Saint James Parish, Belvidere

Saint James Parish, Belvidere Catholic Church

12/28/2025

New Year’s Day Masses
Wednesday, December 31st, 2025
7:30 am - No Mass!
4:00 pm - English
6:30 pm - Spanish
11:00 pm - Holy Hour

Thursday, January 1st , 2026 - Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God (Holy Day of Obligation)
12:00 am - Midnight Mass
7:30 am - English
10:00 am - English
12:00 pm -Spanish

*Please note there will be no adoration, confessions, or 6:30 pm Spanish Mass
*Tenga en cuenta que no habrá adoración, confesiones, ni Misa de 6:30 pm

12/24/2025

Christmas Mass Schedule/Horario de Misas Navideñas

Wednesday, December 24th, 2025 - Christmas Eve
4:00 PM - English
7:00 PM - Spanish
11:15 PM - Choir Concert

**Join us for our Christmas concert at 11:15 pm preceding the Midnight Mass, both English and Spanish choirs will be singing.

**Acompáñenos para el concierto de Navidad a las 11:15 pm, los coros de Ingles y Español estarán cantando.

Thursday, December 25th, 2025 - Christmas Day
12:00 AM - Midnight Mass
7:30 AM - English
10:00 AM - English
12:00 PM - Spanish

11/25/2025

Thanksgiving Mass times are 7:30 am in English and 9 am in Spanish. The parish office will be closed Wednesday at 12 p.m., Thursday, and Friday in observance of the Thanksgiving Holiday. We will reopen on Monday at 8 am.

Deacon Stu Dobson's Homily 7-18-25Friday, July 18, 2025 – 15th Week in Ordinary timeAlso Feast Day of Saint Camillus de ...
07/18/2025

Deacon Stu Dobson's Homily 7-18-25
Friday, July 18, 2025 – 15th Week in Ordinary time
Also Feast Day of Saint Camillus de Lellis, Priest
Ex 11:10-12:14; Ps 116:12-13, 15 and 16bc, 17-18; Mt12-1-8

On this Feast Day of St. Camillus de Lellis, we need to pay close attention to today’s reading from the book of Exodus in the Old Testament. It is where God prescribes the method the Israelites will celebrate the Feast of the Passover for all times to come. God is preparing them to flee their oppression. And while they may not know it yet, this will be a practice for the night they are to flee. It is also time for all of us to take notice, and prepare, for our own exodus. Just like St. Camillus did by fleeing from a life of gambling, and to serve those who were stricken with the plague. No matter where you are in the world, the world is changing, and we need to prepare for what is coming next.

The plight of the Israelites in Egypt is something that all of us should study, learn, and understand how God was with them throughout all the times of their history. How God’s plan for the salvation of the Israelites is also God’s plan for our own salvation. God needed to make a statement, and He will do so on that night, to convince the Pharaoh to let His people go; by taking the Pharaoh’s only son away from him. Only by doing so will it procure the freedom of God’s children from oppression. Then, by the symbol of a pure unblemished lamb’s blood spread over their doors, the destructive blow from God will pass over them and they will be set free. This is the promise God made to them. Our Jewish friends celebrate this feast every year, the Feast of the Passover, to commemorate the time the Lord freed them from persecution and oppression.

As Christians, we can look back on this time and see the parallels of our own savior, Jesus Christ. How God gave up His own son, the unblemished lamb, to free us from our own persecution and oppression by sin; to allow us to escape that torment and become free. We commemorate it every time we go to Mass and re-live the passion of our Lord, Jesus Christ. A time for us to girt our loins and mark ourselves with the body and blood of Christ by participating in the Eucharistic celebration and receiving Jesus in us. Just like our Jewish friends, we too need to remember our savior, the one who gave everything for us and shed His blood so as to free us for all eternity.

As Jesus tells the Pharisees, something greater than the temple is here. Now is our time to see what that is, to receive the mercy, and grace God wants us to have. The time to stop our sinful nature and have that torment of sin pass over us. The final sacrifice has been given, for the Lord is here. Take heed and remember, not only what the Israelites did during the Passover, but what Jesus did for us and for our salvation. Study it, learn from it, and remember it every time we go to Mass.

Deacon Steven Johnson’s Homily 7-10-2514th Week of Ordinary Time, Thursday, 7-10-25, Year CReadings: 1st Reading: Gen 44...
07/11/2025

Deacon Steven Johnson’s Homily 7-10-25

14th Week of Ordinary Time, Thursday, 7-10-25, Year C

Readings: 1st Reading: Gen 44:18-21, 23b-29,45:1-5; Psalm 105:16-21; Gospel Mt 10:7-15

Theme: Give Without Cost

At Baptism, we were given the Holy Spirit to strengthen us, faith to believe in God and His saving grace, the forgiveness of our sins, and adoption as His sons and daughters so we can share in the inheritance of God’s Kingdom. Without cost. we have received; without cost, we are to give.

It is hard to give something away without expecting something in return. We give away our car to charity and get a tax deduction. We donate money and get our name on a plaque. We do a good deed and get a “thank you” in return. We always seem to want something in return for what we give. But what if we did not get anything in return? How would we feel if we gave away our car and received nothing return, donated money and remained anonymous, or did a good deed and did not get a “thank you” in return? Would we feel disappointed, maybe harbor some resentment or even get angry?

It is human to give and receive. It is divine to just give. To give our time, talent, and treasure to those who need it most and then walk away with no expectation or an IOU chip in our back pocket, is divine. Yet, even Jesus recognizes that the “laborer deserves his keep.” Our giving must be tempered with that of surviving and living for God. If we give everything away without any return, then we, ourselves will be lost, and that is not God’s intent. What we need to do is understand the measured meaning of giving and receiving and what our true motives are behind our actions.

If we only give in order to satisfy some desire for ourselves, then our giving is transactional. But, if we give out of love for another with no expectations of any kind, then that is divine.

Joseph gives his love to his brothers with no regard to how they treated him in the past. He even recognizes that it was God’s will that he was sold into Egypt in order to save lives and bring the news of the one living God to all people. There was no expectation of a return on his gift of love to his brothers, even though they felt unworthy of that love.

Jesus’s entire life, from birth to the cross, was a gift without return. He gave His life and demanded nothing for our salvation except for our love of Him, which is His “keep.”

When our gift is done out of love, support, and respect for another without the slightest hint of a need for a return, then our gift is one of true love; in other words, divine. If we receive an unexpected return, such as a “thank you,” or card in acknowledgement of our gift, then we should be gracious and accept it as our “keep.” For that returned gift to us is their expression of love for our actions, and can be divine for us.

Love and be loved, if not by the person you gave to, then by God Himself, knowing we are following His Son, Jesus. That is our “keep.”

06/18/2025

The parish office will be closed tomorrow, June 19th, in recognition of "Juneteenth," and will re-open at 8:00 am on Friday, June 20th. Although the parish office will be closed on Thursday for the legal holiday, the church will be open as usual for the 7:30 a.m. Mass, Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament, Adoration during the day, evening Confessions, then Mass in Spanish at 6:30 p.m.

This Sunday, June 22nd, is "The Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ" (Corpus Christi). There will be a procession with Jesus in the monstrance through the streets of Belvidere at 1:00 p.m., after the 12:00 Spanish Mass. To join in the procession, please meet outside the main church entrance at 1:00 p.m.

Deacon Stu Dobson's Homily 6-6-25Friday of the 7th week of Easter, Saint Norbert, Bishop, June 6, 2025 Acts 25: 13b-21; ...
06/06/2025

Deacon Stu Dobson's Homily 6-6-25

Friday of the 7th week of Easter, Saint Norbert, Bishop, June 6, 2025

Acts 25: 13b-21; Ps 103-1-2, 11-12, 19-20; Jn 21:15-19

A group of men were sitting around talking about their lives in Christ a while back. It seemed to be a great topic given Pentecost is on Sunday. Often, we forget how we first met the Lord. As we went around the room, each man shared their encounter with Christ. Some had very existential experiences, much like St. Paul being knocked down, and others had a very quiet moment, where they knew God was present. A couple of the guys expressed the idea that they have never felt a “spiritual” experience, yet they still believe that Jesus died for us and rose from the dead. Much like after Thomas’s encounter with the risen Lord where Jesus says, “Blessed are those who have not seen, yet still believe” (Jn 20:29). We realized that everyone has or had their own encounter with the Lord in a unique way. None was better, or worse than the other. But it was what we did with that experience that made a difference. All of us felt the presence of the Holy Spirit, but each of us reacted differently to that presence. We realized that God was moving in a way we could not understand, and all we needed to do was act on the impulse and let God lead.

St. Norbert, Bishop, whose feast day is today, also took a different path with his spiritual life. After becoming a sub-deacon, he declined to take on higher roles. But, after hearing a divine announcement, basically a word from God, and narrowly avoiding death, he had a complete conversion of heart. He went on to be ordained and became a monk. Persecution followed him as he tried to preach, and eventually, he took to preaching in Northern France, where he earned a reputation for eloquence and miracles. Along with 13 of his followers, he established the order of Premonstratensians in 1120. Today, they number around 1,125 members. He died from exhaustion around 1132 and was canonized by Pope Gregory in 1582.

In our first reading today, Paul’s imprisonment on the surface would seem like a disastrous event. Yet Paul, who knew the Lord through a personal encounter, let God lead him to places he never thought he would go. In those places, God used Paul to do good. Here is Paul, imprisoned falsely, and he still preaches the truth, that Jesus is the risen Lord. In the Gospel, Jesus is challenging Peter to a deeper sense of love. Not that He believed Peter didn’t love Him, but to get Peter to understand the deep relationship Jesus wants to have with everyone. Jesus is getting Paul to dig deep into his own psyche and love others as Jesus wants him to love. It is only after that deep commitment that Jesus hands His flock over to Peter to lead. To guide Peter on how to do that, Jesus simply says, “Follow me.”

Each one of us has, or may have had, a personal encounter with Jesus. In many cases, we see it clearly, but in other cases we may not have recognized it yet. And that is ok. There are also times where that encounter can feel thousands of miles away, and that is ok, too. Our lives are filled with many ups and downs, and sometimes we tend not to think about God, but you know what? God is always thinking about us. It does not matter if we are not right there in the moment. It is during these hard times that we rely on our faith to carry us through. We reach deep down into our own psyche like Jesus did with Paul, Peter, and St. Norbert and say, Yes Lord, I love you. In the end, that is all that matters. That is the love Jesus wants from us. That is when we answer the call, when Jesus says, “Follow me.”

06/04/2025

We would like to let you know that a Missionary Priest will be at all Masses this weekend, June 7th & 8th, speaking on behalf of the Carmelite Missionary Sisters of St. Therese. There will be a second collection taken up at all Masses this weekend. Thank You.

Les informamos que un sacerdote misionero estará presente en todas las misas de este fin de semana, 7 y 8 de junio, en representación de las Hermanas Carmelitas Misioneras de Santa Teresita. Se realizará una segunda colecta en todas las misas de este fin de semana. Gracias.

Deacon Stu Dobson’s Homily 5-23-25Friday of the 5th week of Easter, May 23, 2025Acts 15:22-31; Ps 57:8-10, 12; Jn 15:12-...
05/23/2025

Deacon Stu Dobson’s Homily 5-23-25
Friday of the 5th week of Easter, May 23, 2025
Acts 15:22-31; Ps 57:8-10, 12; Jn 15:12-17

One of my nightly routines is to sit and watch the news. Much of the news is just yelling in your face about how urgent and devastating something is, or how we must take immediate action or something disastrous will happen. The announcer was practically yelling in my face about the “urgent story” that happened that day. We needed to react right now so justice could be done. There was no discussion about the fact, nor whether the way they wanted us to act was right or wrong. We just needed to succumb to our emotions and act. There was so much noise I was beginning to feel my opinions and, even worse yet, the truth didn’t matter. After all, it was in the announcer’s urge to act immediately was all that mattered. So, I decided to shut the TV off and sit in silence. It wasn’t too long before my ears heard birds chirping. My eyes then turned toward, them and I watched the birds feeding on the bird feeder. I heard a car go by, and then an airplane fly overhead. But mostly, I heard silence. My head stopped spinning and hurting and my heart slowed down. I felt a sense of peace in the quiet. So I decided to leave the TV off and put my phone away. I went to bed that night feeling very peaceful and had one of the best night’s sleep I have had in a long time.

It seems the Christians in Antioch, Syria, and Cilicia were struggling in a similar way. They were getting overwhelmed with those claiming to be disciples and teaching them all sorts of things. They didn’t know who to believe and were easily led away from the truth. It was so unsettling that representatives needed to be sent to straighten things out. By just showing up and explaining a few things, the Gentiles were overjoyed to hear the truth and not be led astray. The “noise” they heard before was silenced, and in the quiet, they heard the truth. Barnabas, Paul, Judas, and Silas, by being themselves, strong Christians who projected their way of life just by the way they walked, talked, and greeted others, showed that in the quiet, truth and love prevails. Jesus reminds us of this again in the Gospel; all we need to do is “Love one another as I love you.”

I spent the remainder of that evening, not so much in silence, but in conversation with someone I love. Something we had not done in a while. And later on, I read a book about Jesus and the Eucharist, something else I truly love. Both of these things, the conversation, and the reading, allowed me to hear the truth and feel the love of God. When this first happened, I made a commitment to myself that I would try, at least one night a week, to unplug, listen to the silence, and be with those I love. Unfortunately, I haven’t been able to do that as much as I would have wanted, but it is still a goal.

“Love one another, as I love you.” A simple phrase to say, but so difficult to carry out, but we must. If we are going to keep ourselves focused on the one who loves us the most, we need to shut out the world and the noise, and spend time with Him. He is the truth, the way, and the life. in the quiet, in the silence as we listen to the birds and an occasional car or plane go by. It is there that we will find truth and love, and not be swayed to “Act now” regardless of the consequences.

Deacon Stu Dobson’s Reflection 5-16-25Friday of the 4th week of Easter, May 16, 2025Acts 13:26-33; Ps 2: 6-11; Jn 14:1-6...
05/19/2025

Deacon Stu Dobson’s Reflection 5-16-25
Friday of the 4th week of Easter, May 16, 2025
Acts 13:26-33; Ps 2: 6-11; Jn 14:1-6

This week started with Jesus being the good shepherd, the one who will make sure we are protected and cared for. All week long we have been hearing about how Jesus is not only the Good Shepherd, but also the Son of God (Tuesday), the light of the world (Wednesday), and the servant to all (Thursday). And today, we hear; He is the way, the truth and the light. No one can come to the Father, unless they come through Him. Jesus has completed what He could do on earth, and soon now He must depart and prepare a place for us in the everlasting kingdom.

Thomas, who at first didn’t believe, but then declared, “My Lord, and My God!,” once he saw the risen Jesus, now questions how they will know the way. I can almost hear the exasperation in Jesus’ voice. “I am the way….” Like Thomas, why do we even question the directions from our master? I sometimes question the directions from my guidance map, but for 2000 years we have been studying and working to understand the directions Jesus gave us. There should be no question on what way we should go. And yet, we still make wrong turns.

“I am the way and the truth and the life.” How clearer can it be? If we want life, life that will last for eternity, there is no other way. The trouble we have is, following that path. Our own free will gets in the way and forces us to take the harder road. And sometimes, we come across roadblocks that make it almost impossible to continue on. I heard the other day the phrase, “Stay close to Jesus.” When I was young, I was always taught to stay close to the leader of our group, they will keep us safe. As I got older, and became one of those leaders, I always told those following, stay close, and you will be fine. I have to believe, as Jesus was approaching His inevitable return to His Father, He was also saying, “Stay close to me, I AM the way.”

If you want to know, the way, the truth and the life, what better way to do that then to stay close to Jesus? Stay close to him from the moment you get out of bed, until you fall fast asleep. Implore Him to stay with you throughout the night, to be there and protect you while you sleep. Let him lighten the darkness as you travel around. And I am not talking just about when it is dark outside, it is also about when we are living our life, where we need to stay in the light and not be darkened by sin. Then emulate His service by being a humble servant to all we meet. Love them, care for them regardless of who they are. Remember, they deserve the dignity of being a person, just like us. And finally, we say YES to Him by consecrating our whole life to Him, the one who will provide the way, the truth, and the everlasting life we seek.

Deacon Stu Dobson’s Reflection 5-9-253rd Friday of Easter, May 9, 2025Acts 9:1-20; Ps 117:1-2; Jn 6:52-59Once again, I h...
05/09/2025

Deacon Stu Dobson’s Reflection 5-9-25

3rd Friday of Easter, May 9, 2025

Acts 9:1-20; Ps 117:1-2; Jn 6:52-59

Once again, I have the opportunity to attend one of my grandchildren’s First Communion during Mother’s Day weekend. What an honor to be invited to witness Jesus’ invitation for all of us to receive Him! Especially for the first time! The last time I saw my grandson, he was preparing. He was proud to show us all he had learned about the Real Presence of Jesus in the Eucharist. I can’t wait to see him receive Jesus for the first time. As I was thinking about this, I flashed back to the Easter Vigil we had at our church. I was almost brought to tears seeing the Catechumens receive Jesus for the first time. To see their faces light up and be brought to tears is so wonderful to see. Watching the conversion these folks went through in their lives, and now see them fully participating in the sacraments. It’s a great reminder that this is a gift Jesus brings to all of us.

Today, we once again hear the story of St. Paul’s conversion. Dramatic and beautiful all on its own. Wouldn’t we all want a powerful conversion like that? I’m not sure I would want to get knocked down and lose my sight. Just to have the encounter with Jesus would be enough excitement for me! However, many of us do not experience that kind of a conversion. For many of us, it either started as a child at our own baptism, or some significant event in our life which drew us back to God. Sometimes it’s a slow process, taking years for our eyes to be opened, like the catechumens at the Easter Vigil. And, I can imagine, some are still wondering if they will ever have a St. Paul like experience.

I hadn’t thought about it much in the past, but when I read the story again, I thought of Ananias. What was Ananias thinking during all of this? He was a strong man of God, and dutifully answered “Here I am, Lord” when called. But I sense that he also had a moment of doubt. Seriously God? This man, Saul, is evil! He is persecuting and doing awful things to Jesus’ followers. And you’re asking me to go see him? But God persisted and Ananias obeyed. When Ananias went to see Saul, he made it very clear who sent him and what was to happen. Ananias was still sheltering himself from the situation, but also making it very clear who sent him there. We can be that way sometimes. We tend to hide behind our faith a little and say, “God told me to do this,” or “God said this…” and then we lack the boldness to tell the rest of the story. We seem to be waiting for the Saul experience on a road somewhere to bring our faith out of the shadows.

But, we can be bold. And we don’t need that roadside knocking down shakeup that Paul needed. All we need to do is proclaim the truth, and live our lives as Jesus has guided us. It takes strength to do that, and what better place to get that strength than from the Eucharist. Jesus tells us today that unless you eat of his flesh, and drink of his blood, you will not have life within you. As crazy as it sounds, it is the only way for us to be in union with Jesus. You want a roadside Paul experience? Come to mass, praise and worship God, and receive the Eucharist. What a beautiful way to express our own personal conversion. And that life you receive, will be with you forever. Just be ready to be knocked off your horse when you receive Jesus.

Deacon Steven Johnson’s Homily 5-1-252nd Week of Easter, Thursday, 5-1-25, Year CReadings: 1st Reading: Acts 5:27-33; Ps...
05/09/2025

Deacon Steven Johnson’s Homily 5-1-25
2nd Week of Easter, Thursday, 5-1-25, Year C
Readings: 1st Reading: Acts 5:27-33; Psalm 34:2,9,17-20; Gospel Jn 3:31-36/
Optional Memorial: St. Joseph The Worker
Theme: Faith & Works Leads to Everlasting Life

As I walked along someone approached me who was handing out church pamphlets and said, “Faith in Jesus Christ will save you! All you have to do is have faith in Jesus, and you are saved.” I said to him, “But what about works? If all I have is faith alone and do not put it into action, what good is my faith? Am I not being selfish and hoarding my faith to myself? Is that what Jesus asks of our faith?” He looked at me with a blankness in his eyes and then quickly moved on to the next person.

Jesus taught us that the two most important laws are, first, a complete love for God, and second, for our neighbor. (Mt 22:36-40) In other words, our salvation boils down to two things: Faith (love for God) and Works (love for neighbor). These two go hand-in-hand. You cannot have one without the other and expect to be truly saved. Faith alone is not enough, as St. James tells us,

“What good is it, my brothers, if someone says he has faith but does not have works?

Can that faith save him?

So, also, faith of itself, if it does not have works, is dead.”

(Jas 2:14,17)

Reading scripture by yourself and contemplating God’s Word alone is a very pious act and a start on the path to salvation. But keeping these words and the faith that comes from them to yourself is not enough. You must put into action what you have read in the Holy Scriptures, or your faith is well, dead.

Reaching out to others beyond your comfort zone, forgiving those who have hurt you, or spending your time helping others without expecting a return is imperative for a true believer, one looking for salvation. We must find ways to put our faith into action as the apostles did in the first reading.

The apostles were scared at first to even mention Jesus’ name in public. But, after Jesus gave them the Holy Spirit, they took their faith in Jesus and, through works of evangelization, boldly proclaimed Him all over Jerusalem, knowing that they could be put to death for doing so. Their “works” came out of their faith.

In today’s gospel, Jesus tells us that “the one who comes from above is above all” and “Whoever does accept His testimony certifies that God is trustworthy.” So, these words tell us we must have “Faith.” Jesus also tells us that, “Whoever believes in the Son has eternal life, but whoever disobeys the Son will not see life, but the wrath of God will be upon him.” These words, especially that of disobeying, tell us that we must “do” what Jesus asks us to do, which is “Works”.

If your Faith is solid but you are not quite sure where to begin with Works, why not start out with the Corporal Works of Mercy:

Feed the Hungry, Give Drink to the Thirsty, Shelter the Homeless, Visit the Sick, Visit Prisoners, Bury the Dead, and Clothe the Naked.

These seven merciful acts are a great place to start thinking about how you can apply Works to your Faith in everyday life, not just at home but out in the world.

So have Faith and love God by reading scripture, attending Mass, and praying. Then do Works by reaching out to help your neighbor through the Corporal Works of Mercy. In this way, you are putting your Faith into action. Believe in Jesus’ words with Faith, live out those words with Works, and you will be granted salvation in heaven.Today we celebrate St. Joseph the Worker. St. Joseph is the true manifestation of putting faith to work for the good of all humanity. For without the works of St. Joseph, Jesus’ mission to save humanity would have been much more difficult. Like the Archangel speaking to Mary at her annunciation, the Archangel spoke to St. Joseph in his betrothal to Mary. As with Mary’s fiat to God and her works in bearing His Son Jesus, St. Joseph’s fiat in creating a family for Mary and Jesus is no less important or astounding.

Address

402 Church Street
Belvidere, IL
61008

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 4pm
Tuesday 8am - 4pm
Wednesday 8am - 4pm
Thursday 8am - 4pm
Friday 9am - 4pm

Telephone

+18155476397

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