Daily Archives: February 23, 2012

WHEN GOVERNMENTS WAR AGAINST FAITH AND FAMILY


WHEN GOVERNMENTS WAR AGAINST FAITH AND FAMILY

The prelude to Holy Lent this year in the United States at the federal level and, given provinces have great power, in Canada at the provincial level, is outright war against Christianity in general, the Catholic Church in particular and against the sanctity and sanctuary of the family.
Bl. Pope John Paul gave ALL families, not just Catholic/Christian families, their charter rights, a copy can be found at: http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/pontifical_councils/family/documents/rc_pc_family_doc_19831022_family-rights_en.html

As the Pope teaches, 3D: the family, a natural society, exists prior to the State or any other community, and possesses inherent rights which are inalienable;

When an American President or a Canadian Premier seeks to invade the sanctity of the family, such as stating by law what parents may/may not teach their children, such action is evil, destructive and is the very type of action which spreads ever more dangerous anger throughout the land.

In Article 5 of the Charter the Holy Father reminds us that: Since they have conferred life on their children, parents have the original, primary and inalienable right to educate them; hence they must be acknowledged as the first and foremost educators of their children.

Listen up government warriors against the family: that inalienable right means to educate their children in conformity with the parents’ own moral and religious convictions, and includes the right to choose the specific schools or other means necessary to teach their children in the faith of the family.

The Church herself is a family, Christianity in general is a family and so when a President seeks to force Catholic institutions to subsidize in any way medical procedures or drugs whose sole purpose is to murder unborn children then such a President has chosen not to wage war on an institution alone but to wage war against God, the creator and sustainer of life, to throw the gauntlet down before Christ, to insult the Holy Spirit.

Those government leaders referred to herein are waging war against every citizen’s religious liberty, which includes the freedom to be a non-believer, and it is a slippery slope for if government can do that, and if government can make it a crime in the sanctity of the home for parents to teach their children according to their faith – then the question must be asked: why do we wage war against the Taliban? Are they not already, to the extreme, doing what American and Canadian politicos are doing?

This Lent already are we not experiencing the prophecy of Jesus: “….you will be hated because of Me….many will turn from the faith and will betray and hate each other….but the one who stands firm to the end will be saved..”[cf. Mt.24:4-14]

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WHEN GOVERNMENTS WAR AGAINST FAITH AND FAMILY

Gueranger and the ‘Practice of Lent’

This is long but it’s well worth reading bits of it over your Pretzel collations. This is with credit to the excellent Liturgia Latina Project.

After having spent the three weeks of Septuagesima in meditating upon our spiritual infirmities, and upon the wounds caused in us by sin, – we should be ready to enter upon the penitential season, which the Church has now begun. We have now a clearer knowledge of the justice and holiness of God, and of the dangers that await an impenitent soul; and, that our repentance might be earnest and lasting, we have bade farewell to the vain joys and baubles of the world. Our pride has been humbled by the prophecy, that these bodies would soon be like the ashes that wrote the memento of death upon our foreheads.

During these Forty Days of penance, which seem so long to our poor nature, we shall not be deprived of the company of our Jesus. He seemed to have withdrawn from us during those weeks of Septuagesima, when everything spoke to us of his maledictions upon sinful man;- but this absence has done us good. It has taught us how to tremble at the voice of God’s anger. The fear of the Lord is the beginning of Wisdom [Ps. c x. 10.]; we have found it to be so;- the spirit of penance is now active within us, because we have feared.

And now, let us look at the divine object that is before us. It is our Emmanuel; the same Jesus, but not under the form of the sweet Babe whom we adored in his Crib. He is grown to the fulness of the age of man, and wears the semblance of a Sinner, trembling and humbling himself before the Sovereign Majesty of his Father, whom we have offended, and to whom he now offers himself as the Victim of propitiation. He loves us with a Brother’s love; and seeing that the season for our doing penance has begun, he comes to cheer us on by his presence and his own example. We are going to spend Forty Days in fasting and abstinence:- Jesus, who is innocence itself, goes through the same penance. We have separated ourselves, for a time, from the pleasures and vanities of the world:- Jesus withdraws from the company and sight of men. We intend to assist at the Divine Services more assiduously, and pray more fervently, than at other times: – Jesus spends forty days and forty nights in praying, like the humblest suppliant; and all this for us. We are going to think over our past sins, and bewail them in bitter grief :- Jesus suffers for them and weeps over them in the silence of the desert, as though He himself had committed them.

No sooner had he received Baptism from the hands of St. John, than the Holy Ghost led him to the Desert. The time had come for his showing himself to the world; he would begin by teaching us a lesson of immense importance. He leaves the saintly Precursor and the admiring multitude, that had seen the divine Spirit descend upon him, and heard the Father’s voice proclaiming him to be his Beloved Son; he leaves them, and goes into the Desert. Not far from the Jordan, there rises a rugged mountain, which has received, in after ages, the name of Quarantana. It commands a view of the fertile plain of Jericho, the Jordan, and the Dead Sea. It is within a cave of this wild rock that the Son of God now enters, his only companions being the dumb animals who have chosen this same for their own shelter. He has no food wherewith to satisfy the pangs of hunger; the barren rock can yield him no drink; his only bed must be of stone. Here he is to spend Forty Days; after which, he will permit the Angels to visit him and bring him food.

Thus does our Saviour go before us on the holy path of Lent. He has borne all its fatigues and hardships, that so we, when called upon to tread the narrow way of our Lenten Penance, might have His example wherewith to silence the excuses, and sophisms, and repugnances, of self-love and pride. The lesson is here too plainly given not to be understood; the law of doing penance for sin is here too clearly shown, and we cannot plead ignorance;- let us honestly accept the teaching and practise it. Jesus leaves the Desert where he had spent the Forty Days, and begins his preaching with these words, which he addresses to all men: Do penance, for the Kingdom of heaven is at hand [St. Matth. iv. 17]. Let us not harden our hearts to this invitation, lest there be fulfilled in us the terrible threat contained in those other words of our Redeemer: Unless ye shall do penance, ye shall perish [St. Luke, xiii. 3].

Now, Penance consists in contrition of the soul, and in mortification of the body; these two parts are essential to it. The soul has willed the sin; the body has frequently co-operated in its commission. Moreover, man is composed of both Soul and Body; both, then, should pay homage to their Creator. The Body is to share with the Soul, either the delights of heaven, or the torments of hell; there cannot, therefore, be any thorough Christian life, or any earnest penance, where the Body does not take part, in both, with the Soul.

But it is the Soul which gives reality to Penance. The Gospel teaches this by the examples it holds out to us of the Prodigal Son, of Magdalene, of Zacheus, and of St. Peter. The Soul, then, must be resolved to give up every sin; she must heartily grieve over those she has committed; she must hate sin ; she must shun the occasions of sin. The Sacred Scriptures have a word for this inward disposition, which has been adopted by the Christian world, and admirably expresses the state of the Soul that has turned away from her sins: this word is, Conversion. The Christian should, therefore, during Lent, study to excite himself to this repentance of heart, and look upon it as the essential foundation of all his Lenten exercises. Nevertheless, he must remember that this spiritual penance would be a mere delusion, were he not to practise mortification of the Body. Let him study the example given him by his Saviour, who grieves, indeed, and weeps over our sins; but he also expiates them by his bodily sufferings. Hence it is, that the Church, – the infallible interpreter of her Divine Master’s will, – tells us, that the repentance of our heart will not be accepted by God, unless it be accompanied by fasting and abstinence.

How great, then, is the illusion of those Christians, who forget their past sins, or compare themselves with others whose lives they take to have been worse than their own; and thus satisfied with themselves, can see no harm or danger in the easy life they intend to pass for the rest of their days! They will tell you, that there can be no need of their thinking of their past sins, for they have made a good Confession! Is not the life they have led since that time a sufficient proof of their solid piety? And why should any one speak to them about God’s Justice and Mortification? – Accordingly, as soon as Lent approaches, they must get all manner of Dispensations. Abstinence is an inconvenience: Fasting has an effect upon their health, it would interfere with their occupations, it is such a change from their ordinary way of living: besides, there are so many people who are better than themselves, and yet who never fast or abstain:- and, as the idea never enters their minds of supplying for the penances prescribed by the Church with other penitential exercises, such persons as these, gradually and unsuspectingly, lose the Christian spirit.

The Church sees this frightful decay of supernatural energy; but she cherishes what is still left, by making her Lenten observances easier, year after year. With the hope of maintaining that little, and of seeing it strengthen for some better future, she leaves to the Justice of God her children who hearken not to her, when she teaches them how they might, even now, propitiate his anger. Alas! these her children, of whom we are speaking, are quite satisfied that things should be as they are, and never think of judging their own conduct by the examples of Jesus and his Saints, or by the undeviating rules of Christian penance.

It is true, there are exceptions; but how rare they are, especially in our large towns! Groundless prejudices, idle excuses, bad example, – all tend to lead men from the observance of Lent. Is it not sad to hear people giving such a reason as this for their not fasting or abstaining, – because they feel them ? Surely, they forget that the very aim of fasting and abstinence is to make these bodies of sin [Rom. vi. 6] suffer and feel. And what will they answer on the Day of Judgment, when our Saviour shall show them how the very Turks, who were the disciples of a gross and sensual religion, had the courage to practise, every year, the forty days’ austerities of their Ramadan?

But their own conduct will be their loudest accuser. These very persons, who persuade themselves that they have not strength enough to bear the abstinence and fasting of Lent, even in their present mitigated form, think nothing of going through incomparably greater fatigues for the sake of temporal gains or worldly enjoyments. Constitutions, which have broken down in the pursuit of pleasures, – which, to say the least, are frivolous, and always dangerous, – would have kept up all their vigour, had the laws of God and his Church, and not the desire to please the world, been the guide of their conduct. But such is the indifference, wherewith this non-observance of Lent is treated, that it never excites the slightest trouble or remorse of conscience; and they who are guilty of it will argue with you, that people who lived in the Middle Ages may perhaps have been able to keep Lent, but that now-a-days it is out of the question: and they can coolly say this in the face of all that the Church has done to adapt her Lenten discipline to the physical and moral weakness of the present generation! How comes it, that whilst these men have been trained in, or converted to, the Faith of their Fathers, they can forget that the observance of Lent is an essential mark of Catholicity; and that when the Protestants undertook to Reform her, in the 16th century, one of their chief grievances was that she insisted on her children mortifying themselves by Fasting and Abstinence!

But, it will be asked, – are there, then, no lawful Dispensations? – We answer, that there are; and that they are more needed now than in former ages, owing to the general weakness of our constitutions. Still, there is great danger of our deceiving ourselves. If we have strength to go through great fatigues, when our own self-love is gratified by them, – how is it we are too weak to observe Abstinence? If a slight inconvenience deter us from doing this penance, how shall we ever make expiation for our sins, for expiation is essentially painful to nature? The opinion of our physician, that Fasting will weaken us, may be false, or it may be correct; – but is not this mortification of the flesh the very object that the Church aims at, knowing that our soul will profit by the body being brought into subjection? But let us suppose the dispensation to be necessary: that our health would be impaired, and the duties of our state of life neglected, if we were to observe the law of Lent to the letter:- do we, in such case, endeavour, by other works of penance, to supply for those, which our health does not allow us to observe:- Are we grieved and humbled to find ourselves thus unable to join with the rest of the Faithful Children of the Church, in bearing the yoke of Lenten discipline? Do we ask of our Lord to grant us the grace, next year, of sharing in the merits of our fellow-Christians, and of observing those holy practices, which give the soul an assurance of mercy and pardon? If we do, the dispensation will not be detrimental to our spiritual interests; and when the Feast of Easter comes, inviting the Faithful to partake of its grand joys, we may confidently take our place side by side with those who have fasted; for though our bodily weakness has not permitted us to keep pace with them exteriorly, our heart has been faithful to the spirit of Lent.

How long a list of proofs we could still give of the negligence, into which the modern spirit of self-indulgence leads so many among us, in regard of Fasting and Abstinence! Thus, there are Catholics to be found in every part of the world who make their Easter Communion, and profess themselves to be Children of the Catholic Church, who yet have no idea of the obligations of Lent. Their very notion of Fasting and Abstinence is so vague, that they are not aware that these two practices are quite distinct one from the other; and that the dispensation from one does not, in any way, include a dispensation from the other. If they have, lawfully, or unlawfully, obtained exemption from Abstinence, it never so much as enters into their minds, that the obligation of fasting is still binding upon them, during the whole Forty Days; or if they have had granted to them a dispensation from Fasting, they conclude that they may eat any kind of food they wish. Such ignorance as this is the natural result of the indifference wherewith the commandments and traditions of the Church are treated.

So far, we have been speaking of the non-observance of Lent in its relation to individuals and Catholics; let us now say a few words upon the influence which that same non-observance has upon a whole people or nation. There are but few social questions which have not been ably and spiritedly treated of by the public writers of the age, who have devoted their talents to the study of what is called Political Economy; and it has often been a matter of surprise to us, that they should have overlooked a subject of such deep interest as this, – the results produced on society by the abolition of Lent, that is to say, of an institution, which, more than any other, keeps up in the public mind a keen sentiment of moral right and wrong, inasmuch as it imposes on a nation an annual expiation for sin. No shrewd penetration is needed to see the difference between two nations, one of which observes, each year, a forty-days’ penance in reparation of the violations committed against the Law of God, and another, whose very principles reject all such solemn reparation. And looking at the subject from another point of view, is it not to be feared that the excessive use of animal food tends to weaken, rather than to strengthen, the constitution? We are convinced of it, – the time will come, when a greater proportion of vegetable, and less of animal, diet, will be considered as an essential means for maintaining the strength of the human frame.

Let, then, the Children of the Church courageously observe the Lenten practices of penance. Peace of conscience is essential to Christian life; and yet it is promised to none but truly penitent souls. Lost innocence is to be regained by the humble confession of the sin, when it is accompanied by the absolution of the Priest; but let the Faithful be on their guard against the dangerous error, which would persuade them that they have nothing to do when once pardoned. Let them remember the solemn warning given them by the Holy Ghost in the sacred scriptures: Be not without fear about sin forgiven! [Ecclus. v. 5]. Our confidence of our having been forgiven should be in proportion to the change or conversion of our heart the greater our present detestation of our past sins, and the more earnest our desire to do penance for them for the rest of our lives, the better founded is our confidence that they have been pardoned. Man knoweth not, as the same holy Volume assures us, whether he be worthy of love or hatred [Eccles. ix. 1]; but he that keeps up within him the spirit of penance, has every reason to hope that God loves him.

But the courageous observance of the Church’s precept of Fasting and Abstaining during Lent must be accompanied by those two other eminently good works, to which God so frequently urges us in the Scripture: Prayer and Alms-deeds. Just as under the term Fasting the Church comprises all kinds of mortification; so under the word Prayer, she includes all those exercises of piety whereby the soul holds intercourse with her God. More frequent attendance at the services of the Church, assisting daily at Mass, spiritual reading, meditation upon eternal truths and the Passion, hearing sermons, and, above all, the approaching the Sacraments of Penance and the Holy Eucharist, – these are the chief means whereby the Faithful should offer to God the homage of Prayer, during this holy Season.

Almsdeeds comprise all the works of mercy to our neighbour, and are unanimously recommended by the Holy Doctors of the Church, as being the necessary complement of Fasting and Prayer during Lent. God has made it a law, to which he has graciously bound himself, – that charity shown towards our fellow-creatures, with the intention of pleasing our Creator, shall be rewarded as though it were done to Himself. How vividly this brings before us the reality and sacredness of the tie, which he would have to exist between all men! Such, indeed, is its necessity, that our Heavenly Father will not accept the love of any heart that refuses to show mercy: but, on the other hand, he accepts, as genuine and as done to himself, the charity of every Christian, who, by a work of mercy shown to a fellow-man, is really acknowledging and honouring that sublime union, which makes all men to be one family, with God as its Father. Hence it is, that Alms-deeds, done with this intention, are not merely acts of human kindness, but are raised to the dignity of acts of religion, which have God for their direct object, and have the power of appeasing his Divine Justice.

Let us remember the counsel given by the Archangel Raphael to Tobias. He was on the point of taking leave of this holy family, and returning to heaven; and these were his words: Prayer is good with fasting and alms, more than to lay up treasures of gold: for alms delivereth from death, and the same is that which purgeth away sins, and maketh to find mercy and life everlasting [Tob. xii, 8, 9]. Equally strong is the recommendation given to this virtue by the Book of Ecclesiasticus: Water quencheth a flaming fire, and alms resisteth sins [Ecclus. iii. 33]. And again: Shut up alms in the heart the poor, and it shall obtain help for thee against all evil [Ibid. xxix. 15]. The Christian should keep these consoling promises ever before his mind, but more especially during the season of Lent. The rich man should show the poor. whose whole year is a fast, that there is a time when even he has his self-imposed privations. The faithful observance of Lent naturally produces a saving; let that saving be given to Lazarus. Nothing, surely, could be more opposed to the spirit of this holy Season, than the keeping up a table, as richly and delicately provided, as at other periods of the year, when God permits us to use all the comforts compatible with the means he has given us. But how thoroughly Christian is it, that during these days of penance and charity, the life of the poor man should be made more comfortable, in proportion as that of the rich shares in the hardships and privations of his suffering brethren throughout the world! Poor and rich would then present themselves, with all the beauty of fraternal love upon them, at the Divine Banquet of the Paschal Feast, to which our Risen Jesus will invite us after these forty days are over.

There is one means more whereby we are to secure to ourselves the grand graces of Lent; it is the spirit of retirement and separation from the world. Our ordinary life, that is, such as it is during the rest of the year, should all be made to pay tribute to the holy Season of penance; otherwise, the salutary impression produced on us by the holy ceremony of Ash Wednesday will soon be effaced. The Christian ought, therefore, to forbid himself, during Lent, all the vain amusements, entertainments, and parties, of the world he lives in. As regards Theatres and Balls, which are the World in the very height of its power to do harm, no one that calls himself a disciple of Christ should ever be present at them, unless necessity, or the position he holds in society, oblige him to it: but if, from his own free choice, he throw himself amidst such dangers during the present holy Season of penance and recollection, he offers an insult to his character, and must needs cease to believe that he has sins to atone for, and a God to propitiate. The world, (we mean that part of it which is Christian,) has thrown off all those external indications of mourning and penance, which we read of as being so religiously observed in the Ages of Faith; let that pass: but there is one thing which can never change: God’s Justice, and man’s obligation to appease that Justice. The world may rebel as much as it will against the sentence, but the sentence is irrevocable: Unless ye do penance, ye shall all perish [St. Luke, xiii. 3]. It is God’s own word. Say, if you will, that few now-a-days give ear to it; but, for that very reason many are lost. They, too, who hear this word, must not forget the warnings given them by our Divine Saviour himself, in the Gospel read to us on Sexagesima Sunday. He told us, how some of the Seed is trodden down by the passers-by, or eaten by the fowls of the air; how some falls on rocky soil, and gets parched; and how, again, some is choked by thorns. Let us be wise, and spare no pains to become that good ground, which not only receives the Divine Seed, but brings forth a hundred-fold for the Easter harvest which is at hand.

An unavoidable feeling will arise in the minds of some of our readers, as they peruse these pages, in which we have endeavoured to embody the spirit of the Church, such as it is expressed, not only in the Liturgy, but also in the decrees of Councils and in the writings of the holy Fathers. The feeling we allude to, is one of regret at not finding, during this period of the Liturgical Year, the touching and exquisite poetry, which gave such a charm to the forty days of our Christmas solemnity. First came Septuagesima, throwing its gloomy shade over those enchanting visions of the Mystery of Bethlehem; and now we have got into a desert land, with thorns at every step, and no springs of water to refresh us. Let us not complain, however; Holy Church knows our true wants, and is intent on supplying them. Neither must we he surprised at her insisting on a severer preparation for Easter, than for Christmas. At Christmas, we were to approach our Jesus as an Infant; all she put us through then, were the Advent exercises, for the Mysteries of our Redemption were but beginning.

And of those who went to Jesus’ crib, there were many who, like the poor Shepherds of Bethlehem, might be called simple, at least in this sense, – that they did not sufficiently realise, either the holiness of their Incarnate God, or the misery and guilt of their own conscience. But now that this Son of the Eternal God has entered the path of penance; now that we are about to see him a victim to every humiliation, and suffering even a death upon a Cross; – the Church does not spare us; she rouses us from our ignorance and our self-satisfaction. She bids us strike our breasts, have compunction in our souls, mortify our bodies, – because we are sinners. Our whole life ought to be one of penance; fervent souls are ever doing penance; could anything be more just or necessary, than that we should do some penance during these days, when our Jesus is fasting in the desert, and is to die on Calvary? There is a sentence of this our Redeemer, which he spoke to the daughters of Jerusalem, on the day of his Passion; let us apply it to ourselves: If in the green wood they do these things, what shall be done in the dry? [St. Luke, xxiii. 31]. Oh! what a revelation is here! and yet, by the mercy of the Jesus who speaks it, the dry wood may become the green, and so, not be burned.

The Church hopes, nay her whole energy is labouring, that this may be; therefore, she bids us bear the yoke; she gives us a Lent. Let us only courageously tread the way of penance, and the Light will gradually beam upon us. If we are now far off from our God by the sins that are upon us, this holy Season will be to us what the Saints call the Purgative Life, and will give us that purity, which will enable us to see our Lord in the glory of his victory over death. If, on the contrary, we are already living the Illuminative Life; if, during the three weeks of Septuagesima, we have bravely sounded the depth of our miseries, our Lent will give us a clearer view of Him who is our Light; and if we could acknowledge Him as our God when we saw him as the Babe of Bethlehem, our soul’s eye will not fail to recognize him in the divine Penitent of the Desert, or in the bleeding Victim of Calvary.

Originally posted here - 

Gueranger and the ‘Practice of Lent’

Gueranger and the ‘Mystery of Septuagesima’

This is with credit to the excellent Liturgia Latina Project

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CHAPTER THE SECOND
THE MYSTERY OF SEPTUAGESIMA

The Season, upon which we are now entering, is expressive of several profound mysteries. But these mysteries belong not only to the three weeks, which are preparatory to Lent; they continue throughout the whole period of time, which separates us from the great Feast of Easter.

The number seven is the basis of all these mysteries. We have already seen how the Holy Church came to introduce the season of Septuagesima into her Calendar. Let us now meditate on the doctrine hid under the symbols of her Liturgy. And first, let us listen to St. Augustine, who thus gives us the clue to the whole of our Season’s mysteries. “There are two times,” says the Holy Doctor: “one which is now, and is spent in the temptations and tribulations of this life; the other which shall be then, and shall be spent in eternal security and joy. In figure of these, we celebrate two periods: the time ‘before Easter’ and the time ‘after Easter.’ That which is ‘before Easter,’ signifies the sorrow of this present life; that which is ‘after Easter,’ the blessedness of our future state. * * Hence it is, that we spend the first in fasting and prayer; and in the second, we give up our fasting, and give ourselves to praise.” [Enarrations; Psalm clviii.]

The Church, the interpreter of the Sacred Scriptures, often speaks to us of two places, which correspond with these two times of St. Augustine. These two places are Babylon and Jerusalem. Babylon is the image of this world of sin, in the midst whereof the Christian has to spend his years of probation; Jerusalem is the heavenly country, where he is to repose after all his trials. The people of Israel, whose whole history is but one great type of the human race, was banished from Jerusalem and kept in bondage in Babylon.

Now, this captivity, which kept the Israelites exiles from Sion, lasted seventy years; and it is to express this mystery, as Alcuin, Amalarius, Ivo of Chartres, and all the great Liturgists tell us, that the Church fixed the number of Seventy for the days of expiation. It is true, there are but sixty-three days between Septuagesima and Easter; but the Church, according to the style so continually used in the Sacred Scriptures, uses the round number instead of the literal and precise one.

The duration of the world itself, according to the ancient Christian tradition, is divided into seven ages. The human race must pass through seven Ages before the dawning of the Day of eternal life. The first Age included the time from the creation of Adam to Noah; the second begins with Noah and the renovation of the earth by the Deluge, and ends with the vocation of Abraham; the third opens with this first formation of God’s chosen people, and continues as far as Moses, through whom God gave the Law; the fourth consists of the period between Moses and David, in whom the house of Juda received the kingly power; the fifth is formed of the years, which passed between David’s reign and the captivity of Babylon, inclusively; the sixth dates from the return of the Jews to Jerusalem, and takes us on as far as the Birth of our Saviour. Then, finally, comes the seventh Age; it starts with the rising of this merciful Redeemer, the Sun of Justice, and is to continue till the dread coining of the Judge of the living and the dead. These are the Seven great divisions of Time; after which, Eternity.

In order to console us in the midst of the combats, which so thickly beset our path, the Church, – like a beacon shining amidst the darkness of this our earthly abode, – shows us another Seven, which is to succeed the one we are now preparing to pass through. After the Septuagesima of mourning, we shall have the bright Easter with its Seven weeks of gladness, foreshadowing the happiness and bliss of Heaven. After having fasted with our Jesus, and suffered with him, the day will come when we shall rise together with him, and our hearts shall follow him to the highest heavens, and then after a brief interval, we shall feel descending upon us the Holy Ghost, with his Seven Gifts. The celebration of all these wondrous joys will take us Seven weeks, as the great Liturgists observe in their interpretation of the Rites of the Church:- the seven joyous weeks from Easter to Pentecost will not be too long for the future glad Mysteries, which, after all, will be but figures of a still gladder future, the future of eternity.

Having heard these sweet whisperings of hope, let us now bravely face the realities brought before us by our dear Mother the Church. We are sojourners upon this earth; we are exiles and captives in Babylon, that city which plots our ruin. If we love our country, – if we long to return to it, – we must be proof against the lying allurements of this strange land, and refuse the cup she proffers us, and with which she maddens so many of our fellow captives. She invites us to join in her feasts and her songs; but we must unstring our harps, and hang them on the willows that grow on her river’s bank, till the signal be given for our return to Jerusalem [Ps. cxxv]. She will ask us to sing to her the melodies of our dear Sion: but, how shall we, who are so far from home, have heart to sing the Song of the Lord in a strange Land? [Ps. cxxxvi]. No, – there must be no sign that we are content to be in bondage, or we shall deserve to be slaves for ever.

These are the sentiments wherewith the Church would inspire us, during the penitential Season, which we are now beginning. She wishes us to reflect on the dangers that beset us, – dangers which arise from our own selves, and from creatures. During the rest of the year, she loves to hear us chant the song of heaven, the sweet Alleluia! – but now, she bids us close our lips to this word of joy, because we are in Babylon. We are pilgrims absent from Our Lord [II Cor. v. 6]; – let us keep our glad hymn for the day of his return. We are sinners, and have but too often held fellowship with the world of God’s enemies; let us become purified by repentance, for it is written, that Praise is unseemly in the mouth of a sinner [Ecclus. xv. 9].

The leading feature, then, of Septuagesima is the total suspension of the Alleluia, which is not to be again heard upon the earth, until the arrival of that happy day, when, having suffered death with our Jesus, and having been buried together with him, we shall rise again with him to a new life [Coloss. ii. 12].

The sweet Hymn of the Angels, Gloria in excelsis Deo, which we have sung every Sunday since the Birth of our Saviour in Bethlehem, is also taken from us; it is only on the Feasts of the Saints, which may be kept during the week, that we shall be allowed to repeat it. The night Office of the Sunday is to lose, also, from now till Easter, its magnificent Ambrosian Hymn, the Te Deum; and at the end of the Holy Sacrifice, the Deacon will no longer dismiss the Faithful with his solemn Ite, Missa est, but will simply invite them to continue their prayers in silence, and bless the Lord, the God of mercy, who bears with us, notwithstanding all our sins.

After the Gradual of the Mass, instead of the thrice repeated Alleluia, which prepared our hearts to listen to the voice of God in the Holy Gospel, we shall hear but a mournful and protracted chant, called, on that account, the Tract.

That the eye, too, may teach us, that the Season we are entering on, is one of mourning, the Church will vest her Ministers, (both on Sundays and the days during the week, which are not Feasts of Saints,) in the sombre Purple. Until Ash Wednesday, however, she permits the Deacon to wear his dalmatic, and the Subdeacon his tunic; but from that day forward, they must lay aside these vestments of joy, for Lent will then have begun, and our holy Mother will inspire us with the deep spirit of penance, by suppressing everything of that glad pomp, which she loves, at other seasons, to bring into the Sanctuary of her God.

Continued: 

Gueranger and the ‘Mystery of Septuagesima’

Gueranger and the ‘Mystery of Lent’

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This is with credit to the excellent Liturgia Latina Project.

We may be sure, that a season, so sacred as this of Lent, is rich in mysteries. The Church has made it a time of recollection and penance, in preparation for the greatest of all her Feasts; she would, therefore, bring into it everything that could excite the faith of her children, and encourage them to go through the arduous work of atonement for their sins. During Septuagesima, we had the number Seventy, which reminded us of those seventy years’ captivity in Babylon, after which, God’s chosen people, being purified from idolatry, was to return to Jerusalem and celebrate the Pasch. It is the number Forty that the Church now brings before us: – a number, as Saint Jerome observes, which denotes punishment and affliction [In Ezechiel, cap. xxix].

Let us remember the forty days and forty nights of the Deluge (Gen. vii. 12), sent by God in his anger, when he repented that he had made man, and destroyed the whole human race, with the exception of one family. Let us consider how the Hebrew people, in punishment for their ingratitude, wandered forty years in the desert, before they were permitted to enter the Promised Land [Num. xiv. 33]. Let us listen to our God commanding the Prophet Ezechiel to lie forty days on his right side, as a figure of the siege, which was to bring destruction on Jerusalem [Ezech. iv. 6].

There are two, in the Old Testament, who represent, in their own persons, the two manifestations of God: Moses, who typifies the Law; and Elias, who is the figure of the Prophets. Both of these are permitted to approach God, – the first on Sinai [Exod. xxiv. 18], the second on Horeb [3 Kings, xix. 8], – but both of them have to prepare for the great favour by an expiatory fast of forty days.

With these mysterious facts before us, we can understand why it was, that the Son of God, having become Man for our salvation, and wishing to subject himself to the pain of fasting, chose the number of Forty Days. The institution of Lent is thus brought before us with everything that can impress the mind with its solemn character, and with its power of appeasing God and purifying our souls. Let us, there fore, look beyond the little world which surrounds us, and see how the whole Christian universe is, at this very time, offering this Forty Days’ penance as a sacrifice of propitiation to the offended Majesty of God; and let us hope, that, as in the case of the Ninivites, he will mercifully accept this year’s offering of our atonement, and pardon us our sins.

The number of our days of Lent is, then, a holy mystery: let us, now, learn from the Liturgy, in what light the Church views her Children during these Forty Days. She considers them as an immense army, fighting, day and night, against their Spiritual enemies. We remember how, on Ash Wednesday, she calls Lent a Christian Warefare. Yes, – in order that we may have that newness of life, which will make us worthy to sing once more our Alleluia, – we must conquer our three enemies the devil, the flesh, and the world. We are fellow combatants with our Jesus, for He, too, submits to the triple temptation, suggested to him by Satan in person. Therefore, we must have on our armour, and watch unceasingly. And whereas it is of the utmost importance that our hearts be spirited and brave, – the Church gives us a war-song of heaven’s own making, which can fire even cowards with hope of victory and confidence in God’s help: it is the Ninetieth Psalm [Ps. Qui habitat in adjutorio, in the Office of Compline]. She inserts the whole of it in the Mass of the First Sunday of Lent, and, every day, introduces several of its verses in the Ferial Office.

She there tells us to rely on the protection, wherewith our Heavenly Father covers us, as with a shield [Scuto circumdabit to veritas ejus. Office of None.]; to hope under the shelter of his wings [Et sub pennis ejus sperabis. Sext.]; to have confidence in him, for that he will deliver us from the snare of the hunter [Ipse liberavit me de laqueo venantium. Tierce.], who had robbed us of the holy liberty of the children of God; to rely upon the succour of the Holy Angels, who are our Brothers, to whom our Lord hath given charge that they keep us in all our ways [Angelis suis mandavit de te, ut custodiant te in omnibus viis tuis. Lauds and Vespers.], and who, when our Jesus permitted Satan to tempt him, were the adoring witnesses of his combat, and approached him, after his victory, proffering to him their service and homage. Let us get well into us these sentiments wherewith the Church would have us be inspired; and, during our six weeks’ campaign, let us often repeat this admirable Canticle, which so fully describes what the Soldiers of Christ should be and feel in this season of the great spiritual warfare.

But the Church is not satisfied with thus animating us to the contest with our enemies; – she would also have our minds engrossed with thoughts of deepest import; and for this end, she puts before us three great subjects, which she will gradually unfold to us between this and the great Easter Solemnity. Let us be all attention to these soul-stirring and instructive lessons.

And firstly, there is the conspiracy of the Jews against our Redeemer. It will be brought before us in its whole history, from its first formation to its final consummation on the great Friday, when we shall behold the Son of God hanging on the Wood of the Cross. The infamous workings of the synagogue will be brought before us so regularly, that we shall be able to follow the plot in all its details. We shall be inflamed with love for the august Victim, whose meekness, wisdom, and dignity, bespeak a God. The divine drama, which began in the cave of Bethlehem, is to close on Calvary; we may assist at it, by meditating on the passages of the Gospel read to us, by the Church, during these days of Lent.

The second of the subjects offered to us, for our instruction, requires that we should remember how the Feast of Easter is to be the day of new birth for our Catechumens; and how, in the early ages of the Church, Lent was the immediate and solemn preparation given to the candidates for Baptism. The holy Liturgy of the present season retains much of the instruction she used to give to the Catechumens; and as we listen to her magnificent Lessons from both the Old and the New Testament, whereby she completed their initiation, we ought to think with gratitude on how we were not required to wait years before being made Children of God, but were mercifully admitted to Baptism, even in our Infancy. We shall be led to pray for those new Catechumens, who this very year, in far distant countries, are receiving instructions from their zealous Missioners, and are looking forward, as did the postulants of the primitive Church, to that grand Feast of our Saviour’s victory over Death, when they are to be cleansed in the Waters of Baptism and receive from the contact a flew being, – regeneration.

Thirdly, we must remember how, formerly, the public Penitents, who had been separated, on Ash Wednesday, from the assembly of the Faithful, were the object of the Church’s maternal solicitude during the whole Forty Days of Lent, and were to be admitted to Reconciliation on Maundy Thursday, if their repentance were such as to merit this public forgiveness. We shall have the admirable course of instructions, which were originally designed for these Penitents, and which the Liturgy, faithful as she ever is to such traditions, still retains for our sakes. As we read these sublime passages of the Scripture, we shall naturally think upon our own sins, and on what easy terms they were pardoned us; whereas, had we lived in other times, we should have probably been put through the ordeal of a public and severe penance. This will excite us to fervour, for we shall remember, that, whatever changes the indulgence of the Church may lead her to make in her discipline, the justice of our God is ever the same. We shall find in all this an additional motive for offering to his Divine Majesty the sacrifice of a contrite heart, and we shall go through our penances with that cheerful eagerness, which the conviction of our deserving much severer ones always brings with it.

In order to keep up the character of mournfulness and austerity which is so well-suited to Lent, the Church, for many centuries, admitted very few Feasts into this portion of her year, inasmuch as there is always joy, where there is even a spiritual Feast. In the 4th century, we have the Council of Laodicea forbidding, in its fifty-first canon, the keeping a Feast or commemoration of any Saint, during Lent, excepting on the Saturdays or Sundays [Labbe, Concil., tom. i.]. The Greek Church rigidly maintained this point of Lenten Discipline; nor was it till many centuries after the Council of Laodicea that she made an exception for the 25th of March, on which day she now keeps the Feast of our Lady’s Annunciation.

The Church of Rome maintained this same discipline, at least in principle; but she admitted the Feast of the Annunciation at a very early period, and somewhat later, the Feast of the Apostle St. Matthias, on the 24th of February. During the last few centuries, she has admitted several other Feasts into that portion of her general Calendar which coincides with Lent; still, she observes a certain restriction, out of respect for the ancient practice.

The reason of the Church of Rome being less severe on this point of excluding the Saints’ Feasts during Lent, is, that the Christians of the West have never looked upon the celebration of a Feast as incompatible with fasting; the Greeks, on the contrary, believe that the two are irreconcilable, and as a consequence of this principle, never observe Saturday as a fasting-day, because they always keep it as a Solemnity, though they make Holy Saturday an exception, and fast upon it. For the same reason, they do not fast upon the Annunciation.

This strange idea gave rise, in or about the 7th century, to a custom which is peculiar to the Greek Church. It is called the Mass of the Presanctified, that is to say, consecrated in a previous Sacrifice. On each Sunday of Lent, the Priest consecrates six Hosts, one of which he receives in that Mass; but the remaining five are reserved for a simple Communion, which is made on each of the five following days, without the Holy Sacrifice being offered. The Latin Church practises this rite only once in the year, that is, on Good Friday, and this in commemoration of a sublime mystery, which we will explain in its proper place.

This custom of the Greek Church was evidently suggested by the 49th Canon of the Council of Laodicea, which forbids the offering the Bread of sacrifice during Lent, excepting on the Saturdays and Sundays [Labbe, Concil., tom. i.]. The Greeks, some centuries later on, concluded from this Canon, that the celebration of the Holy Sacrifice was incompatible with fasting; and we learn from the Controversy they had, in the 9th century, with the Legate Humbert [Centra Nicetam., tom. iv.], that the Mass of the Presanctified, (which has no other authority to rest on save a Canon of the famous Council in Trullo [Can. 52. Labbe, Concil. tom. vi.] held in 692,) was justified by the Greeks on this absurd plea, – that the Communion of the Body and Blood of our Lord broke the Lenten Fast.

The Greeks celebrate this rite in the evening, after Vespers, and the Priest alone communicates, as is done now in the Roman Liturgy on Good Friday. But for many centuries, they have made an exception for the Annunciation; they interrupt the Lenten fast on this Feast, they celebrate Mass, and the Faithful are allowed to receive Holy Communion.

The Canon of the Council of Laodicea was probably never received in the Western Church. If the suspension of the Holy Sacrifice during Lent was ever practised in Rome, it was only on the Thursdays; and even that custom was abandoned in the 8th century, as we learn from Anastasius the Librarian, who tells us that Pope St. Gregory the Second, desiring to complete the Roman Sacramentary, added Masses for the Thursdays of the first five weeks of Lent [Anastas. In Gregorio II]. It is difficult to assign the reason of this interruption of the Mass on Thursdays in the Roman Church, or of the like custom observed by the Church of Milan on the Fridays of Lent. The explanations we have found in different authors are not satisfactory. As far as Milan is concerned, we are inclined to think, that not satisfied with the mere adoption of the Roman usage of not celebrating Mass on Good Friday, the Ambrosian Church extended the rite to all the Fridays of Lent.

After thus briefly alluding to these details, we must close our present Chapter by a few words on the holy rites, which are now observed, during Lent, in our Western Churches. We have explained several of these in our “Septuagesima.” [See their explanation in the volume for Septuagesima]. The suspension of the Alleluia; the purple vestments; the laying aside the deacon’s Dalmatic, and the subdeacon’s Tunic; the omission of the two joyful canticles, – the Gloria in excelsis, and the Te Deum; the substitution of the mournful Tract for the Alleluia verse in the Mass; the Benedicamus Domino instead of the Ite, Missa est; the additional Prayer said over the people after the Post-communion Collects on Ferial Days ; the saying the Vesper Office before mid-day, excepting on the Sundays; – all these are familiar to our readers. We have only now to mention, in addition, the genuflections prescribed for the conclusion of all the Hours of the Divine Office on Ferias, and the rubric which bids the Choir to kneel, on those same Days, during the Canon of the Mass.

There were other ceremonies peculiar to the season of Lent, which were observed in the Churches of the West, but which have now, for many centuries, fallen into general disuse; we say general, because they are still partially kept up in some places. Of these rites, the most imposing was that of putting up a large veil between the Choir and the Altar, so that neither clergy nor people could look upon the Holy Mysteries celebrated within the Sanctuary. This veil – which was called the Curtain, and, generally speaking, was of a purple colour – was a symbol of the penance to which the sinner ought to subject himself, in order to merit the sight of that Divine Majesty, before whose face he had committed so many outrages. It signified, moreover, the humiliations endured by our Redeemer, who was a stumbling-block to the proud Synagogue. But, as a veil that is suddenly drawn aside, these humiliations were to give way, and be changed into the glories of the Resurrection [Honorius of Autun. Gemma animae. Lib. iii. cap. lxvi.]. Among other places where this rite is still observed, we may mention the Metropolitan Church of Paris, Notre Dame.

It was the custom also, in many Churches, to veil the Crucifix and the Statues of the Saints as soon as Lent began; in order to excite the Faithful to a livelier sense of penance, they were deprived of the consolation which the sight of these holy Images always brings to the soul. But this custom, which is still retained in some places, was less general than the more expressive one used in the Roman Church, and which we will explain in our next volume, – we mean the veiling the Crucifix and Statues only in Passion Time.

We learn from the Ceremonials of the Middle Ages, that, during Lent, and particularly on the Wednesdays and Fridays, processions used frequently to be made from one Church to another. In Monasteries, these Processions were made in the Cloister, and barefooted [Martène. De antiquis Eccles ritibus. Tom. iii. cap. xviii.]. This custom was suggested by the practice of Rome, where there is a Station for every day of Lent, and which, for many centuries, began by a procession to the Stational Church.

Lastly, – the Church has always been in the habit of adding to her prayers during the Season of Lent. Her present discipline is, that, on Ferias, in Cathedral and Collegiate Churches, (which are not exempted by a custom to the contrary,) the following additions are to be made to the Canonical Hours: on Mondays, the Office of the Dead; on Wednesday, the Gradual Psalms; and on Fridays, the Penitential Psalms. In some Churches, during the Middle-Ages, the whole Psaltery was added each week of Lent to the usual Office [Martène. De antiquis Eccles ritibus. Tom. iii. cap. xviii.].

Read more:  

Gueranger and the ‘Mystery of Lent’

La descente aux enfers

Lire 1 Pierre 3, 18-22

« A été crucifié, est mort, a été enseveli, est descendu aux enfers… » Ces mots sont tirés du Credo des Apôtres, récité à la messe tous les dimanches. Il a été composé à une époque où certains chrétiens, pour sauver la dignité de Jésus, refusaient de croire qu’il était vraiment mort. Ils disaient qu’il avait plutôt fait semblant de mourir. Mais le Credo des Apôtres insiste : la torture de Jésus a mené à son décès et à sa sépulture. Encore plus, il est descendu au séjour des morts. Car pour les Juifs au temps de Jésus, comme pour les Grecs, il y avait un genre de demi-vie au-delà la mort. D’après les idées du temps, les morts ne mouraient pas complètement, leurs « ombres » continuant à vivoter dans un séjour obscur qu’on appelait « les enfers ».

Saint Pierre voit dans cette descente aux enfers non seulement un événement passif, un sort auquel Jésus doit se soumettre dans la mort. Il y voit un geste actif, une décision de Jésus qui va annoncer, au cœur du séjour des morts, la victoire de la vie. Et il va l’annoncer aux pires coupables que les Juifs pouvaient imaginer : les pécheurs qui avaient provoqué le déluge au temps de Noé.

J’ai lu quelque part : « Tu ne peux jamais sombrer si bas dans le péché et le mal que l’amour de Dieu est incapable de t’en relever. » C’est un peu la leçon que je tire de ce passage de Pierre. Si Jésus est descendu jusqu’au séjour des morts, il peut aussi venir me rejoindre dans mes morts à moi, dans ces coins de ma vie où règne encore le mal. Il peut venir me rejoindre dans mes désespoirs et mes souffrances, dans mes peurs et mes indifférences. Et il ne vient pas pour condamner, mais pour guérir et annoncer la victoire de sa vie sur ma mort.

Cette victoire-là, elle est déjà réalisée en nous par le baptême. Plongés dans l’eau du baptême, c’est comme si nous descendions confronter la mort elle-même. Mais nous ne le faisons pas seuls : nous y descendons avec Jésus. Et c’est avec Jésus que nous remontons vers l’air et la lumière, vers la vie et l’amour. Déjà, par le baptême, la victoire de la résurrection est inscrite en nos vies.

Comme le dit si bien Saint Pierre : « Être baptisé, ce n’est pas seulement se laver le corps : c’est s’engager envers Dieu qui nous sauve par la résurrection de Jésus Christ. » En ce sens-là, le baptême n’est pas simplement un événement de mon passé : il est un chemin sur lequel je suis engagé, par lequel je m’engage un peu plus chaque jour envers Dieu qui me sauve en Jésus. Voilà tout un programme pour ce carême qui commence.

Originally posted here: 

La descente aux enfers

The "Ash-mob" & Your 40 Day Spiritual Workout!


The "Ash-mob" & Your 40 Day Spiritual Workout!

Lent has arrived and with it, 40 days of reflection, a time to take stock of where we are in our spiritual journey. Of course, it's still popular to "give something up" for Lent. That's not a bad way of keeping a tangible reminder that something is different, there's reason for pause, it's not about the indulgences but, rather, what we can give back during this season of fasting, almsgiving and reconciliation. Yet giving something up isn't the only way to engage ourselves in the season.

Did you wear your ashes proudly? Perhaps by God's intervention, this year my car broke down on Ash Wednesday which meant taking public transit to work, down to St. Mike's Cathedral for Ash Wednesday services, subway back to the office and a final extended subway ride to pick up the car (I didn't realize my first act of charity for Lent would be for the local mechanic).

So I certainly had the opportunity to wear my ashes publicly throughout the day. I'm not sure if it was an official declaration or not but the Cathedral this year (standing room only for the lunchtime service) was giving out particularly generous doses of ash, the kind that could require a scouring pad to remove. Perhaps that was the reason for a few extra looks but no less than 8 people asked me in my travels, "What's that on your head?" or some resorted to, "Hey do you know you have something on your head?"

These encounters gave me a brief moment to evangelize, to explain in a moment what the ashes were for. It got me to thinking - if every one of us had the chance to explain the symbolism of Ash Wednesday to another 8 people, we'd have the potential for, not a flashmob but an "ash-mob" of sorts, the opportunity to share our faith in the public square en masse.

I also caught a few people in my travels wearing ashes themselves - while we didn't stop for a fist-pump, it was tempting. Kind of affirming seeing someone from the same team on the street, wearing the ashes proudly and offering a smile or brief word of encouragement along the way.

So maybe we can collectively deploy "Operation Ash-Mob" to extend throughout these 40 days of Lent. How can we joyfully embrace the season each and every day? Last year in this space I had the chance to share some tangible ideas to bring Lent to life. It's not necessary to reinvent the wheel so below, with a few slight modifications, are some suggestions to chew on once again this year:

1. Reflect on the words of the new Mass translation. Digest the words don't just ingest them.
2. A more intentional prayer life - consider morning, mid-day and evening prayer.
3. Read a good book on spirituality, one that will enrich your spiritual journey.
4. Make a prayer basket at home - slips of paper or construction paper hearts (invite kids to participate) writing names or intentions that each person around the table picks out before each meal.
5. Attend weekday mass.
6. Say the rosary - even better if you don't mind bringing out your beads in public - on the bus, coffee shop or anywhere else people gather.
7. Make a point of experiencing the sacrament of reconciliation at the beginning and end of Lent at minimum.
8. Tell someone you're praying for them.
9. Don't tell someone you're praying for them and pray for them.
10. Give up meat on Fridays but don't substitute lobster - make fasting something that is truly sacrificial.
11. Keep track of your television and online habits - devote at least as much time to prayer or service.
12. Rumours, gossip, negative chatter that devalues others ends at your doorstep.
13. Begin and end each week with an email thanking someone for all that they do.
14. Be sure to say grace at any restaurant you frequent (don't dodge making the Sign of the Cross either)
15. Buy a coffee for someone living on the street but not until you learn their name and something about them.
16. Pray before the Blessed Sacrament.
17. Reconcile with someone you've hurt or aren't speaking to.
18. Invite someone who's been away from the church to attend mass with you.
19. Write a letter to a political leader on an issue you're passionate about.
20. Donate to charity - make a sacrificial gift not what's "left over" (remember the ShareLife campaign is underway).
21. Attend a lecture or public discussion centred on faith issues.
22. Thank a bishop, priest or member of a religious congregation for their public witness - invite them out for coffee or a meal.
23. Participate in the 40 Days for Life or other pro-life initiative.
24. Learn about the lives of the saints especially your parish saint.
25. Visit someone who's alone.
26. Consider a new liturgical experience - attend mass in the extraordinary form, an eastern rite service, etc.
27. Wash someone's feet - literally.
28. Pray the Stations of the Cross.
29. Find something you admire in someone you dislike.
30. Send a note of encouragement to someone who is participating in the RCIA program.
31. Get involved in Refugee Sponsorship at your local parish or contact the Office for Refugees to offer assistance.
32. At your parish Good Friday service, cram 3 more people than is comfortable in your pew to give them a spot to sit. Better yet give up your seat for them.
33. Attend Lectio Divina (March 4 & April 1).
34. Make time for family activities that are faith related.
35. Express your appreciation to someone in your parish who goes the extra mile - a lector, usher, pastoral associate, etc.
36. Journal about your spiritual highs/lows.
37. Pray for vocations.
38. Make a playlist of spiritual music that you enjoy and share it with a friend.
39. Embrace periods of silence in each day (it's the theme in Pope Benedict's message for the 2012 World Day of Communications).
40. Invite someone you know will be alone to your home for Easter Sunday dinner.

Our "Ash-mob" can make a profound impact this Lent. Now it's just up to us to take up the challenge as ambassadors for Christ. Are you up to it? So while giving up the chocolate and the chips is a good thing, let's embrace this Lent, body, mind and soul. Consider it your 40 day spiritual workout!

Off we go...

Taken from:

The "Ash-mob" & Your 40 Day Spiritual Workout!

Redemptive Sufferer of the Day: Saint Gemma Galgani

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The Life of Saint Gemma Galgani

Gemma Galgani was born on March 12, 1878, in a small Italian town near Lucca. At a very young age, Gemma developed a love for prayer. As a student at the school run by the Sisters of St. Zita, Gemma was loved by her teachers and her fellow pupils. Although quiet and reserved, she always had a smile for everyone. Although she was a good student, she had to quit school due to chronic ill health.

Throughout her life, Gemma was to be favored with many mystical experiences and special graces. These were often misunderstood by others, causing ridicule. Gemma suffered these heartaches in reparation, remembering that Our Lord Himself had been misunderstood and ridiculed.

Gemma had an immense love for the poor, and helped them in any way she could. After her father’s death, the nineteen year old Gemma became the mother of her seven brothers and sisters. Two young men proposed marriage to her, but Gemma wanted silence and desired to pray and speak only to God.

Gemma soon became very ill with meningitis. Throughout this illness, her one regret was the trouble she caused her relatives who took care of her. Feeling herself tempted by the devil, Gemma prayed for help to the Venerable Passionist, Gabriel Possenti, who was later canonized. (St. Gabriel was a Catholic seminarian whose marksmanship and proficiency with handguns single-handedly saved the village of Isola, Italy from a band of 20 terrorists in 1860). Through his intercession, Gemma was miraculously cured.

Gemma wished to become a nun, but her poor health prevented her from being accepted. She offered this disappointment to God as a sacrifice. Today, Gemma’s mortal remains are still treasured at the Passionist monastery in Lucca.

On June 8, 1899, Gemma received the marks of the stigmata. Each Thursday evening, Gemma would fall into rapture and the marks would appear for a few days. The stigmata would continue to appear until the last three years of her life, when her confessor forbade her to accept the grace. Through her prayers, this phenomenon ceased, but the whitish marks remained on her skin until her death. During the apostolic investigations into her life, all witnesses testified that there was no artfulness in Gemma’s manner. Most of her severe penances and sacrifices were hidden from most who knew her.

In January of 1903, Gemma was diagnosed as having tuberculosis. She died quietly in the company of the parish priest, on April 11 at age twenty-five. He said, “She died with a smile which remained upon her lips, so that I could not convince myself that she was really dead.” She was beatified in 1933 and canonized on May 2, 1940, only thirty-seven years after her death.

Gemma’s Redemptive Suffering

In one of her personal letters we read: “Jesus spoke these words to me: ‘My child, I have need of victims, and strong victims, who by their sufferings, tribulations, and difficulties, make amends for sinners and for their ingratitude.’” Saint Gemma offered herself as a victim soul for the salvation of sinners. Upon learning about a person who was deeply caught up in sin, she prayed to our Lord: “Jesus, give me this soul. In exchange I will give you three years of my life.” And another time she said “….I am willing to give the last drop of my blood to satisfy the Heart of Jesus to prevent the offenses of sinners.”

Saint Gemma knew that her time on earth was to be spent praying and suffering for others, and she looked forward to heaven more than anything: “I greatly rejoice that time flies so quickly, because that means so much less time to spend in this world, where there is nothing to attract me. My heart goes incessantly in search of a Treasure, an immense Treasure that I do not find in creatures; a Treasure that will satisfy me and console me, and give me rest.”

Gemma has now found that Treasure in heaven, and is in the position to intercede for all who call upon her aid.

Original article: 

Redemptive Sufferer of the Day: Saint Gemma Galgani

Purgatory

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“It is quite impossible for us to imagine the cruel torments endured by the souls in purgatory. The fathers of the Church tell us that they are terrible in the extreme. St. Augustine says that the fire which purifies the elect is of the same nature as that which torments the damned. This fire is fiercer than any we have seen, or can conjecture, on earth. If we had no other testimony than this to the terrible character of the purgatorial fire, it would suffice to make us believe in its awful agony, and tremble at the thought of it. St. Augustine proceeds to describe it further: ‘Although this fire,’ he says, ‘is not eternal, it is marvellously intense, and inflicts worse pain than any ever suffered in this world. No physical suffering can equal it, not even the fearful tortures the martyrs endured.’ Now if, after hearing this, we read in the lives of the saints of the cruel tortures they underwent, we may form some faint conception of the awful nature of the pains of purgatory.

“According to St. Cyril, Patriarch of Alexandria, it would be preferable to suffer all imaginable anguish [until] the end of time than to pass one day in purgatory. My God, how intolerable those pains must be if an unhappy soul suffers more in one day than a man could suffer from now until the day of judgment! St. Thomas of Aquin declares that a single spark from the flames of purgatory is worse than all the most dreadful tortures of this life. Terrible words, almost surpassing our powers of belief! Alas, what is to become of us, wretched
sinners, if after our death we are plunged into those scorching flames? What intense suffering, my God, is in store for us then! And yet not the slightest doubt can be entertained that, unless we endure these torments, we cannot enter heaven; for we are not holy and perfect: far from it, we are full of evil desires, and are soiled with the stains of sin.


“Many more passages from the fathers might be quoted concerning the pains of purgatory, but we will content ourselves with the words of St Bernadine, who says: ‘There is as much difference between our material fire and the fire of purgatory as between a painted fire and a real fire.’ St. Magdalen of Pazzi, who several times had a vision of purgatory, and even descried her own brother there, said that a large fire on earth appeared like pleasure-grounds in comparison to the fires of purgatory. This forcible comparison is enough to give us some idea of the agony suffered in purgatory, and to urge us to make atonement for our sins now, that we may not have
to expiate them hereafter in the torturing flames. It ought also to awaken within us heartfelt compassion for the holy souls who at the present time are enduring the terrible torture of that fiery prison, and on that account deserve our deepest commiseration.


“There are many different ways of helping the suffering souls and delivering them from purgatory; but none of these is so sure and so effectual as the holy sacrifice of the Mass”.

An Explanation of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass (Fr Van Cochem)

——–

This is why we must have Masses said for the dead. But there is also another way. Indulgences. We can apply them to the Holy Souls in Purgatory. And we now find ourselves in Lent. The modern Enchirodon says:

8 §1. A plenary indulgence is granted to the Christian faithful who:


2° in any Friday in the season of Lent piously recite the prayer En ego, o bone et dulcissime Iesu, before an image of the Crucified Jesus Christ after communion; …

This is with the usual conditions (Holy Confession, Holy Communion, prayers for the Pope and freedom from any attachment to sin, even venial). Here, handily is the prayer – though it must be said after Holy Communion. You are also likely to find it in your missals.



En ego, o bone et dulcissime Iesu, ante conspectum tuum genibus me provolvo, ac maximo animi ardore te oro atque obtestor, ut meum in cor vividos fidei, spei et caritatis sensus, atque veram peccatorum meorum paenitentiam, eaque emendandi firmissimam voluntatem velis imprimere; dum magno animi affectu et dolore tua quinque vulnera mecum ipse considero, ac mente contemplor, illud prae oculis habens, quod iam in ore ponebat tuo David Propheta de te, o bone Iesu: «Foderunt manus meas et pedes meos; dinumeraverunt omnia ossa mea».

(Behold, o good and most sweet Jesus, I fall upon my knees before Thee, and with most fervent desire beg and beseech Thee that Thou wouldst impress upon my heart a lively sense of faith, hope and charity, true repentance for my sins, and a firm resolve to make amends. And with deep affection and grief, I reflect upon Thy five wounds, having before my eyes that which Thy prophet David spoke about Thee, o good Jesus: “They have pierced my hands and feet, they have counted all my bones.”)

Original source - 

Purgatory

Lent A Time to Start Again


We have just entered Lent. Lent is a time of change. During Lent we can reflect on where we can make changes in our lives so we can become a better person. The day before Ash Wednesday is Shrove Tuesday, or Fat Tuesday, Or Mardi Gras, or whatever you want to call it. Shrove comes from the word shriven, which means to go to confession. The idea is that on the day before Ash Wednesday it is a day to go to confession, clean our souls, to start again.

I like a clean
house. I am certainly not obsessive compulsive when it comes to
cleaning, but I do have a schedule of when I dust, vacuum and wash
the floors so that things do get done. Once a week whether I like it
or not I clean the house so that I can keep on top of the dust that
builds up. That way when I have a surprise visitor I am not
embarrassed. It is the same with my soul. Once a week whether I
think I need it or not, I go to the sacrament of Confession. That
way when Jesus makes surprise visit I am ready for Him.

Frequent
confession is something that is practiced by the saints and is
recommended to us by the Church. A few years ago a child asked Pope
Benedict XVI why we should go to confession regularly if we always
seem to be confessing the same sins. His very practical answer hit
me, “It is true: Our sins are always the same, but we clean our
homes, our rooms, at least once a week, even if the dirt is always
the same; in order to live in cleanliness, in order to start again.
Otherwise, the dirt might not be seen, but it builds up. Something
similar can be said about the soul. If I never go to confession, my
soul is neglected and in the end I am always pleased with myself and
no longer understand that I must always work hard to improve, that I
must make progress. And this cleansing of the soul that Jesus gives
us in the sacrament of confession helps us to make our consciences
more alert, more open, and hence, it also helps us to mature
spiritually and as human persons. Therefore, two things: Confession
is only necessary in the case of a serious sin, but it is very
helpful to confess regularly in order to foster the cleanliness and
beauty of the soul and to mature day by day in life.”

The famous quote
“love means never having to say you’re sorry” from the old
movie Love Story is so wrong. If love is to last we always
have to say we are sorry whenever we do anything wrong. If we love
God it means always having to say you’re sorry and we have this
beautiful sacrament to help us do it.


The loss of the
sense of sin is one of the biggest problems facing our society today.
Sin breaks the supernatural bond which unites us to God. We have to
constantly remember that Christ suffered His Passion for our sins.
We must do all that we can to make our consciences more sensitive,
and to guard them from becoming deformed or imperceptive. The sense
of sin is clearer for us when our relationship with God is
strengthened by our sacramental life and by sincere prayer.


I recently was helping prepare some grade 8’s for Confirmation and
got quite a chuckle when one boy told me there were 9 Sacraments. He
thought the sacrament of confession; penance and reconciliation were
all different sacraments! It certainly is the sacrament of many
names. Some call it the

sacrament of conversion

because it
makes sacramentally present Jesus’ call to conversion, the first step
in returning to the Father from whom one has strayed by sin.

It
is the
sacrament of Penance,
since it sanctifies the sinner’s personal steps of conversion,
penance, and satisfaction. It is the
sacrament
of confession
, since the confession
of sins to a priest is an essential element of this sacrament. It is
also our “confession” – acknowledgment and praise – of the
holiness of God and of his mercy toward us sinners. It is the
sacrament of forgiveness,
since by the priest’s sacramental absolution God grants the sinner
“pardon and peace.” It is the
sacrament
of Reconciliation
, because we
reconcile with God when use this sacrament.

This sacrament
could be considered the “environmentalists sacrament.” We hear a
lot these days about the recycling of garbage. Well the sacrament of
confession is the recycling of human “garb age”. Through the
graces of the sacrament we are treated and processed and made
suitable for reuse. We come out bright and shiny new, in the image
of God, ready to be start again. G.K. Chesterton once said: “When
a Catholic comes from Confession, he does truly, by definition, step
out into that dawn of his own beginning…in that brief ritual God
has really remade him in His own image. He may be grey and gouty;
but he is only five minutes old.”

Through this
sacrament we receive special graces to help us to be stronger in our
fight against our defects and to help us avoid sin though we must
also realize that we will never get rid of sin. Because of Original
sin were born to fall. In the Gospels we read that “The just man
falls seven times a day”. We need to have sin and confession in
order to progress in the spiritual life. The problem is not that we
fall, or sin; it is whether we get up and try again or not. In the
Stations of the Cross we can see what Jesus did each time He fell.

Penance and
repentance are demanded due to sin, because of the virtue of justice.
St. Augustine said, “It is not enough to change ones habits and
abandon sin. One must make satisfaction to God through the sorrow of
penance, the sobs of humility, the sacrifice of contrition and
almsgiving. External penance – prayer, mortification and fasting –
should always be accompanied by interior penance in order to be
effective.” The penance that the priest gives us has an atoning
power that our privately performed penance cannot match.

Sorrow for our
sins is a very important part of confession. Sorrow is not
necessarily a feeling, it is an act of the will which leads us to
rectify and improve to love God more and to use the means to do so.
Our catechism teaches us that the more sorrow for sin that we have
the more the temporal punishment due to sin is taken away. The
argument is always that if we just say an act of contrition then our
venial sins can be forgiven. From experience we know that we do a
much deeper examination of conscience and have a much deeper sorrow
for our sins when we go to confession than if we were just to say an
act of contrition

Sure our
protestant friends think it is sufficient to privately confess to
God. Sacramental confession though forces us to acknowledge our sins
out loud and to actually hear the absolution by the priest assuring
us of forgiveness. The process we have to go through in the
sacrament is a lesson in humility which acts as a deterrent to sin.
We do not have to rely on subjective “feeling”. Also in
Confession we obtain sound advice on avoiding sin in the future. It
is Jesus himself who speaks to us through the priest.

In order to make a
good confession, each day we need to make a good examination of
conscience. Many of the saints did a quick examination at midday as
they said their Angelus. This practice helps us to keep on top of
all that is happening during our day. Then at the end of the day we
should spend a few minutes doing a more thorough examination.

A firm purpose of
amendment is also necessary to be forgiven. If we do not have any
intention of changing the priest will be unable to give us
absolution. For example if we say we are sorry for something we have
no intention of stopping we will not be forgiven.

When we confess
our sins we should follow the example some of the greatest saints
taught, the 4 “c’s”. When we confess our sins we need to be
clear, concise, concrete, and complete. We must also keep in mind
that we are there to confess our sins, not our spouses sins, or what
our mother-in-law has done to us or what our children have forced us
to do.


Sure we may have
heard stories of those who have had a bad experience in Confession.
It is important that we choose a confessor who is reliable, pious,
learned, and who likes being in the confessional. For each one of
us, it is important that we seek out and find a good confessor and
learn again, as the Church urges us, to confess our sins with
faithful frequency and not let the cobwebs build up. We must also do
all we can to help our friends and family understand the importance
of this sacrament. We should be constantly involved with the helping
bring them to this healing sacrament, through our prayer, our example
and our loving words. It is the best thing we can do for those we
love.

So Lent has begun. Why not take the time to make a good confession.





See the original post:

Lent A Time to Start Again

lent is here

With Lent beginning, my heart is turning to the deeper questions in my walk with God. What is necessary to draw close to Him? What is pulling me away?

I am praying about these things, and don’t have all the answers. There are blogs everywhere with lots of ideas for bringing Lent down to the level of children’s understanding, so I won’t reinvent the wheel. Simplicity is what we’re after this year. Not the doing-doing-doing, but the being in His presence, striving to listen. Our nature table is being transformed into a desert, to gently spring to life as a garden during the unfolding of these 40 days of Lent.

Elizabeth Foss really inspired me this morning with

her words

. This, in particular, is bringing me to my knees.

But I also think that the devil drives the information superhighway. He claps with glee when moms log on. Lent is a time of discipline. Ascetism is about growing in self-discipline. This prayer helps me to see how I must order my time and my attention. Quiet stillness is a good thing. Idleness is not. Concern is a good thing. Despair is not. A home to grow in is a good thing. Chaos in that home is not. Encouragement and support in my vocation is a good thing. Empty talking is not.

What little sacrifices are you making this Lent? How do you draw closer to the King on the path to Calvary?

Originally from - 

lent is here

Apocalypto (2006)

Jaguar Paw & Mel Gibson
Apocalypto

is the fourth film directed by Mel Gibson (and only the second to be written, directed and produced by him). Having seen

Apocalypto

recently for only the second time, I was reminded of just how good Gibson is at what he does.

The narrative largely unfolds in a jungle, and if the spoken Yucatec Mayan language is any indication, Apocalypto is likely taking place in south-eastern Mexico (or perhaps northern Belize). Likely set in the early sixteenth century, I recognize a certain anachronism in speaking of a Mexico or a Belize long before either would have been identified as such.

The film begins with a number of Mayan tribesmen hunting in a forest. After successfully catching an animal, the tribesmen are encountered by a group of persons whose community has been attacked and who seek to pass through the jungle. Unaware of their own impending doom, the community to which the Mayan tribesmen belong has only one more night of peace before they too will be attacked by warriors in search of persons who will eventually be sacrificed to the god Kukulkan. Before being captured, the Mayan tribesman Jaguar Paw succeeds in hiding his wife Seven, and their son Turtles Run. Lowering them into a deep cave, the pregnant Seven and Turtles Run are outside of immediate danger but have no means of escape. A good deal of

Apocalypto

surrounds the attempts of Jaguar Paw to return and save his wife and son.

On their last night of peace, the Mayan community gathers around an old man who tells them a story of Man “drenched deep in sadness:” In the story, the animals, not liking the sight of the man so sad, approach him and invite him to seek from them whatever he wishes. Asking for sight, the man receives it from the vulture. Seeking strength, the jaguar then shares his with the man. The man, wanting to know the secrets of the earth, finds in the serpent the reply: ‘I will show them to you.’ The story teller continues: “And so it went with all the animals. And when the Man had all the gifts that they could give, he left. Then the owl said to the other animals: ‘Now the Man knows much and is able to do many things. Suddenly I am afraid.’ The deer said: ‘The Man has all that he needs. Now his sadness will stop.’ But the owl replied: ‘No. I saw a hole in the Man. Deep like a hunger he will never fill. It is what makes him sad and what makes him want. He will go on taking and taking until one day the World will say: ‘I am no more and I have nothing left to give.’”


A

deep hole

within the human person;

deep like a hunger he will never fill. It is what makes him sad and what makes him want

. One could easily read the story environmentally insofar as it holds out the concern that the human person will exploit his or her surroundings so greatly that, one day, such surroundings will no longer be life giving. However, I was struck by something rather different.

In biblical times, the sins committed by each Israelite over the course of a year would be, in a general sort of way, annually confessed by the high priest and symbolically transferred to a goat designated to carry such sins. The (scape)goat would then be cast into the wilderness and the Israelites would have a sense of having being cleansed and having been reconciled to God.

Trends in anthropology identify the relationship between

desire

and

imitation

as a most basic source of conflict. The story the old man tells anticipates conflict insofar as the man, perhaps, sees his fellow animals in possession of things he lacks. Think of how food or shelter must have existed as some of the strongest desires within the earliest communities and how a shared desire for food or shelter might have even have been the occasion for the formation and growth of communities: Might a person or a couple of persons, perhaps, have once set out in search of food and shelter and been encountered by another or by others who imitated (to the extent that they shared) that same desire for food or shelter?

What would have happened, though, when either a real or a perceived limitation in food or shelter became apparent? As a mechanism to avoid constant warring, or a relatively larger scale conflict, when conflicts between individuals became apparent to the wider community, persons would move in the direction of the one they perceived to be stronger. Others would follow in imitation and before too long a person or a group of persons would be abandoned. Such persons would become vulnerable to accusation, and once the community had projected some sort of guilt onto the lone individual or group of persons, the community would then feel justified in killing, stigmatizing or driving out the victim.

Why this talk of scapegoating? Others have observed a relationship between

Apocalypto

and scapegoating insofar as two significant scenes surround such a mechanism. The first of these two scenes, when considering the violence found therein, is not particularly subtle. It surrounds human sacrifice. Under the guise of appeasing this god Kukulkan, members of the captured Mayan community begin to be sacrificed. One gets the impression that representatives of the sacrificial establishment have some anticipation of an eclipse which will occur, and know that the sun will become visible thereafter. Their system of sacrifice seems built around the private knowledge of a few, and with such knowledge the impression has been created that the sacrifices are meritorious. One representative even says: “Rejoice! Kukulkan has drunk his fill of blood. We have sated his thirst.” Those watching cheer, as they are made to believe that the problems which surround them (like the famine and plague, for example) will diminish.

The second scene is more significant and easier to pass over. It takes place in the context of the arrival of the Europeans. One such European, a representative of the Christian religion, holds a cross as the boat he occupies approaches the sands upon which Jaguar Paw kneels. About a month ago in the Lectionary, prior to the beginning of Jesus’s public ministry, Jesus was in the desert. The desert, remember, was the destination of a scapegoat. Might Jesus’ presence in the desert foreshadow the way in which his own community will make him a scapegoat? As Caiaphas says in the Gospel of John: “It is to your advantage that one man should die for the people, rather than that the whole nation should perish.”

In the Gospel of Mark, as Jesus’s reputation spreads, and as his authority is presented as eclipsing that of the religious leadership, a conflict is brewing, and an important question surrounds who the community will imitate. After only one week of Jesus’ public ministry we are told that representatives of the religious leadership and the political leadership — two unlikely allies — have come together to discuss how to destroy Jesus. Shortly thereafter, the rumours begin to spread: Jesus derives his power from forces of evil, it is claimed. In taking the side of victims in the Gospel (victims of a scapegoating establishment), as Jesus has done in his first week of public ministry, it is only a matter of time before Jesus will become one himself.

I don’t know how Mel Gibson understands Christ. Perhaps Gibson feels that the Mayan attempts to appease one of their gods anticipates the way in which Christ’s death will satisfy God. Perhaps Gibson feels that just as the problems which surround the Mayan people are hoped to diminish once their god has been appeased, so also reconciliation can only occur between an appeased God and a sinful human race once Jesus has died for such a race. To repeat, I don’t know if this is how Gibson understands Christ, but certainly such sinister understandings of God are not without precedent throughout Christian history.

A result of following Christ should be the taking the side of victims. Risk exists in doing so. One’s good reputation, bestowed by the community, might find itself beyond repair. Forces which have made one person a victim might then turn on those who have chosen to side with the oppressed. That part of being a Christian, I imagine, is difficult. Perhaps what might be even more difficult is the preservation of the dignity of those who oppress. Jesus does not destroy the communities in the Gospels who perpetuate this cycle of violence. Instead, he provides the example of his own person — the example of a person taking the side of a victim — and he offers it to the community for imitation. He is reversing the cycle of violence, and as it is imitated a new cycle is being created.

Does Apocalypto seek to present Jesus as reversing the violence perpetuated in sacrifice? I doubt it. Nonetheless, in at least two significant scenes an understanding of the mechanism of scapegoating can complement whatever message Gibson wanted to emerge.

From: 

Apocalypto (2006)

The Devil and Rick Santorum

Image 454px-Satan_detail_LCZ.jpg

Rick
Santorum is accused by Drudge Report of saying, at Ave Maria
University, that Satan is attacking America.

image
Pleased to meet you. Hope you guessed my name.

Satan
is, of course, doing exactly that. Santorum was speaking at a
Catholic gathering at a Catholic university in proper Catholic
theological terms. Check the Catechism of the Catholic Church. Satan
is real. He is pure spirit. He attacks both individuals and
societies.

his
action may cause grave injuries – of a spiritual nature and,
indirectly, even of a physical nature- to each man and to society”
(CCC, para 395).

If
no presidential candidate is permitted to say this, even in a
religious setting, then no Catholic is permitted to run for
president.

image
Gaea by Feuerbach. Wikimedia.

So
too with Santorum’s remarks that Obama’s environmental policy is
based on a “theology that does not come from the Bible.” It ought
to be self-evident, surely, that he was referring to the
quasi-religious beliefs of radical environmentalists. Yet the Obama
White House, along with many commentators, objected immediately that
Santorum was impugning Obama’s Christianity. Obliquely, I suppose he
was, but surely in a perfectly legitimate way, in saying that his
environmental policy is not in keeping with Christian ideas. It
isn’t. Radical environmentalists consider humanity a kind of cancer
on the suffering body of the goddess Gaea. Ask David Suzuki. This is
incompatible with the Christian idea that man is above nature—let
alone that nature is not divine.

The
problem here, I think, is just that too many people, notably
including journalists, are theologically illiterate.

View original article:  

The Devil and Rick Santorum

Quickpost: Wow Cardinal Collins Quotes Humanae Vitae in Interview with Vatican Radio Just after being Red Hatted

Score one for Canada!!!! Anyone think maybe, just maybe, Cardinal Collins will be the next Pope of the Church?

Here’s the post by an Ontario group of Catholic bloggers: http://torontocatholicwitness.blogspot.com/2012/02/cardinal-collins-on-humanae-vitae.html

Here’s the interview from Vatican Radio: http://www.news.va/en/news/cardinal-collins-families-need-to-be-strong

Don’t forget to read the important (but sadly controversial and now well-ignored) Encyclical Humanae Vitae here: http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/paul_vi/encyclicals/documents/hf_p-vi_enc_25071968_humanae-vitae_en.html

BTW, I went to a Solemn Latin Mass at a parish in my city for Ash Wednesday case you were wondering. (Only 1 meal, no meat). YCRCM.

Excerpt from: 

Quickpost: Wow Cardinal Collins Quotes Humanae Vitae in Interview with Vatican Radio Just after being Red Hatted

WINTER RETREAT REGISTRATION IS OPEN – Signup now!

This will not be a retreat to miss out on! The Winter Retreat will be centered on PRAYER

Taken from: 

WINTER RETREAT REGISTRATION IS OPEN – Signup now!

WINTER RETREAT REGISTRATION IS OPEN – Signup now!

This will not be a retreat to miss out on! The Winter Retreat will be centered on PRAYER. Do you know how to pray? Would you like to learn how to pray? What is the best way to pray? Would you like to depeen your prayer-life & your relationship with God?

Check out more information about the retreat: http://yorkcatholic.ca/?portfolio=winter-retreat-2012-2

You can either send us an email at: catholic@yorku.ca (the chaplaincy office will be closed during reading week, and will re-open on Monday, February 27, 2012) or register at the chaplaincy my March 2nd, 2012.

See you there!!!

See more here - 

WINTER RETREAT REGISTRATION IS OPEN – Signup now!