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Holy
Eucharist is administered during the following Masses:
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Saturday
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4:30 PM
(Vigil) |
| 7:00 PM
(Haitian Creole Vigil)
Our Lady of Faith Haitian Center |
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Sunday
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8:00 AM,
9:30 AM and 11:30 AM |
| 5:00 PM
(Haitian Creole) |
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Every first Sunday,
Family Mass at 9:30 AM (Sept. thru May)
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Monday through Friday
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7:30 AM
and 12:05 PM |

Fr.
Dumarsais Pierre-Louis celebrates Mass
Excerpt
from The Vatican's "Catechism of the Catholic
Church" on Holy Eucharist
The Holy Eucharist completes Christian initiation. Those
who have been raised to the dignity of the royal priesthood
by Baptism and configured more deeply to Christ by
Confirmation participate with the whole community in the
Lord's own sacrifice by means of the Eucharist.
"At the Last Supper, on the night he was betrayed, our
Savior instituted the Eucharistic sacrifice of his Body and
Blood. This he did in order to perpetuate the sacrifice of
the cross throughout the ages until he should come again,
and so to entrust to his beloved Spouse, the Church, a
memorial of his death and resurrection: a sacrament of love,
a sign of unity, a bond of charity, a Paschal banquet 'in
which Christ is consumed, the mind is filled with grace, and
a pledge of future glory is given to us.'"
The
Eucharist is "the source and summit of the Christian
life." "The other sacraments, and indeed all
ecclesiastical ministries and works of the apostolate, are
bound up with the Eucharist and are oriented toward it. For
in the blessed Eucharist is contained the whole spiritual
good of the Church, namely Christ himself, our Pasch."
"The
Eucharist is the efficacious sign and sublime cause of that
communion in the divine life and that unity of the People of
God by which the Church is kept in being. It is the
culmination both of God's action sanctifying the world in
Christ and of the worship men offer to Christ and through
him to the Father in the Holy Spirit."
Finally, by the Eucharistic celebration we already unite
ourselves with the heavenly liturgy and anticipate eternal
life, when God will be all in all.
In brief, the Eucharist is the sum and summary of our faith:
"Our way of thinking is attuned to the Eucharist, and
the Eucharist in turn confirms our way of thinking."
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