Mustard Seed Catholic Worker

Mustard Seed Catholic Worker The Mustard Seed Catholic Worker is a house of hospitality inspired by the vision and witness of Peter Maurin and Dorothy Day.

Send mail to The Mustard Seed, PO Box 2592, Worcester MA 01613. The Mustard Seed Catholic Worker is a house of hospitality in the Catholic Worker movement, an apostolic movement begun in 1933 by Peter Maurin and Dorothy Day. The intent of the movement is to give flesh to the teachings of Jesus of Nazareth and Catholic social thought by doing the works of mercy and opposing the works of war. Our mi

ssion is to perform the corporal and spiritual works of mercy at a personal and social sacrifice, to nurture and promote a culture of concern and generosity so that human suffering is relieved and a better society not only envisioned but lived as a microcosm of what can be pursued more widely by allies and friends. The Mustard Seed (founded in 1972) is a community of faith, hope and love that has manifested as a living room, as a refuge for the hungry, lonely, and homeless and as an ideal (that in the ideal) is what a Christian community looks like or should look like in practice. Our community is committed to: prayer, personal and communal conversion of life, clarification of thought (lifelong learning), “the building of a society where it is easier for people to be good” and a work culture that sees labor as sacred and that upholds small-scale agriculture and artisanship as virtues and hopeful means for “building a new society in the shell of the old.”
The Mustard Seed has a major role in feeding the hungry. The house of hospitality at 93 Piedmont Street offers a free meal to Worcester’s hungry. The community has fed the hungry for over 40 years and has also worked on behalf of peace and environmental and social justice in many campaigns and initiatives over that time. The community remains committed to the Catholic Worker vision as espoused in its “Aims and Purposes” published each May in the Catholic Worker newspaper.

Thank you to Ken Robeau for volunteering his time and materials to put risers on our basement steps and fix the handrail...
05/29/2026

Thank you to Ken Robeau for volunteering his time and materials to put risers on our basement steps and fix the handrails. Appreciate it very much!

05/25/2026
05/23/2026

“The Good Samaritan”
“One does not have a neighbor; I make myself someone’s neighbor” -Paul Ricœur

This parable from Luke 10 is considered one of the most well known in the gospels. Like many other Christians, I have heard this story hundreds of times. However, it wasn’t until adulthood a mentor gave me a more significant understanding of this story.

When an expert in religious law, a lawyer, asks Jesus, “Who is my neighbor?”, Jesus answers him with this parable. A man traveling down a well known dangerous road from Jerusalem to Jericho is ambushed by robbers, who steal his possessions, and beat him leaving him “half dead.” Two members of the lawyer’s own religious class pass the man by but the one who does stop is an outsider, a Samaritan, who takes pity on the man, caring for his wounds, and takes him on his donkey to a nearby inn. He is the true neighbor. Jesus tells them to go and do likewise. The Jewish listeners would have winced because at the time Samaritans were considered a member of an excluded group, an ‘other’. Jesus is giving the lawyer a lesson in God’s law of love.

In his short essay on this parable Paul Ricouer notes that the Gospel would completely condemn the modern world. Jesus is telling us that we don’t simply HAVE neighbors. We MAKE ourselves someone’s neighbor. This is a very anti-modern attitude. Through a modern world of fences, borders, screens, social media, ring cameras, automobiles, etc. we are increasingly living in an age of a dehumanized world of abstract, anonymous and distant relationships. Many often using, religion, politics or “the law” to distance themselves from the wounded and most vulnerable people in our communities. Immigrants, refugees, single mothers, the unhoused, and those in prison. Like all of the parables, Jesus is using this one for the church to imagine the kind of community it is called to be. The parables are meant to be lived. If you want to love your neighbor you are going to have to go make yourself one.

Signed Giclee Prints, Digital Downloads, Coloring Page and Original Icon available: kellylatimoreicons.com

Many thanks to John Dick for volunteering his time to finish up the bases of the pillars on our new pavilion. Much appre...
05/21/2026

Many thanks to John Dick for volunteering his time to finish up the bases of the pillars on our new pavilion. Much appreciated. 🙏🏻

05/18/2026

There are so many to thank for helping to keep the Mustard seed going but I wanted to thank Berkshire Blanket company for giving us over 100 blankets and 60 pillows -all new -this season. Additionally, a thank you to Ned Lesure who painted/stained our front porch at no cost and Ken Robeau who installed risers on our basement steps at no cost as well. 🙏🏻

05/16/2026

Hi, we are looking for two four drawer filing cabinets.. maybe you have one you don’t use? We can take it off your hands.😊 call the mustard seed at 508-754-7098 and leave a message for Paula. Thx! We can pick up .

Address

93 Piedmont Street
Worcester, MA
01609

Opening Hours

Monday 5pm - 6:30pm
Tuesday 5pm - 6:30pm
Wednesday 5pm - 6:30pm
Thursday 5pm - 6:30pm
Friday 5pm - 6:30pm

Telephone

+15087547098

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