1) Letter from Archbishop Vigneron Regarding the Supreme Court Dobbs Decision
Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
 
While the decision announced today by the U.S. Supreme Court is a cause for praise and thanks to God, it does not mean our work is over. I join my brother bishops in Michigan in affirming that the Church must redouble her efforts to ensure every woman, child, and family has the support necessary to thrive in pregnancy, early childhood, and beyond.
 
In the Archdiocese of Detroit, we have partnered with Catholic Charities of Southeast Michigan to launch Walking With Moms in Need, which equips Catholic parishes and parishioners to assist pregnant and parenting mothers. We seek to address and resolve the struggles women and families face, rather than contributing to the “throwaway culture” that proposes eliminating people as an acceptable solution. 
 
As we renew and redouble our efforts, let us continue to pray unceasingly for all pregnant women and their children, that they know the love of Christ as shared through the witness borne by you, me, and all Catholics.
 
Our Lady of Guadalupe, pray for us.
 
Sincerely yours in Christ,
 
The Most Reverend Allen H. Vigneron
Archbishop of Detroit
2) SJA's Family Faith Camp: July 26-28, 2022
3) Want to become Catholic? Are you an Adult who Wants to be Baptized? A New RCIA Group is forming soon!
4) 'I Am Here' campaign shares power of the Eucharist in a 'uniquely Detroit way'

Partnership between the Archdiocese of Detroit, Hallow app a response to U.S. bishops' call for National Eucharistic Revival
From Detroit Catholic — It was 3 a.m. during a parish-sponsored retreat, and Marie Wilkie of Our Lady of Sorrows Parish in Farmington Hills was in her pajamas, drowsily sitting before the exposed Blessed Sacrament in the chapel.

Wilkie wasn’t very familiar with Eucharistic adoration, but she was drawn to the presence of the Lord before her.

While chaperoning students on a trip to St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome, Karen Ervin of Our Lady of Good Counsel Parish in Plymouth stumbled into an adoration chapel. Following the example of the nuns praying before the Blessed Sacrament, she sank to her knees. Overwhelmed with emotion, Ervin got up to leave, and Christ clearly spoke to her, saying, “Stay with me.”

Over and over again, Christ calls out from his exposed place in the adoration chapel and invites his beloved children to stay with him, to sit in silence and be present with him — “I am here,” he says.
These stories are at the heart of the new I AM HERE campaign, a partnership between the Archdiocese of Detroit and the Hallow app created to support the U.S. bishops' three-year National Eucharistic Revival and to inspire people to encounter Jesus in the Eucharist and experience his transformative power.

The revival will kick off locally June 19, the feast of Corpus Christi, when Archbishop Allen H. Vigneron will lead a two-mile Eucharistic procession from the Cathedral of the Most Blessed Sacrament to Sacred Heart Major Seminary.

5) CSA 2022
Dear Friends in Christ,
 
This year’s Catholic Services Appeal (CSA) theme comes from the First Letter of Peter: “As each has received a gift, use it to serve one another, as good stewards of God’s varied grace.” (1 Peter 4:10). It’s a call for hospitality and service, and to “let love for one another be intense.”
 
The Catholic Services Appeal is an opportunity to celebrate the ways our Church in Detroit responds to the material and spiritual needs of individuals and families. Our parish alone could not meet these many needs. It is through the sharing of our gifts and our service that we, together, can be the Church Christ wants us to be.
 
Would you consider making a gift to this year’s CSA?
 
Your generosity makes it possible for more than 170 ministries, services, and programs to love intensely and to bring the indescribable joy found in Christ to our communities.

Our CSA goal this year is $211,447. Anything raised above the goal will return to the parish, while any shortfalls must be covered by the parish. Thus, your support is greatly needed and appreciated.

You may have already received a mailing from the Archdiocese of Detroit. If you did so, please make a contribution to the CSA as indicated in that mailing.

You can also easily give by visiting: sja.aodcsa.org or by clicking on the button below.

Also available at the Church exists, in the bins outside the Sr. Carol Center, and at the Parish Center are general CSA brochures and envelopes that can be used to make a contribution to the CSA.


Assuring you of my prayers, I remain,

Sincerely yours in Christ,
Msgr Mike Simple Signature 2
6) CSA Update as of June 26, 2022
I am grateful to those who have already contributed to CSA 2022. As of today, we have $78,430 in pledges and gifts toward our $211,447 goal ($65,609 has been paid thus far toward our total pledged amount). This amount represents gifts from 268 families (we have 3,317 families registered). We have thus achieved 37% of our goal!
 
Here is a breakdown by gift range:
 
$2,500+ (4)
$1,000+ (17)
$500+ (16)
$250+ (41)
$100+ (108)
$75+ (5)
$50+ (36)
$25+ (32)
$10+ (8)
$0+ (1)
 
 
As stated above, the easiest way to give is electronically by clicking on the button above. If you wish to give by check, feel free to contact the Parish Center and we will mail out an envelope and related material.
7) Preschool and Elementary Summer Storybook Hour Starting in July
8) Families of Parishes
This Friday, July 1, 2022, our parish will join the other half of the dioceses in being formed into a Family of Parishes.

Our family consists of St. Joan of Arc, Our Lady Star of the Sea, St. Basil the Great, St. Lucy, and St. Veronica Parishes.

To learn more about Families of Parishes please watch the two short videos below or click on the link below to check out a FAQ site the Archdiocese of Detroit has developed to answer questions about Families of Parishes.
How Will Families of Parishes Work?
Introducing Families of Parishes
Click on the image below to visit the FAQ Site about Families of Parishes
9) Ukraine Relief Efforts
If you are interested in supporting the Catholic Church's relief efforts for the people of Ukraine, please click here to donate through our OSV Online Giving Platform.
10) This Sunday's Readings - June 26, 2022, The Thirteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time
11) Sunday Reflections by Jeff Cavins
Focusing on the connection between this Sunday’s Old Testament and New Testament readings, Jeff Cavins discusses how we must put Christ before all else if we choose to follow him.




Readings:
First Reading: 1 Kings 19:16B, 19-21
Responsorial Psalm: Psalms 16:1-2, 5, 7-8, 9-10, 11
Second Reading: Galatians 5:1, 13-18
Gospel: Luke 9:51-62
12) Bishop Barron's Reflection for the Thirteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time
Friends, I’m going to be blunt with you: today’s Gospel is really challenging. It cuts right to the heart of the ethical implications of the Gospel. There’s something of a “be all, end all” quality about Jesus, something of an either/or. As he says, “Whoever is not with me is against me.” What follows from this is what I call the principle of detachment and clarification of motives. If Jesus is unambiguously the center of your life, then everything else has to find its place in relation to him. If the good things of the world become more important than following him, then something has gone off-kilter.
13) Grow+Go for the Thirteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time
Grow+Go, content is designed to help you understand what it means to be an evangelizing disciple of Christ. Using the Sunday Scriptures as the basis for reflection, Grow+Go offers insight into how we can all more fully GROW as disciples and then GO evangelize, fulfilling Christ's Great Commission to "Go, therefore, and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit." (Matthew 28:19) The concept behind the weekly series is to make discipleship and evangelization simple, concrete, and relatable.

Click on the button or image below to download a PDF copy of this Sunday's Grow+Go.
14) Giving to SJA:

I'm truly grateful for all of your support of SJA during this pandemic. Your support means so much. The increase in electronic giving has been tremendous. Giving electronically, whether on a one-time or recurring basis is pretty simple. For more information on online giving, please click on the following button.
15) This Week's Edition of TALLer Tales
Emergency Bypass: No, I’m not talking about anything heart-related here, but something different.
 
As part of my never-ending quest to make my mom’s life more complicated, oops, I mean easier, I was doing some work on her iPhone not too long ago. I decided that the four kids should be listed as Emergency Bypass contacts on her phone. The theory was that if my mom’s phone were on silent or “do not disturb,” our four phones would still ring through no matter what. We tested it a few times, and everything seemed to work well.
 
Well, a few weeks ago, my mom and I traveled down to St. Joseph’s Church in Wyandotte for the funeral of Father Gerry Frawley. Father Gerry was an Irish Pallottine priest who was once stationed up at St. John the Evangelist Church in Allenton. That’s the church where some of my family and extended family belong. Father Gerry was an extraordinary priest and was greatly loved by so so many. He probably became a part of many families’ lives like he did with our family. You couldn’t help but greatly love this bigger-than-life Irish priest ... complete with his Irish accent that was so easy to imitate.
 
A caravan from Allenton went to the funeral, and they were kind enough to pick my mom up on the way down. Since it was Friday, I drove separately so I could drive my mom back home after the funeral; we could then do our usual Friday routine that afternoon.
 
My mom and family were in the back section of the church, probably about five pews from the back. I was in the sanctuary as I was concelebrating the funeral. At the end of the funeral, Bishop Battersby was about to give some remarks to a now quieted Church after Communion, and this very distinctive ring tone could be heard LOUD and clear echoing throughout the church. “Oh my,” I thought to myself, “that sounds like Mom’s phone.” I looked out into the congregation, and I could see my mom moving around to find her phone and my family, especially my sister’s brother-in-law Don, just smirking from ear to ear. It WAS my mom’s phone. I’m surprised Don didn’t make an arm motion to point my mom out! As soon as I heard the ringtone and saw my mom squirming around to find her phone, I knew I was the cause of this snafu because my mom is really good about silencing her phone in church. As always: IT. WAS. MY. FAULT. Surprise, surprise. I just couldn’t wait to hear which of the sisters called mom during the funeral.
 
As soon as we got to the luncheon, Don COULDN’T WAIT to rat out my mom. “Yea, and she even reminded us to silence our phones; and look whose phone went off at the quiestest part of the funeral.” My mom was mortified and was so confused about how her phone had gone off. Even worse, she said, was that she had to sit on her phone because there was no way to silence it … there was no option to reject the call so it kept ringing. She kept assuring Don and others that her phone was truly in silent mode. I don’t think Don believed her. I then had to come to her rescue and redirect the blame back to me. I then shared what I did with her phone and how I created the four kids as emergency bypass contacts. People were laughing. After all the “splainin,” I had to ask my mom the ultimate question, “So who was it: Jackie, Cindy, or Sandy?” Jackie came out as the winner; I was the loser! This was another MBI: a Mike Backfired Idea. And I have many of them! As I think about it, I need to reprogram her phone before it happens again. Seriously, I really do try to make life easier with all my brainy ideas!
 
Families of Parishes: This Friday, our parish will formally join Our Lady Star of the Sea, St. Lucy, St. Veronica, and St. Basil parishes to form what the Archdiocese is calling “A Family of Parishes.” On July 1, rather than being the Pastor of St. Joan, I will become a member of the “in solidum” team serving the parishes mentioned above. Likewise, Father Andrew will no longer technically be the associate pastor of just SJA but will instead be a member of the in solidum team serving the parishes mentioned above.
 
As I have previously mentioned, and in the simplest of terms, the Code of Canon Law allows parishes to be “governed” by two distinct models. The one model is familiar to all of us: the model with a pastor and possibly an associate pastor or several associate pastors. The other model is for a group of priests to be appointed “in solidum” to provide pastoral care to a parish or a grouping of parishes. Following the extraordinary work of Synod 16, Archbishop Vigneron decided to move the Archdiocese into this other model of governance for our parishes. In this model, Father Andrew, Father Jim Commyn (currently the pastor of St. Lucy Parish), Monsignor Gary Smetanka (currently the pastor of Our Lady Star of the Sea Parish), Father Stan Pachla (currently the pastor of St. Veronica Parish), Father Eric Fedewa (currently the pastor of St. Basil the Great Parish) and I will now form a team of priests who will now be responsible for the pastoral care and governance of the five parishes in our family. Father Jim Commyn was appointed to serve as the Moderator of the in solidum team; he serves as the “First Among Equals” but is the official representative/spokesperson for the team. He also serves as the “tie-breaker” of any discussions we have about our grouping of parishes. While Father Andrew and I will serve primarily at SJA and be mostly responsible for the governance of our parish, we now technically have a responsibility to serve all five parishes.
 
Moving to this model became a reality because of the decline in the number of priests. It was also set in motion so that our parishes could become more mission-oriented and thus utilize the gifts and skills of more priests and leaders to better serve a grouping of parishes.
 
With this new model of governance, we have six priests today. In the years to come, that number will change based on retirements or other needs. The grouping of parishes will remain the same, but the team providing governance and pastoral care might change, and we might have five priests instead. It will undoubtedly be a learning process. But, to the outsider or the person sitting in the pew for this next year or two, you won’t see or feel a difference other than maybe be seeing some different faces celebrating mass at SJA from time to time. We, as a team, are now responsible for the care of these five parishes.
 
Over the weeks and months ahead, we will continue reporting and sharing news about our Families of Parishes efforts. In the meantime, please keep these efforts in your prayers, especially on Monday and Tuesday, as we priests will gather on retreat as we formally begin our new ministry to our Family of Parishes.
Enjoy the week. Know of my prayers.
 
In Christ,
Msgr Mike Simply Signature
16) Tire Tracks in the d’Arc
“I do believe, help my unbelief!”: I have written previously, probably more than once about my rocky relationship with my Jeep’s GPS. It continues…Recently, without warning or deliberate provocation, Bobbi Jo (my Jeep) took it upon herself to move me to Kroger. She now believes that I have moved in at the new Kroger on Harper and 9 Mile. I don’t know if she’s making a point that I visit too often, or in fact what her point is, but every time I plug in directions to anywhere, starting from my driveway, she shows me a map and starting directions from that Kroger store rather than from the rectory. I would think this might be an easy fix, regardless of her point, her reasoning or the cause—that I would just have to re-program my home address to the rectory address…. Except that whenever I return home and hit the “Home” button, she knows to bring me back, not to St. Joan of Arc, but at least to “St. Joan of Arc Festival” (close enough… I don’t argue that one with her.)

Well, last week I discovered that she is equally capable of getting confused in other states, not just Michigan. If you’ve travelled down I-75 past Monroe recently, you’ll have encountered the fun, fun, fun of Michigan’s Finest Construction Zone. I was headed to Ohio last week and I wasn't aware of the trouble on the freeway until just before leaving my house. Not knowing if the delay on the map was construction or an accident, but just that it was showing 45 minutes delay, I waited a while. It wasn't getting better, so deciding that it was still an hour away, I figured I’d set out and maybe it would have cleared by the time I arrived.

Wrong.

Everything seemed fine until suddenly Bobbi Jo tells me, “Take the next exit to save an hour and 15 minutes.” What???!!! An hour and 15 minutes??!! So if I usually debate whether to trust her directions, I wasn't chancing this one. I took the ramp and headed through the streets of Monroe. It wasn't a part of Monroe that I know, so I dutifully followed her further instructions and eventually back onto I-75…. right into the middle of standstill traffic! “Well, that didn’t help!” I thought. But Bobbi Jo urged me to be patient and sure enough, it was the front end of the traffic and perhaps just a seven minute delay. So I continued on way for another 4 hours.

I was headed to the Hocking Hills, near the town of Logan. Arriving there (I might add by what I suspected, and later confirmed, to be the most awkward of routes through the smallest of towns, because Bobbi Jo had now lured me into a false sense of trust in her). I moved into the cabin I was staying in. And within minutes, Bobbi Jo had successfully led me, by her extensive knowledge of grocery chain stores, to the Logan Kroger.

The following morning, I figured I would go to the Hocking Hills visitor center and get a map of the trails and park sites. And from there I headed off to Old Man’s Cave, an impressive cave and rocky outcrop. The guide at the visitor center assured me that it was 11 miles away and well sign-posted. This is where I would insert a raised eyebrow of suspicion emoji in this article, if I had known at the time. Off I went, expecting an enjoyable walk through the woods to the cave.

Now, the Hocking Hills… beautiful area, but if you’ve never been, as I had not, what they don’t tell you is that every road is specifically designed to make you get into a car crash. Narrow roads and hump-backs that put your stomach in your mouth, one after another, then as you’re beginning to acclimate to that, suddenly… blind hump-back followed by an immediate 15 mph, 90 degree blind corner to the left. And just for jeopardy, a telephone pole in the field on the outside of the corner. If you make it around the corner, you have about 2 seconds to gather your courage again before the road turns into a blind corner to the right!

After maybe 7 or 8 miles, on route to Old Man’s Cave and driving behind another car, Bobbi Jo tells me to take the turn on the left. I’ve seen none of the supposedly “well sign-posted” indications I had been anticipating so far, but I take the left turn, as does the car in front. If I thought the road had been narrow to that point, I’d seen nothing yet. THIS was a narrow road, a lot like roads back in Yorkshire where I grew up, but Yorkshire roads usually have stone walls at the sides. The road is only as wide as it is wide! This one was deceptive. It was only as wide as the ditch on each side! Maybe a car and half, two in places if you inched past each other. I was just hoping not to find anyone coming the other way. The road was winding through the forest, steeper and steeper all the way. Blind corners, but at least with a car in front, I wouldn't be the first one an on-coming car hit! Eventually, we meet a pick-up truck pulled off to the side of the road, facing downhill. The car in front stops to talk to the truck driver… and talk… and talk… and talk….Eventually, he sets off and I reach the truck. The truck driver tells me, “Sorry, we are pouring asphalt, you’ll have to turn around.” I hang my head….275 miles to get there, in the middle of a state forest and I found construction!

There was a small area off the road to turn around and the driver of the car in front stopped to tell me that he was trying to find Old Man’s Cave and his GPS had told him to follow that road. “Me too!” We commiserated and parted ways. I turned around and headed down the hill, half expecting the truck driver to tell me they were pouring asphalt at the bottom of the hill now too, so I’d have to turn around and I’d be trapped half way up a hill in a forest in Ohio.

I found my way back to the cabin, avoiding all telephone poles, thankfully, and I pulled out the map. I looked at that map several times over next couple of days and satellite images, and I never found that mysterious ghost-road up the hill! “Bobbi Jo! What were you thinking?!” If I had not turned off the road I had been on, at her instruction, I would have arrived at the trail-head and parking lot for Old Man’s Cave….!

I never made it to the cave. Instead, what did I visit? What is the sum total of my sight-seeing trip to the Hocking Hills?

Here it is….
The Paul A. Johnson Pencil Sharpener Museum….. The world’s “largest” museum of pencil sharpeners. And who knew it was on our doorstep…. Just 275 miles, 15 hump-backs, a dozen telephone pole hazards, 14 chickens (that’s a different part of the story), a sight-seeing tour of the back streets of Monroe, a tank of gas, two construction zones, and a Bobbi Jo GPS jokester away. Thanks Ohio. It was fun! Insert raise eye-brow emoji a second time. 3,400 pencil sharpeners, y’ know...?! You’re wowed… I know, I know. Bobbi Jo, you’re grounded!
You are in my prayers this week.

Fr. Andrew

17) Ascension Presents: Father Mike Schmitz
Why Self-Care is Important for Loving Others

Jesus challenges us in the Gospels to “love your neighbor as yourself.” But what if you struggle to love yourself? How can we pour ourselves out for others if we are not first filled up?

Today Fr. Mike challenges us to properly order our love for others, namely willing the good of the other by first willing our own good and setting clear boundaries so that we can love more fully.
18) Words on the Word: June 26, 2022 – Gridiron Chaos - Formula for Prayer

Fans of college athletics, especially college football, know the landscape has been changing quickly over the last year or so, and the pace of the change is intensifying.

The Supreme Court ruled last year that college athletes whose name, image or likeness is used for someone’s profit have a right to be reimbursed for that usage.

Some agree with the reasoning behind that ruling, some disagree. Regardless, as many anticipated, it has opened the door to all kinds of chaos, as schools, boosters, businesses, players, families, coaches, and others all jockey to position themselves, their stakeholders, their loved ones, etc., for maximum benefit.

One such mini-drama played out a few weeks ago when a well-known football coach from a southern school called out another well-known coach, claiming that the rival’s team was essentially bought and paid for under the auspices of the name-image-likeness guidelines.

As might have been expected, that allegation infuriated the coach who had been singled out; he fired back quickly and pointedly with name-calling and allegations of his own. Media and fans – not only those related to the two schools in question, but all over the country – quickly jumped into the fray, and chaos ensued.

College football is fairly unimportant in the big scheme of things. But, as we know, what happens on and around the field of play can often be a metaphor for life in general. And so people of goodwill – including coaches, fans and others – might take a pointed lesson from today’s second reading.

“For you were called for freedom, brothers and sisters,” St. Paul writes to the Galatians. “But do not use this freedom as an opportunity for the flesh; rather, serve one another through love … But if you go on biting and devouring one another, beware that you are not consumed by one another.”
 
© 2022, Words on the Word
19) The Bible in a Year Podcast by Father Mike Schmitz
If you’ve struggled to read the Bible, this podcast is for you.

Ascension’s Bible in a Year Podcast, hosted by Fr. Mike Schmitz and featuring Jeff Cavins, guides Catholics through the Bible in 365 daily episodes.

Each 20-25 minute episode includes:

  • two to three scripture readings 
  • a reflection from Fr. Mike Schmitz
  • and guided prayer to help you hear God’s voice in his Word.

Unlike any other Bible podcast, Ascension’s Bible in a Year Podcast for Catholics follows a reading plan inspired by the Great Adventure Bible Timeline®  learning system, a groundbreaking approach to understanding Salvation History developed by renowned Catholic Bible teacher Jeff Cavins.
Tune in and live your daily life through the lens of God’s word!
20) FORMED Pick of the Week:
Our parish has a subscription to FORMED, a premier online platform filled with over 4,000 Catholic studies, movies, audio dramas, talks, e-books, and even cartoons for our children. FORMED has content from over 60 apostolates, including Augustine Institute, Ignatius Press, and the Knights of Columbus, with material that is professionally produced, engaging, and solid in its catechism. Best of all, this material is free to you because of our parish subscription.

You have easy access to all of the material on FORMED to support your own faith journey and that of your family members.

You can enjoy FORMED on your computer or on your television with an inexpensive Roku device or Apple TV. You can even listen on your phone as you commute to work or do chores. 

To gain access to all of FORMED’s content, follow these simple steps:

  • Go to https://signup.formed.org/ 
  • Enter our parish’s zip code 48080 or enter St. Joan of Arc
  • Enter your name and your email address
 
That’s it! You’re in. Now you can get the free FORMED app for your phone by searching FORMED Catholic in your app store.

21) Hallow App:
Are you looking for a one-stop app for prayer and meditation? Look no further than Hallow. Hallow is an awesome prayer app. Hallow is a Catholic prayer and meditation app that helps users deepen their relationship with God through audio-guided contemplative prayer sessions. The app launched 2 years ago and is already the #1 Catholic app in the world.
 
We have a number of parishioners who are already using the app and loving it (my mom being one of them and she is on the app most of the day). Great for praying alone or together with your spouse/family, Hallow truly has something for everyone, no matter what you are going through (see below for their different content categories).
 
Hallow is free to download and has tons of permanently free content, as well as a premium subscription, Hallow Plus.

To get started, simply click the button above/below to activate your free account on the Hallow website. Make sure to select “Sign Up with Email” when registering. For step-by-step instructions, you can visit this process guide. Enter the code stjoanofarcmi to obtain a discount on individual pro plans.
22) Mass Intentions for the Week:
Cross
Monday, June 27, 2022, Weekday Saint Cyril of Alexandria, Bishop and Doctor of the Church
7:00 a.m. Mary & Joe Tobin and Herbert Thelen


Tuesday, June 28, 2022, Saint Irenaeus, Bishop & Martyr
7:00 a.m. Hugo Calisi and Richard & Virginia Robinette


Wednesday, June 29, 2022, Saint Peter and Paul, Apostles
7:00 a.m. Edward Mack and Kenneth A. Smith


Thursday, June 30, 2022, Weekday, The First Martyrs of the Holy Roman Church
7:00 a.m. Sue Krolikowski


Friday, July 1, 2022, Weekday, Saint Junipero Serra, Priest
7:00 a.m. Frank Mecha and Anna Marie Wilson


Saturday, July 2, 2022, Vigil for the Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time
4:00 p.m. Mary J. Rademacher, Jerome & Geraldine Rogier, the deceased members of the Batche Family, Jerry Bodendistel, Rachel Hollern, Helmut Linden, Bonnie Batche, Joseph Sloan, Joseph Drouin, Josephine Ciaravino, and Special Intentions for the Thomas Family, for the J. Champine Family and Prayerful Appreciation for the work of the Priests and Staff of St. Joan of Arc

6:00 p.m. Anna Fazi


Sunday, July 3, 2022, Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time
8:00 a.m. For the Intentions of Saint Joan of Arc Parishioners
 
10:00 a.m. Joseph Paluzzi Jr.

12:00 p.m. Salvatore Ciaravino, Margaret Cardamone, Doreen Oster, Anna Mae Reinhard
23) This Week on St. Joan of Arc LIVE:
This week's LIVE Stream
Schedule at St. Joan of Arc:
 

Monday (June 27):
7:00 AM - Mass
8:30 AM - Scripture Service for Barbara Voorheis (Read Obituary HERE)


Tuesday (June 28):
7:00 AM - Mass


Wednesday (June 29):
7:00 AM - Mass


Thursday (June 30):
7:00 AM - Mass
7:00 PM - Holy Hour


Friday (July 1):
7:00 AM - Mass


Saturday (July 2):
12:30 PM - Baptism of Theodore J. Peleman
4:00 PM - Mass
6:00 PM - Mass


Sunday (July 3):
8:00 AM - Mass
10:00 AM - Mass
12:00 PM - Mass


Please note that all of our masses and events can be accessed through the ARCHIVE section of our Live stream page if you are not able to watch it live!

We also have our own ROKU Channel. Search for "CATHOLIC" in the ROKU channel store, and you will find SJA's channel. A Fire TV Channel is also available.
24) SJA's Bulletin for Sunday, June 26, 2022
Click on the image below
to download a copy of the bulletin
for May June 26, 2022
25) Weekly Bulletin Mailing List
Sending the bulletin has been greatly received by so many people. If you are getting the bulletin online and would prefer that it not be mailed to your home, please click on the button below to be removed from the mailing list.

At the same time, if you are NOT getting the bulletin and would prefer to get it, click on the same button and ask to be ADDED to the list.

Read the latest from the DETROIT CATHOLIC
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