Immaculate Conception Church

Helping our community grow in faith, since 1933.

08/21/2024
07/25/2024

Celebremos juntos!!!🥳🥳🥳

07/18/2024

🤓

05/29/2024

A little late, but congratulations to all those who made their first communion!!!.

Let us all pray as a community that this is the beginning of a life close to Jesus, may they never let go of his hand!

05/07/2024

Make plans to attend and have some fun at our Sombreritos de Cafe Lotería. Tickets available in Parish office.

04/25/2024

¿Qué es la memoria de Santa María en sábado?

Desde el siglo IX por institución del papa Beato Urbano II y hasta nuestros días, en toda la iglesia católica de rito romano se ha celebrado la memoria de Santa María en sábado.

La razón por la que se consagró este día a la madre de Dios aún es discutida y desconocida, sin embargo, se considera que como la memoria de los santos se celebran el día que padecieron, así como el viernes santo el hijo (Jesucristo) padeció, el sábado santo la madre lo hizo y por eso se le dedicó este día de la semana a ella.
También se considera que como el sábado es mediador entre el día penoso (viernes) y día glorioso (domingo), así la Virgen María es mediadora entre Dios y los hombres.

Celebremos juntos a la Santísima Virgen María y pidamos su intercesión por nuestra comunidad.

Al finalizar la Celebración Eucarística tendremos unos momentos de convivencia, los esperamos!

04/25/2024

Now it's in Saint Alphonsus!!!

See you there!

03/24/2024

Join us for some Spring Sunday Fun! Tickets available now! 🌸🌷

03/22/2024

Nos vemos el 13 de abril!!!

02/23/2024

Nos vemos este 2 de marzo para chacharear juntos!🤩🤩

02/11/2024

Come join us this Lenten season and enjoy our delicious Guadalupana Lenten meals every Friday!

02/05/2024

Se aproxima la cuaresma, tiempo de preparación para la Pascua. Preparémonos en compañía de los frailes conventuales de centro américa. Te invitamos a la Misión de Cuaresma de nuestra triparroquia!😇😇

01/01/2024

January 1st

Blessed Virgin Mary, the Mother of God

Mary’s divine motherhood broadens the Christmas spotlight. Mary has an important role to play in the Incarnation of the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity. She consents to God’s invitation conveyed by the angel (Luke 1:26-38). Elizabeth proclaims: “Most blessed are you among women and blessed is the fruit of your womb. And how does this happen to me, that the mother of my Lord should come to me?” (Luke 1:42-43, emphasis added). Mary’s role as mother of God places her in a unique position in God’s redemptive plan.

Without naming Mary, Paul asserts that “God sent his Son, born of a woman, born under the law” (Galatians 4:4). Paul’s further statement that “God sent the spirit of his Son into our hearts, crying out ‘Abba, Father!’” helps us realize that Mary is mother to all the brothers and sisters of Jesus.

Some theologians also insist that Mary’s motherhood of Jesus is an important element in God’s creative plan. God’s “first” thought in creating was Jesus. Jesus, the incarnate Word, is the one who could give God perfect love and worship on behalf of all creation. As Jesus was “first” in God’s mind, Mary was “second” insofar as she was chosen from all eternity to be his mother.

The precise title “Mother of God” goes back at least to the third or fourth century. In the Greek form Theotokos (God-bearer), it became the touchstone of the Church’s teaching about the Incarnation. The Council of Ephesus in 431 insisted that the holy Fathers were right in calling the Holy Virgin Theotokos. At the end of this particular session, crowds of people marched through the street shouting: “Praised be the Theotokos!” The tradition reaches to our own day. In its chapter on Mary’s role in the Church, Vatican II’s Dogmatic Constitution on the Church calls Mary “Mother of God” 12 times.

Blessed Virgin Mary, pray for us!🙏🙏🙏🙏

01/01/2024

Happy New Year!!!

12/31/2023

The Feast of the Holy Family of Jesus, Mary and Joseph is normally celebrated on the Sunday after Christmas. This feast developed at the beginning of the 19th century in Canada and then spread to the entire Church in 1920. At first, it was celebrated on the Sunday after Epiphany. It is a Feast that seeks to portray the Holy Family of Nazareth as the “true model of life” (cf. Opening Prayer) from which our families can draw inspiration and know where to find help and comfort.

Holy Family pray for us!

12/28/2023

December 28

Holy Innocents

Herod “the Great,” king of Judea, was unpopular with his people because of his connections with the Romans and his religious indifference. Hence he was insecure and fearful of any threat to his throne. He was a master politician and a tyrant capable of extreme brutality. He killed his wife, his brother, and his sister’s two husbands, to name only a few.

Matthew 2:1-18 tells this story: Herod was “greatly troubled” when astrologers from the east came asking the whereabouts of “the newborn king of the Jews,” whose star they had seen. They were told that the Jewish Scriptures named Bethlehem as the place where the Messiah would be born. Herod cunningly told them to report back to him so that he could also “do him homage.” They found Jesus, offered him their gifts, and warned by an angel, avoided Herod on their way home. Jesus escaped to Egypt.

Herod became furious and “ordered the massacre of all the boys in Bethlehem and its vicinity two years old and under.” The horror of the massacre and the devastation of the mothers and fathers led Matthew to quote Jeremiah: “A voice was heard in Ramah, sobbing and loud lamentation; Rachel weeping for her children…” (Matthew 2:18). Rachel was the wife of Jacob (Israel). She is pictured as weeping at the place where the Israelites were herded together by the conquering Assyrians for their march into captivity.

Let us pray for all the innocents who continue to die unjustly.🙏🙏🙏🙏

12/27/2023

December 27
Saint John Apostle and Evangelist

It is God who calls; human beings answer. The vocation of John and his brother James is stated very simply in the Gospels, along with that of Peter and his brother Andrew: Jesus called them; they followed. The absoluteness of their response is indicated by the account. James and John “were in a boat, with their father Zebedee, mending their nets. He called them, and immediately they left their boat and their father and followed him” (Matthew 4:21b-22).

For the three former fishermen—Peter, James and John—that faith was to be rewarded by a special friendship with Jesus. They alone were privileged to be present at the Transfiguration, the raising of the daughter of Jairus and the agony in Gethsemane. But John’s friendship was even more special. Tradition assigns to him the Fourth Gospel, although most modern Scripture scholars think it unlikely that the apostle and the evangelist are the same person.

John’s own Gospel refers to him as “the disciple whom Jesus loved” (see John 13:23; 19:26; 20:2), the one who reclined next to Jesus at the Last Supper, and the one to whom Jesus gave the exquisite honor of caring for his mother, as John stood beneath the cross. “Woman, behold your son…. Behold, your mother” (John 19:26b, 27b).

Because of the depth of his Gospel, John is usually thought of as the eagle of theology, soaring in high regions that other writers did not enter. But the ever-frank Gospels reveal some very human traits. Jesus gave James and John the nickname, “sons of thunder.” While it is difficult to know exactly what this meant, a clue is given in two incidents.

In the first, as Matthew tells it, their mother asked that they might sit in the places of honor in Jesus’ kingdom—one on his right hand, one on his left. When Jesus asked them if they could drink the cup he would drink and be baptized with his baptism of pain, they blithely answered, “We can!” Jesus said that they would indeed share his cup, but that sitting at his right hand was not his to give. It was for those to whom it had been reserved by the Father. The other apostles were indignant at the mistaken ambition of the brothers, and Jesus took the occasion to teach them the true nature of authority: “…[W]hoever wishes to be first among you shall be your slave. Just so, the Son of Man did not come to be served but to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many” (Matthew 20:27-28).

On another occasion, the “sons of thunder” asked Jesus if they should not call down fire from heaven upon the inhospitable Samaritans, who would not welcome Jesus because he was on his way to Jerusalem. But Jesus “turned and rebuked them” (see Luke 9:51-55).

On the first Easter, Mary Magdalene “ran and went to Simon Peter and to the other disciple whom Jesus loved, and told them, ‘They have taken the Lord from the tomb, and we don’t know where they put him’” (John 20:2). John recalls, perhaps with a smile, that he and Peter ran side by side, but then “the other disciple ran faster than Peter and arrived at the tomb first” (John 20:4b). He did not enter, but waited for Peter and let him go in first. “Then the other disciple also went in, the one who had arrived at the tomb first, and he saw and believed” (John 20:8).

John was with Peter when the first great miracle after the Resurrection took place—the cure of the man crippled from birth—which led to their spending the night in jail together. The mysterious experience of the Resurrection is perhaps best contained in the words of Acts: “Observing the boldness of Peter and John and perceiving them to be uneducated, ordinary men, they [the questioners] were amazed, and they recognized them as the companions of Jesus” (Acts 4:13).

The Apostle John is traditionally considered the author also of three New Testament letters and the Book of Revelation. His Gospel is a very personal account. He sees the glorious and divine Jesus already in the incidents of his mortal life. At the Last Supper, John’s Jesus speaks as if he were already in heaven. John’s is the Gospel of Jesus’ glory.

Saint John Apostle, pray for us 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏

12/26/2023

December 26

Saint Stephen, first martyr

“As the number of disciples continued to grow, the Greek-speaking Christians complained against the Hebrew-speaking Christians, saying that their widows were being neglected in the daily distribution. So the Twelve called together the community of the disciples and said, ‘It is not right for us to neglect the word of God to serve at table. Brothers, select from among you seven reputable men, filled with the Spirit and wisdom, whom we shall appoint to this task, whereas we shall devote ourselves to prayer and to the ministry of the word.’ The proposal was acceptable to the whole community, so they chose Stephen, a man filled with faith and the Holy Spirit…” (Acts 6:1-5).

Acts of the Apostles says that Stephen was a man filled with grace and power, who worked great wonders among the people. Certain Jews, members of the Synagogue of Roman Freedmen, debated with Stephen, but proved no match for the wisdom and spirit with which he spoke. They persuaded others to make the charge of blasphemy against him. He was seized and carried before the Sanhedrin.

In his speech, Stephen recalled God’s guidance through Israel’s history, as well as Israel’s idolatry and disobedience. He then claimed that his persecutors were showing this same spirit. “…you always oppose the holy Spirit; you are just like your ancestors” (Acts 7:51b).

Stephen’s speech brought anger from the crowd. “But he, filled with the holy Spirit, looked up intently to heaven and saw the glory of God and Jesus standing at the right hand of God, and he said, ‘Behold, I see the heavens opened and the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God.’ …They threw him out of the city, and began to stone him. …As they were stoning Stephen, he called out, ‘Lord Jesus, receive my spirit.’ …‘Lord, do not hold this sin against them’” (Acts 7:55-56, 58a, 59, 60b).

Saint Stephen pray for us!!🙏🙏🙏

12/25/2023

🙏😇🙏😇🙏🎄🎄🎄

12/20/2023

Posada en Inmaculada!😁😁😁🎄🎄🎄🎄🎄☃️

12/20/2023

Nos vemos en las posadas!

Photos from Immaculate Conception Church's post 12/18/2023

Our ICC Religious education and community kids had a very special visit yesterday from Santa, who came filled with gifts and joy! Making the season brighter with lots of smiles! Merry Christmas 🎄
(With parents permission for pictures)

Photos from Immaculate Conception Church's post 12/09/2023

Gracias a todos los involucrados en hacer de esta una celebración maravillosa!
Paz y Bien!😃😃

Photos from Our Lady of Guadalupe Shrine's post 12/09/2023
12/01/2023

Calling all vendors!! Spaces are still available both indoor and outdoor! Or come and support our vendors and Christmas shop from us!

11/29/2023

Celebremos a María!!🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏

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Videos (show all)

Now it's in Saint Alphonsus!!!See you there!
Happy New Year!!
Franciscan Feast
hOLY cROSS
Saint John Chrysostom
Saint of the day
Advent Mission with Father David Muñoz, OMI. Part 2.Misión de Adviento con el Padre David Muñoz, OMI. Parte 2.
Misión de Adviento. Advent Mission.
Consagración

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314 Merida Street
San Antonio, TX
78207

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 12pm
1pm - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 12pm
1pm - 5pm
Friday 9am - 12pm
1pm - 5pm

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