Well, the new phones are in and operational. We are now accepting donations for the parish phones. ($6000)
One of the problems with having an ancient land-line system as they eventually stop working. The Phone system in the parish office and the rectory developed real problems last weekend. The phones would ring at all hours of the day and there would be no one calling. People would call and it would immediately go to voice mail, but then would not let you leave a message. We could call out, but if no one was by the phone, no one could call in. There are phones in the parish office, in the Financial Director's office, In the Parish small meeting office, in the Buildings and Grounds office, in the kitchen, in the living room, and in each bedroom and office in the priest's quarters. It is apparently repairable, but as expensive as a new system. So three companies have been through here this week, and we signed a contract yesterday. The New system should be installed on Thursday. Thanks for your patience. In the meantime this may be the easiest way to contact us: ![]() John Carillo, a seminarian for the Diocese of Oakland, begins his Pastoral Year at St. Edward this weekend. Here is his story from the Diocesan Website: My vocation story like any other vocation story, I believe, began in the heart and mind of God. It started long before I was born, long before I was made aware of it, and long before I accepted it. I was baptized John Alain Ilarina Carillo on June 29, 1979 just ten days after I was born in Kalibo, Aklan, Philippines. My parents Leodegario H. Carillo Jr. and Jesseline I. Carillo were proud and happy to have their third child of five baptized that day. They gave me a name that I consider to be God’s concrete manifestation of His enduring and incessant calling. It means “A cart carrying God’s goodness and beauty.” I believe that I am a “cart,” called to be an instrument of God’s goodness and beauty to others. This might sound odd, but it has always been a source of inspiration for me and a constant reminder of God’s love. It entails the mission, purpose, meaning and goal for my life. I entered the Seminary in the Philippines at the age of thirteen and stayed there for eleven years. It occurred to me, however, that during those long years I had become overly accustomed and dependent on the Seminary and its structures. It became my comfort zone and it overshadowed my purpose and goal. After a difficult discernment process, I decided to leave the Seminary and live a life of a “common” man immersed in the world. It was a painful decision and a humbling experience. But I believed that if I was to become Christ’s minister and witness for His people, I needed to understand them better by becoming one with them in their joys and sufferings, in their hopes and failures, in their wealth and poverty, in their belief and unbelief (but without forgetting who I am and what I am for). In my seven years outside the seminary working as a high school teacher, I found God continually renewing His call to me, and myself gradually claiming it. I am grateful to my family, friends, co-workers, and students who accompanied me and prayed with me in that time. Now, with a deeper insight and a more mature faith, I have said my “Yes” to God. Not because I am worthy of it, but rather, I believe I am better prepared to bear His goodness and beauty so that He may be glorified through me and my ministry. |
NewsNews and views from the Catholic Parish of St. Edward in Newark, CA Archives
April 2017
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