • 2023 Bulletins
    • 2022 Bulletins
    • 2021 Bulletins
    • 2020 Bulletins
    • 2019 Bulletins
  • YouTube
  • Donate
  • Events
  • Blog
  • Contact Us
  • Covid-19