Our cheers were for Archbishop Sarah, but also for our peers who minister despite excommunication and patriarchal stupidity.

Our cheers were for Archbishop Sarah, but also for our peers who minister despite excommunication and patriarchal stupidity.

Holy Week Reflection: “She Anointed Him for This Moment” (John 12:1–11)
Holy One,
Womb of Mercy and Breath of Life,
We remember Mary of Bethany,
who anointed Jesus with love that could not be contained.
She saw what others could not see.
She acted when others hesitated.
Awaken in us that same courage.
Bless the women of our world
who anoint the Body of Christ today—
in Word and Sacrament,
in justice and compassion,
in quiet acts of healing and bold acts of truth.
When their voices are silenced,
be their strength.
When their ministries are denied,
be their affirmation.
When their love is poured out and questioned,
be the fragrance that fills the house.
May we become a Church
that recognizes and rejoices
in the priestly, prophetic witness of all the baptized.
And like Mary,
may we pour out our love without counting the cost,
trusting that nothing offered in love is ever wasted.
We ask this in the name of Jesus,
the Anointed One,
who receives our offerings
and calls us all to serve as equals in the holy circle of love.
Amen
Holy Week Reflection: “She Anointed Him for This Moment” (John 12:1–11)
By Rev. Dr. Bridget Mary Meehan, ARCWP
In the quiet intimacy of Bethany, just days before his arrest, we encounter a Gospel moment that shimmers with courage, tenderness, and prophetic power. John 12:1–11 invites us into a sacred act that breaks open the meaning of discipleship—and reveals the often-hidden authority of women
in the ministry of Jesus.
Mary of Bethany kneels before Jesus. She carries costly perfume—nard, extravagant and unapologetically abundant.
She anoints his feet and wipes them with her hair.
The fragrance fills the house.
This is no small gesture.
This is priestly action.
This is love poured out in embodied, sacramental form.
From a feminist theological lens, Mary’s act is not passive devotion—
it is bold, public, and liturgical.
She does what prophets and priests do: she anoints.
In a world where women’s bodies were often controlled and silenced,
Mary claims her body as a vessel of blessing.
Her touch becomes a proclamation.
She recognizes what others do not yet see:
that Jesus is moving toward death—and that love must be poured out
now, without hesitation.
And yet, her act is challenged.
Judas objects. He cloaks his discomfort in the language
of concern for the poor, but Jesus sees through the distortion.
He defends her:
“Leave her alone. She has kept this for the day of my burial.”
In that moment, Jesus affirms her authority. He honors her as one who understands the sacred timing of love. He does not silence her.
He lifts her up.
This is our Gospel inheritance.Today, in our time, we see
Mary of Bethany rising again—in women who anoint the Body of Christ
in countless ways:
-in women priests breaking open the Word and blessing the bread
in inclusive Eucharistic communities
-in chaplains and pastors who accompany the dying with oil, prayer,
and presence
-in mothers, activists, healers, and spiritual companions who pour out
compassion in a wounded world
-in those who dare to say, with their lives: Love cannot wait.
Like Mary, these women are often questioned. Their authority is challenged.
Their ministries are dismissed or condemned by institutional structures
that cannot yet recognize the Spirit moving through them.
And yet—the fragrance continues to fill the house.
Holy Week invites us to stand in that tension: between love poured out
and systems that resist it, between prophetic action and
institutional fear.
But Mary shows us the way.
She does not ask permission.
She does not measure the cost.
She acts out of deep, intuitive knowing—what we might call Spirit-wisdom,
Sophia moving within her.
And Jesus receives her offering as holy.
What if we recognized today that the Body of Christ is still being anointed—
right now—in places both seen and unseen?
What if we honored the sacramental ministries of women not as exceptions,
but as essential signs of a Church being reborn?
What if we allowed the fragrance of inclusive love, justice, and equality
to permeate our communities, even when it unsettles us?
As we enter more deeply into Holy Week, let us remember:
The Passion of Christ is not only about suffering.
It is also about love poured out—extravagantly, prophetically,
without reserve.
And in Bethany, it is a woman who shows us how.
However, some think that in the scriptures there are sufficient indications to exclude this possibility, considering that the sacraments of eucharist and reconciliation have a special link with the person of Christ and therefore with the male hierarchy, as borne out by the New Testament.
Others, on the contrary, wonder if the church hierarchy, entrusted with the sacramental economy, would be able to entrust the ministries of eucharist and reconciliation to women in light of circumstances, without going against Christ's original intentions.“
GATHERING AND WELCOME:
Elena: We warmly welcome you to our celebration of the Easter Vigil, a holy
and blessed night in which we rise with Christ to new life.
We are so happy you have joined us and we welcome you
to share in our eucharistic celebration as we gather around
this zoom table of friendship and unity.
SERVICE OF LIGHT
Elena: The Divine Mystery, which is our Lover,
the power of the Beloved which rises in every act of love,
and the Breath of Love which breathes in,
with, through and beyond the Cosmos is with you, within you and beyond you.
On this most sacred night, in which Jesus Christ passed over from this earth to a new life,
the People of God everywhere come together from all over to watch and pray.
Like Mary Magdalene and the other women, who came to the tomb weeping
and, there, encountered the Risen One's ongoing presence with them,
our tears and longings move us more deeply into union with God and
with our sisters and brothers everywhere.
BLESSING OF THE FIRE
Michael: We begin our liturgical celebration today by blessing the
Easter fire, lighting our Easter Candle and lighting our individual candles –
all symbols of the Risen Christ, alive in and around us. Hallelujah!
Michael: Let us pray. As we bless this new fire, may our paschal
celebrations be inflamed with new hope. May our Easter
celebration empower us to make possible the impossible.
Christ is raised from the dead, and as his sisters and brothers,
we are raised with him imbued with Resurrection power.
PREPARATION OF THE PASCHAL CANDLE
Michael : Christ, yesterday and today (pause);
The Beginning and the End, the Alpha and Omega;
All time belongs to God;
And all the ages;
To Jesus, be glory and power;
Through all time and all places, Amen
BLESSING AND LIGHTING OF THE PASCHAL CANDLE
The Paschal Candle is lit, then blessed.
Jeanne: May the light of Christ - rising in glory -
dispel the darkness of our hearts and minds.
Michael and All: We Rejoice. We Remember.
Jeanne: May the light of Christ - rising in glory - dispel the darkness.
Michael and All: We Rejoice. We Remember.
Jeanne: The Christ – a spark that lit the cosmos at the beginning of time.
Michael and All: We Rejoice. We Remember.
Jeanne: The Christ – a spark that is expanding across time.
Michael and All: We Rejoice. We Remember.
Jeanna: The Christ – a spark that was borne, sheltered and passed to us
by our ancestors.
Michael and All: We Rejoice. We Remember.
Jeanne: The Christ – a spark that was fanned into flame by those
who ignited our lives in love and wisdom and joy.
Michael and All: We Rejoice. We Remember.
Jeanne: The Christ – a spark that is a sacred trust held by us to pass
on to generations yet to come.
Michael and All: We Rejoice. We Remember. We celebrate.
Lighting of Individual Candles
Michael. Please light your individual candles and hold them up so that
our candles may represent all of us, all our loved ones,
and all previous and current members of MMOJ
who are united with us in the Universal
Resurrected Christ.
Michael: Lumen Christi, light of Christ. (3 Xs)
Michael and All: Deo gratias. Thanks be to God!
EASTER PROCLAMATION
Elena: At the Easter Vigil, the Church proclaims the Exultet, a glorious
hymn of praise, about the Holy One’s compassionate presence in creation,
the liberating history of the people of Israel, the story of Jesus’ life,
death and resurrection. In the radiant presence of the Risen Christ
dwelling within us and present everywhere, we are filled with
hope for the transformation of our suffering world in the
embrace of infinite love. May we be filled with joy as we
experience a contemporary Easter Proclamation.
Exsultet sung by Ellen Garcia
https://youtu.be/r0fKg4PlRkg?si=I-HL_UpYPZOAUxBQ
NEW: Exultet sung by Ellen Garcia (Stop at 2:51)
The Liturgy of the Word
Joan P
First Reading: THE STORY OF SALVATION HISTORY
The first Reading is the Story of Salvation History (adapted from the books of the
Hebrew Scriptures by Jay Murnane)
In the beginning, there was only chaos and a void. God breathed life
into it and said, "Let there be light." And there was light: sun and moon and
stars in the heavens. There emerged vast bodies of water filled with live creatures.
Then, birds flying across the breadth of the skies, and on the earth,
reptiles and animals of every kin
d, color and shape. And all had a purpose. God saw what had come to be, and
God found it very good.
God then said: "Let us make human beings in the divine image; women
and men together to take care of all of this, and one another!
When this was done, God viewed the whole of creation, and loved it,
for it was very, very good.
Reader 2: Anna
But human beings did not take care of creation and each other.
Human beings corrupted the good-ness of what God had made.
Rain fell, a torrential, purifying rain, covering the earth and
washing away all the corruption to which people had given
birth. Only Noah, his family, and living creatures from
every species on earth floated above the flood in an ark made of wood.
After forty days, the rain subsided, so that the water was no longer a
flood, and the ark came to rest on high, dry ground.
The people and the animals looked up into the sky and
saw something beautiful. God said: "That is my
rainbow, the sign of my presence with you and my
love for you. It will forever be the sign of my
relationship with you, and your responsibility to take
care of creation, and each other."
Reader 3 : Cheryl
From these survivors of the flood, creation was begun all over again.
Many, many years went by and there were many gatherings of
people all over the face of the earth. One of these was the people,
Israel, and among all of God's precious people, the Jews were
very precious. During a time of famine, the Jews were invited by the Egyptians,
their neighbors, to share their land and their food.
But some centuries after this hospitality, a cruel leader in Egypt forgot the
old relationship and made the Jews into slaves.
They lived this way for a long time, until Moses came among them and
risked his safety and security to convince the Jews that God loved them
and wanted them to be free. So, they left Egypt, filled with the
Spirit of God, led by Moses and Miriam through the desert in search of a
new home where they could be free again.
During this difficult journey, they were often disillusioned and resentful,
and they complained bitterly. Moses asked God for help, and God offered
the ten commandments, so that the people might know the
simplest possible way to love God and their fellow human beings.
And from these survivors of oppression, Israel began all over again.
Reader 4: Jane S.
But the people forgot the simple way of God and were not always faithful,
and at times they were as oppressive to each other and to strangers as the
Egyptians had been to them. They paid lip service to God, but their hearts
were very far from God, and therefore, from justice and compassion.
People of wisdom came from among them to remind them of the
rainbow of their journey to freedom, and of their promise to
God about caring for creation and each other.
These were the prophets, and like Moses, they risked everything to
convince the people to come home to freedom and responsibility,
compassion and justice, faithfulness and integrity.
The prophet Isaiah said: "God is displeased with your prayers and your
liturgies because the hands you lift in prayer are covered with blood.
God wants prayer from the heart. God wants justice for the oppressed.
God wants food for the hungry. God wants true peace!"
Reader 5: Jim B.
The prophet Amos said: "Some of you have grabbed power and made
your own people no better than slaves. You have stripped people of
their dignity as God's children, buying and selling them as if they
were groceries or sandals. Greed is your god and selfishness, your liturgy!"
The prophet Micah said: "My people, you struggle blindly to know what
God wants, and you act as if you remember nothing from your history,
as if you know nothing. From the beginning of time, there has been one
message from God. What God wants is this, ONLY this:
That we live justly, that we love tenderly, that we walk with integrity in God's presence!
These are the inspired words of our prophets.
\
Responsorial Psalm: A Prophet Woman Broke a Jar (Stop at 2:17)
(words by Brian Wren, Music by Ron Klusmeier)

unsung, unwritten, and unheard, derided and forbidden,
the Spirit’s breath, the Spirit’s fire, on free and slave descending,
can tumble our dividing walls, our shame and sadness mending.
The Spirit knows, the Spirit calls, by Love’s divine ordaining,
the friends we need to serve and lead, their powers and gifts unchaining.
The Spirit knows, the Spirit calls, from women, men, and children,
the friends we need to serve and lead.
Rejoice, and make them welcome!"
Gloria: Glory to God by Marty Haugen - video by Bridget Mary Meehan
and Mary Theresa Streck
Mary Al:
A Reading from the Letter to the Romans (6:3-4)
Sisters and Brothers, are you aware that we who were baptized into Christ Jesus
were baptized into his death? We were indeed buried with him through
Baptism into death, so just as Christ was raised from the dead
by the glory of God, we too live in newness of life.
These are the inspired words of Paul in the Letter to the Romans
and we respond,
All: Alleluia
Alleluia (Easter Sunday) by Joel Raney
Gospel
A Reading from the Easter Stories in the Gospels according to Matthew, Luke and Mark
Mary Al: They found the stone rolled away from the tomb… (Luke 24:2)
So, the women left the tomb quickly with great joy, and ran to tell his disciples.
And they came to him took hold of his feet, and worshiped him. (Mt. 28-29)
Mary Magdalene went out and told those who had been with him while
they were mourning and weeping. But when they heard that he was alive
and had been seen by her, they would not believe it. (Mk: 16:10-11)
A Reading from the Easter Story in the Gospel according to John
Cheryl: Meanwhile, Mary was standing close outside the tomb weeping.
Still weeping she leaned forward into the tomb.
After again seeing the empty tomb, Mary turned around and walked to the garden.
She turned and looked at Jesus standing there, but she did not know
that it was Jesus. “Why are you weeping? Whom are you seeking?”
he asked. Supposing him to be the gardener, Mary answered:
“If it was you sir, who carried him away, tell me where
you have laid him, and I will take him away myself.” “Mary!” said Jesus.
She called out and exclaimed in Hebrew:
“Rabboni!” (which means, “Teacher.”)
Jesus said; “go to my brothers and sisters and tell them that
I am ascending to my God and their God.”
Mary of Magdala went and told the disciples that
she had seen the Risen One and that he had said this to her.”
These are the inspired words according to women in the Easter Gospels and the community responds: Alleluia!
Easter Vigil Homily 2026 by Bridget Mary
At this Easter Vigil, we stand at the threshold of mystery—
between darkness and light, grief and hope, death and new life.
We have listened to the great stories of our faith—
the God who creates, liberates, accompanies, and promises new life.
And now we proclaim with joy:
Christ is risen!
But notice this:
The Risen Christ does not first appear to emperors or religious authorities.
The first witness is Mary Magdalene—a woman once silenced,
now sent forth as apostle to the apostles.
This is no accident.
This is the Gospel.
God entrusts the Easter message to a woman. God reveals resurrection
to those on the margins-not through power, but through love
that refuses to be extinguished.
And so we proclaim not only that Christ rose, but that
Christ is rising—again and again—in us and in our world.
Christ Rising Among Us Today
So where do we see resurrection today?
We see it:
• When people stand for justice and dignity, protecting the
vulnerable and defending human rights.
When citizens across the world defend democracy and human dignity.
One power example of Christ rising among us happened in the
United States, when millions of people participated
in the “No Kings” demonstrations on March 28th.
We see resurrection today in the Ukraine and Middle East
where ordinary people protect their communities amid war;
Christ is Rising today when people advocate to protect Social Security,
healthcare, and the rights of the most vulnerable including the undocumented;
We see resurrection today in climate activists—especially young people—
who rise up to defend our common home, insisting that the future matters.
We see Christ rising today for gender equality in the installation of
Sarah Mullally as Archbishop of Canterbury.
When survivors of violence become healers, transforming pain into
pathways of reconciliation and hope, This is resurrection power:
hope refusing to be silenced.
We see resurrection in survivors of abuse who now accompany others
on the path to healing:
in survivors of sexual abuse including women who advocated for justice
and transparency in release of Epstein files in the United States
and LGBTQ+ leaders who transform trauma into advocacy,
creating spaces of safety, dignity, and restoration.
Like Mary Magdalene, they move from grief to proclamation.
This is resurrection as healing love.
When inclusive communities open their tables,
welcoming all as beloved—without exception.
We see resurrection in inclusive Catholic communities—
like Mary Mother of Jesus and ARCWP communities around the world—
where all are welcomed to the Eucharistic table:
divorced and remarried, LGBTQ+ persons,
those long excluded or wounded by the Church.
We see it in parishes, shelters, and grassroots ministries
that feed the hungry, accompany migrants, and create belonging.
Every time someone who has been told “you don’t belong”
hears instead “you are beloved,” the stone is rolled away again.
This is resurrection as radical welcome.
When a person awakens from shame or fear and
discovers their sacred worth.
We see resurrection in quiet, holy moments—
when someone steps out of depression into hope,
when a young person embraces their identity with courage,
when someone burdened by shame finally knows: I am loved just as I am.
This awakening of connection, purpose, and love is a profound
spiritual rebirth.
This is resurrection from within.
Each of these is an Easter moment.
Each is a living proclamation: Love is stronger than death.
And so, Easter is not only something we remember—
it is something we recognize,
something we participate in,
something we become.
Our Call as Easter People
Like Mary Magdalene, we are sent forth.
We carry the Good News not as an idea, but as a way of living.
We become the ones who say with our lives:
Hope is alive. Love is rising, New life is possible.
Alleluia is not just a word we sing.
It is the song we are called to become. Christ is risen—
and Christ is rising—in us, through us, and among us!
Alleluia! Alleluia! Alleluia!
Community Sharing
As we continue our celebration, I invite you to reflect:
Where are you being called to embody resurrection in our world today?
Renewal of Baptismal Promises: Beth P
Beth P:
Do you promise to see what is good for your sisters and brothers everywhere,
rejecting injustice and inequity and living with the freedom and responsibility
of children of God?
Beth and All: Yes!
Beth P:
Do you promise to work for the realization of God’s vision of harmony
and right relations among people and peoples, rejecting the idols of
money and property and color and sex and position?
Seth and All: Yes!
Kathryn :
Do you promise to seek peace and live in peace in one human family,
rejecting prejudice and half-heartedness in every form, and all barriers to unity?
Beth and All: Yes!
Beth:
Do you promise to cherish the universe, and this precious planet, working
creatively to renew and safeguard the elemental sacraments of air, earth, water?
Beth and All: Yes!
Beth:
Do you believe in God, the great Spirit of Creation, in Jesus, the simple servant of
justice and love who lived among us so that all might live with abundant fullness;
in the breath of God’s center, the Spirit who continues the work of forgiveness
and reconciliation, birthing and blessing, challenge and hope, so that together
we can continue the work of creation?
Beth and All: Yes!
(Source: Baptismal Promises: Jay Murnane), Adaptation of Baptism Rite)
Prayers of Community:
Dotty : That every person in this Mary Mother of Jesus community will experience
the Presence of the Risen Christ dwelling within them and all around them this Easter.
Jane and All: Alleluia
Dotty : That the earth will always be your beloved garden, seen from space
as a beautiful jewel.
Jane and All: Alleluia
Dotty That your indwelling life rising in us will bring healing and
strength to all who are suffering from the chaos and turmoil in our government and world.
Jane and All: Alleluia
Dotty : That your Risen life will sustain all those who have poured out
their own lives in loving service to help others.
Jane and All: Alleluia
Dotty: That your Risen life will lift the fog that clouds understanding
between people, allowing hate to dissipate and be transformed into
peace and justice especially between Israel and Palestine and Russia and Ukraine.
Jane and All: Alleluia
Dotty: That all who have died will rest in your eternal light and boundless
love especially those we remember in our hearts now. (pause)
Jane and All: Alleluia
Dotty: We invite Joan Meehan to share requests from our community prayer list.
: For what else do we pray?
(voice your petition)
Joan and All: Alleluia
Jane : God of life, we put before You these prayers of our community,
spoken and unspoken. We believe that we can trust and hope in your wisdom. May it be so.
Amen, Alleluia
Liturgy of Eucharist
Preparation of the Gifts
Dotty: Blessed are You, O Holy One, through Your divine providence
we have this bread to offer, it will become for us the Bread of Life.
Jane and All: Blessed are You, Holy One, forever.
Jane : Blessed are You, O Holy One, through your divine providence
we have this wine to offer, it will become our spiritual drink.
Dotty and All: Blessed are You, Holy One, forever.
Dotty: Nurturing One, we are united in this sacrament by the love of J
esus in communion with all who proclaim the liberating power of your Spirit,
rising in our midst.
Jane and All: Amen. Alleluia
Preface: Eucharistic Prayer
Joan P: O Risen Christ
Jane and All: Alleluia
Joan P: O Risen Christ, You speak truth through us
Jane and All: Alleluia
Joan P: O Risen Christ, You walk beside us and work through us
Jane and All: Alleluia
Joan P: O Risen Christ, You who broke the bonds of death and rose in the
radiant light of dawn, be present among us now in bread. and cup,
and in word and song.
We rejoice with the angels, and saints and all people in joyful praise
for the gift of new life.
Holy, Holy, Holy (Karen Drucker) Linda Lee Miller
Eucharistic Prayer
Beth:: Risen One, You rise still in the courage of peacemakers, in the resilience
of the oppressed,
in the healing hands of caregivers, and in all who work for justice and peace.
Let your rising be not only a story we tell,
but a power we live, lifting us from fear to faith,
from despair to dreaming, from silence to singing your Alleluia in the streets.
Cheryl: May this holy meal, feed us with your risen presence.
Transform this table into a wellspring of life, where brokenness becomes blessing,and ordinary bread becomes the Body of the Living God.
As we receive You, make us also your rising for the wounded, the weary and
the waiting world.Let your resurrection live in us today.
Please extend Your hands in blessing.
Bridget Mary and All: Pour out Your spirit anew upon this bread and wine and
upon us as we become more deeply the Christ Presence in our world.
On the night before he died, Jesus came to table with the women and men he loved.
Jesus took bread blessed and broke it, saying,
“Take, eat, this is my body. Do this in memory of me.”
Pause
Bridget Mary and All: After supper, Jesus poured a cup of wine
and shared it with his friends, saying,
“This is the cup of the covenant of my love.
As often as You drink of it, remember me.”
Bridget Mary : Let us proclaim the mystery of faith:
Beth and All:
Christ has died in all who have died.
Christ is rising within us each moment.
Christ comes again and again everywhere each day.
Mary Al : Embracing Presence, we remember all the companions who have
gone before us: Mary, Mother of Jesus, Mary of Magdala, and all people of f
aith who rise up to offer comfort and consolation to those who suffer today.
Mary Al and All: For it is through living as Jesus lived, and loving as he loved,
that we awaken to Your Spirit empowering us to work for justice.
COMMUNION RITE
The Prayer of Jesus Jane and All:
Let us pray as Jesus taught us.
Anna: Sign of Peace
Jesus said to his disciples, “My peace I leave You. My peace I give You.”
Namaste! Namaste Namaste
Jim : Please join in praying the Litany for the Breaking of the Bread:
and All:
Holy One, You call us to speak truth to power; we will do so.
Holy One, You call us to live the Gospel of healing and justice; we will do so.
Holy One, You call us to be Your presence in the world; we will do so.
Jim: This is the Bread of Life and the Cup of Blessing.
Happy are we who are called to the table.
All: We are the Body of Christ.
Communion Song
You Raise Me Up Josh Groban (Stop at 2:02)
Prayer after Communion:
Beth:
Let us pray, Risen Christ, you are rising still in every act of compassion,
in every cry for justice, in every heart that chooses love over fear.
As we go forth from this table, may the power of your resurrection take root
in our lives.
Let the stone be rolled away from anything
that keeps us from living fully in your light.
May we rise with you to serve,
to forgive, to rejoice, to walk boldly into the new life you offer the world.
And together we say, Amen So be it.
Bridget Mary: Thanksgivings, Introductions and Announcements
Concluding Rite: Blessing:
Mary Al :
Please extend your hands as we pray our final blessing.
May the Risen Christ go before you to guide your steps with grace.
May the Risen Christ walk beside you as a companion in joy and struggle.
May the Risen Christ rise within you, that you may be a sign of hope,
a bearer of peace, And may the blessing of God-Creator,
Risen Christ, and Breath of Life
be with you and remain with you always.
All: Alleluia! Go forth in the joy of the Resurrection! Thanks be to God!/Alleluia!
Closing Song: No Grave by Rend Collective (Stop at 2:21)
Please send intention for our community prayer book to Joan Meehan.
www.marymotherofjesus.net
Eucharistic Prayer written by Dr. Bridget Mary Meehan with assistance
from MMOJ Presdiers)
GATHERING AND WELCOME: Elena : We warmly welcome you to our celebration of the Easter Vigil, a holy and blessed night in which we ris...
