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    October 11, 2008   Saturday of  27th Week in Ordinary Time    

 

DAILY LITURGICAL/THEME MEDITATION:

"Blessed are those who hear the word of God and keep it"

UNIVERSAL CHURCH/WORLD EVENT(S):

India to Have 1st Female Saint

SAINT OF THE DAY

Blessed Angela Truszkowska

 GENERAL MARIOLOGY
THE SECRET OF THE ROSARY - Tenth Rose

DIVINE MERCY

On Happiness, Joy, Delight, Rejoice: God Dwells Within Me

 TEACHING/TESTIMONY/CONVICTION:

Message for World Refugee and Migrant Day

 

Monthly Index

 

DAILY LITURGICAL MEDITATION

 
Saturday (10/11): "Blessed are those who hear the word of God and keep it"

Scripture: Luke 11:27-28

27 As he said this, a woman in the crowd raised her voice and said to him, "Blessed is the womb that bore you, and the breasts that you sucked!" 28 But he said, "Blessed rather are those who hear the word of God and keep it!"

Meditation: Who do you seek to favor and bless? When an admirer wished to compliment Jesus by praising his mother, Jesus did not deny the truth of the blessing she pronounced. Her beatitude (which means "blessedness" or "happiness") recalls Mary's canticle: All generations will call me blessed (Luke 1:48). Jesus adds to her words by pointing to the source of all true blessedness or happiness – union with God in heart, mind, and will. Mary humbly submitted herself to the miraculous plan of God for the incarnation of his only begotten Son – the Word of God made flesh in her womb, by declaring: I am the handmaid of the Lord; let it be done to me according to your word (Luke 1:38). Mary heard the word spoken to her by the angel and she believed it.

On another occasion Jesus remarked that whoever does the will of God is a friend of God and a member of his family – his sons and daughters who have been ransomed by the precious blood of Christ. (Luke 8:21). They are truly blessed because they know their God personally and they find joy in hearing and obeying his word.

Our goal in life, the very reason we were created in the first place, is for union with God. We were made for God and our hearts are restless until they rest in him. An early martyr once said that "a Christian's only relatives are the saints." Those who follow Jesus Christ and who seek the will of God enter into a new family, a family of "saints" here on earth and in heaven. Jesus changes the order of relationships and shows that true kinship is not just a matter of flesh and blood. Our adoption as sons and daughters of God transforms all our relationships and requires a new order of loyalty to God and his kingdom. Do you hunger for God and for his word?

"Lord Jesus, my heart is restless until it rests in you. Help me to live in your presence and in the knowledge of your great love for me. May I seek to please you in all that I do, say, and think."

Psalm 105:2-7

2 Sing to him, sing praises to him, tell of all his wonderful works!
3 Glory in his holy name; let the hearts of those who seek the LORD rejoice!
4 Seek the LORD and his strength, seek his presence continually!
5 Remember the wonderful works that he has done, his miracles, and the judgments he uttered,
6 O offspring of Abraham his servant, sons of Jacob, his chosen ones!
7 He is the LORD our God; his judgments are in all the earth.

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UNIVERSAL CHURCH/WORLD EVENTS

 

India to Have 1st Female Saint

As Christians of Her Country Face Persecution

 
ROME, OCT. 10, 2008 (Zenit.org).- As Christians in India continue to face persecution for their faith, they will have a new advocate in the figure of soon-to-be St. Alfonsa of the Immaculate Conception.

Blessed Alfonsa (born Anna Muttathupadathu) is one of four people to be canonized by Benedict XVI this Sunday. The other three are Maria Bernarda Butler, from Switzerland; Narcisa de Jesús Martillo Morán from Ecuador; and Father Gaetano Errico from Italy.

Blessed Alfonsa will be the first woman from India to be canonized. She was a religious of the Poor Clares.

Anna Muttathupadathu was born in the Indian state of Kerala in 1910. Her mother died when she was a baby and she was brought up by an aunt who wanted her to marry.

However, Muttathupadathu was determined to dedicate her whole life to Jesus Christ, following the example of St. Thérèse of Lisieux. She entered the convent in 1928, and received the name of Alfonsa.

Her delicate health was held to be an obstacle in religious life and her superiors wanted her to return to her home; but Sister Alfonsa persevered in her vocation and made her perpetual vows in 1936. She died 10 years later at age 35.

Ecuador

Maria Bernarda Butler, founder of the Missionary Franciscan Sisters of Mary, Help of Christians, born Verena Butler, will also be canonized.

She was born to peasant parents in Switzerland in 1848. In 1867she entered the Franciscan convent of Mary Help of Christians in her country. She made her religious profession two years later, taking the name Maria Bernarda of the Sacred Heart of Mary.

She left for Ecuador with six companions in 1888, where she founded the Congregation of Franciscan Missionary Sisters of Mary Help of Christians, whose charism is to spread the Kingdom of God through works of mercy.

Seven years later, in the wake of the religious persecution headed by the Ecuadorian government, Mother Maria Bernarda and her companions left the country and went to Colombia. She stayed there for 29 years, until her death in 1924 at age 76.

Another evangelizer of Ecuador is Blessed Narcisa de Jesús Martillo Morán.

She was born to a farming family but left her home village in search of spiritual direction, where she met Franciscan Father Pedro Gual, who lived in Lima. The priest began to help her spiritually and materially, and eventually asked her to go to Lima, where she practiced charity, especially toward the poor and infirm.

She longed to live in herself the passion of Christ, and scourged herself and crowned herself with thorns. She died the day Vatican Council I opened, offering her last sufferings for this important ecclesial event.

"Humility and charity, practiced to a heroic degree, shine in Narcisita, as does penance appropriate to the age, for the expiation of the sins of her people, especially of priests, radiating Christ in the midst of the people," Monsignor Roberto Pazmino, vice postulator of her cause of canonization, told ZENIT.

Showing mercy

Gaetano Errico was born on the outskirts of Naples, Italy, in 1791. He died in that town in 1860.

As a priest he visited terminally ill patients in Neapolitan hospitals for the incurable, as well as prisoners.

He heard confessions at all hours of the day and night until his death. In confession, he tried to show the mercy of the love of God, at a time when Jansenism advocated a rigorous vision of the Christian faith.

He was spiritual adviser to cardinals and archbishops and to King Ferdinand of Naples, but he also counseled the very poor in search of direction.

To all, he repeated, "Spend much more time at the feet of the sacramental Jesus than at the feet of the confessor."

He wished to make his life a prophecy of God's mercy, and thus named the congregation he founded the Missionaries of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary.

 

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DAILY LITURGICAL SAINT

 

October 11, 2008

Blessed Angela Truszkowska

(1825-1899)

 Today we honor a woman who submitted to God's will throughout her life—a life filled with pain and suffering.

Born in 1825 in central Poland and baptized Sophia, she contracted tuberculosis as a young girl. The forced period of convalescence gave her ample time for reflection. Sophia felt called to serve God by working with the poor, including street children and the elderly homeless in Warsaw's slums. In time, her cousin joined her in the work.

In 1855, the two women made private vows and consecrated themselves to the Blessed Mother. New followers joined them. Within two years they formed a new congregation, which came to be known as the Felician Sisters. As their numbers grew, so did their work, and so did the pressures on Mother Angela (the new name Sophia took in religious life).

Mother Angela served as superior for many years until ill health forced her to resign at the age of 44. She watched the order grow and expand, including missions to the United States among the sons and daughters of Polish immigrants.

Pope John Paul II beatified her in 1993.

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GENERAL MARIOLOGY


  

THE SECRET OF THE ROSARY FOR RENEWAL AND SALVATION

By St. Louis Marie de Montfort   

 (continued)
 

Tenth Rose

 

31   While St. Dominic was preaching the Rosary in Carcassone,

a heretic made fun of his miracles and the fifteen mysteries of

the Rosary, and this prevented other heretics from being

converted. As a punishment God allowed fifteen thousand devils

to enter the man's body.

     His parents took him to Father Dominic to be delivered from

the evil spirits. He started to pray and he begged everyone who

was there to say the Rosary out loud with him, and at each Hail

Mary our Lady drove a hundred devils out of the man, and they

came out in the form of red-hot coals.

     After he had been delivered, he abjured his former errors,

was converted and joined the Rosary Confraternity. Several of his

associates did the same, having been greatly moved by his

punishment and by the power of the Rosary.

 

32   The learned Franciscan, Carthagena, as well as several other

authors, says that an extraordinary event took place in 1482. The

venerable Fr. James Sprenger and the religious of his order were

zealously working to re-establish devotion to the Rosary and its

Confraternity in the city of Cologne. Unfortunately, two priests

who were famous for their preaching ability were jealous of the

great influence they were exerting through preaching the Rosary.

These two Fathers spoke against this devotion whenever they had

a chance, and as they were very eloquent and had a great

reputation, they persuaded many people not to join the

Confraternity. One of them, the better to achieve his wicked end,

wrote a special sermon against the Rosary and planned to give it

the following Sunday. But when the time came for the sermon he

did not appear and, after a certain amount of waiting, someone

went to fetch him. He was found to be dead, and he had evidently

died without anyone to help him.

     After persuading himself that this death was due to natural

causes, the other priest decided to carry out his friend's plan

and give a similar sermon on another day, hoping to put an end

to the Confraternity of the Rosary. However, when the day came

for him to preach and it was time to give the sermon, God

punished him by striking him down with paralysis which deprived

him of the use of his limbs and of his power of speech.

     At last he admitted his fault and that of his friend and in

his heart he silently besought our Lady to help him. He promised

that if only she would cure him, he would preach the Rosary with

as much zeal as that with which he had formerly fought against

it. For this end he implored her to restore his health and his

speech, which she did, and finding himself instantaneously cured

he rose up like another Saul, a persecutor turned defender of the

holy Rosary. He publicly acknowledged his former error and ever

afterwards preached the wonders of the Rosary with great zeal and

eloquence.

 

33   I am quite sure that freethinkers and ultra-critical people

of today will question the truth of the stories in this little

book, as they question most things, but all I have done has been

to copy them from very good contemporary authors and, in part,

from a book written a short time ago, The Mystical Rose-tree, by

Fr. Antonin Thomas, O.P.

     Everyone knows that there are three different kinds of faith

by which we believe different kinds of stories. To stories from

Holy Scripture we owe divine faith; to stories on non-religious

subjects which are not against common sense and are written by

trustworthy authors, we pay the tribute of human faith; and to

stories about holy subjects which are told by good authors and

are not in any way contrary to reason, to faith or to morals

(even though they may sometimes deal with happenings which are

above the ordinary), we pay the tribute of a pious faith.

     I agree that we must be neither too credulous nor too

critical, and that we should keep a happy medium in all things

in order to find just where truth and virtue lie. But on the

other hand, I know equally well that charity easily leads us to

believe all that is not contrary to faith or morals: "Charity

believes all things," in the same way as pride induces us to

doubt even well authenticated stories on the plea that they are

not to be found in Holy Scripture.

     This is one of the devil's traps; heretics of the past who

denied tradition have fallen into it, and over-critical people

of today are falling into it too, without even realizing it.

People of this kind refuse to believe what they do not understand

or what is not to their liking, simply because or their own

spirit of pride and independence.

(to be continued)


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DIVINE MERCY

Dairy from St. Faustina

On Happiness, Joy, Delight, Rejoice

God Dwells Within Me

My happiest moments are when I am alone with my Lord. During these moments I experience the greatness of God and my own misery (Diary, 289).

† I look for no happiness beyond my own interior where God dwells. I rejoice that God dwells within me; here I abide with Him unendingly; it is here that my greatest intimacy with Him exists (Diary, 454).

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 CATHOLIC  TEACHING/CONVICTION/TESTIMONY

 

Message for World Refugee and Migrant Day

"St. Paul Migrant, 'Apostle of the Peoples'"

 
VATICAN CITY, OCT. 9, 2008 (Zenit.org).- Here is the message Benedict XVI wrote for the 95th World Day of Migrants and Refugees, to be held Jan. 18, 2009. The Vatican released the message Wednesday.

* * *

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

This year the theme of the Message for the World Day of Migrants and Refugees is: "St Paul migrant, ‘Apostle of the peoples’". It is inspired by its felicitous coincidence with the Jubilee Year I established in the Apostle's honour on the occasion of the 2,000th anniversary of his birth. Indeed, the preaching and mediation between the different cultures and the Gospel which Paul, "a migrant by vocation" carried out, are also an important reference point for those who find themselves involved in the migratory movement today.

Born into a family of Jewish immigrants in Tarsus, Cilicia, Saul was educated in the Hebrew and Hellenistic cultures and languages, making the most of the Roman cultural context. After his encounter with Christ on the road to Damascus (cf. Gal 1:13-16), although he did not deny his own "traditions" and felt both esteem and gratitude to Judaism and the Law (cf. Rm 9:1-5; 10:1; 2 Cor 11:22; Gal 1:13-14; Phil 3:3-6), he devoted himself without hesitation or second thoughts to his new mission, with courage and enthusiasm and docile to the Lord's command: "I will send you far away to the Gentiles" (Acts 22:21). His life changed radically (cf. Phil 3:7-11): Jesus became for him his raison d’être and the motive that inspired his apostolic dedication to the service of the Gospel. He changed from being a persecutor of Christians to being an Apostle of Christ.

Guided by the Holy Spirit, he spared no effort to see that the Gospel which is "the power of God for salvation to every one who has faith, to the Jew first and also to the Greek" (Rm 1:16) was proclaimed to all, making no distinction of nationality or culture. On his apostolic journeys, in spite of meeting with constant opposition, he first proclaimed the Gospel in the synagogues, giving prior attention to his compatriots in the diaspora (cf. Acts 18:4-6). If they rejected him he would address the Gentiles, making himself - an authentic "missionary to migrants" - as a migrant and an ambassador of Jesus Christ "at large" in order to invite every person to become a "new creation" in the Son of God (2 Cor 5:17).

The proclamation of the kerygma caused him to cross the seas of the Near East and to travel the roads of Europe until he reached Rome. He set out from Antioch, where he proclaimed the Gospel to people who did not belong to Judaism and where the disciples of Jesus were called "Christians" for the first time (cf. Acts 11:20, 26). His life and his preaching were wholly directed to making Jesus known and loved by all, for all persons are called to become a single people in him.

This is the mission of the Church and of every baptized person in our time too, even in the era of globalization; a mission that with attentive pastoral solicitude is also directed to the variegated universe of migrants - students far from home, immigrants, refugees, displaced people, evacuees - including for example, the victims of modern forms of slavery, and of human trafficking. Today too the message of salvation must be presented with the same approach as that of the Apostle to the Gentiles, taking into account the different social and cultural situations and special difficulties of each one as a consequence of his or her condition as a migrant or itinerant person. I express the wish that every Christian community may feel the same apostolic zeal as St Paul who, although he was proclaiming to all the saving love of the Father (Rm 8:15-16; Gal 4:6) to "win more" (1 Cor 9:22) for Christ, made himself weak "to the weak... all things to all men so that [he] might by all means save some" (1 Cor 9:22). May his example also be an incentive for us to show solidarity to these brothers and sisters of ours and to promote, in every part of the world and by every means, peaceful coexistence among different races, cultures and religions.

Yet what was the secret of the Apostle to the Gentiles? The missionary zeal and passion of the wrestler that distinguished him stemmed from the fact that since "Christ [had] made him his own", (Phil 3:12), he remained so closely united to him that he felt he shared in his same life, through sharing in "his sufferings" (Phil 3:10; cf. also Rm 8:17; 2 Cor 4:8-12; Col 1:24). This is the source of the apostolic ardour of St Paul who recounts: "He who had set me apart before I was born, and had called me through his grace, was pleased to reveal his Son to me, in order that I might preach him among the Gentiles" (Gal 1:15-16; cf. also Rm 15:15-16). He felt "crucified with" Christ, so that he could say: "It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me" (Gal 2:20), and no difficulty hindered him from persevering in his courageous evangelizing action in cosmopolitan cities such as Rome and Corinth, which were populated at that time by a mosaic of races and cultures.

In reading the Acts of the Apostles and the Letters that Paul addressed to various recipients, we perceive a model of a Church that was not exclusive but on the contrary open to all, formed by believers without distinction of culture or race: every baptized person is, in fact, a living member of the one Body of Christ. In this perspective, fraternal solidarity expressed in daily gestures of sharing, joint participation and joyful concern for others, acquires a unique prominence. However, it is impossible to achieve this dimension of brotherly mutual acceptance, St Paul always teaches, without the readiness to listen to and welcome the Word preached and practised (cf. 1 Thes 1:6), a Word that urges all to be imitators of Christ (cf. Eph 5:1-2), to be imitators of the Apostle (cf. 1 Cor 11:1). And therefore, the more closely the community is united to Christ, the more it cares for its neighbour, eschewing judgment, scorn and scandal, and opening itself to reciprocal acceptance (cf. Rm 14:1-3; 15:7). Conformed to Christ, believers feel they are "brothers" in him, sons of the same Father (Rm 8:14-16; Gal 3:26; 4:6). This treasure of brotherhood makes them "practise hospitality" (Rm 12:13), which is the firstborn daughter of agape (cf. 1 Tm 3:2, 5:10; Ti 1:8; Phlm 17).

In this manner the Lord's promise: comes true: "then I will welcome you, and I will be a father to you, and you shall be my sons and daughters" (2 Cor 6:17-18). If we are aware of this, how can we fail to take charge of all those, particularly refugees and displaced people, who are in conditions of difficulty or hardship? How can we fail to meet the needs of those who are de facto the weakest and most defenceless, marked by precariousness and insecurity, marginalized and often excluded by society? We should give our priority attention to them because, paraphrasing a well known Pauline text, "God chose what is foolish in the world to shame the wise, God chose what is weak in the world to shame the strong, God chose what is low and despised in the world, even things that are not, to bring to nothing things that are, so that no human being might boast in the presence of God" (1 Cor 1:27).

Dear brothers and sisters, may the World Day for Migrants and Refugees, which will be celebrated on 18 January 2009, be for all an incentive to live brotherly love to the full without making any kind of distinction and without discrimination, in the conviction that any one who needs us and whom we can help is our neighbour (cf. Deus Caritas Est, n. 15). May the teaching and example of St Paul, a great and humble Apostle and a migrant, an evangelizer of peoples and cultures, spur us to understand that the exercise of charity is the culmination and synthesis of the whole of Christian life.

The commandment of love - as we well know - is nourished when disciples of Christ, united, share in the banquet of the Eucharist which is, par excellence, the sacrament of brotherhood and love. And just as Jesus at the Last Supper combined the new commandment of fraternal love with the gift of the Eucharist, so his "friends", following in the footsteps of Christ who made himself a "servant" of humanity, and sustained by his Grace cannot but dedicate themselves to mutual service, taking charge of one another, complying with St Paul's recommendation: "bear one another's burdens, and so fulfil the law of Christ" (Gal 6:2). Only in this way does love increase among believers and for all people (cf. 1 Thes 3:12).

Dear brothers and sisters, let us not tire of proclaiming and witnessing to this "Good News" with enthusiasm, without fear and sparing no energy! The entire Gospel message is condensed in love, and authentic disciples of Christ are recognized by the mutual love their bear one another and by their acceptance of all.

May the Apostle Paul and especially Mary, the Mother of acceptance and love, obtain this gift for us. As I invoke the divine protection upon all those who are dedicated to helping migrants, and more generally, in the vast world of migration, I assure each one of my constant remembrance in prayer and, with affection, I impart my apostolic Blessing to all.

From Castel Gandolfo, 24 August 2008

BENEDICTUS PP. XVI


 

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