Friday, May 29, 2009

I Love You, Lord, sung by Angelina EWTN

Gregory Mussmacher, "The longer the trial to which God subjects you, the greater the goodness in comforting you during the time of the trial and in the exaltation after the combat." Saint Padre Pio

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The Beautiful Hands of a Priest

Gregory Mussmacher, "You cannot please both God and the world at the same time, They are utterly opposed to each other in their thoughts, their desires, and their actions." -- St. John Vianney


The Beautiful Hands of a Priest



We need them in life's early morning,
we need them again at its close;
We feel their warm clasp of friendship,
we seek them when tasting life's woes.
At the altar each day we behold them,
and the hands of a king on his throne
Are not equal to them in their
greatness; their dignity stands all alone;
And when we are tempted and wander
to pathways of shame and sin,
It's the hand of a priest that will absolve
us----not once, but again and again;
And when we are taking life's partner,
other hands may prepare us a feast,
But the hand that will bless and unite
us is the beautiful hand of a priest.
God bless them and keep them all holy
For the Host which their fingers caress;
When can a poor sinner do better than
to ask Him to guide thee and bless?
When the hour of death comes upon us
may our courage and strength be increased.
By seeing raised over us in anointing the
beautiful hands of a priest!

Author UnknownSphere: Related Content

John 21:15-19

Gregory Mussmacher, Christ said, "I am the Truth"; he did not say "I am the custom." -- St. Toribio

Daily Reading & Meditation
Friday (5/29): "Do you love Jesus more than these?"
Scripture: John 21:15-19

15 When they had finished breakfast, Jesus said to Simon Peter, "Simon, son of John, do you love me more than these?" He said to him, "Yes, Lord; you know that I love you." He said to him, "Feed my lambs." 16 A second time he said to him, "Simon, son of John, do you love me?" He said to him, "Yes, Lord; you know that I love you." He said to him, "Tend my sheep." 17 He said to him the third time, "Simon, son of John, do you love me?" Peter was grieved because he said to him the third time, "Do you love me?" And he said to him, "Lord, you know everything; you know that I love you." Jesus said to him, "Feed my sheep. 18 Truly, truly, I say to you, when you were young, you girded yourself and walked where you would; but when you are old, you will stretch out your hands, and another will gird you and carry you where you do not wish to go." 19 (This he said to show by what death he was to glorify God.) And after this he said to him, "Follow me."

Meditation: Do you want the fire of God’s love to burn in your heart? John the evangelist tells us that God is love (1 John 4:16). His love is unconditional, unmerited, and without limit. It edurings forever. It’s the beginning and the end – it's the reason God created us wants us to be united with him – and it’s the essence of what is means to be a Christian – one who knows God's love and forgiveness and who loves God in return with all one's heart, mind, soul, and body. God's love heals and transforms our lives and frees us from fear, selfishness, and greed. It draws us to the very heart of God and it compels us to give to him the best we have and all we possess – our gifts, our time, our resources, our full allegiance, and our very lives. Paul the Apostle tells us that God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit which has been given us (Romans 5:5). What can quench such love? Certainly indifference, disbelief, and rejection of God and his word.

Why did Jesus question Peter’s love and fidelity three times in front of the other apostles? It must have caused Peter pain and sorrow since he had publicly denied Jesus three times. Now Peter, full of remorse and humility, unequivocally stated that he loved his master and was willing to serve him whatever it might cost. When Jesus asks him "do you love me more than these?" Jesus may have pointed to the boats, nets and catch of fish. He may have challenged Peter to abandon his work as a fisherman for the task of shepherding God's people. Jesus also may have pointed to the other disciples and to Peter's previous boast: "Though they all fall away because of you, I will never fall away" (Matthew 26:33). Peter now makes no boast or comparison but humbly responds: "You know I love you."

The Lord calls us, even in our weakness and sin, to love him above all else. Augustine in his Confessions wrote: "Late have I loved you, O Beauty so ancient and so new. Late have I loved you! ...You shone your Self upon me to drive away my blindness. You breathed your fragrance upon me... and in astonishment I drew my breath...now I pant for you! I tasted you, and now I hunger and thirst for you. You touched me! - and I burn to live within your peace." (Confessions 10:27) Nothing but our sinful pride and wilfulness can keep us from the love of God. It is a free gift, unmerited and beyond payment. We can never outmatch God in giving love. He loved us first and our love for him is a response to his exceeding graciousness and mercy towards us. Do you allow God's love to change and transform your heart?

"Lord Jesus, inflame my heart with your love and remove everything that is unloving, unkind, ungrateful, unholy, and not in accord with your will."

Psalm 103:1-2,11-12,19-20

1 Bless the LORD, O my soul; and all that is within me, bless his holy name!
2 Bless the LORD, O my soul, and forget not all his benefits,
11 For as the heavens are high above the earth, so great is his steadfast love toward those who fear him;
12 as far as the east is from the west, so far does he remove our transgressions from us.
19 The LORD has established his throne in the heavens, and his kingdom rules over all.
20 Bless the LORD, O you his angels, you mighty ones who do his word, hearkening to the voice of his word!



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Thursday, May 28, 2009

Jesus

Gregory Mussmacher, another great song sung by Angelina from EWTN!!


The Miracle Prayer
Lord Jesus, I come before Thee, just as I am, I am sorry for my sins, I repent of my sins, please forgive me. In Thy Name, I forgive all others for what they have done against me. I renounce Satan, the evil spirits and all their works. I give Thee my entire self, Lord Jesus, I accept Thee as my Lord God and Savior. Heal me, change me, strengthen me in body, soul, and spirit.

Come Lord Jesus, cover me with Thy Precious Blood, and fill me with Thy Holy Spirit, I love Thee Lord Jesus, I praise Thee Lord Jesus, I thank Thee Jesus, I shall follow Thee every day of my life. Amen.

Mary, My Mother, Queen of Peace, all the Angels and Saints, please help me. Amen.


Say this prayer faithfully, no matter how you feel. When you come to the point where you sincerely mean each word with all your heart, Jesus will change your whole life in a very special way. You will see.Sphere: Related Content

Padre Pio and Our Lady

Gregory Mussmacher, "Do you not see the Madonna always beside the tabernacle?" Padre Pio


Padre Pio and Our Lady

" 'Love our Lady. Recite the Rosary. May the Blessed Mother of God reign supreme over your hearts.' These were the messages Padre Pio sent out continually to his spiritual sons and daughters near and far. This was the order he issued and the legacy he left to all, springing from his own ardent love for the Mother of God.

"His love for Our Blessed Lady was a tender love, the love of a son who believes and hopes and trusts. It was no sentimental piety expressed in fine phrases, but a deep love resulting from constant meditation which gradually influenced his whole life. His own mother . . . was deeply devoted to Mary the Mother of God. In the little rural centre in which he was born, devotion to the Madonna has been an outstanding characteristic of the people's religion for many centuries. In this respect the Pietrelcinese share a heritage common to the whole of southern Italy. Shrines to Our Blessed Lady, honoured under a great variety of titles, are to be found all over the region." [Padre Pio: His Life and Mission, Mary E. Ingoldsby, p. 127.]

As a young boy Francesco Forgione made pilgrimages with others from his town to various Marian shrines, including Our Lady of Pompeii.

The image above was carried in procession by the people of the region every year, the highlight of a festival.

We have a number of charming vignettes about his devotion to Our Lady under various titles, from those who knew the Saint:

When Francesco was leaving for the Capuchin novitiate, the singular gift his mother bestowed upon him was a large Rosary, which is maintained in the archives of the Postulation in San Giovanni Rotondo. He cherished this Rosary which he carried all his life, along with a picture of "our own Madonna" as he referred to Our Lady Liberatrix. The title Our Lady Liberatrix (Madonna della Libera) goes back very far in the history of that region. [Ibid., p. 128.] In the seventh century, when the little dukedom of Benevento was besieged by the Byzantine Emperor Constans II, the saintly local bishop who is known today as San Barbato led his people in prayer to Our Blessed Lady with the intention of freeing (liberare) the city from the fury of the Greeks. Their prayer was heard and San Barbato spread devotion to Our Lady under the title of Liberatrix. "In his youth Padre Pio venerated the Mother of God under this title, which has special import in Pietrelcina even today. The little town celebrates a feast in honour of its Madonna more than once during the year, in grateful thanks for past favours." [Ibid.]

In 1854 Pietrelcina was ravaged by cholera. At the beginning of December it seemed as if the population would be wiped out completely. "Dozens were dying each day," says the local historian. " [Ibid.] On the third day of that month the whole population gathered at the church to pray at the feet of Our Lady of Liberatrix. Then her statue was carried through the streets because the people were convinced that would flee before her image, which is exactly what happened: "from that day the disease claimed no more victims and the people were convinced that Our Lady of the Libera had obtained this grace for their town". [Ibid.]

Under this title, the Mother of God has often come to the assistance of her petitioners in Pietrelcina, water during times of drought so that the crops would have a good yield, and the protection of the fields from hail-storms.

A most special grace from Our Lady occurred at the turn of the last century.

The day is Palm Sunday 1906, and the church in the castle district was packed for high Mass at noon. To everyone's surprise the sun-brushed sky turned black as ink, as if night had come. A tempest of a thunderstorm struck with such fury that the parishioners were not able to hear the priest's words----moreover the storm came in the form of not just water, but clay and stones! They were so frightened that they cried out and wept for it appeared as if the end of the world was upon them. Then they began to pray most fervently to our Lord and His Blessed Mother. As suddenly as the storm had erupted, it subsided, the sun came out and everyone could walk back home. The explanation of this phenomenon only reached Pietrelcina some days later. They later learned that the stones and other debris which pelted the church was formed of ashes and cinders, from a violent eruption of Vesuvius over fifty miles distance.

"Although there is feasting and music in the piazza, including fireworks without which no southern Italian fiesta would be complete, the feast of Our Lady Liberatrix is an essentially religious celebration with a preparatory novena which is always well attended. In Padre Pio's letters, written during his prolonged stay in Pietrelcina as a young priest, there is frequent mention of this celebration and Padre Agostino, his Confessor at the time, was invited more than once to preach for the occasion." [Ibid., p.129]

The wooden statue of Our Lady Liberatrix, the work of a seventeenth-century Neapolitan artist, was formerly venerated in a church that lay just outside Pietrelcina, which was destroyed by a landslide; the statue was removed to the parochial church where it can be seen today. It was restored and repainted in 1965 and on July 17,1966 the Vatican Chapter assigned to it a golden crown in recognition of the part it had played for centuries in the people's devotion to Mary. In a solemn ceremony on August 6, 1966, the crown was placed on the head of the Madonna by Mgr. Raffaele Calabria, Archbishop of Benevento. Padre Pio, in his friary at San Giovanni Rotondo many miles away, rejoiced along with his townsfolk. Some of the older folk in Pietrelcina tell how they used to see him as "a young Capuchin priest of thoughtful and ascetical appearance, transfigured before the statue of his beloved Madonna" as he prayed there each day during his enforced residence at home. [Ibid., p. 130.]

Our Saint was blessed with a deep contemplative knowledge of Mary's role in our salvation, the closer he felt to her, the closer he said he felt to jesus, her Son. In a letter he sent May 6, 1913 to Padre Agostino he wrote:

"This most tender Mother, in her great mercy, wisdom and goodness, has been pleased to punish me in a most exalted manner by pouring so many and such great graces into my heart that when I am in her presence and in that of Jesus I am compelled to exclaim: 'Where am I? Who is this who is near me?' I am all aflame although there is no fire. I feel myself held fast and bound to the Son by means of this Mother, without seeing the chains which bind me so tightly." [Ibid.]

His devotion to the Mother of God can best be said to be continued, uninterrupted prayer, especially the Rosary, some days he managed 200 decades.

Padre Pietro Tartaglia, Guardian of the friary in San Giovanni Rotondo in 1978, said:

"I can see him today as he appeared to me when I was a youngster. It was beautiful to see him there in the silence of his cell when we Capuchin aspirants went to him for Confession. The dim light gave a mystical touch to his emaciated but radiant countenance. Near him was . . . a little statue of Our Lady and he spoke to us about her and taught us to love her. At a certain hour he used to walk in the friary garden, absorbed in his sufferings and his love while the beads slipped through the fingers of his wounded hands. And how full and ardent was his voice when he recited the Angelus with the others." [Ibid., pp. 130-131.]

"From his earliest years Padre Pio cherished a tender filial love for the Blessed Virgin honoured as Our Lady of Pompeii and on many occasions he went to her shrine near the ruined city. In 1901, at the age of fourteen, he made a pilgrimage there with seven of his schoolmates accompanied by their teacher. His mother does not seem to have been very happy about that trip and complained about it in a letter to her husband who had emigrated to America to earn some extra money for his son's studies. When his father wrote to young Francesco from America the boy answered him in order to justify his trip to Pompeii: 'As regards my going to Pompeii, you are quite right. However, you ought to remember that next year, please God, all holidays and amusements will be over for me when I abandon this life to embrace a better one.' " [Ibid., pp. 134.]

Even while he served in the army as a young friar, he took every opportunity to pay a visit to Pompeii from Naples where he was stationed, to pray to Our Lady. When he left army service for a six months' convalescence in 1917, he went again to thank Our Lady of Pompeii for this grace. He made one novena after another novena for a return to conventual life, though still obliged by ill health to stay in his own home. He also prayed to her for what he called his "speedy departure", by which he meant his death. He asked his directors and to others bound to him by spiritual ties to say novenas to Our Lady of Pompeii for his intentions. It was to the Virgin Mother of God honoured under this title that he also directed his fervent prayers to be finally exempt from the military, which he found was both physical and spiritual torture. At last he was granted a return to his community and a discharge from the army, but the "speedy departure" would not be for half a century. In 1968, when he knew that he was dying, it was to Our Lady of Pompeii that he turned, to thank her from the depths of his heart.

Meanwhile, in our narrative, after having briefly looked forward in Padre Forgione's life with the Mother of God, it is still 1917; World War I is drawing to a cessation; Our Blessed Lady appears in Fatima. St. Pio has experienced the hardship of life in a military barracks. Now he meditates deeply on the Fatima message, "and in response to Our Lady's invitation prayed without ceasing that the Divine mercy might prevail over the Divine justice." [Ibid., p. 135.] No one of Catholic faith and with their wits about them can deny the connection between the apparitions in Fatima and the justice of God-----and what is just as certain, of that between this justice and the victim state, the state of those souls who offer themselves in reparation for the sins of men against God, to appease His Divine Majesty. It was through the intercession of Our Lady of Fatima that St. Pio obtained a true miracle for himself, he who was the inspiration and pathway of so many miraculous graces for others. He had been ill with pleurisy since May of 1959 and the doctors had discovered a lung tumor, so that his life was in mortal danger. It was not coincidence that it was then that the pilgrim statue of Our Lady of Fatima was being transported throughout Italy in the Peregrinatio Mariae or Rosary Caravan. "On August 5, in the last days of the pilgrimage, the statue was brought to San Giovanni Rotondo in a helicopter, which circled over the Capuchin friary. Before the image departed, Padre Pio addressed a fervent prayer from his sick-bed to Our Blessed Lady in the following words: 'My dear Mother, since your arrival in Italy I have been reduced to helplessness by this illness, and now that you are leaving have you nothing to give me?' At once he felt a mysterious strength invade his body and he exclaimed to his confreres: 'I'm cured!' Shortly afterwards a local paper in Foggia published an article asking why the Pilgrim Virgin should have been taken to San Giovanni Rotondo and not to the famous shrine of St. Michael in Monte Santangelo higher up on Mount Gargano, a place of pilgrimage for centuries. When one of the Capuchins drew Padre Pio's attention to this complaint, he replied quite simply: 'Our Lady came here because she wanted to cure Padre Pio!' " [Ibid.]

He once said , "Always hold the weapon of Mary tight in your hand. It will bring you victory over your enemies." [From the Housetops, p. 13.] Our blessed friar was able to do more than one thing at a time and well, thus it was possible for him to recite so many Rosaries, a set of beads being a permanent fixture in his hands. He was often seen in conversation while the beads were filing one by one through his fingers. He paid tribute to Our Lady once by saying, "May Mary fill your heart with the flowers and fragrance of ever-fresh virtues, and place her maternal hand on your head. Always keep close to our Heavenly Mother, because she is the sea that must be crossed, in order to reach the shores of eternal splendor in the kingdom of dawn." [Ibid.] Padre Pio exclaimed that those who thought they could go through life without the assistance of the Blessed Virgin were foolish. She would come to him many times when he had special need of her. A priest asked him if she ever appeared to him and Padre pio replied "Why not ask me instead if she ever leaves my room?"

Our holy card image is not in good shape, but we managed to remove the worst stains and cracks. This is one of the loveliest of the old type of paper holy cards in color; as far as I know it is no longer available for sale. I did an extensive search on the web with three major engines. If it is available, it is going by another title, for whatever reason. I bypassed E-Bay for practical reasons.Sphere: Related Content

John 17:20-26

Gregory Mussmacher, "Prayer is the best weapon we have; it is the key to God's heart. You must speak to Jesus not only with your lips, but with your heart. In fact on certain occasions you should only speak to Him with your heart." Padre Pio


Daily Reading & Meditation
Thursday (5/28): “May they become perfectly one”
Scripture: John 17:20-26

20 "I do not pray for these only, but also for those who believe in me through their word, 21 that they may all be one; even as you, Father, are in me, and I in you, that they also may be in us, so that the world may believe that you have sent me. 22 The glory which you have given me I have given to them, that they may be one even as we are one, 23 I in them and you in me, that they may become perfectly one, so that the world may know that you have sent me and have loved them even as you have loved me. 24 Father, I desire that they also, whom you have given me, may be with me where I am, to behold my glory which you have given me in your love for me before the foundation of the world. 25 O righteous Father, the world has not known you, but I have known you; and these know that you have sent me. 26 I made known to them your name, and I will make it known, that the love with which you have loved me may be in them, and I in them."

Meditation: Do you pray as Jesus did for the unity of all Christians? The distinctive mark of Jesus’disciples is their love and unity. “How good and delightful it is when brethren dwell together in unity” (Psalm 133:1). Jesus' high priestly prayer at the last supper concludes with the petition for Christian unity among all who profess Jesus Christ as Lord. Jesus prays for all men and women who will come after him and follow him as his disciples. In a special way Jesus prays here for us that as members of his body the church we would be one as he and his Father is one. The unity of Jesus and his Father is a unity of love and obedience and a unity of personal relationship. Because Jesus loved us first and united us in baptism we are called to live in a unity of love. Jesus’ prayer on the eve of his sacrifice shows the great love and trust he has in his beloved disciples. He knows they would abandon him in his hour of trial, yet he entrusted to them the great task of spreading his name throughout the world and to the end of the ages. The Lord entrust us with the same mission – to make him known and loved by all. Jesus died and rose again that all might be one as he and the Father are one. Do you love and accept all baptized Christians as your brothers and sisters in Christ?

"Lord God, have mercy on your people and heal the divisions in the body of Christ. May all Christian people throughout the world attain the unity for which Jesus prayed on the eve of his sacrifice. Renew in us the power of the Spirit that we may be a sign of that unity and a means of its growth. Increase in us a fervent love for all our brothers and sisters in Christ."

Psalm 97:1-2,6-7,9

1 The LORD reigns; let the earth rejoice; let the many coastlands be glad!
2 Clouds and thick darkness are round about him; righteousness and justice are the foundation of his throne.
6 The heavens proclaim his righteousness; and all the peoples behold his glory.
7 All worshipers of images are put to shame, who make their boast in worthless idols; all gods bow down before him.
9 For thou, O LORD, art most high over all the earth; thou art exalted far above all gods.



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Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Padre Pio

Gregory Mussmacher,"Pray, hope, and don't worry. Worry is useless. God is merciful and will hear your prayer." Padre Pio




Litany of Padre Pio of Pietrelcina
Lord, have mercy.
Christ, have mercy.
Lord, have mercy.
Christ, hear us.
Christ, graciously hear us.
God the Father of Heaven,
have mercy on us.
God the Son, Redeemer of the World,
have mercy on us.
God the Holy Spirit,
have mercy on us.
Holy Trinity, One God,
have mercy on us.
Holy Mary, Virgin Immaculate, pray for us.
St. Pio of Pietrelcina, pray for us.
Beloved of God, pray for us.
Imitator of Jesus Christ, pray for us.
Good shepherd of the people, pray for us.
Model for priests, pray for us.
Light of the Church, pray for us.
Adorer of the Blessed Sacrament, pray for us.
Faithful son of St. Francis, pray for us.
Marked with the stigmata of Jesus, pray for us.
Patient in suffering, pray for us.
Helper of the dying, pray for us.
Director of souls, pray for us.
Heart of gold, pray for us.
Apostle of mercy, pray for us.
Worker of miracles, pray for us.
Consoler of the afflicted, pray for us.
Lover of the Most Holy Rosary, pray for us.
Helper of souls in doubt and darkness, pray for us.
Comforter of the sick, pray for us.
Example of humility, pray for us.
Source of wisdom, pray for us.
Mirror of the divine life, pray for us.
Lover of Jesus Crucified,
Resigned to the will of God, pray for us.
Doing good upon earth, pray for us.
Filled with the spirit of self-sacrifice, pray for us.
Our help and hope in all our needs, pray for us.
Vessel of the Holy Spirit, pray for us.
Leading us to Christ, pray for us.
Our spiritual father and advocate, pray for us.
Crowned with glory in Heaven, pray for us.


God our Father, You helped St. Pio to reflect the
image of Christ through a life of charity and self-sacrifice.
May we follow your Son by walking in the footsteps of
St. Pio of Pietrelcina and by imitating his selfless love.
AmenSphere: Related Content

The Bread That Our Heavenly Mother Gives Us

Gregory Mussmacher, My confidence is placed in God who does not need our help for accomplishing his designs. Our single endeavor should be to give ourselves to the work and to be faithful to him, and not to spoil his work by our shortcomings. -- St. Isaac Jogues

The Bread That Our
Heavenly Mother Gives Us

Taken From JESUS OUR EUCHARISTIC LOVE
by Fr. Stefano Manelli,
OFM Conv., STD
Imprimatur, 1973


The Holy Eucharist is the Bread that comes from our Heavenly Mother. It is Bread produced by Mary from the flour of Her immaculate flesh, kneaded into dough with her virginal milk. St. Augustine wrote, "Jesus took His Flesh from the flesh of Mary."

We know, too, that united to the Divinity in the Eucharist there is Jesus' Body and Blood taken from the body and blood of the Blessed Virgin. Therefore at every Holy Communion we receive, it would be quite correct, and a very beautiful thing, to take notice of our Holy Mother's sweet and mysterious presence, inseparably united with Jesus in the Host. Jesus is always the Son She adores. He is Flesh of Her flesh and Blood of Her blood. If Adam could call Eve when she had been taken from his rib, "bone of my bone and flesh of my flesh" (Gen. 2:23), cannot the holy Virgin Mary even more rightly call Jesus 'Flesh of my flesh and Blood of my blood"? Taken from the "intact Virgin" as says St. Thomas Aquinas, the flesh of Jesus is the maternal flesh of Mary, the blood of Jesus is the maternal blood of Mary. Therefore it will never be possible to separate Jesus from Mary.

For this reason at every Holy Mass which is celebrated, the Blessed Virgin can repeat with truth to Jesus in the Host and in the Chalice, "You are my Son today I have generated You" (Ps. 2:7). And justly St. Augustine teaches us that in the Eucharist "Mary extends and perpetuates Her Divine Maternity", while St. Albert the Great exhorts with love, "My Soul if you wish to experience intimacy with Mary let yourself be carried between Her arms and nourished with Her blood" ... Go with this ineffable chaste thought to the banquet of God and you will find in the Blood of the Son the nourishment of the Mother.

Many Saints and theologians (St. Peter Damian, St. Bernard, St. Bonaventure, St. Bernadine ...) say that Jesus instituted the Eucharist above all for Mary and then through Mary, the Universal Mediatrix of All Graces, for all of us. And from Mary therefore Jesus comes to be given to us day by day; and in Jesus is always the Immaculate flesh and the Virginal blood of His Most Holy Mother which penetrates into our hearts and inebriates our souls. In an ecstasy during the celebration of Holy Mass, St. Ignatius of Loyola contemplated one day the reality revealed by this most sweet truth and he remained celestially moved for a long time.
Furthermore, if we reflect that Jesus, the Fruit of Mary's immaculate womb, constitutes all of Mary's love, all of Her sweetness, all of Her tenderness, Her whole riches, her whole life, then we see that when we receive Him we cannot fail to also receive her who, by ties of the highest love, as well as by ties of flesh and blood, forms with Jesus one unity, one whole, as She is always and inseparably "leaning upon her Beloved" (Cant. 8:5). Is it not true that love, and above all divine love, unites and unifies? And aside from the Unity in the bosom of the Blessed Trinity, can we think of a unity more close and total than that between Jesus and the Virgin Mary?

Mary's purity, her virginity, her tender ways, her sweet manner, her love, and even the very features of her heavenly face---all these we find in Jesus; for the most holy humanity assumed by the Word is wholly and only Mary's humanity, on account of the great mystery of the virginal Conception accomplished by the Holy Spirit, Who made Mary Jesus' Mother, while consecrating her as a Virgin that would be forever undefiled and glorious in soul and body.
And thus "The Eucharist," writes St. Albert the Great, "produces impulses of a love that is angelic, and It has the unique power to put in souls a holy feeling of tenderness toward the Queen of Angels. She has given us what is Flesh of her flesh and Bone of her bone, and in the Eucharist she continues to give us this sweet, virginal, heavenly banquet.

Finally, in the eternal generation of the Word in the bosom of the Trinity, the Father gives Himself wholly to the Son, Who is "Mirror of the Father", similarly in the temporal generation of the same Word in the bosom of humanity, the Mother of God gives herself wholly to the Son, to her Jesus, "the virginal Flower of the Virgin Mother" (Pius XII). And the Son in His turn gives Himself wholly to the Mother, making Himself similar to her and making her "fully Godlike" (St. Peter Damian).

St. Peter Julian Eymard, that Saint so totally devoted to the Eucharist, declared that even in this world, after Jesus' Ascension into Heaven, the Blessed Virgin "lived a life in and by the Blessed Sacrament;" and thus he liked to call her "Our Lady of the Blessed Sacrament." And Padre Pio of Pietrelcina would sometimes say to his spiritual children, "Do you not see the Madonna always beside the tabernacle?" And how could she fail to be there ---she who "stood by the Cross of Jesus" on Calvary (John 19:25)? Therefore St. Alphonsus Liguori, in his book of devotions, used to always join a visit to the Blessed Virgin Mary to each visit to Jesus in the Holy Eucharist. And Saint Maximilian M. Kolbe used to recommend that when we go before Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament, we never fail to remember Mary's presence, calling on her and associating ourselves with her, at least seeing to it that her sweet name comes to mind.

In the life of the Dominican friar, St. Hyacinth, we read that once in order to avoid a profanation of the Blessed Sacrament, the Saint hastened to the tabernacle to take out the ciborium containing the sacred Particles, in order to put it in a safer place. When, hugging Jesus in the Eucharist close to his breast, he was about to leave the altar, he heard a voice coming from the statue of the Blessed Virgin which was next to the altar, saying, "What? Would you take Jesus away without taking me?" The Saint halted in surprise. He understood the message, but he did not know how he could manage to carry Mary's statue too. Puzzled, he drew near the statue to see if he could take it with his one free hand. There was no need to strain himself, for the statue became as light as a feather. There is a precious lesson in this miracle: When we take Mary along with Jesus, she adds absolutely no weight or cost, for in a wonderful way they abide in one another (John 6:57).

The reply St. Bernadette Soubirous gave was very beautiful, when someone put this tricky question to her: "What would please you more, to receive Holy Communion, or to see the Madonna in the grotto?" The little Saint thought for a minute and then answered, "What a strange question! The two cannot be separated. Jesus and Mary always go together."

The Madonna and the Holy Eucharist are by the nature of things united inseparably "even to the end of the world" (Mt. 28:20). For Mary with her body and soul is the heavenly "tabernacle of God" (Apoc. 21:3). She is the incorruptible Host, "holy and immaculate" (Eph. 5:27), who, with her very self, clothes the Word of God made Man. St. Germain ventured to call her "sweet paradise of God." According to a pious opinion, supported by the ecstasies and visions of St. Veronica Giuliani and especially those of Blessed Magdalen Martinengo, within her breast the Blessed Virgin in Paradise preserves and will always preserve Jesus in a visible Host; and this is for her "eternal consolation, is an occasion of rejoicing for all the blessed inhabitants of Heaven, and in particular is an everlasting joy to all devotees of the Blessed Sacrament." This is represented in the "Madonna Mediatrice Universale," which Mother Speranza in recent times has painted and which has been placed in the Shrine at Collevalenza. It is the same as the image often reproduced in monstrances (sacred stands for exposing the Holy Eucharist for adoration) of the last century, which represent the Madonna, and make a place in her breast for the visible cavity in which the consecrated Host is put. "Blessed is the womb that bore Thee!" cried the woman amid the crowd (Lk. 11 :27). Thus in some of the churches in France the tabernacle used to be encased in a statue of Our Lady of the Assumption. The significance is quite clear: it is always the Blessed Virgin Mary who gives us Jesus, Who is the blessed Fruit of her virginal womb and the Heart of her Immaculate Heart. And She will forever continue to carry Jesus in the Holy Eucharist within her breast so as to present Him for the joyful contemplation of the Saints in Heaven, to whom it is even now given to see His Divine Person in the Eucharistic Species, according to the teaching of the Angelic Doctor, St. Thomas' Aquinas.

It is in the Eucharist, and especially in Holy Communion, that our union with the Madonna becomes a full and loving conformity with her. We receive her devoted care and protection along with the Blessed Sacrament. her tender attentions overlook nothing as Christ is united to each of us, her children, moving her to pour out all her motherly love on our souls and bodies. The great St. Hilary, Father and Doctor of the Church, wrote this excellent passage: "The greatest joy that we can give Mary is that of bearing Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament within our breast." Her motherly union with Jesus becomes a union also with whoever is united to Jesus, especially in Holy Communion. And what can give as much joy to one who loves, as union with the person loved? And we—--do we not happen to be beloved children of the heavenly Mother?
When we go before Jesus on the altar, we always find Him "with Mary His Mother," as the Magi did at Bethlehem (Mt. 2:11). And Jesus in the sacred Host, from the altar of our hearts, can repeat to each of us what He said to St. John the Evangelist from the altar of Calvary, "Behold thy Mother" (John 19:27).

St. Augustine beautifully illustrates even better how Mary makes herself our own and unites herself to each one of us in Holy Communion. He says, "The Word is the Food of the Angels. Men have not the strength to feed It to themselves, nor need they do so. What is needed is a mother who may eat this supersubstantial Bread, transform it into her milk, and in this way feed her poor children. This mother is Mary. She nourishes herself with the Word and transforms It into the Sacred Humanity. She transforms It into Flesh and Blood, i.e., into this sweetest of milk which is called the Eucharist."

Thus it is quite natural that the great as well as the lesser Marian shrines always foster devotion to the Holy Eucharist, so much so that they can also be called Eucharistic shrines. Lourdes, Fatima, Loretto, Pompei, come to mind, where crowds approach the altar in almost endless lines to receive Mary's blessed Fruit. It cannot be otherwise; for there is no bond so close and so sweet with the Madonna, as the one realized in receiving the Holy Eucharist. Jesus and Mary "always go together," as St. Bernadette said.

Remember, too, that at Fatima the Madonna asked that, together with the holy Rosary, there be above all the Communion of Reparation for all the offenses and outrages which her Immaculate Heart receives. She is looking for loving hearts that want to console her by welcoming her into their home, as St. John the Evangelist did (John 19:27). We truly welcome her in the home of our hearts with the warmest hospitality, the hospitality dearest to her, every time we invite her company by way of our receiving Jesus in Holy Communion, when we present her with the living, true Jesus for her great comfort and delight. We need to appreciate what a great grace this is to have the Madonna's full care and attention with Jesus and in Jesus. Ah, St. Ambrose wanted all Christians to have "Mary's soul to magnify the Lord and Mary's spirit to exult in God"! This is the favor granted us in the noblest way in every Holy Communion. Let us reflect on it with love and gratitude.

One of the old monstrances made in the figure of Mary carrying the Holy Eucharist in her breast has these words inscribed on its base: "O Christian who comest full of faith to receive the Bread of life, eat It worthily, and remember that It was fashioned out of Mary's pure blood." Mary can quite rightfully beckon to us and speak to us in the words of the inspired prophet, "Come and eat my bread, drink the wine I have prepared" (Prov. 9:5). Saint Maximilian M. Kolbe wanted to convey the thought of this passage when he proposed that all altars of the Blessed Sacrament be surmounted with a statue of the Immaculate Virgin with her arms extended to invite us all to come eat the Bread that She herself had made.

With beautiful imagery, St. Gregory of Tours said that Mary's Immaculate bosom is the heavenly cupboard, well-stocked with the Bread of Life that was made in order to feed her children. "Blessed is the womb that bore Thee and the paps that gave Thee suck!" exclaimed a certain woman to Jesus (Lk. 11:27). The Immaculate Virgin carried Jesus within her while His Body was being formed from her own flesh and her own blood. Thus every time we go to Holy Communion, something sweet to recall is that Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament is the Bread of Life produced from Mary with the flour of her Immaculate flesh, kneaded with the admixture of her virginal milk. She has made this for us, her children. And we realize more fully our brotherhood with one another as we all partake of this savory, exquisite Bread of our Mother.



Communion With Mary
(Meditating on the Hail Mary)
Preparation

O holy Virgin, I am about to receive thy Jesus. I wish my heart were like thine when thou didst become Mother of the Savior at the time of the Annunciation of the Angel.


Hail Mary


I greet thee, good Mother. Allow me to unite myself with thee to adore Jesus. Lend me thine affections, thy sentiments. Moreover I ask thee to adore Him for me. Hail, O true Body of Jesus, born of the Virgin Mary! I believe, and I adore Thee.


Full of grace


Thou, Mary, wert worthy to receive the all-holy God, for thou wert full of grace from the first moment of thy life. But I am poor and sinful. My evil ways make me unfit to go to Communion. O my Mother, cover me with thy merits and lead me to Jesus.

The Lord is with thee


The Lord is with Thee, O most Holy Virgin. By thy ardent longing thou didst draw Him down from Heaven into thy heart. Instill also in my heart an ardent longing and an insatiable hunger for Jesus, so that I can truly say, "Come, O my Jesus, I long for Thee with the heart of Mary, Thy Mother and mine."


Blessed art Thou among women


Blessed art Thou, O Mary, who hast never known the remorse that comes from committing sin; for thou art free of every kind of sin and imperfection. But I know I have sinned, and I am not sure that I have been sufficiently sorry. Make me understand the evil of my sins and the goodness of God Whom I have offended. I weep for my sins. Present me thus penitent to thy Jesus.


And blessed is the Fruit of Thy womb


Ah, good Mother! What a great gift thou hast given us in giving us our Savior, Jesus! And behold, He wants to come to me to make me an especially beloved child of thy heart. I go with confidence to receive Him, and I say to Him: "My Jesus, I abandon myself to Thee. Come to give me strength to serve Thee faithfully, and the hope of enjoying Thee forever with Thy Mother in Heaven."


Jesus


Grant, O Mother, that I experience those sentiments that thou didst experience as thou didst live in Jesus' company, as thou didst call Him by name. I am now about to receive Him. Allow me to be able to say to Him: "Come, O my Jesus. Thou wilt find in me the same welcome that Thou didst have from Thy Mother on earth. I hope that through her intercession Thou wilt welcome me into Heaven."


Thanksgiving

Holy Mary, Mother of God


O my Mother, how happy I am to be united with my Jesus! But how do I deserve to have my Lord come down to me? O Mary, who art holy and Immaculate, offer Him worthy thanks for me.
O Thou who from the first perceived the heartbeats of that Jesus Whom I now welcome within me, Thou who loved Him more than all the Saints together hast loved Him, and who lived for Him alone when thou wert on earth, grant that I may now share thy sentiments and thy love.


And Thou, O Jesus, accept the love of Thy Mother as though it were my own and do not deny me a tender glance while I also say to Thee with all my heart, "I love Thee."


Pray for us sinners


Pray for me, O Mary. At this time unite Thy prayers to mine. And now that Jesus has come into my heart, ready to grant me all graces, I wish to ask Him above all that I never separate myself from Him by sin. And thou, O Mary, preserve me from evil, and be my refuge in temptation.


Now


For now and from now on, beloved Mother, I beg for all the graces that are profitable to my soul. Obtain for me this favor: that I be clothed with the virtues of goodness and meekness and that my life be one of spotless purity.


And at the hour of our death

From now on my prayer, O Jesus, is that I may receive Thee worthily at the time of my death and that my death may be a holy one. I accept it, when and how Thou shalt send it to me—--I welcome it in union with Thy sacrifice fulfilled on the Cross. I accept it in order to submit myself to the Divine Will, for the glory of God, for my salvation, and for the salvation of souls.

O Sorrowful Virgin, assist me as thou didst assist Jesus in His last agony.

"Amen"

"So be it." O Jesus, here is the word that I want to repeat at every instant, both during my youth and throughout my life. May Thy Will be done always. And all that Thou doth provide is the best thing for me, and from now on I accept it and give Thee thanks. Amen.

Before The Holy Eucharist
The Visit to the Blessed Sacrament

My Lord Jesus Christ, Who, for the love Thou doth bear towards men, remain in this Sacrament night and day, filled with compassion and love, waiting, calling, and welcoming all who come to visit Thee: I believe that Thou art present in the Sacrament of the Altar; I adore Thee from the abyss of my nothingness, and I thank Thee for all the graces Thou hast given me, particularly for having given me Thyself in this Sacrament, for having given me Thy Most Holy Mother Mary as my Advocate, and for having called me to visit Thee in this church.

I pay reverence to Thy most loving Heart today, and this for three purposes: first, in thanksgiving for this great Gift; second, to make reparation for all the outrages Thou hast received from all Thy enemies in this Sacrament; third, I intend by this visit to adore Thee in all the places on earth in which Thou art present in this Sacrament, and in which Thou art least honored and most abandoned.

My Jesus, I love Thee with all my heart. I repent of having so often displeased Thy infinite Goodness in the past. I resolve with the help of Thy grace not to offend Thee ever again in the future; and for the present, poor sinner though I be, I consecrate myself wholly to Thee. I renounce and surrender to Thee my whole will, my affections, my desires, and all that belongs to me. From this day forward do whatever You please with me and what belongs to me. I ask and wish only of Thee Thy holy love, final perseverance, and the perfect fulfillment of Thy Will.

I recommend to Thee the souls in Purgatory, especially those most devoted to the Most Blessed Sacrament and to the Blessed Virgin Mary. I also recommend to Thee all poor sinners.

O my beloved Savior, I unite all my affections with the affections of Thy most loving Heart, and thus united, I offer them to Thy Eternal Father, and I beg Him in Thy name that for love of Thee He accept them and heed them. Amen.

Spiritual Communion

My Jesus, I believe that Thou art really present in the Most Blessed Sacrament. I love Thee above all things, and I desire to possess Thee within my soul. Since I cannot now receive Thee sacramentally, come at least spiritually into my heart.

(Make a brief pause, and during it unite yourself with Jesus.)

I embrace Thee as being already there and unite myself wholly to Thee. Never, never permit me to be separated from Thee. Amen.

Visit to the Blessed Virgin Mary

O most holy, Immaculate Virgin and my Mother Mary, to thee who art the Mother of my Lord, the Queen of the world, the Advocate, the hope, the refuge of sinners, I, who am the most miserable of all sinners, have recourse today. I venerate thee, O great Queen, and I thank thee for all the graces thou hast conferred on me until now, especially for having delivered me from Hell, which I have so often deserved. I love thee, O Most amiable Lady, and because of the love I bear thee, I promise to serve thee always and do all in my power to make thee loved by others. I place in thee all my hopes; I confide my salvation to thy care. Accept me as thy servant, and shelter me under thy mantle, O Mother of Mercy. And since thou art so powerful with God, deliver me from all temptations, or obtain for me the strength to triumph over them until my death.

Of thee I ask a perfect love of Jesus Christ. From thee I hope to die a good death. O Mary, my Mother, for the love thou doth bear to God, I beg thee to help me always, but especially at the last moment of my life. Leave me not, I beseech thee, until thou seest me safe in Heaven, blessing Thee and singing thy mercies for all eternity. Amen. So I hope. So may it be.

—--St. Alphonsus LiguoriSphere: Related Content

John 17:11-19

Gregory Mussmacher, When you feel the assaults of passion and anger, then is the time to be silent as Jesus was silent in the midst of His ignominies and sufferings. -- St. Paul of the Cross

Daily Reading & Meditation
Wednesday (5/27): "Sanctified and consecrated in God's truth"
Scripture: John 17:11-19

11 And now I am no more in the world, but they are in the world, and I am coming to you. Holy Father, keep them in your name, which you have given me, that they may be one, even as we are one. 12 While I was with them, I kept them in your name, which you have given me; I have guarded them, and none of them is lost but the son of perdition, that the scripture might be fulfilled. 13 But now I am coming to you; and these things I speak in the world, that they may have my joy fulfilled in themselves. 14 I have given them your word; and the world has hated them because they are not of the world, even as I am not of the world. 15 I do not pray that you should take them out of the world, but that you should keep them from the evil one. 16 They are not of the world, even as I am not of the world.17 Sanctify them in the truth; your word is truth. 18 As you did send me into the world, so I have sent them into the world. 19 And for their sake I consecrate myself, that they also may be consecrated in truth.

Meditation: Do you know why God created you – what purpose and mission he has entrusted to you? Jesus' aim and mission was to glorify his heavenly Father. All he said and did gave glory to his Father. On the eve of his sacrifice on the cross and in the presence of his disciples, Jesus made his high priestly prayer: "Holy Father, keep them in your name that they may be one as we are one". Jesus prayed for the unity of his disciples and for all who would believe in him. Jesus' prayer for his people is that we be united with God the Father in his Son and through his Holy Spirit and be joined together, in unity with all who are members of Christ's body.

What motivated Jesus to lay down his life on the cross as the atoning sacrifice for the sin of the world? It was love – love for his Father in heaven and love for each and everyone of us who are made in the image and likeness of God. Jesus was sent into the world by his Father for a purpose and that purpose was a mission of love to free us from slavery to sin, Satan, fear, death, and hopelessness. Jesus saw glory in the cross rather than shame. Obedience to his Father's will was his glory. Jesus kept his Father's word even when tempted to forgo the cross. Jesus did not rely on his own human resources and strength to accomplish his Father's will. He trusted in his Father to give him strength, courage, and perseverance in the face of opposition, trials, and temptation. We also must take up our cross and follow the Lord Jesus whever he may call us. He will give us the strength and power of the Holy Spirit to live as his disciples. John Henry Newman wrote: "God has created me, to do him some definite service; he has committed some work to me which he has not committed to another. I have my mission – I may never know it in this life, but I shall be told it in the next. I am a link in a chain, a bond of connection between persons. He has not created me for nothing. Therefore, I will trust him. Whatever, wherever I am. I cannot be thrown away." Do you trust in God and in his call and purpose for your life?

Jesus prayed that his disciples would be sanctified and consecrated in God's truth and holiness. The scriptural word for consecration comes from the same Hebrew word which means holy or set apart for God. This word also means to be equiped with the qualities of mind and heart and character for such a task or service. Just as Jesus was called by the Father to serve in holiness and truth, so we, too, are called and equipped for the task of serving God in the world as his ambassadors. God's truth frees us from ignorance and the deception of sin. It reveals to us God's goodness, love, and wisdom. And it gives us a thirst for God's holiness. The Holy Spirit is the source and giver of all holiness. As we allow the Holy Spirit to work in our lives, he transforms us by his purifying fire and changes us into the likeness of Christ. Is your life consecrated toGod?

"Lord Jesus, take my life and make it wholly pleasing to you. Sanctify me in your truth and guide me by your Holy Spirit that I may follow you faithfully wherever you lead."

Psalm 103:1-2,11-12,19-20

1 Bless the LORD, O my soul; and all that is within me, bless his holy name!
2 Bless the LORD, O my soul, and forget not all his benefits,
11 For as the heavens are high above the earth, so great is his steadfast love toward those who fear him;
12 as far as the east is from the west, so far does he remove our transgressions from us.
19 The LORD has established his throne in the heavens, and his kingdom rules over all.
20 Bless the LORD, O you his angels, you mighty ones who do his word, hearkening to the voice of his word!



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Tuesday, May 26, 2009

St. Patrick's Breastplate, sung by Angelina (EWTN)

Gregory Mussmacher,“The only way to win audiences is to tell people about the life and death of Christ. Every other approach is a waste.”
Fulton J. Sheen quote

Sphere: Related Content

SIN! THE ONLY REAL EVIL

Gregory Mussmacher, Mother Mary keep me from sin and protect me from evil. Amen!!

A VOICE FROM THE PAST!
WHEN ALL CHURCH INSTITUTIONS
WERE UNEQUIVOCALLY CATHOLIC
Taken from C.T.S. Leaflets, Series No. 3.

SIN!
THE ONLY REAL EVIL

PHYSICAL EVIL.

The world is for ever complaining and murmuring about the supposed evils that oppress it. It complains of poverty, of hard work, of pain and sickness, and of disease and death. But can such things be truly called evil? Can we rightly stigmatize as evil that which may be made an occasion of immense good? How can we truly say, for instance, that poverty is an evil, when our Divine Lord Himself, says:---"Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven" (Matt, vi, 3)? Or again, are hard work and labour and early tribulations to be reckoned as evils when we know that it is---"through many tribulations that we must enter into the Kingdom of God" (Acts xiv, 21.)? Are disease and suffering and sickness to be classed among evils, when we are well aware that, if patiently borne, they will purchase for us eternal treasures, far beyond anything that the world can offer us? Why! To one who is serving God faithfully, even death itself is a blessing. For to such a one death is but the flinging open of the prison doors, and the entry of the soul into ecstatic joys which will have no end. Surely then, none of these things should be looked upon as evil!

MORAL EVIL.

As a matter of fact and if rightly understood, THERE IS BUT ONE ONLY EVIL---but one thing that may rightly and justly bear the name. I call that thing evil, which is so powerful and so terrible that it can, in a moment, transform an Angel into a devil, a Saint into a demon, and blast the whole of my eternal career. I call that thing evil which can deprive me, at one fell stroke, of the supreme end for which I have been created, and that can rob me in an instant of the accumulated graces and merits of a lifetime; take from me the very power of meriting; change God Himself from a loving Father into an angry Judge; that can---in a word---close the gates of Heaven for ever against me, and open wide the dreadful portals of Hell to receive me. Now there is only one thing that possesses this awful power, and that one thing is SIN. I need fear nothing else, for nothing else can do me any permanent injury.

THE REMEDY.

So long as I maintain myself, having been Baptized, "in a a state of a grace," and am truly repentant of all serious sin, I am a child of God, a brother of Jesus Christ, an heir to the Eternal Kingdom of Heaven. My soul reflects the supreme beauty of God Himself, I even share in His Divine life (2 Peter i, 4), and am destined to be the companion of the glorious company of Saints and Angels in God's heavenly home.

Now neither poverty, nor sickness, nor persecution, nor any temporal misfortune nor even death itself has any power whatsoever to deprive me of anyone of these infinite treasures. There is one thing only that can rise to dispute my claim to my sublime and eternal destiny, and that can wreck my entire being; that one thing is Sin.

Our natural life consists of the union of body and soul. Death is their separation. The supernatural life of the soul consists of the supernatural union of the soul and God. The death of the soul consists, not in its annihilation, for it is immortal, but in its separation from God.

As God is infinite, this may be described as an Infinite Evil, an Infinite Loss.

Every thinking man who has tried in vain to solve for himself the problem of evil must consider the solution just outlined. It is the only satisfactory solution, since it embodies the teaching of Christ.

The Catholic Church, as the Church founded by Christ, and the only authoritative interpreter of His teaching, gives the one adequate explanation of the evil in the world, and offers the only real remedy.

This leaflet was found in a second-hand book published in 1914. We used an old-style holy card image printed in vintage tones and a late victorian flower motif to match the age of the leaflet. No image painted by mere men can match the power of the eternal verities, such as this one!Sphere: Related Content

John17:1-11

Gregory Mussmacher, Ignorance of scripture is ignorance of Christ -- St. Jerome

Daily Reading & Meditation
Tuesday (5/26): "This is eternal life, that they know the Father the only true God"
Scripture: John 17:1-11

1 When Jesus had spoken these words, he lifted up his eyes to heaven and said, "Father, the hour has come; glorify your Son that the Son may glorify you, 2 since you have given him power over all flesh, to give eternal life to all whom you have given him. 3 And this is eternal life, that they know you the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent. 4 I glorified you on earth, having accomplished the work which you gave me to do; 5 and now, Father, glorify me in your own presence with the glory which I had with you before the world was made. 6 "I have manifested your name to the men whom you gave me out of the world; they were yours, and you gave them to me, and they have kept your word. 7 Now they know that everything that you have given me is from you; 8 for I have given them the words which you gave me, and they have received them and know in truth that I came from you; and they have believed that you sent me. 9 I am praying for them; I am not praying for the world but for those whom you have given me, for they are yours; 10 all mine are yours, and yours are mine, and I am glorified in them. 11 And now I am no more in the world, but they are in the world, and I am coming to you. Holy Father, keep them in your name, which you have given me, that they may be one, even as we are one.

Meditation: In his Last Supper discourse Jesus speaks of his glory and the glory of his Father. What is this glory? It is the cross which Jesus speaks of here. How does the cross reveal his glory? In the cross God reveals the breadth of his great love for sinners and the power of redemption which cancels the debt of sin and reverses the curse of our condemnation. Jesus gave his Father the supreme honor and glory through his obedience and willingness to go to the cross. In times of defense the greatest honor belongs not to those who fought and survived but to those who gave the supreme sacrifice of their own lives for their fellow citizens.

Jesus speaks of the Father bringing glory to the Son through the great mystery of the Incarnation and Cross of Christ. God the Father gave us his only begotten Son for our redemption and deliverance from slavery to sin and death. There is no greater proof of God's love for each and every person on the face of the earth than the Cross of Jesus Christ. In the cross we see a new way of love – a love that is unconditional, sacrificial and generous beyond comprehension.

Jesus also speaks of eternal life. What is eternal life? It is more than simply endless time. Science and medicine today looks for ways to extend the duration of life; but that doesn't necessarily make life better for us here. Eternal life is qualitative more than quantitative. To have eternal life is to have the life of God within us. When we possess eternal life we experience here and now something of God's majesty, his peace, joy and love and the holiness which characterizes the life of God. Jesus also speaks of the knowledge of God. Jesus tells his disciples that they can know the only true God. Knowledge of God is not simply limited to knowing something about God, but we can know God personally. The essence of Christianity, and what makes it distinct from Judaism and other religions, is the knowledge of God as our Father. Jesus makes it possible for each of us to personally know God as our Father. To see Jesus is to see what God is like. In Jesus we see the perfect love of God – a God who cares intensely and who yearns over men and women, loving them to the point of laying down his life for them upon the Cross. Jesus is the revelation of God – a God who loves us completely, unconditionally and perfectly. Do you seek unity of heart, mind and will with God and unity of love and peace with your neighbor?

"If only I possessed the grace, good Jesus, to be utterly at one with you! Amidst all the variety of worldly things around me, Lord, the only thing I crave is unity with you. You are all my soul needs. Unite, dear friend of my heart, this unique little soul of mine to your perfect goodness. You are all mine; when shall I be yours? Lord Jesus, my beloved, be the magnet of my heart; clasp, press, unite me for ever to your sacred heart. You have made me for yourself; make me one with you. Absorb this tiny drop of life into the ocean of goodness whence it came." (Prayer of Francis de Sales, 1567-1622)

Psalm 68:10-21

10 thy flock found a dwelling in it; in thy goodness, O God, thou didst provide for the needy.
11 The Lord gives the command; great is the host of those who bore the tidings:
12 "The kings of the armies, they flee, they flee!" The women at home divide the spoil,
13 though they stay among the sheepfolds -- the wings of a dove covered with silver, its pinions with green gold.
14 When the Almighty scattered kings there, snow fell on Zalmon.
15 O mighty mountain, mountain of Bashan; O many-peaked mountain, mountain of Bashan!
16 Why look you with envy, O many-peaked mountain, at the mount which God desired for his abode, yea, where the LORD will dwell for ever?
17 With mighty chariotry, twice ten thousand, thousands upon thousands, the Lord came from Sinai into the holy place.
18 Thou didst ascend the high mount, leading captives in thy train, and receiving gifts among men, even among the rebellious, that the LORD God may dwell there.
19 Blessed be the Lord, who daily bears us up; God is our salvation. [Selah]
20 Our God is a God of salvation; and to GOD, the Lord, belongs escape from death.
21 But God will shatter the heads of his enemies, the hairy crown of him who walks in his guilty ways.



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Monday, May 25, 2009

Father Aloysius H. Schmitt & Inoculation Against Tradition

Gregory Mussmacher,
No earthly pleasures, no kingdoms of this world can benefit me in any way. I prefer death in Christ Jesus to power over the farthest limits of the earth. He who died in place of us is the one object of my quest. He who rose for our sakes is my one desire. Do not talk about Jesus Christ as long as you love this world. --St Ignatius of Antioch

Inoculation Against Tradition
PAULY FONGEMIE

So many Catholics who have been attending the Novus Ordo Mass exclusively since its imposing eruption onto the scene, and who have had little if any exposure to good Traditional literature and or the Council of Trent and various encyclicals of the Pontiffs before 1960, have been almost completely inoculated against Tradition, which is treated as if it were a fatal, communicable disease. I was reminded of this pathology last week.

I know a woman who drives a relative to the Traditional Mass, and remains to return him home, then goes back to her own parish for the NO Mass, where she takes Communion, having refrained at the first Mass. I have overheard people discussing the Traditional Mass who suspect that the Mass itself is invalid, which is quite ironic, if you think about it. That woman has a very kind heart and her dedication to her relative who is unable to drive is laudatory. I expect God will reward her with much grace that will impel her towards Tradition when He deems to do so. When you tell these people that it is the same Mass many of them grew up with, they just look at you as if you are eccentric and change the subject. A few turn their backs, literally, they are so repulsed by the mere thought of a Mass in Latin; yet they do not mind at all about attending a "Polish" Mass, a "Spanish" Mass, when they do not speak these languages either. They say, well, there is an English translation provided. Indeed. And one as well, with the Latin Mass. The inconsistency of their argument does not escape them, the realization of which makes them irritable. Truth---and its pristine logic---has this uncanny quality.

They no longer want to be reminded that they now worship as the Protestants do. I know that they know they do, down deep, because almost to a person the same people say, "There's not much difference now between us." One said, "no more difference", not "not much difference." Since the Protestants haven't changed, this must mean by definition that they have. It is the NO Mass that changed them, because it is the common denominator. Books by heretics are not on their reading list as I understand it. I have no reason to doubt them at all. In fact, I know they are devout and sincere.

Their frame of reference as Catholics is Vatican II, not Tradition, although I suspect they would not put it that way---because they have no frame of reference for that reference point. Then, too, just as the newly formed Anglicans of their day thought themselves still Catholic while Anglican in name only, although their children would know otherwise and be proud of it, these Catholics are no longer Catholic, only this time it is in name only, the very opposite. Of course they intended no such thing at all. Their children know better, too, and being pragmatic as good little Americans, they simply walk away more often than not. The Novus Ordo Mass and the culture it spawned is more than an insult to Almighty God, it is an insult to that which is the best in people and just as it has laid waste to whole dioceses, it has decimated entire families. Almost every Catholic family bewails the apostasy of at least one of the children, sometimes all the children, including families of ten children. I am speaking of families where the Rosary was prayed. The Rosary did not do this, for it is holy and most salutary; it took the full force of liberalism with all its rotten fruits to accomplish the deed. The true cost cannot be calculated this side of eternity. Of course there were other influences, but where the true faith is strong, those worldly lures are minimized, for there is ever the world and its attractions to deal with for every generation.

I do not place any blame on the first generation [as I don't for the next], for they grew up believing that the priest was beyond reproach and what he says, is right, just as you and I were taught. Those of us who had someone wiser take us under his wing as he guided us out of the scorched earth that was the "American" [C]hurch milieu were blessed beyond the words to tell. Not so, for everyone. Why God's grace is communicated to one and not another at a particular moment is indeed a mystery. We were gently, but persistently prodded to recall our bounden duty to adhere to Tradition, to avoid novelty in faith, morals, and worship, following the counsel of all the Saints, Martyrs [St. Paul for one], and good Popes. Even if it meant disregarding the pastor and avoiding his bad example whenever possible. Eventually it became an utter necessity to avoid it altogether or risk the loss of the gift of faith in some places.

Those left behind, beyond our reach for now at least, are under the sway of priests steeped in the habit of conducting search and destroy missions in order to detect any vestige of Tradition and the authentic Catholic faith that might be lingering in parishioners, thereby to eradicate them before objective truth, reverence for holy things---the sacred---makes a serious comeback. This is why the "new evangelization" is successful in closing parishes because of dwindling numbers while the Protestant hives have an abundance of busy bees with churches springing up all over and those which are long established, building additions. In our locale of a 16 mile radius five Catholic parishes have been joined as one while four Protestant sects have been added to the scene, a large Mormon tabernacle I think is what you call it, two Baptist churches and one of the Pentecostal genre. This is in the last two years alone. Astonishing! They are having more than two children per family and gaining converts, a number of them from the Catholic exodus. If you are going to have Protestantism by another name rammed down your throat, you might as well have the real McCoy which is not playing coy, at least give them that credit. We live next door to a Baptist church and every Sunday we see the families with several children arrive, the girls in dresses, too, not blue jeans and skimpy tops. If you did not know better you would think that they were Traditional Catholic families. Some even have head coverings, I kid you not. The irony is spectacular! They at least do not have St. Paul in a three year cycle designed to avoid pertinent passages pertaining to women in church.

Modernist priests trained in the deprivation of Tradition in the morally depraved and spiritually disoriented seminaries from the 1960s until the beginning of this decade, learned their lessons well. They merit our pity and prayers, for who can gauge the demoralization of spirit, the total "breakdown" they underwent before ordination? Perhaps through the same sort of process they use themselves now? At best they are woefully ignorant. Their parishioners merit our pity and prayers as well. They are contracepting because these priests do not preach on Christian marriage and because of the contracepting, how many future priests have not been born? The current rage---the scam "theology of the body" ought to complete the devastation. How many have been lost at the altar [table now] because the priest is either wishy-washy or swishy-swashy or both? Liberalism destroys the sacerdotal in favor of the man-made or secular; but tepidity, the very soul.

One of the priests who appears regularly on EWTN said that when he was in the seminary in the 60s and 70s, he was told that the Liturgy is "wide open", meaning that he could experiment. The Catholics of today are still feeling the effects of this sacrilege. Although the heady experimentation of those decades has somewhat moderated, the false religion it taught has found fertile ground in the mentality of a captive people stripped of the sense of mystery. That same priest said that Mass facing the people has removed the mystery of the Mass. Why he does not say the ancient Roman Mass exclusively is beyond me! So, even he, who seems to know better, appears to be still imprisoned within the confines of the liturgical shipwreck that is the new "liturgy". It has partially blinded him. He mistakenly believes, with all good intentions, that the NO "offertory" is equivalent, theologically and liturgically with the authentic offertory of the Traditional Roman Mass. A comparison of the two forms, side by side is startling! I am struck that he fails to see!

Inoculating against Tradition is carried out at a three-prong injection site---at Mass---in an unholy trinity:

1. Condemnation of the past [and the sense of the sacred];
2. Marginalization of parishioners who do not get with the program; and
3. Ridicule or sarcasm and mockery.

Human nature and the insidious poison of the Mass of Pope Paul VI [his "smoke of Satan making its entrance"] itself take care of the rest.

Numbers 2 and 3 are nasty, sordid undertakings and the average "apostate" will avoid using them if necessary, especially if he is prescient, because he knows that this renders him smaller than he considers the ones he victimizes. No, the pride of the worldly heretic, the thief in the sanctuary, who has come to plunder the Catholic heritage and strip the altars of the Divine---the new evangelization---induces him to choose the first option with the other two as backup plans B and C. He will only opt for these as first choice if the person or persons, who meet his hubris head on by challenging his conceits, salacious suggestions, and false notions, have any knowledge of the Sacred Councils, Church history and Tradition. He, too, is a good little pragmatic American. The bully in the pulpit has too much self-awareness to let himself be bested in an honest discussion, if he can help it. Lest you think I am being presumptuous, let me assure you that more than one priest has announced his intentions and I quote one precisely, "to change the faith" of the people he has found in his new assignment. One of them even boasted that it would take him "less than two years" and he was dead on, unfortunately. He had prefaced his remarks by saying that he was amazed to find such traditional devotions. It is to weep. He died an unexpected death at what most would consider a far too young age. Ah, but "death" was his constant companion.

Condemnation of the past [and the sense of the sacred]

The tools of the trade for this undertaking come straight out of the secular-liberal manual for denigrating Western culture: Exaggeration of the faults of the past or the deliberate distortion of history, and the tyranny of "tolerance" which in actuality will brook no dissent from its peculiar orthodoxy.

It goes something like this, to use just two prominent, pervasive examples. Father ------- opens his monologue replete with jokes [sermons and homilies are passé now that the microphone has empowered him] with some news item that fits his agenda. Let us use a recent one, the English schoolteacher who was imprisoned by the Islamic Sudanese government for unintended blasphemy and released after international outrage. Any similar incident would suffice, provided it involves a clash of religions or cultures. Father then expresses his disgust, quite normal under the circumstances, then launches into an undocumented, unexplained general condemnation of past injustices at the hands of the official Church toward those of other religions. He is never precise, and omits any context, this way he can't be tripped up by the actual facts. How does one challenge a generality that could be a little bit true about individual Catholics in theory? It is like trying to prove a negative. Tails he wins, heads you lose. Now that his audience---I use the term pointedly---is softened up and feeling a sense of shame for the supposed past injustices of its forebears in the faith, he maneuvers for the coup d'etat. "We must be tolerant". "We ought not judge others." Of course we ought not judge our neighbor per se, but this does not mean we have to pretend to be blind to the situation at hand. How otherwise are we to make an assessment of any danger to the faith, for instance? And sound the alarm? The necessary distinctions are eliminated from the beginning as if to purposefully muddy the waters.

Inordinately skilled at rooting out any trace of intolerance in others, especially the Church he imagines, he is blind to his own. He proceeds to demonstrate this irony with consummate tediousness by always bringing up some irksome person of the past weeks [becoming fewer and farther between] who has had the temerity of pointing out Father's peccadilloes or less than priestly habits that may be bad examples for others, say young children. "How dare they judge me!" "They are being intolerant and judgmental!" Which is a judgmental declaration, is it not?

He fails to see that he has made the very judgment he claims to abhor against his own neighbor, who may have very well have been accurate in his conclusion that Father has room for improvement as they say, without actually judging the state of his soul. Yet Father presumes that the person meant to "judge" him as is forbidden. Following Father's standard no parent could correct a child, no teacher a student, no constituent his Congressman, no Senator his President, and so forth. And no priest his parishioner. Including the person being denounced. A parent who must have a priest who is a good example for his children has the obligation to his children to remove them from bad influences. Now I know that Mutter Vogel, in a short adviso in the PIETA prayer book condemns anyone who would correct a priest, and that this has caused many a Catholic to permit a modernist priest to harm the faith of his children. I do not think that Mutter ever met Father ------- or had any children under his charge. Prudence and humility, yes, stupidity, no!

Now that Father knows the assembly is more likely to be reluctant to disagree with his monologue which gets worse, each and every time, he wipes up his campaign for dissent with the following [example two], with almost no variation:

"In the past the Church was fixated on sin, mortal sin." Since he rightly suspects that his parishioners no longer have a sense of sin, particularly mortal sin---apart from murder and adultery---since it is he that has contributed to the loss, he then explains what a mortal sin was or is. It is Tradition, especially the Roman Mass of Tradition that he fears and despises. So the mortal sins he chooses to expound on are the imaginary ones he presumes the Church once anathematized, using a few real ones, but greatly exaggerating the number, stressing the injustice of it all. Perhaps the best example is that concerning the ancient norms for the Latin Mass that bind the priest under pain of sin, mortal and or venial. He says, or words to this effect, "Personally I never bought into it, all those supposed mortal sins a priest could commit. Now that is no more. This is the same with missing Sunday Mass. The Church used to teach that it was a mortal sin to miss Mass even if you were so sick you could not literally get out of bed. It isn't a sin anymore. If you want to go fishing, well, who's to judge."

Now Father is more than confused, he is being dishonest. Everyone of us older Catholics [the approximate age of Father] remembers what we were taught as wee ones about attending Sunday Mass, the same as today: It is a mortal sin to miss Sunday Mass unless one has a valid reason, illness, unduly taxing and hazardous travel, such as in winter, serious family obligations [an elderly dependent at home who has no one else to care for him, for instance or that do not include social and sporting events] unexpected emergency police duty and the like, or necessary travel that could not be adjusted. Today the problem of finding a Mass that does not endanger the faith of one's children or your own is also a priority.

And in almost every case cited above the obligation to read your Missal still binds where possible. Who judges if we go fishing instead? Christ does, and so do we, objectively speaking, for we know it is still a mortal sin, no matter what Father ------- says. It may not be any of my business if my neighbor goes fishing, but it is if he is influencing my son who likes to fish. How does Father absolve in Confession???? Does he say, "So what?"

As for the mortal sins of the priest, I can think of one he overlooked, the mortal sin of telling one's parishioners that it is not a mortal sin to deliberately miss Sunday Mass of one's own choosing. Regarding the others, yes, some deliberate failures of the priest who did not simply forget due to old age, etc., were indeed included in mortal sin. And to the good! The Catholic people have a right to a noble and pure liturgy, unstained by neglect and casualness. They have this right because they have the obligation to render to Almighty God the worship that is worthy of Him. When the Israelites abandoned the worship commanded by God, they were slain in great numbers, on at least one occasion. Mortal sin is death, death of the soul and merits death itself. But God is patient and long enduring, giving us chance after chance, but for how long? This is why the Church was so exact. Would it were the same today! Sometimes a change in practice can be for the worse, not the better. Just ask anyone who lives in a border state.

Father overlooked the fact that it was Christ Who said to Peter and the other Apostles, "What you bind, is bound in Heaven ...". This is understood by the Church to mean absolution in Confession and governance, the authority to bind in conscience even disciplinary acts. Thus, when the Church was more strict in its requirements for Lenten penance and Friday penance, it had the full authority to do so. Was it "unfair" that my grandmother had to fast more than I am required to do? I think she was better off for it. The spirit is willing but the flesh is weak. We need prods sometimes, stinging ones, like the penalty of mortal sin. Would that we were all Saints now! Father is confusing [I surmise] doctrinal sin with disciplinary sin. Because the latter can change he thinks the former can and that because he thinks the past was unfair the present must be fair. Fair is what is required in a just manner at the time. Fairness or equity is a characteristic of justice, not charity. It is nothing short of a scandal that he would tell his people "I never bought into it." He had to "buy into it" or else be guilty of sin himself, because the Church had the authority under Christ and Christ honors that authority, provided it does not violate morals or doctrine or Tradition. No one has the right to abrogate those. Beyond belief, this priest! Does he not consider that if he can in "good conscience" undermine the authority of the Church herself, that he consequently undermines his own? In this case a good thing no doubt. And he is legion. With one monologue he manages to scandalize those still clinging to the faith, however tentatively, render sin attractive to the rest, mislead children or the pure of heart who trust the priest, and divide the parish along those lines.

He mops up with the usual gag line or amusing joke, sometimes genuinely funny and wholesome, sometimes not at all. So they know what a regular Joe he is, how human and just like them. After all, the church is no longer a sacred place, it is a meeting hall with profane music, clapping and laughing and talking while before the Blessed Sacrament. There is virtually no more Benediction in many parishes and where there is still Eucharistic Adoration it is by the laity and "Eucharistic ministers" with nary a priest in sight, including the placement of the Sacred Host in the monstrance. Attendance is often slight. Mass is a hootenanny circus unbecoming a Catholic people worthy of the name. And to think we do not permit [rightly] dogs to enter a church. Every dog I have raised would show more reverence, if prayer time at home is any indicator. From the profane to the insane. Modern "progress". This is desecration itself, terribly sinful, an abomination, yes mortal sin objectively speaking!

Time for old-fashion regression, less tolerance as befitting a people with the use of reason if nothing else.

Marginalization of parishioners who do not get with the program

This is easily accomplished by the above method, from the pulpit ordinarily, in two formats, direct and indirect. The direct approach is to either mention the person outright while pointing out a fault of "intolerance" with a slight note of humor to cover the legalities canon law-wise, or to condemn parts of a letter the "offending" parishioner may have written to the pastor, about concerns, facts of Church history, and so forth. The excoriation is swift, and withering. The purpose is to dissuade any one else with the same inclination. It works with few exceptions: "I am not going to say a word to Father, I do not want to be the focus at Mass." The person who says such a thing is quite understandable from a human nature point of view. However, since he knows that Father has scandalized the faithful, he undergoes inner turmoil and if he decides to make his peace with his pusillanimity he succeeds at a great price, his self-respect, then the light of faith dims slowly if he feels constrained to repeat the rationalization. This, too, is human nature. I wonder if they have a sub-course in the seminary or update bulletins at priestly summer institutes on how to "dispose" of Traditionalists, just as the teachers' organizations instruct their members how to get around objecting parents. The person who is denounced is now effectively marginalized by the rest if they want to be in Father's favor or seen as one of the crowd. It was the crowd that proclaimed, "Give us Barabbas!" So much for the insights of the crowd ...

The indirect approach involves simply ignoring the concern and never mentioning it to the person who raised it, no reply by mail, phone or in person. As if the person is a non-person. Chairman Mao would be proud. When money is needed the non-person is "rehabilitated" momentarily.

Ridicule or sarcasm and mockery

This is the last resort, although in practice it tends to be combined with the second modus operandi, and is self-explanatory. It is the worst because of its cruelty and spitefulness, and requires no ignorance. The first two at least admit to a possibility: one could say that the priest is simply ignorant and thinks he is doing the right thing, but with mockery there is no such exculpatory circumstance because the Church including the modern "American Church" still teaches the venality and utter sinfulness of willfully subjecting one's neighbor in person or by name [as opposed to the situation sans name in a rhetorical exercise] to derision for his beliefs and the upholding of them. My neighbor may no longer believe in the Real Presence, but I must not use ridicule against him; I ought to pray for him at the very least while looking for an opportunity to talk to him about this doctrine everywhere and always taught by the Church and believed by the faithful. Sarcasm is okay for political satire when dealing with a known hypocrite with unjust designs, if necessary, but this is not what we are talking about. The average Catholic is defenseless against such a merciless attack, which is the whole point in using it. This will stick deeply when the other two barely prick. Lawyers use this approach all the time: if the law is against you, argue facts; if the facts are against you, argue the law; if both are against you, assassinate the character of the opposing witness.

The bad medicine continues, uncontraindicated by a group of bishops who appear to be apostates themselves, if their latest pronouncement about the film, "The Golden Compass" means anything at all. This while still remaining mute as a group on the Motu proprio ...



DECEMBER ALL THE WAY


Father Aloysius H. Schmitt
December 4, 1909 – December 7, 1941


Roman Catholic priest of the Archdiocese of Dubuque
Chaplain in the United States Navy during World War II

Early Life and Ordination
He was born in St. Lucas, Iowa and studied at Loras College in Dubuque after which he prepared for the priesthood as a seminarian in Rome, where he was prophetically ordained on Our Lady's Feast, the Immaculate Conception, December 8, 1935. Father Schmitt then served in Dubuque parishes, and one in Cheyenne, Wyoming. After four years, he received permission to become a chaplain, and joined the United States Navy. He was appointed Acting Chaplain with the rank of Lieutenant, Junior Grade (LTJG) on June 28, 1939.

The USS Oklahoma at Pearl Harbor
On December 7th, 1941, Fr. Schmitt was serving on board the battleship, USS Oklahoma when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. He had just finished saying Mass when the call went out for "general quarters". A Japanese hit caused the ship to capsize. A number of sailors, including Fr. Schmitt, were trapped in a compartment with only a small porthole as the means of escape. Fr. Schmitt helped a number of men through this porthole. When it came his time to leave, he declined and helped more men to escape. In total, he helped 12 men to escape.

Fr. Schmitt died on board the Oklahoma. He was the first chaplain of any faith to have died in World War II. His example inspired a number of other priests to become chaplains.


Posthumous Honors
He was honored posthumously by the U.S. government when it awarded him the Navy and Marine Corps Medal along with the Purple Heart. A destroyer escort named USS Schmitt was commissioned in 1943 by the Navy in his honor, ceremonially launched by his sister, and served the U.S. Navy until 1967 when it was transferred to Taiwan. The Christ the King Chapel at Loras College was dedicated in his memory, and contains some of Fr. Schmitt's property that was donated to the school. When the USS Oklahoma ["the Oakie"] was recovered his body was never identified, but his liturgical book was found. There are many memorials in his honor. A picture of one on the web is HERE.


Another link of interest that includes Catholic Chaplain, Fr. Kirkpatrick [Captain] of the USS Arizona is HERE.


We chose the shell as one of Father's symbols because it represents the Sacrament of Baptism, rather than the Navy anchor. The medal is the Purple Heart. The title of this brief memorial is taken from the video documentary of the same title which was broadcast on EWTN. The image of him in his Navy uniform is the only one we could locate. The documentary has many fine black and white photos of him.


THIS IS HOW CATHOLIC TRADITION WANTS TO CELEBRATE THE FOURTH OF JULY,
FOLLOWING HIS QUIET EXAMPLE, INSTEAD OF FIREWORKS.Sphere: Related Content