St Francis of Assisi Parish

St Francis of Assisi Parish To keep you informed about activities at the Church.

02/02/2025

Jubilee Year - Pilgrims of Hope

02/02/2025

The past two weeks attendance has been awesome.

09/01/2024

Announcements - 07/01/2024

Friday - Mass at 1730hrs
Sunday - Rosary 0800hrs
- Mass 0830hrs

2023 reports and 2024 year plans to be submitted on Sunday

PPC executive meeting - Wednesday 1730hrs
PPC meeting - after Mass on Sunday, all reps to be present

Thobo preparations to commence for an improved end of year celebration

Maintenance issues to be addressed :-
Tile grouting in the church
Attend to non working fans
Broken window pane to be replaced
Benches - nails popping up on some benches, need a hammer

Ngome Pilgrimage - Feb 22 - 25. P1200 fare.
We can start paying instalments now.
See me if you need more info.

Let's make a change this year and care more for our priest and our church.

Now available... Get yourself a copy.. P20.00
18/12/2023

Now available... Get yourself a copy.. P20.00

17/12/2023

Today's announcements:-

Tuesday and Friday Mass at 1730hrs

Saturday - General cleaning by all at 10am

Sunday - Rosary 0800hrs followed by Mass at 0830hrs

Sunday evening - 1800hrs - Christmas Mass carols & dinner (please pledge dishes) Plate will be P50, glass of soft drink P10, glass of wine P15 - please be punctual

Christmas Eve Mass at 2030hrs (to be confirmed)

Monday - Christmas day Mass at 0900hrs

Tuesday - Boxing day (St Stephen) Mass at 0830hrs

01/06/2023

Good morning
An update to Archbishop Frank's visit to Kasane.
Arrival Sat 3rd June approx 2pm - light lunch with Executive Committee and the Sisters
- Boat Cruise at 3pm, you are welcome to join the Bishops, boat fee P200 including park fee, bring own water and drinks. Register with me by Friday afternoon so that we can book the boat depending on the number of people keen to go.
- Supper at the priests house for our visitors
MmaPeter has pledged 3 bean salad, Tracy Pasta Salad, Josephine scones
Sunday 4th June
Mass at 0830hrs
Bishops will go to Vic Falls after Mass
Braai for all and we are encouraged to pledge dishes, BoRre to organise meat and braai wood
Don't forget to include drinks in our pledges.
Please forward your pledges to me.
Am reachable on 71 616 736
Let's make it a memorable weekend for all and enjoy the company of our Good Shepherds
Have a blessed day

09/04/2023
01/04/2023

Palm Sunday 02/04/2023 - Procession starts from the bus rank at 7am.

22/02/2023

ASH Wednesday mass at 1730hrs .
Lenten talk by Sr Clotilda before Mass.

13/08/2022

BENEDICT XVI WAS THE SECOND POPE TO ABDICATE THE PAPACY , BUT WHO WAS THE FIRST?

Before Pope Celestine V ascended to the papacy in 1294, the Church was in a sort of “curial crisis.” Pope Nicholas IV had died in 1292, and for two years the Chair of Saint Peter was left sede vacante.

The twelve surviving cardinals (later eleven, as one died during the sede vacante) were in a deadlock, deliberating for nearly two years without reaching a consensus after the death of Nicholas IV in April of 1292.

They first balloted in Rome for 10 days, but no candidate reached a two-thirds majority. They adjourned until June, which was later extended until September after a summer epidemic in the city. After failing to elect a new pope, the non-Roman cardinals dispersed from the city, while the Roman cardinals remained.

The remaining cardinals continued balloting into the next summer of 1293 while Rome fell into disorder – palaces were razed, churches were sacked, and pilgrims were slayed. Still unable to elect a new pope, they adjourned and agreed to meet again in October at Perugia north of Rome.

In Perugia, they debated fruitlessly into the next year. By the summer of 1294, only six cardinals remained in the city. At their final meeting before they were to adjourn again, a letter was read from brother Pietro da Morrone, a Benedictine hermit known to the cardinals as a saintly figure. Morrone’s letter warned them that God revealed to him they would incur divine wrath if they did not quickly elect a pope.

After the letter was read, the Dean of the College of Cardinals Latino Orsini exclaimed: “In the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, I elect brother Pietro di Morrone.” The other cardinals agreed and recalled the others to Perugia to consent to the election on July 5th, 1294.

When sent for at his mountaintop hermitage, Morrone refused to accept the papacy and even tried to flee. It was only when a group of cardinals and the King of Naples Charles II came to see him that he agreed and took the name Pope Celestine V.

His coronation ceremony took place on August 29th, but since only three cardinals were present, his coronation was repeated a few days later when more had arrived in the city of L’Aquila. Known as the “Hermit Pope,” he was the only pope to be crowned twice.

The reluctant pope, Celestine V’s papacy proved ineffectual. He did however renew the papal bull Ubi periculum which made the papal conclave the standard way to elect a pope, preventing any further long periods of sede vacante. He was thus the last non-conclave elected pope in the history of the Church.

After realizeing his lack of authority, personal incompatibility with papal duties, and desire to return to the life of a hermit, h consulted with Cardinal Benedetto Caetani about the possibility of resignation.

His final decree as pope was declaring the right of resignation. A week later, he exercised his right and became the first pope to formally resign the papacy. In his resignation, he cited the following reasons for doing so.

“The desire for humility, for a purer life, for a stainless conscience, the deficiencies of his own physical strength, his ignorance, the perverseness of the people, his longing for the tranquility of his former life.”

Over 700 years later, Pope Benedict XVI would become the second pope to freely exercise the right to resignation on February 28th, 2013.

Address

P. O. Box 579
Kasane
KASANE

Opening Hours

Tuesday 17:30 - 18:15
Sunday 08:30 - 17:00

Telephone

+2676252631

Website

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