Sunday, August 10, 2008



Ten Day Devotion to the Holy Spirit (1)

Introductory Prayer (2)
Come, O Holy Spirit! Enlighten my understanding in order to know your commands;
strengthen my heart against the snares of the enemy; enkindle my will … I have heard your voice,
and I do not want to harden my heart and resist, saying, “Later … tomorrow.”
Nunc coepi! Right now! Lest there be no tomorrow for me.
O Spirit of Truth and of wisdom, Spirit of Understanding and of counsel, Spirit of joy and peace!
I want whatever you want; I want because you want; I want as you want; I want whatever you want …

Consideration
Please refer to meditation for the day.

Concluding Prayer
Holy and divine Spirit! Through the intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary, your spouse,
bring the fullness of your gifts into our hearts. Comforted and strengthened by you,
may we live according to your Will and may we die praising your infinite mercy.
Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

References:
(1) Fr James Socias, et al (Eds), Daily Roman Missal, 1989, p2080
(2) St Josemaria Escriva, “Prayer to the Holy Spirit”. In postulation for the Cause of Beatification and Canonization, “HistoricaL Registry of the Founder of Opus Dei 20172, p145)
(3) John Bautista de Mayo, To Jesus Daily Through Mary, Vol 2 (Apr-May-Jun), 2005, pp107-34

2 May 2008
Decenary to the Holy Spirit: 1st Day

The First Novena (1)
Immediately after the Ascension the Apostles returned to Jerusalem, and as commanded by their Divine Master, remained in the upper room with Mary, the Mother of Jesus, and 120 disciples.
They continued in prayer, expecting the coming of the Holy Spirit, during nine (9) days. From this was derived the practice of preparing for certain great feasts by a novena of prayers and good works.
The novena of Pentecost was first made by the Apostles, so that it is not only apostolic, but may even be called of divine institution, since the Apostles made it in obedience to a formal command of Jesus Christ. How excellent must it be then, and with what devotion we ought to observe it.
Why did Jesus command His Apostles to pray as such? That they might dispose and prepare themselves to receive the gifts of the Holy Spirit, without which they would have remained forever what they were then: nothing in themselves, useless to others, absolutely incapable of fulfilling their sublime vocation; but with these gifts all would become possible, even easy.
We make this novena with extraordinary fervor for the same reasons, for certainly we are not greater than the Apostles. We are not better able than they were to dispense with the assistance of the Holy Spirit, and to fulfill the duties of our vocation; to achieve that degree of perfection required of us, and to save the souls of others both by word and work.
Jesus gave a third motive to encourage a more careful preparation for receiving the Holy Spirit – the wickedness of the world, the miseries and snares in their midst, and the expected persecutions. “In the world you shall have distress; you shall be brought before governors and kings for my sake; they shall deliver you up to councils, and in the synagogues you shall be beaten; they will lay their hands on you and persecute you. (2)
We, too live in days of tribulation and the rage of the wicked against the religion of Jesus Christ. Where shall we see the supernatural courage and prudence to fight these threats? Only from the Spirit of counsel, fortitude, and piety!
Mary and the Spirit (3)
Meditating on the Holy Spirit implies looking at the woman who gave birth to Jesus through the Spirit. To conceive of Christ and the Church without the indispensable intervention of the Holy Spirit is impossible. Thus it is also impossible to think of Mary, the Mother of God, ‘type and outstanding model’ of the Church (4), outside the context of the Spirit.
The profound action of the Holy Spirit in the history of salvation leads us to analyze “the hidden relationship between the Spirit of God and the Virgin of Nazareth, and show the influence they exert on the Church”. (5)
Everything with Mary became, with her free acceptance and collaboration, she owes to her Son Jesus and the action of the Holy Spirit. The Virgin is ‘all holy’ because from the first moment of her existence she was the ‘temple of the Holy Spirit’. (4) ‘Full of grace’ means nothing but ‘full of the Holy Spirit’, because it is always the Spirit who brings about communion with the entire Trinity.
“The Father predestined her but the sanctifying virtue of the Spirit visited her, purified her, made her holy and, so to say, immaculate.” (6) Mary’s transformation by the Spirit was so profound as to touch her very essence. “Mary from the beginning was united with the Spirit, author of life; everything that she experienced she shared with the Spirit so that her participation in the Spirit became a participation in being.” (7) This is why Mary was ‘all holy’ from her conception.
The Spirit molded and made Mary into a new creature; but Mary’s ‘original holiness’ was not passive, because from the moment she became conscious of this, she collaborated uniquely with the Spirit to nurture that intense and profound union with God.
Prayer to the Holy Spirit (8)
Come, Holy Spirit, enlighten with your truth our journey [toward the great Jubilee of the Year 2000]. Enable us to witness with ardent faith to Jesus Christ, our Lord and Redeemer, who died and rose again for our sake. He is the One who always comes. He is the Gospel of God’s love for humanity of fraternal communion, and of unbounded love. He is the new shoot that has blossomed in the soil of history: he alone can bring about a genuine renewal of the Church and of society.
Come, Holy Spirit, and renew the face of the earth!
Come, Holy Spirit. Inflame us with the fire of your love, so we will be able to humbly and courageously discern the good and evil in society. Help us to listen to your words with the docile attitude of the disciples; to be ready, like Mary, the attentive Virgin, to make those words bear fruit in the form of holiness in our personal lives, in our families and in society. Make us receptive to Christ, who knocks on the door of our heart, and transform us into ardent dwelling places of God.
Come, Holy Spirit. Pour out the power of your grace on the Pope and on his bishops, so that, with evangelical wisdom and apostolic courage, they will be able to show everyone how to respond to today’s challenges according to the plan of God. Bestow your seven gifts on all called to work in the Lord’s vineyard: priests, deacons, those consecrated to the service of witnessing your kingdom, Christian families, all the faithful. Work in us, so our lives might be a sign of a new humanity, reconciled in truth and love, to the praise and glory to the Father. Come, Holy Spirit, and renew the face of the earth! Pope John Paul II

References:
(1) cf Practical Meditations by a Father of the Society of Jesus, 1964, pp272-4
(2) cf Luke 21:12, 25; Mark 13:9
(3) cf Theological-Historical Commission, The Holy Spirit, Lord and Giver of Life, 80-81, 1997
(4) Second Vatican Council. Lumen Gentium, 53
(5) Pope Paul VI, apostolic exhortation, Marialis cultus, 27
(6) St John Damascene, Homily on the Dormition, I, 3
(7) Theopanes of Nicea, Discourse on the Mother of God, 30
(8) Pope Paul II in Pray Always 2, Pauline’s Publishing House


3 May 2008
Decenary to the Holy Spirit: 2nd Day

Proper dispositions to receive
The gifts of the Holy Spirit (1)
God, says St Augustine, desires to bestow the gifts of the Holy Spirit abundantly upon us; but he wills that we should rightly dispose ourselves to receive them. How then shall we do this?
The example of the Apostles will teach us best. They retired into an upper chamber, where they passed their time in recollection and silence. They meditated on all that Jesus had taught them, especially on the attributes and operations of the Holy Spirit.
If I desire to receive an abundant outpouring of the gifts of the Holy Spirit, I must, during this novena, keep myself recollected. I ought to be more fervent in my norms, to guard my senses, and to avoid every irregular affection which tend to the least sin, the chief obstacle to interior peace and reception of God’s gifts.
The Apostles joined their recollection to continual and earnest prayer, mindful of their Divine Master’s words, “How much more will your Father from heaven give the good Spirit to them that ask Him? (2) Their prayer was efficacious and pleasing to God because they were united in the same words, asking the same favor.
This, too, Jesus had taught them – “If two of you shall consent upon earth concerning anything whatsoever they shall ask, it shall be done to them by my Father who is in heaven.” (3)
During this novena we, too, must add to our ordinary devotions some especially addressed to the Holy Spirit. God will surely hear and answer these prayers. We recall Saint Luke’s words – “All these were persevering with one mind in prayer.” (Acts 1:14)
Convinced of the power of Mary over the heart of Jesus, the Apostles strove to increase their fervor by her example and begged her to make up for their imperfections, and to present their humble petitions to her Son. They persevered in prayer “with Mary the Mother of Jesus” (cf Acts 1:14).
Many of the Church Fathers also expressed the opinion that the powerful intercession of Mary helped hasten the coming of the Holy Spirit. Let us all seek her intercession – to beg of her to aid our efforts, to be in our midst, and to present our desires to her Divine Son. That she may obtain for each of us the grace not to forfeit any of the special graces which God may intend to bestow on the Feast of Pentecost.

Mary, docile resting place of the Holy Spirit (4)
The Spirit guided Mary her entire life, especially in the most salient moments, just as he leads the children of God (see Rom 8:14) and as he guided Jesus in the desert (see Lk 4:1). At the time of the Anunciation, sustained and inspired by the Spirit, she freely consented to become the mother of the Word.
She “responded with all her human and feminine ‘I’, and this response of faith included both perfect cooperation with ‘the grace of God that precedes and assists’, and perfect openness to the action of the Holy Spirit, who constantly brings faith to completion by his gifts” (John Paul II, Redemptoris Mater, encyclical letter on the Blessed Virgin Mary, 25 March 1987).
She cooperated with the Spirit in the visit to her cousin Elizabeth when, inspired by the Spirit, she ‘prophesied’, interpreted the history of salvation according to the ‘logic’ of God, and proved to be the ‘humble one of God’ always disposed to fulfill the Lord’s will.
The Magnificat is the inspired expression of her sentiments. This became possible because she “had personal experience through the Holy Spirit who illuminated and instructed her …” [In this way] “she learned from the Holy Spirit the great knowledge that God did not want to manifest his power in any way other than elevating that which is low and lowering that which is high.” (5)

Oh Holy Spirit, Fill Our Hearts (6)
The Cenacle in Jerusalem opens before the eyes of our faith, the upper room from which the Church came and in which the Church ever remains. It was exactly there that the Church was born as the living community of the people of God, and as a community conscious of its mission in the history of man.
During these days the Church prays: “Come, Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of your faithful and enkindle in them the fire of your love!” These words are very often repeated, but today they sound with particular ardor.
Fill the hearts! Reflect what is the measure of the human heart, if only God can fill it through the Holy Spirit! The marvelous world of human science opens up before us with its manifold branches. Your self-consciousness certainly develops side by side with this science of the world. You certainly have often put the question to yourself, “Who am I?” I would say that this is the most interesting question. The fundamental question. With what measure is man to be measured? Shall we measure him by the physical powers at his disposal? With the senses which enable him to make contact with the outer world? Or measure him by the gauge of intelligence, ascertained through various tests and exams?
The answer given today, the answer given by the liturgy of Pentecost indicates two gauges: ‘the need to measure man with the measure of the heart’ … In the language of the Bible, the heart signifies man’s ‘spiritual inner part’, it particularly means the ‘conscience’ … So we must measure man according to the gauge of the conscience, with the measure of the spirit open to God. Only the Holy Spirit can fill up this heart, ie, lead it to self-realization through love and wisdom.

References:
(1) cf Practical Meditations by a Father of the Society of Jesus, 1964, pp274-6
(2) Luke 11:13
(3) Matthew 18:19
(4) cf Theological-Historical Commission, The Holy Spirit, Lord and Giver of Life, 81-82, 1997
(5) Martin Luther, Werke, Kritsche Gesamtausgabe, Weimar, 1883 – in reference 4 (supra)
(6) cf Prayers and Devotions from Pope John Paul II, pp213-4


4 May 2008
Decenary to the Holy Spirit: 3rd Day

Invoking the Holy Spirit (1)
The Holy Spirit bore witness to Jesus in the most striking manner by proving to the world that Jesus is the Son of God, Saviour of men, Judge of the living and the dead. He led men to worship a crucified God, and to crucify all the concupiscences of their own flesh.
He made the cause of Jesus to triumph over all the malice of whoever opposed the preaching of his Gospel. He gave courage to women and children, making them despise a cruel death and suffer the most fearful torture for the love of Jesus.
Jesus had foretold these marvellous effects of the operation of the Holy Spirit, who was to guide the Church after his Ascension. He had solemnly promised to send him to the Apostles, telling them that without his help they could do nothing; with it they would work miracles of conversion and sanctification.
He desired, nevertheless, that they should ask for him and be disposed to receive him by constant and fervent prayer. The same conditions apply to us if we hope to produce any fruit in our labor for souls.
Experience must have taught us that, without the help of the Holy Spirit, all our efforts are in vain and fruitless. Hence, comes the practice introduced in the Church since she began, and in prayer groups, of invoking the Holy Spirit before every important undertaking; even before all ordinary actions of the day.
After saying, “He will give testimony of me”, Jesus promptly added, “and you will give testimony in Jerusalem, in all Judaea, Samaria, and even to the ends of the earth” (Acts 1:8).
They made known their Master’s name in all the world, and caused him to be adored despite all the opposition of men and devils. They destroyed the idols, and overthrew the temples of the heathens’ false gods. They changed the world from pagan to Christian, and founded the Church of Jesus Christ, which [more than] twenty centuries have neither changed nor shaken.
Those who worked all these miracles were twelve poor, weak and ignorant fishermen. Why did Jesus choose such instruments? 1) To prove that it is a divine, not a human, institution, claiming therefore our obedience and submission; and 2) that our weakness and unworthiness should not deter us from undertaking great things for the glory of God and the salvation of souls.

Mary and the Spirit at the foot of the Cross (2)
The Spirit was not only present at the birth of Christ, but also accompanied Mary during the growth of Jesus, even in the most difficult and mysterious moments when she had need to ‘meditate’ and interiorize these events so that she could become more deeply aware of their importance and significance (see Lk 2:19, 49-51).
“I am convinced that no man can exist capable of suffering as much as the Virgin suffered.” (3) Even at the foot of the Cross Mary had need of special assistance from the Spirit. She did not leave when faced with the harshness of the death of the Son, but pronounced her ‘yes’ in the Spirit and became the mother of those for whom Christ offered his life.
In the “Upper Room”, afterwards, Mary invokes the Father with her supplications until he sends his Spirit: “But since it had pleased God not to manifest solemnly the mystery of the salvation of the human race before he would pour forth the Spirit promised by Christ, we see the apostles before the day of the Pentecost ‘preserving with one mind in prayer with the women and Mary the mother of Jesus, and with his brethren’ (Acts 1:14); and we also see Mary by her prayers imploring the gift of the Spirit, who had already overshadowed her in the Anunciation.” (4)
The Virgin, completely penetrated and transformed by the Spirit, is ‘vivified’ by him and ‘redeemed’ even from corporal decay and ‘assumed’ into heaven. By her sublime holiness and radical transformation through the Spirit, Mary had already, during her life, a “spiritualized body, that is, one transformed by the Spirit”. (4)
She was so completely penetrated by him ‘who is the Lord and gives life’ that she possessed the source of immortal life. The Virgin had that life in the Spirit while she lived on earth, although hidden. However, when her earthly life ended, she radiated immortality in the same way as Christ did after his death. (5)

The Spirit, Mankind and the Cosmos (6)
The Apostolic Constitution Gaudium et Spes of Vatican II pictures the presence of the Holy Spirit in the world as a mysterious agent of evangelization that leads all and everybody to the achievement and fulfilment of the mystery of Christ.
He acts in the heart of all to enable them to adhere to the Paschal mystery (GS 22);
He accompanies the life of the Church and guides the evolution of all the evangelical ferments towards the Good: “The Spirit of evolution of God, who, with providence, directs the course of time and renews the face of the earth, assists this development” (GS 26);
He urges interiorly and incessantly the heart of the human person (GS 11); leads history to its fulfilment.
It is the Holy Spirit that touches man’s heart to renew and lift, opening human feelings to a filial relationship of prayer. Thus, the cultic and cultural wealth can be assumed and clarified in a liturgy of the Spirit within the Catholic Church. Cosmos and history are introduced into the dynamics of the whole liturgical symbolism, anticipating the new creation and the new humanity.
Well-known is the expression of Saint Ambrose, quoted also by Saint Thomas: “Every truth, and whoever says it, comes from the Spirit.” …

References:
(1) cf "Practical Meditations by a Father of the Society of Jesus", 1964, pp276-8
(2) cf Theological-Historical Commission, "The Holy Spirit, Lord and Giver of Life", 82-3, 1997
(3) Nicholas Cabasilas, "Homily on the Assumption", 11
(4) "Lumen Gentium", 59
(5) Nicolas Cabasilas, op cit, 10-11
(6) cf "The Spirit is Lord and Gives Life", Pauline's Publising House, 1997, p22


5 May 2008
Decenary to the Holy Spirit: 4th Day

The Apostles persevered in prayer (1)
Prayer was the chief occupation of the Apostles and disciples during the nine days after the Ascension. (Acts 1:14) How did they pray? With great faith, a keen sense of the presence of God; consequently, with great exterior and interior recollection. Since his Ascension, Jesus was no longer visibly present with them.
As man, Jesus was parted from them, but as God, they knew he was still in their midst, seeing, hearing everything. They, therefore, observed the greatest reverence and modesty in all they said and do.
Behold here the first conditions of acceptable prayer. Attended by a lively faith and firm conviction that God sees and hears us. His eye pierces the recesses of our hearts; reads our most secret thought.
Do we have this faith? If so, we will always be modest and reverent; attentive to our words. It follows that, if we pray without this reverence and attention, we have little faith, our prayers can avail but little.
The prayer of the Apostles and disciples was accompanied by a deep humility and great confidence. Their humility proceeded from the remembrance of their past infidelities, and consciousness of their own weakness and inability to accomplish the work entrusted to them. On the other hand, this very weakness led them to place great confidence in the efficacy of prayer, which their Divine Lord had told them would obtain all their desires and supply all their needs.
“The prayer of him that humbles himself shall pierce the clouds”, says the Wise Man. Have our prayers often failed for want of humility? And yet what motives we have for humility! Our past sins, frequent infidelities, and uncertainty of final perseverance. If we keep them constantly in mind, we shall always pray with a humble and contrite heart; and will increase both our confidence and fervor.
The Apostles prayed with perfect resignation regarding when it might please God to send his Holy Spirit. They knew he would be granted to their prayers; but being ignorant of the day and hour, they resolved to persevere for as long as it should please their Lord. Their perseverance was rewarded. On the tenth day they received the gifts of the Holy Spirit in full.
Have we perhaps, implied certain conditions to our prayers with regard to time? We have abandoned it because our prayer was not granted at once. Our failure in resignation and perseverance is the cause of our prayer remaining unanswered – our own fault.

In virtue of the Spirit,
Mary becomes Mother of God (2)
All of Mary’s greatness is in the fact she is the “Mother of God”; the central point of all the Virgin is in herself and relative to believers. The Spirit is present and effective in a most precise way in this divine maternity. We are indebted to the Spirit for that event.
Let us pause and meditate on ‘how’ Mary ‘virginally’ becomes the Mother of God. The Holy Spirit, in the present economy of salvation, is always the ‘precursor of Christ’. Without the previous descent and activity of the Spirit, there can be no visible presence of the Word.
‘The Anunciation to the Virgin’ is the most evident and most important event in this process of the divine economy./ This salvific fact in which ‘our salvation began’ already represents a pentecost.
The Spirit descends on Mary in an effective way to make the Son of God a human being. Mary
asked, ‘How can this be …?’ How can I virginally conceive a baby? The angel replied: ‘The Holy Spirit will come upon you, the power of the Most High will overshadow you.’ (3)
The Creed professes that Jesus ‘was born of the Virgin Mary by the work of the Holy
Spirit’. The Holy Spirit, ‘he who gives life’ descends on Mary; surrounds her. It is he who has made known the Word of God.
In the fullness of time, the Son of God, is made man in the womb of the Virgin. Fathers of the Church affirm: “When Mary gave her answer to God, she received the Spirit, who molded in her that flesh equal to God.”
Why, we may ask, does this ‘becoming flesh’ of the Word, his becoming man, take place in the very womb of Mary, the Virgin of Nazareth? Why has such involvement between a human creature and the Holy Spirit never happened at any other time in human history? In Mary all this took place with the least resistance.

Prayer for the Seven Gifts of the Holy Spirit (4)
O Lord Jesus Christ, who before ascending into heaven did promise to send the Holy Spirit to finish Your work in Your apostles and disciples, deign to grant the same Holy Spirit to me that he may perfect in me the work of Your grace and your love.
Grant me the Spirit of Wisdom that I may not cling to the perishable things of this world and aspire only after the things that are eternal.
Grant me the Spirit of Understanding to enlighten my mind with the light of your divine truth.
Grant me the Spirit of Counsel that I may ever choose the surest way of pleasing God and gaining heaven.
Grant me the Spirit of Fortitude that I may bear my cross with you and that I may overcome with courage all the obstacles that hinder my salvation.
Grant me the Spirit of Knowledge that I may know God and know myself and grow perfect like the saints.
Grant me the Spirit of Piety that I may find the service of God sweet and amiable.
Grant me the Spirit of Fear that I may be filled with a loving reverence towards God and may dread in any way to displease Him,.
Mark me, dear Lord, with the sign of Your true disciples and animate me in all things with your Spirit.
Amen.

References:
(1) cf "Practical Meditations by a Father of the Society of Jesus", 1964, pp279-80
(2) cf Theological-Historical Commission, "The Holy Spirit, Lord and Giver of Life", 83-4, 1997
(3) Luke 1:35
(4) Rev James Alberione, SSP in "Pray Always", Pauline's Publishing House

Friday, May 23, 2008

The Sign of the Cross reminds us of the Holy Trinity

4 June 2008

'In the name of the Father, ...'
In saying these words when we make the sign of the cross, add, mentally, 'who created me in his image, and for heaven'. These words are a meditation in themselves: 'who created me', out of nothing, by his almighty power. Still more by his love in electing me instead of so many others who would have served him better.
'In his image' -- how beautiful and precious, then, must my soul be in the sight of the angels? The living portrait of God, and like another God upon earth -- 'I have said, you are gods'. And for heaven -- to be happy there forever, body and soul, full of glory and wonderful joy.
Such are some of the thoughts which may occupy our mind when, in making the sign of the cross, we add the words, 'Who created me in his image for heaven'. These thoughts will excite suitable affections.

Formation of the Trinitarian Dogma
From the beginning, the revealed truth of the Holy Trinity has been at the very root of the Chruch's living faith, principally through Baptism. It finds expression in the rule of baptismal faith, formulated in the preaching catechesis and prayer of the Church. Such formulations are already found in the apostolic writings such as this salutation taken up in the Eucharistic liturgy: 'The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all.'
During the first centuries the Church sought to clarify its Trinitarian faith, to deepen its own understanding and to defend it against errors that were deforming it. This clarification was done by the early councils, aided by the theological work of the Church Fathers and sustained by the Christian people's sense of the faith.
The Church uses (1) the term 'substance' (rendered also at times by 'essence' or 'nature') to designate the divine being in its unity; (2) the term 'person' or 'hypostasis' to designate the Father, Son and Holy Spirit in the real distinction among them; and (3) the term 'relation' to designate the fact that their distinction lies in the relationship of each to the others.

The Sign of the Cross
This is the ritual gesture used principally at Baptism, Confirmation and the Eucharist reflecting the conjunction of the paschal mystery invoking the Trinity. As early as the third century, Tertullian (~230) attests to tracing of the sign of the cross on the forehead as a personal gesture of piety to sanctify the deeds of daily life.
From their earliest development, initiation rites attest to tracing the sign of the cross on the forehead. At present, this form is used in the rites of becoming a catechumnen and of welcome of children to be initiated.
It developed as a Mass gesture later, in the form of placing the right hand on forehead, breast, then both shoulders [left then right], to accompany the celebrant's speaking the formula invoking the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. It is now used in two places in the 'Order of the Mass': before the greeting after the entrance procession and at the end of the liturgy to accompany the final blessing. This form is customarily used when one begins or ends prayers of personal devotion.

The sacred humanity of Christ
We read the Gospel eager to know our Lord just as his disciples knew him. To observe his reactions, behaviour; to see him full of compassion at the sight of so many people in need; to see him tired after a long day's journey; impressed by the faith of a mother or of a centurion; and patient with the defects of his most faithful followers.
We also contemplate his habitual closeness and the trusting way he turns to his Father, in his nights of prayer and ceaseless love for all. To love him more, to know his most blessed humanity, to follow him closely, we must read the New Testament; meditate on it slowly, with love and piety.
The Second Vatican Council 'forcefully and specifically exhorts all the Christian faithful to frequently read sacred SCripture. Ignorance of Scripture is ignorance of Christ, said Saint Jerome. Therefore, let them go gladly to the sacred text itself, whether in the sacred liturgy, which is full of his divine words, or in devout reading.'

Our Lady
Saint Josemaria Escriva advised: 'Talk to the Three Persons, to God the Father, to God the Son, to God the Holy Spirit. And so to reach the blessed Trinity, go through Mary.' We have received our divine filiation by means of Christ, the incarnate Word, and we behave as children because of our identification with him. Mary leads us by the hand to imitate her Son: "Our Lady, Holy Mary, will make of you 'alter Christus, ipse Christus', another Christ, Christ himself.
"Our Lady: Who could be a better teacher of God's love than this Queen, this Lady, this Mother? Isn't hers the closest bond with the Trinity: Daughter of God the Father, Mother of God the Son, Spouse of the Holy Spirit? And yet she is our Mother!"
Devotion to Mary, expressing as it does mutual affection between mother and child, overflows with personal intimacy. That is why the affirmation that Mary becomes mother to each disciple enlightens the meaning of the apostle John's response: "From that hour the disciple took her to his home." (cf Jn 19:27)

Reference: John Bautista de Mayo, "To Jesus Daily Through Mary", a compilation of spiritual readings, 2005, Vol II, pp258-60.
(Imprimatur by Most Rev Honesto F Ongtioco, DD, Bishop of Cubao, Quezon City, Philippines)

Our Lady Help of Christians

24 May 2008

Mary, Help of Christians
Devotion to Mary under this title dates back to 1624 in Southern Germany. In 1683, Emperor Leopold of Austria was said to have fled to her shrine in Passau when the Turks invaded his country. There, he beseeched her put an end to the 30 Years War with the aspiration, "Mary, help!" Another story is the Blessed Virgin appeared to Saint John Bosco in Turin, Italy, where she asked to hafve a church built to her under this title.

Mary, Help of Christians, cares for us
As Mary cared for her first-born, Jesus, so she cares for each one of us, as her other children, too.
As Mary listened to the teachings of Christ, so she cares for the purity of His doctrine against the attacks of the enemies of truth.
As Mary cared for the infant Church, so she cared and defended the Chruch throughout the centuries. She protects it now and will continue to protect it until the end of the world.
It is impossible to ennumerate the numerous times Mary has come to the aid of her children. Her graces and favors are infinite. The history of the Church gives faithful testimony to Mary's continual protection and assistance against many heresies through the centuries. She revived faith, reinforced hope, increased prayer, and inspired scholars to wield the pen in defense of the truth.
Naturalism, rationalism, modernism, materialism, and Communism, almost suffocated every religious sentiment, but through Mary's work all passed and will pass. 'You have overcome heresy in the whole world!'
Mary protected nations from destruction and saved their Christian faith. Who saved Europe in 1683 from the Turks? The victory of Lepanto in 1571 where the Christian fleet destroyed the Turks was obtained through the recitation of Mary's Rosary.
'Mary is the help of individuals' -- She constantly watches over each one of us, obtains for us graces to avoid falls, to gain strength in tribulations, to overcome the difficulties of life. She aids us in all our necessities.
1) In temporal needs -- The Gospel shows Mary's intervention in these needs. A splendid example is at the marriage feast of Cana in Galilee. Saints and Founders could tell us how many times Mary provided the material and financial needs of their congregations.
2) Spiritual needs -- Mary is even more solicitous about what concerns our eternal salvation. She welcomes sinners and obtains for them the grace of converison. She protects us in temptations; sustains us in good will. Mary desires our spiritual progress and is anxious for us to receive a greater share of the fruits of the Redemption. Thus she sustains us in our efforts to attain sanctity. She obtains for us perseverance and will assist us at the hour of our death.

The love of Mary
Saint Anselm states: 'Mary's love towards God surpassed the love and sweetness of all other creatures.' Mary's love was always constant. Her heart was like the altar upon which a fire burns night and day. Mary did not love God like other Saints with frequent acts of charity: she loved Him with a sole continual act.
Whoever really loves God cannot help but love his neighbor. Mary loved God more than all the Saints, thus immensely more than all the Saints does she love men, and helps them in every need.
Saint Gregory Nazianzen says that 'there is no more effective way for us to obtain Mary's love than by strong charity to our neighbor'.

NB: Feast day also of Our Lady of 'Bon Secours' (Montreal, Canada) and 'Madonna della Strada' (Our Lady of the Way / 'Santa Maria ng Landas'), the first patroness of the Society of Jesus. Her first shrine was a tiny chapel erected in Rome in the 15th entury. This was to become the first oratory and, later the first church of the Jesuit order.

Reference: John Bautista de Mayo, "To Jesus Daily Through Mary", a compilation of spiritual readings, 2005, Vol II, pp214-6.
(Imprimatur by Most Rev Honesto F Ongtioco, DD, Bishop of Cubao, Quezon City, Philippines)

Saturday, May 10, 2008

May Devotions: 13 - 15 May

Our Lady of Fatima: The first apparition (4)
On 13 May 1917, around midday, Our Lady appeared to Lucia, Jacinta and Francisco, who were pasturing their sheep in a hollow, known locally as the 'Cova da Iria'. (5) The Blessed Virgin asked the children to return there on the thirteenth of each month for the next six months.
Her message to them speaks of penance for sins; about saying the Rosary, and consecration of the world to her Immaculate Heart. Each time the beautiful Lady appeared to the children she asked them to say the Rosary every day.
She also taught them a prayer to say often in which they would offer God the events of their lives, especially many small mortifications: "O Jesus, this is for love of you, for the conversion of sinners and in reparati0on for the offences made to the Immaculate Heart of Mary.
"Mary came to awaken men's consciences, illuminate the authentic meaning of life, call men to conversion from sin and to spiritual fervor. To inflame souls with the love for God and with charity towards their neighbor. Mary came to help because many, unfortunately, do not wish to accept the invitation of the Son of God to return to their Father's house.
"From her sanctuary at Fatima Mary renews even today her maternal and urgent petition: conversion to Truth and Grace; return to the life of the sacraments, especially Penance and the Eucharist; devotion to her Immaculate Heart, accompanied by a spirit of penance." (6)
"The message of Fatima is, in its basic meaning, a call to conversion and repentance, as in the Gospel ... The Lady seems to have read with special insight the 'signs of the times', the signs of our age. The call to repentance is a motherly one; at the same time strong and decisive." (7)
In the Gospel the words 'repent' and 'penance' (cf Mk 1:15) appear repeatedly. Jesus begins his mission asking for penance: "Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand" (Mt 4:17). 'Penance' signifies conversion of the sinner, and stands for internal and external actions aimed at making reparation for sins committed. (8)
Mary reminds us that without penance man does not receive the Kingdom of her Son; without penance man is in the kingdom of sin. In Our Lord's own words, without penance "all likewise perish". (Lk 13:3)

May Devotion: 13 May
Mary's hidden life with Jesus (10)
"I like to go back to my imagination to the years Jesus spent close to his Mother, almost the whole of his life on earth. ... as a little child, cared for by Mary who kisses him and plays with him. ... growing up before the loving eyes of his Mother and Joseph ... What tenderness and care Mary and the Holy Patriarch must have shown towards Jesus, during his childhood, silently leaning so much from him. Their souls would become more and more like the soul of that Son, who was both man and God. This is why his Mother, and after her, Saint Joseph, understand better than anyone the feelings of the heart of Christ, and the two of them are thus the best way, ... the only way, to reach the Saviour." (11)

Let us offer our Mother: The effort of doing our ordinary work well, on time, with competence and finesse.

References:
(4) F Fernandez, In Conversation with God, 6:221-4
(5) C Barthas, The Virgin of Fatima, Madrid, 1963
(6) John Paul II, Angelus, 26 Jul 1987
(7) cf Ibid, Homily at Fatima, 13 May 1982
(8) cf L Bouyer, Penitence in Dictionary of Theology, Barcelona, 1983
(10) Belmonte and Socias (Eds), Handbook of Prayers, p308
(11) St Josemaria Escriva, Friends of God, 281

NB: Copied from TO JESUS DAILY THROUGH MARY, a compilation of spiritual readings by John Bautista de Mayo, Vol 2 (Apr-May-Jun), 2005, p183. Imprimatur: Most Rev Honesto F Ongtioco, DD, Bishop of Cubao, Quezon City

May Devotion: 14 May

Mary loses and finds the Child Jesus (6)
"The Mother of God, who looked for her son so anxiously when he was lost through no fault of her own, and experienced such great joy in finding him, will help us retrace our steps and put right whatever may be necessary when, because of our carelessness or our sins, we have been unable to recognize Christ. With her help we will know the happiness of holding him in our arms once more, and telling him we will never lose him again." (7)

Let us offer our Mother: A good, sincere and sorrowful confession of our sins and failures in the sacrament of Penance.

References:
(6) Belmonte and Socias (Eds), Handbook of Prayers, pp308-9
(7) St Josemaria Escriva, Friends of God, 278

NB: Copied from TO JESUS DAILY THROUGH MARY, a compilation of spiritual readings by John Bautista de Mayo, Vol 2 (Apr-May-Jun), 2005, p185. Imprimatur: Most Rev Honesto F Ongtioco, DD, Bishop of Cubao, Quezon City

May Devotion: 15 May

Mary in Cana (9)
"In the Gospel Saint John recorded how our Lady at the wedding of Cana turned to the waiters and said: 'Do whatever he tells you.' That's it! Getting people to face Jesus and ask him: 'Lord, what do you want me to do?'" (10)

Let us offer our Mother: Prompt obedience when we are asked to do some errand or act of service.

References:
(6) Belmonte and Socias (Eds), Handbook of Prayers, pp309
(7) St Josemaria Escriva, Christ is passing by, 149

NB: Copied from TO JESUS DAILY THROUGH MARY, a compilation of spiritual readings by John Bautista de Mayo, Vol 2 (Apr-May-Jun), 2005, p189. Imprimatur: Most Rev Honesto F Ongtioco, DD, Bishop of Cubao, Quezon City

Sunday, April 6, 2008

Another Page



Here's another interesting link.

Thoughts on Marian apparitions in Lipa



Mediatrix of all Grace has been manifesting in Lipa.
You can read about it on this link:
Here's the link again.

Carlsbad


We are in Carlsbad for Haley's baptism.