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Tuesday, March 31, 2020

Cognitive Offloading

Anything that lightens your mental load is called cognitive offloading.  For example, if you are worried about waking up early, set an alarm.  There, now you can sleep.

If you have many tasks to perform, make a list.  Cross the tasks off one by one.

If you can't remember phone numbers, put them in your phone.

If you can't remember names, then associate the name with something: red hair, height, rhyming name, etc.  Put these associations on your phone.

Once you do something like this, your mind is free and can focus on your present situation, whether it's sleep or work.

BTW, I posit that it is this cognitive offloading that St. Anthony uses to help us find things. Once you ask for St. Anthony's intercession for help in finding something lost, you can relax. You've turned the problem over to someone else.  You're free of that worry.

That's when you remember where your lost object is.  God is clever.

Tony, Tony, please come down.
Something's lost and must be found.

Monday, March 30, 2020

Cadfael # 1


A Morbid Taste for Bones, the first Brother Cadfael book, by Ellis Peters is a mystery. This is my second time reading it. Since I have the time now (COVID-19 quarantine) I thought I would finally read it. It didn't take me long to remember that I had already read it. The problem is, I didn't remember where the plot led, until after reading it. So I continued reading.

The first time I probably enjoyed the mystery. Who killed Rhisiart? Will the abbey get the relics?

However, this second reading I could see another layer of mystery. There is a battle between heaven and earth. The bones of St. Winifred are physical for sure, but they represent divinity. The people on earth are in conflict over these bones. Isn't there always a conflict between the spiritual and the physical? Thus Brother Columbanus spiritual ecstasies will bring him to rank high in the Benedictine order.

Peters' characters are very human. I enjoyed the monks' shenanigans. The villagers are more religious than the monks in that they accept religious mystery yet are also practical in their daily obligations.

The quarantine isn't over. On to Cadfael # 2.

Sunday, March 29, 2020

Four Witnesses

Four Witnesses The Early Church In Her Own Words by Rod Bennett is an entertaining history of four important people in the early church: Clement of Rome, Ignatius of Antioch, Justin Martyr, and Irenaeus of Lyons. The author writes in storytelling mode in giving us the history of these 4 men. History becomes alive by adding plausible events and descriptions. It is an enjoyable way to learn.

My favorite church father of the four is Justin Martyr.  He is the only layman of the four.  The others are clerics.  Justin was a philosopher and not a Christian.  He converted and wrote letters to the Roman emperor to explain tyhe misinformation that was being spread about the new religion.  

Someday I'll have to read Justin's apologetics.

Saturday, March 28, 2020

Time Is Finally On Our Side

One advantage of the self-quarantine people are asked to do during this COVID-19 pandemic is time to do what we never had the time before to do.  Of course, now that we have the time to do what we put off doing, we find out that that was just an excuse.  I'm still not doing it.

All kidding aside, time is on our side, now.  In Bishop Robert Baron's YouTube on the quarantine he talks about this.  He refers to Blaise Pascal's complaint that people don't have the ability to be alone--to be silent.  The good bishop waxes poetic about it.  His suggestions range from reading to praying.

But I would like to offer my own suggestion--write letters.  Since I can't be with my granddaughters, whom I used to see almost every day, I write to them.  But also, I am writing to old friends.  I'm sending Easter wishes to those who live alone.  Letter writing is a lost art.  I prefer to text or email.  But now I look for nice stationery or a "thinking of you card" and compose a few thoughts. I'm hoping people will appreciate my efforts.


Friday, March 27, 2020

Beautiful...But.


I watched the pope give his unprecedented ubi and orbi blessing today.  The world is in the midst of a pandemic, COVID 19.  It was beautiful.  So beautiful.

But.

I am happy I didn't tell my kids about it.  They would have been turned off because they wouldn't have understood what was going on.  My criticism is that the commentary wasn't explanatory.  This was for the world, meaning non Catholics.  They would have seen worshipping pictures, statues of the cross, what is Adoration?

If Catholics don't want the explanation (and I bet there's much for them to learn too) they can turn the sound down or off.

Thursday, March 26, 2020

The Rosary Beads

My Hail Mary's stopped
to watch the cross sway,
annoyed with myself
for the distraction
because my rhythm broke.

Slowly, slowly, slowly
the silver cross dangled
back and forth, back and forth,
my eyes flicked down
and then up, but again down

to the hour of our death.
Amen.

Amen.

Neighborhood Scavenger Hunt

My town just announced that school wouldn't open until May 4th.  Another month!  All due to COVID-19.

Many in town are creative.  We've had chalk artists decorate the town's sidewalks.  Chalk artists are everybody with chalk.  We've had generous business owners donate money and their wares.  Neighbors are telephoning neighbors. 

The latest endeavor is to put stuffed animals, namely, teddy bears in our windows for children to walk around the neighborhood and look for bears and Easter bunnies.

Wednesday, March 25, 2020

Overcoming the BS

What Would Jesus Do? He Would Raise Up Lazarus - and Us  This is a post from Father Gordon MacRae's prison cell.  He tells the story of  Kewei Chen, who didn't speak English very well when he was sent to the US for college.  A cruel trick landed him in prison for sexual assault.  Being only 18 he would have been easy prey in prison until Father Gordon took him under his wing.

That story I know and have seen myself, too often.  But what I always find hard to believe are the obstacles the system and people put up in our justice system to frustrate the inmates and their families.  Thankfully, there are people working tirelessly to overcome this. Please read the story.  Click on the highlighted link.


The Flying Memorares


Mother Theresa made up this "novena."  When she had an immediate need and she didn't have time to pray a novena, which takes nine days, she prayed a Memorare nine times.  Then she added a tenth memorare as a thanksgiving.

Perhaps you are in need now?

Memorare

Remember, O most gracious Virgin Mary, that never was it known that anyone who fled to thy protection, implored thy help, or sought thine intercession was left unaided.
Inspired by this confidence, I fly unto thee, O Virgin of virgins, my mother; to thee do I come, before thee I stand, sinful and sorrowful. O Mother of the Word Incarnate, despise not my petitions, but in thy mercy hear and answer me.
            Amen.

Tuesday, March 24, 2020

What It's All About

This time it's an Easter poem by one of my "cloistered brothers," Eric.

Even though we see things sometimes we don't believe
We struggle with faith because invisible is hard to conceive
Though heavy was his cross he suffered for you and me
He cured lepers and blindness but we still didn't see
How could we be so foolish how could we not know
Everything he taught us was a lesson and not for show
If you want forgiveness follow me and bring your cross
Stop pointing fingers because it's you that will suffer loss
It's not just about Lazarus being awakened from his sleep
It's about God's love, mercy, and care what you eternally keep.

Monday, March 23, 2020

Another COVID-19 Poem

and the author is a Franciscan friar.

Lockdown
Yes, there is fear.
Yes, there is isolation.
Yes, there is panic buying.
Yes, there is sickness.
Yes, there is even death.
But,
They say that in Wuhan after so many years of noise
You can hear the birds again.
They say that after just a few weeks of quiet
The sky is no longer thick with fumes
But blue and grey and clear.
They say that in the streets of Assisi
People are singing to each other
across the empty squares,
keeping their windows open
so that those who are alone
may hear the sounds of family around them.
They say that a hotel in the West of Ireland
Is offering free meals and delivery to the housebound.
Today a young woman I know
is busy spreading fliers with her number
through the neighborhood
So that the elders may have someone to call on.
Today Churches, Synagogues, Mosques and Temples
are preparing to welcome
and shelter the homeless, the sick, the weary
All over the world people are slowing down and reflecting
All over the world people are looking at their neighbors in a new way
All over the world, people are waking up to a new reality
To how big we really are.
To how little control we really have.
To what really matters.
To Love.
So we pray and we remember that
Yes, there is fear.
But there does not have to be hate.
Yes, there is isolation.
But there does not have to be loneliness.
Yes, there is panic buying.
But there does not have to be meanness.
Yes, there is sickness.
But there does not have to be disease of the soul
Yes, there is even death.
But there can always be a rebirth of love.
Wake to the choices you make as to how to live now.
Today, breathe.
Listen, behind the factory noises of your panic
The birds are singing again
The sky is clearing,
Spring is coming,
And we are always encompassed by Love.
Open the windows of your soul
And though you may not be able
to touch across the empty square,
Sing.
-------- Richard Hendrick, OFM

MEK's Sacred Heart of Jesus

You know how I have a special devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus (well I do, if you don't) well I just came across one of Mick's (cloistered brother) drawings.  Wow!


Sunday, March 22, 2020

Blessings




Pope Francis is seen in a window greeting a few nuns standing in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican March 22, 2020, after reciting his weekly Angelus prayer from the library of the Apostolic Palace. The pope announced he will give an extraordinary blessing "urbi et orbi" (to the city and the world) at 6 p.m. Rome time March 27 in an "empty" St. Peter's Square because all of Italy is on lockdown to prevent further spread of the coronavirus. (CNS photo/Alberto Lingria, Reuters)

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VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- In response to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, Pope Francis said he will give an extraordinary blessing "urbi et orbi" (to the city and the world) at 6 p.m. Rome time March 27.

The formal blessing -- usually given only immediately after a new pope's election and on Christmas and Easter -- carries with it a plenary indulgence for all who follow by television, internet or radio, are sorry for their sins, recite a few prescribed prayers and promise to go to confession and to receive the Eucharist as soon as possible.

After reciting the Angelus prayer March 22 from the library of the Apostolic Palace, Pope Francis announced his plans for the special blessing, which, he said, would be given in an "empty" St. Peter's Square because all of Italy is on lockdown to prevent further spread of the virus.

With the public joining him only by television, internet or radio, "we will listen to the word of God, raise our prayer (and) adore the Blessed Sacrament," he said. "At the end, I will give the benediction 'urbi et orbi,' to which will be connected the possibility of receiving a plenary indulgence."

An indulgence is an ancient practice of prayer and penance for the remission of the temporal punishment a person is due for sins that have been forgiven. In Catholic teaching, a person can draw on the merits of Jesus and the saints to claim the indulgence for themselves or offer it on behalf of someone who has died.

In addition to announcing the special blessing, Pope Francis said that at a time "when humanity trembles" because of the COVID-19 pandemic, he was asking Christians of every denomination to join together at noon March 25 to recite the Lord's Prayer. The Catholic Church and many others mark March 25 as the feast of the Annunciation.

"To the pandemic of the virus we want to respond with the universality of prayer, compassion and tenderness," he said. "Let's stay united. Let us make those who are alone and tested feel our closeness," as well as doctors, nurses, other healthcare workers and volunteers.

Pope Francis also expressed concern for "authorities who have to take strong measures for our good" and the police and soldiers maintaining public order and enforcing the lockdown.

Inform or Influence


No spoilers here.                                                                Before the Fall by Noah Hawley



by Noah Hawley


3031560
's review
really liked it
bookshelves: fiction

Noah Hawley's novel, Before the Fall, is about the news media and questions the role of journalism. Ask yourself if you watch the news to be informed or to be entertained. Why can't it be both? Because they're two different genres that most of the time don't gel together and trying to do both too often leads to sensationalism.

The storyline of Before the Fall involves a plane crash where only two characters survive. The novel will explain who is who and why they are on this particular plane at this particular moment in time. Because the people on that plane are high profile millionaires the media descends upon the story like the Pharisees upon Christ.

Once the facts of the incident are known, the news starts to speculate and influence the public. The hero who saved a four-year child by swimming all night with a dislocated shoulder is vilified. The reader will see our hero's stock plummet due to the machinations of a journalist and his news outlet.

It's painful to read.

But it's not the whole story. Our hero doesn't cave. He gives as much as he's gotten. He's the moral example of how to behave. (There is literally no explicit sex scenes.) Sex, money, and fame are not important. Children are. And saving and protecting a child defines heroism.


Saturday, March 21, 2020

COVID-19 Poem


A friend sent me this poem in an email.  The author is unknown.



History will remember when the world stopped
And the flights stayed on the ground.
And the cars parked in the street.
And the trains didn’t run.

History will remember when the schools closed
And the children stayed indoors
And the medical staff, first responders and truckers walked towards the fire
And they didn’t run.

History will remember when the people sang
On their balconies, in isolation
But so very much together
In courage and song.

History will remember when the people fought
For their old and their weak
Protected the vulnerable

The Omnipresence of God

I see His Blood Upon the Rose
By
Joseph M Plunkett

I see His blood upon the rose
And in the stars the glory of His eyes,
His body gleams amid eternal snows,
His tears fall from the skies.

I see His face in every flower;
The thunder and the singing of the birds
Are but His voice--and carven by His power
Rocks are His written words.

All pathways by His feet are worn,
His strong heart stirs the ever-beating sea,
His crown of thorns is twined with every thorn,
His cross is every tree.

General Absolution

An article by Kathleen N. Hattrup | Mar 20, 2020 in Aletheia explains how General Absolution might be used during this COVID-19 pandemic.  

My first thought was what a boon this would be for Catholics who feel estranged from the church.

However, memories recollected brought back my wedding ceremony.

The celebrant was Father Paul Keyes.  The date was July 4, 1971.  Since it was a holiday and the church was a little crazy then in the years immediately after Vatican II, Father agreed to my request to give the congregation General Absolution.  But I noticed many in the congregation didn't receive Communion.  How Come?  They just received absolution!

Later when the occasion arose, upon talking to some of the people who had attended my wedding, why they didn't receive Communion, they responded that they didn't understand what it was.

So with that incident in mind, I don't think people would understand if they were given General Absolution.  Somewhere I read that people have to hear something three times to hear it to understand.

So would General Absolution have any meaning?  Would it matter?

Friday, March 20, 2020

Plenary Indulgence During Covid-19

Usually to gain a plenary indulgence one has to go to Confession and receive Communion.  These requirements you probably do anyway.


Thursday, March 19, 2020

When Jesus Calls the Unqualified

Saint JosephToday is the feast of St. Joseph.  While reading a sermon by St. Bernadine of Siena about St. Joseph, he states: "Whenever the divine favor chooses someone to receive a special grace or to accept a lofty vocation, God adorns the person chosen with all the gifts of the Spirit needed to fulfill the task at hand."

But that does not mean God necessarily increases the chosen person with a higher IQ, or gives them a musical talent.  He gives them what is needed to fulfill the task that is needed.  Think about it.

Moses still was a stutterer.  David was still the youngest in his family and a boy.  Peter was still impetuous.  Paul constantly had to struggle to assert his worth and authority.  They were not qualified, yet God used them and their faults to turn bad into good.

And today, on the feast of St. Joseph, God chose Joseph to be the foster father of His Son, not a king but rather a poor laborer.  God's ways are not our ways.

Blessed be the name of the Lord.

Giddy-Up


The Rocking-Horse Catholic by Caryll Houselander

The Rocking-Horse Catholic by Caryl Houselander is an autobiography. The title is explained by Caryl's faith journey. She wasn't born Catholic but she was baptized as a child and from then on her faith waned or grew stronger.

This is an easy and short read. In places, I laughed at Caryl's humor and in others, I almost cried. She had a lonely childhood and I don't think she ever graduated from high school. Her education was spotty. So she isn't a theologian with a couple of degrees. Rather, she is a writer, a devotional, mystical, Catholic writer.

The Rocking-Horse Catholic is written in a conversational style. She was blessed with three mystical experiences in her life which made me jealous. Her last experience filled the rest of her life with love of neighbor. "I saw too the reverence that everyone must have for a sinner; instead of condoning his sin, which is in reality his utmost sorrow, one must comfort Christ who is suffering in him . And this reverence must be paid even to those sinners whose souls seem to be dead, because it is Christ, who is the life of the soul, who is dead in them; they are His tombs, and Christ in the tomb is potentially the risen Christ."

  • Print Length: 142 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 1785163280
  • Publisher: Aeterna Press (March 16, 2015)
  • Publication Date: March 16, 2015
  • Sold by: Amazon.com Services LLC
  • Language: English

Wednesday, March 18, 2020

Living Without the Eucharist

I wanted to post this on Facebook but there is something wrong on FB.  It won't let me post on my page. So I'll post it here.  This is from https://aleteia.org/

                                                                             I hope this gives you encouragement.


Saints who have had to live without the Eucharist

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These stories will put our momentary fast from the Body and Blood of Christ into perspective.

With dioceses around the world canceling public Masses for weeks to come, many Catholics are already feeling starved for the Eucharist. When the world is fighting a global pandemic, it seems that the Mass would be more necessary than ever. But while public Masses are canceled, the private ones continue and the body of Christ is able to receive the graces from those Masses, especially when we make a spiritual communion.
Still, how can we who depend on the Sacraments survive this crisis when divorced from holy Mass? Well, there are plenty of saints (and millions more Christians) who’ve had similar experiences, months and years of surviving without the Sacraments. Looking to them can strengthen us to persevere.
Though not canonized, thousands and thousands of Japanese Christians lived without priests for nearly 250 years. They baptized their children in secret, passing down the faith in whispered lessons, praying before images of the Madonna and Child that were disguised to look like Buddhist images. In 1858 Japan finally readmitted Christian missionaries, who found 10,000 hidden Christians waiting for them. Imagine being raised with the near certainty that you would never in your life attend Mass, knowing of the Eucharist only because your grandmother’s grandmother’s grandmother once went to Mass. It puts social distancing in perspective.
The saints of 19th-century Korea were in a similar situation. After the Gospel was first preached by Servant of God Yi Beok and his companions in 1784, the Church was run entirely by laypeople until 1795. At that point, Bl. James Zhou Wen-Mo arrived and discovered 4,000 Catholics, only one of whom had ever seen a priest. Wen-Mo served as the only priest in all of Korea for six years, until his martyrdom. For the next 36 years, there were again no Masses in Korea until a small group of French priests arrived in 1836—and were killed two years later.
St. Isaac Jogues (1607-1646) may have been prepared for torture and martyrdom when he traveled to North America to evangelize Native Americans. But as a priest, he wouldn’t have expected to be deprived of the Eucharist — until his hands were marred by his captors. At the time, a priest who was missing thumb or forefinger was unable to celebrate the Mass, so from the time of his injury until (having escaped his Mohawk captors) his return to France 17 months later, Fr. Jogues was unable to confess, to celebrate Mass, or even to attend Mass. He was given a special dispensation and permitted to celebrate Mass again, in spite of the state of his hands, and requested permission to return to America after his recovery. He was killed not long after his return, but his killer later repented and was baptized with the name “Isaac Jogues.”
Bl. Victoire Rasoamanarivo (1848-1894) was a Malagasy noblewoman and a convert to Catholicism. A leader in the Church in Madagascar, when the French were expelled from Madagascar in 1883, the departing priests left the care of the Church in her hands, along with Bl. Raphael Rafiringa, a Malagasy religious Brother. For nearly three years, Victoire and Raphael led the 21,000 lay Catholics in Madagascar, bringing them together each Sunday for communal prayer though there were no priests to celebrate Mass. Victoire explained, “I place before my mind the missionaries saying the Mass, and mentally attend all the Masses being said throughout the world.” Three years later, a vibrant community hungry for the Eucharist welcomed their priests back—all of them far more grateful for the Mass than they had been before their three years without it.
St. Mark Ji TianXiang (1834-1900) was an opium addict. Because his priest didn’t understand the nature of addiction, he told TianXiang that he couldn’t be absolved until he had beaten his addiction—which meant that he couldn’t receive communion either. For 30 years, TianXiang continued to practice the faith while being denied the Sacraments. He never did manage to get clean, but he died a martyr and has been canonized a saint not just for his martyrdom but for his decades of attempting to follow Jesus even in the absence of the Sacraments.
Bl. Laurentia Herasymiv (1911-1952), like countless other Catholics in Nazi concentration camps or Soviet gulags, spent the last months of her life without the Sacraments and in the near certainty that she would have no opportunity for viaticum or a final confession. Arrested for refusing to abandon the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church for Orthodoxy, Sr. Laurentia and Bl. Olympia Bida were sent to Siberia, where both died as a result of all they’d suffered at the hands of the communists. As she lay dying, she begged for the Eucharist, calling out in her delirium, “Jesus, I do not want to die without you!” She died, as she had lived for two long years, without the Eucharist, and was fully united to Jesus.

Shepherd One

 Whenever the pope flies anywhere, you will see that the plane is called Shepherd One.  Even so, the Vatican doesn't own any planes.  Th...