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Sunday, April 30, 2023

The Power and Glory are Jesus'

 This weekend in Boston there's the largest satanic convention, in history. At least, that's what they say.  Boston's Cardinal Archbishop, Sean Patrick O'Malley said not to give it any attention.  Just pray to Jesus.  

This morning at Mass, at the end of the Lord's Prayer, we always pray 

Deliver us, Lord, we pray, from every evil,
graciously grant peace in our days,
that, by the help of your mercy,
we may be always free from sin
and safe from all distress,
as we await the blessed hope
and the coming of our Savior, Jesus Christ.
For the kingdom,
the power and the glory are yours
now and forever.

But today, because of satancon, this prayer had special meaning.



Saturday, April 29, 2023

Looking at the Burghers


The city council discussed the demand—Why, and Who, and How.  For eleven months the port of Calais, France had been starving.  This war between France and England had been going on too long.  Why are the kings so cruel? Generations have grown used to bombardments, starvation, fear, worry and this blockade around our city.  When will it end?

I, Eustache de Saint Pierre am weary.  My business is ruined.  My wife has died.  My own mother, once again is a mother to her own grandchildren.  I am tired:
tired of the heaviness of an empty stomach,
tired of hearing the thin hungry cries from babes,
tired of looking at malnourished children,
tired of people slowly staggering aimlessly along,
I am just plain tired of living. 
Can death be worse than living like this?

We have surrendered to the English and appealed for mercy.  The enemy has demanded that six burghers, prominent citizens of Calais, give up our lives to save the people of Calais. We are to walk barefoot, in our underwear, with nooses around our necks, and carry the keys to our property.

Thus here we stand:

Eustache de Saint Pierre
Jean d’Aire,
Andrjeu d’Andres,
Jean de Fiennes,
Pierre de Wissant
Jacques de Wissant.

No one looks around to see our loved ones’ eyes, or the anguish in each others’ eyes.  Our slumped shoulders follow our slow, dragging footsteps, walking dutifully towards the enemy. 

This is what the people see, not the inner conflict between life, death, the need to save the city.  We must die so that the rest may live.  But this is not a proud, triumphant procession with heads held high into martyrdom.  We burghers are afraid….but resigned. 

We do it, regardless.       Il faut le faire.

 

 

 

Thursday, April 27, 2023

The Burghers


Strange sculpture, is it not?  The history this statue depicts varies.   The event that motivated this interesting tableau occurred during the Hundred Years War.  The English blockaded the town of Calais.  No food could get in.  The townspeople were starving.  They appealed to the English for mercy.  
The English agreed on one condition.  Six prominent Calais citizens had to offer themselves as ransom.  Look at the picture.  The six are in their underwear, barefoot, and wearing nooses around their necks.

 

Thursday, April 20, 2023

It's Not Perfect, But It's the Best We Have

 Garry Wills is Catholic and loves his church, that's why he's always criticizing it. I cut him a lot of slack. I understand because I love the people in my family, yet I can't help wanting them to be perfect and all too often nag, harangue, criticize, and plain old annoy them. Wills reminds me of me.

I'm not a theologian, so I can't criticize his theology. I look at his critique as his opinion, not the last word. I googled a bit and surmised that secular publications liked this book, Papal Sin, and Catholic publications picked it apart.

What I liked best about Papal Sin is the history behind the topics he chose to write about: Holocaust, Humanae Vitae, Marianology, Maxmillian Kolbe, Edith Stein, etc. Of course, Wills cherry picked to prove his points, but his view is food for thought.

And it's only his view, his opinion. Read Papal Sin for Garry Wills' smooth writing articulation. He has a way with words. He is clear, succinct, clever, and writes for the masses. Just keep in mind, that theologians contest his views and challenge his Catholicity. He is a church going Catholic and that's why he criticizes.

Wednesday, April 19, 2023

Introducing Father Gabriel

 This is a Who Done it Mystery! The Sleeping Witness by Fiorella de Maria solves a murder. The detective is a Benedictine Priest, named Father Gabriel. Two acquaintances from a concentration camp meet again, many years later. One, almost two, are murdered. The arrested husband of one of the victims turns out not to be the killer. That's not really a spoiler, because the first arrested in mysteries is never the real murderer.

WWII is involved; I actually learned a few facts. Only in Auschwitz were concentration numbers used. Also, war continues long after a peace treaty is signed.
I found the trail of evidence convoluted, and the suspects confusing. This is why I only gave the book an average rating.

Tuesday, April 11, 2023

Coming of Age

 In a narrow pew in an old wooden church, a little girl knelt, stood, and prayed next to her sister.  Stations of the cross were well underway.  Father Lombard, accompanied by three altar boys: one carrying the processional cross, the other two carrying tall candles, on either side of the priest.  The little procession went from station to station, and read the narrative by Alphonse Ligouri.

Young as I was, I got it.  I followed the story.  My heart was stirred.  Sadness filled my thoughts.  My eyes filled and poured down my cheeks, quietly dripping into my collar.  A lump formed in my throat and it was a struggle to keep my sobs in check.

I didn't understand.  How could people be so cruel?  What had He done?  

Why?  Why?


Monday, April 10, 2023

Prudence

 The book, Prudence, Choose Confidently, Live Boldly by Father Gregory Pine, OP was a Lenten Read.  It was perfect for Lent.  It lasted the 40+ days, as I only read a bit each day.  It's not the type of book to read as fiction, as a page turner, nor something to read in bed, at night.  I read it as meditative reading, which is what made it perfect for Lent.  

Before reading this book, I never gave prudence, a thought.  I don't know what I thought it was, but it was a revelation to me that it mostly is patience to wait for reflection.  That's my interpretation.  Patience is exactly what I need.  I'm too impulsive and I've gotten into trouble more than a few times due to lack of what I now know as prudence.

Father Pine ties this natural virtue to the catechism's Cardinal Virtues: fortitude, justice, temperance, and prudence. We have to pray for God's guidance. God's plans are at work in our own talents in life.  Prudence gives us the insight to see how we can fulfill God's plans.  Good book to bring on retreat!



Sunday, April 9, 2023

A Cross on a Lanyard





Today is Easter.  As I was listening to the Deacon's homily I was meditating upon his words.  Deacon Rossini said we could never repay Jesus for what He did for us.  His suffering and death were something beyond our human capabilities to imitate.  We can never thank the Lord enough, nor more than we can thank our parents for their sacrifices for us.  

I was immediately thinking of the years of fertility tests and treatments, my husband and I underwent.  Then nine months of gestation.  One labor was 21 hours.  Another labor took place in my bedroom.  Nursing each of my three children for two years = six years of nursing.  Changing careers in order to accommodate a family life.  And I haven't mentioned the financial sacrifices!

These are things that can't be paid back.  There is nothing that equals these sacrifices.  Now think of Jesus' sacrifice.

Thank you Lord, for loving me.

Billy Collins alludes to this unbalance of sacrifice and gratitude in his poem, The Lanyard I copied and pasted it from The Poetry Foundation.  If this is not allowed, tell me and I'll remove it. Upon reading, the reader can identify with the feelings.  That's what Billy Collins is good at.


The Lanyard

The other day I was ricocheting slowly
off the blue walls of this room,
moving as if underwater from typewriter to piano,
from bookshelf to an envelope lying on the floor,
when I found myself in the L section of the dictionary
where my eyes fell upon the word lanyard.

No cookie nibbled by a French novelist
could send one into the past more suddenly—
a past where I sat at a workbench at a camp
by a deep Adirondack lake
learning how to braid long thin plastic strips
into a lanyard, a gift for my mother.

I had never seen anyone use a lanyard
or wear one, if that’s what you did with them,
but that did not keep me from crossing
strand over strand again and again
until I had made a boxy
red and white lanyard for my mother.

She gave me life and milk from her breasts,
and I gave her a lanyard.
She nursed me in many a sick room,
lifted spoons of medicine to my lips,
laid cold face-cloths on my forehead,
and then led me out into the airy light

and taught me to walk and swim,
and I, in turn, presented her with a lanyard.
Here are thousands of meals, she said,
and here is clothing and a good education.
And here is your lanyard, I replied,
which I made with a little help from a counselor.

Here is a breathing body and a beating heart,
strong legs, bones and teeth,
and two clear eyes to read the world, she whispered,
and here, I said, is the lanyard I made at camp.
And here, I wish to say to her now,
is a smaller gift—not the worn truth

that you can never repay your mother,
but the rueful admission that when she took
the two-tone lanyard from my hand,
I was as sure as a boy could be
that this useless, worthless thing I wove
out of boredom would be enough to make us even.
 
“The Lanyard” from The Trouble With Poetry: and Other Poems by Billy Collins, copyright © 2005 by Billy Collins. Used by permission of Random House, an imprint and division of Penguin Random House LLC. All rights reserved. 

Saturday, April 8, 2023

New Beginnings

LECTIO:                                       1 Corinthians 5:6-8

Your boasting is not good. Don’t you know that a little yeast leavens the whole batch of dough? Get rid of the old yeast, so that you may be a new unleavened batch—as you really are. For Christ, our Passover lamb, has been sacrificed. Therefore let us keep the Festival, not with the old bread leavened with malice and wickedness, but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth.

STUDIUM:

There is a situation that provokes Paul advice.  One of the community is sleeping with his mother or stepmother.  Worse, the community is not treating this abomination as harmful.

To explain Paul's position he uses the Passover preparations as an example.  All yeast products have to be removed from the house before Passover.  You get rid of every form of yeast, if you are committed to making a new beginning.  Paul wants the Corinthian community to be the new unleavened bread.

MEDITATIO:

Paul's words bring to mind, Confession.  We penitents get rid of our sins and begin again.  

ORATIO:

Our new life is beginning.

CONTEMPLATIO:

I choose to do good.

RESOLUTIO:

I must make an effort to go to frequent Confession.



Poetry Workshop

 Today I went to a poetry workshop with Jamele Adams.  We wrote some haiku and then he rapped a poem and we had to respond.  Guess what.  It was fun.  Here's the group.


Believe

Evil is the dragon. Where is St. George?

Perhaps the slayer hasn't been born.
Perhaps she needs to be bred
             or nurtured, to be fed
     a diet of
            righteousness
            goodness
            faith
            love
            kindness
            wisdom
            strength
All the virtues needed to slay evil.

A sword to keep the pain away:
    the pain of
          worry
          failure
          sickness
          death

DEATH!  Death, you didn't win!
Death, where is your victory?

Death is birth!
Every death is a rebirth.
The forever yields to the new.

The evil dragon is slain and a new hope triumps!
Because light is stronger than night.

Pain ends.
Peace starts.

Hate yields to understanding.
Understanding leads to love.

Love will give birth to the dragon slayer.

Between Times

 LECTIO;

Colossians 3:1-4

So if you have been raised with Christ, seek the things that are above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God.

Set your minds on things that are above, not on things that are on earth,

for you have died, and your life is hidden with Christ in God.

When Christ who is your life is revealed, then you also will be revealed with him in glory.

STUDIUM:

This is an exhortation to seek the better things, i.e., Christ.  This is appropriate to say now that Christ has risen.  Don't look to sin in one's old life.  Seek a new and better life.  Keep your eyes on Christ and heaven.  He will come again in glory and now we have something to look forward to.

MEDITATIO:

Jesus certainly is taking His time coming back, but as we've been told, "God's time is not our time."  That's what I don't understand.  Jesus became one of us, didn't He experience impatience?  Surely, He must have wished His death to come quick, but The Father didn't come instantaneously.  He did come.  It wasn't fast enough for me but I'm me, and not God. Now, I've answered my own question.

ORATIO:

Lord, give me patience and prudence.  I hate to wait but it does no good to fret.  You are God, help me to be content with that knowledge.

CONTEMPLATIO:

There is a time to be born and a time to die.

RESOLUTIO:

I need to plant some vegetable seeds in my garden.



Wednesday, April 5, 2023

The Fourth Cup

LECTIO:                    Psalm 118: 1-2, 16-17, 22-23, 24.

This is the day the Lord has made; let us rejoice and be glad.

Give thanks to the Lord, for He is good,
      for his mercy endures forever.
Let the house of Israel say,
     "His mercy endures forever."

The right hand of the Lord has struck with power;
     the right hand of the Lord is exalted.
I shall not die, but live,
     and declare the works of the Lord.

The stone which the builders rejected
     has become the cornerstone.
By the Lord has this been done;
     it is wonderful in our eyes.

STUDIUM:

A hymn of Thanksgiving.  A thanksgiving song for the procession of a king.  How appropriate to be sung at the 4th cup of wine in Passover.

MEDITATIO:

This is Easter we praise God for Jesus.  God has given us a resurrection to prove He is Who He said He was.  Jesus is the Messiah.  He is risen.  Truly He is risen.

ORATIO:

Lord Jesus, You have given us this day to rejoice and to know how to serve You.  You are good, Your love endures forever.

CONTEMPLATIO:

Hosanna! He has risen; He has truly risen.

RESOLUTIO:

There are days when I have no reason to rejoice.  But no matter what happens, when I am honest with God, my prayers should end in praise.  He will give me reason to rejoice.






 

Monday, April 3, 2023

Justice and Piety

 John 12: 1-8, tells the story of Mary anointing the feet of Jesus with expensive ointment.  Judas' response reminds me of the disagreements between conservatives and liberals.  Piety versus social justice, if you will.  One is concerned with the cost.  The other with service to the people.  

Why didn't Jesus stop Mary after she had used half of the ointment?  Then both sides of the argument would have been satisfied, if only a little.

Another question, to ask Jesus.


Sunday, April 2, 2023

Choosing Faith

 

LECTIO:                                           ACTS 10: 34A, 37-43              

Peter proceeded to speak and said:
“You know what has happened all over Judea,
beginning in Galilee after the baptism
that John preached,
how God anointed Jesus of Nazareth
with the Holy Spirit and power.
He went about doing good
and healing all those oppressed by the devil,
for God was with him.
We are witnesses of all that he did
both in the country of the Jews and in Jerusalem.
They put him to death by hanging him on a tree.
This man God raised on the third day and granted that he be visible,
not to all the people, but to us,
the witnesses chosen by God in advance,
who ate and drank with him after he rose from the dead.
He commissioned us to preach to the people
and testify that he is the one appointed by God
as judge of the living and the dead.
To him all the prophets bear witness,
that everyone who believes in him
will receive forgiveness of sins through his name.”

STUDIUM:    

Luke, the author of Acts, has Peter giving a speech.  In a vision, Peter is 
told that a Roman Centurion, Cornelius, will come and invite him to his
home to instruct his family and friends. Peter explains that as a Jew, he 
shouldn't associate with Gentiles, but he had a vision, in which God
showed him that no one is to be considered unclean.
     Peter gives a lesson on the righteousness of Jesus. He explains how
Jesus was crucified, but then resurrected.  Jesus commissioned him and others to 
preach.  Lastly, if you believe, your sins will be forgiven.
    As proof of the quality of Cornelius' household, the Holy Spirit will come
down and everyone starts speaking in tongues.  

MEDITATIO:

Peter had a vision.  I don't think he understood it, in fact I bet he was 
shocked to find a Roman soldier standing outside his door.  But he did
what he was told and saw the vision unfold before him.
     What I get from this story is that Peter, not completely understanding
what God wanted, went with the flow.  This is what I have to learn
to do.  I should not do what I want, but be more situationally alert to
see God guiding me what to do.

ORATIO:

Lord, help me understand Your Ways.  I will try to listen to Your Voice.  

CONTEMPLATIO:

My heart is open.  Come into my heart, O Lord.

RESOLUTIO:

I plan to spend more quiet time with the Lord.  Adoration will be scheduled.



    

Saturday, April 1, 2023

 For Christians around the world, the road to Damascus is a symbol of transformation.  According to the Bible, the Jewish pharisee, Saul of Tarsus persecuted the followers of the Nazarene, Jesus.  One day, on the road to Damascus to persecute more followers, Saul was blinded by light, possibly heat lightning, and for the next three days, Saul was blind.  We presume that during those three days, Saul was instructed by God because he converted and became the evangelist Paul, that we know from the New Testament.

Long gone are those days of early Christianity.  Today, Christians only make up about 10% of Syria.  

We must pray for poor Syria, not only for the too many years of civil violence, extreme terrorists' organization, but also for natural disasters.  

 

Updated Blessing of the Houses

 

Blessing of the Houses   


 

Lord, have mercy…
                Lord, have mercy.

Christ, have mercy…
                Christ, have mercy.

Lord, hear our prayers…
                Christ, graciously hear us.

St. Dominic, and Bl. Lataste, hear our prayers…
                Bless our sister of Mont.

Our Lady of Grace and St. Teresa of the Child Jesus…
                Bless our sisters of Montferrand Chateau.

Jesus in the Eucharist and St. Rose of Lima…
                Bless our sisters of Nukerke.

Our Lady of Peace and St. Niklaus of Flue…
                Bless our sisters of St. Niklausen.

Mary, Mother of Mercy…
                Bless our sisters of New Way, Germany.

Holy Face of Christ and Our Lady of Consolation…
                Bless our sisters of Turin.

St. Mary Magdalen…
                Bless our sisters of Venlo, Thorn, and the Netherlands.

Our Lady of Mercy…
                Bless our brothers and sisters in the fraternity of Norfolk.

Mother Admirable…
                Bless our Novitiates

Our Lady of Bethany…
                Bless our mission.

Our Lady of the Church…
                Bless our Lataste Fraternities.

St. Francis and St. Clare…
                Bless our Franciscan Sisters of Milwaukee and our Franciscan friends.

Mother of God…
                Bless our sisters in West Springfield.

St. Cecilia…
                Bless our sisters in Nashville.

Risen Lord…
                Bless our sisters in Maine.

Saint Dominic…
                Bless our Brothers at Santa Sabina and throughout the world.

Pauline Quinn…
                Pray for prison ministries.

Yves Congar…
                Pray for the Southern Province.

Our Holy Founders…
                Bless us.

Blessed Pere Lataste, Apostle of Prisons…
                Bless us.

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...