Daily Archives: March 5, 2012

Don’t Dam It

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Taken from: 

Don’t Dam It

Don’t Dam It

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Gordon_Dam.jpg

ANGER,

the dam,

placed unconsciously

into the middle of our being.

On the one side,

the collected tears,

the pool of hurt,

growing larger

and deeper

everyday,

threatening,

to overflow,

out of containment.

And so,


we build an even bigger dam,

a stronger one,

a big strong angry dam,

in an attempt to control,

to keep away,

this overwhelming pool of sadness.

And it works.

Works so well in fact,

that the other side

is completely…

EMPTY.

View the original here: 

Don’t Dam It

Another good priest gets Hammered

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(A prior version of this cartoon had Cardinal Wuerl’s rank as “Archbishop”. Forgive me for my lack of attention.)

You knew it was going to happen. The Archdiocese of Washington is falling all over itself trying to “make nice” with another member of the Grand High Ultimate Protected Class. Another priest doing his job gets the Beetle Bailey treatment.

Originally from - 

Another good priest gets Hammered

Women Minstering to Women

Women Minstering to Women

We’ve heard it said that “iron sharpens iron” and that is so true.

In the past few years during my reversion to the Catholic faith and afterwards, it has been the example and support of other women, wives and mothers that have been a source of strength and encouragement for me.

Years ago, I would read Proverbs 31 daily. I wanted so much to be like the woman in the proverb. So I prayed that God would send me a friend who was living like the woman praised in Proverbs 31 so that I could have a mentor.

Well, God is gracious and not only did He send me one, He sent me a few! Some of these ladies are very close friends of mine. Others have been more like acquaintances that I have the opportunity to speak with occasionally and to witness God’s action in their lives from a distance.

Either way, I am always encouraged by their strong faith, their love for Christ and their families.

God knows I am still far from being a Proverbs 31 woman.  That is why I continue to attend my weekly prayer meeting with other women and why I enjoy attending reflections, retreats and conferences. It’s my time to be renewed and refreshed.  

These events take me away from my family for a time. But when my husband encourages a supports my attendance, I have to assume that I am a better wife and mom when I return from these events. I know he is a better husband and father when he takes the time to attend men’s spiritual events.

Why am I sharing this today?

Why am I sharing this today? I encourage you, to attend this upcoming Dynamic Women of Faith conference.  I have attended this conference for the last two years and it has proven to be a truly uplifting and eye opening event.

I am not used to self promoting. However, I am excited and humbled that Dorothy Pilarski, author or Motherhood Matters and blogger at Gutsy Catholic Mom has invited me to be one of the many talented and inspiration panel speakers. I plan to share the story surrounding our new son’s birth. One I have not shared on this blog yet! You’ll have to attend the event to hear it for the first time.

If you would like more information about regular monthly reflection or annual retreats contact me through this blog and I’ll be in touch.

Continued here:  

Women Minstering to Women

Are pro-lifers self-righteous?

So, it looks like my post from last week has some critics. I thank Christine for the post and I was hoping for a little discussion on equality and rights for the unborn, but maybe next time (I guess debating the personhood of the unborn is tough?).

See more here: 

Are pro-lifers self-righteous?

Are pro-lifers self-righteous?

So, it looks like my post from last week has some critics. I thank Christine for the post and I was hoping for a little discussion on equality and rights for the unborn, but maybe next time (I guess debating the personhood of the unborn is tough?). In the comments section Christine said something interesting:

…and if my side is reactionary, yours is nothing but self-righteous…

That got me thinking. Are pro-lifers self-righteous? Do we feel morally superior to pro-choicers? Are we so absorbed with the rights of the unborn and abortion that we fail to find common ground with pro-choicers and work with them?

First, it is important to note that I am pro-life because I believe the pro-life side to be true. There is no other reason for me to be on this blog unless I am convinced that the unborn are persons and that others need to come to this realization, as well. Therefore, it is not a matter of I am right because I am so smart and wonderful, but rather it is a realization of the truth of the pro-life side and a desire to spread that message of the sanctity of all human life from conception to natural death.

Furthermore, I am not pro-life so that I can put other people beneath me and tell them what to do. I respect everyone’s freedom and choices because we are all human beings with free will. However, and I think even pro-choicers will agree with me, when that freedom impedes or harms another person, then you have crossed a line. Pro-choicers believe that by outlawing abortion we are impeding and harming women. However, any society that has to resort to abortion has failed women. If a woman has no support, is frightened and has no other alternatives then abortion is not a choice but rather a necessity. The last thing authentic pro-lifers want to do is to put women down or to make them feel even more scared than they may already feel. We understand that an unplanned pregnancy is a difficult situation to face for any woman. Therefore, there are pro-lifers who run crisis pregnancy centres so that women can have the support and care they need to ensure they choose life for their children. Crisis pregnancy centres have gotten a bad rap recently but, minus the media bias, they do more than Planned Parenthood when it comes to taking care of mothers and their children.

Now, I will grant the pro-choice side the fact that they truly want choice. I just want to ask a question: What are pro-choicers doing to ensure that pregnant women actually have a choice? I do not know of any pro-choice pregnancy centres but if they are helping pregnant women in any way, please let me know.

I think pro-choicers may also believe we are self-righteous because there are some pro-lifers, although not all, who disagree with birth control. Not only are we taking away a woman’s right to choose, but we are telling her what to do in the privacy of her own bedroom (nevermind the fact that there are pro-choicers in the States who would like to keep us out of their bedrooms but pick up the tab, but that will be for another post). The University of Toronto Students for Life has no opinion on birth control (unless, of course, they can act as abortifacients) but you cannot deny the link between birth control and abortion. In fact, the United States Supreme Court had this to say in the 1992 ruling of Planned Parenthood vs. Casey:

But to do this would be simply to refuse to face the fact that, for two decades of economic and social developments, people have organized intimate relationships and made choices that define their views of themselves and their places in society, in reliance on the availability of abortion in the event that contraception should fail.

In other words, abortion has to remain legal because for the last few decades it has been available as “back-up birth control”. It is quite logical once you think about it. However, pro-lifers bring it up because it is true not because we are so wonderful at self-control and we think that women who use contraception are heathens.

In addition, pro-lifers are not trying to solely work through the courts to get rid of abortion. We are, primarily, trying to raise awareness on the ground level through dialogue and education. We do this in sun or rain and whether it is warm or freezing cold. We realize that raising awareness for the rights of the unborn is something that needs to be done not for our sake but for the sake of those who do not have a voice.

Finally, the reason pro-lifers usually do not try to find common ground with pro-choicers is that we believe in the personhood of the unborn and they do not. If you truly believe that the unborn are human beings who have rights then abortion can never be a choice. How can you justify murdering someone when you acknowledge that they have rights like you and me? Does that mean it is okay for someone to murder you for any reason? If pro-choicers, for example, want to help at crisis pregnancy centres that is great. However, we will not allow anyone to tell a woman that if all else fails then it would be alright to murder her child. That should never be a choice. The most bogus claim is when a person says that they believe that the unborn are persons but they themselves should stay out of the woman’s “choice”. That is not acceptable. If your neighbour was beating his wife every night would you say to yourself, “spousal abuse is wrong but I am going to stay out of it.”? I would hope you would have the courage to call the police. All it takes for evil to succeed is for good people to do nothing. Again, it is truth that drives us to speak up against abortion, not that it makes us feel good and mighty.

I hope I have done a good enough job at pointing out why pro-lifers are not self-righteous. If I have missed anything, please comment :)

Read original article:  

Are pro-lifers self-righteous?

Raphael, Receive the light of Christ!

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“Raphael and Tobias” by Michael O’Brien.
Raphael is named for the angel Raphael in the book of Tobit.


Raphael was baptized last weekend.

I am always so profoundly humbled and moved by this ritual, every time.

It was the traditional baptism of the Latin Rite…incredibly beautiful, and almost never used anymore, although it is the universal rite of baptism in the Catholic Church.


The
prayer begins outside the church (the foyer, in our case, as it was so
cold and windy that day)…

Priest: Receive the
Sign of the Cross both upon your forehead + and also upon your heart +;
take to you the faith of the heavenly precepts; and so order your life
as to be, from henceforth, the temple of God.

Priest: Accipe signum Crucis tam in fronte, quam in corde,
sume fidem cælestium præceptorum: et talis esto moribus, ut templum Dei
iam esse possis.

There is so much depth to the symbolism of the entire ritual: the salt (tasting the nourishment of Christ), the oil (for healing and kingly anointing) and of course the water (for spiritual cleansing and rebirth).

Priest: Raphael, ego te baptizo in nomine + Patris, et Filii, +, et Spiritus + Sancti.




Raphael, my beautiful, innocent baby, right now you don’t know about
the ugliness of sin. Your heart is wide open and beautiful. But as you get older,
you’ll realize how much we need the mercy of God! May the grace of your baptism flow like a river in your heart, from the endless source that is the in-dwelling Trinity, the fountain of everlasting life.

I feel a little…shy…sharing baptism pictures here, but don’t think you can get away without seeing sewing pictures! I made Rafe a little gown….out of a table cloth…and it’s definitely exciting. Silk, old. (More of that to come.)

Link:

Raphael, Receive the light of Christ!

Lenten practices – Fasting

The Christian season of Lent, which began last week, is a time of fasting, prayer and almsgiving. Lent lasts 40 days and reminds us of the 40 days that Jesus spent in the desert before beginning his public ministry.

The desert is a dry place, often devoid of all that is nourishing to the body. The most common  images of the desert have lots of sand, rock and cacti, not a pleasant place to be. And yet each year before Easter, we are given the opportunity to enter this desert experience.

I use the term, opportunity, because sometimes I have let Lent pass by me by without noticing. In better times I allow this season  to be a period of change or “conversion”.

The Christian tradition has three suggestions to assist us in this conversion process. The first one is called fasting. When I was a little girl, fasting during Lent meant giving up sweets and that was made easy because for the most part, we were not given sweets either by our parents, our teachers nor our Catholic neighbors.

But can we look at fasting in another way? How can it bring us closer to God, and strengthen our connection with his eternal love? This youtube link  offers some explanations.

Fr. Tom Ryan from the Paulist Evangelization Ministries explains that when we fast for God, we are affirming to God that He is central to our life and that his love is what is most important to us. We are invited to put our life in perspective and show what is really important to us. Fasting helps us to move beyond ourselves and is a form of self-discipline. To read Fr. Tom’s article, click here 

Have you ever tried fasting?  What did you learn about yourself, your relationship to food, well-being and to God?

 

Read article here:  

Lenten practices – Fasting

More on St. Gabriel Possenti – As Promised

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I received many comments and emails asking for more information about St. Gabriel Possenti. He was the eleventh of thirteen children of Sante Possenti, a lawyer and the Governor of Assisi, Italy. He was born in 1838 and was baptized “Francis,” then later educated at the Jesuit college at Spoleto. His mother died when he was a small boy.


He joined the Jesuits when he was seventeen after he had vowed to do so if cured of an almost fatal illness, but he delayed entering the novitiate. His father, who misunderstood the meaning of the worth of a religious vocation did much to try to dissuade his son from entering the religious life. But Francis was devoted to the Sorrowful Heart of Mary. It was Our Lady who helped him to bear suffering during this trial.


While still in his teens, set his heart on that which transcends anything of this world. Answering the call of his Crucified Lord, he joined the Passionist Congregation at 18 years old, taking the name Br. Gabriel of Our Lady of Sorrows (or the Sorrowful Virgin). The heart of his spirituality was to study and imitate the virtues of our Suffering Savior as mirrored in the heart of the Sorrowful Virgin Mary.

He led an exemplary life as a religious, filled with penances and self-effacement, was stricken with tuberculosis before he could be ordained, and died at Isola di Gran Sasso on February 27, 1862 – months before his 24th birthday. Yet, he had attained such remarkable sanctity in that short time he was a Passionist that he was canonized a Saint by the Church in 1920. Only five years later, weekly devotions in his honor were begun in St. Michael Church, Union City, N.J. For over 55 years, thousands of favors, some of a most extraordinary nature, have been granted and are attributed to his powerful intercession with Christ Crucified and the Sorrowful Mother Mary.

He is known to be a patron of youth, and more recently has been considered a patron of handgunners, since as a seminarian he once singlehandedly defended his town from robbers with two handguns:



St. Gabriel, pray for us!

Continued here: 

More on St. Gabriel Possenti – As Promised

Monday Pick-Me-Up

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I need a little pretty pick me up this morning! We were all sick with a cold this weekend, and this morning, although I’m feeling a bit better the two littlest boys are cranky and have very leaky noses. Here’s hoping I can make it to nap time.

Aren’t these abstract paintings beautiful? I think the colours are perfect, I’d love one for my bedroom! They’re done by Linda Monfort, and here’s her beautiful

shop

.

(All images Linda Monfort)


Link: 

Monday Pick-Me-Up

Does God Exist?

Some find it hard to believe in a God they cannot see. In this world we inhabit, we have come to such an intellectual place that if it is not within our own imaginings, or cannot be seen, touched, felt, tasted, or smelled it does not exist.

Some would even tell you that “I am God, the master of my destiny.” That is a load of mallarkey, though other descriptive words more readily come to mind.

So, the world was created by this Big Bang, right? And then out of the nothingness that existed before this Big Bang, stuff started to happen randomly, right? And voila!! We have the world we live in as it is now. Believing that takes a lot of faith.

But the God who actually created this world, and everything in it speaks quietly, often in silence, where his creation speaks for him.

When you look at the video linked below called “The Life of Flowers”, and see the array of colour and majesty in just a few of the flowers of our universe, as they open up to show their beauty to the world, can you really put that all down to a Big Bang?

I will put My God up against your Big Bang any day of the week?

Go to this URL and see “The Life of Flowers”
http://vimeo.com/vorobyoff/flowers

See the original article here: 

Does God Exist?

Wisdom of Saintly Men and Women Posters 6

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Saint Augustine

Since love grows within you, so beauty grows.For love is the beauty of the soul. — Saint Augustine

http://www.4catholiceducators.com/saints/augustine-5a.htm

Saint Patrick

Christ beside me, Christ before me, Christ behind me, Christ within me, Christ beneath me, Christ above me.

– Saint Patrick

http://www.4catholiceducators.com/saints/saint-patrick.htm

Saint Augustine

Since love grows within you, so beauty grows.For love is the beauty of the soul.

– Saint Augustin


http://www.4catholiceducators.com/saints/augustine-5.htm


Read article here: 

Wisdom of Saintly Men and Women Posters 6

what are YOU doing for LENT?

Two weeks into Lent….

just a reminder to post your Lenten reflections, crafts and sacrifices

on our special

Lent Link-Up

as part of the Fiestas de Enlaces!

We’ve got 82 Lenten Links so far!


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what are YOU doing for LENT?

Happy Sunday

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Happy Sunday