Mission Statement

The Mission Statement of St. Cecilia’s church is the foundation that our community is built on. We are built on stone, on the Lord Jesus Christ. Baptized into faith we are a living sign of the Lord Jesus. All of us strive to be consciously Christian in our attitudes, beliefs and actions. It is the goal of the priests, staff and members of the parish to open the doors of faith to all people and to encourage that faith especially in those who belong to our parish.

“Our parish is a living sign of God’s saving Word.

The people of St Cecilia parish have been called by God to foster a genuine, caring Catholic Christian community.

He empowers us to be a visible sign of the Kingdom of God in the world.”

All of us have been called to foster a genuine atmosphere of love at St Cecilia’s. We are responsible for communicating the full faith of the Catholic Church. We are in union with the Bishop of Orange, Bishop Kevin Vann and with the Holy Father Francis of Rome. We hold to the Seven Ecumenical Councils, the Seven Sacraments and the Tradition of the Church as has been handed down to us through the ages.

As we learn more and more about our Catholic faith and experience more and more the life of God in us we become visible signs to God in our world. Following the advice of St Francis of Assisi, we strive to preach the Gospel through our actions and when necessary through words.

St Cecilia’s was especially impacted by the ministry of her second pastor, Monsignor John Sammon. He brought to people a living faith, joy and hope. One of the great gifts that he gave to the parish was a love for the foreign missions. Today, St Cecilia’s helps over 20 missions in and outside of the United States. Through financial help and parish members who monthly write to those in the mission field, we continue the work of the Lord to build up the Body of Christ wherever we can.

We have a parish school that continues to provide excellent education and faith formation to over 300 students each year. All of our parish ministries, visiting the sick, helping the poor, youth and young adult ministries are the tangible ways that we do God’s work. Our Light Team of youth leaders counts over 80 each year as they are formed into the Catholic leaders of today and tomorrow.

Our parish is known to be welcoming and warm. This is because of the wonderful people that make up our parish. We are culturally diverse: Anglo, Hispanic, Vietnamese, Filipino, and Indonesian. Though different we are threaded together by our Catholic faith.

Our mission is to love as He did. Our mission is to bring others to the Lord. Our mission is to prepare our own hearts for the Kingdom of Heaven.

Please don’t hesitate to join us! Welcome to St. Cecilia!


Happy 68th Anniversary of the Dedication of St. Cecilia

Dear brothers and sisters in Christ,

Today we give thanks to God as we celebrate 68 years since the dedication of our beloved parish of St. Cecilia. This is more than a milestone—it is a moment of gratitude, reflection, and renewed commitment.

For nearly seven decades, this parish has been a home of faith, a refuge of hope, and a community of love. Generations have been baptized, married, confirmed, and even commended to God from this sacred space. Brick by brick, prayer by prayer, St. Cecilia has stood as a witness to God’s faithfulness and our enduring response.

We remember with gratitude all the clergy, religious, lay leaders, and parishioners who came before us—whose faith and sacrifice built the foundation we now stand on. And we look ahead with hope, trusting that the Holy Spirit will continue to guide us as we grow in faith, welcome all people, and serve with joy.

May our patroness, St. Cecilia, continue to inspire us to live our lives in harmony with God’s will—through worship, service, and song.

To God be the glory—yesterday, today, and forever.

Fr. Michael T. Khong
Pastor of St. Cecilia Church & School

Rev. Michael Moran, 1957 – 1960, was appointed the first pastor of St. Cecilia;
Msgr. John F. Sammon, 1960 – 1976;
Rev. Patrick Doherty, 1976 – 1988;
Rev. Desmond Colleran, 1988 – 1990;
Rev. Timothy MacCarthy, 1990 – 2005;
Rev. Al Baca, 2005 – 2015;
Rev. Bao Thai, 2015 – 2022; and
Rev. Khoi Phan; 2022 – 2024
Rev. Michael Khong, 2024 – Present

We remember with gratitude our founding pastors, parochial vicars, deacons, religious and generous parishioners who have built this beautiful parish and nurtured the seed of Catholic faith. May we continue to ask Our Lord to bless our priests, deacons, religious and faithful who have served our community tirelessly with its diversity of cultures and races for the greater honor and glory of God. We send our special thanks to Bishop Kevin Vann, Bishop of Orange, and his assistant Bishops for their love, prayer, support and care for us. Last but not least, we would like to wholeheartedly express our sincere thanks to the Church and School clergy, religious, staffs, faculties, parents and students, council members, ministry leaders, volunteers, benefactors and parishioners who have been immensely generous with their time, talent and treasure, and contributed towards its growth in various ways.

With the intercessions of Our Lady of Guadalupe and our patroness St. Cecilia, may God let our Anniversary be a year of joy and thanksgiving and a time to receive abundant graces in our journey towards the heavenly Promised Land.

As always, we are grateful to you and your family for your constant prayer and loving support for our St. Cecilia. May God reward and bless you and your family abundantly!

God loves you and so do we!


st-cecilia Saint Cecilia

Virgin & Martyr – November 22

She lived in the Third Century and is the Patron of Musicians. A cultivated young Patrician, her family loomed large in Rome’s history. After her acceptance of Baptism she vowed herself to God through a promise of perpetual virginity but her parents married her to Valerian of Trastevere. She told her new husband that she was often visited by an angel of heaven but in order to see the angel himself he must also receive Baptism. He agreed and took instruction and was Baptised into the Catholic faith by Pope St. Urban (223-230 AD) . Returning from the ceremony, he found her in prayer accompanied by an angel. The angel placed a crown on each of their heads and offered Valerian the grace of bringing his brother to the Faith.

During the great persecutions of this time, the two brothers risked their lives by secretly burying the bodies of Christians who had been executed for the Faith. They were arrested, martyred for Christ and buried by Cecilia at her villa on the Appian Way. Cecilia was also arrested and ordered to sacrifice to the pagan gods of Rome which she refused to do. The prefect Almachius shut her up in the baths where for two days she was left to be suffocated. In spite of little air and the intense heat of the baths she remained unharmed. An executioner was sent to cut off her head but was unable to kill her after three attempts. For another three days she remained living though mortally wounded to the neck, praying for and exhorting the crowds who visited her to accept Baptism and remain steadfast in the Faith. She died and was buried by Pope Urban. Her grave was rediscovered in 817AD and her body transferred to the church of St. Cecilia in Rome. Her tomb was again opened in 1599 and again found to be miraculously incorrupt. The account of 1599 states, “The body lies on its side, the limbs a little drawn up; the hands are delicate and fine…they are not locked but crossed at the wrist: the arms are stretched out. The drapery is beautifully modeled and modestly covers the limbs. The head is enveloped in linen, but the general form is seen.” The feast day of St. Cecilia is November 22nd.