PARISH STAFF
Fr. Alvin A. Sinasac, C.S.B., Pastor
Fr. Jay F. Walsh, C.S.B.
Fr. William J. Frankenberger, C.S.B.
Deacon Jean-Paul Budinger
Welcome to St. Anne Catholic Community
Our Mission
We, the Catholic Community of St. Anne,
aspire to follow the example of Jesus Christ.
We foster holiness by encouraging each other
on our journey of faith. We seek the Kingdom of
God as a Eucharistic community. We witness
the presence of the living Christ by our
profound hospitality, respect and love for all.
Sunday
7:30AM - 9AM - 11AM - 5PM
Spanish 12:45PM - 7 PM
Weekdays
Monday, Wednesday, Friday
7AM - 12 Noon
Tuesday and Thursday
7AM - 12 Noon - 5:30PM
Spanish: Wednesday: 7:30PM - First Friday of
the Month: 7:30PM
Saturday
8:15AM - 5:30PM (Sunday Vigil)
St. Anne, Matron
Our Parish Namesake
Her Feast Day: July 26
Patron Saint of Canada; Cabinetmakers; Housewives; Women in Labor
We have no certain knowledge of the Mother of Our Lady. For her name
and that of her husband Joachim, we have to depend on the testimony of
the apocryphal Protevangelium of James, which is not a trustworthy
document even though its earliest form dates to the second century. The
story told is that his childlessness was made a public reproach to
Joachim, who retired to the desert for forty days to fast and pray to God.
At the same time, Anne (Hannah, which signifies “grace”) “mourned in
two mournings, and lamented in two lamentations.” As she sat praying
beneath a laurel bush, an angel appeared and said to her, “Ánne, the
Lord hath heard thy prayer, and thou shalt conceive and bring forth, and
thy seed shall be spoken of in all the world.” Anne replied, “As the Lord
my God liveth, if I beget either male or female I will bring it as a gift to the
Lord my God; and it shall minister to Him in holy things all the days of its
life.” Likewise, an angel appeared to her husband, and in due time it was
born of them Mary, who was to be the Mother of God. Mary was most
likely their only child.
Tradition has it that, fifty years after her death, St. Anne’s body was
brought to France by St. Mary Magdalen and her companions. The early
cultus of St. Anne in Constantinople is attested by the fact that the
Emperor Justinian I dedicated a shrine to her in the middle of the sixth
century. Pope Constantine (708-715) probably introduced the devotion
into Rome. There are two eighth-century representations of St. Anne in
the frescoes of St. Maria Antiqua. She is mentioned conspicuously in a
list of relics belonging to St. Angelo in Pescheria, and we know that
Pope St. Leo III (795-816) presented a vestment to St. Mary Major which
was embroidered with the Annunciation, St. Joachim, and St. Anne. But
though there is very little to suggest any widespread cultus of the saint
before the middle of the fourteenth century, this devotion became very
popular a hundred years afterwards and was later derided by Luther. The
so-called selbdritt pictures (that is Jesus, Mary and Anne) were
particularly an object of attack. At the request of certain English
partitioners, Urban VI addressed in 1382 to the bishops of England
alone the first papal pronouncement on the subject, enjoining the
observance of an annual feast. It is quite possible that it was occasioned
by the marriage of King Richard II to Anne of Bohemia in that year. The
feast was extended to the whole Western church in 1584. She became
particularly popular in France, largely due to Tradition that her relics are
there. Her popularity in France later carried to Canada.
(Adapted from 100 Saints and other sources)
The Story of St. Anne
From the beginning, St. Anne was not only
conceived as a place of prayer and worship, but
also, like the great churches of the Middle Ages,
as a beautiful structure which, in the wealth of its
architectural features, would speak to the faithful of
the wealth of their Christian heritage.
This schedule for Mass is subject
to change. For changes to Mass
times and Holy Days of
Obligation, please refer to the
Church Bulletin.