We are hosting a Flea Market on August 9th from 9am until 4:30pm at Blessed Virgin Mary Parish Hall at 250 Old Maxwell Road in Latham. Come out and enjoy sellers and vendors from across the region. We will serve refreshments and there will be raffles as well. If you a vendor or seller, please see our Vendor’s Page here. We look forward to seeing you on August 9th.

  

Corpus Christi 2025

I received from the Lord what I also handed on to you,
that the Lord Jesus, on the night he was handed over,
took bread, and, after he had given thanks,
broke it and said, “This is my body that is for you.
Do this in remembrance of me.”

Let’s talk about food. 

Perhaps, a part of our nature, our cultural heritages, or just because we live our faith in tangible ways – we love to feed people and to feed them well. We love to carry food into the community through the giving of food. There is our parish food pantry and our food collections.

There is also our food centered fundraising efforts, Polish, food sales, goulash and soup sales. No one approaches these things with a grumpy attitude. Rather we come together to do the work and most importantly we serve with smiling faces.

When we have guests over at home, whether it be family or friends or members of the church family none of us would likely serve corned beef hash from a can with a side of cheese whiz (although I love cheese whiz).  Rather, we pull out the best. We spend the extra. We take the time to present something lovely. We hear people say, they really pulled out all the stops, they went over the top in preparing that food.

Take a moment to reflect on some of those special moments in our lives, the looks on people’s faces, the way they really dug into that food. We could call it joy, pure pleasure, happiness. Following Thanksgiving dinner my father-in-law always tells me: “You can cook for me anytime.”

Thinking of all these things, the food, the experiences, let’s ask: What would we feed Jesus if He was coming over?

One of the best places to start planning is to get an appreciation for what Jesus ate and drank.

When we read through scripture we tend to place a lot of our own experience into the moments. Jesus ate bread and drank wine. Jesus liked figs and grains in the field. We think of the stuff we can get at a local farm or down at the supermarket.

Jesus did not eat like that at all.

First, we must consider what was available. God made promises to Israel about the produce the land would yield. There were seven essential foods, or species, that God promised. These were wheat, barley, grapes, figs, pomegranates, olives, and dates. 

In Deuteronomy 8:7-8 we read: For the LORD thy God bringeth thee into a good land, a land of brooks of water, of fountains and depths, springing forth in valleys and hills; a land of wheat and barley, and vines and fig-trees and pomegranates; a land of olive-trees and honey.

Some of these were a regular part of Jesus’ diet, but not all. For ordinary Jews, and especially itinerant preachers like Jesus, their diet was at the bottom of the economic ladder. The foods Jesus ate were produced locally. It was really farm to table for Jesus.

The poor only ate barley bread. Barley was less expensive since it was ground roughly, not fine like wheat flour. We see this at Jesus’ miraculous feeding recorded in John 6:9, “There is a boy here who has five loaves of barley bread and two fish with him.”

Most ordinary people’s diet in Jesus’ time was bread, barley bread, up to seventy percent of daily calories. Bread was essential, important to each person. As such, Jesus’ teaching us to pray included a verse that resonated for everyone because it came from their need: Give us our necessary bread today. (Matthew 6:11)

While there was bee honey in Israel, that was also expensive and unavailable to ordinary people. They ate a honey produced from figs. Grapes produced juice and wine. Olives gave every form of oil from oil for burning in Temple worship (the best), to oil for cooking and healing as in Luke 10:34  “And he came and bound his wounds and poured wine and oil on them and set him on his donkey and he took him to an inn and cared for him,” to the lowliest oil used to light homes. 

Jesus certainly enjoyed fish which was inexpensive and abundant in His seaside headquarters in Capernaum. Even after His resurrection we see Jesus preparing fish at His seaside barbeque: But when they came up to the land they saw burning coals, which had been set, and fish were lying on them, and bread. (John 21:9) As far as other meat protein sources there was likely none. Lamb was super expensive as was cattle. If anything besides fish, proteins were derived from beans and other legumes.

Jesus used food as symbolic objects in His teachings, referencing things from everyday life. In addressing the hypocrisy of the leaders of the time He says: “Woe to you Scribes and Pharisees, impostors, for you tithe mint and dill and cummin and you forsake the weighty things of the law: Justice, mercy and faith!” (Matthew 23:23)

We see from all this that Jesus was well versed in Scripture and in food. Both Scripture and food were key to Jesus’ feeding of the disciples.

Finally, we arrive at the ultimate meal, the Last Supper and the gift we celebrate in this Octave. Archeologists suggest that the items on the Last Supper table included a bean stew, lamb, olives, bitter herbs, a fish sauce, unleavened bread from wheat, dates and aromatized wine. The seven species of Israel are there, and most importantly, it is all top-of-the-line stuff – the best.

In having the best prepared for that supper Jesus foreshadows the best food gift of all, His very Body and Blood which is for us.

Jesus understood our need for Him, our need for nourishment, for what is best, for what is simply comprehended and gloriously deep. 

What would we prepare for Jesus? 

The best dinner we can prepare for Jesus is that of our very selves, the giving of our hearts and lives to Jesus in all things and in every way. “For as often as we eat this bread and drink the cup” we place our lives, families, work, courage, trust, and future into His hands. Don’t give Him anything less than what He gave us.

Fr. Jim is digging out some old family recipes and will be providing a take-home/take-away American Goulash dinner on Sunday, December 8th starting at 11:30am until sold out. Drive up and pick-up. Food will be brought to your car or you can stop in to the church hall. This filling and comforting dinner is just perfect for the season. Dinners are available in a 64oz family size or individual 16oz servings accompanied by fresh bread.

Be sure to reserve your dinner by pre-ordering below. We look forward to serving you.

Individual 16oz dinners are $10 each.

Family 64oz dinners are $30 (save $10).

All dinners include Italian bread.

Order Family Size Dinners

American Goulash Dinner

Family Dinners Order Form

$

Order Individual Dinners

American Goulash Dinner

Individual Dinners Order Form

$

There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is no male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus.

This month, along with the celebration of the Solemnity of the Christian Family, we also celebrate Heritage Sunday (October 18th). Why? Reading through the documents created in the Church’s organizing years we see so many references to humanity, established in nations, to be bearers and sharers of the gifts God has given them. In the Tenant and Aims Document it is recorded: “The most important objective of the Church… is to maintain, enrich and develop the life of God in the soul of man…” Likewise, the Confession of Faith, our Creedal Document. Familiarize yourself with these statements, for they are a call to us and to the world. We are to recognize the dignity and value of each person and nation in their contribution toward helping us know God. These documents from the early 1900’s a sure cure to the inequality we still face today. We are not called to division, but to celebrate each other in unity and equality. We celebrate heritage because God has given us gifts, attributes, and experiences that when shared adds to our collective knowledge of God. A paraphrase of the Preamble to our Constitution sums this up: “Religion is the source of life and regeneration. Religion [that] possess the character of a nation [transmits innate] moral principles from which we achieve real freedom and stature.” As we celebrate let us each experience God more fully in each other and in what we share of ourselves.

October, our next jam packed month of events and opportunities. We bless pets on Sunday, October 4th. We celebrate the Solemnity of the Christian Family, a feast unique to our Church as well as Heritage Sunday. We will pray the Rosary every Wednesday evening in church and virtually. And … Fr. Jim is in the kitchen cooking up a yummy take-out/take-away American Goulash Dinner for Sunday, October 25th. Your efforts at discipleship and evangelism are drawing people to church – keep up the good work in the ministries you each have. There are some great prayers for family and our nation and a wonderful reflection on Certainty in God.

Read about all it in our October 2020 Newsletter.

Every taste.

Heed me, and you shall eat well, you shall delight in rich fare.

I’m going to ask for some votes, those of you here, and those watching remotely: Who likes steak the best? Fish? Veggies? Cake?  Ice cream? A full-on breakfast with bacon, eggs, sausage, pancakes, and waffles? Salads?

Now imagine I were to walk among you and offer each of you a wonderful slice of Wonder Bread. Plain, white, bland Wonder Bread. Actually, growing up, I would pass by the Wonder Bread factory in Buffalo, just off Genesee Street. It smelled wonderful each morning. So, ok, I like Wonder Bread.

Now, imagine you are holding that plain old piece of Wonder Bread. I ask you to sniff it, to taste it, and your taste buds come alive. You taste that thing you love the best. For you it is steak, fish, veggies, cake, ice cream, bacon and eggs, sausage and pancakes and waffles, that favorite salad.

Wisdom 16:20-21 speaks of the Manna that God gave to His children as they wandered through the desert: You nourished Your people with food of angels and furnished them bread from heaven, ready to hand, untoiled-for, endowed with all delights and conforming to every taste. For this substance of Yours revealed Your sweetness toward Your children, and serving the desire of the one who received it, was changed to whatever flavor each one wished.

The Manna was not simply flakes that could be made into a dough, it was real food that fulfilled the needs and desires of each of the Father’s faithful. It was an expression of God’s sweetness and care toward His children.

God’s great love is wonderfully expressed in the manner in which He feeds us, fulfills us, and brings us to completion. He feeds us in every way we need, never bland Wonder bread, but as Isaiah tells us: a feast of rich food and choice wines, juicy, rich food and pure, choice wines. We eat well and delight in rich fare when we partake in what God provides, His word, His way of living and interacting, in worshiping Him and living that kingdom moment out each day.

In feeding us His Body and Blood, in allowing us to be the people to Eucharist as one, Jesus renews His covenant with us forever. He feeds us. He is our waybread, the perfect food for the journey to the kingdom, the food that grows us into His image. From Jesus to us, the crowd. We have His free, rich, untoiled-for food; a pure blessing poured out on us over and over.

We will be holding a Polish Dinner on Saturday, September 22nd from 4pm – 7pm at the Parish Hall, 1040 Pearl St., Schenectady. Dinner includes: Kiełbasa, 2 Pierogi, Kapusta, Gołąbki, Rye Bread, and a Drink for $14. Polish pizza and homemade desserts will also be available.

You may purchase pre-sale tickets here:

$

Subtotal $14.00

Total Amount: $14.00

Eat and
run.

“Get up and eat, else the journey will be too long for you!” He got up, ate, and drank; then strengthened by that food, he walked forty days and forty nights to the mountain of God, Horeb.

Elijah is both literally and spiritually in the wilderness in today’s first reading. He is so despondent that he asks the Lord to take his life.

Elijah had engaged with the worldly prophets of Baal and Asherah, the false gods that the people of Israel had come to adore. With God’s power he destroyed those prophets and any hope their false gods could deliver. We would think that he would have had a new found confidence, obviously, look at what the One and true God had done. But something is wrong. Elijah experiences a sense of failure, some kind of downer emotion that is not at all obvious to anyone. It is inside him, a nagging evil that leaves him deflated, despondent, depressed, and ready to die. He sits under the Broom tree; the end has to be now.

Most of us have experienced hard situations like Elijah did. We may feel down even though all around us seems great. There may be true miracles in our lives, but we take a different message from them. We grow sad or even despondent.

This story is repeated many times in scripture. Hagar lays Ishmael under a bush and waits to die. Jonah sits under the Castor Bean tree and is angry and despondent.

Some people calls these times ‘bumps in the road,’ but they are more than that to us when we are in the middle. Previously, Elijah was seen as assured and triumphant. He seemed to have no problem finding his way, yet now we see a very different Elijah, an Elijah sharing more in common with Hagar and Jonah. All were, at one time, seen as the blessed of God. Yet they came to ask: ‘Where is the blessing?’

The answer and blessing, as always, comes from God. While we meet a very different Elijah, we meet the same Lord who ministered to Hagar and Jonah. We meet the true God who feeds us, provides drink, gives strength, and shows the way. Elijah’s story, that of Jonah and Hagar, invite us to get up, to eat and continue moving forward. Just as God stays close to Elijah in order to help him overcome his travails, we must have the same confidence that God is present and will be present in our lives; He stays close to us. It is always down to Jesus’ promise: “I am the living bread that came down from heaven; whoever eats this bread will live forever”

Our ever growing, super fun, and free parish and community picnic is scheduled for Sunday, August 19th. There will be one Holy Mass that day at 10:30am and the picnic will immediately follow on the parish grounds. The tent, tables, and chairs have been ordered. We look forward to seeing everyone there along with your family and friends. The picnic is open to everyone. The parish will be providing hot dogs and hamburgers – and many are bringing a dish to share. Come join in!

Our annual Basket Social & Polish Kitchen will be held on Sunday, April 15th from 12 until 4 PM at the Rotterdam Senior Citizens Center, 2639 Hamburg St, Schenectady, New York 12303

Polish food will be served as well as homemade desserts. Tickets are $2 for admission, and $12 for a sheet of 24 tickets plus a door prize chance. There will also be special raffles for more expensive items such as jewelry and electronics.

We look forward to seeing you!

Arise, shine, for your light has come, and the glory of the Lord has risen upon you.

Arise and shine, I can just hear my mom saying those words as I covered my head with the blankets. Never all that happy to get up in the morning, here I am in 2018 as a priest of our Holy Church, leading a wonderful family of faith in our worship of God through His Son, Jesus. Of course that means I have to get up early. It’s worth it! The prophet Isaiah, using the words above, was speaking to the dejected people of Israel. They were in captivity in Babylon, with covers over their heads. He tells them to get up, to wipe the sleep from their eyes, to shine because an amazing thing was happening. They were being saved, recalled from exile. They were being called home. This happened to us that first Christmas. We were called to take on a new attitude. No more pulling the covers over our heads. The time of Jesus is here. We are being saved. Salvation had come, redemption is being accomplished. All we have to do is get up and meet and accept Him. Funny things happen in life. Sometimes not too “haha” funny. The light dims, the warmth cools, and we start pulling the covers over our heads again. When that happens we have to recall these words from Isaiah. We have to reconnect with the Manger, the start of great light and warmth. We have to gather the courage to engage in worship and community once again. The New Year is here. We are being called. Time to arise and shine.

Join us during this Christmas season (all forty days of it). We celebrate the Circumcision of the Lord, the Holy Name of Jesus, the Epiphany, and the Baptism of the Lord. The SouperBowl of Caring is coming up – help us feed those in need in our local community. Take part in our annual Outrageous Valentine’s Raffle. Stop by for a great homemade spaghetti dinner. Schedule a home blessing. Learn about our music scholarships. Become a member and sign up to help serve the community. We so look forward to meeting you. Time to arise and shine!

You may view and download a copy of our January 2018 Newsletter right here.