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Welcome to the web site for St. Michael’s Parish in Oakville, Ontario, Canada . Some of you are searching for general information, and we hope this site will help your search, others are looking for more specific information, and we hope your needs are met as well.

The people of St. Michael’s Parish come from a variety of cultural, linguistic and economic backgrounds. With all of our unique characteristics we are brought together through Christ and in Christ. We believe what Jesus taught, that God loves all in the world and wishes everyone to experience the fullness of life. Jesus also said that he came into the world as one who serves not one who is to be served and he directed his followers to follow in his footsteps.   Read More

Mass Schedule

 

Sunday Masses

Vigil Mass – Saturday 5:30 PM 
Masses on Sunday – 9:30 AM & 11:30 AM

Spanish Mass Sunday 6:00 PM

Weekday Masses

Please refer to English bulletin

Healing Masses 
Third Thursday of each month at 7:30 P.M.

 

             

Horario de las Misas

 

Misas Dominicales

Misa de Vigilia en Ingles Sabados 5:30 PM

Misas en los dias Domingos en Ingles: 9:30 AM & 11:30 AM
en Espianol 6:00 PM
   
Eucaristias en la Semana
Para las favor consultar el boletin en Ingles
  
Eucaristia de sanacion
Tercer Jueves de cada me a las 7:30 p.m.
 
 
 
 
 
The New Translation of the Mass

The new translation of the Mass

Are you wondering about the new translation of the Mass according to the 3rd Roman Missal for the Roman Catholic Church?

The following sites may help to answer your some of your questions. The first two sites refer to the R.C. Church in the United States but what they describe is true for all English speaking Conferences of Bishops including the Canadian Conference. The videos are directed to teenagers; however, it should help to clarify certain points for adults as well.

 

 

 

The following site’s video is for the Roman Catholic Church in Canada and was produced courtesy of the Diocese of Hamilton.

 

 

News
25 Latest Articles


Catholic Register -  Thursday, 29 April 2010 17:13 
 

TORONTO - Ontario’s public Catholic schools will always assert their right to teach students Catholic doctrine on matters of faith and morality, says the Institute of Catholic Education.

“When it comes to matters of faith and morality, denominational rights accorded to the Catholic schools of Ontario supersede any Government of Ontario directives which are at variance with the teachings of the church,” said ICE executive director Sr. Joan Cronin.
On April 20, Premier Dalton McGuinty had defended a controversial sex-ed program which had been set to begin this fall. But after public outcry over the changes, McGuinty backtracked three days later. He said the government was reconsidering the program and seeking more input from parents.

The proposed changes would have introduced the concepts of oral sex, anal intercourse, masturbation and vaginal lubrication to Grade 6 and 7 students. Grade 3 students would have been taught about sexual identity and orientation and Grade 1 students would have learned the proper names of body parts, including genitalia.

Cronin said ICE, which develops religious curriculum for schools, was consulted for more than two years when the government began its revision of the province’s health and physical education curriculum. At that time, Cronin said ICE intended to adapt the government’s expectations and align it with the Catholic schools’ curriculum.

Bishop Paul-Andre Durocher, chair of the Assembly of Catholic Bishops of Ontario, told The Register that Catholic schools have been ahead of the government in this area. About 30 years ago, Ontario’s bishops published guidelines about family and sexual education “long before the Ministry of Education did,” Durocher wrote in an April 26 letter to the editor in The Cornwall Standard-Freeholder.

For more than 20 years, Ontario Catholic schools have been using the Fully Alive family life program which includes lessons on human sexuality from a Catholic lens. The bishops had also sponsored and approved Fully Alive guidelines for Grade 1 to 8 students “after extensive consultations with Catholic parents across the province and have met with overwhelming support.” 

A revision of the Fully Alive material began in 2006 and has since been completed. It addresses new issues in family and sexual education from a Catholic perspective.

Meanwhile, Amy Gerdevich, president of the Ontario Association of Parents in Catholic Education, says it was “caught off guard” by the government’s proposed changes. She said the association took part in consultations about high school curriculum revisions on physical health and education, but does not recall consultations on the elementary school program.

Gerdevich said she would bring up the importance of having “the parent voice” heard at an April 29 meeting between Education Minister Leona Dombrowsky and education groups.

 

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