All Saints

To see our 2019-2020 State of the Parish report please click here, to see the 2019-2020 Financial Report please click here.
Pastoral Council
Members: Christine Eisenhut (Chair), Chandler Benson (Lay Trustee), Erin Socha, John Callister, Matthew Connolly, Julie Berens, Julie Eisenhut, Randy McDonald, John Phillips, Matthew Montague, and Maureen Rosvalle.
Minutes: Minutes for October 15, 2020
Minutes for December 10, 2020
Minutes for January 14, 2021
Minutes for March 18, 2021
Minutes for April 22, 2021
Minutes for June 7, 2021
Minutes for August 9, 2021
Minutes for October 11, 2021
Minutes for December 13, 2021
Minutes for February 7, 2022
Schedule of Meetings: All meetings will be held in the Parish Hall from 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm. October 11, 2021; November 21, 2021; December 13, 2021; February 7, 2022; April 11, 2022; & June 13, 2022.
Finance Council
Members: Dan Brown (Chair- Lay Trustee) Dan Dwyer (Secretary), Chandler Benson (Lay Trustee), Christine Hass, Gerry McDonough, Eric Eisenhut (Buildings and Grounds Chair)
Minutes: Minutes for September 17, 2020
Minutes for November 19, 2020
Minutes for February 25, 2021
Schedule of Meetings: (if for any reason meetings cannot be held in person, schedule will remain the same and meeting will be held via Zoom.)
- Thursday, September 17, 6:00 pm Budget and Financial Reports Meeting
- Thursday, September 24, 5:30 pm Corporate Meeting 2020
- Thursday, November 19, 5:30 pm Quarterly Meeting 1
- Thursday, February 25, 5:30 pm Quarterly Meeting 2
- Thursday, May 20, 5:30 pm Quarterly Meeting 3 and Preliminary Budget
- Thursday, August 19, 5:30 pm Quarterly Meeting 4: Presentation of Revised Budget and Whole Year Financial Reports (Corporate Meeting 2021)
History
All Saints, a vibrant, family oriented Catholic community in Myers/Lansing, NY for over 105 years.
Andrew Myers arrived with his family at the mouth of Salmon Creek in 1794. The Cayuga Railroad was built around 1875 and its first stop out of Ithaca was the Ludlowville station at Myers Point. The railroad brought many new settlers to the area, including Frank and Brigit Gallagher. In May 1892 the first salt well was drilled. As the salt industry thrived, families from many different ethnic backgrounds moved into the area.
At the turn of the 20th century, there was still only one Catholic family in Myers, NY. Because the railroad did not run on Sundays, they used an old section-hand car to propel themselves to and from services in Ithaca. Later, wooden benches and an improvised altar were placed in a vacant tenant house owned by the Gallaghers. Father John Doran from St. Bernard’s Church in Scipio Center provided services; sometimes his assistant pastor, Father Chapwe, would celebrate Mass in this house. When the house became occupied. the benches and altar were stored in a shed at the Gallaghers. On Sundays, the Galaghers’ big dining room was cleared and the benches and altar brought in for mass. Father Francis Moffitt, assistant at Scipio, conducted the services. But as attendance increased, it was clear that this faith community needed its own worship space.
In 1910, James Cooney, the superintendent of the International Salt Company and a devout Catholic, began communicating with the Diocese of Rochester to establish a place of worship. Through the efforts of Mr. Cooney and Father Doran, and the good will of Bishop Thomas Francis Hickey, the Diocese acquired from David and Fred Barr for $175 a 75 x 140 foot piece of land on the south side of Myers Road as it slopes toward Cayuga Lake. Architect Mark Conklin of Auburn charged $80.50 to design the chapel and G.B. Styker completed the wooden structure at a cost of $2,000. The new church was blessed by Father Doran on March 23, 1913 and served the families of Ludowvilie, Myers, and Portland Point with 12 registered families.
A few months later, Our Lady of the Lake parish (King Ferry) became independent of Scipio and took All Saints as its mission church. Father Thomas O’Connor used a hand-powered cart on the railroad tracks between King Ferry and Lansing to service the two faith communities under his guidance. Over the next seventy years, Fathers Thomas O’Connor, Michael Groden, George Kalb, Theodore Winterroth, Albert Geiger, John Newcomb, Joseph Maloney, Frederick Walz, and Richard Stanton served the two communities.
Over the next two decades, 29 Holy Matrimonies, 129 Baptisms, 140 First Holy Communions and 91 Confirmations were celebrated. All Saints had grown to more than 100 families. Those families spanned 14 nationalities. In 1930, the chapel floor was painted, Mrs. Leo Hennick of Point Pleasant, NY, donated an organ, and a choir was formed. But the chapel was overcrowded and a larger worship space was needed. A 237 x 184 foot plot on the corner of Myers Road and Ridge Road (Highway 34B) was acquired from John and Katherine Uhrovich. On November 13, 1930, Rev. William Byrne, pastor of Immaculate Conception in Ithaca, blessed the plot. Rev. John Crowley of Auburn gave the address and priests from Trumansburg and Scipio Center assisted.
Following Bishop Hickey’s 1915 recommendation (apparently no one was in a hurry), All Saints was incorporated as a separate legal entity according to the laws of New York state on January 22, 1932, with Bishop John Francis O’Hern as its Director, Reverend George Kalb as its Pastor, and Michael Myskow and Michael Zifchock as Trustees. The land and partially completed church were transferred to the corporation.
The last service in the Myers Road chapel was conducted on April 20, 1933 and two weeks later, Pastor George Kaib celebrated the first mass in the new church. On May 7, Bishop O’Hern dedicated the church and a solemn high mass was celebrated with the assistance of several priests from ithaca and Auburn. The clergy and out of town guests were served dinner at Our Lady of the Lake church hall in King Ferry.
Following the service of dedication, Bishop 0’Hern spoke to the congregation and congratulated Father Kalb and his parishioners for constructing such a fine church in these hard times (the Great Depression). He said he would return again soon; but it was not to be — he died two weeks later.
The exterior of the new church was imitation brick. The interior was of Gothic design, measuring 70 feet by 30 feet, was painted cream and white, with oak pews. The nave sat 224 and another 20 could be seated in the choir loft. The high altar, built at the back of the sanctuary area (with the back of the priest to the congregation), was donated by Mrs. Brigit Gallagher in memory of her deceased husband. The recently donated organ was moved to the new church. Statues of the Blessed Virgin Mary and Saint Joseph were moved from the little chapel to the new church after being restored by Florence Croft and Mrs. Joseph Uher. They are the same statues found today in the narthex of the new church. The new church cost approximately $10,000.
In 1958 the church was completely renovated. Both the exterior and interior were repainted, a new roof installed, and the pews received a fine coat of varnish. An additional strip of land facing Highway 34B was purchased from Joseph Uher to provide for future development. In the late 1970s, a rod used to keep the building from sagging outward was removed. The Church interior was redone, with a new superstructure in the roof area and covered with a wooden ceiling. The floor was carpeted and “new” pews from the King Ferry Church of the Brethren were installed.
Father Richard Stanton served as the pastor of Our Lady of the Lake and All Saints for 21 years. When he retired in 1983, ministerial responsibilities for All Saints were transferred to St. Catherine of Siena, where Father Michael Hogan was pastor. In 1987, Father Ronald Gaesser replaced Father Hogan and immediately began preparing All Saints to become a stand-alone parish. Gail Riina was appointed the first Pastoral Associate. Then, in 1994, Sister Mary Wintish became Pastoral Associate. She and Father Gaesser guided All Saints to become an independent parish in 1997. Sister Mary was appointed Pastoral Administrator (the second pastoral administrator in the Diocese of Rochester) and Fr. Larry Barnett became the Sacramental Minister.
About 1990 All Saints acquired the adjoining 9 acres between Myers Road and Salmon Creek from Mrs. Irving Jenkins, a relative of the Uher Family, at a very reasonable price. The trailer had been acquired years earlier and was located on the parking lot north of the Church. From time to time a visiting priest would take up occupancy. The “living room” was used for religious education and a prefab 1 5×20 addition provided space for meetings and served as an office.
During a very heavy snowstorm in the winter of 1993, the roof of the trailer collapsed. Some took it as a sign that it was time to build a parish center. A building and capital campaign committee set out to raise $175,000 from the 170 registered families and ended up with pledges of $240,000. With these pledges, a bridge loan from Holy Sepulchre Cemetery Fund, and the accumulated savings from decades of operations, All Saints constructed a $340,000 parish center. Designed by architect Thomas Schickel and constructed by a parishioner, Joseph Serico, the Parish Center included offices, five classrooms, a conference room, kitchen and large meeting room. The Center is 6,912 sq.ft. and was completed in 1995. Tables, chairs and dinnerware were purchased with separate fund raising activities ranging from candy sales (Sister Mary’s favorite) to pancake breakfasts. The bridge loan was fully repaid by 2002.
With just over 200 families registered and attendance at mass exceeding the seating capacity of its church, All Saints and its new Pastor (Rev. Scott Kubinski) and Pastoral Associate (David Lippert), began planning to construct a second church in 2003. Architect Thomas Schickel developed alternative designs and locations and the parish voted to proceed in 2004. A capital campaign committee set out to raise $500,000 and ended up obtaining pledges for just over $700,000. This campaign, along with bridge loans from Holy Sepulchre and a few parishioners, a mortgage loan from Chemung Canal Trust Company, and about $150,000 of savings accrued over the 2002-06 period, allowed All Saints to construct its new church at a total project cost of $1.7 million. The church is designed to seat almost 350 in the nave and about 40 in the choir area, double the size of the old church. The first mass was celebrated on June 3, 2007.
To see the Presentation on our Seniors click here
To see our 2019-2020 State of the Parish report please click here, to see the 2019-2020 Financial Report please click here.
Pastoral Council
Members: Christine Eisenhut (Chair), Chandler Benson (Lay Trustee), Erin Socha, John Callister, Matthew Connolly, Julie Berens, Julie Eisenhut, Randy McDonald, John Phillips, Matthew Montague, and Maureen Rosvalle.
Minutes: Minutes for October 15, 2020
Minutes for December 10, 2020
Minutes for January 14, 2021
Minutes for March 18, 2021
Minutes for April 22, 2021
Minutes for June 7, 2021
Minutes for August 9, 2021
Minutes for October 11, 2021
Minutes for December 13, 2021
Minutes for February 7, 2022
Schedule of Meetings: All meetings will be held in the Parish Hall from 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm. October 11, 2021; November 21, 2021; December 13, 2021; February 7, 2022; April 11, 2022; & June 13, 2022.
Finance Council
Members: Dan Brown (Chair- Lay Trustee) Dan Dwyer (Secretary), Chandler Benson (Lay Trustee), Christine Hass, Gerry McDonough, Eric Eisenhut (Buildings and Grounds Chair)
Minutes: Minutes for September 17, 2020
Minutes for November 19, 2020
Minutes for February 25, 2021
Schedule of Meetings: (if for any reason meetings cannot be held in person, schedule will remain the same and meeting will be held via Zoom.)
- Thursday, September 17, 6:00 pm Budget and Financial Reports Meeting
- Thursday, September 24, 5:30 pm Corporate Meeting 2020
- Thursday, November 19, 5:30 pm Quarterly Meeting 1
- Thursday, February 25, 5:30 pm Quarterly Meeting 2
- Thursday, May 20, 5:30 pm Quarterly Meeting 3 and Preliminary Budget
- Thursday, August 19, 5:30 pm Quarterly Meeting 4: Presentation of Revised Budget and Whole Year Financial Reports (Corporate Meeting 2021)
History
All Saints, a vibrant, family oriented Catholic community in Myers/Lansing, NY for over 105 years.
Andrew Myers arrived with his family at the mouth of Salmon Creek in 1794. The Cayuga Railroad was built around 1875 and its first stop out of Ithaca was the Ludlowville station at Myers Point. The railroad brought many new settlers to the area, including Frank and Brigit Gallagher. In May 1892 the first salt well was drilled. As the salt industry thrived, families from many different ethnic backgrounds moved into the area.
At the turn of the 20th century, there was still only one Catholic family in Myers, NY. Because the railroad did not run on Sundays, they used an old section-hand car to propel themselves to and from services in Ithaca. Later, wooden benches and an improvised altar were placed in a vacant tenant house owned by the Gallaghers. Father John Doran from St. Bernard’s Church in Scipio Center provided services; sometimes his assistant pastor, Father Chapwe, would celebrate Mass in this house. When the house became occupied. the benches and altar were stored in a shed at the Gallaghers. On Sundays, the Galaghers’ big dining room was cleared and the benches and altar brought in for mass. Father Francis Moffitt, assistant at Scipio, conducted the services. But as attendance increased, it was clear that this faith community needed its own worship space.
In 1910, James Cooney, the superintendent of the International Salt Company and a devout Catholic, began communicating with the Diocese of Rochester to establish a place of worship. Through the efforts of Mr. Cooney and Father Doran, and the good will of Bishop Thomas Francis Hickey, the Diocese acquired from David and Fred Barr for $175 a 75 x 140 foot piece of land on the south side of Myers Road as it slopes toward Cayuga Lake. Architect Mark Conklin of Auburn charged $80.50 to design the chapel and G.B. Styker completed the wooden structure at a cost of $2,000. The new church was blessed by Father Doran on March 23, 1913 and served the families of Ludowvilie, Myers, and Portland Point with 12 registered families.
A few months later, Our Lady of the Lake parish (King Ferry) became independent of Scipio and took All Saints as its mission church. Father Thomas O’Connor used a hand-powered cart on the railroad tracks between King Ferry and Lansing to service the two faith communities under his guidance. Over the next seventy years, Fathers Thomas O’Connor, Michael Groden, George Kalb, Theodore Winterroth, Albert Geiger, John Newcomb, Joseph Maloney, Frederick Walz, and Richard Stanton served the two communities.
Over the next two decades, 29 Holy Matrimonies, 129 Baptisms, 140 First Holy Communions and 91 Confirmations were celebrated. All Saints had grown to more than 100 families. Those families spanned 14 nationalities. In 1930, the chapel floor was painted, Mrs. Leo Hennick of Point Pleasant, NY, donated an organ, and a choir was formed. But the chapel was overcrowded and a larger worship space was needed. A 237 x 184 foot plot on the corner of Myers Road and Ridge Road (Highway 34B) was acquired from John and Katherine Uhrovich. On November 13, 1930, Rev. William Byrne, pastor of Immaculate Conception in Ithaca, blessed the plot. Rev. John Crowley of Auburn gave the address and priests from Trumansburg and Scipio Center assisted.
Following Bishop Hickey’s 1915 recommendation (apparently no one was in a hurry), All Saints was incorporated as a separate legal entity according to the laws of New York state on January 22, 1932, with Bishop John Francis O’Hern as its Director, Reverend George Kalb as its Pastor, and Michael Myskow and Michael Zifchock as Trustees. The land and partially completed church were transferred to the corporation.
The last service in the Myers Road chapel was conducted on April 20, 1933 and two weeks later, Pastor George Kaib celebrated the first mass in the new church. On May 7, Bishop O’Hern dedicated the church and a solemn high mass was celebrated with the assistance of several priests from ithaca and Auburn. The clergy and out of town guests were served dinner at Our Lady of the Lake church hall in King Ferry.
Following the service of dedication, Bishop 0’Hern spoke to the congregation and congratulated Father Kalb and his parishioners for constructing such a fine church in these hard times (the Great Depression). He said he would return again soon; but it was not to be — he died two weeks later.
The exterior of the new church was imitation brick. The interior was of Gothic design, measuring 70 feet by 30 feet, was painted cream and white, with oak pews. The nave sat 224 and another 20 could be seated in the choir loft. The high altar, built at the back of the sanctuary area (with the back of the priest to the congregation), was donated by Mrs. Brigit Gallagher in memory of her deceased husband. The recently donated organ was moved to the new church. Statues of the Blessed Virgin Mary and Saint Joseph were moved from the little chapel to the new church after being restored by Florence Croft and Mrs. Joseph Uher. They are the same statues found today in the narthex of the new church. The new church cost approximately $10,000.
In 1958 the church was completely renovated. Both the exterior and interior were repainted, a new roof installed, and the pews received a fine coat of varnish. An additional strip of land facing Highway 34B was purchased from Joseph Uher to provide for future development. In the late 1970s, a rod used to keep the building from sagging outward was removed. The Church interior was redone, with a new superstructure in the roof area and covered with a wooden ceiling. The floor was carpeted and “new” pews from the King Ferry Church of the Brethren were installed.
Father Richard Stanton served as the pastor of Our Lady of the Lake and All Saints for 21 years. When he retired in 1983, ministerial responsibilities for All Saints were transferred to St. Catherine of Siena, where Father Michael Hogan was pastor. In 1987, Father Ronald Gaesser replaced Father Hogan and immediately began preparing All Saints to become a stand-alone parish. Gail Riina was appointed the first Pastoral Associate. Then, in 1994, Sister Mary Wintish became Pastoral Associate. She and Father Gaesser guided All Saints to become an independent parish in 1997. Sister Mary was appointed Pastoral Administrator (the second pastoral administrator in the Diocese of Rochester) and Fr. Larry Barnett became the Sacramental Minister.
About 1990 All Saints acquired the adjoining 9 acres between Myers Road and Salmon Creek from Mrs. Irving Jenkins, a relative of the Uher Family, at a very reasonable price. The trailer had been acquired years earlier and was located on the parking lot north of the Church. From time to time a visiting priest would take up occupancy. The “living room” was used for religious education and a prefab 1 5×20 addition provided space for meetings and served as an office.
During a very heavy snowstorm in the winter of 1993, the roof of the trailer collapsed. Some took it as a sign that it was time to build a parish center. A building and capital campaign committee set out to raise $175,000 from the 170 registered families and ended up with pledges of $240,000. With these pledges, a bridge loan from Holy Sepulchre Cemetery Fund, and the accumulated savings from decades of operations, All Saints constructed a $340,000 parish center. Designed by architect Thomas Schickel and constructed by a parishioner, Joseph Serico, the Parish Center included offices, five classrooms, a conference room, kitchen and large meeting room. The Center is 6,912 sq.ft. and was completed in 1995. Tables, chairs and dinnerware were purchased with separate fund raising activities ranging from candy sales (Sister Mary’s favorite) to pancake breakfasts. The bridge loan was fully repaid by 2002.
With just over 200 families registered and attendance at mass exceeding the seating capacity of its church, All Saints and its new Pastor (Rev. Scott Kubinski) and Pastoral Associate (David Lippert), began planning to construct a second church in 2003. Architect Thomas Schickel developed alternative designs and locations and the parish voted to proceed in 2004. A capital campaign committee set out to raise $500,000 and ended up obtaining pledges for just over $700,000. This campaign, along with bridge loans from Holy Sepulchre and a few parishioners, a mortgage loan from Chemung Canal Trust Company, and about $150,000 of savings accrued over the 2002-06 period, allowed All Saints to construct its new church at a total project cost of $1.7 million. The church is designed to seat almost 350 in the nave and about 40 in the choir area, double the size of the old church. The first mass was celebrated on June 3, 2007.
To see the Presentation on our Seniors click here
FAQs
N.E.T. Catholic
N.E.T. CatholicLet us pray for our Seminarians The Lord Jesus, during His public life, had disciples and apostles, who continued with the evangelizing task to preach the Gospel to all people. Since then, the Church throughout her history, under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, has ordained priests. They have the responsibility to bring the Eucharist, the real presence of the Lord. There is a special relationship between the priests and the Eucharist. Fr. John A. Hardon, S.J. says about this relationship, “In the Catholic Church, the priest exists for one main purpose: to offer the Sacrifice of the Mass. So true is this that, without the priesthood, there would not only be no Sacrifice of the Mass. There would be no Catholic Church. This may sound strange, even exotic. But the fact of life is that God became man in order to sacrifice Himself on the Cross by dying for the salvation of the world. Having died once on Calvary, He continues offering Himself in every Mass so totally that He would be willing to die every time that Mass is offered” (taken from http://www.therealpresence.org/eucharst/priesthd/priesthd.htm).Therefore, I invite each of you to pray for our priests and vocations to the priesthood. Let us pray for our seminarians, who are preparing themselves to become Holy Priests for our Diocese of Rochester, and of course, for our Roman Catholic Church. Let us pray for all of them because all of us (priests, seminarians, deacons, religious people, and all laity) need to act in persona Christi, to act in the Person of Christ.These are our seminarians for this year. Let us pray for them, and if you wish, you can write them by mail or email. They will appreciate our prayers.George Bastedo – George is 27 and beginning his second year of Theology at St. John’s Seminary in Brighton, MA. He is a former music teacher and plays the piano, trumpet and organ. His home parish is Saint Joseph the Worker in Clyde. (Birthday March 17) George A. Bastedo St. John’s Seminary 127 Lake Street Brighton, MA 02135 [email protected] David Cataline – David is a former vice-principal in the Baltimore city school disrict. He grew up as a parishioner of Our Lady of Peace at Saint Stephen Church in Geneva. He has completed his first year of Theology at St. John’s Seminary in Brighton, MA, and will experience his Pastoral Year at Our Mother of Sorrows Church during the 2022 – 2023 academic year. (Birthday June 3) David M. Cataline c/o Our Mother of Sorrows Church 5000 Mount Read Boulevard Rochester, NY 14612 [email protected] Joseph Maurer – Joseph will be 29 years old in December, and is a parishioner of Saint Thomas the Apostle Church at Saint Kateri Tekakwitha Parish. A native of West Irondequoit, he has been working the last several years as first a woodworker and then a project manager/estimator at a local manufacturing company. He is beginning his first pre-theology year at St. John’s Seminary in the Fall of 2022. (Birthday December 18) Joseph L. Maurer St. John’s Seminary 127 Lake Street Brighton, MA 02135 [email protected] James Muscatella – James is 27 years old and a parishioner of Holy Family at Saint Jude Church in Gates. He’s a graduate of Roberts Wesleyan College with a BS in Education. He is in his…
All Saints – N.E.T. Catholic
All SaintsTo see our 2019-2020 State of the Parish report please click here, to see the 2019-2020 Financial Report please click here.Pastoral CouncilMembers: Christine Eisenhut (Chair), Chandler Benson (Lay Trustee), Erin Socha, John Callister, Matthew Connolly, Julie Berens, Julie Eisenhut, Randy McDonald, John Phillips, Matthew Montague, and Maureen Rosvalle.Minutes: Minutes for October 15, 2020 Minutes for December 10, 2020 Minutes for January 14, 2021 Minutes for March 18, 2021 Minutes for April 22, 2021 Minutes for June 7, 2021 Minutes for August 9, 2021 Minutes for October 11, 2021 Minutes for December 13, 2021 Minutes for February 7, 2022Schedule of Meetings: All meetings will be held in the Parish Hall from 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm. October 11, 2021; November 21, 2021; December 13, 2021; February 7, 2022; April 11, 2022; & June 13, 2022.Finance CouncilMembers: Dan Brown (Chair- Lay Trustee) Dan Dwyer (Secretary), Chandler Benson (Lay Trustee), Christine Hass, Gerry McDonough, Eric Eisenhut (Buildings and Grounds Chair)Minutes: Minutes for September 17, 2020 Minutes for November 19, 2020 Minutes for February 25, 2021 Schedule of Meetings: (if for any reason meetings cannot be held in person, schedule will remain the same and meeting will be held via Zoom.) Thursday, September 17, 6:00 pm Budget and Financial Reports Meeting Thursday, September 24, 5:30 pm Corporate Meeting 2020 Thursday, November 19, 5:30 pm Quarterly Meeting 1 Thursday, February 25, 5:30 pm Quarterly Meeting 2 Thursday, May 20, 5:30 pm Quarterly Meeting 3 and Preliminary Budget Thursday, August 19, 5:30 pm Quarterly Meeting 4: Presentation of Revised Budget and Whole Year Financial Reports (Corporate Meeting 2021) History All Saints, a vibrant, family oriented Catholic community in Myers/Lansing, NY for over 105 years. Andrew Myers arrived with his family at the mouth of Salmon Creek in 1794. The Cayuga Railroad was built around 1875 and its first stop out of Ithaca was the Ludlowville station at Myers Point. The railroad brought many new settlers to the area, including Frank and Brigit Gallagher. In May 1892 the first salt well was drilled. As the salt industry thrived, families from many different ethnic backgrounds moved into the area. At the turn of the 20th century, there was still only one Catholic family in Myers, NY. Because the railroad did not run on Sundays, they used an old section-hand car to propel themselves to and from services in Ithaca. Later, wooden benches and an improvised altar were placed in a vacant tenant house owned by the Gallaghers. Father John Doran from St. Bernard’s Church in Scipio Center provided services; sometimes his assistant pastor, Father Chapwe, would celebrate Mass in…
All Saints Mass Times – Lansing, New York
All Saints Mass Times – Lansing, New York Mass Times Saturday: 4:30 PM Saint AnthonySunday: 8:30 AM Holy Cross 10:30 AM All Saints 2:00 PM Saint AnthonyMonday: 9:00 AM Holy Cross 3:00 PM All SaintsTuesday: 9:00 AM Saint AnthonyWednesday: 9:00 AM Holy CrossThursday: 9:30 AM All SaintsFriday: 11:00 AM Saint Anthony Confession and Adoration Times——————————–Tuesday: 7:00 PM to 8:00 PM Holy CrossThursday: 3:00 PM to 4:00 PM All SaintsSaturday: 2:45 PM to 3:45 PM Saint Anthony Update Church Info » 9th Friday Saint Peter Claver, priest Friday, 23rd week in Ordinary Time 10th Saturday The Memorial of the Blessed Virgin Mary on Saturday Saturday, 23rd week in Ordinary Time 11th Sunday 24th Sunday in Ordinary Time 12th Monday Holy Name of the Blessed Virgin Mary Monday, 24th week in Ordinary Time 13th Tuesday Saint John Chrysostom, bishop and doctor 14th Wednesday Triumph of the Holy Cross 15th Thursday Our Lady of Sorrows 16th Friday Saints Cornelius, pope, and Cyprian, bishop, martyrs If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness. 17 Whig Street Trumansburg, New York 14886 309 Siena Drive Ithaca, New York 14850 G19 Anabel Taylor Hall/Cornell Univ. Ithaca, New York 14853 113 N Geneva St Ithaca, New York 14850 1001 Muller Chapel, 953 Danby Rd. Ithaca, New York 14850 312 Locke Rd. Groton, New York 13073
All Saints Roman Catholic Parish | Pastoral Services Directory
All Saints Roman Catholic Parish – Pastoral Services Directory Address: 375 George Rd, Freeville, New York 13068, United States 312 Locke Road, Groton, New York 13073, United States 347 Ridge Road, Lansing, New York 14882, United States Description: All Saints Roman Catholic Parish 347 Ridge Road, Lansing, NY Rev. Jorge I. Ramirez, Parochial Administrator Mass Schedule Sunday: 10:30 AM Monday: 9:00 AM Scheduled Confession Times Monday 8:15 AM to 8:45 AM Live Stream Schedule all liturgies are live-streamed and recorded available at www.facebook.com/netcatholic and www.youtube.com/c/netcatholic. Media Links: Weekly Bulletin Website: http://www.netcatholic.org Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/netcatholic Youtube: http://www.youtube.com/c/netcatholic Contact Information Phone: 607-241-0821
All Saints – Discover Mass
All Saints All Saints We invite you to celebrate Mass with us at All Saints. We are located in Lansing, NY; Directions to our church can be found here.Please note that Mass times are listed below.The faith community of All Saints welcomes you! Additional Info (Custom Fields) Mass TimesSunday10:30am – Monday3:00pm – Thursday9:30am – Powered by MassTimes.org Additional Info (Custom Fields) Other ServicesConfessionsThr: 3:00pm-4:00pm – Location Additional Instructions Rte. 13 to Triphammer Rd to Rte. 34/34b, L Church about 4 miles on Left, c/o Myers Rd. Bulletins Shucks! There are no bulletins available. There are currently no bulletins available for All Saints. If you are a parish representative and would like to learn more about making your weekly bulletins available on DiscoverMass.com, complete the form below and we will followup with you shortly. Supporters Supporters of the Catholic Church Catholic RetailEvents & Event PlanningMediaTechnology
All Saints Parish | 347 Ridge Road, Lansing, NY 14882
All Saints Parish | 347 Ridge Road, Lansing, NY 14882 Weekend Mass Schedule Sunday 10:30 AM Weekday Mass Schedule No Information Available Mass Schedule for Holy Days No Information Available
All Saints Parish – Church – The Catholic Directory
All Saints Parish on The Catholic Directory Contact Information Organization All Saints Parish Website http://allsaintslansing.org/ Location 347 Ridge RoadLansing, NY 14882United States of America View Map & Get Directions More about All Saints ParishSat: 5:30 p.m. Sun: 9:45 a.m. Holy day & Vigil: 6:30 p.m. Confessions: By appointment. ,Rev. Malachy Nwosu/ Pastor AnnMarie Hautaniemi/ Administrative Assistant Doreen Alseen/ Music Director Andra Benson/ Faith Formation All Saints Parish Mass Times All Saints Parish Reviews Sorry, we did not find any results for your search. All Saints Parish Articles Sorry, we did not find any results for your search. All Saints Parish Audio Files Sorry, we did not find any results for your search. All Saints Parish Classifieds Sorry, we did not find any results for your search. All Saints Parish Coupons Sorry, we did not find any results for your search. All Saints Parish Events Sorry, we did not find any results for your search. All Saints Parish Job Openings Sorry, we did not find any results for your search. All Saints Parish Photo Albums Sorry, we did not find any results for your search. All Saints Parish Products Sorry, we did not find any results for your search. All Saints Parish Properties Sorry, we did not find any results for your search. All Saints Parish Videos Sorry, we did not find any results for your search.