18.12.11

December 18, 2011

This week are first semester final exams. Students are exhorted to study; parents are exhorted to pray!
School will be dismissed Wednesday, Dec. 21st at 12:30 p.m. for the Christmas/New Year break. Classes resume Tuesday, January 10th.


Thanks to those parents and friends who have helped
For providing a parent-sponsored lunch: Mrs. Aguilar, her mother, and her aunt on Monday and The Porretta Family on Thursday.
Mrs. Virginia Schoenfeld, for taking pictures and the basketball games.

Financial Aid Applications Due: Please begin submitting your financial aid renewals for the 2012-2013 school year. Applications must be received by PSAS prior to February 1, 2012. The application may be found on our school webpage in the Admissions section or by opening the following link: http://stmichaelsprep.org/images/stories/Admissions/psas_financial_aid_application.pdf

Photographers! When you take exceptional photos of the students doing things noble, virtuous, studious, or fun -- send a copy to the school. This will significantly enrich the treasury of photos available to adorn the electronic and real walls of the campus.

Parent/Student Handbook: FRIDAY AND WEEKEND RULES

All students shall be picked up from St. Michael’s for the Friday dismissal by 1 PM. In the event that a parent or guardian of a student encounters an emergency situation that delays their arrival to the school, the student may remain at the school until 4 PM and will be supervised by one of the Deans of Students or the confrere assigned to weekender duty. In the event that the parent or guardian is delayed past the 4 PM deadline, an additional charge of one day’s boarding cost will be assessed to the student’s account.

With regard to the actual dismissal on Fridays, the parent will be required to report to the supervising Dean of Students who is monitoring student dismissal in the parking lot and sign their student out. At that point, the student will be released to the parent or guardian. Only those individuals who are registered parents or guardians with the Headmaster’s Office will be allowed to retrieve their students.

For those students who routinely stay over the weekend at St. Michael’s they will be supervised by the confreres assigned to weekend supervision. In the event that a weekend boarding student opts out of their weekend status to stay locally with a St. Michael’s host family, the parents of that student and the hosting parents must email the Headmaster’s Office by 12 PM the Wednesday before, giving mutual permission for the opting out of weekend status for that particular weekend. A student will not be granted opt out status of weekend stay by casually stating to a member of the faculty that they are staying over the weekend at another student’s home. If concurrent permission is not received from the concerned parents via email by the stated deadline, the student will not be released to the host family by the Dean of Students.

Oftentimes, students who live locally and return home each weekend are invited to stay the weekend with another local school family. This arrangement will also require notification to the Headmaster’s office via email by 12 PM the Wednesday before so that the supervising Dean will be aware of the arrangement when releasing the student to the host family.

For those students who routinely transit home by train after Friday dismissal, St. Michael’s will facilitate the transportation of that student to the nearest train station for a nominal transportation fee. However, the student’s parents or guardian must confirm the fact that the student will be traveling home by train for the weekend. The parent or guardian will be required to email the Headmasters Office by 12 pm, Wednesday, of each week to confirm their student will in fact be traveling home. They will also provide the departure time of the train their son will be taking home.

This Week’s Photos: Basketball; Christmas Room Decorating Contest



Sports This Week:
To allow our students extra time to study for semester exams without distractions, there will be no athletic competitions scheduled this week, only practices.

Birthdays:
Dec. 19th: James Howard
Dec. 20th: Newton Vu
Dec. 31st: Thomas Esser; Matthew Shelton
Jan. 1st: Faris Alquaddoomi
Jan. 10th: Andrew Bonello; Chimaobim Ejiaga

Homily of the Week by Fr. Abbot Eugene Hayes

This evening with our annual Lessons and Carols service we comply with the church’s admonition to us to rejoice. We have arrived precisely at the midpoint of the season of Advent, the season which prepares for the coming of Christ and the reception of the grace of Christmas, a grace renewed each year, one to be communicated to those who have lived these four weeks well. And through the liturgy and the scriptures of this season we are reminded of the various elements of the program of Advent. Today the element put before us, as I mentioned, is one of rejoicing, in fact this 3rd Sunday of advent was known as rejoicing Sunday, Gaudete Sunday – Latin word – plural imperative, telling, instructing, commanding all to whom it is addressed to rejoice. It is a message accompanied by rose colored vestments and the return of the organ and for us here this evening songs prepared by the choir and particularly its schola members under the expert direction of Kathleen Winters.

At one time this midpoint observance was celebrated in a much more penitential context. In face for many Advent was like a little Lent. So rejoicing at this time included a welcome break in that penitential journey. Likewise in this setting the midpoint of advent and its celebration was a harkening back to the chosen people and their centuries of expectation. The faithful were asked to continue to persevere in their advent program and given a foretaste of joyful sentiments soon to come.

For people of our time the arrival at the midpoint of Advent might elicit much different sentiments. The realization that Christmas is exactly two weeks from today, for many, signifies how quickly the time is passing and how much more needs to be accomplished in an increasingly brief window of opportunity and for some induces a state close to panic. Yet for those too the message is no less pressing than for previous generations. For people of our time the command to rejoice provides a welcome break from hurry and haste. If all we do today is come to this service and be glad in its celebration then we too have heeded the message. This evening draws the focus once more to what the season and its final goal is all about.




The readings we have heard this evening call
our attention to the simple fact that humanity got off to quite a bad start and
yet in the near immediate wake of catastrophic disobedience and disregard for
God’s plan and God’s program, God himself offers the remedy: a future encounter
between the woman’s seed and that of the serpent, an encounter that will see
disobedience transformed into obedience, and the fall reversed into a
resurrection. God’s plan is foreshadowed
in Abraham and made clearer in his promise of descendants as countless as the
stars and a people more numerous than
the sands of the seashore. That people
who for generations walk in darkness in a gloomy land will rejoice in a child,
a son, the wonder-counselor, the prince of peace.

What centuries of listeners heard as
prophecy, we hear as accomplished fact, for the child has been born, the Son is
given to us, His dominion is vast … over his kingdom both now and forever, all
of this more than reason enough, for us this evening to rejoice.

In publishing this
homily, we hope to share a portion of the spiritual treasure by which the
students are enriched every day.
However, this homily may not be reproduced by the parents or friends of St. Michael’s without written permission of the author.

Prayer Requests
● Jodie Meschuk,
wife of Coach Aaron Meschuk, who is expecting.
● The paternal grandfather of sophomore Andrew
Bonello who is hospitalized
with a broken hip.
● Mrs. Marge DeClue, past parent-league
president, who has declining health.
● Mr. Glenn Emanuel, a member of the Norbertine
Lay Order, who has a serious heart condition.
● Those who are in the armed forces.
● St. Michael’s older priests and those who
care for them.

11.12.11

December 11, 2011


Thanks to those parents and friends who have helped
● For providing parent sponsored lunches for students and faculty, the Aguilar Family and the Porretta Family
● For all those who donated food and time to the Advent and Carols reception.

Advent Lessons and Carols
December 11th at 7:00 p.m. We encourage the whole family to join us for this beautiful event! A reception will follow.

Financial Aid Applications Due: Please begin submitting your financial aid renewals for the 2012-2013 school year. Applications must be received by PSAS prior to February 1, 2012. The application may be found on our school webpage in the Admissions section or by opening the following link: http://stmichaelsprep.org/images/stories/Admissions/psas_financial_aid_application.pdf
Photographers! When you take exceptional photos of the students doing things noble, virtuous, studious, or fun -- send a copy to the school. This will significantly enrich the treasury of photos available to adorn the electronic and real walls of the campus.

Parent/Student Handbook: Chapter 3 , Section 15
SECTION15: HONOR ROLL PRIVILEGES
Rewards and privileges at St. Michael’s are aligned with academic success.
Students who enjoy First Honors (94%-100% grade point average) will be treated by the administration to an off campus dinner once a quarter.
They may also bring their own computer and printer to school to use at their own desk. Personal computers are stored in the school office, checked out by the roomleader at 6:00 pm, and returned at 9:45 pm.During the evening recreation period from 6:00 to 7:00, students on First Honors may play games on their computers, as long as the content of the game does not offend Catholic moral teaching. Watching films or any entertainment shows on one’s computer is strictly forbidden to all students at all times.

If a student plays computer games after the evening recreation, that computer will be confiscated for two weeks with a donation to the mission funds of $100. If any student assumes computer privileges that are not his, that computer will be confiscated for two weeks with a donation to the mission funds of $100. If any student watches a film or any other entertainment show on a computer, that computer will be confiscated for two weeks with a donation to the mission funds of $100. For this reason, students are strongly encouraged to place passwords on their computers to prevent others from unauthorized use. IPods used as movie-watching devices on campus will be confiscated for two weeks and may only be redeemed with donation to the mission funds of $100. All these infractions negatively impact the student’s conduct grade, 10 points “off the top.”
Roomleaders may also enjoy this privilege throughout the week at the First Honors level if they have maintained at least an 88% with no “D” or “F”. Recreational use of the computer (games, etc.) is likewise determined by this scale.
At no time does the school assume liability for loss and/or damage of the computer (hardware, software, information) or the radio (CD player, iPod™).

This Week’s Photos:
School choir singing at Mass at St. John the Baptist Parish; Soccer Team; Room Cleaning

Sports This Week:
Congratulations to our basketball team for winning their last 2 games!

*Tuesday, Dec. 11th: Soccer and Basketball @ San Diego Jewish Academy, 3:30 p.m. *Thursday, Dec. 8th: Soccer vs. Emerson @ STM; 3:00 p.m.
*Friday, Dec. 9th: Soccer @ Southlands, 3:15 p.m.; Basketball @ St. Margaret’s,
3:00 p.m.

Birthdays This Week:
Dec. 15th: Moises Gomez; Michael Porretta
Dec. 19th: James Howard

Homily of the Week by Fr. Brendan Hankins, O. Praem.
Among other things, Fr. Brendan is one of the Assistant Deans and teaches American Literature.

Blessed Miguel Pro is an unassuming saint and much is made of his sense of humor and proclivity for practical jokes. But he clearly fits the mold of holy men in at least 2 fundamental areas; he suffered with patient resignation and he died a most holy death.

Like the prophet Daniel, who was forced to leave his home in Jerusalem, Blessed Miguel was forced to leave Mexico due to religious persecution; traveling from Mexico to California to Spain, Nicaragua and Belgium. He then underwent an extended period of poor health and consented to 3 operations which were intended to relieve his pain, but they had the opposite effect. Resigned to it all he wrote “The doctors found three openings, with the wound they made on the 5th of January still open and bleeding, so here I am in bed again, dieting and unable to say Mass, with the prospect of bleeding again as soon as they give me the medicine, which is the rule after the operation. God be praised for it all! He knows the reasons for all these setbacks. I am quite resigned to it, and I kiss the hand that sends me this suffering.”

It was at this point that his superiors decided to send him back to Mexico believing he may die and wanting to give him the comfort of dying near his family. Indeed, death was on the horizon, but it would come after a period of great apostolic activity and under some of the most difficult of circumstances. Within 23 days of returning to Mexico all public worship was suppressed. In the days preceding the suppression Catholics flocked to the confessionals and the still infirm Blessed Miguel heard confessions 10 hours a day and had to be pulled out of the confessional on 2 occasions after passing out. After the suppression the Church then went underground and Blessed Miguel took communion to hundreds each day, organized spiritual conferences, found shelter, food and clothing for nearly 100 poverty stricken families.

Subsequent to being arrested on several occasions and constantly harassed by police he was captured for the last time on false charges. In today’s gospel our Lord tells his disciples that he will give them wisdom that their adversaries will be powerless to resist or refute. Blessed Miguel was sentenced to death without a trial or opportunity to defend himself, but his actions spoke eloquently. Led before a firing squad his last request was to be given a few moments in prayer. He then held a crucifix in one hand and a rosary in the other while standing with his arms extended to each side. Photographers were present to capture the execution and put the pictures in the paper in order to deter additional religious activity, but Blessed Miguel’s faith and resignation to offer his life in imitation of his Savior had the opposite result. Following Blessed Miguel’s example there was even greater enthusiasm and devotion and many more offered their lives before the firing squad, carrying the newspaper photo of Blessed Miguel’s martyrdom with them.
Shortly before his death Blessed Miguel wrote this prayer “I believe, O Lord, but strengthen my faith, Heart of Jesus, I love thee, but increase my love; Heart of Jesus, I trust in Thee, but give greater vigor to my confidence; Heart of Jesus, I give my heart to Thee, but so enclose it in Thee that is may never be separated from Thee. Heart of Jesus, I am all Thine; but take care of my promise so that I may be able to put it in practice even unto the complete sacrifice of my life.

Blessed Miguel Pro—Pray for us!

In publishing this homily, we hope to share a portion of the spiritual treasure by which the students are enriched every day. However, this homily may not be reproduced by the parents or friends of St. Michael’s without written permission of the author.

Prayer Requests
● Jodie Meschuk, wife of Coach Aaron Meschuk, who is expecting.
● The paternal grandfather of sophomore Andrew Bonello who is hospitalized with a broken hip.
● Mrs. Marge DeClue, past parent-league president, who has declining health.
● Mr. Glenn Emanuel, a member of the Norbertine Lay Order, who has a serious heart condition.
● Mrs. Beverly Schaefgen who is battling cancer.
● Those who are in the armed forces.
● St. Michael’s older priests and those who care for them.

4.12.11

December 4, 2011

Thanks to those parents and friends who have helped
● For hosting a student over the weekend: Schardt and Unterman families
● For providing photos of school events: Mr. Rudy Aguilar

Advent Lessons and Carols
December 11th at 7:00 p.m. We encourage the whole family to join us for this beautiful event! A reception will follow.

Annual Parent Survey of School: Parents and guardians, please check your email for details from the school office on
how to complete the school’s annual online survey. A link to the survey has been provided in the email. The deadline for
completing the survey is Dec. 9th.

Financial Aid Applications Due: Please begin submitting your financial aid renewals for the 2012-2013 school year. Applications must be received by PSAS prior to February 1, 2012. The application may be found on our school webpage in the Admissions section or by opening the following link: http://stmichaelsprep.org/images/stories/Admissions/psas_financial_aid_application.pdf

Photographers! When you take exceptional photos of the students doing things noble, virtuous, studious, or fun -- send a copy to the school. This will significantly enrich the treasury of photos available to adorn the electronic and real walls of the campus.

Parent/Student Handbook: Chapter 3, Section 14
SECTION 14: COLLEGE COUNSELING
All St. Michael’s students plan on going to college. College counseling at St. Michael’s, therefore, focuses on college-readiness (in terms of standardized testing); individual and group advisement regarding college choice and financial aid; support throughout the college decision-making and application process.

College readiness/standardized testing: School policy is that all seniors must have taken the SAT Critical Reasoning (formerly called the SAT I), the ACT, and two SAT Subject Tests (formerly called SAT II). Students and parents are made aware of testing dates and registration deadlines through parent meetings and reminder emails. In preparation for the SAT, all 9th, 10th, and 11th graders take the PSAT in October, on-campus and during school hours.

All students who study their course work at the advanced placement level also sit for the AP examination. Other students may take AP exams provided they have permission from their parents and the appropriate faculty member.
From time to time St. Michael’s additionally provides standardized exams of various types. Some of these include: National Greek Exam and National Latin Exam.

Advisement regarding college choice and financial aid: Individual student appointments during the junior and senior years assist students in doing online college searches and in determining a pool of colleges to which the student will apply. Each junior and senior is given a customized “handbook” of relevant information. Group advisement is done as needed. Juniors and seniors go together on a formal visit and tour of a local college, attend the Santa Margarita Catholic High School College Night, and hear presentations by college reps who visit St. Michael’s during the school year. Students have access to continually updated information about individual colleges in the college file and scholarship notebook available in the school library.

Support throughout the college process: St. Michael’s College Counselor is available by email (CollegeCounselor @StMichaelsPrep.org), voicemail (949-858-0222 x 319), and/or face-to-face appointments to parents and students throughout all phases of the college-decision and application process. Two college counselor presentations are scheduled at parent meetings in fall (college decision-making and applications) and early winter (financial aid for college). While targeted at senior parents, parents of students at all grade levels are encouraged to attend.


This Week’s Photos
Weekend students hiking in the foothills of Saddleback Mountain.
Students cleaning their rooms in anticipation of a white-glove inspection.

Sports This Week:
Tuesday, Dec. 6th: Soccer @ Webb; 3:15 p.m.
Thursday, Dec. 8th: Soccer vs. Crean Lutheran @ STM; 3:00 p.m.
Thursday, Dec. 8th: Basketball @ St. Margaret’s; 6:00 p.m.
Friday, Dec. 9th: Soccer practice till 3:00 p.m. @ STM
Friday, Dec. 9th: Basketball @ Bethel Baptist; 4:00 p.m.

Homily of the Week by Fr. Victor Szczurek, O. Praem.
Among other things, Fr. Victor teaches Latin and Greek in the school.

There are certain times of the liturgical year which must seem rather strange to the outsider, and maybe even to us. Today we are presented within today’s Gospel the flipside, so to speak, of the Christmas story. It’s the very same God and the very same love which motivates Him (as it were) to do all that He does. The difference between the Christmas Story and the end of the world’s gloom and doom, has more to do with man than God. That is, the God Who is love does not change from a good God to an evil God; what changes is man’s reaction to God’s pure love. The story about the little Christ Child being born in a manger, and that same Christ coming to judge the living and the dead with all power and might, is about one and the same God. It’s even one and the same story; and it’s a love story—a love story seen from two different perspectives. Our own Praemonstratensian writer Adam Scot once expressed it this way: Just as the sun makes the wax melt and the clay harden with one and the same ray, so the same divine will punishes the impious and rewards the just. This weeks’ readings about the final judgment is a story, then, about the power of divine love—a love which can seem somewhat strange to those who do not know Christ.

This divine love, which flows from the Sacred Heart of Jesus, that Burning Furnace of Charity, is the most powerful force in the universe—more powerful than any forest fire or tsunami. Strong as death is love, says Sacred Scripture. And when this divine love is accepted into a person’s heart, it works wonders, completely changing their outlook on life, their ways of acting, their thoughts, their desires, their words. It levels in the heart of him who accepts it all sin and vice, like a fire which refines a precious metal, leaving the soul purified and strong; and it will ultimately bring the soul immense peace and joy, even while in the midst of afflictions. In short, when God’s love is accepted into the heart of man, we see the loving mercy of that first Christmas morning. Man’s heart, like that manger, becomes full of light, joy and peace.

But when that same divine love is not accepted, when it is rejected by a cold hard heart, then we become witnesses not of God’s loving mercy, but rather of God’s loving justice. That same divine love which brings such joy when it finds a heart to welcome it, brings divine justice when it meets an obstacle. And this is what we shall see at the end of the world, when the full effects of God’s love are manifested in all: perfect mercy for those who received His love; and perfect justice for those who rejected it. St. Augustine used the analogy of the waters of the Red Sea which both cleansed the Israelites who passed through them, but destroyed Pharaoh and the evil Egyptians [De Cataclysmo]. Divine charity and sin cannot exist forever in the same soul: either that charity will wash away the sins in mercy, or, if that same charity is met by a stubborn will, it will cast the soul from its sight, which is exactly what hell is. God’s love can either purify us and unite us to Him, making us one with Him like two candles melted together; or it can destroy us and cause us eternal suffering. It’s up to us. Do we accept this love or reject it?

Let us ask our Blessed Mother’s intercession, that we might imitate her and open our hearts to the love of Christ, and allow that love to change us completely, and so bring us the peace and joy of an eternal Christmas.

In publishing this homily, we hope to share a portion of the spiritual treasure by which the students are enriched every day. However, this homily may not be reproduced by the parents or friends of St. Michael’s without written permission of the author.

Prayer Requests

● Mrs. Marge DeClue, past parent-league president, who has declining health.
● Mr. Glenn Emanuel, a member of the Norbertine Lay Order, who has a serious heart condition.
● Mrs. Beverly Schaefgen who is battling cancer.
● Mr. Mike Smith who is recuperating from knee surgery.
● Those who are in the armed forces.
● St. Michael’s older priests and those who care for them.
● For the repose of the soul of Mrs. Eugenia Brokaw