Around the Parish – May 25, 2025
Around the Parish – May 25, 2025
Published on May 24, 2025
70 Years of Immaculate Heart Parish
As part of our 70th anniversary celebration, we are creating a new parish directory! Every household photographed will receive a free 8×10 portrait and a copy of the directory. To schedule your photography session, sign up today at https://ihmercer.org/2025-directory
In celebration of our 70th year, we’re also creating a beautiful parish cookbook—and we want your favorite recipes! You can submit them online by visiting https://ihmercer.org/cookbook. Whether it’s a family favorite, holiday tradition, or simple comfort food, your contribution will help make this cookbook a treasured keepsake for years to come.
Vacation Bible School
Registration for this summer’s Vacation Bible School is now open! You can register online through our parish website or pick up a paper form at the entrances of church. Let’s make this a great week for our children to grow in faith and fun! https://ihmercer.org/vbs
300 Club Raffle
We are just a few weeks away from our first 300 Club drawing! Don’t miss your chance—purchase your ticket today and be part of the fun while supporting our parish.
40 Hours Adoration
40 Hours Adoration is quickly approaching! Join us from Sunday, June 8 through Tuesday, June 10 for this beautiful time of prayer and reflection before the Blessed Sacrament. Our guest preacher will be Father Ian McElrath, a native son of St. Joseph Parish in Sharon and a classmate of mine. Sign-up sheets for adoration hours are located in the main vestibule. Please consider committing to an hour with the Lord. Sign-ups for adoration hours are in the main vestibule and on our website at https://ihmercer.org/40-hours
Mission Appeal
Next weekend, we welcome Father Bosco Padamattummal from the Diocese of Kottapuram in India for our annual mission appeal. He will share the vital missionary work being done in his home diocese. Please join me in offering him a warm and generous Mercer welcome!
Here are a few thoughts for the week ahead:
Change the changeable; accept the unchangeable; remove yourself from the unacceptable. Stop saying, “I wish.” Start saying “I will.” Nothing will work unless you do. When you can’t put your prayer into words God listens to your heart.
Pax et Bonum, Fr. Andy
The Power and Tradition of Mass Intentions

The Mass is considered the greatest prayer of intercession in the Church. This is because it is the perfect offering of Christ to the Father, making present the Paschal Mystery of His death and resurrection. Traditionally, a Priest may be requested to offer a Mass for a specific intention, even if the requester cannot be physically present.
Offering Masses for the Deceased:
Having a Mass offered for a deceased person is an ancient and commendable practice. A Mass is offered to pray for the departed, that they may find peace in heaven. Since each Mass holds infinite value, requesting one or several Masses is of tremendous benefit to the person prayed for, as well as their family, who can take comfort in knowing that their intention is united with the prayers of the Church.
The Mass: Center of Christian Life:
Every Mass is a precious gift from God. It is the center of the Church’s life, known as “the source and summit of the Christian life,” because in the celebration of the Mass, we are brought back to Jesus’ Last Supper, the first Mass. We consciously recall the love of God poured out for us through the life, death, and resurrection of His only Son, Jesus Christ. At each Mass, all the intentions of God’s people, both living and deceased, are included. As Pope Paul VI noted in his motu proprio “Firma in Traditione,” the faithful, moved by an ecclesial and religious sense, join their own sacrifices to the Eucharistic sacrifice, participating more intensely and supporting the Church’s needs, especially its ministers.
Requesting a Mass Intention:
Anyone may request a Mass Intention for a living person, a deceased person, members of a family, or a special intention appropriate to the celebration of the Eucharist, such as World Peace, Vocations, or Respect for Life. The Church allows only one intention per Mass.
Offering a Mass Stipend:
The normal stipend offering for a Mass is $10. However, a Mass Offering can be more or less than the suggested amount, depending on the financial position of the person requesting the Mass. Envelopes for Mass intention requests are available at the entrances of the church. These envelopes can be placed in the collection basket or returned to the parish office. The requester may also ask for a card to be sent to notify someone that a Mass Intention has been requested (one card per intention). Please note that the name of the person(s) requesting the Mass is not announced.

Around the Parish – May 25, 2025
May 24, 2025