
Palm Sunday
by Fr. Michael D. Accinni Reinhardt, MA, Mdiv, MS | 03/29/2026 | Pastoral CornerDear Parish Family,
We have now entered the most cherished and sacred time of the year, as we as Church commemorate Passiontide. It is here that the stark reality of the Lord’s Passion is encountered through the lens of Holy Week. News Flash! This is not just another ordinary week. Stop yourself dead, before beginning it as such! We must echo the question of Jesus “Will you be my disciple? “Will You! It's not a rhetorical question, it never was! It’s not a redirect for the faint of heart, nor the one that lives a compartmentalized life. It’s the life of the cross, a life filled with convictions and deep conversion. This is the life of a Christian, not one caught up in petty incidentals.
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5th Sunday of Lent
by Fr. Michael D. Accinni Reinhardt, MA, Mdiv, MS | 03/22/2026 | Pastoral CornerTo know where we are going, we must know where we have been. This is the plight of embracing this Fifth Sunday of Lent, knowing full well we began in the cross marked upon our heads by the ashes that remind us of our human nature and our mortality. Lent causes us to think about the grim realities of our fate, that we are going to spend eternity somewhere. Lent is the reminder of our call to conversion by way of confession and penance.
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Laetare Sunday
by Fr. Michael D. Accinni Reinhardt, MA, Mdiv, MS | 03/15/2026 | Pastoral CornerThis Fourth Sunday of Lent brings us to the silver- lining, as we return to the liturgical color rose for the simplicity of the joy that is in our midst. It is through the paschal mystery in sharing in the passion, death, and resurrection of Christ that we know that joy is truly present in our midst, and as a result we rejoice in it. Rejoice in the Lord always again I say Rejoice! Who among us could not manage a sprinkle of joy, because we know we are turning the corner toward the most joyful and glorious event for which Jesus conquers sin and death, by overcoming the grave. We now can see what is ahead of us on the horizon, the sun is rising and upon us is the dawning of a new day!
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Samaritan Woman at Well
by Fr. Michael D. Accinni Reinhardt, MA, Mdiv, MS | 03/08/2026 | Pastoral CornerNow in this third week of Lent, we connect at the beginning of our journey with the cross of ash we received upon our heads, in recognizing the invitation from Jesus we receive, and how Esther we are to be marked by him and for him.
1. We have been invited to bear the cross of the Lord, and to bear it boldly. We say yes in a radical way to his call, "will you be my disciple" It is by the cross that we identify with Christ, and his cross as a device of torture, shame, and execution, but his cross becomes our gateway to redemption and eternal life.
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The Transfiguration
by Fr. Michael D. Accinni Reinhardt, MA, Mdiv, MS | 03/01/2026 | Pastoral CornerIn these first Sundays of Lent since Ash Wednesday, we have come from being marked in the cross, accepting our mortality, and deciding to be the disciple Christ is calling us to be, and following him. Today there is a shift, as we enter the transfiguration, and we ascend the mountain to witness the Lord in all his glory. Scripture has a way of skipping us through these aspects of Christ's life, not concerned so much about chronological order, but the order of illumination of how such parts of the Gospel coincide with the context of the season of faith we are in, and how they illuminate in us the message of redemption.
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First Sunday of Lent
by Fr. Michael D. Accinni Reinhardt, MA, Mdiv, MS | 02/22/2026 | Pastoral CornerWe have now crossed the threshold of Lent. Each year marked in the boldness of ashes upon our forehead; we are marked in the cross of Christ. This is a pivotal crossroads for us, because it is here that we must decide how well invested into the process of Lent that we are. Lent is a penitential season primarily designed for us to be led into a deeper conversion. The first order of business is that all the faithful are called to admit their faults, take a long look into the mirror of our soul, and determine what must change about us.
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Let Peace Begin with Me
by Fr. Michael D. Accinni Reinhardt, MA, Mdiv, MS | 02/15/2026 | Pastoral CornerDear Parish Family,
We find ourselves at the brink of entering the season of Lent. This is a time for change. It's not so much being concerned with how others change, but how such change begins with us. In this jubilee year of St. Francis his prayer rings true to let peace begin with me. You want change than be the change, you want more fervor than practice it! Don't try to transfer your sense of piety on others, if anything, you should be a good example of humility and let that be contagious. After all, we can only change ourselves. We are also called to bloom where we are planted, to pick-up our cross, not run from it or move away from it.
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Salt and Light
by Fr. Michael D. Accinni Reinhardt, MA, Mdiv, MS | 02/08/2026 | Pastoral CornerDear Parish Family,
Something wonderful occurs as the minutes of light grow in number during the month of February. Our days become a little longer, brighter, and in Arizona a little warmer with the return of the sun. It's a bit of a miracle really to begin witnessing nature awakening from her deep winter slumber. Arizona is privy to literally front row seats, as the deserts will soon burst into color as the sun calls the wildflowers to bloom. It's supposed to be a great spectacle this year with the winter rain that fell. One thing we learn from nature is if we do not have light, we die.
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The Incarnate Word
by Fr. Michael D. Accinni Reinhardt, MA, Mdiv, MS | 02/01/2026 | Pastoral CornerDear Parish Family,
Our scripture readings today sheds some light upon the human aspects of our struggle in faith. We learn that such faith is made real and is visible during our moments of heartache and difficulty. The Christian does not run from the cross, nor says may I have an easier one to carry. We obey the Lord and pick up our cross and follow him. Our call to discipleship is our willingness to accept the cross, and to give our lives to Christ. Our struggle is the source of our motive to seek God, and to better align ourselves with Christ.
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Where Charity and Love Prevail
by Fr. Michael D. Accinni Reinhardt, MA, Mdiv, MS | 01/25/2026 | Pastoral CornerDear Parish Family,
In this season of celebrating the coming of the Light of God to all nations, we realize the message from Sacred Scripture is not just for the people in the days of Jesus, but for today as well.
The news of the death of John the Baptist saddened Jesus, but prompted him to retreat, and see that the prophecy from Isaiah be fulfilled. John the Baptist was martyred for the sake of the Light, God Himself. Jesus like John was drawn to the mission of God, the very reason He who is God came into the world.
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The Lamb of God
by Fr. Michael D. Accinni Reinhardt, MA, Mdiv, MS | 01/18/2026 | Pastoral CornerDear Parish Family,
Though we are back to Ordinary Time for just a few short weeks, we are still reflective of where we've been recently. We also concern ourselves with Quo Vadis, in Latin where are you going? Well for us collectively we are headed to Lent, but in the meantime, we are called to relish in the presence of Jesus among us as one of us.
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Baptism of the Lord
by Fr. Michael D. Accinni Reinhardt, MA, Mdiv, MS | 01/11/2026 | Pastoral CornerToday marks the end of the Christmas Season, but it does not mean what we celebrated has ended. We have become renewed in the hope of the Incarnation, and the profound reality that God loved us so much He became one of us by taking on human form. The spirit of Epiphany lives on in the reality of His manifestation in the world, and our awakening to His presence.
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Epiphany of the Lord
by Fr. Michael D. Accinni Reinhardt, MA, Mdiv, MS | 01/04/2026 | Pastoral CornerEpiphany is here and marks the twelfth day of Christmas. The feast day traditionally falls on January 6th but had been moved to the nearest Sunday. This was an attempt to have more people attend Mass. Today marks the visitation of the Three Magi and is most significant because we witness that the message of salvation causes us to be awakened and responsive to the voice of God. Mary, Joseph, Elizabeth, Zacharias, and the shepherds in the field all encountered the voice of God via an angel or in a dream.
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