Wednesday, March 31, 2010

For critics of pope and Church, end justifies means

As published today in the Johnstown Tribune-Democrat
 En Español | Em português| En italiano
H.H. Pope Benedict XVI For the past several years now, I have sat back and waited during the Lent and Easter seasons for the inevitable eruptions of sensational reports, purported exposés and clever reinterpretations of traditional Christian teachings. This year, would it be a new documentary concerning the discovery of the corpse of Jesus? Would it be another shallow, runaway bestseller such as “The Da Vinci Code”?

Nope. This year’s Easter surprise has been the relentless attacks against the Catholic Church in general, and Pope Benedict XVI in particular, from critics both outside and inside the Church. Who they are and what they say reveal a lot of what they want.

But before we go into that, let’s reaffirm what is accepted by all: This injury is largely self-inflicted. Years of negligent handling of sexual abuse allegations have brought us here. As Pope Benedict recently told the Irish bishops:
It cannot be denied that some of you and your predecessors failed, at times grievously, to apply the long-established norms of canon law to the crime of child abuse. Serious mistakes were made in responding to allegations … it must be admitted that grave errors of judgment were made and failures of leadership occurred. All this has seriously undermined your credibility and effectiveness.
And to the accused priests and religious, he said:
You betrayed the trust that was placed in you by innocent young people and their parents, and you must answer for it before Almighty God and before properly constituted tribunals. You have forfeited the esteem of the people of Ireland and brought shame and dishonour upon your conferees. Those of you who are priests violated the sanctity of the sacrament of Holy Orders in which Christ makes himself present in us and in our actions. Together with the immense harm done to victims, great damage has been done to the Church and to the public perception of the priesthood and religious life.
The same papal observations would apply here, even though he didn’t state it.

Abp. Demeritus Rembert Weakland Nevertheless, it is still somewhat shocking to me that one of the sources of a recent New York Times investigative piece on alleged Vatican complicity is none other than the former archbishop of Milwaukee, Rembert Weakland (pictured left), an avowed homosexual who was forced to resign his office for embezzling money from the Church to buy his lover’s silence.

What’s worse, Weakland held to his information and waited with malice aforethought until the time when its release would cause maximum damage.

Or consider dissident Swiss theologian Hans Küng, whose principal writings I’ve read and who, by my reckoning, once had important things to say about being a Christian and the nature of the Church.

In the 1970s, Küng (pictured below, right) proposed as facts his personal opinions in theological and moral matters that, in my view, not only attacked the integrity of the Christian message, but canonized the ethical relativism and the psychobabble that sustained the ecology of sexual abuse in the Church.

Now, he’s attempting to hold the pope accountable for his alleged complicity in covering up sexual abuse in his former diocese in Germany.

Dr. Hans KüngSo, what’s their agenda?

Weakland and Küng are cogs in a machine seeking, if not the destruction of the Church, to render her ineffective in the public arena.

External critics understand that a discredited Catholic Church will be unable to speak convincingly in the defense of the poor, the downtrodden, the aged, the infirm and the unborn.

A weakened, discredited Church will be powerless to oppose trendy agendas such as civil and even ecclesiastical marriages between people of the same sex, or influence politicians to stop abortion-friendly reforms of our health-care system.
Internally, critics of the Church’s normative teaching intend to impose their views of married men and/or women in the priesthood, and relaxing the Church’s sexual ethics, particularly as it impacts the permissibility of artificial contraception and abortion.

Critics also seek to empower so-called Catholic organizations that often set themselves at odds with the teachings of the pope and bishops, as we have seen recently during the health-care debate.
Finally, critics and activists seek the rehabilitation of dissident theologians, such as Küng, and their elevation to the status of normative teachers.

Wrapped in the mantle of justice for the sexual abuse victims, the critics are getting away with it through endless litigations aimed at draining the Church of money and resources, while submitting the pope and bishops to relentless public dissent, criticism and ridicule.

Yet the mainstream media seem uninterested in questioning the critics’ motives, and that makes them complicit, in my view, in the agenda to undermine the Church.

All things considered, it seems that for the Church’s enemies, the ends justify the means.

And that’s also an evil to be resisted.




- Read Hans Urs von Balthasar's On the Withdrawal of Hans Küng's Authorization to Teach at the Communio website

Litany of the Passion

Author: John Henry Cardinal Newman | Source: NewmanReader.org

Litany of the Passion

LORD, have mercy.
Lord, have mercy.
Christ, have mercy.
Christ, have mercy.
Lord, have mercy.
Lord, have mercy.
Christ, hear us.
Christ, graciously hear us.

God the Father of Heaven, Have mercy on us.
God the Son, Redeemer of the world, "
God the Holy Ghost,
Holy Trinity, one God,

Jesus, the Eternal Wisdom, Have mercy on us.
The Word made flesh, "
Hated by the world,
Sold for thirty pieces of silver,
Sweating blood in Thy agony,
Betrayed by Judas,
Forsaken by Thy disciples,
Struck upon the cheek, {231}
Accused by false witnesses,
Spit upon in the face,
Denied by Peter,
Mocked by Herod,
Scourged by Pilate,
Rejected for Barabbas,
Loaded with the cross,
Crowned with thorns,
Stripped of Thy garments,
Nailed to the tree,
Reviled by the world,
Scoffed at by the malefactor,
Wounded in the side,
Shedding Thy last drop of blood,
Forsaken by Thy Father,
Dying for our sins,
Taken down from the cross,
Laid in the sepulchre,
Rising gloriously,
Ascending into Heaven,
Sending down the Paraclete,
Jesus our Sacrifice,
Jesus our Mediator,
Jesus our Judge,

Be merciful.
Spare us, O Lord.
Be merciful.
Graciously hear us, O Lord.

From all sin, Lord Jesus, deliver us.
From all evil, "
From anger and hatred, {232}
From malice and revenge,
From unbelief and hardness of heart,
From blasphemy and sacrilege,
From hypocrisy and covetousness,
From blindness of the understanding,
From contempt of Thy warnings,
From relapse after Thy judgments,
From danger of soul and body,
From everlasting death,

We sinners, Beseech Thee, hear us.

That Thou wouldest spare us, We beseech Thee, hear us.
That Thou wouldest pardon us, "
That Thou wouldest defend Thy Church,
That Thou wouldest bless Thy own,
That Thou wouldest convert Thy foes,
That Thou wouldest spread the truth,
That Thou wouldest destroy error,
That Thou wouldest break to pieces false gods,
That Thou wouldest increase Thy elect,
That Thou wouldest let loose the holy souls in prison,
That Thou wouldest unite us to Thy Saints above,

Lamb of God, who takest away the sins of the world,
Spare us, O Lord.
Lamb of God, who takest away the sins of the world,
Graciously hear us, O Lord.
Lamb of God, who takest away the sins of the world, {233}
Have mercy on us.
Christ, hear us.
Christ, graciously hear us.
Lord, have mercy.
Christ, have mercy.
Lord, have mercy.

We adore Thee, O Christ, and we bless Thee,
Because through Thy Holy Cross Thou didst redeem the world.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Change Catholic Mores and Everything Will be Honky-Dory

Folks, yesterday I hear this NPR News Story Pope Opens Holy Week Amid Sex Abuse Scandals, an interview with Paddy Agnew, the Vatican correspondent for the Irish Times. He concludes his analysis this way:
Mr. AGNEW: Until it is seen that a pope - and I can't believe it will be this pope - is willing to face some of the most serious problems in the church, by this: the role of woman, the role the lay, the question of the celibate priesthood, or the whole variety of areas of teaching on sexual mores - unless those change, the Catholic Church could be in for some very lean days in the future.
Listen to the story here.

Commentary. Let me start by pointing out the obvious: if these evil men had remained faithful to their vow of CELIBACY, these violations would have never taken place. The problem is not celibate chastity, but the failure to live the vow by men who solemnly promised it. Now, this failure has several causes including a very important one pointed at by the Pope in his recent letter to the Irish Catholics:
4. In recent decades, however, the Church in your country has had to confront new and serious challenges to the faith arising from the rapid transformation and secularization of Irish society. Fast-paced social change has occurred, often adversely affecting people's traditional adherence to Catholic teaching and values. All too often, the sacramental and devotional practices that sustain faith and enable it to grow, such as frequent confession, daily prayer and annual retreats, were neglected. Significant too was the tendency during this period, also on the part of priests and religious, to adopt ways of thinking and assessing secular realities without sufficient reference to the Gospel.
No doubt the Pope speaks of the excessive reliance on psychological methods, specifically talking therapies, that for decades were thought to be adequate therapies to cure sex abusers and restore them to service. This was the standard treatment in the 60's and 70's, following the "sexual revolution" which led to a relaxation of morals in many Catholic seminaries and institutions of higher learning. This situation also opened the door to the uncritical assimilation of Eastern mystical disciplines, and New Age psychobabble.

That's why I think that Paddy Agnew's "solution" is not to be taken seriously. What got us where we are today is not the "rigidity" of Catholic mores or adherence to Apostolic Tradition. What got us here was their erosion. Mr. Agnew's solution would not save the Church, but kill her.

I prefer a leaner, meaner Church, faithful to the Gospel and Apostolic Tradition, to a "broader" Church that would be weak, unfaithful, and therefore, uncapable to mediate Christ's very presence in the world today.

Monday, March 29, 2010

A Short Road to Perfection

John Henry Cardinal Newman

September 27, 1856

It is the saying of holy men that, if we wish to be perfect, we have nothing more to do than to perform the ordinary duties of the day well. A short road to perfection—short, not because easy, but because pertinent and intelligible. There are no short ways to perfection, but there are sure ones.

I think this is an instruction which may be of great practical use to persons like ourselves. It is easy to have vague ideas what perfection is, which serve well enough to talk about, when we do not intend to aim at it; but as soon as a person really desires and sets about seeking it himself, he is dissatisfied with anything but what is tangible and clear, and constitutes some sort of direction towards the practice of it.

We must bear in mind what is meant by perfection. It does not mean any extraordinary service, anything out of the way, or especially heroic—not all have the opportunity of heroic acts, of sufferings—but it means what the word perfection ordinarily means. By perfect we mean that which has no flaw in it, that which is complete, that which is consistent, that which is sound—we mean the opposite to imperfect. As we know well what imperfection in religious service means, we know by the contrast what is meant by perfection.

He, then, is perfect who does the work of the day perfectly, and we need not go beyond this to seek for perfection. You need not go out of the round of the day.

I insist on this because I think it will simplify our views, and fix our exertions on a definite aim. If you ask me what you are to do in order to be perfect, I say, first—Do not lie in bed beyond the due time of rising; give your first thoughts to God; make a good visit to the Blessed Sacrament; say the Angelus devoutly; eat and drink to God’s glory; say the Rosary well; be recollected; keep out bad thoughts; make your evening meditation well; examine yourself daily; go to bed in good time, and you are already perfect.

Source: NewmanReader.org

Sunday, March 28, 2010

Eastern Christian Holy Week Resources

Here are some resources for Holy Week:

Texts for Holy Week & Pascha (Word & PDF formats) prepared by V. Rev. Michael Najim

Holy Week Texts in Spanish (Word format) scroll down to “Semana Santa”

Audio Recordings of Holy Week Services from Holy Resurrection Orthodox Church (OCA)

Video Recordings of Holy Week Services from St. Mary Cambridge

Hymns of Holy Week and Pascha from the Greek Archdiocese’s Lent page

Holy Week Hymns Pascha Music from various sources

Holy Week Explanations:

Getting Ready for Holy Week: A Guide for Families

Articles by Fr. Thomas Hopko:

Lazarus Saturday & Palm Sunday

Holy Week

Holy Thursday

Holy Friday

Holy Saturday

Easter Sunday: The Holy Pascha

Los Oficios de la Semana Santa por Padre Hopko (in Spanish)

Source: Orthocath: Musings on the Orthodox Catholic Faith

Palm Sunday of the Passion of Our Lord - AD 2010

Luke 19:28-40 (New International Version)

The Triumphal Entry

Icon of Palm Sunday28After Jesus had said this, he went on ahead, going up to Jerusalem.

29As he approached Bethphage and Bethany at the hill called the Mount of Olives, he sent two of his disciples, saying to them,

30"Go to the village ahead of you, and as you enter it, you will find a colt tied there, which no one has ever ridden. Untie it and bring it here.

31If anyone asks you, 'Why are you untying it?' tell him, 'The Lord needs it.' "

32Those who were sent ahead went and found it just as he had told them.

33As they were untying the colt, its owners asked them, "Why are you untying the colt?"

34They replied, "The Lord needs it."

35They brought it to Jesus, threw their cloaks on the colt and put Jesus on it.

36As he went along, people spread their cloaks on the road.

37When he came near the place where the road goes down the Mount of Olives, the whole crowd of disciples began joyfully to praise God in loud voices for all the miracles they had seen:

38"Blessed is the king who comes in the name of the Lord!" "Peace in heaven and glory in the highest!"

39Some of the Pharisees in the crowd said to Jesus, "Teacher, rebuke your disciples!"

40"I tell you," he replied, "if they keep quiet, the stones will cry out."

Mass Readings

Entrance Reading: Matthew 21:1-11
First Reading: Isaiah 50:4-7
Psalm: Psalm 22:8-9, 17-20, 23-24
Second Reading: Philippians 2:6-11
Gospel: Matthew 26:14 - 27:66 or Matthew 27:11-54

Saturday, March 27, 2010

BBC Speculates about Pope Benedict’s Resignation

Yellow journalism is at work here.

Folks, can you believe it? Well, OK, there’s precedent. I remember clearly how after Pope Benedict’s election the BBC journalist practically wished him a short tenure via natural causes, as he continuously spoke about his advanced age and the fact that Benedict’s was a “transitional election”.

With Pope Benedict continuing good health, the BBC’s tune has changed and now they seek to inject the idea of the Pope’s resignation into the conversation. Theirs is yellow journalism at its worst.

This is what I think: this Pope has nothing to be ashamed of in this dealings with the sexual abuse crisis. His handling of the crisis has been as energetic as it has been compassionated.  The perception – and it is a perception, not a reality – of what the Pope may have done or failed to do during his tenure in Munich is irrelevant and, as I will argue soon in an upcoming newspaper column, the timing of the latest “revelations” and the people making them reveal a nefarious agenda lurking below. More on that after my Op-Ed is published.

The BBC, the New York Times, and the media types echoing them know full well that the Holy See will be unable to mount an effective defense without opening their confidential personnel files to the public, something that not even Enron was forced to do. The BBC et al are being dishonest and their little smear campaign should undergo a critical scrutiny of its own.

I support Pope Benedict, the yellow journalists attacking the Pope notwithstanding.

P.S.Trying to get back to my Lenten silence but these developments are derailing me; I feel I must comment on them.

Friday, March 26, 2010

Haiku to the Unrequited Love of Loves

 

 

Francis liked to say
"Love is not Loved" as he prayed
in springs and winters

Season by season
Hoping that others would see
that Love stood alone

In an uncaring
World lost to people's blindness
Indifferent, bored

Francis cared too much
I’m certain, the only one
who’s heart was open

To love a bit more
The least of the least, the small
The innocent and

The pure as he loved
All the more with all his soul
The Unrequited

Love of Loves, the Lord

Total Consecration Accomplished

Folks, last night, the Feast of the Incarnation of the Word and in the presence of my Spiritual Director, I consecrated myself totally to Jesus in Mary, in accordance to the teachings of St. Louis de Monfort, after 30 days of preparation. Benedicamus Domino!

O Jesus, living in Mary,
come and live in thy servants,
in the spirit of thy holiness,
in the fullness of thy might,
in the truth of thy virtues,
in the perfection of thy ways,
in the communion of thy mysteries.
Subdue every hostile power in thy spirit,
for the glory of the Father. Amen.

Please, keep my family and I in your prayers.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Today We Remember the Annunciation and the Incarnation of the Eternal Word of God

From today’s Office of Readings
A Reading From a letter by Saint Leo the Great, pope

The mystery of man's reconciliation with God

Lowliness is assured by majesty, weakness by power, mortality by eternity. To pay the debt of our sinful state, a nature that was incapable of suffering was joined to one that could suffer. Thus, in keeping with the healing that we needed, one and the same mediator between God and men, the man Jesus Christ, was able to die in one nature, and unable to die in the other.

He who is true God was therefore born in the complete and perfect nature of a true man, whole in his own nature, whole in ours. By our nature we mean what the Creator had fashioned in us from the beginning, and took to himself in order to restore it.

For in the Saviour there was no trace of what the deceiver introduced and man, being misled, allowed to enter. It does not follow that because he submitted to sharing in our human weakness he therefore shared in our sins.

He took the nature of a servant without stain of sin, enlarging our humanity without diminishing his divinity. He emptied himself; though invisible he made himself visible, though Creator and Lord of all things he chose to be one of us mortal men. Yet this was the condescension of compassion, not the loss of omnipotence. So he who in the nature of God had created man, became in the nature of a servant, man himself.

Thus the Son of God enters this lowly world. He comes down from the throne of heaven, yet does not separate himself from the Father’s glory. He is born in a new condition, by a new birth.

He was born in a new condition, for, invisible in his own nature, he became visible in ours. Beyond our grasp, he chose to come within our grasp. Existing before time began, he began to exist at a moment in time. Lord of the universe, he hid his infinite glory and took the nature of a servant. Incapable of suffering as God, he did not refuse to be a man, capable of suffering. Immortal, he chose to be subject to the laws of death.

He who is true God is also true man. There is no falsehood in this unity as long as the lowliness of man and the pre-eminence of God coexist in mutual relationship.

As God does not change by his condescension, so man is not swallowed up by being exalted. Each nature exercises its own activity, in communion with the other. The Word does what is proper to the Word, the flesh fulfils what is proper to the flesh.

One nature is resplendent with miracles, the other falls victim to injuries. As the Word does not lose equality with the Father’s glory, so the flesh does not leave behind the nature of our race.

One and the same person – this must be said over and over again – is truly the Son of God and truly the son of man. He is God in virtue of the fact that in the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He is man in virtue of the fact that the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us.

- Source: Universalis.com

Today’s Mass Readings

Today I’ll also make my Total Consecration to Jesus through Mary according to the teachings of St. Louis Grignon de Monfort

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Glenn Beck Wrong on Christian Social Justice and Dorothy Day

Folks, I’ve read with great attention Jim Wallis’ rebuttal of Glenn Beck entitled, What Glenn Beck Doesn't Understand About Biblical Social Justice, over at The Huffington Post and I have to say I’m impressed. You should read it too: there’s such a thing as “social justice”despite loud denials from conservatives like myself who see a Marxist almost every rock.

For me the clincher was Beck calling Dorothy Day “a Marxist” when everyone familiar with her life will find that she went out of her way to put distance between her and communists throughout her entire life. But you know, Dorothy was no pushover when it came to her convictions and sadly, it appears to me that Glenn doesn’t like that trait in this servant of God and has distorted her record and stance accordingly. Mr. Wallis' quotes from the Bible and from Pope Benedict XVI were also right on.

Hats off to Mr. Wallis. Glenn needs to chalk off this one from his board I'm sorry to say.

Read more in Vivificat about:
· Catholic Social Doctrine

· Dorothy Day

· Immigration Issues

· Health Care Reform

· The Corporal and Spiritual Works of Mercy

· The Gospel and Human Rights

Collection of Writings of St. Louis Grignion de Montfort

Source: EWTN

1. Montfort - 34LETTRS.HTM - Fragments of 34 Letters of St. Louis de Montfort
St. Louis de Montfort

This file contains fragments of letters written by St. Louis de Montfort.

2. Montfort - HANDBOOK.HTM - Jesus Living in Mary: Handbook of the Spirituality of St. Louis de Montfort
Montfort Fathers

This file is indexed and hyperlinked to the articles contained in "Jesus Living in Mary: Handbook of the Spirituality of St. Louis de Montfort. The articles in the "Handbook" are as follows: Acknowledgements, Preface/Forward, Adoration, Angels/Demons, Apostles, Associations, Baptism, Beatitudes, Beauty, Bible, Brothers of St. Gabriel, Canonization, Charisms, Childhood, Church, Company of Mary, Consecration, Covenant, Creation, Cross, Daughters, Discernment, Disciple, Ecumenism, Education, Endtime, Eucharist, Faith, Family, Fidelity, Freedom, French School, Friend, God, Holy Spirit, Hymns, Iconography, Incarnation, Inculturation, Jesus, Last Things, Legion of Mary, Love of Wisdom, Liturgy, Love, Magnificat, Man, Marie Louise, Mary, Milieu, Mission, Model, Montfort, Montfort Spirituality, Mortification, Mystic, Noels/Christmas, Oxford Movement, Path of Perfection, Peace, Penance, Pilgrim, Popes, Poverty, Prayer, Priest, Providence, Psalms, Reign, Reparation, Retreats, Rosary, Saint, Salvation, Secret of Mary, Sacred Heart, Sick, Silence, Sin, Slavery, True Devotion, Tenderness, Trinity, Triptych, Virtues, Wisdom, Zeal.

3. Montfort - HANDBOOK.ZIP - Jesus Living in Mary: Handbook of the Spirituality of St. Louis de Montfort
Montfort Fathers

This ZIP file contains the articles from "Jesus Living in Mary: Handbook of the Spirituality of St. Louis de Montfort. Acknowledgements, Preface/Forward, Adoration, Angels/Demons, Apostles, Associations, Baptism, Beatitudes, Beauty, Bible, Brothers of St. Gabriel, Canonization, Charisms, Childhood, Church, Company of Mary, Consecration, Covenant, Creation, Cross, Daughters, Discernment, Disciple, Ecumenism, Education, Endtime, Eucharist, Faith, Family, Fidelity, Freedom, French School, Friend, God, Holy Spirit, Hymns, Iconography, Incarnation, Inculturation, Jesus, Last Things, Legion of Mary, Love of Wisdom, Liturgy, Love, Magnificat, Man, Marie Louise, Mary, Milieu, Mission, Model, Montfort, Montfort Spirituality, Mortification, Mystic, Noels/Christmas, Oxford Movement, Path of Perfection, Peace, Penance, Pilgrim, Popes, Poverty, Prayer, Priest, Providence, Psalms, Reign, Reparation, Retreats, Rosary, Saint, Salvation, Secret of Mary, Sacred Heart, Sick, Silence, Sin, Slavery, True Devotion, Tenderness, Trinity, Triptych, Virtues, Wisdom, Zeal.

4. Montfort - LFCROSS.HTM - Letter to the Friends of the Cross
St. Louis de Montfort

St. Louis writes to all who would follow Our Lord in carrying their cross, and instructs them how to do so. SUFFERING PENANCE SORROWS MONTFORT

5. Montfort - LMONTBER.HTM - Letter to the People of Montbernage
St. Louis de Montfort

A letter of St. Louis de Montfort to the people of Montbernage, St. Saturnin, St. Simplicien and La Resurrection, condemning many of the irreligious practices of his day, such as shops opening on Sunday. SPIRITUALITY

6. Montfort - LCM.HTM - Letters to Members of the Company of Mary
St. Louis de Montfort

Letters written by St. Louis de Montfort to members of his religious congregation, the Company of Mary.

7. Montfort - PMISSION.HTM - Prayer for Missionaries
St. Louis de Montfort

A prayer for missionaries by St. Louis de Montfort. SPIRITUALITY

8. Montfort - RULECOM.HTM - Rule for the Missionary Priests of the Company of Mary
St. Louis de Montfort

St. Louis de Montfort's "Rule" for the religious community which he founded, the Company of Mary. SPIRITUALITY RETREATS MISSIONS

9. Montfort - SECRET.HTM - Secret of Mary
St. Louis de Montfort

St. Louis de Montfort explains why "true devotion" to Mary is the secret to the spiritual life of the Christian. PRAYER HOLINESS

10. Montfort - LEW.HTM - The Love of Eternal Wisdom
St. Louis de Montfort

St. Louis de Montfort, writing on the beauty and lovableness of the Eternal Wisdom, Jesus Christ. This file is also available as a ZIP file.

11. Montfort - LEW.ZIP - The Love of Eternal Wisdom
St. Louis de Montfort

St. Louis de Montfort, writing on the beauty and lovableness of the Eternal Wisdom, Jesus Christ. This file is also available in HTML format.

12. Montfort - THERULES.HTM - The Rules
St. Louis de Montfort

Rules written by St. Louis de Montfort for groups of lay men and women known as the Forty-Four Virgins and the White Penitents. SPIRITUALITY VIRGINITY PENITENCE PENANCE PRAYER

13. Montfort - WILL.HTM - The Will of St. Louis de Montfort
St. Louis de Montfort

St. Louis de Montfort's last will and testament.

14. Montfort - WISDOM.HTM - The Wisdom Cross of Poitiers
St. Louis de Montfort

A poem on the Wisdom of the Cross by St. Louis de Montfort. SPIRITUALITY PRAYER

15. Montfort - TRUEDEVO.HTM - Treatise on True Devotion to the Blessed Virgin
St. Louis de Montfort

St. Louis de Montfort's great work on the nature of perfect consecration to Jesus Christ by means of "true devotion" to the Blessed Virgin Mary. SPIRITUALITY PRAYER HOLINESS

16. Montfort - TRUEDEVO.ZIP - Treatise on True Devotion to the Blessed Virgin
St. Louis de Montfort

St. Louis de Montfort's great work on the nature of perfect consecration to Jesus Christ by means of "true devotion" to the Blessed Virgin Mary. SPIRITUALITY PRAYER HOLINESS

17. Montfort - MONTFORT.ZIP - Writings
St. Louis de Montfort

This ZIP file contains the writings of St. Louis not contained in the Montfort handbook (handbook.htm/zip): his letters, his rules, his treatises etc...

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Avoid the daftness: don't hitch your cart to Hitchens et al.

Folks, this from Sean Murphy over at CERC:

Christopher Hitchens' venomous attack on Pope Benedict XVI ("The Great Catholic Coverup", 18 March, 2010) is a revelation that deserves wider attention. Were it not for its appearance in the National Post in Canada and Slate in the United States, it would be difficult to believe that a reputable newspaper would publish such absurdity.

Mr. Hitchens states that in May, 2001, Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger sent a "confidential" letter to Catholic bishops to remind them that anyone who disclosed "child rape and torture" by priests would be excommunicated. He claims that Cardinal Ratzinger imposed a ten year "statute of limitations" on actions against such priests, and was thus guilty of "obstruction of justice."
These assertions are false.

The 2001 instruction was issued to clarify how reports of clerical sexual misconduct were to be handled. Ratzinger's directive actually facilitated Church proceedings against clerical sex offenders by extending time limits that had previously hampered prosecutions. Limitations of action are not unique to Canon Law. They exist in secular legal jurisdictions, and can prevent prosecution of serious sex crimes.

The so-called "confidential" instruction was published and appeared in English in 2001. It has been 'discovered,' 'revealed' or 'exposed' by so many reporters since then that it might give pause to those who doubt the possibility of the resurrection of the dead. Certainly, Mr. Hitchens' wild fabrication that Cardinal Ratzinger threatened to excommunicate anyone who revealed "child rape and torture" has trumped the rhetoric of his predecessors. However, lurid prose is hardly a substitute for sound research.

Bishops were not "reminded" by Cardinal Ratzinger of secrecy or excommunication. The passage quoted by Mr. Hitchens as 'proof' of his extravagant claim is not (as his readers might believe) from Ratzinger's instruction. It is from Crimen Sollicitationis, a 1962 instruction that Ratzinger merely noted had been under review.
Read it all here.

Commentary. A great piece that reinforces my own conclusions: ff you get your information from Christopher Hitchens - better known for his base attacks against Mother Theresa - on this issue, and think you are the best informed because of him, my friend, I pity you, for you are a moron.

(What a great way to start a paragraph. So be it.)

There's an ongoing rhetorical effort aimed at destroying the moral authority of the Catholic Church in general and of Pope Benedict XVI in particular. You can see it not only in Hitchens' latest drivel, but also in the recent statement made by the disreputable Dr. Hans Küng (here and here), as well as asinine references in the press to "the church's secretive canon laws" which you may buy, if you so cared, from Amazon (The Code of Canon Law: In English Translation).

There's a free for all of invectives, accusations, and litigations going in their scope well beyond the appropriate compensation of the victims, and this is by design.

The aim is clear: to strip the Church of all her ways and means, undermine her credibility, even strip the Holy See's diplomatic standing before world bodies and with it her sovereign immunity, in order to remove her as the world's principal actor in the moral arena. Once Hitchens - and Dawkins and all the other "brights" - and theological has-beens like Dr. Küng accomplish their goals, there will be no other peaceful moral force in the world powerful enough to oppose their totalitarian impulses - yes, "totalitarian," and I mean it - or so they see it.

I put Hitchens, Dawkins, and Küng at the same level with the pederasts. The amoralism they represent - yes, even Küng's - is the root cause of the Church's illness, not its cure.

When churchmen, seminaries, monasteries and convents absorbed the psychologism that plagued our societies in the 1960's, this is what we reaped. That prelates opened the door to, or facilitated these ills due to their naiveté and/or gross incompetence goes without saying, but what should also be stated with perfect, unambiguous clarity is that we find ourselves in this bind not because we didn't open the doors to the amoralities that Hitchens, Dawkins, Küng and many other "brights" advocate as black-letter science, but because we did.

I support Pope Benedict XVI, the Vicar of Christ, the Successor of St. Peter, "the sweet Christ on earth" as St. Catherine of Siena would have put it. Hitchens, Küng etall are not to be taken seriously. Their animus is very apparent, they have an ax to grind, they are not impartial, unbiased commentators. They have a clear agenda: the destruction or subversion of the Church.

Morons will believe them anyway, I reckon. As I see it, we are better off letting morons be and suffer them, while we ourselveves vow not to succumb to their sickness.

Avoid the daftness: don't hitch your cart to Hitchens, Dawkins, Küng et al.

Mary: Co-Redemptrix, Mediatrix and Advocate

Source: EWTN

Series of articles related to the proposed proclamation of the next Marian dogma:

  • Cardinals Hoping for a 5th Marian Dogma - ZENIT
    ZENIT reports on a letter sent by five cardinals, inviting prelates worldwide to join in petitioning Pope Benedict XVI to declare a fifth Marian dogma, proclaiming Mary as Mother of humanity, Co-redemptrix, Mediatrix, and Advocate for the human race.
  • Cardinals' Letter Promoting Marian Dogma - Five Cardinal Co-sponsors
    This is an English translation of the letter written by the five cardinal co-sponsors of the Fatima Symposium on Marian Co-redemption and sent to the world's bishops and cardinals asking them to sign a petition that asks Benedict XVI to proclaim Mary as the Spiritual Mother of Humanity. The letter was sent 1 January 2008.
  • Mary Cooperates in God's Saving Plan - Pope John Paul II
    At the General Audience of 12 January 2000, the Holy Father reflected on Mary's place in our journey to the Father, who "desired Mary's presence in salvation history". The Virgin Mother has a mediating role, but one subordinate to the Saviour's. Her cooperation is founded on Christ's mediation and her sharing in his work takes nothing from him as the unique Mediator.
  • Mary United Herself to Jesus' Offering - Pope John Paul II
    "With our gaze illumined by the radiance of the Resurrection, we pause to reflect on the Mother's involvement in her Son's redeeming Passion, which was completed by her sharing in his suffering", the Holy Father said at the General Audience of 2 April 1997, as he reflected on Mary's participation in the mystery of Redemption and her presence at the foot of the Cross.
  • Mary's Cooperation Is Totally Unique - Pope John Paul II
    At the General Audience of 9 April 1997, the Holy Father continued his catechesis on the role of the Blessed Mother, calling attention to her unique "role of co-operator in the Redemption, which she exercised throughout her life and in a special way at the foot of the Cross."
  • To the Disciple He Said, Behold Your Mother - Pope John Paul II
    "The universal motherhood of Mary, the 'Woman' of the wedding at Cana and of Calvary, recalls Eve, 'mother of all living' (Gn 3:20). However, while the latter helped to bring sin into the world, the new Eve, Mary, co-operates in the saving event of Redemption." So said the Holy Father at the General Audience of 23 April 1997.
  • Mary's Cooperation in Work of Redemption: Present State of the Question - Salvatore M. Perrella, O.S.M.
    In the context of many requests for the Holy Father to define "ex cathedra" the Marian dogmas of Mediatrix, Coredemptrix and Advocate, Fr. Perrella explains the declaration of August 1996 from the Pontifical Marian Academy meeting at Czestochowa. The Academy is an organ of advice to the Holy See and does not speak authoritatively.
  • A New Marian Dogma? - L'Osservatore Romano
    An editorial of L'Osservatore Romano, following upon the declaration of the Pontifical Marian Academy of August 1996, against the definition of new Marian dogmas, that is, Mediatrix, Coredemptrix and Advocate.
  • 5th Dogma a Marian Antidote - ZENIT
    An antidote to the challenges facing the Church and society today is the glorification of Mary through the proclamation of a fifth Marian dogma, says Cardinal Varkey Vithayathil of the Syro-Malabar Catholic Church. In this interview with ZENIT, Cardinal Vithayathil comments on the effect the proclamation of the dogma could have on interreligious and ecumenical dialogue, and the possible fruits he foresees could result.
  • Gibson's Passion and Mary Co-redemptrix - Dr. Mark Miravalle
    Dr. Miravalle, Professor of Theology and Mariology at Franciscan University of Steubenville, shows how Mel Gibson, in his film, The Passion of the Christ, portrays Our Lady as Co-Redemptrix in a uniquely effective manner.

Monday, March 22, 2010

Planned Parenthood Declares Victory in Health Care Reform

Folks, this is the statement of Cecile Richards, President of Planned Parenthood, on the recent passing of the Health Care Reform Bill:

“Today is a truly historic day for the American people who have long demanded affordable, quality health care coverage.

“For more than a year, Planned Parenthood has worked tirelessly for a health care reform bill that would fix our broken health care system, strengthen women’s health, and achieve quality, affordable health care for all Americans.  Today, monumental progress was made toward achieving these goals with the passage of historic health care reform legislation by the U.S. House of Representatives, despite a symbolic gesture, in the form of an Executive Order, to anti-choice Congressman Bart Stupak (D-MI), which has diverted attention from the central goal of health care reform — controlling costs and extending coverage. 

“As a trusted health care provider to millions of women and families across the country, Planned Parenthood applauds the fact that this legislation would extend health care coverage, including family planning, to tens of millions of women and families, guarantee access to affordable life-saving screenings for cervical and breast cancer and other serious health problems, protect women against gender discrimination by private insurers, end the practice of dropping coverage because of pre-existing conditions, and significantly increase access to reproductive health care.  The proposal also includes a commonsense provision to expand family planning under Medicaid, which would significantly increase access to essential preventive health care for millions of women.

“As a result of this historic expansion of health care coverage to more than 30 million Americans, the doctors, nurses, and other health care professionals who work for Planned Parenthood health centers will be providing care to many  more women, men, and families who will be seeking primary and preventive care.

“Planned Parenthood is also extremely pleased that members of the House listened to the millions of women and men who expressed their strong opposition to the Stupak abortion ban.  Stopping the Stupak ban was a high priority for women across the country who rejected the notion that they would not be able to even use their own money to obtain private insurance coverage for abortion.  It was a tough fight, but we salute Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D- CA), Congressman Rosa DeLauro (D–CT) , members of  the House Pro-Choice Caucus, and all others who stood up for women’s health and women’s rights.

“Nonetheless, we regret that a pro-choice president of a pro-choice nation was forced to sign an Executive Order that further codifies the proposed anti-choice language in the health care reform bill, originally proposed by Senator Ben Nelson of Nebraska.  What the president’s executive order did not do is include the complete and total ban on private health insurance coverage for abortion that Congressman Bart Stupak (D–MI) had insisted upon. So while we regret that this proposed Executive Order has given the imprimatur of the president to Senator Nelson’s language, it is critically important to note that it does not include the Stupak abortion ban.

“This is a historic day for American people. We regret that a gesture to Congressman Stupak has diverted the nation’s focus from this bill’s accomplishments, including the extension of family planning to millions of women.”

Commentary. Surely, this thoroughly evil, corrupt organization advocating the murder of innocents on the altar of choice and its minions has reasons to rejoice. I can’t wait to see the day Planned Parenthood comes to an end and their members brought before the Eternal Judge. Even if it happens at the End of Time, I know I will see it.

As for health care “reform,” there is no doubt that the Executive Order has drawn blood and that cutting public funds from abortuaries is probably the best we could expect under the Roe v. Wade regime. But the Executive Order is a flimsy instrument that can be bypassed. It’s still incumbent upon us to demand, if not the entire derogation of this law, then the writing of explicit language defunding abortion and protecting conscientious objections to abortion and artificial contraception throughout the land.

The political price is yet to be paid. You will all see that come November.

I return now to my Lenten silence.

- Hat tip to Jill Stanek.

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Prayer for Healing the Family Tree

Folks, I feel a particular need to pray this prayer. Please, remember me and my family in your prayers and pray this one for your own needs.

Heavenly Father, I come before you as your child, in great need of your help; I have physical health needs, emotional needs, spiritual needs, and interpersonal needs. Many of my problems have been caused by my own failures, neglect, and sinfulness, for which I humbly beg your forgiveness, Lord. But I also ask you to forgive the sins of my ancestors whose failures have left their effects on me in the form of unwanted tendencies, behavior patterns, and defects in body, mind, and spirit. Heal me, Lord, of all these disorders.

With your help I sincerely forgive everyone, living or dead members of my family tree, who have directly offended me or my loved ones in any way, or those whose sins have resulted in our present sufferings and disorders. In the name of your divine Son Jesus, and in the power of his Holy Spirit, I ask you Father, to deliver me and my entire family tree from the influence of the evil one.

Free all living and dead members of my family tree, including those in adoptive relationships, and those in extended family relationships, from every contaminating form of bondage. By your loving concern for us, heavenly Father, and by the shed blood of your precious Son Jesus, I beg you to extend your blessing to me and all my living and deceased relatives. Heal every negative effect transmitted through all past generations, and prevent such negative effects in future generations of my family tree.

I symbolically place the cross of Jesus over the head of each person in my family tree, and between each generation; I ask you to let the cleansing blood of Jesus purify the blood lines in my family lineage. Set protective angels to encamp around us, and permit Archangel Raphael, the patron of healing, to administer your divine healing power to all of us, even in areas of genetic disability. Give special power to our family members’ guardian angels to heal, protect, guide, and encourage each of us in all our needs. Let your healing power be released at this very moment, and let it continue as long as your sovereignty permits.

In our family tree, Lord, replace all bondage with a holy bonding in family love. And let there be an ever-deeper bonding with you, Lord, by the Holy Spirit, to your Son Jesus. Let the family of the Holy Trinity pervade our family with its tender, warm, loving presence, so that our family may recognize and manifest that love in all our relationships. All of our unknown needs we include with this petition that we pray in Jesus’ precious name. Amen.

Author: Reverend John H. Hampsch C.M.F. Source: Catholic Warriors.

Elizabeth Presents Mary to Us: Blessed Are You…

Father Nicolas Schwizer

Mary is presented by her cousin, Elizabeth, with the greeting of praise: “Blessed are you who believed.” She invites us to recognize her as the Mother and Educator of the faith and as the model of our own faith.

If we pay close attention to the world today, we notice that it is going through a strong crisis of faith. There is a slow process of de-Christianization, a paralysis and even an extinction of faith in modern man. This is even so in religious Movements.

Perhaps it may also occur to us that someday we might have to confirm: Ultimately, I no longer believe what I believed before; my enthusiasm is lost…..the religious fervor of my youth is gone, and perhaps we may not feel too sad if we do not simply confirm it. Our faith-life has its ups and downs. We have times where everything goes bad for us… times when we find it hard to pray, to go to confession, to seek God. But, what will happen if these repeat themselves and they become permanent? In that crisis of faith, the Church today shows us the attitude of the Blessed Virgin. The Church shows us her exemplary faith. How does the Gospel present Mary’s faith to us?

a) Personal faith: For Her, believing is not knowing the “Creed” by heart… accepting it… defending it and confessing it every Sunday at Mass. For Mary, believing is committing herself with her entire being and with her entire existence to the personal God. It is not accepting truths and articles of faith, rather it is personally uniting to God. Mary is always open to God and to His wishes because She has great confidence in Him and because She trusts Him.

b) An active faith (free and obedient): The account of the Annunciation emphasizes the dialog between Mary and the Angel. It stresses that Mary does not give her answer in a passive way but in free and obedient faith. It is an active and responsible agreement.

Mary teaches us that true faith is far from being totally passive. Mary obeys by giving herself completely to the plan of God. But this unconditional surrender does not impede Her from questioning so that She can express her obedience freely and thus become a collaborator of that same plan. Mary’s faith is active because She supports and accepts that her own projects must always be destroyed anew. She does not question God, She questions herself.

c) Strong and loyal faith: Mary’s faith is not a finished faith from the beginning. She is also on the way with her faith.

Often she does not understand the ‘why’ of the events. She has to go through darkness – as all of us do, but She, as the Gospel says, “She kept all these things in her heart.” She places everything which happens to Her in relationship to God… with His Word and His Will. She seeks the meaning of everything… the Divine Will behind them.

Mary has maintained the faith throughout many trials and darkness…..even to the foot of the Cross. Pope John Paul II says of Her: “She knew the same contradictions of our own earthly life. She was promised that her Son would be given the throne of David, but when He was born there was not even room for Him at the Inn…..and Mary continued believing. The Angel told Her that her Son would be called Son of God, but She saw Him calumniated, betrayed and abandoned to die like a thief on the cross. In spite of it, Mary believed that the Word of God would be fulfilled.”

The strength and the loyalty of her faith is truly admirable. There was never anyone like Her; therefore, the Holy Spirit praises Her in her cousin Elizabeth by proclaiming Her Blessed because of the incomparable firmness of her faith. Mary is happy… blessed… full of grace… the greatest because She believed in God and surrendered to Him unconditionally.

The Blessed Virgin, this woman of extraordinary faith, has been given to us as a model on our pilgrimage of faith. From Mary we learn to trust and to surrender ourselves to a personal God. From Mary we learn to accept the Will of God in freedom and to collaborate with Him with an active faith. From Mary we also learn to believe when we do not understand God’s plan and to remain faithful in the trials of life. Therefore let us ask the Blessed Mother to form us and educate us in the faith according to her great example. Then someday we will also be told: Blessed are you because you believed!

Questions for reflection

1. How would I define my faith: lukewarm, profound?

2. Am I a Christian because of tradition?

3. Do I maintain my faith in difficult trials?

Saturday, March 20, 2010

Feminism's "Gendercide"

By Joseph Meaney

Wondrous news! The mainstream media and even the United Nations have "discovered" the 30 year old crisis of "missing girls." The Economist (the recent edition entitled, "Gendercide") and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) came out with the "news" that over 100 million girls and women that should be alive are not.

The culprits are parents who want to have sons only and use sonograms to identify the sex of their child in the womb. The end result is millions of sex-selection abortions of unwanted girls every year.

Pro-lifers have denounced this "slaughter of Eve" in the strongest terms for some time now. It is undoubtedly the greatest campaign of deadly discrimination against women in history. Incredibly, with few exceptions, the problem of sex-selection abortion is steadily worsening in Asia and around the world!

Shockingly, The Economist's recommended solution is more feminism: more propaganda from the same folks who brought you abortion, but this time directed toward somehow improving the public image of women and daughters. Basically, they are saying that a big PR blitz is needed to highlight the positive contributions of women to society.

Of course, any society that does not value female children or women in general, as much as men, is in serious need of a change of heart on the subject. Can anyone take seriously, however, the proposition that those who trumpet abortion as a paramount right of women are the best ones to lead us in recovering a sense of the dignity of womanhood?

The Economist points approvingly to modernization and societies which have abortion on demand but no sex-selection abortion crisis. Putting aside the fact they acknowledge that Chinese and Japanese-Americans are having recourse to sex-selection abortions, these same "progressive" societies have embraced myriad other assaults on female dignity: pornography, contraception, "sex education" which teaches the objectification of the human person, and so on.

If they are seriously proposing that the solution to the eradication of women in the developing world is a more complete embrace of the very ideology that has so obviously harmed women and men, then we must point out the absurdity of this view as many times as it takes to sink in.

Radical feminists willingly sacrifice the health and lives of mothers on the altar of abortion-on-demand. It is only one step further to stand by while unborn girls are killed for the "crime" of being female. Some "pro-choice" feminists are understandably uncomfortable with this, but they are trapped by their sinister ideology which affirms that no one can tell anyone else their "choice" to abort is wrong.

A turning point in my pro-life education regarding so-called "women's rights" organizations came while attending a March 2007 meeting deep in the bowels of the United Nations headquarters in New York. South Korea's government proposed that the full assembly of the UN Commission on the Status of Women adopt a resolution to condemn sex-selection abortion. The vast majority of international delegations were initially favorable to this proposal; then the feminists unleashed their fury.

The self-proclaimed "defenders of women" lobbied hard and successfully to have the European Union and others abandon preborn girls to their fate and kill the largely symbolic UN resolution. Their logic was essentially this: If we accept that some abortions must be stopped, then all abortions are in danger, and our goal is to spread, not limit, abortion.

The way to end sex-selection abortion is to convince the world of the truth about the human person. All children are created in the very image of God, and as such have profound dignity and a right to life regardless of what doctors, parents, society or the State "choose." No PR campaign can compare with this Natural Law standard when it comes to protecting the lives of unborn girls.

The lie that these feminist hypocrites are defending women or girls must be exposed and denounced in the strongest possible ways. They are defending abortion, period. They are not part of the solution - they are part of the problem - and millions of girls' (and boys') lives are being snuffed out every year because of them.

Joseph Meaney is Human Life International’s Director of International Coordination. He has visited more than 67 countries of the world in over a decade of service to the cause of life. He writes today on the international sex-selection abortion crisis.

Saturday, March 06, 2010

Lenten blog fast continues

Foks, just to remind you again that I've reduced my output due to Lent. I want to, as the Byzantines say, "lay aside all earthly affairs." At best I can, of course, because I still have to go to work and feed my family. Please enjoy the current contents or feel free to search past contents or explore the site by clicking on the links on either sidebar.

Wednesday, March 03, 2010

Solidarity

Father Nicolas Schwizer

We all know the Biblical phrase: “I assure you that whenever you did it for the least of my brethren, you did it for me”… When we hear it, it is as if suddenly we are banished from Heaven to earth, from spiritualism to the incarnation. The surprise is deep and general. The just as do the condemned protest: “When have we seen you…?”

Jesus warns us beforehand that we will not be judged by our religious practices: we will not be asked if we have prayed, if we have prophesied, if we have attended talks, retreats or religious gatherings. The final judgment will not be based on the quantity of our communions, Sunday Masses, or confessions. All the apparent intimacy with Jesus will not keep us from being placed at the door of the Kingdom. We will not be questioned about what we did before God, but rather what we did before others.

Here Christ identifies fully with the little ones, the poor and humble. In them, God is within our reach so we can love Him and serve Him. “When you did it for one of these of my brethren, you did it for Me.”

He is there beside us with a thousand different faces. But we…..blind, hard hearted, selfish and negligent… do not know how to see Him, and better still, we do not want to see Him. We let Him go, and perhaps even despise Him. We bring forth their justice with our injustice and lack of solidarity. “Whenever you did not do it for one of these my brethren, you did not do it for Me.”

If fraternal solidarity is the only guarantee for entering Heaven, then we have no other way than to seek the face of Christ in the faces of our brethren who suffer. And when we discover it, we have to welcome them and help them as we would do it for Jesus Himself.

Thus, no Christian can remain calm while there are children who have nothing to eat…..adolescents with no possibility for an education… adults who lack employment… elderly who spend the last days of their lives in resigned desperation.

Our Lord is reflected in each one of these faces because in each one of these brethren in need, God comes to meet us.

Authentic love manifests itself and becomes a reality when it is capable of becoming solidarity because love is a force of unity… a tendency to consider another as part of my own being, like my own brother in Christ.

Therefore, love is sharing: to feel the joys as my own, the hopes, anxieties and needs of the other person, and helping him/her feel that what is mine – my heart, my time, my bread – is at their disposal. Solidarity consists in this. During this difficult time we are experiencing, it is necessary that we are in solidarity with our brethren in need. Besides, it is the only sign by which mankind can recognize us as disciples of Christ and instruments of the Divine Spirit.

The worst is certainly not the bad we do, but the good we do not do. A great number of people exist who “do not steal, kill, or harm anyone,” but still do not do good.

To retire to private life… to take refuge in the multitude… to wash one’s hands before the cries of the poor and oppressed – is to become an accomplice and to be co-responsible for the injustice. But everyone will be found out and condemned when the day for responsibilities comes. Everyone will be stripped of their peace and their bourgeois security on that terrible day because God will come like a thief who does not announce the day nor the hour of his visit.

Dear brothers and sisters, let us renew not only our love for the Lord, but also our generous service to our brethren, especially to all our poor, abandoned and marginalized brethren… then at the end of our lives, we will await the invitation from the Divine Judge: “Come, blessed of my Father; yours is the Kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world!”

Questions for reflection

1. What do I do for the poorest of the poor?
2. Is religion a refuge for me?
3. Do I think of myself as a solidary person (a sympathizer with)?

Tuesday, March 02, 2010

Haiku to Pope John Paul the Great

Pope John Paul the Great
Fearless Pastor, Holy Priest
You live forever

In our memory
In a renewed Church of God
In our minds and hearts

Monday, March 01, 2010

How to Write a Personal Rule of Life

Folks, it was years in the making but last year, praised be Jesus and the assistance of the Holy Spirit and thanks to the advice of numerous people, I put together a Personal Rule of Life. I’ve been following it since.

If you want to be holy, you should have one. It doesn’t matter if your write it or not, or how long it is, as long as you have one.

For the nitty-gritty of writing one, please read the following booklet by Fr Michael Woodgate, A Rule of Life for Daily Christian Living. It is published by the Catholic Truth Society. It is filled with lots of valuable advice and insight on how to put one together. Creating A Rule of Life by Dr. Joe Colletti is also a worthy essay on the subject. There’s a good one too from the Episcopalian Benedictines at Washington’s National Cathedral, Creating a Rule of Life.

I also humbly offer my own Rule of Life in PDF, which you may download from here.

Feel free to ask me any questions on this subject. If I can’t answer them. I’ll try to steer you to the right person or source for the answer or simply say, “I don’t know”.

Remember, things that work for me may not work for you. Use mine as an example or guide, not as a blueprint. If you have problems downloading the document from Google Docs, let me know via email (click on the e-mail link in the left sidebar) and I’ll email it to you.

Take advantage of this Lenten season to write one! May the Lord richly bless all of us as we grow toward him during this Lent.

- Download Theo’s Personal Rule of Life

- Another example, John Sturdy’s Rule of Life.

- Sagely advice on the subject from hermit Sr. Laurel O’Neal, of Stillsong Hermitage.

- A Married Man's "Rule of Life" by Deacon Pat Kearns.