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Dear Parents, Guardians and Carers,
Staff and students have all enjoyed pancakes today as we celebrated the tradition of Shrove Tuesday.
In Australia and Britain the day preceding Ash Wednesday is popularly known as Shrove Tuesday. It is also frequently called Pancake Tuesday or Fat Tuesday as well as by its Latin name, Mardi Gras, which when translated from the French also means “Fat Tuesday.”
Tomorrow we will be attending as a whole school the Ash Wednesday Mass at 12pm at St Michael’s Church. Parents are very welcome to join us. Ash Wednesday is the beginning of the Lenten season.
In his message for Lent 2023, Pope Francis encouraged Catholics to listen to what Jesus wants to tell them through the Scriptures and through others.
Using the story of Jesus’ Transfiguration as a launching point, Francis addressed both the journey of Lent and the Catholic Church’s ongoing Synod on Synodality in the message released Feb. 17.
The pope recalled “the command that God the Father addresses to the disciples on Mount Tabor as they contemplate Jesus transfigured. The voice from the cloud says: ‘Listen to him.’”
“The first proposal, then, is very clear: We need to listen to Jesus,” he said. “Lent is a time of grace to the extent that we listen to him as he speaks to us.”
“During this liturgical season,” he continued, “the Lord takes us with him to a place apart. While our ordinary commitments compel us to remain in our usual places and our often repetitive and sometimes boring routines, during Lent we are invited to ascend ‘a high mountain’ in the company of Jesus and to live a particular experience of spiritual discipline — ascesis — as God’s holy people.”
Pope Francis said one of the ways Jesus speaks to us is through the Word of God, which we can hear at Mass.
But if one cannot attend Mass during the week, it is a good idea to still read the daily readings of the liturgy, the pope encouraged.
“In addition to the Scriptures, the Lord speaks to us through our brothers and sisters, especially in the faces and the stories of those who are in need,” he added.
Francis’ second suggestion for Lent was to confront the difficulties of ordinary life remembering that Lent is a period that leads to Easter.
“Do not take refuge in a religiosity made up of extraordinary events and dramatic experiences, out of fear of facing reality and its daily struggles, its hardships and contradictions,” the pope said.
“The light that Jesus shows the disciples is an anticipation of Easter glory, and that must be the goal of our own journey, as we follow ‘him alone,’” he said. “Lent leads to Easter: the ‘retreat’ is not an end in itself, but a means of preparing us to experience the Lord’s passion and cross with faith, hope, and love, and thus to arrive at the resurrection.”
Parent Access Module (PAM)
Thank you to everyone for their support of the upgrades to PAM. By adding in your child’s medical information it provides a smoother process for school events which will result in less time for you as parents as it only needs to be filled in completely once and then reviewed if there are changes or a new medical condition diagnosed.
PAM is the primary method of sending out and returning permission forms for school activities so it is vital that your child's information is up to date.
ATHLETICS DAY
We are closely monitoring the weather forecast for Friday and will be making a decision tomorrow Wednesday by the close of business as to whether we will need to postpone the Athletics carnival due to the extreme heat policy. If we postpone the day, you will receive notification via the school app on Wednesday afternoon.
UPCOMING SCHOOL CLOSURE DAYS
On the following dates the school will be closed to students:
- Thursday 6th April
- Monday 24th April
Term One holidays will begin at 3:20pm Wednesday 5th April.
Term Two will resume on Wednesday 26th April at 9am.
Kind regards
Jodie
Today is Shrove Tuesday and we are preparing for the arrival of Lent. Shrove Tuesday is traditionally known as the day when people used up the “rich foods” that they had in the house by making pancakes before the period of fasting began. All around the school today there was the beautiful smell of pancakes.
Project Compassion
During Lent, Project Compassion works hard to raise money to end poverty, promote justice and uphold dignity across the globe. A focus in the Lenten period is almsgiving; donating money or goods as an act of charity. This is a great concept for the children to understand: it might be simply going without an icy-pole once a week and donating their 50c to the Project Compassion Box. There will be collection boxes throughout the classrooms for the children to donate throughout Lent.
Today our 5 school captains attended the official launch of Project Compassion 2023 along with Mrs Ware and myself. We had the opportunity to gather with Bishop Greg Bennet, priests and other school principals and leaders from the area at Lavalla Catholic College.
Preparation for the 2023 Reconciliation Sacrament is about to begin with a Parent / Child Information Meeting on the 1st March at 6pm in the St Michael’s Church. The Sacrament of Reconciliation is available for children in Grade 3 who have been baptised Catholic. Registration forms were sent home with all of the Grade 3 children last Thursday. If you have not yet received your information or you have a child in another year level that has not received the sacrament yet please contact me via email srickwood@stmtraralgon.catholic.edu.au .
Regards
Sue Rickwood
Mt 5:38 - 48
Sunday's readings make it very clear that we are to love one another, even our enemies. The readings are both beautiful and challenging; we must not hate people or bear grudges. Instead we are to “turn the other cheek” and show forgiveness and compassion. This week's gospel is part of the Sermon on the Mount where Jesus preached to the crowd. During the Sermon Jesus reinforces the laws of the Old Testament and teaches how the laws can still be applied. In today’s gospel, Jesus teaches that we should love our enemies and pray for them rather than instinctively seeking revenge when we are wronged. The concept that ‘two wrongs don’t make a right’ is one that we are probably very familiar with and is a simple idea that our children can understand. Jesus, in his teaching, wants us to learn that paying evil with evil is not the way of God but rather we should show love and compassion.
Each week students from each class are awarded Student of the Week certificates. These children are nominated for the example they have been within the school based on the School Wide Expectation focus for that week. The weekly focus will be from Wednesday until Tuesday the following week. Awards will be presented to students at assembly on Friday.
In Week 4 the School Wide Expectation focus was Learning:
I set high expectations of what I can achieve.
I work hard and always try my best.
I reflect on my own learning and how I can improve.
I can receive and act on feedback.
The award winners for Week 4 are:
Ameleia Manio | Lakyn Lowe | Varnika S |
Liam Hunter | Janina de Souza-Daw | Solomon Konyi |
Eva Flowers | Dylan Rawson | Dante Lourensz |
Lincoln Baxter | Cooper Greaves | Ethan Pritchard |
Beau Collins | Oliver Sutherland | Rosemaria Thomas |
Cato Nightingale | Leisha Poole | Flynn Waite |
Theo Moretti | Isla Jensen | Jasie Maiden |
Ava Cahir | Jaxon Flowers | Mia Francolino |
Elijah Kimanyi | Alex Witte | Nicolette Chihota |
Keeley Brown | Edelweiss Vickers | Sidney Sposito |
Logan Suter | Seb Mazza | Ariana Riseley |
Maggie Heller | Rose Calabro | Archie Nowak |
An Hua | Aria Pearson | Charlie Pollard |
Jack Hill | Savannah Frendo | Layla Lockwood |
Traralgon District Swimming Carnival