October 27, 2019 – Thirtieth Sunday

Why Do We Do That? Pray for the Poor Souls

One thing that certainly distinguishes Catholics and Orthodox from Protestants is in our praying for the dead. Why should we pray and make sacrifices for the dead? Doesn’t death lead to the final judgment?

There are several references to purgation and praying for the dead in Scriptures (2 Maccabees 12, Matthew 12:32, Rev. 21:27, 1 Cor. 3). The resurrection has  broken the power of death to separate us from each other. Once baptized, we are members of the Body of Christ and are never separated from that body except if we should die in the state of mortal sin. The  effectiveness of our prayers for the dead is due to the love of Christ and the power of the Holy Spirit that keeps our bond to each other firm even in death. It is not a person’s biological functions that keep him or her in the Body of Christ, but the breath of the Holy Spirit and Blood of Christ.

November is the last month of the Church’s year and is therefore designated as the time to consider the dead and those who still wait for the consummation of the blessed life. We remember them in fidelity.

Catechesis: The Option for the Poor

The scriptures are full of God’s proclamation that he hears the cry of the poor. For most of history the poor have suffered great injustices at the hands of the powerful. In forming the nation of Israel, God  expressed clearly that his “ear” is turned to the  oppressed and that, unlike the earthly powerful, his power was at the disposal of the downtrodden.

The Church has continued this mission of service to the poor. Jesus himself lived in poverty and he made clear that the poor include not just the material  impoverished but especially those who are spiritually poor. Anyone who suffers from oppression is poor to the Church. Spiritual oppression is the worst form of poverty and afflicts everyone; sometimes the  materially wealthy are the poorest spiritually. The mission of the Church is to seek out those who are oppressed in any way; but because material poverty so often interferes with a person’s ability to have time for spiritual growth, the Church in particular has  focused on the materially poor in her apostolates. In this way, the Church continues her evangelical mission to proclaim good news to the poor just as Jesus proclaimed at the beginning of his ministry. While the oppressed may be ignored by the earthly powerful, God hears their cries and the Church is his arm.

Lectio Divina

“The Lord is a God of justice, who knows no favorites.”  —  Sirach 35

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? What does it mean that the Lord is a God of justice? What is justice? Does God have favorites? If the Lord is a God of  justice does that mean he has no mercy? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. Might you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to apply this to your life.

The Catholic Way: The Poor Souls of Purgatory

November is the month dedicated to the Poor Souls of Purgatory. The month begins with the great  solemnity of All the Saints and then All Souls on the 2nd. It ends this year with the Solemnity of Christ the King. We are called to contemplate our final  destiny and the need for the grace of God to make the journey. There are still many souls in need of our assistance in completing the purification necessary for the beatific vision. Plenary indulgences may be gained for the Poor Souls during the first 8 days of November.

On November 2 (All Souls Day) a plenary indulgence may be gained for the poor souls by visiting any church and praying the Our Father and the Creed. A plenary indulgence may be gained each day from  November 1 – 8 by visiting the grave site of loves ones and praying for them there.

As with all plenary indulgences, the other  requirements are: Remaining in a state of grace  during the work and being detached from all sin, confessing sins within 20 days, receiving communion on the day of the work, pray for the pope

The Friends of God: St. Jude Thaddaeus

Patron of: Hopeless Cases

Feast Day: October 28

The apostle St. Jude was a relative of the Lord and one of the twelve pillars of the Church. His letter to the Churches in the East is part of the New Testament. Not much is known of his life except that he preached in Judea, Syria and Libya and was a martyr. He is buried at St. Peter’s Basilica. There have been many attestations over the centuries to the power of his intercession.

Most holy St. Jude – apostle, martyr and friend of Jesus, today I ask that you pray for me and my intentions! (State your intentions here) You are the patron of the impossible. Pray for me and my intentions! O St. Jude, pray that God’s grace and mercy will cover my intentions. Pray for the impossible if it is God’s will. Pray that I may have the grace to accept God’s holy will even if it is painful and difficult for me. St. Jude, you loved our Lord, help me to love Him more. O St. Jude, pray for me that I may grow in faith, hope and love and in the grace of Jesus Christ. Pray for these intentions, but most of all pray that I may join you in heaven with God for all eternity. Amen

The Grace of a Holy Death

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

Salvation considered as an end is  desirable, but considered in relation to the means it is very burdensome work. It is not exactly suitable for proper self love to ask for the grace of arriving at salvation but not the grace to walk along the straight way that conducts us there, for the grace to be admitted among the victors in heaven but not the grace of entering into the number of generous spiritual combatants on earth, for the  final grace of a good death but not the proximate grace of a good life. This would be to ask for the grace not to be damned along with the liberty to do as one pleases. Now, such graces are illusory graces, graces that are not found in the treasury of God.

God does not command the impossible, but he admonishes you to do what you can, and to ask for help in what you cannot, and he helps so that you can

brunolanteri.org

October 20, 2019 – Twenty-ninth Sunday

Why Do We Do That? Litanies

Litany is derived from Greek meaning “supplication.” We have many litany prayers in the Church which allow us to repeat blessings, praises and petitions to the Lord, Our Lady and the saints.

Litanies were actually first practiced by the Jews as a way of fulfilling what Moses had prescribed: “Hear, O Israel! The LORD is our God, theLORD alone!Therefore, you shall love the LORD, your God, with your whole heart, and with your whole being, and with your whole strength. Take to heart these words which I command you today. Keep repeating them to your children. Recite them when you are at home and when you are away, when you lie down and when you get up .” The repetition of praises to God and petitions to him helps these truths to penetrate deeply into our hearts and minds establishing an intimate connection to God and the saints. As any athlete or musician can testify, it is through repletion of movements that habits are instilled and excellence is achieved — an excellence that leads to freedom of movement. Through litanies we experience the movements of prayer instilling in us the intimacy with the Holy One that leads to freedom.

Catechesis: Justice

One of the more troubling aspects of the Old Testament is recorded in today’s first reading: “And Joshua mowed down Amalek and his people with the edge of the sword.” How do we reconcile these types of events from the Old Testament with the reality of the loving God of the Trinity? It is an opportunity to think about justice and history.

We have the benefit today of thousands of years of Judean-Christian history and teaching. With the benefit of that influence on society we know what real justice is and what charity and mercy are. But the world did not always have this influence. Prior to the Jewish people being chosen to become the people of God and entering into the Promised Land, there were not many examples of true justice in the world, certainly not in the lands occupied by Amalek and others. Even the Jewish people did not possess a deep experience of justice at the beginning of their journey. The simply existed no true concept of justice in those times, so no one would judged violence the way we judge it today after so many millennia of Judea-Christian teaching. Joshua was bringing into the land what did not exist prior. There was no standard or just culture for him to judge by. With the ascent of God’s people we now have those standards.

Lectio Divina

“Remain faithful to what you have learned and believed, because you know from whom you learned it.” 2 Tim 3

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? What have you learned and what do you believe? From whom have you learned the faith? Have you expressed gratitude to them? Did you receive a good example of how to live the faith? How do you go about remaining faithful? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. Might you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to apply this to your life.

The Catholic Way: The Litany of the Hearts of Jesus and Mary

Hail, Heart most holy,
Hail, Heart most meek,
Hail, Heart most humble,
Hail, Heart most pure,
Hail, Heart most devout,
Hail, Heart most wise,
Hail, Heart most patient,
Hail, Heart most obedient,
Hail, Heart most vigilant,
Hail, Heart most faithful,
Hail, Heart most blessed,
Hail, Heart most merciful,
Hail, most loving Heart of Jesus and Mary;
Thee we adore,
Thee we praise,
Thee we glorify,
To Thee do we give thanks;
Thee we love,
With all our heart,
With all our soul,
And with all our strength;
To Thee we offer our heart,
We give it,
We consecrate it,
We immolate it;
Accept and posses in entirely,
And purify it,
And illuminate it,
And sanctify it;
that in it you may live and reign
both now and forever,
and in the ages of ages.
Amen.

The Friends of God: St. Laura Upegui

Patron of: People Suffering from Racial Discrimination and Orphans

Feast Day: October 21

Laura Upegui lived from 1874 till 1949 in Colombia. To support her widowed mother she became a school teacher at an early age. Through her experience teaching she encountered the local discrimination against the native Indians. Combined with her teaching skills, her great devotion and desire to serve God and to serve the Indian populations, she started a missionary congregation of sisters with five other women. She desired to become an Indian among the Indians that she might win some for the Christ. She taught her sisters the life of contemplatives-in-action.

Lord, Jesus Christ, Who reached across the ethnic boundaries between Samaritan, Roman and Jew, who offered fresh sight to the blind and freedom to captives, help us to break down the reality of racism and bigotry, and free us to challenge and uproot it from ourselves, our society and our world. Amen.

The Power of Prayer

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

If one goes through sacred and profane history, regarding the strengths and successes of prayer, we will see, century after century, men at their pleasure, as if all powerful, disposing of the treasures of nature and grace. To the voice of Moses, the sea opens a passage to freedom for the Israelites, and buries in its womb the power of Egypt.

Joshua prays and the walls of Jericho collapse, the Jordan retains its waters, the sun follows its course. Samuel blows the great trumpet to avenge the despised of ungrateful Israel. And Joshua speaks to the elements as sovereign; he dissipates and gathers the clouds, consumes the earth with an ardent blast and bestows life again with fruitful rains. While Joshua fights, Moses lifts his hands to heaven, and these powerless and unarmed hands can do more than those which shoot arrows and wield swords. When Moses was tired, he lowered his arms, and victory was arrested, but when he revived his prayer, the enemy succumbed.

October 13, 2019 – Twenty-eighth Sunday

Why Do We Do That? Ritual

Liturgy is the use of rituals (rites) that the body of Christ (the faithful) do together in worship of God. The greatest of these is of course the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. Sometimes people find these repetitive rituals empty or boring, so they seek a more emotional or exciting experience in another Christian community. Mega churches are common across the world these days where large bodies of Christians gather to pray and seek healing for their wounds. Sometimes these mega churches are centered around a pastor with a dynamic and charismatic personality. The holy Mass is done rightly when it is focused on the actions of Christ within the liturgy itself, the rituals.

In this week’s first reading we see the account of Naaman the Syrian who sought out the prophet Elisha for healing of his leprosy. Naaman thought Elisha the famous holy man was going to perform some magic on him to heal him. All Elisha did was instruct him to wash in the Jordan seven times (like the rituals of the seven sacraments). In the celebration of the sacraments, the rituals, the priest is not a magician or a “rock star.” He makes Christ present in the liturgy.

Catechesis: Mystical Prayer

St. Teresa of Avila is one of the great mystics in history. Her feast is celebrated on October 15. She is also a Doctor of the Church, which means she has made original and unique contributions to our understanding of the faith. She wrote of the spiritual life as if it was an interior castle with seven mansions within it.

God is at the absolute center of a person’s soul (castle) and we must journey through prayer to arrive at this central mansion. Prayer starts with vocal recitations of what we memorize. Meditation is the next stage where we carefully ponder the words of the vocal prayers and of Holy Scripture. From meditation we arrive at contemplation where we are filled with a loving gaze on God and his beauty.

This journey to the center of one’s soul where God resides requires perseverance in prayer, including through the dry times. It also requires humility and acknowledgment of one’s sins and asking for forgiveness from God who is eager to grant it in Christ.

For St. Teresa the soul is called to a habit of recollection where it is easy to withdraw from the sensual world around us and speak intimately to the loving God within us. This is not only for contemplative nuns, all the baptized have a vocation to mysticism.

Lectio Divina

“I will no longer offer holocaust or sacrifice to any other god except to the LORD.”2 Kings 5

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? Do you consider anything in your life to be a sacrifice? What makes something a sacrifice? To whom are you offering sacrifice? Is it the Lord? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. Might you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to apply this to your life.

The Catholic Way: Pope St. John Paul II

October 16 marks the 41st anniversary of the election of Cardinal Karol Wojtyla as Pope John Paul II. He was the first non-Italian to be elected in 456 years. His pontificate became noted for two very significant movements within the Church and in history: he was instrumental in giving the proper interpretation and integration of the principles of Vatican II, and for the victory over communism.

The “battle” with communism was not the Cold War as between the Soviet Union and the United States. Pope St. John Paul II led the Church in its struggle against communism as a battle between the truth about the human person and the falsehoods of  communism. John Paul II boldly proclaimed the idea from Vatican II that each human person possesses incalculable value because he or she is made in the image of God and shares human nature with Jesus Christ, the Son of God. By looking at Jesus, we know what it truly means to be human. Communism’s atheistic materialism reduced the human person to a part within a larger societal machine. The Church makes battle with the truth of the Gospel and the truth that we are made by and for God.

The Friends of God: St. Callistus I

Patron of: Cemetery Workers

Feast Day: October 14

Callistus was a Roman slave in the 2nd century. He was entrusted with his master’s money which he lost through bad investment. He was sent to a prison camp. After he was released he tried to recover the lost money and ended up causing a fight at a synagogue over the money. Arrested again, Callistus was sent to the mines. He was released as part of an amnesty for Christians and eventually became employed by the Church in Rome. He became an advisor of Pope Zephyrinus and managed the cemetery which still bears his name in Rome. Eventually he was himself made pope after the death of Zephyrinus. He was martyred in the 3rd century. A great story of redemption.

O God, who raised up Pope Saint Callistus the First to serve the Church and attend devoutly to Christ’s faithful departed, strengthen us, we pray, by his witness to the faith, so that, rescued from the slavery of corruption, we may merit an incorruptible inheritance. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

On Priests

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

For the Holy Mass three things are required: to pronounce well and clearly; to carry out the ceremonies with decorum and gravity; to apply the mind to an actual understanding and awareness of that which one says and does.

A priest totally recollected in himself advances as much as can be done in the most sacred things. The priest ought to have eyes only for  considering that which he does, and should be blind to all other things. One may be weary of all his various occupations but not of praying and meditation.

Ask of Jesus not that he kneel at my feet, my feet who am a sinner, so that he might wash them and purify them of their uncleanness, but that he do it by his Word alone. Consider that you are the vicar of Christ. Therefore, the priest is bound to strive for perfection, and God himself draws him to this; being persuaded of how much there is yet to do, he will distrust  himself and trust in God.

October 6, 2019 – Twenty-seventh Sunday

Catechesis: Ectopic Pregnancy

In the midst of the Church’s celebration of Pro-Life month, it may be a good moment to understand one controversial element in the moral issues on life: the difference between an abortion and the surgery required in an ectopic pregnancy. A pregnancy should, of course, always be a wonderful and joyful thing, but in our ‘valley of tears’, it often is not. Many complications can occur. It is a terrible tragedy that our culture proposes to women the “solution” of abortion. What makes an abortion a moral evil is that it is the direct killing of an unborn child.

The question then arises about ectopic pregnancies. This is the tragic situation when the fetus becomes stuck outside the uterus, usually in the fallopian tube. The unborn child developing in the tube causes a serious threat to the mother. It should be known that half of ectopic pregnancies are usually resolve on their own as the fertilized ovum is naturally passed. When the living fetus remains stuck in the tube, action must be taken for the sake of the mother. Again, directly and intentionally attacking the fetus is considered abortion. However, removing the part of the tube that contains the fetus is not a direct action against the fetus and is thus morally acceptable. The tragic death of the fetus is neither intended nor direct.

Why Do We Do That? The Rosary

Using beads for prayer has a long tradition that even predates Christianity. Buddhists and Hindus have been using prayer beads for many, many centuries as well. The use of beads for prayer is an obvious way to keep track of the number of prayers one is reciting as the praying continues. Monks as far back as the 3rd and 4th centuries were utilizing beads to keep track as they prayed through the 150 psalms. This is where the original 150 Hail, Mary’s came from. It matches the 150 psalms prayed by the monks every day.150 remained the number for centuries until Pope St. John Paul II added he Luminous Mysteries in 2002, which added 50 more Hail, Mary’s.

The purpose of the beads and the Hail, Mary’s is to provide a rhythm of prayer and a Marian context to the Rosary. The heart of the rosary, though, is the contemplation of the mysteries of the life of Jesus and Mary. The mysteries of their lives enter into ours and we can begin to see with the eyes of faith the meaning of those mysteries and how they are being relived through us in our own time. October is rosary month!

Lectio Divina

“How long, O LORD?  I cry for help but you do not listen!”Habakkuk 1

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? Have you ever expressed this type of prayer? Is it a surprise for you to find this in the Bible? What do you think could cause this type of prayer? Why would the Holy Spirit inspire the author to write this? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. Might you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to apply this to your life.

The Catholic Way: Archangels

September 29 is the feast of the Archangels. This year, due to it being on a Sunday, it will not be celebrated liturgically. For centuries, this day was known as Michaelmas after St. Michael, the chief archangel and defender against Satan. Michaelmas was celebrated with great festivals, games and sports. Just as we divide our financial year into quarters, medieval England and Ireland used Michaelmas as the quarter day for Autumn. It was on that day that debts had to be settled, new hiring would take place, universities would begin their terms and judges would take their place on the bench. The faithful would pray for St. Michael’s protection from financial ruin as the season turned toward the winter months.

In more modern times, the feast of the Archangels has been a day to celebrate Blue Masses for police and the military, those who defend the public order and keep us secure. It is a good time to remember to pray for all those who dutifully serve in these noble capacities, especially those soldiers overseas and away from their loved-ones. We can give thanks to all our guardians as we remember the archangels who have been entrusted with great missions from God.

The Friends of God: St. John Leonardi

Patron of: Pharmacists

Feast Day: October 9

John was a pious young man from 16th century Italy who, while studying for the priesthood, worked as a pharmacist’s assistant. After he was ordained he took his lessons learned in pharmacy with him to minister to the sick and to prisoners. A group of laymen began to help him and some of them became priests themselves. Soon they formed a congregation of secular priests to continue this ministry. The desire to form this congregation actually caused political turmoil and John was exiled from his hometown for the rest of his life. He became friends with St. Philip Neri and founded the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine (CCD), which educated many children in the faith.

O God, giver of all good things, who through the Priest Saint John Leonardi
caused the Gospel to be announced to the nations, grant, through his intercession, that the true faith may always and everywhere prosper. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

On Our Lady

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

I will avail myself of all the merits, graces, and privileges of this, my Lady, as one who knows that he has such right to them as sons have to their mother; and when I say Mass, I will beg her to lend me her raiment, her joys, and all the fitting household adornments, for that function, and to be able to offer all her merits to her blessed Son, so as to cover up the impropriety of so sordid a lodging place. And I am firmly persuaded that she will do this with great pleasure, as she said to St. Gertrude. I will unite my acts of faith, hope and charity to the merits of my Mother, and inserted thus into so great and rich a business venture, my poor little capital will grow beyond all bounds.

I will wear a rosary around my neck, recite nine Hail Mary’s, have a picture of her, speak to her and greet her often

September 29, 2019 – Twenty-sixth Sunday

The Catholic Way: Archangels

September 29 is the feast of the Archangels. This year, due to it being on a Sunday, it will not be celebrated liturgically. For centuries, this day was known as Michaelmas after St. Michael, the chief archangel and defender against Satan. Michaelmas was celebrated with great festivals, games and sports. Just as we divide our financial year into quarters, medieval England and Ireland used Michaelmas as the quarter day for Autumn. It was on that day that debts had to be settled, new hiring would take place, universities would begin their terms and judges would take their place on the bench. The faithful would pray for St. Michael’s protection from financial ruin as the season turned toward the winter months.

In more modern times, the feast of the Archangels has been a day to celebrate Blue Masses for police and the military, those who defend the public order and keep us secure. It is a good time to remember to pray for all those who dutifully serve in these noble capacities, especially those soldiers overseas and away from their loved-ones. We can give thanks to all our guardians as we remember the archangels who have been entrusted with great missions from God.

A Reflection on the Guardian Angel

Why Do We Do That? The Sign of the Cross

One of the principal ways Catholics and Orthodox are distinguished from Christians of other confessions is by the sign of the cross. There are writings of the Church fathers that inform us that the sign of the cross was being made by Christians as early as at least the 2nd century. Christians had transformed the cross from a sign of humiliation and torture into a sign of God’s love and Christ’s conquering of sin and death. From the earliest times Christians made the sign of the cross from forehead to chest, then from right shoulder to left shoulder. The Orthodox and Eastern Rite Catholics still use this practice. For them it is a sign of the sheep on Christ’s right hand triumphing over the goats at Christ’s left.

Beginning around the 12th century Catholics started to change by going from the left to the right shoulder, which is still in practice today. The reason for this was to show that through Christ’s sacrificial death we have passed from the misery of sin on the left to righteousness and holiness on the right. In either tradition this rich and ancient practice is a sacramental that prepares us for grace.

Catechesis: Sins Against Prudence

Prosopon is the Greek word for person. It can be translated as “a face turned toward” or manifestation of a face. This definition is very important in determining what makes a person a person. A person is constantly developing to turn his face toward another in love. The three Persons of the Holy Trinity are persons in the most perfect sense because they are turned toward each other in perfect love and manifestation. We are called to be persons in the true sense by constantly manifesting more of ourselves to others in virtuous love.

In Sunday’s Gospel, Jesus discusses the parable of the rich man and Lazarus. Notice that the rich man does not have a name but the poor man, Lazarus, does. Part of what Jesus is saying is that the rich man is given no name because he has not developed his personality in the proper way. He has not turned his face toward Lazarus, so he is actually less of a person because of it. Lazarus turns his face towards others, especially God in prayer. Despite his suffering Lazarus holds on to the hope that God will deliver on his promises. Having Lazarus enter into the bosom of Abraham, Jesus indicates that Lazarus’ hope was not in vain. But the nameless rich and selfish man shall never see the face of God.

Lectio Divina

“Compete well for the faith.”  — 1 Tim 6

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? What does Paul mean by competing for the faith? Against whom are we competing? How does one compete well for the faith? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. Might you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to apply this to your life.

The Friends of God: St. Linus

Feast Day: October 3

Born Anne-Therese is France in 1798, she was raised in a very devout family. At 15, her father was murdered by bandits and her mother suffered a break-down. Anne took care of her mother, her younger sister and the farm they lived on. All this was preparation for her future life as the foundress of a new religious order. After a few years as a teaching nun in France, she migrated to Indiana with some sisters and began a new order of nuns dedicated to teaching and helping orphans and the poor. She founded several schools for Catholic immigrants in Indiana. She was praised for being a prudent businesswoman.

Saint Mother Theodora Guerin, valiant woman of God, intercede for us in our needs. Implore for us through Jesus, the Christ, the gifts of a living faith, abiding hope and steadfast charity, so that through a life of prayer and service with others we may aid in promoting the Providence of God among all peoples. Amen.

The Mercy of Jesus

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

The mercy and the compassion Jesus publicly displayed towards sinners, was tested by Pharisees to see how far his patience with us would last. They wanted to know if they could somehow overcome his mercy and show that it had limits. Pharisees knew this to be his predominant passion, and his characteristic. They also knew his perfect observance of the law. They wanted to see how he could balance his compassion in comparison with the law, and if they could prove he was unable to maintain his mercy in all situations. But the good Jesus knew how to conciliate justice and mercy, and to make mercy overflow!

The mercy of Jesus generates hope in us, let us promote them both.

September 22, 2019 – Twenty-fifth Sunday

Why Do We Do That? Mediation

“First of all, I ask that supplications, prayers, petitions, and thanksgivings be offered for everyone…There is also one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus (1 Tim. 2).”

The Church is part of the mediation of Christ who is the bridge between us and God. Mediation is the “process” by which God’s graciousness touches our lives. St. Paul writes to Timothy that through baptism we have become participants in the mediation of Christ. As members of Christ’s body we are able to share in his mission of bringing the grace of God to all the world. As we pray for one another and for others we enter into that mediation, which is a great privilege.

The critical parts of the Church’s mediation includes, first, Jesus himself in his humanity. Next is the Blessed Virgin Mary by whose “yes” the Son of God was able to take his humanity. After the Virgin Mary comes the priesthood, which makes the sacraments available to the people and the blessing of God available to all. All the baptized follow from there as those who are consecrated for Christ’s mission to the world.

Catechesis: Sins Against Prudence

In this Sunday’s Gospel Jesus provides the parable of the dishonest steward. He concludes his parable by saying that the master, who was swindled twice by the steward, commended him for being “prudent”. What Jesus is providing is an example of how people who are shrewd in a dishonest and worldly way seem to be more skilled than the children of God who are supposed to be truly wise in managing the gifts of God.

The dishonest steward demonstrated several sins against true prudence, which is the virtue of applying truth to practical situations. By changing the master’s promissory notes with his debtors, the steward used fleshly prudence, guile, fraud, craftiness and covetousness. Fleshly prudence is when we make decisions to gain pleasure as the most important goal of life. Craftiness is setting about to achieve some goals through dishonest means. Guile is the sin of actually executing these crafty and dishonest means through words, and fraud is the sin of executing craftiness by deeds. Finally, what motivated the dishonest steward to do all of this was his covetousness. He had a disordered desire to have the things his master had and so set about to steal in order to obtain them. Real prudence seeks only for what is good, true and beautiful.

Lectio Divina

Praise the Lord who lifts up the poor. — Psalm 113

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? How does the Lord lift up the poor? Why is lifting up the poor praiseworthy? Who are the poor? Do we have a part to play in lifting up the poor? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. Might you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to apply this to your life.

The Catholic Way: Autumn

You make the grass grow for the cattle
and plants for people’s work
to bring forth food from the earth,
wine to gladden their hearts,
oil to make their faces shine,
and bread to sustain the human heart.
(Ps. 104: 14-15)

As we enter the season of Autumn we mark the time with apple and pumpkin picking, hay rides and corn mazes. Traditionally, this was the time of the harvests and many feasts and festivals were instituted to bless God for the abundance he brings upon his people. As the Psalm states,
Autumn was, for the Jewish people and for early Christians, a time when God blessed the land with grain, wine and oil. Traditionally, Catholics would use these items in their cooking at this time of year. Sharing meals with grapes, bread and olive oil and praying together Psalm 104 is a great way to integrate the faith into daily life and to usher in the new season.

The Friends of God: St. Linus

Feast Day: September 23

When the First Eucharistic Prayer is used during a Mass there is a twice-mentioned list of saints, Apostles and Martyrs. Included in the list is St. Linus. He was the first successor to St. Peter as the Bishop of Rome and therefore the second pope in history. He is mentioned in Paul’s second letter to Timothy in chapter 4. His election as pope demonstrated very early on how the Church of God would truly be universal as he was Italian, not Jewish. His pontificate lasted twelve years.

O God, Shepherd and Ruler of all Thy faithful people, look mercifully upon Thy servant Francis, whom Thou hast chosen as shepherd to preside over Thy Church. Grant him, we beseech Thee, that by his word and example, he may
edify those over whom he hath charge, so that together with the flock committed to him, may he attain everlasting life. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Resolutions

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

I will treat everyone with moderate cheerfulness, magnanimity and fortitude, with honest freedom and free honesty, with sincere simplicity, with affability, accommodating myself to people’s taste. I will be humble, sweet, modest, edifying. I will consider myself a servant of all and I will consider everyone from within the Heart of Jesus and each as the person of Jesus, as tools of God for the sake of the universe. I will be persuaded of human miseries and strive to be compassionate and merciful, and all the more so for those who are engulfed in the miseries of sin. I will esteem those considered the worst of all and I will see if I can help them spiritually or bodily.

September 15, 2019 – Twenty-fourth Sunday

Why Do We Do That? Our Lady of Sorrows

September 15 is the feast of Our Lady of Sorrows. Since it is on Sunday this year it will not be celebrated. Still, the month of September is dedicated to Our Lady of Sorrows. The 15th is the day after the Feast of the Hoy Cross. Christ has triumphed on his cross over sin and death but the price was high. Our Lady participated in the suffering of her Son through the agony of her heart and the tears she shed.

The Catholic Faith is about realism. There is no false joy with Christ. While there is much beauty in the created world and in our lives, it is still a valley of tears due to the sin of the world. Our Lady’s sorrow reflects that realism that we ourselves must embrace. As disciples of Christ, we are called to bring love and joy into the world but they very often pass first through many tears. Love and suffering are usually two sides of one coin. Our Lady’s love is immense. That immense love exposed her heart to the suffering of witnessing the crucifixion. We are tempted to keep our hearts safe and secure from hurt but the path to real love and freedom is the vulnerability and courage of Our Lady.

Catechesis: Idolatry

The most wretched sin, according to the Scripture, is idolatry. In the first commandment, God states that we should have noting before him. Loving God first is the only path to freedom and dignity. We become what we love. To be the best, we must love the best and God is the best and what’s more, he knows that. To love idols is to become as the idol, ultimately lifeless and shallow.

The worst moment for the people of Israel is recorded in this week’s first reading. The sin of the golden calf. By this sin of idolatry, the Israelites preferred a god of their own making that they could control. The living God cannot be reduced to any object nor can he ever be controlled. To love the living God is to be launched into a great adventure of trust. To put our ultimate trust and security in anything other than God is to reduce ourselves. God led the people out of slavery in Egypt and into the desert so he could mold and shape them into a good and holy people. The principle means of accomplishing that was to show them how to properly worship the living God. Instead, the people chose to mold and shape god into their own image. By this grievous sin they returned to an even worse form of slavery. We must smash all the idols in our lives so that we may truly live free.

Lectio Divina

“I have been mercifully treated because I acted out of ignorance in my unbelief.”1 Tim 1

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? Why does Paul write this? Have you been mercifully treated? Have there been times in your life when you acted our of unbelief? Are there others in your life who have hurt you who acted out of ignorance and may need mercy? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. Might you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to apply this to your life.

The Catholic Way: The Rosary of Tears

The Rosary of Tears:

In place of the Creed, pray: Crucified Jesus! We fall at Your feet and offer You the tears of her who with deep compassionate love accompanied You on Your sorrowful Way of the Cross. Grant, O Good Master, that we take to heart the lessons which the tears of Your most holy Mother teach us, so that we may fulfill Your holy will on earth, that we may be worthy to praise and exalt You in Heaven for all eternity.

In place of the Our Father, pray: O Jesus, look upon the tears of her who loved You most on earth. And loves You most ardently in Heaven.

In place of the Hail, Mary, pray: O Jesus, hear our prayers. For the sake of Your most holy Mother’s tears.

Conclude: O Mary, Mother of love, sorrow and mercy, we beg you to unite your prayers with ours so that Jesus, your Divine Son, to Whom we turn may hear our petitions in the name of your maternal tears and may give us, in addition to the favors we ask, the crown of everlasting life. Amen.

The Friends of God: St. Maria de Cervellon

Patroness: Sailors

Feast Day: September 19

Maria was born into a noble Spanish family in the 13th century. Rather than be married into another wealthy family, she spent her days caring for the sick, the poor and prisoners. She joined the Missionaries of Our Lady of Ransom, dedicated to caring for a seeking the release of Christian slaves being held by the Turks.

O God, who by means of the most glorious Mother of Thy Son was pleased to give new children to Thy Church for the deliverance of Christ’s faithful from the power of the heathen; grant, we beseech Thee, that we who love and
honor her as the foundress of so great a work may, by her merits and intercession, be ourselves delivered from all sin and from the bondage of the evil one. Through the same Christ, our Lord, Amen.

On the Mercy of Jesus

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

The heart of man is made to love, and he loves what moves him the most and makes an impression on him. Discovering the goodness of God, he becomes enraptured and he will turn to love God as a result. St. Mary Magdalene loved the world and did great things for the world; she loved Jesus Christ, and did great things for him, too.

One day she was taken to the temple before Jesus Christ as a sinner, in hopes that he would condemn her. Jesus Christ turned to [her accusers], and told them that whoever felt himself to be without sin should be the first to stone her. When the crowd heard this, they all came out of the temple and left them alone, so that Jesus was left with Mary. Being alone, Jesus saw her misery and responded with his mercy. So he does to all who fall before him in humility and trust.

September 8, 2019 – Twenty-third Sunday

Why Do We Do That? Birthday Feasts

In a previous issue it was explained that usually the feast day of a saint is on the day of death, which is considered the day of birth into eternal life. There are three times on the Church’s calendar, however, when births are celebrated. The birth of Christ, the birth of Mary and the birth of John the Baptist.

It is obvious why we celebrate the birth of Christ. The birth of Mary is also a celebration on the liturgical calendar because of her unique role in salvation history. Our Lady is the vessel prepared by God for his Son. She is the true Ark of the Covenant and not only born but conceived without original sin. When we are born we are not in communion with God due to original sin. We are made children of God in communion with him through baptism, this is why we don’t celebrate the birthdays of saints as feast days. Our Lady was never, at any moment of her existence, out of communion with God. So, both her conception and her birth and right to be celebrated.

John the Baptist, too, was born (though not conceived) already filled with the Holy Spirit and cleansed of original sin.

Catechesis: Time

Psalm 90 relates that “For a thousand years in your sight are as yesterday, now that it is past, or as a watch of the night.” God is eternal and therefore is not subject to time at all. We experience time as something like a flow of events with three parts — past, present and future. The reason we experience time is because, like all things in the universe, we are material and therefore constantly in motion. We are changing beings and part of that change is realizing our potential. God has not potential; he is absolute perfection. There is no potential for God to realize. Being absolute, God has no time.

When we think about Divine Providence and our part in it, we tend to think of being part of God’s plan for the future. We might think of God being able to see the future and know what will happen. God does not “see the future” because there is no future to God at all. Divine Providence is not a future plan God has made that we just sort of “fall into.” Divine Providence is God’s wisdom shaping the world and our participation in the shaping, right in the present moment, through the decision we make, hopefully guided by our reaching out to the Holy Spirit.

Lectio Divina

“Whoever does not carry his own cross and come after me cannot be my disciple.”  Luke 14

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? What does the Lord mean by this? What is your cross? How have you tried to carry it? Have you helped someone else carry his cross? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. Might you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to apply this to your life.

The Catholic Way: Prudence

The chief moral virtue is prudence. It is the virtue of the mind that enables us to make practical judgments for good. Prudence takes abstract truth and applies it to concrete circumstances, thus enabling us to bring about good outcomes. One of the virtues that makes up a part of prudence is docility. Docility essentially means to be teachable. We cannot develop prudence if we are not disposed to receive the truth from teachers, whether they are living teachers or the great minds from the past.

We normally associate September with school. It is an apt time, then, to remember the importance of docility. The purpose of that is to be taught what is true. We are not supposed to have a perpetually open mind otherwise we can never make prudent decisions. Two vices interfere with docility. One is laziness, which is the refusal to do the necessary work to learn. The other is pride, which refuses to learn from another. None of us is born with the truth pre-programmed. We are not self-sufficient. Being docile also opens us to communion as we depend on one another for growth and learning.

The Friends of God: St. Peter Claver

Feast Day: September 9

Peter Claver was born of a wealthy Spanish family. He joined the Jesuits in the early 17th century. Peter volunteered to be sent to the missions in present-day Columbia, which at the time was the major city for the slave trade. Peter spent the rest of his priesthood ministering to slaves in Columbia. He advocating for the ending of slavery and fought for improving the conditions of slaves in Columbia. He is said to have baptized over 300,000 people during his ministry.

O God Who, calling to the knowledge of Thy Name the Negro tribes sold into slavery, didst, in order that he might be a help to them, imbue blessed Peter with marvelous patience and charity: giving ear to his prayers, vouchsafe unto us to seek only the things which are of Jesus Christ, and thereby to love our neighbor in deed and in truth. Through the same Christ our Lord, Who will, Thee and the Holy Ghost live and reign, one God, world without end. Amen.

On the Blessed Virgin Mary

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

I want a tender love for the Virgin Mary and confidence in her as a son has in his mother.

The Virgin Mary was crowned in heaven as daughter, as mother and as spouse, with the threefold crown of wisdom, power, and goodness. When we pray, we share in her wisdom; when we conquer ourselves we share in her power; when we act with charity, warmth and openness toward our neighbor we imitate her goodness.

O Virgin immaculately conceived, put into my heart those things of your Son which are most pleasing to him.

September 1, 2019 – Twenty-second Sunday

Why Do We Do That? Commemorations

Commemoration is one of the most consistent Catholic practices. It actually dates back to the Old Testament and the Jewish people. To commemorate in the Biblical sense is to make present a mystery that had a beginning in one historical moment but the reality and effects of which continue into the present moment and into the future.

The Jewish people still commemorate the Exodus from Egypt at every Passover. They are not simply recalling an event from thousands of years ago. What they are dong is acknowledging that the Exodus is, in fact, still happening and that they are part of it and are benefitting from having been chosen by God to be his people.

The Mass is a commemoration. Jesus said, “Do this in memory of me.” At Mass, we do not simply recall the Last Supper or the Crucifixion, death and
resurrection of Jesus; they are being made present to us in our own time and we are being brought into those mysteries. In the Mass we are dying and rising with Jesus and maintaining the communion with him won at the Cross by his sacred sacrifice.

Catechesis: Honor

In the Gospel this Sunday, Jesus instructs his disciples to not seek the places of honor; rather, he wants us to wait to be honored and to seek out the poor and lowly who cannot repay the favor. We need to properly understand honor and pride to ensure that we keep to the Lord’s way in life.

St. Thomas Aquinas named honor a virtue. This is not in contradiction to the command of Jesus. As a virtue, honor is the reverence due a person because of his or her excellence. For example, suppose a soldier cultivates his talents, studies hard at the Academy, courageously serves his country in every duty assigned to him and thereby helps to provide security for millions of people, he is entitled to be honored by his countrymen. This is a virtue because the soldier has performed in such a way as to provide good for others. By being honored, the soldier is also participating in the good of service, dedication and security. The focus is on the good things people are experiencing and on the good performance by the soldier. If the soldier doesn’t care about doing good service for his countrymen but cares only for his own glory, then that would not be honor but pride. It is pride we must avoid but receiving honor that is due because of some real good that is done for others is noble and true.

Lectio Divina

“When you hold a banquet, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, the blind.”  — Luke 14

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? What does the Lord mean by this? Why would Jesus command such a thing? How might you heed this command? Are we to take this command literally? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. Might you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to apply this to your life.

The Catholic Way: Remembering World War II

2019 is the year when we commemorate both the 75th anniversary of D-Day and the 80th anniversary of the beginning of World War II. The Catholic way of remembering these solemn events includes both patriotism and religion. For Christians, to remember is not just an act of thinking about past events but of focusing on the virtues of the heroes of the times and seeking to emulate those virtues. It is also an act of seeing where God was present in the midst of the suffering.

In 1942, a Jewish family in Poland was running from the Nazis. They came to a neighboring farm, knocked on the door and asked the family inside if they would agree to hide them. It was the household of devout Catholics Józef and Wiktoria Ulma and their six children. Jozef and Ulma agreed to provide refuge to the Jewish family. For two years they managed to keep them secretly safe; but in 1944, a confidant of the Ulma family revealed their secret to the Nazis in hopes of earning a reward. The Nazis came to the farm, executed the Jewish family and the entire Ulma family, including Wiktoria, who was seven months pregnant. We remember and we seek to emulate their courage.

The Friends of God: Bl. Jan Czartoryski

Feast Day: September 6

Jan was born in Poland in 1897 to a noble family of royal blood. Jan became a Domincan priest and took the religious name of Michal. He was a defender of Polish freedom and served as a chaplain to the Polish Underground Resistance against the Nazi occupation in Warsaw. In 1944 he was arrested and executed by firing squad. He is one of the 108 Polish Martyrs of World War II.

St. Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle; be our defense against the wickedness and snares of the devil. May God rebuke him, we humbly pray, and do thou, O prince of the heavenly host, by the power of God, thrust into hell Satan and all the other evil spirits who prowl about the world seeking the ruin of souls. Amen.

Confidence in Jesus Christ

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

If your conscience reproaches you, and obliges you to this confession: “But I have deserved death a thousand times”, also answer with confidence: “Yes it is true, I know, I confess with regret my sins, but Jesus Christ, Only Son of God, died for me, and to delivers me from death “.

Here open your heart. The heart of Jesus Christ for you it is not closed; therefore, do not close yours to Him.

The merits of Jesus Christ are like an immense and infinite ocean: open and dilate your heart with confidence, in order to be able to participate in these merits with greater abundance. The greater your confidence in Jesus, the more you will be part of the infinite merits of this righteous victim.

August 25, 2019 – Twenty-first Sunday

Why Do We Do That? Processions

One of the most identifiable Catholic practices is the liturgical procession. Whether it is at the beginning of a Mass with the procession of the priest celebrant to the altar, a Marian procession at a festival or shrine, or a Eucharistic procession, liturgical walking is part of Catholic identity. Processions have not only been part of the Church’s practice from the earliest centuries but it was a common practice in the Old Testament. Ever since the Chosen People made their exodus from Egypt through the desert to the Promised Land, processions have been part of the story of God’s people.

Processions remind us that we are pilgrims on a journey. The promised land of heavenly union with God is our ultimate destination. Theologically we say that the there is the procession of the Son from the Father and the Holy Spirit from the Father and the Son. The Trinitarian processions have reached us in the missions of Jesus and the Holy Spirit. As we participate in our observance of a liturgical procession, we recall that we have come forth from God and are returning to him thanks to the grace of Christ in the Holy Spirit.

Catechesis: Grace

August 28 is the feast of St. Augustine, one of the greatest minds in the Church’s history and, indeed, in Western Civilization. Augustine is a Doctor of the Church and as such made a unique contribution to the understanding of the faith. Augustine is known as the “Doctor of Grace” due to his defense and exposition of the grace of God as primary in our spiritual life over personal effort. Augustine helped to explain the Church’s teaching that grace is always primary over any personal effort and, in fact, grace is what enables our personal efforts. What is our proper understanding of where grace “stops” and our personal efforts begin?

First, we should think of grace not in terms of some kind of magic. Perhaps the best way to understand grace is to see it as the quality of our relationship with God in Christ. To the extent that my relationship
with God is strong and intimate it can be said that I have “more” grace. The fruit of that relationship is my personal efforts to love God and neighbor. The more we love someone the more we wish to be pleasing to that person and self-giving to that person. We shouldn’t ask which one come first chronologically, grace or personal effort. We should see them as two sides of one coin. Grace is ‘heads’, my effort is ‘tails’.

Lectio Divina

“Go out to all the world and tell the good news.” Psalm 117

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? What does the Lord mean by this? What is the good news that is supposed to be announced? How might you heed this commission ? Why should the whole world receive this good news? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. Might you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to apply this to your life.

The Catholic Way: Eutrapelia

“Dost thou think, because thou art virtuous, there shall be no more cakes and ale?

This line is one of Shakespeare’s most witty epigrams. It is from his play Twelfth Night. The line is delivered by the character Sir Toby, a hearty and merry fellow who enjoys dancing, singing, eating and drinking. He addresses the line to Malvolio who is a self-righteous and uptight fellow who complains about Sir Toby’s behavior. With his line, Sir Toby dismisses Malvolio’s prudishness. To be Catholic is to pursue virtue with great zeal but one of the least understood virtues is eutrapelia. This is the virtue of play. Malvolio represents someone who lacks playfulness and is too stuffy. He is insufferably uptight. Catholics seek to be balanced in life. We need to have serious minds toward responsibility but the body and soul also need rest and refreshment. Merriment has it’s place in life.

This weekend, the North End in Boston celebrates the 100th St. Anthony Festival. It is a good time to venerate the relic of St. Anthony, honor this great man of God and enjoy some good Italian playfulness!

The Friends of God: St. Edmund Arrowsmith

Feast Day: August 28

Edmund was raised in a very devout Catholic family in England in the late 16th century. Later he studied for the priesthood and ministered to Catholics while the English persecution was still occurring. He joined the Jesuits in 1624 and preached effectively throughout England. When Fr. Edmund rebuked a young man for being in an incestuous marriage, he was turned-in by the young man to authorities. Edmund was convicted of being a Catholic priest and executed.

O God, in whom there is no change or shadow of alteration, you gave courage to the Holy Martyrs. Grant unto us, we beseech you, through their intercession, the grace to always value the Holy Mass. May we be strengthened to serve you in imitation of the courage of these Holy Martyrs. We ask this through Jesus Christ, Your Son, who lives and reigns with You in the unity of the Holy Spirit, forever. Amen.

The Narrow Way

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

My dominating vice is sloth from whence comes a roughness in dealing with others, such that if I remedy the one, the other will be remedied as well. In fact, all my defects in regard to God and my neighbor arise from the fact that I do not have a great esteem and a great love for God and my neighbor, and this arises from my failure to apply myself seriously to think about what I am doing. I do not apply myself because I do not want to face the mental labor necessary, that is, a serious application to this. So I need a remedy to overcome this spiritual laziness. If I take this only from the point of view of mortifying myself, then this is a condition of forcing myself and it will not last. It is more helpful to take this from the point of view of freedom of spirit and of generosity of heart; and to procure more efficaciously for myself this viewpoint, I find no better means than to propose to myself to seek in everything the Greater Glory of God, examining myself often as to whether what I am doing is the best to glorify God.

August 18, 2019 – Twentieth Sunday

Why Do We Do That? Consecration to Mary

To consecrate is to set something aside for a holy purpose. We have all been consecrated in baptism. We are set aside for God’s great purposes and made children of the Father. A religious is consecrated formally through vows of poverty, chastity and obedience. A priest is consecrated and set aside for holy service to God. All of these are forms of consecration. The Church also recognizes the consecration to the Virgin Mary as a means of great sanctity.

Consecration to Mary has been a popular means of pursuing holiness, especially since the preaching of St. Louis de Montfort in the early 18th century. The reason for this consecration is because of the efficacy of the Virgin Mary in teaching us how to be completely dedicated to the service of Jesus, her Son. Our Lady is the perfect teacher (she likely taught Jesus prayers) and the only perfect disciple of Christ. By consecrating ourselves to her, we take her into our hearts where the quality of our relationship with her vastly improves the quality of our relationship with God. The gospel of John includes an implication that we should “take her into our homes.”

Catechesis: Just War

In the gospel Jesus states that he has not come to bring peace but division. By this he means that being a disciple of his is more important than maintaining peace with our family and friends. It also means that peace comes with the hard work of truth and love, not from wishful thinking.

The Church has never been a proponent of peace at all costs. The Church recognizes that there are
moments when a people must be prepared to defend itself from aggression. This teaching is called Just War. In order for a war to be just, certain conditions must be met.

  1. The enemy’s aggression will result in certain, grave and lasting damage to the nation or world.
  2. Every means short of war must have been sincerely tried and found to be ineffective.
  3. There must be a serious chance of success in the war for the defenders.
  4. The damage caused by the war cannot be worse than the aggression being defended against.

Finally, the Church recognizes that only a legitimate civil authority is able to make the judgment that the conditions have been met. In our case that means Congress.

Lectio Divina

“I have come to set the earth on fire, and how I wish it were already blazing!” Luke 12

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? What does the Lord mean by this? What does it mean for the Lord to set the earth on fire? Why does he wish it were already blazing? Why do you think the fire is not already set? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. Might you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to apply this to your life.

The Catholic Way: The Thirty Days of Mary

Beginning with the Solemnity of the Assumption on August 15 and ending on the Memorial Feast of Our Lady of Sorrows on September 15, the Church has traditionally observed this period as “The Thirty Days of Mary.” In between these two feasts we also celebrate the following Marian days:

August 22: The Queenship of Mary

September 8: The Birth of Mary

September 12: The Holy Name of Mary

These five feasts in a span of thirty days allow us to dedicate important moments of life to Our Lady. How many of us, as the Church does with Mary,
celebrate a birth in September? We remember that she is a beautiful queen who watches over us with care as we return to responsibilities in September. Mary’s holy name is one we should have ready at our lips in veneration of her but also as a means of
protection against the maneuvers of the evil one.

These Thirty Days are an opportunity to invite Our Lady into every facet of our lives and reignite our relationship to so great a mother.

The Friends of God: St. Cyriaca

Patron of: Hospitality 

Feast Day: August 21

Cyriaca was a Roman woman of the 3rd century who belonged to a very wealthy family. After her husband died, she used her fortune to assist Saint Lawrence in his ministry to the poor. She even made her Roman villa available to Lawrence as he distributed alms to the poor. She was eventually martyred, as was St. Lawrence, during a general persecution.

Peace in Christ

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

If I shall fall, even were it a thousand times, I will not lose courage, I will not be troubled, but always I will say immediately with peace, nunc coepi [“begin again”). My God, I have acted in accordance with that which I am. What else could you have expected from me? Nor would I have stopped here had you not held me back. Act now in accordance with that which you are. I do not desire to think so poorly of you, that I could come to believe that you allow yourself to be conquered by one who is evil, when I know that you have my conversion and salvation so much at heart.

I will always be patient with myself, and distrustful of myself, and totally trusting in our good God.

August 11, 2019 – Nineteenth Sunday

Why Do We Do That? Dogmatic Proclamation

The First Vatican Council promulgated the Papal Infallibility. It taught that when the Roman Pontiff proclaims officially in his capacity as Supreme Teacher of the Faith a dogma to be held firmly by all Catholics, he is incapable of error and his teaching cannot be altered. Papal infallibility is one of the Catholic doctrines that causes difficulties with Orthodox and Protestant believers. The Pope is infallible when he teaches a dogma officially, not just when he is giving a personal opinion about some matter. The infallibility is actually quite restricted to certain times and is not meant to be utilized in every instant the a pope speaks or acts.

There have been only two instances when a pope made a solemn dogmatic proclamation in an extraordinary way. The first concerns the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin Mary in 1854 and the second was her Assumption in 1950. The true purpose of infallibility is to protect the faithful from error and to prevent future leaders from changing the Tradition. Dogma is to be understood as performing the role of a map that is keeping us on the path to salvation.

Catechesis: Faith

The eleventh chapter of Hebrews from the second reading this Sunday is an exposition of the great heroes of faith in the Old Testament. The focus in the lectionary reading is on Abraham. He is the first person in history to receive revelation from God. If we see history not simply as a series of events from the past but as the unfolding of the plan of God for our salvation, then history in many respects begins with Abraham. God’s revelation generates faith in Abraham and in us.

The greatest knowledge there can be is the knowledge in the mind of God. And the best knowledge is what God knows about himself since he is goodness, truth and beauty itself. By revealing himself to Abraham and Moses and the prophets, and especially in the life of Jesus Christ, God has made his own knowledge known to us. Faith is first of all a sharing and participation in the mind of God. This knowledge generates hope in us. We cannot see God as he is and we cannot see the future but we can have hope by knowing who he is and how he has acted in our past. Faith isn’t a leap in the dark, it is a commitment to God because he has revealed himself to us. In knowing his goodness we have hope for the future.

Lectio Divina

Blessed the people the Lord has chosen to be his own.”  — Psalm 55

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? What does the Lord mean by this? What does it mean to be chosen by God? How do we know we are chosen? What does it mean for us to be “the people”? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. Might you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to apply this to your life.

The Catholic Way: The Feast of the Assumption

As the bodies of the Son of God and the Virgin Mary were united during her virginal pregnancy, and she remained physically near him during his suffering on the cross, so they were destined to be together in spirt and body eternally. We celebrate the Solemnity of the Assumption of Mary, body and soul, into heaven on August 15. Our Lady is where the whole Church is destined to be. Assumed into heaven, the Mother of God makes the Church present before the face of God.

In the Eastern Churches August 15 is celebrated as the Dormition of Mary, or the Falling Asleep of the Virgin Mary. The emphasis in the East is not so much an assuming of Mary’s body into heaven; rather, it is on the fact that she fell asleep from this life and woke to the next. The early Church Fathers taught that if Adam and Eve had not sinned they would not have died as we know death. Without original sin Adam and Eve would have fallen asleep then awakened to full participation in the glory of God. Our Lady’s “death” is really more like a falling asleep than it is death as we usually perceive it. The Western and Eastern Churches thus have a different emphasis.

The Friends of God: St. Maximilian Kolbe

Patron of: Drug Addicts, Prisoners, Families, Pro-Life Movement 

Feast Day: August 14

The Polish-born Raymond (Maximilian) Kolbe was visited by Our Lady when he was but 12 years old. He asked her for both the crown of martyrdom and purity. After ordination to the priesthood as a Franciscan, Maximilian built a publishing giant promoting consecration to Our Lady and fighting the Nazis. He was arrested and sent to Auschwitz in 1941. He voluntarily took the place of another condemned prisoner who had a family. He died of lethal poison injection after being starved for two weeks inside a small bunker with 9 other men. He is a champion of heroic charity.

St. Maximilian, amidst the hate and lonely misery of Auschwitz, you brought love into the lives of fellow captives, and sowed the seeds of hope amidst despair.  You bore witness to the world, by word and deed, that only “Love alone creates.” Help me to become more like yourself.  With you and Mary and the Church, may I proclaim that only “Love alone creates.” Amen.

Devotion to Our Lady

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

I will avail myself of all the merits, graces, and privileges of this my Lady, as one who knows that he has such right to them as sons have to their mother; and when I will say Mass, I will beg her to lend me her raiment, her joys, and all the fitting household adornments, for that priestly service, and to be able to offer all her merits to her blessed Son, so as to cover up the impropriety of so sordid a lodging place. And I am firmly persuaded that she will do this with great pleasure, as she said to St. Gertrude. I will unite my acts of faith, hope and charity to the merits of my Mother, and inserted thus into so great and rich a business venture, my poor little capital will grow beyond all bounds.

August 4, 2019 – Eighteenth Sunday

Why Do We Do That? Saints’ Feast Days

On May 12th, the Oblates of the Virgin Mary celebrated the 260th anniversary of the birth of our Founder, Venerable Father Bruno Lanteri. Being Venerable means he is on the stages toward canonization as a blessed, then a saint. Those two stages require a confirmed miracle at each stage in order to advance. On Monday, August 5th, we celebrate the 189th anniversary of Ven. Bruno’s death. If the happy day should come that Ven. Bruno becomes a blessed and/or a saint, which day will become his feast day?

The tradition for the Church in choosing a feast day is the day of the holy person’s death. The reason is that that day is considered the saint’s day of entering into the union with God that is called heaven. Since the union with God is the whole purpose and definition of holiness it follows that the day of death would be the proper feast day. However, some days are obviously already taken by some other saint or holy mystery. In the case of John Paul II, his date of death occurred in April when it is usually Lent or Easter. In order to avoid this the Church assigned him October 22, the day of his pontifical inauguration.

Catechesis: Spiritual Plan of Scripture

“Vanity of vanities, says Qoheleth, vanity of vanities!  All things are vanity!” One of the most well-known verses of the Bible is the opening from Ecclesiastes. It expresses a supreme sense of emptiness and futility about life. The Holy Scriptures are very honest. Every emotion and spiritual state is expressed within the pages of the Bible, from exhilaration and supreme joy to rage, deep sadness and boredom, as in the case of Ecclesiastes. We should see within the Bible the spiritual journey that we must all take.

Qoheleth says that all life is vanity. This is an expression of someone in a spiritual state of boredom. There are stages along the spiritual journey when life seems exactly like this. Nothing seems new and nothing seems to change or matter. The honesty and deep humanity of the Bible helps us to know that we can find ourselves within its pages. The psalms, in particular, express virtually every type of human emotion but they do so within the context of a relationship with God rather than one that is purely worldly. Staying faithful to God brings forth joy from little things.

“Go, eat your bread with joy and drink your wine with a merry heart, because it is now that God favors your works” (Ecclesiastes 9:7).

Lectio Divina

“If you were raised with Christ, seek what is above, where Christ is seated at the right hand of God.”  — Col. 3

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? What does the Lord mean by this? What does it mean that you were raised with Christ? How do you seek for what is above? Why is it significant that Christ is seated at the right hand of God? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. Might you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to apply this to your life.

The Catholic Way: Immaculate Heart of Mary

August is dedicated to the Immaculate Heart of Mary. In the heart of Our Lady there is only purity, love and great goodness. That heart awaits us.

Immaculate Heart of Mary, my Mother, I come to you in childlike prayer. I earnestly desire that all the people of the world may be brought back to the humble knowledge and love of the Sacred Heart of your dear Son. I pray, dear Mother of my God, that the wonderful beauty and purity of your own Immaculate Heart may so win our souls that we may detest all sin and dedicate our lives to the honor and glory of the God who created us.

You revealed the secrets of your own sad heart at Fatima and begged for penance, prayer, and conversion of the world to God. What more can I do than unite my heart to yours in this great yearning? What can I add but the fervent prayer that all the world may listen to your pleading?

I give my heart to you, my heavenly Queen, and in confidence I leave to you what is best for me in answer to my prayer for love and reparation.

Immaculate Heart of the Mother of my God, I implore through your powerful intercession, the conversion of the hearts of men, complete victory over sin, and the return of the peace which you have promised. Amen 

The Friends of God: St. Teresa Benedicta of the Cross

Patron of: Europe, World Youth Day

Feast Day: August 9

Edith Stein was born of a Jewish family in Poland in 1891. As a young lady she abandoned her faith to pursue philosophy. After reading the autobiography of St. Teresa of Avila in one night, she began her process of conversion to Catholicism. Eventually Edith became a rising star in European philosophical circles but faced discrimination for being a Jewish woman. Ultimately, she became a Carmelite nun with her sister who also converted. The Nazis arrested them both and sent them to Auschwitz where they died in the death chambers in 1942.

Dear St. Teresa Benedicta of the Cross, Child of the Day of Atonement –Yom Kippur, Daughter of Abraham, Bride of Christ, Seeker of truth, Scholar of the Church, Handmaid of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, Servant of the Suffering Servant, Presence of mercy, Victim of victimizer, Embracer of the Cross of Christ-like love, Martyr of Auschwitz, Imitator of Jesus, Conqueror of evil, Friend of God, Edith, Please pray for me. Please intercede for this petition of mine. (Here, mention your petition). Amen.

A Happy Death

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

Salvation considered as an end is desirable, but considered in relation to the means it is a very burdensome work. It is not exactly suitable for proper self love to ask for the grace of arriving at the terminal point desired and not the grace to walk along the strait way that conducts us [there], for the grace to be admitted among the victors in heaven and not the grace of entering into the number of generous combatants on earth, for the final grace of a good death and not the proximate grace of a good life.

Behold where human strength stands with its vices and the decree of the mystery of grace. God does not command impossible things. In general he only asks two things, that of doing that what one can, and that of asking for what one cannot. There is here perhaps something impossible but, note well, it is not necessary to separate these two duties that he unites. If we stop to do what we can without praying for that which is lacking, we will not find success.

July 28, 2019 – Seventeenth Sunday

Why Do We Do That? Our Father

The essential Christian prayer is the one received directly from Jesus himself, the Our Father. This prayer is totally unique to the disciples of Christ and designates them as belonging to the body of the Church. It is rightly said only by those who are baptized and have become, through Christ, children of God.

The Jewish people had a prayer that was unique to them and contained the essence of what it meant to be the Chosen People. This prayer is called the Shema. The very short prayer is this: Hear of Israel, the Lord is our God, the Lord is one. This Shema established the monotheism of the Jewish people. When the disciples of Jesus asked him to teach them how to pray, they were essentially asking him for their own version of the Shema. When Jesus taught his disciples the Our Father prayer, he was stating that this would be the prayer that identifies someone as belonging to the New Covenant in the blood of Christ.

By saying “Our” we recognize that we are members of a family, a communion, a body. By saying “Father” we recognize God for who he truly is and who were are in him.

Catechesis: The Justice of God

The first person in history to receive revelation from God is Abraham, which is why we call him our Father in Faith. With Abraham begins Salvation History. Prior to Abraham and the faith he received from the One, True God, the peoples of the earth worshipped many different forms of deity. What was not common from either gods or men was justice. When Abraham entered into a dialogue with God about Sodom and Gomorrah he was not simply interceding on behalf of the people of those cities, he was, even more importantly, trying to learn more about the God who he was just beginning to know. On behalf of all human beings, Abraham was asking if the One, True God was just. Abraham was asking, “Does the One, True God allow the innocent to get swept up with the guilty? If there are fifty innocent people in the city, will the One, True God allow them to be consumed?” Abraham is trying to determine if the great Power behind all things is a just God or not.

The encounter between God and Abraham is another moment of revelation and Salvation History. From this encounter we learn that God is indeed just and that we are able to ask things of him with confidence as he is quick to come to the aid of the righteous.

Lectio Divina

Ask and you will receive.”Luke 11

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? What does the Lord mean by this? Do you have confidence that the Lord will deliver on his promise? What are the type of things you normally ask for? Is there something in your life you have not yet asked the Lord about? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. Might you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way: Madonna della Strada

Madonna della Strada (Our Lady of the Way) is the Patroness of the Jesuits. Going back to St. Ignatius himself, the Jesuits have always venerated Our Lady who accompanies us on all our journeys, especially our pilgrimage in this life toward the Father. It is a good and pious tradition to pray to Our Lady of the Way before all journeys that she will be with us as we travel and protect us from all dangers.

Prayer to Our Lady of the Way

O Lady of the way, 
be with us on our journey, 
for all your ways are beautiful 
and all your paths are peace.  
O God, who with unspeakable 
providence does rule and
govern the world,
grant unto us, your servants, 
through the intercessions 
of our watchful mother, 
to be protected from all danger 
and brought safely to the 
end of our journey.  Amen

The Friends of God: St. Ignatius of Loyola

Patron of: Soldiers, Educators and Retreats

Feast Day: July 31

Ignatius was a courtesan desiring to be a great soldier in 16th century Spain. He was seriously injured in a battle and during his recovery, Ignatius experienced deep conversion and discovered the discernment of spirits. His personal experience of conversion to the Lord and process of interiorization of the faith has become the basis of his Ignatian method of prayer. Ignatius became the founder of the Society of Jesus — the Jesuits — and is well-known for his Spiritual  Exercises, the book of spiritual direction gleaned from his personal experiences.

Lord, teach me to be generous.
Teach me to serve you as you deserve;
to give and not to count the cost,
to fight and not to heed the wounds,
to toil and not to seek for rest,
to labor and not to ask for reward,
save that of knowing that I do your will. Amen.

Asking in Prayer

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

Graces so precious, so important as those which conduct us to salvation, merit well that we at least pay the cost of asking for them, and asking for them with eagerness and fervor. If we do not ask for them, it is a sign that either we do not esteem them enough or that we do not feel the need of them enough. And if God himself would give them to us even without prayer, they might then be easily despised and rejected by us, and we would lack recognition and humility with God. How much more the grace of his nature wants to be accompanied by our cooperation, that is, by the victory of ourselves, which struggle is such that no wonder so few want to bother to pray, whence the Lord might come to “throw pearls before swine” if he would accord us as an ordinary rule graces without their being prayed for. “God wants to give, but he does not give unless one asks, unless one desires”

July 21, 2019 – Sixteenth Sunday

Why Do We Do That? Anointing of the Sick

Anointing is one of the seven sacraments of the Church that is a celebration of the victory of Jesus over sin and death. Anointing is referenced in the Gospel of Mark, chapter 6, and in the Letter of James, chapter 5. It is a sacrament that strengthens one to face the trial of suffering that is of a deathly nature.

Baptism already provides the grace necessary to face the normal trials of life including normal illnesses. There are, of course, illnesses of a graver nature that require a more specific sacrament in order to face. Any illness, whether physical or mental, that gravely threatens life has the Sacrament of Anointing in order to join that suffering to Christ and win the struggle against suffering, death and sin — the enemies of God. Major surgeries may also qualify, as does advanced age that causes serious hardships. One need not wait till the moment of death to ask for the anointing. If there is a situation that is a serious threat to life, the anointing should be requested. This sacramental grace allows us to make up in our own sufferings what is lacking in the suffering of Christ, namely, our own freely embraced cross united to Christ’s.

Catechesis: Filling Up in My Flesh

St. Paul mentions in his Letter to the Colossians that in his own personal sufferings on behalf of the Church, he makes up for what is lacking in the  sufferings of Christ. It is a passage that has confused many. How can anything be lacking in the sufferings of Christ? What does it mean that Paul makes up for this lack with his own suffering?

First, it must be noted that Christ’s suffering was perfect. There is nothing lacking in Christ’s suffering in terms of its effectiveness in obtaining our redemption. Sometimes it is thought that Christ’s suffering is merely a substitution for us: Because Jesus has suffered on the cross we, the beneficiaries, don’t have to do anything except have faith in Jesus. The truth is that through Baptism, we have been grafted onto the Body of Christ; we have become members of that Holy Body that was the instrument through which Jesus gave himself as a gift to the Father and to us. We must all, in freedom, accept the same path as Jesus did by courageously and humbly accepting our particular crosses in life and joining our own sufferings to Christ’s. This way, we help strengthen the whole body that is the Church. Jesus did not eliminate suffering; he made it possible for our
suffering to be redemptive and even a source of love.

Lectio Divina

He who does justice will live in the presence of the Lord.” Psalm 15

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? What does the Lord mean by this? Is there a subtle message we are meant to hear? What is justice? How do you know if you are acting justly in a situation? Why is justice required to live in the presence of the Lord? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. Might you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way: Pilgrimages

Pilgrimages have been a natural part of the Christian life since the beginning of the Church. The faithful have sought out significant places in the holy land to celebrate the life of Jesus and they have traveled to shrines to the various saints in honor of their holy lives and example. One of the most well-known and ancient pilgrimages is the Camino de Santiago. Its route runs across northern Spain ending at the Basilica of Santiago de Compostela. Pilgrims have traveled along this route for centuries seeking the tomb of St. James the Greater.

A great Catholic tradition has been the pilgrim houses set up along the way of the most ancient routes, especially in Europe. Pilgrims could find refuge from their Christian brothers’ and sisters’ homes along the way of their pilgrimage. These houses of refuge provided food and shelter for the penitents. In medieval times, these houses were actually called hospitals and were the beginnings of what we now know as the institutions of healing.

It is a beautiful tradition to be very aware of the duties of hospitality. In this time of traveling, we do well to remember.

The Friends of God: St. James the Greater

Patron of: Pilgrims and Spain

Feast Day: July 25

St. James the Greater was one of the first Apostles called by Jesus, along with his brother John. James was present with John and Peter when Jesus was transfigured on Mt. Tabor and when the Lord suffered his agony in the Garden of Gethsemane. He spent many years evangelizing Spain and, afterwards, returned to Jerusalem where he was the first Apostle to be martyred. The Camino de Santiago in Spain is named after him as his tomb is the end point of the pilgrimage.

O glorious Apostle, St. James, who by reason of thy fervent and generous heart was chosen by Jesus to be a witness of His glory on Mount Tabor, and of His agony in Gethsemane; thou, whose very name is a symbol of warfare and victory: obtain for us strength and consolation in the unending warfare of this life, that, having constantly and generously followed Jesus, we may be victors in the strife and deserve to receive the victor’s crown in heaven. Amen.

Practicing Virtue

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

To develop a virtue requires the cultivation of a spirit of familiarity with God, with Jesus Christ, especially representing him often to myself in his sufferings. I will direct my affairs to him. I will ask light and strength from him. I will observe how he would act were he in my situation, I will ask him for his Spirit in my actions, etc. I will note down the acts and I will indicate them to my Director. I will speak often of this virtue and I will strive to exercise it especially with the exercise of the theological virtues. I will seek occasions to practice this virtue and I will compare the days and the weeks.

July 14, 2019 – Fifteenth Sunday

Why Do We Do That? Conscience

It is often said that we as Catholics must follow our consciences when it comes to the moral life. That is true. Sometimes this is misunderstood to mean that whatever we feel we can do in a certain situation is alright as long as we feel strongly about it. Actually, Moses has the better understanding of conscience in his words from Deuteronomy (meaning “second law”: nomo , second, and deutero, law). He says that keeping the commands of God as they are written is imbedded within our hearts. We have within us by nature the sense that we must do right, not wrong. We have in us, for example, the sense that being truthful is right and lying is wrong yet, we still manage to lie all the time. Because we are wounded by original sin, we do not follow properly the voice of God written in our hearts. His voice is often replaced by our own voice or by the voice of the society around us. So, conscience cannot be what I feel to be right at any moment. God gave us Moses, the prophets, the Commandments and
the Church in order that his voice would be heard without confusion. Conscience, therefore, must be formed by the teaching God has left us.

Catechesis: The Image of God

St. Paul instructs us that Jesus is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation. St. Paul is referencing the fact that Jesus is the pattern out of which all things have been made. Specifically, Jesus is the key through which God the Father and Creator has made the human person. Christ is the spiritual “mold” from which we are made and we are meant to reflect the glory of God in our lives as he does. As the paradigm of the human person, Jesus Christ is the framework and context of our lives. We know what a “hero” is in a story or a theme such as “good versus evil.” These are story archetypes that establish a context and framework for us to understand the story. That is what Jesus is for our lives. As the Image of God and firstborn of all creation, Jesus is the great archetypal character and theme that provides the proper key for understanding our life story. If we wish to make sense of our lives, we need to understand it within the context of the life of Christ. In his visible, physical body, Jesus is the principal Sacrament; the true way to the Father.

Lectio Divina

“If only you would heed the voice of the Lord.” — DT 30

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? What does the Lord mean by this? What does it mean to heed the voice of the Lord? Are you able to discern the “voice” of the Lord? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. Are you able to notice the desperation in the voice of Moses? Ask The Blessed Virgin Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way: The Shrine of St. Kateri Tekakwitha

Situated close to the Shrine of the North American Martyrs in Auriesville, NY is the Shrine of St. Kateri Tekakwitha in the town of Fonda. The Shrine to St. Kateri is close by the original site of Kateri’s Mohawk village of Ossernenon. Nearby is the original spring of water that served as the source for Kateri’s baptism on Easter in 1674. Visiting pilgrim sites in the Summer is an excellent way to add a bit of holy reflection to time-off. St. Kateri’s shrine, in particular, provides the opportunity to learn more about the history of the Jesuit missionaries and their part in the history of North America. It is also a chance to discover how Catholicism is celebrated within the context of the Native American culture. Pilgrimages don’t always have to be to far-off, distant places. The catholic nature of the Church demonstrates that the impact of the holiness of the saints is found everywhere around the globe. By including these holy sites in your travels, the seed of the gospel is planted, even in our times of relaxation.

The Friends of God: St. Kateri Tekakwitha

Patron of: the Environment

Feast Day: July 14

Kateri is known as “the Lily of the Mohawks” as she was born of that tribe in Ossernenon, what is now upstate New York. Her family all died of smallpox. Kateri was raised by her uncle, the Mohawk Chief. Showing her sense of personal dignity, she refused to marry and converted to Catholicism at age 19 in 1674. For this, she was ostracized by her family and had to escape from the tribe to live in Montreal. She made a vow of virginity so as to claim Christ as her spouse. She is the first Native American saint.

Saint Kateri Tekakwitha, our elder sister in the Lord, discreetly, you watch over us; May your love for Jesus and Mary inspire in us words and deeds of friendship, of forgiveness and of reconciliation. Pray that God will give us the courage, the boldness and the strength to build a world of justice and peace among ourselves and among all nations. Help us, as you did, to encounter the Creator God present in the very depths of nature, and so become witnesses of Life. With you, we praise the Father, the Son and the Spirit. Amen.

Diligence in Devotion

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

May God be praised for your perseverance in spiritual resolutions made during a time of prayer. Do not doubt that the Lord will continue to bless you with endurance in your proposals right to the end; never neglect to pray to him insistently for this. Continue without fail your devotions twice a week, be inexorable in never neglecting your spiritual reading, meditation and the examination of conscience, share frequent news about these with spiritual friends or spiritual directors, not only concerning the exactness in carrying this out, but also the sentiments which you receive, and the books of which you might use. Add to this continual occupation with some work of charity toward your neighbor, and I am sure that the Lord will bless you, and will even procure for your heart great consolations.

July 7, 2019 – Fourteenth Sunday

Why Do We Do That? Peace be with You

When Jesus sends his seventy-two disciples on a mission, he instructs them to greet a household with “Peace.” To this day the disciples of Jesus still wish peace to one another and to all those they greet. It is Christ’s peace that is the gift offered by all Christian disciples.
First, we wish this peace to each other. Every Mass provides the opportunity to extend this original greeting to one another. To extend peace to others in the Christian sense is really a prayer. The peace of Christ should not be confused with worldly peace. In the Christian sense, peace is the fruit of order and charity. When everything in life is ordered properly in obedience to God’s will, we have peace. To the extent that one’s life is not ordered to God, peace will be lacking. It is also a fruit of charity. The one who lives life from the love of God and neighbor will find peace from within. The peace within leads to the peace without. When the seventy-two granted peace to the homes they entered, they were saying to those families, “may your home be ordered to God and filled with love.” And so also to one another in our time.

Catechesis: The Marks of Jesus

In St. Paul’s letter to the Galatians he writes that he bears the marks of Jesus on his body. It is possible that he may be referring to the stigmata, that is, the mystical reception of the very wounds of Jesus on one’s body, as in the case of Padre Pio or St. Francis. Whether Paul is referring to that or not, he is  certainly referring to the wounds on his body  received from his work in service to Christ and the gospel. As Paul shared in his letter to the Corinthians, he was beaten many times, left starving, verbally abused, betrayed, stoned, imprisoned and even left adrift at sea. These are all marks of Jesus left on his body. They are the marks that show St. Paul as a true servant who was not living as one of this world but truly already living within the Kingdom of God.
The first “mark” we receive is at baptism and again at confirmation. A mark is put on our souls that can never be removed. It is the mark that makes us priests, servants and heirs in the Kingdom of God. We must live in accord with this mark and  progressively within the Kingdom. As we die to this world so as to be reborn to the world of God (even while still living in this world), we begin to retain the external marks of Jesus on our bodies, our red badge of courage.

Lectio Divina

“May I never boast except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ.”
— Galatians 6

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? What does the Lord mean by this? Is there a message we are meant to hear? What would it mean for us to boast in the cross of Jesus? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. Might you ask Mary, who was with Jesus at the foot of the cross, to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way: Maryland

In 1634 the colony of Maryland was established by Catholic Lord Baltimore. It was the colony for  Catholics in the Americas. However, circa 1649 – 1689, the laws of Maryland were changed by the English Crown to outlaw Catholicism in Maryland. Children could not be taught by Catholics. Catholics could not vote or hold public office and their taxes were double that of Protestants. All of this  demonstrates that one of the earliest biases in  America was against Catholics.
The last surviving signer of the Declaration of  Independence was Charles Carroll of Carrollton. His family was the most well-known and wealthiest in Maryland. He passionately fought for religious freedom and urged all Americans to revere that  important right. Charles’ brother John was the first American bishop of the first diocese of Baltimore. Their cousin Daniel Carroll was a signer of the Constitution of the United States. They all urged respect for the right of free worship as the original purpose for the founding of the colonies. The very first right enumerated in the Bill of Rights, the First Amendment, is religious freedom. It is the essential American freedom. To lose it is to lose the soul of America.

The Friends of God: St. Paulina

Patron of: Diabetes

Feast Day: July 9

Born Amabile Visintainer in Italy in 1865. Her family emigrated to Brazil when she was 10. The faith was always central to her life. When she was a teenager Amabile and a friend moved into the home of a poor, dying woman who had no relatives so they could care for her. This act of pure love became Amabile’s vocation in life as she and other women who followed her initiated the Congregation of the Little Sisters of the Immaculate Conception. She took the name  Sr. Paulina and was elected Mother Superior. Over her life, she and her sisters cared for the poorest of Brazil. She suffered from diabetes most of her life.
St. Paulina, you have suffered much in your life, blind with Diabetes. In heaven, you can see clearly now. The love of God and the sick enabled you to endure tragedy; your  example will forever be our vision. Ask God to give me the strength to sustain this illness, and to allow my body to  produce  the energy needed to function. Healing Heart of Jesus, cleanse us from all sin to be Reborn in Faith, Hope and External Love. Amen.

The Imitation of Christ

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

During the time of meditation or of the Holy Mass or of the visit to the Blessed Sacrament,  remember that Jesus Christ is the seal of the Father with which he marks all the predestined and that if all his glory is to be the image of his Father, the character of his substance, so also all our happiness lies in being marked with this seal — in bearing his traits and characteristics.
Consider how he invites you to engrave this seal deeply upon your heart. Pray of him that he engrave it there himself and that he print it profoundly in all the powers of your soul.
Pray of him that he apply this seal to your body and your soul to impress thereupon the radiant marks of his humility, his purity, his innocence and all his  virtues.

brunolanteri.org

June 30, 2019 – Thirteenth Sunday

Why Do We Do That? The Precious Blood of Christ

July is dedicated to the Precious Blood of Christ. Just as May is dedicated to Our Lady and June to the Sacred Heart, July focuses on the Blood Christ. We are now in Ordinary Time and the use of the liturgical color of green. Green is the color of growth and hope. Looking out at the gardens and grounds around us we see plenty of green and vegetables that are being harvested. It is a time of life and joy. All of this growth is dependent on the rains that fall bringing moisture. The rain is the life blood of vegetation.

This symbolism helps us to understand what the Precious Blood of Christ is for us. We need the Blood of Christ to flow into to us through the sacrament of Holy Communion so that eternal life may grow up within us. Just as the summer harvests of fruits and vegetables would be impossible without watering, so eternal life is impossible for us apart from the Precious Blood.

With the Summer travel upon us it is important to include God in our travel planning; make sure to find a church for Mass when we on vacation.

Catechesis: Summer Vacations

From Pope Benedict XVI:
Tourism, together with vacations and free time, is a privileged occasion for physical and spiritual renewal; it facilitates the coming together of people from different cultural backgrounds and offers the opportunity of drawing close to nature and hence opening the way to listening and contemplation, tolerance and peace, dialogue and harmony in the midst of diversity. Travelling reflects our status as pilgrims in this world; at the same time it evokes that other deeper and more meaningful journey that we are called to follow and which leads to our encounter with God. Travelling, which offers us the possibility of admiring the beauty of peoples, cultures and nature, can lead to God and be the occasion of an experience of faith. In places where tourists visit churches, many of the manifestations of the historical and cultural religious patrimony are authentic ways to God, Supreme Beauty; indeed they help us to grow in our relationship with him, in prayer. Vacations allow the body to relax and to nourish the spirit with more time for prayer and meditation, in order to grow in personal relationship with Christ and become ever more conformed to his teachings.

Lectio Divina

“Foxes have dens and birds of the sky have nests, but the Son of Man has nowhere to rest his head.”Matthew 8

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? What does the Lord mean by this? Is there a subtle message we are meant to hear? What would it mean for us to tend to the physical needs of Jesus? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. Do you say that Jesus is Lord? Can you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way: The Rosary of the Holy Wounds

Using a Rosary:

On the crucifix and first three beads:
* O JESUS, Divine Redeemer, be merciful to us and to the whole world. Amen. * STRONG God, holy God, immortal God, have mercy on us and on the whole world. Amen. * GRACE and mercy, O my Jesus, during present dangers; cover us with Thy Precious Blood. Amen. * ETERNAL Father, grant us mercy through the Blood of Jesus Christ, Thine only Son; grant us mercy, we beseech Thee. Amen, Amen, Amen. The following prayers, composed by Our Lord, are to be said using the Rosary beads. On the large [middle] beads: * Eternal Father, I offer Thee the Wounds of our Lord Jesus Christ. To heal the wounds of our souls. On the small [decade] beads: * My Jesus, pardon and mercy. Through the merits of Thy Holy Wounds.

The Friends of God: St. Joseph Peter Uyen

Patron of: Catechists

Feast Day: July 3

Joseph was a Vietnamese layman living in the early 19th century. He joined the Dominican Lay Third Order to deepen his Catholic faith and became a catechist for his local parish. Vietnam outlawed Christianity and demanded that all Christians publicly renounce their faith and trample crucifixes under foot. Churches and parochial schools were burned. Joseph was arrested and was treated very poorly in prison and died there in 1838. His dedication to spirituality prepared him for the supreme test.

Vietnamese Martyrs, with the Grace of God, you had victoriously implanted the mustard seed of Faith that grew into the Church of Vietnam. Your courageous sacrifice had reserved your Heavenly rest. United with you, we offer our gratitude and thanks to God and the Holy Mother, for all of your martyrdom and your lives that we now celebrate.
We beseech you, as your descendants, to follow your Faith in humility, charity and love. When we are in despair and danger, please aid and console us in fulfilling the Father’s Will and carry our crosses to Eternal Glory. Amen.

On Following Jesus

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

We should follow always and generously the will of God once recognized, and make conscious note of the times when we transgress it; and do not give importance except to faults which are certain and deliberate, since we do not have to give an account to God except of that which we know we ought to have done, and did not do.
Every day we should seek to read from of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, perhaps even buy a small edition of the New Testament for ourselves. A great means, easy and powerful for repelling temptations, is to make use of the word of God which is so holy, efficacious, and omnipotent, as we see in the example of Jesus Christ. The love of God, and the outpouring of his graces will not cease if we will not be ungrateful, negligent or proud.

June 23, 2019 – Corpus Christi

Why Do We Do That? Eucharistic Adoration

From the time of the Apostles, the faithful have been constant in revering the Blessed Sacrament. Bishops used to send emissaries carrying the Eucharist with them to other bishops as an expression of communion among the different dioceses. Hermits in the 3rd and 4th centuries were known to keep the Blessed Sacrament in their cells with them to have access to Holy Communion but also to express their reverence for the Great Sacrament of Sacraments. In the early middle ages monks would bring the Eucharist with them as they worked in the fields or went on a journey, often securing the Sacrament in a container and wearing it around their necks. By the time of the 11th century, there were Eucharistic Processions and preservation of the Sacrament in tabernacles in most churches. St. Francis of Assisi is known to have had a great devotion to the Blessed Sacrament and to encourage adoration.

The idea of hours of adoration developed after the Council of Trent and the institution of Forty Hours of Adoration in Italy. Today this great tradition continues, including at St. Francis Chapel daily.

Catechesis: The Eucharist Makes the Church

The Wikipedia entry on the Holy Mass begins by stating that the Mass is when the bread and wine are consecrated and become the Body and Blood of Christ. While that is true, it does not present the full picture. This idea makes it seem as if the Church (the priest and the people) make the Eucharist. Actually, it is the Eucharist that makes the Church. When we are together at the Sacrifice of the Mass we are there because of the Eucharist, for the Eucharist. So, it can rightly said that it is the Eucharist that makes us the Church and not some other kind of assembly.

The Sacrifice of the Mass is the re-presentation of the Sacrifice of Christ. The Lord’s saving death and resurrection is made present to our time through the Mass. Before there was a Mass, there was the cross of Christ. Jesus left us a way to participate in his sacrifice when he instituted the priesthood and the Eucharist at the Last Supper. That was the first assembly of the faithful coming to eat and drink the Lord’s Body and Blood. For two thousand years since, Catholics have assembled for the same purpose in virtually the same way as they did in the first century.

Lectio Divina

“Give them food yourselves.” Luke 9

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? What does the Lord mean by this? Why does Jesus give this command? Why doesn’t Jesus allow the disciples to dismiss the starving crowd? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. Do you say that Jesus is Lord? Can you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way: Enthronement of the Sacred Heart of Jesus in the Home

It is a great pious tradition to consecrate one’s home to the Sacred Heart of Jesus. An image of the Sacred Heart is placed in a prominent position in the home and prayers of consecration are made. Usually a priest is invited to make the consecration with the household. Jesus promised St. Margaret Mary that he would inscribe the names of anyone who is devoted to his Sacred Heart into his Heart. He promised peace to all homes consecrated to the Sacred Heart and fervent faith to the lukewarm.

You can find the instructions for consecrating your home to the Sacred Heart of Jesus here.

The Solemnity of the Sacred Heart of Jesus is Friday, June 28.

The Friends of God: St. Emma

Patron of: The Poor

Feast Day: June 27

Emma was a member of a courtly German family in the 12th century. She and her husband were Nobles of the Realm and of a caustic disposition. After her husband died on a trip to Russia, Emma deepened her Catholic faith and disciplined her temper. She began to build churches and to care for the poor for which she became renowned. Her only son became a bishop, testifying to how devout Emma had become.

Lord, Our God,
You alone are Holy,
and nobody is good without Your help.
Grant that, at the intercession of Blessed Emma,
we may model our life according to Your will
and attain that level of holiness which You intend for us.
We ask this through Christ, our Lord.  Amen.

Visit to the Blessed Sacrament

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

During the time of meditation while visiting the Blessed Sacrament, remember that Jesus Christ is the seal of the Father with which he marks all the predestined; and that if all his glory is to be the image of his Father and the character of his substance, so also all our happiness lies in being marked with his seal and in bearing his traits and characteristics.

Consider how he invites you to engrave this seal deeply upon your heart. Pray of him that he engrave it there himself and that he print it profoundly in all the powers of your soul.

June 16, 2019 – Trinity Sunday

The Catholic Way: Prayers for Fathers

Prayers for Fathers’ Day

Intercessions:

For our fathers, who have given us life and love, that we may show them respect and love, we pray to the Lord. R. Lord, hear our prayer.

For fathers who have lost a child through death, that their faith may give them hope, and their family and friends support and console them, we pray to the Lord. R. Lord, hear our prayer.

For fathers who have died, that God may bring them into the joy of his kingdom, we pray to the Lord.
R. Lord, hear our prayer.

Prayer for Fathers:

God our Father, in your wisdom and love you made all things. Bless these men, that they may be strengthened as Christian fathers. Let the example of their faith and love shine forth. Grant that we, their sons and daughters, may honor them always with a spirit of profound respect.

Grant this through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Why Do We Do That? The Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity

The Solemnity of the Holy Trinity is celebrated the Sunday after Pentecost. Immediately following the conclusion of the Easter Season which celebrates the saving work of God in Christ and the sending of the Holy Spirit into the world in the Church, we remember that we should love and honor God primarily for his own sake and not just for what he does for us.

The most important thing we learn from the mission of Jesus Christ is not how we can come to reconciliation with God but who God really is. He is Father, Son and Holy Spirit. It is precisely because God is a Trinity, a community of Persons, that he seeks to save us and bring us back to himself. Without community there is no love. Remembering that God as a Trinity also tells us what the final result of salvation is. Those who are saved in Christ are destined to participate in the loving community of God. This community has already begun in this life. The Church is communion with the Trinity. With the Solemnity of the Holy Trinity we celebrate that the source of all things is eternal Love.

Catechesis: The Holy Trinity

That God is One God and yet Three Persons is certainly not scientifically provable, nor could we ever come to that conclusion on our own thinking. It is a revealed truth that comes to us in the Scriptures and especially through the life of Jesus Christ. It is Jesus himself who spoke of One God but also of his Father and the Holy Spirit as distinct Persons.

The human person is made in the image and likeness of God as Genesis tells us. We image the Trinity in several ways. First, God is one and Three, therefore he belongs to himself and is in relationship at the same time. Like God, we are individuals but also require relationship. Without relationship we cannot function properly, yet we also have our own personal dignity apart from others. As three, God (the Father) knows himself (the Son) and loves himself (the Spirit). We also can know and love ourselves, just as God does. But we perfectly image God when we know and love him and not just ourselves. Finally, just as the love of God the Father and God the Son for each other is the Holy Spirit, so the love of husband and wife is the child.

Lectio Divina

“No one can say, ’Jesus is Lord,’ except by the Holy Spirit.” I Cor. 12

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? How do we listen to Jesus? What would it mean for you to listen more? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. What might the Lord be telling you at this time of your life? Can you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Friends of God: St. Juliana Falconieri

Patron of: Sick People

Feast Day: June 19

Juliana was born in 1270 to a very wealthy family of privilege in Florence. With determination and guidance from the Holy Spirit and her saintly uncle, Juliana refused the marriage arranged for her by her family and sought a life of religious consecration. She founded a group of young women who dedicated their lives to prayer and the service of the sick. At the end of her life she asked for the Blessed Sacrament to be placed on her chest so she could adore before she died.

O faithful bride of Jesus and humble servant of Mary, Saint Juliana, you who by practicing the most heroic virtues, especially the virtue of penance and the love of Jesus in His Sacrament, did arrive at the highest peak of Christian perfection and did merit to be fed miraculously with the Bread of Angels in thy last agony; Obtain for me the grace to live a holy life In the exercise of every Christian duty and to be able to receive at the moment of death the comfort of the holy Sacraments in order to come with you to the blessed happiness of heaven. Amen.

Relationship with the Trinity

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

As Jesus loves us most ardently, he desires nothing other than the closest union with us, as he ardently said on the day before he suffered: That they may be united as one.”

The perfect union consists in this: that you may be one with Him as He is one with the Father, that is, in nature, in virtue, and in operation, with this difference: that while He is one by nature, we are truly one through participation, through adoption, through grace, and through will.

You will be pleasing to the Holy Spirit, because we follow his leadership, who desires nothing other than to form Christ in our hearts as he was formed in the womb of the Virgin Mary.

You will be pleasing to the Most Holy Trinity, whose purpose is to perfect his image in us and to complete it so that we live the same life as God, which happens in us when we imitate Christ.

brunolanteri.org

June 9, 2019 – Pentecost Sunday

The Catholic Way: Come, Creator Spirit

Come, Holy Spirit, Creator blest, and in our souls take up Thy rest;
come with Thy grace and heavenly aid to fill the hearts which Thou hast made.
O comforter, to Thee we cry, O heavenly gift of God Most High, O fount of life and fire of love, and sweet anointing from above.
Thou in Thy sevenfold gifts are known;
Thou, finger of God’s hand we own;
Thou, promise of the Father, Thou Who dost the tongue with power imbue.
Kindle our sense from above, and make our hearts o’erflow with love;
with patience firm and virtue high the weakness of our flesh supply.
Far from us drive the foe we dread, and grant us Thy peace instead;
so shall we not, with Thee for guide, turn from the path of life aside.
Oh, may Thy grace on us bestow the Father and the Son to know;
and Thee, through endless times confessed, of both the eternal Spirit blest. Now to the Father and the Son, Who rose from death, be glory given, with Thou, O Holy Comforter, henceforth by all in earth and heaven. Amen.

Why Do We Do That? Confirmation

Confirmation is probably the most misunderstood and forgotten sacrament. Unfortunately, the experience of most of the faithful in the United States is that Confirmation is very much like a religious graduation. It is often thought of as “becoming an adult in the Church.” That is not at all that
Confirmation is. It is true this sacrament is about Christian maturity, but that has little to do with being an adult. There are many children who are much more spiritually mature than adults.

Confirmation is a strengthening of the Holy Spirit after Baptism, and one of the three sacraments of initiation. Confirmation, like baptism, imprints a character—a permanent mark—on the soul. This mark empowers a person to become a fighter for the faith. It strengthens the baptismal priesthood in a person so that they can make the Church present out in the world where it is not currently. Those who are baptized are entitled to participate in the Eucharistic Sacrifice. Those who are Confirmed are entitled to make sacrifices out in the world as a witness to the power of the Eucharist.

Catechesis: Pentecost

The name Pentecost is Greek meaning “Fifty”. Originally, in the Old Testament, the Jewish people celebrated the Feast of Weeks at the time of the Spring wheat harvest. That festival was weeks plus one day (thus 50 days) after Passover. The first fruits of the wheat harvest were to be dedicated to the Temple in recognition that the land yielding the wheat was gifted to the Jews by God. It was also a feast of remembrance of the Law of Moses, given to the people while they still wandered in the desert on their way to the Promised Land.

Pentecost in the Church celebrates the Descent of the Holy Spirit upon the Church, thus launching its mission in the world. The Law of Moses has been transcended by the Law of Grace given through the Holy Spirit.

The Church offers a plenary indulgence with all of the normal conditions if one recites the Veni, Creator Spiritus (Come, Creator Spirit) on the day of Pentecost. The words of the prayer above under The Catholic Way.

Lectio Divina

“No one can say, ’Jesus is Lord,’ except by the Holy Spirit.” I Cor. 12

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? How do we listen to Jesus? What would it mean for you to listen more? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. What might the Lord be telling you at this time of your life? Can you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Friends of God: St. Anthony of Padua

Patron of: Lost Things

Feast Day: June 13

He was born in Portugal in the 12th century and began his life in an Augustinian monastery in Coimbra. When the Franciscans came to the town, he was very impressed with their simplicity of life and dedication to holiness. Soon, he was given permission to join the Franciscans. He became a very good friend of St. Francis himself and was famous for his learning and powerful preaching. When a novice secretly left the Franciscan monastery and stole Anthony’s favorite book, Anthony prayed fervently that it would be found and both it and the novice returned.

O Holy St. Anthony, gentlest of Saints, your love for God and Charity for His creatures, made you worthy, when on earth, to possess miraculous powers. Encouraged by this thought, I implore you to obtain for me (request). O gentle and loving St. Anthony, whose heart was ever full of human sympathy, whisper my petition into the ears of the sweet Infant Jesus, who loved to be folded in your arms; and the gratitude of my heart will ever be yours. Amen.

Pentecostal Resolutions

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

Since God is the fullness of all that is Good and good always shares itself, God is pleased to make himself known and to share himself. This is what the Holy Spirit accomplishes in the Church. In response we must absolutely obey the will of God as it becomes known. We should refer every action to God. We should be quick to invoke the Holy Spirit in all our actions.

And every setback, sadness, listlessness, every obstacle, both internal and external, is an opportunity that God favors to send to us so we might deserve more merit. I want to take advantage of every opportunity. All things we should do with great will.

brunolanteri.org

June 2, 2019 – Seventh Sunday of Easter

The Friends of God: St. Charles Lwanga

Patron of: African Catholic Youth Action, Converts

Feast Day: June 3

Charles was Ugandan and was a convert to the faith. Charles and his companions served in the court of the king of Buganda in southern Uganda in the late 19th century. The king demanded that his male servants satisfy his lusts. Charles steadfastly refused to participate, thus upholding the virtue of chastity and his own dignity. As a result the king had Charles and his companions tortured and burned alive. The courageous martyr is a witness to truth speaking to power.

Eternal Father, I wish to honor St Charles Lwanga and Companions and I give You thanks for all the graces You have bestowed on them. I ask You to please increase grace in my soul through the merits of these saints, and I commit the end of my life to them by this special prayer, so that by virtue of Your goodness and promise, St Charles Lwanga and Companions might be my advocates and provide whatever is needed at that hour. Amen.

On Prayer

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

It is thus necessary that prayer, which lifts up man and raises him from his lowliness, remove his weakness, and make him perceive that through it he can do all things— he feels that he can do nothing in the way of salvation and, by removing his weakness, and by communicating to him all the power of doing good, all the vices of his heart are opposed, since man abandoned to himself would be a fountain of corruption and deficiency.

It belongs therefore to the singular providence of God, advantageous to man, glorious to God, that we not be assured of obtaining graces except through prayer, so that man increases in gratitude. Thereby, man has the merit, and God the glory

June 2, 2019 – Seventh Sunday of Easter

The Friends of God: St. Charles Lwanga

Patron of: African Catholic Youth Action, Converts

Feast Day: June 3

Charles was Ugandan and was a convert to the faith. Charles and his companions served in the court of the king of Buganda in southern Uganda in the late 19th century. The king demanded that his male servants satisfy his lusts. Charles steadfastly refused to participate, thus upholding the virtue of chastity and his own dignity. As a result the king had Charles and his companions tortured and burned alive. The courageous martyr is a witness to truth speaking to power.

Eternal Father, I wish to honor St Charles Lwanga and Companions and I give You thanks for all the graces You have bestowed on them. I ask You to please increase grace in my soul through the merits of these saints, and I commit the end of my life to them by this special prayer, so that by virtue of Your goodness and promise, St Charles Lwanga and Companions might be my advocates and provide whatever is needed at that hour. Amen.

Why Do We Do That? Holy Days of Obligation

We have just concluded May, which is observed as a month of Mary in the Church. In June, the Church focuses its devotion onto the Sacred Heart of Jesus, the holy symbol of divine love for us.

The Divine Love has been a focus of the Church from the very beginning. St. John is recorded in his Gospel as resting his head on the bosom of Christ at the Last Supper. It is John who would write in his First Letter that God is love. Meditation on the wound in the side of Christ has also been a devotion for centuries. But it wasn’t until the 17th century that a special devotion with particular spiritual activities was developed to focus on the Divine Love specifically symbolized in the human heart of Jesus. It was in 1673 and 1674 that Jesus began appearing to St. Margaret Mary Alacoque and requested special devotion to his Sacred Heart. It was beginning in this time that frequent Holy Communion began to be practiced in response to the request of Jesus that we honor his Sacred Heart in this way. The visions of Margaret Mary concerning the Sacred Heart occurred in June of 1674.

Catechesis: At the Right Hand of God

In the first reading from the Acts of the Apostles we read the account of the martyrdom of St. Stephen. Stephen cries out that he sees a vision of heaven opened up and the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God. Stephen is referencing psalm 110:

The LORD says to my lord:

“Sit at my right hand,

while I make your enemies your footstool.”

The scepter of your might:

the LORD extends your strong scepter from Zion.

Have dominion over your enemies!

Yours is princely power from the day of your birth.

In holy splendor before the daystar,

like dew I begot you.

The LORD has sworn and will not waver:

“You are a priest forever in the manner of

Melchizedek. (Psalm 110)

The reason the mob reacts in rage and stones
Stephen is because he is claiming that Jesus is the fulfillment of this psalm. It is Jesus who sits at the right hand of God. It is Jesus whom Stephen says is “my lord.” It is Jesus who is a priest forever and therefore the center of true worship instead of the Temple. For these claims Stephen is martyred.

Lectio Divina

“Behold, I am coming soon. ” (Revelation 22)

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? How do we listen to Jesus? What would it mean for you to listen more? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. What might the Lord be telling you at this time of your life? Can you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way: Marana’ tha

“Come, Lord Jesus.” This phrase (Marana’ tha in Aramaic) appears twice in the New Testament and is an appeal for the ultimate for the fulfillment of
history. It has also been traditionally used as a method for deep prayer in the monastic tradition. Beginning with the ancient Christian monk, John Cassian, the phrase “Come, Lord Jesus” has been used to peacefully center oneself to begin contemplative prayer. What makes this prayer different from mantras in other religions is that it is addressed away from oneself and to the Lord. Mantras are very often self-focused. The marana ‘tha prayer expresses the longing of the heart for Christ to make his dwelling within us.

Praying these words deeply, in rhythm with ones breathing, expresses confidence in Jesus to come and bring righteous and merciful judgment. It expresses our humble acknowledgment that we are under the Lordship of Jesus and joyfully so. It also manifests the intimate nature of our relationship with the Lord as we utter his holy name, the name that makes
demons tremble with fear.

On Prayer

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

It is thus necessary that prayer, which lifts up man and raises him from his lowliness, remove his weakness, and make him perceive that through it he can do all things— he feels that he can do nothing in the way of salvation and, by removing his weakness, and by communicating to him all the power of doing good, all the vices of his heart are opposed, since man abandoned to himself would be a fountain of corruption and deficiency.

It belongs therefore to the singular providence of God, advantageous to man, glorious to God, that we not be assured of obtaining graces except through prayer, so that man increases in gratitude. Thereby, man has the merit, and God the glory.

brunolanteri.org

Read this Sunday’s Reflection

May 26, 2019 – Sixth Sunday of Easter

Prayer Before Mass

My God, I offer you this holy sacrifice to recognize, honor and glorify your infinite greatness and the supreme dominion which, as the first principle and last end, you have above all created things. I give you this homage for all those who still do not know you or do not want to recognize you.

I offer this too in thanksgiving for the benefits that I and all the world have received and will receive from your infinite goodness; in satisfaction for my sins and those of the whole world; to implore the graces that are necessary for my eternal salvation and for all mankind. Oh, my God, I offer to you the merits of Jesus Christ; grant me at this Holy Mass a profound adoration.

My God, my Creator, I implore you to grant me the grace of final perseverance, I know by faith that I do not deserve it, nor can I deserve it, but your Divine Son deserves it for me with so many praises, with so many wounds he shows you in his Most Holy Body, on behalf of my wounded love. Amen.

Venerable Bruno Lanteri

Why Do We Do That? Holy Days of Obligation

This coming Thursday, May 30, is Ascension Thursday. In the Archdiocese of Boston, it is a holy day of obligation. In most dioceses of the country, The Ascension of Our Lord is transferred from Thursday to the following Sunday. Boston, Philadelphia, New York, Newark and Omaha celebrate the original Thursday. On this day, we remember that Christ ascended with his human nature into heaven 40 days after his resurrection. Christ is both God and man and he sits at the right hand of the Father, which means he has taken our humanity with him. There is a human being sitting in glory in heaven with the Father. That is the destiny of every human being who remains in the love of Christ. It is a tremendous mystery that a human should sit in glory in the presence of God.

This is why we must celebrate these days with great solemnity. Holy Days of Obligation recall events of such great importance to salvation that it is obligatory for us to remember them. To forget something of such importance would be sinful. This is the reason for these obligatory days.

Ascension Thursday Schedule

Reflection on the Feast of the Ascension of the Lord

Catechesis: Ecumenical Councils

In this week’s first reading form the Acts of the Apostles, we hear about what tradition often considers the first Ecumenical Council. Officially, the Council of Nicaea was the first formally convoked Ecumenical Council but the Council of Jerusalem, described in Acts 15, contains all the elements of what an Ecumenical Council would come to be.

Ecumenical is a word that refers to the universal nature of the Church. An Ecumenical Council would be a gathering of bishops from the whole world to discuss matters of great importance that affect the entire universal Church. Local councils would only address issues relevant to the local Church. The Council of Jerusalem was a gathering of the Apostles with other leaders of the early Church to discuss whether circumcision and the Law of Moses had to be followed by Christians. Clearly this was a matter effecting the universal Church and so would qualify as what would later be known as an Ecumenical Council.

It is notable that the decision reached by the Council in Jerusalem was made in the name of the Holy Spirit. The Church speaks in the name of God and claims the authority to teach definitively on matters of faith and morals. There have been 21 Ecumenical Councils in history, Vatican II being the most recent.

Lectio Divina

“Whoever loves me will keep my word, and my Father will love him, and we will come to him and make our dwelling with him ” (John 14:23)

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? How do we listen to Jesus? What would it mean for you to listen more? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. What might the Lord be telling you at this time of your life? Can you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way: Rogation Days

For centuries in Catholic tradition the Church celebrated Rogation Days for the Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday before Ascension Thursday. These days of prayer, procession and even fasting were meant to call upon God’s mercy to stem the ferocity of nature. Certainly we celebrate the beauty of nature on display during Spring but we must also respect the awesome power of the natural world to cause terrible upheaval in our lives. Earthquakes, floods, fires and many other natural disasters strike at any time. We are humbled by the forces at work in the natural world.

We, however, in our humility and spiritual poverty, call upon the mercy of God to keep natural disasters at bay and bless our gardens, plants and fields.

The tradition is to process around your property with holy water to bless the grounds. You may also recite the litany of saints while processing.

Rogation Day Prayers

The Friends of God: St. Joan of Arc

Patron of: Soldiers, France

Feast Day: May 30

Joan was a peasant girl of the 15th century. At age 13 she claimed to receive messages from Saints Michael, Catherine and Margaret telling her to lead France to victory over England. Following these visions, she proved herself worthy to the French court and began to lead the French Army in battle against the English. The Army became greatly successful when she rode with them. She only carried a banner, never a sword. Eventually she was captured in battle by Burgundians and sold to the English who accused her of heresy and witchcraft. She was found guilty at trial and burned at the stake in 1431.

Saint Joan of Arc, patron of France, I ask you now to fight this battle with me by prayer, just as you led your troops to victory in battle.  You who were filled with the Holy Spirit and chosen by God, help me this day. Grant me by your
divine and powerful intercession, the courage and strength I need to endure this constant fight.  Oh St. Joan, help me to be victorious in the tasks God presents to me. Amen.

On Prayer

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

Think, feel, reason in a manner worthy of God: ‘Think of the Lord in a spirit of goodness.” That is, convince yourself of his serious will to pardon us, help us, save us. Think frequently of the Lord and thank him for the goods that we possess and hope to possess. For example, for the great good, namely the grace of God, that we possess and for the Paradise that we hope for. Let us go often to take from the Angels and Blessed above, an air of joyfulness, thinking that from now on we are citizens of Heaven and fortifying ourselves in Christian hope. Think of the merits connected with each good action and to the communion of saints. Likewise, it is helpful to act with a holy freedom of the spirit: despising every fear that is not founded on offending God, and not waiting for tomorrow to do that which can be done today.

brunolanteri.org

May 19, 2019 – Fifth Sunday of Easter

The Friends of God: St. Rita of Cascia

Patron of: Difficult Marriages, Parents, Impossible Cases

Feast Day: May 22

Rita was born at the end of the 14th century in central Italy. She was know from a young age to be of great piety and she asked her parents for permission to enter into a convent. Her parents refused and arranged for her to be married to a very belligerent man at a very young age. Her husband Paolo treated her very badly. He was verbally, emotionally and physically abusive and he committed adultery on many occasions. Through her patience, long-suffering and prayer, Rita began to convert her husband. He was ultimately killed by his rivals. Rita’s sons then followed in their father’s footsteps but she prayed that God would take them before they committed mortal sin. They died before they could avenge their father.
St. Rita is a model of extraordinary patience, love and holiness. She is not necessarily a model for how battered women should live their life today. She prayed to suffer as Jesus did and was given a wound in the forehead to share His crown of thorns.

Oration to the Saint of the Impossible

O excellent St. Rita, worker of miracles, from thy sanctuary in Cascia, where in all thy beauty thou sleepest in peace, where thy relics exhale breaths of paradise, turn thy merciful eyes on me who suffer and weep!

Thou seest my poor bleeding heart surrounded by thorns Thou seest, O dear Saint, that my eyes have no more tears to shed, so much have I wept! Weary and discouraged as I am, I feel the very prayers dying on my lips.

Must I thus despair in this crisis of my life? O come, St. Rita, come to my aid and help me. Art thou not called the Saint of the Impossible, Advocate to those in despair? Then honor thy name, procuring for me from God the favor that I ask.

[Here ask the favor you wish to obtain.]

Everyone praises thy glories, everyone tells of the most amazing miracles performed through thee, must I alone be disappointed because thou hast not heard me? Ah no! Pray then pray for me to thy sweet Lord Jesus that He be moved to pity by my troubles and that, through thee, O good St. Rita, I may obtain what my heart so fervently desires.

(Pray the Our Father, Hail Mary, Glory be to the Father, three times.)

Those wishing to offer a novena should repeat this prayer for nine days.

Why Do We Do That? Liturgy

Liturgy is a originally a Greek term that originates in ancient Athens. It was any official public service performed by the public. It was the duty of Athenian citizens to perform public service in some form, so they were involved in liturgy. The term is also used in the Greek bibles to described the official worship performed by priests in the Temple. The Letter to the Hebrews speaks of a “better liturgy” with Christ. Liturgy then is the term used by the Church to describe any official public religious service of God and one another.

There are public prayers and there are private prayers. When you pray the rosary, even if it is done in public with a group, it is really a private devotion. The prayers of the rosary are not legally established; they are known from tradition. The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass however is the supreme, official, public service in honor of God. It is also a service to one another. Publicly witnessing to our faith in Jesus Christ helps to bolster the faith and hope of others. We pray for one another and we publicly declare our communion in Christ with one another.

Catechesis: A New Earth

The Book of Revelation promises not only a new heaven but a new earth as well. What could this mean? The typical person who believes in heaven may think that the point of everything is to die on earth only to wake up “in heaven.” The idea being that we leave the earth behind or that it is ultimately doomed to destruction. That doesn’t appear to be God’s vision according to Revelation.

We must recall that the world, the universe, it is all of God’s creation and according to Genesis, he found it all very good. While the “earth” fell away from God through our rebellion, God himself has never abandoned it; in fact, he redeems it in Christ. What we know from Scripture is that all things will be transformed. God’s good creation will not come to ultimate ruin. Does this mean we will have an earth like it is now except much better where everyone is kind to one another. That is not what transformation will mean. While we cannot ultimately know what this new heaven and earth will be like, we do know that it will be an experience of having been totally renewed with God completely at the center of our lives. He will be our everything!

Lectio Divina

“Behold, I make all things new. ” — Revelation 21:5

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able tobidentify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? How do we listen to Jesus? What would it mean for you to listen more? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. What might the Lord be telling you at this time of your life? Can you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way: A Marian Garden

One long-time tradition in the Church during the month of May is the Mary Garden. It originates with the monasteries from the 7th century that created gardens on their grounds with a statue of Our Lady at the center.  Plants and flowers associated with Mary include laurel trees, strawberries, lady slippers, lilies of the valley, peonies, violets, irises and roses. Marigold is a flower traditionally given to our Lady. The name means Mary’s gold as they were considered a replacement for god coins.

These gardens provide an opportunity for quiet contemplation and for celebrating the gift of life.

Blessing of a Marian Garden

O almighty everlasting God we beseech thee to bless these flowers…that there may be in them goodness, virtue, tranquility, peace, victory, abundance of good things, the plenitude of blessing, thanksgiving to God the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost, and a most pleasing commemoration of the glorious Mother of God—that they may put forth an odor of virtue and sweetness. Amen.

Thoughts on the Virgin Mary

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

The Virgin Mary was crowned in heaven as daughter, as mother, and as spouse, with the threefold crown of wisdom, power, and goodness. When we pray we share in her wisdom; when we conquer ourselves we share in her power; when we act with charity, warmth and openness toward our neighbor we imitate her goodness.

I want a tender love for the Virgin Mary and confidence in her as a son has in his mother. I will try to spread devotion to the Virgin Mary whenever there is an opportunity.

O Virgin immaculately conceived, put into my heart those things of your Son which are most pleasing to him.

May 12, 2019 – Fourth Sunday of Easter

A Blessing for Mothers

Intercessions

  • For our mothers, who have given us life and love, that we may show them reverence and love, we pray to the Lord.
  • For mothers who have lost a child through death, that their faith may give them hope, and their
    family and friends support and console them, we pray to the Lord.
  • For mothers who have died, that God may bring them into the joy of his kingdom, we pray to the Lord.

Prayer

Loving God,
we thank you for the love of the mothers you have given us, Whose love is so precious that it can never be measured, whose patience seems to have no end.
May we see your loving hand behind them and
guiding them. We pray for those mothers who fear
they will run out of love or time or patience.
We ask you to bless them with your own special love.
We ask this in the name of Jesus, our brother. Amen.

Why Do We Do That? Use of the Word Easter

The principal feast and season of the entire year is the Resurrection of the Lord. We call this feast and the season Easter, yet it no where appears in the
Bible. Easter is derived from Old German, referencing the name of a pagan German goddess. The Church adopted and “baptized” the name to make it a reference to the greatest event in human history.

Eoster (Easter in English) was considered the goddess of the rising sun and the light of spring. Because life begins anew in the Spring and the light remains for longer days, the Church taught that Christ is the true rising light and his resurrection is the primary New Life.

The use of the word Easter for our principal feast is a reminder that the Church did not seek to destroy the cultures that existed prior to Christianity; rather, the Church seeks to demonstrate how every authentic human desire and celebration is realized perfectly in the life of Jesus Christ.

Catechesis: Heaven

“God will wipe away every tear from their eyes.” This very beautiful description of heaven is by John in his Book of Revelation. Those who receive salvation in Christ and enter the eternal choir of praise are those “who have survived the time of great distress; they have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.” They have already shed many tears on their earthly exile and pilgrimage of return to God. They have survived the stresses of life by seeking refuge in Christ and immersing themselves in his salvific blood.

It is easy to think of heaven as a “place” we go to after death. Really, it is a state of being. It is a state of being at one with the Lord, united in will and mind, desiring everything he desires and doing everything he would do. This cannot be accomplished by us through our own power. Ultimately, heaven is a gift of grace from God through Christ in the Holy Spirit. This grace enables us to act as he acted in this life; thus, doing so we become what he is and “where” he is.

Lectio Divina

“My sheep hear my voice. ” — John 10:27

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able tobidentify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? How do we listen to Jesus? What would it mean for you to listen more? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. What might the Lord be telling you at this time of your life? Can you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Friends of God: St. Julian of Norwich

Patron of: Anxious People

Feast Day: May 13

Julian was an English contemplative who withdrew from the world to seek the divine love without being impeded. She prayed, did penance and sewed clothing for the poor. She is best known for her books concerning 16 visions she had of Jesus titled Revelations of Divine Love. In it, Julian wrote that, after her visions of the Divine Love, she could confidently say that all things will be well in the end.

In you, Father all-mighty, we have our preservation and our bliss. In you, Christ, we have our restoring and our saving. You are our mother, brother, and Saviour. In you, our Lord the Holy Spirit, is marvellous and plenteous grace. You are our clothing; for love you wrap us and embrace us. You are our maker, our lover, our keeper. Teach us to believe that by your grace all shall be well, and all shall be well, and all manner of things shall be well. Amen

Means of Acquiring Joy

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary
Born May 12, 1759

I think that it is for some purpose that God has placed me in full liberty. I think of the special conduct, the providence of God for me in the past, for which I cannot thank him enough—namely, a greater inclination and duty to consecrate myself totally, myself and all my belongings, to the service of God so as to bind myself more closely to him, and grow in merit. I would like to take a vow concerning my service.

Bruno Lanteri with the Madonna and child

May 5, 2019 – Third Sunday of Easter

Prayer Before Mass

My God I offer you this holy sacrifice to recognize, honor and glorify your infinite greatness and the supreme dominion which, as the first principle and last end, you have above all created things. I give you this homage for all those who still do not know or do not want to recognize you in thanksgiving for the benefits that I and all the world have received and will receive from your infinite goodness, in satisfaction of my sins and of the whole world, to implore the graces that are necessary for my eternal salvation and for all mankind. Oh, my God, I offer to you the merits of Jesus Christ; grant me at this Holy Mass a profound adoration.

My God, my Creator, I implore you to grant me the grace of final perseverance, I know by faith that I do not deserve it, nor can I deserve it, but your Divine Son deserves it for me with so many praises and with so many wounds which he shows you in his Most Holy Body on behalf of my wounded love. Amen.

Venerable Bruno Lanteri

Why Do We Do That? Sunday

The celebration of the Lord’s Day on Sunday is really the weekly celebration of Easter. Every Sunday of the year is a remembrance of Easter, which is the most important event in history. Clearly Easter Sunday is a special day that commemorates the resurrection of the Lord but every Sunday is meant to be a weekly recognition of Christ’s defeat of death.

This is why Sunday must be kept as a day of obligation every week. It is the day that we come together as the family of God to acknowledge publicly that we have been transferred into God’s Kingdom out from the kingdoms of the world. Each Sunday is a sacrament of Easter. Without the weekly commitment to the Sunday Eucharist we would swallowed whole by the secular world.

To keep this sacramental sense of each Sunday as Easter we have to be clear that Sunday is the first day of the week. We tend to think of it as the last day of the week and part of the “weekend.” It is actually the first day of the week and sets the tone for the rest of the week to follow. Jesus is risen!

Catechesis: The Paschal Candle

One of the most pronounced symbols of the Easter season is the large Paschal Candle. It is lit for the first time at the Easter Vigil and all of the other candles are lit from that one. This candle is a symbol of Christ, the Light of the World.

It was a custom in the early Church to hold vigil prayer services prior to each Sunday. The light of the candle scattered the darkness just as Christ scatters the darkness of sin and death.

On the Paschal Candle there are five pieces of incense representing the five wound of Christ. The Greek letters alpha and omega are also traced on the candle for Christ who is the beginning and end of all things. Finally, the current year is placed on the candle to manifest the year of grace of our Lord. For all 50 days of the Easter season the Paschal candle remains near the altar or ambo. After Pentecost the candle is brought out for baptisms and funerals once again to symbolize the

Lectio Divina

“We must obey God rather than men” — Acts 5

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able tobidentify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? How do we listen to Jesus? What would it mean for you to listen more? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. What might the Lord be telling you at this time of your life? Can you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way: The Paschal Greeting

One way Christians have traditionally identified themselves to one another is through the Paschal Greeting. It is still in use in the Eastern Church but not much practiced anymore in the West.

In Luke chapter 24 the disciples, after seeing Jesus resurrected, gather together and proclaim, “The Lord is risen indeed.” This was adopted by the first Christians as a means of greeting. In place of “hello,” Christians would say, “The Lord (or Christ) is risen!” The response would be “Truly, he is risen.”

This is a venerable practice and one that could prove quite beneficial today in a time when Christians need to support one another in the marketplace.

The Latin phrase: Christus resurrexit! Resurrexit vere!

The Friends of God: St. John of Avila

Patron of: Priests of Spain

Feast Day: May 10

John of Avila was a priest of immense significance in the 16th century. He was a spiritual director to several Spanish saints including Teresa of Avila, John of the Cross, Francis Borgia and Peter of Alcantara. He was renowned for his learning and mystical preaching. John is also one of the 36 Doctors of the Church, mostly for his original contributions to the understanding of the spirituality of priests.

Almighty and eternal God, who gave your holy Church blessed John of Avila as Doctor, grant that what he taught when moved by the divine Spirit may always stay firm in our hearts; and, as by your gift we embrace him as our patron, may we also have him as our defender to entreat your mercy. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

Means of Acquiring Joy

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

Think, feel, reason in a manner worthy of God: ‘Think of the Lord in a spirit of goodness.” That is, convince yourself of his serious will to pardon us, help us, save us. Think frequently of the Lord and thank him for the goods that we possess and hope to possess. For example, for the great good, namely the grace of God, that we possess and for the Paradise that we hope for. Let us go often to take from the Angels and Blessed above, an air of joyfulness, thinking that from now on we are citizens of Heaven and fortifying ourselves in Christian hope. Think of the merits connected with each good action and to the communion of saints. Likewise, it is helpful to act with a holy freedom of the spirit: despising every fear that is not founded on offending God, and not waiting for tomorrow to do that which can be done today.

April 28, 2019 – Divine Mercy Sunday

Why Do We Do That? Divine Mercy Sunday

“The Feast of Mercy emerged from my very depths of tenderness. It is my desire that it solemnly be celebrated on the first Sunday after Easter. Mankind will not have peace until it turns to the fount of My Mercy.” These words of Jesus to St. Maria Faustina Kowalska were spoken on April 28, 1935. Jesus desires greatly that we should celebrate with great devotion the divine mercy. St. Faustina records in her diary, “Divine Mercy in My Soul,” that Jesus told her that souls are perishing because they do not trust in Christ’s merciful love. Jesus proclaimed to St. Faustina that every person who receives communion and goes to confession on Divine Mercy Sunday and obtains the indulgence will receive complete pardon from all their sins.

St. Faustina promoted the divine mercy and the idea of a Feast of Divine Mercy. On April 30, 2000 Pope St. John Paul II canonized Faustina and on the same day he instituted the Feast of the Divine Mercy on the second Sunday of Easter in fulfillment of St. Faustina’s mission received from Christ himself.

Catechesis: Indulgences

Divine Mercy Sunday is one splendid opportunity to receive a plenary indulgence from the Church. An indulgence is a spiritual favor offered by the Church in recognition of an act of piety. There are many spiritual acts that can be performed with indulgences attached to them. Reading the Bible for 15 minutes is one. Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament is another. Celebrating the Divine Mercy on the second Sunday of Easter is another. The effect of these acts is to remove any damage done to the soul from past sins.

A partial indulgence grants a partial expunging of the effects of past sins that would require purgation after death. A plenary indulgence removes all damage done by past sins. These indulgences may also be obtained for the sake of dead loved ones but not for any other living person besides oneself. To obtain a plenary indulgence requires that one be completely detached from any desire for sin, to receive holy communion on the day of the act, to go to confession within 20 days before or after the indulgence act, and to pray for the Pope on the same day as the indulgence act. A partial indulgence is granted for the same act if it is done with at least a contrite heart.

Lectio Divina

“His mercy endures forever” — Psalm 118

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able tobidentify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? How do we listen to Jesus? What would it mean for you to listen more? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. What might the Lord be telling you at this time of your life? Can you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way: Divine Mercy Sunday Indulgence

To obtain the plenary indulgence for Divine Mercy Sunday requires one to participate in a devout celebration of the Feast at some Church or Chapel. You must receive Holy Communion on the day of the Feast. You must make a good confession within 20 days before or after Divine Mercy Sunday. You must be completely detached from all sin and you must pray for the Pope in some way. Finally, an Our Father and the Creed must be recited in the presence of the Blessed Sacrament adding these words at the end: “Merciful Jesus, I trust in you.”

A partial indulgence is received for Divine Mercy Sunday just for fulfilling the last part of the plenary indulgence act provided it is done with a contrite heart.

Those who are too sick to go to Church may also receive the plenary indulgence for fulfilling the last part mentioned above with the understanding that they would fulfill the sacramental requirements as soon as possible.

The Friends of God: St. Athanasius

Patron of: Theologians, Faithful Christians

Feast Day: May 2

Athanasius was known as the great champion of orthodoxy in the 4th century as he defended the divinity of Christ against the ancient heresy of Arianism. For his firm efforts Athanasius was exiled from his diocese 5 times in his life as a bishop, often hiding to save himself from arrest or worse. He wrote and preached passionately to preserve the Apostolic faith in the divine Sonship of Jesus.

Father,
you raised up Saint Athanasius
to be an outstanding defender
of the truth of Christ’s divinity.
By his teaching and protection may we grow in your knowledge and love.
Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

On Divine Mercy

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

Believe as a matter of faith itself that God (as St. Paul says) is faithful, and will not permit a heavier temptation than that which I can bear, and that if, with one hand he permits the temptation, with the other he helps us, so that when the temptation is all the stronger, I will thank him that he makes me share in that little bit of the cross, and, examining what it is that God seeks from me by the temptation, I will find that he wishes to compel me to give myself to the arms of his mercy, and to know by experience how much I can and should rely on his riches.

The Image of the Divine Mercy

April 21, 2019 – Easter Sunday

Why Do We Do That? Asperges

During the Easter season, it is common to see a baptismal font in the sanctuary. In parishes, the font is typically used to baptize converts during the Easter Vigil. It is also used to remind us all of the gift of our baptism — a gift won for us by Christ.

Usually, at the beginning of Mass we acknowledge our sinfulness and pray, “Lord, have mercy; Christ, have mercy.” At Easter, this rite is often replaced by the the Aspereges Rite. For this, the celebrant walks through the congregation and sprinkles them with water from the baptismal font in the sanctuary. This is done as a reminder of the gift of baptism and of the vows we take at that baptism. Baptism is a powerful sacrament. It makes us children of God and destroys original sin and, in the case of older children or adults, eliminates all sins ever committed by the person. So, an adult who is baptized at the Easter Vigil will not have to go to confession for any sins committed prior to baptism. With asperges we are able to rekindle the joy of being children of God and the immense gift that Jesus has bestowed upon us in making the forgiveness of sins so simple.

Catechesis: Resurrected Body

The description of events after the resurrection provide important details for us to understand elements of a resurrected body.

Jesus appears in his own body; the same body he had prior to death. We know this because the gospels tell us that he still bears the marks of crucifixion. He also eats fish with his disciples which demonstrates the physicality of his body. The resurrection does not turn us into ghosts. Jesus possesses the same body as before but now it is within the divine realm, not of earth. Being completely of God, Jesus is able to command his body to be where he wants it to be and when he wants it to be there, as we hear that he appears suddenly and disappears. So, the resurrected body is not constrained by time and space as on earth.

The resurrected body is a spiritualized body. It is still physical but is completely under the power of the spirit and will of the person, a will in total union with God. This explains how Jesus could appear in such a way as to look like a gardener or any other stranger.

Lectio Divina

“If then you were raised with Christ, seek what is above.”  — Colossians 3

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able tobidentify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? How do we listen to Jesus? What would it mean for you to listen more? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. What might the Lord be telling you at this time of your life? Can you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way: Easter Eggs

Easter Eggs have been a long tradition in many Christian lands around the world. For Christians in medieval Europe, breaking open a boiled egg was symbolic of Christ breaking open the tomb into life. Eggs were also traditionally one of the foods from which the faithful would abstain during Lent, so many Christians would hard-boil the eggs during Lent and store them for later; thus, Easter would be a time to feast with them. The coloring of Easter eggs began among Syrian Christians who would dye the eggs red as a symbol of the blood of Christ shed for our
salvation.

Blessing Prayer for Easter Eggs

We beseech thee, O Lord,
to bestow thy benign blessing upon these eggs,
to make them a wholesome food for thy faithful,
who gratefully partake of them
in honor of the Resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ. Amen.

The Friends of God: St. Mark

Patron of: Venice, Barristers

Feast Day: April 25

St. Mark is the writer of the first Gospel and an early disciple of Jesus. He was not one of the apostles but he was very closely associated with Saints Pete and Paul as he is mentioned by both in their letters. Mark is considered the founder of the Church in Alexandria, Egypt, which was one of the earliest and greatest dioceses. His body was originally entombed in Alexandria but in the early 9th century it was stolen and taken to Venice where it remains to this day in the Basilica of St. Mark in the Piazza San Marco. His tomb is behind the main altar in the Basilica and can still be visited to this day.

O Glorious St Mark, through the grace of God
our Father, you became a great Evangelist, preaching
the Good News of Christ.

May you help us to know Him
well, so that we may faithfully live our lives
as followers of Christ. Amen.

On the Pius Practices for Easter

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

  1. Exercising Joy with Jesus risen, with the Virgin Mary, with the
    Angels, with the Magdalene, with St. Peter, with the disciples
    of Emmaus and with the Apostles.
  2. Hope for spiritual and corporal goods and remedies for all ills.
  3. Hope for the forgiveness of sins.
  4. Hope for aid to fight.
  5. Hope for eternal life.
  6. Rejoice for any weddings

April 14, 2019 – Palm Sunday

Why Do We Do That? Palms

We begin Holy Week with Palm Sunday, also referred to as Passion Sunday. This commemorates the day Jesus entered into Jerusalem for the final time. He was greeted with cries of “Hosanna!” Hosanna means “save now.” Those who greeted Jesus were most likely expecting a military savior who would expel the Romans from Jerusalem by force, the way David had originally taken the city many centuries earlier.

Palms were a symbol of well-being and victory. In the Book of Kings it mentions that Solomon had palm branches carved into the walls of the Temple. Throwing palms down before Jesus was a recognition of his kingship; but the people failed to recognize the nature of his kingship.

As we now memorialize the entrance of Jesus into Jerusalem and the final week of his mission we must challenge ourselves not to make the same mistake as was made originally. Jesus has not come to grant our every wish but to save us from some of those wishes. Today we cry, “Jesus, save us from the corruption of sin.”

Catechesis: Psalm 22

My God, my God, why have you abandoned me? These words were uttered by Jesus as he died on the cross. He was quoting Psalm 22 to demonstrate that the psalm is in fact about him. All the psalms really point to Jesus. It is the key to understanding the book of the Church’s prayer. When we read psalms, we should do so with an understanding that they, in many ways, present the voice of Jesus or point to his life.

From the viewpoint of Christ, Psalm 22 is the description of the crucifixion. It also expresses the voice of all humanity summed up in Christ. Who among us has not cried out in anguish to God that we feel abandonment? Jesus then expresses what every human being experiences: our alienation from God as a result of sin. Even in this anguish, though, the Psalm expresses unwavering hope in God. Jesus, as we know, stays true to the Father to the end. In the Psalm and in the sacrifice of Jesus we find expressed the only answer to feeling distance and separation from God. Distance is an opportunity to cross the gap between God and us and make of ourselves a gift to him again. That is what Jesus does on the cross. He felt the distance but he crosses it by making his last moment of mortal life a gift to the Father. And the gift is returned in resurrection.

Lectio Divina

“He emptied himself, taking the form of a slave.” — Philippians 2:7

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able tobidentify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? How do we listen to Jesus? What would it mean for you to listen more? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. What might the Lord be telling you at this time of your life? Can you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way: Holy Week

Holy Week is the most important week of the liturgical year. This is the culmination of the mission of Jesus and the whole purpose for which he was born.

The week begins with the commemoration of his entrance into Jerusalem with Palm Sunday. On Tuesday, most dioceses of the country celebrate the Chrism Mass. The priests of the diocese join together with the bishop to renew their commitment to the priesthood. During the Mass, the bishop consecrates all the oils that will be used in the diocese throughout the coming year including the Oil of Catechumens, the Oil of the Sick and the Chrism Oil used for Confirmations and ordinations to the priesthood and episcopacy. Spy Wednesday is the day we recall the betrayal of Judas. Holy Thursday celebrates the institution of the Eucharist and the priesthood at the Last Supper. Good Friday commemorates the saving death of Jesus. On Saturday we remember the day Jesus remained silent in the tomb. And of course the Easter Vigil on Saturday evening is the Mass of all Masses as we celebrate Christ’s defeat of death. It is the night when neophytes receive their Christian Initiation and become members of the Body of Christ.

The Friends of God: St. Bernadette

Patron of Poverty, Illness and the Ridiculed

Feast Day: April 16

Bernadette Soubirous was the oldest of nine children born in poverty in Lourdes, France. All her life she suffered from poor health. In 1858, at age 14, Bernadette received an apparition of Our Lady. The apparitions totaled 18 in number. Our Lady revealed herself to Bernadette as the Immaculate Conception. News of the apparitions created a firestorm in the country, involving even government authorities. Since Bernadette’s visions and the opening of the Shrine at Lourdes, 69 confirmed miraculous cures have taken place. Bernadette took vows with the Sisters of Charity till her death at age 35.

BERNADETTE, pure and simple child, you who were privileged to behold the beauty of Mary Immaculate and to be the recipient of her confidence eighteen times at Lourdes; you who did desire from then on to hide yourself in the cloister of Nevers and there live and die as a victim of sinners, obtain for us that spirit of purity, which will lead us also to the glorious vision of God and of Mary in Heaven. Amen.

On the Love of God

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

God loves me with all the Creatures that are here on earth and in Heaven, since he has created all of them. And he uses them for me, and even serves me himself in all things.

He loves me with his whole self,because he uses all his Perfections for me, and all three Divine Persons concern themselves with me.

God loves me as himself, because the Eternal Father already gave me his Only Son and the Holy Spirit, who loves me as himself, and he reserves himself still in order to give himself to me in Heaven.

He loves me in a certain sense more than himself, since I can say that God sacrificed himself and died for me. That led St. Thomas Aquinas to say that if man had been the God of God, he could not have asked for more.

April 7, 2019 – Fifth Sunday of Lent

Why Do We Do That? The Veiling of the Images

One of the most striking times in the Church is the last two weeks of Lent. Traditionally, this is known as Passiontide as the focus of the liturgy is on the weight of the passion of Christ which is fast approaching. Perhaps the most dramatic reminder of the tone of these weeks is the veiling with violet cloth of the images in the Church. Those statues, crucifixes and paintings that provide us with so much comfort and encouragement are taken from us for the final days of the Lenten season. As we are creatures of sense, these types of actions generate in us, in a tangible way, the drama of the Lord’s passion.

It can be easy to take for granted the graces that are available to us. Veiling the images in the Church remind us that we have grace due to the sacrificial work of Christ. His obedience to the Father to the point of suffering and death is what makes us free to live in the grace of God.

Entrance into Passiontide in an invitation to unveil our hearts to the healing light of God’s mercy.

Catechesis: Pursuit of the Goal

St. Paul’s Letter to the Philippians in one of the greatest treasures of the New Testament. In chapter two, we learn of the self-emptying of Christ: his stripping himself of glory and coming in the likeness of a slave to save us. In chapter three, we hear Paul’s passionate reminder to us that to know Christ Jesus makes is worth the loss of everything that has come before it. That we come to righteousness not through works of the law but through faith in Jesus.

In the third chapter, Paul also tells us that sharing in Christ’s sufferings through faith, hope and love opens up for us the power of his resurrection. But, Paul reminds us, we have not yet taken possession of this resurrection. We must continue as long as we are in this life the pursuit of our upward calling. We are redeemed but not yet saved. Some of our Protestant brethren believe that once you have professed faith in Christ you are saved. Paul’s inspired words inform us that that is not the case. Indeed, faith provides us with the grace of redemption but also with the
responsibility of an upward calling. We must surrender to this grace and allow it to envelope the whole of our lives, even to the loss of all things.

Lectio Divina

I consider everything as a loss because of the supreme good of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord.” — Philippians 3:8

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? How do we listen to Jesus? What would it mean for you to listen more? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. What might the Lord be telling you at this time of your life? Can you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way: The Seven Sorrows of Our Lady

In order to make a good confession it is necessary to have sorrow for sin. It is this feature on our part that makes us ready to receive God’s forgiveness. As we now enter into Passiontide, it is the time for us to ask for the grace of sorrow. One of the Church’s great devotions is to the seven sorrows of Our Lady. Let her teach us how to mourn and how to find courage to rise through all grief. Meditate on these seven sorrows.

  1. The prophecy of Simeon (Luke 2:25-35)
  2. The flight into Egypt (Matthew 2:13-15)
  3. Loss of the Child Jesus for three days (Luke 2:41-50)
  4. Mary meets Jesus on his way to Calvary (Luke 23:27-31; John 19:17)
  5. Crucifixion and Death of Jesus (John 19:25-30)
  6. The body of Jesus being taken from the Cross (Psalm 130; Luke 23:50-54; John 19:31-37)
  7. The burial of Jesus (Isaiah 53:8; Luke 23:50-56; John 19:38-42; Mark 15:40-47)

The Friends of God: St. Michael de Sanctis

Patron of the Cancer Patients

Feast Day: April 10

Michael was born in Spain on the feast of the Archangel St. Michael in 1591. As a child he was a great devotee of St. Francis and imitated him so extensively that he often had to be restrained by his parents. He was known as exceptionally pious and kind. He became a monk with the Trinitarian Fathers at the age of 15. Michael was elected superior of his monastery twice in his life and was very devoted to the Blessed Sacrament and to holy Mass. He was observed going into ecstasy during the consecration on several occasions. Michael’s care for the sick and the poor made him a powerful pastor.

Most Holy Trinity, You who gave us Saint Michael of the Saints as trusted friend and intercessor, and as patron of those afflicted with cancer, look with kindness on your servants who this day invoke your name. Through his intercession, comfort those in distress, confirm those in doubt. Satisfy their spiritual needs from the treasury of your grace. Remember all those who call on your help, Amen.

Means of Acquiring Joyfulness

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

St. Francis de Sales says that perfection does not consist in never falling, but in getting up immediately, recognizing our misery, asking forgiveness from God, but quietly and without wonder, saying to God that we do it from weakness. Yes, we fall, but holiness means to stand up  immediately, to ask for forgiveness, not becoming tired of getting up again, even if we fall a thousand times, because if a child would no longer want to get up and walk, because he often falls or for fear of falling every step, never again will he learn to walk.

Let us have a great idea of ​​the goodness of God; let’s not measure it with our weakness, thinking that he gets tired of so much of our instability, slackness, forgetfulness, and that he must take revenge for our sins, or that he takes away his help, denies us graces. For these reasons we don’t dare go and ask him for forgiveness. Our good is not such God. God needs us to show us his mercy.

March 31, 2019 – Fourth Sunday of Lent

Why Do We Do That? Laetare Sunday

The fourth Sunday of Lent is known as Rejoice Sunday. Laetare is Latin for Rejoice and is derived from the entrance antiphon for the Mass. The customary rose vestments may be used on this day just as for Gaudete Sunday in Advent.

Rose-colored vestments date from the ancient papal custom of sending golden roses to all the heads of state of Europe. The blessing of these golden roses always happened on the fourth Sunday of Lent before they were dispatched to their intended recipients.

As our Lenten penitential acts continue, Laetare Sunday is a reminder of why we do what we do. We fast, pray, give alms, and do other penances as a means of preparing ourselves to feast rightly and freely during Easter. The Easter joy is what propels us forward for the rest of Lent. Ultimately, we fast so that later we may feast in an ordered and truly blessed manner.

Catechesis: Mercy

Every Christian is quite familiar with the parable of the Prodigal Son. It is the quintessential parable about the Father’s extravagant mercy. The explication Jesus gives in the parable provides us with several constitutive elements of mercy.

Abandoning his father, the prodigal son loses his identity; for which the analogy is that of being in a far away country. In this state he completely loses his dignity as he even finds himself longing to eat the husks of the pigs (particularly horrifying for the Jewish people). Once the son comes to his right mind he returns home expecting to be received back as a servant. The father lavishes great love upon him and restores him to his identity as a son, signified by the ring and the robe. The older son wants to know why this extravagance for a wayward son. That is what mercy is. It is loving someone specifically when they are in misery. Mercy-love also refuses to seek vengeance but restores one to his original identity and dignity, raising him up out of the misery. But, in being restored, the young son must also resume his responsibilities within the father’s house. In restoring the sinner to his dignity, mercy expects and demands righteous conversion.

Lectio Divina

Whoever is in Christ is a new creation.” 2 Corinthians 5:17

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? How do we listen to Jesus? What would it mean for you to listen more? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. What might the Lord be telling you at this time of your life? Can you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way: Sacrament

Perhaps the most important word for understanding Catholicism is sacrament. It is a particular way of seeing the world. Pope Benedict XVI called it “sacramental mysticism.” It means to see beyond the mere appearance of things and into their inner reality, as we do with the Eucharist. Sacraments allow us to experience, through our senses, the reality of God’s grace at work. Without the sacraments we could never really know if God was working for our salvation.

The greatest sacrament of all is Jesus himself. His human body is a sacrament. He is the Son of God who has made himself visible to us through his humanity; and that is how we experience him. With respect to his mercy — God’s love for us while we are in misery — we can only  experience this merciful love in a sacramental way. That is the sacrament of confession. The inner reality of the sacrament is an encounter with the merciful love of Christ while we are in the state of our sinful misery. Through the absolution of the priest we are lifted from our misery and restored to our dignity as saints in the communion of the blessed.

The Friends of God: St. Isidore of Seville

Patron of the Internet

Feast Day: April 4

Isidore lived from 560 to 636. He was a bishop known for his extensive learning and for ensuring that his seminarians learned arts and sciences along with theology. Isidore was unique in calling for synods to assist him with administration of his diocese as opposed to pure monarchical governance. As a boy, Isidore was raised and educated by his older brother who was very harsh in his treatment of his younger brother. Even through the harsh treatment, Isidore kept his resolve to be educated. His efforts paid off as he became a Doctor of the Church. Isidore’s forgiveness towards his brother also helped him to become a saint.

Almighty and eternal God who has created us in thine image and bade us to seek after all that is good, true and beautiful, especially in the divine person of Thy only-begotten Son, Our Lord Jesus Christ, grant we beseech Thee that through the intercession of Saint Isidore, bishop and doctor, during our journeys through the internet we will direct our hands and eyes only to that which is pleasing to Thee and treat with charity and patience all those souls whom we encounter. Father we ask you this, through Christ our Lord. Amen

Spiritual Joyfulness

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

With spiritual joy, one gives greater glory to God and honors him: demonstrating with deeds that one thinks well of God and is content in his service and with his treatment. By contrast, one dishonors God, slights God by one’s deeds and in the estimation of God if one remains unhappy: “and it was thus that my people thoroughly humiliated me.” If to belittle a neighbor is such an abominable thing, what then will it be to belittle God? A sad servant dishonors his master, but a joyful and content servant honors him. For that reason we want to give to others a great idea of God our Father in order to give him the glory that is his due. We serve him with pleasure and joy, not with sadness and against our will. We esteem, we appreciate, we magnify his gifts. We pray by hoping in him, and we glorify him again, as a GOD absolutely good, merciful, generous and faithful. Let those be sad who serve tyrants such as the world, the flesh, the devil, as the saints have said.

March 24, 2019 – Third Sunday of Lent

Why Do We Do That? The Scrutinies

In many parish churches all around the world, the third Sunday of Lent begins the series of Scrutinies during Sunday Mass. The Scrutinies are rites celebrated on the third, fourth and fifth Sundays of Lent wherever there are candidates preparing for the Sacraments of Christian Initiation (Baptism, Confirmation, Communion). These rites involve the Elect. These are the catechumens who are preparing to become Christians at the Easter Vigil.

The Scrutinies do not involve cross-examination but are, in fact, prayers of healing and strengthening for the catechumens. Minor exorcisms are actually performed over the catechumens. These prayers are focused on expelling all that is weak and sinful in the catechumens but also calling forth all that is good and true in them so that they will be better prepared for the initiation awaiting them. During these rites, the catechumens are also anointed with the Oil of Catechumens, one of the Sacred Oils consecrated by the Bishop during the annual Chrism Mass which is held on Tuesday of Holy Week in the Archdiocese of Boston.

Catechesis: The Divine Name

When Moses saw the burning bush (Exodus 3) he met God for the first time. It was at that time that God revealed his name. YHWH, meaning “I AM,” is the name God presented to Moses when asked. Observant Jews to this day do not pronounce this name; rather, they substitute for it the title “Lord” or “Adonai,” in Hebrew. For Hebrews, to know one’s name was to know the person. As the name “I AM” suggests, no one knows God. Yet, in telling his name to Moses, the Lord was making himself known and giving himself to us to the extent that we can grasp the mystery. What we know of God is much less than what we do not know of him.

In ancient Israel the name of God was only to be spoken by one man: the High Priest. Even the High Priest was only to speak the name YHWH only once a year on the Day of Atonement. The High Priest would enter into the Holy of Holies — the most sacred space in the world in the heart of the Temple in Jerusalem — to perform rituals of atonement for the sins of the people of Israel, and he would utter the divine name. Out of respect for the Jewish people, the Church does not permit the divine name to be used during any liturgy.

Lectio Divina

“But I tell you, if you do not repent, you will all perish as they did!”   — Luke 13:3

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? How do we listen to Jesus? What would it mean for you to listen more? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. What might the Lord be telling you at this time of your life? Can you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way: Choosing a New Name

The Easter mysteries will soon be upon us and there will be some newly baptized members of the Church. One special tradition will be the taking of a new name. We choose a baptismal and/or confirmation name to emphasize that we are made new in Christ. A name indicates the dignity of a person as it is a sign of one’s unique personal identity.

Christians should have names that reflect Christian sentiment. Chosen names can be of any of the saints or of Christian virtues (Faith, Hope or Charity for example). It would not be in keeping with Christian piety and good religion to adopt a name that is reflective of either a purely secular or non Judeo-Christian culture. For example, one should not attempt to baptized with the name Jupiter as this is the name given to a god of the Roman Empire.

There is a pious custom in the Church to conduct a naming rite before one receives baptism or confirmation. It is a moving moment when someone publicly chooses the name with which he or she will forever be connected to the mighty act of God.

The Friends of God: Bl. James Claxton

Feast Day: March 28

The period in English history during the reigns of Queens Mary I and Elizabeth I was one of terrible religious persecution. Queen Mary attempted to reverse the Reformation. She executed 284 Protestants in her desire to preserve Catholicism. Elizabeth, a Protestant, had around 800 Catholics martyred. One of them was Bl. James Claxton, a priest educated at the English College Seminary in Reims, France. One third of the graduates of that seminary were executed in England for the charge of being a priest. Bl. James was one of those priests who left the seminary for England knowing that his life was in danger. Still, he went to his native home to courageously minister to English Catholics. He was arrested, drawn and quartered in 1588.

Almighty God, who in England raised up martyrs from every walk of life to vindicate the authority of Your Churchin teaching and worship, grant through their intercession, we pray, that all our people may be gathered once again to celebrate the same sacraments under the one Shepherd, Jesus Christ, Your Son. Who lives and reigns with You in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

Obstacles in Prayer

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

To ask for purely temporal graces, or for no other end but the sole needs of life, such as good fortune, prosperity, quiet, or good health, not in order to better follow the Lord, not to better practice virtue, but for a more comfortable and tranquil life: “these are the things all men seek after,” says the Lord (Mt. 6). These are fleeting things, passing goods, of an order inferior to man, and particularly dangerous for the Christian, and liable to convert themselves into evils. Jesus Christ said, “whatever you ask the Father in my name he will give you.” That which is asked for, must be something worthy of God. Otherwise it would not be suitable for him to be involved with it. Now all the goods on this earth, considered apart from salvation, are nothing before God. “Up to this point you have not asked me anything in my name.” the Lord said to his Apostles because they asked for purely earthly things, not according to his spirit.

March 17, 2019 – Second Sunday of Lent

Why Do We Do That? No Alleluia

The Alleluia is the one of the most recognizable parts of prayer and, certainly, of the Mass. It is sung just prior to the reading of the Gospel and emphasizes the joy of having received the gift of faith and the presence of the Kingdom of God. In scripture it says that the angels sing alleluia, so our singing of it is a participation in the heavenly liturgy.

In Lent, however, we stop singing alleluia during the Mass. While it is true that we already participate sacramentally in the joy of heaven, it is also true that history has not reached its final consummation in heaven. Lent is a time to remind us that we are not there yet; there is still more to be done in this life. To emphasize the pilgrimage of Lent and the disciplined work required, the Church ceases with the alleluia during this penitential season.

The return of the alleluia at Easter marks a recognizable shift back to the joy of the resurrection.

Catechesis: Citizenship in Heaven

One claim that has always had enormous significance in human life is the claim of citizenship. Being a citizen of a society obviously makes a substantial and practical difference. Passionate debate about the difference between the citizen and the non-citizen is a perpetual feature of any organized society. It was no different in the time of St. Paul who wrote to the Philippians about their citizenship being in heaven.

Philippi was a colony city of the Roman Empire. Having citizenship in the empire was of immense importance and would have certainly been on the minds of anyone living in the city. Paul writes to remind them that their principal citizenship is actually in heaven due to their baptism. Also, because Paul has founded the Church in Philippi, he wants them to know that it is now a colony of Heaven. One whose mind is so emphatically concerned about the earthly citizenship that he forgets about the heavenly one has made himself an enemy of the cross of Christ. We must consider more the rights and responsibilities of our ultimate citizenship.

Lectio Divina

“Listen to him .”  — Luke 9:35

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? How do we listen to Jesus? What would it mean for you to listen more? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. What might the Lord be telling you at this time of your life? Can you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way: The Code of Canon Law

The Code of Canon Law is the collection of rights and responsibilities for all citizens of heaven. Here is a sample:

Can. 212 §

1. Conscious of their own responsibility, the Christian faithful are bound to follow with Christian obedience those things which the sacred pastors, inasmuch as they represent Christ, declare as teachers of the faith or establish as rulers of the Church.

2. The Christian faithful are free to make known to the pastors of the Church their needs, especially spiritual ones, and their desires.

3. According to the knowledge, competence, and prestige which they possess, they have the right and even at times the duty to manifest to the sacred pastors their opinion on matters which pertain to the good of the Church and to make their opinion known to the rest of the Christian faithful, without prejudice to the integrity of faith and morals, with reverence toward their pastors, and attentive to common advantage and the dignity of persons.

The Friends of God: St. Rafqa

Patron of: Lost Parents

Feast Day: March 25

Rafqa was a Lebanese woman born in 1832 and a member of the Maronite Rite. Her mother died when she was 7 and she spent her early years working as a domestic servant to help support her family. She would eventually choose life as a nun where she excelled as a woman of silent contemplation and as a teacher. She once even saved a child from being murdered. Rafqa requested that Jesus grant her the grace to share in his suffering, which he granted to her. She spent many years suffering from terrible headaches and paralysis. Confined to a bed in her later years, she used hear healthy hands to knit socks as an act of service for others.

We ask you, Saint Rafqa, to spread joy in our world and comfort those who are suffering.  You healed the sick by enduring sorrow and sharing in the Mystery of Redemption with Our Lord Jesus Christ. We ask you to intercede for all the sick, to fill our hearts with joy and love and to guide us to follow in your example. May we glorify with you, the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit forever. Amen.

Means of Acquiring Joyfulness

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

Think frequently of the Lord and thank him for the goods that we possess and hope to possess. For example, for the great good — namely the grace of God, that we possess and for the Paradise that we hope for. Let us go often to take from the Angels and Blessed above an air of joyfulness, thinking that from now on we are citizens of Heaven and fortifying ourselves in Christian hope and the merits connected with each good action; and to the communion of saints.

Act with holy readiness and simplicity, that is, do things with a good intention, and do them immediately, without reasoning too much about them, or becoming over-reflective. Rather, cut off all reflections, saying to yourself: “I should not dwell on this; one needs only to do what is good.”

March 10, 2019 – First Sunday of Lent

Why Do We Do That? Abstinence from Meat

Eating meat has long been considered a normal part of the Western diet. But think of past centuries, especially several centuries ago, and you can imagine that meat would have been quite expensive. Given that expense in the Middle Ages, for example, meat was usually served for special times of celebration — for feasts. This is why the Church binds us to abstain from meat on Ash Wednesday, Good Friday and all the Fridays of Lent. Those days are days of penitence and mourning, not of feasting. The Church is calling us through abstinence to make a practical form of
penance and simpler living by abstaining from a staple of our diet.

Prior to a the Penitential Reform of Pope St. Paul VI in 1966, all Fridays of the year were days of abstinence. That is no longer the case. All Fridays are still days of penitence and should be observed with some form of penance. Keeping the tradition of abstaining from meat on all Fridays of the year (except when a Solemnity falls on a Friday) is a venerable practice, but other forms of penance are acceptable. For Lent, though, abstinence is a Church law.

Catechesis: You Shall be Saved

St. Paul writes to the Romans that everyone who confesses that Jesus is Lord and believes in the heart that he was raised from the dead, will be saved. Clearly, this is an important passage as it speaks of salvation. There are two important points to make from this crucial statement.

First, one must confess with the lips that “Jesus is Lord.” This is a creed, one of the earliest. The faithful continue to confess this creed (along with other important statements, to be sure) to this very day. The creed is given to and accepted by those who are baptized. Believing in the resurrection is also part of this faith. Salvation, then, is something received and freely accepted by someone through faith expressed in a creed given by the Church. It is not a faith that I invent for myself. It is truly a gift that pre-dates me.

Second, Paul is declaring that Jesus is God. The name “Lord” was only given to God in the Old Testament. So, Paul is proclaiming the world-changing news that, in fact, Jesus of Nazareth is the true God. Lent is the time to strengthen our grasp of this saving faith.

Lectio Divina

“You shall worship the Lord, your God, and him alone shall you serve.” — Luke 4:8

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or apprehension? What constitutes worship? What dies it mean to serve the Lord? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. Have you taken the time to listen to what the Lord may be telling you? Can you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way: Stations of the Cross

One of Lent’s most well-known devotions is the Stations of the Cross. This devotion dates back to very early in the Church’s history. Once Christianity was legalized in the Roman Empire and St. Helen sought out the ancient holy sites in Jerusalem, the Way of the Cross became a naturally desired site for pilgrims. St. Jerome, who lived in Jerusalem toward the end of his life in the 4th century, wrote about the many pilgrims who followed the steps of our Lord to Calvary.

Over the centuries, as the popularity of the devotion increased, the stations were reproduced in other parts of Europe so the faithful who could not make the pilgrimage to the Holy Land could still make the Way of the Cross spiritually.

In 1686, Pope Innocent XI permitted stations to be erected in every Church since the Muslim Turks did not permit Christians to have access to the real stations in Jerusalem. In 1726, Pope Benedict XIII granted an indulgence to anyone who practiced the devotion no matter where there were.

The Friends of God: St. Nicander

Feast Day: March 15

Nicander of Alexandria, Egypt lived in the 3rd century during the time of the great Diocletian Persecution of Christians. He was a physician and one of charitable disposition. Nicander would visit the Christians in prison, bring them food and tend to their medical needs. After Christians in Alexandria were martyred, their bodies would be dumped unceremoniously to be eaten by wild animals. Nicander risked his life to go out at night under cover of darkness to bury the Christian dead. He was eventually caught in the act, arrested, tortured and martyred himself. Nicander exemplified the Hippocratic Oath and was a true martyr for faith and charity.

O my Jesus, Thou who art very Love, enkindle in my heart that Divine Fire which consumes the Saints and transforms them into Thee. Amen.

Faith in Jesus

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

I believe, oh my God, I believe that Jesus Christ on the Cross is the truth of the mystery, of which the bronze Serpent was the figure. With this spirit, through the Faith, I believe in Him, I join Him to be healed from all the bites of the infernal Serpent.

Consider therefore Jesus Christ on the cross, as Life, and source of Life. Consider faith like a channel whereby the life of grace springs from the heart of Jesus Christ in that of the faithful. So, by means of this channel, join the heart of Jesus Christ.

Be united to this Most Sacred Heart, the source of life, in order to draw life in the heart of Jesus Christ. O Life! O source of Life! Give me life, communicate, spread, and make your life descend in my soul.

March 3, 2019 – Eighth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Prayer Before Mass

My God I offer you this holy sacrifice to recognize, honor and glorify your infinite greatness and the supreme dominion which, as the first principle and last end, you have above all created things. I give you this homage for all those who still do not know or do not want to recognize you in thanksgiving for the benefits that I and all the world have received and will receive from your infinite goodness, in satisfaction of my sins and of the whole world, to implore the graces that are necessary for my eternal salvation and for all mankind. Oh, my God, I offer to you the merits of Jesus Christ; grant me at this Holy Mass a profound adoration.

My God, my Creator, I implore you to grant me the grace of final perseverance, I know by faith that I do not deserve it, nor can I deserve it, but your Divine Son deserves it for me with so many praises and with so many wounds which he shows you in his Most Holy Body on behalf of my wounded love. Amen.

Venerable Bruno Lanteri

Why Do We Do That? Blessings

In the Church there are blessings happening repeatedly. Benediction is a very recognizable action of faith.

It’s important to know that benediction means “good speech.” In the first reading from Sirach much is made of the speech of a person. To grant a blessing is to speak good words of someone or something. These good words invoke the divine goodness and stir up the hearts of the faithful in preparation for receiving sacramental graces. Blessings are the chief sacramentals of the Church. These are sacred objects or actions meant to prepare the faithful to receive the grace of the sacraments worthily. Sacramentals are not guarantees of grace as the sacraments are.

There are two types of blessings: invocative and constitutive. Invocative blessings are pleas for the divine favor to rest upon someone, reminding the recipient of the goodness of God. Constitutive blessings actually consecrate someone or something to God. A blessed chalice is consecrated for use at Mass and a consecrated person is set aside for service to God as in a religious who takes vows.

Catechesis: The Power of Sin is the Law

St. Paul writes in his Letter to the Corinthians that the law is the power of sin. He writes of the Mosaic Law and the Commandments. Why would St. Paul say that the Commandments and the Law, so revered by the Jewish people, is the power of sin? We have to see Paul’s writing in Romans chapter 7 to understand.

In Romans Paul states that the Law is what makes us aware of sin. In other terms, the Law and the Commandments informs our consciences. With the formation of the Commandments we know, St. Paul states, for example, that coveting is an evil. If we didn’t have the Commandment against coveting, then how would we know that coveting was a sin? Paul is not saying consequently that the Law is sinful but that the Law forms our consciences which in turn informs us of the sins we commit. This what he means when he says that the power of sin is the law. The Law therefore cannot save us from sin; it can only inform us of the existence of sin.

St. Paul would remind the Corinthians and us that the victory over sin is not in the law but in a person: Jesus.

Lectio Divina

“Praise no one before he speaks, for it is then that people are tested.” — Sirach

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Does it bring you hope or frustration? How is someone tested when they speak? Why would we praise someone immediately? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. Have you taken the time to listen to what the Lord may be telling you? What might he be telling you at this time of your life? Can you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way: Ash Wednesday

Ash Wednesday is upon us — one of the most popular days of the liturgical calendar. Ashes have always been a symbol of penitence. References to placing ashes on one’s head as a sign of mourning and repentance can be found in Esther, Job, Daniel and Jonah in the Old Testament. There are also references to the use of penitential ashes in the early Church.

The history of Ash Wednesday as the beginning of Lent dates back to at least the 8th century AD. Ashes were used to launch the Lenten season of penance as preparation to combat sin in one’s life such as to be open to receive the Easter sacraments and the joy of resurrection.

Ashes remind us of our origin and our destiny. We are made of the dust of the earth and we are destined to return to it. Only the Easter triumph of Christ can save us from this end. It is an immense dignity that God saves us by grace through our own freedom. We have a part to play in our own work of holiness. God gives his 100% and we must give ours.

The Friends of God: John of God

Patron of: Booksellers, firefighters

Feast Day: March 8

John was a Spaniard of the 16th century. His was truly not a normal, quiet life. He was known his whole life for being impulsive, yet he would follow through on any impulsive decision he ever made. He went off from home at age 8 to live as a begging missionary, never to see his parents again. Later he would become a shepherd and a Spanish soldier serving in two wars. At first, he lived a disreputable soldierly life, but a war with France led him to an impulsive decision to convert, which he dutifully completed. He would just as impulsively give away everything he had to serve someone in need, which he did several times in his life. He even once saved several people from a fire and stopped the spread of it by chopping the building in half with an axe. He also started his own hospital to serve the poorest.

Father, you gave John of God love and compassion for others. Grant that by doing good for others, we may be counted among the saints in your kingdom. Amen.

On the Speech of God

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

There is only one thing that is necessary, there is only one God who is necessary, he is everything: the rest is nothing; and all that is vanishing before his face, and all the nations are emptiness and nothingness in his eyes, he alone is necessary to us, he alone must be desired, and to whom it is necessary to unite. Fear God, and keep his commandments; for this is the everything, all the rest is foreign to us: that alone belongs to us, as a thing of our own, but it is all our substance, all our being. Whatever you lose, provided you do not lose God, you have lost nothing, so let the rest go; resolve yourself only to fear God and love; this is everything.

February 17, 2019 – Sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Why Do We Do That? Fraction Rite

As we sing the Agnus Dei (Lamb of God) during the Mass just prior to communion the fraction rite takes place. This part of the Holy Mass is when the priest breaks the Host. The first breaking is the sign of Christ breaking his body for us on the cross. Typically bread is broken that it may be shared. So is it with the Body of Christ. His body is broken for us that we might share in his life. We too are called to be broken, sacrificially, for the sake of others that they might share in the love God has for us.

The second fraction (called the comingling) happens when the priest breaks a small piece of the Host and drops it into the chalice. This is the sign that the Body and Blood of Christ which were separated at his death are now reunited in the resurrection. It is not the dead Body of Christ that we receive in communion; no, it is the living, glorious Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity of Christ

Living this breaking for others in our own lives in union with Christ is what will lead us to resurrection in Jesus, too.

Catechesis: Hope

St. Paul tells us in his First Letter to the Corinthians that there are three theological virtues: Faith, Hope and Love. This Sunday’s readings focus on hope. Natural hope is the emotion that provides energy for us to struggle in the attainment of difficult goals; goals that are worthy of effort. Supernatural hope is a gift from God that empowers the will to pursue salvation, which is sharing in the joy of God, based not on our own merits but by grace from the Holy Spirit.

We naturally hope for happiness. It is ultimately for happiness that we do everything we do. By grace our desire for happiness reaches to a point well beyond nature. We can only attain to the happiness of heaven through Christ himself who provides us with many reasons for hope that we can; namely, forgiveness of sins, the sacraments, the intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary, etc. Preaching about the beatitudes Jesus gave a picture of what true happiness is and what it is we should hope for. Though we may weep much in this life, clinging to Christ we may hope for the day when nothing remains of tears but only the sound of joyous laughter.

Lectio Divina

“Blessed are they who hope in the Lord .” — Psalm 1

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Do you have hope? What does it mean to be blessed? What does it mean to hope in the Lord? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. Have you taken the time to listen to what the Lord may be telling you? What might he be telling you at this time of your life? Can you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way: The Chaplet of Divine Mercy

One of the greatest devotions in the Church is the Chaplet of Divine Mercy. This chaplet is prayed on a normal set of rosary beads and is derived from the mystical visions of St. Faustina     Kowalska, a Polish nun of the early 20th century. In one of her visions in 1933 she saw that an unnamed city was set to receive divine retribution. As the Angel of the Lord was preparing to strike the city, St. Faustina found herself praying earnestly before God in words that came from within her but not from her. The prayer was from the Lord and it was the basis of the chaplet imploring God’s mercy on the world, not for our sake but for the sake of the passion of the Son of God.

As a devotion concentrated on the mercy of God through the passion of Jesus, the Chaplet of Divine Mercy is an instrument of hope. Praying it we are given great encouragement to overcome sin not by our will-power but by the merits of Christ, which then gives us confidence to grow in holiness. Cultivating trust in God is an exercise of great value that increases our hope in the eternal Father.

The Friends of God: St. Polycarp

Patron of: Ear aches

Feast Day: February 23

Polycarp was a student of the Apostle St. John and a leader of the second generation of Christians. The challenges of governing after the founding generation are always manifold. Polycarp helped decide on liturgical practices not settled by the Apostles. He diligently fought off heresies that sought to change the course of the Church established by the Apostles. He was a holy bishop who was known for using the gospel as his model for how to interact with people. As the Roman persecution of the Church raged Polycarp, being a well-known bishop, was targeted and ultimately placed in the arena with wild animals. He bravely accepted his martyrdom while assuring his flock of the rewards of the Kingdom of Heaven.

God of all creation, who were pleased to give the Bishop Saint Polycarp a place in the company of the Martyrs, grant, through his intercession, that, sharing with him in the chalice of Christ, we may rise through the Holy Spirit to eternal life. Amen.

Prayer Before Meditation

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri
Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

God with faith enlightens us, with hope helps us; thus he remedies our ignorance and infirmity.

Through Revelation God speaks to man: the Creator communicates his thoughts to the Creature, communicates all the truths consoling for her, all the necessary truths and without whose cognition we would necessarily perish.

The Most High God saw how many troubles the ignorance in man has caused, and because of his immense goodness he drew them out of that ignorance by that great communication of his Eternal Wisdom.

Let us therefore thank the Lord from the heart for having spoken to us earlier through his prophets, ultimately then through his own Son, who became like us for this purpose; nor content with thanking him; remember that they are not words of a man, but of God: therefore, let us firmly believe them.

February 10, 2019 – Fifth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Why Do We Do That? Holy, Holy, Holy

Just before the Eucharistic Prayer begins (the first time the congregation kneels) we all sing Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord, God of Hosts. In Latin this is called the Sanctus. In the reading from Isaiah chapter 6 (the first reading this Sunday) we read how the Seraphim in Heaven cry out with the thrice-holy acclaim of God. As we sing this we must know that we are truly participating in the worship of the Seraphim in Heaven. This is another way of realizing one of the petitions of the Our Father. We pray that “Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.” In heaven they cry “holy, holy, holy;” and so it is on earth at Holy Mass. This helps us to understand the sacramentality of the Church and of the liturgy. Being sacramental means that the Church and her liturgy makes visibly present an invisible reality or power, allowing us to have a share in that reality and power. Through Jesus Christ, our High Priest, our humanity is able to be where, previously, only the angels belonged.

Singing “holy” three times, we are reminded of the Holy Trinity and the fullness of his holiness.

Catechesis: The Creed

A very important part of being Catholic is to be able to answer in some form what it means to be a Christian. We know from the writings of St. Paul, including from this week’s 2nd reading from the Letter to the Corinthians, that creeds existed in the earliest times.

St. Paul writes:
“For I handed on to you as of first importance what I also received: that Christ died for our sins in accordance with the Scriptures; that he was buried; that he was raised on the third day in accordance with the Scriptures; that he appeared to Cephas, then to the Twelve.”

This is an example of a very early creed. We still
profess this today, along with other essential elements of the Apostles’ Creed or the Nicene Constantinopolitan Creed, which we profess together every Sunday. It is not sufficient in the least to say that “I believe in something.” For us, we must state clearly that we believe in God — the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. We must state clearly that we know that Jesus is the Son of God and that he has died for our sins and is risen from the dead. That this is real history as confirmed by the physical eyes of the Apostles who have handed on this living faith.

Lectio Divina

“Then I heard the voice of the Lord saying,”Whom shall I send?  Who will go for us?”
“Here I am,” I said; “send me!”
 — Isaiah 6:8

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the Word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Do you have peace? What does the Lord wish to convey to you? Have you heard a call from God such as this? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. What might the Lord be telling you through this? Are you able to experience being in the presence of God as Isaiah did? What does it mean to be sent? “Where” might God be calling you to go?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way: Burial

In baptism we are said to be buried with Christ, so that we might rise with him. The connection between dying with Christ and rising with him is found in the white baptismal cloth and the white pall cloth draped over the casket at the beginning of a funeral. One of the corporal works of mercy is to bury the dead. It is immensely important to have a funeral mass for Catholic loved ones. One form of burial that is becoming increasingly popular is cremation. It is important to know a few points before planning a funeral at the local parish.

Cremation is indeed permitted by the Church as long as belief in the resurrection of the body is understood. The body of a baptized person is to be reverenced with great solemnity as it serves as the Temple of the Holy Spirit.

Therefore, it is preferred that the body be present at the funeral before the cremation, so that it may receive all of the proper attention it deserves. After cremation, ashes MUST be buried as any other body would. NO part of the ashes may be scattered in any way, nor kept in an urn at home.

The Friends of God: Sts. Cyril & Methodius

Patron of: Europe & Slavic People

Feast Day: February 14

These saints were brothers and highly educated. Among their many roles and talents, they were physicians, professors of philosophy, government officials, monks and missionaries. In the 9th century there was a great need for missionaries to assist with the growth of the Church among the Slavic peoples. Cyril and Methodius were called upon at different points to help Slavs become a local Church in their own rite. To this end St. Cyril created an alphabet so the Slavic people could pray and worship in their own language, read the Bible and develop prayer books. They faced serious opposition to German clergy who disdained the idea of the liturgy being in any language but Latin.

Father, you brought the light of the gospel to the Slavic nations through St. Cyril and his brother St. Methodius.
Open our hearts to understand your teaching and help us to become one in faith and praise. Through Christ, our Lord. Amen.

Prayer Before Meditation

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri

Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

God of infinite Power, Wisdom and Goodness, I believe with firm and living faith that I am in your Divine presence; I know that you penetrate most intimately into my heart, and you know what I am in your sight. Humbly prostrated before your incomprehensible Majesty, I adore you with all those who adore you in Heaven and on earth. I adore you as One in essence and as Three Persons. I adore you and I take delight in your Divine attributes.

I know that by myself I am efficacious in nothing. However, I beg you, O Lord, to succor me with your holy grace in this meditation that I am beginning. Deign, O Eternal Father, to settle my memory and fill it with good thoughts. Deign, O Divine Son, to dissipate the shadows of my intellect and illumine it so that it is occupied only with you. Deign, O Holy Spirit, to purify and inflame my will, so that it goes only in search of you.

January 27, 2019 – Third Sunday in Ordinary Time

Why Do We Do That? The Epiclesis

In Luke’s Gospel we read that Jesus returned to Galilee “in the power of the Spirit.” This is a reminder of a very important part of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. At the heart of the Mass is the Anaphara, or the Eucharistic Prayer. This Greek term refers to “offering up” something. In the case of the Mass, what is being offered up is the Holy Sacrifice of Christ in the Eucharist. The anaphora is the whole Eucharistic Prayer and part of that prayer is what is called the epiclesis. This Greek term means to “call down from on high.” It happens at the part of the Eucharistic Prayer when the priest asks that the Father send his Holy Spirit down upon the bread and wine to change them into the Body and Blood of Christ. As he invokes the Spirit, the priest places his hands solemnly over the bread and wine. In the Western Churches it is understood that the epiclesis is a prayer acknowledging that the Mass happens only in the power of the Spirit, while the consecration (“This is my body”) is when the actual change takes place. In the Eastern Churches the epiclesis is considered the point at which the bread and wine become the Body and Blood of the Lord, and the words of consecration express the mystery that has just been carried out.

Catechesis: The Mystical Body of Christ

Mystically, all the faithful form the Body of Christ. Using the word mystically is important because it demonstrates that the union of all the baptized in Christ is not a social club or a corporation, nor is it exactly like a physical body, but it does have boundaries. The body of Christ is the society of the faithful united together in a bond of charity with the Bishop of Rome. This union in Christ is the Church. The Church as the Mystical Body of Christ is a sacrament in that it makes our union with God a visible reality.

As any other body, the Body of Christ has various organs to make it living and effective. The soul of the Body is the Holy Spirit. The head of the Body is Christ himself and all the faithful together compose the parts. As St. Paul reminds us in his letter to the Corinthians, we each possess charisms or personal spiritual gifts that contribute to the building up of the Body. This is the mystical form of democracy. We don’t vote for what we believe, that is given to us by revelation, but we do participate as citizens in Body of Christ through our talents and charisms utilized for the glory of God.

Lectio Divina

“Today is holy to the LORD your God. Do not be sad, and do not weep.”  — Nehemiah 8:9

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

This is the Word of God. Take time to consider it carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Do you have peace? What does the Lord wish to convey to you? Why would He say this? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. Have you taken the time to listen to what the Lord may be telling you? What might he be telling you at this time of your life? Can you ask Him to help you listen with confidence? Have you been sad? How will you make today holy?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way: The Lord’s Day

As we read in Nehemiah, we are called to remember to keep the Sabbath Day holy. This is the third commandment. For Christians the Lord’s Day (Sunday) has perfected the Sabbath Day (Saturday), so we observe Sunday as our day of rest and worship due to its being the day of resurrection and re-creation. Proper observance of Sunday means having a day of worship and recreation, of relaxation and joy. We are called to put aside all labor and business concerns that would impede this important time of rest and happiness. It should be a day of leisure, works of charity and service, along side a day of public worship with the rest of the Body of Christ. There are circumstances of course that make it near impossible to observe fully a day of rest (the classic examples would be police officers or nurses) but the faithful are called to avoid making labor on Sunday a habit. To lose Sunday to labor and unnecessary activities is to risk one’s humanity and to become like a machine. Sunday is vital to keep the Body of Christ fresh and renewed. When necessary, travel or other grave concerns make Sunday Mass impossible to observe, the faithful should take time for prayer and the Bible.

The Friends of God: St. Thomas Aquinas

Patron of: Universities and Students

Feast Day: January 28

St. Thomas Aquinas is a towering intellectual figure in the history not only of the Church but, truly, the whole world. His mark on understanding the Catholic faith is virtually unparalleled. Almost the entirety of the section on morality in the Catechism of the Catholic Church is taken from his writings. St. Thomas’ great accomplishment was to synthesize the Greek philosophy of Aristotle with the revelation contained in Scripture and Tradition. His parents, recognizing their son’s talent, wanted him to become a Benedictine on a path toward being an Abbot. Thomas chose the way of poverty with the Dominicans thus, renouncing a life of glory and accepting one of humble service.

Grant me, O Lord my God, a mind to know you, a heart to seek you, wisdom to find you, conduct pleasing to you, faithful perseverance in waiting for you, and a hope of finally embracing you. Amen.

On the Law of the Gospel

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri

Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

What more has the Lord to do to persuade me to believe that which he teaches me and to practice the Law? After having sent the Patriarchs and the Prophets, he came himself in person, visibly, making himself one of us, and making himself our Associate in the Incarnation, our Teacher in Preaching, our exemplar in the whole course of his life. And to precede us he also provided the example of so many fragile others like ourselves, who practice the virtue that he has proposed to us, so that it is inexcusable if we do not also practice the same virtue ourselves, taking up the resolution of St. Augustine, and saying “That which this man is doing, and that man, why am I not also doing it?” And saying to the Lord “I will follow you wherever you go.”

January 20, 2019 – Second Sunday in Ordinary Time

Why Do We Do That? The Ministers of Matrimony

Every sacrament requires a minister to effect it and make it valid. Without the priest there is no Eucharist or absolution of sin. In the case of matrimony the ministers are the spouses. Sometimes it is thought that the priest or the deacon is the minister but he is actually the witness. The true ministers that make the sacrament of marriage happen are the man and the woman exchanging their vows. When the two give their consent and pronounce their vows to one another and to God they make the sacrament happen. The couple has the power to do this because of their baptism. Baptism empowers one to offer sacrifice to God and the greatest sacrifice is life itself. This doesn’t have to mean violent sacrifice as in the case of a martyr but the everyday martyrdom of married life. The sacrifices required in a marriage are priestly and should be joined to the ultimate sacrifice of the Jesus on the cross – and in this life that means the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. All married couples should attend Mass together as they realize concretely for each other the meaning of the Eucharist and are strengthened as ministers.

Catechesis: Mediatrix

Our Lady was given a role in salvation unique and singular, to be Mother of God and of the Church and all the redeemed. From the moment she gave consent to become the Mother of the Savior at the Annunciation she became a mediator for us. Her intercessory power is completely under Christ and is received as a gift. The very first miracle performed by Jesus was through Our Lady’s intercession at the wedding at Cana. It was then that Jesus first manifested his glory. He continues to manifest his glory in manifold ways and Mary continues to perform her role as mediator and Mother. As Vatican II stated: This motherhood of Mary in the order of grace continues uninterruptedly from the consent which she loyally gave at the Annunciation and which she sustained without wavering beneath the cross, until the eternal fulfillment of all the elect. Taken up to heaven she did not lay aside this saving office but by her manifold intercession continues to bring us the gifts of eternal salvation. Mary’s role in our lives is indispensable as she is The Woman with the Mediator.

Lectio Divina

“Do whatever he tells you.”  — John 2:5
Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy. Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated? These are the words of Mary. Take time to consider them carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Do you have peace? What does Our Lady wish to convey to you? Why would Our Lady say this? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart.
Have you taken the time to listen to what Jesus may be telling you? What might he be telling you at this time of your life? Can you ask Mary to help you listen with confidence to the Lord?
Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way

Weddings are among the most excited and wonderful experience in life. What makes a marriage different from every other type of relationship is the depth of intimacy and mutual commitment made by the man and woman. There are four components of a marriage that make it different from all other relationships. 1. Fidelity—The emotional, physical, spiritual and psychological intimacy of marriage belongs to the spouses exclusively. “You and none other.” 2. Openness to life—A sexual relationship that blocks life is not a marriage. While having children at any given moment is a matter of prudence, being open to life is essential in a marriage. 3. Mutual service— Spouses vow to one another that they live for the other, not for themselves. To love is ultimately not about feeling good all the time but about choosing the good of the spouse even if it temporarily may be difficult. 4. The Sacrament—The previous three are common to all marriages but the fourth is exclusive to Christians. Marriage is a sacrament, which means there is grace in it. Marriage makes the partners holy and prepares them to be saints. These four goals make a marriage.

The Friends of God: St. Agnes

Patron of: Young girls, chastity, sexual assault survivors

Feast Day: January 21

Agnes was a girl of 12 or 13 in the late 3rd century. As she was from a wealthy family and quite beautiful many men sought her hand in marriage. However, she had promised herself in perpetual chastity to Jesus. When one wealthy suitor was rebuffed by her he betrayed her to authorities as a Christian; it was still illegal in Rome at the time. She was arrested and urged to renounce her faith or face death or defilement. Remaining faithful to Jesus and to her chastity she refused. She was martyred in Rome. Her relics are venerated at her basilica in the Piazza Navona in Rome.

O glorious St. Agnes, you served God in humility and confidence on earth and are now in the enjoyment of His beatific Vision in heaven because you persevered till death and gained the crown of eternal life. Remember now the dangers that surround me in the vale of tears, and intercede for me in my needs and troubles. Amen.

On Marriage

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri

Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

God has placed me in this state of life; in this and no other I must serve him and be saved. All of the circumstances and events in mystate of life, for example the different dispositions I have to dealwith, the events that will take place, the times and places in which they will happen, manifest the order of Providence that the Lord has willed to save me. I have to adapt myself to all these things that happen to me, and not think I can force them to adapt to me. In fact, I will always try to adapt with peace and joy of heart, convinced that God knows better than I what is best suited for my good. My principal care will be to win the affection of my spouse. Therefore, it will be my concern and consolation to please him/her in everything. In fact, I will be particularly attentive to his innocent inclinations so as to anticipate and satisfy them when with him.

January 13, 2019 – Baptism of the Lord

Why Do We Do That? The Formula for Baptism

Human beings are both material and spiritual. We posses bodies and we posses souls. In the same way the sacraments have both a physical/material aspect and a spiritual component. The physical component of a sacrament is the material thing needed for the action. In Anointing of the Sick the material thing is oil. In priesthood it is a man. In marriage is a man and a woman. In Baptism the material thing is water. The spiritual component is the words spoken by the minister(s) celebrating the sacrament. In baptism the words are, “I baptize you in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.” This formula is absolutely essential and necessary for the sacrament to take place. Without those words there is no sacrament just as there could not be a baptism without water, as if speaking the words without pouring the water of the head makes a   baptism happen. Under normal circumstances only a bishop, priest or deacon should baptize someone. In an emergency though, say if someone were in immediate danger of death, anyone can baptize validly by using water and the proper formula.

Catechesis: Baptism

Baptism is the first and most necessary of all the sacraments. It is the gateway to salvation and to all the other sacraments. Through it the guilt of original sin is removed and one is made a child of God and incorporated into the Body of Christ. Without baptism, no one is able to be admitted to any other sacrament. There is within the Tradition of the Church the idea of baptism by desire. This would refer to someone who is not sacramentally and physically baptized but who would receive it if he or she were to know how necessary it is and who truly desire to be in union with God. If this baptism by desire exists then why would the Church insist that physical water baptism is necessary? Baptism of desire is something that can only be known by God. The Church can   never know with certainty that anyone has baptism by   desire. We can know for sure that water baptism does in fact work because our Lord has promised such.  Furthermore, it is water baptism that admits one to the other sacraments, especially penance and eucharist. It is the difference between desiring to participate and actually participating.

Lectio Divina

The Lord will bless his people with peace.” — Psalm 29

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

These are the words of God. Take time to consider them carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Do you have peace? What does the psalm say about how to come about peace? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart. What makes us His people? Do you desire to be His? Can you tell the Lord now about your desire for peace?

Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way

Usually on the Tuesday of Holy Week the bishop blesses the holy oils at the Chrism Mass. One of the three oils blessed is the Chrism Oil. This oil is used in three sacraments: Baptism, Confirmation and Holy Orders. Since Chrism is used for these three they must have something important in common. What they have in common is priesthood. A baptized person joins the priesthood of all the faithful. Being a priest, the believer is able to offer sacrifice. For the layman this sacrifice is his or her life in being faithful to God in all the moments of life. In Confirmation one becomes a priest for others, offering the sacrifice of working for the salvation of others. In Holy Orders one becomes an ordained priest (or bishop) and thus able to offer the sacrifice of the Holy Eucharist, which unites and perfects all other sacrifices. In the end, all three sacraments point to the supreme sacrament of the   Eucharist, the perfect sacrifice of Christ the High Priest. Chrism oil is also used in the consecration of a new altar upon which the supreme sacrifice is offered.

The Friends of God: St. Anthony, Abbot

Patron of: Animals, Farmers

Feast Day: January 17

Anthony sold off his possessions and left resources to provide for his younger sister, then he fled into the desert to seek union with God without distraction. In the desert Anthony had to deal with the temptations of lust, boredom, sloth, anger and many others. Persevering, Anthony found holiness and the union with God he sought so passionately. Monks and nuns who leave behind the world to focus on the spiritual life leave behind for the rest of us a map of the soul that we too might make out journey to God.

Dear God, St. Anthony the Abbot accepted your call to renounce the world and to love you above all things. He faithfully served you in the solitude of the desert by fasting, prayer, humility and good works. In the Sign of the Cross, he triumphed over the devil. Through his intercession, may we learn to love you better, with all our hearts, all our souls, all our minds, all our strength, and to love our neighbors as we love ourselves. St. Anthony the Abbot, great and powerful saint, intercede for us also for this special request…. We ask this through our Lord Jesus Christ, who lives and reigns with God the Father and the Holy Spirit, one God for ever and ever. Amen.

On Prayer

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri

Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

In the order of divine providence, the more necessary the means to salvation, the more God renders it easy to practice. Thus among the sacraments, there is nothing easier than Baptism; the matter is simply water, the minister any person, and it can be administered at any place, time, or age. So too one can pray in any place, at home, while traveling, in bed, at any time during the day or night, without sublimity of thought or elegance of style. Rather “He hath had  regard to the prayer of the humble, and he hath not despised their petition” (Ps 101:18).

It is not necessary to wait for an audience, to seek out mediators, to study expressions. We ourselves are the temple of God. The heart is the altar where prayers reside and are welcome, without which it opens to others or interferes there with our hearing God.

January 6, 2019 – Feast of the Epiphany

Why Do We Do That? Candles

An epiphany is a manifestation of divine power. In the face of Christ God himself is manifested. Jesus is the light of the world as he has unveiled the full truth about God and his kingdom. On the solemnity of the Epiphany we celebrate his manifestation to all the nations, represented by the visit of the Magi. He is now the light of all nations. The Church continues to utilize candles at all of its liturgies to symbolize the light of Christ. In the modern age of electricity there is no practical need for candle light. But the power of a flame burning a candle for the glory of God remains a powerful reminder that the light of Christ is deeper and truer than all other lights. We continue to use candles also as a reminder that the there are Catholics who must hide in the darkness of the underground to celebrate the Eucharist. Their perseverance through persecution keeps the flame of faith alive for us through the mystical Body of Christ. We must always remain vigilant and watchful for the day of the Lord.

Catechesis: The Economy of Salvation

In his letter to the Ephesians, St. Paul mentions his stewardship of God’s grace as something already known by the Church. Stewardship is basically being a manager or supervisor in service to an organization. Paul is claiming to be a caretaker of grace. Salvation happens in an economy. Just as in monetary economics, salvation has production, distribution, trade and consumption. Grace happens in an economy and, in normal circumstances, in a systematic way. Grace comes to us from God through a series of mediations. The One supreme mediator is Jesus Christ. His birth into the human family made his humanity (particularly his body) a sacrament — an instrument for God to distribute his manifold graces to us. From Christ flows the seven sacraments of the Church and all of the devotions that prepare us for them. St. Paul and all of the Apostles were the original stewards of this system of graces. The bishops are now properly the stewards of this grace. Just as a monetary economy must have a market through which to work, so too does salvation require the “marketplace” of the Church.

Lectio Divina

“They were overjoyed at seeing the star, and on entering the house they saw the child with Mary his mother.”  -Matthew 2:10-11
Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.
Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?
These are the words of God. Take time to consider them carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Do you experience any joy over the birth of Christ? What have you been experiencing this Christmas? Have you found Jesus and Mary at all this Christmas season? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart.

The holy Family found a house to welcome them. Is that true of your home? What do you wish to offer the newborn King? Ask the Holy Spirit, in your
heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way

Epiphany blessing is a simple way to witness to your visitors and to the neighbors that the light of Christ has reached you and your home and that you will extend that blessing and welcome to all those who visit in this new year of grace.

Use blessed chalk to write the following above or near the doors of the home: 20 + C + M + B + 19. The numbers represent the year 2019. CMB represents two things:

1. The initials of the three Magi who are traditionally named Caspar, Melchior and Balthazar.

2. The Latin phrase for a home blessing is Christus Mansionem Benedictat.

While writing pray: The three Wise Men, Caspar, Melchior, and Balthazar followed the star of God’s Son who became human two thousand and fifteen years ago. May Christ bless our home and remain with us throughout the new year. Amen
Visit, O blessed Lord, this home with the gladness of your presence. Bless all who live or visit here with the gift of your love; and grant that we may manifest your love to each other and to all whose lives we touch. May we grow in grace and in the knowledge and love of you; guide, comfort, and strengthen us in peace, O Jesus Christ, now and forever.

The Friends of God: St. Aelred of Rievaulx

Patron saint of: Bladder stone sufferers
Feast Day: January 12

Aelred was a monk and abbot of the Cistercian tradition in 12th century England. He was a man of great erudition and an exemplary teacher. He is most known for his writing on Friendship. Aelred was particularly devoted to helping his monks and other readers to know how Christians should live out their friendship as the truest form of love. For him friendship meant shared love in both divine and secular things where each person shares, listens, gives and receives.
O God, who gave the blessed Abbot Aelred the grace of being all things to all men, grant that, following his example, we may so spend ourselves in the service of one another, as to preserve the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace. Amen.

On Epiphany

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri

Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

Jesus Christ has chosen us to further his interests, to give currency to his maxims in taking up the defense of virtue against the pernicious ways of the world.

Jesus Christ is at the same time our way, our final end, our light, our food for the journey, our guide. Resemblance is the cause of love. You must imitate him if you want him to love you. He cherishes his friends in such a fashion that he wants to be at one with them. For this he has instituted the Sacrament of love in the form of flesh that is incorporated into the one who partakes of it, in order to unite himself bodily to us and to be only one, in a certain fashion, with unity of substance.

December 30, 2018 – Feast of the Holy Family

Why Do We Do That? Bible Readings at Mass

Through most of the year on Sundays and weekdays the first reading from the Mass is from the Old Testament. Over the course of a three-year period the Church organized readings so that we see the promises of God in the Old Testament and their ultimate fulfillment in Jesus in the New. This three-year period allows us to hear almost the entirety of the Bible.

During the seasons of Christmas and Easter, however, our first readings are often from the New Testament. At Christmas we hear the whole of St. John’s first letter as it replaces the Old Testament. This happens due to the special nature of the season. Because Christmas celebrates the birth of Jesus and the Word of God becoming flesh, John’s first letter is written to help us understand just what that means and the implications for our lives from this event. So, for the season of Christmas we absorb deeply just how profoundly and surprisingly God has delivered on the promises he made throughout history, the ones we hear about from the prophets through the year. What John has seen, heard and touched he must proclaim to us.

Catechesis: Lamb of God

When you hear the word “lamb”, what do you imagine? Usually modern audiences think of a cute little animal with fluffy wool, like a cloud. But John the Baptist was not speaking to a modern audience. His audience was Jewish, and when they heard the word “lamb” they thought of sacrifice. It was a lamb after all that was the sacrificial Passover meal that they ate, and still eat. John the Baptist is claiming that Jesus is the true Lamb of God. Christ will be the one who truly sacrifices himself for us that we may pass over sin and death and enter the promised land of God’s presence. He is the ‘Lamb” we eat at every Mass, the sacrificial meal that establishes communion with God and others. This is why we sing, “Lamb of God, you take away the sins of the world, have mercy on us,” before we receive holy communion. By our recitation of that title we are showing ourselves to be disciples with those who first heard John preach in the wilderness. We are the disciples who follow the Apostolic faith in the Lamb of God who has come to us and takes away all sin, replacing it with his mercy. Jesus is our true Passover and, in communion, we pass with him into the Promised Land.

Lectio Divina

“What are you looking for?”  –John 1:38

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

These are the words of God. Take time to consider them carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. What are YOU looking for in your life? What has brought you to this Mass? What are you hoping for by believing in Jesus Christ and being in his Church? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart.

Does this bring you comfort? Why would Jesus ask this question? Are you able to answer this question to Jesus himself in your prayer?? Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way

Family is the basic institution in the world. By institution the Church means a pattern of customs, behaviors, expectations and practices that have been established through many, many generations that is left for every member of society as a gift from descendants to help shape a persons character. St, John Paul II taught that family is a school of socialization that teaches children how to be human. There we are supposed to learn how to communicate, how to share, how to resolve disputes, how to cooperate, how to pray and how to deal with the outside world in a confident and constructive way. The family is the Domestic Church where one should first learn how to live out the faith in a practical way every day. Ultimately it is families that are the building blocks of society. If families are not strong, if they are not supported, if they are not complete, the society suffers. The Christmas season provides an ample time for families to connect, to heal wounds and to learn and establish traditions that can be passed from generation to generation, creating a bond between the past, present and future.

The Friends of God: St. Elizabeth Seton

Patron saint of: Problems with in-laws, widows, against the death of children, opposition by Church authorities

Feast Day: January 4

Elizabeth Ann Seton has the distinction of being the first American-born saint. She was a convert from a high-society, New York Episcopalian family. Her wealthy husbands business and health both failed and she eventually lost him and their wealth. After her entrance in the Church she moved to Baltimore and started a school for girls. It became one of the first in what would eventually become the Catholic school system in America.

Lord God, you blessed Elizabeth Seton with gifts of grace as wife and mother, educator and foundress, so that she might spend her life in service to your people. Through her example and prayers may we learn to express our love for you in love for our fellow men and women. We ask this through Christ our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

On the Goodness of Jesus

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri

Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

Jesus is a deep font of Goodness that not only contains eminently and in a most perfect way every good that is found in creatures but every good that can still be imagined, and every good that can not be imagined not only by humans and angels, but by God himself. Having said this, I no longer wonder when I see Jesus Christ infinitely humble in a stable, infinitely humiliating on the Cross among two thieves, Jesus Christ made for us food and drink; Jesus Christ does not despise those who despise him, does not offend those who offend him, but rather, offering himself as victim to his enemies, dies, so to say, at the feet of his enemies to give them life, for having received, as Son of God and as man, a kindness without limits. His heart suffers in a certain way if it is not yet communicated to us, and we raise his heart if we accept his grace; nor can we do to Jesus Christ anything more acceptable than this.

December 23, 2018 – Fourth Sunday of Advent

Why Do We Do That? The Christmas Proclamation

Traditionally, at the beginning of Midnight Mass, before the Gloria is sung, the Church makes a formal declaration of the birth of Christ. The proclamation situates the birth of Jesus within both salvation and secular history to demonstrate that God has entered into our time and altered it.

All of the events mentioned are connected to the Nativity and fulfilled by it. For example, the prophecy of Daniel is mentioned, so we come to understand that the birth of Jesus is the fulfillment of that prophecy.

It is quite common to proclaim a new birth. At the very least we send out letters, postcards, emails or texts to friends and family to announce the arrival of the little one. When the child born is of royal lineage the announcement is usually quite formal, even today the press is present to witness the announcement. So, the Church makes this solemn and formal announcement that God is King in Jesus Christ and all of history has been preparing for this event. With the birth of Jesus history has altered from time moving away from God to time heading straight toward him to culminate eventually in a great wedding feast.

Catechesis: The Incarnation

References to The Incarnation mean that God became a man in Jesus Christ. Essentially this means that Jesus is the most important Sacrament. He makes God, who is pure Spirit, visible to us in his human body, just as all the sacraments make the power of God visible to us through the sacramental sign.

One of the earliest debates in the Church’s history was over the proper understanding of the Incarnation. The first ecumenical council in Nicaea, from which we derive most of our Creed, was called in order to address this very issue. There would be several other councils called in the early centuries of Christianity to settle the issue for good.

Jesus Christ is one person. He is the Son of God, the second person of the Trinity, God from God and Light from Light, true God from true God, as we profess. But in the Incarnation he also took on a human nature to be like us in every way except sin. So, Jesus is also fully human. He is not half-human and half-divine; Jesus is fully human and fully divine. Being such is not a case of multiple personalities. He remains one person. Truly the Divine Person of the Son of God.

Lectio Divina

“Blessed are you who believed that what was spoken to you by the Lord would be fulfilled.”   — Luke 1:45

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

These are the word of God. Take time to consider them carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Why is a believer blessed, as Elizabeth tells Mary? How is the Lord’s word fulfilled in the life of Mary? What is it that Mary believed? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart.

Does this bring you comfort? What do you think he means? How have you been blessed through your belief in God’s word? Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way

Christmas is more than a day! We celebrate a season that lasts till the feast of the Baptism of the Lord on January 13. You will notice that the Christmas decorations remain up till then. The mystery of Christ’s life is not a one-day affair. God becoming a man is an event unparalleled in history. The world is a much different place since the birth of Jesus Christ. These events require an entire liturgical season to celebrate and remember.

Christmas Day itself is actually extended for 8 days, called the Octave of Christmas, encompassing two Sundays. The first 8 days of the Christmas season are considered as if one day in the liturgy. Throughout this octave and indeed throughout the whole season we hear in the readings at Mass how the birth of Christ has already started to change the world and the lives of those who surround Jesus, for both good and bad.

Continue to send your Christmas cards and extend Christmas greetings to everyone. The secular world starts Christmas after Halloween and ends it on December 25. The truth is, we are just beginning!

The Friends of God: St. Stephen

Patron saint of: Deacons, Altar Servers, headaches

Feast Day: December 26

St. Stephen was the first Christian to suffer a death for his witness to Christ. In his defense before the Sanhedrin, the Jewish Senate, St. Stephen argued lovingly that Jesus has fulfilled the promises of the Old Testament given through the prophets. With Christ, the full and true worship of God was now in established, which all peoples are invited to participate in through Baptism, Confirmation and Eucharist. For his argument, Stephen was stoned to death with the approval of Saul. Stephen prayed at his death for his persecutors. A prayer that converted Saul and made him St. Paul.

O glorious saint, faithful imitator of Jesus Christ martyr in will and in reality, so full of charity, zeal, love, and purity, deign to intercede for us poor   exiles; you who are so high in the favor of God, we do entreat you to procure for us a little spark of that divine love which animated your heart, that we too one day may have the happiness of seeing our God face to face. Amen.

The Incarnation

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri

Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

Traditionally, at the beginning of Midnight Mass, before the Gloria is sung, the Church makes a formal declaration of the birth of Christ. The proclamation situates the birth of Jesus within both salvation and secular history to demonstrate that God has entered into our time and altered it.

All of the events mentioned are connected to the Nativity and fulfilled by it. For example, the prophecy of Daniel is mentioned, so we come to understand that the birth of Jesus is the fulfillment of that prophecy.

It is quite common to proclaim a new birth. At the very least we send out letters, postcards, emails or texts to friends and family to announce the arrival of the little one. When the child born is of royal lineage the announcement is usually quite formal, even today the press is present to witness the announcement. So, the Church makes this solemn and formal announcement that God is King in Jesus Christ and all of history has been preparing for this event. With the birth of Jesus history has altered from time moving away from God to time heading straight toward him to culminate eventually in a great wedding feast.

December 16, 2018 – Third Sunday of Advent

Why Do We Do That?

Rose Vestments

Gaudete Sunday is the third Sunday of Advent. The color used in the Mass is changed from violet to rose. The reason for the change is to express joy and the coming of the Lord at Christmas. Gaudete is Latin for joy or rejoice. The second reading in the Mass from St. Paul’s letter to the Philippians admonishes us to rejoice. He does not give us a suggestion; it is an imperative: Rejoice! How can Paul command us to rejoice? He can do so because the Lord has come and given himself as a gift to us making it possible to become his children. There is no greater dignity, no greater victory than to be a child of God and heir to his kingdom. The birth of Jesus Christ into our world has made all of that possible. God is with us!

Rejoicing is necessary when the Lord is near. The previous two weeks of Advent have had readings at Mass that focused on judgment and the coming of the Lord at the end of the world. Now the focus of the reading changes from this point on to the expectation of the Nativity. We should feel the excitement of knowing that Christmas is so close and God has come to be with his people. The change of color to rose provides and outward sign of this shift from penance to joy.

Catechesis: Daughter of Zion

There are several references from the prophets in the Old Testament to daughter Zion. This refers to Israel in its purest and most ideal form, exhibiting the faith of Abraham. Abraham trusted God on Zion when he was prepared to offer his son Isaac in sacrifice. His trust was not disappointed as God delivered him and Isaac and launched the history of Israel. The sins of the people kept them from living up to this pure faith and trust of Abraham. But the prophets promised that pure faith (daughter Zion) would be redeemed and find its way into Israel once and for all. The Church knows that daughter Zion, with pure faith and trust in God, is the Blessed Virgin Mary. She is the one who gave her complete “yes” to God’s plan at the Annunciation and become the Mother of God. She trusted all the way to the crucifixion of her Son and never wavered in that trust. Just like Abraham, Mary and her Son were ultimately delivered by God in the resurrection. Through Our Lady, the daughter of Zion, we all have access to God’s gracious gifts.

Lectio Divina

“The crowds asked John the Baptist, ‘What should we do?’”   — Luke 3:10

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

These are the word of God. Take time to consider them carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. Are you able to picture the scene of John the Baptist in the desert with all of the people? What is it like? What question do you have for John? What may he have to say about what you need to do? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart.

Does this gospel bring you comfort? Anxiety? Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way

John the Baptist witnessed to a godly life. He admonished many to change their conduct and consider how their actions affected others. When he counseled about sharing clothing and food, John was mentioning corporal works of mercy. There are seven general ways in which we go beyond justice and practice real love for people in need. Feed the hungry, give drink to the thirsty, clothed the naked, shelter the homeless, visit the sick and prisoners, bury the dead, give alms to the poor. People who are afflicted in these ways are suffering misery. When we love people in their misery that is called mercy. It is a particular kind of love that is meant to lift some of the burden of life and restore a person to joy or at least the possibility of finding joy. The corporal works of mercy remind us that when we are confronted by suffering it is real life breaking in. Seeing the suffering of others in not simply an inconvenience for us but an opportunity to make the fallen world a little better. When we act mercifully toward others we allow the Kingdom of God to break into their lives and make crooked ways straight.

The Friends of God: St. Peter Canisius

Patron saint of: Germany, the Catholic Press.
Feast Day December 21

St. Peter lived and ministered in the middle of the 16th century in Europe, mainly Germany, during the time of the Protestant Reformation. He was a prolific writer and teacher. Teaching in parishes, universities and writing books to revitalize the Catholic Faith in the heart of Protestantism. He lent much credibility to his teaching about the Catholic faith by personally caring for plague victims in Vienna. He became well-known for his catechism explaining the faith in ways accessible to the people. St. Peter also urged charity, not derision to Protestants, ultimately leading many back into the Church.

Dear Doctor and Defender of the Church, to you the Master must have said: “Well done, composer of books which have taught and inspired countless persons in many lands.” Help those who compose catechisms to communicate the true teachings of Christ  in ways that can be understood by our contemporaries so that they will be moved to follow Jesus. Amen.

On Spiritual Joy

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri

Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

Ask the Lord for joyfulness.
Joy or cheerfulness is the second fruit of the Holy Spirit.

Think frequently of the Lord and thank him for the goods that we possess and hope to possess. For example, for the great good, namely the grace of God, that we possess and for the Paradise for which we hope. Let us go often to take, from the Angels and Blessed above, an air of joyfulness, thinking that from now on we are citizens of Heaven and fortifying ourselves in Christian hope. The merits connected with each good action and to the communion of saints.

December 9, 2018 – Second Sunday of Advent

Why Do We Do That?

Lord, have mercy — No Glory to God

One very recognizable feature of the Mass is the Gloria sung or recited right after the penitential rite (Lord, have mercy). “Glory to God in highest” was the refrain sung by the angels announcing the birth of Christ. We sing it together on Sundays and Solemn feast days to proclaim God’s greatness. During Advent and Lent, you may notice, the Gloria is omitted. The reason for this is to emphasize the penitential nature of the seasons, As the days leading into winter get darker and darker, so the season of Advent reminds us of life without God and how we must have hope in his coming to save us lest the final darkness of death overwhelm us, It is the unconscious dread of death that causes so much of the bad habits we form in life as an attempt to hide the inevitable from ourselves. But the season of Advent ultimately is a season to pull us out of the bad habits and into a true hope in the coming of Christ who destroys the darkness of death forever. Thus, we prepare our voices to sing the alleluia at Christmas with great joy and passion.

Catechesis: New Year of Grace

Advent begins the new year of grace. Time comes in two verities: Chronological (chronos) time represents the progression of events moving toward a particular point, namely, the second coming of Christ in glory. Quality time (Kairos) represents a deepening into the meaning of events. As chronos is represented by a straight line, Kairos is represented by concentric circles. The liturgical calendar represents both.

The 1st Sunday of Advent symbolizes Hope with the “Prophet’s Candle” reminding us that Jesus is coming.

The 2nd Sunday of Advent symbolizes Faith with the “Bethlehem Candle” reminding us of Mary and Joseph’s journey to Bethlehem.

The 3rd Sunday of Advent symbolizes Joy with the “Shepherd’s Candle” reminding us of the Joy the world experienced at the coming birth of Jesus.

The 4th Sunday of Advent symbolizes Peace with the “Angel’s Candle” reminding us of the message of the angels: “Peace on Earth, Good Will Toward Men.”

Lectio Divina

“I am confident of this, that the one who began a good work in you will continue to complete it until the day of Christ Jesus. ” — Philippians 1:6

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

These are the word of God. Take time to consider them carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions. What do you suppose is the Day of Christ? Who began good work in you? What is this good work? Take time right now to let these words touch your heart.

Does this bring you comfort? What do you think he means? Why would his word be the only thing that does not pass away? Ask the Holy Spirit, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way

The initiation of the Christian life and salvation is Baptism. The great and holy sacrament removes the separation from God by original sin and makes one a child of the Holy One.

It is also the sacrament that enables one to worship God properly in the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. To worship properly requires a “commission” from God so to speak. This commission or mark is received at Baptism. Being part of the family of God is not something one can give to oneself must it must be received as a gift gratefully. Gratitude is a fundamental Christian disposition. No child should be deprived of these marvelous gifts. To do so is to launch them into life with the idea that everything is “for the taking;” that is the disposition of the original sin. As a child of God through Baptism one discovers that real freedom happens within a community, within the Communion of Saints, not in isolation. We are called to a mutual dependence and affection with one another.

The Friends of God: St. John of the Cross

Patron saint of: Contemplatives and Mystics

Feast Day   December 14

John helped Teresa of Avila to reform the Carmelites to return to their contemplative roots. He wrote extraordinary Spanish poems to describe his mystical experiences. He had the courage to pursue fully the life of deep prayer and to face the fire of purification. Thus he found union with God in this life and left a “map” behind for Christians to follow.  John is considered one the greatest Spanish poets of all time. He described in his poetry the journey to God known as the dark night of the soul and the ultimate mystical marriage.

O Blessed Jesus, give me stillness of soul in You. Let Your mighty calmness reign in me. Rule me, O King of Gentleness, King of Peace. Amen.

Daily Offering

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri

Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

Almighty and Eternal God, I (name), although most unworthy in your sight, encouraged however by your compassion and infinite mercy, and by the desire of serving you, offer before the Most Holy Virgin Mary and all the Court of Heaven, to your Divine Majesty, this day and all my thoughts, words and actions in it. I humbly beg of your infinite goodness and mercy, by the Blood of Jesus Christ, that you choose to accept this offering in the odor of sweetness, and that as you have given me the grace to desire and to make this offering, so also you grant me the grace to fulfill it. Amen.

December 2, 2018 – First Sunday of Advent

Why Do We Do That?

Lord, have mercy — Kyrie Eleison

Every Holy Mass begins with the sign of the Cross because the Mass is out participation in that supreme event of God’s love. We pledge that we are acting now, not in our own name, but in the name of The Father, and of The Son, and of The Holy Spirit.

Then we acknowledge our sins and ask for pardon and peace. This is a crucial moment when we humbly admit that we do not live up to our mission of sacrificial love. We submit ourselves to our true judge, confident that God is reconciling us to Himself right now in Jesus Christ. We should, at this moment, pause and truly consider our particular sins and how they block us from proper love of God and neighbor. When we cry out, “Lord, have mercy,“ we are placing ourselves entirely into the Father’s hands. Our venial sins are forgiven at this part of the Mass. Do not miss the opportunity. Thus, we are prepared for the worship now to come.

The Mass is the celebration of God’s triumph over sin in the life, suffering, death and rising of Jesus. We call this the Paschal Mystery.

Catechesis: Advent

Advent is the first season of the Church year. We prepare for the coming of Christ in three ways: The first part of Advent is a focus on the second coming of   Jesus at the end of time to usher in the fullness of the Kingdom of God. This is the goal of all of history — to be with God forever. It constitutes the first part of Advent because as the goal of history, it shapes everything else in the calendar.

The next way prepare for the coming of Christ is by grace. He comes to us in the sacraments and in the whole life of the Church throughout the calendar in the feast days and seasons of the year.

The final part of Advent (beginning December 18th) is the preparation for the coming of Christ in nature at his birth. Christmas is an entire season of the Church year where we celebrate the beginning of grace in our world due to the birth of Jesus.

It is important to fully embrace Advent as a time of renewal, penance and deep longing for God. We are meant to wait for God, not leap ahead. It’s not Christmas yet.

Lectio Divina

“Beware that your hearts do not become drowsy.”   — Luke 21:34

Ask the Holy Spirit to open your heart and mind to receive the word of God with reverence and joy.

Notice the thoughts and emotions within you. As you prayerfully consider this passage, are you able to identify what thoughts and feelings are generated?

These are the words of Jesus. Take time to consider them carefully. Clear from your mind all distractions, for Jesus says that all of those things will pass away in the end. Only his words remain forever. Take time right now to let these words touch your heart.

Does Jesus bring you comfort with these words, or are you unsettled? What do you think he means? Why would his word be the only thing that does not pass away? Ask Jesus, in your heart, to help you to know what this means for you and how best to apply it in your life.

The Catholic Way

Christ’s coming in glory at the end of history will usher in the last judgment. We are called by Jesus to be prepared, to be vigilant. As we consider all the ways to be prepared we should remember the Last Rites of the Church for ourselves and our loved ones. These rites provide the sacraments to strengthen us in the most important moment of our lives, namely, our death.

The last indulgence provided by the Church during the Last Rites is the Apostolic Pardon. This is given by the priest at the time of anointing and removes all stains of sin that may remain in a person. All the usual conditions for any plenary indulgence remain. This pardon can even remove the need for Purgatory.

The Church is so eager to aid every person in the journey of salvation that the Apostolic Pardon is available even when a priest is not available as long as a person has maintained some kind of minimal prayer throughout life. Two Hail Marys a day means a lot!

The Friends of God: St. Ambrose

Patron saint of beekeepers, beggars, learners, the city of Milan. Feast Day: December 7

In 390 AD, Ambrose confronted Roman Emperor Theodosius about the massacre of 7,000 people ordered in Thessalonica; refusing him entrance to the Cathedral and denying him Communion, Ambrose demanded the emperor repent publicly. His deep desire for the Eucharist brought Caesar to his knees in repentance. From that time on, the emperor stood with the people in the cathedral and no longer in the sanctuary with the priests as was custom. The courage of Ambrose brought about the first separation of Church and state.

O Lord, who hast mercy upon all, take away from me my sins, and mercifully kindle in me the fire of thy Holy Spirit. Take away from me the heart of stone, and give me a heart of flesh, a heart to love and adore Thee, a heart to delight in Thee, to follow and enjoy Thee, for the sake of Christ. Amen.

Entrustment to the Virgin Mary

by Venerable Bruno Lanteri, Founder of the Oblates of the Virgin Mary

O Mary, I choose you as my loving Mother, and choose to depend on you in all my actions. I wish to discern at every moment what is most pleasing to you that I may fulfill with all my strength what you chose for me. I desire to be totally available to your desire, and that my only desire be what you desire. I declare above all, that my firm purpose is to adore, love and praise Jesus Christ, the fruit of your most pure womb, with that spirit, that heart, and in that perfect way that you, most blessed Virgin, adore, love and praise him in heaven, with the intention of giving him the same glory that you constantly give him in heaven.

Be pleased, my sovereign Lady and most loving Mother, to accept me as your unworthy servant and son/daughter, and grant me the grace to imitate the angels in my readiness to follow your desires, and to love Jesus with your own most ardent heart. Amen.

The Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception
of Our Lady:
December 8