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Pastoral Plan 2008-2013

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PASTORAL PLAN 2008-2013

INTRODUCTION

In the spring of 2000, the Welcoming Parish Plan was developed and implemented at St. Michael’s Parish in Kailua Kona. In the intervening years, the planning group achieved some of the goals they proposed. The strategies that were done immediately were the most effective because with three subsequent changes in pastors, there was little attention given to the plan between 2002 and 2007. In 2007, when Father Lio Faletoi was appointed as pastor, attention to the future spiritual growth and development of the faith community resumed.

In an effort to be more inclusive, Father Lio changed the designation of the parish to the North Kona Catholic Community. The Community includes St. Michael the Archangel Catholic Church in Kailua Kona and all its mission churches which are the following:  Immaculate Conception Church in Holualoa, St. Paul’s Church in Hanalo, St. Peter’s Church in Kahalu’u, and Holy Rosary Church in Kalaoa.

During this period of time, the number of Hispanic parishioners doubled. There are approximately 350 people who attend the Spanish Mass each week. In addition, in 2006 Father John Fredy Quintero was assigned to minister to the Hispanic community. He quickly gained the trust and affection of the community. Father John, Father Lio and the Pastoral Council are all committed to helping incorporate and integrate the Spanish community into the mainstream of parish life at North Kona Catholic Community. Members of the Hispanic community serve on most of the parish’s major ministry committees, including the Pastoral Council The number of part time residents continues to grow. Many of them have expressed an interest in being more involved in the ministries of the parish. Members of the North Kona Catholic Community continue to show interest in both spiritual initiatives and social activities that will bring the community together. They are willing to use their gifts of time, talent and treasure to assist in achieving these goals.

Although in group discussions, surveys and focus groups, ministry to the youth of the parish has been raised repeatedly as a priority, the North Kona Catholic Community still lacks a specific ministry that addresses religious, social, and service needs of our youth. The Pastoral Plan lays out a plan to resolve this issue for the parish within a three-year period.

To read the full document, please download the PDF below.

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Last Updated on Saturday, 28 November 2009 08:27  

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Readings

Eighteenth Sunday in OrdinaryTime

Reading I – Ecclesiastes 1:2; 2:21-23

Reading II – Colossians 3:1-5, 9-11

Gospel – Luke 12:13-21

Values to Live By -  Today’s Scriptures contain some catch phrases that are still quite familiar in our world:  “All is vanity,” and “Eat, drink, and be merry” are both Scriptural in origin.  In the same way that it is easy to pray last week’s Lord’s Prayer thoughtlessly, it is easy to let the potent passages of Scripture that are built on these common sayings glide right off our slick ears.

Last week’s Scriptures instructed us to listen attentively to the Lord, so that we might pray carefully.  Our listening and our prayer are intimately connected.  In the same way, this week we learn that our values and our living are connected as well.  It has become quite common to ask, “Do you own your possessions or do they own you?”  Like the familiar maxims from today’s Readings, we might be tempted to quote this saying flippantly, and think that in the quoting of it we have truly considered it, perhaps lived it.  Not true, Qoheleth, Paul and Jesus tell us today.  It is not wrong to treasure or cherish things of earth or of our own humanity; it is only wrong when those things we cherish are not of God, are not of the self-giving Christ.  Copyright, J.S. Paluch Co.



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