Posted in MORNING Prayers, PAPAL SERMONS, QUOTES of the SAINTS, QUOTES on FAITH, SAINT of the DAY

Thought for the Day – 24 February – The Memorial of Blessed Thomas Mary Fusco (1831-1891)

Thought for the Day – 24 February – The Memorial of Blessed Thomas Mary Fusco (1831-1891)

The outstanding vitality of faith, …. emerges in the life and activity of Tommaso Maria Fusco, founder of the Institute of the Daughters of Charity of the Precious Blood.   By virtue of the faith he knew how to live in the world the reality of the Kingdom of God in a very special way.   Among his aspirations, there was one which was his favourite:  “I believe in you, my God, increase my faith”.   It is this prayer that the Apostles direct to the Lord in the Gospel reading today (cf. Lk 17,6).   Bl Tommaso understood that faith is first of all a gift and a grace.   No one can conquer it or obtain it by himself.   One can only ask for it, implore it from on high.   For that reason, enlightened by the teaching of the new Blessed, we never tire of asking the gift of faith because “the just man will live by faith” (Hb 1,4)

“God is wonderful in his saints!”.   With the communities in which the Blessed lived and for which they spent their best human and spiritual energies, we want to thank God, who is “wonderful in his saints”.   At the same time, we ask Him through their intercession, to help us respond with renewed eagerness to the universal call to holiness. Amen….St Pope John Paul on the Beatification of Blessed Thomas Mary Fusco – 7 October 2001

Blessed Thomas, pray for us!bl thomas mary fusco - pray for us - 24 feb 2018

Posted in LENT, MARIAN QUOTES, MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, QUOTES on LOVE, QUOTES on OBEDIENCE

Quote of the Day – 24 February 2018 – Saturday of the First Week of Lent

Quote of the Day – 24 February 2018 – Saturday of the First Week of Lent

“The nicest word to say to our Lord is: “Yes”.
If our Lady hadn’t said that at the Annunciation,
where would the world be now?”

Servant of God Guy Pierre de Fontgalland (1913-1925)

guy pierre de fontgallandthe nicest word - servant of god guy pierre de fontgalland - 24 feb 2018-no 2

Posted in MORNING Prayers, QUOTES on SUFFERING, SAINT of the DAY, The WORD

One Minute Reflection – 24 February – The Memorial of Blessed Thomas Mary Fusco (1831-1891) and Saturday of the First Week of Lent, Year B

One Minute Reflection – 24 February – The Memorial of Blessed Thomas Mary Fusco (1831-1891) and Saturday of the First Week of Lent, Year B

…”for he causes his sun to rise upon the bad as well as the good and sends down rain to fall on the upright and the wicked alike.“…Matthew 5:45 (Today’s Gospel Matthew 5:43-48)

REFLECTION – “May work and suffering for God always be your glory and in your work and suffering, may God be your consolation on this earth and your recompense in heaven.”……………..Bl Thomas Mary Fuscomay work and suffering for god - 24 feb 2018

PRAYER– O Lord my God, give me the strength to endure with patience the sufferings I encounter in my life. Teach me to do my daily work for You alone and to do more than that in every way I can, for your greater glory. Teach me, Holy Father, to obey the words of Your Son, to pray for those who persecute me and to suffer for the glory of the Kingdom. Blessed Thomas Mary Fusco, pray that we may achieve the crown of glory in heaven, amen.bl-thomas-mary-fusco-pray-for-us.-24 feb 2017

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS of the SAINTS, SAINT of the DAY

Our Morning Offering – 24 February – The Memorial of Blessed Thomas Mary Fusco

Our Morning Offering – 24 February – The Memorial of Blessed Thomas Mary Fusco

The One Thing Necessary
By St Alphonsus Liguori (1696-1787) Doctor of the Church

O my God,
help me to remember,
that time is short, eternity long.
What good is all the greatness of this world
at the hour of death?
To love You, my God
and save my soul is the one thing necessary.
Without You, there is no peace of mind or soul.
My God, I need fear only sin
and nothing else in this life,
for to lose You, my God, is to lose all.
O my God, help me to remember,
that I came into this world with nothing,
and shall take nothing from it when I die.
To gain You, I must leave all.
But in loving You,
I already have all good things,
the infinite riches of Christ and His Church in life,
Mary’s motherly protection and perpetual help,
and the eternal dwelling place Jesus has prepared for me.
Eternal Father, Jesus has promised
that whatever we ask
in His Name will be granted us.
In His Name, I pray:
give me a burning faith,
a joyful hope,
a holy love for You.
Grant me perseverance in doing Your will
and never let me be separated from You.
My God and my All,
make me a saint.
Amenthe one thing necessary - st alphonsus liguori - 24 feb 2018

Posted in SAINT of the DAY, VATICAN Resources

Saint of the Day – 24 February – Blessed Thomas Mary Fusco and Tommaso Maria Fusco (1831-1891)

Saint of the Day – 24 February – Blessed Thomas Mary Fusco and Tommaso Maria Fusco (1831-1891).   Priest, Founder, Apostle of Charity, Apostolic Missionary, Spiritual Director, Confessor, Preacher, Writer, Blessed Thomas was born on 1 December 1831 at Pagani, Salerno, parish of San Felice e Corpo di Cristo, diocese of Nocera-Sarno, Italy and he died on 24 February 1891 of a chronic liver disease at the age of 59.   He was Beatified on 7 October 2001 by St Pope John Paul II.   The beatification miracles involved the healing of Mrs Maria Battaglia on 20 August 1964 in Sciacca, Agrigento, Sicily.   Patronages – of Daughters of Charity of the Most Precious Blood.HEADER - BL THOMAS MARY FUSCO

Thomas Mary Fusco, the seventh of eight children, was born on1 December 1831 in Pagani, Salerno, in the Diocese of Nocera-Sarno, Italy, to Dr Antonio, a pharmacist and Stella Giordano, of noble descent.   They were known for their upright moral and religious conduct and taught their son Christian piety and charity to the poor.   He was baptised on the day he was born in the parish of St Felice e Corpo di Cristo.   In 1837, when he was only six years old, his mother died of cholera and a few years later, in 1841, he also lost his father.   Fr Giuseppe, an uncle on his father’s side and a primary school teacher, then took charge of his education.

Since 1839, the year of the canonisation of St Alphonsus Mary de’ Liguori, little Tommaso had dreamed of church and the altar;  in 1847 he was at last able to enter the same diocesan seminary of Nocera which his brother Raffaele would leave after being ordained a priest in 1849.   On 1 April 1851, Tommaso Maria received the sacrament of Confirmation and on 22 December 1855, after completing his seminary formation, he was ordained a priest by Bishop Agnello Giuseppe D’Auria.

In those years, sorrowful because of the loss of his loved ones, including his uncle (1847) as well as his young brother, Raffaele (1852), the devotion to the Patient Christ and to his Blessed Sorrowful Mother, already dear to the entire Fusco family, took root in Tommaso Maria, as in fact his biographers recall:  “He had a deep devotion to the crucified Christ which he cherished throughout his life”.

Right from the start he saw to the formation of boys for whom he opened a morning school in his own home, while for young people and adults, bent on increasing their human and Christian formation, he organised evening prayers at the parish church of St Felice e Corpo di Cristo.  This was a true place of conversion and prayer, just as it had been for St Alphonsus, revered and honoured in Pagani for his apostolate.

In 1857, he was admitted to the Congregation of the Missionaries of Nocera under the title of St Vincent de Paul and became an itinerant missionary, especially in the regions of Southern Italy.   In 1860 he was appointed chaplain at the Shrine of our Lady of Carmel (known as “Our Lady of the Hens”) in Pagani, where he built up the men’s and women’s Catholic associations and set up the altar of the Crucified Christ and the Pious Union for the Adoration of the Most Precious Blood of Jesus.

In 1862 he opened a school of moral theology in his own home to train priests for the ministry of confession, kindling enthusiasm for the love of Christ’s Blood;  that same year, he founded the “(Priestly) Society of the Catholic Apostolate” for missions among the common people;  in 1874 he received the approval of Pope Pius IX, now blessed.

Deeply moved by the sorry plight of an orphan girl, a victim of the street, after careful preparation in prayer for discernment, Fr Tommaso Maria founded the Congregation of the “Daughters of Charity of the Most Precious Blood” on 6 January, the Solemnity of Epiphany in 1873.   This institute was inaugurated at the Church of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, in the presence of Bishop Raffaele Ammirante, who, with the clothing of the first three sisters with the religious habit, blessed the first orphanage for seven poor little orphan girls of the area.   It was not long before the newborn religious family and the orphanage also received the Pope’s blessing, in response to their request.

Fr Tommaso Maria continued to dedicate himself to the priestly ministry, preaching spiritual retreats and popular missions;   and from his apostolic travels sprang the many foundations of houses and orphanages that were a monument to his heroic charity, which was even more ardent in the last 20 years of his life (1870-1891).

In addition to his commitments as founder and apostolic missionary, he was parish priest (1874-1887) at the principal church of St Felice e Corpo di Cristo in Pagani, extraordinary confessor to the cloistered nuns in Pagani and Nocera and, in the last years of his life, spiritual father of the lay congregation at the Shrine of Our Lady of Mount Carmel.bl fusco - larger

It was not long before Fr Tommaso Maria, envied for the good he achieved in his ministry and for his life as an exemplary priest, was faced with humiliation and persecution and, in 1880, even a brother priest’s slanderous calumny.    However, sustained by the Lord, he lovingly carried that cross which his own Pastor, Bishop Ammirante had foretold at the time of his institute’s foundation:  “Have you chosen the title of the Most Precious Blood? Well, may you be prepared to drink the bitter cup”.

During the harshest of trials, which he bore in silence, he would repeat:  “May work and suffering for God always be your glory and in your work and suffering, may God be your consolation on this earth and your recompense in heaven.   Patience is the safeguard and pillar of all the virtues”.

Wasting away with a liver-disease, Fr Tommaso Maria died a devout death on 24 February 1891, praying with the elderly Simeon:  “Lord, now let your servant depart in peace, according to your word” (Lk 2, 29).

He was only 59 years old!   In the notice issued by the town council of Pagani on 25 February 1891 the Gospel witness of his life, known to one and all, was summarised in these words:  “Tommaso Maria Fusco, Apostolic Missionary, Founder of the Daughters of Charity of the Most Precious Blood, an exemplary priest of indomitable faith and ardent charity, worked tirelessly in the name of the Redeeming Blood for the salvation of souls: in life he loved the poor and in death forgave his enemies”.

His life was directed to the highest devotion of Christian virtues by the priestly life, lived intensely in constant meditation on the mystery of the Father’s love, contemplated in the crucified Son whose Blood is “the expression, measure and pledge” of divine Charity and heroic charity to the poor and needy, in whom Fr Tommaso Maria saw the bleeding Face of Jesus.   His writings, preaching and popular missions marked his vast experience of faith and the light of Christian hope that shone from his vocation and actions. He had a vital, burning love for God; it enflamed his words and his apostolate, made fruitful by love for God and neighbour, by union with the crucified Jesus, by trust in Mary, Immaculate and Sorrowful, and above all by the Eucharist.

Fr Tommaso Maria Fusco was an Apostle of Charity of the Most Precious Blood, a friend of boys and girls and young people and attentive to every kind of poverty and human and spiritual misery.   For all these reasons he enjoyed the fame of holiness among the diocesan priests, among the people and among his spiritual daughters who received his charism and witness to it today in the various parts of the world where they carry out their apostolate in communion with the Church.

The cause for the beatification of Fr Tommaso Maria Fusco was initiated in 1955 and the decree of his heroic Christian virtues was published on 24 April 2001.   The miraculous healing of Mrs Maria Battaglia on 20 August 1964 in Sciacca, Agrigento, Sicily, through the intercession of Fr Tommaso Maria Fusco was recognised on7 July 2001.

With his beatification, St Pope John Paul II presents Fr Tommaso Maria Fusco as an example and a guide to holiness for priests, for the people of God and for his spiritual daughters, the Daughters of Charity of the Most Precious Blood…vatican.vabl thomas mary fusco 2 - snipfusco

Posted in SAINT of the DAY

Memorials of the Saints – 24 February

St Adela of Blois
Bl Antonio Taglia
Bl Arnold of Carcassonne
St Betto of Auxerre
Bl Berta of Busano
Bl Constantius of Fabriano
St Cummian Albus of Iona
St Ethelbert of Kent
Evetius of Nicomedia
Bl Florentina Nicol Goni
Bl Ida of Hohenfels
Bl Josefa Naval Girbes
St Liudhard
Bl Lotario Arnari
Bl Marco De’ Marconi
St Modestus of Trier
St Peter the Librarian
St Praetextatus of Rouen
St Primitiva
St Sergius of Caesarea
Bl Simon of Saint Bertin
Blessed Tommaso Maria Fusco (1831-1891)

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, LENT, MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS of the SAINTS, QUOTES of the SAINTS, QUOTES on CONVERSION, QUOTES on LOVE, QUOTES on REPENTANCE, The PASSION, The WORD

23 February 2018 – Friday of the First Week of Lent – The Memorial of St Polycarp (c 69 – c 155) Martyr and Apostolic Father of the Church

23 February 2018 – Friday of the First Week of Lent – The Memorial of St Polycarp (c 69 – c 155) Martyr and Apostolic Father of the Church

Ezekiel 18:21-28, Psalms 130:1-8, Matthew 5:20-26

Ezekiel 18:21-22 – “But if a wicked man turns away from all his sins which he has committed and keeps all my statutes and does what is lawful and right, he shall surely live; he shall not die. None of the transgressions which he has committed shall be remembered against him; for the righteousness which he has done he shall live.”

Matthew 5:20 – “For I tell you, unless your righteousness exceeds that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.”

friday of the first week - 23 feb 2018

Who wants to enter the Kingdom of Heaven? Certainly all of us do! That should be our primary goal in life. And, along with that goal, we should seek to bring as many people with us as possible.

Too often we fail to see this as an ultimate goal in life. We fail to keep our eyes on Heaven as the primary reason we are here on Earth. It’s very easy to get caught up in the day-to-day satisfactions of what we may call the “mini goals” of life. These are goals such as entertainment, money, success, and the like. And we can often make these mini goals our only goals at times.

So how about you? What is your goal? What is it you strive for and seek throughout your day? If you honestly examine your actions throughout each day you may be surprised that you are actually seeking unimportant and passing mini goals more than you realize.

Jesus gives us one bit of clear direction in this passage above on how to attain that ultimate goal of life – the Kingdom of Heaven. The path He points to is righteousness.

What is righteousness? It’s simply being real. Being authentic. Not fake. And most especially, it’s being real in our love of God. The Pharisees struggled with pretending they were holy and good followers of the will of God. But they were not very good at it. They may have been good at the acting job, and they may have convinced themselves and others, but they could not fool Jesus. Jesus could see through the fake veneer and perceive that which was underneath. He could see that their “righteousness” was only a show for themselves and others.

And a great part of this, is our relationship with our neighbour – with everyone we come into contact with! This is not easy – “whoever insults his brother shall be liable to the council and whoever says, ‘You fool!’ shall be liable to the hell of fire. So if you are offering your gift at the altar and there remember that your brother has something against you, leave your gift there before the altar and go; first be reconciled to your brother and then come and offer your gift.” So we have been told – this is as clear as daylight – there can be no desenting or pretending – go and do it!

Reflect, today, upon your own righteousness – your honesty and sincerity in striving for holiness. If you want to daily keep Heaven as your ultimate goal, then you must also strive to make each daily mini goal an honest attempt at holiness. We must daily seek Christ with all sincerity and truth in all the small things of life. We must then let that sincerity shine through, showing what truly lies beneath. To be righteous, in the truest sense, means we sincerely seek God throughout our day and make that sincerity the constant goal of our life.

Is there someone I need to make peace with?

Pray for the grace of forgiveness and reconciliation.

Am I keeping my eyes on my ultimate goal
or do I allow this daily life to become the goal?

Fr Nicholas King S.J.

Learn the kindness of the Crucified. His enemies said, “His blood be upon us and upon our children.”   Not so Christ, but supplicating the Father, He said:  “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.”   For if His blood had indeed fallen upon them and upon their children, the apostles would not have been made out of their children, neither three thousand nor five thousand would have believed on the spot.   See how barbarous and cruel those were towards their descendants – they ignored even nature itself, while God was more loving than all the fathers put together, and tenderer than any mother.

He did not at once let the chastisement and penalty fall upon them, but He allowed forty years and more to pass after the cross.   Our Lord Himself was crucified under Tiberius, and their city was destroyed under Vespasian and Titus.   Now why did He allow so long a time to elapse after all these things?   Because He wished to give them time for repentance, so that they might put off their impieties and be quit of their crimes.  As, having a respite for conversion, they remained in their impenitence, He at last inflicted punishment upon them, and destroying their city, sent them out wanderers over the, face of the earth.   And this He did through love. He dispersed them that they might everywhere see that Christ whom they had crucified adored, and that seeing Him adored by all they might learn His power and acknowledge their own exceeding wickedness, and in acknowledging might come to the truth….St John Chrysostom

Support us all the Day Long
Blessed John Henry Newman (1801-1890)

O Lord,
support us all the day long
of this troublous life,
until the shades lengthen
and the evening comes
and the busy world is hushed,
the fever of life is over
and our work is done.
Then, Lord, in Your mercy,
grant us a safe lodging,
a holy rest and peace at the last,
through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Amensupport us all the day long - bl john henry newman - 23 feb 2018 - lent

Posted in MORNING Prayers, PAPAL MESSAGES, PAPAL PRAYERS, PRAYERS for VARIOUS NEEDS

Day of Prayer and Fasting for Peace: 23 February 2018 Especially for People of Democratic Republic of the Congo and South Sudan

Day of Prayer and Fasting for Peace:  23 February 2018

Especially for People of Democratic Republic of the Congo and South Sudanday if prayer and fasting DRC & SOUTH SUDAN - 23 feb 2018

Pope Francis has called on all local Churches to join him in a Day of Prayer and Fasting for Peace, particularly in the Democratic Republic of Congo and South Sudan, on 23 February (Friday of the first week of Lent).   On 4 February he said:

“In the face of the tragic protraction of situations of conflict in different parts of the world, I invite all the faithful to a special Day of Prayer and Fasting for Peace next 23 February, Friday of the First Week of Lent. We will offer it in particular for the populations of the Democratic Republic of Congo and of South Sudan. As on other similar occasions, I also invite non-Catholic and non-Christian brothers and sisters to associate themselves to this initiative in the way they consider most opportune, but all together.

Our heavenly Father always listens to His children who cry to Him in sorrow and anguish, who “heals the broken-hearted and binds up their wounds” (Psalm 147:3). I make a heartfelt appeal so that we also listen to this cry and, each one of us in his/her own conscience before God, ask ourselves: “What can I do for peace?” We certainly can pray but not only: each one can say concretely “no” to violence in as much as it depends on him or her. Because the victories obtained with violence are false victories while working for peace does everyone good!”

Daily Prayer for Healing from Racism

Loving God, You hold us in Your hands
for we are all made in Your image.
Help us to celebrate our differences.
Help us to use our diversity
to share with each other
the richness of our many cultures,
languages and backgrounds.
Help us to dissolve racism
still found in our hearts
and in the Church
and help us work for a loving society
in which none are despised
and discriminated against
by virtue of their colour.
We ask this through Jesus, our Lord,
who taught His disciples
to see beyond all human division
and reach out to the good within each person.
In the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God forever.
Amen.daily prayer for healing from racism - 23 feb 2018

Posted in MORNING Prayers, SAINT of the DAY

Thought for the Day – 23 February – The Memorial of St Polycarp (c 69 – c 155) Martyr and Apostolic Father of the Church

Thought for the Day – 23 February – The Memorial of St Polycarp (c 69 – c 155) Martyr and Apostolic Father of the Church

The story of Polycarp’s martyrdom is the earliest recorded account of a Christian martyr.

Polycarp was a disciple of St John the apostle.   While still quite young, he became the bishop of Smyrna and was one of the most respected leaders in the first half of the second century.   St Ignatius of Antioch and St Irenaeus spoke highly of him and people loved him very much.

Polycarp was seized for being a Christian.   Persecution and death would not tear him away from Jesus now.   Polycarp was led into the stadium of Smyrna.   The crowd demanded that he be left to the lions but instead he was sentenced to death by fire.   An eyewitness account claims that the flames didn’t harm him.   He was finally killed by the sword and his body was burned.

The community of believers celebrated the anniversary of Polycarp’s death with great joy, for in him they had seen an outstanding example of love and patience.   He had held strong and had won the treasure of eternal life.   Polycarp is remembered as an Apostolic Father, one who was a disciple of the apostles.

St Polycarp was a Christian leader in a pagan world.   He spoke clearly and simply, fearless in love and defense of Christ, even though persecutions raged around him.   He sought only to hand on the message he had been given by John.   Even as Polycarp prepared for martyrdom, his joy and confident trust were evident to all.

St Polycarp pray for us!st polycarp - pray for us - no 2 - 23 feb 2018

Posted in FATHERS of the Church, MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, QUOTES on CONVERSION, QUOTES on PERSECUTION, QUOTES on SUFFERING, SAINT of the DAY

Quote/s of the Day – 23 February – The Memorial of St Polycarp (c 69 – c 155) Martyr and Father of the Church

Quote/s of the Day – 23 February – The Memorial of St Polycarp (c 69 – c 155) Martyr and Father of the Church

“Stand fast, therefore, in this conduct
and follow the example of the Lord, firm
and unchangeable in faith, lovers of the brotherhood,
loving each other, united in truth,
helping each other with the mildness of the Lord, despising no man.”

“You threaten me with fire
which burns for an hour
and after a little is extinguished
but are ignorant of the fire
of the coming judgement
and of eternal punishment,
reserved for the ungodly.”

“Let us, therefore, forsake the vanity of the crowd
and their false teachings and turn back to the word
delivered to us from the beginning.”

“Hear me declare with boldness, I am a Christian!”

St Polycarp (c 69 – c 155) Martyr and Father of the Churchquotes of st polycarp-23 feb 2018

Posted in FATHERS of the Church, LENT, MORNING Prayers, QUOTES on FAITH, QUOTES on SUFFERING, SAINT of the DAY, The WORD

One Minute Reflection – 23 February – The Memorial of St Polycarp (c 69 – c 155) Martyr and Father of the Church

One Minute Reflection – 23 February – The Memorial of St Polycarp (c 69 – c 155) Martyr and Father of the Church and Friday of the First Week of Lent 2018

Only, conduct yourselves in a way worthy of the gospel of Christ, so that, whether I come and see you or am absent, I may hear news of you, that you are standing firm in one spirit, with one mind struggling together for the faith of the gospel...Philippians 1:27

REFLECTION – “Eighty and six years have I served Christ, nor has He ever done me any harm.   How, then, could I blaspheme my King who saved Me?….I bless Thee for deigning me worthy of this day and this hour that I may be among Thy martyrs and drink the cup of my Lord Jesus Christ.”…St Polycarpeight and six years have I served Christ - st polycarp - 23 feb 2018

PRAYER – Lord of all creation, You gave St Polycarp, a place in the company of the Martyrs.   Grant that, through his intercession, we may, like him, drink from that cup which Christ drank and so rise to eternal life.   Through Christ our Lord, in unity with the Holy Spirit, one God forever, amen.st polycarp - pray for us - 23 feb 2018

Posted in MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS of the SAINTS, SAINT of the DAY

Our Morning Offering – 23 February – The Memorial of St Polycarp (c 69 – c 155) Martyr and Father of the Church

Our Morning Offering – 23 February – The Memorial of St Polycarp (c 69 – c 155) Martyr and Father of the Church

Prayer Before His Martyrdom
St Polycarp

Lord God almighty,
Father of Jesus Christ,
Your dear Son,
through whom we have come to know You,
God of the angels and powers,
God of all creation,
God of those who live in Your presence,
the race of the just, I bless You.
You have considered me worthy
of this day and hour,
worthy to be numbered with the Martyrs
and to drink the cup of Your Anointed One,
and thus to rise and live forever,
body and soul,
in the incorruptibility of the Holy Spirit.
Amenprayer before his martyrdom - st polycarp - 23 feb 2018

Posted in EARACHE, EAR disorders, FATHERS of the Church, SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 23 February – St Polycarp (c 69 – c 155) Martyr and Father of the Church

Saint of the Day – 23 February – St Polycarp of Smyrna – (69-155) – Martyr, Apostolic Church Father and Bishop of Smyrna, Writer, Preacher, Theologian – Patron against dysentery and earache.   Bishop of Smyrna (Asia Minor), Polycarp was martyred between 155 and 167.   His name means “much fruit”.HEADER - st polycarp

It is recorded by St Irenaeus, who heard him speak in his youth and by Tertullian, that he had been a disciple of John the Apostle.    Saint Jerome wrote that Polycarp was a disciple of John and that John had ordained him bishop of Smyrna.

With Clement of Rome and Ignatius of Antioch, Polycarp is regarded as one of three chief Apostolic Fathers.   The sole surviving work attributed to his authorship is his Letter to the Philippians and a letter addressed to him by Ignatius of Antioch, he is known especially for the account of his martyrdom, the first such account to be written after the narrative of Stephen’s martyrdom in the Acts of the Apostles.   This extraordinary narrative was composed shortly after Polycarp’s death.   Many passages should be quoted here, like this one, where the governor invites Polycarp to curse Christ.   Here is the bishop’s response:

“For eighty six years I have been His servant and He has done me no wrong.   How can I blaspheme against my king and saviour?”   

This text is also the first one where we find a mention of the cult of relics and of the celebration of the anniversary of the martyrdom:  “Collecting the remains that were dearer to us than precious stones and finer than gold, we buried them in a fitting spot. Gathering there, so far as we can, in joy and gladness, we will be allowed by the Lord to celebrate the anniversary day of his martyrdom, both as a memorial for those who have already fought the contest and for the training and preparation of those who will do so one day.”

Posted in FATHERS of the Church, SAINT of the DAY

Memorials of the Saints – 23 February

St Polycarp of Smyrna (c 69 – c 155) (Memorial)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NCN09WDLpKM


St Alexander Akimetes
St Boswell
St Dositheus of Egypt
St Felix of Brescia
St Florentius of Seville
St Giovanni Theristi
Bl Giovannina Franchi
Bl John of Hungary
Bl Josephine Vannini
Bl Juan Lucas Manzanares
Bl Ludwik Mzyk
St Martha of Astorga
St Medrald
St Milburga
Bl Nicolas Tabouillot
St Ordonius
St Polycarp of Rome
Bl Rafaela Ybarra de Villalongo
St Romana
St Serenus the Gardener
Bl Stefan Wincenty Frelichowski
St Willigis of Mainz
St Zebinus of Syria

Martyrs of Syrmium – 73 Christians who were martyred together in the persecutions of Diocletian. We know no details about them, and only six of their names – Antigonus, Libius, Rogatianus, Rutilus, Senerotas and Syncrotas.

Posted in LENT, MARIAN PRAYERS, MORNING Prayers, SAINT of the DAY, The BLESSED VIRGIN MARY, The WORD

22 February 2018 Thursday of the First Week of Lent and the Feast of the Chair of St Peter

22 February 2018 Thursday of the First Week of Lent and the Feast of the Chair of St Peter

1 Peter 5:1-4, Psalms 23, Matthew 16:13-19

1 Peter 5:1-3 –  “So I exhort the elders among you, as a fellow elder and a witness of the sufferings of Christ as well as a partaker in the glory that is to be revealed.   Tend the flock of God that is your charge, not by constraint but willingly, not for shameful gain but eagerly, not as domineering over those in your charge but being examples to the flock.”

Matthew 16:14-19 –  He said to them, “But who do you say that I am?” Simon Peter replied, “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.”   And Jesus answered him, “Blessed are you, Simon Bar-Jona!  For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you but my Father, who is in heaven.   And I tell you, you are Peter and on this rock I will build my church and the powers of hell shall not prevail against it.   I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven and whatever you bind on earth, shall be bound in heaven and whatever you loose on earth, shall be loosed in heaven.”lent - thursday of the first week - 22 feb 2018

Organisations develop and thrive under enlightened leadership and through the hard work of dedicated members. The Church is not different. She has rendered amazing service to human society, starting with just twelve members, because at every period of history, she has had committed and perceptive leaders to guide her, always, under the main leader, God, the Holy Spirit.

Today, Peter asks his fellow Church-workers, to fulfil their duty with joy, not out of compulsion or for any material advantage.   He himself was entrusted with the mission of guiding and caring for the destinies of the early Christian community, in spite of his limitations.   One of his great distinctions was that he was the first to confess, before his brethren, that Jesus was the Christ, the Son of the living God, this is the source and ground of the whole operation.   Many others had seen in Jesus a gifted prophet.   But God reveals His Son to those whom He chooses.

Those who are open to God’s ways, not only recognise Him for what He really is but become eager to take His message to the ends of the earth.   They listen for His voice! And this is the end result of our Lenten penances, to become those lights in our world, to become those Catholics who truly resemble their Founder, those Catholics who pray, who love, who live charity and thus, by their lives, they preach the Good News to all who meet them!   ArchBishop Thomas Menamparampil SCB

Hearing the Voice of God:  A man practised in woodcraft, out of a babel of sounds in a tropical forest, will recognise any one.   He may hear the calls of a hundred, a thousand, different species of birds, squawking, hooting, whistling, singing but he says, “There! Listen to the note of such and such a bird.”   The novice strains his ears but cannot catch the particular sound.   “I listen,” says he, “but I cannot recognise it.   How can you know it?”   And the master says, “I could tell that note if every leaf on every tree had a different voice and all were speaking.   I could tell that note in the midst of any tumult.”

So, the man who knows the voice of God, hears it anywhere – in the midst of crowded streets, at an entertainment, on a battle field, in his soul, even when temptation is making pandemonium within.   He can recognise the voice of God anywhere…– Father James M Gillis – A Thought a Day for Lent, by Father James M Gillis, C.S.P

O Jesus, living in Mary
By Fr Jean-Jacques Olier, S.S. (1608-1657)

O Jesus, living in Mary,
Come and live in Your servants,
In the spirit of Your sanctity,
In the fullness of Your strength.
In the reality of Your virtues.
In the perfection of Your ways.
In the communion of Your mysteries.
Be lord over every opposing power.
In Your own Spirit, to the glory of the Father.
Amen

Fr Jean-Jacques Olier (20 September 1608 – 2 April 1657) was a French priest and the founder of the Sulpicians.   (Prayer a Day for Lent, compiled from approved sources by Father Albert A Murray, C.S.P.)o jesus, living in mary - 22 feb 2018

Posted in FEASTS and SOLEMNITIES, MORNING Prayers, PAPAL SERMONS, QUOTES on the CHURCH, SAINT of the DAY, The BLESSED VIRGIN MARY

Thought for the Day – 22 February – The Feast of the Chair of Saint Peter

Thought for the Day – 22 February – The Feast of the Chair of Saint Peter

Today’s celebration highlights the role of Peter and his Successors in steering the barque of the Church across this “ocean”….  Let us thank God together for founding His Church on the rock of Peter.   As the opening prayer suggests, let us pray intensely that amid the upheavals of the world, she may not be shaken but advance with courage and trust.

By virtue of the transforming experience of the Good Shepherd, Peter described himself, in his Letter to the Churches of Asia Minor, as “a witness of the sufferings of Christ as well as a partaker in the glory that is to be revealed” (1 Pt 5: 1).   He urges “the elders” to tend the flock of God and become examples to it (cf. 1 Pt 5: 2-3).   Today, dear friends, this exhortation is addressed particularly to you, whom the Good Shepherd has wished to associate in the most eminent way with the ministry of Peter’s Successor.   Be faithful to your mission and ready to lay down your lives for the Gospel.   The Lord is asking this of you, and the Christian people who have gathered around you today with joy and affection expect it of you.

“I have prayed for you that your faith may not fail” (Lk 22: 32).   This is what the Lord said to Simon Peter at the Last Supper.   Jesus’ words, fundamental for Peter and his Successors, also spread light and comfort to those who cooperate more closely in their ministry.   Today, …Christ is repeating to each of you:  “I have prayed for you” that your faith will not fail in the situations in which your fidelity to Christ, to the Church, to the Pope, may be put to the greatest test.

May this prayer, which never ceases to flow from the Good Shepherd’s heart, always be your strength!   Have no doubt that just as it was for Christ and for Peter, so it will be for you:  your most effective witness will always be one that is marked by the Cross.   The Cross is God’s chair in the world.   On it Christ has offered humanity the most important lesson, that of loving one another as He has loved us (cf. Jn 13: 34): even to the ultimate gift of oneself.feast of the chair of st peter - 22 feb 2018 - today's celebration highlights - st john paul

The Mother of Christ and of the disciples, Mary Most Holy, always stands beneath the Cross.   The Lord entrusted us to her when He said:  “Woman, behold, your son!” (Jn 19: 26).   Since the Blessed Virgin, Mother of the Church, protected Peter and the Apostles in a special way, she will not fail to protect the Successor of Peter and his collaborators.  May this consoling certainty encourage you not to be afraid of trials and difficulties.  But, reassured by God’s constant protection, let us obey together the command of Christ, who vigorously asked Peter, and with him the Church, to put out into the deep: “Duc in altum” (Lk 5: 4).   Yes, dear Brothers, let us put out into the deep, let us cast our nets for the catch and let us “go forward in hope!”  (Novo millennio ineunte, n. 58).

Christ, the Son of the living God, is the same yesterday and today and forever. Amen!…Excerpt from the Homily of St John Paul on Thursday, 22 February 2001, Feast of Saint Peter’s Chair

St Peter Pray for Holy Mother Church, Pray for us all!st peter - pray for us - 22 feb 2018

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, FEASTS and SOLEMNITIES, MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, QUOTES on the CHURCH, SAINT of the DAY

Quote/s of the Day – 22 February – The Feast of the Chair of Saint Peter

Quote/s of the Day – 22 February – The Feast of the Chair of Saint Peter

“The universal Church, that is,
the faithful everywhere, must be
in agreement with this Church
because of her outstanding superiority.”

St Irenaeus, Bishop of Lyons (130-202) Father of the Churchthe universal church - st irenaeus - 22 feb 2018

“He who deserts the
Chair of Peter, upon whom
the Church was founded,
does he trust himself
to be IN the Church?”

(De Catholicae Ecclesiae Unitate, 251)

St Cyprian, Bishop of Carthage and Martyr (200-258) Father of the Churchhe who deserts the chair of peter - st cyprian - 22 feb 2018

 

 

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, FEASTS and SOLEMNITIES, MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, QUOTES on the CHURCH, SAINT of the DAY, The APOSTLES & EVANGELISTS, The WORD, Uncategorized

One Minute Reflection – 22 February – The Feast of the Chair of Saint Peter

One Minute Reflection – 22 February – The Feast of the Chair of Saint Peter

“On this rock I will build my Church”…Matthew 16:18on-this-rock-matthew-16-18.22 feb 2017

REFLECTION – “How blessed is the Church of Rome, on which the Apostles poured forth all their doctrine along with their blood!” (De Praescriptione Hereticorum, 36)…….Tertullianhow blessed is the church of rome - tertullian - 22 feb 2018
“I decided to consult the Chair of Peter, where that faith is found exalted by the lips of an Apostle;  I now come to ask for nourishment for my soul there, where once I received the garment of Christ.   I follow no leader save Christ, so I enter into communion with Your beatitude, that is, with the Chair of Peter, for this I know is the rock upon which the Church is built.” (cf. Le lettere I, 15, 1-2)…………..St Jerome  (343-420)  Father & Doctori-decided-to-consult-the-chair-of-peter-st-jerome-22feb 2017

PRAYER – Holy Father, send Your Divine Enlightener into the hearts of all Your faithful, filling us with the strength to fulfil our mission as the followers of the Chair of St Peter. And most of all, we pray Lord Holy God to inspire and light the way of our Holy Father, Francis.   Sustain and guide him, keep him in health and strength, to lead Your people by the Light of the Way and the Truth.   Holy Father, have mercy on us, Holy Spirit guide and lead us, Lord Jesus Christ be our intercessor and teacher, amen.st-peter-saints-and-popes.-22 feb 2017

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, FATHERS of the Church, LENT, MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS of the SAINTS

Our Morning Offering – 22 February – Thursday of the First Week of Lent

Our Morning Offering – 22 February – Thursday of the First Week of Lent

Penitential Prayer
St Jerome (343-420) Father & Doctor of the Church

Show me, O Lord, Your mercy
and delight my heart with it.
Let me find You whom I so longingly seek.
Behold, here is the man
whom the robbers seized, manhandled
and left half dead on the road to Jericho.
Kind-hearted Samaritan,
come to my aid!
I am the sheep who wandered into the wilderness.
Seek after me
and bring me home again to Your fold.
Do with me according to Your Will,
that I may abide with You,
all the days of my life
and praise You with all those
who are with You
in heaven for all eternity.
Amenpenintential prayer - st jerome - 22 feb 2018

Posted in FEASTS and SOLEMNITIES, SAINT of the DAY

Feast of the Chair of St Peter/Cathedra Petri– 22 February

Feast of the Chair of St Peter/Cathedra Petri– 22 February – The Chair is the cathedra of St Peter’s Basilica.   Cathedra is Latin for “chair” or “throne” and denominates the chair or seat of a bishop, hence “cathedral” denominates the Bishop’s church in an episcopal see.   The Popes formerly used the Chair.    It is distinct from the Papal Cathedra in St John Lateran Archbasilica, also in Rome, which is the actual cathedral church of the Pope, because the Cathedra he currently and officially sits upon is in its apse.

 

 

When the pope cautions world leaders, pleads for peace, or condemns social injustice, people listen and respond.   What makes the world listen to this man?   The answer lies in Scripture and in Tradition.   Peter is named first among the apostles of Jesus;  he was often their spokesman and leader;  he was the first to preach after Pentecost;  and he was the leader in defending Christ and his message.   Peter was at the Transfiguration and in the garden.

He proclaimed to Jesus, “You are the Christ,” and Christ singled him out:

“So I say to you, you are Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church, and the gates of the netherworld shall not prevail against it. I will give you the keys to the kingdom of heaven. Whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven; and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.” (Matthew 16:18–19)

Jesus prayed for Peter that he might strengthen his brothers. (Luke 22:32)   And Jesus gave Peter a threefold commission to “feed my sheep.” (John 21:15–17)

 

From the beginning, the primacy, of Peter has been recognised.   On the feast of the Chair of Peter, we celebrate our unity as a Church.   We celebrate the love, presence and protection of Christ for us, the Church.   The title Chair of Peter refers to the chair from which a bishop presided, a symbol of his authority.   When the title refers to Saint Peter, it recalls the supreme teaching power of Peter and his successors.   It is from the chair, from the pastoral power given him, that the pope shepherds Christ’s flock.cathedra-altar

Last year’s post has a homily from Pope Benedict: https://anastpaul.wordpress.com/2017/02/22/feast-of-the-chair-of-st-peter-22-february/

Posted in FEASTS and SOLEMNITIES, SAINT of the DAY, Uncategorized

Feast of the Chair of St Peter and Memorials of the Saints – 22 February

The Chair of Saint Peter (Feast)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_rKxSFpExWA

St Ailius of Alexandria
St Angelus Portasole
St Aristion of Salamis
St Athanasius of Nicomedia
St Baradates of Cyrrhus
Bl Diego Carvalho
St Elwin
Bl Émilie d’Oultremont d’Hoogvorst
Bl Isabella of France
St John the Saxon
St Limnaeus
St Margaret of Cortona
St Maximian of Ravenna
St Miguel Facerías Garcés
St Mohammed Abdalla
St Papias of Heirapolis
St Paschasius of Vienne
St Raynerius of Beaulieu
St Thalassius

Martyrs of Arabia – A memorial for all the unnamed Christians martyred in the desert and mountainous areas south of the Dead Sea during the persecutions of Emperor Valerius Maximianus Galerius.

Posted in LENT, MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS for VARIOUS NEEDS

21 February 2018 – Wednesday of the First Week of Lent

21 February 2018 – Wednesday of the First Week of Lent

Jonah 3:1-10, Psalms 51:3-4, 12-13, 18-19, Luke 11:29-32

Jonah 3:6-10 – Then tidings reached the king of Nineveh, and he arose from his throne, removed his robe, and covered himself with sackcloth, and sat in ashes. And he made proclamation and published through Nineveh, “By the decree of the king and his nobles: Let neither man nor beast, herd nor flock, taste anything; let them not feed, or drink water but let man and beast be covered with sackcloth and let them cry mightily to God; yea, let every one turn from his evil way and from the violence which is in his hands. Who knows, God may yet repent and turn from his fierce anger, so that we perish not?” When God saw what they did, how they turned from their evil way, God repented of the evil which he had said he would do to them; and he did not do it.
Luke 11:29When the crowds were increasing, he began to say, “This generation is an evil generation; it seeks a sign, but no sign shall be given to it except the sign of Jonah.”wed of the first week - 21 feb 2018

It’s quite a mystery – that Jonah, a mere man and a reluctant prophet was able to bring an entire city back to God.   But Jesus, who is God in person, fails.   What can we make of this?   Maybe we can just settle for the perverseness of fallen human nature – our unwillingness to respond to divine goodness, even when, at times, we recognise it.

Sin itself is a mystery.   We know what harm it does to ourselves and to others and yet we deliberately choose to commit it.   Would we have been converted by the preaching of Jesus?   Does His presence now, in the Gospel, bring us back to Him?   Why is it that year after year, we need the preaching, of Jesus, of John the Baptist, of the prophets?

I suspect that part of Jonah’s effectiveness resulted from the kind of motivation he inspired – he SCARED the Ninevites into conversion.   Inspired by fear or not, the conversion was genuine and the Lord God “saw what they did, how they turned from their evil way”.

All this throws light on our own Lenten journey, it makes us examine our motives for these Lenten practices.   We don’t have to observe a strict fast as in the old days but the Church will never give up telling her people of the serious need for self-discipline in their lives.   She knows that if we do not control our appetites, they will control us and deprive us of our humanity and any chance of eternal life.

“With all your heart turn to me” says the Lord, ” for I am tender and compassionate” (Gospel Verse)

And it is noteworthy that the Church has us respond to the story of the Ninevites’ conversion by putting into our hearts and mouths the familiar penitential Psalm 51: “Create in me a clean heart, O God and put a new and righty spirit within me.
Cast me not away from thy presence and take not thy holy Spirit from me.   Restore to me the joy of thy salvation and uphold me with a willing spirit.”

What are my motives for these Lenten practices?
Have I appetites that tend to overpower me?
What can I do to ‘turn around’ and amend my life?

Fr E Lawrence OSB – Daily Meditations for Lent

I Wish to Clasp Your Hand – Do Not Refuse Me!
Prayer of Eugene de Ferronays

“Dear Lord! It is just when I am in the world
that I have most need of You
because You know it is full of snares
that the devil has set for me.
You must hold my hand, dear Lord,
if You will not abandon me.
A little of the world is not bad for me;
it is even good, for it teaches me how small it is
and I feel the greater happiness
when I come back to You.
But that I may surely do so,
You must only loose Your hold a little,
that it may not try me too far,
You must not entirely leave hold.
Do You see dear Lord?
I wish to clasp Your hand – do not refuse me!”i wish to clasp your hand - do not refuse me - eugene de ferronays - 21 feb 2018 - lenten prayer

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, MORNING Prayers, SAINT of the DAY

Thought for the Day – 21 February – The Memorial of St Peter Damian O.S.B. (1007-1072) Doctor of the Church

Thought for the Day – 21 February – The Memorial of St Peter Damian O.S.B. (1007-1072) Doctor of the Church

Born in Ravenna, Italy, in 1007, Peter Damian knew hardship as a child.   He became a successful teacher professor but only for a short time.   He was ordained to the priesthood and in 1035, he entered a Benedictine monastery.   The monks lived in small hermitages, with two monks in each.   Peter was known for his fasting, penance and long hours of prayer.   In 1043, he was elected abbot.   Peter began re-organising the rules of the order to return to the original spirit and purpose of the order.   Men were drawn to the monastery and Peter started five other foundations.

In 1057, Peter was made cardinal and bishop of Ostia.   Soon he was called upon by the Church to settle disputes, attend synods and fight abuses.   He devoted much energy to helping the clergy, as well as the leaders of the empire.   With his letters, biographies, sermons, stories and poems, he encouraged others to restore discipline to their lives.  He wrote many letters.   Some 170 are extant.   We also have 53 of his sermons and seven lives, or biographies, that he wrote.   He preferred examples and stories rather than theory in his writings.   The liturgical offices he wrote are evidence of his talent as a stylist in Latin  .Through all his diplomatic missions, Peter Damian remained a monk at heart.   He served the Church as he was asked, however and as best he could.   He died February 22, 1072, and in 1828, was declared a Doctor of the Church.

Peter was a reformer and if he were alive today, would no doubt encourage the renewal started by Vatican II.   He would also applaud the greater emphasis on prayer, that is shown by the growing number of priests, religious and laypersons who gather regularly for prayer, as well as the special houses of prayer recently established by many religious communities.

St Peter Damian, intercede for us that we may learn to pray!st peter damian - pray for us - 21 feb 2018

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, JESUIT SJ, MARIAN QUOTES, MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, QUOTES on CONVERSION, QUOTES on FAITH, QUOTES on LOVE, QUOTES on PERSECUTION, QUOTES on REPENTANCE, QUOTES on SUFFERING, SAINT of the DAY, The BLESSED VIRGIN MARY, The HOLY GHOST

Quote/s of the Day – 21 February – The Memorial of St Peter Damian O.S.B. (1007-1072) and St Robert Southwell S.J. (1561-1595)

Quote/s of the Day – 21 February – The Memorial of St Peter Damian O.S.B. (1007-1072) and St Robert Southwell S.J. (1561-1595)

“He pours light into our minds,
arouses our desire and gives us strength…
As the soul is the life of the body,
so the Holy Spirit is the life of our souls.”he pours light into our minds - st peter damian - 21 feb 2018

“Through a woman [Eve]
a curse fell upon the earth;
through a woman [Mary] as well,
there returned to the earth a blessing.”through a woman (eve) - st peter damina - 21 feb 2018

“When you are scorned by others
and lashed by God, do not despair.
God lashes us in this life,
to shield us from the eternal lash in the next.”

St Peter Damian (1007-1072) Doctor of the Churchwhen-you-are-scorned-by-others-st-peter-damian-21 feb 2018

“God gave Himself to you:
give yourself to God.”god gave himself - st robert southwell - 21 feb 2018

“Where sin was hatched, let tears now wash the nest.”where-sin-was-hatched-st-robert-southwell-29-jan-2018

“Christianity is warfare
and Christians are spiritual soldiers.”

“Not where I breathe
but where I love,
I live.”

“When Fortune smiles,
I smile to think, how quickly she will frown.”

St Robert Southwell (1561-1595)christianity is warfare - st robert southwell - 21 feb 2018

 

Posted in LENT, MORNING Prayers, PRAYERS of the SAINTS

Our Morning Offering – 21 February – Wednesday of the First Week of Lent

Our Morning Offering – 21 February – Wednesday of the First Week of Lent

The Grace of Thy Love
By Blessed John Henry Newman  (1801-1890)

O My God,
strengthen me with Thy strength,
console me with Thy everlasting peace,
soothe me with the beauty of Thy countenance,
enlighten me with Thy uncreated holiness.
Bathe me in Thyself
and give me to drink,
as far as mortal man may ask,
of the rivers of grace
which flow from the Father and the Son,
the grace of Thy consubstantial,
co-eternal Love.
Amenthe grace of they love - bl john henry newman - 21 feb 2018

Posted in JESUIT SJ, MORNING Prayers, QUOTES on FAITH, QUOTES on SANCTITY, QUOTES on SUFFERING, SAINT of the DAY, The WORD

One Minute Reflection – 21 February – The Memorial of St Robert Southwell S.J. (1561-1595)

One Minute Reflection – 21 February – The Memorial of St Robert Southwell S.J. (1561-1595)

How narrow the gate and constricted the road that leads to life.   And those who find it are few...Matthew 7:14

REFLECTION – “The path to Heaven is narrow, rough and full of wearisome and trying ascents, nor can it be trodden without great toil and therefore wrong is their way, gross their error and assured their ruin who, after the testimony of so many thousands of saints, will not learn where to settle their footing.”…St Robert Southwell (1561-1595)the path to heaven is narrow, rough and full of - st robert southwell - 21 feb 2018

PRAYER – Lord of heaven and earth, You blessed us this day with the grace of the Martyr St Robert Southwell.   Grant that, through his intercession, we may, like him, drink from that cup which Christ drank and so rise to eternal life.   We make our prayer through our Lord Jesus, in unity with the Holy Spirit, one God forever, amenst robert southwell - pray for us - 21 FEB 2018

Posted in JESUIT SJ, SAINT of the DAY

Saint of the Day – 21 February – St Robert Southwell S.J. (1561-1595) Martyr

Saint of the Day – 21 February – St Robert Southwell S.J. (1561-1595) Martyr, Religious Priest, Poet, Hymnodist, Writer,  clandestine missionary – Additional Memorials:  25 October as one of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales and 29 October as one of the Martyrs of Douai.   He was born in 1561 in Horsham Saint Faith, Norfolk, England and he was martyred by being hanged, drawn and quartered on 21 February 1595 (aged 33) in Tyburn, London, England.   St Robert was Canonised on 25 October 1970 by Blessed Pope Paul VI.

The Life of St Robert Southwell below, is written by Servant of God, Fr John A Hardon S.J. (1914-2000) – one of my heroes, so I hope you enjoy his chatty style as much as I do which was, as you can tell, presented live.

Our saint for this evening is St Robert Southwell, the English Jesuit, poet and martyr.   He was born in 1561, died in 1595 at the ripe old age of thirty-three.   He was canonised – took a long time, in 1970.   His family on his mother’s side was related to the Shelleys’, the other English poet.   By this time the Catholic faith was proscribed in England – English Catholics, had to go into hiding. If they wanted a catechetic education they had to leave the country.   In case you haven’t been told, it’s getting closer and closer to that in the United States.   He was therefore sent to Douay, which as you know, is the place where the first and official English translation of the Bible was made, Douay, later on revised, the Douay-Rheims.web-saint-robert-southwell-england-flag-001-public-domain-and-shutterstock-aleteia-comp

It was while studying at Douay that he first met some Jesuits, including the famous Leonard  Lessii, a great Jesuit theologian, who’s best known work is on the ‘Attributes of God’.   Then he went on to Paris and by this time, he was just seventeen.   Incidently, young people matured much earlier in those days.   It is thirty-one years that I have been working with the daughters of St Mary of Providence in Chicago.   As you know their special apostolate is caring for the handicapped, say, the retarded.   I would say this is a very common phenomenon.   In other words, that young people nowadays are really young.   It takes them a long time to grow up – thirty years old and they behave like young adolescents.

When Southwell applied to enter the Society of Jesus, he was seventeen.   They turned him down because he was too young.   Well, just before his eighteenth birthday, they figured, he qualifies.   He was ordained in 1584 at the age of twenty-three.   Two years after his ordination, by that time he had taken his final vows, he was sent back to England to try to reconvert his fellow ex-Catholic, English people.   The actual time span of his attempted evangelisation mission work would be about six years, that’s all.   He got himself a position as chaplain to a certain Anne who was Countess of Arundel.   Her husband suffered a great deal for defending priests who were trying to hide out from those who were trying to root out the Catholic faith.   It’s well to know that the hostess who hid Robert, her husband, had since been declared blessed.   What is remarkable about St Robert Southwell, is that although he worked quite openly in the sense that it was not a big secret that he was a priest.   He did, of course, try to work in disguise but, he was allowed extraordinary freedom.   A number of factors were in his favour, he was naturally of a gentle disposition, he was quiet.   In other words, he did not make unnecessary noise or create a scene or you might say, irritate those who were out to destroy the Church.   He avoided, as much as he could, controversy.

As I re-read a short biography of St Robert Southwell, well, I was reminded how over the years, there are certain of my confreres that have stood out as models for me to try to imitate, Robert Southwell was one.   There are not too many of us, Jesuits, who have survived nationally, mainly of course, God’s grac, but one reason I think, is avoiding as far as possible, controversy.   Keep proclaiming the truth, keep insisting on what the faith really teaches and avoid either unnecessary exposure as a critic of those who don’t go along with the Church’s teaching – in a word, keeping as much as you can, in the background, so as not to irritate those who are still nominally Catholic, but My Lord, who have lost their faith.

In 1592, Robert Southwell was arrested by an infamous spy by the name of Topcliffe who had to his credit many English martyrs, including Robert Southwell.   Significantly, it was a young girl in the household of this Countess of Arundel, one of her daughters that betrayed the priest.   Topcliffe brought Southwell to his own home – we have record of nine separate severe, cruel tortures.   You may have seen pictures or descriptions of some of the machinery in which the people were tortured.   For example, they would be stretched over a barrel, either way, either face down or back down, of course the back down would break your back and the two hands were made to touch the two feet and they would keep twisting and twisting until the one under torture couldn’t stand it any longer and then would confess, as the expression goes, to what his torturers wanted to get out of him.   What did they want to get out of Robert Southwell – they wanted him to betray his fellow Catholics, who were in hiding;  those who had hidden him, those that helped him escape, those who helped him work in disguise.   He refused.   We don’t know how many times he was tortured, all we know is many times during three years in prison.   One reason they kept torturing him is because they were hoping to break down his resistance and get him to implicate many other Catholics to really root out the faith. Topcliffe was a very successful torturer in the quaint English of those days, remarked, ‘I never did take so wavey a man if he be rightly used.’   In other words, ‘if we could break down Southwell’s resistance, he would be very useful.’

Being three years in prison, he finally insisted that he should be tried or freed.   In other words, it was a request he made, ‘either put me on trial or get me out of prison’, so they said, “all right.”   They put him on trial and they found him guilty and he was condemned to death because of his priesthood.  The opposition didn’t even attempt to disguise his martyrdom on political grounds.  He was hanged and drawn – that means cut into pieces and quartered into four pieces on 21 February 1595, which has, over the centuries remained his feast day, 21 February.

The bystanders that watched his being martyred by hanging pleaded with the executioners to let him die on the scaffold and only then, that is, after the body was really dead, to then cut him into pieces, which was as you know, the familiar English form of execution – John Fisher, Thomas More and here Robert Southwell.   Just to remind ourselves, I like the date.   Thirty-three years old, exactly my age at ordination.   In fact, I was ordained on my birthday.San Roberto Southwell

Robert Southwell, on the grounds we have so far seen, was not unlike other martyrs whose lives either we’ve talked about or that we are familiar with.   His age of course – he was a young man but what makes Robert Southwell stand out among Jesuit saints and among the Church’s martyrs, is the fact that he has left us so much for a man of thirty-three, has left us so much in writing that has made world literature.   Southwell, he is called, is one of the great writers of the English-speaking world.   He wrote prose, he wrote poetry.

Just a few statements to I think to be exact from his prose writing touching on the spiritual life.   Remember, he was turned down when he applied for the Jesuits because of his age, sixteen is young but once he was admitted, here’s what he said:   “How great a perfection is required of a member of the Society of Jesus.   He should be ready at a moment’s notice to go to heretics, pagans or barbarians.”   That moment’s notice is almost a quotation from St Ignatius.   As I think I told the people this afternoon, you may have heard, the priest who was to have conducted the day of recollection, forgot.   So somebody else pinch-hitted until I got there.   Lucky I took my cassock along, on general principles.   But I told the people and I can tell you because that’s what this is all about. All we have to know, that’s all, what is God’s will and in a moment’s notice, with the twinkling of an eye, you do it.   As weak human beings our temptation is to hesitate, or in Christ’s words, “We turn around.” and the key is, the moment we know God wants us don’t even put a comma – do it.   It is dangerous to speculate, once you know that God wants something, because then human reason, being very shrewd, they’ll find reasons, otherwise known as rationalisation for not doing it.

The second quotation, “we should be prepared for being cast into chains” – I like this – “by the heretics.”   The worst persecutors of the Church have not been native born pagans, they have been Christians who have lost their faith.   The vicious hatred of the Communists is born of God’s punishment for having rejected Christ.   We should be prepared for being cast into chains by the heretics, starved by hunger, seduced and tortured.   I like that combination-seduced and tortured.   Between the two, I would choose torture to seduction.   What Southwell is saying is, that in his day and, of course in ours, you rub your eye, shake your head and we can’t quite be sure we’re seeing right – people we’ve known, whose faith we’ve admired; priests, for example, who may have been instrumental in leading us closer to God, who allow themselves to be seduced or are afraid of being starved by hunger and, my friends, the deepest hunger of the human spirit is not for food but for recognition.

Pray acceptance – take it from a man who knows. Southwell knew and that’s why I thought I picked some choice quotations and I ended up with those two.   Almost from the time that he entered the Jesuits, he felt that he would be a martyr.   He was getting constant reports from home about one more being put to death for the faith or languishing in prison.   Long before he was martyred himself, the account of the first Jesuit English martyr, St Edmund Campion S.J., was already in print.   He read it, admired it and hoped to die the same.   Among his many letters, I should keep reminding us that he was only 33 when he died, his run to the superior in England, Father Parsons – you couldn’t write an ordinary letter about things religious, so being educated Jesuits they could read between the lines;  they have their own crypto-language.   Here’s a quotation, see what you make of it:  Robert Southwell is writing to Parson, superior in England, he is writing about Edmund Campion who had already been martyred – he doesn’t mention Campion’s name, but he says, I quote:  “He has had the start on you” – Parsons later on was also martyred – “he has had the start on you in leading his vessel with English wares (a business letter) and has successfully returned to the desired port. Day by day we are looking for something similar from you.”

In 1586, two years after his ordination, he wrote to the father general, I quote:  “I do not much dread the tortures as I look forward to the crown.” st robert southwell large

There are two books, prose writings, that Robert Southwell wrote that are worth reading. They are of course written in 16th century English but, powerful, written to encourage his fellow Catholics to remain firm in their faith.   The one is called ‘Mary Magdalene’s Funeral Tears’.   And the other one is called ‘Epistle of Comfort‘.   We would probably call it a letter of encouragement.   His poetry – we don’t know exactly when he began to write but it must have been very young because he wrote a great deal of which we have the record and by now the English speaking world knows Robert Southwell.   His two outstanding poems are ‘The Burning Babe’ and ‘The Virgin Mary to Christ On The Cross.’

The Burning Babe, by Saint Robert Southwell

As I in hoary winter’s night stood shivering in the snow,
Surprised I was with sudden heat which made my heart to glow;
And lifting up a fearful eye to view what fire was near,
A pretty babe all burning bright did in the air appear;
Who, scorchëd with excessive heat, such floods of tears did shed
As though his floods should quench his flames which with his tears were fed.
Alas, quoth he, but newly born in fiery heats I fry,
Yet none approach to warm their hearts or feel my fire but I!
My faultless breast the furnace is, the fuel wounding thorns,
Love is the fire, and sighs the smoke, the ashes shame and scorns;
The fuel justice layeth on, and mercy blows the coals,
The metal in this furnace wrought are men’s defiled souls,
For which, as now on fire I am to work them to their good,
So will I melt into a bath to wash them in my blood.
With this he vanished out of sight and swiftly shrunk away,
And straight I called unto mind that it was Christmas day.
It’s not surprising, it’s one of the great poems of the English language.holy-poet-martyr-st-robert-southwell-and-the-burning-babe-199-william-hart-mcnichols

Now some comments on St. Robert Southwell’s spirituality.   I know of no martyred saint who has left us a longer and more detailed record of his desire for martyrdom than Robert Southwell.   One reason no doubt because he wrote so much that he died so soon. In any case what he is telling us, is not only not wrong but, quite all right to pray for a martyr’s crown.

There have been 21 general councils of the Church including the Second Vatican.   My business is to read these councils because that’s my profession.   I know of none that is ever written as clearly and expensively on martyrdom as the peak of Christian perfection as has the Second Vatican Council.   I’ve mentioned this, I’m sure, to you before, it’s well worth repeating.   The Church has had more martyrs since 1900 than in all the 19 centuries before.   We are living in an age of martyrs.   You better believe it, because if you don’t, you will not measure up to the kind of loyalty to Christ that today’s world demands.   Ordinary Catholics will not survive, not today.   I’m not even asking you to believe it;  it’s too obvious.   So St. Robert Southwell’s desire for martyrdom is something we can legitimately ask God to grant us.   And among other things that I think I’ve learned from experience, I’m not sure, not really, which is more demanding – living a martyrs life or dying a martyrs death.

Second feature of his spirituality.   Robert Southwell was an Englishman to the tips of his fingers, quiet, gentle, compassionate and consequently, you would expect that naturally speaking he dreaded what supernaturally he desired, am I clear?   He proves what God’s grace can do with fallen human nature given strength and courage that is impossible to nature alone.

And finally, Robert Southwell put so many of his prayers into writing, that I recommend that we all, at least, on occasion do the same.   It is a wonderful way of praying and a most effective way of remembering the insights that God gives us and even the effort we make to go over and over what we may write in the prayers we compose so they express exactly the sentiments we want to say.   With apologies for this late evening conference. We invoke St.Robert Southwell, pray for us.   In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.

Posted in DOCTORS of the Church, JESUIT SJ, SAINT of the DAY

Memorials of the Saints – 21 February

St Peter Damian (1007-1072) Doctor of the Church (Optional Memorial)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wj_s-gZFQtc

St Avitus II of Clermont
Bl Caterina Dominici
Bl Claudio di Portaceli
St Daniel of Persia
Bl Eleanora
St Ercongotha
St Eustathius of Antioch
St Felix of Metz
St George of Amastris
St Germanus of Granfield
St Gundebert of Sens
Bl Noel Pinot
St Paterius of Brescia
St Pepin of Landen
St Peter Mavimenus
St Randoald of Granfield
St Robert Southwell S.J. (1561-1595)

St Severian of Scythopolis
St Severus of Syrmium
Bl Thomas Pormort
St Valerius of San Pedro de Montes
St Verda of Persia

Martyrs of Sicily – 79 saints – Seventy-nine Christians martyred together in the persecutions of Diocletian.   They were martyred in c 303 on Sicily.

Martyrs of Hadrumetum – A group of 26 Christians martyred together by Vandals. We know little more than eight of their names – Alexander, Felix, Fortunatus, Saturninus, Secundinus, Servulus, Siricius and Verulus.   c 434 at Hadrumetum (modern Sousse, Tunisia)

Martyrs Uchibori – Three Japanese laymen, all brothers, all sons of Paulus Uchibori Sakuemon, one a teenager, one only five years old and all martyred for their faith in the persecutions in Japan.   21 February 1627 in Shimabara, Nagasaki, Japan.   Beatified 24 November 2008 by Pope Benedict XVI.
Antonius
Balthasar
Ignatius

Posted in LENT, MORNING Prayers, QUOTES on PRAYER, The WORD

20 February 2018 – Tuesday of the First Week of Lent

20 February 2018 – Tuesday of the First Week of Lent

Isaiah 55:10-11, Psalms 34:4-7, 16-19, Matthew 6:7-15

Isaiah 55:10-11 – “For as the rain and the snow come down from heaven and return not thither but water the earth, making it bring forth and sprout, giving seed to the sower and bread to the eater, so shall my word be that goes forth from my mouth;  it shall not return to me empty but it shall accomplish that which I purpose and prosper in the thing for which I sent it.

Matthew 6:7-15 – “And in praying do not heap up empty phrases as the Gentiles do; for they think that they will be heard for their many words.   Do not be like them, for your Father knows what you need before you ask him.   Pray then like this:
Our Father who art in heaven,
Hallowed be thy name.
Thy kingdom come.
Thy will be done,
On earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread;
And forgive us our debts,
As we also have forgiven our debtors;
And lead us not into temptation,
But deliver us from evil.
For if you forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father also will forgive you; but if you do not forgive men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses.”tuesday of the first week of lent - 20 feb 2018

Today we learn another of Lent’s purposes, perhaps the best of all.   The Opening Prayer instructs us “Father, look on us, your children. Through the discipline of Lent, help us to grow in our desire for you.”   If at Easter, our desire for God is more intense, more demanding, we shall know that our Lent this year, has been a success!

But what nourishes desire for God more than His own word?   The more we know about Him, the greater will be our eagerness to possess and be possessed by Him, who is love in person.   The desire for God is unlike any other desire.   It is its own reward, its own fulfilment but that’s not all.   We are satiated but we still yearn for more.   Infinite abysses in human hearts demand infinite satisfaction, which is a task that only endless eternity can really gratify.   To behold the Face of God!

The prophet Isaiah today provides us with a glorious description of what will happen to us when God’s word becomes our daily nourishment.   He compares the word of God to the rain and snow that refresh the land, make it fertile and give life to the seeds planted there.   In the same way, God wants His word to refresh our hearts and fertilise the seeds of desire for Him that we so need.

But the best is yet to come.   In the Gospel, Jesus tells us that what matters is not the quantity of our responses to God’s words to us, it is the quality.   It is not what we say or think when we pray but HOW we say or think what is in our hearts.
Remember how we prayed in the Opening Prayer, ‘Father, look on us your children…..’ He looks at us and we look at Him, with Jesus’ own prayer on our lips and in our hearts! “Our Father, who art in Heaven ……”

It has been said that the Lord’s Prayer is the summary of the Gospel.   It is Jesus’ own prayer, so it has to be the perfect prayer.   It comes from His heart, it is His personal response to all that the Father is and says to Him.

“In every age, O Lord, you have been our refuge.   From all eternity, you are God.” (Entrance Antiphon)   Fr E Lawrence OSB _ Daily Meditations for Lent

There is a sermon that is always being preached, not by the tongue of man but by the myriad voices of God’s vast universe.   Day and night, without ceasing, in every land, among all peoples, in the universal language of nature – the language that is foreign to none of the children of men – God is preaching His sermon.  He is whispering it upon every breeze, booming it with every thunderclap, flashing it upon the clouds with the lightnings.   His message is trailing its way in a blaze of fire across the sky “from the rising of the sun to the going down thereof.”   All nature is a panorama created to illustrate the sermon of God, painted in colours gay and sombre by turn to catch the fickle eye of man, the spectator.   All the universe is one vast stage for the enacting of the drama that God has written.   All human history is a pageant, a never-ending procession passing before the bewildered eyes of mankind and upon every banner in that pageant is written the motto that God would have us read.   And yet this obvious lesson is one we never learn.   The sermon is one to which we will not listen.   The pageant passes in review but we gaze as in a stupor, seeing but not understanding.   For the sermon, the lesson, the play, the pageant, the spectacle, is “Life and Death.” Father James M Gillis – A Thought a Day for Lentthe our father - matthew 6 7-15 - lenten reflection 20 feb 2018

Posted in LENT, MORNING Prayers, QUOTES of the SAINTS, QUOTES on REPENTANCE, QUOTES on SUFFERING, STATIONS of the CROSS, The HOLY CROSS, The HOLY FACE, The PASSION

Thought for the Day – 20 February 2018 – Tuesday of the First Week of Lent

Thought for the Day – 20 February 2018 – Tuesday of the First Week of Lent

Excerpt from “Behold the Man”, a Lenten Reflection

By Blessed John Henry Cardinal Newman (1801-1890)

“I see the figure of a man, whether young or old I cannot tell.   He may be fifty, or he may be thirty.   Sometimes He looks one, sometimes the other.   There is something inexpressible about His face that I cannot solve.   Perhaps, as He bears all burdens, He bears that of old age too.   But so it is;  His face is at once most venerable, yet most childlike, most calm, most sweet, most modest, beaming with sanctity and with loving kindness.   His eyes rivet me and move my heart.   His breath is all fragrant and transports me out of myself.   Oh, I will look upon that face forever and will not cease.

And I see suddenly someone come to Him and raise His hand and sharply strike Him on that heavenly face.   It is a hard hand, the hand of a rude man and perhaps has iron upon it.   It could not be so sudden as to take by surprise, Him who knows all things past and future and He shows no sign of resentment, remaining calm and grave as before;  but the expression of His face is marred;  a great welt arises and in a short time that all-gracious face is hidden from me by the effects of this indignity, as if a cloud came over it.

A hand was lifted up against the face of Christ.

Whose hand was that?   My conscience tells me:  ‘You are the man.’

I trust it is not so with me now.   But, O my soul, contemplate the awful fact.   Fancy Christ before you and fancy yourself lifting up your hand and striking Him!   You will say, ‘It is impossible: I could not do so.’   Yes, you have done so.   When you sinned wilfully, then you have done so.   He is beyond pain now:  still you have struck Him and had it been in the days of His flesh, He would have felt pain.   Turn back in memory and recollect the time, the day, the hour, when by wilful mortal sin, by scoffing at sacred things, or by profaneness, or by hard hatred of your brother, or by acts of impurity, or by deliberate rejection of God’s voice, or in any other devilish way known to you, you have struck the All-Holy One.” (to be continued…………….)

NOTE of Interest:  A second miracle attributed to the intercession of Blessed John Henry (2016) is still in progress of investigation by the Congregation for the Causes of Sainthood and if Vatican theologians and doctors conclude the healing is a divine sign of Newman’s sanctity the Pope will be invited to canonise him as the first English saint since 1970 and the first British saint since 1976.a hand was lifted up against the face of christ - john henry newman - 20 feb 2018

Prayer for the Canonisation of Blessed John Henry Newman (1801-1890)

God our Father,
You granted to Your servant,
Blessed John Henry Newman,
wonderful gifts of nature and of grace,
that he should be a spiritual light
in the darkness of this world,
an eloquent herald of the Gospel
and a devoted servant
of the one Church of Christ.
With confidence in
his heavenly intercession,
we make the following petition:
………………………………………….
[here make your petition]
For his insight into
the mysteries of the kingdom,
his zealous defense
of the teachings of the Church
and his priestly love
for each of Your children,
we pray that he may soon
be numbered among the Saints.
We ask this through Christ our Lord,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God forever.
Amenprayer for the canonisation of bl john henry newman - 20 feb 2018