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TRÁI TIM
MẸ: NƠI CON NƯƠNG NÁU - ĐƯỜNG ĐẾN VỚI CHÚA |
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"Chúa Giêsu muốn dùng con để làm
cho Mẹ được nhận biết và yêu mến" |
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July 2, 2009 - Thursday
of thirtheen Week of Ordinary Time
LITURGICAL/THEME MEDITATION:
"Why do you think evil in your hearts?"
UNIVERSAL CHURCH/WORLD EVENT(S):
Pope On Priestly Identity
SAINT OF THE DAY
St.
Oliver Plunkett

GENERAL
MARIOLOGY
THE DIVINE
HISTORY AND LIFE
OF THE
VIRGIN MOTHER OF GOD
Book Four -
Chapter V
THE ADORATION OF THE
SHEPHERD; THE CIRCUMCISION.
DIVINE MERCY
Divine Mercy in My Soul
Notebook I V
TEACHING/TESTIMONY/CONVICTION:
Dr. Paul Jarrett

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DAILY LITURGICAL MEDITATION |
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Thursday (7/2): "Why do you
think evil in your hearts?"
Scripture: Matthew 9:1-8
1 And getting into a boat he crossed over and came to his own city. 2
And behold, they brought to him a paralytic, lying on his bed; and when
Jesus saw their faith he said to the paralytic, "Take heart, my son;
your sins are forgiven." 3 And behold, some of the scribes said to
themselves, "This man is blaspheming." 4 But Jesus, knowing their
thoughts, said, "Why do you think evil in your hearts? 5 For which is
easier, to say, `Your sins are forgiven,' or to say, `Rise and walk'? 6
But that you may know that the Son of man has authority on earth to
forgive sins" -- he then said to the paralytic -- "Rise, take up your
bed and go home." 7 And he rose and went home. 8 When the crowds saw
it, they were afraid, and they glorified God, who had given such
authority to men.
Meditation: What cripples the mind and heart and stiffles the
healing power of love? Sin and unforgiveness for certain! Sin cripples
us more than any physical ailment can. Sin is the work of the kingdom of
darkness and it holds us in eternal bondage. There is only one solution
and that is the healing, cleansing power of Jesus' forgiveness. Jesus’
treatment of sinners upset the religious teachers of the day. When a
cripple was brought to Jesus because of the faith of his friends, Jesus
did the unthinkable. He first forgave the man his sins. The scribes
regarded this as blasphemy because they understood that only God had
authority to forgive sins and to unbind a man or woman from their burden
of guilt. Jesus claimed an authority which only God could rightfully
give. Jesus not only proved that his authority came from God, he showed
the great power of God's redeeming love and mercy by healing the cripple
of his physical ailment. This man had been crippled not only physically,
but spiritually as well. Jesus freed him from his burden of guilt and
restored his body as well.
The Lord is every ready to bring us healing of mind, body, and soul.
His grace brings us freedom from the power of sin and from bondage to
harmful desires and addictions. Do you allow anything to keep you from
Jesus' healing power?
"Lord Jesus, through your merciful love and forgiveness you bring
healing and restoration to body, mind, and soul. May your healing power
and love touch every area of my life – my innermost thoughts, feelings,
attitudes, and memories. Pardon my offences and transform me in the
power of your Holy Spirit that I may walk confidently in your truth and
goodness."
Psalm 19:7-10
7 The law of the LORD is perfect, reviving the soul; the testimony
of the LORD is sure, making wise the simple;
8 the precepts of the LORD are right, rejoicing the heart; the
commandment of the LORD is pure, enlightening the eyes;
9 the fear of the LORD is clean, enduring for ever; the ordinances of
the LORD are true, and righteous altogether.
10 More to be desired are they than gold, even much fine gold; sweeter
also than honey and drippings of the honeycomb.
www.dailyscripture.net
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UNIVERSAL CHURCH/WORLD EVENTS |
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Pope On Priestly Identity
"One Who Prays Is Not Afraid; One Who Prays Is Never Alone"
VATICAN CITY, JULY 1, 2009 ( Zenit.org).- Here is a translation of the address Benedict XVI gave today during the general audience in St. Peter's Square. He continued with the theme he took up last week: the Year for Priests.
* * *
Dear brothers and sisters:
As you know, with the celebration of First Vespers for the solemnity of the holy Apostles Peter and Paul in the Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls, the Pauline Year has come to a close -- the year that marked the 2,000th anniversary of the birth of the Apostle to the Gentiles. Let us give thanks to the Lord for the spiritual fruits that this important initiative has brought to so many Christian communities.
As a precious heritage of the Pauline Year, we can reap the Apostle's invitation to go deeper into the knowledge of the mystery of Christ, so that he becomes the heart and center of our personal and social realities.
This is, in fact, the indispensable condition for a true spiritual and ecclesial renewal. As I already emphasized during the first Eucharistic celebration in the Sistine Chapel after my election as the Successor of the Apostle St. Peter, it is precisely from that full communion with Christ that "flows every other element of the Church's life: first of all, communion among all the faithful, the commitment to proclaiming and witnessing to the Gospel, the ardor of love for all, especially the poorest and lowliest" (1st Message at the End of the Eucharistic Concelebration With the Members of the College of Cardinals in the Sistine Chapel, April 20, 2005).
This is true in the first place for priests. Because of this, I thank Divine Providence, which now offers us the possibility of celebrating the Year for Priests. It is my heartfelt wish that this will be an opportunity for interior renewal for every priest, and consequently, [a year of] firm reinvigoration in the commitment to his own mission.
Just as during the Pauline Year, our constant reference point was St. Paul, so in the coming months we will look to St. John Vianney, the holy Curé d'Ars, recalling the 150th anniversary of his death. In the letter I wrote to priests for this occasion, I wanted to emphasize what shines forth in the existence of this humble minister of the altar: "the complete identification of the man with his ministry."
He often said that "a good pastor, a pastor after the heart of God, is the greatest treasure that the good God can give to a parish, and one of the most precious gifts of divine mercy." And almost unable to conceive the greatness of the gift and the task entrusted to a poor human creature, he sighed, "Oh how great is the priesthood! … If he could understand himself, he would die. … God obeys him: He pronounces two words and Our Lord descends from heaven at his beckoning and enters into a tiny Host."
In truth, precisely considering the binomial "identity-mission," every priest can better see the need for this progressive identification with Christ that will guarantee him fidelity and fruitfulness in the evangelical testimony.
The very theme of the Year for Priests -- Faithfulness of Christ, Faithfulness of Priests -- shows that the gift of divine grace precedes every possible human response and pastoral accomplishment, and thus, in the life of the priest, missionary proclamation and worship are never separable, just as the ontological-sacramental identity and the evangelizing mission are not separable.
Apart from that we could say the objective of every priest's mission is "cultic": so that all people can offer themselves to God as a living host, holy and pleasing to Him (cf. Romans 12:1), that in creation itself, in people, it becomes worship and praise of the Creator, receiving from it that charity that they are called to abundantly dispense among each other.
We clearly see this in the beginnings of Christianity. St. John Chrysostom said, for example, that the sacrament of the altar and the "sacrament of one's brother" or, as they say, the "sacrament of the poor," are two aspects of the same mystery. Love for neighbor, attention to justice and to the poor, are not just themes of social morality, but rather the expression of a sacramental conception of Christian morality, because through the ministry of the priest, the spiritual sacrifice of all the faithful is carried out, in union with that of Christ, the one Mediator: the sacrifice that priests offer in an unbloody and sacramental manner awaiting the new coming of the Lord.
This is the principal dimension, essentially missionary and dynamic, of priestly identity and ministry: by way of the proclamation of the Gospel, those who still do not believe are begotten in the faith, so that they can unite their sacrifice to the sacrifice of Christ, that translates in love for God and neighbor.
Dear brothers and sisters, faced with so many uncertainties and struggles, it is urgent to recover -- also in the exercise of priestly ministry -- a clear and unmistaken judgment about the absolute primacy of divine grace, recalling what St. Thomas Aquinas wrote: "The smallest gift of grace surpasses the natural good of the whole universe" (Summa Theologiae, I-II, q. 113, a. 9, ad 2).
The mission of every priest depends, therefore, also and above all on the awareness of the sacramental reality of his "new being." The priest's renewed enthusiasm for his mission will always depend on the certainty of his personal identity, which is not artificially constructed, but rather given and received freely and divinely. What I have written in the encyclical "Deus Caritas Est" is also true for priests: "Being Christian is not the result of an ethical choice or a lofty idea, but the encounter with an event, a person, which gives life a new horizon and a decisive direction" (No. 1).
Having received such an extraordinary gift of grace with their "consecration," priests become permanent witnesses of their encounter with Christ. Beginning precisely from this interior awareness, they can plentifully fulfill their "mission," by means of the proclamation of the Word and the administration of the sacraments. After the Second Vatican Council, the impression has come about that in our times, there is something more urgent in priests' missions; some believed that they should in the first place build up a distinct society. On the other hand, the verses from the Gospel that we heard at the beginning call our attention to the two essential elements of priestly ministry. Jesus sends the apostles, at that time and now, to proclaim the Gospel and he gives them the power to cast out evil spirits. "Proclamation" and "power," that is to say "word" and "sacrament," are therefore the two foundational pillars of priestly service, beyond its many possible configurations.
When the "diptych" consecration-mission is not taken into account, it becomes truly difficult to understand the identity of the priest and his ministry in the Church. Who in fact is the priest, if not a man converted and renewed by the Spirit, who lives from a personal relationship with Christ, constantly making the Gospel criteria his own? Who is the priest, if not a man of unity and truth, aware of his own limits and at the same time, of the extraordinary greatness of the vocation he has received, that of helping to extend the Kingdom of God to the ends of the earth?
Yes! The priest is a man totally belonging to the Lord, because it is God himself who calls him and who establishes him in his apostolic service. And precisely being totally of God, he is totally of mankind, for all people. During this Year for the Priest, which will continue until the next solemnity of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, let us pray for all priests. May there be an abundance of prayer initiatives and, in particular, Eucharistic adoration, for the sanctification of the clergy and for priestly vocations -- in dioceses, in parishes, in religious communities (especially monasteries), in associations and movements and in the various pastoral groups present in the whole world -- responding to Jesus' invitation to pray "to the lord of the harvest that he may send workers to his harvest" (Matthew 9:38).
Prayer is the first task, the true path of sanctification for priests, and the soul of an authentic "vocational ministry." The numerical scarcity of priestly ordinations in some countries should not discourage, but instead should motivate a multiplication of opportunities for silence and listening to the Word, and better attention to spiritual direction and the sacrament of confession, so that the voice of God, who always continues calling and confirming, can be heard and promptly followed by many youth.
One who prays is not afraid; one who prays is never alone; one who prays is saved! St. John Vianney is undoubtedly a model of an existence made prayer. Mary, Mother of the Church, help all priests to follow his example so as to be, like him, witnesses of Christ and apostles of the Gospel.
[Translation by ZENIT]
[The Holy Father then greeted the people in several languages. In English, he said:]
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
There is a close link between the Pauline Year, which concluded last Sunday, and the Church’s current celebration of the Year for Priests. As we have seen, Saint Paul, in his life and his writings, teaches us that the mystery of Christ must stand at the very heart of our lives as individuals and as a community. This is true in a very special way of priests. In Saint John Mary Vianney, the patron saint of parish priests, we see a wonderful example of a priest whose person was completely identified with his ministry. The priest’s personal identity, grounded in his calling and his sacramental configuration to Christ, may not be separated from his pastoral activity. Indeed, the ministry of every priest is essentially "cultic", in the fullest sense of the word: it is meant to enable the faithful to offer their lives to God as a pleasing sacrifice (cf. Rom 12:1). It is my hope that this Year for Priests will help all priests to appreciate the immense grace of their vocation, consecration and mission. During this Year may the whole Church pray and work more fervently for the sanctification of priests, an increase of priestly vocations, and a greater appreciation of the role of the priest in the life of the ecclesial community.
I offer a warm welcome to the English-speaking visitors present at today’s Audience, including the pilgrimage groups from England, Scotland, Japan, Malaysia, the Philippines, Canada and the United States. I thank the choirs for their praise of God in song. Upon all of you I cordially invoke God’s blessings of joy and peace!
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DAILY LITURGICAL SAINT |
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July 2, 2009

St. Oliver Plunkett 
(1629-1681)
The name of today's saint is especially familiar to the Irish and the
English—and with good reason. The English martyred Oliver Plunkett for
defending the faith in his native Ireland during a period of severe
persecution.
Born in County Meath in 1629, he studied for the priesthood in Rome and
was ordained there in 1654. After some years of teaching and service to
the poor of Rome he was appointed Archbishop of Armagh in Ireland. Four
years later, in 1673, a new wave of anti-Catholic persecution began,
forcing Archbishop Plunkett to do his pastoral work in secrecy and
disguise and to live in hiding. Meanwhile, many of his priests were sent
into exile; schools were closed; Church services had to be held in
secret and convents and seminaries were suppressed. As archbishop, he
was viewed as ultimately responsible for any rebellion or political
activity among his parishioners.
Archbishop Plunkett was arrested and imprisoned in Dublin Castle in
1679, but his trial was moved to London. After deliberating for 15
minutes, a jury found him guilty of fomenting revolt. He was hanged,
drawn and quartered in July 1681.
Pope Paul VI canonized Oliver Plunkett in 1975.
http://www.americancatholic.org/Features/SaintofDay
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GENERAL
MARIOLOGY |
THE DIVINE HISTORY AND
LIFE
OF THE
VIRGIN MOTHER OF GOD
BOOK FOUR
Describing
the Anxieties of Saint Joseph on Account of the Pregnancy of
Most Holy
Mary,the Birth of Christ our Lord, His Circumcision,the
Adoration
of the Kings, the Presentation of the Infant Jesus
In the
Temple, the Flight into Egypt, the Death of the
Holy
Innocents, and the Return to Nazareth.
THE ADORATION OF THE SHEPHERD; THE
CIRCUMCISION.
His desire of holding the infant God and his
reverential fear of Him caused in saint Joseph heroic acts of love, of
faith, of humility and profoundest reverence. Trembling with discreet
fear He fell on his knees to receive Him from the hands of his most holy
Mother, while sweetest tears of joy and delight copiously flowed from
his eyes at a happiness so extraordinary. The divine Infant looked at
him caressingly and at the same time renewed his inmost soul with such
divine efficacy as no words will suffice to explain. He broke out in new
canticles of praise at seeing himself thus enriched with such
magnificent blessings and favors. After having for some time enjoyed in
spirit the sweetest effects of holding in his arms the Lord, who
contains heaven and earth (Is. 40, 12), He replaced him into the arms of
his fortunate Mother, both of them being on their knees in receiving and
giving Him. Similar reverence the most prudent Mother observed every
time She took Him up or relinquished Him, in which also Joseph imitated
Her, as often as it was his happy lot to hold the incarnate Word. When
they approached his Majesty, they also made three genuflections, kissing
the earth and exciting heroic acts of humility, worship and reverence.
Thus both the great Queen and the blessed Joseph observed all propriety
in receiving or giving the Child from and to one another.
From the moment the most prudent Virgin found Herself
chosen as the Mother of the divine Word, She began to ponder upon the
labors and sufferings in store for her sweetest Son. As her knowledge of
Scripture was profound, She understood all the mysteries contained
therein and She began to foresee and prepare with incomparable
compassion for all that He was to suffer for the Redemption of Man. This
sorrow, foreseen and expected with such a full knowledge of details, was
a prolonged martyrdom for the most meek Mother of the sacrificial Lamb
of God (Jer. 11, 19). But in regard to the Circumcision, which was to
take place after the birth of the Child, the heavenly Lady had received
no command or intimation of the will of the eternal Father. This
uncertainty excited the loving solicitude and sweet plaints of the
tender and affectionate Mother. Her prudent foresight enabled Her to
conjecture, that, as her most holy Son had come to honor and confirm his
law by fulfilling it and as He had moreover come in order to suffer for
men, He would be constrained by his burning love and by other motives to
undergo the pains of circumcision.
On the other hand her maternal love and compassion
longed to exempt her sweet Child if possible, from this suffering;
moreover She knew, that circumcision was a rite instituted for cleansing
the newborn children from original sin, whereas the divine Infant was
entirely free from this guilt, not having contracted it in Adam. In this
hesitation between love of her divine Son and obedience to the eternal
Father, the most prudent Virgin practiced many heroic acts of virtue,
unspeakably pleasing to his Majesty. Although She could have easily
escaped this uncertainty by directly asking the Lord what was to be
done; yet, being as humble as She was prudent, She refrained. Neither
would She ask her angels; for with admirable wisdom, She awaited the
opportune time and occasion, assigned by divine Providence for all
things, and She would not presume curiously to search or pry into his
decrees by consulting supernatural sources of information, especially in
order to rid Herself of any suffering. When any grave and doubtful
affair arose, in which there was danger of offending God, or some urgent
undertaking for the good of creatures, in which it would be necessary to
know the divine will, She first asked permission to submit her petition
for enlightenment regarding the divine pleasure.
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DIVINE MERCY
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Divine Mercy In my soul
The Mercy of the Lord I will sing Forever.
Divine Mercy in my soul.
Sr. Faustina, Diary
Notebook V
J.M.J.
The barque of my life sails along
Amid darkness and shadows of night,
And I see no shore;
I am sailing the high seas.
The slightest storm would drown me,
Engulfing my boat in the swirling depths,
If you yourself did not watch over me, O God,
At each instant and moment of my life.
Amid the roaring waves
I sail peacefully, trustingly,
And gaze like a child into the distance without fear,
Because You, O Jesus, are my Light.
Dread and terror is all about me,
But within my soul is peace more profound than the depths of the sea,
For he who is with You, O Lord, will not perish;
Of this Your love assures me, O God.
Though a host of dangers surround me,
None of them do I fear, for I fix my gaze on the starry sky,
And I sail along bravely and merrily,
As becomes a pure heart.
And if the ship of my life sails so peacefully,
This is due to but one thing above all:
You are my helmsman, O God.
This I confess with utmost humility.

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CATHOLIC TEACHING/CONVICTION/TESTIMONY |
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Dr. Paul Jarrett
(continued)
At the county hospital, we received patients from
the other two private hospital residency programs when they didn't want
to take care of a particular patient. Consequently, we looked down on
those residents and developed the mind set that we were to take care of
every problem we encountered. We would not "dump" problems on others.
When I finished my residency, I covered my father's practice for 6
months before beginning a teaching position at Indiana University. I
recall asking my department chairman what I should do about abortions,
since my father was pro-life. His wise advice was not to perform them in
Anderson.
However, when I returned to the medical center, I was placed in charge
of the outpatient OB/GYN clinics at the county hospital, now called
Wishard Hospital. Since Roe v Wade was now the law of the land, Drs. Joe
Thompson and Bob Munsick were both performing abortions at Wishard. I
greatly respected both men. I was faced with the direct question, "Would
I also perform abortions at Wishard?"
I had already bought the big lies that "Abortion is a logical extension
of family planning services" and that "All people needed to prevent
unwanted pregnancies is more information and better access to
contraception."
I might add at this point that I was not encumbered by any personal
religious beliefs at that time. As a teenager, I had expressed to my
future wife, that I had a desire to know God and had joined her church,
but I didn't have any conviction of sin and I didn't come to a saving
faith at that time.
After studying science, I had come to an agnostic position with respect
to God. Without a foundation of absolute truth, and under the influence
of my peers, and based on my own experiences, I decided to do what was
right in my own eyes and perform first trimester abortions for poor
women at Wishard. I would be a good soldier and do my duty. A doctor's
duty, I believed, was to do everything in his power to fix what was
wrong with his patient.
I believed in applying this medical solution of abortion to a societal
problem of unwanted pregnancy. I believed that if these women were
unencumbered by unwanted children that they could rise above their
poverty.
I still believe that I was not in it for the money. In my teaching
contract, I only got to keep 25% of anything I earned in private
practice. At age 28, I was idealistic, immature, and too inexperienced
in the way of the world.
In making the decision to do abortions, I went against God's Word, the
beliefs of my father and violated my Hippocratic Oath. Incidentally, the
section of the oath stating "I will not give a woman a pessary to induce
abortion" has been deleted from the oath when it is used by new
physicians today. I'm not sure Hippocrates would understand,
Between January and May of 1974, I performed 23 "pregnancy terminations"
at Wishard. That is a euphemistic way of saying that I killed 23
children. One definition of a euphemism is a figure of speech where a
less disagreeable word or phrase is substituted for a more accurate but
more offensive one.
The deception in
the language of abortion is achieved through the use of euphemisms.
"Pregnancy termination" rather than abortion. "Menstrual extraction"
rather than early abortion. "Products of conception" rather than baby
and placenta. "Tissues" rather than flesh and bones. It makes it sound
more like a Kleenex than a baby. Even "fetus" and "embryo" are Greek and
Latin words for Baby. "Chorionic Villus Sampling" rather than placental
biopsy. "Selective Multi Fetal Reduction" rather than random killing of
several babies in an attempt to save the remainder of the lucky ones.
All of these terms dehumanize what is being destroyed so that we deceive
others -- and ourselves.
(to be continued)
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