Our Lady of Guadalupe School fosters Gospel values, inspires academic excellence, and develops service and leadership. We face this as a sacramental community united and

sponsored by the Holy Spirit.

Congratulations to all our

Pi Competition Participants!

Preschool wishes everyone

Happy Pi Day!

Check out the NEW OLG Preferred Business Partners Directory

Principal's Letter

Dear Families, 


Happy Pi Day (3.14) to each of you! Today, students, led by our 8th graders, at the direction of Ms. Savio, taught their Family Groups all about 𝞹! Through scavenger hunts, games and interactive opportunities, all of our K-8 students had an opportunity to learn something new, and grow together! Thank you for your leadership, 8th graders and Ms. Savio! Want to know a little more about the most infamous irrational number of all, 𝞹 ? Check out the video, shared here from PBS Kids to learn a little more about Pi!


Congrats also to our Pi Recital Champs in middle school: 1st place: Lena, 7th grade -89 digits, 2nd place: Frankie, 6th grade -70 digits, 3rd place: Eli, 6th grade -50 digits and Other participants: Kellen, AJ, Emmett, and Evi!


Quick Announcements before my Lenten reflection for the week:

  • Re-enrollment closes tomorrow. See below. 
  • Auction Updates!!! See below! All I can say is WOW!!! AWESOME!
  • Tomorrow is Green Spirit Day in honor of St. Patrick’s Day on Sunday.
  • Saturday night is St. Patrick’s Day (Eve) Community Dinner with Holy Rosary! Please join us as we celebrate this festive day, and join as a new Parish Family. See more below. 
  • Check out the many important announcements below.


And now for another Lenten Reflection: 


On this Pi Day, I spent my day at a Principal Meeting with other leaders in the Archdiocese. Beginning our day with Mass, I found myself thinking about other things, besides Pi, that are irrational. Countless things in our world do not make sense, and yet often we find ourselves believing anyway. For some people, believing in God is irrational. “How can you believe in something you cannot see? Touch? Hear?” For others, not believing in God is equally nonsensical. “How can you believe that you are the end and the beginning? That there is no power higher than your own human existence? How can you not believe in the boundless, unending love He has for each of us?”  All people believe in something. All people have doubts. No one is excluded, including Jesus himself.  We are a society brimming with people of faith, and people of doubt. On a daily basis, we are engulfed with the complexities and things that leave us in constant quandary and wonder. Things that we believe without seeing, regardless of how unbelievable they may be to someone else, and things that we question; perplexed without clear articulation why things are the way they are. And yet here we are-- together as a society of mixed feelings, beliefs, and relationships. How irrational. 


No matter the size of a circle, the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter will always be the same (Pi.) For people of faith, no matter what we do, God still loves us. These are irrational things that we know to be true. Facts. So often, things in life are irrational, for good and for bad. Winning the lotto, irrationally awesome. Unexplained loss and heartache, irrationally crushing. They are facts that are true, yes, but sometimes simply do not make sense, aren’t justified. Aren’t fair. And yet, these things exist. They occur, with or without an explanation, even if we feel we are entitled to an answer.


Americans are notorious for wanting to rationalize everything. So the question then is this: How do we sit with the irrational? The unexplained? The unknowns? How do we just “let go and let God”, especially when we don’t want to?  Americans, unlike so many other cultures, feel deserving of control. We must have the ability to control a situation, an outcome. We must make sense of all things. In so many ways, this makes us a society of doubt, of laxed faith. We struggle, as a whole, to remember that all things in life are only rational to God, and it is up to us to accept the irrational, the unexplained, the unknowns and leave the certainties to God. It’s beyond our pay grade to have all the answers. We are not God, so why do we even feel entitled to play God? I’m certain there are not many of us who would truly welcome the responsibility that God has. 


In this season of Lent, we are reminded to sit in that irrationality of the world around us. Things that we cannot justify, explain, reason or accept. We have to make space to allow God to speak to us through the world and people around us, and guide us in ways to help change the inequities and make the world better. We have to be willing to hear where God is guiding us, as his people, and lean in to the irrationality, with the belief that something more is there-- that there is a purpose for the imperfection. We must let go of the desire for control. There is a purpose for the unexplained, even if it’s not explained to us in the timely fashion we desire. As people of faith, we must find it in our hearts to believe in the no-matter-what-ness. No matter the size of our world, God will continue to call us each by name and love us just the same. His love for us will not change, regardless of the population. There will always be good, there will always be light, there will always be hope, mercy, forgiveness and love; all these things will always exist, even when they don’t make sense. 


To believe can so often be irrational. But when we let go of control, we let God step into the driver’s seat of our lives. When we put God at the center, as I have said before, the irrational suddenly finds its place, and if we are lucky, sometimes we are guided to answers in this world, in our time. Faith can be the most perfect and most powerful example of Pi, something irrational and yet perfect, if we allow it to be.  Pi beautifully goes on and on forever. It is a mathematical constant. And God’s love for us is the same, if we choose to believe it.  Or as George Strait once put it-- it’s “a love without end, Amen.”

With Gratitude, 

Ms. Lauren Hobbs
Lauren Hobbs

Principal, Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic School

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Important Dates

Mar 15 - Wear GREEN in honor of St. Patrick's Day ☘️

Mar 16 - Lenten Communal Reconciliation Services 10:00 am

Mar 20 - Wednesday 2:15 Early Dismissal (K-8)

  • After School Tutoring 2:15-3:00 pm

Mar 21 - K-8 in Full Uniform "blues"

  • All School Mass (1st and 6th grades lead) 9:00 am

Mar 23 - Last Day to Save Loop the 'Lupe event

Stay up-to-date with calendar events

School Happenings

2024-2025 Re-Enrollment Closes Tomorrow

Late re-enrollments will incur a $50 late fee. Log in to Finalsite. Questions? Contact Laura Wong or Shelley Bradley


Tax Time

Access tuition and childcare tax documents within Finalsite's Billing Management tab. Look for a link to “Tax Statement”,


Volunteer! to fulfill your family's 2023-2024 Commitment Hours

Start at our Volunteer Opportunities main page. (Day of Service projects include at-home projects). Unmet hours (by May 31st) will incur a $50 per hour fee. Log Volunteer Hours Here

Auction News

Nothing Compares 2 U - Thanks to the massive generosity of everyone who supported the OLG Rocks Auction we are excited to announce we far surpassed our fundraising goals! With a net total of just over $125,000 including a record breaking Fund-A-Need fund of just over $28,000 we are well on our way to ensuring the beloved building that embraces our children day in and day out will receive the TLC it has long deserved. 


In looking ahead to future auctions, we want to make sure no future co-chair is feeling Under Pressure and, One Way Or Another, delivers an event the OLG community enjoys. Please help us ensure we can provide fun events in the future by filling out this Post Event Survey!

Parenting Workshop

safeTALK: A Suicide Prevention Workshop

Sunday, April 21st 9:00am-12:00 pm. OLG church


Register Here Only 30 spots available!

Parents are encouraged to attend with their middle schoolers.

Prayers

Please keep the Beza family (Enrico 6th grade) in your prayers. More on Caring Bridge. You can also show support through a Go Fund Me created here and shared by request of the family.


Please pray for staff and students who are sick and those that are well, stay well.


For our community members whose family members who are fighting cancer and other ailments.


For our neighbors experiencing homelessness. We ask God to help them find shelter and comfort.

Parish News

Registration is now open for OLG’s Vacation Bible Camp!

June 24-28, 9:00-Noon at the OLG Walmesley Center

“Spring into Action" and become a SuperHero for OLG! This past weekend the parish sent out a letter by email discussing the projected revenue shortfall for this fiscal year. Each of you are being asked to help support this call to action and ensure that by July 1st, when our new Pastor and Parochial Vicar arrive and we become a new Parish Family with Holy Rosary, we will be financially strong and our parish ministries will be thriving and meeting the needs of the OLG community. To find out more please read the letter here.  You too can be a Superhero by donating online at https://pushpay.com/g/olgseattle and select Fund OLG Superhero.  Our Lady of Guadalupe, pray for us!

More parish events and announcements including opportunities to learn about the Catholic faith, feed the hungry in our neighborhood, opening day Mariners game, HERE

Don't miss these opportunities!


Loop the 'Lupe News

We’re BACK with Loop The ‘Lupe

Seattle’s best 5K obstacle course fun run!

What's in store for 2024!

This event will take place at Walt Hundley Playfield in West Seattle on Saturday, June 8th.

Register / Find out More

Price increases next week March 23rd

Partners in the Gospel

RECENT UPDATE:  This past week, Fr. Kevin, Michelle Scheving, Administrator, Lauren Hobbs, Principal, and Helen Oesterle, Pastoral Associate, attended a meeting with the Archbishop and other leaders about the next phase of the process. The announcement of Pastor and Parochial Vicar assignments will take place the first or second weekend of April. They will start on July 1st, which also begins Phase 1 (of 3 phases). The primary focus of this phase is to welcome our new Pastor and Parochial Vicar and the new members of our Parish Family from Holy Rosary. This entire process is intended to be slow, giving time for our new Pastor to get to know parishioners and staff, and form a leadership team to collaborate with moving forward. What can you do now?? Pray for those working on the new assignments and for Holy Rosary parishioners and staff as we prepare to become a Parish Family. 



Our Lady of Guadalupe, pray for us.

Our Lady of the Rosary, pray for us 

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