St James the Apostle HCN

St James the Apostle HCN St James is committed to safety, well-being and dignity of children and vulnerable adults.

We acknowledge living culture of the Bunurong people, traditional custodians of the land we stand on, upon which we celebrate our Eucharist and live out our faith. St James the Apostle Parish was conceived in 1981 when Fr Dom DeGiorgio, parish priest of St Peter Apostle Mission Parish, Hoppers Crossing, purchased a ten acre wheat paddock on Derrimut Road. Mindful of the rapid population growth pla

nned for this outer Melbourne western suburb, this land was earmarked for a new parish and primary school. Continuing the theme of naming local parishes after the apostles, the new parish was dedicated to St James the Greater. In January 1982, St James the Apostle Primary School started functioning from portable classrooms at St Peter Apostle Primary School and moved to its Derrimut Road campus later that same year. Sr Marlene Monahan csb, a Brigidine sister, was appointed the founding principal. St James the Apostle Parish was officially established in January 1989 and Fr Peter Ray was appointed its first parish priest; upward of 650 families lived in the area. As there were as yet no church buildings, on January 25 Fr Peter celebrated the first Mass in one of the classrooms, a humble beginning for the new parish. The parish church was opened and consecrated on 17th December 2000 by Archbishop George Pell and renovated in 2020.

31/05/2026
The LINK - Newsletter of the MSSP Australia Region (Issue 16 - May 2026)
30/05/2026

The LINK - Newsletter of the MSSP Australia Region (Issue 16 - May 2026)

“Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit.”31 May 2026 (Trinity Sunday; Year A) Exodus 34:4-6,8-9; D...
29/05/2026

“Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit.”

31 May 2026 (Trinity Sunday; Year A)

Exodus 34:4-6,8-9; Daniel 3:52-56; 2 Corinthians 13:11-13; John 3:16-18.

At the end of the Easter Season, the Church now continues its pilgrimage along the gospel according to Matthew during the Sundays in the Ordinary Time of the year – a time when there are no major festivities like Christmas or Easter. The first two Sundays of this liturgical season are taken up by the feasts of the Holy Trinity and the Body and Blood of Christ. The Church invites us to reflect on these two foundational mysteries in our Christian life.
One reason for celebrating this feast of the Trinity is for us to reflect more deeply about what God we worship. In our world there are many different gods and idols. Some gods are offered us by our secular world, like money, work, gadgets, gambling etc, other gods are religious. Different religions call god by different names and have their own different image of god. Even within our Christian religion we have created different images of God, different from the God revealed to us by Jesus Christ. In the book of Genesis we are told that God created us in God’s own image and likeness, and often we return him the favour and create him in our own image and likeness! Often we hear people speak about a God who acts like a tough judge, a policeman God, waiting in the darkness behind street corners ready to pounce on us each time we break the law. Today’s celebration offers us an opportunity to revisit our image of God.
The image of God we worship is very important for us. Since we are created in the image and likeness of God we are invited to grow and develop into the fullness of this image. Jesus himself often encourages us in the gospels to be holy, merciful and forgiving because God our Father is holy, merciful and forgiving. If our image of God is that of a God who punishes and condemns, then we will condemn and punish our sisters and brothers who do not fit into our image of what a human person should live like. Today’s readings present us with different images of God. In the first reading from the book of Exodus, God reveals himself to Moses as ‘a God of tenderness and compassion, slow to anger, rich in kindness and faithfulness.’ Paul speaks to us of a God who is a Trinity of persons living in peaceful harmony. In the gospel Jesus speaks about the Father’s great love for us.
In today’s readings we are reminded that God is a relationship of beings. God is described as Father, Son and Spirit. Obviously, these are human categories because God is genderless. We understand that God has always been like a parent, a parent who eternally loves his child in such a perfect way that the love itself is a third person. We often describe God as the Lover, the Beloved and Love itself.
Since God is a relationship of beings that can only love one another, we too are invited to imitate this community of love and, even in our own human weakness, try to love our sisters and brothers. God’s love is eternal and ever giving. In his great love God gave us his own Son so that he could show us the love of the Father. In Jesus, born as one of us, we discover the Father and the Spirit. When we believe in Jesus Christ, the Son of God, when we enter into a relationship with Jesus, then we enter into a relationship with the Father himself and with the Spirit of God.
In today’s gospel reading John the evangelist clarifies that God did not send his Son to condemn us. Every human parent struggles to condemn a son or a daughter, regardless of their actions. Every loving parent will find it within herself or himself to reach out to a daughter or a son who is in trouble. If we can understand this of human parents, how much more God, love itself, is always ready to reach out and forgive us our many sins. Indeed, for God, no sin is big enough to destroy the image of Christ within us. God condemns our sinful actions but never condemns us and, each time we are prepared to turn back to him, then God is happy to welcome us back. In the gospel according to Luke we read of the beautiful parable referred to as ‘the Prodigal Son,’ and in the gospel according to John we read of the adulteress woman who is brought to Jesus. In both cases, God is always ready to be loving, merciful and forgiving. We have received the Spirit of God, the Life and Love of God, and when we allow the Spirit to work within us, we too are able to be loving, merciful and forgiving to our sisters and brothers.
As we celebrate this feast of the Holy Trinity, let us be ready to destroy all our false images of God that we have created in our life and let the Spirit lead us to grow into the real image of God that Jesus has come to reveal to us.

Mario mssp

---------
❓Are you a young male adult?
🔍 Is your heart burning with zeal to dedicate your life to God?
✝️ Are you searching for a religious community where you can live God’s will through missionary service?
🙋‍♂️ Get in touch with the Vocation Director Fr Bernard Falzon mssp on:
📞 +63 960 253 6977
💬 Whatsapp +63 960 253 6977
📧 email: [email protected]
👨‍💻 web page: https://web.depiromssp.org/
👍 Through this page
🏘 We invite you to become part of our community.
📖 Join us in proclaiming the Good News in the footsteps of St. Paul.
#️⃣

This Sunday we celebrate the great mystery of God who is one Holy Trinity of persons. As we meditate this great mystery ...
29/05/2026

This Sunday we celebrate the great mystery of God who is one Holy Trinity of persons. As we meditate this great mystery we understand that God is a God of relationships, love, forgiveness and mercy. Since we are called to grow into an image and likeness of God, we too are called to a life of relationships with our sisters and brothers, love, forgiveness and mercy.
The Servant of God Joseph De Piro lived a life of relationships and love. From a young age he wanted to live and work at St Joseph's Home in Santa Venera, so that he could live in community with the other priests working there. Moreover, he always lived either in one of the orphanages under his care, or with the members of his young Missionary Society.
To read a reflection on this gospel, based on the Life and Writings of the Servant of God Joseph De Piro, kindly follow the link below. Alternatively, you may copy the link and paste it in your internet browser. Thank you.
https://web.depiromssp.org/2026/05/25/sunday-reflection-the-solemnity-of-the-most-holy-trinity-year-a-3/

--------
❓Are you a young male adult?
🔍 Is your heart burning with zeal to dedicate your life to God?
✝️ Are you searching for a religious community where you can live God’s will through missionary service?
🙋‍♂️ Get in touch with the Vocation Director Fr Bernard Falzon mssp on:
📞 +63 960 253 6977
💬 Whatsapp +63 960 253 6977
📧 email: [email protected]
👨‍💻 web page: https://web.depiromssp.org/
👍 Through this page
🏘 We invite you to become part of our community.
📖 Join us in proclaiming the Good News in the footsteps of St. Paul.
#️⃣

“Receive the Holy Spirit.”24 May 2026 (Pentecost Sunday of Easter; Year A) Acts 2:1-11; Psalm 103(104):1,24,29-31,34; 1 ...
22/05/2026

“Receive the Holy Spirit.”

24 May 2026 (Pentecost Sunday of Easter; Year A)

Acts 2:1-11; Psalm 103(104):1,24,29-31,34; 1 Corinthians 12:3-7,12-13; John 20:19-23.

After the experience of the ascension of Jesus into heaven the Church experienced what Jesus had promised them: the coming of the Spirit of God, the Paraclete, the Holy Spirit. Once again the readings today present us with two slightly different accounts of this experience of the early Church. The gospel of John tells us that on the day of the resurrection, while the apostles and some disciples were gathered in a room, locked away for fear of the Jewish leaders, Jesus was in the midst, he breathed on them and imparted to them his spirit. In the book of the Acts of the Apostles, Luke, using a number of Old Testament images, links this experience to the Jewish feast of Pentecost. As we read these two texts we pick up a number of images and symbols that inform us about the role of the Holy Spirit.
In the gospel according to John, the evangelist speaks of peace and forgiveness. The Spirit of God is a spirit that brings peace. When Jesus shares with us the Holy Spirit he is inviting us into the life of God himself. We can only imagine that in the Holy Trinity there is perfect unity, love and peace and hence one of the fruits of this Spirit is this peace that is from God. Yet peace does not mean lack of conflict. In his text Luke uses the images of a strong wind and fire, two images that can cause great change and conflict. The gospel also speaks of the need for us to forgive one another when we rub against each other.
Luke compares the experience of the Holy Spirit to a strong wind. The wind represents the breath of God, which we also read about in today’s gospel and in the book of Genesis when God breathed his spirit on the humanity he had created. When we observe the wind, we notice that we do not know where the it starts or where it ends, as Jesus points out to Nicodemus in the gospel according to John. Moreover, strong wind sweeps away and destroys. The Church has often invited us to open the windows of our hearts to let the Spirit into our lives to breathe into us a new life. The old stuff needs to be pushed away to let the Holy Spirit create newness within our life.
The image of what looks like tongues of fire works in a similar way. Fire too has a power to create, clean and destroy, all at the same time. While fire destroys old growth, fire clears the understorey in the bush, it releases chemicals that fertilise the soil and creates space for new life to grow. Moreover, fire purifies precious metals, cooks our meals and warms our homes. While fire can be violent, it can also be creative and warm. If we want to be children of the Spirit, as Jesus invites us to be, we cannot expect to be allowed to sit quietly in our small corner and simply watch the world go around us. The Spirit, like wind and fire, will force us to move out of our comfort zone into dangerous and unknown new experiences. If we commit ourselves to live the life of the Spirit, we need to expect to become new people.
Luke places this strange experience on the Jewish feast of Pentecost, a feast that celebrates the giving of the word of God, the Torah, to the Jewish people. The Holy Spirit, the spirit of peace, forgiveness and love, is the new law brought to us by Jesus. The Holy Spirit opens the word of God to us and invites us into a new journey of trust and discovery in God.
Finally, after experiencing the Holy Spirit, the Church is born. Luke explains how the apostles immediately leave the room they were gathered in and go out to preach the Good News to all gathered there. Their fear of the Jewish leaders is gone and, full of courage, they are ready to go out and face the crowds. The Spirit is a spirit of courage and a missionary spirit. The Church full of the Holy Spirit goes forth proclaiming the Good News. While in the book of Genesis, in the story of the tower of Babel, we are told that due to sin, humanity could no longer communicate with each other, because God confused their languages. Through the Spirit the effect of sin is reversed and now people from all nations can understand the apostles speak in a language they all can understand. Indeed, the Church goes out to preach the Good News to all peoples in different languages and with different cultures.
We celebrate the feast of Pentecost today. We welcome the Holy Spirit, the Spirit that is the life of God within us. Let us be open to let the Spirit work in and through us so that we too may become missionaries to our world.

Mario mssp

-------
❓Are you a young male adult?
🔍 Is your heart burning with zeal to dedicate your life to God?
✝️ Are you searching for a religious community where you can live God’s will through missionary service?
🙋‍♂️ Get in touch with the Vocation Director Fr Bernard Falzon mssp on:
📞 +63 960 253 6977
💬 Whatsapp +63 960 253 6977
📧 email: [email protected]
👨‍💻 web page: https://web.depiromssp.org/
👍 Through this page
🏘 We invite you to become part of our community.
📖 Join us in proclaiming the Good News in the footsteps of St. Paul.
#️⃣

After the celebration of the Ascension of Jesus into Heaven, we celebrate the coming of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost. Je...
22/05/2026

After the celebration of the Ascension of Jesus into Heaven, we celebrate the coming of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost. Jesus promised us that we would share in the life of God through his Spirit. In the gospel Jesus breathes on the disciples and gives them a Spirit of peace - peace be with you - and a spirit of forgiveness - the sins you forgive are forgiven.
In his ministry, the Servant of God Joseph De Piro often had to face people who opposed him or contradicted him. At times he even encountered people who tried to destroy what he was trying hard to build. Through the Holy Spirit which was in him, the Servant of God was able to continue to love everyone, even his 'enemies.' He always forgave and continued in his ministry.
On the example of the Servant of God, we too ought to try hard to continue loving and forgiving even those who do not agree with us.
To read a gospel reflection based on the Life and Writings of the Servant of God Joseph De Piro, kindly follow the link below. Alternatively, copy this link and paste it into your internet browser. Thank you.
https://web.depiromssp.org/2026/05/18/sunday-reflection-pentecost-sunday-year-a-3/

---------
❓Are you a young male adult?
🔍 Is your heart burning with zeal to dedicate your life to God?
✝️ Are you searching for a religious community where you can live God’s will through missionary service?
🙋‍♂️ Get in touch with the Vocation Director Fr Bernard Falzon mssp on:
📞 +63 960 253 6977
💬 Whatsapp +63 960 253 6977
📧 email: [email protected]
👨‍💻 web page: https://web.depiromssp.org/
👍 Through this page
🏘 We invite you to become part of our community.
📖 Join us in proclaiming the Good News in the footsteps of St. Paul.
#️⃣

17/05/2026
16/05/2026
Some time after the resurrection (forty days), the early Christians understood that they will no longer be experiencing ...
15/05/2026

Some time after the resurrection (forty days), the early Christians understood that they will no longer be experiencing the physical presence of the Lord in their midst. The question arose as to how they could continue to keep him present with them. In the gospels we find various experiences of this. The main understanding was that it was when the community gathered 'in his name' and especially when they gathered as a family at the table of the Eucharist that Christ will be always present among them. Christ lives, no longer in the Jerusalem Temple or on the mountain, as it was believed, but within the community. It is we who make him present in the world today.
The Servant of God Joseph De Piro understood this concept. He not only lived in community and worked hard to create community wherever he was, he also devotedly celebrated the Eucharist and understood that it was the presence of God in the world. Moreover, he was always ready to be the presence of Christ to others, all those who came across his way. Like him we too need to continue to always live Christ, love as he did and be of service to everyone, especially those who are poor and marginalised.
To read a gospel reflection based on the Life and Writings of the Servant of God Joseph De Piro, kindly follow the link below. Alternatively, you can copy and paste the link into your internet browser. Thank you.
https://web.depiromssp.org/2026/05/11/sunday-reflection-the-ascension-of-the-lord-year-a-3/

---------
❓Are you a young male adult?
🔍 Is your heart burning with zeal to dedicate your life to God?
✝️ Are you searching for a religious community where you can live God’s will through missionary service?
🙋‍♂️ Get in touch with the Vocation Director Fr Bernard Falzon mssp on:
📞 +63 960 253 6977
💬 Whatsapp +63 960 253 6977
📧 email: [email protected]
👨‍💻 web page: https://web.depiromssp.org/
👍 Through this page
🏘 We invite you to become part of our community.
📖 Join us in proclaiming the Good News in the footsteps of St. Paul.

Address

336 Derrimut Road
Hoppers Crossing, VIC
3029

Opening Hours

Monday 7am - 6pm
Tuesday 7am - 6pm
Wednesday 7am - 6pm
Thursday 7am - 6pm
Friday 7am - 6pm
Saturday 7am - 6pm
Sunday 7am - 6pm

Telephone

+61394016367

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