Saturday, July 31, 2010

St. Ignatius Loyola-Founder of the Jesuits - Saturday July 31, 2010

St. Ignatius Loyola, pray for us!!

St. Ignatius LoyolaFounder of the Jesuits - Saints & Angels - Saints & Angels - Catholic Online

When we discover the presence of God within us, all our pretensions fall apart. We now see the sin and selfishness in our own lives and have deep remorse and sorrow for we know the great love our creator has for us. We fall to our knees in praise and thanksgiving for this love is beyond any earthly love. It's an infinite love that fills us to overflowing and we know that the truth has always lived within us and we were separated from that truth by the lies promulgated by sin. It was that emptiness we longed to fill and no earthly desires could fill it, only the love of our creator. We were made for God and as St. Augustine said: Our hearts are restless until they rest in him. God bless!!

Thursday, July 29, 2010

St. Martha - Thursday July 29, 2010

St. Martha, pray for us!!

St. Martha - Saints & Angels - Saints & Angels - Catholic Online

Why do we humans seek after matter which is finite? Spend time today in quiet, seeking the infinite who will give you the gifts you need in order to obtain supernatural life. All that you need is found within! And when you find it, you will seek no more! God bless!

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Bl. Titus Brandsma - Tuesday July 27, 2010

A Carmelite -
Bl. Titus Brandsma, pray for us!!

Bl. Titus Brandsma - Saints & Angels - Saints & Angels - Catholic Online

Ephesians 2: 4-10
God, who is rich in mercy, because of the great love he had for us, even when we were dead in our transgressions, brought us to life with Christ (by grace you have been saved), raised us up with him, and seated us with him in the heavens in Christ Jesus, that in the ages to come he might show the immeasurable riches of his grace in his kindness to us in Christ Jesus. For by grace you have been saved through faith, and this is not from you; it is the gift of God; it is not from works, so no one may boast. For we are his handiwork, created in Christ Jesus for the good works that God has prepared in advance, that we should live in them.

St. Pantaleon - Tuesday July 27, 2010

St. Pantaleon, pray for us!!

St. Pantaleon - Saints & Angels - Saints & Angels - Catholic Online

Friday, July 23, 2010

Our Lady, Mother of Divine Grace - Friday July 23, 2010

http://www.stl-ocds.org/blog/?p=989

A Carmelite Memorial

Taken from Theology and Sanity by Frank Sheed, pg 170
"It is a pity that any man should be so very conscious of the material beings below him, and altogether ignore these spiritual beings (angels) above him. It means that he is spending too much of his life in the company of his inferiors - not, one imagines, through mere preference for low company, but through mental inertia."

St. Bridget of Sweden - Friday July 23, 2010

St. Bridget, pray for us!!

St. Bridget of Sweden - Saints & Angels - Saints & Angels - Catholic Online

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

St. Lawrence of Brindisi - Wednesday July 21, 2010

St. Lawrence of Brindisi, pray for us!!

St. Lawrence of Brindisi - Saints & Angels - Saints & Angels - Catholic Online

Reflection: The Forgotten Sense Of Sin In The Modern World - Living Faith - Home & Family - Catholic Online

Sin? What is sin? Most of our current culture do not believe in sin. All is right and good if you believe it's right and good. We are living in a world where the murder of unborn babies is considered for some a good. We are being fooled and lied to, but as long as our comforts are not denied we don't seem to care. Read the reflection and ponder.
God bless!!

Reflection: The Forgotten Sense Of Sin In The Modern World - Living Faith - Home & Family - Catholic Online

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

St. Elijah - Tuesday July 20, 2010

from Wikipedia

Prophet saint

Russian Icon of the Prophet Elias (12th century, Pskov school. Tretyakov Gallery,Moscow).
In Western Christianity, the Prophet Elijah is commemorated as a saint with a feast day on 20 July by the Roman Catholic Church[43] and the Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod.[44]
In the Eastern Orthodox Church and those Eastern Catholic Churches which follow the Byzantine Rite, he is commemorated on the same date (in the twenty-first century, Julian Calendar 20 July corresponds to Gregorian Calendar 2 August). He is greatly revered among the Orthodox as a model of thecontemplative life. He is also commemorated on the Orthodox liturgical calendar on the Sunday of the Holy Fathers (the Sunday before the Nativity of the Lord).

[edit]Carmelite tradition

In 1 Kings 18, Elijah returns from his stay with the widow of Zarephath to confront Ahab and announce the end of the drought. He encounters Obadiah and orders him back to Ahab to announce his return. Obadiah is reluctant to comply for Elijah has just spent several years in hiding from a determined search by the king. Obadiah is afraid that Elijah will disappear again leaving him to face the king’s wrath. After the confrontation on Mt. Carmel, Elijah will again avoid a determined search by Jezebel by going to the Sinai wilderness. After the confrontation over Naboth’s vineyard, Elijah will disappear from the record completely and not reappear until the confrontation with Ahaziah in 2nd Kings.
Elijah is revered as the spiritual Father and traditional founder of the Catholic religious Order of Carmelites. In addition to taking their name from Mt. Carmel where the first hermits of the order established themselves, the Calced Carmelite and Discalced Carmelite traditions pertaining to Elijah focus upon the prophet’s withdrawal from public life.[45][46] The medieval Carmelite Book of the First Monks offers some insight into the heart of the Orders' contemplative vocation and reverence for the prophet.
The prophet Elijah's feastday is celebrated on July 20 of the Carmelite Liturgical Calendar.

St. Margaret of Antioch - Tuesday July 20, 2010

St. Margaret of Antioch, pray for us!!

St. Margaret of Antioch - Saints & Angels - Saints & Angels - Catholic Online

Monday, July 19, 2010

man with black hat: 20 Years After: Divorce and the Culture of Death

Divorce is not an option!!

man with black hat: 20 Years After: Divorce and the Culture of Death

St. Arsenius the Great - Monday July 19, 2010

St. Arsenius the Great, pray for us!!

St. Arsenius the Great - Saints & Angels - Saints & Angels - Catholic Online

Taken from the July Magnificat, pgs 264-265)

THE DIVINE LIFE CALLING MARTHA

Holiness is you who have become the Kingdom of God, it is you divinized by the gift of yourself. Precisely, if we see that this is really about a Presence, about a person-to-person exchange, if we see that each gesture allows us to be in communion with divine life, we will understand that the eternal is now…
That is exactly what we must do. There is no question for us of waiting until the afternoon. It is now, here…That is where God is waiting for you. There lies your eternity, your infinite communion, because each human act, if it is a gift of ourselves, is an act creating eternity. There is nothing else to expect. If you die tonight and your day has been full of God, you will be in eternity because you yourselves will have become eternity. This is the only way of triumphing over death, by making the “now” eternal. Here, now, today in the kitchen, bringing the dishes of food to the table, in recreation, before your bills in your office, it is at every instant that divine life is calling you, that it can circulate through you, communicate itself to others, provided you are attentive to life with its immense dimensions.
God is not someone we can speak about, he is someone we breathe, whom we communicate through the atmosphere emanating from ourselves. People around you will feel if you are in constant communion with God. There is not a religious action: it is the whole life that is religious, the whole life or nothing, I repeat, the whole life or nothing…
That is why Our Lord, who wanted to instill in us the infinite dignity of our lives, spent thirty years doing manual labor, a labor that apparently had nothing religious about it, the most ordinary work which he gathered in the Eucharist as bread and wine.
You need no more than that to be in communion with God. Labor, rest, the daily relationships of humans among themselves, that is religion provided every act is vested with this divine presence and communicates it.
Father Maurice Zundel
Father Zundel (1975) was a Swiss mystic, poet, philosopher, liturgist, and author

Thursday, July 15, 2010

St. Bonaventure - Thursday July 15, 2010

St. Bonaventure, pray for us!!

St. Bonaventure - Saints & Angels - Saints & Angels - Catholic Online

"Truly, we should feel much compassion for those who, given to things of sense and content with external exercises only, neglect throughout their life to enter into the secret sanctuary of their own soul, and there to cultivate the blessed union they might have with God. For while they care little for true mortification of themselves, and consume their life and strength in things not principally necessary, they make little or no progress in spirit, and always stick in the same mire. If they would not exactly like to say the words, yet, in reality, in their hearts and by their actions they do say: "Let him who desires unite himself to God, but that is a thing we do not concern ourselves with, for it is not our way.'" (Blosius the Venerable, died 1566)

Abortion and the Autism Trigger: Is There a Connection? - Health & Wellness - Catholic Online


How many more children are born with autism and why??

Abortion and the Autism Trigger: Is There a Connection? - Health & Wellness - Catholic Online

Reviewing the New 'Sex-ed' Agenda: Battle is On in Montana and Across America - U.s. - Catholic Online

Interesting!! Parents be aware of what the schools are teaching your children!

Reviewing the New 'Sex-ed' Agenda: Battle is On in Montana and Across America - U.s. - Catholic Online

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Blessed Kateri Tekakwitha - Wednesday July 14, 2010

Blessed Kateri Tekakwitha, pray for us!!

Blessed Kateri Tekakwitha - Saints & Angels - Saints & Angels - Catholic Online

Philippians 3:7-10
Whatever gains I had, these I have come to consider a loss because of Christ. More than that, I even consider everything as a loss because of the supreme good of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord. For his sake I have accepted the loss of all things and I consider them so much rubbish, that I may gain Christ and be found in him, not having any righteousness of my own based on the law but that which comes through faith in Christ, the righteousness from God, depending on faith to know him and the power of his resurrection and (the) sharing of his sufferings by being conformed to his death.

Taken from Theology and Sanity by Frank Sheed, pg 132
"Because we are made by God of nothing, then we cannot continue in existence unless God continuously holds us in existence. There is an emptiness at the very center of the being of all created things, which only God can fill; not an emptiness merely in the sense that it cannot be happy without God; but in the sense that it cannot be at all without Him."

(pg 133)
"Take God away and the universe ceases."

Pope: 'Should Never be Necessary to Deny God in Order to Enjoy One's Rights' - International - Catholic Online

Pope: 'Should Never be Necessary to Deny God in Order to Enjoy One's Rights' - International - Catholic Online

Monday, July 12, 2010

Blessings of a Large Family

http://bit.ly/9kLVq3

The Catholic Woman, the Imposter, and the Heresy of 'Abortion Rights' - U.s. - Catholic Online

Read and weep for life and love, precious gifts!!

The Catholic Woman, the Imposter, and the Heresy of 'Abortion Rights' - U.s. - Catholic Online

Bl. Louis & Zelie Martin, Monday July 12, 2010

Blesseds Louis & Zelie Martin, pray for us!!

These are the parents of St. Terese of Lisieux.

Psalm 46
God is for us a refuge and strength, a helper close at hand, in time of distress: so we shall not fear though the earth should rock, though the mountains fall into the depths of the sea, even though its waters rage and foam, even though the mountains be shaken by its waves.

The Lord of hosts is with us: the God of Jacob is our stronghold.

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Readings for the 15th Sunday in Ordinary Time, July 11, 2010


Reading 1Dt 30:10-14

10 if you obey the voice of Yahweh your God, by keeping his commandments and decrees written in the book of this Law, and if you return to Yahweh your God with all your heart and soul.
11 'For this Law which I am laying down for you today is neither obscure for you nor beyond your reach.
12 It is not in heaven, so that you need to wonder, "Who will go up to heaven for us and bring it down to us, so that we can hear and practise it?"
13 Nor is it beyond the seas, so that you need to wonder, "Who will cross the seas for us and bring it back to us, so that we can hear and practise it?"
14 No, the word is very near to you, it is in your mouth and in your heart for you to put into practice.

GospelLk 10:25-37

25 And now a lawyer stood up and, to test him, asked, 'Master, what must I do to inherit eternal life?'
26 He said to him, 'What is written in the Law? What is your reading of it?'
27 He replied, 'You must love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your strength, and with all your mind, and your neighbour as yourself.'
28 Jesus said to him, 'You have answered right, do this and life is yours.'
29 But the man was anxious to justify himself and said to Jesus, 'And who is my neighbour?'
30 In answer Jesus said, 'A man was once on his way down from Jerusalem to Jericho and fell into the hands of bandits; they stripped him, beat him and then made off, leaving him half dead.
31 Now a priest happened to be travelling down the same road, but when he saw the man, he passed by on the other side.
32 In the same way a Levite who came to the place saw him, and passed by on the other side.
33 But a Samaritan traveller who came on him was moved with compassion when he saw him.
34 He went up to him and bandaged his wounds, pouring oil and wine on them. He then lifted him onto his own mount and took him to an inn and looked after him.
35 Next day, he took out two denarii and handed them to the innkeeper and said, "Look after him, and on my way back I will make good any extra expense you have."
36 Which of these three, do you think, proved himself a neighbour to the man who fell into the bandits' hands?'
37 He replied, 'The one who showed pity towards him.' Jesus said to him, 'Go, and do the same yourself.'

Reading 2Col 1:15-20

15 He is the image of the unseen God, the first-born of all creation,
16 for in him were created all things in heaven and on earth: everything visible and everything invisible, thrones, ruling forces, sovereignties, powers -- all things were created through him and for him.
17 He exists before all things and in him all things hold together,
18 and he is the Head of the Body, that is, the Church. He is the Beginning, the first-born from the dead, so that he should be supreme in every way;
19 because God wanted all fullness to be found in him
20 and through him to reconcile all things to him, everything in heaven and everything on earth, by making peace through his death on the cross.

St. Bendict of Nursia - Sunday July 11, 2010

St. Benedict of Nursia, pray for us!!

St. Bendict of Nursia - Saints & Angels - Saints & Angels - Catholic Online

Dictatorship of Relativism. Catholic Professor Fired for Being Catholic - U.s. - Catholic Online

Great article and good summary of current events in the life of a Catholic who remains true to the Magisterium.

Dictatorship of Relativism. Catholic Professor Fired for Being Catholic - U.s. - Catholic Online

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Sunday, July 4, 2010

Ethan's Graduation 2010

Click here to view this video

Happy Fourth of July to all!!

Party at Jim and Amy's house!! Thanks so much for a great day!!







All the kids and adults had a GREAT time!!

Blessed Maria Crocifissa Curcio, Carmelite

Taken from the Vatican web site:


MARIA CROCIFISSA CURCIO (1877-1957)

Maria Crocifissa Curcio, foundress of the Carmelite Missionary Sisters of Saint Therese of the Child Jesus, was born in Ispica (Rg), southeast Sicily, in the diocese of Noto, on January 30, 1877. Her parents were Salvatore Curcio and Concetta Franzò.  Being the seventh of ten siblings, she spent her childhood in a highly cultural and social home environment, in which she quickly exhibited lively intelligence and a pleasant personality. She was very strong-willed and determined, and in her early teens she developed a strong tendency towards piety, with specific attention and solidarity towards the weak and marginalized.
At home she was raised under the strict moral guidelines, by virtue of which her father not only impeded her yearning for an intense life of faith, but according to the customs of the era, he did not permit her to study beyond grade six at the elementary level. 
These deprivations cost her greatly. However, eager to learn, she drew comfort from the many books in the family library, where she found a copy of the Life of Saint Teresa of Jesus. The impact of this saint enabled her to come to know and love the Carmel, and so she began her"study of celestial things".
In 1890, at the age of thirteen, she succeeded, and not without difficulty, in enrolling in the Carmelite Third Order, which had only recently been re-established in Ispica. Because of her regular attendance at the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Mount Carmel and her deep devotion to Our Lady of Mount Carmel, who "had captured her heart since childhood" by assigning her the mission of “making the Carmel reflourish”, her knowledge of Carmelite Spirituality made her understand the divine plans in store for her.
Her desire to share the ideal of a Missionary Carmel, which unites the contemplative dimension with that of a specifically apostolic dimension, she began an initial experience of community life with a few fellow members of the Third Order in a small apartment in her ancestral home, which her siblings had bequeathed to her. She then transferred to Modica (Rg) where she was entrusted with the management of the "Carmela Polara” conservatory for the acceptance and assistance of young females who were orphans or in any way needy, with the firm resolution to turning them into "worthy women who would be useful to themselves and to society".
After several years of trials and hardships in the vain attempt to see this undertaking of hers in some way supported and officially recognized by the local ecclesiastic authorities, she finally managed to obtain the support and agreement of her missionary ideal in Father Lorenzo Van Den Eerenbeemt, a Carmelite Father of the Ancient Order.  On May 17, 1925, she came to Rome for the canonization of St. Therese of the Child Jesus, and the next day, accompanied by father Lorenzo, she visited Santa Marinella, a small town on the Latium coast north of Rome.  She was struck by the natural beauty of this region, but also by the extreme poverty of a great number of this town’s inhabitants and it was here that she finally realized that she had reached her landing place.  Having obtained an oral permission “of experiment” from the bishop of the Diocese of Porto Santa Rufina, Cardinal Antonio Vico, on July 3,1925, she definitively settled in Santa Marinella, and on July 16 of the following year, she received the decree of affiliation of her small community with the Carmelite Order, hence sealing her belonging to Mary in the Carmel forever more.
In 1930, after many sufferings and crosses, her small nucleus obtained the recognition of the Church and Cardinal Tommaso Pio Boggiani, Ordinary of the diocese Porto Santa Rufina, erected the Congregation of the Carmelite Missionary Sisters of St. Therese of the Child Jesus as an institute of diocesan rights.
“To bring souls to God” is the objective that brought to life the numerous openings of educational and charitable institutions in Italy and abroad.  For this reason she urged her daughters to bring a Christian point of view to families.  She was able to achieve her missionary yearning in 1947 when, on the ashes of the second world war, she sent the first sisters to Brazil with the mandate to “never forget the poor”, continuing to dream of increasingly vast horizons towards which to drive the sails of her missionary Carmel.
With her entire life marked by poor health and diabetes, which she forced herself to always accept with strength and a serene adhesion to the will of God, she passed the last years of her life in illness, continuing to pray and to give of herself to her sisters, to whom she offers a precious example of virtues, which became all the more transparent and bright.
Her prayer was an imitate and constant dialogue with Jesus, the Father, and all the Blessed, inspired by a filial confidence, spousal love, sentiments of gratitude, praise, adoration and amends, that she sought to transmit, first of all, to her spiritual daughters and to all those who had the opportunity to know her through the example of her life, always nourishing the “desire to have holy daughters, eucharistic daughters, and daughters that know how to pray”.
She intensely cultivated the union of love with Christ in the Eucharist by giving all of herself to satisfy the desire to make amends “for the immense number of souls who do not know and do not love God” and by offering to be the victim of atonement along “with the Great Martyr of Love”.  An amends which made her capable of sharing the pains and anxieties of humanity; of becoming aware of their various needs, with charity and justice; of providing a voice to those who do not have one; and of perceiving the image of the Crucified Christ in those whose image had been distorted by pain and suffering.  For this reason she urged the sisters to “love with holiness the treasures with which the Divine Goodness entrusts you; the souls of the youth, the hope of the future.” And to not spare oneself in the service of the youth most humiliated and abandoned by “freeing in them the gold from the mud”, in order to restore in every creature the dignity and the image of being a child of God.
From the Mother of Jesus she learned to be a mother to those in need.  With St. Therese of the Child Jesus she found spiritual bliss in the “regular and faithful fulfilment of one’s duties”, doing “with love and dedication even the smallest deeds”; experiencing with humility and simplicity, joy and tenderness, every human relationship and everyday achieving that unity of life and faith “by peacefully combining” the untiring activity of Martha and the profound mysticism of Mary.
On July 4, 1957, in Santa Marinella, she serenely returned forever to Christ, her spouse, leaving behind in everyone’s heart a live memory of her love and of her holiness.

Readings for the 14th Sunday in Ordinary Time, July 4, 2010

Taken from Catholic Online:


Daily Readings for Sunday July 04, 2010

Reading 1Is 66:10-14c

10 Rejoice with Jerusalem, be glad for her, all you who love her! Rejoice, rejoice with her, all you who mourned her!
11 So that you may be suckled and satisfied from her consoling breast, so that you may drink deep with delight from her generous nipple.
12 For Yahweh says this: Look, I am going to send peace flowing over her like a river, and like a stream in spate the glory of the nations. You will be suckled, carried on her hip and fondled in her lap.
13 As a mother comforts a child, so I shall comfort you; you will be comforted in Jerusalem.
14 At the sight your heart will rejoice, and your limbs regain vigour like the grass. To his servantsYahweh will reveal his hand, but to his enemies his fury.

GospelLk 10:1-9

1 After this the Lord appointed seventy-two others and sent them out ahead of him in pairs, to all the towns and places he himself would be visiting.
2 And he said to them, 'The harvest is rich but the labourers are few, so ask the Lord of the harvest to send labourers to do his harvesting.
3 Start off now, but look, I am sending you out like lambs among wolves.
4 Take no purse with you, no haversack, no sandals. Salute no one on the road.
5 Whatever house you enter, let your first words be, "Peace to this house!"
6 And if a man of peace lives there, your peace will go and rest on him; if not, it will come back to you.
7 Stay in the same house, taking what food and drink they have to offer, for the labourer deserves his wages; do not move from house to house.
8 Whenever you go into a town where they make you welcome, eat what is put before you.
9 Cure those in it who are sick, and say, "The kingdom of God is very near to you."

Reading 2Gal 6:14-18

14 But as for me, it is out of the question that I should boast at all, except of the cross of our Lord JesusChrist, through whom the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world.
15 It is not being circumcised or uncircumcised that matters; but what matters is a new creation.
16 Peace and mercy to all who follow this as their rule and to the Israel of God.
17 After this, let no one trouble me; I carry branded on my body the marks of Jesus.
18 The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit, my brothers. Amen.

In God We Trust: The Meaning of the Folds of the American Flag - U.s. - Catholic Online

Happy Fourth of July to all my family and friend!!
God bless America!!!

Very interesting article on the folds of the flag. These words are repeated at military funerals.

In God We Trust: The Meaning of the Folds of the American Flag - U.s. - Catholic Online

St. Elizabeth of Portugal - Sunday July 4, 2010

Happy Feast Day to my daughter Elizabeth!!

St. Elizabeth of Portugal, pray for us!!

St. Elizabeth of Portugal - Saints & Angels - Saints & Angels - Catholic Online