Welcome to

St. Hubert Catholic Church

in

Bluegrass

 

22008 County Road 23, Bluegrass, MN

We now offer the church bulletin to be emailed to you every Monday, if interested click this link: Father Mike

Mass Schedule

St. Frederick Catholic Church

Verndale

Sunday

7:30 a.m.

  • Tuesday: Mass - 7:00 p.m.; Reconciliation - 6:30 p.m.

St. Hubert Catholic Church

Bluegrass

Sunday

9:00 a.m.

  • Wednesday: Mass - 9:00 a.m.; Reconciliation - 9:30 a.m.

Assumption of our Lady Catholic Church

Menahga

Sunday

10:45 a.m.

  • Thursday: Mass - 1st and 3rd at Church: 10:00 a.m.; Reconciliation 9:30 a.m.
  • Thursday: Mass - 2nd and 4th at Green Pine Acres Nursing Home: 10:00 a.m.
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From the Pastor's Desk:

This week we celebrate the patron saint of our diocese, St. Cloud. Although this particular saint isn’t well known, he is most fascinating. Here is a biography that was compiled by Fr. Steve Binsfeld that you might find interesting.
Enjoy!,
Fr. Mike

Saint Cloud was born in 522. He was the grandson of Clovis, founder of the Kingdom of the Franks, and his wife Saint Clothilde. Following the death of his parents, Cloud and his two brothers were cared for by Saint Clothilde, the widowed queen who was their grandmother. Upon his father’s death his uncles sought to seize his father’s throne by plotting the murder of Cloud and his two brothers. They succeeded in killing his brothers, but Cloud escaped and sought sanctuary with St. Remegius, the Bishop of Rheims, a short distance from Paris. Cloud grew from childhood into young manhood under the guidance and protection of the holy bishop and his sainted grandmother.

Little is know of Cloud’s life from the age of five until the age of eighteen. He lived most of these years with St. Remegius, Bishop of Rheims and later with St. Severin, a hermit. During these formative years he drew closer to God through the practice of silence and solitude. Although this life-style was forced upon him by his uncles’ plot to murder him, Cloud grew to appreciate his separation from the world and a life of silence.

At the age of twenty Cloud left his hermitage, appeared before the Bishop of Paris surrounded by religious and civic leaders and members of his royal family. (Remember he was a prince and heir to the throne!) He had clothed himself in royal robes and carried scissors in one hand and a coarse garment in the other. He stripped off his royal robes and offered the coarse garment to the bishop, who clothed him as a symbol of his preferred spiritual riches. With the scissors the bishop cut Cloud’s long hair. In the silence and solitude of his hermitage Cloud had established priorities in his life. He had learned the difference between true and false pleasures.

After St. Severin the hermit died, Cloud left the neighborhood of Paris to find solitude deeper in the forest. He sought to communicate with God more intimately as he prayed for the needs of people. God answered his prayers in a strange sort of way by sending people out to find him in the forest. They came by the hundreds because they learned that Cloud had the gift of healing the bodies and souls of the afflicted. His was a ministry of reconciliation.

Cloud lived eleven years as a hermit. During these years he spent time pouring over the Scriptures. These were not idle years for the prince who fled the royal court. For this reason artists throughout the centuries have portrayed Cloud holding a bible.

Although Cloud shared many gifts with others there was one he could not give  -  the Body and Blood of Christ. People recognized this and many urged Eusebius, Bishop of Paris, to ordain the hermit-prince a priest. The bishop complied, and in 551 Cloud was ordained a priest for the Church of Paris. He became the pastor of a small village—Nogent—near Paris consisting of poor people who fished in the river and farmers who lived off the land. Today the village, now a part of the outer ring of Paris, is called Saint Cloud in memory of the man who was its pastor who is buried within the church there.

In the village, Saint Cloud used his gifts of healing, counseling, preaching and celebrating the Eucharist...distributing his wealth to the poor. As time passed the uncles of Cloud repented of their sin and reconciled themselves with their nephew. They, in turn, restored many castles, estates and lands to him. As a hermit he sold some of these properties and distributed his wealth to the poor. He received permission from Bishop Eusebius to use a small portion of that wealth to build a church for the poor of Nogent. He built this church with his own hands and dedicated it to Saint Martin of Tours. 

Joy is contagious. People like to be with happy people. Cloud radiated that deep joy of a Christian heart in love with God. Other recognized this in Cloud and came to live near him. In time he became a leader and teacher of those who joined him. In time they formed a religious community, not like a convent or monastery but an association of men dedicating themselves to love of God and service to God’s people. The last seven years of his life Saint Cloud lived in this community attached to the Church of Saint Martin of Tours. His body had literally become worn out by the penances he imposed upon himself; he was old before his time. Surrounded by his community, he died serenely on September 7, 560.

 

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