6 DECEMBER 2019. Today the Church celebrates the feast of Saint Nicholas of Myra, a much beloved and historically mysterious 4th Century saint. A wonderful presentation of information, believed to be historically accurate, can be found here: The Life of Saint Nicholas the Wonderworker by Michael the Archimandrite.
God, Our Father,
we pray that through the intercession of St. Nicholas
You will protect our children.
Keep them safe from harm
and help them
grow and become worthy in Your sight.
Give them strength to keep their
Faith in You;
and to keep alive their joy in Your creation.
Through
Jesus Christ, Our Lord.
Amen
06 December 2019
19 November 2019
Saint Ampelus
20 NOVEMBER 2019. Today the Church celebrates the feast of Saint Ampelus, a third century martyr, who was killed for his faith during the reign of Diocletian.
O, blessed Ampelus, whose martyrdom we recall today,
help us by your prayer, we beseech you,
to face the world today with a spirit of charity,
to stand in the face of untruth, bearing witness to the truth
of Christ, our King.
We pray, that by your example, and intercession,
we may follow you in obedience and love for God.
Aid us, we pray, that we may persevere in holiness,
until death.
Amen.
O, blessed Ampelus, whose martyrdom we recall today,
help us by your prayer, we beseech you,
to face the world today with a spirit of charity,
to stand in the face of untruth, bearing witness to the truth
of Christ, our King.
We pray, that by your example, and intercession,
we may follow you in obedience and love for God.
Aid us, we pray, that we may persevere in holiness,
until death.
Amen.
Labels:
Saint Ampelus
28 September 2018
et alia
28 SEPTEMBER 2018. Today the Church celebrates the feast of Saint Wenceslaus - the tenth century Duke of Bohemia and martyr for the faith, known far and wide for his humility and pious works on behalf of the poor and needy. Named posthumously as a king, Saint Wenceslaus is yet another reminder that all of us are called to be saints. That is, each of us is called to holiness in our lives, given our state in life, where we seek fully to join ourselves and conform ourselves to the Holy and Divine Will, through our submission to Christ.
Running on at the keyboard:
Much has been made in the U.S. this week of the Brett Kavanaugh hearings before the Senate Judiciary Committee, which is considering his nomination to the Supreme Court. A number of accusations of sexual misconduct and sexual assault have been made against him, and he gave an emotional and pointed rebuke to those accusations and the nomination process yesterday. However, I was disappointed in Judge Kavanaugh. Judicial temperament requires one to maintain a detached view of facts and circumstances to evaluate the application of the law. No judge should be outwardly partisan or emotional, and we saw both from Judge Kavanaugh yesterday in his testimony. To the contrary, a good judge addresses his or her task with humility, emotional neutrality, and somber intellectual inquiry, knowing that decisions can have life-changing consequences for the people impacted. Certainly the Supreme Court's role in our system of government should be able to count on sound judicial temperament from all nine of its justices.
As to sexual assault and all manner of sexual aggression. There is no excuse for these actions. I had a roommate in college who once told me that once he reached a certain point of arousal, there was no way he could stop himself. In his words, he was "animalistic." Not true. We are not animals, and no person should be objectified and victimized for another's sexual gratification or self-satisfaction. As a community of faithful, and as a nation, we should stand in solidarity with those affected by these crimes and ensure that victims are provided for in a manner befitting their dignity.
Dignity of the marriage sacrament, too, must be upheld in our country and throughout humanity. As we have continued to see marriage redefined as any relationship that two individuals want to commit to, not matter what its circumstances and no matter what the sex of the individuals involved are, it is no wonder that our society feels itself in crisis. The basic building block of society, the family--the domestic church--is being defined out of existence. For this reason, we should head carefully and follow Pope Francis' call for a permanent catechumenate for marriage. The marriage vocation should be formed and nurtured from early childhood, through adolescence, into the marital relationship, and throughout life. Our world cannot afford to get this wrong.
Dignity of human life is under constant attack in our world, because we are told that self-gratification is the point of life. "Do what you want. Live for you. Be happy. You do you." These are the messages of Western culture, and they are wrong.
We have an obligation to return our whole selves to God in love, because He loved us. We are called to be something more than animals, because we share in the divine--by virtue of our immortal soul--and have been given the gift of being the adopted brothers and sisters of Christ, our God and savior. Each of us, from the moment of conception until natural death, has a unique and inalienable dignity as the beloved creatures of our God. Our lives are not for us to live for ourselves, they are gifts to live for God, who is our eternal home!
This is why, too, the universal call to abolish the death penalty is important. All life is sacred, no matter the circumstances. No matter the situation. From the earliest point of development, to the end stages of disease and infirmity; no matter the culpability of a person for harm done to others. Life is still precious and shares in the divine and, therefore, must be protected and upheld.
This is truth. It is counter cultural because our culture tells us lies. Live for truth dear brothers and sisters. That is our call.
Dear readers, please pray for me and I will pray for you.
NOVUS:
It also occurs to me that there has been little mention of the influence of alcohol on all that is involved in the Brett Kavanaugh allegations. No high school teen should ever be drinking, under any circumstances. Teenage drinking is the great contributor to an untold number of teenage deaths and life altering, harmful events. Parents, keep your children from this influence and model responsible behavior of your own.
-3OP-
Running on at the keyboard:
Much has been made in the U.S. this week of the Brett Kavanaugh hearings before the Senate Judiciary Committee, which is considering his nomination to the Supreme Court. A number of accusations of sexual misconduct and sexual assault have been made against him, and he gave an emotional and pointed rebuke to those accusations and the nomination process yesterday. However, I was disappointed in Judge Kavanaugh. Judicial temperament requires one to maintain a detached view of facts and circumstances to evaluate the application of the law. No judge should be outwardly partisan or emotional, and we saw both from Judge Kavanaugh yesterday in his testimony. To the contrary, a good judge addresses his or her task with humility, emotional neutrality, and somber intellectual inquiry, knowing that decisions can have life-changing consequences for the people impacted. Certainly the Supreme Court's role in our system of government should be able to count on sound judicial temperament from all nine of its justices.
As to sexual assault and all manner of sexual aggression. There is no excuse for these actions. I had a roommate in college who once told me that once he reached a certain point of arousal, there was no way he could stop himself. In his words, he was "animalistic." Not true. We are not animals, and no person should be objectified and victimized for another's sexual gratification or self-satisfaction. As a community of faithful, and as a nation, we should stand in solidarity with those affected by these crimes and ensure that victims are provided for in a manner befitting their dignity.
Dignity of the marriage sacrament, too, must be upheld in our country and throughout humanity. As we have continued to see marriage redefined as any relationship that two individuals want to commit to, not matter what its circumstances and no matter what the sex of the individuals involved are, it is no wonder that our society feels itself in crisis. The basic building block of society, the family--the domestic church--is being defined out of existence. For this reason, we should head carefully and follow Pope Francis' call for a permanent catechumenate for marriage. The marriage vocation should be formed and nurtured from early childhood, through adolescence, into the marital relationship, and throughout life. Our world cannot afford to get this wrong.
Dignity of human life is under constant attack in our world, because we are told that self-gratification is the point of life. "Do what you want. Live for you. Be happy. You do you." These are the messages of Western culture, and they are wrong.
We have an obligation to return our whole selves to God in love, because He loved us. We are called to be something more than animals, because we share in the divine--by virtue of our immortal soul--and have been given the gift of being the adopted brothers and sisters of Christ, our God and savior. Each of us, from the moment of conception until natural death, has a unique and inalienable dignity as the beloved creatures of our God. Our lives are not for us to live for ourselves, they are gifts to live for God, who is our eternal home!
This is why, too, the universal call to abolish the death penalty is important. All life is sacred, no matter the circumstances. No matter the situation. From the earliest point of development, to the end stages of disease and infirmity; no matter the culpability of a person for harm done to others. Life is still precious and shares in the divine and, therefore, must be protected and upheld.
This is truth. It is counter cultural because our culture tells us lies. Live for truth dear brothers and sisters. That is our call.
Dear readers, please pray for me and I will pray for you.
NOVUS:
It also occurs to me that there has been little mention of the influence of alcohol on all that is involved in the Brett Kavanaugh allegations. No high school teen should ever be drinking, under any circumstances. Teenage drinking is the great contributor to an untold number of teenage deaths and life altering, harmful events. Parents, keep your children from this influence and model responsible behavior of your own.
-3OP-
Labels:
Brett Kavanaugh,
et alia,
Saint Wenceslaus,
sexual assault
29 August 2018
A Litany of Reparation
Lord have
mercy, Lord have mercy.
Christ
have mercy, Christ have mercy.
Lord have
mercy, Lord have mercy.
I am
sorry for my sins,
Father
forgive me.
I am
sorry for having contributed to the sins of others,
Father
forgive me.
I am
sorry for having spread sin,
Father
forgive me.
I am
sorry for my pride, leading me away from You,
Father
forgive me.
When I
have seen sin and ignored it for the sake of convenience,
Jesus
have mercy on me.
When I
have failed to examine my own sin,
Jesus
have mercy on me.
When I
have failed to love another by constructive correction,
Jesus
have mercy on me.
When I
have relied on prideful self,
Jesus
have mercy on me.
In my
need for love,
Holy
Spirit provide me Your grace.
In my
need for satisfaction,
Holy
Spirit provide me Your grace.
In my
need to be fulfilled,
Holy
Spirit provide me Your grace.
In my
every longing,
Holy
Spirit provide me Your grace.
Hail
Mary, Mother of God,
pray for
us.
Saint
Mary Magdalene, recipient of Mercy,
pray for
us.
I
reparation for my sin and the sins of all the world, I beg You, Holy Lord,
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, to accept my offering and provide for me a clean,
humble, contrite, and open heart to love and serve you more, now and always.
Amen.
Labels:
2018,
Litany of Reparation,
sexual abuse
Veritas
29 AUGUST
2018. The specter of horrible truth has been upon the U.S. and worldwide Church
for some days now: the horrible truth that some senior and well-regarded pastors
used their ministries as a selfish means to fulfill their own sexual desires;
the horrible truth that the Pennsylvania Church, over the last seventy some-odd
years, regularly reassigned priests who were know abusers, regardless of the
potential for fresh abuse and continued victimization of innocents; and the
horrible truth that there has been or is a sexually disordered subculture in
some seminaries and rectories that undermines the heart of Christ’s teaching of
self-giving love that the Church has proclaimed since our Lord’s sacrifice on
the cross. God bless the people in Chile, Ireland, and the multitude of other
countries affected by their own abuse scandals.
Our
bishops have failed us. They have not lived up to the life of holiness that
each of us is called to live - that each of us is invited to strive for to live
life-eternal with God, our Creator. They have failed us in their humanity. And,
it is no surprise.
We are
all human, and all of us are in need of conversion of heart. Why else did
Christ enter the world to save us, but from the ravages of sin and death?
Without conversion, we are doomed – literally and figuratively. Doomed to a
life without hope in Christ, without Christ’s peace (conformity to the Divine
Will), and doomed to a life without happiness and satisfaction, as St.
Augustine says: “Our heart is restless, until it rests in You [O Lord].”
So, what should
the response to this failure be? And, are we right to assign this failure to
all bishops, including the Holy Father?
Our
response should be one of action – prayer-centered action. Prayers of
reparation have poured out of some, and more are needed. But, each of us
faithful, including those ordained, should pray for wisdom and guidance in doing
our own part, given our state of life, our abilities, and our capacity to
effect positive change, in conformity with the Divine Will, to do what is needed
or appropriate to bring about healing and build up the Kingdom of God on earth.
A people centered on this cannot fail. The Holy Spirit will not permit the
forces of evil to prevail against us. (Psalm 21:11)
If the
laity seeks holiness, the Church will be transformed. If the laity exercises
its priestly calling to be Christ to one another, the Church and the world
cannot remain the same. If the laity acts, our shepherds will bring us further
as the body of Christ.
This
action, too, must have a practical sense about how to seek solidarity with the
victims of abuse and prevent abuse from ever occurring again. Solidarity is the
first practical objective, we must walk with the victims of abuse in their
journeys, so that healing can begin.
Bishops –
I beg you – throw open the dark recesses of these problems to the light of
truth. Allow us all to grieve with abuse victims and seek reconciliation with
them. And, truth will provide no quarter to abusers.
Bishops, be vulnerable to
your flocks in all failings and do not consider yourselves above any other. All
are equally answerable to our Lord, all must be held to account for their actions,
especially those actions that rob innocents of faith and trust in God and the
Church.
No evil
can stand the light of truth. We must truly seek it in every way.
So, are
all bishops guilty of failure? Yes. Each of us is complicit in looking away
when we see sinful failings, and we all sin. All sin affects the community. A
bishop’s failure affects his flock, and the flock’s failure is the “stink” that
the shepherd has to contend with in loving, as Christ taught. Let none think he
is without blame.
However,
this does not mean that our bishops should be condemned. On the contrary, they
need the support of the faithful in fulfilling their ministry – to proclaim the
Gospel and lead souls to Christ.
Any bishop
who cannot, after an examination of conscience, rest comfortably that his
first mission is to lead in holiness, so as to bring about the Kingdom of God,
should resign. All other worldly, societal, humanistic, social, and cultural
concerns should be swept aside, if truth is to reign in the heart of the
Church.
I pray
for our priests, bishops, religious, consecrated, and all souls who earnestly
yearn for God.
Pray with
me, and build up the Kingdom, set upon the foundation of Jesus Christ, the
truth, the way, and the life. (John 14:6)
Labels:
2018,
Cardinal McCarrick,
homosexuality,
scandal,
sexual abuse
21 June 2018
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