Archbishop Updates Guidance During Pandemic
On Wednesday, April 1, Archbishop Jerome E. Listecki met via conference call with priests, deacons and parish directors across the archdiocese to update them on protocols during the COVID-19 pandemic.
On Wednesday, April 1, Archbishop Jerome E. Listecki met via conference call with priests, deacons and parish directors across the archdiocese to update them on protocols during the COVID-19 pandemic.
For the last few weeks, even attending daily and Sunday Masses at our churches, which normally would bring consolation, has been closed in order to ensure personal safety.
Archbishop Listecki shares his Easter message with the faithful of southeastern Wisconsin.
This Holy Week is going to be difficult. We are going to feel isolated. We are going to feel disconnected. We may feel angry or even abandoned.
My mom gave me a small, framed copy of The Serenity Prayer. I have always kept it on my bathroom counter as a reminder of how to live.
The Women’s Care Center made the difficult decision to close its front lobby and offer only limited services at both of is Milwaukee locations.
Our church doors will be locked this year and though there will be churches streaming this holy celebration, we will not smell, we will not touch; we will not receive the bread and the wine.
I know Lent is a time when many people desire to receive the Sacrament of Reconciliation, but this Lent is not like any other.
Fr. Sergio Rodriguez experienced tragedy early in life. When he was 5, his father was killed by guerrillas in their hometown of Chaparral, Colombia, and soon after he was sent to live with his grandmother so his mother could work as a teacher in a remote mountain village far away.
The Milwaukee Catholic Mamas Facebook group is a veritable brain trust of great ideas and nifty resources for surviving an apocalyptic quarantine situation while keeping your family’s sanity — and souls — intact.