Sacred Heart Parish has moved to Flocknote – Update your Information!

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Sacred Heart Parish has moved to Flocknote – Update your Information!

Please visit: https://shojgr.flocknote.com/register to verify the information we have on file for you, add children to the database, and request to join some of the groups already available.  Updating your information will ensure that the parish have up-to-date information on parishioners and visitors alike.  An app is available, with a white sheep, or access through a browser. Overtime, this will replace Remind, Sign up Genius, paper registrations, and our giving platform. Questions, please email Laureen Fish at lfish@shgr.org.

First Friday Adorers Needed!

Did you adore our Lord during our 40 Hours Devotion? Would you like to adore Him every First Friday? We are in need of those willing to commit to an hour of adoration every First Friday. We particularly need adorers for the 5:00pm and 10:00pm hours. If you would like to sign up or want more information, please call Noelle in the parish office at 616-459-8362.

Annual Auction Video 2024 – The Fruit of Love is Service

Enjoy this beautiful video created for our recent annual auction:

The Fruit of Love is Service – Auction Video 2024

Rays of Hope (Handmaids of Mary Immaculate)

Any young ladies in 7th – 12th grade are invited to join a prayer group called Rays of Hope. This group meets twice a month on the first and fourth Saturdays of the month, starting with morning Mass as 7:45AM. Following Mass, we pray the rosary, have breakfast, and have a discussion about how to follow in the footsteps of Mary more closely. Each meeting also includes an activity of assisting at the parish, for example doing an initial watering of the flowers for Christmas and Easter and reaching out to the community. We are always open to suggestions. We have taken on two charities at this time: Kids Food Basket and Help Pregnancy Aid. If you are interested you can just show up or if you have any questions please contact Sr. Jacinta Miryam at srjacintamiryam@shgr.org

Recent Homilies Available

Great news! Recent homilies are back up and available here. You also will find them at the Homilies tab in your myParish App.

Join one of our three parish choirs!

Saint Faustina Choir – Sings for the 7:45am Mass every Sunday. Rehearsals: Sunday Morning at 7:15am in the belfry.

Saint Colombiere Choir – Sings for the 9:30 Mass every Sunday and Holy Days. Rehearsals: Wed nights from 7:30pm to 9:00pm in the choir room.

Saint Margaret Mary Singers – Sings for the 11:30am Traditional Latin Mass every Sunday and Holy Days. Rehearsals: Wed nights from 6:00pm-7:30pm in the choir room. 


For more information or to participate in any of these choirs, please contact: Mr. Jonathan Bading, Director of Sacred Music (musicdirector@shgr.org)

A Brief History of our Current Pipe Organ upon the Occasion its Noble Retirement

This Sunday, August 18, 2024, marks the last Mass at which Sacred Heart’s current pipe organ publicly performs. The instrument will be removed this week as the first of many preparatory steps in anticipation of our new Fratelli Ruffatti pipe organ which will arrive here from Italy next spring. And while the advent of the new organ is of immense liturgical, historical, and cultural import to our parish, diocese, and city, it is right and just to honor the end of this current era with a brief history of our soon-to-be former instrument.

Sacred Heart’s current organ was installed in 1962 by the Wicks organ company of Highland, Illinois, as the company’s 4,295th installation. Oral tradition has it that this instrument came secondhand to the parish from a music store in Kalamazoo where it served as a display organ for potential buyers to try out.

The Wicks replaced the church’s original organ, a small Kimball (of Chicago) instrument installed in 1925. There is no explanation as to why the Kimball was replaced, though I theorize that it was a cost-effective decision. The Kimball was most likely a tubular pneumatic organ, meaning that it maintained its wind pressure through lead tubing. After 30 years of use and inconsistent maintenance, the lead lines deteriorated, and the cost of restoring these lines outweighed the purchase of a new, more stable electro-pneumatic organ. In the spirit of continuity, Wicks did integrate one set of Kimball pipes into their organ, a lovely set of sub-bass wood pipes.

The 1962 Wicks was also rather small, an organ of only four ranks (1 rank= 61 pipes, a full keyboard’s worth). With the addition of the aforementioned Kimball rank and a three-rank mixture from a local builder (Mutchler), the organ’s 8 ranks seemed meager, especially in an acoustic as rich as ours. This was probably intentional; organ salesmen often offered parishes modest instruments that they could then expand in the future once more money had been raised. Wicks drafted a proposal for such an expansion (an additional 11 ranks) in 1987, 25 years after the original installation, but this was never completed. This is why only the right chamber contains pipes. (Note to the reader: the painted façade pipes that you see from the nave are truly a “façade;” they are decorative. The actual pipework sits enclosed behind them in the right chamber.)

However, the organ was “expanded” by a Rodgers digital system in 2001, supplementing the extant pipe- work with digital MIDI “ranks” produced through speakers. Rodgers also replaced the Wicks console with the current one, from which the organist could manipulate both real and digital ranks. This “new” organ, classified as a “Wicks-Rodgers hybrid,” was dedicated in honor of John A. Kamyszek, longtime parish organist at Sacred Heart, by Fr. (now Msgr.) Edward Hankiewicz in April 2001. It has remained more or less unchanged for the last quarter-century.

Next year, a century after the original Kimball organ was dedicated, we shall dedicate our new Ruffatti organ as the “Peter F. Secchia Memorial Organ” in memory of the late ambassador to Italy, whose family gifted the parish this state-of-the-art organ. Unlike the Kimball, the Ruffatti organ will not deteriorate in a quarter-century’s time. And unlike the Wicks, the Ruffatti consists of 39 ranks of pipework, an instrument which will finally satisfy the height and breadth and depth of our architecture. It is a severe privilege and honor to serve as organist during this historic moment in the life of our parish. What has taken a hundred years to come to fruition may God make flourish for a thousand more.

Jonathan Bading, Director of Sacred Music

Special thanks to Mr. Chad Boorsma of the Organ Historical Society for his excellent database work.

Palestrina500 – LIVE on Holy Family Radio!

Listen! Jonathan Bading and Michael Tober on Holy Family Radio talk about Palestrina500: Sacred Heart Music Program 2025 – Holy Family Radio Tune in for the installments listed here:

Monday, January 29, 3pm-4pm / Session One – Discussion:  Sacred Music & it’s Importance in Encountering God 

Monday, March 4, 3pm-4pm / Session Two – Discussion: The work of the Liturgy in building, maintaining, and strengthening a Christian Society (As the Liturgy Goes, so Goes man)

Monday, May 6, 3pm-4pm / Session Three – The Riches of the Rite of Rome.  The unique power of its Signs & Symbols. 

Monday, July 8, 3pm-4pm / Session Four – Man’s need for Beauty, Contemplation, and the Mystagogical nature of the Mass

Monday, September 9, 3pm-4pm / Session Five –  Personal Testimony – Our Journey and How the Mass has impacted our lives.    Live Questions on Air?

Monday, November 11, 3pm-4pm / Session Six –  Ready, Set, Go Palestrina500!  – A review of the event, live on air questions

STAINED GLASS WINDOW RENOVATION

Miss me yet? You may have noted that our ten painted glass art deco windows have been removed and their rotting frames replaced. As part of the church restoration project, the windows are themselves being reworked with the central figures in each window being retained and the decoration around the figure being replaced. The draft proposal for the first window to be reworked is featured on the cover of this week’s bulletin. You might note that the decorative border, which was originally art deco, now matches the more classical style found on the St. Cecilia window in the choir loft, while the background of the scene is far more realistic and is reminiscent of the background of the windows in the apse, behind the altar. The hope is to create a stylistic unity with the new windows while maintaining the subject matter and ele- ments of the original windows. The first two windows are being worked on now and will be installed by the end of the year. They are being funded by a generous loan from the diocese. If you are interested in the project or know someone who would like to fund a window, large or small, please contact our Direct of Advancement, Mrs. Am- ber Hiske at ahiske@shgr.org for more information.

Sunday Bulletins emailed to you

Did you know you can have our Sunday bulletin delivered directly emailed to your inbox? Go to:

discovermass.com/subscribe to sign up.