First Penance and Solemn Communion Class of 2017.

Today was a very special and joyous day at Assumption parish in Perth Amboy, NJ as we welcome fifteen of our little parishioners and students of ACS who received their First Solemn Confession, and their Solemn Holy Communion. We congratulate them on this very important step in their religious life where they received these two sacraments. This is indeed a happy occasion for our parish community, school and for the children’s families. A sincere thank you to Sr. Yosaphata, Sr. Thomas, and Ms. Hucul (2nd grade teacher) who have served as their catechists. Special thanks go to our school’s FSA for preparing a delicious breakfast for our children and their families.

Ukrainian Cultural Festival in Perth Amboy, NJ

The 5th Annual Ukrainian Cultural Festival  is set for  Saturday, June 24, 2017 from 12 noon to 9:00 p.m. on the parish grounds at 686 Alta Vista Pl, Perth Amboy, NJ. With free admittance the festival will feature dazzling performances of traditional Ukrainian dances.  The 2:00 p.m. show will be performed by children from Assumption school and a group “Barvinok” from Bound Brook, NJ.  At 4:00 p.m. the show  will continue by groups  “ Chervona Kalyna”, “Veselka”, “Nadia” from Perth Amboy, NJ.  The live music band  “Anna Maria Entertainment”  will play outdoors  from 5-9 p.m. There will be delicious homemade Ukrainian food, Ukrainian beer, delicious desserts, vendors, a church tour , a beautiful baskets raffle and 50/50 money ruffle. Admission to the festival is FREE.   For vendors, advertisement of your business or more  information call 732-826-0767 or visit us at www.assumptioncatholicchurch.net

Palm Sunday Celebration and Easter Egg Hunt.

Assumption Parish in Perth Amboy, NJ held it’s annual Easter Egg Hunt on Palm Sunday, April 9, 2017. Over 60 children from the church joined in to find a reported 600 eggs that were prepared by men from the Holy Name Society. It was a blast! The children had a great time hunting for eggs filled with goodies such as coins and candies. From the looks of things, everyone had a great time, and not just the kids either, the parents and grandparents and families had fun just watching. Many thanks goes also to Fr. Taras Kchik, C.Ss.R., a Redemptorist Father from Canada for conducting the Lenten Mission this year.

GREAT FAST PASTORAL OF THE UKRAINIAN CATHOLIC HIERARCHY OF THE U.S.A.

TO OUR CLERGY, HIEROMONKS AND BROTHERS, RELIGIOUS SISTERS, SEMINARIANS AND BELOVED FAITHFUL

 “Zacchaeus, come down quickly, for today I must stay at your house.” (Lk. 19:5)

For many of us, on the Sunday when we hear the Gospel reading of the ‘vertically challenged’ tax collector, Zacchaeus it means one thing for certain: the liturgical season of Great Lent will be upon us before we know it!

The details of his encounter with Jesus are familiar to all of us.  Zacchaeus, a sinful and avaricious tax collector, despised by everyone, hears Jesus passing by.  He experiences a sudden desire to see him in the flesh and climbs up a tree in order to catch sight of him.  Jesus notices him perched on a branch and orders him to climb down and take him to his house where Jesus dines with him.  As a result, Zacchaeus undergoes a total conversion from his sinful ways.

In many ways, the story of Zacchaeus mirrors our own personal story because each of us sits, mired in the morass of our sins and temptations, much like Zacchaeus at his money table.  Unfortunately, many people today remain in this deplorable state for a lifetime, content to be so.

But the story of Zacchaeus demonstrates to us that it does not have to be this way.  We are not necessarily doomed to live out our lives in sin and despair.  Jesus Christ came to this earth as man and God, to change the direction of our lives and to make them better.

Jesus is always seeking us out, always calling us by name, but many times the concerns and comforts of our life stifle His voice from reaching our ears, much like Zacchaeus, whose short stature prevented him from seeing Jesus through the crowd of people.

But something wonderful and unexpected happens to Zacchaeus.  He suddenly feels a tug of desire at his heart.  He realizes that he must, at all costs, see Jesus for himself, up close.  And, leaving his personal dignity at his table, he makes a spectacle of himself as he clambers, like a child, up a tree and onto an overhanging branch in order catch a glimpse of Jesus, passing by.  And the rest, as they say, is history.

What was this strange desire that suddenly came over him?  And, more importantly, can we also experience this same feeling that would enable us to leave our sins at the side of the road and radically change our lives and devote them to Jesus, as well?  The answer is: yes, we can, but not alone!

Fortunately for us, the Church realizes that we need help in hearing the voice of Jesus, we need help in experiencing the desire to see Jesus, we need help in climbing the tree of our personal conversion, and we are helpless if we attempt this with our own limited powers alone.  This is why the Church, in her wisdom, offers us the gift of the holy forty days of Great Lent each year before the celebration of Our Lord’s Passion and Resurrection, as a divine aid in attaining personal conversion.

During Great Lent the Church presents us with a sure formula for achieving this goal: prayer, alms-giving and fasting.  During the time of Lent we are encouraged to be more devoted to our prayer life, through private meditation and by attending the beautiful and unique Lenten services celebrated in our parish churches.  We are also encouraged to pay special attention to our brothers and sisters around us, who may be suffering physical, emotional, or spiritual distress, and serve them in their needs.  And finally we are encouraged to fast, in order to attain humility through the taming of our physical appetites, our thoughts, our actions and especially our unruly tongue.

Standing on these three tall pillars of Great Lent, we will be able to rise above the crowd just like Zacchaeus climbing the tree.  Like Zacchaeus, nothing will be able to impede our vision, nothing will be able to block our hearing.  Zacchaeus shows us that, when we take the first, sometimes difficult step towards Jesus, He will always quickly hasten to us, always beckon us, always embrace us, always enter into our homes, always forgive us, always renew us.

Zacchaeus’ journey of conversion climbing up a tree towards a personal encounter with Jesus is a symbol of our own Lenten journey of conversion towards our own encounter with Our Lord during the time of Great Lent; a journey towards the moment when we recognize Jesus as Lord and Master of our lives.

For each of us the place of encounter is personal and unique.  For Zaccheus, the encounter took place in a very unlikely place, in the branches of a Sycamore tree.  For us it could be when we are immersed in prayer, or when we offer a helping hand to someone in need, or when we choose to speak good of someone rather than evil, or at some other time and place when we least expect it.

Our sincere prayer is that each of us, during this blessed time of Great Lent, may experience an encounter with Jesus and a personal conversion in Him so that we, along with Zacchaeus, would hear the voice of Jesus saying to us: “Today salvation has come to this house”.  (Lk. 19:9)
    
+Stefan Soroka
Archbishop of Philadelphia for Ukrainians
Metropolitan of Ukrainian Catholics in the United States

+Paul Chomnycky, OSBM (author)
Eparch of Stamford

+ Bohdan Danylo
Eparch of St. Josaphat in Parma

+John Bura
Auxiliary Bishop of Philadelphia

Very Rev. Richard Janowicz, Apostolic Administrator
 St. Nicholas Ukrainian Catholic Eparchy in Chicago…

Feast of the Theophany of our Lord

The Feast of the Holy Theophany (Epiphany) of our Lord God and Savior Jesus Christ is celebrated each year on January 6. The Feast commemorates the Baptism of Christ and the divine revelation of the Holy Trinity. At the Baptism of Christ at the river Jordan, all three Persons of the Holy Trinity—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—were made manifest. During Theophany, people traditionally attend a prayer service… where the priest blesses regular water into holy water at the “Blessing of the Water” ceremony. This year, after the blessing of the water ceremony in the church, Fr. Ivan walked around the Assumption Catholic school with a small group of students and blessed each room with holy water and offered a blessing to students and staff. Father Ivan explained to children that Christ’s baptism in the Jordan was a “theophany,” a manifestation of God to the world, because it was the beginning of our Lord’s public ministry. He also asked students various questions about Feasts of Christmas and Theophany and was very pleased by their answers.

Christmas Eve Holy Supper

On Christmas Eve, January 6th, 2017 the Assumption parish has sponsored a traditional Holy Supper (Sviaty Vechir ) for all parishioners and guests. Many tasty lenten dishes were prepared and shared. Filled with the spirit of the carols and poetry, more than 100 people  truly enjoyed a traditional Christmas foods in anticipation of Christ’s birth. Thank you to the Holy Name  members  for sponsoring this event and for cooking lenten foods  for us to share during the Christmas Eve supper. Thank you to  St. Ann’s Society for sponsoring  baked goods for Prosfora.

Christmas Concert

Thank you to everyone who made our parish Christmas Concert a huge success last Sunday! Thanks to the parish youth group “Svitanok” for presenting a beautiful selection of carols, to our younger children for putting together a play "Malanka" and to our famous parish choir “Boyan” for singing popular Christmas carols. It was an outstanding teamwork effort and a successful parish event. I would  like to thank all those who gave their time and talents to make that afternoon possible, especially  Mrs. Iryna Borsa for preparing children’s program, parents of children for bringing  them to rehearsals, Mrs. Alla Korostil  for leading the choir “Boyan”, the choir members for sharing their talents and voices in the Christmas Joy. May God bless each and every one of you this year and forever.